MAXIMS A OI-IA MERE MAN cougunoo yet conscience bonsoflevo. have in too young to know viiist in carrier: oiiuiottmwn; Bununeroide 00o weekly. 1 Elsewhere in 3'; i. no weekly. other Provinces and u. s. A. 012.00 per Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew . CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6. 1951 RUSSIAN TYPE TANKS RE-APPEAR ON KOREAN FRONT U. S. Lets Contract For Atomic-Powered Plane Bush Pilot 1 10 Days In Far North May Still Be Alive EDMONTON. Sept. 5 - (CP) - A norihland veteran said today ifu-re is a chance that bush pilot Johnny Bourassa, missing for 110 clays in the far north. may have 5iilW'lV('d. As air and ground searches for Rnui-ash got under way. Matt Hm-ry said there is reason to hope that the young pilot may suit be alive somewhere in the Yorthwest Territory after crash- lnndlng on a small lake. Berry, a pioneer bush pilot and central figure in many northland -nzris. said Bourassa knew how to handle himself in the bush. First indication that Bourassa. uhn is about 30. may have sur- vived canto yesterday when his riinndoned plane was found with 2 note telling how he was forced cl.mn last May 18 far from the rorthland aerial paths and was .-zrlking out for Fort Reliance at the eastern end of Great Slave Lake. hogan overland Trek Off course and out of gas, Bour- assa said in his note. he landed at Wholdaia Lake and after wait- ;ng Tive days began the over- land trek through muskeg and scattered bush. Reliance is about :00 air miles northwest of Whol- riaia. Berry, who found Flt. Lt. Shel- mn Coleman and LAC. Joseph Yortey after they had been lost "nr 30 days in 1986 in the North west Territories' barren land. said he thinks Bout-assa would have Coming-Events "Chicken supper. Kelly's Cross. Wtdilesday, October 3rd. 'Dunce in Howois Hall. Brack- lrv Point. Thursday. September :i':l "Diilive. Glcnroy School, Friday. -1. pzcniber 7th. Lunches. Burke's .)iihcs'.ra. - "All mi-mbcis please attend the 1'.PPill1K of Hamilton Lodge. Clyde River. 'l'hursdiiy iiighl. "Dance in St. Andrews School. tlumday. September 10th. Refresh- .llClliS. Good music. "Dance in St. Andrew”; School, ifonday, September 10th. Refresh- ilrnts. Good music. "Old time fiddling and step- irlnrinl contest in Crapnud Hall. lifhvlrsday night, Sept. 6. Dance I if'i'. "For Snapshots that will not fade mail your Films and Nega- tives to Gsrnhuni Photo studios Charlottetown. y"Dance at south Rustlco Hall. hlday. September 7th. Charlotte- tnninns Orchestra. Canteen ser- i "0. "Farmers. ask about the stwr f;iin Feed Finance Plan. For llirtlculars contact your local frcri mill. "Buying live and dressed poul- l:.v daily. except Saturday. Mac's Fm: do Poultry, 258 Queen Street. T-znrl tetown. "Provincial Plowing Mulch at livmlns. September 26th-27th. zlrlte fnr prize list. Albert Acorn. -Hrdlsznn. 17.. n. 5. '"Eliminatlons for fiddling and "D-dancing Championships at Suurlli. Friday. Sept. 7th. Entries -'""t'lvcd .St. Mary's Hall. night of mntcst. "Dance. Emerald Hall. Thurs- flall nillht. Music by Blue Haven Ramblers Orchestra. Sponsored agrk Home and School. Ladies take 3 Cl. ” "All interested in repairs to ..ornwall I-nil. please attend meet- fns in Cornwall Hall Monday. Sep- mlber 10th. Tuesday. September on Rerulnr Friday night Dance in St Peter's Boy Holy Name Hall. "idly. sepeambor 'Ith. Dancing lmm 9.30-1.00. 0bslrson's orch- estrg, "The annual convention of the omen's Christian Temperance Union will be held int Central Be- tlvaue Thursday. Sept. 13 at 2:30 '-M- Mrs. R. C. Eaton will de- 'V"' M lddreu. X...- hvbonee. Inf noynliy Rink mil. M7. e. mi. George chop- Elo and ii in MW"! x. I. 1'. ii Islanders. line and 10 P :0. mission 50 cents. canteen service. client tools ' a better chance. Coleman and Fortey were far- ther north than Bourassa and the latter. who grew up in the north, should have a much better chance of living off the land. Berry said. T. P. (Tommy) Fox. owner of Associated Airways. said he hopes Bourassa. will be found alive. "Johnny knew the north well and how to take care of hurl- self in it." said Fox. "Barring ill health he'd make out all right." Bourassa was flying a Bellanca owned by Yellowknife Airways when he disappeared. Since that time, Fox purchased the air line from Berry. Bourassa. who has a wife and two children at Peace River. Alta. said in his note he was carrying a rifle, smoke flares. fishing tackle. maps. tent and a compass. Because ii first-aid kit in Bour- assa's plane was untouched. R.C. A.F. investigators said they be- lieve he was not injured in the forced landing. Tough Journey The note said he intended to walk to Fort Reliance. This journey would be much longer than 200 miles on foot because of the numerous lakes. Berry said that in attempting to circle the many lakes. he may have become hopelessly lost. Berry said a basic rule in north- land flying is: "If you are down. stay with the aircraft." The R.C.A.F. set. up search head- quarters at Yellowknife. Four Air Force planes searched today along a 50-mile-wide strip from Whol- daia Lake to Reliance. Bourassa became lost when driven off course on ii southbound flight from Bathurst. inlet on the Arctic Ocean to Salmita Mines. Schools Affected By Polio In N.S. HALEFAX, Sept. 5 -(CF) - Schools in several Nova Scotla centres failed to open on schedule today because of I ban enforced to check further polio outbreaks. Provincial health officials said. meanwhile. that they hoped the disease had reached its peak schools remained closed in Hall- fax city and county, Liverpool. x Amherst, Chester, Mahone Bay. Parrsboro. Stewlooke. Trum and Brldgewiiter. Admittance for treatment. of polio victims dropped below nor- mal here yesterday for the second succeuive day and officials hoped the cooler weather had slowed its progress. ' Spine 130 persons are under treatment here. About 50 have been discharged and there have been seven deaths. Halifax and county banned children from public buildings and other centres have followed suit. FINE!) FOR BOGUS BILL ST. JOHNSBURY. Vt... Sept. 0 -(AP) -- Herve Fournier of Vic- lorlavlllr. Que.. was fined cm and costs in court today after he was convicted of passing a 320 counterfeit bill at a gasoline sta- tion. Judgc Albert Barney ini- posed the fine after Fournier. who pleaded innocent. agreed to co- operate with United Stritcs Secret Service agents in seeking the Canadian source of counterfeit Actual rliglil May Not Be 1 For Few fears ' By C. Yates McDaniel WASHINGTON. Sept. 5 -(AP) -Atomic-powered flight today moved another step from the lab- oratory toward the factory stage with the award of a contract for development of the first atomic- powcred airplane at the Consoli- dated Vultee Corporations Fort Worth, Tcx., plant. The bare announcement was a signal that theoretical work has advanced to the stage where ex- ports are convinced they can have 9. plane with virtually limitless range and no refuelling problem. That feature is inherent in the whole idea of an atom-powered plane. along with the probability of tremendous speed and altitude. Officials in close touch with the development work. however. stress- ed the belief that actual flight with the new power still is years away. It was announced previously that the atomic power plant will be developed nt the General Elect- ric Company's Gas Turbine Divis- ion at Lockland. Ohio. Early planning toward atomic- poivered flight found its major obstacle in the weight of the nuclear plant and the heavy shielding to protect men and delicate instruments from atomic radiation. Believe Problem Solved Engineers now believe it is pos- sible to construct Qn atomic eng- ine nnd its protective sheathing to weigh not more than 100 tons- the approximate weight of the power plants and fuel supply of the new B-52 heavy bombcr and the latest all-jet B-36. , Neither the Air Force nor any officially-sponsored statement by a recognized scientist has at- tempted to give the maximum speed envisugcd for the atomic powered airplane. , The new 13-52 is expected to cruise at nbout. 400 miles an hour- and be able to reach a top speed of 600 mph. This leads to the conclusion that the projected atom plane is expected to exceed ill0 :- speeds by a sufficient degree In help justify the heavy cost of de- velopmcnt. Tobacco Crop Damaged By Storms m... QUEBEC. Sept. 5.-- (CF) - An Agriculture Department sur- V0.V released today indicates about 3 per cent of the tobacco crop in Jollette. Montcalm, and Ber- thier Counties. was destroyed last week by strong winds and hail. About 360 acres of land planted with tobacco. representing about 300,000 pounds. was affected. Dani- age was confined largely to cigarette tobacco. , THREE RIVERS, P) - Analysis in the Duplessls months before its collapse, re- vealed that it had too much carbon and not enough manganese. a research expert. of the Provin- cial Mines Department said to- Que. Sept. 5 of steel used Bridge five -( bills. I)iana Wilgr Hit As Fashion Model By MUIIIEL NAIIIIAWAY LONDON, Sept. 5 -- (CF) .. Dark-eyed Diana wilgress. lil- year-old daughter of the Canadian High Commissioner in London. made her television debut today as a fashion model showing Bri- tish clothes soon to be sold on the Canadian market. in a gruelling first day, Diana paraded before the cameras eight IUCCCSSIV: times to show off lat- est models and give uni L d interviews with British commente- tor Bill Taylor. "Perhaps you'd like to talk about your father . . . do you think he's it good high commis- llonor?" the announcer; aiked at one point. "I hope he is." Diana answered with shy grin. But when Taylor tried some more questions in the same vein. Diana laid with Ill the fact of a diplomat? dlillbhf that it might be better if he tried another subject. . day. ess Makes two amused people -- High Com- missioner L. Dana Wilgress and Mrs. Wilgress. Among the models. shown by Analysis Showed Steel In Bridge Was Defective TEHRAN. Sept. 5 - (OP) .. Premier Mohammed Mosiadegh got Senate backing today for 3 new ultimatum to Britain to re- sumo oil negotiations or face ex- pulsion of her refinery techni- cians. But the cabinet. without; explanation, postponed delivery of the ultimatum to Britain, Without giving the reason for the cabinet action. Deputy Premier Hussein Fatemi announced the postponement after a meeting. He salt; the Shah had not been in- formed of the ultimatum. Mossadegh won the support after an impassioned de- nunciation of senators who had criticized his handling of the na- tionalization crisis. Then he went home "in a state of collapse." Fatemi said the ultimatum was planned to defeat a "British plot" to sit on the fence until the Mossadegh government toppled. (in London. a Foreign Office spokesman said such an evicatlon the 420 Anglo-lranian Com- pany staff members would violate the interim ruling of the Hague International Court. Senate's H Iran Postpones Delivery Of Ultimatum To Britain In a shuffle of R.C.N. officers naval headquarters has announced the appointment of Capt. Ernest Tisdall of Duncan. B.C., as com- mander of 9,000-ton cruiser HM. C.S. Ontario. Capt. Ttsdall. above. relinquished his former post as commanding officer of I-I.M.C.S. Naden to Commodore R. E. 8. (Continued orTPage 5 Col. 1) Bidwell. Fine weather and an attendance of more than three thousand people contributed to the success of the twenty-fifth annual Prince County Exhibition at Alberton yesterday afternoon. Lester Profit. president of the Exhibition Association welcomed- the visitors. Lieutenant Governor T. W. L. Prowse officially opened the exhi- bition. Other speakers included Senator G. H. Barbour. Attorney General W. E. Darhy and Mr. J. W. Don Campbell, M.L.A. Much favorable comment was heard on the increased size of the new exhibition building and on the industry of the directors in hav- ing it ready in time for the exhi- bition. The old building was de- stroyed in a storm in July. Exhibits were all of good quality, although the entries in some clas- ses were less than in some pre- vious years. There were large showings of cattle, sheep and swine. Horses were judged by Robert Chappell of York. There was a marked decease in the number of ghorses entered but all animals were of good quality. Very few young horses and only two foals were shown. F. C. Ramsay of Montrose was the largest exhibit- or. More Cattle Exhibited With the exception of Ayrshires land Jerseys. there was an increase (Continual on Er-;E"l5 col-.7)" , The two-man commission in- quiry lnto the collapse of the: bridge last J.1n.' 1, re-opencdl hearings into the tragedy whlclil clnim-:d five lives. Four were kllled in the collrlpse and it man was drowned when the tractor he was using in an attempt to salvage a submerged automobile crashed through the ice on the St. Maurice River. Dr. Maurice Arcliambault. di- rector of research. said he sent a letter on Aug. 22. 1960 to the Provincial Government. which was turned over to Yvan Vallee. provincial deputy works minister. It contained I paragraph which said the steel showed I lack of sufficient manganese. Dr. Archambauli. said that Miss Wilgress was a tent-shapcd- colt. reversible in ii. black clrel spotted taffeta lined with apple. green. The coat was worn overt I tailored suit with arrowhead builoning and velvet collar. She also wore a blue-and-grey hounds tooth check swagger coat with high buttoned collar and slotted fringed scarf. Diana was chosen by the trades magazine. British Textiles, which circulates in overseas markets. London's three evening papers all. displayed pictures of the young Canadian girl. The Even- ing News said she "Today he- came on smliiisudrcae of fashion in her own right." Al for Dion herself. the show was "grand fu " and helped to nourish her ambition to become a professional model. "But I'm ad-aid I'll have to slim s blt," she analysis by his department and by J. Bayot. s metaliurgist. show- ed the grain in the steel was not. uniform. the chemical composi- tion was not similar in every piece. and the steel used was not of uniform quality. Bayot'I in- spections had substantiated Dr. Archambault'l analysis that the composition showed a lack of manganese. Earlier, Lucien Peri-ault. man- ager of the industrial Labora- tories of Movreal. said reports of his company on steel samples showed nothing to indicate "poor steel" had been used. ' Reports on checks by the Do- minion Bridge Company on the material and subsequent inspec- tions by four other companies also showed nothing wrong with Alberton Exhibition Is Huge Success Suggests New Site Be Chosen For Trucelallls By Tom Bradshaw TOKYO. Sept. 8 -tThui's- day)-(AP)-Geri. Matthew B. Ridgway today suggested to the Reds that a new site be chosen for the Korean truce talks in order "to achieve ii. just and honorable military armistice." (rho Supreme Allied com- mandcr thus sought to bring about resumption of the talks which began July 10 at Kae- song and were suspended Aug. 23 by the Reds. Bandil-Captured After Holdup; Partner Escapes MONTREAL. Sept. 5 - (CF) -Four policemen and two bani: bandit shortly after partncr had robbed the Peel and Sherbrooke Street branch of the Royal Bank of Canada. of about s5.000 today. The second gunman escaped with the money. g Police said the men. wearing Halloween type ru-bbcr masks. held 15 employeeyand two I-'u5' tomcrs at bay while they rifled the tellers cages. Police said the capture of the bandit was facilitated by the ac- who tripped an alarm. system which sounded a warning in I police station 10 blocks away- liingilo Visit London For Examination LONDON. st-pt. 5 - tkwlml .. The King. now on vacation. in Scotland. will pay In P"lV3"-' V'1::” 10 London Saturday to SIVCH 5 doctors" an 0llP0l'l"""-V M "m I"! n thorough examination. it Elli! lllifl0lll:iC('fi from Buckingham a- t -. , ulet. gvaas) understood the Kinlll viienilon is procccdlnl normally and he is expected to attend the annual Highland Games at Brae- mar tomorrow. He will WW9 Scotland by train Friday 9V9"'"l and return Sunday. It was reported last Thursday that the King. after a day on the moors. had complained of a cold- Dr. Godfrey Marshall. chest spec- iiillat. and Dr. George Cordiner. the radiologist. flew in Blllmflrll Saturday to see him and returned the some night. Their attendance was described as purely routine. It was their first visit since the King's arrival in Scotland I month ago. They sre understood to have attended him several the steel. Perrault laid the metal met all specifications called for Watching the performance were added, smiling. in the plan!- tlmea since his illness in June. when he was attacked by caisrrh- ol inflammation of the lung. in ii.c.li. lMall00lIVf0' tion of one of the bank cmP10Y9”vi employees captured a 27-year-old: he and his Two Seeii-.Ilid Nol Engage Allied Troops Korea. Sept. 6 -(Thursday)-(AP) Allied infantry reported the first appearance of Russian-type tanks on the Korean front since last: winter. . This report followed official dis- closure that 700,000 Reds--lnclud- ing thousands of "Caucasian Soviet puppet troops,” planes. tanks and armored cars--were messing for ii possible offensive. Allied infantry said two Rus- sian type T-34 tanks approached it United Nations outpost position this morning west of Yonchon but did not engage the Allied force. Yonchon is 35 miles north of Seoul and six miles north of par- allel 38. The T-34, roughly comparable to the American Sherman. was the standard Russian tank of the Second World War. The North Korean army had about 800 when it invaded South Korea. June 25.' 1950. Hundreds of blasted and burned out T-34 hulks are scattered along the main Korean highway from Taegu. in deep South Korea. to! Pyongyang, the Reds North Kor- ean capital. Eight T-34 tanks were spotted by ground and air observers in the vicinity of Yonchon, 35 miles north of Seoul. Allied fliers saw two of the tanks firing on United Nations infantry- men. some tanks moved within 1.500 yards of Allied positions west of Yonchon, six miles north of par- allel 38. A Red battalion. about 1,000 men. was seen in the area of the tank probe. To Test Freighter Wirli Gus-Turbine IJBBBURNQN-TYNE. England. Sept. 5 -(Reuters)- The world's first freighter to be powered- by a gas-turbine engine. the 12.500-ton British tanker Aui-ls, will begin sen trials probably next month off the northeast coast of England. it was announced today. Chief advantage of the new engine is the reduction of wear and tear compared with other engines--it has only two moving parts. ON THE WESTERN FRONT. A make the weeper laugh and the laughter weep. MAXIMS 0? A MERE MAN different skill is ncce , io 16 PAGES The Guardian. Five Cents. Morning Diilly Founded 1081. .1: SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 0 -(AP) Russia's drive to block Anglo- American control of the Japanese. peace conference was abruptly cut ,short today and the confercnccl fadopted by a vote of 48 to 3 rules? lof procedure sponsored by the two Western powers. 1 The rules are designed to pre-.' vent Russia from fliibusterlng thej peace treaty--now scheduled for signing Saturday--or from chang- ing it in any way. Speeches on the treaty are limit- ed to one hour for each delegation with five minutes to answer quest- ions. i Proposals for changes in the. treaty can be ruled out of order. . Thwarted in his first attempt tot stall the conference. Russia'sg Andrei Gromyko came back to the speakers stand late today and vigorously attacked the treaty the U. S. and Britain have invited 50 other countries to sign. "Certain great powers." Gro-l myko said. are "helping to prepare' for a new war with the Far East." The dour-faced Russian called Japan the "spearhead" of aggres-. sion. l He said it is the liitent western Powers to tie Japan "hand and foot" into the U. S.- headed military, grouping against Soviet Russia. of the New Hurricane ls Reported MIAMI. Fla.. Sept. 5 - (AFL- Two hurricanes churned the vast reaches of the Atlantic today, one new-born and the other two days old and packing "dangerous" 135- mlle-an-hour winds. A third disturbance in the Car- ibbean disintegrated into 40-mile-' an-hour squalls. . The new storm called "Fox" was spotted about 1.700 miles east of Antigua. British West Indies. It was the sixth of the season. Weather Bureau officials em- phasized thai both Atlantic dis- pturbances were too far away to threaten any land areas at pre- sent. l I By Ronald Bachlor TOKYO, Sept. 5 -tRcutei's)- Like everything else in post-war Japan-the cost of living. ernization" and the the not-so-gentle art of suicide is on the increase. For centuries. "hara-klri" (self- disembowelment) has been recogni- zed in Japan as an honorable form of wiping out a stain on one'- character, family or country. F Occupation authorities frowned; on the practice. but despite vigor-: ous efforts to stamp it out. suicide is one of the most popular methodsl of personally solving the problemsl of love, bad debts and fear of arm other world war. In the year ended last April, police records show that 62 Jap- anese took their lives every day. or it per cent over the previous year. And this "season" is unof- ficially reported to be heading to- wards a record. ' Everything On Increase In Japan, Even Suicides --we,t.l and with a population of less than b;,u,.,aLe..3O,000. has gained the unenviablel l killing themselves. Since the last war. the DOPUl3l';”bllCi(Eli licart' is the most preval- lmdtncy M5 been to indulge in on: reason for committing suicide "family suicides." tin Japan--'.nth money troubles in Modern suicides seldom prnctlcelset-nnd place. "hare klri." The most popular means now is to jump off a cliff. Nikko. 90 miles north of Tokyo reputation of the "suicide in recent years. More than 400. Japanese on an average go there each year for the sole purpose of resort" Nikko has been hard pressed to cope with this situation. The town council decided to erect barbed wire barricades to prevent approach to the Kegon Falls. is popular suicide spot Hotel keepers protested. Unable to jump over ilie falls. would-be suicides returned to their hotel rooms and variously stabbed, shot. gassed or lilinxed themselves. When their protests went un- heeded. hotel owners gathered af- lter iilglitfall and tore down the barricades. Investigation has shown that a l VANCOUVER. Sent. .5 - (CPI - Policemen have a new mission in life. Fred Daugherty of Vancouver, president of the Western Canada Police Association. told the an- nual convention here today: "We want. to let. the public know we're not a bunch of dumb .'latfeet." The aim of the association, he said. was to increase efficiency of police forces, boost standards of entry and to equalize rates of pay and working conditions. The association also wants I status that will permit the "man on the best" to make sugges- tions to the big break for im- provements in police department operations. One plan advocated is to cul- tivate a better relationship with police commission! and the chief constables. Addrusing the opening of the three-day convention. Police Chief Walter Mulligan of Vancouver Modern Policemen No Longer ”Dumb F latfeet” to professional status. . Before this can be achieved. he said, qualifications for entry will have in be raised and salaries and working conditions improved to make the job more attractive. Twenty-two delegates from Sas- katchewan. Alberta and British Columbia will combine the ideal and suggestions from rank and file policemen and pass them on to the annual meeting of chief constables in Halifax later this month. "We're all working to one end -to better the efficiency of police forces." said Dougherty. The educational standards are increasing Iind if association members have their way. crime chasing will become a profession with high qualifications. The one stumbling block is wages. Higher wages must be paid to attract and hold properly qualified men. Both Dougherty and Constable Jack Dsviel. preci- dent of the Calgary Association. said many policemen would like to see the service's level raised said their cities have lost. con- stables going to other Jobs. Russian Delegate Suffers Defeat At Peace Conference local Insurance Rates On Houses Cut 20 Per cent The satisfactory experience of fire unilciwriiers here is reflected in the annctincemcnt that insur- tince rates on private dwellings and their contents are being re- duced by approximately 20 per ccnt. This will apply to practically all private dwellings within the city limits. and the rates are ap- plicable to new and renewal busi- ness. The low incidence of fires in pzivate dwellings here is respon- slble for the reduction which is being made under the authority of the P. E. 1. Board of.Flre Under- writers. - similar reductions will apply in Summerside. DENVER, Sept. 5 -(AP) -The government today nslred U. S. dist- rlct court in Denver for an in. junction to end the strategic cop- per strike for at least 80 days. EGGS ARE -(HE HENS 'BUY PRODUCT” HALIFAX. Sept. 5 - (GP) -Of- ficial forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Of- fice here and valid until midnight: Thursday. Synopsis: Cool, invigorating sir flowed across the Msritimes today. giv- ing bright skies but. low tempera- tures. During the afternoon the mercury remained in the low 00's throughout the district. The fine weather will continue Tliursday. with higher tempers- tures forecast for all regions. Prince Edward Island: sunny and warmer. Light winds increas- ing late morning to west 15. Low and high Thursday at Charlotte- town 45 and 70. High tide today at 1.17 A. M and 2.07 P. M. V sun rises today at 5.39 A. M. and sets at 6.43 P. M. Summcrside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. lh.c.A. AIR SERVICE Daily Except Sunday Leave Ch-r' ttetown for Moncio! 5.30 A.M.; 11.20 A.M.; 050 l'.M. Ar. Charlottetown from Mencior. Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgow-Halifax 7.40 AM. New Glasgow & Sydnev 1.50 P.)l. New Glasgow .0 Halifax Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax 11.00 A.)l. from New Glasgow 0 Sydney. 4.20 PM. from New Glasgow and Halifax. Charlottetown - Sydney flights daily except Sunday. SUNDAY ONLY Lv. Charlottetown for Moiictol 11.20. Ar. Charlottetown from Monctol 5.55 PM. BOBDIIN - CAPE TORMENTINI FERRY SERVICE Dally Standard Time Leave Borden Leave O. I 9.10 A.M. 0.10 A.M. I035 A.M. I035 A.M. 1.00 l'.M. 1.00 RM. 2.40 PM. 2.40 PM- i.30 l'.M. 0.80 l'.M. 'IJO l'.M. 1.00 RM. 0.00 P.M. 0.00 RM. 10.30 l'.llI. 10.30 EM. WOOD ISLANDS -- IJARIBOII FERRY SERVICE (Standard Tune) Leave Wood Islands- Pririeo Nova - 1 AM. ll A.ll 0 PM. fun A. Dunning-0 A.hl. I hit. 0 M. heave cortisol- Cvhss A. Dunning-1 AM. it LI. 0 M. Prince Nova - 0 1.00., I II. 0 PM.