OIL . use: MAN ,____ ‘Liafinlsarrhai "- mask. I and flllllfll III Cents. IN FULL RETREAT FROM SALIENT ciinizwrrarovviii. ‘CANADA, rHfiRsnAv, JANUARY 11, 194s YZZ/fl’ The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Vice-Admiral .Percy W. Retired Nelles Has I-Qrrraw J .io- (or) - rm?‘ ‘ma. h...“sl‘.':.- Iii Ohm a t e eti.red with rank of or Macdonsld Dep- ears of service wh Irom cadet rank in 1006 when he was 1e years old. ‘Canada's first Naval Chief of ltaff-the late Sir Charles Kings- mill of Ottawa-attained Admiraks rank on the Royal Navy's retired list. He came to Canada to organ- ise the Canadian Navy, after he re- ilred from the Royal avy with the rank of Bea-r Admiral. sir Charles was siscceeded as Chief of Staff in 1920 by Rear Ad- miral Waiter Hose who was suc- ceeded in 1934 by Admiral Nellee. Admiral Nelles went to his 1mi- about s ear ago and he was succeeded as ef of staff by Vice-Admiral George Jones. Mr. Macdonaid said the responsi- bilities of the mission in Britain "are of continuing importance al- thoiuh its activities have been reduced by the successful comple- tion of the Nayyk share in invas- ion opera cns. Admiral Neiles, informed of the announcement at his ideau Gate residence. thanked a reporter for congratulations on his promotion d id. “that sounds very nice. I really can't te_1l you abou m plans yet because I haven't in e any. imagine 1 will take some sort of a vacation first." Percy Walker Nelies — born in Brantford. Ont. Jan. ‘I. ism-was the second of the first seven Can- adian naval cadets to enroll in the Royal Canadian _ Na full o lzatldn wtarted And career-has been closely linked with the development of the Navy since those eary days. He assumed the office of Chief of Staff in ‘i034 and with the out- break of wir in i980 saw the Navy separated from the Defence De- partment and made a department with its own minister. ‘He has held appointments as senior naval officer at Halifax and lsquimalt and was the first Canadian trained officer to com- mand a cruiser in the Royal Navy. he wss ‘promoted Rear-Admiral. Aug. 4, and Vice-Admiral. Nov. l5. 194i. ,In 1015 he married Helen Sciiy- lar Allen, daughter of the then United States Consul at Ber- niuda. They have two sons-Char- las Macklin and William Allen. at i~———~—— ~ -—.~—.-—: .~.--—. (confirms 0117?!!! 1. col- o‘ Coming Events “Twins live and dressed poul- . PI - “and o€i‘.i“sr‘.§'.‘i..‘.“‘fi§f.‘ "$31151 "$11190 dressed hOII Irida .- blcfiiiigan Boyle. 1.g.§| "Until further notice we are l!‘ bilyliil live poultry at our Dilut in Charlottetown. We will *0 P“ 25c." ‘"0"’ r . B 8. Packers Limited. i-ixiigiai. "Fused ii t H t i. g evaei-Iyhg-idaositiil noogix.‘ goglgn I-l 1- 17-13-31. " ‘_ “sup and a , a i Bill. yrldav. JItIlairlx-fy filth‘, aw M fine Pridly night. i-io-ii. ‘ "Unloadi fl It. Bradaibnaanefu-Thseitrdlynd ‘Bed loan and Friday. "'. ‘ea good timTaasur d " t social ineMarshiielfi on . uisdav. January 11th at P M. Alilpices W. Institute. I-S-l-i. Qéwilii‘. “l?” “i.” ‘l’ "° vc u ry a i in Iaiarlotteglown. a u 1911MB“! to buy dressed poultry at at the stall 1 hilt k r1 . 93o... b12182..." °“ ‘Zflbtil "Notic -l.osdin h t Ai- baiay ThIirsday, ii , Igm. noon un l 4 obiork Friday. lhnerald until 11.80. G. 0. Green and A. c. Green. i-io-ii. ."U|itii fiarther notkis we are lot live uitrv at our that ot . We will ‘gzlglé! (assay drused éit . and a new: flihiisd. i-io-ai. _._._ " “Until further notice we are 50C bu ii I “ but iiruilrlgteafilfit.” u ‘fight-tattle to b chefs fill!’ Limited. ‘ 351mb; g tod and Jim». .:r._'§°"“.*r'.*"".. ..-...‘§:;"ii NtIOOIi g6 and '15 llll. Dliis 51-00 foe padgthbllt black teeth dressed poultrv at prices. __i\\l lids your iil W ll we expectthia wil be the ‘it dev we will be buying this over- _ iv- I Canadian bacon - trary. that the appeal should be 11- dismissed with costs We will 11R" ADMIRAL NELIES Seek To Maintain Manitoba liae Plans For New Health Program wimirrna. Jan. io - <01» A comprehensive program of new health services to be enacted by {he Manitoba Government with he Province bearing the greater part of the cost was announced to- Iiillht Hon. Ivan Schultz, Pm. viricial eaith and Public Welfare Minister. The program provides for: 1. Preventive services. 2. Diagnostic facilities, X-ray and labcrato , available to eve one at the pubic cost and cent in local hospitals. 7i. Curative’ or personal health 56"!“ to provide “such medical care and supervision as can be given in the patient’: own home or in the doctor's office or local hosmal including maternity work and minor surgery," 4. Assurance of "sufficient and adequate hospital facilities avail- able at reasonable distance to all the people in the Province" with capital costs to be met for all hos- pitals by the municipalities in each hospital district and a greater share met by the municipality where the hospital is situated. . Schultz said that the pro- gram outlined was the only one Volume 0f "Bacon Going To Britain OTTAWA. Jan. l0 - (OP) —To maintain volume and quality of L‘ eiits to Bri- tain. the Canadian Meat Board is undertaking to requisition a con- siderable part of the bacon pro- duction of inspected abattoirs. the rtifiiculture Department announced v s Grade Bl hogs. but the exact iier- centage of the product of B1 hoes tamn for export will be varied from ! .1: 7:: -.--- ~~- —~ -— (Continued on page 6. Col. .4) Shortage 0f Men, Equipment Overcome CAMP BORDEN. ONT., Jan. l0- (CPU-Shortnges of ammunition. equipment and supplies for Can- adian and Allied fcrccs were more critical last fall than was the man- power "crisis" which precipitated conscription for overseas service. Defence Minister McNaughton said at s. press conference here tonight However, he added. the manpow- er and material shortages had been overcome or wre being overcome ‘with amazing speed." in the Supreme Court yesterday Ohief Justice Thane A Campbell. Jiustlce A.E. Arsenault and Justice M R. MCGUXEHII, sitting us a Ciilirt of Appeal. each filed lengihv judg- ments in the case of The Kris. appellant, vs. Andrew Perry. Suin- merslde. s pondentA The Chief Justice and Justice McGuigan con- curred in showing the appeal and granting a new trial. Justice Ar- senault maintained. on the con- The effect of these two-to-one judgmenw. will be a. new trial. which has been set down to open at Sillflllmriidg on April 10th. In this case the nspondent. charged with conspiracy to dist-ii spirits or brew wort without having an Excise license. was first tried before Chief Justice lglampbeli‘ in“! a uryatspeca stingso is Supreme Oourt. 0n Nov. 26. 1045. the jury disagreed: they were un- animous that an unlawful con- spfrwy had been formed, but two found that Andrew Perry Was not prover: to be a party to the con- splracy. At the loci June oitiincs for Prince Countv a second trial was held before Mr. Justice Arsenault. eni the jury retiuned e verdict oi acquittal. From that verdict an appeal was taken by flit! Cmwn- Tho grounds of the n a1 were that the learned judge ad erred in rejectinz evidence covering tiie finding and seizure of alcoholic or SQ I'D QIIOI‘ fl .16 mlgi mof li t i! some PM?! on Dec. so. i042. also that he erRd “‘ with; ‘I’; SW23 i“ hill” iiess ra y. B ii to direct the Jury as to the not? any defense. older Justice campbeil merit yesterday 0N‘! 0am“ ll referred in I life- liminnw ob » ‘nter. Knud Jorgeneen. ; . . l-IO-Ii. >mnjor centres in Winnipeg, Bran- lAppeal Court Judges In Disagreement Over Perry Conspiracy Case possible at the resent time be- cause of the lac of medical and nurs and the lack of building and hospital equipment. The minister said the Province tras planning concentration of initial services on the "under- served" rural areas. The preventive services part of the pro ram will be founded on the sctt ng up of health units throughout Manitoba . under local boards largely of lay persons. with the cost to be carried two-thirds by the Province and one-third by ihe municipal authorities. Mr. Schultz said the not new cost to the province of these units is $26,000 capital and 3265.300 an- nual. The municipalitlesLannuai contribution was set at $65,000 and that of the population in unorgan- ized territory at $6,000 annually. ‘Those sums were in addition to a total of $167300 now spent annu- ally by the Province. To assure early and correct diagnosis. tiie Manitoba health pro- grnni includes the locating cf three don and Dauphin with full medical radiologist and bacteriologist-path- ologist services in each. All rural hospitals will have X-ray and laboratory equipment provided and will be supervised from the key centres. These services are to be pra- vidcd at public cost as a utility on reference of a regular prac- titioner. The Province will meet the entire capital cost, $300,000, and roughly five-thirds of operating costs up to 50 _cents a head for the diagnostic clinics everywhere except in Winnipeg. The two-thirds of the operating cosls to be borne by Manitoba annually were set at $242,600 bv the Health Minister. wag not the Betti-Bl 5099111113., B5 reqiirlred by Sec. i013 of the Cr.m- inal Code and by a recent Jildflmcht cf this Ccurt in the case 0f Rex vs. Prank Gallant and another. hunched From Ottawa “It seems clear," stated the Chief, Justice, "that tiie appeal was launched nt the r est of the Dominion Government. which has retained Messrs. Hughes and Hin- ton, counsel for the appellant (and presumably plying them). to Josecut the appeal for the prim- ary purposes of better enforcing the revenue law, of the Dominion. Mr. Hilihflfi admits that the appeal wag brought ‘through the Attorney General’ in order to bl" r4: it within the requirements mentioned. " On the other hand. the Attor- ney General personally signed iihe notice of appeal; then he wrote Mi‘. Hinton that he was retainins the discretion to decide, on full con- whether the appeal rocoed or not; finally he appear on the hearing of the iippell and requested the Oourt to permit Mr. Hughes gnd Mi‘. Hin- ton m conduct mo arsumerrt- With some hesitation, I find that the Attorney General has amimed the ulflmpiq responsibility, for the wp- pea], and 1 would therefore over- rugdigile objizmtgndie fourth srouad r a alefnamallv fafclkm to dlrgct a; to q,- a any e- $53.13,“; Chief Justice found that it had no merit. "The laok of evi- dencg for the defense must have been obvious to the jury." he said. "n; affect was purely flttlill Ind ‘ 1; m, "151 judge had seen {it to mention it t0 "if lurYi b9 ‘mm have carefully avoided akny refer- he riiicllil ‘l0 '. MIMI’ fiewtéogage-Qg 2. llie accused himself m h nd.. . "Shh; 1%,“, third gmtlfld. i feel 10 miles of Belgian salient; Ber‘- lin admits St. Hubert evacuated: British forces gain 1i I-2 miles as U. S. armies close to within nine miles on north and south of bulge; killed, wounded or captured; Ger- iure four towns. meet only week Isla despite i l tion Last-Night A ‘(War Situa . By KIRK]; L. EDISON (Associated Press War Analyst) The Mari; and all but unbelievable fact about the invades! of Luzon is that landings in the Bight of Lingoyen Gulf within less than 100 miles of Manila Bay were made virtually unopposed ashore and afloat as well as ineffectlvely combztted in the nir. Many hours after the first troop waves hit the Luzon beaches rmil had probed inland. there was no report of contact with enemy ground forces in any substantial number. At sea, only isolated iniieide saliiea by single destroyers and a midget submarine fell against the BOO-ship armada on route except for the future air attacks. Just what that might» mean as an indication of Japanese defens- ive stratezy none yet can say. Minimum estimates credit the enemy commander on Luzon with 150,000 troops. The Japanese fleet still ls a. powerful striking force in all but plane carrier categories. It is possible that the very boldness of the amphibious operation was its greatest assurance of success. It may have seemed so impossible to Japanese leaders that the assault there came as the complete sur- prise its feeble reception indicates. Ii. does not sufficiently explain. however. the failure of the Jap- anese commander on Luzon to rush substantial mobile forces to meet the American forces on Llngaven beaches once he was certain that they were the ‘ “ " of the , ‘ ‘ ’ and “ “ ’ by air at sea. 1r the Japanese fleet or what is left of it is u. figure n. all in the Luzon campaign, the time for it to strike would have been while the American troop convoys were at sea. American naval forces in that cnse must have been hampered and denied full high-speed abflfly for battle manoeuvres by the prime necessity of protecting the troop and supply shins. That opportunity was lost, either because the buttered enemy fleet had been recalled virtually to home waters to reduce losses. or to guard more closely the sea corridors from Japan, to northern China. If the fleet moves now against the A -' beacheads on Luzon. it would risk annihilation. There is one other remote possibility. It might be that Tokyo has in effect written off the Philippines as lost and abandoned its garri- sons to their fate. conserving sea and air, power for home defence. Car Ferry Progress Reported Satisfactory By Naval Architect Need for a "revived and rejuven- aied"? izavtiun was urged "by- President Morton Dew at the an- nual meeting of tiie Charlottetown Board of Trade last night. Owing to the small number pres- ent, the meeting was adjourned to a future date at which time a. din- ner‘ will be held, election of of- " International . At A Glance (By The Canadian Press) flcers conducted. and a definite WESTERN FRONT — German llmgTam Outlined. forces reporicri quitting western Secretory W. L. Higgins inform. ed tiie meeting that having heard rumours tiie new car ferry plans wereto be changed to provide coal- burning engines instead of the oil- burning equipment, he had com- municatcd with the naval archi- tcci. H. H. Germain, at Montreal, and had received the following telegram in reply: "No change in plans contemplat- cd. We consider progress very sat- isfactory particularly in view war situation. Department and all in- teresis here doing their best for you all." Major T. E. MncNutt briefly ad- dressed the meeting on what could be done toward beautifying the City by caring for the trees. Lt. Col. K. S. Rogers attributed the failure of tiie Board to at- tract a larger attendance to the lack of vision winch, he maintain- ed. was keeping the youn er peo- ple away from the meet ngs. I: was useless to attempt bring new industries to the City without having the sites upon which new industries could locate and before industries could come to the City. its incorpomte limits would have to be extended. He expressed ap- proval of the proposed public com- fort station which, he said. if built tzloniz suitable architectural lines. would not detract from the City's laciiuiy but would enhance it. He (was supported in his arguments by llfcsrzrs. R. E. Mulch. V. A. Ains- ivorth and Major MilCNiitt. The following new members of the Board were welcomed to the meeting: Messrs. Ivan Home. L. German threat to continues. RUSSIAN — Soviet troops hold three-quarters of Budapest; at least half oi‘ garrison believed rissbourg man relief attempts fail. AERIAL -- If. A. I". Mosquitos hit Ifannover aficr U. S. hen es hli German targets behind Bel- gian salient. NORWEGIAN -— Norwegian paratroops liinrlcd in Norway des iroyed sections of two trunk rail- ways. PHILIPPINES - U. S. forces advance inland four miles. cap- Jiipanese resistance Luzon nd. BURMA — British troops gain ‘ resistance north- lndian troops its alr- 0h west of Shivebo; enter Shtvebo capture drome. Goal Shortage Threatens i ll. S. WASHINGTON, Jan. l0 - (AP) — Iéii drastic‘ SCZDS to meet an “i?- pen n; coa s Oi‘“‘.ifl'.0." amc . Byrnes called teddy ior ii rcduzticn ~74 5981?"- steru"? 139M“- w wi in temperatures in all homes and llillivib P~ C~ Mncmmelh Rr w public buildings in the u ted Mennlns- C. C. Thompson. Gwrse of 68 States to a maximum de- Ives. and Hiram Atkinson. grees. In addition. the War Mobilizat- PRESIDENT'S REPORT ion Director asked the War pro- Following L1. the text of Pre- ductlon Board to prohibit "all out- door advertising. ornamental zinil display lighting‘ except in those areas when: flush gas und hydro- electric power can be shown r0 be available without drawing on the CQELEBEY- sldent Dow's address: "For over half a century. mem- bers of the Charlottetown Board of Trade have. wc presumed. listened to annual reports of their Presid- ..-.. _.--" .. tndnnio trial ivflse "dlillf?" I" in hi. Justice tion by the remn- dent, that the Attorney-Gem"! ' ‘ioatiiktoi i... vise l.’ 001-’ iii: l j“}'c1'»/17Z}i/~tz;' rsz/a/aai/ A ‘SAiAllAiv: MAXIM-S OIL MERE MAN A y g up] ii wilhalli ruhhisfiniior angianwperflgcted with- out trials. Resistance Still Weak 0n Luzon ls. SOUTHWEST PACIFIC. AD- VANCE COMMAND. Jan. 11 (Thursday) (AP) —- Powerful Luzon invasion forces have ad- vanced on an average of four miles inland from tneir Lingayen Gulf beachheads, headquarters re- ported today. The American forces who landed at four points in the Gulf Tues- day after a blistering naval and air barrage still found resistance surprisingly weak and ineffective. S’siiie Officer ls Named To iiow Position OTTAWA. Jan. 10 -— (OP) Appointment of Major J.R. Crue, of Summerside. deputy cuartennaster-generai of Canadian division, as D.A.A.G., MD. i0 with headquarters at Winnipeg. Man. is announced. Major Crue. whose home is at Summerside. was born Jan. 9. 1006 . After being commissioned he served g5 5131131. ling officer. machine gun officer and adjutant and in 1938 passed the militia staff course. After the out-break of war he was appointed staff captain st Sydney fortress headquarters and was transferred to Khizstoin in Sep. tember. 1941. Where he became D.. AQ M.G. from Kingston he went to 0th Canadian Division in the Same WWcl-ty» in December. i942. he was made brigade major of the 13th Infantry Brigade and next, April went back to his post at Div- isional Headquarters. For p. flmg he served as D.A.Q.M G__ Phflflg command Maiior Cruels wife and three chlldrer. I've at Summerside, PEI. Germans Fakeil B. iB. G. Broadcast LONDON. Jan. 10 - (CP) —The BBC declared today that the Ger- mans faked a broadcast, attribut- ed to the BBC. which gave Field Marshal Montgomery all the credit for stopping tiie Germans’ Belgian drive and which described Ameri- cans on the Belgian front as "be- wildered." l Disturbed over the ill-feelings! stirred by the broadcast. whiclil infuriated United States troops. the BBC in n formal stair-merit de- clared “no such broadcast has been made in niiy BBC service“ The dissenslon-causing program was attributed by BBC to the Ger- man station, “Arnhem Calling" which fills intervals on BBC pro- grams with Axis propaganda. MembeT Of Jesuit Seminary Staff Dies TORONTO. Jen. lU - (C?) —- Father Erie Gladstone Bartlett. 58, member of the staff at the Jesuit Seminary in Toronto for some years, died today. He had been director for Canada of the Sacred Heart radio hour during the last three years. BUENOS AIRES. Jan. 10 -- (AP) -Argentina severed her last con- nection with Amcricnn conutrics ar. a group today-temporarily at least -by announcing that she would not partipiDfli-e in future meetings Pan-American Union be- cause her ri his had bétil lknore’) and the U on's consultative pro- cedm-e had been altered. (A dis atch from Santiago. Chile. said dip omatic observers there re- Bdrded the Argentine move as a mistaken one. cracking wide open the division between A entina nnd other countries of the cmisphere (Argentina's self-isolation. these observers said. gives other Amer- ican nations no recourse but to lea-- ve Ar tina out of their councils. The hilean dispatch added "i" it w felt in many quarters NW l! Argentina's withdrawal boded 8 PAGES Mail, SIM; other Provinces I U.S.A. $5.00. Subscription Delivered. $6.00. Shrew M21; Mines 1222M Al"? FARE. Jan. l0 - (CP) -- German troops were in general retreat today from the western end of their Bei- giiin salient under steady pressure from British 2nd Army forces and ivcrc believed already to nave cxiriczited the bTulk of their forces from the ihreai of entrapment by Lnlicd States armies thrusting into the bulge from the iiorth_ and south, front dispatches said tonight. Field Marshal _von Rundstedi appeared io have ef- fected :ui orderly iviihdrawal under cover of the same foul weather _which shrouded the westward plunge of his arm- ies in mid-December llIHI reduced the Allied tactical air force m impotciicy. British forces smashing at ihc western tip of the salient had ad- vanced 3 1-2 miles during the last 24 hours, crossing the Ufiomme River cast of Rochefort and seiz- ing a number cf tov-"ns, including Griipont. midway between Roche- fort and St. Hubert. "The Germans are disengaginl! in most sectors along the north- west tip of the salient and falling back in uihat appears to be a gen- Allies Iiave Jet Plane In Action MOSCOW, Jan. 10 —- (AP) -- erai withdrawal," said a British r835... F§,°,‘;.,,,§§"'“§;mh§§§ staff officer. “There are few con- d”, m" ‘he ‘American M,» comet jet propelled plane reo- ently has been in use aguinnt German robot bombs. Suprun has just returned from a six-month visit in tho United States. where he studied production of the Jet-propelled plane at the Bell Aircraft plant. is the first disclosures that any of the Allies have placed jet-propelled planes In tacts and the enemy is making iii- fle or no attempt to fight." Tomsnaimrir‘... ofod. e) Airlines Plane Grashes In Galif. Argentina Steps Out Of-Pan-American Union ii‘ I01‘ action. 24 Are Killed Canadian Officers T rain In Australia rash ' —~—- fn i. 3.58,? b5“'1‘1§d,,,1fé",y,on‘f‘§§§ nmsaaun. Australia. Jan. 10.. fog-shrouded 51mg" ‘vhere 1t (CP Reuters» -— Canadian an! British officers are now receiv- ing instruction at ihc new Aus- tralian Army Staff School at flnbarlah, Queensland. This is the outcome cf decisions aiming at the exchange of Bril- ish, Dominion and Australian of- ficers with the objrct of estab- tishing nn Empire standard office. tried to land. All 24 lerscn were killed. ' s abuam 'I’.he victims were the 21 passen- gers-three from the navy and is from the army-and a crew cf WW9. Amiy and navy sources will announce the passengers‘ numrs after relatives have been notified. All but two men were burned be- frond recognition. The plane, arriving from New York by way of Washington. Cin- cinati, Memphis. Dallai. E1 Past l and Phoenix, reached Lockheed l air terminal in Burbank at 4.30 arn. P.D.T. (T08 a.m. EDVIE-JLUB p.111. A.D.’I‘.) Barred by fog from landing. Capt. Joseph Russell Mc- ‘llrll , Slllillotlmd SHARP KNNES \% ir- SWORD SWMLOYIERS Auley. 34. told th tr l t ' c by radio that he Ivoiflzin lliotenligfig aRvAv “ND land at an emergency field 30 auffER5 miles to the northeast of Palmdalc. Instead of turning to the right for Palmdale airline attaches said he apparently swung to the leit The plane flying low. was heard c- i-er various southern California ‘owns during the next hour. At 5.- 10. McAuley was heard culling Palmdalc but evidently could not hear its replies. for he kept ex- citedly repeating his calls. Several hours later. after ihc fol had lifted. the wreckage was sight- ed with field glasses from the air- port tower. Secret Weapon p g METEOROLOGICAL OFFICE. '”_ TORONTO. Jan. 10 — ‘C?! - I-‘ONDON J11“- 19 ~ i9?‘ — Minimum and maximum temper- The Japanese have joined the Ger- Mums; Vancouver i3, 55 Edmon- mans ganda. ,, ‘rhe Australian izldlu quoted ii Tokyo bmadcast oi‘ a Japanese newspaper story describing these three "secret iveapons": radio-controlled plsiic . carriiir! a bomblca-a who, {Olllfiiit destroy ‘um cntgle A- b meiican c y." szc iiiistai . a a ~ fQllQii-ed y "mortuary weapon‘ ‘not otherwise 9:. ’§{j§',,,c,_.ru.-o iiiid occasional explained but also declared to be 1 - fatal to an entire city, and a radio _ John: Moderaic i< detection unit to spot airplanes “3.- fresh wlnds and not quite so cold 000 miles away." Wm. llght snowfalls or ilurries. The paper also meiilloncd. the] Gun B“. Cmleur, and North broadcast said n radio-controlled Shmejficsh ‘finds. scum-um. {all- torpedo boat which was iemlcd and decidedly cold‘ capable of sinking a battleship at waflmm’ Provinces: I-‘resli one strike “$5,; “mi-ally fair and ile- flflgflly cold with scattered snowfirirries. High lug? tthlgbgnoriiifig at 9.59 fl . . {mgurionsogis this afternoon at 5.3.‘: mid rises tomorrow moriiifll a B New moon January 14"" 1°‘ A M. ‘ i lteen mimi- ..§".'::2:".‘isHabit-oo- DAILY AIR SERVICE _ Charlottetuwriiol-"glimmlmfl " r~ ii; " - -. .22; Win- ln sec ct ucilon toll zcln. Iii; ggxg$izio82a H; o“ m.“ 243‘ 12B; Montreal 15B. 7B; Quebec 15B. 2; Moncton l4. 14: _ Charlottetown 19. 20 Forecasts: Lawrence: Moderate Lower St. . ~ and decidedly (will ,0 fresh umda a “me mg” piupn- America). The announcement followed the Pan-American Union's decision Monday to postpone consideration of Argentina! request for a con- sultative meeting to discuss her ro- lations vgitgo gthekr clountrics oi 7 A M Nor i aii u i . Illtii‘ ca u" . This request for a meeting oi ior- "gaaxlti; ‘f-Iiimrf . In cign ministers in which Arlicnzlna Km". ch.,.|,¢"g,m| iz i5 P M- said it was hoped her relations 5“ |,_M_ 739 pp], with her neighbors would re- - solypay saitvics turned to normal wins sent to ilic Union last October with ciznectui- ion of a quick and favorable res- ponse. The anouncemeni. handed to re- porters here. significantly lXlllitcd out that Argentina would continue to absent herself from the Unions deliberations‘ so lmllibil? eh; BUM‘;- od icr i is were ciig Iliiirc . cont nental peace in SouthIArrive Charlottetown Leave Charlottetown 11.80 A-M- “Ir-iv: lghsrlottotown 2 P- M and 5.45 P. M- CIIARLOTTETOWN -- NEW GLASGOW (Dally escape Sunday) Leave Charlottetown ‘lulflrMi- i . l