72%’ The PeoplesPaper NAXIMG OIA MDRI MAN 4-..."- (lovers Prince Edward 4353'». g‘ ~-—--..__.. \ Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody CHARWFTETOWN. CANADA. THURSDAY, JANUARY 1e, 194s British Army Continues Advance Murder Trial Opens In The Supreme Expect More ' Bompotition For ll. S. Goal (Iy Jack Williams. Canadian Press Staff Writer) BYDNEY. N. 8. Jan. l7-(C.P.) u-NOVI Booties coal mines face the possibility of increased competition from United States, and to a less- er extent from Russia and Great Britain, after the war. T. I... Mc- Landcrs, general manager of coal sales for the Dominion Steel and coal Corp. said today before the Carroll Coal Co In the second day of its hearings detailed de- inarket which could afford an ditlonal outlet for Nova. Bootia coal or could maintain the 1989 sales of Nova Sootia mines. To compete with United States coal in this market assistance in the form oi and subventiona to meet high transportation costs -possibl_v on a greater scale than was paid by the Federal Govern- ment before the war-would be rc- uuired. ~ In‘ 1B3 mini . IIJU fonfltfg" Should the min Ihtll seemi- tlolsa be wi ed out that entire market woud be and auction “cud rise ins g more u compete w Ame an of: in the home Maritime market. "The. industry would languish and die. oi that there can be no flqilltht." Mr. Mchanders said. producing count hat has-not asssted its coal in- dustry." This statement. he said. applied to Euro an countries and to the United totes where assistance was given in the forrn of price in- creases. “We have an obligation to be as self-supporting as we can." he con- tinued. ‘When we have done that fioeaila foaii of’ ' Coming Events “leading dressed hogs Frlda. Mtfluison and Boyle. l-l7-gi "Car oi Screened l due to Arrive January 22nd. nton Jen- kins. Vernon. l-lQ-zi "Bl-lying live and creased coul- utv. Ply-ins lop marker. prices. ls- land Cold Storage Ltd. ll-17-ti. time dance School. Pri- a good old come to Kelly's Cross l-17-2l. lily. January 10th. “Dance. Lltt!c Pond l-lall. Tucs- div night. January 23rd. i-la-li. _ "Load Hogs at Hunter Riv- er overly day till noon. Borden Biiinal . l-ll-IT-ll-Bl. "Card Parity: and Dance in gran-us Ball iday ma, starti-rg - Under W. I. l-l’! . "Annual Meet l" ‘ Dis- trict scarlet Chs at Csaeud. January 20th at P. M. I l - ilon of officers. l-i'l- "Mceilng of the West River fifzigbfirn Assoeiixsiticrl‘ at lsenneth ma. ' m m ‘Y’ f.";“‘§f-;. "W still have a uusntity of '52‘ ?.‘.’.‘.‘.°°“.‘£l'l.i..‘.l.'..°.‘l“°'.ti.l."°°ie ma. m; m,“ _, , . lottetown. g o‘ an 0° 191;? "m, __ u ban m. lint until i180 Green. "Loading hogs at Fredericton. rmlviimuflreynuaetyhfldineixnthhlg "WI. ‘ D. ieslie MacDowelli u u hogs at Al- from noon . fence chiefs were viewed in 2i. 6N7! after the M Court Before a eourtrouu packed te overflowing, Mrs. Florence Eliza- beth McNeill went on trial in the Su reme Court y rday before Chef Justice Thane A. Campbell and a ury for the murder oi her husban William (Ryan) McNeill on Nov. 1t last. Crown witnesses were d when the Court at 10:30 this momin . On the o ingl o Court yes- terday mo g t e Chief Justice asked the aefiiéseddwllilether sine had counse o en er an u on receiving a negative reply. staged that under such ‘ cunlstan it was usual for the Court to appoint s Junior member of the Bar to de- time“? £°i’1“i.°.“2l .i“?"’°..'§i' “m” r. . . e e en her at the preliminary hearing, and there- fore was familiar with the case, thcnélhgef Justllccflsaigq‘ M1; Bell wo e ap n . e efend- ant. would trill- hsve the benefit of an ‘ ‘ cc Considers time was taken in selecting a ‘wry as there were wventy- wo c hangs léy the de- enee and four by e rown. Af- er th selection of the jury and thc al%ntlnent of Lyman Tre- mere. mpton, as foreman. Mr. G. R. Holmes opened the case for the Crown. John Moore. barber at 118 Rich- mond Street, was the first witness and stated William McNeiil had come into his shop between 7 and 8 o'clock on. the evening of Nov. 14 last and had had his hair cut. Deceased appeared sober and his health “all right to me.” Wit- ness saw deceased at his ‘shop eke‘- flwfll 3r“ .. QVIII t e ’h Pdd? deceased‘ m he was going home to have a bath. Cross examined by Mr. Bell, wit- ness said he had paid no particu- lar attention to deceased when he came to the shop that evening. It was after 1:00 when deceased left. Mrs. White's Evidence Mrs. Pearl White, half-sister oi the deceased. said she lived for $1 l0 or 12 years at 25 King Street, (Continued on page 1, cafe?‘ LL-Gen. Saneom iiaued To Survey Reinforcement: (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Jan. I'M-Appointment 0i lit-Gen. E. W. Sansom. 55. for- mer corps commander overseas. as inspector-general te survey and fro-ordinate training and reinforce- ments in Canada and overseas and arrival in Britain oi Canadian de- Capl- tal circles tonight as ‘ ’ sting the Government may be contem- plating a revision of recruiting and , policies in the lightof war developments. In London are Navy Minister Macdonald, Vice-Admiral George JOHN. chief of the naval staff, and Air Marshal Robert Leckie. chiei oi the air staff. Gen. sansom, Whose lIPPOi ‘ was announced today, ls ex acted w establish headquarters n London shortl‘. Air Marshal feckis was the m. to arrive in Britain and air circles here discusaed the possibility he might talk to RAF. officials on a modification of the Commonwealth Air Training Plan slow-down pol- icy announced Nov. l7. It is possible he will discuss tile prospect of continuing training alr- arch Bl expira- tion date oi the plan and also rc- tain a larger number of men in the service than was contemplated. Miaadacdonald has been at times minister for the three services since the resignation of lion. C. G. Power as Air Minister and since Defence Minister McN ” n be- an preparations for the Grey orth by-election. He atte War Cabinet meeting lust he left for Britain and it was understood that he obtained the general feeling oi Government en the nature of Canada's future manpower com- mitments. Armed with this information and also with a plan for active artic- ipaticn in the Pacific he w l ‘gos- bly meet British planners wl a view to dove-tailing efforts against Japanese. n. Bsnsomu Job will he "to ensure complete era-ordination on all matters relating to the stand- ard and type of training and the handling and availability of rein- forcmsenie" in Canada. in. northwest Europe and the Medit- mwas~ rurr" “W” n. a . A native of tenlez‘. N. 3-. Gen. Sansom returned mm 0"!!!" last my and went on leave pend- ina retirement. f-Iis retirement rs- ' ii W .. hi“? ‘l: ggelsnllslguleiazgilu the! "trouble- their‘ .,. m...“ ._.__>. hear adJourned at 0:20 o'clock. to meet 1a iiezis Big In iloar Base 0f Belgium Bulge B? AUSTIN BEALMIAI. clad British 2nd infantry- mw Idvimood 1.000 ards and cap- tured thc Village of Dieter-an in their new offensive N er- m Q rs en ions centre of St. . Farther southward in tha, Bel- gian bulge the United States 3rd Army cleared the entire Bastognc- ffoiufaliae road and hammered the enemy back toward the St. Vlth-Wiltz ridge. Southward of the bulge American 3rd Army infan- try, fighting on. German soil m- tween the Moselle River and the Saar cast oi Luxembourg. closed a trap around an enemy force oi un- disclosed sire in a woodland south- east of Tottinaen. e Germans appeared in be dig- ging in again in the Ardenncs. stiffening their resistance with the first armor seen in days. The British Tummles Dushinz deeper into the German - held Maas-Roer triangle advanced like ghosts through a swirling sen ‘of fog _ behind flailing ml * tanks in the first Allied return to the offensive since the beginning of the battle of the Ardennes. They edged forward against sav- age and at times suicidal German opposition. In addition to cantor; ing Dietereu, Lt.-Gen. Dempseys sed the Roode River at troopslmw and s med into ano - __p ees . " a“; village whiehsgnnnot be ‘iden- tified immediately for security reasons. German tanks were reported in action for the first time since the British and Army launched this =5- sault in the long-quiet Sittard area 1B miles north of Aachen Tuesday mfié?’ bottle gonditlons were made worse by flush "WW- The Air Forces were abic to lmi 110mm“ mm me all‘ in this sector: but a few weather reconnaissnlwt‘ J10“- Allied soilrcesdlad no repflfléi 05 important activity on the lstd all; admn Anny from, m ifoilan . u‘ tho German Transccean Agent! assorted Canadian iulits made loc- al attacks northeast of Nlmtbgtl: and at Driel, on the Maas W59! River about 30 miles eoufh_ o Nilmegen. Dig ln Feverishly The Germans now were dialling in feverishly all along the north- (31151; are from the Bastogne sector to scholpen. and German arm-hi‘ which mo] pulled back from the ggllapsing western end of the Al‘- degfifls sack appeared 539m i“ ac on. V If, appeared tonight that Field Marshal von Runsiedt had given the "stcp-and-hold order to sill/B m, “m, ha]; of the salient from “Exlyoljrlilnlgunstcdtls withdrawal has slowed up,’ a staff officer said in ghihgglg, ‘that fighting is hard on o s es. With the 1st and 3rd Armies 1i- ain fighting side by side. Brit's" no Army formations which had polled up the west end of the Ger- mans‘ Ardsnnes salient now Were out, ~01 the actual battlelinc. ‘hi: were lnoPPinB uh I if!“ 59mm“ pockets remaining to the rear. 100 Superior-ts Bomb Formosa WASHINGTON. Jen- 1’! — M!" ._ upwards of 100 Superiortrlesses dealt fresh blows to Formosa today The strike aparentlv was co-crdin- with carrier plane attack fl- t 131m and the south- na. eagokgburagllio, reportindg the lat- est Formosa strike. Iii B150 ml- zloo carrier-based clones of the United States 8rd Fleet were thrown against the Chine. coast mosdsy (North American Time) for the fourth consecutive day- The broadcast. r by the Federal Communications. was not confirmed by American sources. The Japanese radio said that sinkle flights of 8-89’: from Bei- pan bombed the ToliYO N”. the aircraft manufacturing centre of Ngggyg and Kyoto. ancient capital olTliigpulsloundlnl 11nd "W l" planes are lfiViflB Fwmii“ m" "in anldlulsidcafiglalllg? thong; a of. ° Chino coast. ft llol Philip lngg to Ohlnl. from ‘he mainland andjib north of Luzon. n0 of infonnation plans to make a so- rninute movie based on the gov- ernment white PB f" °" u“ mill" glngqom-g w" ef ort. Actual pages be shown on lhlagclaenl bol- stared with some of lmme menu-ail - h...“- flpgTfiflfaB-Tfl-‘le ministry . Omens of a total military German armies in flight across the armies at their heels. banks of the Vlatula. nouneed capture of Csestoehuws. and to Berlin. the war in Europe will endure. It f lsation ‘as Marshal Stalin's end-the trerne peril in which huge segments The Russian objective of the a sible destroy much of it in the field. forged to match relen v, .. .. . impossible. Possibility of a fertilizer short- age this year in view of the heavy demand from liberated countries in Europe is causing local deal- ers somo concern. it was learned yesterday. Growers who are negli- gent in ordering their require- ments may find thenlselves at a disadvantage next spring. despite assurances previously received that there would be sufficient fertilizer this year to meet the demand. It is understood that the fertil- izer administra-tor has left 0t- tawa for Washington to discuss this matter with the authorities there. Holland alone. it is reported. has asked for 20.000 tons of cyan- amide from Canada. As the total Canadian output is only 100.000 tens for fertilizer purposes, this order, if filled. would create a seri- ius supply problem. Seed nequirements Local dealers m touch with Ot- tawa also report a very heavy Elurcpean derrland for seed pota- toes from Canada. . A representative from France is reported to be on his way to Oi.- tawa with a request for 7.000 tons of seed. which is about 300 car- loads. The Balkans are after a similar amount. Corsica and oth- er liberated countries are askin for some thousands of tons. Al these requirements cannot pos- sibly be met. and very careful planning must be done if the needs of Canadian and American growers are to nl . With regard to the reported po- iato shortage in Quebec and Ont- ario, local dealers agree with press reports from New Brunswick that this shortage is entirely fictitious. It ls due merely to difficulty in moving the tubers in sub-zero weather over snow-locked farm roads. That is a. condition, they point out. which Maritime grow- or‘: l uently have to contend w h. "There is a su erabundance of potatoes in Onto o this ear, and I think it hardly likely hat the Wartime Prices and Trade Board will pay attention to any request to stop the export of Maritime potatoes to the United States for iMvI/TSEIIR" Last Night l Fertilizer Shortage Threavfened In View ' ' Of'Eu“rofiéun' " . only distinctive Canadian the purpose of filling orders in years. A Q Q "'1 |I| 1P1 low/fiv- w‘ ziz/a/aai/ I! KIIKI L. SIMPSON (Associated Pruaa War Analyst) disaster in the east an stalking shattered Polish plains with massive Russian Within less than a week that Btil-mile-wlde Red Army winter ef- fenaive has ripped to shreds the whole critical centre of the German east front from the Carpathians to the southern border of East Prussia. The Russians took Warsaw in their stride to lungs on down both They threaten to isolate all East Prussia and menace Berlin itself at close range. There remain no formidable natural barriers across the wide breadth of the lower Vistuia valley behind which tottering German forces could rally short of German 1938 front- iers a bare 100 miles from Berlin. Southwarll Krakow was credibly reported seized and Moscow an- Between them the Silesian hub of German war industries — the Glelwlts-flindenburg-Bcuthen-Katowlce- Sosnowlec cluster of factory cities that rivals the Ruhr in the west-lay exposed to the Oil-mile wide Rufllan southern advance lies the Oder Valley leading into the heart oi north central Germany Just beyond The dating speed with which the main Russian winter offensive has been driven home invalidates every current estimate of how long ully justifies its German character- -war campaign because of the ex- of the German army stand. ttack in Poland which can be de- duced from their pattern is to out the German army ta pieces and ii poe- To that end triple pockets in East Prussia, west of Radon: and in the Ca. athlans apparently are being Red pressure up the Danube toward the V Successful ciosi-ng of any of theathree ‘raps on the foe could tear so wide a hole in the forces available to man f‘ old German eastern frontier that any protracted stand there would he defences on the Central Canada ' one local dealer informed The Guardian. This fear seemed to be preval- ent in New Brunswick, but lie did not believe Island growers need worry about A much more pressing problem. at the pres- ent time. he said. was the threat- ened fertilizer shortage. International At A Glance EASTERN FRONT — Russian armies capture Wnnnw, roll Germans back ‘along 250-mile , front in Poland; aim seize Czestochowa, I5 miles from Ger- man border in southwest Poland; Lubiln reports full of Krakow. WESTERN FRONT — British 2nd Army attack in Netherlands ,. n-handle slowed after capture of several villages; Germans use tanks in stiffening resistance in A denncs; heavy. fluctuating fighting rages on US. 7th Army front in Alsace. AERIAL Allied bombers. fighter; strike at. enemy oil, shipping and rail targets Wod- nesday: R.A.l'-‘. attacks rail routes to Netherlands V-bomb lite; PACIFIC AERIAL-More than 100 Sirpcrfortresseg flttlfli For- mosa Wednesday; Tokyo reports U.S. carrier-horns pianos ain attacking Chinese ports and on- shu Isis mi. BURMA — Allied planes lup- port British push through cent- ral Burma: 14th Army columns approaching Mandalay. P IL FINES-JLS 6th Army ‘ beachhead zone to tip of Bolinao Peninsula: resistance continues in left flank; Porcor- rubio entered. PORTSMOUTH. England, — (CP) — Education Minister RA. Butler said Britain's technical col- leges have produced 300,000 men and women trained for the services any industry during the past five Father Mcllonald To Visit Churches 0f lledelnptoriete Rev. A. blcDonald, c, s, 3 R rector of the Holy Redeemer Parlgh in Charlottetown is leaving law m“ ‘W’! i0 blight a tour of all tha DBTlBhQs of the R-edemptorlst 0r. ill?!‘ in Canada. and Newfoundland. Mcnaxpecis to Join Rev. Edward mo 03;; rector of a. Itedcmbtorist neoilgcandntilcl °i3§“1..e§“hli‘14°i§“'ly fir; iawiur ifiam thajre. W“ a er cDou d expects lo be 5W8)’ from Ch ltteto . bout three woetlsfs? w“ for a New British War Decoration OTTAWA. Jan. 17 - (CP Military authorities here said yes- terday they had not been advised of the war medal which Prime Minister Churchill told the Brit- ish Commons would be given to members of the armed forces aft- er the war but they assumed the new decoration would avail- able to Canadians. Canadians are already eligible to receive-all other British decora- tions and so far the Canadian volunteer service decoration is the award issued. Gen. llflNaughton Delayedjt Ottawa OTTAWA. Jan. 17-40?) -- Da- fence Minister McNaughton today indefinitely postponed his depart- ure for Owen Sound. t.. head- quarters of his campaign in the Grey North by-eleoticn. Gen. Mc- Naughton had intended to leave tonight. Veterans Minister Mackenzie has gone to Owen Sound to speak in support of the General. Report Nazis Testing New Ramming Plane LONDON Dispatches the Germans are reported to testing a new Jet-propelled "ram- min plane" designed as s. defence nga nst Allied bombers. The new plane was said to be e- quipped with a heavily armored bow and to be of special construc- tion to enable it to survive a crash mid-air. A New lfi§eout Controls Opened . Jan. 17 — (OP) — from Zurich today said MONTREAL, Jan. 17 — (C?) — The Earl of Athlone. Govemcr- General of Canada and Chief Scout for the Dominion. officially opened today a new Boy Scout centre in northwest Montreal. In a brief address His Excellency said most troubles came from idle- ness and that scouting gave the boys something usuefui and en- joyable to occupy themselves The war record scouts was "extre- melv and many Canadian Army leaders today had scout training. DONDON -- (OP) — New officer commanding the R.C.A.F. City of Oshawa Spitfire squadron is Sqdn. bdr J.D. Mitchner, D.F.C., of 721; fithLmgLsaskatoon. HALIFAX, Jan. 1.‘1—-(CP)—-Afi Allicd freighter ran aground today on Sambro Shoals. just outside Halifax Harbor. and was aband- oned by her crew after she started filling with water. The 30 seamen-including two Canadians-escaped in two life- boate. taking with them their li- year-oid mascot dog s louco" but leaving behind an assortment of livestock that included six cows 01nd several pigs and about 50 chickens. The two Canadians aboard Wm Stoker Geo e MacDonald of Syd- "ty and Abe Seaman Alfred Smith of. ronto. The rest of the crew included French. Polish. Greek. British and Bsthcnian seamen. MacDonald said he was 4m watch in the stoke-hold when the Filip ran aground. “Bile started to leak badly and No. l hatch seem- Wl i0 be getting plenty wafer- |n3Hu M the Because a oath is diffieul and dangeso but only III. we must net old it surlfltbethe path. Ill"- HM: other ri-ovlaeu s use. e _ A.__..___. .I. “BIWWOI Delivered, use. FRONT IN POLAND COLLAPSES Warsaw Falls; Reds ge Offensives LONDON’ J“- 17 — (C?) — Russian troops captured glgfiisehd ‘and battered Warsaw today as the Germans‘ whole "QM coulfPifld under three mammoth oifensives one of which carried io within l5 miles of Germany itself. and Vxarlsilrvyl fall with amazing swifiness in a pincers push, Prussia broke tuhsslanhogenslve to the north toward East _] f Tolig azl defences for 2o miles on a 63- ml e1 ronl._Premlcr-Marshal Stalin announced. C tn i!‘ third order_of ‘the day he announced capture 0f Z°5_ °° Obi/d. only 1b miles from German Silesia, io Red armies which have s_lashed‘l10 miles westward in six days from the Vlstula River brldgqead below Warsaw. 0n a front at least 250 ll Ions. 2.00am or more Rugéiaii rolled westward hoyaild shattered encrnv defences. reaching Points from 260 i0 290 miles iron; Berlin V As the Polish Capital fcll aitcr five years and four months of Ger- man occupation and the Russians laced their huge new Stalin super. tanks along the main llighroad due west toward Berlin, the Boy. let-sponsored P h Government at German radio at Krak s ' went dead. ow uddemy Political implications of the Rus. slon offensive at once gained M. “$111051: r e a o Warsaw w - . nourwed by the Ludollnu ‘$3313.1- ment which the Russians apongor- ed and which they recognize a5 the official government o; 591mm The Polish government in Lon. don. recognized by Britain and the United States, immediately 15- sued a statement crediting w“. saw‘a cantor to Soviet troops and indicating th t it would pres; m; the right to return to Warsaw dos. Ritgukne Lgxfincral belief that the ' vemment woul mov there immediately. d e Advance _70 Miles IDNXN, Jan. 17 —- (Reuters;__ The German High Command, in n radio report tonight. said Marshall Gregory K. Zhukovs troops have advanced more than '10 miles west from their original Vistula bridge- heads and now are almost due south of the Lodz area beyond Tomaszov fromasaov is 60 miles southwest, adéilarsaw and 30 miles south of Prepares Germans IDNDON. Jan. l7—(C.P. Reut- ern-Propaganda Minister Goeb- bels today prepared Gerrnans for a big Nazi retreat before the vast Soviet offensive in Poland. In an article issued by the DNB agency; it was stated significantly "terri rial chan as as a result of new deve oprnents are un- avoidable . . they should how- ever give no cause for alarm. "The German east front ls faced ulth the trcmendous task. perhaps tho most difficult it has ever met ._ . . " rhe storm has risen in the east and men equipped te the hilt in numbers unheard of are on the move all along the front with me password on their lips ‘to Berlin?‘ Export Bacon Show Planned For Gh’Town Interesting Meeting held yeterday. Sev. eral phases 0f swine Industry discussed. Prince Edward Island hogs aru- dBd a hishcr rcentage of gradq A than any ot er Province in in. Dominion, hog production in this Province increased l4 per cent in, 194A and an export bacon show will. be held in Charlottetown during Farmers‘ Week this winter. were highlights of announcements at a rdillgting in Charlottetown yester- The meeting was called bv tha Dominion Department of Agricul- ture Markets Division. with a \'lf‘.V to impressing on shipping agems and hog purchasers the importance of correct tettoo identification. Mr. J W Graham. Dominion Deparle merit of Agriculture, Moncion was the special speaker. Dr. El S. Ni“- tlng. Charlottetown noted as chair- man. Ml‘. Graham in his opening xv- marks reviewed lh-y- hog industry _—_--.-»--_==—_.=_—..—.=—j.—-:1 (Continued on page B. Col. 7) Son: tlhtoasvl We uses 1o Bl: (poo - Foa- r101 RING. ARV. Now DEMANDIHQ A nickel. 1 Australian Dairymen g Call Off Strike SYDNEY, Australia. Jan. i7 (C.P. Cabiv-Dairymcn in Sydney and Newcastle urcas today called off their milk strike and agreed to abide by the decision oi an independent arbiter on their ri- uest for an increase in the price rom one shilling. 6i‘. pens-s (about 20 cents) to one shilling 10 pence a. gallon. 'l‘his action came after nearly all persons but hospital patients and expectant mothers had been with- out milk since last Thursday be- cause of the price dispute between the dairymen and the Federal Government. Freighter Grounds On Shoals Outside Halifax was about 12 feet deep in the stoke-hold when I decided it was time to leave." Although the hull received ex- tensive damage. the crewman made efforts to pull her off. Engines were reversed at full speed for un hour and a half but the crew said they "were unable to budge her." They finally jumped into two llfeboats and after a short time were picked up by a naval launch and brought to this port. Smith. the other Canadian. bid short service with the ill-fated freighter. A_survlvor cf two for- pedoings during the early gears of the war and a veteran of t e Mur- mansk run, he was a member oi‘ the crew only 38 hours. "I had just finished watch and was going for a cup of coffee when f heard a thump. l knew some- thing hsd happened," Smith said. l METEOROLOGICAL Ol"l'~'lCl':i, TORONTO. Jan. l7 -— (CPI - Minimum and maxim tcnilivi- atures: Vancouver 38. 4B: Minion- ton zero; l3; Regina 8. l9. Willi!" pgg 2o, 2d; Toronto 9. Z0: 0N6“? 4. 12- Montreal 14: Quebec i! Monown 2i, 20. lliillllflk 3.. . Charlottetown 22. J3- FORECASTS ST. LAWRN ‘E: Frlegiwgnstiong Wind!‘- “nan” fair and cold. LAKE Si‘. JOHN: Fair and (xlld. CHALEUR AND GULF‘ BAY winds or NORTH SHORE‘. Biron! _ _ modgrgte ales with light ..l mod crate know- : St winds MARITIMES rot-Lam" “m, l l d, and ysnosridlll: or flurrius. m. at 3.1a 3%,“ £56 g? liilfklzlflgfl] at 5-48 and rises tomorrow momlng iii 831131,.“ quarter moon January 20- 7.45 P. M. _ Summerslde tide cillhiee" mm“ tes later than Charlottetown. DAILY All! SERVICE Charlottetown — Summersi... — Mom-ton Leaves Charlottetown i 11.30 A.Mi 5.15 EM. M Arrives Charlotfitowis l1. t5 P - , EM. 1.30 . . H‘ suunsv SERVICE “new Calarlottetown 11-30 ‘figs-rive’ Charlottetown 2 P- M- gnfl 5J5 P. M. CIIABLOTTETOWN — NEW GLASGOW (Baily except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown l P. M. Arrive Charlottetown l.” P-M- AM. A.M. i;