. MAXIM! OIL 111.2111: MAN injustices an people should Mire the nmphete of lfitlnd Jock as >%/’ * The People's Paper Covers Prince Edwardilsiand Like the Dew MAXIMS CIA HIRE MAN my}. iiiwccw“... 11.1.i'.....,‘1':..":,’.-,,,. Q1ARLOT'I‘ETOWN, cannon, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1944 s races ::',:,..':,°:,=,.":,":.i.:".1"",::.f "M ‘m WLLETIN HARBOR. Sept. l1 - 1A 1 _. Currier planes of the tlnimi Stat‘ 8rd Fleet made the United aitatoc’ first iii-rial coun- 1 m-nimolr of the war on Manila n“ area yesterday, sinking 11 m}; 111d destroying Z05 planes, } lieu‘ Frigate . . , tummissicned 1 . 1 orrawa. Sept. 21 - 1c?) - . gird-L Wbblc, a new river class . Royal Navy hut 1111111- _ 111 Navy. has been eoinmis- ‘ 11mm and now is i11 service. the ‘ounrrti or. of is cclnuianiiinrt of- 11! the new ship, which is nuued after a famous rivrr run- 111111: !?.r11-.111.l1 Northern England lmi is zlreiuned to licensed either as 1111 11.~:c.11't or a striking force . 1 v. . L 1 offieors 111¢111<11= 1.11111. ‘it Saint. John. 3., and 1 Lzeuz, E, D. Dickie. Digby, (El 11 S. a g ii__._____i_._. iioitiwcii iienereai it Luncheon IDNIDN. Sept. 2i - .J. C 1.1111111, (21111111iiu11 ' ' ilir r k. .1" 1.1111251 “Ila; ill. _ inions is One of the Cma- 1111-1111101‘ of Mvifort. iiiiiliié~ii EVE111T3 1 u‘ -—- Murray 1111112111‘ 51.11111. .1. ~ U-LIU-LZ. Road o. 1100i ‘hlmi, ' 21. .1111 S1111,1.i . MuligLiy, Su111e11111cr 2 9-2 11nd Dance. Si. \i1. 1111 R1111, (.1~ 311,111 1111.-."1' s Orchestra. 9 -1'. Vernon - 13.3111 11.111. Lillian-r. (J q >1 . .\i1:(.‘11t* ue, Satur Webster's 0 “u 1 l '1(i1\y ‘Jilllil °I uiinlies. ln m. 111 all Ladies nlmsc trim; 1111‘ has ( "_L" stock .. 111211 . imgs at .'.vl1111 _ ' 1-111111111, 31131101111101‘ 25th 1 . 1111111 ~l 11.111. Plea list l1, Ray Brooks i11 0111111111- 9-22-21 " ‘ting Iloard "Unloading today and lrrhltiv. tar oi Barley anti Barley’ M1111. "ll Dricc oii c111‘ Bring Imus Mcfiillgnn and B11110. 9-21-21. "Livestock Marketing Iloarri load"!!! hogs Prince 00111111’ Sfnurhc to Alin-rtoii -- usual lchedlfle. Consult local agent. 51-22-21 "Fire sale of barley meal, meat 5°51. ground oats, hog 11nd poul- "Y concentrates rleyhdratcd alf- la meal avnila le after Wednes- “Y 1101111. Sept. 2o. 1111111 511111. 12110 ‘Alli of usable feeds at half-price. International Fox and Animals "eds 1.111.. Bummersidc P1101111 mi Q-N-Ii b Livestock Marketing Board teiidini! i1og,s during Wcck of Sell" mber 25th as follows: Mommy Ili- Elmirn. Souris. St. Peters. orell. Montague. Cardigan, M11r- Tl)‘ River Melville Uigg. Chur- ‘(gfitemwll- ’ ‘Plies-day forenoon. llrlotteiown, North Wiltshire. [Ollnicr River, Kinkora, Kensing- p“ "Kl Albany will lond 11niil 2 f". For information re trucking ' "i? Dhonc local agent your io- l- 9-22-21 in the United King- nixincrl by ihejloval (F91 .- of 1111101111011 11111-11 11v Rt. (‘anariian 1 1 wer of 1111111» (‘ommon- P1111) here 0211M‘ il1el1111r11w111 r6111" N ' " ( ‘111.\11oi gUnind States of America is men- God lilting in r6111"!- . i i111: . 11111111111 Clarence (iiilia C.C F‘ _ 11a'-li:1111».~11t im- (7-1 ~ $111111 and P F) ' sea themselves and thanked 00d 1 1 ' '.ii\‘\' of Winnipeg. said in an in- 1 1 1 1 1 i? Gensorship Rumpus 1 11v River Mun- 1 nested today as liberated France's _ by the river of blood where he felt ‘1i1a\'n1' t0 decide which side first __-¢r<( l! Jllllll Icahn " l- Wur Odrreupomleuc 3AM. Italy Sept. 21 - (AP) - Allied roo 1 “i.” been termed by fellow 11:21:». 93g of the most important document; of the War. ' M1 Mwmt of hi; nor-oi: work in enemy and Partisan territory was binned” 10118:: he iiveddvutwhile M I- I!" trip by 111m. Sept. l1 he was ki ed, leaving l. legend of scorer of rounded Allied fliers saved from t e clutches of Bul- gar and Gcnnan troops. (Mrs. Parish is in Charlottetown at Present. she is the former Mica Norah Jenkins, daughter of the late Dr. Stephen Jenkins.) Maj. Farish parachuted into the Wild Bosnian hinterland Sept. 19, i943. and spent three 90 day per- 1o1is in the interior of Yugoslavia 1n the your that followed. An engineer. Maj. Parish estab- lishcd many secret airfielda from which Allied filers (and others have flown out to freed . He obtained Marshal 1110's assistance in the rescue of stranded aviators and in difficult case; he went himself to guide them aorou the rough coun- try and through enemy lines. Maj, Furlsh was moved deeply by conditions as he found them in Yugoslavia-by the eternal strife be- tween the Partisans and Chetniks. there should be brotherhood in arms. A short time before hia death he Went to the Island of Capri 1o out his feelings m1 paper. ‘T1111 report was prepared pain- ‘Llkllifiiy with a. careful regard for the opinion; of other American liai- son officers attached, as he was, w Tim's headquarters. The report. went to President Roosevelt. "m all this wetter and confusion of eonfllctin report; and misunder- siandmgs," e wrote. “a few per- tincni. facts stand out: “The senseless killing of them 1n- nncciv people by each other must be stopped. It is useless now to en- divi wrong. "in all this terrible story of mis- 1 111111 frustra tion which we felt in the -\1.'1>\1ld be called 111 "11 1n.gi1t have prevented it or stopped it. has never been used. The tioneri in the same breath With in Yugoslavia. We were the one 11.111011 on earth to whom the pee- 911- believed they could turn for iillblPSiTi, unpolitical aid and ad- v-ee ivithout having to DH! 801119‘ "How many hundreds of homée fiid 11x1- enter in which the people cros- o' ‘l. iirrss the utter sense of heIDIBSBHQSB face of such complete faith in the 1111111111 of our countri’ to right wrongs so evident on all sides. Expects Election Before liec. i5 EDMONTON. Sept. 21 — (C?) --Seuatcr John T. l-laig, Conserva- icrview here today he felt cer- tain a Dominion general election fore Dec. l5. “itriiirniiir: officers in Manitoba have received notices asking that vnumeratora be appointed." he said. Flares In Paris PARIS. Sept. 21 — (AP) -—The Leftish Bloc of the Paris press pro- flrst big- censorship rumpus boll,- ed up around the Governments 111m on publication of a proposal of the semi-official National Coun- cil oi Resistance. it was unofficially learned that Hie Council criticized the slow- floss of supplying Allied military rqulpment to the French army. Apparently the ban stemmed from French military quarters out of a desire to avoid friction among the Allies. i The Socialist Party: aper. Le Populalra, and the ommunili Partly. llumanite, barred from lil- ing the pro-war device of running black space to emphaeiac censor- ship. peppered their stories on the forbidden pronouncement with the word "censored." Le Populaire, in a prominent front page editorial plastered with repented "censored" slugs, relat- ed that the censor had first ark- 1111 that publication of the quea; tioned material be "postponed. then banned it entirely. Le Populaire ran the text of the Governments May fl ordinance on 1-11111111ry security 11nd censorship- which is 11111111011111! w be the only censorship existing in France now /filid said the National Council Farleigh WING COMMANDER J. ANGUS MACLEAN, D. l‘. C. Icwes, Belfast, P. E I. Officer Commanding the Test and Devel- opment Establishment. R. C. A. F., Rockliffc, 01112.. who is enjoying a brief furlough in his native Pro- vince. Army Awards OTTAWA, Sept. 2i —- (C?) —— Defence Headquarters announced tonight ll awards for gallantry to Canadian soldiers sewing overseas. Citations were not available. The list includes the Distin- guished Service Order to a Lieu- tenant-Colonel and a Captain; the Military Cross to two Majors, two Captains and a Lieutenant; and the Military Medal to four non- commissioned officers and mun. Those decorated included:-- St. Louis, Raoul, Tr., 31, Cana- dian Armored Corps. Three Rivers and Cap-de-la-Madeleinc, Que. MacLean, George, Tr., 2'7, Cana- gign Armored Corps, Sydney Mines, Londoners iirumhie Repairs Too Slow LONDON, Sept. 21 —- (A P) — Grumbles about slow progress in for Germany is apparent. from. the Swiss border to the North ginning of the end of the Battle of begun. flected that. Rhine bridge had been closed and salient so far as it could be traced line south of the Wall-Rhine and Nazi flanking thrusts. y is in u intensified the triple-threat nature prelnurc to the south. 1 War _Situatio a, rnnuc 1.. srureoufa-s-uua Preeu War Analyst Nuul forces on all fronts in Europe are reeling under synchronised Kudzu-Allied blows but it ir around the Arnhem Gateway in Holland to the vulnerable German coastal plain that the most immediate crisis Complete Allied success there could let the whole Null west front Broadcast appeals to German troope to fight to the death re- Thcy acknowledged that the fight on that narrow sector of the 500 miles Wide west front could prove "decisive." intact of the Nilmcgcn bridge across the Lower Rhine strongly indicates a confused and uncertain situation within cuemy ranks at that critical point of which Field Marshal Montgomery's charging tuulu and leap- frogglng air borne forces were tubing full advantage. Official Allied reports etill lagged hour: behind front-line advices. There were many intirnutions, however, that the gap between air-borne advance elements and British tank forces surging across the vital might also have been crossed utflrnhem. There was no question that Field Marshal Montgomery was al- ready shuttling heavy ground forces across the all important Nijmegen bridge. intent ain't only of quick relief for the urlvuncc air-borne troops enemy besieged at or near Arnhem, but also on widening his front north of the. Rhine usululckly as possible. It appeared a dangerously narrow ers emphasized that Montgomery had lost no time in expanding its base Not. until the last Rhine crossings are secured and Field Marshal to begin ' forces through the Arn- hem-Emmerich Gap will his next objectives become apparent. German failure to hold or deltroy the Nijmegeu bridge has greatly erutions. It compels a. diepeninn of enemy reserves being rushed to bolster the line from other or lean dangerous fronts under American Front-line reports are already picturing the battle ac a. perfect dem- onstration of ground-air tin-operation. O1111z11 TROOPS 121111-31 PORT 11111111111111 Story 0f - L .11i.lFari§_l1 l n Last Night Sea rocking. It could spell the bc- the Ihlne almost before it actually Yet swift Allied seizure that the eastern arm of the Rhine on the maps and Allied Headquart- the Mus to guard against possible of the Allied left flank surprise op- Uver Nazis Stimson Pleased With Air Army WASHINGTON, Sept 211 ._ (AP) — Wur Secretary Stimson said 1o- dnv the first airborne armv by hgp- Ding “barriers of coastal forts ‘flooded lands and difficult canals‘; had brought inc Allies 111 a point repairing bombed houses grew lou- der in London today With chill win- 1 tcr nights only a month awaY- 1 After hearing robot bomb alerts, for four straight nights, most Lon-j donors have given up hope of lght-p ing up even as much as the law al-| lows. The principal concern has he- come not how to let light out of windows but how to keep Mud from coming in. It is legal for windows to glow] with "half light" until the _§lr61'i sounds and the general feelzng is that, it is less trouble w black .1ut| entirely as usual. The requirement; for total blackout in an alert stands‘ in spite of press comments that ro- but; haven't eyes and can't aim. The great. sigh of relief. prompted by the official statement nearly two weeks ago that the battle of the robots was largely a timing of the past. has been effectively erased by recent raids. The latest Ritflfiiflfi have been comparatively minor. however. Seventy-five thousand men have been busy repairing bombed homes but it has been officially uillmflwifld- ged that nearly half of the 400.090 dwellings dam ed 111 the first two weeks of t e robot 01111111111!!!‘ haven't even been given "field dres- sing." 111111111 Field 11111111111 ilannctein Arrested NEW YORK. Sept. I1 -—- (APl _ The United States Office of War Information distributed today l smckholm report that Field Mar- a115,] “m; mic Von Mannstein. former German commander of the calm-n "one, had been arrested in Qgflnany an orders of Henrich "immlerx. m m r m "a . . . a e e11 gushed in the newspaper stock- Edlflia Tidningeh and related that 51m,“ Noske, minister nf war in 1.1m 01d Weimar republic had been bellied. ’ ls Executed (SHUNGKING. Seiit. M - (Fri- dgy) ._ (AP) - Gen. Chen Mu- Num, commander of the rd Chinese Arm has been executed for failure " car-r out his in- structionr to defen Chauuanh- glen," strong-hold on the way to Kweilin, the Chinese Central News‘ Agency said today. . General Chen "fled at the ap-' preach of the enemy.” Recording to the dispatch. The executfon was carried out at the front. Sept alt Donal was imPIO- S1111’; lilmlgeedwlidtil‘ this rule. 20, ‘on orders of the Chinese High Command. where Siegfried Linc defences may be found "less formidable " “This airborne operation." he told a news conference. "again support. ed the hopes of all of us who have been interested in developing this means of offensive warfare. It achieved tactical surprise." Former Police 1 Chief In Rome Sentenced To llie ROME. Sept. 21 - (AP) — Pie- 111 tro Caruso. police chief in Rome during foiu- months oi German oc- cwgation, Louay was sentenced to diu by b01111; snot 1n the back for his ollaboration with the Nazis. 1t was the first crimnial trial 1n Italy. '1 ‘c X11211 court of Justice con- cicnurccl i-wbcino Occuietto, -Ca1'- usot; secretary nnu co-detendam, to 30 yours‘ unprisonment on the same charge. The eight-man high court of justice presided over by Judge Lor- enzo Maroni heard prosecutor Marie Berlinguer characterize the two defendants as “wild beasts" and the VCPCUCIS were announced after two hours’ deliberation. Caruso — convicted of turning over w the Germans 50 of $85 host- ages executed by the Nazis at Posse Ardcatine last March -1- turned pale as Maroni pronounced the death sentence. ' Occlnetto. accused of attending a German sabotage school in the Netherlands, uncencernedly chew- ed gum as the court convicted him; Earlier, however. Cansrfs secre- tary hnd went and buried his face in his handkerchief 11s his counsel pleaded for leniency. The courtroom was tense as the judges filed in but there was no demonstration from the spectators. hand-picked by the six political parties. A row of Cerabinieri a aratcd the spectators from judges. the accused and newspaper- men. 0 91¢,“ Bfogso CA NADA Allies Score Victory Seize Vital Bddge To Speed Up Drive Against __ >___ Ruhr Valley. In Holland By HOWARD COWAN IAIJDON, Sept. 21 - (AP) American airborne troops in a brilliant stroke seized the vital Lower Rhine bridge at Niimegen intact today and British tanks raced over it and deep into Holland througn enemy defences guarding German industrial might in the Ruhr Valley. (Berlin radi said British troops fought on cig t‘ miles north to a. Junction with British airborne forces at Arnhem. and the Ger- man Transoccan Agency said the my was in flames.) As the American arachute and gliderborne infantry <i§§§§§ cut on the bridge and jerked louse llici enemy's demolition charges, the British 211d filmy attacked simul- lflfleflllsly from the south, pouring Ollt 0f shell-torn Niqmegen rigging; m‘? Gefmflll defenders. Saved Bet Buck BOW the Americans got across to the north bank oi the Waai Rh ne 5° accomplish this daring feat was Gen. Heldrichb parachutists were pulling out of Rimini this mor- ning after Canadian forces had moved up west bf the city with such speed and determination that the port, once the Adriatic anchor of the Gothic Linc, no longer was tenable. The Greeks went quickly to work cleaning out the few snipers left behind. By BILL BOSS (Canadian Press War Corres- pendent) WITH THE CANADIANS 0N THE ADRIATIC FRONT. Sept. 21 —iCP Cable) - On the battlefield north of Rimini airport today the Canadians were burying the bodies of their comrades and those of the Germans slain in the Allied ad- vance on the eastern flank of Hit- ler‘s Gothic Line. For 24 hours on Monday, On- tario, Quebec and Maritime- in- fantrymen fought a close combat struggle with Germans who strug- gledh fanatically from ditch to d tc . On a plain as flat as a. billiard table and criss-crossed by a. net- work of irrigation canals and shallow ditches, the Germans had men at every ditch intersection, 11nd fortified every battered house. 11nd enlbeddcd tank turrets in con- crete at every strategic point. ‘They had platoon and company imadnuartcrs under road culverts and commanded the whole area. Everything Favored Null: Xi. scanned incredible today that the Canadians were able w strug- p.10 forward 1,000 yards in less than 24 hours to take this sector and beat out the Germans from this type of obstacle when the Nazis had everything in their avor. There were ruined houses where the Germans had mounted a gun in every window. commanding a view of all approaches. There were Panther tank turrets embedded in concrete and protected inside by three-inch armor plate. In a visit to the battlefield I saw two of them that had been knocked out: one by four 77-millimetre armor- pirrcing shots from a Sherman tank, the other by air bombing. It “'21s these tank turrets that gave the Canadians on the ap- proach to the plain and the Greeks on their flank so much trouble. It was a fierce, bloody and of-1 ten individual fight as the 08118-3 (Imus and Germans met at close‘ quarters. Many Germans lay dead! n! the end of it, but there were] Canadian dead too. The Canadians are striving to hammer out a wedge yvest of Rimini which would outflnnk the Adriatic port and open the way for n battle across the Po Valley. not immediately learned at slip. reme Headquarters, but their 1111101; saved the Allies from a timc-con-1 511111211"! setback in the battle of Hol- Tlie crossing occurred some time Wednesday. and when Bruish guns on the other side signalled the at-1 $60k they dashed from hiding. Now the battle has swung toward- Arnhcim, eight miles north, where the British 2nd Army hopes to come‘ to the relief of hard-pressed air-i borne units which are believed 1101;1- ing a budge euros; the Nedcr Rhine, a second formidable watercourse in the Rhine Della. If that crossing is made secure] they will have only the Ijssel River! 1 i4; ford before they are out on Ger- many's northern plains north of the reputed Siegfried Line terminal, at Klcve. Arnhem is 15 mics north- west of Klcve. I The greet bridge at, Nijmegen- loss of which is turning .thc Ger-i mans northern flank — rises i300.‘ feet; above the Waal Rhine. ivhichl is broad. clecp and swift, with 111cm banks that would pose a tcughi problem for army engineers ancl1 delay the Allied campaign for days. ‘ A; British tanks thundered ever the 1 1-2 mile long bridge. signal- ling a great victory in the battle for Holland, the Germans to the south struck back savagely against the American lat and 3rd armies with mutter-attacks in and before the Siegfried L'ne. These cost them at lelwt 134 tankiin 24 hours. _ ‘;Stn‘es 8th Air Force fighters shot Dismal Flying Weather Hampers Allied Airmen LONDON. Sept. 2l-—(CP)—In :1 day of dismal flying weather. Al- lied air forces hammered hard ag- ain at German 0'1 sources and rail- ways. dropped Polish paratrooper reinforcements to the Allied airborne army in Holland and carried an-‘ other load of supplies to the forces already landed. The German Air Force threw some of its carefully boarded figh- ters against them in the bitterly- conbcsted Nijmegen area. Unwed down 20 while losing four of their aircraft. 0. P. Newsman Reported Overdue LONDON. Sept. 21 —- (C? Cable) -Charles Bruce. London super- intendent of The Canadian Press is overdue aboard a lane carrying reinforcements to arborne troops niaernting in the Netherlands. it was disclosed tonight. Mr. Bruce,‘38, was on the flight as a war correspondent to report on the aerial supply trains which have been operating out of Bri- tain to back up the airborne forces already landed. Also on the overdue aircraft is likimurld Townshend. war corres- pondent the London Daily Telegraph. Information here was that the British aircraft was due to land at its bus.- at 7 p.m. yesterday. The plane was last reported as being about io land on Dutch territory. It did not appear lo be in distrcssi hut flak had been heavy in the1 £ll'(‘ll. 1 The plane was said to have fallen 1 our of formation after dropping ital glider tow. C11. c. a. F. 11111111: RIMIN l Tendered Mr. Un MR. D. l. BONNELL OTTAWA, Sept ‘J1 — <CP1-—A.ir Fbrce Headquarters announced w- night l0 awards-one Distinguished Service Order. one Member of the Order of the British Empire. seven Distinguished Flying Cross and one Distinguished Flying Medal — to members of the R.C A F . serving overseas The recipients included: cln Ldr. I. A blarch of (No. 4 Kimberley Roe) st. John's, Nfld, who won the D F.C. 111111111 c11111=11111 By Russian Papers MOSCOW, Sept 21 — iAP- - Complimentary Banquet German troops haye been permit- ted to remain 1n Finland unmolest- ed since Sept. l5 despite a ore-l armistice promise the Finns made to intern or dnve out all Nazi sol- diers by that day. Russian news- papers charged touar. “ he Germans haven't left, Finnish territory yet nuci 1t 1s obvi- ous that they intend to offer re- sistance." Izvestia declared. accus- ing the Finns of breaking the pro-1 mlse which was the basic condition; whereon the Russian army sus- pended hostilities _ Pravda. Joining lzvustia in accus-. Helsinki government of breach of faith. said: ‘ "Although one week has passed‘ not a single German soldier has been handed over to the Allies. Hitlefs radio Berlin continues to broadcast nll over the world that; German troops arc evacuating Fin- nish territory with the officimis a1: of Finnish authorities" 1 Al‘. newspapers agreed that Fin- land had been "one of the" most szubboru Allies of Germany and "tried to remain faithful to Hitler until the last moment ’ 1 An lzvesiia editorial stated that "the Soviet people cannot for at how Finland. which received 1n e- peudence from the Soviet Govern- mcnt 111 1917. used her eeoeraolucell position for incessant threats to, the security of our northwestern , borders and thrice violated peace 11-1 1921, 19:10 and 19-11 " 1 The armistice siililvd Tllfida-l’ was seen here as butting Filllflfld on probation whereby she could be assured sovereignty and indenend-i encc onlv by faithful fulfillment of‘ her obligations Under the terms. withdrawal of the Finnish armies to the 940 frontier was begun today. Fonner Governor (if Texas Dies AUSTIN, TeX.. Sept. 21 -— (AP) -Formcr Governor James E. Fer- guson, 73, died at his home here today. For more than a quarter of a ceutilry" he was a pom-r in Texas politics. He “'11s twice elected Governor. During his second term he was impeached and removed from of- fice. Later he was defeated as n Presidential nominee of a party he organizczl. He saw his wife elected Gov- ernor of Texas twice and defeated three times, the last time in i940. 11115111 Aichor OF Gothic Line Cracked WITH THE 8TH ARMY IN RIMINI, Italy, Sept. 21 - (AP) — Greek troops hoisted their flags on the main postoffice of Rimini today and the last German hope of holding the 8th Army away from the Po Valley lay crushed in the deco-late ruins of this once-beautiful resort andmporilyciity,‘ D. J. Bonnell Eve Of His Departure Citizens representing many war- time service organizations joined last night with the Charlottetown Rotary Club in paying signal tri- bute to one of the Club's most highly esteemed members, Mr. D. J. Bonnell, who leaves shortly with Mrs. Bonnell for the Pacific Coast. The function took the form of a. complimentary banquet at The Charlottetown, and was very large- ly attended The special guests included His Honour Lieut-Gcv- ernor B. W. LePage, Hon. Thane A. Cam bell, Chief Justice, Premier the on. J. Walter Jones, Hon. W. J. P. M an. O.B.E., leader of the Opposition, His Worship Mayor Zglanlghard, and Mr. Peter G. ar An illuminated address was pre- sented to Mr. Bonnell by Capt. N. W. Lowther on behalf of the War Services campaign, the Rotary Club, the Blood Donors‘ Clinic, the Navy League, the Provincial San- atcrium. the Red Cross. the War Finance, the Y.M.C.A. The cover of the address wu artistically de- wrl Karl Cameron and Mina Jennie Tumor. at the dinner by Grace was raid the Rev. T. l2. McLennan. There was an enjoyable musical pro- gram. including club singing. solos by Mr. Raoul Raymond. and duets and solos b Stan Lancaster, RAF and Allan tlki, RAF. Complimentary telegrams were refill by Rota Secretary George Walters from essrs. R. S Hos- keny, general secretary of the Y. M.C.A. National Council. and H. ,1. Humphrey. president of the Na- tignal Council Y.M.C.A.'a of Can- a a. also a genial message from Rev. Dr. J. S. Bonnell. Mayor John MacLean. of Syd- ney. N.S.. who is visiting the city. was present last night and gave a brie! address. recalling Mr. Bon- nells residence in Cape Breton and Paying warm tribute to him as a public spirited citizen. A number of Summerside citizens were also present at the function. President T. Roy Cudmore of the Rotary Club. presided and said, in the course 0f a. brief address, that M1‘ Bvnnell. during his well earned 110115811‘ in the far West. will be remembered here es "a great leader, 9- cievei‘ Ofillflllel’. and one who in- silired confidence in those with Whom he associated 5n the various r’ rcEt1EflFcm§1>F1r_7T'cELAe1" 011cc ‘film: Was AN Aascur Mlliiiiii 611111118111. ‘N110 ATE iliheilF ! i gin-s‘ ‘ 111 1.11.1 ‘ and “msricthticliifr“°fi' {if ' u Sun sets this evening gt a, m5 rises tomorrow morning at 6. ‘f. First gIuaQrtfi moon sepwrhbq 5111mm idc ti fies laterethan Chdsrlg DAILY All. SERVICE Charlottetown - Sullieruiile -... Moneton Leave Charlottetown 1 all.) 11.30 1.111.; c p.111. Arrive Ch-rlottetowu 18.45 pm: 5.45 p.m.; M0 pan. SUNDAY SIBVICI Leave Charlottetown l! noon. 1 Arrive C‘ lottetawu 5J5 Mll- Charlottetown - New G ow (Dull except Sunday) Leave C urlottetowu l pm Arrive Cr-crlottetowu m pa. r. a. 1.-1v. a. nun! ssuvrcl nanx rucwnmo srmnau Leave “"12" 5' rl I -¢ 1». 11'?» i. ‘if.’ teen -‘ Iminu i.» a. 1a. 1.00 We?” Islands-Hit) A. M t