MAXIMS IPA MERE MAN 312:.- g...--an-sun. jjng lungs to govern-temper. us-slag 0liarlettatowa.lusnaaeualde rllllalwaahly. otliarhovineeaand lilo weekly. Elsewhere In II. B. A. 512.00 per annum. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Everybody CHARLOTTETOWNI CANADA. MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1951 Three things to teach-is-nth. h- dnsh. and eenlanhasat. MAXIM8 or A MERE MAN T1 16 PAGES The Guardian, live Cents. Mornlng Daily rounded 1581. COUNTER - ATTACKIN G REDS HURLED BACK. IN KOREA Explosive Iranian Oil Issue Before U. N. Today Doctors Report King Continues To Improve DONDON. Sept. 30 - (AP) Palace doctors reported today that the King. who underwent a seri- ous lung operation a week ago. coritlnuee to improve. 'rhe medical bulletin said: "The Klnrjs progress continues." It was the briefest of ii bullet- ins issued since the King lost all or part of a lung last Sunday. A crowd of about 2,000 -, rsons prcljed against the high fences in front of Buckingham Palace when the bulletin was posted just before noon. Earlier. the Queen. with Prin- cess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh. had driven through a heavy fog to the Lambeth Palace chapel where the Archbishop of Canterbury. Dr. Geoffrey Fisher, celebrated holy communion. British subjects cluster at all hours about the ornate iron fence enclosing the forecourt of Buck- lll'!llillll Pnlace. All sorts of persons. humble and distinguished. gather in a spont- Coming Events "Buying Timothy Seed daily. G. 0. Green, Emerald. "Dance. Forest Bill Hall. Wed- nesday. Oct. 3rd. ""1-iot chicken supper and dance. Kelly's Cross Hall. Wed- nesday. Oct. 3. "Reserve October 24th for Hot Chicken Supper. Bingo and Dance at Tracadie Hall. "store closed Wednesday. stock taking. W. '1'. Lllll. wheat- in IUVCI. - (AWN. -' "Ladles Aid chicken supper. New Glasgow hall postponed un- til further notice. "Kinkora Hall, dance Klnltora night, October ilih. come to the Hall. Monday "Hot turkey dinner at Fred- arlcton Friday evening. Oct. 5. Please note change of date. "Dance at the home of Alphon- sus Peters, Bedford Station, Mon- day. October lst. Burke's orch- estra. ”Shur-Gain Amateur Caval- cade. Harrington Hall. Brackley Point Road. Thursday, October 4, 3 p.m. "Dance. st. Peter's Legion Hall every Monday night from 9.30-1.00. Webster's Orchestra. Admission 50 cents. "hr Snapshots that will not fade mail your Films and Nega tivea to Garnhum Photo Studios Charlottetown. "Dance. chicken and Ham sup- per. Orwell Cove Hall. Tuesday. October 2nd. sponsored by Women's Institute. "Tonight. South Rustlco Hall, the outstanding Movie "Come in the tstable." Don't miss it. It's a mus . "Come to hot chicken supper in Pownal. Wednesday. Oct. 3rd. sponsored by the Ladies Aid. Supper 5 to 9 p.m. "Les McDonald will be hauling cream to wiltshii-e Factory on Wednesday only. commencing Wed- nesday, October 3rd. "Chicken supper in Springfield Hall. Wednesday. October 8rd. be- ginning at 5 o'clock. Admission: Adulia 75o. Children 50c. Proceeds for nail. "Nova Sootia's Five. featuring l'ha Bourgeault Family and Joe ways. guitlr Artist. Crapaud Hall, Ilondny. October fit. 8.30 r. M. Sponsored by Crapaud Branch P. I. 1. Libraries. "Burl!!! Live Fowl and Chicken Monday to Friday noon. every week. We weigh and pay at your Yard. Get our price before selling. Phone collect for pick up service. I. J. ilcnougaii. Vernon. "Old Time Flddllng and Stop Dancing Contest in St. Peter's Bay Holy Name Hall Wednesday. Oct. 3ld. with masquerading contest- ants; lotrles received at the door. Time 8.80. "Poultry Wsntsd. Loading iivs fowl and chicken weekly for that canadian and axmvrlcan markets We give you a pick up service and mi: and npey on farm. Paytwg mark limes. Write or a 83 day. 1514-82 niuit Gniral I: a 4! Poultry ate: . 3': drags: "street. ciiarlo:i;l- aneous but silent demonstration of the love Britons bear their royal family. Explains Feelings A woman in the crowd, who might have been a maid in a fine home. iumbled for words to explain why she was hanging around in a dismal rain. A "The King and Queen. well they are something like your father and mother." she said. "They are al- ways there and somehow they are the head of the family. or course there is nothing personal about it and the King doesn't know I'm alive. But if I did meet him I know he would be the perfect English gentleman. kind. toncerned and interested in whether I get my pension." The King's illness is the first topic of conversation throughout the land. The BBC is being scolded round- ly in letters to newspapers because it has not been broadcasting med- lcal bulletins instantly. Crowds at Buckingham Palace telephone all over town when a new bulletin is posted. The BBC hasn't explained but delays appar- ently have been due to reluctance to interrupt programs on the air. Satui-day's bulletin said: "Six days have now elapsed since the operation on the King. This has been a period free of complic- ations. His Majesty is gaining strength daily." Another sign of growing optim- lam was Princess Margaret's de- parture Saturday for Scotland. She told lnqulrers about the King's health before she left for balmoral: "it is all very good news." Says Satire Lung Removed The Sunday Express said today that the King had his entire left lung removed in last Sunday's op- eration. The paper quoted no source for this information. The operation was officially described as one for "lung resection," and palace spokes- men withheld all further details. The Sunday Express. publishing what it called "the full story of the anxious week," said'the King recovered consclousne Monday morning and "suddenly opened one eye and made a joke." The Queen had seen her hus- band every morning since the op- eration and once sat by his bed- side until the early hours of the morning. when she first saw him Customs. Excise Ass'n Meeting SAINT .lOHN. N. B.. Sept. 30-- fCP)-F. T. Dorcy. St. Stephen. N. B.. was elected president of the New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island branch of the Customs and Excise OffIcers' As- sociation at Its annual meeting here Saturday. He succeeded W. L. McPhee. Saint John. About 125 members attended the one- day session. Other officers are first vice- prosldent. J. A. Neilson. Saint John: a ' vice-president C. P. McKinley, Mcncton: third vice- presldcnt W. N. Stafford. Fred- ericton: secretary Leo J. Garey. Saint John. and treasurer F. F. Dykemnn. Saint John. Ext-ceutivc Officials-See Grave Danger Of Armed Clash By Norman Aitatedter UNITED NATIONS. N. Y.. Sept. 80-(C-P)-United Nations medi- ation of the explosive Iranian oil dispute was discussed by worried U. N. diplomats at urgent confer- ences today as a new way to set- tle the problem which Britain calls a threat to world peace. Sir Gladwyn Jebb. Britain's lop delegate to the U. N., cut short a vacation and flew today from London, expecting to arrive here in time for an urgently-convened session of the U. 5. Security coun- cil at 3 p. in. EDT Monday. Britain requested the session to hear her demand that the council over-rule Iran's order expelling by Oct. 4. (50 British technicians from the Abadan refinery area of the 1.-i00,000.000 Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. Iran's ailing Prime Minister. Mohammad Mossadcgh. will fly to New York to argue Iran's case if the council decides it is com- petent to deal with the problem. Officials in Tehran said today that Mossadegh-Iwho falnts and weeps in the midst of parlia- mentary speeches but displays an iron will on the oil issue-will make his final decision on the trip after Monday's council sees- on In the face of Britain's com- plaint to the U. N.. opposition deputies in the Iranian Mailis (parliament) today threw their support behind Mossadegh in a solid patriotic front-dor the dur- action of the U. N. debate. For the first time in three weeks, oppos- ition deputies attended he Maills. dropping the boycott hich pre- vented 'Mossadegh's getting a vote of confidence. Officials here expressed belief that Britain's move to bring the dispute before the U. N. narrow- ly-and perhaps only temporarily -averted an Anglo-Iranian clash which might set off a war in the Middle East. Truce Talks llemain Stalled TOKYO. Oct. 1 - (Monday) - UP) - Gen. Omar Bradley, pre- paring for a flying visit to Korea. expressed hope Sunday that an armistice still could be achieved but conceded that it depends on the Communists. The Reds remained silent on the Allied proposal of last Thurs- day to move the truce talks from Communist-held Kaesong to no- man's land. near the village of Songhyon six miles to the south- east. . Whether negotiations will end if the Reds reject that proposal "will depend on the nature of their an- siver." Bradley said. The chairman of the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff. here for conferences with Gen. Mat- thew B. Ridgway, made his re- marks at a press conference. The Reds suspended the truce talks Aug. 23. charging Allied violation of the Kaesong neutral acne. AMPUTEE5 MEET MONTREAL. Sept. 30 -(CP)- New devices designed to help amputees were demonstrated Sat- urday by the 300 membe s of the members include G. A. MacDon- aid. Charlottetown. War Amputations of Canada holding a five-day convention here. Atom Bomb M. LONDON. Sept. 30 -(AP)- Royal Air mrce fighters battled American heavy bombers today all across the industrial English mid- lands in a mock air war testing Britain's defenses against atom bomb planes. This was the second phase of the nine-day "lixercisc Pinnacle." the larlut air manoeuvres of this type ever staged in Britain. No results of the day's tests will be known until the umpires have worked out what would have been the losses on both sides if the bat- tle had beeniraal. Across the Channel, fog delayed another aspect. of the sstem Allics' mock air war. " erciea Cirrus." The biggest air battle was over Brussels. which was twice. "at- tacked" from high level by no Redland bombers in successive waves. Jet fighters rose to head them off. Paris also was "attack- ed." but headquarters described Mock Air War Tests U.K. Defences other phases of the exercises were carried out over Germany. the Netherlands, and Northwestern France. . In the "raids" on the English Midlands the American bombers. screened by diversionary "attacks". burst through the outer screen of defences but were hotly engaged by the fighter craft. Earlier a force of R.A.P'. heavy bombers had at an assault on llpndon. ADI”, Germany. Sept. Ii -(AP)- Allied troops today ended three days of manoeuvres testing their ability to press an attack against a mock foe who had seised the country east of the Rhine. The Bench-directed exercise ieam'ei up more than 100,000 American and rrench soldiers with supporting elements from the Belgium and Dutch in a myth- ical assault acrom West Europe's great river banter against the east. German laboi-' service units inan- riod amphibian "duxks" which carried troops in assault crossings the defence as particularly good. of the broad and busy Rhine. OEIDARS. Que., Sent. 80-(OP) -Six persons. including five members of one family. were drowned today when their auto- mobile was sidcswiped by another car and plunged into the Soulanges Canal. Drowned were: Alcide Marier, 45-year-old farm- er from nearby St. Fereol. His children. Pierrette, 18. Ger- main. 11, Monique, 12. and Louise. 1 Antonin Dault, 60, a. neighbor of the Marlers. It was feared at first that Mrs. Marier also was in the car, but she had remained home with two other children. All passengers in the car were on their way to church here when the accident occurred about 9 a. I'll. Cedars is 41 miles west of Mont- real. The Marier car was just clear- ing ihe St. Fereol bridge when it was sldeswlped by Arthur Sparks' auto. The latter, from Gait. Ont... was riding with his wife. Neither was injured. Six Drowned While En Route To Church A Marier lost control from the impact and his car careened off the road. squeezing between the bridge and a steel-pipe fence. It fell into 19 feet of water. Bridge watchman Arthur Chartrsnd telephoned the district coroner. Dr. A. B. clement of Cedars. who called in Provincial Police. A diver was sent down and the car vi1.s recovered. Mrs. Marier told police that Dault joined her husband and children on their ride to Cedars to attend morning mass. She stayed at the farmhouse to care for her two other children, aged l0 and 6. Dr. Clement. a friend of the Marlers who attended the birth of all their children. was the first to advise Mrs. Marier of the tragedy. - The coroner would be held. In the past the canal has taken a heavy toll in similar accidents and work was started last year to said an inquest build a high cement wall along its bank. Souris Soldier Among Group From Korea VANCOUVER. Sept. 30 - (CP)- Twenty-five members of the Princess PatricIa's Canadian Light Infantry were scheduled to return to Can- nda tonight by plane from Tokyo. Veterans of the Korean war. they are returning home for parntroop training at Riv- crs. Mnn. Heading the group is Maj. H. D. P. Tlghe of Victoria. 8. C.. who commanded the Patriclas in battle during the compassionate leave earlier this year of Lt.-Col. Jim Stone of Salmon Arm. B. C. All will get 30 days' leave before reporting to Rivers. Others returning include: Cpl. J. E. Bcaudoin. Lac Ste. Marie. Que.; Pies. R. J. Crofion, Sydney. N. S.; W. l. Goodsin. Hillaboro. N. B.: J. W. Paquot. Souris. P. E. 1.: and E. G. Rogers, Bathurst. . B Three Killed In Truck-Car Accident WAKEFIELD. Que. Sept. 30 - (OP)-Three persons. including a four-year-old boy. were killedand six others escaped with minor in- juries Saturday night in a spect- acular triple car-truck crash in the Mnniwaki lllghway just north of here. Dead are My Mccooeye. four- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mccoocye of Ottawa. who was killed instantly and Mr. and Mrs. Sylvia LePage of Eastview. 0nt.. who died in hospital. All were passengers in a sedan driven by Sylvia LePage. only other person in the car. six-yeah old Diane LePage, escaped unhurt though the car was demolished. suffering shock were wllliam Moore. brother of Mrs. l.ePage. and Mrs. Vincent Lascelle. sister of Mr. Lerage. who were in a truck following the car at the time of the crash. Shaken up but otherwise unhurt. were Ernest LcPage of Lao Si. Merle. Que. driver of the second truck and Mr. and Mrs. Henry chauss: of Lao st. Marie. passengers in his truck. , Wakefield is about 20 miles north of Ottawa. Two Priests Killed in Quebec Crash Qunaac. Sept. so -(oP)- Two prominent Roman catholic priests and a 15-year-old Quebecer died today after their automobile smashed into a tree on the out- skirts of Quebec. The dead: Abba Jules Roy. 57. pastor of Quebec's Sacra Occur parish. rather Marc Liissirr. superior of Quebec community of the cm. of at. Vincent De Paul. Jean-Marc Gimras. 15. I pas- senger 'in Abba Roy's can Labor Platform For Election Announced SCARBOROUGH, Yorkshire. England. Sept. 30 - (AP) - The Labor Party pledged tonight it would work for world peace. cut the cost of living and carry for- ward eocialism in Britain. In its platform for the Oct. 25 general election campaign, the party's 2'1-member executive coni- mltter healed its recent split over Britain's rearmament and unanimously approved this pro- gram: 1. "To secure peace." 2. "To maintain full employ- ment and increase production." 3. "To bring down the cost of living." 4. "Po build a just society." "Only with .2 Labor Govern- ment can the British people achieve these aims," the plat- form said. The 1,800-word document was released here on the eve of the .party's annual conference of some l,500 delegates and party leaders. The platform was roughed out during the last two days by party leaders. includlngiAneurln Bevan. who quit Prime Minister Attlee's cabinet last spring. Bevan pro- tested that the United States was dragging Britain into an arms -program so big that it would hurt the welfare state. Threat Brings Unity The threat; of the loss of power to the now-favored Conservatives has brought unity-at least on the surface-to the two factions in- side the Labor Party. "Our first aim is to save the peace of the world,'' the platform said. The size of Britain's i:i,'l00.000.- 000 thrcc-year dcfencc program -was not mentioned in the party (Continued on Page 5 Cali? Peron Tightens Grip (in Argentina BUENOS AIRES. Argentina. Sam. 30 - (AP ) -- President Peron tightened his grip on the country Saturday, six weeks in advance of the presidential elec- tion. as s result of the ill-starred military revolt announced by the govemmen-t Friday. The presidential press disclosed without explanation the resignation of the Navy Min- ister. Admiral Enrique B. Garcia, 50, and his replacement by a navy captain. Anibal O. Olivieri. the former under-secretary. it was not known whether the Minister quit under pressure or as a gesture of self-blame be- cause some naval air officers were reported to have joined in the revolt-a revolt which the news- paper El Laborlsta said resulted in one killed and seven wound- ed. The socialist and radical part- ies. chief political opposition. reported several of their prom- inent membcrs were under ar- real. Peron described the plot- ters as traitors and cowards. Heavy guards were placed around all embassy offices and residences to prevent rebellious otflcera from taking refuse un- der diplomatic immunity. The plot. which Peron said aimed at the assassination of himself and his glamorous wife. Eva, son-nee to have strengthen- ed his hand for re-election Nov. lil Allies Seiz-e Two Heartbreak Ridge Pealts by John Randolph U. S. l!iIGll-ITH ARMY HEAD- QUARTERS, Korea, Oct. 1 - (Monday)-(AP)-Fanatical bands of Korean Reds slashed inio Ai- lied lines Sunday night during a howling wlndstorm on the East- ern Korean front. They were hurled back in sharp local actions. The Communist probing attacks on the slopes of "Heartbreak Ridge” following Allied seizure of two strategic peaks on the cent- ral and eastern fronts earlier Sunday. The Allied drive was the initial phase of an autumn oficnsive. AP correspondent Stan Cnrtrr reported from the eastern front that the Korean Reds struck at American and French positions on the bloody slopes north of Yangzii in a continuing struggle for "llP'dTl.l)1'CBl( Ridge." Communist ariillery and mor- iai' fire on lilicnrtbi-oak Ridge" increased Sunday night after slackening off for several days. The R..O.K S. hit the peak from two sides and battled most of the day. Carter placed the action west oiiHcartbr:akRldge" where fighting had slacizencd during the- last four days. The pcak aver- looks a Communist supply and troop concentration point. Communist trafifc into the buildup areas was evidently in- creasing. The Far East air forces reported some 1.400 Communist vehicles were spot- ted in North Korea Saturday night after more than 5,M0 had' been destroyed or dam- aged during the last week. The air force also listed seven locomotives destroyed. 14 dam- aged; 55 railroad cars destroy- ed and 420 damaged. - The North Korean communique. broadcast by Moscow radio. as- serted that the Chinese and Kor- office ' can Reds "on all fronts continue to repel the fierce attacks of the -"(Continued on Page .50-tiolf)-IV BON-N. Germany. Sept. 30 - (AP) - Talks on a German peace contmct resume here tomorrow with Chancellor Konrad Aden- auer holding a hand full of aces. The three Western high coin- missioncrs and the Chancellor are to have their second conference since the Washington Big-Three decision to negotiate an agree- ment that will remove most oc- cupation controls from West Germany. Since the foreign ministers told their high commissioners to go ahead with the negotiations. several important new factors have come up which have strengthened Adenaucr's hand and may lead to long delays unless the three Allies are ready to make some big concessions. Last Monday Adcnaucr told included the .provislon man soldiers for the army. in the intervening week. the Germans and the Allies have. by mutual agreement, been fight- llpped about the sovereignty-db fence contribution deal which is being arranged. But it has become evident that was the Western terms. which European enemy, inflicting heavy losses on ,0 of Ger-. Paving Cont A contract valued at approxi- mately 3140.000 has heen awarded to L. G. Rawding Ltd. of Bar- wick, N. S. for the paving of the streets of Slemon -Park at R. C. A. P. Station. Summcrside. An as- phalt mix will be used similar to that used on provincial high- ways and work is expected to get under way in about a week. This contract also includes side- walks and driveways to the houses and it. will amount in over two miles of paving. The company will set up its own mix- ing plant in the vicinity of the airport and as soon as this is done the work will he proceeded with. This is the some company which was earlier given a con- tract. for landscaping and build- ing walks and drives about. the Slemon Park school. This latter job is just about completed. The hard surfacing of wltli the laying of sidewalks nnd driveways will be a grant im- provement to the area and will mcnn much next spring to the people living there. Last sprint: all of them got much too well acquainted with Island mud so the announcement of the paving contract will be welcomed by all the married personnel and their families.-S. Use Synthetic iridium In Cancer Treatment- THE HAGUE, Sept. 30-(Reu- tersi-Nctherlands scientists have perfected a synthetic radium sys- tern of oancer'treaiment by the use of radio-active cobalt, it was reported Saturday night. The new method 'wllI soon re- place radlum treatment at Dutch hospitals. Radioactive cobalt possesses all the qualities of radium and is an improvement on it. said. Dr. G. J. Van der Plaals, Dutch atom iscientist. One gram of radium costs about 522,000. The same amount f the now substance will cost nhollt. 530. Van Der Pinata said. , German Leader Holds Aces In Peace Talks erous as the German govern- ment would like. While the Americans are urg- ing haste to get 250.000 German soldiers lined up in the common front against aggression, the oth- er Allies are not so enthusiastic and in the opinion of qualified observers events have combined to give Adenauer these "aces": 1. The three Allies themselves are not agreed on all the points on which they are to negotiate with the Germans. 2. Over-optimistic interpreta- tion was put on the Allied Wash- ington communiquc in Bonn, so that Adcnauer can tell the Allies their proposals will. unless mod- ified. be a disappointment to the German people. 3. The German ex-soldiers now have a powerful voice through a new association claiming millions of supporters. 4. The Russians have caused confusion in West Germany by the offer of national unity from their East German Soviet Govern- ment. ' 5. The powerful Socialist Party the Allies are not being as gen- is still opposed to German par- ticipation in Western defence on the terms the Allies have offered. LE'PHiBRiLDGE. Alin., Sept. 30- (CP)-Southern Albertals crop of cannery corn is a s2oo.ooo fail- ure, cannery operators said to- day. Three thousand of the 3.600 acres in cannery corn this crop year have been written off as unfit for canning following last week's snowstorm and killing il'08l. r Operators said the failure of the Southern Alberta crop is certain to produce a shortage of canned corn in Western Canada. They said the price likely will rise sharply when canned corn is shipped in from Ontario to fill gaps in grocersl shelves. Operators of the four canner- iea in the Lethbrldge district said they got. in from five to 20 per cent of their scheduled pack from corn harvested before the storm struck. The crop failure is a hard blow to Southern Alberta growers who had banked on a recon! yield of high-quality corn. The cabr- ies had contracted for the corn at 815 a ton and the crop had promleed to yield four tons in Alberta Cannery Corn Crop Reported Failure the acre. Many farmers did not even get a start on harvesting their crop. Although the crops had been lush prior to the turn in the weather, they had been backward because of the wet summer. Most fortunate of the three cannrries was the Cornwall plant' at Taber. where ii more ad- vsnced crop enabled it to start. packing four days ahead of its competitors. It managed to get in about 20 per cent of its an- ticipated pack. The cannery will close Monday or Tuesday, its season's work completed. The Broder Canning Company cannery and quick-freeze plant in Leihrbridge ended its run Satur- day after processing only be- tween five and lo per cent of its scheduled pack. More than 90 per cent of its contracted crop was lost in last. week's atom. Hardest hit was the Alberta Canning Company. with canner- iss at Maecrsth and Brooks. Man- ager T. C. Peterson said the com- pany is wrlting off 5 per cent. of its allocated Moo acres as un- fit for canning. It will close down tomorrow or Tuesday the streets in Slemon Park along- rt-g fact Let At RCAF Slemon Park 27th Brigade Gets Ready To Leave Far West Germany Sept. so -(CPI The advance guard of Canada's 27th Brigade Force is gettinz ready to move to West Germany. to the Hannovor area, about 150 miles west of Berlin. This was indicated by Defence Minister claxton Saturday in a statement announcing that can- adian army "exploratory recon- naissance parties" are going to leave shortly to "inspect possible locations for the 27th Brigade Group." "Inspections will be carried out in the Hannovcr area." Mr. Clax- iton said. I Previous reports were that the ,6.000-man iorcc likely will start ,movinq ovcrsc-as in November. with the whole brigade establish- ed ln Europe by December. It will be linked with British troops in Germany to serve as part of Gen. Eisenhower's West- ern European forces. In addition. Canada is sending 11 sabre jet fighter squadrons for a Canadian air division to be grouped with American forces in Europe. The first of these divis- ions will leave for England with- in the next few weeks. OTTA WA. SIDES OP flit giduntuf sirr if 0 . HALIFAX. Sept. 30 -(GP)-Oh ficial forecasts issued tonllhlv by the Dominion Public Weather 0!- fice here and valid until midnight. Monday. Synopsis: Warmer air will move over the Marltimes Monday. and most res- ions will have a fine day with at- ternoon temperatures near 60. However, a band of showers in Western Ontario will Rich 1110 mouth of the St. Lawrence by Monday evening. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island-Clear with a few cloudy intervals. wamier. Light winds low and high Monday at Charlottetown 33 and 58. High tide today at 10.55 A. M- and 11.08 P. M. Sun rises today at soc A. M. Ind sets at 5.55 P. M. Summersldc tide eighteen mil)- utes later than Charlottetown. M.('.A. AIR SERVICE Dally Except ” i' . Loavc Charlottetown for Mcncton 5:30 A.M.: 11:20 A.M.: 4:50 P.M. Ar. Charlottetown from Mcncton Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgow -' Halifax :40 A.lil. New Glasgow & Sydney. :50 P.iil. New Glasgow & Halifax. Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax 11:00 AM. from New Glasgow l Sydney. 4:20 l'.M. from New Glasgow and Halifax. Chlrlottetown - Sydney flights daily except Sunday. SUNDAY ONLY Charlottetown for Mcncton 7 1 Lv. 11:20 Ar. Charlottetown from Mcncton 5:55 M. BOBDEN - CAPE TOIMINTINIG PERRY SERVICE Dally i Standard Time Leave Borden leave C. T. 0:10 A.M. :10 AH. 10:85 A.M. 10:88 AM. 1:00 P.M. 1:00 EM. 2:40 P.M. 2:40 EM. 6:80 RM. (.80 EM. 1:80 P.M. 7:80 P.M. 0:00 l'.M. 900 RM. 10:80 P.M. 10:80 EDI. WOOD ISLANDS - CAIIIOU FERRY SERVICE (Standard Time) IA-ave Wood Islande- Prince Neva-l A. M., 1 P. H. Chan. A. - 1 A, II. 4 P. M. Leave Caribou- WI90F.!'.!-135-Halli