MAXIM}! OIL MERE MAN min-mi flirilevowhlnnvsvnhb ceI. The Guardian. Three Can Morning Daily Pounded l . Premier Smallwocd Expected Sunday Prom!" Joseph Smaiiwood of Newfoundland. who is scammed to open the 01d Home Week and Provincial Exhibition Moniay night, 1s expected to arrive in P.E.I. mint 4 pim. Sunday. Present plans are for a Maritime Central Airy-Jays plane to pick up Mp smallwood at Sydney, 10.5, gun. up’. ‘The official opening of tho 01d ironic Week is scheduled for 7.15 Monday evening. It is expected P11311181‘ Simallwood will speak at 7.4 . Fire Near Moncton Continues to Burn MONOION. N. B., Aug. 1.1 _ tCP)—A sudrien shift in the wind late today opened a new fire front ‘ fi-r crews battling a forest fire that has burned over 20 acres of 5 timberland near the Canadian National Railways main lins five miles west of Moncfnn. . After containing the fire within on area carved out by bull donors, crews vzers forced to change their front when the wind caused the flames to bridge the fire break. Forestry service officials said crews were holding their own on the new firs front and the flames had not made much headway. Dec. Z6. Jan. 2 Legal Holidays 0'1'i‘AWA. Aul- iil-—(CP)- With the coming Christmas and New Year's falling on Sundays, the Government has decided to declare the follow- ing Mondays-Danie and Jan. 2-—Iegal holidays, it was dis- closed today in the Canada Gazette, "Come to the regular dance in Bonshaw every Tuesday night. "Mail your Films to Garnhum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Ebenezer School Monday, August 22nd. "Ico Cream and Dance, Hane- ville. Aususi 1cm. Good music. "Ice Creaim Festival and Dance, Glen Roy School. Monday, August 15th. will rO-open "Dance and Ice Cream, Cardi- gan Head School, Monday, August 15th. "In stodr. Cement. Asphalt Shingles. etc. W. 1. Bovrnmn, Hun- ter River. “ "Come to the dsnce and lswn party st South Melville Monday, Aug. 15th, sponsored by Women's institute. McNeiPs Orchestra. "A show you will always re- mornber. See "Personal Column" at MacDonald Bros. Theatre tonight. "Owing to our help requiring Ii much needed vacation, R. L. Dickinson will be closed Aug. ‘l7 to Aug. l9. , "Open Air Dance, Lower New- town, August 16th. Good floor and canteen. Eldon Orchestra in attend- M108. "Double feature show at Bon- shsw tonight. "Prairie Chickens" and ‘The Last Three." aiming Jimmy Rogers and Marjorie Wood- worth. _ . "Boston, leaving August 22nd. Take two, share expenses. Phone Summerside 380-4 and leave mes- sage for Miss Sang . References exchange. "Our Store at Bradalbane closed Wednesday afternoon. Au!- ust 17th. K. W. Doull. L. B. Seaman. "Our Stores will bo closed Wod- nsaday Thursday afternoons and e evening except Saturday for Old Home Week Clayton Oms- lfl, Parker Oanileld, Brent W000. "Notice - Arrears of tans duo St. Georges School, are requested to N paid on or bsiors content! 15111.30. Otherwise. will b0 - ed in for collection. By order of Trua- teea. John .1. Sainero. Sou-story. P‘ htbiccra -- Beaten and flac- haa Ilil be deliver-ix‘ Slur-lain Roda to hhlsidon Grounds 0W?! mcrnind dirinl Old Home Week. woiiisiibopieusstotsaoemox Your requirements. Phone 214-1 01' ltop our truck. "The Atlas Grain Ocmlllllr. 301M of Trade Building. Montreal, invites enquiries from covers o! assorted earl of whole and ground lambs“? 0:0 bulk oats. a Am can m. Iran when avail- _ i Z- Boston Man Will Visit P. E. I. Hon. R. H. Winters. Federal Min- ister of Reconstruction and Supply, who is expected to arrive in Char- lottetown today on a brief visit. luly Construction Contracts Set , New Reccidsf . ‘TORDITIOLA-ug. IVY-BTU?) - Juiy construction contracts were the highest ever recorded in Can- ada for that month. MaoLean Building Reports, Ltd. put them at $139,209,000, up $39.- 477900 from July last year. The increase reverses s. trend of recent months. for April. May and June had shown a failing 0ft from their corresponding months in 1948. All classifications showed gains in July as follows, with figures for July, 1048, in brackets: Residential $52.195,000 ($38,314,- 800); business $32.'l'il4.i00 ($27,370,- 200); industrial 8.378.700 ($4.011.- 600); engineering $30,981,200 ($20.- (86,000 And by regions: Maritlmes $8,200,000, down $800.- 000; Ontario 8531510700, up 812.- 300.000; Quebec $44,848,600. up $24.- 000,000; Western $32,048,900; up 8.800.000. Large contracts included: Building for St. Mary's College. Halifax, $1,500,000; Dalhousis Un- lverslty arts and administration building, Halifax, 01.500000. A 110000.000 contract for s. rall- wsy and wharf at Havrs St. Pierre. Que, for the Quebec Iron and Titanium Corporation, award- ed last fail. is also included in the July tabulations. U. S. Would By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASI-DNGION. Aux. 1d ~40?) — State Secretary Deon Acheson indicated today that tho United States would oppose. at least through the United Nations‘, any aggressive action by the Chinese "Special lobster supper, Sf. Mark's Lot 7, Tuesday evening. August 23rd. Supper served from 5.00 o'clock on. Games. bingo, ice cream. various attractions. Supper '75 cents per plats. Dance that night. Coma to the but lobster supper‘ than is anywhere. "The District convention of the Southport. (Zrcos Roads. Pownai, Alexandra. Haseibroot. Water-vale. Dcnagh, Mt. Abion and Johnston's River. Wouieims iitutss will be haid in Mt. He rt Orphanage Ball, on Monday. August 22nd. at 2.30 P. ll. All members are invited to attend. "Buying pigs, all kinds and gins, and poultry, Monday at Fredericton. Buying young pigs Tuesday D a.m. st Brookfleld: 10. Milton; 1 p.m.. York: 3. Bedford: 8, Mount Stewart; d. Wain-vale; I. Vernon River; 5.00, Pownsl. Wednesday, 0 l.fi'i.. New. Glasgow; l0, Whoatley River; ll, Holmes’ Corner: l p.m.. New Haven: 3. Bonshaw; 8, Kelly's Cross; 4, Em- erald; 8, Clifton; 8.80. Remington. Paying $24.00 per pair for good pigs over 80 lbs. each. Will also buy smaller onsa laud Jorsen- Sh and lblqaadgati sctioaguarsataaa._ ‘ inches in diameter, looks Hopes To Sept New Diving Record Off California Today SMUGGLEi-FS COVE, CaliL, A113. 12—A Boston marine scien- list may dive deeper into the black depths of the ocean tomor- row than man has ever gone be- fore. Otis Barton, 48, Harvard-train- ed engineer, hopes to descend 6,- 000 feet in a cast-steel ball, called a benthoscope, dangling from a steel cable. At that depth water pressure Would be 27,000,000 pounds on the benthosphcre. Burton and Dr. William Beebe 0f the New York Zoological S0- ciety already hold the world's deep-diving record, 3.028 feet in a bhthysphere off Bermuda in 1934. Burton hopes to nearly double that depth tomorrow. Vessels of the little fleet en- gnucd in the project gathered to- night at this cove on Santa Cruz Island, 25 miles south of Santa Barbara. Early tomorrow they'll but out to the spot in the Santa Cruz basin where the deepest water was found by electric fs- thnmeters. Burton can sit or kneel in the sphere, 5'7 1-2 inches in diameter. It weighs 7,000 pounds and ifs steel shell is 1 3-4 inches thick at its thinnest point. It is designed to withstand pressures down to 10.000 feet, Its steel door is 15 inches in diameter. One fused quartz win- dow, three inches thick and 5 3-4 straight ahead. Another, 2 3-4 inches across, looks straight down. Two outside lights will illumin- ate the ocean depths. A motion picture camera shoots through the forward window. Telephone and power lines are ettachedmtq, the main cable. " Barton will have constant tele- phone communication with the surface. He'll have a cylinder of oxygen. sufficient for him to stay down six hours. Carbon dioxide expelled from his lungs will be absorbed by screens of soda iimn. The sphere has been tested at 2.000 feet, and Barton has been down in it 500 feet. Housiniilepori (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA. Aug. lZ-—Homes are still going up in Csnads to meet the ever-present housing short- age. The Bureau of Statistics today reported an increase of 7.860 in the number of dwelling units completed during the first five months of this year when com- pared with the first five months of 1948. Ontario had the largest under construction at the end of the month at 20.892; Novs Scotla. 2.- 254; New Brunswick, 1.105; Prince Edward Island 135. Among the Iarger‘ metropolitan areas there were 8.482 under con- struction in Montreal, 324 in Hal- lCs lfax. and 275 in Saint John. Oppose a Red Assault, On Hong Kong Communists to wrest control oi the great port of I-Icng Kong from Britain. At a press conference. Acheson stopped short of saying flatly that the United states would back up Britain at Hcng Kong but he left the way open for such action. Ho also said in response to ques- tions that Foreign Secretary Ern- est Bevin of Britain and he might very well discuss the whole Chin- ese situation when Bevin comer here for a round of conferences early next month. m. primary purpose of the conerencos will bs to devise ways o! tackling Brit- aln's economic uisis. The question of Bong Kong arose when a reporter asked Ach- eson whether the United States had reached a decision to back Britain at her cmwn colony. Acheson replied that tho United States Government has talked with the British Government about tho situation. But ho said that the answer to the question is very difficult beéause it depended on what happened and the Ameri- csn Government would have to know what it Wlp backing up. He added firmly. however, that any action there which violated the United ltatlohs ehartn would call tor action in tho Security council and the United States of course would live up fully to its obligation undu- tho chatter. ‘this was in lino with tho gea- sral policy tion taken last wot whm o white papa: on Ignores gOrders, Reaches Only will... lefi To Complete World Flight HALIFAX. Aug. 12 ~40!) _ Mrs, Richards (Dickie) Morrow- Tait. 26-year-old flying housewife, Pulled a “Wrong-Way Oorrigan" today and landed safely in Green. land afici- a 700-mile hop from Goose Bay. Labrador, in her single engined plane. The British aviatrix, who set out "M959 B Year ago to circle the Klflbe. touched down at Biuie West One, the United States base in Southern Green nd, the RNQJAJ‘, here reported la e tonight. The plucky red-head now has 0H1? two hops left-Greenland to Iceland and Iceland to Scotland- to fulfil a life-long dream of being the first woman to fly around the world in a single-engined plans. Navigator Michael Townshend. also of Cambridge, flew with her on the long, over-water flight. i Mrs. Morrow-Tait took of! from Goose in her small Yale plane at 8:50 am. ADT, ostensibly for Bangor, Me. she had been refused permission by the Canadian 13¢. partment of Transport to make the flight to Greenland and was order- ed to return to the American field. An R.C.A.F. Lancaster was de- tailed to escort her back to Dow Airfield at Bangflr. which said Mrs. Morrow-Tait couldn't land there except in an emergency. Suddenly, the Lancaster radioed that it was changing lie flight plan to "investigate a single-engined aircraft heading east"—towsrd Greenland. In the little plane. of course, were Mrs. Morrow-Tait and Thwnsherici. About 6 1-2 hours lat- Si,” the pair landed at Bluis West The Lancaster flew with the Yale to Greenland. landing about half an hour ahead of it It will return to Gcosrnay as Mrs. Morrow-mitt now is outside limits of Canadian jurisdiction. , Bad luck has dogged Mrs. Mor- (Contlnued on Page 0 Col b) For Alleged CALGARY, Aug. 12~ CP)——Po- lice combed Alberta tods for the man who allegedly beat to death 24-year-old Yvonne Levesque of Pincher Creek, Alts.. lest night in Ia tourist cabin they shared as |man and wife. . Donald Henderson. recently of Clive and Lacombe, Alta, was rc- ported to have fled the cabin on the outskirts of the city when po- lice arrived to find the woman's nude and unconscious form on the cabin floor. Henderson was ssid to have fled to n nearby riverbnnk and then made his way to ii friend's home where he borrowed an automobile. Miss Levesque died in hospital. nppnrnnfly from injuries received in a beating. Police said s murder warrant would be issued for Henderson's arrest. ‘ l Possibility Henderson may flee into Saskatchewan, where he has relatives, was being checked by police. Miss Levesque and Henderson were registered as men and wife at the auto-court since Aug. 2. Police sold they learned of the slaying after Henderson ran into the auto-camp office and told Police Comb Alberta Georgina Smith, 15-year-old daugh- tor of the manager, to "Cell a doc- tor quick." "Never mind asking any ques- tions, go and call a doctor," Hon- derson was reported ss saying. Mrs. Delbert Miller, camp clerk. said she followed Henderson beck to his cabin and found him giv- ing Mlss Levesque artificial res- piration. She said the woman's naked body was covered with bruises and scratches. Henderson. reported still in the cabin when police arrived. quickly fled towards the rlverbank. Governor Declares Alaska Dofoncoloss WASHINGTON. A08. l2 —-(AP) -Goverrior Ernest Ciruening told Congress today that Alaska is de- fenseless and the territory could be captured tomorrow by a minor scale airborne invasion. "If than is anoth Pearl Huber it shall not be so d that no warning has been given.‘ Grinning said in a telegram ca” Senator Lester Hunt (Dem. 0.). ' ~ UNEMPLOYMENT ‘OLAIII OITAWA. Aug. l0 - (OP) - Claims for unemployment insur- ance benefits declined In June. The Bureau of Statistics today said i110! were down to 58,100 from the 03.700 claims filed in‘ M“. but up from tho 00,000 filed in Juno last I cancellation of those trips sa orig- _ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1a, 1949 YUGOSLAVIA BRANDED AS ENEMY 0F flying Housewife 32 PAGES SOVIET NION Greenland ..l"la.t0eren make cream ‘MIOSQ of chllk. . MAXIMS or A MERE MAN I Mall Today Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gardiner (above) of Central Lot l0 celebrate their 70th wedding an- niversary. Mr. Gardiner is 92 years of age and Mrs. Gardiner is 87. Both of them enjoy good health and have been looking forward to this day for many months with pride in reaching this unusual milestone intheir married life.‘ » ' Yesterday afternoon they were guests at the home of neighbors, Mr. and lVLrs. PH. Lyle and many friends and neighbors dropped in to offer their congratulations. This Murderer p. Large Blast Furnace At Sydney Closes SYDNEY, N.S.. Aug. 12 —(OP) -A large blast furnace at the Dam. inlon Steel and Coal Corporation plant hcrc was closed down today because "the shortage of pig iron in Canada is over." Seventy men were affected by the shutdown. but they have been ab- sonbed in other departments of the plant. The furnace produced foundry-type pig iron. Pig iron used in making steel is still in strong demand. steel men here said. Triple Sunday Trips 0f Ferry Extend-ed lintil October 31st -___ The Provincial D l! Industry and Natural Resources announced yesterday that through the co-opcraticn of the Canadian National Railways. the Bundfll’ trips of the carferry at Borden- Tormentine, due to be cancelled on ssptember 4th and September 11th, had been extended ic the end of October. This means that the Sunday trips from Borden at i).l0-a.m. and 1.00 p.m. will con- tinue in effect together with the Sunday 0.46 pm. trip which latter trip will continue to December 25th as originally scheduled. Automobile traffic on this route is constantly increasing and the lnally intended would surely cause inconvenience to many motorists. The continuation of these trips is regarded as an important im- provcmeht. Official confirmation of the continuation of the Sunday trips was received yesterday by Mr. B. Graham Ringers. who is in charge of the transportation work of the Department. During the Provincial Exhibition and Old Home Wefi heavy period of travel, both ear ferries are op- erating at Borden-Tormeniine giv- ing a service of eight trips each way per day. This service runs from Aimistillth to Sunday, Aug- ust 21st inclusive, and will again be in operation over the Labour Day holidi? period. 10th Wedding Anniversary afternoon there will be a reception, again at the home of Ms‘. and Mrs. Lyle. A son. Mr. Leslie Gar- diner of Wetaskewin, Alberta, ac- companied by a daughter. Mrs. Gordon Harris have arrived for the anniversary. A daughter. Mrs. Ben Pillman of New Annan is the only member of their family residing lll the Province. Mrs. Gardiner before her mar- riage was Adele Lyle of Central Lot 16. Her husband was born at Cape Traverse but moved to Central Lot 16 74 years ago. ' I states. "needs l. service of this kind throughout the whole summer sea- son and it is generally felt that if there were more trips of the fer- ries traffic would grow materially. Tourists and others are greatly inconvenienced by having to wait for .s number of hours for another trip and this could be overcome by the extra trips." By DOUGLAS HOW OTTAWA, Aug. 1B — (OP) - Canada and Russia came to a3- reemcnt today - on ice-breakers, The Russians said the Russians. not the Canadians. made the first ice-breaker. The Canadians said they were probably right. But they reserved the right to chuckle over further Russian "first" claims which have already embraced the automobile, telephone. submarine and whai-havc-you. It all appeared to be another in- temai ideological dispute anyway. A Russian writer in the news- paper Reii Fleet took issue with a "distortion of historical fact" in the Soviet Encyclopedia which said "The first ice-breaker was built in Canada in 1837 for use on the Delaware River" in the United Slates. The wrltor- praised a Russia. book named “Chronicle of the North" for raising "an extremely important and topical question — that of Russian priority in the Starling: Cause Big Sen To Run Slow LONDON, Aug. 12 —(AP) —Blg Ben, famed London clock atop the Rllhllient Buildings, failed to ring at 9 o'clock tOnight, Listeners to the BBCs 9 o'clock news were startled to hear the news begin without the familiar Big Ben chimes, signal for the program's. start. The BBC later announced ilia‘. Big Bcn WES running four minutes siow-"swarms cf starlings are sitting on the hands holding them back " Drifting Boat Found 0ft C. B. SYDNEY, N. S., Aug. 12—(CP) ~Tho mysicrv surrounding iiie discovery of an abandoned 30-foot fishing vessel off ihtr western coast of Cape Breton Island deep- ened tonight as investigating R. C. M. P. reported they had drawn a blank. The ship, ouifiiivd but deserted. was found half-submerged iatc Thursday 1.3 miles northwest of Cheticamp, N. S. R. C, M. P. said their investi- gation showed the vessel was not of chcticamp registry, nor was it from Prince Edward Island ports. The vessel. which carried no name, would normally have a crew of six. Fishing gear and a ragged gray cap was found by police when they boarded the while-painful ship. Her cne-cyciinder engine was not serviceable. From her position when discov- ered, observers said she could have drifted to the spot from any- where aiong the Gaspe Coast of Quebec, St. Pierre ef. Miqueloh, Newfoundland, the Magdalen Is- lands or Prince Edward Island. Meml5 ous Vaudeville Act Dies NTEW YORK. AuS- 12 —(AP) — Al Shean of the famous vaudeville act of "Gallagher and Shean" died tcdsy at the age of 81. He had been ill with a heart ailment. for some time. Shean was born in Dornum. Germany. in 1868. l-ie came to the United States as a child and was brought up in New Yoiflr City. His partner in the fam- ous song "Absolutely Mr. Gallagher. Positively Mr.‘ Shean" died some Red Paper Claims First Ice - Breaker In Russia time EEO. construction of ice-breakers." The dispatch from Moscow fail- ed to say whether it gave the date of the birth 0i the first one. Officials of Canada's Transport Department noted that ilie En- cyclopedia,“ Britannica says the steamer "Pilot." launched in 1872, wais the first ship specially de- signed as an ice-breaker. It was planned on the basis of experience gained by a Russian shipownor named Briineff. The Pilot proved too light. i0 break the ice by its own weight but it embodied principles Hill!‘ were generally accepted. the En- cyclopedia says. An official book published hero in 1905 refers to the launching in Subscriptions Delivered 86.00, $5.00; other Provinces o. U. l. 17,00 Moscowfiiarges Belgrade ‘In Bloc With West By sour GILMOBI f MOSCOW. Aug. l2 — (AP) lussia today branded Yugoslsvi as an enemy of the Soviet Unio and an ally of foreign capitalists.‘ In a note to Belgrade, Russ changed that the Yugoslav Gov eminent is in a bloc with th Western Powers and "more an more is joining up with imperia lst circles against the USSR.” “Let the people of Yugoslavi know," the Russian noto said. "th soviet. Government looks on th present Yugoslav Government no as a friend and ally but as a i-nemy and adversary of tho 50v lei Union." ‘ The note was the fourth in series 0f bitter diplomatic cg Charles: over. what the govern meni. of Marshal Tito regards Russia's abandonment of Yug slav territorial claims at the reJ cent B18 Four foreign minister conference in Paris. ' The Kremlin attack on YUQO-o slavla, made public by the M954 cow radio, said the Tito Governi mcni, as early as April 1940, wai willing. to abandon its basil claims for Austrian territory at wmilensation for war locus. bu ivanted to toss the responsibility for this decision to the Soviet Government, At the Paris conference, sided with the United France and Britain in YLlBoslavltrs claim for a Southern Austria. Prior to meeting. the Soviet Union 5ul>ll0rted the Yugoslav demands, (The Soviet note referred Yugoslavia. as an "enemy" 1o;- u; first time despite the fact Tito an the Kremlin have been at politic (Continued on Tfie 5 g9], 1) I LvERY our. hues To SEE his NAME in PRINT untass if-s iN ‘fill! POUC! News TORONTO, Aug. 1.3 —(OP) J Minimum and maximum temp atures: Vancouver 50 65; Edmo ton 52 T5; Regina 54 97; Wlnnip B4 90; 'l"oi"ontn 70 82; Montreal so; (lttawa 60 83; Quebec 54 74g saint Jnhii 01 71; Moncton 56 - l-laliiax 00 65; Charlottetown 6S); Sydney 46 08; Yarmouth 0E); Si. John's 49 62. HALIFAX. Aug. 12 — (C?) % Ofiiriril inland forecasts issued fol itiglit by ihc Dominion Publiil Weather Office at Halifax: Synopsis: ' Skies are cloudy in all-reglo of the forecast district, and ther are WICIEI)’ scattered showers. weak ilisiurbaiice over the Ne England States will paiss to south of Nova Scotia Saturday. 1877 of "Canada's first icebreaker." the "Northern Light." built at. Levis. Que. for the run from New| Brunswick to Prliicc Edward Is- land. It cost $50,000. i So, all in all. the Transport De-i parimant made no attempt to= quarrel with the Red Fleet. By Charles S. llspinet Canadian Press Correspondent PORT OS‘ SPAIN, ‘hinidsd, Aug. 12 - (OP) -_~Five gaunt men, skins burned black by a tropical sun, landed here today from their 27- foot open sailboat after a 90-day trip from the Canary Islands. The men said they were fleeing from [Franco Spllll. They identified themselves as Capt. Francisco Caiballo. Heronimo Coll. Manuel Nunos. Juan Sanches and Trujillo Fens. One weekly told questioner-s they. and 11 companions had left be- hind their wives and children "to seek new fortunes in Venesuels." This was their story: The group sailed from the Gen- iiry Islands. a Spanish Atlantic possession. March e. headed for Dakar. French West Africa. There. they found “conditions" little bet- ter than at home. With limited food stocks, they pointed their tiny craft westward into the you. ‘This Province". Mr. Rogers Cross Atlantic In Small Boat To Escape Franco for South America. A violent. three-day storm shat- tered the bowsprlt of their craft and split its boom down the mid- dle. The boat started to ship wat- er and food ran short. Meals were cut to two a day along with three small cups of water. Rising panic gripped the i6 starving men. One day late in June, the repaired boom swung around and struck Ferra. He was blind for four days. One nightmarish they put in st Cayenne, Hench Guiana, and 11 of them stayed ashore. The romaining five soon sailed for Georgetown. British Guiana, with replenished food sup- plies and reached there July 25. They pushed doggedly on. Two days out of Port of Spain, food was gone and they lived on weak coffee. month later, Little change is expected in th weather. However, sunny skies a indicated for Sunday in all re gions, along with seasonable teml DIINAIOI. Regional forecasts, valid unfi! midnight Saturday. with an out look for Sunday: Prince Edward Island — Cloud with widely scattered showers. No much change in temperatur Light winds. Low early Saturda morning and high in the after noon at Charlottetown 62 an 73 Outlook for Sunday — Sunny. . High tide today n. 1.4a a. as mi 1.37 P. M. Sun rises this and sets at 723. Summerside tide eighteen mini utes later than Charlottetown. aonnrx - TORMENTINI raunf morning at 5.14 WEEK D l! Lv. Borden Lv. Cape Tonnentin‘ 9.10 Al“. 10.35 AIM. l.00 P.M. 2.40 P."- ‘Jfl PJW. 7.80 P)‘. 9.00 P-i‘ . 10.80 P-M. SUNDAYS Lv. Barrdc-n Lv. Capo Tonnentln‘ 0.10 A-M. 10.35 A.“- ].00 Pl". 3.00 REM: 6.05 P-M. $.00 PM WOOD ISLANDS-CAMEO‘! DAILY FERRY Leave Wood Islands A.M. 0 AJVL; l1 A.M.| l EM.‘ Now, they intend to rest; then continue their journey to LaUulra. a village on the north coast of turbulent Atlantic and set course i Venezuela. 5'15 milea west oi here. ‘I i 3 P.M.; 5 PM. Leave Caribou ‘l A.M .; 0 A.M.; 11 A.M.| 1 Pill l 2M4 l PM. -