1H1. Assembly work now i; goin us. ugdlen, IQIIMI III, file-sagas: Guardian. Two Cents. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1944 zf/A/fl The People's Paper Oevorshlaeeildward lsleadLtefliellew 12 PAGES C sim a ‘Tllotory Loan Total Ahead Last llrive t Ofv v "seoefoo um 1 total In "f" guitmniglinsitei- QI CID s Wll l0 lib fill.‘ with the tot-ll (or the first f m! . the fifth loan carn- iwo llyl in The oblectlv now as iii? is summ- ' ' Begins by , h l a counties and for Char- iattltown Ind were‘ not avsilsblg last nigh hous- second- n. liAfl ‘AX. April flk-(OH-Nova icotlis sirbscriptlons in vlctoly Loan stood so . . al loan headquarters an- limb, . The obiective is $84,500.- 4 Y. CEYLON. Agrll i8 -( i-sCfllmlre bv rltish and dis: troo of the village of [nglauiongb . :2 miles north of llnphal the - Katina highway In 50b wseeliaeaaoed tonight. 5A1?!‘ JOHN. . (CPL-Victory loan aal die sixth paying ass Archbishop Installed Last Evening “lnvasion Year Budget” For Britain IONDON Awil i0 — (O P) — Britain's invasion year bu et. new“ for expenditures of £6. .- 000. (about $N,fl)l,600,000) W08 presented to the House of Comm- ons by sir John Anderson, chancellor of the exchequer, who propose " produce slight- ly more than half but announced no new taxation. Sir John placed total timated tax revenue or 1M4 £2,102 000000 .000 more the rest to than last ear-leaving be raised liy borrowing. "lt is not necessary for m. to aropos, any additional taxation on i; occasion," he told the House before taking his seat after an hour and thievquar- teis. ‘ he pgepoription is a mix- ture as . Thus the treasury spparenti took the view that e nation, now B0 per cent tax on ‘ and 100 cent on outright lux- uries, v usliy has reached its taxable capacity. The amount to Lo produced by ation srnoun‘ u. at roll! from every man. woman and child in Britain. Altho Sir John announced no new aticn, he did increase the beer dutyzby a penny a stand- ard barrel. e specified, however, that the incflrfaase is not to be pas- . sed on ‘ff-awn consumretra m e c or repo e e cost ofqliliing had increased until it was 30 per cent above pre-war and still rising despite government expenditure of £l00.000.000 last year, alone on stabilization. He informed the House. too, that Biu ck at the end 3 the carn- same aim! , s second dav anioumed to s3. 065. . or .000 more hail disr- ins of the fifth loan The two-day subscrwtio by personnel in militorv No.1 amounted to 911,200. P9 sed rsorial incomes last year increa- by £OO0.000.000 above 194.2. Mine Laying ls Big Job For Planes Now New Cars '10 Pour From Soviet Plant IIHCOW. April I - (A P) — lkw automobiles soon will be - in: off the assembly - ling o a hlse factory in the Ural Mountains, livestia reported today. Construc- ilm began lri_ the winter of 194i T» first engines and gear boxes wre turned out in the spring of 8 tonnnifvrurs "Pier-Morel! ‘Bnrrsday. i 4-5-3. “To arrive another oar Victory Registered Seed Oats, book now. lfcGuigan and Boyle. e-if-loi "oi-Id P l. ill w. wlanflialy, m” m“ April 28th. lid of the Alter society. 4-26-2021. Bingo and Dance. Bt. Afldtbw‘! g, It Ball. Pride lit. A ma. y m‘ w“ e-ae-n. and Dance. st. And- M’! .Fi'ida A seen. y’ w“ l-ae-ii. meal- 0;‘ oats April Winsloe. u 4-311: f“ m" *':.."s"x‘...r..r."i- lP. M. to clean up the grounds. ciliFh w?» Pitt. Willie.“ lift‘ l“ 29's....“ ""1"- , ' m ‘e-sa-al ————r O Mz-llniéention farmers! Will not be Dramatic House of "Notice —- ! will t. bal 110 at either Iinertild or §iedl§§ ‘in ii further notice. Watch for "4101 dates. "eld- s-ae-si-se-si "$005M orders for Asphalt Shin l May ‘.3’... Htfieianifi‘: l- -H- . m..." are.“ d-Bb-flia f. G. C. Green mi- m1; ma. IP00! W0 LONDON April 25-40?) - The laying of mines in enemy waters has resolved such proportions that it oooubia 1O per oent of the great force at Bomber Camille-ad's dis- weal. 'i'ne Air Ministry made this known in an announcement on tho fourth anniversary of the first magnetic mine being laid in enemy waters. Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur was one of the s press for airborne mines and now the air force has taken over the bulk of the mineiayinll from the The technique has been davelorp- ed to a high pitch and the lob de- mands great skill and daring the bomlber crews.‘ Casualties surfer are little less than ed on normal bombing 0D- erations. The Air Ministry calculated the am as iom they those that ‘ ‘ . W resul in the szniing of 1.010.000 tons of elm! slim I18 since i040 how- ever. only s. part of the punxxse of . Every night enemy waters from the Bay of Bisoay a- long the entire enemy coestiin to the Ciuif of Danni: up distant Norwe with mines. boon forced to‘ lvbando? or‘: most imflflliblll BICGB C! 6 ing of new submarines and of new c memy convoys orced to ab- andon short. sheltered routes and move farther out to sea wh v are more at the mercy of the navy and coastal command offense of mines are used acmist tic. Thev :30 m. misty; huie and sink we. will ll u.» Allied rwlv to Bit- lors "secret weapon" of 1040. tho magnetic mine. W of its test- the rewa . are f ypes work. Report Find Of Stone Age Tools mcslném. ovmulgielmm '“ '° ' ‘ 31's‘ Piranha row 4 ‘Y ° in. of roughly dripped stone in the Vail and Riet Valleys near Khnberley which he estima- ted dated bee! 1.000.000 years- Ho u“ they constituted the oldest known f of man's esdstence in Mill-h fil- NDGl. A ril no war Borrespondent Erwin ailgmoqnllkoadstal fortifications toda h th vsd {hemllasia I-le ologfat a wee - (C?) -A a who - th Pi M oiimssglrlriinneii emu flowers. observed nderful to think that for his direc- ted in secret to 1.000.000 ° content with simply buyin man irit f I018 01°‘ all’... duff...- O’Sallivan KmGfllONwlh, 0M8 — of Charlottetown. afilnlionian Catholic 01000180011 of Baton at a col- orful ceremony in 5t. Mary's Cathedral here tonight. He auc- ceeds Most Rev. M. J. OfBrlen who died last Aug. Si. ived here gr foil? born ear , was at Hamilton, Ont., Nov. N, i000 and was educated at St. Mary's School and St. Jerome’; College, Kitchener, Ont. On completing his classical course he to Grand seminary, Montrea , deified at Hamilton in 1911. After his ordination he was at- tached to his native parish until. i921 when he was appointed chance‘ of the diocese of Ham- ilton. In i920, sident of St. Augustine's ary, Toronto, an five years lat- er Wlg appointed bishop of Char- lottetown. . Ari estimated 4M priests and officials of the church attended to- night’; ceremony. at which Most Rev. Ildebrando Antoniutti. Apos- Deiegate to Canada and Nowf . Visiting arclsblshwl and bishops included- Most Rev name-Leon Pelletier. Auxiliary iBshop of Que- bec. who represented Cardinal Vil- leneuve, and Bishops J. B. limo- ges. Mont Laurier. Que, L. Rhea- time, Timinins .. A. 0. Com- , Three Rivera. Que. P. A. Bray. Seine John, N. 3.. L. P. Whelari. Montreal, and C. Le- lanc, Bathuret. N. B. Protest Secret Sessions Of Suh-Oommittee OTTAWA, April ZS-(GB-James Clark. a former chief inspector oi‘ the Cations-United. Kingdom Ins- pec Board, has been subpoena- before a commons ex- mmi ton-or- Mr. Clark. whose charges in re- spect to army boots were under ex- amination by the sub-committee, walked out of a meetinwday af- ter statlm through s so its sessions should be open secr _ (P.C.—'I‘omuite . . Shaw (8.0.- Red Deer) also walked out, stating they retested the inquiry in Mr. Clerks charges being conduc- Jackmnn Mr, Clark had charged that about airs of army boots were made of nferior materials. Manley Edwards (L.—Calgary confirmed tonight that a subpoena csllinl on Mr. Clark to l W0!“ P“... glllirlllnllblligk $270,050 In Bonds Are Sold In Few Hours Mayor Lidstone Makes 350,000 Purchase On Behalf Of Town. A sale of "invasion oquipmentW- in the form of bonds at Bummer- side last night, topped by tme l!“ - chase of a, fighter plane by the town, netted an unofficial $270,050. it was announced. "Brownie approximately 56 cent of the town's objective of .000. salesmen will begin to- dsy to contact last night‘; bidders and complete the sales. "The weather. which caused can- cellation of a, parade scheduled to precede the auction, interfered to some extent. However, the C. W. A. C. pipe band paraded from the Armouries to the Blah School at 8 o'clock. On arriving there the girls put. on a display of counter marching etc, until the actual sale bean at 8,30. . Hugh P. Morrison acted as auctioneer and bidding from the lsrg crowd was spirited and en- ohus tic from the beginning. Loud applause greeted the first urchase when Mayor Lidstone uglit a fighter aircraft, $50,000. in the name of iiie town of Sum- meraide. Other large were R. T. Holman Ltd., two nr- moured ears. $24,000 and Brace Mc- Kay and Co. Ltd., a 25 pound field gun, $20,000. Previous to the beginning of the auction a short program of speech- dout, under the Alien. town ch ofllr. L. R. Mr. W. E Darby. Prince County chairman said he was pleased to see so many present, which aug- ured well for the success of the sale. He said he thought it; should be imnecessafy to urge anybody to buy bonds. “Our service men are willing to oppose their bodies to the foe to take whatever fate may bring, if necessary to die. that we may be free from danger Let us :- wfiFiilli-riiai-Bh‘ Elliot 1f“ Local Pilot In Fighter Sweep purchasers IJONDON. April 25- (CP Cable) —Canndian Spitfires swept a path for American heavy bombers smashing at enemy fighter iields today. downing five enemy planes in a three-minute fight near Loon, w so miles northeast of Paris One Canadian fighter squadron siliwised some 200 Germans bury- ing mines and a llot who swoo-pcd down to 50 feet o attack scored shell hits on troops and on a truck. Canadians partlcipatin in the sweeps included FL’). Wi ism Pea- cock, Noranda, Qua, F0. James appear at the sub-committee meet- ing had been served. eir every call has assured each loan of success and the Sixth Victory Loan is no exception. 0n Prince Edward Island the servicemen have swung into action with such enthusiasm as to make civilians redouble their own ef- forts to keepJte-p with them. Not g bonds to the limit, they have entered into friendly rivalry for the ‘Per Capita Vtfitiiry Bond Champion- shi i’ of h. Loan o irmen ve been appointed at all stations and their success may be measured in the result obtained at Beech Grove Training Centre where the camp subscribed 110% of its quota in iii‘: 22th. “h”? $2312 I yet, but equally startling results sr expected from each. ' zihainnen selected to head the drives were Lt. aster John E"'<‘.°'n“""é tial" i">i‘.'a°°.i‘.'.ii" . . - an . . - non. Beech Grove: Bqdn. w. o. Nickie, B. o. A. It. Charlottetown: air 3:3.’- "nrmi- can": kins’. Mounsqiflessant: ' ' Entering the competition are the two Government civilian sar- vlces — civil Service under Chair- d Good win. and Canadian under Chair- man J. F. uigh r. Both of them are confident that their branches can win the Island championship. The showing of the Artillery training centre becomes all the more remarkable when it ts learn- neatli those flowers 00.000 were concealed." ed that this eairm ls well in the Stewart. Terrebonne. Que. and Flt. Lt ‘lhouisumdsvnnqhsrleiteiawn- Novel Contest Develops For l land B d T'tl One of the bi gest factors in all" a; "m. in victory Loans lo data has been fiflnitmp triilztmNo. cam“ the whole-hearted m-o ration mans}, “muted” “w” l of all men and wpmqn in he Ier- rel-nae pace in the drive to bring vices. pom w the title to Beech Grove, u. Mc- Donald and Qms. Shannon be- lieve that they can hold their position in the race for the service crown. A competition such as this may t have to be ranked with the amous county contest. or the erenhisl struggle between Char- ottetown and Summerside. The boys may even surpass all others on a per capita basis. ‘SUMMERSIDE INVASION EQUIPMENT sins BIG SUCCESS rains. “assault” missions. ern Burma. long Bharno line. Ahead Of That In on... Hitler Inspects llis “Atlantic Wall” coupon. April 25—(AP)—Adoif Hitler" r vlng his enth-hour inspection tonig preparation for the Allied invasion. and llis sub-Fuehrer ln_ Denmar moved swiftly to crush rising sab- otage which might provide tne A1- lles with a. crumbling breach in these defences. Werner Best. Hitler's special d - Duty in Denmark. hreatened wholesale execution of imprisoned saboteurs ilniass underground ilct- lvities fire curbed warning carne_.lu.st one day D 1 after the virtual isolation ct‘ Den- mark in another move to get. the Nazi house in order for the invasion Communication and travel betrwee . Denmark and Sweden were ended. and the restive little country was in effect under a. blockade. Selected aides accompanied Hit- ler on llis inspection of the "At- lantic wall." According to a rcport received here through a reliable connection with the continental un- dBfRTOiilld. The German strength ready to battle the Allied invasion is now estimatcd at between 54 and 6O divisions. with little change since a recent swift shift from the eastern front. Hitler apparently wanted to see the reinforced defences for himself. since Marshal Edwin Rom- mel. in charge of them. hud completed his own personal tour There was a suvelli flood of in- vasion talk from Berirl and Paris from neutral the western front -seoping from this island bastion. almost isolated from the rest of the "D-daw" a roaches. There is lust a steady uttle of Allied airpower ‘between Britain and the continent. Australian Army Commander Retires (CP) -- Liz-Gen. Gordon Bennett, who commanded the Australian 8th Division in Malaya. will retire from the Australian Army "next Sunday. Gen. Bennett and his stuff es- caped from Singapore Feb. l5. 19m two hours after the signing of the armistice when they were techni- ,_- My...» ‘AA Q95. cally Pfl-SOHCfgll war. DA’ Jzz/a/aaifllll iWar ‘Situation Lalst biiéh By Klrke L. Simpson. Associated Press War Analyst With the abortive Japanese Lwaslon of India checkmaied, Admiral Lord Louis Mountbettows southeastern Asia. eoiunand may be preparing for a quick counter stroke into northern Burma before the monsoon That deduction, at least. can be drawn from current reports from Cey- lon headquarters of the command. They tell of Allied estimates of 10.000 oa- more probable Japanese casualties in the stalled drive at lmplial and Kohima. They also described strong columns of the 14th army, equipped with tanks and guns. moving into the Assam-Burma action theatre on Linked together, these reports imply that an Allied shift from ilie| defensive to the intensive in the Assam-Burma sector may he impending. e There ls every reason io expect a Japanese retreat from India before the monsoon rains start. A fast and powerful Allied follow-up to join. beyond the Chindwin River. with llth army elements threatening enemy rear communications and air borne troops holding the Bhamo “block" on the upper Irrawaddy could conceivably alter the whole situation in north- Only a few weeks remain before the seasonal change in northern | Burma will tend to throttle extensive military action, but it mifflit be ‘ to establish a trap for all enemy forces north of an lrnphul- "Army Personnel titives Fine Support To Loan General Campaign Going Well; Opening Day k an objective of $l,200.000.000; the world a8 200000 SYDNEY. Australia. April 25 —' El Fifth Loan Drive. OTTAWA. April Z5—(OP)-Tlie National War Finance Committee announced tonight that Army Personnel in Canada. although off to a later start than their comrades overseas. are on their way to equalling the total of S6.803.800 in Sixth Victory Loan Bonds sn- nounccd as purchased by troops overseas. Canada has reached $2,013,800 so} far; giving the Canadian Anny» as a whole a subscription total of‘ 9.777.500. Th, three-week Victory Loan Drive, whim opened yesterday has same as that of fast Fifth Victory 110011. The R. C. A. F. which for a con- Siderflble period during the Fifth Victory Loan was out in front of the Army is behind in this cam- puign due to the whirlwind start of the men in khaki. The Air Force total reached tonight was 53.589000. an even $1,000,000 or which came from personnel over- seas. No over-all total was announced by the Royal Canadian Navy. Many Navy ships are at sea and reports cannot be prepared reg. ularly. However, partial reports which have been received show that all Naval units reporting are buying Sixth Victory Loan Bond; oven more enthusiastically than they did in the last loan Following first day's galgg 1n which the urclioses totalled S74.- 775153-0 3.000.000 increass over 09901-08 day of the Fifth Victory loan-indications were that the ground gained on the first day of canvassing would not be 10st in the second day's business. A number of large purchases by Insurance Companies. Industrial Organizations. Mining COmpgn. lea and similar establishments W?" "Ported during the second day of sales. These totalled $32, AilbilmlfS A number _of the large purchases reported today came from Brl ish Columbia. Included in the 115g was Consolidated Mining and Smeltlng Company of cm,“ ‘iifanited. Trail, n, 0., with smaso, lilrom Ontario came the an. nouncement that Canada Life As- surance Compan h d 1 ted $12,000,000 in Siilth ilictnraviiliin Bonds. Ontario also came through with a number of other large orders as follows: Kerr-Addison Gold Mines. Limited, 51.000009- 541300000: F. W. Woolworth Com- ing?!‘ LgrflllI-‘id. $l.000.000. e ov nceof Quebec report- ed s $000,000 purchase by the A5. bestos Corporation Limited. Ceiling Prices For llew Potatoes UITAWA. April 25 —fCi-‘l—'l‘he Prices Board said that an order will be issued shortly ting ceiling pricesjor shippers Ol‘ producers of new potatoes. The highest shipper and producer prices will involve n maximum oonsumgr price oi about five cents a 0mm ~ The order will provide a ceiling rice for shipper or ‘producer of .75 per hundivdweight 1120.3. ‘. 0nt.. and Vancouver BC. Jrom the time at which domestic lnew potatoes become available . The known dead thug MEWS’ Harris Company, Llmitedii Aerial Drive Goes lnto 12th Consecutive Day LONDON. April 25—(AP) -— A ore-invasion fleet of znore than l.- OOO United States bcmbers and fighters wday hurled hundreds oi‘ ions of explosives on three Elil‘li.i‘S detsp in France. industrial targets in southwest Gennanv uncl channel fortifications on the lltli clay of an unprecedented Allied sky assault which has rocked Axis Europe from tslée Atlantic coast to the Black a. ‘ihe American assaults fnlluwied heavy R A F.-R C AI‘ night at- tack; on Karisruhe and Munich in Germany At ll pm. tonight the German radio warned that Allied planes a- gain were aporoachinz- ‘which meant the attacks were entering the 12th consecutive dav Reviews Maritime Labor Outlook HALIFAX, April 25 — (GP) — Selective service ofliciflls 0° 00L 9X‘ pecl. any additional moss lay-offs of workers in the Mnritimes in tli irrmedlato future R. P. Hartley Moncton. N. B. regional S119"- intendent- said here today. Mr. Hartley said the peak o! the labor shortage in the Msriimes apgarentiy had been p early th year. with unfilled vacancies dropping from 22,000 the number wag on the again. Workers displaced from iiadustfy.‘ he said, were being taken army where routed info lire. Those not fitted for agriculture T°m1 Subscribed by the Ami-V l" rwere being placed in Maritime in-,P dustries wherever possible, with a limited number being moved out of the art-province area. ilection. c ofi to 5.000, but. increase . y the eligible, and next ivere ag ul OIL MERE MAN’ hrlsfs life w bii h ii Di-Miy. its en-e-rgy? ax... and labsarlptlon Dallavevd. 00.00 Iall. “MM other Provinces I lI-IA. II.‘ W LLlES THREATEN THREE JAP AIRFIELDS Little Tnimy Opposition At llollanilia By C. Yates McDaniel ADVANCED HEADQUARTERQ New Guinea. April 28 - (Wednes- day) _ iAPl — Against negligible Japanese opposition, strong Ameri- can forces swung closer the Jaws e, pincer; on l-lollandlaks. three airfields while planes from captur- ed Tadji airdrome ruled the Dutch New Guinea skies, n spokesman disclosed today ln contrast. a single Japanese bomber landed the enemy's only reported blow, dropping bfllllils cu the Hoiiandin beaxlihead. "We are closing in on the air- drcme area from both directions." read the terse picture of the Holl- anciia situation Rs Dreselitrd in i0- da\"s communique. Headquarters reported today that the Japanese around the Tadji airfield iiacl been chased into the jungles and hill: but gave no new renorts an ilie drive against. APane village five miles ncrtliwest of lllU ‘dromr _ l~\ sLIIJXJCTi. oi the invasion, plan- 0s from souilivcese and south ‘Pacific bases struck blows at un- iemy air bases iOanada To Step lip Shell Output OTTAWA. April 25-(CP)—Can- adian shell production is to be stepped up and some 10.000addii- iional workers will be required al- most at once. Munitions Minister Howe said in an interview tonight. a new shell program will af- ifcct plants throughout central and eastern Canada and may result in the re-npening of the large de- ielicg industries 1td., explosive piano at Nobel. Ont. It L; undestood that the new or- [ders Canada has obtained centre largely on heavy ammunition, in- 'cluding a major increase in 25- oimdci- ammunition The program is t.) be launched ‘immediately nnd is scheduled l0 ha ‘in fullivdiig by ea iBe_r_.___ Plane Crashes in to Ruins At By Guy Beaudry Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL, April 25 — lCPl ~ search thirties dug through the wreckage of a shattered rer, _:i iai block tOniglit, seeking p .sii)l0 victims of the crash of a Liberator bomber which took at least i3 lives here today. The known dead included the five crew members of the bomber bound for the United Kingdom from the R. A. F. Transport Command base at nearby Dorval, and eight occupant? of the old brick hous- es that ell a art like a. stack of cards when t e crippled bomber struck. Three of the dead were still un- identified at the morgue tonight, and ollce said they believed it si 1e that three or four other leg might be found in the wreckage of the houses. ‘Three others were in critical condition in hospital. far:- The five members of F T. C crew. three of y. Mrs. James Welles. 50; Mrs. Victor Geoffrlon, 59' Loul; Phlli pe lsmieux, 3'1, real Police unstable- AUNlC Ilarochelle, Que : Mrs. Delih Bowling. 56 earth in one of Montreal's Royal. los the heart of the city. The plane had take half an hour before from Dorval '-l . C. officials said awn Street, in the city's mes leaped 75 feet into the air Eye - witnesses said the pilot for the river for g forced landing. before crashing One eye - witness. P. N assistant director of Quebec Soden hillldifl’! and then downwards three blocks bPl/‘ond. Ally. . W11 retail mark-ups will remain the sgme u in the we. sent potato order. tom to shreds. and one engine fe ‘into the yards of the commission Dwellings; I Searchers Still Look For Bodies In Charred were said to be of Polish national- Mont- 53‘. of Farnham. The 05 ton plane plummetted to worst air crashes after hundreds saw the big craft go into its fatal glidcl from a spot, apparently over Mount ing altitude rapidly. en- gineg sputtering, skimming chim- neys and rooftops as it dove across off barely i one of a group of many which left for the United Kingdom. R A F‘. The plane fell on a block of dwel- lings on Shannon Street. near Ott- district known pg Grifflntown. A terrific explosion which followed immedlat- 3 l0 ely after the impactscattered debris of the craft over a wide area Rs fla- of the plane was apparently making Reports still conflicted a; to wne- ther the plane exploded in mid-air Civil Defence, said the four engined boni- ber passed 100 feet over his office piummeiietii 11,09 no“, "One wing struck the top of the‘ round building in the vnrd of the‘ Quebec Hydro - Electric Commiss- lon on Shannon Street. and Will: 3 Dead Montreal. "Before the plane drug; Lilli-J" into the blot-k of houses. it took zhs chimney off one house and brexs 1h: windows in ill? third storv o! annli1ei~ hci e bcforn it. crashsdrs a big explosion took illaco Wllivil sent flame; iiiin all zlirccticns." .\i; Scdeii said Others said they liad seep tha Diane 1n flames before (‘Tll-Silllli allfi. that it was an explosion in mid am that tore the Diane to shreds Ii, was impossible to Eel 00y d0‘ tails from hysterical women and children ivho managed to leave iilB crushed and blazing dwellings. They were later taken care of ill. n“. ne5rb_t' rlviffintown Club where pgilqemsn ~lisurcessfuilv attemp- ted to so: en account of the trag- edy from them With You CoMBms BUSINESS wlfu PLEASURE as Soar Ana REMEMBER ‘luv. foMclnnfion High tide this afternoon at 2 c’- clock and tomorrow morning as Sun sets this evening at 7 5B an! rises tomorrow morning at ll.b'f_ First quarter moon April $0, S0 m. L Summe side tide l8 minutes la- ter than Charlottetown. DAILY All. QEIVICI ~ Charlottetown - Oanimeraids — Monoton Leave Charlottetown 1.10 a. aa I .80 in. ,Arrive Chariot own Li! p. in 5.45 p. in. 1.05 p. m. SUNDAY SERVICE i Leave Charlottetown l! noon. Ill Ill-nu Charlottetown s.|s s. a