The P . Canadian Press) m-fiwzgmaril ib-Tbree new mhiBUOM l0 m! ' -""i:“.:°ii..“ en Imm- Mac h for t e worl secur- {Iomfng Events Bench ___ Jgyoa-IB Stewart IIMl-Ifibwlllll: ‘m... - Murray nivaalfi by Dundas Y. P. 5.. éQmMn°"1-rb..1i, April aim. i-oo-ii. alunlopdm‘ tomorrow and Pri- m, car fresh cement. P. initial‘. hogs every Thursday prulllosgrdiinadt Fraser Ltd. Merlvn pivipe. Pealres. 1-33"! ' giymmag Sal Girl Guides. £99m! Sechooirbbm, rll 21st. mr. u. 4-30-11- gEGULAII Navy meeting ward- Mn, Friday, April 30, at 841;?“ “uploading cs.r of bran and m“; today at Milton station. llcrfll Kitson. 4-30-11 ‘idrain Crushing at Boss’ Mil-id. prigcwwn, .on Saturday only um April 22st. 4- -'.-i- "panee, Orwell Hail, Monday. April 33rd. Mtliview Orchestraio m "On hand, quantity 0f Bub wire. Buy now. W. I. Bowman, Hunter River. 4-18-11-20-21-41. “it'd”; iiifnilfi?’ xll‘n.‘“»'°§ n. Montague} Norman.‘ - node. cardigan. i-lfl-liri-Sat-tf. "lu stock, bulk wheat. bill! utctulk barley. Due to arrive seed ts, 02.50 cwt. Book :1. MoGoirigan dc $.19. 417-101. "Alexandra Women's Institute Pantry Sale, Moore Mc- lesds, Saturday, April 28th be- [inning at 2 P. M. 4-50-11. "The Cornwall-York Poirit In- h“ lillhfm“ ‘ “i? “hi? H‘! R Cr > ‘ an, w r y t-eo-n. "Driving w one up to the min- ute. rubber tirigd or steel tired- hltilbber tbraoes sflaib. New rrneu, an express - Clinton M5551»... Frsdericton.m s’ "Shipping hogs from Hunter itiver Monday afternoon. APT“ ni and Tuesday 24th until train time. Trucking service supplied. ilmdon Mathescn, Lemuel Cras- veil. _ 4-20-21 "George Dunsford trucking hogs. to Charlottetown Thursday of each veek until further notice. Phone for service. Livestock Marketing hid, 4-20-2i "Tr kl h Tuesday io Cillscrloligetcvgg‘ Ierllieil" Miiiview. mloii Bridge and vioinities un- til further notice. Please hone service. Crane Bros, M 2,021‘. 4. . "Loading hogs at Charlottetown "ti? day in the week except Sat- u- l“ m n It Charlottetown. Board. "Biii 1 'Wiltahirc. lrsadaiispslixi: 0'19: Summer- i-"w s" our: u"- . l“ , VI‘ Marketing Bdard. i-so-n "its prod wishing to ha a? this‘... slog-o rel: mar our agent located at your alli in . eatoc in! ggarii. pom‘ uvi-N-flki "Wei i Wurmisllobnu horb roisliiiariairg MON. Li it is “It. I} u‘ you u v rec mm“ mtptlowmg. and a cordial "°°" "liming Boa: in“, s-Laligl v-‘Jhtlmlilfi... '.'-‘.':ti...l."'°..“.i“ fir: indicates that no Illllld we heir: processed for ea- S» this: i as“ rsmir ‘ii- .Wbcl Marketing Boa . Q 4 i-ao-ai mriaw...’ us: M "gélviiie. 11$. sinus. Bourls. 3mm“. ti l. rell. ntafire. . St. ‘Issuer-am: all giants fl c go 3"‘ i" Summers do e fiPlg-ulfen swell our volume in 0n for Britain Osm- - “vs-tour mam s. Ept. B. Robinson, ‘~,S"side, Named To Senate the Senate and w l-GHT BlNDlN f’! ity conference at San Francisco. The appointments to the Senate re:- Ca t. Brewer Robinson oi Sum- mers 4!. P.E.I.. now assistant man- ager of the Canadian Legion War Services in London, Eng. Hon. ll‘ W. Pirie, Minister of Lacnkds and Mines for New Bruns- George Percival sol-ohm oi South lscn. N. B., president oi a (Con on ge 3 C5171) ‘linnouiicc Gmilr. J. J. Gonnolly's llcvi Gommanil OTTAWA, April i9 _ (C?) - J .J . Connolly, 44, oi Charlottetown, has been appointed commanding officer of H.M.C.S_ Avalon, tiie Royal Canadian Nil/Y's major shore establishment in Newfoundland. ai- ter common"... H M.C.S. York, big training establishment in Tor- (A-ito. since September, 1943, the Navy announced today. dr. Connolly, who previously served as‘executiva officer of the destroyer Hamilton, succeeds acting Capt SW. Davis oi Riossland and Trail. B.C., who has become naval number oi the War Grants Board at Otto/we. Acting Cnidr. ES. McGowan oi Victoria has succeeded acting Cmdr. HJ. Plaxton of Toronto as cit-EC- utive ofiicer oi HM C S Avalon. cmdr, maowsn commanded the naval dnckyard at Halifax. and later the ineswceper KM 0.8 Daerwood on the Pacific coast. Cmdr. Plaxton. former Liberal m of parliament for Toronto ‘rrinli/y. has turned toxcanade. ior llevi Yallli i... is I Match‘ For German's (By The Assoclaf " Press) WITH 'I'HE U. S. 1ST ARMY ON THE RIHNE, March i3-(De- laycd by Censor)--The Americans now have a tank in action on the Western Front which can s ack up with the German Mark V anther and Mark ‘I! Tiger. The new battle behemoth is the 45-ton Gen. Pershing, mounting a 90-min. gun oi high velocity. The Pershings were used ior the first time in the drive from the r River the Rhine, which opened Feb. 23. Hitler Declares Fanatical Battle ls Beginning Goebbels ails On Ger- mans To Disregard Rules Of War. (Bv The Associated Press) LONDON. April 19—Adolf Hit1er' declared tcdav on the eve oi his 56th birthday that “we now are startin a battle as fanatical as that w ich we had to fight for our ascent to power years ago," and Propaganda Minister Goebbels call- ed cn Gen-nuns to discard the rules oi warfare and use every means tn defend the Fatherland. ansocean Agency. tle against the terrible enem all means are proper right an sl- iowed." He added that the war “h"s entered a phase in which only the utmost effort oi the nation and everyone can save us.” FISH AGREEMENT A WITH GREAT BRITAIN 1B‘ The Canadian Pram) WA, April 10-Pisheries Minister Bertrand today announ- ced at under an arra ement United Kin d 104G Atlan c coast produc- on. If out t permits the quantity mgyrbe rsasad. - . Bertrand said arrangements now were in progress to supply Britain with lsrle quantities of Bri Columbia froaen fish and ctherCanadian fish products, and 'r....."“ 'P.°.%"l.‘;'l.‘..l$’° t‘.’.§‘.?.‘.i.‘.'.“‘l°. neat other needs the United he site's eople's Psi /// //- ‘ l ¢ per Reports that the Russians are humanly gratifying even if it woul Few things are so satisfying as against him In the last act. It must be harrowing for Hitler, whose troops invaded the Belgian The indoctrination of war ‘ era, have German Army. They finally convln i" ‘ at “ lion under him. For a time it was denied. Remembering the " it is easy to imagine what could b men-call them traitors or converts German lines. Would they devote themselves arranging the surrender oi whole them. remaining true to what they B: l. as. nonimrs, In, Associated Press War Analyst flccrs in German uniforms f0 Ipread confusion behind enemy lines are other powers so fondly call the rules oi war. uniform. to have to warn his troops against their own former leaders. usslans, not being parties to the conven uses to which they might put captured l‘ Very early the Reds began persuading the Pruaslans about the error of their ways, and used them to broadcast defeatiat propaganda to the this group as the nucleus for a new German government, but this was an trooper’: subservlence to brass and braid, fuss the whole defence lips? Or would they rely largely on diplomacy, Russian teachers about the futility oi Germany continuing the war. could do an extremely important military Job for their captors. dropping “converter? German pf- rl be slightly off-color under what to sec the villain's weapons turned the great organiser of fifth columns, bulge last December in American which prohibits taken a realistic view regarding the officers. ced even Field Marshal von Panlus, . .. , and . , M] _ feared the Russians intended to use appen with large numbers of thesc as you wish-operating behind the to giving orders designed to con- units? Probably both. Enough of have professed to absorb from the Home ” Says INTERNATIGNAL i u i guilt: wusrunn snout-Americans fake Leipzig and Halle; encircle Nuremberg; British 2nd Army five miles iz-orn Harburg; Canadians gain in Kusfcn ‘rldgeheud fight- EASTERN FRONT - Russians finally announce Oder crossing; Berlin says Russian tanks thrust. lng toward Strauabcrg, 10 mile; from capital. ITALY-British 8th Army ll miles from Ferraro; 5th Army troops seven rnileg from Bologna. AERIAL-More than 2,500 Allied planes pound German targets. PACIFIC-Americans seek to break deadlock in southern Okin- awa; Americans in Philippines in- vade Balnbac Island 45 miles north of Borneo. British Pioneer In Wireless Passes SIDMOUTH. Diglaiid. Alfifll l9 - (CP) - Sir Ambrose Fleming. 06. one of Britain's el-ectricalscicnt- isis and pioneer in wireless and teioqrach developments. died today. He was twice aw-irded the in- stitution premium nf the Institute of Electric Endlneers nnd iiiiifl the Sll\'-"l‘ mcrliii oi "is Roval Society of Arts ior scientific investigation Local Officer llcmc From Overseas OTTAWA. April iii-There's hap- piness in hundreds of homes across, Canada today, following the recent return of Canadian fighting men and women from the scattered fronts oi Europe for leaves with their families cr for new positions in their homeland. Bulk oi the returnin veterans were soldiers, ‘ but inc uded also were members the other ser- vices, women oi the C.W.A.C. and nursing sisters. Prince Edward Islanders return- ing included Capt. R. A. McCabe. Charlottetown. Nations. To ensure that at least the min- usntity -ci fr illie the eemenir is avail- able-ii. 0.000 pounds o i, .000 pounds cf polock-t-IIQ Department was requiring all pro- ducers of Atlantic frosen fish to supply to the British Food Minis- sa d. Ilach ecd producer will be re- uired to supply 25 er cent of his iotal handlings, exc uslve of used for saiting. ch pcllock rc- ducer must su i er can canta es may decrease at the try percent es of the tot- al uantities oi ‘c and liock whic the receive or hsn e dur- in the 1 season, Mr. Bertrand - discretion oi the _ (levers Prime Edward island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1945 03E T0 LINK-UP WITH 3|6,93Q fipiureei I Lluhr Poclte-l: llcw Type Felts Sell Well lit Montreal Sale Silver Pelts Bring Lower Prices Than At Last Sale. - (Special to The Guardian) MONTREAL. April i9--The Cam adian Fur Auction Sales Company's vendue oi sliver fox and new type pelts was conclude’ here todgw The total offering oi the three-dcv ‘sale consisted of 24.139 pelts and oi these 6G per cent were sold at an average oi $26.75. Selected full silvers were a’! net cent sold at an average of 5441c, Regular full silvers were 53 ner cent sold at an average of $27.73, Inferior types were 49 ner cent sold at an average of $17.07. Low grad. 95 WEN 29 “Pr cent sold at an average of $6.81. The Canadian National Sliver Fflx Breeders’ Association's ofierlng of 500 skins were all sold. The platinum pelts of which there were 150 averaged $1211.06. '11.»- average of the ton lot was $148. One hun. dred platinum sliver skins averag- ed $118.26. The aver-ave or the mp lot of these was $145. Sixty-five “Leave Politicians At McPhee To Pensions Investigator Strong condemnation of any ef- fort to exploit old age pensions pgiyments politically was in t e legislature on Wednesds by Mr. H. . McPhee. KC _ ‘ ird King's, who lathe Progre vo Con» ‘Candidate ior King's Count/y in the forthcoming Federal election. Mr. McPihoe called attention to the matter when the House was in Committee on the Estimates, during the passage of the item of $446,000 for old 63¢ pensions. ‘The Superintendent," he declared, “has made a practice oi taking around with him politicians. I dont wan't to impute motives, but. it is entirely wrong. I drew the attention of the Minister personally to this matter, and I now draw it to the n‘ “ of the House. “Politicians have no business driving around with the superin- tendent oi old age pensions when he goes around investigstini; cases. The implications that arise are so obvious that it should not be nec- essary for me to develop them here. I think probe-lily the Minister knows what I refer to and I hope he will icli the superintendent that when he goes to investigate he had bet- ter leave pcliticrns at home and go as an official aud- not as a Lib- eral organizer." . Premier Jones: "Do Liberal politicians or tives?" Mr. McPhec: "The ones that I refer to are Liberals." Premier Jones: "Don't. you drink you should go with him when he investigates cases?" Mr. McPhee: "No. I don't The man I refer to was a Dominion politician. When I directed the at- tention oi the superintendent to this matter. he said, ‘Ii you wont M rot“. v would re Qlad to have you‘. I don't think I should 8° with him at all. I think when a civil servant goes investigating glgjmg p9 should go alone, because old age pensions should not be user! for political purposes. There should you mean Conserve - Springton Farmer ls Found llcail Daniel Stewart. iarmer at Springton. near Hunter River. was iound dead late vesterda after- noon a the side of nu wei. It is believe he had been dead for two or three days. Dr. B. Murchison cf Hunter River was summoned and after viewing the baud; decided the late Mr. Stewart h died o a. heart stroke and that an inquest WES IIBCEBSIIy. The Mr. Stewart was bachelor and has nc immediate relatives in the Province. understood two sisters reside the United States. it is in fa pearl nlatinum skins averaged 9.9.1.06. the top lot averaging $120. Two hundred and 35 white marked skins averaged $79.00. The top lot of these averaged S102. The results of the above sale showed that the new types were very strong while the silvers brouehtlcwer prices than in the previous sale. (The above information was sup- plied by Mr. George A. Cailbeck. manager of the fur marketing de- partment of the Canadian Nation- al Silver Fox Breeders’ Associa- tion, Summerside.) Veteran Saint John Doctor PassesAway ' The Canadian Press) JOHN, N. 13., April 1k Dr. Matthew A. Curry, 08. died at his home here today after illness of several months. Born at Wind- sor, N. 5.. he had practised ior years in Halifax. Surviving are his wife, the former Florence Alice Robertson of Saint John; a. daugh- ter resident in England and a son, James R. Curry, manager of the gagk of Nova Scotla at Sackvilie. _ Berlin-Bonn Germans To Get Final Warning llc Atrocities (By The Associated Press) LONDON. April 19—Britaln, the United States and Russia have drafted a final solemn warning to the Germans that both the top liflllS and those who have done the "ioul work with their own hands” will be made to pay for atrocities commit-ted against the Allies, Prime Minister Churchill announced today. Disclosure that the warning had been drafted by himself. President Truman nnd Premier Stalin nnd would be issued within g "very few days" was made by Mr. Churchill to the House oi Commons. whose anger flamed as a result of direct word from Gen. Eisenhower, Allied Supreme Commander, that atroci- ties just discovered “far surpass" anything seen before. In what appeared to be a sug- gestion that the central German Government might not long enough to receive the warn- ing, Mr. Churchill said it had been prepared "for the German Govem- merit or whatever authorities ex- Germsn atrocities have become cf paramount importance in com- munications between the "Big Three," the Prime Minister said. disclosing that n delegation from parliament would leave tomorrow at he invitation of Gen. Eisen- hower to see first hand "these "gruesome scenes." One woman is on the eight-member committee wpcinted to get personal proof of t e crimes. CANADA [cu/c Moscow Announces i True courage and courtesy hand in hand: the bravest men are lbs most forgiving. MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN 10 PAGES Governor SoTight “Other Advice” Says Premier "The Lieutenant Governor has no rigiht to refuse assent on his own authority." Premier J. Walter Jones stated to a Guardian rep- resentative yesterday when asked for comment on the veioing cf the bill amending the Prohibition Act at yozterday’: prorcgaflon of the Legislature by the Hon. PLW. LePage, Lieutenant Governor. “in cases where the constit- utionality of a bill is in doubt." Premier Joncs added, “he might withhold assent and refer it to the Governor General. The for- mer prerogatives of the Crown have long since fllsflllllliirv-i "lid" constitutional government. The Lleutena Govemcr has no choice but to fake the advice of his on» adviser. He sought other advice." New Mt. A. Head Back In Canada iBy The Canadian Mess) SACKVILLE. N. B., April 1c\ Col. W. T. Ross Fleminizton, presi- dent elect cf Mount Allison Uni- versity has arrived back in Caziada from overseas duty. Col. Fleming- ton enlisted in 1939 and proceeded overseas the same year where he has been serving as principal Pro- testant chaplain. e was elected president cf Mount Allison Universit last year to succeed Dr. George , Truempn and expects to take over his new duties in July. CAPETOWN, April iii-Reuters) -To meet the rubber crisis threat- ening South Africa, the Govern- ment has sent G. A. Embleton, controller of rubber. and F. A. Bovet, chief technical adviser to the controller, to visit BritaiinCan- ada and the United States with a view to obtaining the necessary equipment for producing synthetic rubber, the Rand Daily Mail poli- lhll. $4.00; other Provinces l [Ll-L 08.00. Subscription Delivered. $5.00. REDS By AUSTIN BEALMEAR PARIS, April 19—(AP)—United States forces today captured the inner German fo encircled Nazidom’s shrine o rtresses of Leipzig and Halle, f Nuernberg, already mostly in American hands, and pushed 25 miles south of there to within 70 miles of Munich. The U. S. 7th Armyx driv ing toward Munich, captured Nuernberg's twin city of Fuerth, with a population of 85,- 000. Resounding successes were recorded on the opposite end of the front. where British forces, driving up i0 the Elbe River 20 miles southens t of Hamburg, drenched with artillery fire the last bridge across the Elbe at Lauenburg, ihus sealing off from the rest of the Reich the defenders of the ports of Bremen, Emden and Wiihelmshaven. Word virus passed down through American troops that a junction was imminent with the Russians now no more than 55 miles to the east of the U. S. 3rd Army. Posters which illustrated the silhouettes of Russian tanks said they resembled some of those of the Germans and that Americans should shoot. The United States ist and 9th Armies inflicted the worst de- feat of Hitler's armies since Stalingrad with the final smash- ing of the Ruhr pocket, capturing 316.930 prisoners in that cam- paign, including at least 11 gen- erals. The British 2nd Army in a 20- miie gain drove up to within five miles of Harburg and brought that cross-Elbe suburb of Germany's second city of Hamburg within artillery range. - The British forces were on the Elbe at numerous points 20 miles southeast of Hamburg and rush- lng up tanks and troops. The Germans predicted that the Allies would land somewhere along the Elbe‘s mouth from the sea and attempt to take Hamburg and be- sieged Bremen from the rear. In Holland. the Germans blew a SOO-yard gap in the causeway of the Zuider Zee. wantonly flood- ing thousands of additional fertile Dutch acres as the Canadians reached the south shores of the Zulder Zee at two points and roll- ed up against the old Netherlands defence line i0 miles or so from Utrecht ticai correspondent said yesterday. d Drive ’ By ROMNEY wrmuucn LONDON, April 20—i'AP)-Th9 Soviet High Command officially announced late tonight that a great Berlin-bound battle was rag- ing before the German Capital and enemy reports said Russian tanks were thrusting toward Strausberg. 33y 10 miles from the burning Clamping operational silence on what Berlin has called "the great- est Red Army offensive of the war," nounccd only that Red Army for- ces had crossed bnlh the Oder nnd Ni-isse Rivers east nnd southeast of Berlin. The ccmmuniciue did not reveal the depth of Soviet penetrations due east of Berlin, but snirl thin fighting had been raping for three days fnr the "caniurc nnd EXtPYS- ion" of brlriflcheads. This was the first Moscow announcement that bridgehcads had been secured. Enemy broadcasts snlrl the great- est tank bsttlo of all time was raginil before Berlin's suburbs, re- ported by the Paris radio to be under shell-fire. The enemy claim- ed to have destroyed 1.074 Russian tanks in the last '12 hours. The armored struggle t-hnt may decide Berlin's fate was reaching its cli- max. the enemv said. and the Ger- mans were faliing back. Earlier, while two orders of the day from Polish forces fighting with the Russians told of the of- fensive on Berlin. the German ra- dio gaid the Red Anny had laun- ched yet another mighty offensive. The Soviet radio declared the “curtain who falling on the Euro- pean war" and said the time when Moscow's nichtiv communique fill-l the Allied and Russian armies would link up now was at hand. The second session of the 45th General Assembly of the Provincel was prorogued yesterday by His] Honour Lieut. Governor B. LePa e, who assented to a number of blls but withheld his assent from the bill amending the Pro- hibition Act which had been pass- ed in the Legislature by a vote of 30-8. A few days before prcrugu- tion, His Honour had been up- proached by a delegation of the Temperance Federation xvith the request that he exercise his power cf veto in connection with this measure. which provides for the is- All northeast Holland now was cleared of Germans save ior a few pockets on the North Sea. but farther east the Canadians were heavily engaged on and across the Kusten Canal at the approaches to the U-boat nests of Emden and Wiihelmshaven. First Phase Over Gen. Omar N. Bradley, 12th Army Group commander. declared the first phase of the United States 1st, 3rd. 9th and 15th Armies’ of- fensive east of the Rhine was completed. that there would be n temporary pause for consolidation "before we go into the next." and left the uneasy German Hiflh Command to guess which direc- tion it would take. In that‘first phase, he said., 842,804 German prisoners had been takrm. and all the German forces that faced his armies when the lilg push began now hail been wlpcil out. Gen. Bradley's statement flint the Ruhr had been liquidated im- plied that the big munitions city oi Diiesscldorf had been captur- ed. although it last was reported still being mopped up. The 20.000 prlsoncrs taken at Leipzig repro- scnted half the city's estimated garrison. Reveal Names 0f Men Killed llear Truro TRURO. N. 5.. April l9—Fit. Lt S. Balkwill, Toronto, and qal. Richards of Buctouche N. 18.. were the two airmen killed at nearby Mount Pleasant yesterday when their Mosquito bomber crashed. The plane appeared to be in diffi- culties nnd in attempting to make a forced landing a wlngtip touched and if. cartivhecled into the home of James Miller. Miller Wiis ab- sent from homo ni. the time and the house was unoccupied. GO VERN OR VETOES PROHIBITYON BILL suaiice of long-term scripts by dor- tors under Attorney Generals warrant. Accompanying this action over- riding the will of the Government and Legislature was His Honours speech couched in the customary formal terms. thanking them for the moneys appropriated. congraiiilniiiiiz tlicm oii "t h c e ii l‘ n 0st ftllfl iliurmigli mrin- nor wiili which you have applied yourselves to the public business and upon the measures you have (Continued orf Pagan-S:- Ccl. t): look twice now before they ‘Sugar Situation iSaiil “Very Bail" r (By The Canadian Press) TORONTO. April iii-The sugar 5 situation is "frankly very bad right now-Q’ T. A. Cline. director of sugar distribution for the Prices Board today told the National Council o! the Baking Industry at its confer- ence here. " He said world demand for sugar had increased during the pastyem‘, ybut world production had decreas- ed.’ "There might easily be a long period in which rationing will be continued." $0M dove viiiisfi-i: Witt! 4w: aw "ofiieas wer- Winona _1 METEOROLOGICAL Sill-INNER Toronto, April 19—(CP)—- Minimum and maximum temperatures: Van- couver 45. 58; Edmonton 28, 55; Re- glnt 28, 55; Winnipeg 15, 28; To- ronto 33. 52; Ottawa 31, 50: Mon- treal 33, 47; Quebec 33, 4d; Saint John 3i, Moncton 34. 55; Hai- iiax 36. 56; Charlottetown 34, 53. FORECASTS i LOWER ST LAWRENCE: Fresh i to strong winds; mostly cloudy with ‘light scattered showers; not much chnaze in temperature. LAKE ST. JOHN: Fresh to strong winds; mostly cloudy with light. scattered showers: cooler at night with snowflurrles GULF BAY Cl-IALEUR: Fresh winds: partly cloudy and cool fol- lowed by scattered showers at night. NORTH SHORE: -- Iresh to strong winds mostly cloudy and cool with scattered showers over west portion; generally frir over eust nortion MARITIME WEST: Fresh winds? mostly falr and a little milder, light scattered showers at l- MARITIME EAST: Fresh winds: partly cloudy and comparatively mild. High tide this snornlng at 6.40 and this afternoon at 5.30. Sim sets this evening at ‘L51 '82s rises tomorrow morning at mi moon April ‘rim. ass AM. summerside tide cl hteen minu- te; inter than Charlo fetown. DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown - Suinsueraidr- Mcncton Leaves Charlottetown 7.4! AJL ll.30 A.M.. - - Arrives Charlottetown ill! PM» 5.30 P.M.. 8.45 EM. SUNDAY SERVICE heave Charlottetown 12.15. 5.45 PM. Arrive Charlottetown 5.20. I." RM. CIIARLOTTETOWN- NEW GLASGOW (Di-ally Except Sunday) . Leave Charlottetown 1.10. 4.00 PM. ‘Arrive Charlottetown $.35. 5M PM.