MAXIMS 07L MERE MAN d the be are the vory ground substance in the life o! a community. _ i and --- Ieraiug Gus-dim. Founded 1881. Charlottetown Guardian. Two Oeais. CHICAGO CHli D lS KIDNAPPED, THEN MURDERED s; Read byEve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, JANUARY s. 1946 New AdiutantC General ls Busy Man 5 Charged With Murder In Montreal MONTREAL. Jan. 7 -- (CP) -— Five young men were arra ed fore Judge Edouard Teller in Criminal Oourt today and charged with of Edmond Bois- vert, 69-year-old tavern. owner, shot i; his north-end Montreal home ec. . Thomas Pltflicll Walsh. 21, John Kelly, 21, Harold Edwards, 27, and LcouMamil, 121g, vflgeJremtalrided for re minary ar an, , er ahatelois, 2t, who testified foil-Loghe Crown was granted a three - day grbsl remand at request of the own prosecutor. Bolsvert was shot on the stair- way of his north-end Montreal home, above the tavern, and died almost instantly. Police said he had received the day's receipts from the tavern from his manager a short time earlier, but his as- sailant, or assailants, fled without stealing anything. Chatelois, who testified for the Crown, told the coroner's inquest that the decision to rob Boisvert was taken by the five accused at a meeting in a Verdun restaurant Iarl on the evening of Dec. l8. l but Marci], a former em- ployee of Bolsvert, were driven to b9. a place near.the tavern in a priv- ate taxi and after an argument as to whether it was worth breaking into the house it was decided that "we all would go in," Chatelois sold. Walsh and Kelly entered the house first, the witness continued. When Chateiois and Edwards fol- lowed theiy heard a shot and Chatelois rushed out of the house and later left the district in a taxi. He said he did not know until next day that Bcisvert was dead nor did he know that any of the men was carrying a revolver. He told of a conversation later in the evening with Kelly and Walsh during which Walsh said yes when Kelly asked him if he had "dis- posed of the gun." Marci! also testifled for the Grown and said he knew Chufelois was carrying a .25 calibre revolver sometime before the shooting. He said too that on the evening of the murder he saw Kelly give something to Walsh under the ‘table wh 1e they were in the rest- aurant. Reports Russia Has . etter Atom Bomb Weather Mild _Elsewh-er_e__ Too HALIFAX. J-an. '1 -- (CP)— A maseasonal the. 9137100080. in Nova Bootiashowed no signs of‘ lett up tonight. as turban citizens chuck ed and nanny rural rmidente locked worried. The mild weather llimt reached s. high of 54 degrees in Halifax has more than three days now and town and city dwellers, watch- ing their fuel supplies. hoped the snrlnslike weather wotdd continue. Coal has not been plentiful. In the counrtrv districts, however. the mild spell was less welcome, lumberman reporting it was pract- loally lmpomible to oanry on oper- ations in the woods. The early falls of snow 1n December have almost vanished and the bottoms have dropped out of many of the wood MONTREAL. Jan. '1 - (CP) -—- Warm. sunny weather. described by the weatherman as a prema- ture January thaw, continued throughout southern Quebec Pro- vince today. - The high in Montreal yesterday was 52.1 degrees and although it. was cooler today, the ther ‘er was still well above the freezing point. Quebec reported 40 degrees above Were, with snow melting fast and most of the streets clear and ry. The spring-like weather is not expected to last, however, and ple- dlctions were that the temperatures would fall" well below freezing level by tonight. ' Coming Events " ce in Mt. Albion Hall Jan. Gaudet Orchestra. i-l-li "New Wiltahire District L.O.L. meets 1n Clyde River Jan. 9 at 2.- 80 prn. l-‘l-Zi "Our Chick Poacher sure put an the finish. Livestock med Agency. lil-4-6-D-tl " arrived! Car of coal. Un- F ‘Puesday and Wednesday. , J, 1-8-2i. oy A Co. "Box Social and Dance, Pleas- ant Grove Hail, Wednesday} Janu- ary 1-8-11. 9th, in aid of school. "Our hog 'and dairy feed lsnng mash and ch13 tattener fivgpeizk lolly pu u proven. lied Agents. IO-H-lfif "ltqular Sessl Reb- ekah ledge No. l0?'i.on lnstall- alga o officers. v man- "lts the extra lobes-non at livestock n lrom Pan Iillll lfllllbl. Alum!- NCI 387C!- 1-8-11. _ sou-u. 1 on i —__ mam“. previous dmctgj; - M - LONDONDERPY, Northern laud. Jan. ‘i, — (CB; - Dr. Raphael LG. Annattoe. director of the Lomeshie Be- seareh Centre for anthropolo- gy and human biolosy» said to- night in an interview that Russia had developed an atom bomb "which renders the An- "‘ l, atom‘ bomb ob- solctc." He declared that the pur- ported Russian bomb could be manufactured on a “mass pro- duction scale." Dr. Armattoe declined to disclose the source of his information but, pressed for a hint of his source, ro- plied some membe of Mme- shie Centre's staff were af- filiated with Russlan scientific societies. Dr. Arznuttoc said Russian scientists already had tested what he termed "the Russian atom bomb" which he said was about as large as a tennis ball and had a horizontal pul- verlzation range of 53 miles and a vertical lift of more than 8 2/10 miles. ‘The temperature generated." he said, "was in the neighbor- hood of several million degrees oentlgrade." Dr. Armattoe said the Soviet Council of Defence had ordered a group of Russian scientists to concentrate on atomic re- search immediately after the Anglo - American - Canadian atom bomb was first. disclosed to the world. The scientist said the bomb was developed with thc help of two German physicists. Whom the Russians had captured. Rullan scientists who direc- ted the research. he said were named "Joffe" Somyonov, Kapitza, Zeldovitch a n d Vlaivov." lie said he did not know their first names. Kapitsa, he said, formerly was affiliated with Cambridge University. Dr. Anaattoc did not say where the Russian bomb had been tested but he added a sec- ond test will be made at the end of this month, “in a moun- talnous country.’ He added: "The destructive chi-Pith; tat the Angel-Amos: can m spends u a term‘ ’ sine of uranium. The Russian bomb, however, de- veiops its force by a spin or angular motion. makllll i 1M" applicable for enrlneerl . work." _ Scarlet Fever Show: Increase In St. John sis g i} §§r5§§gg§§§;| ii . 5i?» $lét Army Job Keeps MaL-GemWeeks Tied To Desk 5.7 JACK BBAYLIY OTTAWA, Jan. 7 (C?) - Busiest man in the Canadian Anny i5 MEL-Gon- Erncst G. (Bunny) Weeks, 49. mum-decorated veteran of two wars and who as new ad- jutant general has the b twin reflllonsibility of demobillsa on of the fishtlns army and recruiting the peacetime force. The wide ramifications therein implied keep him at Defence Headquarters from early morning until late at night, Sitting behind an expansive mahogany desk in his light blue office. Gen. Weeks. a native of Charlottetown, PiEhL, handles g, running fire of orders and in- structions through an elaborate desk communication system and dispatches an endless stream of assistants who pour through both doors of his office bearing big sheaves of papers. In conferences he smokes clgaretts and waves his hem-rimmed glasses to empha- size a point. Looks The Part He looks every inch the soldier. He is six-feet one-inch tall, weighs 190 pounds; has friendly blue eyes and white brlstiy hair trim- med in short military style. His desk is neat and business-like and his manner is decisive. He wears a drill battle dress in the office and the three rows of decm-stions on his chest include both the Mil. itary Cross and Bar and the Mll- itary Medal and Bar-marking him as a fighting soldier from away Looking down on him from the wail opposlto-his-dealt is an impo- sing array of 21 predecessors fra- med with thumbnail sketches in mahogany. They so back to Ma]. Gen. Patrick McDougall, side- burned “AG” back in 1865. Continued on Page 6 Col 5) Ontario Forces Sudden Change In Dttawa Plans (Special to The Guardian) UITAWA. Jan. 'l-Official Otta- wa is still staggering from the bombshell dropped by Ontario Premier George Drew Sunday night on the Dominion-Provincial conference. Mr. Drew's counter-proposals, it is SBlCl in official circles, \Vlli nco- essitate far-reaching study, and may mean that the conference will have to start anew on a complete- ly different basis to that which Prime Minister King asked the provinces to accept on August (i, 1945 when the conference on Dom- inion-Provinciai relations first op- cried. Newspapermen and other; in Ottawa who witnessed Mr. King emerge smiling from the confer- ence room of the co-ordlnating committee of provincial Premiers five weeks ago, are now wondering what he meant when he said biandly that "we have had - very interesting and rofliable (‘llSCUS- slon." What, it s asked, did the Prime Minister mean by the word "profitable"? Premier Drew's proposals will first necessitate a sudden change of the agenda of the economic committee of the Dominion-Prov- incial conference which foregath- ers here tomorrow. It is considered not improbable that the committee of Premiers. scheduled to re-assembie 1n Otta- wa on January 28, may call an ad- journment for further study of the Ontario pro osais. The attit- ude of Quebec as not yet been reviewed by Premier Maurice Du- plessis, but members of his party north of the Ottawa River hint that he may give solid support to the new Ontario plan. Should Ontario and Quebemwith more than half the population of Canada and two-thirds of its wealth stand fast in their opposit- ion to the Federal Government's proposals, it la cert that the out re basis for negotiation will be revised. Yank Soldiers lloo Explanation- MANILA, 'l- (APzor-A mtentmomeus resolution do fi nobm slowdown. Thesoldlesobooedthe More P. E. I. Women Working, Is Report HALZHAX. Jan. ‘l - (OP) — Nova Scolds. women avPl-‘IWW h“ not taken their places in bushel and industry to the accent that they did in other provinces, accord- ing tq figures released here todm/ by ‘me Provincial Decarunent of Ind . Onlymlk’! per cant o! the employ- ees in Nova Seattle's leading indust- trial establishments W8’!!! W011i?!‘ on Oct 1, m. lowest parent-ale in the country. The average for all Canada was 25.3 The numb!!!‘ of workers on Nova Scotla payrolls at that date was 81.406. 0i W310i! 11.986 were women. Prince Edward Island had the highest proportion of wofnen work- ers in the oountrlk-OBJ! per cent. lioering Growl: Curses At Former llazi Party Man NUERNBFJRG, Jan. 7-45.?) — Hermann Goering growled curses today at a prosecution witness who told the International Military Tri- bunal that the German purpose in attacking the ..5°Ylet Union was to exterminate 80,000,000 Slavs. "Dirty dog! damned traitor!" Goering snarled as waffcxi 5.8. Gen, Erich Von Dem Bach-Zelew- ski ste ped from the stand. Goer ng and others of the 2i high Nazi defendants facing the court were visibly DBfi-ilfbed by ti“? testimony of the 46-year-old former Nazi who was said by Allied au- thorities to have wltnfifiitd DEBOR- ailv or participated in more atro- cities than any other German Wit- ness vet summoned. Gocring lost the mocking smile and the iron control which has marked his demeanor thus far. A German - sa?aklng court attendant 551d the ormer Reichmarshal turned to his fellow defendants and groxviecl: "Why that--—-has more blood on his hands than all the rest of us put together and I Will testify to that under oath" His loud voice could be heard throughout. the courtroom. Bach-Zclewski walked stlffly from the ivitness stand within a few feet of the irate Goering. scar- 991v noticing him, after delivering damaging tcslimcnv which appeal‘- ed to incriminate the entire Ger- man X-[lgh Command for Eastern Front atrocities. Squaredlim Said Latest In Fashions By DOROTHY R0! Associated Press Fashion Editor NEW YORK, Jan. 7-We've had flat hips and rounded‘ hips, slim hips and broad ones, but it re- mained for Claire McCardell, that always surprising young New York designer. to introduce square hips. Ami square they are, in new bal- lerina type skirts with flaring square flap pockets or ingenious seaming to achieve the right-ang- led effect. Slacks, of the frontier- pants type, also lut out squarely at each side, just below the belt. As usual, Miss McCardell likes shoulders that are dropped or rounded, with wide, loose ar - holes and that studied sloppy e- fect which appeals to schoo girls. Another coup in the McCardell collection is the turtle-neck swim suit. Having undressed the Amer- ican bathing beauty to the bare minimum with her sensational diaper swim suit and anung of the last two seasons, isire does an about-face and covers her up. He:- gray jersey swim suit. with turtle-neck and diaper-t e shorts. is a highlight of the col ectlon. She also shows old-fashioned calico rompers, with >1astlc in the legs and top and no straps at all, for sun and play. ..__..._..._ [93 Li» Mllltli FROM llllillii P. E. I. Tourist Travel’ Expected To Recich An All-Time High In ’46 (Special to The Glnrdianl UITAWA, Jan. '1—From present indications, tourist travel to Prince Edward Island and to summer playgrounds of the other Maritime Provinces will reach an all-time high in L940, ‘The Guardian's Ot- tawa correspondent was informed today by D. Leo Dolan, chief of the Canadian Travel Bureau. "The Travel Bureau's allocation for advertising has been substant- ially increased this year." Mr olan said, "and we propose t0 dvertise on a large scale in the, New England and Atlantic Slates, newspapers this spring. Some of out‘ advertisements will be of a general nature, but others _will deal specifically of the attractions of individual provinces. In this respect, I can assure you that Prince Edward Island Will not be forgotten." Mr. Dolan pointed out that while the railways’ rolling stock, ships and buses had been subject- ed to a severe strain by wartime conditions, every effort was being made to put them to marumum civilian use after the Domimcnfls fighting men have been brought back from overseas. Manufactur- ing and repair shops of transpor- tation companieo, he said, were being geared to a high pitch to meet the expected influx of tour- ists from United States points. _ "It is difficult to predict with certainty what the volume of tour- ist travel to P. E. I. and the Mari- times will be this year, but every survey and indication received at this office points to an all-time record," Mr. Dolan continued. "Leaders in the tourist industry in the United States are preparing so!‘ vast fipods" of summer visitors ' otmdqor Canada," he said, “and a very large proportion want to spend their summer vacations’ on the sea coast. It is apparent that many United States people who formerly spent a few weeks or months in Europe are planning to come to Canada and to Eastern Canada this year. “Our increased advertising bud- get for all the provinces will be helpful in attracting growing numbcrs of tourists to Prince Ed- ward Island, and visitors who once have visited that province have acquired a habit of returning Year after year. We look forward to one of 131a greatest tourist years in histo ." (Russia "Plilhs To Increase Drop Areas Written for The Canadian Press B)’ I. BENEDIKTOV _ MOSCOW, Jon. 7—Russia has instituted a "five year plan" for her gram industry, and hopes in that pcriod-l946-50—-to expand crop areas to their pre-waz‘ size and to increase crops by raising tlirir yields. The plan provides for 100 per cent use of selected seed anti in- troduction of top-grade hard spring wheat imsouthern and southeast- ern Slhrria and Kazakhstan. Russia also intends to introduce on a wider scale the planting of grain_ crops in narrow rows h_v in- creasing the output of narrow drill seeders. Wheat production is to he expanded farther northward with introduction of more north- ern varieties. Ivicrcascd mechanization is plun- ned, and machine and tractor sta- tions are expected to make pos- siblc the planting of '70 per cont of the spring grain crops with machines. The stations also will "IRE Cafe 0f 90 per cent of plowing for summer fallow and 7o per cent of collective farm grain crops will be harvested with combines and binders. In 1938 Russia had 256,000,000 acres under grain crops, of which r cent was lost temporarily dur ng the war. I I Rousln : Russia is developing her pre- abricatad housing indus- try. More than 2,000,000 cottages are needed in a hurry and 1t i; planned to establish within the next two years l8 big factories devoted to "pre-fsb" production, Chief Engineer A. Krakovsky of the People's Commlssariat of Building estimates the annual out ut of each "housing works" at etween 4.000 and 5,000 two or BETTER BAKING CANADA FLOUR three-roofned houses. so“ Will Attend Peace Donferonee HON. JOHN BBACKEN OTTAWA. Jan. 1 -—- (CP) — Prime Minister Mackenzie King will be accompanied to the peace conference-wherever and when- eves- it is held-by John Bracken as leader of the official Oppos- ition in Parliament, the Canadian Press learned today. 1t was understood the next oes- sion of Parliament would be opened February 14 or 21, l. week or two earlier than orig- inally planned. in the hope it can complete ita business and prorogue before the opening of the peace conference. The opening date of the peace conference and its site will be de- cided by the assembly of the Un- ited Nations Organization which opens in London this week and gossip coming hack from London is that September is regarded as the probable month, although there la some talk of the confer- ence being held in June. N. B. Premier Urges National Approach FREDERICTON, Jan. ‘I — (GP) -Premicr J. B. McNair of New Brunswick tonight urged a “nat- ional" rather than a “sections? approach to the problems of the Dominion-Provincial conference. In a statement commenting on Ontario's rejection of Federal financial proposals to the Pro- vinces, he expressed hope the con- fcrence would have successful re suits. He declared himself confi- dent of the final outcome, and warned against the danger of re- petition of the conference collapse in 194.1, due largely to the uncom- promising attitude of certain pro- vinces with the Ontario Govern- ment taking the “lead against the Dcminiorfs proposals.“ “In my view." he said, "this re- suit does not necessarily follow and should not be allowed.” Warn Diphtheria Epidemic Possible HALIFAX. Jan '1 — (OP) A warning to Nova Sootians to iflk precautions against a possible out- break in diphtheria in epidemic proportions was issued here today by the Provincial Health Depart- ment The statement said diph- theria epidemics were ta a heavv toll in war-ravaged European countries and there was danger of their spread to lihis country In some Canadian Provinces, me Department said. diphtheria ‘had made a sudden post-war appearance already Wit-h thousands of serv- icemen returning from Euwm. the risk of outbreaks of the disease in this Province was smut. N. S. Not Satisfied With Dominion Plan But Difference Over Financial Views Not Ir- reconcilable. MacDonald Says. (By The Canadian Press) KAI-IF , an. ‘I-Ncvs Bcotla was not entirely satisfied with the Canadian Government's stand on Dominion-Provincial financial pro- posals but the views of the Prov- ince and Dominion were not irre- concilable, Premler Angus L Mac- donald declared in an interview here today. The Nova Scotla Premier gave an interview on his Provlnceh stand following a HMO-word statement on Dominion-Provincial relations by Premier George Drew of Ontario. In the first disclosure of specific Nova Scotla objections since the recent conference in mler Macdonald said two of tho Ottawa, Pre- ‘,, ,, _, M i; H ,3 R [) w Hi r main rovinciai points were:- . a question of whether the Pedenl Government was prepared I PACES ‘ questioned, three of them i hea mi Long before roll rd of doubts is dnight caches —sort of home-leaving instinct. ' MAXIMS or a MERE MAN onaadsodoty werelllfor sndflrehaflreen (By The Associated Press) CHICAGO, Jan. 'I—'I‘he severed head and parts of the body of six- year-oid Suzanne Degnan, who was kidnapped from her bed early to- day, were found tonight in separ- ate sewers near her home, and a priest notified the parents of her death without telling the dis- traught mother of the decapitat- i on. The kldnapper had warned that harm would come to the golden- haired girl if police were notified of the abduction, but Police Cap- tain Sullivan said he was reason- ably convinccd a “sadistic fool- motivaterl by both lust and mon- ey" was the kidna -slayer. “It is my belle that the head was placed in the catch basm be- fore daybreak, probably not long after the child was kidnapped," he said. ‘Medical officials did not harard an estimate of the time of death immediately. The parts of the body were found shortly after the head was discovered. Police, making a routine canvas of the neighborhood, discovered the head a few hours after the girl's distraught father, James E. Degnan, made a series of radio appeals to the kidnappez‘ explain- ing he had notified police before finding the warning near his daughter's empty bed. » Chief of Detectives Walter Storms said the sewermen used long-handled shovels to probe the muck at the bottom of the basin, and brought up the head. 1M: Men Questioned sienna added four men are beans asizlterst. including one for the apflr men building nearest the midi-basin in which the head of was baited bl’ W0 detectives of the cmcaso police force. The building is a half block from the home of James DBEKIB-fl. Office of Price Administration official and father of the child. Storms said detectives Lee O'Rourke and Han-y Benoit found the child's head. Tihe detectives were part of a crow of 75 police who weue making the canvass of basements, sewers. and automobiles in the vicinity 0f tlhe Dflghan home. Stcnns added. The detective chief said Father Carney. a Roman Catholic prist of St. Gertrudels Parish, had notified the parents of the tentative ident- ification of this head, Storms described the catchbasin asakind of cistern under the sidewalk bet ween two north side apartment buildings. The cistern is located at a point where a street gutter empties into a sealer and catches material which would not ordinarily pass through the sewer. A heavy iron plate covered the catch basin - ‘The head of the child could be seen half-submerged in mud and water about four feet, below the surface of the ground, Storms said. and added no blood was found sur- rounding the basin nor any trace of Clair or clothing. The child had been kidnapped and $20,000 ransom demanded early today. and her father appealed b‘: radio for her safe return, saving "I'll lllVl? you the money-I'll do anything to not mv child back " (Continued on Page ti Col '7) Fatally Injured In Freak Accident EJDMUNDSTON, N.B.. Jan. 7 — (OFF-Leo Charest, 40. died last night as a result of a freak accl- dent Friday while he was putting air into a tire of his truck. The locking rim came off, the tire blew out, he was knocked to the floof and the tire landed on his head. A passerby. Eddie Martin. suffered minor leg injuries. A sim- ilar accident at the same scene Subscription Delivered Mail. 84.00; other Provinces I IJ-l. Ill- $6.00. Head, PzTrtsOl Body Discovered In Sewer Telegraphic Blackout Faces N. Y. ( The Associated Proof l\ YORK, Jan. 'l—New Yorll City tonight was on the verge of a tdicgraphlc blackout as 7.0M Western Union employees in New. York and New Jersey prepared to icavc their jobs in a wage disputl. Mayor William 0’Dwyer said hil last-minute efforts to forestall the walkout had failed. He said the Union had agreed to accept hil arbitration proposal, but that the Company had refused. He met with Union and Compan repre- sentatives in separate seas ans. The walkout, called by the Am»- crlcan Communications Association (C.I.O.), is scheduled to begin at 11 a.m. tomorrow and if it materi- alizes, a Company spokesman said: it will halt all but "life or death messages in and out of the city. Supervisory personnel will handld such messages. Transoceanic communiootioni will also be affected. De illarigny Romance ls Definitely Dvsr NLEXICO CITY, Jun. 1 - (AP? Nancy Oakcs do Mar n said to- day that she has y arated from the husband when upheld so steadfastly during trial for and acquittal of the nur- der of her father in Nassau in l9- 43. Although there is no bifltllllll between Count de Mutiny. MW in Montreal, and the tourist! Countess. she said in an interview the romance is over. No proceed- ings have as yet been started for a divorce but she has considered seeking it either in Mexico or the United States. CRUSHED BY LOG PLASTER ROCK, N.B., Jan. '7- (CP>—Crusl1ed under a hardwood log after it rolled from a truck at Two Brooks 20 miles from here, Roger Aucoln, 18, died today be- fore he could receive medical at- tention. ' stunt. A iss MAY B: ~ ‘Pzffwr LARcenY’ i Bu? ANYWAY H's GRAND 9 (Bv The Canadian Press! TORONTO, Jan. '1 _ Minimum and maximum temperatures: caused the death of Herve Coutu- rier nearly s year ago. to vacate certain tax fields in favor of the Provincial Govern- ments; J h ; Ngrilh Shore: Fresh or strons W!" and cloudy and somewhat col er; l“?- tered snowflurries. Vancouver 32. 44; V1010"! 31- 14, 20‘ Calgary i3. t ggigiimzrii, 25; Winnlprz 3h, Toronto 4-0. $52 0115"" 3a- Montroal 42, 462 5,1": Joli? ggi 52; Moncton 41 ll . Z g: 5:55;.” 39, s8; Yarnsouth M. 5. 402 52; Charlottetown 41. Quebec 80. IOIICAQK , mt at. mwwofiir. “Byienglislsure W! northwest winds‘ Pill-V- Maritl : Fresh wed nortbwesutuainds: plfl! 410$ and slightly colder. 2. Ottawa‘: unwillingness to i guarantee it would not move fur- H5831 "d? m“ ‘i’ ‘a the!‘ into the field of direct tax- and toni ht a 2. . “ ‘a ation that it had set forth in its Sun so th lfibmgmtn‘ d original conference proposals last. f"! ugu . - On the first point, the Premier 32511;} "PIP" mm“ “film”? m‘ said he had asked Ottawa it awn-mafia‘ "do o mh, would guarantee to get out of "certain tax fields heretofore oc- cupied only by the Provinces, but which during tbs war also were tenanted b the ominion."'1‘hese fields wou d include gasoline and 1| uor taxation. s remier Macdonald said that tho answer to this proposal was "not entirely satisfactory." (ouattasedoahseldrmli leave Arrive Charlottetown A IAIN Charlottetown utes later than Char CBARLOTTETOWN - NIW GLASGOW (Daily heart sum) Charlottetown 1.10 Mt r.‘ IJI l- N.8. - P-I-l. IIIII I BII Wm: