MAXIM! OIL MERE MAN t hlltoryoltbesffeotlous. A woman's obols cuisines h a The Guardian.‘ Tin-so Cents, Morning Dally Founded 1881. EAST- GERMAN POLICE ORDERED T0 SLAV BORDER Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1049 -1 The great end of life ls not knowledge but actions. MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN 7 2 PAGES Mail Fire Sweeps Huge Mining A Troops Slash To Within 30 Miles of Defence Forces Lifeline Reports Of Dissension Discredited By Fraser Wightoss LONDON, Aug. 30 — (Reuters) — High government sources to- day discredited reports suggesting that there was a difference of opinion between Sir Stafford (‘ripps and Foreign Secretary Be- vin concerning the British brief for the Washington economic talks next week. These sources said “no spilt of any kind exists between them; (Continued on Page s CbThT Province Will ~ Be Represented REGINA, Aug. 30—(CP)— The annual convention of the Assoc- iatlon of Workman’: Compensation Boards of Canada will bs held hcrc Sept. 5-7, Prince Edward Island will be represented for the first time. Representatives from Newfound- land may be present although workmens compensation legislation in Canada's 10th Province differs from that in the rest of Canada. National president is A. W. Hclse of Saskatoon, a member of the Saskatchewan board. Coming Events "Dance. Ice Cream, Iona Hall, Friday, September 2nd. "Mall your Films to Garnhum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Dance Orwell Hall, Friday, Sept. 2nd, Miliview Orchestra. "Reserve August 31st. for Carni- val and- Chicken Supper at Borden. 1 "Show at Hunter's River tonight. ‘son of Rusty" with Tod Donald- lOil. -- "Barn Dance at. ‘Dc-m Carson's. git.‘ Theresa's, Wednesday, August s . "Chicken Supper. Tracadie Hall, Nlttindsy, September 5th. Dance s er. “Special Meeting Clyde i... O. 531. ‘A. Wednesday night, August S . "Dance Long River i-lali every Wednesday. Good music. Door P!‘ ze. "Dance in St. Peter's lisll every Tuesday night. Peters Orchestra, Legion Cliff "Dance Mt. Stewart Legion liali every Thursday night, music by Al Blanchard. "Provincial Plowing Match and Horse Show at Dundss, Wednes- dll’. September 21st. “Dance Point do beefs i. yvednesdsi. August am. w‘: mnches, Ice Cream, Drinb. "Dancing Islanders Country club. Travellers Rat. every Thurs- fill’, Orchestra. Western Rhythm Boys. "Dance in New l-lsvcn School. Wednesday. August also, with canteen service, good music. Spon- Wfcd by Kingston Branch Canad- lsn bsgion. “Reserve Wednesday, August lilst for bingo, clam chowder. and dance in South Rustico Hall in lid of the Saint ‘Thomas Aquinas 5001017. and sponsored by its Itu oats. "Will b0 idlllllll‘ hOIl lb tho huwl-II points each Thtlsdsy: limos Wiginoso. Brsdslbasio. until 11-80 A. ll. Bordon Bsgnsll. Hunter Rivas. until noon. flumrnersido until 130 P. I. snd Kssislngioss until 8 P- - llscEsvon and Cssoley. {wholes American molar ‘no oliow Oorn for November ship- Inlnt h most attractive in price. °m thousand burials to s cor. Also "fitted oars of whole and begged Irllm and bull oats. barley and "but. hit no bran. shorts or "Wilma iii assorted cars with "It'd ltain. 111s Atlas onto Gm 9g .4‘ 3?‘! By Spencer Moose. CANTON. Aug. 30 -(AP) _ Chinese Communist troops today slashed to within 3o miles of u... Cariton-Hankow railway, lifeline g...- Lhe main Nationalist defence force for all South China. The Reds overrun Jucheng, l'70 miles north of Canton and 40 miles east. of the railway. They tihen tiled on 10 miles west. and attack- Qd Lltin. press reports said. Should the Communists reach the Ylilwfi-Y. si-‘Dplies no longer will be able to move from Canton by rail to the armies of Gen. Pal Chung. hsl. His headquarters are at Hang. yang. 265 miles north of Canton. Para 200.000-mari armies then would have little choice but to re- tire southwestward into Kwangsl Province. west of Canton. It appears to be Communist strategy to force Pal into Kwangsl and leave Canton to its fate. The Reds are stepping up their pressure east of the railway. They still are withdrawing troops west oi the railway, where Pal gave them a beating. This western with- drawal leaves an escape route open for Pal into Kwangsi, his native province. As the Reds approached, civilians began fleeing Kiulcong, south of Jucheng snd 125 miles north of Canton on the railway. Kukong is considered the gateway to Canton. Fresh troops from llalnan Island. off the south coast. are reported arriving in Canton for movement to the front. The Reds also are mov- ing reinforcements down from the northeast. The M11115"? of National Defence also reported it new Rod drive from the east. The Ministry said this drive is threatening Lungchung. g5 miles east northeast of Can- fl. Lungchung ls well inside the border of Kwangtuiig Province. of which Canton is the capital. The news frcm the far northwest was also bad for the Nationalists. A commercial pilot was forced tn turn back from Slning, capital of Tslnghai Province. i-Ie said he was told the field there was unsafe. Sining is 110 miles west of Lan- chow, capital of adjacent Kansu Province. Lanchow was captured by the Rcds last week. Parachuied To Safety SPOKANE, Wash., Aug. 30- (AP)-—Five survivors of u 13-29 bomber crash were picked up by a rescue party lat today after they had parachuted, o safety from the plane. They were reported to he un- hurt. he Spokane air force base, the p he's home field, said the 3-20 was believed to be carrying a tn- tal of 13 crew members and pas- sengers. l The Lincoln County sheriff's of- fice placed the scene of the crash near Wellplnit, Wash., nearly 40 miles northwest of Spokane. A ric- puty said rescue crews had been sent from his office. Two crush crews from the air force base also were dispatched. Ari air force spokesman said the plane had not been sighted yet in the hilly region. but that a timber fire was burning in the area the pianc was believed to have gone down. High-ranking Prelate Arrives At HALIFAX, Aug. 30 -— (CP) — Most Rev. Cyril F. Garbett, Arch- bishop of York and second-rank- ing prelate of the Church of Eng- land, arrived here today aboard the liner Aquitanla for a busy two months in Canada and the United States. The Archbishop wss aboard s train for Montreal less than half an hour after the liner was warp- ed into her pier. The 74-year- old prelste had only time for a "hello" snd "goodbye" before the train roared out of the station. Ho is going to Quebec for s day sad will return here Satur- day for tbs General Synod of the Church of England in Canada. opening next week. After the synod ho will go to Boston, NW York and Washing- ton and from there to Salt Lako City for the triennial convention of the Episcopal Church of Arn- orlcs. After that he goes to Vic- toria. Vancouver, Seattle, Los Angeles, Santiago snd New York sgsla before returning home. Blaze. SeEnd In Two Years SAUILT STE. Mamas. Oat. AI. o0 —(CP) —The second disastrous‘ fire within two years swept the huge Chromium Mining and Simelt- in: Corporation plant here early to- day, destroying s. storage plant and several adjacent smaller buildwgs, Company officials declined to make any estimates but unofficial estimates of the damage were more, than 3100,4110. I Work at: the plant was resumed at. 3 pni. today. 12 hours after the fire broke out. No one was injured by the fire 0r thc explosion that started it os all workers had left the plant four hours before. Cause of the oiast is unknown. ‘Two years ago a. new research laboratory and all its equipment Were dsfitroyed by a $40,000 fire. More than 50 firemen poured water on the roaring blaze with lt- tle effect. It spread rapidly through the inflammable materials and turn- ed the building into a mass of flames seconds after the explosion. Nearby power lines and transform- ers were burned, cutting of! ai: power in Sault Ste. Marie for an hour and leaving water mains with- out pressure. When water pressure failed, firemen were forced to bring water from the 5t. Mary's River nearby. In three hours the bdlldlng was a mass of twisted steel girders. Flames, which shot hundreds of feet into the sir. could be seen several miles away. It is believed an exploding motor may have started the blast, which ripped off the roof of the building and scattered it around the yard. Apple Contract Prices Said To Be Unsatisfactory N.B.. Aug. 30 — (GP)—Prices to be paid for Can- adian apples under the new Angio- Canadlan agreement» are "most un- satisfactory.” R. J. Leslie. general manager of the Novn Scotla Apple Marketing Board, said today. .Wbcn dealers realize the "full lmrpiict‘ of the deal. he said, "there will be no elation." Mr. Leslie was addressing the 39th annual meeting of the United Fruit Companies of Nova Scotlal i Ltd, Canada's largest apple oo- operative. Growers must guard against re- ducing production. he said. Further‘ reduction of acreage would pave the way for squeezing out. the: smaller growers. | Present shipments to Britain were built on “political rather than economic lines" and will probably be only for this year. (Annapolis Valley growers yester- day approved a deal which will see export of 400.000 barrels of apples to the United Kingdom. There also is an option for another 125.000.- barrels. (The total shipment of 535.000 barrels would bring Valley grow- n" about 02.000000). ' It. l. MacSwecn, Provincial D.:;:tor of Marketing. agreed that growus should not begin a pro- cess of liquidating orchards. It was in runes like these, ‘he said. that a certain class of pcop‘e think it is s good time to get. in on something good at small cost. SYDNEY, Australia, Aug. 3i — (CP) _ Arthur Coles, chairman of the Australian Government's Na- tional Airlines Commission, left here today for Canada and Brit- ain to inspect new Jet airliners. Halifax The Archbishop was met by Archbishop ‘George Frederick Kingston, Primate of sll Canada, and other high Church of Eng- land clergy. Also among the 1,800 passeng- ers were two Europeans brought hero on fellowships by the Cans- disn Council of Reconstruction through the United Nations edu- cstlonsl, scientific snd cultural organization. The two were Elier Mogensen of the Danish Ministry of Edu- cation. Copenhagen. and Geor e Ghez of the French Governmen ‘s Labor Department, Paris. Ghez will study labor relations at the institute of industrial Re- lations st Laval snd the Unl- versity of Montreal sad at Ot- tows. Mogenson is bere to study the administrative side of educa- lion-how schools snd universities nro run. Ho will begin his stu- dies at Dsliiousis University hero and the University of New Bruns- wick at Fredericton. nd Smelling Plant: oppccl for Russian intervention mun sopublic's first fros election gives Communist Forty its worst beating. Gor- mon Communists form new f anti-Russian party and pledge support to Tito. dro successful in wiping out Grselt Communists, Albania will be isolated without direct con- tdct with any Russian satellite l "ti AND Communist-sparks gm- cvol strike foils cs government octs - firmly, disregarding Rods’ tliteot to i». 22.2: o,” g /////// '//////// p” \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ "iisdf" put on Tito in- dicdtes Kremlin is ofrdid his so-fdr suc- cessful independence will infect other solel- llls notions with "T ito- lsm.“ Stalin fears los- ing his rip on the sim- tsgicol y vital Balkans. I ' I fit , 4 52TH...“ 01x13". clidrgo that fis is on 4/ lMmy of,ths USSR. // opporsnliy abandoned i active support of Com- ' 0 msnist-lod Greek Isb- . sis. Nationalists’ spring offensive has them on ' . the run. Tlisir orniiss, ‘o spiitond disintegrating, 3 if" ""9004 against Albanian frontier. f‘ REDS WORRY 1N WEST-Map of Europe spots symp- toms of apparent worry in the Kremlin. Stalin's hope of easy Communistyictorles in western Europe has faded and his once-tight Balkan bloc may be loosening at. the seams. Death and Life Sentences Follow Smashing of Plot Vaughan Says Money Went To Campaign Funds Dy ARTHUR. EDSON WASHINGTON, Aug. 30 -— (AP) - Mat-Gen. Harry W. Vaughan testified today that he collected at least. $4.000 in Democratic cam- paign funds from John Maragon and a. widely-known race-track figure -- both of whom received Vaughan favors. But he swore he did nothing wrong. i-ie told Senators investig- ating Washington's “influence in- dustry" they could look at his bank account if they wanted to sec whe- ther he ever had profited person- (Continued on Page Ii Col. 7) Further Blast ' levelled Al Slav Premier By NATE POLOWETSK! IDNDON. Aug. 30 — (AP) - Soviet Russia tonight accused Pre- mier Tito of Yugoslavia and his lieutenant of bclng deceiving doub- le-deaiens and stooges of western masters. The newest Moscow note to Bel- grade, eighth in the name-calling battle between the two Commun- lsi capitals, made no mention of Yugoslaviifs recent offer to settle outstanding differences. The Yugo- slav note of Aug. 2d offered to set- tla the feud-provided Russia will clearly recognize that the Balkan state is determined to stay inde- pendent in all her policies. Nor did Russia make furflier mention of the threat voiced in a Moscow note of Aug. l0 threaten- ing to take "more effective mess- ures" for protection of Soviet cit- izens allcged to have suffered bru- tslities in Yugoslavia. w Tho latest note exchange coin- cided with reports from respon- sible diplomatic officials here that Brita-in and the United States are considering loosening their rs- strictlons on arms shipments to Yugoslavia. Russia snd Yugoslavia have been- feudlng since June, i060 when the Com‘ (Oomisulnlst Interns- tional Information Bureau) accus- ed Tito snd his government of be- ing nationalists snd anti-Soviets. The Yugoslav leaders have replied that. they are fighting for the" equality of Communist stein- PRAGUE, Aug. 30 — (AP) -— Czechosiovaklas Communist Gov- ernment announcerl today it has smashed an armed large number of conspirators who tried to seize the capital and set up an anti-Soviet. regime. The official account claimed the plotters were "under the direction of a certain western imperialist revolt by a- power" and that a copy of their plan of action was deposited with an unnamed western embassy in Prague by the conspirators. It was the biggest plot story in Czechoslovakia in months, and most Czechs apparently were start- led by the government's melo- dramatic announcement, The Government said the revolt already was in motion whcn po- lice seized armed rebels who had gathered at their pre-arranged concentration point. The regime disclosed the smash- ing of the plot only after auth- orities were ready to announce that they already had tried and sentenced the accused participants in secret in the Prague 51MB court. Six men were sentenced to death. Tcri others, including: thrce women. drew life sentences. Ari unspecified number received pris- on terms ranging from one to 25 years at hard labor, and 10 were acquitted. Named as the political leader _____ (Continued on’ Page 5 Ooi. l1 Four lose Lives In Collision CAMPBELLFORD. Ont., Aug. 30 — (CP) — Four persons were killed tonight when a freight train hit an automobile st a level crossing on the outskirts of this Eastern Ontario town. The dead: Mr. and Mrs. Ken- neth Milne; Mrs. Er st Ingram and one of the Milne ‘ two chil- drsn who were also in the car- either Fay, 10, or Betty, 8. Tho other child was critically injured. Milne, s young farmer from nearby Seymour township, was on a shopping trip to Campboii- ford with his family when the " ‘ happened. Mrs. Ingram was Mrs. Miine's mother. ' TORONTO, Aug. 30 - (CF) — Malschy Ooslier, 34, s. construc- tion laborer fell 14o feet today from a 10th storey of the Bank of Nova Booth building new under construction. His fail was broken by high tension Wires and he landed on s wooden ledge. At. the hospital Ooaiter was still con- scious. Ho is suffering muilple fractures to the body and arms and Abegweit Oats Accepted For Seed Registration By Growers Body 0f island Man Found SAINT JOHN, N. B., Aug. 30— (CPP-A man's body found in the Kennebecasls River today was identified as that of Charles Gai- lnnt. 32, of Prince Edward island. No inquest will be held. Gallant was last seen by a ferry operator July 3 while swimming about 200 yards from the shore of Gondola Point. Projects Will Triple Area 0f lrrigaled_|._and By Norman Altstedter Canadian Press Staff Writer LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Aug. 30 —(CP)—Projects planned and un- der construction will increase the area of irrigated farm land in Canada from about 1.000.000 to more than 3,000,000 acres, s top Canadian irrigation engineer said today. Gordon MacKenzie of Regina. chief engineer of the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration. bold the United Nations sclentlfic.con- ference he hOpcs that “Canada will in the near future triple her pres- ent irrigated area. and thus be able to contribute her share to the world's population and food re- quirements. . . " He said Canada's irrigation de- velopment will be limited only by thefltvlilailaie wail!‘ Supply. The suitable land is almost unlimited Mackenzie spoke before the Water-Development section of the UN. Scientific Conference on the conservation and utilization of re- sources where some 535 scientists from 4S) countries are excharging ideas and experiences on how to boost world living standards. “Under the impetus of our nat- ional Government. large-scale ir- rigation is rapidly developing. Pro- jects now llndcr construction and in the planning stage will increase the area three-fold until we can foresee an irrigated area. of 3.000.- 000 acres on the plains of West-Elli Canada as well as 300,000 acres in the iIItBY-IIIIOUXTlJB-lfl areas of Brit- ish Columbia." ‘Frisco Scene Ol Big Fire I it SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 30 — (AP) -- This city's biggest fire in years swept through a giant grocery warehouse of Safeway Stores today slightly injuring 35 firemen and causing an estimated $4,500,000 damage. After a six-hour fight, 300 iircmcn brought the blaze under control and removed threats to a nearby gas tank of a steel com- pany. When firemen answered the alarm. they found the building boiling with flames and barred them by huge steel doors. Cause of thc fire was not im- modiatciy determined. Four firemen were taken to hospital for smoke - inhalation treatment and more than 30 were treated at the scene for mlllm‘ burns and hurts. Association. “A-beiwell" 0M5. tho first variety d oats originating at the Elxper. mental Farm at Charlottetown, has bccil accepted for registration. according to word just rt-ccivei from thc Culmciian Seed Groom's‘, Association by Mr. Bruce R. Ma»- Larcn, ccrcalist at the Experimental Farm. Speaking of the new Mr. RC. Parent, superintendr-nt at thc Farm. says "Albcgivcit has been grown extensively on illu- siration Stations ihls year with very good results. if it CDXlllflllOS lo show as well as this year, it should replace most of the other variet- ies in the Province, until something better is produced." Registration places this Island variety of oats on the recognition level of the other leading varieties. and follows a long, tedious series cf experiments to develop a high- yiieidirrg grain for Maritime produc- on. variety, Good Reception During this experimental stage, when “Abegwci? was distributed around the Eioperlmental Farms and selected growers, good reports were received from all over Eastern Canada. Farmers, often highly conservative in their opinions of new varieties. have given it a good reception. The great majority are satisfied it. is a “really good. high- yielding oat.” It has been con- demned by none, although some have stated that they can see little improvement in it over one of it's parents, "Erbars", ' As originators of the strain, it will be the responsibility of the Experimental Farm to maintain foundation seed, as in the case of Charlottetown No. 80 barley which was developed there in 1916. But at. present, there is something less than 100 libs. available A‘ A number of farrnersI-F-however. have been growing certified “Abeg- welt" for the past. two years. These will be able to continue growing "certified" seed for the next three (Continued on Page 5 Col. B) Salary Boosts Are Suggested BANFF, Alta. Aug. 30 — (CP) — Effect on the Supreme Court of Canada. of the proposed abolition of Canadian appeals to the privy council was discussed informally today by dl-‘iegates attending the 31st annual convention of the Can- adian Bar Association. The question was raised at the final session of the two-day exec- utive meeting which preceded to- morrow's official opening of the convention. About 1,000 delegates are sit-ending. some delesates suggested that salaries of the puisrie judges of the Supreme Court be increased to SXDOO a year and that the chief justice receive s. larger salary. The chief justice now receives $20,000, puisne judges $16,000. A committee was set up to bring a ffllwrt on the question before} the general session. During the discussion. Hon. W.B. Farris of Vancouver. Chief Jilstlcel of British Columbia. said salaries‘ of "all judges are entirely indo- ‘lilltic and not in keeping with the dignity of the superior courts." Hc suggested that any increases Rrsriicd to thc judges of the Su- Dreme Court of Canada be extend- ed "to the judges of all superior courts to raise them above the level of police courts." Granting of OTTAWA. Aug. 30 - (C?) — Some tempers flared todsy when about 300 persona gathered at s meeting of the Ontario Liquor Lic- ence Board to oppose the granting of additional cocktail lounge or beverage mom licences in Ottawa and district. The lack of space in the meet- ing hall was the cause of the dem- onstration, limited to much push- ing and shoving and to the hurl- lng of some charges at a board official and a police guard. The temperance forces. headed by controller Dan McCanri and Rev. R.W. Battles of the Gospel Tabernacle, gathered early in front of the Odd Fellows Temple on West - Central Somerset Street where the meeting was held. Liquor Licence Board officials ordered that the ‘empieb doors be kept locked until o few moments before tho hearing of I applica- tions began. Shortly after tho doors were op- ened, Eric Hanna. the Board's dis- sovno bead injuries. ,trlct registrar, stood with both Liquor Licenses Opposed arms braced in the doorway in an effort lo keep down the size of the crowd. He warned that. firc marshal regulations prohibited more than 150 persons in the room at one time. He was unceremoniously shoved aside as the crowd determlnedly moved ahead. There were no demonstrations in the meeting, but when Mr. Hanna or the police attempted to stop the entry of more people they were charged with "working for the big interests and keeping away people opposed to the granting of new licences." _By the time the meeting ended. the Board had reserved judgment on 24 applications for new licences for Ottawa and district and re- jected two others, ‘Iwvo applica- tions were voluntarily withdrawn. Counsel for the temperance forces protested each and every Subscriptions Delivered $6.00 55.00; other Provinces 8r U. S. SIM Follows Moscow Threat To Tito By Carter L Davidson BERLIN, Aug. 30 —(AP) -'I‘ho West-Berlin newspaper Sczlalde- mokrst said today a vanguard of 3.500 heavlly-snncd East-German police have been sent to the Yugo- slav border for "a possible war against Tito." The XlFWISDlIDCi’ said perhaps l2.- 000 more will be sent for “anti- Tito action" m the Balkans, arid "Wllh feverish hurry, tanks. suns arid other military equipment are being loaded on trains and trucks to go with thc German police troops." . British and United States in- ielligrlit-e officers said they knew of iht- report, but. could not cor.- flrm it. The newspaper's report. followed by a. day the disclosure by the Llilied States military government that five East-German policemen fled into the American zone at I-Iof. saying they escaped to avoid mil- itary service with Communist guer- rlllas in GreeceaThe escaped poi- iccman sold the Russians had is- succl an order for all unmarried members of the East-German police under 25 years of age to be Ir cruited for the service. The Volkspolizei (People's Pol- ice) of the Russian sons is report- ed to have a target ersrolmcnt of 300.000 but is believed to actually numioer only about 80.000 men un- der the command of Soviet General Smlrnov. It has participated in military-style training. The report comes closely after a threat by Moscow to tcko "mOIB effective measures" against Prem- icr Tito of Yugoslavia. whose Communist regime has split with the Cominforrn (Communist Inter- national Information Bureau). In recent. days reports have dir- cuiated of soviet mechanized div- isions moving up to the $18091!” border through Hungary. Yugoslav officials have referred to than ro- ports as "crliy rumors." A Piiaixsifr. is A (‘iuY WHO cots (Macaw n aevotvisc. 000R wifiiouf Dotti ‘ lllS Silesia or Busi-iini c. s High tide today at 3.21 A. M. and ' 4.56 P. NI. Sun rises this and scts at 6.43. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes iutcr than Charlottetown. morning at 5.83 HALHFAX. A118. 30 -((P) — ‘Official inland forecasts issued by tlic Dominion Public Weather 0f- fice in Halifax and valid until Wrdiicsday midnight’ Regional forecasts. l Prince Edward Island, eastern New Brunswick counties, Lower St. John River Valley-Clear during ilie night. Wednesday sunny in the morning becoming cloudy in the afternoon followed by widely scat- icrr-d shmvcrs in thc evening. A little cooler on Wednesday. Light. winds bcci-ning southwest 15 Wed- nesday morning. Low early Wed- nixsday morning and high in the afternoon st Charlottetown 53 and 72, Mom-ion 49 and 71, Fredericton 40 and 71, Saint John 52 arid 71. Summary for Wednesday-Sunny in the morning. Showers in t-ho evening. TORONTO, Aug. 30—-((7P)—-Mln- imum and maximum temperatures: Vancouver 55, 74; Edmonton 52, '10: Regina 35. 66: Winnipeg 4'1. 62; Toronto E6. 81: Ottawa 4'1. 76¢ Montreal 55. 74: Quebec M, 73: Saint John 58. ‘H; Moncton 60, 00; Halifax 62, '16; Charlottetown 64. 76; Sydney 68. 80: Yarmouth 50., N; 8t. John's 00, 76. i BURDEN - TORMENTINE FREE WEEK DAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Cape sormeritlssdl 9.10 A.M. 10.85 A.M. 1.00 PM. 2.40 RM. 4.30 RM. ‘L80 EM. 9.00 RM. 10.80 RM. SUNDAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Capo sormentlnd 8J0 A.M. 10.35 AJVI. 1.00 PM. 3.00 LM. 0.46 PM. 5.00 1AM. WOOD ISLANDS-CARROT! DAILY FERRY Leave Wood Islands A.M.; 0 A.M.; ll AJVL; I. EM. application as it was called and their protests had the general sup- port of the Ottawa City Council. 1 i ma; s viii. 1 a. A.M.;_11 an; s us. ls ma. s PM. .__'::'_C:t..':r.:7i: