OI -A MERE MAN Mun- 5"?’ Guardian. Founded an. it'll‘. rest Yeiliigs nbenuvtcllltlna will-ch grow as we live by them and . w" Guardian. Two Cont. CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1944 72%’ ” The Peop e's Paper Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew i 8 PAGES mils%a use. mo. U. 3. AR Y FIVE MILES INSIDE (IERMAN “azis Lose its Planes In Battle ‘Rural Electric __ A Rate lfeflactions New Schedule Of Rates Fixed By Public Utilities Commission. Bitter Fighting iiear Bimini ROME. Sept ll - (AP) - wnlle British 8th Army ‘troops are un- Aged in bloody, inconclusive ighiing with the Germans near itimini on the Adriatic. American troops advancing north and north- west of Florence have come squarely rgainst ti.‘ enemy's main Gothic line defences Allied headquarters lnnounced One American spearhead,. stab- bing almost due north from Flor- ence, reached Usellan within 35 miles of the industrial metropolis iii Bologna in the Po Valley. Other tth Army forces farther west clear- ed out the city of Prato and Pistoia ind seized important high ground northeast of Pistoia. “Poundmaker” ls iiew Frigate MONTREAL, Sept. 11 —- (CP) — The frigate H. M. C. S. Pound. maker, named after a famous chief oi the Cree Reservation outside llorth Battleford, $ask., was deliv. rred lo the Royal Canadian Navy ‘ifs?!’ by Canadian Viclrers Lim. The shin was the 20th frigate tompletcd by Canadian Vickers. in i1 months. Two have been delivered to the United states Navy,. eight to- ihe Royal Navy and the rest to the Royal Canadian Navy. DOCUMENTS FOR. NATION CAPE TOWN - (C?) - Thousand. o! documents collected Africa's most distinguished his- torians are now in the possession geihjemisiitkzn. hlAn egitire rrgrrn ' at n rc the collection. ves 06cm) ed by fiflliillifi EVENTS "Show Malpequo Wednesday. 9-1 l-Il "Chicken supper and dance. Lot 0 hnl. Sept. 13th. 9-11-31 "Dance Millvale Sciwol, Wed- iitsdfly. Sept. 13th 9-12-11 "Insti-t to . liall welilneadcilavicesebl? °i ‘Willis. 9-12-21 "Crapaud Scarlet. Chapter meet- gélfrhumdfly. Sept. 14 Craps. v i) 13- 1i IUD it‘ 9-12-21 ‘out Olini rimmed by or”. gaciiuggwgwguiglehiifi ‘ - 2 Io 4 D-m. 9-12- "Hiliiiital dan MG ' Warehouse, Montaigiie Wgdnrifogrllirys “member 13. Webster's orchestra: g- - Match and Livestock uoid 20th Boom ; "n" on Ilf-rlgla-klii l0 Den . w at’? si...‘““..."'.‘fi.'é'°l‘i..f".i.'.....“i». lhuohv and Mrs. Alfred Ougleigu "Pl Show M, as’ . entertainment and grounds. vhf?” mvgipber and Dance in Microbe; 1a Nn. ' I-lall. Wednesday. supper served at 0 9-12-21 "Chicken 8187001‘ Bazaar RA- mglfiiitl. Bi c and other games w“ M30100 . Tuesday and ‘uneasily. 12h and 18th Be - . W. Q-lfl-Qj "508 Producers n- tcwn — "m" 0. Gardiner, eirectown. m Farmers requiring $353131 “f. iiiuse arrange two d: a in s-i? “"""°' "-2.12%: Ill- tirnc and °' s°'.'..lt."°rifi"‘"ltfi 30am ’ 0-10-21 Y) th l Dr. Gustav Preller, oneyol ‘Soilttlgijl A substantial reduction _in rural electric rates" totalling approxim- ately s4,200 per year, is made under a ruling Passed at o. meet-i i/erdiiy of the Board of ilitles Commissioners of the Pro- vlnce. A}, present there are two rural ram schedules, one passed in i937 and one in 1939. each affecting d“. fererit rural sections. The rates passed in 1939 were more favorable to users. Both these rate schedules are now abolished. and the revis- ion appllos to all rural districts. For churches, schools, or build- ings used solely for ublic worship or community and welfare work. the minimum charge set forth in rev. ioustgatlngs is reduced by $1. per m on . Further reduction is made by a. discount of twenty-live cents on each bill if paid not later than fif- teen days from the dateofthe bill The minimum charge, which in- eludes the use of 20 kilowatt hours of ener y Der month. is as follows: (i) W en customers average more than ten to the mile, $2 25 per month. (2) When customer average be- tween eight and ten to the mile, $2 50 per month. (3) When customers average be- tween seven and eight to the mile, $2.75 per month. (4) when customers average bc- tiyfien six and seven to the mile, $3.00 per month. (5) When customers average be- tween live and six to the mile. $3.25. (B) When customers average‘ be- twe7egi four and five to the mile (7) When customers average be- avcgon three and four to the mile. In connection with the above I'M/BS. Dr I. J. Yeo, Utilities Coni- mlssion chairman, e lained to a Guardian represents. ve that no customers are placed in classific- ations (A) (5) (6) and (71 but .111 are given the advantage of the les- ser rates under (i) (Z) or (3). All energy used over 20 kilowatt. hours per month is at the rat;- of 2 1-2 cts. per kilowatt hour. 1n contrast to the new rates, Dr. Yeo polluted out that at. present. under classificaion (l) for example, l5 kilowatts only were charged at. $2 50 per month. the rate above this being 7 cts. per kilowatt, hour. He cit/ed the case of a farmer on Brack- ley Point Road, using 50 kilowatt hours per month. He paid under the old rate, for the first l5 kilowatt hours, $2.50; the next 2p kilowatt hours at 7 cts. amounted to $1.40; the next ill kilowatt hours at 3 1-2 cts. cost him fifty-three cents: a total of $4.43. Under the new rates (Continued on page 7:001." 8)- iio Easy 0n Butter, Sugar (lamps Advised OTTAWA, Sept. ll - (OP) -— Naval. military. and air force sta- tions across Canada have been ad- vised to "go easy on butter and M t; sugar" in a general order announ- ced here today. The order said civilly of butter and sugar in Canada is critical. with 2; ilritzle prospect of relief in the near u 1h“: telegram w Toronto officials Go n todfly. Donald . ‘n ces board chairman. said Canada faced the possibility oi a cut in the sugar ration. I-Ie said nothing a- bout but/tier. but offietsls said an ‘ “ shortage would be season- Service wuoly officials are not estimate how many tons of hitter and sugar (lanadian servicemen and women use. fianadian Steel Output Doubled ..;.'atr~-...§€E.s.ra<<".ir time rt teal same eliwonfllom nhmirllihtion. today. - teTllac oveéeig‘ out a e plan as vlac the Dom 380$ of Canadian oubled since 2m in on fourth many of them quiring great metaliunrlcal skill in which M W! up to ive times the tire-war e‘ Prime Minister a few weeks pre- re- home last night included Tpr. Luftwaffe Fails To Stem Allied Tide LONDON. Sept. ll — (CP) — United Slates 8th air force fighters and heavy bombers trail- pod and beat. the German air force today, destroying 176 Nazi planes in one of hhe fiercest air ba/ttles ever fwght over Europe. It was the heaviest Luftwaffe loss in more than a year and one which cl deeply into the air reserves wlilch the enemy has been careful- lynhoidinfi is until now ior the f al bat e of Germany. Of the Germans destroyed. Am- erican fighters shot. down 116. While the heavy bombers knocked down another 17. and 42 were destroyedl on their airdromes l Indicating the extent of the 0P" position. 48 of the American heavy bombers and 29 fighters failed to return. This air battle lavas only part. of the day's widespread operations which included R. A. F. attacks on German troop concentrations and renewed battering of e I-Iavre by R. A. F. and RCAF bombers. R. A. F. Spitfires and rocket- firing Typhoons battered isolated pockets of German troops along the Belgium and Netherlands coasts and medium bombers sov- erely damaged u ferry crossing between Flushing and Brcskens. in Holland. which was being used by the Germans. Early tonight R. A. F. Lan- casters and Hallfaxes attacked three synthetic oil plants in the Ruhr Valley at Castrop-Rauxel. Kamen and Nordstern. Visibility was excellent and first reports in- dicated the three P1511“ We" heavily bombed. The devastating attack on _Lc Havre. threatened by British units of the 1st Canadian Army. continued with RAF. and R.C.A.i F. heavy bombers again blasting| at the besieged port early today! shortly after R. A. F. Mcsqiiitflij resumed the attack on Berlin af-. ter a lZ-night interval. The Mos- quitos dropped many ‘LOOU-lwiiiid bombs on the battered-citadel. 800 Allied Fighters Allied headquarters reported that "without a question the toll pf German P181195 by the American fighters today “was the greatest number of enemy planes eve}: shot down in combat by our fig ters.’ ' There were more than 800 fight- ers on hand for the greatest air battle ever fought over Germany between American fighters and the German air force. For more than two hours fierce combats raged with enemy planes —puttlng up their first serious opposition since July 7--striving furiously to break through the heavy fighter screen about the heavy bombers. Targets were Merseburg. Lutz- kelhdorf near Leipzig. Misburg and er tral Germany. The weather was good and a greater part of the bombing was visual. Aside from the heavy bomber attacks it was a big day in the air generally. Nine waves of light and medium bombers of the United States 9th Air Force renewed support of the American 3rd Army with hellliy iii- tacks on large-calibre guns and emplacements on the Moselle Riv- er and on a German headquarters building and signal centre e Result. of the 60-minute attack was called excellent. with six gun placements neutralized. American fighter-bombers in response to a request by an Am-, erlcan column knocked out ll. 'I‘i er ranks blocking a road two miles from Luxembourg, aiding in the liberation of the city which quickly followed. iiomo 0n Furiough After Long Service Home on furlough after service overseas since January, 1940, is Sgt. Roy S. McGee, 13 Euston Street. who arrived last evening after landing in Halifax in time to participate in tire rousing re- ception Minister Churchill. Sgt. McGee saw the British viously in Italy. He served throughout most of the Italian campaign with a medium artil- ler regiment. and saw heavy act on at. Casino and other places. when he left Naples for home. the Allies had established their lines well outside Rome and were advancing towards the Gothlic n Caliber Island soldiers returnin “led places in Cen- ' given there to Prime. north of the Rhineland loop of the shell fire. An A " 7th army. some soon and Gennany would be possible only weeks ago could go far erican advance in the Pacific. ‘ This conference being essentially of course. be no disclosure of ’ the final crushing attack on Japan. Marshal Stalin's stated attitude War Situation Last Night l‘ By Kirke L. Simpson, Associated Prom Wnr Analyst QUEBEC. 59W- 11 '— (AP) — Prime Minllkr Churchill and Presid- cnt Roosevelt and their military staffs are back in Quebec to carry on from wherc they left off last time they met to nap war strategy-but with an utterly changed situation on the battle fronts of Europe. Allied armies are battering their way to the crucial sectors o! Ger- many's western frontiers, the Maastrict gate and the Lorraine gap, which domino‘ tbe approaches to the core of the German war effort, the in- dustrial area of the central Rhine Valley. Aachen, bastion ciiy to the Siegfried Line, was reported under ridgehearlaeveral miles long has been established across the Mnselle. The United States 3rd army has linked up with the Reports from the European scene left the impression that an Allied break-through into Germany was imminent. E r station that it would forced to collapse. perhaps within weeks. probably had a great deal to do with the timing of the Quebec follow - tlrrnrrgh strategy conference. What has nnppened in Europe or may happen thcre even sooner than the best Allied conjecture had ‘lmuglit ta determine Just how snnn the full weight of British power can be thrown against Japan to match the Am- s military get - together, there will, lsious taken or of the timing schedule agreed upon. There has been no official effort at any time to conceal or obscure the fact that what is to be worked out is the broad outline for of apparent. cordial sympathy wiih the Anglo-American preparation to get on with the destruction of Japan l5 possibly significant. It chimes in with current reports passed by Mos- cow censors that Russian - Allied war collaboration in other than Europ- ean theatres is not beyond the range of Possibility- Thut cnuirl conceivably refer only in the war with Japan and mplies that once Germany is finished off. Russia milk-t lli "m"! 7051139" "m u" New President For Si. Francis Xavier ANTIGONISH, N. 5.. Sept. 11 P) The resignation of Very Reverend D. J. MacDon- ald, P.P.D., President cf St. Francis Xavier University, and the appointment of Reverend P. J. Nicholson. P.P.D., as his successor, was announced here yesterday. Father MacDonald is resigning because of ill health. iio More Practice Blackouts In ii. S. HALIFAX. Sept. 11 -—- 1GP) — Hon. Dr F. R. Davis oo-ordinator cf Civil Defense for Nova Scotla. announced tonight that practice blackouts in the province will be, disccntlnued. The am ounccm d- said there will be no relaxation in llghtng restrictions, which forbid liighted outdoor signs and flood light- rig. Anglicans , iileet At Sherhrooke snaaanooxa, Que., Sept. 11 — _,(CP) -— A meeting of the synod of the Ecclesiastical province of Canada. under the presidency of His Grace Archbishop Cairrington, is opening at Bishops University to- morrow. Those attending the synod meet- ing. apart from the Archbishop, are Right Rev. W. H. Moorhe , rd Bishop of Fredericton: Right Rev. John Dixon, Lord Bishop of Mont- real and Right Rev.. George King- ston, Lord Bishop of Nova Sotrtia. Seventy clerical and lay delegates from districts representod by these bishops are also expected to take part in the deliberations. The synod convenes with a cele- bration of the Holy Communion in the university chapel rind closes Allied effcrt to bring the war across the YlL°§1W€5Q§Le.!°_Pl!8 - Pacific to a quick end. A Canadian .lVavy,wAir Force For Pacific Role? Army May Not Participate To As‘ Large An By JACK BRAYLEY .. OTTAWA. Sept. l1 — (CP) —- Dclence nmiisiers and service iieis have prepared to g0 to tin.- Vc-JMJCC conference with bulging portiolios which riolii the set... u‘ o......a.... plan for participation lllracun: 0p- erutions-a plan on ivnich hinge supplementary plans for demobil- izatlpn or me uomiriions 100,900 service personnel. Prune Minister Mackenzie lilng already is at the old rweiic l acluan capital. is there, mo, fence lviimsacr Ralscon and Minister" Macdonaid and the three 1L1 V)! chiefs of staiI—Lt.-Gen. Jollll lviurcnie, vice admiral ueci-ge Jones and air Marshal Robert Lecicic—vrill ioliow shortly. At some convenient time during the talks between Britain and the United states Canada's war cnieis Will sit in at. a JOiDL meeting with Britain's delegation and decision Will be reached on the size and {nature of this country's contribut- on who big powers first must portion out the s/imeres of responsibility as between Britain aiid_ the United States and then indicate what is expected from Canada and other United Nations. It is reliably reported here that Mr. Macdonald and lVlal. Power are prepared to make specific oi‘- fers. These offers have been des- cribed by high officials as “ex- tremely substantial and possibly larger than will be accepted.“ However. it is understood the less mobile army is not yet prewar- ed to offeij any more than a gen- eral commitment. The atrny~not expected to participate in the Pac- icfi: war uitli as proportionately large numbers os inc other two ser- vices—will wait until its role ill the European theatre is more clearly defined. This will depend on such minori- ant matters as the rapidity of vic- tory amid decisions regarding VhlCh nations will be called on to furnish thxefl army of occupation for enemy be iory. There also is a possibility that a joint international police force may be set um as a temporary sec- urity measure and Canadians may asked Wparticipate. When decisions are taken on rhc composition of the Canadian wire." in the Pacific, the small corps of cemobilizers here can drait rrnrli‘ definite ialans for bringing the nat- ion's forc<s back to their families and civilian life. For the purpose of discussing meccjital questions. it is___u.nder- l tcmitinauea 0_f‘l___ page; __oei._4i__ W. Ward and Gnr. E. J. Steele: of Charlottetown, and Gnr. Wil-i llem P. Aylward, Summer . . Line positions, the 3rd army found " Elected Honorary British French Maginot Line intact. American forces "in reasonable strengtW-that was the official language-crossed the Licririun bor- der to strike the blow for which the United Nations long had waited after an artillery barrage first chewed up the cnqnv DO-Sliic-JS The British 2nd army in its smash The Americans probably were penetrating well into the Siegfried defence system at this point. (The exact location of the Sieg- fried Llne, or west wall. never has been disclosed officially.) into the Netherlands was for the weakest link in the 400 miles of the west. wall—-tlie belt of pillboxes. tank traps form stretching south from German city of Kelcve across shortest recite to rlin. Other elements oi, the U .5. 1st army already were fighting through the mmefields of the Siegfried Une south of the key city of little more than eight miles from Germany's frontier. and were blast- ing fortifications inside the Reich with heavy artillery. British foil-nations or the 1st Can- adian army lunched a heavy sault on the big Port of under siege for eight days, and met stubborn enemy resistance. ‘But Allied headquarters said tonight ult- British forces dominate the cltv Elsewhere ‘the 1st Canadian army front was relatrvelv quiet. The strength of the various Ger- man holdings along the coast was estimated as lollows: Boulozne-SOOO men under com- mand of Admiral Frlsor. a fanatical e rid me the Nazi Calais-about 3,000 men most cf whom are ardent Nazi marines. probably dominating a less enthu- siastic commander. DunkHq-ue-10.000 men. Coastal batteries between Bou- lcgne and Calais-batteries which i include one sct cech of AOO-MNL. SSO-MNL. and BBC-MM“ guns. mun- ihrciigh Zcebruggc - Gent - Ant- warp-elements of four S S. div- isions, totalling between 10,000 and D5. _ Sweeping through the Maginot the French Kid-millimetre Sims lstill pointing eastward. ready -flre except for ammunition, As- lgcclaicd Press Correspondent Ed- tward D. Bali reported from the ron There had been reports that most of the underground fortification.’- guns had been moved out. but Ball was told by a young French care- taker that the Germans seized lit- tie except bedding. iL-Sol. Maelfinnon Pres. 0f Battery Aachen. in . through an noel by 1.500 troops. ; The pocket north of a line drawn; t Aiming Al: Weak Spot In Line LONDON, Sept. 11 — (CP) — The United States 1st. Army burst into, Hitler’a inner fortress of Germany today and plowed ahead to a depth of five miles, meeting the enemy on his home soil north of the frontier town of Trier-Hi miles from th/ Rhine and the great industrial city of Cob lerrz. It was a black day for German arms, for the British 2nd Army broke across the frontier of the Netherlands and the U. S. 3rd Army seized a great part of the old By C. R. Blackburn QUEBEC Sept ll — (CP) - Early destruction of the aggressive power of Japan and the completion 0f Hitlerite dissolution in Europe ning between Prim Churchill and President Roosevelt when they sat down together today this ancient city for their first meeting in nearly a year. The war leaders. who chose the walled citadel of Quebec as the scene of their meeting for a second time in l3 months. let it be known official spokesman that:- 1. Their main purpose in meet- gjs to plan the ear-lit com- lilete destruction of the Axis powers; 2. They will concentrate on military problems; 3. Their chief topic will be the war in the Pacific and Far East-without overlooking the European scene where the Eng- lish - speaking Allies and Russia are swiftly closing in on Hitler's stronghold. One of the first positive ann- ouncemenis made by an official source after the two leaders arrived in Quebec this morning was the re- lease of a message from Marshal Stalin stating that he was too busy with his armies to accept a Chur- chill - Roosevelt invitation to meet them here. The Prime Minister and Presid- ent, expressed their agreement that Stalin was properly absent, from their talks While busily engaged “on i» the field of duty." F. D. R. Arrive; First Mr. Roosevelt arrived in Quebec about9A M E D T. (l0 A. D. T ) and Mr. Churchill about special trainjrom Halifax where he landed from a ship on Sunday. and Mr. Roosevelt on a special from Washington. Both trains stopped a. Wolfe's Cove-landing place of ocean g0- lng steamshlps close by the scene of Gen- Wolfws successful assault of Quebec's citadel nearly 200 years ago. A small crowd had gathered in the bflgllf, autumn sun to see the not- SYDNEY. Sebt ll -— (CP) — Lt-Col. D.A lviacKliincii ofi Charlottetown. was rc-el-ectcd hon-, orary president of the 36th sixth bia-ttcry at the annual reunion. held at Anthony's Camp. SV-dneYE River. over the weekend. | Hugh Philpott of Glace Boy wast elected president; Charles Dickson. also of Glace Boy. “'11s clcctcd first vice-president; JomrsjJ MacDon- ald, Sydney. second wee-president: Murdoch MacPhee. Sydney. 506T!!- tam-treasurer. The executive committee consists of Neil S. MacDonald. Thomas J. Currie, TH. Kitchen. Basil Brayc, Harry Higdon and Arthur Higgins. yN. B. Liberal Has ! One-Vote Majority OROMOCTO, N15. Sept. 1-1 - (CPi-Annouucemcni was made late this afternoon that as a re- sult of tihe Siunburv Countv recount of ballots cast in the provincial election May 28 Dr. Gordon I-aw- soii, the second man on_ one Liber- tlckiet, has a majority of lust one over A D To lor, Progressive- Conservative can idate. Previous e candidates. Hon. Dr. F.A Mc- cl Dr. Lawson. have been declared elected. EISENIIOWER BUSY ALLIED SUPREME HEAD- QUARTERS, SEpt. Ii — (C? ~ Reutcrl-Gen. Eisenhower. in a week-end of intense activity, con- ferred with Field Marshal Mont- gomery in Brussels, Maj -Gen. Troy Middleton, commanding gen. eral of the 8th Corps at Brest, and decorated Lt -Gen. Koenig with the Legion of Merit Kelli; all but pass-holders well in the background. Prime Minister MacKenzie King. official host for Canada in the cit. adel vice-regal residence where the and‘ Churchill - Roosevelt party is housed.‘ W115 first aboard the Roosevelt train. By the time President; Roosevelt had left his car and taken his seat Man open car Mr. Churchill's train had backed through the tunnel to the station platform and the Brit- ity House uniform, had to the President's automobile. Old Friends Meet Théy talked of the war and vic- ibfy. and Mr Churchill was heard things were "iovel fishers??? ll. S. 3rd, 7th Armies Meet [FOODS here as "an b anriy invaded 7t _ (A field dlSDRtch from the west of Dijon l headquarters disclosed today. "M. were the objectives of fresh plan-. e Minister’ A M“ an hour later. The latter came b i ables but heavy guards of Royal‘, Canadian Mounted and other police‘ ish Prime Minister. smoking a big; ¢18ar and wearing his famous Trin-y hurried‘ to mention “France" and say that -. _ th t . ' . mg possibly? ‘Elli?’ lglilgn The Vanguard: of the two armies met at a point described officialgtal L. spo American-French southm-n arm said th ti m. liicinity S‘. ‘sfitefinlihllfiiif; "i 1117mm pushed within 15 miles of the vital Belfort gap. gate-way tor southern Germs Pacific War Is Main Tbpic Of Conference Roosevelt And Churchill Reached Quebec Yesterday. lilouncil Discusses éistimates For ‘New City Scales _.i. * _Before_a full City Council last night, with His Worship Mayor J. E. Blanchard presiding, Coun. A. T. McKinnon submitted his eati- mate of the cost of two new city scales and their installation as well as the cost of the two build- ings requlreo to house them. Aft- er some discussion on the estimate, it was decided to invite the city coal dealers before a special meet- ing of the City Council, to be held next. Monday night at 7:80, when the whole matter of cl co weighing would be thoroughly qe- bated. Other matters decided upon were (a) not to take civic action toward changing the city's reg. ent adherence to Atlantic ay light time; (b) to lay a concrete sidewalk on the south side of Re- serve Street between Upper Queen and Valley; (c) to have a survey made of the Kensington Range with the view of the City con- structing a suitable park and bath- ing beach on that site. After the health. sanitary, food inspection, and police reports were read and adopted, and some dis- cussion on minor matters cori- eluded, Coun. McKinnon submit. ted his estimates for the proposed coal-weighing equipment, The scales would cost $1,017 each, the I lnsllllflimfl $750 for each scale; and .the buildings $3,465 each. Adding i5 per cent to this cost for the architect's fee, and the total cost , would amount to $9.814. Cour-i. Mc- lKirihon said. Considering that 110.000 loads of coal were weigh- | ed in Charlottetown each year, the city would thus have an annual Yeveililfl 0f $1.000 a year from the coal weighing. Allowing fair sal. to th welghers aries 22 “Til (Continued n and Wu lNSOMNIA invent/aw not: (as Btsf Steer iieaoeas! i l High tide this ihcznnig ..r 6.20 and this evening at 8.47. Sun acts this evening at 7.17 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.35. New moon Se . 17:19.87 am Summer-aide I than (Tun-lo DAILY All. SERVICE RQME so t u __ _, Charlottetown - Suuuuenfdc - United Smttcsp 3rd and (lAtlll) onlliré: Mann“ completed a function today in L"" ch"'°“*"°"' 7 "54 eastern Fiance. sealing or: Gm-mm, 11.30 a.rn.; 0 pan. Arrive Charlottetown 12.45 p.m.r 5.45 p.m.; 8.40 pan. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown ll noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 p.111. Charlottetown - New Glasgow (Daily except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown l p.111. Arrive Charlottetown 0.50 ‘Mll- Wliilc unite of the two armies l’. E. l.—N. S. FERRY SERVIC! were loining hands. French forces DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS otxrupied the important hizhway "m" 0f Dijon and other Amer- Leave Wood [clinch-LN A. M. 11.00 A. M. 8.00 P. M. Leaver Caribou -- 0.00 A. M. 1.00 i P. M. 5.00 P. II. _ e i8 minute lat- ttetoiwn. a .