4: MAXIMS OFA MERE MANA 3.12:- inadm- ma pg-sine, after all. Is the Carrier: 0 p, gr. I. 9.00. other Provinces bariottstown, Sununentdo 815.00 per aanuns. Elsewhere and 0. I. A. 812.00 per snnans. Kill. The Pe's Pape Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. Read by Everybody CANADA, MONDAY; FEBRUARY 4, 1952 The hint that blows loudest is soon overblown. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN A 16 PAGES Homing Daily Founded llli. The Guardian. Elva (lento. U. N. VOTES TO DELAY DEBATE ON KOREAN QUESTION Colorful Figure Oi U. S. "New Deal" Era Dies Smart Operators Beat Exchange Controls In London - N. Y. Traffic By Sydney Gampell K IDXHDON. Feb. 3 -tReuters)- slick continental operators are snatching thousands of dollars from under Britain's nose with a complex system of tradflcking in silver between London and New York. - The British Government. ser- inusly short of dollars, can do no- thing about it because the deals are legal. The trafficking can be carried nut in any sterling area product- from wool or coffee to diamonds and rubbcr- but the main trading at the moment is in silver. How Scheme Works "middlemen" in London at 90 The continental luiy the metal Coming Events "seedsi send for free catalogue. .lrthur Vescy, York. "Per Snapshots that will not fade mail your Films and Nega- tives to Garnhum Photo studios Charlottetown. "Unloading Old Sydney Coal at Hilton today and Tuesday. Vernon Gillespie. "Unloading Bulls Western No. 1 Feed Oats. 33.50 cwt. today. Bring bags. Dillon as Splllett. "St. Pam-ck's Youth Club Dance. Fort Augustus Hnll. Wed- 'lE5dly night. February 6th. "Hockey tonight liver rink. Y.M.C.A. vs. -liver Shur Gains. "Ice being cut for ihe public ibis week only. Gates'- Mill Pond. Nest Royalty. Hunter Skate ufter. "Hockey Stanley Bridge rink nnlght, Brcndalbune vs. Stanley. lame 8:30, skate after. "Hockey at. Sandy's tonight, Sandy's Ramblers vs. York. Lea- rue game. Skate after. "Unloading Acadia nut coal at I-Emerald Monday and Tuesday, George Power. "'Now in stock. Cod Liver--Oil, Fishmcal Purina Steer Fattena. Purina Dryenna. Dillon and Spillett. "Come in and talk over our Purina Finance Plan. for your lloga and Poultry. Dillon and splilett. "Hockey North River rink to- night Feb. 4th, Milton Hornets vs. Glasgow Road Maple Leafs. Game zima 8:15. Skate after. "Hockey tonight at. Wlltshire 'Ink. Hunter River Juniors vs. lil'iltshlre Juniors. Cnnteen ser- rcs. i "Emir Gain Amateur Cavalcade. lforeil Hall, February ooh, I P. M. ipomored by Morell women's In- itituie. Entries to he sent to Mrs. "reeman Jay. Morell. ;"f'l1e annual meeting of King's -Dllllly L.O. L. has been postponed to meet at a later date. of which due notice will be given. Joseph Cook. County Master. "In the South Queens Hockey Millie. the New Haven "Royals" Ira scheduled to meet the Appin Road "Bulldogs" on Monday night in Victoria Rink. skate after for D01) and pleasure. "The 1062 Prince Edward Island Drama Festival information back- lot is now ready. and will be mail- ed free upon request to the score- . J. E. Murphy at summerside. Three not plays will be allowed GM?! this year. also a special class lo? groups entering Festival for i-hl first time. " ' "Collecting Hogs for csnias Packers Ltd. each 'nmday at thread and out-man, when do are impassable farmers are Mind to deliver begs to our trucks lit Ortrnuo. and Carleton, up until is. each hrssday. lender it: man as ss year. N. h c No. 12-11 or 11. "3WllllIl orders for ear of lllbhalt shin lea and tidings dc- MI7 in spr ng. call now and get fl" nrieu. We have in stock a united suvvlv of register laur- Ttirnlp 'leed. This seed frlslnatod from nsedonsid Col- Ilm There will be shorts "IND! nod. You are wcel ad; yours now. onsu x "NS mt feeding problem. I poultry roses are in new lute VII 5,8, Inebougllls Vernon. at Hunter 1LL.::.LLL....LL cents an ounce and resell it in New York at 871-4 cents. They can aiford to take this initial loss be- cause the next. stages of the deal pays them a 17 per cent working prof Once they've got the dollars they sell them-again in New York -for so-called "cheap aterllng" at less than s.2.4o per one pound ster- ling instead of the official British rate of 32.80. They take this rake-off. and the British Treasury stands by. help- less as it watches its silver being sold for dollars it will never get. Another racket is to use the dol- lars to buy goods to sell in the sterling area for which the sterling countries will not. allot dollars- such as nyons or autos-and which. therefore, command a. high price. one day recently some contin- tcontinued on Page 5 Col. 1) Fire Destroys Dwelling Al Johnston's River A serious fire Saturday night completely destroyed the farm home of Mr. Frederick Trainer, Johnson's River. and all its con- tents. Mr. Trainer managed to es- cape safely with his children, one of whom was in bed when the fire started. , ainor. who had been work- - . 4 !f. .0.--88311319 lantern. had returned to the house to refill the lantern which had burned dry. As he was pouring the gasoline, the lantern exploded caus- ing superficial burns on Mr. Train- er's hands. The resulting flames quickly enveloped the house which burned to the ground within a short time. Adding to the loss was the fact that at the time of the blaze Mr. 'n'alnor had 0240.00 in cash in the house. It also was lost. Probe Death Of Woman In Fire' SYDNEY. N.B.. Feb. 3 -tCP)'- A woman died and another was in- jured today when fire of undeter- mined origin damaged a three- room shack in Sydney's Whitney Pier district. Firemen found the body of Mrs. Eric Young behind a door barred by an iron rod. Police are waiting for MrsEf-fie Doueette's condition to improve before questioning her on details of the fire. She is suffering from burns and shock. Two other occupants. Mike Grif- fiths, a tenant. and Mary Downs. W-'IPed with Mrs. ouucette through a window. Griffiths said the blaze started when the stove exploded. special investigator Ned snow said the stove was intact an hour after the blaze was extinguished. An inquest will be held Friday. NYEBI. Kenya, Feb. 3-(CP)L African tribesmen poured from their villages to line the road and pound jungle drums triumphantly nl Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh motored by today on the way to Sun: Lodge. their wedding present from the people of Kenya colony. At the market town of 'l'hlks 30 prisoners from the local lull cheered from a special roadside compound. built to give them a view of the royal couple. The Princess and her husband will stay at Sagana. which nestles at the base of 1,100-foot Mount Kenya, uaiil Feb. 7 when they embark for Ceylon, next stop on their fl. Commonwealth tour. - Today's trip of ill) dusty miles took them from the noise and heat of the cities into a forest stillness where all was quiet save ......j..j..:.. "Unloading car of coal today and Tuesday. Feb. 4th and 5th, H. B. Willis 1nc., O'Leary. ' "Car of coal to arrive in a few days. C. R. Campbell, wmsnm. ,",lt, will be a close game to- night in Victoria rink between New Haven Royals and Appln hold Sulidogs. Tuesday night Lqchool lmit-I Harold Ic-Ites Was Prominent in U. S. Gov'i WASHINGTON. Feb. 3 -(AP)- Hamid L. lckes. one of the most colorful figures of the Roosevelt new deal. dicd tonight. lckes. 77. died in emergency hospital. where he had been under treatment for complications of a former arthritic condition. lckes was secretary of the in- terior in 1932-46 and head man of the public works administration of the turbulent depression years. A sharp-iongued phrasemaker. lckes called himself "The Old Curmudgeon" and in his time was Just as rough on others. lckes previously had been under hospital treatment but returned to his home at nearby Olney. Md., Jan. 18, apparently much improv- ed. He took a turn for the worse, 10 days later and went back to the hospital. Vigorous Career Few men of his day could look back on such a vigorotm-and of- ten stormy-career. His running feud with the late Harry Hop- kins, President Roosevelt's close fi'icnd and hand of the Works Pm- ersinl to the end. no resigned from President Truman's cabinet in 1946 saying he could no longer siuy in the cabinet and "retain my self respect." lie had argued. with Truman over the President's nomination of Edwin W. Pisuiey, an oil man, as the navy. lckes regarded Pauley's appointment-which was never confirmed by the Senate-as con- trary to his concept of preserving the nation's oil resources. veiva -attention--ntwtlioauab - , Roosevelt's presidential ..c'arear. Both men were interested in con- servation and Roosevelt named him to be secretary of the interior. He held that post. longer than any other man. lckes once said Huey P. Long. lnie senator from Lousiana. had "hnlitosis of the intellect." when Wendell L. Wilikle ran against President Franklin D. Roosevelt, lckes called him "The simple. barefoot wall Street lawyer." Ickcs is survived by his widow, the former Jane Dahlman. whom he married in 1938 after the 1935 death of Mrs. Anna Wilmarih Thompson lckes. He is also sur- vived by a son. Raymond. by his first marriage, and linrold and Elizabeth, by his second marriage. (AP)-Rt. Rev. William Mellon. Roman Catholic bishop of Gallo- way, died Saturday at the age of grass Administration. made "New Deal" history. Ickcs' public life was controv- undersecretary of: lckes came to Franklin D.i3o9so- an '- DUUVIFRJES. Scotland. Feb. .1 - (By Robert B. Hewett) SINGAPORE, Feb. 3-- (AP)- Britain took a bold gamble today in a "new broom" policy for beat- ing Red terrorism in Malaya. She appointed a new British admin- istrator with no previous Malayan experience in hopes he will "bring a fresh line to bear on the many complexities" in this strategic tin and rubber producing country. Donald Charles MacGillivrsy, colonial secretary to Jamaica, is the new deputy high commission- or for the Malayan Federation. His Job will be to direct civil affairs under the ncwly-appointed high commissioner. Gen. Sir Ger- By-elections, EGYPTIAN SOCIALIST JAILED AFTER. RIOTS Ahmed Hussein. leader of the Egyptian socialist party. has been arrested in Cairo, and is reported- ly held as chief instigator of the recent riots. Mobs swept through the Cairo streets, putting the torch to several buildings including the famous Shephearcl's hotel. ORAWFORDSVILLE. Ind. Feb. 3-(AP)-Three business buildings were destroyed Saturday by a S-500,000 fire that threatened an entire city block near the public square. several other buildings, in- cludlng a. school. were damaged. There were no reports of casualt- .lcs Reds Agree By Robert B. Tuckmlui MUNSAN, Korea, Feb. 4 - (.Vlonday)-(AP)- The Commun- isis agreed Sunday to an Allied plan for speeding the Korean nmiistice talks and offered a sweeping prisoner parole deal, but differences on fundamental issues Tribesrhen Pound Drums ToWelcome.R.oyal Couple for the sound of small birds and the rustic of leaves. The lodge gardens-result of 18 months of work-were a riot of color with cncil, iobelias, vcrbcna, lavender and syrlnga. Red dust from the roads fleck- ed the Duke's fair hair, his sports Jacket and grey fianneis when the couple arrived at their moun- tain retreat. Alighting from the car, the Princess smiled. passed her hand across her forehead and brushed the front of her white-lined three- quarter length motoring coat. Sir Philip Mitchell. governor of Kenya. and Lady Mitchell greet- ed them. "I am afraid we are dusty," smiled the Duke. The Royal Couple, the Governor u and his lady, and Major Henry Sharpe. the ex-district Commiss- ioner who planned tho grounds, walked for 20 minutes in the shady arden. The incess and her husband both planted a podocapous tree in the lawn by the river. "I think the garden is simply lovely." the Princess told Sharpe; ' Saturday, the Princess got a thrill by seeing some real lions. During a visit with Philip to a national park outside Nairobi, who watched and photographed a full- grown lion yawning and working To Allied Plan. For Speeding Talks still barred the way to a quick set- tlemcnt. The Reds agreed to star: negotiations on the final agenda item. dealing with A commendat- ion; to governments involved in the 19-months-old Korean war. This was in reply to a speed-up suggestion Jan. 31 by Vice-Admiral C. Turner Joy. chief Allied negotiator. Although there was no prospect of quick agreement. this move would broaden the talks to in- elude all three unsettled items- truce supervision. prisoner ex- change and the last item. recom- mendationa. staff officers and s subcom- mittee of the main armistice dele- gation were scheduied to meet again today in Panmuniom on the truce and prisoner terms. The talks were called for 11 am.. (9 D- m.. Sunday. EST). In order not to break the con- ilnuiiy of these talks, Gen. Nam ll. head communist negotiator, suggested that's full dress. plenary meeting of armistice delegations arrange to meet atia later hour on the recommendations to gov- ernments. - It would be the first face to face meeting of Nam and Joy since Nov. 21. when the full delegations agreed on a provisional cease-fire ne. Britain Planning Plastic Worplonos LONDON, Feb. .1 -(AP) --nrlt- ain is planning to build super- sonic warplanes out of moulded plastics-a stop which if success- ful might slash the costs of her defence drive. The first of the new planes may be flying within two years. it was announced Saturday. A wing made of the plastic will be exhibited as thrinhui In- ovcr his fresh-killed meal. dustrios hlr in1M-gay Britain Tries Bold, New Broom Policy In Malaya -aid Temples, Rumors Heard At Ottawa ' may decide to nu some of the 15 strong-arm military man who was named last month to lead the war against the Red guerrillas. Malay and Chinese political leaders. who are seeking eventual independence for the British-com trolled federation. doubtless will view the appointment of Mac- Gliiivray with suspicion and dis- appointment. They had been ex- pecting someone familiar with Malaytfs complex political prob- lems as deputy high C0mmlS- sioner. Government supporters last week voted down a proposal in the federal legislative council at Kuala Lumpur that an Asian be named to the post. Cabinet OTTAWA, Feb. 8-(CP)-The government shortly may move to fill four vacant seats in the House of Commons. The vacancies were created in recent months through deaths and resignations and the cabinet may decide to call by-elections in some or all of them before parliament opens its 1952 session Feb. 28. At present. the standing the 262-member House is: Liberals 184: Progressive Con- servatives 55; CC)”. 13; Social Credit 10; Independent 4: Inde- pendnent. Liberal 2; vacant 4: total 262. v Prime-Minister St. Laurent also in in the 102-seat senate, -which now has 78 Liber- als and nine Progressive Conser- vatives. Senate seats are filled by appointment by the Prime Minister. Also in the realm of possible political moves-if only because it has not happened for many months-is a cabinet shuffle. There have been rumors that Mr. st. Laurent may make some alter- ations in his cabinet lineup. There have been reports that Postmaster-General Rinfret will be appointed to the Quebec Su- perior Court and that P. E. Cote, parliamentary assistant to Labor Minister Gregg. elevated to the cabinet. This would create a fifth vacancy in the Commons. Of the four Commons vacan- cies. the most pressing would be Ontario rid-ing. vacant since its Liberal member Walter Thom- son, resigned last fall to contest the Ontario provincial election in November as provincial Lib- eral leader. The three other vacancies only were created during the last month. On of them-the only Progres- sive Conservative sent. vacant - is the New Brunswick riding of Victoria-Carleton. it became va- cant early in January through the death of 66-year-old H. H. Hatfield, Progressive Conserva- tive who held the seat since 1940. Another exists in the Qllebflc riding of Brome-Missisquoi. whose Liberal member. Henri A. Gos- selin. 64. died last week-end. The fourth by-cleclion is pend- ing in Ontario's Waterloo North. its member. Louis 0. Breitiiaupt, Liberal. resigned recently to ac- cept appointment as the new lieutenant-governor of Ontario. Two lose lives By Drowning YARMOUTI-I, N.E., Feb. 3 - (OP) - Two persons. including a youth who gambled his life in a rescue attempt. drowned today in a pond at nearby Plymouth. Ray Joh . 20. was passing the pond when he saw Leo Lenlanc. ii, plunge through the ice while skating. He jumped into the gaping hole amid broken ice and made a heroic attempt to save the boy. Both disappeared after a few frantic struggles. The bodies were recovered but attempts with a rea- uscitator were unsuccessful. W1-IMON. Mass. Feb. .1 -(AP) -'nvo earthquakes of moderate intensity were recorded Saturday at the Boston College Seismograp- hlo Station. The first was register- ed at 0:30.55 a. m. EST and was about 4.800 miles from Boston in an undetermined direction. The second. registered at 7:29.84 AM. EST. was placed 1.130 miles south of Boston. near the northern coast Soviet DEgaie . Angry; Says New World VIarSiaried By Francis W. Carpenter PAIRHS. Feb. &-(AP)-Despite vehement Russian opposition, a United Nations committee voted Saturday to postpone consider- ation of the Korean issue until an armistice is reached or a breakdown at Panmunjom forces the U. N. to discuss stronger action. The General Assembly's polit- ical committee and the economic and. social committee, - acting jointly, voted 51 to 5 (Soviet bloc) for a resolution to this effect put up by the United states, Britain and France. The resolution provides for cal- ling a special or emergency ses- sion of the assembly whenwer Koran developments warrant. one way or the other. The assembly is expected to give final ap- proval this week. The vote came after Jakob Malik. Soviet deputy foreign minister, cast aside a plea from British Minister of State Selwyn Lloyd to end the debate on a "note of unity." Malik told the committee: "The full responsibility for fu- ture events in Korea and the Far East will rest completely on the government of the United States. The United States in- tends to prolong the Korean ag- gression and expand aggression in the Far East. The third world war has in fact commenced-in Korea. lndo-China. Tunis and Morocco." Stormy Sessions The action climaxed s day of tense and stormy sessions in the U. N. assembly which included: 1. NOL-.y demonstrators in the balcony calling themselves the "Federation of Anarchists" in- terrupted assembly debate in the red-and-gold theatre of the Psi- ais dc Chailloi; by throwing eggs, tomatoes and anarchist leaflets at the delegates. The leaflets said: "Politicians. gossips-wind- bags-enough talking-" Police threw out about a dozen of the demonstrators and detain- ed five. 2. Channing Tobias, U. S. dele- gate and Negro edueationist. heaicdly defended in the social committee American principles of freedom during a debate on the case of William N. Oatls, As- sociated Press writer imprisoned by Czechoslovakia on charges of spying. Tobias today defended Oatis as "an honest researcher and re- porter" who was imprisoned with- out good reason. 3. The assembly rejected a Sov- iet bloc demand for the return of Iron Curtain refugees in Western Europe who do not want to go back home. Spectacular Fire In Packing Plant HAMELTON. Feb. 3 -(CP)- A spectacular fire Saturday night swept through the Essex Packvrs plant on Wentworth street here. No one was believed injured. Hundreds of carcases of bet-.'. hogs. calves and lambs, as well as cured meats, lord and margarine were destroyed in the four-hour blaze. Of unknown origin. it is believed to have started in lie smoke house and spread across the top floor of the building to the killing floors. which were gutted. J. Yarcm. plant manager. said damage might run from 3250.000 to ll1.500.(l)0. WELLAND, Oni., Feb. 8-(CF) -Police said today they have charged 34-year-old Lloyd Frank Cross with the murder of a taxi- drivcr whose battered body was found in a field more than two years ago. Cross. picked up in Brookville. N. B., late Saturday. is accused of killing Sam Delibasch. 4'1. Police said another arrest is "expected shortly." Inspector Charles Wood of the Ontario Provincial Police gave few details of the arrest, but said it "shapes up as being a fantastic case.” He said he and a fellow in- mector, Len Neil. went to Brook- vlile recently to make the arrest. They said Cross, married and with three children. left his home in Welland shortly after of the Dominican Resriiblio. the cab driver's body was found Antarctica BURT STANLEY. Falkland Is- lands. Feb. 3 - (Reuters) - A British-Argentine dispute over rights to Antarctica took a violent turn Friday when shots fired overhead prevented a British land- ing pariy from putting shore. An Argentine shore party fired the shots over the heads of mem- bers of a British group attempting to land from the survey ship Jc-hn Biscow at liopc Bay on the top of Ant:1rclica.'s Graham Land. News of the incident reached this Brit- ish settlement Saturday. Hope Bay is a British base but British - Argentine Dispute Takes Serious Turn Britain hasn't used it since 1949. When the John Biaoow tried to a party ashore Friday. the Ar- gentinlans. supported by a trans- port ship and a tanker. refused permission to land and accentuated their refusal with warning shots. The British contingent returned to the John Biscow. The dispute over that part of the southern continent results from claims to the land by the two countries. After the incident. was reported to British authorities, a protest was lodged at the Argentine For- eign Office in Buenos Alres. Canadian Be OTTAWA, Feb. 3--(CP)-Shlp- ments of Canadian beef and hogs to the United States have been sharply curtailed in recent months because domestic produc- ers now can get higher prices at home, an agricultural spokesman said tonight. This reversal of the historic price pattern-prices in the U. 5. have usually been higher - czlme about within the last two months. It brought about a big slowdown in Canadian shipments across the border and in some instances a reversal of the ordin- ary flow, bringing U. 5. beef into Canada. 1 A number of eastern Canadian cities, notably Toronto and Ot- tawn, recently received ship- ments of American because of the higher Canadian price. But it seemed to make market with stable at about 31 a pound re- tail, the spokesman said. the Winnipeg market were 31.75 a hundredweight higher than at Chicago. Even late last year the Canadian price was 31 better than the American. This, the spokesman said, caused the re- versal. N. S. Youth Charged In Double Murder LAGGAN. N. 3., Feb. 3 (GP) - Roy Haggart, 18. to- night was charged with mur- der in connection with the death of his aunt and uncle in this Pictou County backwoods settlement some 25 miles from New Glasgow. Immediate details of the kill- ings were few pending the com- pletion of R. C. M.P. investig- ations. Police said that Haggart has so far been charged only with the death of his uncle. Alex- ander Haggari, but that devel- opmcnts were expected soon re- gnrdlng Mrs. I-Iaggart's death. The bodies were found today by Duncan I-laggariiffather of the accused. in the couple's small, frame dwelling. Both were about 50 and married tliree years ago. Police said they died of gun- shot wounds. They did not say when the shooting took place. A coroner's jury was empsn- olled today but adjourned until Man. Arrested In N. B. Charged With Murder Feb. 13. biurigeoned and 'frozen in this Niagara peninsula area Dec. 1'1. 1010, by rabbit hunters. . Delib.-islch had disappeared De ccmber ii. Shortly after the murder. clues led police down a tangled trafi pointing to robbery and political intrigue as possible motives. Early stages of the investiga- tion extcnded from here . to downtown Toronto where a taxi- cab stolen from Delibasich was abandoned. The case took a weird turn early in 1960 when balk circulated here of a vendetta being carried across the sea. Police were inclined fo discount suggestions of a uvenle killing although a friend of the slain man said Delibasfclfs brother was dragged from his home in Yugo- beef cattle ' little difference in the consumer - beef remaining; Early this year beef prices on ef, Pork Prices Higher Than U.S. cyclonic Storm off Atlantic coast MIAMI, l"la.. Feb. 3 -(AP)- A cyclonic storm of about hurricane force (75 miles per hour and up- ward) has developed off the At. lantic coast and is moving north northcsstward toward the North Carolina Capes the Weather Burn eau reported today. in a 5 p. m. ET advisory. the Weather Bureau ordered south: east storm warnings north of Wlln mington. N.C.. through Capo Hah- teras. Diirrnt ls ems. Foe feast: wan- Alllvuf if 2 HALIFAX. Feb. I -(C?)-Q Official forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Ole lice hero and valid until midnight Monday. synopsis: The weather is fine in the Marltimes as a high prmurl area crosses the district. A storm in the southern state accompanied by a broad band 0 rain is moving northeastwanl. The rain is expected to reach the western Mariiimrs Monday aven- mg. Prince Edward Island--A few clouds becoming overcast by even- ing. Much milder. Light winds in- creasing in evening to southeast 15. Low and high Monday at, Charlottetown 5 and 32. High tide today at Charldieu town at 5.36 A. M. and 4.31 P. M. High tide on the North Shore al 1246 A. M. and 11.44 A. M. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 730 A. M. and sets at 534 P. M. S MCA A13 BIBVICB DAILY IXCIPT IUNDAY Leave Charlottetown for Monctoa 0:30 A.M.: 11:20 AIL: 0:50 BM Ar. Charlottetown from Monctnl 1:25 A.M.: 1:86 PAL: dill IJI. Leave Cbariocutown for New Glasgow - HAIIIII 7:40 ass. New Glasgow I 1:50 EM. New Glaagovr 8 Halifax Arrlva Curiotbatosvn from New Glasgow and Halifax 11:00 AM. from New Glasgow 0:85 PM. froas”Naw Glalgowaae Halifax. ' i MONDAY. WIDNIIDAY. 7311353 New Glasgo 10:30 AM. Arrive ll . from Sydney. IUNDAI ONLY have Charlottetown for Ilcaeha il:lO A.M. Arrive Cltarlotbahvn from Molded lull Ill. slavia in 1016 and beaten to death byll'ml- ""- BOIDIIC - OAPI TOIICITINI Dali (lmwm ! have Iordn I511 11 I 0.10 A.M. 10.8! LN P.M. 8.” EM. C-ll PJI I30 LI. 1.” I3 I00 PH-