5 MAXIMGV‘ OI A MERE MAN v cherleteaecwa Guardian, he gusts; fluelllal. lauded Ill‘! NAPLES WITHIN SIGHT 0F ALLIED hhhlh RIB Male Workers in A and B Industries Labor leader Supports F. ll. R. TORONTO, Sept. 20 — (GP) — pun support for President Roose- velt. was advocated today by S. H. Dalrymple, President of the United Rubber Workers of America (C.I. . in his presidential address to the eighth annual convention of me Union here. Aftor assertinu that "we are go- Lng to be confronted with a nat- ional election in 1944", Mr. Dalrym- ple said labor had benefited un- der the Present administration b the no of the Wagner Ac, socia Security Laws and ‘legislation. "During the next year we have a pofound duty t0 perform. Cer- nly we cannot afford to sit idly by like we did in the last election and allow a number of progres- tive minded Congressmen and Benstors to be ousted and reac- tionarfee elected to take their place. “Neither can we afford fo fail to give undivided and full support to our Commander-ln-Chief. I-ion- orable Franklin Delano Roosevelt." other Five Cnt. Men up 0n Robbery Charge CHATHAM. Ont" Sept. M-(OP) Jive Windsor, Ont. men today were remanded for a wee-k when W; appeared before Magistrate I. . Craig on charges of. armed robbery 8134.000 holdup of the Royal Bank of Canada at nearby Wheatley. Sept. i0. Pleas and election were reserved. The five men were: Allan M. Baldwin. Franklin Smith. Peter —Devlin, Leo Dubroy and Bernard Gates. LONDON‘ STOCK MARKET LONDON. Sept. 20 — (AP) stock Market activity increased to- dav and prices were generally Ilrm. Industrial: finished selective- Iv higher. especially brewery and textile issues. Home rails were Ilfifldv and oils were ill demand. itubhcr and tea shares eased. ‘Kaf- .ir Development shares advanced ‘hflfhlv on Cape Town buying. COMING EVENTS -g- "Talkles-Morell Tuesday.“ m m "Talkies-St. Peters Wednesday. 9- i B-Iil . "Talkies - Murray River Thurs- day- oal-al "Dance, Corran Bonn Hall Wed- nesclay 22nd. ll-la-zl. "Talkies-Eldon Friday. a m m "Fe d O ts . G 1 d: Boyle. " '°""'° ""..".l'-%I‘. __ "Dance Seven Mlle Bay, Wed., ° Pt. 22. Il-ZIJI. "Bulk Wh t arri . Book new. moms: BFABOYIGII.‘ 9-18-108- "Robert MacKenale will be hllllihl cream on Wednesdays hence forth. o-ao-al. "Pant S Monti." all‘. "Elbrnffiiiirtb W. M. S. 9 M. "Chicken auplper and dance Vernon River all Wednesday, Pt. I Supper starts at Goliath” "Chick , Bin d Dance lfifr-IWIEL i-f ‘,1 Wniexcl- Wdly. Septomber 22nd. o-c-ll. "Chicken Supper, Sin o and ghee St. Andrew's l-Iail, educa- v. deownber 22nd. o-al-ll. “Souris Hospital dance Wednes- ily 22nd September. Improved In . Two orchestras. Refresh- ments sold. 0- . "Burial lim we number feeder m“ mfitky Elllltgfllllé w: . I .4380‘... noel-e. o-ao.al “Wanted to buy live d d seed alums and ml. lilylnl’ w; mullet Prices. Island Cold Storall - XM- e-ae-el. i “Dance in Iknprald nail leotember nth. sore Am ‘M? Carr owl's... a r. Bingo “leaner. Chicken eu Rum” . Friday. by Mrs. ohn Mc- 40-21-23 are Frozen OTTAWA, Sept. 20 — (OP) _ New control meelurq to keep em- ployees cf high priority industries‘ at their present jobs were announ. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1943 HIS!!! New Labor C Covers Prince Edward! lhhhhl Island Llllejlle Dew lllhmh 10 ontrol Measures To Have German Shipping Suffers at Ilande 0f Allied ilirmen By GLADWIN HILL “d h" “d” b7 bu”! M15155" Associated Press Staff Writer Mitchell. UONDON, Sept. 20-(AP)—-A n. hi." r . .. “many . .-. .. ‘med which “ "- ~ * m M, ' ~ enemy ship "fflfllihe" male workers in "A" ing has been makina lhcreasing and “B" priority indust ' , require lluuads in Germany's war produc- that men in these categories now may not be released by their em- ployees and may not give nqtloe of separation their employers without first obtaining the written permission m’ a. Selective service officer. Effective Today The order is effective today. The Minister's announcement said the two top priorities include, "all war industries and essential civilian services, including the delivery of fuel in cities, food processing and meat packing plants and many Other services." The publication of newspapers and the dissemination of news are also included in the which come under the order. No estimate was available of the number of workers who come un- der the governmenfls latest man- power action, but officials said the effect would be "very widespread". It is understood a further anoun- ccment will be made givln! more detail of the types of employment which fall within the provisions of the order. The Labor Department said ills- tructions belng issued to Selective Service Officers will permit“ the issuance of the necessary permit to change employment “in cases where obvious hardship or unfair- ness would result from refusal to fic grant a permit." Explains Action Explai ing the action, Mr. Mit- chell sai i "Many thousands of firms fall within categories "A" and "B”. While every effort will be made to avoid imposing hardship on any individuals, the need of preventing avoidable labor turnover in Ind\ls- priorities c tion, it was disclosed tonight. This campaign is waged with mines sown from the air. While large-scale air attacks against the German air force and Nazi industry have been holding the limelight in recent weeks. the unseen campaign has proceeded methodically by day and hlllht "0111 British bases with both British and American planes participatinfl- Nazi vessels are being torpedoed. bombed, strafed and sunk by mines sown from the air. The forays have been intensified until some dozen croft were sunk and no fewer than 60 set afire or damaged in the last week, a I which the Nazis. if they followed the line of their propaganda reports in the Dust. would magnify to a bis "W"! cu . The attacks are unfolding largely along coastal routes. in the Baltic Sea, and among the Scandinavian Straits-routes as important to the Nazis now as trans-ocean shipping is to the Allies. _ With her highly self-contained continental production system. Germany can exist on small lm- ports from overseas, but continent- al materlals must be moved 1mm mines and other sources to her factories. A large portion of the burden of her over-strained railroads, bombed, shot up and sabotaged by h" 9h- emies ,has fallen on coastal traf- Thc campaign against thlsutraf- fic is what the Allies call sub- marines of the air" attacking. All main branches of thc RAF‘- hnd been partlci ating in this at- tack for some tme. flhli TBCBMIY American heavy bombers have been helping along the campaign dur- ing their operational flights. On nights when R. A. F. heavy bombers can't fly, anti-shipping ac- tivities flourish because clouda give lust the cover planes need for un- _(f_7_ont1rlu_ed_on Page 9 Col, 2) ngerved mine laying. Soviets Flank Nazi Base at Smolensk IDNDON. Sept. 20—-(AP>——Tho Red Army overran more than 1.1.40 villages and towns today. iiahklhs the German central anchor at Smolensk and cutting the Kiev. Chernlvog highway and the railway into the Crimea amki signs that the enemy was abandoning the Caucasus. A Moscow also dis- closed tonight a vast Red Army wheeling movement aimed at ' Cherkasy, on the middle Dnieper southeast of Kiev. in an effort tu trap hundreds of thousands of en- emy troops in the river bend. One Red Army unit was within 40 miles of the Cherkasy area. key to the extensive rail network in the bend. East of the bend the Red Army reached n point only eight miles from Melltopol after snapping the Crimean escape railway between Ba orozhe and Dnepropehrovsk an ca. turin a town only l5 miles from t e Dn eper, said the broad- cast communique l ed by the Soviet Monitor. __ljo_d airmen bugs Black Sea fleet the bulletin said. sank B Gfifmhll minesweeper and three troop barges along the south side of the Tainan peninsula north of recap- tured Novorossisk, indicating an enemy withdrawal from the narrow Caucasian foothold. Inventor Sues Ford Motor Co. DETROIT, September 20—(AP)-— Grant C, Brown. Pontiac, Mich., in- ventor acting as his own attorney, named the Ford Motor Company defendant today in a patent in~ irln ment suit for Sl,500.000.000— the argest amount involved in any Court records. Brown's complaint asserted that in 1926 he patented a device for equalizing four-wheel brakes. Ho. notified the Ford Company in 1935, he said, that it had been using thc principles of lris_patent_slnce_l92'7 Nazis Rushing Men to Italy and the Balkans By WILLIAM IMITII WHITE Associated Prue Staff Writer LONDON, Sept. 20—(AP)-—-'I‘he Germans were reported tonight to b4. ruehin 30 divisions. aggre at- ing more an 250.000 men. to v and the Balkans to protect them- selves from the growing Allied men- ace to their southern flank. Twenty-four of the divisions were said to have been dispatched tic the Salkans and the others to tal . These figures came from an in- formant who Is in clendest communication with meurcea in- side Germany. While ey are not subject to precise confirmation. the stood up well against the bac ouid of known facts. The informant said lI of the divisions were drawn from Hitler's strate c reserves behind the Rus- sian ront. while three were taken from Norway and one from i-fol. land. The other l4 were said to be . of substandard quality. made up of youngsters. corivalescents and mid- die-aged men drawn from the in- tclor of Germany. This would brin §3.°l'e5'aF-l'-'#fla‘°.h u... o-il-al troop strength in I divisions, while the forces sent to the Balkans would largely replace the 2'7 Italian garrison divisions lost to l-litler upon Premier Mar» shal Pietro Badoglids surrender. The marshalllng of German strength in the south was going forward urgently at a time when the sea approaches to a Balkan invasion were being steadily cleared of the enemy, During the day the Nazis them- selves acknowledged the loss of Sar- dinla-which could have been a strong barrier between Allied for- ln lower central Europe-a though Sardinia was the fifth island fallen earlier into allied control. British Fleet iew of recent rumors from the Middle East. the German to about it " through the cee based in Africa. and ob ectives it was merely an ev- reported to have been swept up in recent days. Cos, Lords. Samoa and Castellorize in the Aegean having Among the reports coming up from the south was one that the was in the Aegean and this was heard with interest in V th British 9th Army was on tllet mm: tured heights of Sorronfo se blocking their wa as formidable as Vesuvius, rising nearly 5,000 toot Tlflapleal itself. to CID B 8V9 P0350)! QXPOQ and sea or bothrlf the retreating t famous volcano. moves to turn the retrea rentn heights, occupied b may ernu ullu Ebuli plains afforded. With the Islands of Ischla and plains. some 30 miles wide and to by-nass Vesuvius and Allied seizure of By NOLAND NORGAARD (Associated Press War Correspond- ent) A L L I E D riEADQUAR-‘PERS, NORTH AFRICA. Sent. 20—(AP)- Premier Marshal Pietro Badogllo called upon the people of Italy to take up arms against their former German Allies ill active co-o er- ntioll with the United Nations n a proclamation published here today. The Premier's appeal. l‘l effect a declaration of hostilities, was the first official indication from. any source that the Italians m! hi. be accepted as full-fledged Alisa in the campaign to drive the r- mans from Italy. Budoglio declared that "all talk about unconditional surrender (to the Aiilesl is out of date ‘Ihil lr- relevant to the changed conditions of today," adding that "we ll8\(_ intervened decisively against Ger- ; on Page 9, C0lA'6')_ More Cows, More Milk in Canada OTTAWA, Sept. 20—(CP)—- Count not least among war achievements that of Bossy, the cow. Canadians are drinking more milk, and in spite of rationing. thev are using more butter, The precise figures reveal that in July, 104's. the lnilk production per cow per day ill Canada was 22.1 pounds, compared with 20.6 in 1942 and 15.8 In 1930. Not only was each cow giving more milk, but the perccmrlrss oi’ cows milking to the total was high. er—8'i.2 per cent against 83.1 in July. 1942. Reports from dairy correspond- ents received by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics indicated that the cow population is increasing addition of young stock Just coming into maturity. "The health.giving qualities of fresh milk are apparently giving it increased favor," said the Bur- eau. in a report on the dairy situ- ation. "The consumptl of whole milk showed pronounced gains during the month of July as compared with the same month a year a o. and owing to the shift 1n popu a- tlon in industrial areas, the ad- vance in fluid milk sales may be expected to continue." Apart from the incleasedfluid milk consumption, the eau llot- d that the combined output of creamery butter and cheddar cheese in August represented the equivalent of 1,200,000,000 pounds of milk, an increase of about 33.000. 000 pounds compared with the com- bined make in forms of milk for tglgmsoondlnghmohth BLUSSU C NADA Anglo-American forces are within nlnsula over coking the Naple. Bay, but to direct northward advance stands Mount Vesuvius, ount Etna waafln Sicll ect shelf midway between the northern and southern shore; 0g u", Bay. affords a powerful natural anchor for a new Nazi defence line to III"- §IWIIIUYIIOI‘), also in Allied hands, new anles are practicable. There is an arc of flat land there on the Volturno miles more in shore ilelgths are reached. inviting further Allied nmllhihllln ollefiliillll! Naples and outflank the 1W zla from the north. the Gaeta bridgehead would bring troops within 150 miles or less of Rome. It would make shuttle bombing of all Nazi escape routes from the Italian Peninsula to the Po Ilfle In the north a simple matter either from Gull or from Corsica. and Nazi commanders seem lware nf that dan- ger. It may be that the Salerno victory has cracked the whole Italian Peninsula. Italians in War Against Germans By Klrko l. Simpson. Associated mm Was- Analyst. ht of Naples from flu cap- y. In air behind a narrow 110M131 Allied enoirolemcrlt tactics by land divisions fl in; back from the Salerno bridgehead sector attempt a new stand on the slopes of the There is no doubt about that retreat. only about the amount of grounu the Nazis are pre aring to surrender In Italy and about Allied into a rout. f‘ ‘ 5th army patrols without apparent heavy fighting, could have no ot er meaning. prove, however, that Naples itself is tenable by the Nazi high command except for delayin Mount tesuvlus. There is a wider and deeper potcn heall just north of Naples on the shores of Gaeta Gulf than the Sal- evacuation of the bor- DOI Ifllflfflefl fig Ill!- actlon based 0n ill Allied bridle- Proclda off the tip of the Nollie! Allied beach landings above depth before the in- thn invading bases on the shores of Gaetu. by the Allied amphibious 10ft! to fast-paced Allied occupation- Badoglio calls upon people of Italy to take up arms against former Nazi allies. Halifax Played Important Role In Churchill Visit By SYD THOMAS (Canadian Press Staff Writer) HALIFAX, Sept. 20 -- ICPJ — This old new-world seaport has guarded many wartime secrets but perhaps none as significant as it has burstingiy held the last few weelm — the story of Prime Minister Winston Churchill's ar- rival and departure from North American shores during the course cf his recent visit. , Now that the British leader is back in Britain after ills five-week round, of conferences and discus- sions, the story of his Atlantic voyaging can be told. Halifax lays an important and historic roe in that account of the visit that plac- ed Canada on the front (pages of the world for days on on . The Prime Minister arrived here one evenln early 1n August aboard s giant Br tlsh transport. and was immediately placed aboard a waiting special train and whisked off through the night to Levis, opposite Quebec. From there his arrival was an- pounced next morning as he puss- ed into Quebec for his now his- toric conferences with President Roosevelt and other United Nat- ions leaders. Secret We’; Kept. The secret has born wefl kept until now. The general imn-essicll had been that he trr-vclhd by plane. or else directly to Quebec. In fact. some newspapers printed maps showing his route from Britain across the Atlantic and straight to Quebec. The joval "Winnie" left Halifax (Continued on page '1 Col. 3» May Call Arts . 20-— 4GP‘ l‘ “or said Dr. N. A. M. Mac siriont of the "miv Brunswick. In udd l1 students today at the s. fall term. 1' Smooth Sailinq For MI yourBokInq W hen you use 1M have] Students Into Army ' univer- DO l to enter work, Kenzie, pre- ' cf Neiv g U NB rt of thc xprosscrl o lnlon e ' ‘NCIILIPOT. Canuoks Were Right at Ilome In Sicily By DOUGLAS AMARON (Canadian Press Staff Writer) IN ENGLAND. Sept. 20 — (OP) - SiciIy's wind- ing roads bear such s striking re- semblance to England's country lanes that the Canadians. found themselves right at home when they invaded the Italian island. Three years training in south- ern England - difficult terrain from a. point of view in movement —were invaluable to the Canadians in Sicily, Lt-Gen, A. G. Mc- Naughton. Canadian Army Com- mandcr. said when he returned from his visit to the troops in the Mediterranean. Sicilyls towns all seem to be built on hills and tile roads wind around and around until they reach the top. invariably, the General cross-roads are at the tc-p of a mountain, When the Germans destroyed some of the roads, tho Canadians turned to goat tracks—little dot- tcd lines on the map. They couldn't move their equipment over these paths so sent bulldozers ahead to carve out passable highway. Other points from Gen. Mc- Naughtorrs interview with corres- pondents: Most of the equipment used by the Canadians was made in Can- ada. Exceptions were filnae items for which spares had to come from a common pool. In such in- stances Canadlans and British us- ed the same equipment. Some tanks. medical stores and other equipment were lost on the way to Sicily but the Canadians captured Italian material. By the time he left Sicily. Gen. McNaugh- ton said. mplacsments had been received from overseas. Speaking of the Canadians’ health. Gen. McNaughton said he never saw fitter soldiqrs and they are brown as berries. ‘Phere were .1 few cases of sunburn at first but now the men can go all day (Continued on Page l0. Col 7) Japs Feel Sting 0f Allied Planes By C. Yatoe McDaniel Associated Press War Corres- pendent ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, The Southwest Pacific, Sept. 2 (Tuesday) — (AP) - Allied planes calried the main burden of the offensive against the Japanese in the south Pacific today with re- peated attacks against enemy bas- es scattered over a wide area. The scene of greatest activity -is In the northern Solomons wllel-e American bombing squadrons went into their 10th day of sustained at- tack against Nipponese air bases on Bougalnville and Shortland Islands The Monday Allied communique reported thre surprise night raids against Kahlil and Bslllnle followed by a daylight attack on Bnllnlc. In the latest assault on Ballale l4 of 60 Japanese interceptor planes ‘were Ishot down compared with a 'uss cf two Amezican bombers and four ‘ fighters. ‘ In New Guinea the battle against j zhe enemy was carried on bv a .6- ; ton bcmblng raid in the Finsch- ihafen area. 60 miles northeast of the Lae air base captured lost Thursday by Australian and Unl- 'cd States soldiers. Three Japanese '..\i‘ll SIIIDS wwc Jlllk or danlapcd by ofiu-l" lilneri hlFCYRft in New Guinea and Niw Britain waters. ,0. Papers Get Cut in Newsprint WASHINGTON, Sept. 20—(AP) -The war production board toddv announced a five per cent cut In newspapers‘ consumption of news print on Oct. 1 and told publishers throughout the United States that "a further. perhaps lar nlepcl" curtailment is inevitable next veor. W.P.B chairman Donald M. Nelson said that even with the new fourth quarter slash of newsprint in that period will ex- ceed production by 94,000 tons, or about l0 per cent. In a report to Lyle Boren (Dem-Okla», chair- laerve supplies now. the next year. T (Continued on‘ rswTa'c4.l;‘ al v coilsulnhtion representative men of a. House Representatives "subcommittee investigating news- v the newspaper industry's wish. But , he warned that by uslni! lip its re- industry , must run the risk of more drastic usto A radiant personality l‘ s rich benefit within the power of each of MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN bestow upon his day. PAGES Subscription Delivered, 85.00 ll". H.001 other Provinces I ILIJ. $.00. ARMY Wide Effects By WES GA Associated Press W Sept. 20--(AP)—NapIes 5th Army which captured mountains- AII Sardinia was in t Badoglio and chased Ger French Island of Corsica, also appeared utenable. (A United Nations radio broad- cast from Algiers said that the Al- lied penetration of the Salemo area now extended inland l9 miles. The BrliLsh 8th army is Joined "in illll 5lT9h8t " with the 5th, said thc broadcast. recorded by The As- lfs Junction with 1ark‘s 5th army on the churn- ed beaches of Salerno. the British 5th corps to the east captured Gioja, '8 miles lillil-Ild and north- west of Taranto. ext/endin the Al- lied hold on southern It y. A communique issued tonight by the French high command at Allied headquarters said French com- mandos had landed on Corsica to aid French Patriots fighting the Germans there and said the action was progressing favorably. (A German propaganda organ- ization, the international infor- mation bureau, broadcB-st a report that three divisions. including the Canadian lst division, had been moved into the Salerno area. (It named the other two as the U.S. 82nd airborne and the U 3 3rd infantry divisions, and said this bro ht Gen Clark's forces up to l0 div ions. German report said the C lsion had been ordered to the "American wing," of the bridgehead position where it was under “Gen. Clark's command." (This division, or unite of it. believed to have gone into south- rfmiff ‘edIon Sees Benefit In Controlled IEeonomy llere $03115. Que. sept- Z0 — (C?)- Hon. Cyriiie VBIIIEXICOUIW. 1116mm‘? of the Quebec logisiatlve COJIICII 1 and Speclhl BAZIVISOI‘ to Donald Gol- don. Cllnirmnn of the Prices Boardi Isald lll an addlT-‘o llfepamd it)". ' delivery tonight that the war have proven that controlled econ-i omy is superior to economic liberal 1 . ism In obtaining a production more‘ ‘ ndhplCd to real nPPds and in obtain. . . lng a more rational and equitable idlsirlbuiion of products avfliifihlv- . gpenking nt the three day conq volition of La Federation Des, Chambres De Commerce Des Jeun-i cs (Junior Chamber of Commerce.” Mr. Vaiilnncourt said that “with, 1 out this wartime, directed econom_ .i Canada would have ileoll limited by the free play of economic labor. to a much lessor war effort." "Noni essential production would have continued," ho said. “and there would have been incomplete use of industry and manpower and a poorl distribution of products available". "I any that production and buy-I ing restrictions are necessary, be- cause without them the mass 0i the population would lack the necessities of life, especially food products. without them, an enter- prising, rlCll, audacious and egot- istical minority could, without re- gnrd io the increase in prices. even. waste rare essential products and spend money for the luxury of non - essential products." Despite its imperfection. he said. the restricted or directed economy policy of the Prices Board has "helped Canada through the gr ~w- ing difficulties of the past two years. without any permanent ill effects." The loyal observance of this policy is essential to the maln- tnlnance of enonomlc conditions capable of preserving harmony and internal peace." he said. "But transported into times of peace. directed economv BPDPRTR as : print. Nelson said the W.P B. has decided to h Id m. t I t 1o " "W" “°°"‘“Y °I ‘he l!" "l" five per cent? in llifltwcoulfligllflllewnwith “m”- Thi’ w“ h“ “hm” "m" left entirely to themselves, individ- uals. pushed by the enticement of gnin. are incapable of dI-cr-ing their economic activities In a man- ner capable of bringing the great- the consumer. est. good lo the individual and to 5th Army In 15-Mile_l)ush 8th Army in Full Strength at Salerno; LLAGHER ar Correspondent = ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NORTH AFRICA. was within sight and within 12-mile artillery range tonight of the Allied the Sorrento Peninsula. in a 15-mile advance west of Salerno through weakenlng German resistance, dust, heat and he hands of two Italian divisions which acted on orders of Marshal Pietro man elements onto the seven ITIIIGS north which Free French In Battle For Corsica By WEB GALLAGHER. (Associated Press War 0.... pendent) A L L I E D HEADQUARTERS. North Africa, Sept. 20 — (AP)- Freneh Commandos, taking their first active part in the war since Tunisia, have stormed into Cor- sica. w battle side by side with French patriots in an effort. to seize the key Mediterranean is- land Mes than 50 miles from the northern shores of the Nazi-held Italian mainland. it was an- nounced tonllhf- The "French Iligh Command, in announcing the swift, surprise action against the Germans on the turbulent island, which lies directly north of hardinla, de- clared the fighting there had taken "a favorable turn." The new! of the French land- ing, under the very noses of’ the Germans and within rand’! of the Nazi air force in both [Cr-anon and "My. eemc a few hour! after It was announced that Lt.- Gen Mark W. Clark's 5th Army had seized key positions over- looking the Gulf of Naples. “Immediately after the Itauan armlailoe became known Corsican patriots took up the fight against the Germans," the French High Command said in a communique, gm. "French common’ were medintely landed to back up the patrio ." "Events have taken a favorable turn." The communique was signed by Gen. Ilenrl Giraud, Commander- in-(‘hief of French Forces. A mm can? " r, Even blow His own I giiohh ‘tiifiiflul 1 ' Pahcflcay i 4 High tide this afternoon. at 5.2 and tomorrow morning at 4.36. Sun s ts this i rises tomorrow ngglsrxllirxll: 65:6,,’ u‘ ‘ ‘gist quarter moon seotzl. so Bumm id tid 1 than chllletlemwenls m “m” M‘ DAILY AIR. BEIIVI‘ (EXCEPT SUNDAYIL‘ Charlottetown — Surnmerelalo .- Moncto n Leave Charlottetown 7.50 s. m 3 1 "arr- w ‘.' r- . ve . ar o e o l, _ 5.4a p- m. 7.0a n. m,“ '° " " radar srzavlrl I r. a. I.—N. s DAILY lsctubluu sumlnrl Leave Wood Islands - 1.00 a. n anldcll has. 3 p, n; ave _ .- lnlamlip‘: UMmnae H. ...