MAXI MS or A MERE MAN u-mit all. ‘Mummy l; s necessary virtue to .----—~— 4'" " ttbto II I‘ i=1?‘ 554-41“, landed clan. ‘Iwo out!» llfl ' lids} Remnants Of British ‘Army Reaches India Defenders OflBurma Forced To Abandon Heavy Equipment; Hardly More Than 5,000 Survivors Of Campaign. fruit r ‘By Preston G70"? Auoclhtcd Press Staff Writer “lo-Remnants [M Japanese pushed westward be- lllnd them and pom-l deeper into Chins. ‘pl-lush force, now estimated to number hardly more than 5.000 ml ext-nested. themselves from I. ‘pmgerous salient, in the Chindwln nlley of northwest Burma, c5081)- h; a Japanese attempt to get be- lveen them and the Indian Iron- her. They had Yo destroy their heavy equipment, since they -could not move it through the readies; wild- srnesi where the streams are newly flooded by sudden ralnstomls. No land fighttig has been re- ported in that section of Burma~ flnoe Monday, and the spokesman ,ufd there had been no cont-act giih the Japanese for 24 hours. Another small British fcrce Roch had been left far behind in (he port town of Akyab to do dem- uiilcn wcrk has been evacuated to jodia by sec. , British bombers again attacked qtpanese barges on the Chindwin River, and United States army flier; ‘from Indie bombed the .My tkyino. ' lnlrome 1n north Burma yesterday or (he second day in a row. bu he Japanese were busily consol- l- -ting their hcld fn Burma. wlhere was scant indication, how- mr. that th crxd the five- ‘nonth battle cf Burma would mark the bvglnning of a long-expected lmult on India. Desnite roundabout Axis reports relayed by the Vichy radio that the Japanese are 6B miles inside iifda on (he way to Chittagong, tspatches from Ch’na and infor- mal‘ n here indicated the belief ‘i (he Japanese would concen- l o in an effort to scrlash the fli- Iqu" ed armies of China. I A: the Chinese announced loss .0fT6ll_£\'l1€'-I. important caravan town an wsslern Yunnan Pro- vnce. the threat. to China appeared ‘be m: erious in nearly five years Jil-aiubi; n warfare against Napane Lwuders. §Five_Axis Planes Downed Over Malta - VALETTA. Malta, May 15-(0?) -Flve_ Ax.s planes were shot down d SlX damaged over Malta today h-‘ncut the loss of a single R. . A revised official tabulation show- ed 21 C-erman planes destroyed or milked over Malta yesterday. of which 51X bombers and five fighters were destroyed, mflius in the first 15 days of May kcficnenty lost 74 planes definitely £131 to have been destroyed ovcr ' Coming Events on- llh for Notices In tnlg S cents per word "Talkies-Sounds Monday. 5 l‘ m “Taikles-Morell ‘Tuesday. l-ll-fll. O '31”)! newly-born calves daily “W1 Gallant. Oyster Bed Bridge. 5-9-10. “it and slow buttery charg- ‘i MflUBi/t’: Buttery service. 6-14-8l. gfffflvlinfi i‘! s every mesday Pi “h” '*°"“"=..f.‘;.°-‘% “Toni ht At 680 h.“ g . Kirk Rummage volt All“ m" M“ also: n ‘mm 5N Graha ‘ hm ms Road p]; u.*."-".o..o:;1"v- M" l: "Dem in aid pl, T, , of the Red UNI’. mhuljifl May mm. wgbftasrd: Inc . If a. hazggtii further notice I wlll be m, hos: to Charlottetown Wftum m WI. George 311x88. . 5x4“. fidlnfi "one in Bredslbcne n, ll 3R M. Will call for if H5“? James T. Homers. S-lfl-ll. 003"“ _* m H‘! his: Monday at ma- mfg“; Q16» l0 am. Brook- wm m: Elation: a Bedfordi | m," "It: '1 Vernon River; I11; Huztevlllev: Wednesda 1o 3 RP River: l1 New in. Kelly's mogislllvo. ‘an wnunm; a ill 1 hm‘ lien“ Qflld, “mfg- Y I Hilton ccttl g “Clifton corner. Knud 501-23:- dl-ll. pmw DELHI. India. May l5- of the Brltida my from Burma struggled across m, border into fndia fcday while A mllltgry spokesman said the Sharp Gas Ration Cut in Maritimes simultaneous}! OTTAWA Mly 1km?)- Gasoline rations for Ms-rltims motorists were reduced today when the coupon unit al- lowance was cut from five gal- lons to two gallons In an ef- fort by oil control officials to counteract an acute shortage. Announcement. of the out wul made by M. rticns ltL r Howe who said it was hoped the reduction, effective at. mid- night tonight, might be only temporary. No cbanle was made in the coupon uult for other parts ouf Canada. Oil from Western Ontario and Montreal is ‘being sent to the Marillmes where crude oil de- mands sre heavy and er llnklngs have created an acuilc shortage, Mr. llowc said. The eastward movement of oil could not keep pace with consumption while Maritime motorists were nuowed five gallons for l. cou- Doll. .New Lead In Kidnap Case LTON, Ont, M8! 15-(5?) HALE DHamiltcn police searched lcs 0f e city and Wentworth until Children's Aid Societies today 1°1- iowing a mysterious telephone call may might provide a clue to gm! kidnapping of Barbara Ann W 10mm“, Ont, who was taken from her ciérrlilgg; in downtown "°-*i°‘3§.‘a.'.”£‘°n talkubout the baby that was kidnapped at londgrli. said an unknown woman whoumfr- phoned the Hamilton 5W0 ‘ t- vlzvsss oiazrisl brmils to we ma‘ bwgmtgg London ch10" 9“ ° w broke the connection- Tltcldcalli t‘): he automatic syllfim- W" 5° raced. Ship Tcrpedoed Near Mouth_Of Mississippi ANS. May 15-451’) owlzoldest attacks‘! ode by Axis submarines e lilo United states and 0151! mgr-l: ‘the destruot-bn by WPIK 09,? Inge cargo vessel a short dslab-OE on the mzuth of the Mxssisslppl o >~. NEW _One of l Riven-was announced today M’ W"! united Bates Navy- Twenty-seven f the 41 019W members Were lined 13 me exp"? slon and fire in the attack. The remalnlng crew meznbersb M216 critically or dangerously “"1 - l Lon. wi-l-lkeuaatltzigi: kilrwille German U- boat, which coherently WM lvlfli on the shallow bottom waitini Y“ the ship to enter the river, oc- lurmdugayivelrgi ma? M mm rem r - While walti to enter flit FRI. the sup was h t by l-hm Wydtf: in rapid succession. Most crqw ngver reached flit WM?!- Survivors who 8°‘ 7° W? wmdw“ rail urn-pad and were poked up in abou half an hour. only seven bod HER were recovered n 7 - were not immediately ldentlfsd. The sills: we; the fifth attacked in (he G of Mexico in isas than a week, and the fourth lost. 0M ship was towed into 90ft although badly damaged. ‘Ihreo lives we" lost, in the previous attacks. "‘ Wild Scenes At Stockings Sale “m,....*§. u“il..ll1:‘°§’“.l.' Wll 0 kind for the duration end hundred-I "it?" ninr swocniu an‘ er: mrdeilt on g wcm dent to be llkaathe Halifax explosion. use of the eru loin were N0 mac ma: M’ 511°- lo s winner-end dcore pairs of nylon only t pairs before t leg-cones l!) $1.100 minutes. than half Ill hour all that wag an were the wllfcdsllrl r11. (he tiered remnsnts of a s ck- llll and one woman. BI 95111951 I tbs crowd. Cl-IARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, SATURDAY, MAY 1o, 1942 ‘More Soldiers It Needed Reason For New Policy Navy And Air Force Will Discontinue Recruiting At Army Centres; Rul- l ing Effective May 20. UITAWA. Ml)’ 15—(OP)—'I’h0 National Defence Department an- nounced tonight that after May 30 men called out for training under the provisions of the national re- sources mobilization act will not be permitted to transfer from the army to the navy or the air force after they have reported to an army training centre. The announcement added that the navy and air force will dis- continue recruiting in army train- ing centres. Reason for the ch e in proced- ure. the departments statement said. is the expansion of army ac- tlvlties The statement continued: "The mobilization of the 7th visions. and of special units. calls for a large increase in the number of men suitable to train as trades- men. The arm has particular need of men of th type lust now m connection with mechanized and special army equipment." News Briefs i} Msé ltb-(Sstur- lay) -( — crman troops occupied all save the harbor ares cf the city of Kerch at the eastern end of the Crimea. but l Russian counter - attack romptly drove them out of the wn, Reuters said today in a dispatch from "the German frontier." CHUNGKING May 16-(Satur- dayb-(AH-Chlnese troops batt- ling the Japanese in the Tengyueh- Lun ling areas of Yunnan Province in t e past week have inflicted more than 4,000 casualties 0r. the invaders. the central new: agency reported today. OTTAWA, May 15 — (GP) — Motoring tourists entering Can- ada wlll be given only four gas- oline coupons good for what- ever amount of gasoline the rs- tion unit culls for in that dis- trict, Munitions Minister Hows acid the House of Commons to- l1. MOSCOW ssible source o rictlon in the Far East was remov- cd today through ratification of an agreement by Manchukuo and Out- er Mongolia. to end their border dispute which erupted info open warfare fn the summer of 1939- LONDON. May l5 — (C? Cable) — The Royal Air Force today attacked three German mlneswce ers off the French coast, bl them all, sank left another slnkln 1nd the third damaged whl c four Spit- fires, lnclu lng one piloted by u Canadian. knocked down a Dornler bomber off the cal coast of England. . Entire Canuck Army Training As Commandos By Wes Gallagher (Associated Press Staff Writer) SOMEWHERE IN BRITAIN. May l5 - (AP) - Brisk, efficient Ll..- o 15 -- (AP) - A Russian-Japanese ,Ma Gen. H.D.G. Crcrar said today that leased Canada's entire army of more than 130.000 men in Britain is helix given commando-typo traininc W1 the aim that it will spearhead the m eventual Allied attack. “We are shifting from defensive to offensive and building an army that can establish a bridgehead and hold ll," m; 53-year-old conimsnd- er of a corps in the Canadian army said in an interview in which he, c revealed that. every pa um. cook. infsntfymnn and o ficsr is being given the some training ll Britain's famous raiding forces Kgv Canadian officers have been to commando training haul-quart- sr- for study and now have ce- tablishvd n school ivins the um type training wit a few more arduous North American embellish- ments. Trllhlng includes ons month land and one month sea operations. Natural Materlsl Because a large proportion of Canadian troops are natural woods- men accustomed to living outdoors, many of (no preilmln commando coursu used in train Britsfns "city-bred troops are unneccssl-f! for men from the western hem- are being given commando trmng tbl! I" 8W1 m of regular army units and tlon as occasions," such exoevt M) Om» 001w GOIL Covers Prince Edward Read by Everybody Island Like the Dew MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN The world is tho vale for soul- War Situation Last Night (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) The battles for Ksrcb and Kharkov in southwestern Russia. necess- srlly hold the war news spotlight but word that a ‘"- MM s "e It llld l of the pltlf u co .m.“ s-s BrltlsS hudto-ryrreznrds. “u” O rs was llttl Q ll out’ " "h... . their btaqckes’ or in ll}. Wllllillilflpt falls into Jo W B by Jspsn is all but complete. East ccs are moblllzln cursicns into the r homeland hands. Wlm to rtcgorts from the O red e y small force of British and India-n the surglzgrsligfttléway. like the men of the B.E.F. panese b mi rltish evacuation of fur: nncl ntal battle ares. e chance of esca all the way from Rangoon to India. l O O s as scrap meta from the south and west. The fate or pres- ent disposition of other Chinese troops Is obscure. Weather major hostilities alon wet monsoon is alrea y rains it. brought added British trap about them. O I O Burma m t be rltte ff th _ new comnllcatulwsvn fnrwChln: 2.... ‘ltscrrngnltg llffiifingjilillil “d ’ m" portenfs still point, however, to a retreat as it helped also to O O O Loss of Bur- mese oil sources, although Japan stands to gain little from them her- self ln tbs Immediate fut problem of keeping the distant American or enemy submarines. file]. ‘is a scrlousmmattcr. ‘l; vastly Increases the fig e war mac ne on rlenlai front f in e munitions and su and lubricated. Planes. tanks and other war machines must be fsed ‘$5.1. ment and assisted by Mexicans Angry Over Tomedoing Of Ship Leaders Weigh Grave Issue; Demand Satisfaction From Axis Powers By MEXICO OITY. my 1b—-(AP)- A deluge of demands that Mexico declare war on the Axis arose in political and labor quarters today as anger mounted over the first torpedoing of a Mexican ship in this war with the loss cf l4 lives. Congressional leaders weighed the grave issue at an lnlormfll meeting but deferred actiorruer-d- lng a, reply from Rome. Berlin and Tokya to the government's demands for “complete sattsfaction." That demand set next ‘Ihursday as the deadline for a reply. While (he le lslalors were meet- ing a. throng o National University students stoned (he German Club in the heart of Mexico City. Sev- eral windows were smashed before polim dispersed the demonstrators. senate ader Icon Garcia. spckesman for President Manuel Avila, Camacho in the upper diam- ber. urged that an extraordinary session of Congress be called to declare war on the Axis Deputy Aurelio Pamanes Exoc- bedo, President of the permanent Congressional commission, said. however. such a session would not be summoned uni/l the President and Foreign Minister Eoeuqiel Pa.- "dllia have had time to analyze Ax- is reaction to the government's not . . Tile &neral Canfederaticn of Labor. one of Mexicostbrec mcst powerful workers’ organizations, de- manded that. property of all Axis citizens in Mexico be confiscated as indemnification for the 105s 0f @110 vessel, the 7.5_il0-tcn tanker Potrefo Del Llano which was tomedced o" the United States east 006M» The tanker, fcrmerry the Italian Lucifero which was taken over by Mexico last year. was attacked M» night while proceeding fully light- ed and with the Mexican flax ll- luminatcd. Release Trainees From Quebec Jail ASBESTOS, Que. May l5-—(CP) ._ Police Ccmmlssoner Alfred Le- Fiamme said todsy that two trainees who had oversteycd their leave were still at liberty. after s crowd of Asbestos residents re- them from the town Joli Wednesday night. Commissioner Ialflammo said that a crowd of 700 or 800 released e men by lm the lock on the jail. and added that. the gather- ing was under the impression that the men been token into custody by military police for m"- ‘Hailey. 1i dispersed uletly up v 960D q . ommluloner said after be and Mayor Joseph in e told them that the two men had not return- ed lo camp when their lelve ex- alted Jan. 10. Iaflamme spoke for minutes and told the gathering that the men should luvs return- ed to when camp lr leave ex- ired and that they were not being taken for oversees service. Great Need For More Ships, Admiral Says , 0eJlf., lhy 15-0.?) -The Philippines and pore fell to the enemy for the llck of shl and "we may lose Australia, for the u l)! Allin, - son" Roar Asirnlni J. VA“:- siado warned today. The Oman ndant f‘ the 12th naval dlotrlctappcclcfi directly to if?” “"0 i" m"... sun's- Oi’ i‘ ll ' fut I production. Thursday. BULLETIN ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, May Iii-Saturday) — (CP) — General MaaArthurs headquarters announced today that Allied planes bombed the air field runway and buildings at the Japanese base of Lac, New Guinea, yesterday in a sur- prise attack which left large lres in its wake. Fire Chiefs Chosen For A. R. P._G0urse FREDER-ICTON, N. B-. May 15- (CH-Selected as one of New Brunswiclrs three representatives. Fire Chief Karl A. Walker left last night for Amherst. Mass, to attend an A. R. P, instructional school being conducted by the United States Office of Civilian Defence. Hrc Chief Walker was Joined by a second member of the ‘provincial delegation, Moncton Fire Chief Walter O'Blenes at Fredericton Junction. while the third member deputy fire chief Robert Carson of Ba nt John was scheduled to leave for Amherst this evening. On their arrival at Amherst they will join a delegation of approxi- mately fifty Canadian firemen sel- ected frcm various "vulnerable ar- eas" throughout the Dominion to represent Canada at the school which opens May 17th. Claim U. S. Cruiser Sunk (From German Bread- May l5—(AP)—Gennan aimed today that the Nazi force had sunk a United States cruiser of the 9.100441: Pensacola class and an American destroyer in gttaoks on en American squad- ron betmee. the North Cape of Norws and Spitsbergen. Furl er. the Germans ciamned their air force sank in the far north a Spoil-ton ice-breaker and mu“ o! commons “may for John a MOO-ton merchant ship, hitting and setting on fire s freighter of 10000 tons, and sinking four s .5210 tons lu a British s . There was no comment from wsmln ton or London on the claims. scene of the action as ma: in the German m was ‘uflfll. hint trig; Amercan fleet un m opera so n- song the allied supply line to Mur- mant and Archangel.) Nazi Prisoners Are Recaptured E, Ont”, MAY 1L (CID-Two Nazi lir force lieuten- snis who escaped frcm Bowman- vllis prisoner-of-wu: csmptiwodsys ago were but in cur here tonight hevinl been captured‘ at different nts today. One was captured roll in t7tsnadlhniugla&onalu Rcllwtygf ygrds a . m es eas ere. wing the other was urea lice m Toronto Union Static? write is 4o miles east cf Bow- Maritime Oil Shale lieposi OTTAWA, ullant British force Japanese rap in Burma gives May minister's statement course of debate on l. iulent. to i B its i ti i1 ma. u. 1.33‘ No.32: chifélqifilf 331mm“ °“ " ‘ ’°‘°‘““°“ in strength behind the Salwccn to limit Japanese in- 12 PAGES dvance In Vital Khorko Stop Tffl-lwfers In _Meufi Called Up For Aral! Urge Test Of _ 15-(CP)—Ex- y" u"; "mm"; lamination of Northern Alberta tar rccps whlcb- fought sands in the Fort McMux-ray urea is being conducted with a view to immediate development to meet u'ar time fuel demands. Munitions Min_ a; ister Howe told the House o; com- r equl ment as they could carry on mons today. was eft of their battle-worn heavy “F119 e n R. MacNicol (Con. Toronto- Annual Subscription Uollvcrcd. $6.00 ‘Drive May Be Qn Front 40 To 5O Miles Long Soviets Report 400 German Tanks Destroyed or Dam- aged; Fierce Battle Con: ts \ came in the war after Davenport) had said reports indi- catcd that at least 750,000,000 tons of bituminous sand could be mined Prolonged suspension cf by open-cut methods. the lndihn and Chinese borders of Burma. The blowing up from the Indian Ocean and the immeasurably to the difficulties of the final avert the clcsln of the Japanese film. (i! eve One small l t the Fort Mciigilirlfaywggroglfrrrlaitmg m about 300 miles north of miles. Maritime Deposits An intensive study of nds was under way. org DD .V lea Middle Eastern oil fields across seas haunted b, engineers. Mining of the san ‘was one of the m fully worked out. tinues On Kerch Peninsula. Edmon- 57 "u" P- F L. 04.00! to other Provinces and 0.5. $5.1M v Area. nd by direct pipeline he be. it was not more than 250 the depart- dlng oil — (By Henry C. Cassidy, Associated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, May 16—(Saturday)—(AP) — Red army anizedtby troops beating a bloody path over the approaches to the great Ukraine industrial city of Kharkov have destroyed , d itself or damaged more than 400 Nazi tanks in three days and “l” pmblem n” still are advancing on that key city lo Germany's south- tudy 815., “M, m“, film. m, ern defences, the Russians annolmced early today. S oil shale deposits of New B as a source of oil. and ments had n made to runswick arrange- develop wells on the Lower MacKenzie Riv- er at Fort. Norman, N. W. T lonal wells were being d rllle Fort Norman, refinery capacity was being increased and a short line was being installed to to the location of the Alaska high way. for a thorough exploration lble oil resources of the Peace Riv- er block of British Colum Percy Black (Con. said that when oil should be munitions and supply expiendlltqure n should have been made Scotla and other outlying Canada Inequalities in industrial _ prise in Canada. would be udjusted 4° t9 50 mull‘) m5 by locatinq industries in the Mari- 61055941 the 1300915 Cumberland) reserve Clilannrdal were being examined the o 5 fie deflgflfshf’ mrfgg?’ 3,9,3: ed by Russian-manned British and American tanks and planes wen a reported smashing hard at the German secondary lines before Kharkov. pipe- carry cl of poss- bi a. s OVB. On the Kerch peninsula the Soviet midnight com- munique said Russian troops defending that approach to Ag-dig-t the Caucasus oil fields “continued stubborn fighting.” “In the Ifharkov direction our troops carried out of- l fensive battles and are advancing," the communique said. - “Our troops destroyed 255 guns, damaged over 250 tanks, Arrangements were helm, ma, and brought down 40 enemy planes." No other significant changes occurred on the long Russian front, but. ln the Barents Sea. the Russians reported their airmen sank three o; enemy ships, including a transport. Marshal Semeon Timoshcnko‘: battle-hardened veterans support- Bu?‘ or Along a wide front (some Bri- enm, tish commentators pictured it at troops had river to the time provinces which had “suffered west. and village after village out- grcviously“ in regard to industrial lying the great steel activity. Canada - Critlclsed M. J. c 1a r 11, 0.0.1“. n u l d- l" “Vi” _ {Lafiecnnadlan Dfiefifilgfiam the roads lending flom the broken er. said the United States was not as high German first as he had hoped it would be. On a “YEN ' to Michigan he had been nblc smashed tanks and cannon. yis1t_ to give the facts concerning alleged Canadian opposition to the Alaska {his acglqn_un centre was falling to his arms, said the army organ Red Slur. German in were described m‘ Amts as enormous: line into Kharkov littered with Nazi dead, Some 400 miles to the south of the Kerch pen- highway and in respect to the oper- ' , _ R - ation of United States military air- msula m the Cum“ other us planes into the northern Alberta. The 0.6.1“. lender Dart slan forces were fighting to hold the position to which they had added that fallen back in their second forced Cnnadu had been criticized by Rep. retirement l“ that area‘ John D. Dingle in the Unite d Staffs (Reports from Axis sources in- House of Representatives for fail- dicated that Timoshenko also had ure to permit United Slates trucks thrown in a heavy to use Canadian roads when carry- the attack along north coast of the Sea of ing supplies from Michigan to Buf- Amv ggglnsf, me German position falo and cnstwards- If use of Gan- adlan roads was necessary to facili- tate the movement of Uni war silppiies. Mr. Coldwell ted States said he at Pokrovsk, some 15 miles from Taganrog. in an effort to cut the German wing protecting the Kerch thought, every facimy Should be m“ action while he hurled the bulk of en American trucks to Canada. but he thong should be allowed to use as a. lever to gain such a ion. pass through his W“ 1f, no group north). the war concess- Mr, Howe said representations for opening’ the Canadian roads would be considered. but the proposal was to use the Cunadl "brid e" and the woul yield nothing sing 3,5 an highways us a trucks the COMMUN- ities along their route in Canada. He said he agreed that the war had i eren foot . f E ing Reveal Gasoline Needs for Ration aced the question on a dif- y Books Issued Now UITAWA, IEYIY-(oru-use of all the coupons under tion books issued to te would mean a consumption of 725,015,060 gallons of gasoline in the ye mencing April i, , rted in a return made M‘ com- lt was re- the Diefenbaker (Con, Lake Ce tre Total were 980,426,030, the return I1). said. at Kharkov to the Drive Against “Hooch” Started In Old Country (By Edward Robinson, Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON. MRY l5—(OP)—- Th0 police campaign againsu peddlers of typical bootleg '-hooch‘ blsulfl-‘l for l5 deaths kept the British ssollne ra- public occupied this week, nlonl; with the government's refusal to ration beer and its restriction 0n luxury meals. The source cf much of the i700? leg liquor was said‘ to be “T100 ammo], apparently siphoned from a-sollue sales reported to drill!“ l9 d°°k5 “Wining mm5p°r' of taxing officials in 1941 taticn. Other types were believed to be To date 1,302,510 ration books th l ted . iitsctiemlcally treat- have been issued. 663,824 in the 10W- :18 toy lick llqirizarwhisky, of a drink est category. "A". Licences fcanlgther cigtéegories are divided: B 2,047; commercial, commercial marine, 11.828. The recategorlzation of now underway oases; n £4,015; E. 251.875; non- licences made in back-alley stills from such ingredients as 001M095» ml“- ing barley. sugar, yeast and rais- ins for coloring. m B The reason for bootleg? Ange" downward the amount of is hard w obtain and ls heavi Salvage Collection This Afternoon ‘ Nine trucks, each driven by a member of tho ladies‘ lviotor Trans- pirt Corps, will make the rounds of Charlottetown this afternoon in the interest of the Salvnge Conrmittee. Citizcns are requested to hum‘ all unsie material placer) (iutsi-ir their hcmes shortly befccc two o'clock in order that the men vim ncclnpanv flit? trucks will be able l0 l".l\’.l if. quickly thus saving timc. The City has been complete), zoned now unci it. is cxpocted thn fills will greatly facilitate the mill- ter of collections. Sevrrni blocks nro inclutlrd in e n district map- pcrl out nun‘ a ti‘ l: will mwke (he rcuitcs of nnrh ." iherlnr- the s11- vasc nrficles tired on lilo (‘(0r- sfeDs or in front oi rho hump The ccllfctcrs are an. < to gel as much z-uhbcr as lvo ~, also mot- als. rrqs {is well an .~ ulde variety of other scrap mnvrruls. i-lurvvvy i: is pointed mli that lllls colic " should not. be tnnric nn 1x1" getting rid of tubhlsh '1.~.runl.. . > during sbrlltq ho‘ umuinc A (jflrlqgd of ._ _-r\i.erletl m Charlottetown. um homo VP-dvd yesterday fw scipnwnt to {Puller Canada. _ _ The trucks which are it'll"- dl-iven bv mlls; Moth’ 'l‘r:.n-l‘..'.rf and ct.hcr'lnrl'v_~-- mo brine rionnizvi bv mgyghll l; of the "lty \-\FE Stu/is (o fonsisf 0F A $0M’ or Confmuoi. ' BUYIN ‘ AN‘ SELLIN‘ Z379" u i. no no Q“ k -_ High tide this and at midnight The sun sets this evening at, 7.22 morning at ll l-l will "materially Probably the fact that legal liqutl); and “M: mmorrow morning n 4.30 c gasoline to be consumed, the re- taxed ‘ turn raid- Britain's beer drinkers cheered a “um” "'°°“' M“ 23' 4'“ "-—_"—'—'"' the Government's refusal to ration ‘gum ,3- gd Md l m l _ 533E511“) F0“ noun", beer on the ground that. such “at” $13.13.,“ "Chjficyfffiwfl" “would cause wide- MO . May doling out 15-min‘ spread discontent and a probable NTRBAL Frank Larson. 2i. wanted in Halifax n 00111100 Marltimcs accompanied b Detective. J. Baker and W. F. Clem-y of Halifax- rom a seaman, left tonight for the tectlve Larson was arrested here a week ago on a charge of loitering, Later h he was reco nlzed as the man want- ed in Hail ax in p. the holdu IONDON -- (CP) — Blr George clue-m so m. o; m, My‘; 5cm. other proposal for curtailment of t, he gull pglnu_ Q14”; railroad operations, was consider- acadsmlcian he hes exhibited an- in! Wm nually at the Royal Acad than I0 non. emy. ls 00 connection with any for industry to making long t m, decline in industrial production." um w armed robbery An added official comment was 3 Chief that much of tho quantity of beer being drunk in war-time Britain f; water. anyway. People who must travel by train they had better take their own food in the future: the dining cars will be discontin- ave been told ued. The transport ministry. in nn- iultl-IIOQ Journeys. P. B. l-N. S. FERRY SERVICE Leave Wood Islands 7 p.m., ll mm. .m. nave Caribou 9 mm. l p.m. 5 p.m. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden - Leave 6.30 p.m. 9.25 p.m. 1.00 p.m. 4.45 .m. 7.55 p.m. Leave Ca e Torment m~7.45 p.m. 11.00 mm. 3. 5 p.m. 0.46 p-m. 9.10 p.n|, SUNDAY SERVICE (May 84o Dec. 27 Inclusive) Leave Borden 9-00 p.m. 12.00 noon polling persons not in war 445 _ _7_|5 _ get permission before “m p m m» Tormentlhe 10.1: p.m. use p.m. 8.00 p.m. 8.80 pa;