MAXI M6 .01 A MERE MAN Inetohtes eareelrou. laleli use of yourself. nature will cease t. m; cbarlottetowl Guardian, ‘Iwo Cute lorlainl IIIIICIII- Iellfllf All? FE SUlT OF R U. S. Tightens Prices BULLETIN DONDON April 9--(I‘rldafl- tori-ands. Bombers railed the industrial Ruhr Valley of German Thursday night, It was disc deed today. NEW YORK‘ April l—(AP)-— The Berlin rad o was ofl the sir for an hour and l5 minutes to- night, the federal communica- tion commission reported, ‘ in- dicating Allied air activity over the sentiment. ‘ l also left the air in the ee‘ly evening. MacArthur 0n Anniversary 0f Bataan Surrender By C. YATES McDANlEI. Associated Press Staff Writer MEWE-EERE IIN AUSTRALIA, April 9 -(I'*‘riday)--(AP)—- In a statement commemorating the first anniversary of the surrender of American and Filipino forces on Bataan Peninsula, Gen. Douglas MacArthur said today:- “A year ago today the dimming light oi’ Batman's forlorn hope flut- tered and died. I-ts prayers by that time. and it prayed as well as fought, were reduced in a simple formula rendered hungry men through cracked a patching lips: ‘Give us this day our daily breed.’ The light failed. Bataan starved into collapse. "our flag lies crumpled. itaproud pirlions spat upon in the gutter, the wrecks of whet were once our men and women groan and sweat in prison toil; our faithhil Filipino wards. 10,000,000 souls. gasp in the slavery of a conquering soldiery devoid of those ideals of chivalry IiillCll have so dignified many sr- mes. "i was the leader of that lost cause, and from the bottom of a Control WASHINGTON, April 8 --(AP)-— In a drastic tightening of all wagg alld price controls President Rouse-i velt Wlliflht took steps u: combat, inflation by placing ceiling prices: on all commodities affecting the! cost of iivins in the United Staten: except where some adjustments‘ may be K160855871 He also directedu on the same conditions, that there; be no further increases in wages or salaries. The President also directed Paul V. McNutt, manpower commission chainnam- to prevent switches in jobs to obtain higher pay unless such shifts would aid in the effect- ive prosecution of the war. The President said in an accom- panying statement that this was s “hold-the-line" order under which "all items affecting the cost of lgilng are to be brought under con- HON. J. WALTER. JONQ _________________ "No further price increases," he saic‘. "are to be sanctioned unless lmpsratively required by law, Ad. Justments in the price relationships bet-Ween different commodities will be permitted if such adjustments can be made without increasing the general cost of living. "But any further inducements to maintain or increase production must not be allowed to disturb the PYNBM lifli-‘e level. such further in- nuccments whether they take the form of support prices or silbsidies must not be allowed to increase prices to consumers. Of course, the extent to which subsidies and other payments may be used to help k861i down the cost of living will gamut}, on congressional authoriz- Mr. Jones Becomes New Member 0f Campbell Cabinet 1t "' ' fr» Hon. J. Walter Jones, recently chosen at. a Liberal Party Caucus to succeed Premier Campbell the event of the lattcl-‘s retire- ment, was yesterday sworn iil as member of the Campbell Govern- ment and given the portfolios of Minister of Public Welfare and Minister in charge of Air Raid Precautions and Civilian Defense. Other cabinet positions were re- shuffled at the ceremony which ‘look place at noon in the Confed- eration Chamber before His Hon- . our Lieutenant B. ‘W. LcPage. They included pointment of Hon. M. . Guigan as Attorney General and Hon. H. H. Cox as Minister of Public Works. The changes are detailed ill the following recom- mendation submitted to the Lieut- enant Governor by the Premier: "May it. please Your Honour: "Owing to the resignation from your Government of the Honour- able James P. McIntyre, I recom- mend Ml‘. J. Walter Jones as a. member of His Majesty's Execut- 80 German Planes Lost In Two Raids IDNDON April 6—tAP) —Eighty German planes including many from Reichsmarshal Goerings elite yellow-nosed Focke-Wulf fighter squadrons were destroyed in run- ning dogflghts incidental the American heavy bomber attacks on swornin. Counci Honourable Mr. Jones for appoint- ment as a member of the Treasury CHARLOTTEIOWN, CANADA, in Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew By Glenn Babb, Associated Press War Analyst Gen. McArthuHs ‘ ,, gtalgmgnt Bataan is a reminder that there is a long and probably bloody trail back to be travelled before that filigody ls avenged. But a brief stocktaking i shows that already a good start has been made. that there has been a great and heartening turn in Allied prospects in the Pacific- theatre since that day when the military fortunes of the United States reached their lowest depth. At this point on the road back the latest dispatches emphasize two I aspects of the situation in the Pacific. First, the Japanese are determined to maintain the offensive and are ready to spend men, planes and ships freely to that end. Second, the Americans have such a tremendous qualitative superiority in the air as to make any Japanese offensive ad- l ventures highly costly. , ' t Both in the South Pacific and in Burma the Japanese are increasing their forces and their pressure. The navy's communique of yesterday [g- i cording another brilliant American air victory over Guadalcanel also illustrates the aggressive temper of the enemy. Out of 50 bombers and 48 fighters sent back to attack United States shipping off that Island Arn- Zfrlllfln fighters, shot down 2i Zeros, five dive-bombers and ll of other] H795- On the Burma-Indian frontier again the Japanese are giving proof] of their aggressive purpose. Reinforced by fresh divisions and under l5 new commander, not yet identified, they have compelled the British-In-l dlan forces of Marshal Wavell to relinquish much of the territory gained i in the four-months-old minor offensive towards Akyab. | General Yahagi, the army's mouthpiece in Tokyo, says the British retreat means that "the enemy‘s ambition of recapturing Burma has at’ ,last been crushed" and that this "has increased the confidence of our -forces to advance into India." The threat to invade India can he dis- counted.—but the developments in Burma at least have given Yahapii and his colleagues the first good material for boasting since the tldcl turned in the Solomons and New Guinea half a ycar ago. on this first anniversary of Plan Public Inquiry Into Labor, Wage Conditions OTTAWA. April 8—(CP)- Plans I {mzcisisizailabitisriiialb; iletaiied M395 nalzaz.izsi"iia*slsi.Seas: of Sweden In N i‘ i" " azi Shipment tonal War La-bor Borad. Aim of the inquiry will be to for- STOCKIIOLM, April g _. iAP)— The Swedish ‘Foreign ada today in respect to labor mat-l ters generally, undhavliig particular . iegard to the existing war emir- t merit ive Council. and request that he be “$512,551,, a l also recommends ‘methods m, 'ed in the inquiry. mulate a report "with constructive recommendations for a co-ordinated program on labor relations and Office announced tonight that ""195 of Sweden and Norway, which it described "as ezztrn- wast matters." The SitUZltiOIl prevailing in Can- ordlnarily detailed," had been confiscated from a freight car gency, makes it appear necessary and. advisable that an inquiry of this kind should be instituted at once." the Board said in a state- Preiiminaryi public sessions will be i bouml across Sweden from Ottawa v11 Anni i5 and w. Finland to Germany. .ucl'al canvass 0f the All goods in the car were Program to be cdoivt- l-cmoveli by sweliisil authori- ties. the announcement said, AY, APRIL 9, 1943 PREMIER CAMPBELL OTTAWA. April il-(CPI -—- Reports circulated in Ottawa today that Premier Thane A. Campbell of Prince Edward Isl- and, who today tendered his re- signation as Minister of Public Works and as Attorney General wil| he appointed to a judicial position. Mr. Czimphclk today did not resign the Premiership. It was considered likely that he may either ho made Chief Justice of Prince Edward Island or appointed in the Supreme Court of Canada. A vacancy will occur in the Supreme Court next month when Mr. Jllsiiro 0.x‘. (‘rocket , L the retircnlcnt age of ‘l5 years. Mr. Justice (‘rocket is from New Brunswick and the vacancy will he filled from the Maritime Provinces. Ii/ews Briefs I I DON, April 8 -—-iCP) — (j; .1; illc iii-rial war buck to it: confluent after a lull, Thp ftJLl-X damaged a radio station near [lsliarlt at. the top of the Brittany Peninsula in lriilcsprrutl daylight fighter swoops ovcr Franco today and fightrr-bombers pounded l1 Ger- man airdrome at Arlqucvillc near Lo l-Invre in an evening the Renault Works near Paris last Bundily and the i:‘-rla Aero En- gine factories at Antwerp on Mon- day. an official tally showed today. Seventy were bagged by American gunners firing from the bombers and the other 10 were the victims of the Allied fighter escorts. Allied losses in the two big raids were eight bombers and eight fighters. The official recapitulation showed 4'7 German planes shot down dur- ing the Renault rald at a cost 0i four bombers and seven fighters, 23 German fighters destroyed over Antwerp at a cost of four bombers and one fl liter. In each nstaiice the bombers and escorts were challenged while crossing the continental coast, en- gaged all the way into their tar- gets and followed back to the hannel striking munitions workers were re- The success of the Renault raid ported tonight by union officials t0 was attested today by examination have voted by a "substantial" |of movies taken from the big bomb- mfliority in today's secret ballot to ers durin the attack. Tllcv showed return to their jobs in the 11086 smoke banketiii several square Chgrrier Munitions Plant near here. ‘miles around t e target area, The union's demand for a new spreading quickly from the ob- Wuge-bracket for BOO-odd men and .' jectlves. women working on "deuserovfl i seared and stricken heart I WHY that a merciful God may not delay too long their redemption. that‘ the day of salvation be not so far re- moved that they perish, that it be not again too late." When MacArthur reached Aus- tralia from the Philippines to ss- sume command of United Nations forces in the southwest Pacific he declared: "I mall return." Munitions Workers To Return To Jobs MONTREAL April B —— (CP) - Jobs will be submitted to the Nat- ional war Labor r _ BOB d. I °""lf.ii°‘l.§.;ilf.i.i.l‘°i’é2iiii“ iiuflrdw "vi OIIIOXTOW. Coing into Army Black Market In Vancouver WASHINGTON, April 8 -(APi— Mayor La Guardia of New York City it developed todav. is not go- ing into the United States Army after all, at least not in the near ———- future. vanoouvna. a rii I - w?) - Asked about re ts-wlllcil have Decl -- - gabngili: igflblgwvaywglklggrli?‘ 3:5 stirred criticism i1 congress-that the Mayor would receive an army commission, War secretary I-lanry Stimson said the War Department felt it would be “very difficult to find any lace in the army" where In Guard a would be u helpful as he is in his present Job of admin- istering the affairs ~of the coun- try's largest‘ city. Stimson said the 60-year-old mayor offered his services to the armed forces, but “after talking it over we decided to leave it open and the mayor assii ’ me h mlunld always be available if need- varlcouver ublislied a Price lls wlfigll it)? d prevailed for m: ratiio ed loonamodit es sold by un erw . inclugdd butter. t1 a WW"! ilesai price 4i cents): 21MB. uu i" unt°iit° “°'i.‘»""°° d "t? $.12; l than the iggil l-etapilupl-ioi; tea and Ivfiee. elc about l a. pound: nearly double the legal price, and rasoi ne 50 cents a gallon or an in- crease of 2i cents. Coming Events 1°» ‘Talkies-Montague Saint-dry; a! re flood-Fuel Subsidy orrrawa, April e- (cr) -aolla fide rgdoea-fuevlnflealeresuaai; g: g; ‘° p “°°" on wood fuel "Tslki - Bouris is a . °' °" fif-Si- "i-"e d t overnment subsdy - Mlllmativs mlzenuzlirilytoli- Qizhe munitions department said fool; ‘fins your own bags. c-s-ai. lawn-n tnsablg Mg; inogigsmflfimck "Order your Bab Chicks now (Pml- 9°" W V ’ . I. Bowman. Hunter Rivelgdhu. ‘n33! tyiaalgroduce ma?“ “and by their employeegsutslggalragmlpflymenl was uncccu led at the time. civil and contained 75nbeds alnd u l en aswe asaarges- §§8Flma .5 n so were destro ed Las ed Knights of hostel here claimed worst disaster in Newfoundland to old the cit losing Y“ on) cases gt fooiti and mouth disease “a; ~ a an a e were re r i? i‘ "m "° “°°‘”“" '°" iiioiiie he'll-s 1935-1942, the aha..- ture Department said in a return tabled today in the Board, the Relief Committee, the Board of Trustees of Falconwood Hospital, and the Board of Izlduca- tion. I also beg to report to Your Honour the folio-win resignations of ministerial appo ntmenis: "Of The Honourable Mark R. lvlcGuigan as Minister of Public welfare: "Of The Honourable I-iarr H. cox l\$ Minister in charge o Air Raid Precautions and Civilian De- fence. "Of myself as Minister of Public Works and Highways, and as At- torney and Advocate General. "To fill the resulting vacancies I recommend the following ap- pointmentst "As Minister of public Works and Highways, to be held in con- junction with the chairmanship of the Fisherman's Donn Board at a combined salary of $2,000 per anllum, the Honourable Harry l-f. Cox. “As Attorney and Advocate General, the Honourable Mark R. McGulgan: "As Minister of Public Welfare to include the administration of Flllmllwusod I-Iospiyl. Provincial Infirmary and Falcollwood Farm. at a salary of $1,000 P91‘ 3117mm. the Honourable J. Walter Jones- "As Minister in charge of Air Raid Precautions and Civilian Defence at a salary of 700 per annunl the Honourable . Walter Jones.’ --Yours respectfully. THANE A. CAMPBELL. Premier fiild. ‘Recreation Centre ls Burned ST. JOHN'S Nfld.. A rii il-(CP CABLEJ-Newfoundlandg third re- creation centre fire in less than four months early today destroyed the Yacht Dance Club at Fbxtral). 15 miles from here. The building The club ad been converted as a defence emergency hogm . A number of sni s - belonging to the cub ai- t Decemblarfftre in the crowd- Columbus I00 iv gboats U G ry. Late in January. t swank colony club on the outskirts oi’ was raced, four waitresses eir lives. N0 FOOT, MOUTH DIIEASI OTTAWA, April I — (OP) - N0 ---- House of Com- "Red Da t Hen for wood fuel l. 19' y LL unmm N]; 1rs0fl' ;£f>efll':lgy,‘$pll’ I and delivered after uaroil s, ls- Yggiflmug i .Departmellt disclosed today-q; ra- Japs Try Big .Air Assault WASHINGTON, April 8 —(CP) -- Tile Japanese, in their greatest aerial assault against the Guadal- canal area since last November, hiurlcd almost 100 planes Wednes- day against plevious American shiptpilw off ihnt battle-weary isle. lAmerical-l fighters. rising to intercept, shot down 37 enemy planes and lost seven, the Navy tlo- of one to five. Whether any bombers got through to attack the ships was not. made known. Speculation immediately T088 here on whether the assault sig- iililied the beginning of big new" Japanese moves which some poo- plp have expected for weeks. Not since early February‘ had the ene- nl,v shown up in force ncar Guad- alcanril. Report Riot In iluebec Jail QUEER). April B -(CP)— The Quebec Chronicle-Telegram re- ported today in a newspage story that it has learned from "reliable sources" that "serious damage" was caused in the Quebec jail last night by prisoners believed be protest- lng over the food an new regula- tions remlitlrig in flll earlier return to their cells at night. The jailléslo population generally (Attorney-General Loon Cas- grain said he had “nothing to say" on the reports, adding that he could neither confirm nor deny them. sheriff Laurent LaPiBTYB said the matter was "of no impor- , midst of a of Win danger of being flooded out as the river overflowed the Crescent Rnlld aild was reported riSillg steadily in and a complete investigation has been ordered by the For? elgn Office. Discovery of the maps came on the anniversary of Gor- mzuiy‘s invasion of Norway three years ago and in the controversy nvor shipments of German goods and soldiers through Sweden between Germany, Norway and Finland. Swedish customs and mili- tary officials dilscovercd the maps when inspected goods were being transferred from one ear io another at liapar- andn in northern Sweden. What steps Swedish authorities will take depend on thc results of n full innuiry the Foreign Office reported. Floods Continue In Manitoba WINNIPFG, April B-lCPI-llc- sldelits along Lilc Red River bcgiui moving articles from bllsolllcuis today as ice mid water rose ill-o that there was an overnight drop of 1.8 feet in the Red RlVPi‘ but threat. had vanished. Reason fol" the (ll'0p, it was stated, was the fact that ice began to move faster. Officials warned that Wow‘ flom the South and West had not yet leached Winnipeg from North 200 families homes. Citizens livin driven from their on the East. Sidc the Red, about eight miles south mp6s. were in inlmillcnt rising steadily. Water in the Assirlibolne was Winnipeg and tsnco" and declined to comment further.) FLIJ guards were posted at bridges relieve possible ice-jams. BLCANA M LID EXCELS IN THE KITCHEN back yards. Officials of the City Engineer's Department reported. llU\‘IK‘V€l',. this did not menn that the flood “Applications raid. STOCKHOLM, April 8 -(AP) -- Persons returning from Berlin re- ported thnt fire-fighters were so exhausted after the R A.l'<‘. raids on the German capital March 2'1 and 29 that most wouid have been unable to combat illccndiarlcs had the British bombers returned for a third quick blow. TORONTO. April, 8 —-iCl‘l— Col. Oic Rcistad. officer com- manding Nnrwclrilin forces Canada, said today that airmen who trained at Little Norway hr estimate-ll that fnrrcs hull killed more 60.000 Germans. Norwegian than - -_ t LONDON, Aprl R —(CPt——- The‘ Lcntcn Pastoral Letter in which ill!‘ Billion of. CClOIIIlI.‘ and Plircr- bnrn denounced "frcc love“ and othrl- fl01‘."."!lil'f‘.< from moral stall- dnrri< in Gulrlmiiy todwv in (tel-man in’ the Vatican radio. manna, 11.7.? a _rav> Rlmsinl irllons flchilllg hitter hill llnnzircnflv loc-llizcrl tank and infnittry lriiilcs In the l of the Doneis lzyum sector Basin score"! successes linih in offcncr nml rlcfcnci- against iilc I (lcrmuns imllly. tili- Soviet mid- night communique said tonight. ; LONDON. Aoril ii —fCP\-Al'lcd lipht coastal ships have slink l0. icnolnv vessels and have severely, dnmnccd six others, including sov-i 10ml E-lmrlis, in hnixi-hittlnr: raids; ,nn Axis slliunifli! iii the Ellziish . . ' _ v 1 K - ,wo did not wish to consider before. $35132...‘iii§l{il.i3ii“i§.°§i..3i. in": ma"... u“. if.‘;'c“..'r.t...".“".ir"".'iiw l u mirolty announced inniclli. Ailledi llnsscs were said in have consisted‘ -nnl_v of one llizht craft sunk and.‘ of the Seine Rver, a tributary Iii sllrvorficinl darrlage to a few other ; vesseis. i __ l'Farm Leave OTTAWA, April a -(CPt- in- structions llnvc boon sclit out through the Army that soldiers applications for farm leave are to be dealt with promptly. Belem‘? Minister Rlfston told the House oi Commons today in answer to a question from John Dlcfenbaker (Prog. Con. Lnkc Control. in’ ii.i:".~?.z“"...'zi.f.“also: '12:; iArchbish op was broadcast _ in the country since tllc Olkllillgi PM MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Regard your defeats and mlstzikrs as valuable experience and put the-m to good use for the days to come. Iablcrlbiion Delivered, um llail, 11.00; ofhe~ Protilia-ull s U.s..\, $5.00. ONIMEUS ARMY CONTINUES British 8th Army Advances i 15 Mori Miles ‘First Army Makes Cains; Axis Posit! i ion Growing More Critical. - By EDWARD KENNEDY (Associated Press Staff Writer) ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AF. _R|CA. April 8-—(AP)--The British 8th Army gain- ing 15 miles in the pursuit of Marshal RominePs forces, was reported tonight only 25 miles from a qunctlorl _with a second American column. which was driving toward the sea in the Maknassy- Mez- zouna sector of central Tunisia. In thehorth Gen. K.A.N. Anderson's British 1st TAFmY. striking out northeastward in the Medjez- {El-Bab region, reached a point within 27 airline miles of the Axis stronghold of Tunis. _ _ Field dispatches said all southern Tunisia i'lOV\ is in Allied hands after the British 8th Army shat- tered the Wadi Akarit lines and made its first junc- tion with the Americans of the Gafsa-Gabes Road. The next juncture of the British forces with an American comm“ y, expected in the area between Mezznuna and Grniba, more than 50 miles up thc coast from Gabes. ' There were indications that advance llth swept beyond Ceklilra [La rkhlrra), of Sfax. ' Rommel! transport J and troop colunlns were raked by Allied airmen almost continually. ' Tile loss of every Axis piece of‘ equipment made Rommeks situation all the more critical because Allied I Lime Purchases Army troops already had a coastal settlement williill 50 mill-s retreating Uaombel-s also are doing a LFEHIGIP, dous job against Axis Siildplylillfis,‘ between Tunisia and Sicily. t mlnhthe last wefk lthelsie alnncenlhit s s, nine 0 WllC san m- —*-- lnedlotpcly. Many of the others were‘. WTAW-‘l; Al)!“ 3 -‘CP1— ‘Pr-e left ablaze or in a sinking con-llmmmm“ (*'_°‘"'1'"111“X‘-l 11-" PW - (“Hum {ed Iii) to SZoOJXJO to eilt-ollrll; l NO! Onlg w,“ Rqmmelb flank of “m9 L" ImiJYDW‘ ihv 501i vii Bl- menaccd y tie American co umn ‘I'll Clll near Mezzounn, but another Unit/ed, _ (ills-closed 1r States group is operating in thel. throughvpllbliflliblOlkili all order north-central sector between Pon- , council in V Canadian Will‘ orders douk and Kairouziri. The latter lS 35 , and regulations. miles southwest of soussc. wherel The pnymeilis out of this fund Rommel is cxpcctui to hole up will madl- m 1g“. (j.,,.,.,-n,,,,,,._, eventually with Col Gen. Jurgen of British Cnlllnlblll. l-‘rlllcl- m- Von Al‘lllm'S forces which are un- dcl" pressure in the north. The 1st army's surprise blow at a ncw‘ point on the loiiiz Axis defence, line gained four or five miles res» ward Island. New Bl'llllS\\'i(‘l(, _\'(i\il. Scotia, Quebec and Ontario ill rc- gard to (‘xpoildiiurcs lilCi "rctl iii‘ the provinces in tr-allsporillig limo to farmers, operating or icrrlny ovcr coiuiiry so difficult » , . , . - _ , 1 that mules largely were relied §’,‘,b§l,'.§],?,§‘§‘iilijiilsoluiluil-ti '1 " v~ , upon to move supplies. ‘ ‘ ~‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ “'0 ““ cosl of limo to filrlllus. Anderson hl6fi fi DRAINAGE PROJECTS OTTAWA ADYil il-(CPt- el'llfl'l(‘lll, PXDEllfil1lll('.\ i‘ gallon. drulilngc iilifl u‘ age projects in Ali-u $560.1“ P. C. Biol-k (Ping Cumbcl-illml- was illiorlned in PPlllTll tallied today in lili’ House of Commons. Gov- llTl- Sl-vl _ l .L(li1li’§ 0f iluehec Urges Support 0f Loan QUEBEC, April 8 —\CP\- Cilfd" moi Viileilcuve, Archbishop of Quo—. bee, urging support. to Cnllnlialsl Flourih Victory 10ml. snid ill u‘ Oio FASHIONED to . ~ . - " d.’ 2ii.‘.°“‘i-.'.-‘.‘.i;§"wit.““£..§.‘$..£-i, BE Hi1 BY A necessary for battle. ll is lili‘. pl'(llll-‘ ' ised security following victory." i Tile statement, appearing in Lia] V Scmaine Rcliglcusc. official organ of the Archdiocese. said in part: "It seems tlint, in spite of the evils and disasters which it is sowing every- where, iilc pl-c" lit wllr is the will of God to prepare the restoration, of n more cllrlstlnn and more hilm- 1 all social order ill the world, “Without exagggerated optimism} we must uncorstiuld that certain, problems of public welfare which‘ lfS Now (ordinance the solutions of which would zlcc-l ossnrlly’ reduce the previous omni- poicufl‘ nf a capitalism wiihouti backbone. 1 "Alld not only are governmciitsl trying to avoid tlie mos1 dangerous economical attack; on their war! policy but we also see them pre- paring lnws and illslillltifills which shOlilf. do away with unmeritcd post-war misery. , i " Nictory is brought at the price of our savings and privatlolls of today. . . Therefore, I do not hesitate to cilcouragc you. as encr- geticnlly as l am able. to do vour part in the victorv loan. the fourth; Ilipli ildc this Illifillliiili Amrl inmoi'l'n\v nlorlllilu . ' Sun sols lill~ (‘Vrilill ‘ 1 rises tomorrou lllflflililf.‘ ll. _‘ First. quarto: moon APFI- 11» 11M ‘mm. I , Sllnlnlcrsidc tide ill lliillutr. l.l.(‘l thnll Charlottetown. l-‘i-jlilik Sl- vii-i: viii’; Excsrr slivnar (‘- C05 a m m Bordon-leave 7.0 of hostilities." “A0 a_m_ M," um" u" um "It there any proportion between "m the sacrifices and contribution ‘due can‘. [Qrmpflflng - i034! which we are asked in make for the l mm |_is p.m. 1.05 p.m.. 5.45 p.nl triumph oi our armies," the state-jg]; mm. ment said. " anc. ihc sufferings; and lmflllish which un- npnrvsrrii uaiilr AIR siziivlra C01 Ralslon snid lic believed BP- natlons arc forced to endure nu\\"?i ql-gxrjijf"! SUNDAY) plififliiflns had i0 b" Rilllfqvcd b! Should we not voluntarily do ouri Charinilctnwu sunlml-nirie- he district officer commencing. pay-L? ltlnm-ton Mr, Diofenbnker said he lmdef- "Such considerations, it seems to u"; Charlottetown 6.30 s. m. stood scme commanding officers mo, ore of a nature to mnke our |2.3lI .m.,1.3il p. m. took the stand they hail no nilth- efforts and contributions more Arr ve Charlottetown l D- lil- m-liy in pram. farm leavc for sccd- ggngrnll! for a just. and durable‘ 5.45 p. m.. 1.05 0- Ill- ing operations. victory " ‘l k