Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ' or A MERE MAN f’ filsirlllllllsloslvsslrsslm ‘I 7 ‘*- 0 . “r-"rr" Read by Everybody MAXIMS ova MERE MAN ls essential both is think truly is do righteoullv. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JANUARY a. 1944 s Paces ireak At Jewelry Store; Nlan Arrested t.‘ into the Williams store was g g, the breelnn glass 1n ll. S. Plans ; Education 0f Veterans ABHINGTON, Jan. 2—(AP)—~A eiilvoooloiloo annual otylsy for ed- ucation of the veteruul of the sec- ond greet war is projected tn s re- vised measure like to get con- sideration of in; United Std-We "any: m“ mom ' subcommittee 1) that a "he k."°"'il.%°‘i.‘l‘°l°‘.i.i.‘liit ‘d? $511» Ugo monthly available w ""°"i‘f:.i.l"“¥“ir‘“ " ‘“ . o e iotiimocmmittee redicted ‘Qriiiisifinfe that ts terms coud applied to 75,000 men being d - charger. monthly from the arraed mnumitlined by Thomas: the nul would provide sso monthly for sub- slstcnce of veterans who elect to 8° back to school after the ivar- The" tuition would be bald by the 80V- ernrnent, which also would under- write book costs. senate ‘ , but a. maximum mars government aid would be fix- 4,100 Nazi Fighters Destroyed By Yanks .- I C. "‘ “L” (‘mindin- reported 4-100 German o‘ bomb’ Meal ________.___ Predicts Bust-Up In Germany By Easter rumour. Stevenson, u» Vice-Material, e (Continued on page e, Col. 4) e Army fir»... gunner diirlng 1943 sign 56, tons I1 vice in the l Canadians Drive Forward In Storm Are Within Artillery Widen Hold On Prominent 0n Browne. Beverly Woon. DS.O., M. obvilalgi-Iiasln‘ gin via" r1- c‘ p e in- . , . sPopeo" mliiliurige’ Tgrsigtofn its c . r 1r, ' . Hep-Gen. Washington. ' blflv. Thomas Louis, C M. G., D.S.O., Mai-Con Quebec. Air Force: Anderson, Norman Rilssell Air Vice-Marshal. Officer Com- manding Western Air Command; Vancouver. g an in Marshal. Officer Oommandin R..C.A. . operational group Canada: Otto/wn. Leigh Air mending western sir Vancouver. Sully. John Alfred. Air Vice- llhuibes, A Officer corn- command; R..C.A.I"., headquarters: Ottawa. Companions, Order of Slim Michael and Saint George (C.M.G.). Allward, Walter Seymour; Tor- onto; Sculptor of many important monuments and of the Vim, Mem- Qfil1:°l1_tstending_¢91.1l£1!_lil9n J", Berlin First For Airmen Medical Corps Does Fina Joh WITH THE OANADIANB 1N ITALY, Jan. I -(CP Cable) — soldiers of the Royal Canadian Medical Corps whose war is waged without weapons under the of the Red Cross lived up to the finest traditions of their ser- butfle of the Canadian lst Division troops for the Moro of Ortona. Never before in this war have so many cmadlsns been useo together on such a narrow front and never before has fighting been so heavy. As n result the medical corps has been faced with a steadlel‘ Ind greater flow of casualties than st . 2—(AP\—F YORK, Jan Saturday NEW H. LcGuardis. observed k as 10th anniversary as New Yo; ty's Mayor by predict-ins “ bustup" in Germany around ouster nd the assassination of Hitler by member of the German lenders f "We'll never 8B0 ma" sold in on interview. __..__._.-_- a l own stef . alive", he COMING EVENTS ' ' Rink tonight. "mafia. 1-3-1 "School concert relleflifll l" ‘Prscudle Hall. January 7 at 6 D- I. 12-9l-2l “Staring dull tfled Bass o! w every ecu-lotion? ensecoiigrgy. "Cord t bo social and dance in Helix Tuesday J!"- oin. _ 1-3-21 " in —;m_yvels 8011001 mwiausn. 3. Good music. “Bourls General Meet- lii ‘l’. d‘n.“liiiivli‘i“'..iti‘“'ii train, .2-21-'n. "Wlntsd lo buy ‘live end dressed and few Fagin! Ml market prices. Island Col 00-. IM- l- firs“ l lhd.dflillcatllllfi' up are. mum ‘unless-n. any previous period in tne Mediter. ‘ ranean campaign. .0rganizer 0f R. C. A. F. llios Monmsmvflln- I —- <°P> — wing-Cmdr. John Boott Williams. . I‘. 0.. who organised Canadian Air Force in day night after s. iensthy 111MB!- A native of Goldenville. N- 5-. l", was 5i. He enlisted in the army ls F privcto in the rlrst Greet War.| as commissioned in the field and then joined the ROYII Flylnl Corps in 191d, servi with its sue. censor, the Royal Ar lures until um, winning his Military Cross and Air lbroe Cross in the lnterveL, After demoblllration he return-i ed to Canada where he storied m0! of the first commercial sfr con.‘- pnnles in tho Dominiorh in:‘ur8vukl;; e ress and me mxiieenxpthe Norauds Goldfields and Hsileybury. Ont. m mi. he was rim the Wk of organising the n. C. A. F-v I110 later the some year he handed over comma-nu to the late Air srsbll Llndfly Gordon and went to the United stem u e test Pilot- “ii.” “'°...”'.S.ii.".' “limit ° opera e l0 Sootls, re-Joinlng th A. 1"- orous new battle raged 1hr m; em glo-Arnericsn 5th army cross the Gorigliuno River in a raid six miles inland from D611 Forte and then withdrawing Heakes, Francis Vernon, Air Vlce- -: l! 86d hills was erm . en placed the Ame atelit; six ursixiiles frrfin %assi1no, r Marshal. Air member for personnel, Whom n r mm on m ‘as “om ther the tactical nor strategic air forces made any sorties Saturday and. there were only n. few patrols by the coastal command. The disclosure that were in action with the Allies came i 0f (lfgflnlzailfln. 118V‘? $831611 in w. delayed report that the Ital-| fans had bomb and harbor of Valona in southern: Algnisjsstjleek. ' In New Year River valley and the Adriatic town Dec ‘ dent invest-teeth“ ova mending officer. and later Range Of Pescara; Cloastal Sector. , l! WES GALLAGHER “m5. Juli. 2-(AP)—Can- wbl st-rikinr up the Ad- rie o coast are hin Artillery Kings Nonors List m" °‘ m‘ "m" t e P"- esl than nine es awey a1. tor a hill a. 24-hour __ battle waxed in snow, wind and gleedethgilied headquarters announ- Prominentuunong those honored Canadislru also captured San gay" manic‘; ggc" 211161;‘: $01110? Tomasso, two miles west er mums, lowing: ~ . e o- in bitter fighting. widening their illiddwi>nrsghastormsm fsecttllir‘ ciiulio‘ (‘om nlons 0m.- of th Bath .° . ° a “" imam“? 171mb“) c Iiiverywlietr‘? ‘and and a“ _ mdi l f t . '- I C 00618 - nulisfl-Rltlgfffif? Emtglxgnkrlggripod: Rsdeverepsasiafigmthejentelny githdrow lilo was Du run. Que). ' $15341 River forutsheirounext olmatjolc- ' 5'1"!‘ Artillery action flamed along the entire 8 army front and o. vig eigtusly to Orsogna, o . On the Tyrrhenlan front in west- Italy British NOON 0f the Arl- snakcd a- new the etrating a mile to Castle Further inland. on the north ide of the main highway running hroumh Cesslno to Rome, Ame:- can troops of the 5th army fight- ng for control of that road, sel- three more heights in the ia - east of San Vittorio, it . positions tau,- cans approxim- fin» e. For the first time in months, nei- first Italian bombers l ed the landing strip Target JIDNDON, Jan. 2-—(AP)—R.A.F. and R..C.A.F. Lusicasters rained l.000~0dd tons of bombs on Berlin in s ninth ma or assault esrly i0- day, opening l H with e. fiery dc- luge on the doomed C ital and n1 go the wrecked port cl y of Ham- u . The new attack raised to nearly 14.000 tons the crushing bomb weight heaped on Berlin since the obliter- ation campaign opened Nov. l ro hly seven pounds of bombs for lets: of the city's 4,000,000 inhab- ‘his. This 100th Berlin raid of set roaring new fires in t still burning from the last assault - 29. and sent columns of smoke 8,000 feet hi h, cretwmen said. Twenty-eig t. bombers were lost in the raids on both cities and Mosquito forays into western Ger- many. Two of the misAsirgg aircraft were the war he cl Canadian. R.C. . Lancaster's‘ were included in both the path-, finder force and the main force. which raided erlin "in grout strength," an R.C.A.F. commu- nique said. The New Year offensive con- todav with tinuod by do light cerlv channel forays by fig ters over the and into north fiance. RAJ‘. Mosqultos and Typhoon fighter-bombers made the attack? covered by R..A.1". Dominion an Allied fighters. Other R. fighters destroyed four enemy air- cruft during offensive patrols over France and Belgium, losing one of their own. The plunge over l-iarnbur -where stripping has been report resum- on s small scale-and the Mos- quto dashes served as a fcint to fool Nazi defences. The main body of Nazi night- flghters never reached Be , R. A. F. fliers said a domisn . hid been no the night before possible to celeb t0 restaurants. A F. election which suw the C Possibly Last Pro-invasion Leave For Some Germans Continue To Predict Allied Push Within Weeks. By llldwsrd D. Ball LONDON, Jan. 2 — (AP) -An ever mounting ber of Allied troops thronged the streets of this island capital today as German analysts poured out a. steady stream of invasion alarms pre- dieting that a blow will be struck from the west sooner than h been expected. London's holiday crowds included great numbers of soldiers from ac- mss the Atlantlc—son.¢ of them obviously new arrivals, and some perhaps enjoying their lust pre- lnvasion leave. Predict s vuslon Within Weeks Through press and radio, Nazi propaganda minister Goebbels’ henchmen told Germany that Gen. Eisenhower's supreme stroke would come in a matter of weeks at most. that other Allied blows could be expected elsewhere in Europe. and sought to solace the home front by hammering home the theme that “Germany is ready." At- Alglers Gen. Dwight D. Els- enhower, taking leave of his North African armies before leaving for his post as commander of Allied invasion forces from Britain, told his battle hardened troops in n. farewell message;._. "Until we meet again in the heart of the enemy's continental i, hold, I send. Godspeed. and. good luck to each of you along with the assurance of my lasting gratitude and adnniratlon." Goebbels’ Theme Again and again Goebbels‘ theme was that Nazi leaders "with cus- tomary thoroughness and strength the necwsary measures for defence and counter stroke‘. "No one can expect peace in 1944." was the solemn New Year's message the war weary German people received tron.- their Nazi leadership. Other Berlin propaganda broad- casts fell buck on "secret wean- ons" in their efforts to steel Ger- many for the blow to come. llrges Speed In Post-War Planning wAsr-rnvauién. Jail. 2—(AP)— Expressing concern over what he termed the danger of DOSIrWBI‘ con- B- centration of wealth and power. Commerce Secretary Jesse Jones declared today the need "daily grows more imperative" for all seg- ments of business in e United ‘y SMILES LO DYGDBPE I0)‘ FECOIIVBFSIOII. Jones observed ihat victory might come suddenly, leaving "no time to plan calmly and intelligently for a smooth transition to e. peacetime economy." Mayor 0f Toronto For Fourth Term TORONTO. Jan. 2--lCP) --Dr. Fred J. C. Conboy was elected Mayor of Toronto for his fourth consecutive term Saturday g1 gm defeated in its first serious bid as a political organization in the municipal field. The az-yeanold university of Toronto Professor gained n major. ity of about .3000 votes in re- turns from R59 of B60 subdivisions over his only opponent. Controller James Lewis Duncan Twelve C C. F. candidates for Clt_ Council ~vats, lncludin two sitt ng members, were dcfeaie , The , C. F. nominees were the only candidates to run on s par e . has closed d on: thousands of to the count ng a at Trenton, out, he served st} Calgary and Picton, Ont. After an illness he was posted to the Acci- Brunch Ottawa before coming to No- iinnning Depot st Lschine in 1M3- He took temporary command It Leohine when Air Commodore Raymond went to Uplands as col’: posted to No. a Initial T thing school, Regina. u e R. C 1M0. After train- igguiiintml ‘administration oourll commanding officer. . at‘, [IAN w. l ad iiury undertakings at Teherun. H1550 F“ LC] Ll l: EXEELS I THE KITCHEN Klrke L. Simpson, Assoc The war in Euro e turns into th tory ir 19-14" forecas " by America those optimistic tear-end outgh lflllse in Both participated in mltted himself to theatre. Both are. factors in the European mllitar whole 1.800 mile front from the trope ever conceiv ledge o. Russian plane to force the _ Without the solemn Allied i fixing both the s‘ ' ' it Is Ir w“ th set of munpowcr superiority would s. | l sia, or s! a apart ihi German Ilncs in Russia. Landing On Reported Killed In Action Nov. 23 The following telegram from the ectcr of Records‘; Ottawa, was ceived yesiorday by Prof. J H. Blanchard and Mrs. Blanchard, Charlottetown: "Regret deeply Lieutenant Jos- eph Alfred Blanchurd. previously reported missing in action. now reported killed in action 23rd Nov- ember 1943. Further information follows when received.” ‘German Summary 0f '43 Naval Action LONDON. Jan, 2-(0?) — The Germans presented a summary of i943 naval action Saturday in which they claimed, wlthoutiAllled con- fimiation, to have sunk 607 Allied rnerchantshins an aircraft car- rier. six cruisers, 63 destroyers, 18 submarines. three Corvettes, 56 motor torpedo-boats and several midget submarines. A German radio broadcast claim- ed 3.7M,500 tons of Allied mer- chant shiprpln had been sent to the bottom. T c Nazis claimed U- boats sank 593 of the merchant vessels. 164 Nazi Seamen Reported Rescued LONDON, Jan. 2- (CPl - The Eire governments infonnalion bureau announced Suturd ' t 164 German seamen. ' vivors of the Bay of on Dec. 2 in which Nazi destroyers were sunk, had been picked up by the Irisn ship goerlogue and landed at (queens- wn. There was n possibility. however. that some of the rescued men were the crow of the German blockade runner sunk by aircraft in the Bay of Biscay, the day before the battle with the Gennsn destroyers. threc of ll New Soviet National Anthem Heard In U. S. NEW YORK, Jan. 2 --(AP) — The new Soviet National anthem. replacing the Internationale but retaining its music, was heard in the United States today fc. the first time on the Blue Network's weekly wsr journal, the network announced. Sung by a Russian chorus. the anthem was recorded ty from u British Broadcasting Cor- poration pickup from Moscow on New Year's Eve. M MIA The chief sources. Admiral Ring and Gen. notio- that war-of-nerves propaganda motives had anything to do with ' . Wigs. The both turn hosed their remarks on knowledge hf admin; military events in Europe. not upon vagun ho Germany. goes without suy know about how interlocked Russian- the Teheran war councils. Neither publicly com- an estimate of how long the war . . .. . in Even s. layman in the science of ‘tivar c813? discern that known equa n a d t n t - tlfy I944 victory expectation. ' he INHI plight $3215.17. in. griirilurig more desperate hour by hour. Soviet troops held the imitative along the Baltic a Ella-mile are wosett of Kiev to create one of the most llllnllc military The plain Inference was that Kin; and Eisenhower had fore-know- e of the west front invasion ‘ at the , serves in the Kiev hulgc ihui. has made. possible the great break- that threatens extinction of a substantial purl. of the Nazi urmy in Rus- minimum, Nazi retreat from all Russia. Moscow's knows what to expect of the Anglo-American armies in the west and south now and when to expect It. That knowledge justifies the risks of striking all-out for high stakes in the thundering drfve to slash D055‘. _\' SUI‘- Biscay fight.- Night . . a .-_~ I . lsted Press War Analyst e New Icar- under a barrage of "vis- high c spokesmen. Eisenhower, dupe] the es of an impending internal col- n‘!- And they know all there Is to lied war plans are for I844. might last In any ' military ‘ to the Black Sea. They had forged great break-through toward the Pol- ish and Rumanla h "d . th t. i." th f Ii f third to a half ivfpnllnbigs trofirpvaslnollusslemverle o ("suing rum n I In effect the wide gap being out through routed Nazi armies from; Korosien in Katzttln must be a. first product of joint Russian-Allied mil- I > pledges unquestionably given at Tehcran. effort and the date of its have dared risk the massln Iifoilgh I/eteran Yanks In Fresh” New Guinea ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, New Guinea, Jan. 3 -(Mondayl -— (A- Pl- Gen. Douglas MacArthu landed vetcrnn Amerir" troops, including elements of the 32nd division, on the beach at Snider on the north coast of New Guinea, without opposition Sunday to strike (he third blow in l8 days against ...e Japanese in the south- wsv-t Pacific area The troops, cornm...idcd by Brig.- Gen. Clarence Martin ant. Col. Slade N. Bradley, pushed inland immediately to cuptu~ the air- field end eported shortly sftor landing that they had encountered slzght resistance. With the Japanese still reeling from offensive thrusts at Cape Gloucester and Arawe. both on New Britain Island, all since Dec. l5, MacArthur caught them sculn by surprise by lending the soldiers behind the enemy's lines only 55 miles southeast of Marlung, the alqapsnese’ big base on Astrolebe BY. Coal, Oil Cutput In Canada llovm e OfITAWA. Jan. 2 -—(CP) —Oln. adlan coal poduction in 1943 was 17,878,778 tons. 5.3 pe: cent less than in i942. the Dominion Bur- eau of Statistics said today in s report whlch termed the fuel situ. stion in Canada aslfoflc m“ causes grave concern. "Manpower short-site and the great increase in the demand for coal for industrial and domestic use brought about h critical shortage." said the report. "Steps were tak- en to increase the labor supply and duing the last hall year the monthly output showed an UDWBYd m .. down i5 per cent from last your. while New Brunswick was l4 per tom, higher. Saskatchewan produced 37 per cent more Alberta two icent less nnn British Height, per C611! lass. | Crude petroleum production u! 9.958.000 burreLs. exclusive of Lh mroducecl in the northwest terri-i showed a doors-so 0i 111119 per cent. Alberta ircw pro- duces 99 per (SE7 t of the total dom- inion output. | tories. muted at 43237500000 Cubic 0r five per 0611i. Alberta producini; 1'0 total for Canaan. per tent. of the Three Airmen Killed In Crash Three simian. believed to members of the Royal Canadian Air Force were killed IPrlday af- ternoon whcn a plane crashed 0n the farm of James MacArthur at Mount Pleasant“ The accident occurred about a quarter mile west of the paved highway. 1t was not known when the men were stat- loned. The men died instantly. Cnusc of the crash was not learned. The next of kin have been noti- fied and their names will be made public shortlv. DESTROYER La WASHINGTON. Jon. ‘J-IAM- Tho destroyer Perkins was sunk ln a collision off New Guinea Nov. 20. Lthe United States navy mnounccd , Sshmls . be even with their grout as- ' or rc- l tr. . Ncva Scollas Mines’ output was‘ cr Columbia ’ * IL: illt l i 111510 - Natural n: production w“ Igeti mMoI-lebvcclgmijlfiicznuntril-lcuse rghcm- less than in 1941.. —-—I Appointed Acting 1‘ Liout. Commander , 1 l i 1 LIEUT. CHARLES P. MACKENZIE l n. C. 1v. v. n. ll Officer commanding H. M C. S. f Queen Charlotte, Whose promotion! to (he rank of Acting Lieutenant officially a we rds honors Commandsr has been announced. Other promotions and announced in the King's list include the following: Naval Honors List IZvItish Empire Medal (Military Division) BATCHILDBR. William Milford. Engine Rccm Artiflcer, R. C. N. R.. next of kin, hfrs. Margaret Batchilder. (Mic) 22 Alley Street. Charlottetown. The official citation reeds: “This rating has served at sea in one of His Majesty's Canadian oorvettes since commissioning in i040, both as Stoker Pottil Officer and as Engine Room Artificer in charge of machinery. In the sal- vaging of n torpedce-d tanker m March. 1942, he was the senior En- gine Room rating placed on boardl and played an important part lni steaming the ship for four days to port. He has at all times carried: out his duties with marked offic- iency. great loyalty and devotion in dnty worthy of in; highest traditions of the Royal Canadian Navy. To be Commissioned Engineer: BAT!‘ George Charles. Born 1891 in Charlottetown, where he lived at time of enlistment. Next of kin, Mrs. Gladys M. Conrad (wife) Halifax. Air ‘Iorce Honors List Commendation "for valuable ser- vices in the air": High! Lieut. Lester Cyril John- ston. pllst. Eastom Air Command. Born April 29, i916 at Murray Harbour, P. E I t kin. Mrs. B. C. Johnston Moncton, N l! Member of The British Empire (M. p. s.) Wins Commander Portlock. J 0.. Eastern Air Command (Mainten- ance staff, R. A. l". Station. Char- lotfetownl New Weapon Against Lice WASHINGTON, Jan. 2 - (AP) ' - The United siatcs armed forces ‘disclosed Saturday they have a‘ new and powerful chemical wasp-l {on against body lice, the carriers _of typhus fever and a dreaded] rfellow-trsveller in almost every ical. in experimental tests, render- ed a room destructive to house flies for a period of three months. Moreover. the anti-louse chom- icsl. in experimental tests, rend- ered e r00m destructive to house flies for u period of three months. and provd highly effective. against. s variety of other posts which plague man. beast and plant- thus offering wide pOSSlblIltic for post war use All production of the chemical- called "DDT-now is limited to army and navy uses. except for laboratory expcrinrnts. Army medical dcnartsicnt snicll- fists declare the mut/eriul-used for the first time on a mass scale in the North African campaign-has proved more effective against body lice in the form of powder, and a single application to clothins pro- vldcs nnti-louse protection for n month SO THIS IS LONDON LONDON — (C?) — Delegate A. inblcrlptlon llsllonrll. $6.00 Ill], H.001 other Provlnrnl I ILLA. I530 IT IN RANGE 0F POLAND Many Allied Soldiers In London‘ SovietsWVin Brilliant New Victories By EDDIE GILMORE‘ MOSCOW, Jan. 2__ (A P) — Gen. Nikolai Vatutilfs 1st Ukrainian army swept within hea- vy artillery range of Poland and pushed ad. vanced guards to within 20 miles of the bozundary line in a day of brilliant victories today against Field Marshal Erich Von Mannsteilfs disorgan. ized and retreating Nazi forces. The Swift Red Army advance bmllilht the eastern section Poland lnio the actual field of OPCTBUOIIS. West oi Korosteii, forces fought through shes toward Olevsk. the last mB-lnini important rull town - fore Pclancls 1939 frontier. Ol-evsk is approximately nine miles frcm the border and about 2i miles west of Bclokorvlchi, capture of which was announced yesterday. As swift advances were made in this sector against the crumbling N311 16ft Wins. another powerful Red Army force Just to the south drove down the Korosten - Nov- 0811111 Volynskl hallway and was less than 15 fIllI€5 from Nflvograrl Vfilyfl-ikl. on important railway highway city 20 miles from 1939 POII-nd- The broad. hard surfac- ed Kiev - Warsaw highway runs through the city’. of 1110 fighting still furilzcu south in the Bcrdlchev disti-lci, there was little news. but the Soviets continued to deal strong blows in the Kslinovka region 29 miles south of Berdichev. Kalm- ovka. is approximately l2 llllICS southwest of captured Kazatnr und its fail would sever the rcmsmmg railway into who southern Ukraine and the Dnieiaer Bend before the Odessa - Lwow Trunk line, HEADS YOUTH COMIIIIS SION FREDERICTON, Jan. 2—(CPl-- Roland G Loughlin, Fredericton, has been appointed chairman of the New Brunswick division of the Canadian youth commission, which will make investigations and recon‘- mendations concerning rho welfare of Canadian youth in the post-war ‘period. (our. ' Mobiles is one ' 0W W10 NEVER 6M5 AA Mew. '/' . " ‘safe . K'~;_»;v>\<‘>'~ j s, ‘J f >9‘? ,, Weather forecast for Maine: Thickening cloudiness W l t. h slowly rising temperature MOIIQIIV followed bv snow beginning in, the south portions by late Monday morning and sprcuding to all sec- tions during Monday afternoon. Moderate snow and not so cold Monday night and snow ending followed by clearing on Tuesday. Little change in iclnnernture Tucs- day. Increasing wlncs along the coast Monday night. bccominn fresh to strong late Monday night and Tuesday. High tide this afternoon a: 5.50 and tomorrow morning at 6.14. Sun sols (his afternoon at 5.110 and rises tomorrow momilio" at 8.38. Pull moon January 10. 7.09 am. Silmmerside ilcr ill minutes lat- er than Charlottetown. DAILY All! BERVICB Cherlottetown — Summerside - Moncton Leave Charlottetown 7.35 a. m- 4 12.00 noon. 4.30 |n. Arrive Charlotte own l.l0 o. m. 5.45 p. m. 7.05 o. m. Batchelor told n Louvre Trad" Council meeting that LILIIOII was the "worst mass of chauii: conilow merotlon of housrs. and factories Liana railways in the world.‘ l-Icl spoke on postwar reconstruction. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown l2 noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5.46 o. ll.