MAXIM! "OI A MERE MAN Charlottetown Of Victory Gllrllelllflllellll. Caardlanfwaileal. In Coming Congressional Election Infant Burned [q0oath In Truro Fire (By In Canadian Puss) ‘mlmb. N.S., Nov. S-Nineteen- months-old Clara lliasbeth Jack- son was burned to death here satiirdsy night when fire. blamed on an overturned lamp. destroyed the cottage of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- lism Jackson. Truro negro couple. sleeping while his . was awakened all. who screamed that the house was a- saved four-months-old Ramona and handed her to the The father. wife was eh by a daughter, Stella, fire. He oldest daughter before he went back in a successful attmpt to‘ save two other children. On his third attempt to save the fifth child he back by the flames. Jackson said the daughter Stella told him a four-year-cld souDavid had knocked over an oil lamp. setting a bed aflre. Coming Events "Movies at Borden tonight. "flidovies-Malpeque, Wednesday. "Show -- Diner-aid. ‘Itruredsy. -saoa.saaai_ atom Head Hail, Nov 13th. "Poultry buying daily live and dressed poult , ying top max‘- lret price. Da Fraser, Ltd. "Unloading car Coke at Albany. Write or phone your order to Brent Wood, Crspaud. was beaten "Chicken Supper. Canoe Cove. Noivembcr 6th. Served from 5.30 o‘c ock. "Box Social and dance in North Wiltshire Hail. Wednesday. Nov. d. Ladies with boxes free. "Dance in Knights of Columbus l-lali. Sourla. Tuesday, November 5th. "Kinkora-Dance Klnkora Hall Monday. Nov. 4th. Lunch served. Good mus-c. 1 "Dance Mount Stewart Wed- YlP-idfly. Nov. 0th. MacKenziea Orchestra. "Dance at St. Teresa's Hall. Monday. November 4th. Dancing from 9 to 12.30 P. M. Webster's Orchestra. "Show. Mt. Stewart. Tuesday. a 11m: "That Night with You". starring Pranchot Tone, Suzanne Foster. Pius aerial. “Medina boas at at Peters for Diivisszllraser Ltd each Tuesday For truck pickup service from farm lo car. phone Roddie Pratt i-ib-ld-ll-mt-Ltf "Collecting Hogs for Davis and glee: Ltd., every Tuesday. Writa 1' p one collect. R. N. Dawson, Qlllas. “Cosine to the chicken supper 111 the jridgetown Hill Nov. O. slimm- servad at t. Auspices 11.0. Ladies’ Mg, "collecting f Ds is and {filers even and.” "Scull; Rollo av. Ibrtima . lcmui Amandals, ow‘ 5g‘ . Strathcoria. Oserg-‘Dtngwei. "We Annual Meeting of Norfli Wilt-shire Telephone Co., will be bald in the hall at North wilt-airs °fl Wednesday , N r 6th at s o'clock. John Clark. Sec- retary, "Hers. noel. us... w. require “i "is hm farmers um amp this cam of the "M. all Province. 1' Mme price we've been Mina all fail. (imam dropped "P price). Contact our __ ‘ for trucking service. Livestock Mark- "inl Board. “Farmers. Attention: We‘ are ‘"11 plying same high price for bass. that put us in tbs lead for :01. values put owe weekat Should co char- ‘ottemugia of bilridred a this weeg_y. w "M!!! - svarrwhaaamlrk a I“: Iv Ohm: rsnsclnlmn Canadian Press Staff Writer NEW YORK. Nov. z-Thc demo- mllfi Party's hisn command to- day looked over the national elec- Wfl "UPI-ill! iield and. for the first time. came out with an un- qualified expression of confidence that it would strengthen its con- ggl of Congress in Tuesday's vot- The Democratic national chair- man. Robert l. Hannegan, who mI-msed the " ‘. president- ill campaign lIl 1H4, today pra- dicted that the party "not on-iy will be returned to its majority status in both houses but its membership will be increased over 111B! in the 79th Congress." But the Republican chairman, Carroll Reece. bolstered by reports of polls and amateur experts, re- mained equally confident that his party would win a “substantial- perhaps overamelming - majority in the House" and a majority in the Senate. The only thing significant in "1858 fflrecflsts is the evidence of rising optimism in the Democratic ranks where there has been a fairly frank acceptance that the long reign of the party faces a serious- threat. Only a slight shift is needed to make Republican hopes come true. The party can take control as the House of Representatives by gaining as seats and in the Senate by gaining 10. The election is for all 4M seats in the House and 82 of the 96 seats in the Senate where one- rhird are elected every two years for six-year terms. ‘Three House members. l lover- nol‘ and a senator already have (Continued 0n PS8! 5 Q91. 2) 10 Persons 0n Missing Aircraft KINGSTON. Jaanaica. Nov. 3 — (CP Ca/ble)—A United States C47 aircraft with a complainant. of l0 officers and ar-listcd men was re- ported on a flight to Puerto Rico. ‘llhe plane left Vernon Field near here Saturday and when it failed to reach its destination is search was started. Tlhe aircraft was be- lieved to have come down between here and Port-Au-Priaice, l-Ia-iti, 300 miles east of Kingston alnd the same distance short of its destin- ation. Electrical Strike Ended TORONTO. Nov. 3-(0?) —John Wigdor. business agent of local bl; of the United Electrical Work- ers (C.I.O.) announced the l7- week-old strike at the Amalgamat- ed Electrical Corporation offi- cially ended today when strikers ratified an agreement Previously reached between company and un- ion officials. The ameement called for wags increases .af 1a cents an host, lam" annual statutory holidays with pay, a five-day week and a five- cents-an-hour shift bonus. (By The Canadian Preset CALDVITA. Nov. 8—'I‘wo Hindu and two Moaiem members of India's interim lovernmsnt who came here to investigate at first band communal disordefs which have been sweeping Bengal Pro- vince rslnce Aug. l6. appealed peace throughout India." As they rnads their 199W new violence flared in Bombay. where infuriated mcba smashed into railroad cattle cars and released the animals in order to prevent their use in llcslem sacrificial ceremonies on the Bakrid holiday Tuesday. ‘Ilia four issuing the call for an era were Paradit Js/waharlal Neh- ru, formsr- president of the pre- dominantly Hindu’ all-India Mlle‘ Tfiw- for their bogs. Livestock ‘ark-tine esua ~ ~ grass: larder Valiabhai Patel, courses ‘leader; Idaquat Ali lb been elected ‘in Maine's advance CHARLUPTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1946 17001". Killcd In Battle Between Je o Both Parties Confident. ‘ Uncover Plot To 0verthrow Franco Gov’t (By The Associated Pleas; NEW YORK. Nov. a-More than 100 persons were arrested in Spain today and charged with particip- ation in a plot to overthrow Gen- eralissimo Franco's regime, the BBC reported tonight in a broad- cast heard NBC. The broadcast said the revolt was scheduled to take place dur- lng a discussion cf Franco Spain by the United Nations Assembly in New York. Spanish police _were said to have charged that the plot was engineered by "a Oom- munist element." BBC said the police also claim- cd that among those arrested were a number of residents of the "Communist section" of Madrid. Other arrests were reported at the Tangiers and Hench borders. and one group was said to have been captured as it attempted to land on the northern coast cf Spain from a small boat. Places Wreath 0n Grave 0f Roosevelt . HYDE PARK, N.Y.. Nov 3 — (AP) —- Foreign Minister Molotov of Russia today placed a wreath on the grave of Franklin D. Roosevelt at this national shrine and than issued a statement calling fcr "eter- nal memory to the great President." Mr. Molotov stepped to the grave lifter Paid-Henri Spank. prmidgnt of the United Not-ions Assembly. placed flowers for the UN. Delegates from the 5i United Na- tions, including many of the world's top diplomats, clustered around the monument in the rose garden 0f the Roosevelt rome for the cere- mony and bowed their heads in silent tribute. Canada was represented by the delegation leader, Rt. Hon. Louis St. Laurent, Secretary for Bitter- nal Affairs. accompanied by Hon Paul Martin, Secretary of State; Hugh Ksenleyside. ambamador tc Mexico and M J. Coldwell. leader c,f the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation, all members of the del- egation. win Appeal Sentence WINNIPEG, Nov. 3 — (OP) — Lawrence Deacon. 32-year-old for- mer Canadian army sergeant. to- night swas‘ alone in his prison cell counting the days until Jan, i0 — the date fixed Saturday for his execution for the iron-bolt murder o; taxi driver Johann Johnson. His only hope for reprieve lay in the appeal which defence counsel E.J. McMurray and I-lan-y Walsh announced would be lodged Initial the conviction. u likely‘ will be hoard when the appeal court sits in December. "I am innocent." said Deacon in a clear voice. his Cilmlwfiilfe Pe- turned, when askcu by _tha Judie if he had anything to any. Without the usual motion from the Crown for imposition qf sent- ence, Justice bfnior "M! 590mm“! m, pflgoner so ic hanged Jan. id. between the hours of one and six in the morning. for the fatal club- bing of Johnson last March 01 in Indian Investigators r Appeal For Peace ‘idoaiam League secretary. and Sa-rdar Abdur Rab Nishtar. lee,- gue official. . The ministers‘ statement said: "We do not wish to say mil-hind matters, for the situation ia dif- flcult and delicate and a strong jointly today for "a restoration of th has degraded Indian humanity and attained us before others." (h! statement added: should tolerate acts which danade and brutalise the D0091‘- methods bring no solution and on that basis can build no edifice of and to the Modem-Hindu disord- rreed low citiscns loads to counter and increasing violence. (frying um of social and civic life. ll. It leads to human degradation.‘ suburban ‘nlxedo. at this stage about controversial word may complicate it still fur- II er. . Declaring that "much has hap pened in the recent past which “Whatever our differences. none Ignobla om. l “Violence against neighbor fei- arld to the j ; Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew i750"? Island Ex W i n A w AMHERST, N. S, Nov, 3—(CP) —Wiih more than 1,000 crowding into the new arena to see the horse show, all‘ attendance re- cords were broken at the Marl- time Winter Fair here Saturday nlBht. Prince Edward Island riders and owners starred in all horse an av events while New Brunswick breeders were awarded special prises as stock judging continued. Special awards went to Harry Davis of Davis and Carpenter, Sussex. N. 8.. in the Holstein class while the Swift-Canadian Trophy was presented to Stanley Patterson of the Wellsford Club of Oak Point. N‘. B. r At a Maritime Stock Breeders‘ Association dinner, Agriculture Minister A. C, Taylor of New Brunswick said a new type of show had been developed in New Brun- swick within the last eight years, stressing the educational advan- tage cf such shows from the agricultural and livestock point; of view. i The mlniste said he was con- cerned about the future of several New Brunswick shows which had not fallen in line with this policy. hibitors a r d s A t Amherst Winter Fair In the fox show, Walter Lusby, Amherst, suffered losses when a grand champion female and a well-placed male pup died. G. A. Calbeck, Summerside, P. E. 1., J. R. Lockerby. Cape ‘Irav- erse. P. E. L. and G. F. Cameron divided championship in pearl platinum foxes while in white "Wrked Pearl platlnurns, Dr. Teak- lci and Mrs. A. B. Tackles, Sua- sex. N. 8., took heavy honors, Dr Takles winning a grand champion- shin In glacier blues. J‘. A. Flemming, Debec, N 8.. headed a novelty class and B B. Jones, Charlottetown. literally cleaned up the Yukon class in mink. with L, W. Hancock, Bum. merside taking a second, James Flemming had high tum- ors in eastern standards and won the female championship in snow whites. In the judging of heavy horses, O. J. Stewart, Wiltahire, P. IL‘. I.. with favorite Anne. placed in re- serve in the Junior champion fem- ales, Lewis McMillan, McCuish. P. E. L. exhibited the champion Belgium stallion Norman. (Continued on Page 5 Col. 2) Thick Weather iBiticks lied (Gross Efforts HAL-WAX. Nov. !.—(CP)- Thick weather over Montreal tonight frustrated the efforts of the Can- adian Rcd Cross to speed lo the bedside of Mrs. Lillian Biotkaidgo. her husband and daughter from- Mimico, Ont. Mrs. Blocksidge, who was on her way home from Britain, arrived here Saturday aboard the steam- ship Empire Brent and was re- moved immediately to hosnital. Red Cross officials at Halifax. who learned cf Mrs, Biockaidgah illness while the ship still was at sea communicated with the Red Cross in Toronto and arrange- ments werg made to fly the hither and daughter to Halifax, But weather conditions at Mon- treal caused cancellation of a Trans-Canadn Airlines flilzht and the father and daughter loft Mont- real by train today. In the mean- time, the Red Cross prepared a s-ar to meet the pair at Mcnctnn to- morrow and rush them to Halifax bv road. Red Cram officials were rnahle to sav the nature of Mrs. Block- sidgefia illness. lio Evidence 0f Foul Play ALEXANDRIA, Ont., Nov. 3- (CP)-Ooroner W. Hay of King- ston. 0nt., investigating the death of Alex MacDonald. 87-year-old sign painter whose body was dis- covered at the bottom of an out- side privy Saturday, said today there was no evidence of foul play in the case. _ Dr. Bay's statement followed a postrmortem examination of the strange case after MacDonald's body was discovered by Antoine Sauve, whose wife related aha had dreamed MacDonald “was hidden in a small building that I seem- ed to recognize." MacDonald had World Food Production May Exceed Pre-war Level WASHINGTON. Nov. 3—(AP)— The United States Agriculture De- partment said today world food productW-i‘ for the 1940-47 crop year will be about seven per cent above last year's low level may even edge above the pro-war average. But the report warned there still is danger cf an "acute short- age next spring" unless available exports are carefully used. It ex- plakicd that devastated areas sti-ll need lame imports desnite their own sharply-‘increased food pro- ducticn. The world came up this yea-r with the largest corn output on record, the department said, out it produced the smallest cotton crop since 1923, with the exception of last year. Population increase is a factor to be considered in the world food situation. the department noted. It is seven per cent above the pre- war firzure, Therefore. on .3 per canitn basis, fnod supplies for the 1946-47 consumption year are about fivs nor cent below pro-war. The 1946-47 demand for food exports promises to be as nearly as great as during the last ymr, reflecting a desire of many low- consumntion countries to rebuild reserves. and to raise nutrition standards. The most pronounced production increases occurred in war-devast- ated cmmtrica and in areas strick- en h_v drought last year. Novarihe- less, the cutnnt in many of these areas still is far below aver-we Southern and western Europe and Nnrih Africa showed the "rcatcst increases in food produc- tion. Hnwr-ver. crop nrnsnr-cts are also considerably more favorable than a year ago in manv of the Far Euatorn countries. particularly India. thr- Pbilinch-ies cnrl Jtnnn. About the onlv countries where food production is at nr hclcw last year are the United Kingdom. Eire, Romania, Siam, Korea and Manchuria. Sentenced To Hang - (By The Canadian Press) SI‘. JOSEPH DE BEAUCE. Que, Nov. 3—Iorcnzo Inngelier was convicted Saturday of the rnurder of ifl-yesr-old Joseph Thi- bodaau in September. 1946. and been missing from his home since Oct. ‘l. was sentenced to be hanged next M: a. \ FOR’ Bl FLOUR RHTFP BAH/VG 0850M CANADA and 1 lawful interests of the States or any other country. lea. unless non-Soviet parties. lively trade. and cultural countries, based on a firm found- ation of mutual respect and equal rights.“ Fire Causes Damage 0f a $215,000 (By The Canadian Prey) FREDERICTON, Nov. 3- Flre. apparently starting in the furnace room balm-p noon 55min)’. caused 015.000 dam- IIQ 00 a two-storey brick 50114158 known as the Fred- "imm Clinic. and unestimat- ed daanage to $200,000 worth of furs stored on the second floor. Flames destroyed the oflloea of Dr. G. Everott Chalmers, Dr. Robert Chalmers. Dr. John I‘. McI-nerney, Dr. W. Ross Wright. Dr. 1C. S. McMnllen, l dentist. and Miss Helen 0‘- C 0 II II 0 I'- a physiotherapist. Most of their equipment was saved. The building wag own- ed by Hon. W. G. Clark, a former lieutenant-governor of the province. - Max Albrams. manager of the Abrams Fur Company. entered the burning building and threw some furs from a window tc sal- vage canvas but many were water-soaked. Heat and smoke forced him to jump from the window to a net but he returned later and salvaged the remaining furs Other salvage work was done by Boy Scouts, who had been selling apples, and by salvage corps members and volunteers. All respirators of the Fredericton fire department were put into use. and four others were rusted from the Royal Canadian llingineers fire statiofl. One nreman. Fraser I-Iazelett. suffered a back iniury. lacerations and shock when boards of the first floor gav"e"‘way' and he fell into four feet of water. in the cel- ar. - Re-establishrnent of the clinic in the near future appeared un- likely owing to an already acute shortage of accommodation here. Yehsien Fails To Chinese 0ov’t Troops (By Torn Masterson) PEIPILO. Nov. 3- (APl-Chln- ese Government troops today cap- tured Yehsien on the Shantung Peninsula and extended their at- tacks along more than 160 miles of the peninsuirfs north coast on both sides of the battle-torn Com- munist port c-f Chefoo. pro-gov- ernment and independent dis- patches reported. Strategically linked with the Shantung campaign the twin gov- ernment drives down the Liaotung peninsula toward Dairen remained under a rigorous news blackout. Chinese rer-resentatives were negotiating with the Russians to obtain Chinese administration of Dairerv. The Soviet-Chinese treaty of l945 designates it as g free port under Chinese control. (The implication was that the government armies were marking time while awaitinrz tho nut-come of the negotiations. which Nanklnrz accounts said should he concluded in a fortnight.) The government drives were de- signed to cut off the Chinese Com- munists‘ sea communications be- tween Manchuri-a and China proper arid to trap thousands of J (Oontirrled on Page 5 (ml. S) 12 PAGES MAXIMS »OIL MERE MAN ‘ filasrlptlans 0r. Doro To Head Gan. Delegation CYITAWA. Nov 8 —- (C?) (Advance) — Prime Minister Mac- kenzie King announced tonight that Dr. Victor Dorenformer Que- bec Superintendent of Education, will head Canada's delegation to the general conference of the Un- ited Nations educational. scient- ific and cultural organization which will meet in Paris Nov. l9. - Other delegates are: Dr. Fred McNally, chancellor of the Univer- sity qt Alberta; Edmond Turootie. editor of Le Canada and former Director of Public Relations for UNESCO; Herman Voaden. president of the Canadian Arts Council, and Dr. E. Floyd Wil- loughby, principal 0d Kelvin High School, Winnipeg. They will be accompanied by three alternate delegates: Margaret S Gill, librarian of the National Research Council; Dr. RK. Lan- mour, representative in the United Kingdom of the National Research Council and Miss Elizabeth Wyn Wood. chairman of the Foreign Re- lations Committee of the Oanad- ian Arts Council. War Brides-is ilonvioteii 0f Manslaughter a _M,-s, BrldgeQWSlArS. 8-year-old raven-haired Irish war bride, was convicted today of involuntary manslaughter for tha slaying last Sept. 2 of her husband. Punk. 38-year-old Las Vegas bank teller. Conviction on involuntary man- slaughter in Nevada carries a pen- alty of one to five years in prison. or a fine of 01,000. Mrs. Walters was released sev- eral hours later on $5,000 cash bond put up by Bud Bodeil, a private detective. who previously identi- fied himself as an associate of Jerry Geisler, well-known Los Angeles lawyer. The latter had discussed Mrs. Walters’ defence with her counsel shortly before the trial opened last Oct. 21. The jury of eight men and four women recommended that Mrs. Waters ba deported to Great Bri- tain, of which country she is a subject. after release from prison —if she is so sentenced. She would be eligible for parole after 11 months. ' aters was killed by a single s through the heart from a tiny, .22-calibra pistol. The same hullet slightly wounded the couple's baby. Frank Jrn. now l8 months old. The shootiniz occurred at the home where Bridget was employed as a nurse. Mrs Waters flew here last sum- msr from Lewes. Sussex, England, to contest a divorce action brought by Waters here. She instituted e counter-action. and a jury awni- ed her separate maintenance of 8100 a month. MOSCOW, Nov 3-(AP)—Pravda in a new definition of Soviet for- eign policy, declared today that Russia is placing "absolutely no obstacles" in the path of improv- ed commercial and cultural re- hi‘ ‘ips between the U. S. S. R. and the rest of the world, Referring to Prime Minister Stalin's recent statement that there has been no increase in ten- sion between Russia and the Un- ited States, the Communist party newspaper said: “Nowhere in the whole world is the Soviet, Union assaulting the United ‘There are absolutely no obstac- they are created by to the most financial, scientific bonds between our No Obstacles In Path Of U. S. - Russia Relations Discussing progress of the Un- ited Nations, the newspaper said certain countries “have not yet given up their cavalry attacks on the very foundations" of the world peace organizations. Pravda added, however, that "rt may be observed with satisfaction" that a number of U. N. delegation- has made "a certain if as vet iri- sufficient shift toward a firmer support of the U. N. charter." The newspaper quoted the Times of ‘London as saying that Foreign Minister Molotov, speaking recent- ly before the ‘U, N. General As- sembly, had "attacked powers with whom the Soviet Union by its own admission wishes to collabor- ate.” “Collaboration must not take the fcrrn of rencunclng criticism.‘ Pravda said. "This would not be ‘collaboration’ but vaasal depen- denceff ms vmas. New. Nov, a-(AP) i Delivered “JO Mill 15.00, other Provinces IUJ-A. I.“ ws And Arabs Thirteen British Soldiers (Are Injured In Attacks On Military Vehicles By CARTER. L. DAVIDSON JERUSALEWI. Nov. 3—(AP)— Two Jews and two Arabs were killed today in a battle between Jews and Arabs in the Lake Hula district north of the Sea of Gali- iee-the first multiple deaths in a clash between the two rival Holy Land communities since the bloody Arab uprising of the late 1900's. One Arab woman was seriously hurt and nine Jews were wound- ed, three seriously. Police said the fatalities were caused by knives and clubs. Dr. Hussein F. Khalidi, secre- tary of the Arab higher execut- ive. expressed “amazement" that the incident had not sprlpad "into a. country-wide uprising.’ A Jew- i511 agency representative charged that the clash was a direct result of "political incitement" by Arab leaders. This development in the. tense Holy Land came as Jews partici- pated in a day-long general strike protesting British deportation of would-be immigrants to Cyprus. Thirteen British soldiers were in- lured. three seriously, in attacks‘ Saturday upon military vehicles sicng the Palestine coastal plain. A government a ouncemfiht on the Jew-Arab clash said it oc- curred when the Jews began plOWlfll land on a settlement which Arabs protested was Arab- owned. The general strike ended at 0 p. m. after numerous peaceful mass meetings protesting British -- immigration policies. Several incidents occurred dur- ing observance of the strike~irr"~‘” ‘Iiel Aviv. A military truck in the all-Jewish city was stoned by rov- ing bands of Jewish youths and mother truck hit a barbed-wire barricade. , In Saturday's violence one mil- (Contirmed on Page 5 Col. B) . Sch: Ptottli ARE ALWAYs Pltncucinr. tconom Willie billets Alta Etohohitni. win- oui Panama? HALIFAX. Nov. 3 — Weathfl snyopsis and Official lull-ml 10"‘ casts isued by the 130111111101 Public Weather Office at Halifax at 11:15 p.m.. SlLildlY. Nov. a. Forecasts" vadid until Monday midnight. Prince Edward Island. hetero Counties: Overcast. Intermittent rain or drizzle Monday cvenins- Littla change in temperature. Light winds. Bu!" Monday at Charlottetown 46 and Mona-ton 45. Summary: Rain or drimle Mon- day evening. Higlh tide this momlnt a4‘. 5 Ina tonight. at 7. Sun sets this afternoon at Ml and rises tomorrow morning at 8.43 Pull moon November 9th. 2-11 A. M. Stunmerside tide eighteen min utea later than Charlottetown All lCIIDUl-l Charlottetown-Mouton 40a" Charlottetown I A. M, 11.20 A. M. 6.15 P. M. Arrive Charlottetown 655 A. M. 135 P. M., 5.55 "P. M. Oharlottctcwn-Fhlifax- Inava Charlottetown 1.45 P. M. arrive Charlottetown 4.55 P. M. Charlottetown -New Glasgow- heave Charlottetown 7 A. M. Ldl P. M. Arrive Charlctttown 11.1! A. M. 5.15 P. M. CAR IIDI! "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND‘ Leave Borden at 0.05 AJL, l PM. and 4,80 P M. Leave Tcrmentine 10.30 A. ll. ‘I P_ M., 1.00 P. M. lbrtra trips are made between cn which automobiles are carried. SUNDAY SIDVICI Prom Borden. l P.M., 0.40 PM. Prom Tormentine I P.1d. s P.1d. WOOD tetanus-cannon Leave Wood islands. daily a A 1lA,M., lP.M.. 82M. Carlbouatsalahqysm