' sir Claude Auciinleck, MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Miserable comforters an y! all. 0 rdlll. Two Oollq ‘mfisnftga-rdl: Iouldsll MIT ST The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARIDTTETUWN. CANADA, MONDAY, JULY 20, 1942 8 PAGES Be not righteous in your owu eyxs MAXI MS OFA MERE MAN i-i Annual lilhlcrlpllon lbsllvurod. “.00 By mm P. n. I. v1.0a: to nlhel" Province! lad u. s. 1.1.00 IETFENED SOVIET RESISTANCE SL OWS INAZISS fhinese In Smashing Comeback Against”, 1gp; Drive C-o-{Itinues [Ezinette School And Belfast Church Saved Woods Fire In EIdon-Pinette-Roseberry Area Under Control; Firemen From Charlottetown Join Fight With Big Pumper. Forest fires in widely separated districts throushout the province “used great damage to woodland and threatened a number of build- ings over the weekend. The most. serious fire was located in the Bel- fast District and for a time threat- ened the historic Belfast Picsbyter- tan Church and also North Pinette School. so guest was the danger of the flames spreading to the nearby vill- age of Eldon that the cfiorts of hundreds of volunteer fire fighters were necessary for manv hours bc- iore the blaze was brought under control, The threat to Belfast Church resulted in the sending ni the 1.000 gallons-per-minuic fire pamper from Charlottetown to Dre- vent the destruction of this and other buildings and to check the |pread of the flames. For more than twelve hours the twelve firemen who went to the scene with the pumpci‘ poured two streams of water on the blaze in a move to halt the fire before crossed, the main highway. At. the same time hundreds of other men armed with shovels and other equipment battled the blaze con- tinuously. The two lines of hose pumped water from a. nearby stream after it was dammed up and the woods were kept wet as far as the base would reach. A total of 4.000 feet were used. The ilre in this area not under- way about three o'clock Satin-day afternoon and was brouilht lilldifil‘ control about three o'clock yesterday morningqTlie pumpcr was sent out from the city about 10.30 Saturday evening. A change in the weather yesterday helped the situation. Provincial Fire Marshall C. A. Beer, who happened to be spendint Directs Battle. From Jeep lil-ICP) -Gen. who has taken over personnel command of the British 8th Armv in EEyI-W. has been directing the El Alamein battle ficm a jeep in the field, a military; commentator said today- Tlie commentator quotcd an of- ficers report from Egypt as say- ing: "I went. to army 1190000111‘- ters and found Auchinlcck rush- llls about the battlefield in a jeep ilyinz the Union Jack, dining under the stars and sleeping under i map truck." LONDON. J ul_ Bunting. Events 1-9- llic for Noilcu In this column D conic our word “Cooks Ca-nnery will open Tuesday and Friday. 1-20-11. "Rollo Bay Tea Wcdnesda July 22. 1-11-41. "Due to arrive car bulk ford wheat. Book now. McGuliznn dz Boyle. 7-3. “Dance. Vernon River Hall. Wed- nesday. July 22nd. Webster's Orch- “ila- 7-20-2i. "icc Cram‘ S i 1 Be View Ball WesdsvmnIgIZSaJu? 21st; 20 u “Dance and ice cream, Sinnott Road school, July 28. 7-20-11 "Dance borne Valley Tuesday lY 21st. Webster's orchestra. "UN bulk Wheat unloading filflgyi. Jllimlgo Ssgurday. filéigvlé‘. h . B - Brian lass. Dillon sénflpgllctt. "Tr ki n l f the lummegc mxdgitbg.“ b-llstmllzur ("no s iii A. C. Green Alba-n and G. - _ oreeu. Emerald. b-s-i-i -W-'Z‘-M-l-f The annual District Conven- of the MacDonald. Mt. Her- litli. Johnston; River, i-larclbrook. Pownal, Aiegmiii-g, t. Albion institutes will be held in the Oij- llilllnase. m. Herbert on July 2cm. tcrnoon session s o'clock "lira. Miss Olive speaker- "ellina. sso with m. .1. A. Mac- lllllsn speaker. ‘l-ls-ii. “Bliyin pig; at Fredericton, "will . muddy io a.m.. at Brookf cld. ll p.rn., York Station, 4 Mount aicwsi-t. s Wntervllle, '1 Bummerville; Wednesday ll am. ‘l? New Ola , i p. m. Wheatley River. 4 Kzlly’: Cross: Thursday i P. m. Kensington cattle pens. 8 flliion Corner. Paying I12 a pair g lood pigs over as pound; each. i1 also buy mailer ones, also a wit!‘ of hnvydbeef cattle wan- Il once. Knu Jorgcnsen. 1-30-11. O O tlon l Nazis Use New - Type, Light Flak LONDON. July 19--(c1>)_ Boston bombers attacked Ger- man objectives in the Lille and Bethune occupied grog; this 5|- tcrnoon whle uadrung of Spitfires and Hurr canes dived on German warships off. tho Breton coast, hitting the bridge or one armed vessel and hornb- illk a. new type of enemy mine svveelicr. Two Boston: and one fighter wore missing from the sweep in which power stations at Chocqucs and Mazinzarbe were also hit, authoritative sources aid. A German fighter was dc- strayed. The Alr Ministry said tho planes encountered a new typo of German anti-aircraft. fire. quoting a. returning pilot as saying: "We were met by flercilllght flak of a new type. This came up vertically. It was white and looked like rockets. We also saw heavy anti-aircraft fire from shoro batteries." While the bulk of the R.A.li‘. s’ ’ g. unded. German planes dropped bombs in East Anglia this uiurulnhkllliniz sev- oral ' and-causing some damage. Other enemy raiders appeared over a northeast coast town but fled when British fighters rose to the challenge. No bombs were dropped and a report that one raider was shut into the sea was not conflru-ned. Returning Saturday from the third successive dayllyrht stab of. 1h:- Gcrman Ruhr. a haze Lan- castrr bomber shot. down I -Messci-schmilt-iD9 and damaged a Focke-W f 190 near the Netherlands coast. the Air Min- istry reported. The Germans today said Duisbburg. ll Miles rust of Essen, was the Ruhr target, Bad weather kept the R.A.F. out of the air Friday night and an Air bllnistrv spokesman said the Saturday raid on the Ruhr was ln line with operations dc- sizneil‘ lo knock m-i vii r- izcts and to liar-nos the Germans when bad weather keeps night bombers at home. Fire Eestroys Sydney Bakery SYDNEY. N. 5.. July l9-—(CP)— After a three-hour battle firemen controlled a stubborn fire at W. T. Lynch and Sons Bakerv hem today. Damage was estimated unofficially at 5. . Tenants in adioinlnii blocks were evacuated with their household ef- fects as the flames threatened to spread. A fleet of trucks at the rear of the bakery were saved by employees. Thrce Dead In Manitoba Storm WINNIPEG. July itl-(CEb-A wind storm accompanied biv rain - and hail which swept across Mani- t bu July ll and sari July 12 was rgsponsible for the dxath of three persons ln various parts of the uro- vince. Mrs. Bandy . 34 W“ found dead July ll. one and one m" i§'l"'il..§“2'i.‘e “iluiliilwbiiletiwr fllgilrjf the storm “i; the bushes bu did from expo! - - ‘frame, Germell was killed by ll ht hi8. bkfllisfitlfiléged Pimww was killod y 8 - d . broke pg? “filEyed small bicilfdllils and dui-ulptiil light and telephone com- mllslligitwihrdsherc reached an sverairc velocity of about 5D miles snwlaou‘: and at. one time it was moor 65 miles an hour. Manslaughter Case At Shediac, N. B. BHBDIAC. N. 8.. July 10 --(OP) .._ Adjournment of tho cue uni-l Jul ,2! was mods at a week-end prc minsry honing of Yfyilo Beriveau. charged with manslaught- er and also with failing to s10? after an acccident. The case arose from the death of [no Boudresii, killed wihen hit by I truck alleged- l d ive Beilivesu. ‘Ibo accused fieadedn The pio- secution rooted its case AMI ol- amining seven wi » conclusion of the si ting CHUNGK. IS ELAT . AT NEWS High Command An- nounced Recapture Of Two Seaport Towns. CHUNGKING, July 19—(CP)__ A smashing comeback against the f-lllilor Japanese drives in Clie- riniig and Kiangsi provinces was Tellorted today by the Chinese lllsh command which announced mclwture of the Chekiang sea- ports of Wenchow and Juian and blealllllg of the invaders’ ‘grip on the Kiangsi railway along a l5- mile stretch by geizm-Q 01 1y“; and Mengneng, The Japanese pulled out, aftgr suffering heavy losses at all four Pillni-i. a Chinese communique Sllld. lllld the Chinese seized large quantities of booty_ All Chungking was elated at the gig hflllma t. as the best in The Jilllamse took Wenchow July l1, following up quickly with capture of nearby Juian, in a drive which trill-ended clear across coastal Chekiang province south- ward from the Japanese base at Hflllschow. Just south of Shanghai. The Chinese command announ- Oed that the counter-attacking Chinese forces bl'0ke into both cities 0n Friday killing many Jap- anese and driving back northward .he survivors who had held the port less than six days. The Chinese still are sorting the supplies the Japanese left, behind 1n Kiangsl, which adjoins Che. ‘"18 o" the west.‘ the Chinesc vmllmllllli-llie said the Japanese fled from Henfeng Saturday, set,- lllli; fire to the town and break- "18 lllmllgh a Chinese cordon to Escape eastward toward Shangjao, 35 miles away, The Chinese the town and Pillllikiy reoccupicd fires‘ extinguished the ‘Iyling, another rail town 15 miles west oi.’ Hengfeng, fell amm- the Chinese attacked from several dirlefitions. o filial smash carried the Chinese through the north gate of the walls Saturday and town was investcdby 1 am. today ail/er a night of street-fighting, the Chinese account said, Commons Ill Secret Session B C. R. _Elackbu"n CflasrlLn Press Staff Wfllt-‘r OTTAWA, July 10—(CPi-Mem- bers cf the f-izuse of Comnims sat throughout sa urdcy behind the locked and cloey-guardei d .rs and shaded windows of tlie Crm- mons Carmbei- f"r a secret diz- cusslcn of war i ' ‘eds in Can- adian watzis p*iiicu1arly' ii ship ginkngs in the lowsr St. Liwreiice River area, ' It was the sscfnd secret sit ing of th= scssion and oruwie" the first Saturday on which the C m- moners have worked this your in an effort a soccd ‘he adjourni ent. A terse statement re‘e"'sed at the through Speaker James Glen contilned the only infcnniztion of’lcliil‘y issued- for publcaticn 0:1 what transpzeri in secret. The statement:- "A secret. session of the H use of Commons was held at l1 o'clock n. m. on Saturday tflc 18th of July 1942, ‘me s'tt‘.ng W's devoted to the question of roastal defence in Cin- ada, The situatbn was fiiPlfllfiQd by the three Ministers of National Defence." The Ministers rvemd i0 are Defence Minister Ralston, wavy Minister Maodonald and Air Mn- lster Power. The sitting started pt ii un E. Dfi‘. and continued mrcugh the t afternoon with s. twohcur lu"'ch- eon adjournment, It ended st 0.19 p.211 Enlistments . 22.8 In Past‘ Week HALIFAX. Jul iPfCPh- En- listment; in mill or! district no. 0 (Non pcotis and Prince Edward Island) totalled 2U d the week ended July is, fiirurcs re- leased st the recruiting office hero today showed. Thin repri-urH-d a daily over-ago of 83, or an iii- cram p! six daily over the pre- ccdinir week. i-‘fsllfsx showed the mutant rs- turn with 156 enllstmcnta, includ- ing six In the Canadian women's army corps. Figures for enllatments and re- jections in the other branch do-i pots follow: - Kentvillo 2 m: Sydney 8'1 issi: Truro s (i0); Ynrmouth 4 (B): t A .._.. _ (War Situation Last Night (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) The first month of the critical war summer of 1942 closes with llit- let's master offensive ominously close to vital allied resources and com- munication lines in Russia and Egypt, and still no sign that an Anglo- American second-front offensive i; clogg g1, hand, Comparison of the battle maps at the summer ‘ “ as they stood in Russia and Egypt , June 21-22, and as they are now, a short month later, would be gloomy ll‘ it told all the story. It docs not. I Q i U ll 1t They do not even reflect all the unhappy events of those weeks. They do not record. either. any of the factors that tend to brighten the war prospect for the anti-Axis league despite the grave and growing perils in Russia and the Axis dagger thrust in Egypt still dangerously close to Alexandria, heart of British power in the Middle East. The war maps plot the defeat of the British 8th army in Libya. They define a vast new German-occupied area in Southwestern Russia. I I I ii ll U But they do not show the blood cost to Germany and her saicllits- allies of these still inconclusive victories. They do not show the terrible toll of United Nations shipping taken by Axis submarines in western haml- sphere waters; neither do they show the tremendous and continuing flow of American fighting forces and war machines to the British Isles or the swelling tide of Anglo-American material which has won through to Russia. The cumulative effect of British and American bombing of Nazi in- dustrial targets and German-held continental ports and war centri; cannot be mapped. Its ultimate influence either on the Nazl campaign In Russia or on the sea-attrition battle Hitler is waging in the Atlantic can only be conjectured. ‘ I C I I That. air second-front has not reached its peak. Nothing approach- ing the thousand-planes-a-nigbt scale of sustained bombing has been attained. Just why ls not revealed. London offers bad flying weather as an explanation of long lapses between mass bombln raids aver Germ- any. The promised American air force participation is yet to develop In more than token fashion. Only the allied high command knows what problems of strategy, tactics or loss replacements and supply are still to be solved bmfore the full weight of power makes itself felt. ~ ever-increasing Anglo-American alr And it may be that it is the solution of those problems that bars the way to immediate second-front operations in the west to relieve pressure on Russia. A counter-invasion of the continent to catch llitlor between two fires seems possible only when there is available a vast and unmatchnble Anglo-American ah- umbi-ella to cover it and to blast l Wautsali- .. a Advance On _Pes CAIRO. July 19-(CP)— British advances in all three of the main battle areas along the 40-mile western desert front, where the fate of Egypt hangs in the bal- ance of shifting give-and- take fighting, were reported today. At the same time British troops, commanded by Gen. Sir Claude Auchinleck, threw back Axis counter-at- tacks by tanks and infan- try in the centre of the battlefield some 75 miles west of Alexandria. The scale of fighting Saturday and last night was greatly diminished from the terrific action which raged across the war-churned sands last week but the Im- perinl, Australian, South African and Indian troops took advantage of the com- parative lull to improve their hard-won positions. In the northern sector, along the coast and a few miles inland, rtCoritinued on‘ page 3. Col '1) "|=|§§hTi|§di» Dauscs Damage RIDGWAY. Pm, July l0--(A P)—At least seven rsonii lost their lives in a "f ash” flood which devastated towns and villages, made hundreds of per- homelfss dam! caused un- proper y amage over a north central erl: Fro as. Island Men Win Observers Badges RIVERS, Man, July 19—(CP)— The first award of air observers badges to graduates of the BflLlSll Commonwealth Air Training Plan at N0. 1 Central Navigation School here was made Saturday by Group Capt. A. Lewis, officer command- lng the school. Graduates included: Nova scctla-C A. MacDougall, Christmas Island; T. J. Martin, Halifax. Prince Edward Island — J. F. Hughes. Bedford Station; J, A. MacDonald, North Bcdcque. Repeats Charge French Ships Aiding Axis MOSCOW. July 19—-(AP)-Tass. Soviet news agency. today reiterat- ed and supplied specific instniic.s of reports that French merchant ships are taking reinforcements and supplies to Nazi Marshal Erwin itunimets armies in North Africa. dicated that as runny as 41 ships had operated in this service during May and June, _ (Vichy has issued denials of sim- ilar reports in the past.) The Tass story, dateuncd Geneva, Switzcralnd, said neutral observers had carefully verified the reports and that a. person connected with the Vichy naval administration in Marseille confirmed that sailing d not show the frequent voyages of French ships to Sfax. Tunisia, near the Libyan border. RETIRED WHOLESALER DIES 19- (OP)- '73. Smooth Sailinq For All your Bakinq When you use Prince E"\V"fl island l4 (S); NOW ' Glasgow 0 (Di. Former Dean 0f Medicine Dies At Home MONTREAL, July 19 -— (OP) _ Brig-Gen. H. S. Birkett. former dean of medicine and emeritus pro- icssoi" of oto-iarynolouv. lViUJlll University. died at his iioinc here today niler an illness oi a few months. rie was ‘(B FfldilY. While Genral uirketi Add been in failing health for the last i8 months he haa cunoinueu DHLCtlSlllR until a. few months ago. General‘ Birkett ie the way in lilliilCllllll-f and devel pinu niunv of Llic now esiablisiliecl inclliixis of modern medical practice. lic was the iii-st inaii in America to operate for cancer of the larynx. ilie first to remove a fOl‘6lgfl_ bociv from the bronchial passage with the bronch- iscope. and the first to perform l. surgical treatment for sinus condit- ion. At tho outbreak of the First Great War General Birkctt-tlien a lieu- tciiant-cclonel-organizeri the Mc- Glll General Hospital unit and took it overseas. Later lie u-as named as- sistant-dircctorqzencral of the Can- adian army _ medical corps France and given his present rank. Famous Doctor inspects Naval Training Ship Surgeon Lb-Cmdr. Charles Her- bert. Best of the Royal Canadian Navy is in Charlottetown on an inspection tour. He arrived sat- urday and is cX/pecl/ed t0 leave W‘ day for the mainland. While he“ he inspected the H. M. C, S. Queen Charlotte. Lt-Cindr. Best. M._D-. l5 5370995 for his work us co-discoverci". Wu the late Dr. F. G. Bnntlnfl. of in- sulin, used in the treatment of diabctcs. He served in the flFSli Great; War with the 2nd Tank Corps as driver and Surgfioll- lSTi-illping, Solution? PORTLAND. o... Jill! 19- (AlU-licniy ‘J._ Kaiser. y“? shipbuilding; lire ll d!“ i ‘u ;.-lida ia.nne. - "llrccdp Sfdteso slllpyqrlls be "we'll: nvei.‘ ‘in ‘ p|'t[:’(‘l"'iil(tl0ll of Klan n flCl‘ l! reign - . in fleets of such ilylns _ fever}; i-ies, Kaiser declared in a 5.6 M, the launching of ‘tuft ‘iibcrty ship, "Harvey W. sco . b lhg c-iiswer to the lffiilil"! “l ' marine menace. The speech followed a Waflill- ing by Rear Admiral Howard h- Vickcry, vice-chairman of‘ Sh: Maritime Cnmmlsmon. "l" l United Nations are iosln: 5h l" faster than they Vi" bu“! ‘hem’ vickcry did nlot comment on .l ' rouosu. Kkieigesi-psald that although Kaiser engineers hay" b if‘ their boards plans for a l' 05 l “beyond anything‘ Jules VCIJIE ever could have imaitlileg hpvlng 200 and 5004mm c191‘?! y.‘ capable 0f carrylilll ‘In in 1.0002 ‘r°ops‘ u". ui-gi-ncy of ihi: mu- men‘ “em-nag that lhi- Slliflltlf- ine problem be 51'1"‘! l" "M'- m-uml-vn-er-w-ivi-m Royal Romance Durbcd By War LONDON. July 19-—(AP)—T.he turbulent affals oi hoi‘ Ami-live Greece have imaivecd ag.in in the life of pre.ty 21'l_'5"’°1d Princess Al€X&ii’i(ll‘.l-tl‘il5 tme to prevent iicr morricilfl "mil ‘he w" gqds and her XllltiVe Greece ag in is free. Bzilaln was pleased at rowrlll oi g, growing attachment between tie Princess who has 5179M iwiifmllds of her life in ex iv. andjlil-y-lf-Old King Peter of Yugrc av B. But their rcspsciive governments put. s. quick dmiper on talk of a wartime marriage. There was no official denial that their engagement mishi lil- nouzicsd. but the Geek lovem- ment announced flatly that Alex- . IfiaIfiI-I-Ifii’? '1 andra could not. cons dsr marriage as long as her pecple llvcd under their Axis coiiqulrors, W01‘ N. B. FIRES UNDER CONTROL FREDERXCION, July l9——fCPl Two small BTilllSWlCk we» well irol tonight after weather conditions. One and likedcriction Junction. other, near _ fined tn little more than an acre. Higgins Corporation here Andrew J. Higgins, Yugo- snv government made up Peiefls mini in uimosi prec sely the same sound. under con- a change in burned more than 5f] ncres between Gcary more The ionar, Narysvlllo. was con- c1034; Towards Rostov; Stalingrad Safe Tide Of Battle Swings Somewhat In‘ Favor Of Russians; Situation Remains Critical, (By Eddy Gilmore, Assoc- iated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, July Zti-(llltm- da_v)-—(.-\I’)-Russian troops have evacuated V0roshilov~ grad, only 100 miles north of Rostov, but a stiffened Red army still is gaining grounfl at Voronezh to the north and is slowing up another main German drive south of Millerovo, the Soviets an- ounced early today. The loss of Voroshiiov- grad, claimed by the Ger. mans Friday, meant that a German drive southeastward along the Donets river was threatening a merge with a Nazi column striking south of Millerovo along the rail. Way leading to Rostov, the key Red army southern an- chor protecting the Cau. casus. The Soviets had announ- ced Sunday that United States and British tanks as well as planes are bolster- llli.’ the Russian lines in the imperillcd south where an eastward Nazi push toward Stalingrad definitely had been checked. The Germans, blocked in east. ward thrusts toward the Volga, from Voronezh and Millerovo, ivhoelccl southward along the rail. Way toward Rostov while a sup- porting column 60 miles u, the élzlaltlhwest sucpt into Voroshilov- The Sunday midnight communl. flue said that, aside from the loss of Vorosliilovgrad. the Red army still is inflicting heavy blows on file Germans in the other two HTGKIS. The Russians abandoned Voro- shilovgrad to avoid a. German en- circlement; threaten“; by the dllve south from Millerovo. The soviet! apparently now are WcdiciaiI TScFFeF” Nuge Ship Contract ls Cancelled NEW ORLEANS, July io-(Aip) —Abandonnient of the vast. Mich- aud shipbuilding program of the Satur- day by the_ United States Marl. limo Commission was blamed by president 0f llle Cllllll-illlll‘. " “dollar-a-yeai" men in Washington, The commission announced can- celliiilml 0i illo Hlflgllls contract l0 blllltl 200 Liberty ships 1n my. tlicrance of a curtailment pm. pram to divert all available steel to shipbuilding in existing fagflt. tics TllBElHs said the Maritime Com- mission contract was with the Higgins Corporation and that the Colllmlfisloll stands t0 lose about, $l0.000.000 on work already done. He explained that Higgins indus- lrlei. Inc. a selmrlitc company which he’ heads, builds smaller vessels without government fin. aiiclng or subsidy, “Alert” But No Activity NEW YORK. July 19--(,sp)__,\ However. u...'..-...'...........L. i...- John O. Cullen, l1, ubwo, h" lust been ldentifie‘ by ‘oygfn- mcnt officials u; tho ca“; Guardsman who surprised [our 0g eight Nazi saboieur suspects a; they landed from a U-boat. on g Loni: lfillmd beach, in New york, Cullen, pretended to accept ihci $400 bribe to “keep quiet" an reported the incident to his super. lors. Cullen is pictured in Wash- lnlfllln. where he ll a. witness at fhe suspcc‘; trial, M}? EXPECT LIGHT APPLE CROP FRBDERICTON. July 19 -(CP) ~ This year's apple crop in New _BlllllSWlCk will be llulif. accord. mg to results o! slli‘\'i.'_vs announced here. A decline of‘ {l0 nor cent be. low average is iiidicalcd for tho Vfl-Tlolis varieties in this part of the province. EVERY Jos is A Bic Joo IF‘ You cuoosa 4o MAKE l4 So High tide this afternoon at 3.0. and tomorrow morning at 3.17. Sun sols this ovciuni: at 7.40 illld rises tomorrow morning at. 4.32. can raiinv sauvica pan. EXCEPT suunsv From Borden — Lcave 9.25 a.m., 1.00 p.m., 4.45 li-mu 7-55 0-m- n.m.. 3.15 p.m., Bigfiupfl-bt: up“ Capg Tormcnilon — 11-9. (May 3 U’) Doc. 27 inclusive) Lcave Bonk-n 9.00 n. m» 6.45 9-m- Lmvc Tormenlion 10.15 l-mfl combined eastern defence command. 8.00 p.m. t. army and eastern sca frontier SiRl-f-‘lllolll today said that "a report of siis iclous activity nn the was; llllllllilton. N_ s." caused the M: of an alr raid nlCTl. at. 349 a. m. in that area. rho stniPm-Lnt that. investigation disc-loud 530 P-"l- nd. follows: "As a result. of a rcport. of sus- fm-cst mo; m New plrlous activity on ilie mast. near Wilmington. N. 0., I-:\l‘lV iidlzivflqllii; fll .. . s. m. and Wilmington and Wrlllhts- le B=acli wore blacked out for than an hour as n precaut- measure. Investigation dis- an! 110M‘ added no cncmy activity of ianv kl The text of tho statement. air ralii alert. was sounded no enemy activity of n kind. P. E. L-N. S FERRY SEIIVICI Leave Wood Islands 7.00 l-“Lc 113W Lfiuiylbvarihop I |.m.. 1 il-Ill. ll"! AIR SERVICE __ Clurlotietovm- Snmmersmc Moncton Leave Charlottetown 6-85 u. III-l m. Summer-side 7.10 s. m4 1.20 12.45 n. Leave m [TAVB Manchu ll n. m; nil 0-10 p. m. Daily except lulu)- 9.l0 pan.