y v i IOIIAIOI IDV, . ulldlsl. ‘Iwmo-Gulliamiwollcoto- yummy , j éariydon Asks i iliuestions Re freighLEe-ilp — Mainland nus u conditions permit. ’ lie was answering Gordon Progress! C - l’ d n, :$.'.‘i’..°nnn. leader. 1M government act-Ion i»; taken to relieve e tie-up fleusme to and mm the n- Ibt Croydon sold he was in- ‘ hundreds of oars o! Is- Tm‘ products awaited 1m, ulelndlng many oars of seed Losses would be heavy ‘Islets this freight could be mo- wed quickly. '1 ‘sir. Michoud sold the tic-up was vere weather and ice provide the transfer ed seed pot- atoes in winter. Ill]. Saturday, lit 6.15. "Horse Races. New G liver. Bananas’. March 25th! Golds, Crokirlole. Lunch, etc. l’. Alex Maclgon "Uillilfldilll at. Breadalbane car ll mill feeds. oats, and flour, Pur Al“. tsslna and pig growena in. stock. l... S. Seaman. 3-24-21 "Murray Harbor Bhlppm chub lMins Hogs Monday 2'ith rom 10 NAP. M. D. Rfi-Y BIOOKS. 56C- 344 n oral patents related to radio con- ltttry. "Due to l Apr-l f m No. 35.33 lficigucllrg- dsnow. Willard Prvwse, Brack- lt 3-24-11 l. "load Hogs evegdv Thursday Fraser L . Keith Mc- Iinnon. Montague. Norman Mac- hwe. cardigan. 2-21-22-25-26 "Al-liven at Scuris.‘ l te - liked Outs (V; cachcaictlgrgysnrid Iulnerl orders please takeagizldgi- hr Davis I! from car, hrgellldillll ho s for Davis dz l‘ Every I‘ ursdn afternoon "Albany and Elneral Every Fri- Y iorenoon until further no .0. Green. 3.7.1,; the undersigned ‘"1 not be loading further hogs “fduiilzlhllrsday. March 30th. Keith M“ non. Montague, Norm Kenzie, Cardigan. 3-21- “Marslllleld Presbyterian Cllarg 1°" ’s D "Kindly not: for next Lord Zion ll his. and Mnl-shfleld 12o P. M. llenry P. Baak, Minlstfrz.‘ u "H"! Growers Attention: m‘ ‘eddy for market this week ll should be hi a 1 t’ l‘ "'4 no. m“ 1 fb_i{,$',mf;§hi’t_‘f§d nights with Frankfurt u ole m- m may lose a Government il- Bte our block add this issue 3-24-11 ‘I"I"flnners'—Make a habit of “h” "shin y ‘ any waters. lad lnli"‘{’.l',,',,h",fi‘,,,fi§°§fl,w'fi,kmffl‘i The night's work cost seven Cu- _"'1W tile following week. Holding "Wimk Merkstnng Board. All Bilvemms "block we this gout whose: 5'1 - s etinq m“, ‘ 344,“ nipegmad Bill Kcnney of Frederic. uwsrfli“: Do m‘ this, W“, rons, respectively‘. Ottllalsr who “lament Hog Bonus by hold- twill PI"- W“ a few days. and having k r lir hs& “it no over weight. 1 lb. “mine Board. and hours: The People's Paper (lovers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. cannon, FRIDAY, Mnlzcn 24, 1944 MAKE NEW LARGE GAINS IN EAST N GERMANY iucifil . h 28 — (OP) OTTAWA’ Mum-m Mhilllli: Local Air Gunner Killed In Action 5st. An Mrs. 1-l. Melville Andrew, Pownal St... Charlottetown. but it ls known that Sgt. Andrew has been participating in many oi the nigh an continent. Monoton in November 1942 and received further training at Three Rivers and Mont Jolie, Quebec. He spent some leave last summer with his parents before going over- seas the latter pert of August. He ,' There was only tbs one ferry- loelreaker available, but when millions were better u stan- lsni ferry would be transferred mile run to relieve the sitmt- i BDMIIIG EVENTS wit-plumage Sale, ‘Trinity Social R 3-24-11. lasgow .2441. '~ » ' '-.s_..aa_ ‘m’. »----. "Bee. View Hall, March 24th‘, is d1 w t . ds - Milne. Monday night. 3-24-11. s er m” Gun an ‘x '1 am "Iliad! hgestBadlb - “mega o r a agig-ev ' tual collapse of t‘ many. Word was received lest evening, that Sergeant Air Gunner William. Arthur Roland Andrew was killed m on an operational flight March 22. drew is a son o! Mr. and No particulars were received. raids on the , He first Joined the R. C. A. l‘. at was 20 years of age. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Andrew. two bro- thers, IIn-anlr, Lleut. R.C.A., now in Petawawa, and Allan. Gunner RCA- in England. A sister. Mar- ion. Mrs. Harry Jenkins, recently arrived in the Orkxleys to join her husband, e. Flying Officer in the . A. F. Bill received his education at West Kent School and was a most. popular boy. His ready smile and lovable manners won for him a great many friends who will be greatly saddened at. his loss. To his parents. brothers and est sympathy. Radio-Gontrolled Projectiles Discussed BOSTON. March 23—(A|P)— John Hays Hammond. Jr., inter- national inventor and holderof sev- trol, was uoted tode by the Bos- ton Traveer as sa ng that pre- cision bombing with radio-control- led projectiles could cause the vir- Ih the fourth of a series of ort- icles, approved by the office would be close to collapse l 53s.‘. 26th will be held ns foil A. M lilghfield iug art was u“ -—i $3M Heed” o! Glace Boy. N - "Mock Mafketina Board l We...“ us; “m I For Civilian Use Ilknira Mg" hwy ”_"‘ qp ' - - m - mo, m n ao-l )- It “m” ‘f’? Incqgfigd quentitlaer: of wool have . Hm". been released Bot civ I '5' A. d». .00 e. F“ PM until no PM "t nurse-r veniifs figs. ' Will‘ liar-lounge a- far less resistance. !R. G. A. F. Dut In Full Force nadian aircraft. (is “can you ecoo. No need of Th: combats with ht n-nflnlfitlfifl if?“ ‘m, mu“; "eldou ' heel railway shipping. b01333‘; he was unable to say what were m m“! lrld this issue. Livestock u" ‘will ' Also in the. Canadian 810% WK" t. mm!‘ fighters were rIPOIWd by 1'9- oi De Release More Wool DONDO strong forces of Amerl out a sweooinc ser- other Clea-man targets east 10 enemy plane; as 10 1gp in strenltil. Twenty-seven American bomb- QN 811d 81X fliihters were lost and U. Air Force used pro- bably more than 1.500 planes in bombing rail yards, war factories e a force of nearly 200 Bo to bombers attacked without los the French railroad centre of u Orell for the third time in k and also Nazi all-fields at Beau- lle and Beaumont - Le- Place 0f Proposed Industrial Dank ls Described of thug‘ H 0pm“ done in tbs way of material des- m 681153;: truction." he added, clearly im- Mfiflgggn, (OPF- "if" Production has been lost.’ o "industrial" devcl Th‘ ‘ “w mhrsg§ocglltildflzcgmigiddep' The destruction of government day during a session o! ‘"9131’ trunk“? lwlrlmllltlfi" to t credit £15.. oinsn-Iisilerebusinxensggs 1“ a“ a" mmtmy rem" which m‘ m, intermediate m, longer mm gélxlged l-litlers chnnceilery. the lszmmgzgfrxfmftgargheglgflmkgfag of Justice. food, agriculture, arm- difficult to raise money on a small “mama and munmms and mt‘ loans lndustriclsucan get credit gm damn“ m" destrwed “mus- nks. ..- "-—~——— G rk! and éiffllléillltl. éroweirs. Vice-Regal Couple l V l B . ' s s§p§l§§§ 13.10.!’ uni“ corVlmittene i‘. 0n Vlslt To Toronto it started a study oi the bill creet¢ the bank which has receiv- ed second reading ln Commons. Replying to questions Mr. Tow- and Princess Alice arrived here ers said the difficulty of getting today from Ottawa. During their by visit. which is scheduled to end smell industries had become great- March 31. the vice-regal couple will- u“ Wm" throughout the Reich and was t0 of the kind of credit DERLIN RAIDS _SPRi_1_AD, conruslou l 55:22" Nazi Airforce Puts Many Fighters Into @1_'.___Los=e__At Least 20. British Give Analysis 0f Damage Results LONDON. March 23—(AP)— The submerging of Berlin under great loads oi explosives and fire bombs has spread "administrative confusion thro ‘ Germany and German Europe." an author- itative British ana ysls of damage in the Nazi capital said today. Berlin is “in a dickens oi a mess" an R. A. l". commentator summed 1t has taken the R. A. F. a long time to get comprehensive, recon- naissance photographs and intel- ligence on Berlin following the 15 gent R. A. F.-R..C.A.F. night from Nov. 18 to Feb. 15 ' ln which nearly 27,000 tons of explo- sives were cascaded on the capital but from Air Ministry and other authoritative accounts these high- lights of the picture now emerge:- e numbers of workers have fled Berlin without official sanc- I: ‘d armored divisions, has caused the army to suffer from lack of siwl equipment, and has produced - tlenecks in heavy electrical equip- ment. Except for the southeast district organized industrial activity in this great manufacturing centre virtually ceased at the end o! No- vember and had not been resumed by the end of January. "No doubt portions of Berlin in- Jlflllflfy." said the R. A. F. com- mentator, “but meanwhile 1m r- re. llfstil! ‘a ‘good deal to be plying the intention of doing lt. offices has spread confusion clearly foreshadowed on Jan. i0 ign office, treasury. ministries army records office in the list of on. rmst. by air so Canadians ca Damage has made it increasingly n remote Italian mountain vi difficult for she German army to “jug; 11m, or u“, gupplleg, maintain the tank strength of its “m, Army 0on1“; PM“), <.___ tious made ii difficult to supply this isolated British rried in tho supplies by ski-train. llage. Pte. It. W. Brown of London, England, while the ski party lends a hand. —(Can- dust“ ‘tamed “p P331“ since suddenly appearing out “my jungles. has driven 60 miles into The new Japanese force nl.......‘2.iiZ'.li Willi such TORONTO,- March 23--(CP)— ._ The Governor-General of Canada censorship, the traveler said that u Hammond ' "a ' "If a precision weapon could be used on vital key targets-railroad locomotives, railroad bridges, pow- er plants and the like-German war supplies would ultimately be stalled completely, and the enemy The paper quoted Hammond as aserting that if the United Na- tions brought out an Allied ver- sion of the so-callcd German ra- die-controlled "flying bomb". tho pending invasion might meet with Vichy Refused To Permit Polish Primate To Leave OITAWA. March 38—( Cardinal August I-liond. Pr oi Poland, nad been invited to come to Canada by Cardinal Viil- Bucharest and 8011B in of Quebec before his ar- “"5" imflfillilifli- rm by me Nam in pun“, R1; Even as Hitler rode herd over| 3_ we polish 1955mm um gqday Hungary through n new quisling, g, premier, there were indications that, Th, gcapgmem um the P0115); all Nazi satellites were being given| .1 the choice of providing complete Cardinal had made q u, m," F3111“ [Q]; one o; military co-operatlon under Nazi llled or neutral countries but direction. or of being occupied by the Vichy Government refused was AN H. C. A. F. STATION IN ‘ ENGLAND. March 23-40? Cable) --'i‘he Canadian bomber group was out last ntgm in full force second heavy attack in five et. Canadian Lancaster: and l-lalifaxes joined the RAF. in dropping more than 3.000 tons of high ex- plosives and lncendiaries while squadrons laid mines in sn- ll.- , At l est b: squadrons f the Oa- M even a 1w ca! may calf: “sols: groluo went to Fqrlntfliltt. 0 Cs- mouu” N's" but British And Foreign Bible Society Meeting despite limit- reoorted today snnllrl in th The igure incu d mom illsn use. D1890“! . South Africa Blsho of Bloemfont- , mrt. at W Canada. are considered am lo Wo for all immediate and reasons ll -li.| i" er in recent. years, partly due to open a new convalescent home for blinded veterans of this war. Hitler Bullying Balhczzre; Into Do OLDiePosition LONDON. March 23 -— (AP) - In a desperate demonstration of Nazi power, Hitler, holding Hun- gary under its iilumb. has ‘launched a campaign of bullying the other Southeastern European nations into stand-or-perish position between the Rumanisrl capitol oi Bulgaria m Nazi troops. castigJngLfilm millilit- Ml ‘W4 "P" “Pl” °* Join the Host o Home Bakers who- foundlend lengths: suddenness in B113 shifting By Klrkc L. Simpson. Plotted on any nlup of lllc Indian- sllow road. rall and rlvor communications Invasion of Assam from the uppc tics. the Japanese ll seems no more than a Tokyo-born iot- in Burma makes little sense. sort of sliver lining for the otherwise cloudy e Japanese people. ojo‘s reference to the multiple-front across the Chlndwin River and the Assam border to within 30 miles of tile lmphnl rundheud town from the south and east significant. He Gill ort it ng a Japanese enterprise, bu National Army" with the If It falls of the gran Allied military forces in In “co-operation of (Jap dlose design Tojo assigned to i dla and the placing of all India under author- visional governmenP-obvlously it will be ls- o to Indian. not Japanese collapse. Yet short of u irllolcslllc uprising not in Assam alone but throlllhfl" rt. n Japanese Puppet Regime. failure. Even while adm ilnlnly u. doomdrl to points to endanger Im with‘ penetration nt. two or more Admiral Lord ‘Mountbntlrn, Allied commandcr-in-rhlel in the Burma- ns of small consequence In "i0 a (germany against the onruolling Hedi e unless it picks up Indian "WY. A strongly-supported Ankara ro-lsoughnasgcm A lport. said German troc/ps began the‘ u" (jp),_ fom-lal occupation of Rumania early. ma“ today‘ Telephwe cmnmunlcatmnslinvasion of India could have sent. growing fear in Tokyo tll Burma are hrllwllvz dangerously ncnr the hou Illa to (‘hind will begin pouring supplies into test threat in Nlpponeso Chins. Sea. dismisses the incursion sin military" equation as a who] If it. is not mcrelv n Jnglnn Some London quarters maintaln- __o horl- a‘ the Hitlezmpiressurc could ongy | “my g ay and w not prevent t- e M sgvgl, utimate collapse in the Balkans. mm thlt the in‘; FibberTVIcGee Reported been extended by the Flegfral Ill With Pneumonia " ‘p’ n.*.§°§"“é""°%i’s.l"“l°£‘§‘"t’€§ or an- r c ee o s i5 ' ‘MP9 1mm“ °r radio-was taken to hospital to- ' ‘ day with lobar pneumonia. His physician aakl Jordan's illness was serious but not critical and that it may be from two to iour weeks before he can resume his broad- -Burma operations. and vast la the set-up required to direct aircraft and tell them what les to bring in that a com- "wireless village" was estab- lished at rear headquarters. It The ‘ems: wane!“ ghet .. n struggc or assno, n strong- every wir.i.ss sct in the jungle. hold defend,“ m: 8mm“ vale". b.3355 maintains 24-hour contact with LANAUA i c: 7w iweéjzy . l fwd Jap Invasion Forces Drive Ahead Inside India NEW DELHI, India, March 23— .1 bolsder fighting was located ‘I851 by an Allied headquarters repo the as standing on the nest shores o Lnlo. Logtak, 30 miles due south]; @590, India, it was announced today, in of Imphal. , the second invasion disclosed with.- Aiilegl __ headquarters continued to lullllllllzc the Japanese threat The new force, hitherto unhcr- 1;) Iulphni. A statement said aided, has pushed northward from a Japanese breakthrough lntn Burma un the Manipur river val- l‘lCl‘ wvifiv flatlands was unlikely 16y to within 30 miles of tho key city o! Inuphal, it was disclosed. invasion ly observed. force was a similar distance from British forces. meanwhile. ousted Impllal on the east yesterday af- enemy units from positions south ter crossing the upper Chindwin and southwest of Buthedsun improved their positions whlc re- iilat poking enemy attacks west of that startling town. rm- - Associated Press War Analyst Big Experiment With”, B u Wireless In Warfare e U . , nrcl — - ell ers nth???” M“Et°‘§}”‘<%’€“€sx ‘N. ' no of the greatest experiments! h‘. use of wireless warfare is s» Still Rages raged through its eighth d! .._________ DON N. M Z3— P-R - tersl-lgog-d Betcllrvialltbrookuileclagd Wm‘ b9"'“e'we"y N" in m, House of Lords today that “was 5W1 filth"!!! It the W" without the plans of Prime Mln- °°“"h°m 955° PM “h” lster Churchill the Unit/ed States would not be pljtgilcing “anything A ..__;. __- I OWII. No important change of had been reported sncs tons smashed rail yards 1* _.__..-._. flew Inquiry u Defence Lines . . Request 0f Gaptaln B, M Ynbmn lien, In average monthly payment as fol- owe. Alberta 1117B. $3.80; British — ‘Ofillllllbil. 14.544. $8.56: Manitoba sol. $23.33. n Brunswick u,- - '1. suns; n3; Scotla 14.0w. "TQGS REVISION ‘ll 817.88: Prince lildwsrd Island 1.902 unicss (in; Japanese gather strong- er forces than have been current- Burmcsc border largo enough to which dominate battle lolli- r Chlndlvln region Japanese surge 01'!‘ , Marc contiflzllgt of Canadian servicemen Vic simud- T°1'°1'"°- PM U?“ - t as an attack by the "Indian aneset imperial forces." t-ths repulse of the invasion of India oer- ltting a. surprise Japanese I "m! "M" I‘ ‘pokamn or or take over other posts in the army] . ese gesture for propaganda purposes, the only on:- other meaning, It might repre- ei the Allied successes in clearing northern r when Leda road from In- China. to make it the {Io- trafflc and to Japan itself. the Canadian Army u nurses. o1 soc Canadian girls who went w“; f9 to south Africa. thebywreported, about ' rs still remained re. Some had “EREDHH- _ returned to Canada end others now vane serving in the Mediterranean g EGAN. /"'\ "We had a fins time and the yf"’=- -' South African hospitality was wcn- \\\ deriul. but of course it is good to \n(,\|~ see Canada asai ” untied Jon \ Q norms o! Grand ‘item, u. 1a., the ~ -_-_- NAPLES, March 28 — (A P) — forces clinging stubbornly to sev- léflii hard-won heights west-crepe N mnltsmy. Kinpton, Ont; Dorothy N 0° M“ h u am am "m" ‘mm’ mm‘ °“‘" “*1 “m” Slmmwrsige tid€cl8 minutes m- MAXIMS 0P A MERE MAN 1111 Without heart sincerity. and roo- titudo of life. all form, however ancient. In worthless. ‘l ?e¢-—e-— 3 PAGES i7£e""u’32'..3.‘¢“¥3$i.!3;". v.04. 0.0 Into German wNDofL MtUQIhhVSIiI-I-IOHXI ed s. R. on c Tk-‘rerliloul-i 523p breikthroush in thl OTMWA- “m” “(om- Etlubbornty defended Tamopol nines n “mm” wchmd "m area of the eastern front and Ber- D ‘Y O ommo - ' ifi th C th t he“, o! the , ‘Th, at: 3E! n reported the-t other Red Army lies o the Prince ‘xlfld lslaxfil‘ “Name deep made mew,“ Poland ll forces to the northwest in a ‘ill-mile had broken into the town of Kcwcl . w be conducted at the request of the “PM” l” “mmmd "h" ii“ onrm: e232 {Stag Izfilvgplosrlwwhlch vefilvgstlfhd i ' e span a sad new and 1, 33 -1 1-0 m. Gem“. gglvpeoégnt evfden" hm m” ‘m’ axilsyilun plgrsistlon boundary estab- ' - ‘ line from H” w” amwefln‘ Hmtaa" 3"“ itrlllexggzrmanintlnvadcd Russ- gsnwgilxzgortlgsungurymwho lsk- l, June 2a m“ 1 d rad“ I? ‘a “i” b". The Russian announcement of the t2: cwtzfn h‘ aumf: gsetwfjblg Temopol bloaknilrc-ugh tune crease in h“ pension. ' '24 hours after Berlin had reported the ussians were silent, curl-led the oifensivc, descrtbing i: as a. powerful flanking manoeuvre to the south to meet Russian forces on. Number Receiving Dill t“.:..‘?;‘%§i"°€...§.“:.“ lzntitiiiéniitéi to the norJleast up as far as tho Vinuitss area. n The Russian communique refer- red to 42 recaptured paces in Bes- ___.__ sarabln as being in the Moldavian Soviet Réplihiihniilils breltérating Q7;- ___ the Russian pos on t at escar- Awh Mamh n A "bum abis is Russian territory and that tabled for SJ-l. Knowles (0.01.- mjnmpqbegqqltéy, Centfs)‘ mow?‘ the Romanian border is the Pvut e num r o pol-so . lovlnce fgggivlng 01,115,... Qenfigfm to Russia in 1940 but took it and additional territory 1n payment for Rumanlo, ceded Bessarahla back December. 1943 and also the joining Germany in to‘: 1941 ln- vasion . : -Onta.rlo 56,304 S ma“ ~i~~€f3¥-=°1“*r- Divorce Laws ilere bee .306 . 11sec. szzso; Northwest. Territories OTTAWA. March Zl—\CP)-Re- vision of Canadian divorce laws. divorce can ha granted, was urged ibroadening the grounds on which Archbishop April 25 21"’nitl"°.éé‘il...‘iieb.f°“itg; h as supported by Senator W. lluslfir ‘(L-%tarlo). m 5510"» 055-- Mlrch 23—,numxi:r°€f drvgrzzcspigiallsnvferghlfrxldc: KIN (OPFQAHCAPLP "if st- “"573 ca‘ ‘consideration said the Senate thedral here announced today that Sh.) 1 3k ' o f w, Archbishop J. A. O'5illlivan, rcc- “d ‘ e s m‘ “m” V’ h“ entiy appointed to the K diocese. will be installed Ap 1 2s by the Apostolic Delegate. Most Rev. Hilderbrarld Antnnuitti. ti- Idlvorce hearings removed from W" parliament. “I am disturbed at the large number of divorces with which we hsve to deal." he said. Contingent Of Canuc Serviceman Back Home _ Group includes Army Nurses From South Africa. — h 33 _ (c?) __ A and other offl'.el's included Capt. Pierre Natel, Montreal. f h" ‘mud m pfimhmm Coming back for a post. as an in- overeees. acccnlpanled by a FWD nursm beck f - fi-“(uiwah Amen‘ hosprrtgflfi n: tinumls service with the 48th High- etructor was REM. J. R. Show of Weston, 0nt.. whose 30 years‘ con- Th u t fl h“ lenders of Canada was severed when e m. ‘mun o l n8 mm ht WIS Still?!‘ by a fragment. from. BUG! lfll i l. I 23$“. m?“ °’,"'ug§§§‘“‘ Yjoflndgfl, s. bomb near Reselbuto. Sicily, others szlft ‘back to the Dominion “~§t$%-h1‘5 me leg he any“ on beau“ We’ “wwm or mtdllty until the end '0! the Sicilian h admitted lotions. or to my, u instructors e Cllfllblsln but then The ntrrees, dressed in trim blue- L‘ unlfonns, had been members of‘ ____ the South African Military Nursing Service working in hosptels in , that. country for two years or more. s “QMAN {“ rn had o :1 f soillh An-leimlgfrsololneecr‘. eariyuilg Affalaufz out; ¥‘;‘.‘...."°.i etlfntfllmi. bbmhi Vin-mes (o oua ovum duty, most of them hoping to join ‘FfoR{s A“D OUR others . The Nurses included: Emily Mayhew. Edmonton; Ann West Derry. Spult Ste. Marie and Coiling-wood. Ont; firn ‘mwnsend. Bllht JOhB. N. 28.: Margaret wuloh. Winnipeg; Pa nc Jones, Mvncton. N. 3.‘. A. J. Smith, Sea- manl. Basic: Imllse Eager. Kinn- fififitmbdanfrgulffijmymafi men tide this morning at 11.61 s ‘lusenne slellulel- ' "id will!“ “it m” mun“ 0m . m ‘hem B‘ at’ Sun sets this evening at. 7.11 one ‘ " ' rises tomorrow morning at 6.56. when German parachute troops were disclosed to have rec the wreckage o! the Conti Hotel. American heavy bombers fighter escort blasted mill-cud nt three key points in northeastern division in Italy yesterday — Verona Bo and Bimini - through w lch man armies on the Italian fronts mudboio Ono law b81118 su ed. and last. night ms to peek up and head for Canada, sum“, ‘nwwl I he a. -' I was just situi ther i N" 4,, “.5”, h,“ mf, us e. m. 1.0a b. m. R. A F. Li rotors and Welling- and here am." was the way at Pedun it with 4.000 pound block busters. its Blhlfl‘. Guelph. Ont. gmjm- mm m, m. “ma,” er than Charlottetown. sutured nor-mt “wins Maj, ggbert Kirlgatone, DULY Am gnaw“ ul office;- frcrn Montreal,‘ who was heading for a. put with. Charlottetown - snnslnereide — ltiouoton with lhtional Defence Headquarters at yards Ottawa aitqlfirvics zith an the first Italy. He Leave Charlottetown 1.85 a. I- 18.” noon. I 0 w .3 o. m. vo Charlottetown 1J0 o. Ill- dlfilft. know hi, new job heave Charlottetown l2 noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 o. In. one . Capt. Kincaid of Revelstoke i‘. C , was sdjutant of the movement, ‘u-_._ s- .1. n3; .--.- .__. _