MAXIMS v Maxims ' ' °' 4 p '01s, MERE MAN - , _ MERE MAN km _ I e idlouesu.‘ of o . H?‘ ilnot burilr - is?» sun's-lino wl’... o?» ' Mommy s....‘...'.... Founded rm. Qlurlnttilfllfll Guardian. Two Coats. DANGER 0i“ The Pe ‘s Paper y A / Covers Prlrce Edward Island Like the Dew Read ybody CHARLUFFETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1945 i2 533m")... for m oi office" lays St. ‘don't adverfloo lot your work spools PAGES m, M, ii Former ll.‘ S. Cirl (tets Movie Contract VANCOUVER. Dee. d - tCPl-A former msiilent of Tracadie, N.S.. Joanne Deuren, ii, has been awarded u con- trart with M-(PM Studios in Hollywood. Mrs. llabel Bur- fll and also Isys tho piano. Venezuela-Bound Corvette Aground RIMOUSKI. Dec. 6 - (CP) - A Venezuela-bound former Can- adian corvette which ran aground at seal Rcck, near Gsspe, Que , ycsterdav was still caught today and it was not known whether it would be possible to refloct her. The vessel left the St Lawrence port cf Sorei earlier this week. Two other corvettcs which left sore) in tow bound for New Yprk, scu-zht haven at the dork hero today until a storm raging in the Gull cf St. Lawrence had passed DVCI‘ DENTISTS on srnrnr: coupon. Dee’. c - (on) - Five hundred dentists were on an unofficial strike in Surrey. Sussex. and Hampshire today. refusing to illDDiV false teeth to persons with health insurance until the fees are railed to $46.75 from thepresent fr‘? of 828. '. . , The dentists have agreed to give rmerzencv treatment to former loldiers and returned prisoners oi rer pending a decision bv the Min- strv of Health. Coming-Events “ ‘ ms Concert, Canoe Cove. Thursday, Decenrbcr 20th. 12-7-1i. "Dance in Crapaud liall, Friday, December 7th. Lunch served. Craf- 12-6 l. aud W. i "Unloading oats at Milton this aim-noon and Saturday. Bring balls. Kltson and Colcs. lii-‘l-li "Sisnhope -— Covchead Christ» mas Concert Friday, December 21st N 5 in Community rm). 12-1-11. "Christmas Concert. Siramrock gierllvlnrsllhwednesday night. Decem- 12-7-11. "Buying daily all kinds of live and dressed poultrg. Paying tog market prices. ’ lgncd Dav Fraser Ltd. 11-2811. . e - r-Jtfifitilitifll“ 35°.” “it”? till! 00.. Souris. an u 11-38-13! "The Annual Meeun g u” ‘Wdsral Dairying Co, hinges. will $52916 gr ihcbegelimt Hall. Wed- l “Y. ecem 12th, at. 7.30 P.M. John R. McWilliams, 1mm "our store will be closed all day ‘P?! Saturday. December 8th. h“ Saturday. December sui. Pclers & Gallant Ltd, North Rus- "m- . 12-1-21. ."Wantcd ~— Large quantity of live and dressed trltry. Also dltéibid 8605c and due s. Top prices Pele. Pius MacDonald. St. Pct- "s Bay. "i-farniers York Covehead and vislmtv-Csr mixed feed now on order. soon to arrive. Booking or- ders for few days. Close price off car. Dutrt miss this chalice. Ir- vine McDonald. York 12-7-21 "Partners everywhere. Our truck- men will spnrrrlste having your Ytllucst for Livestock Trucking §mi°° I twilbie of dsv: in advan- ~P. Then they can give vou real -<vv "Livestock Marketing Boa-r low well eoulnned to live Livestock inn Service to farmers ad: llcenl to Ch ottetowu-e-D hone couple day: in advance. timi- servieo assured. ra-v-n Farmers llortll and‘ vicinity nlease note Morel! Cc-operative is ti n now l gdi h lmtil zftelrlrtloon again arrival in- ggimd Monday's u h etofors. miller . livestock ia-vlil n ......... ....':~*- "ca: hnlaltcok m cu Housing Ito-operative Officials Charged MONTREAL. Dee. C - (OP) - A warrant for the uncut of three official: of a Moutrcufhuvning ctr-operative was Issued b! Judgu T A. Fontaine late today charg- ing them with “conspiring to do- fraud the general uublio of 3500i" 000, obtaining $50000 under false pretence and uieallna‘ $48.01» in promissory IlM-Oa a: well as au- othor cum of $20,000”. Comlfllill- ant wa: Fornund Monies‘. a cout- mereiai traveller. The officials of the durum!!- iiv, concerned are the president who i: alum managing director. and two directors. The nomflinillt lloicd ‘l5 person: who alloeedlv were defrauded during a period from January 18M until toduv. Judge l-‘ontalne also signed a search warrant for the ochure of all documents Ind paucru of the ro-opcrativc, th- seizure to be made by Provincial Police. Sydney Man Drowned When Cutter Sinks PORTSMOUTH. 10.3.. Dec. 6- (AP) - Om- oerson was lost at sea. and two companions were rel- cued by Cocstauardsmen tortiaht when their 35-foot auxiliary cutter bound from Sydney. to Florida. rammed into a ledge two miles offshore. Coast Guard officials said the victim was Philip Williams, 2i. oi (Park Street) Bydnev. Those rescued were identified as Allen Macll-‘od 27. of Sydney, and Duffey Atkins, 26. of MacCann. The rescue was effected after observers from the Coast Guard station saw a makeshift flare coming from the founderlng pleas- ure craft. Find Bollv Cf, Murdered Bally At Dartmouth DARTMOUTH. N.B.. Dec. D — (CP)—-A baby boy, whole body was found by Royal Canadian Mounted Police heue today was murdered. Coroner Dr. F. V. Woodbury of Halifax said after a brief inqut tonight. He said he would order further police investigation. Re orted by children, the body was cund just above the high tide mark on the Dartmouth shore oi Halifax Harbor. wrapped in a per bag and a heavy blanket. B‘; Woodbury said the boy had breathed and death was caused by strangulation. A surgical band was wrapped tightly around the baby's neck. Several stones had To Greet Returning N _ Veterans At Moncton 109 Corning To Province By Special Train On Sunday. 0n hundred and niue Island soldiers returning on the Queen Elizabeth and due to arrive ln the City on Sunday afternoon will be met by : cornmhtee in‘ Mcncton. This we: disclosed at a meeting of the Citizen: Reception Corn- mlttee held in the City Hall last ni ht. e chairman, Mr. Inc Bradley, D.C.M., informed the Citizen: Re- ception Committee that the s cial train with 100 service men a ard was due to arrive between 2 and 3 p.m. unday, Dec. 9 the definite hour of arrival to be announced later. The train will be met in Moncton by lit-Col. VJ. D. Stewart. D.S.O., and Joae h Shelfoon and at Borden by ince Lacey unrl Harry MacDonald. The veterans will be met at the station by the Citizens Reception Committee and the band of the 17th Reserve Armoured H/Iliment and will be conveyed to the Lo- gion Home on Grafton Street where they will moot friend: and relatives. Mr. Bradley pointed out that this wa: the largest druit of veteran: to return at one time since the war ended and urged the full co- operation of the public in giving the boys a grand welcome home. A good turnout at the station on Sunday afternoon would go r towards making the reception a success, he said. Mr. Bradley informed the Re- ception Committee that fund: at. their disposal were running low and that it would require lppruxl- mately 01300 to continue the woole- until. Spring.‘ The meeting was informed that the following members of the Le- gion were meeting the train night- ly to greet returning n. lcemen and to arrange accommodation for those who had to remain in the City overnight. They are: Corn- rades Herbert Mohar. Frederick Mahar, Lemuel Rush. Lorne Stun- ley, Wilfred Peters. Mark Spencer, Harry Mortimer, Angus MacRue, John MacAleer, Byron Hewlett, Alec MacLeod and Earl MacTar- lune. UNRRA Supplies For Yugoslavia HALIFAX, Dec. d — (C?) -T]l}e Canadian freighter Montebe o Park will IS" next. Werlneadly with a full cargo of UI\"RRA I‘lPD1i"~ including food, truck!» 8nd 5°",- ~ rzoslavia. '°)Tl1\;u'1,00il-ton'vcllQi. fir!!! 011"!‘ dlan ship to take relief supplies to that country. Will d’!!! Supplies also will include Cross mdedicald equipment and can- ro uc..-, negfoi-ocothgn 48.000 barrel: of fish were sent to Yugoslavia last month aboard the United States freighter Charles Austin Dunnmk. Doolittle To Take ltew Joli NEW YORK, Dec. e - (AP) -- LL-Oen. Jame: H. Doolittle, leader of the first air attack on ‘Tokyo. will leave the Army Air Forces t0 become a vice-president of Shell Oil Corporation Jan. i, the Com- been laced inside the blanket bc- side the body. I NOLAN]? NOIGAAID \ Ell/O Dee. 04A?) — Grand Admiral Iri kl U-boat bun p finitfn ‘of Norway from Nazis’ own official record: dis- l s today. “If...” of wig-blooded tnézh: CF inst th %rn.c:\.t. wltiolrwao I w" m“ In iional t I British tfanccl o Milli.» Cloths. “lin- tlrcdigtons Lntaoarigd n . crman l vi’ "'~.i.':."o:.'."" llclf "i ufhnnush p0 n» O m a: event oi mu» has.“ the war tor cousin to pony announced today. Admiral Reta..- Planned Invasion Of Norway f l hi hi: attack r."t:..i'.'.t":...'t."".=..r. ..h.‘..t:.'.l.3 soul ?ii§“ii.'ii°§i§'r§“.§' Hitler's deciirlou “$3. prosecutor: also‘ tu- troduced the minute: cf the Mil. y; 1m, meeting between Bitter and the late Count. leouo Ctalro, Italian Ibrcig-n Min ster. in wh ch llni’: aon-iu-taw- indica ed» almost childlike I II ll» l" for‘: aurgltrtneerztcntm the Dill" “if? ti.» fin-t time iii tab mu under aud Rosenberg heard themselves comm ll t: W" niuoo: who actually talk erAinto botroyinl .. “u. i od h ha, tat a 3%.; anti-dyes: dogb who only di m outv tn- tila. try. when tau prosecutions cu al gh no r pu d ',‘ d Vmadc. ‘I metastatic. . . we: than, cull! wairitecder of k at Split. _ flit-- Trade Board To Press For Lower Charges A resolution protesting the un- just and exhorbitant rates for trucks charged on the car ferry in comparison with the rates charged on the Wood Islands ferry and atrong criticism of the telephone service in Surnmersl‘ were the main topica discussed at the monthly meeting of the Summer- Iide Board cf Trade last evening at which the president Mr. Donald Baker presided. The resolution on car ferry fut-es was moved by MP- '1‘. 11ml!"- Bedeque, and seconded by Mr- J H. MocFarlane, Bedeque, and reads a: follows: “Whereas the present rates for motor trucks carried on the car ferry S. S Prince Edward Island between Borden, PEI, and Tor- mentine, 10.5., a distance of about nine miles are as follows: for a small size truck ....it. can go up on the apron $7.00 single fare or $10.00 return; and for the larger size that have to be loaded on a flat cnr. in order to cross, $12.00 single fare or 00.00 return. In each case the driver pays : fare of 40 cont: single trl or os cents rc- turn, with an ditlonal chaise 0! 12 cents per cwt. (or $2.40) per tun for the load carried by truck. “A person taking across a six- ton load and returning with the empty truck would have to pay 35.05. "And whereas at the eastern end of our Province the S. B. Prince Nova, owned and operated by the Northumberland Ferry Co, plying between Wood Islands, P.E.I., and Culbou, N.S..Va distance of about 1d mllel, chargu: the fpllowins rates: for a truck fully loaderLu wo-ao‘ 0° ciuetylovrgwoingle fare _.' or‘ $3.00 return. For‘ a truck fully loaded up to 1B ft. long, single fare $3.00 or $4.50 return, with an ad- ditional charge of 15 cents per foot for every foot over l8 feet, single fare or 36 cents per ft re- turn. “Therefore resolved that the Summerside Board of Trade _.)r'i- test against those unjust exorbitant rates charged on the car ferry, 8.5. Prince Edward Island, plying ile- tween Borden, P.E.I. and Tormen- ilne, N.B., and place the matter before our Federal representa- tives at Ottawa and urge them to endeavor to have more lust and reasonable rates established. (Corvilnued on Page 11 Col. 4) lnterostingCollection Donated To ii. S. HALIFAX, Dec, B - (CP)—Dr. William Inglis Morse of Cambridge Mass, and Paradise, N.S., has again shown his interest in his native Province by donating to the Nova Scotia archives a large and valu- able collection of autographs and letters of former British and Can- adlan statesmen of note and mon- archs who ruled France and Great Britain when Canada was in the formative stage. Among the handwriting speci- men: ln the showcase reserved for royalty is one written by Henri III, the French king who granted the first trade charter to North America to the Marquis dc la Roche who founded a sett‘ ent on Sable Island. Other French kings re- resented are Henri 1V, and Louis II. , and XV, all of whom were influential lri the early his- tory of Canada. _ Among British’ monarchs repre- sented in the historic display nre George III who ruled Britain at the time of the American revolu- tion; the Duke cf Kent father of Queen Victoria; and Queen Vic- torta herself. Prime ministers of Canada re- p. the collection include Sir John Thompson. Sir Charlc: Tirpper, and Sir Robert Borden. One-Tenth Of Ounce Of Uranium In Bomb I406 ANDRE. Dec. d -(AP)- Ono-tenth of an ounce oi uranium generate the first m . a cord l1. Snyder. ab; slclot who worked nine months at. their): Alamoo. NM. laboratory. S’side Protests Qar Ferry Truck Rates Oppose Hurley On China Policy Prominent figures in the wrangle over U. S. diplomatic policy China that led to resignation of Mai-Gen. Patrick J. Hurley, former U. S. ambassador, are John Stewart Service, left above, and Rep. Hugh DeLacy (1).. Wash.), right. Service is one oi the 10 foreign service men whom General Hurley accused of blocking administration policy in Chi- na. Recalled from Chins, he is now in Tokyo as an adviser to Gen. Mao- Arthur. Representative DeLacy charged recently that General Hurley had disrupted, U. S. policy in Chins. by showing favoritism to the Na- tionalist government. General Hurley's friends say this charge was "last- straw" incident that sparked off his dramatic resignation. British House Rejects Censure Motion 381-197 (C?) -By_ House of Atomic Power To Compete With Coal? By JOHN F. CHESTER NEW YORK, Dec. 6 — (AB) --Nlnc leaders in the atomic bomb project estimated var- iously today that possibly in three and almost certainly lu D0 yearn the United States could have utmnio power cap- able of competing with Sli- a-tou co ln an extraordinary symp- osium. held on the spotlighted stage of a Hotel grand ball- room, the scientists outlined in detail. before the 50th au- nunl convention of the Not- ional Associatiou of Manufac- turers the possibilities of harnessing the atom for neoco- me use. Other points stressed by the atomic headliners were that: The problem of producing atomic heat has been solved at the big Ilanford plant in Washington State. One of the major difficult-tel will be to protect the user-e of atomic power from radio- active harm. News .. Briefs O’I'I‘AWA. Dec. 6 —- (CF) — An estimated 35.500 veterans were re- gistered as out of work Nov. 30. Arthur MscNamsrs, Deputy Min- ister of Labor. said today. but of that total nearly half would have been listed for 1S days or less. MONTREAL. Dec. 6 — (GP) Pickets maintained a vigil in front of three large Montreal mills of Dominion Textile Company. Ltd- today. which have been clo- sed down through the strike act- ion of approximately 2,300 orn- uloyees in protest against changes in working conditions. SAINT JOHN. NB. Dec. 0 - (CH-More than 90 families will be given housing accommodation soon in former military huts here. Councillor J.K. Kennedy announ- ced today. WASHINGTON. Dec. 0 —-(0P)- The Office of Price Administration today announced an increase of f6 a ton in newsprint cell oriocs in the United States. The use is effective Dec. ll. lasted at 48 per cent in LONDON. bee, g ._ a 38140-107 votefxfle‘ Commons tonight relecwd a Con- servative party motion of censure alter a two-dav debate in which Winston Churchill Opposition leader. charted that the Labor ‘Jday to day nearer disaster." Prime Minister Attlee clashed with Mr Churchill in the closing hours of the debate, denying the wartime prime minister's charges that the Labor Government had "lettered and hobbled" industry- flud enterprise. and impeded the country's rccorwersion and demob- illzation. Mt. Churchill had introduced the censure motion. which from the start was certain oi defeat by the predominantly Labor Home. Mr. Attlee declared: “This vote of censure seems more to be a vote of censure against the electors. It seems to be a terrible shock that n Government should come in which was prepared to carry out its pol- es .. csitStinfl that British reconvereion as the end of September while American rocortversion then had reached 9'2 per cent. Mr. Churchill claimed that industrv and enterprise were "lettered and hobbled at every step by an everopreadlng network of controls and regulations." (President. Truman told a proes conference Nov. 29 that; the job of reconvertine plants in the Un- ited States was virtually completed with Bil per cent; of all plants being cleared for peace work in 60 days or less after request). Mr. Churchill said the Labor Government had kept men and women in the armed forces “doing riothinE. or tolling at artificially invented work." and declared: "It. is certainly an astounding fact, that at tin. end of this year we will be employing 670.000 more workers making obsolete weapons to add to enormous dumps. than in l9 . Mr Attlee sald a certain am- ount of munitions making had to go on. and that. his Government was pursuing the demobilization plans advocated by Mr Churchill himself H... added that no less than 80 new factories were being built for peacetime production. He said 100.000 men a week were being released. and that 1500000 will have been discharged by an. sao,ooo rm run In Toronto Store TORONTO. Doc. c - (CF) - Toronto‘; maior crime wave flared into prominence overnight with the city's largest fur robbery in years and an attempted armed robbery in which o bullet Iraled the head o-f a toboccontst. There were other lesser . Some S30 D00 worth fur coats and scarves were taken by thievfl who broke into a fur store in midtown Toronto. Police offered a t7 reward for arrest. and conviction the thieves ta . tics. ' Jmit. liswiiwwn wowed shop entered proprietor, acid two men his store last. night and dmandod money. He ilrabbed arm one nun and in the ensulnl - ill.- the nun niacin: and the bu The two fled when an airman P. E. I. Divorce A Court To Dpen llcre 0n May 13 Preliminary discussions on the necessary procedure incident to the formation of a Divorce Court in the Province were held yester- day by the Executive Council and Chief Justice Thane A. Campbell. The Court will open on the sec- ond Monday ln May of each year as enacted by legislation passed in 1895. Prior to its opening on Mon. lily. Mfly l3. of next year, rules Royal Gazette. Executive Council, The original Divorce Act of procedure and other informa- tion of interest to prospective liti- gants will be [published in the The Divorce Court will com- prise the Chief Justice and at least five of the nine members of the in q_—-~.-naq Subscription Delivered IBM. qihl: Provinces I U-BA. "M. Finance Minister llsloy Gives lliews In iiouse International Monetary Agreements Needed To Prevent Another Slump. OTTAWA. Dec. 6 — (OP) — me world will tread the same tragic path of which it caught a gllmpsi in the Great Depression of the ll) 30's unless adequate steps are tak- en to organize international mon- etary cooperation on a1 national basis for the common good, Fin- ance Minister Ilslev said today in the Commons. Moving a resolution preliminary to ratification of Canada's par- ticipation in the Bretton Wood! monetary agreements. . Ilsley painted. by his own admission. a gloomy picture of the world out- look but at the same time gave Prince Edward Island was passed in 1833, the third year of the reign o! Kin: William 1v, who preced- ed Queen Victoria on the Cflirone. It was called "An Act for estab- lishing a Court of Divorce, and 1°!‘ Dreveriting and punishing In- cest, Adultery and Fcrnication." It was disallowed by the British Col- onial Office, and re-enacted two yelirs later under the title “An Ac for establishing a Court of Divorce in this Island and for re- pealing a Certain Act therein mentioned." In long Diauuo This Court which was constitut- ed of the Lieutenant-Governor ln cilllllcil. tried Bight cases between the year's 1837 and 1871. Following this it was apparently fell; thug the fifllfihse did not. warrant maintain- ing the court and the Act lntodlsuse. S0 much so that it WlPlPPBMhtly unknown to the Pf°l>0uenta_ of divorce legislation in the Legislature last year, when a resolution was introduced peti- tioning the Parliament of Canadg to have the English statute of i870 extended to Prince Edward Bland. and to vest Jurisdiction in the matter with the Suprgme Court of the Province. This resolution had the support of a delegation from the Canadian lesion. who irrcserited their case at an informal sitting of the House. It was discussed in com- mittee of [the whole House on APP" 13 lust. and defeated on a mogionsof 14-11. n elit- 38 last, by pruclgmg. tion in the Royal Gazette, and cheerful emphasis to be achieved by the two main wo- ducts of the agreement - an in- temational monetary an international bank of struction. mass of details on the functions of the two organizations. Mr. Ilsl under authority of the old Colonial statute of 1835. Chief Justice Campbell was appointed “to pre- side in the place and stead of the Lieutenant-Governor or other Ad. ministrator of the Government of the Province of Prince Edward Is. land in Council, Court for cases of Divorce and Alimony under and by vlriug o; the said Act." llew Vigor Shown Dy Conservatives In Commons Debate OTTAWA. Dec. 6 _ (s 1__ Discussion of the snififigfiiey Powers Bill in Parliament today was enlivened bv a tilt between John Dietmbaker, Progressive Conservative M.P. for Lake Centre and the Ministerial benches as to whether the Government had passed a secret riilht of counsel when brought be- fore a commission of enquiry. The order governing merchant seamen. Mr. Dicfenbaker said. had been kCDt secret until November 5 of this year when it was intro- duced into a Court case in British Columbia where a merchant sea- mdléledwufi involved Moreover he B . WIS (my tabléd in the (hill-infill in reply to s. at, for su action all orders WliCh deny counsel to appear on behalf ofnrrliezr being cite-reed or invest- Justice Minlsfer St. Laurent drew ironic “oh. en's” from tbs House, when he said that witnesses were often called merely for burwoea of informs and that "they do not require to have a lawyer with them when they are aired quee- tions on which they are supposed to live true answers " Ho admit- ted that if a merchant seaman was helm! prosecuted. he should have the right to retain counsel co act in ense. Transport Minister Chevrier (OOIMINQdOIIPIQVCMI. D) Magdalen‘ Islander Drowned In N. S. ARTMOUTl-I, 11.8., Doc. 6 - ( l-Alphonse UOiaeau, d0, nu- tive’ of lhgdalen Islands, was here tonight when he a rail entered the shou constituted a ’ what could fund and recon- In a lengthy address giving a e! also outlined these salient point! of Canadian participation:- 1. The Dominlonfls financial trontribiitlon would total $525.- 000.000 $300., .000 to the monetary fund and $325,000: 000 to the barrk—pa.rtly p35 in gold and pantlv in rtatio currency. 2. Provisions of the fund mean that the Canadian ex- porter will be able to competc in the markets of the world with the assurance that n6 special exchange restrictions will be placed in,his way, 3. There is nothing In fund provisions which (Continued on Pflflg 7 Col. T-jiTi-l I Slicers-wk JAYS __l'_.__2i ‘tiles o.» ‘f elect. times (so fcarfitta fitness METEOROLOGICAL OFTECB, Toronto. Dec. 8 — (CP) - Min-r imturi and maximum temperatures Vancouver 42, 40; Edmonton 17, 2'1; Regina 29, 34: Winnipeg 22, 32; Toronto 28. 38; Ottawa Li, 30; Montreal 10 18; Quebec 12, 33; Saint John 14, ; Moncton 1t. 36; Halifax 22, —; Charlottetown 21, 35; Sydney 23. 36: Ynrmouth 32. 36. FORECASTS: lower St. Lawrence: Stroll! northeast to east winds. with rain, part sleet or snow. Lake St. John: Mostly cloudy and a little milder with some light: snow or pert sleet. North Shore: Partly cloudy and cold followed bv fresh or strong easterly winds and becoming slightly milder. Gulf and Bin" Chaicur: East‘. and northeast ivinds. increasing to strong or moderate gslcs; cloudy and becoming somewhat cold, foi- lowed by snow or part sleet. Maritime West: northeast and east gates with rain; part sleet or mow in New Brunswick. Maritime East: Cloudy. fol- lowed by strong northeast to east winds or moderate galoo with rain: probably part snow. Ottawa and upper Si. Lawrence. Fresh easterly winds with light to moderate freezing rain or part snow. K181i andto Sun s o-ndriseo tide this afternoon mt 1.ll at 12.03. afternoon at i 725 tomorrow morning w quarter moon December 12. 5. A. M. Sununerslde tide eighteen min llta later than cruinwnwrown I m... swam .. m» client-mun 1.10 act's.» Arrive Charlottetown no guru. ‘u --»I'.I.I. nun out“) have ll-ll p Cluloftoto Arrive Charlottetown B.” IJO I.