MAXIMC or a _ MERE MAN aponhotlllllndalllbolll. W951 imposes-needless itraln .__._._-_-. " w,,,;'.-;':'s.".'...t'.".":.~.:;l.€."“ ___ 7Zi-////’ lThe Peop e’s aper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARIACTTETOWN, TUESDAY, MARCHV3O, i943 Vlieviews Extravagant Liberal Financing In Debate On Soviets Cnly 24 Miles From = Smolensk W, March 29--(AP)—i'ted “$3.9m. battling town-a the m; German base at Smolensk. W, only 32 miles from the closest goviet columns. have captured 1W!‘ mm villages, and on tbs southern (not have repulsed trwo German attempts to break through the de- mure line on tha UPWr Donal-l» m, Russians reported by. righting over the long front IP- pwec to be mainly local e 88e- menls. and there were no ma rial plunges." the midday communique declared. - l Canada Packers l‘ Employees Strike WINNIPDG. March 20-40!)- pnployees of Canada Packers. numbering about 900. walked off their Jobs after lunch today in what union leaders termed "a spontan- eous walkout in against the comp ‘s refusal to tars action an lonalanding griev- “i'i.‘.'§el“im’“i“i.n members of the Unites Packlnghouse workers of America. Union. b there was no comment avalla lo l.| ‘bimodal/Bl! from some»: offic- - .-.1\.»..o<.,q-g,. ->.-,,.'Iv um - y. .1». Ellen: on In y littawa Today. con- ferences in wi Pra- aldellt Roosevelt, tata Secretary Cordell Hull and other top-ranklnl American leaders. Anthony Eden la an in Ottawa toruonow for dis- cussions with Prime Minister Mac- King and other Canadian o o . The British Fbrei ’s Secretary's , mission to Washin n has been both important and unspectacular. lie came rlmarily for a frank ex- change o views on a wide range of military and political sub ts Ind mulleaves well satisfied wi tho ra- eu speaking in Annapolis, Md, last Friday night, Eden said “there has _ teen a meeting of minds between us y about the present and the future that will we ans sun. boar fruit.” 14,208 Conscientious ‘llllieotors Registered rm- o- ‘ (YPTAWA sMrch N -— (CP) - ippllcatlons for exemption from . Wwpulsory military service on the pound of conscientious obieotlon bu! 420a, said a return tabled in use f an Ettore and 1,213 now are doing al- native ‘ sol-v l The return aaid m4 faued to repof" ‘- and 152 were taken into custody. . Personnel of tho so c establish- .~ 3d for conscientious ob tors was ~ lit at Dec 1H3. - not... 2:5 marlin“ " sl- Jtienti ob "if: “Your: . I ur t - “l; Que 1' Halifax I: Saint Charlottetown l1: ; v uve . soc; monmlo.‘ l: Coming Events a v0’ f more "'- Tlle Budget With four and a quarter million do-lars more revenue than their Conservative predecessors the Campbell vernment in sev- en years not only spent this addi- tional amount but added four and a half million dollars to the debt of the Province, declared Hon. nr. WALP, MacMillan, leader of the Opplleition, in a trenchant. address ln the logislature yesterday. Dr, MacMillan was speaking in U10 Bllaah dfibllbC. Hg spohg 101' about two hours yesterday after- MOXI. and moved the adjournment ll ‘5 0.111. The House meets again “wt-Till ‘ifiiirfi- . 8T i d l. A was his eighth budget s m m“ h. “I am 8W9." Said Dr. MacMllul, "that everyone e ted him to say his "ei hth and last." e budget speech did not differ materially from those the Premier had made on other occasions, ‘ As an example of the kind of le islation assed under Liberal as: mini-Huston. Dr. MacMillan citod the amendments bro t in a few d!!! 08° by the Minis r of Educa- tion. to make revisions in the Act regarding a most important rnat_ tor so far as the teachers of Gnar- lottetown and Sumrnerside were °°i‘%°"‘§l‘.; i e mer, he continued, had IIKQII CfCdlC l0!‘ b01111 pblg [9 pyg- duce a surplus on current account. and a reduction in liabilities. It was about time that the practice of piling deficit upon deficit was n ex n ures f this administration. pe o when we consi r that we havo m “l!!! lplft 1mm our agricultur- al and fishery industries. We have now reached about half of that Imflllll 0t‘ Oil! debt ll about - sooooo." ”' Whenever a Liberal comes into power in th Dr. MscMillsn continue . there has resulted a tremendo increase in debt. In Sept. i028 when the first Stewart (Conservative) Govern- ment took office, the liabilities were 01,731,406: and when they left in 1M‘! the debt was $159,504. a goo: increase iln four years of S428.- or a yeary ncrease of $107,000, ‘I510 Uberflls in the next four W"! increased the debt to 83.337,- 4-06, an crease of 81.171901, or an 333F080 vurly increase of 52M,- Thc Stewart-Macmillan Govem- ment held office from Aug. 29, 1931 Aug, l5. i035. during the worst period of the depression, to which W86 added the unfortunate 108s of Faiconwood Hospital and Prince of Wales College. The Government was forced to finance these pro- lflcts. and also make a lar e oan to get clear of s huge ban over- dra t which bequeathed them by their Libero ' pred rs. It zoulties in addition ese di to doing a grc deal of work on the Bordan-Glarlottctown high- WIY. for which they obtained $5.500 per mile from Ottawa. At the end of their term the came out with a debt increase o one and a half million dollars. The Liberal Government took of- fice on Aug. l5 i085 and found a debt of carriers. Todn the amount of the debt is t0. 02.382, or an increase in seven years of $4,524,435. This is a debt increase ha rate of $646,000 a year. In seven “years ill have til-tactically doubt the deb of the ovince. Revenues Compared Compar revenues under both parties, Dr. aoMillan recalled that under the Conservatives in i002- Elvernment rovince. n I» n’ S4 gasoline tax amountod to $518,- 012, an verags of $172.00) a year. In the l:st seven years the Camp- C.ll.ll. Revenues At All-Time lligh _ » MR. R. U. VAUGHAN OTTAWA, March so - (C?) - With revenues at an all-time high, the Canadian National Railways paid to the government s. cash sur- plus of $25,068,268 on 1942 oper- utions, it was shown in the annual report tabled tzday in the House of Commons ‘by Transport Minister Michaud. Gross revenues, at $375,654,543 averaged more than $i,000,000 a day and net revenue, after payment of all operating expenses, was 886.655,- 069, an increase of $20,047,528 com- pared with the reviws year. The cash surplus, paid to the govern- ment after payment or taxes and interest. represented an increase of , blllsfiiilifll comkpéadrd with 19:11. t d c reac "unprece en.e m‘ mm“ ire-leg" Pin 3342i liwQlVafilighan, s; “seq to be hm-rmedx. Md rm . . res en, sad n s repor . Mugging“, ‘lw hem. esgonsme Freight traffic was more than 51mm”; o; fl1u,G°vel-nment 5mm double the peak of the first great up in tn; H"_\3 m4 on pubuc pm, war and 40 percent in excess of forms and tell the plq that, A the peacetime recorder i028. Pass- debt "of ‘l u»; ongcftraflifiwas so per cent great- " would not be m, mug)‘ go,- m, er than in 1028. During the year Province. statements c! may, 5nd the railway hauled 71,646,000 tons are most r and 11141111013 of revenue freight and carried 30,883,000 revenue passengers. Handling this increased traffic without large increases in equip- ment and personnel was one of the railways most serious problems. Fonner Secretary To Pope ls Dead LONDON. March 29-lCP)- Cardinal Ermellcgiido Peilegwin- ettl, a distinguished Vatican dip- lomat and oncc secretary to the late Pops Pius XI, died in jtonle late tonight, the Rome radio said in a broadcast recorded by the As- sociated Press. Cardinal Pellcglinettl, who was among those mentioned in 1939 as a, possible successor Pius XI, was 67. l-le was reported ill last Thursday night in a broad- cast by the Borlln radio, which said he was rushed lo a hospital from his home in the Palazzo dsl San Uffizio to be operated on. Tell 0i Sharp Channel Clash LONDON, March 29 —-(CP)-—The Admiralty announced a sharp channel action during darkness ear-y today in which light coastal forces of the Royal Navy either sank (r damaged at least four Ger- man E-boats. The E-boats were intercepted off the esat coast of lllngland and two ‘g engaged five of the ‘gunfire. first bowins up one. An: er was rammed her stern bloke away, the coni- munique said. Serious damage was inflicted on two others. The British forces emer ed from the ‘notion with no casua tieg and motor _ enemy with (Obntlnhod on plfl I. O0! l) A regrettable fatal accident ot-l r“ "m "so". s .*:.~.'~..°.=.':.;' m‘ ——— I . zflp a e I . 33-3’ 1% 1211a? met bis death "m. -'-r—- fi l. n. 3li1'§%“cr°$““°'vsl'd" . m“ A {Mm m gm. a 89th..»- ma. a,“ JI- l" usttbemaoneflifllaababad - |=aa auolaso c f W hm,’ ----,_, , manna-newts. beau v- s»- o-"Pw-Ptfiii- um "l. s tum "t in "'- I-fl-N-ll M" bu‘ ‘o, "PM ems mm. Kicker-l. '3':,*,;',;',,,,Y¥:?,,",; . "°""T"'“\7- ‘mthigllerulhanwasn andhls ' -- --— ' till‘ l... “iPaTaYA. 2'52 tilfifi-i-i-iw ark-r" we "mo": ‘lpilllttl. h’ w m‘; .5 the Mt and athl- , , ..____ ' Meow u» on ma: u» =‘lleservrygqlmqqqmmtepof pclbewasstillll aggro" or ~ "sci r“"~l.'.""“°.t..":.“°.'. s omit ltlltal yam la s-n-‘sl. no _ except t. the gunboat which rammed the E-boat. Fatal Accident Near Sammerside F _ ' By Glenn Babb, Associated Press War Analyst Rommel has begun the last leg of his lens fllsht from Esvnt. The main question now is whether it ever will bring him to the Tunis-BH- l erte area for which he ls heading o r will come to an earlier, bloody end somewhere along the ZOO-mile coastal corridor above his abandoned 1 Muletir Line. The German chieftain faced destruction If he tarrled a slay longer in‘ assault of his old nemesis, Gen. ago wlll complete that 200-mlle north. If ll ‘ does ‘ ' pitched battle with Montgomc y, at the coast and battle all the way to driving his ‘ the tanks and slukas he can spare through the Gsbea bottleneck, altho strike west of Cubes. The forces le Meanwhile the Allied command l in the strongpoints which were crumbling under the unrelenti , grind- Slr Bernard Montgomery's 5th Army. ft remains to be seen whether the course he hla chosen offers any better hops for survival. ln any case it la highly unlikely that any considerable ' part of the 80.000 men arrayed against Montgomery's attack nine days Jamey to Join Von Arnlnfa forces in the t t ‘ n: It will enforce his claim to rank as one of the great Captains of this war. But his troubles are only beginning. When he fled from hi; last El Alamein five months ago, he had most of North Africa in which to manoeuvre. Now he must keep close to prevent the three strong American columns poised on his left flank from plunging down from the hills aral ' ’ columns Into the sea. Doubtless he has assigned all to try to hold Patton's hard-hitting Americans in check but if any of these holding forces breaks it probably will be the end for the famed Africa. Corps. It la possible that already he has passed the bulk of his command ugh that ls not assured. lfe obviously chose to run to escape Montgomery's brilliant manoeuvre of sending a powerful flanking column 150 miles around the Mareth fortifications to ft facing the main body of the 8th Army at the end apparently were little more than a rearguard. shows no disposition to let Von Ar- nlm wait unmolested for the Junction of Axis forces which may never be achieved. Gen. Anderson's 1st Army already ls slashing back after weeks of holding operations at the norihem end of the line. There is every in- dmlmm "l" l fill“! 0! filllllmlg-n for bringing the Tunisian campaign to an early close is being put into operation. Montgomery The “Fox Of vers of North African . .BJ.DON..WWHITEHEAD. . Associated Press Staff Wrifor WEITH THE BRITISH 8th ARMY WFST Oi‘ GABES, March 28 —(Delayed)— (AP) -In his b188cst gamble of the entire Afri- Cfln WmPB-ldn. Gan. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery has out-faxed tho "fox of the desert" by one of the bold- est and most daring manoeuvres accomplished by the so. Army in CBYIIPBIBTI to drive Marilal Rommel out of North Africa. Strong elements of British troops Dill-flanked the Mareth Line lllrwkh a wild. sandy, dust-blown lfmkc of the Sahara Desert across country whim seemed impossible for an army to move over. Waterless Wasteland I know because I hvave Just come across this waterless wasteland which Rommel apparently thought could never be crossed by annor. Never in the almost 2,000-mile ad- vance from El Alamein have a seen country whlzh laszishes men and machines more than this land. But the 8th Army accomplished the final phases of the move in a spectacular dam at almost unbe- lievable . It wasn't a case of playing safe and taking no chances-not, his move. It was the test b1 Qen- lvlwlrsnmerv Fills ta 221-: cool, calculated gamble which forced Rommel to divide his army into two parts in Southern ‘Tunisia. 77"" W961“ 8-80 a force went around the Matmata Hills and then Oatfoxes The Desert” i Accomplishes one of the most daring manoeu- Campaign. towasd» ~ wasteland. Quick Decision When the Germans repulsed the break-through in the Maneth Line a quick decision. was ordered to move swiftly from their Mnreth positions. The move began at night on March 23 that enemy observers in the Mal- umns of transports, tanks, and guns swarming south toward Foum Tntahouine and around the flank of the Inmmtains forming part 0f the Mareth Line. And on March 36 when the ar- mor arrived here. the battle plan was already made and the tanks were sent in to attack the Germans and Italians holding Melab gap. 20 miles south of El l-famma And 30 miles from the sea. After crossing some ZOOJniles of the desert along the trail of the ancient camel caravans, the armor went inlo the attack. Within 4B hours it had taken at 188M 3.000 prisoners. The sudden move threatened to cut RommeYs armv in half and is- olate the enemy holding the Ma- rel-h Line from those around GabesJ The way troops and armor mov- gd across that punishing route was one of the finest pieces of dwrft manoelrvrng in this war. ovafln??r., Carley Floats OTTAWA March 29 — (C?) _ Men who survived the slnki cf the Canadian Corvette Louis urg owe their lives to the functioning of the carley floats, three of which were put into the water and into “m1 which practically all the 48 sur- vivors piled. Lieut. RlAl Jarvis of Toronto said at a press conference hers todisiy. m m " ur e-sav ment func- "Ollod Wtll." he Pllfld I was lad to learn on meeting Capt. C. . Prentice at Halifax that more won: is being done toward impro- ving and increasing the supply of life-saving equipment on the ships.” l-fe said it was his personal, op- hil‘. ‘liltlf f“?! "' “mid: P"; oa on corve an do away with ilfeboaia. H}... Would Like lilo Competition OTTAWA, March 20—(CPJ— H- J, symington, president cf ‘Frans- Canada Air Lines, said todaY b?‘ fore the House of Commons F4111- ways Committee that ‘IIC-A- would rprefer to be Canada's only "W9- sentative in pzst-war trans-oceanic flying but that there has been no assurance private companies will not enter the field. A Liberal mail rate will be es- sential to maintaining trans-ocean service. Mr. Bymington said in out- lining briefly the preparations be- ing made for the opening of ‘RC-A- trans-Atlantic service u econ as possible. A test flight is planned in the lnunediaio future, he revealed. passed away at 12.45 noon. A Coroner's inquest was held at Bowness’ Undertaking Parlor; and, the following verdict was ht. hen sim- ilar operatic necessary t-h power be cutuoflll‘. (Si) Jo Campbell, foreman. Barnett Ran- ba ‘rboa D. Oarruthe W. l. ilcnliil. aamd ucnumr" Claude ammo {new and the family t! rive young children the, sympathy of tbs community ls ex-l i ""' Mlaalal COF UISAALABAII , u FEE Wm Nazi li-Boat Base Still In Flames lied Bombers Corn, -' tinue All-Out of-l fensive. By LEJ-BRANHAM Assoc n..u n-ass with. ...iu:r LONDON, March 2o _ (AP) _ Smoke still was wiling 15,000 feet high oler the great Nazi submar- ine base at St. Nazaire today, mush- lozming from fires estimated to cover a, quarter of the battered city as flesh relays of allied duy bomb- crs shuttled across the channel lo- ‘Wilfd occupied France in a boom- ing continuation cf the new all-out offensive against Hitler's Europe. Radio stations in Germany and Denmark went off the air long before midnight tonight, indicating that Allied bombers again were on the prowl, keep- ing up the ‘round-the-clock attacks. The Air Ministry, in describing last night's 46th raid on St. Nazaire as “heavy and concentrated", in- dicated that the attack probably awe" [Marianne ltmlnlghvs raid bringing to Mam}! 33- Gell- MOIIWOmar-y made icxlllosivcs. Part of the armor and infantrylcmnmunfqu“ recirlled hi’ the A5‘ mnta Hills could not see the col-Wm“) i was as destructive as that of Feb. 28, when 1.000 tons of Britains heaviest bombs shattered and bum- ed the same target. "There were seven large fires merging together." one pilot related. “They sec-med to be bubbing and scathing. The whole attack W85 re- markably concentrated." Mzlny crews described a huge explosion at the southern end of the decks. accompanied by a burst of orange flame and clcuds of black smoke, indicating that a bomb llnri found its mark on a torpedo depot or ammunition dump. One Canadian and one British bomber failed 1c return frcm last. . l6 the .n "mber of allied planes lost during {a busy week-end in which Berlin lWBS dealt probably its heaviest lblcw 0' the WT!‘ and Duisberg. Rot- ltcrdam anti Rouen were raked by‘ , ‘Tcdflks German lligh Command lsociated Prose. from n Berlin broad- 105i. snlrl a llczl riir attacks in west- ern occupied torritory had caused "heavy losses“ among the popul- Brisk Trading At Fur‘ Sale MONTREAL, March 29——(CP)— Brisk trading was reported today at the opening of the four-day llfnrch salc of the Canadian Fur Auction Salas Company. Price ad- vances were general on the basis of comparison with the February sale. I Results of today's trading fol- o . w.- Ermine. 96 per cent sold. advance 20 per cent; lynx. 100 per cent sold, advance 30 r cent; lynx cat, 100 r cent sod, unchanged; beaver, 9 per cent sold, advance l5 per cent: otter. 95 per cent sold. ad- vance l5 per cent: wolves, 8'1 per cent sold, unchanged: timber wolves, 100 per cent sold. unchang- (d; white fox, 84 per cent sold, ad- vance l5 per cent; blue foxes. 92 per cent sold, advance i0 per cent: marten, 93 per cent sold. advance i0 per cent; fisher, 100 per cent sold, advance 30 per cent; red fox. 04 per cent sold, advance 20 per cont: cross fox. 9i per cent sold, advance 20 per cont. Slilver foxes will be traded at t0- morrow’: session. New Protests lie Censors UITAWA, March 39-(CP)-A conference between House of Commons party leaders and offic- ials of tbs dlrectorato of censorship on the attitude of the latlor toward mail addressed to members of par- llament and toward their utteran- ces and questions in the House, was proposed today by Prime Min- ister Mackenzie King. The suggestion came after sev- eral members had protested against their mall being opened. and aftor Hon. R.B. Harmon (Prog. Con. York-Sunbury) had protested be- cause questions he had submitted on an air accident in Halifax, had been referred *- the censors. Several members demandsd a statement from the overrlment on the principles actua ing the cens- ors in their attitude toward the House and its members, Mr. Hanson asid his questions rid to do with an air incident ‘n vhich the lives of young airmen had been lost. He said there had been no lnvn- tigation. as far as he was aware, into the accident. Defence Minister Ralslon said he had no knowledge oi the questions having been submitted to be placed on the order paper and that the air ministry had never seen them. Mr. King said he had a copy of the questions and would confer MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Let a regard for what is helm:- ablo ever govern the mind. 6 PAGES Sulmcriptlnrl Delivered, $5.00 lhll. $4.00» other Provinces a» 0.5a scoo. ULL RETREATTFROM MARETH LINE Victory-Follows Eight Days Cf Fresh I-telays Of Al- troops. l rt, was in imminent peril igiipsln? from the victorious 8th. Army troops which fought their way through the thick defences, but from a. colummwhlch flanked U“? Mareth Line and reached El Ham- ma. and a position 15 miles west of Gabes. The frontal conquerors the Mareth Line were but 20 miles south of Gabes. Farther north. eager American divisions advanced through dllllCl-lll: country‘ east of El Guetar and stood on hi8 Bround ready to vent their offensive fury on Rommel; flanks should he try to flee the 200 mllei north for a junction with Col. Gen. Jurgen Von Arnim _in the north around Tunis and Blzerte. Other American columns Vmen- acing Mezzouna and Kali-ouch farther north likewise gravely _im- perilled the Germans and Italians with entrapment and consequent slaughter, _ Rommel had suffered heavy loss- es in the Mareth Line from a vir- tual non-slop assault by land and air since the night of March 20, and than; were indications that the enemy realized the threat to his flank was intent upon rac- ing up the coast to momentum‘ safety, if he could. Prontllne dis- west of Gabes had been plowed up. a sure indication of flight. ‘the allied offensive in Tunisia became general as the British let army in the north opened Kn B5- smashing against German posi- tions straddling the Tarbaca-Mu- teur road. The allied communique said "successful local advances were of prisoners were taken." William B. Press correspondent with the armv ln the north. called the ist army action an offensive that followed an allied withdrawal tealling 25 miles earlier in March. Among al- lied troops participating were the Goums, pig-tailed warriors from northern Morocco. under Hench officers. A French communique said the Goums and allied troops had cap- bured 400 prisoners and cleaned out a large area. The final assault that cracked the Mareth Line started during the afternoon of nlday, and allied headquarters credited the flnnkind column which swept around the line with neratlng the pressure that cause its fall. Montrealers Walk As Big Strike Continues MONTREAL, Marm 29—lCP)—- ‘thousands of Montrealers lod- ded homeward on foot tonlg t as the tie- of street cara and buses ‘that resu ted from a strike of Mon- treal ‘rramways company employ- ees remained air-tight. As the strlte approached the and of its first full day, there was no evidence that either side in the dia- pllle had made any move toward a settlement despite a deluge of rum- ors that swept the city av hour. Gas ration books took a ating throughout the day, as every r- son who could get an auto e moving used it to neutralise the transportation tie-up. But the great majority of those who Bot to work there on foot and went with yr. Hanson with a view of thl _ wording. \ today 0t 110m! aid HIM III. King, Associated ‘ Gabes. an important "It Wm I patches said enemy landing fields - snult from the Djebel Abiod sector. “Davis made and a considerable number‘ German Line Of Retreat Threatened By Allied Columns. (By Edward Kennedy, Associated Press Staff Writer) ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NORTH_ AF- RICA, March 29 — (AP) — Rommel and his sur- viving troops were in tortured retreat tonight from the fallen Mareth Line, and as shells and bombs turned his coastal retreatpath into a per- ilous gauntlet, Allied warships slipped close into. shore and heavily bombarded th_e_Gabes area 20 miles north of the pulverized fortifications. Extreme pressure from a flanking column oil the British 8th Army which cut around to the AXIS rear forced the Nazi Marshal and the troops love had left of the original 80,0100 to leave the devil 5. cauldron which was the Mareth Line. The W010i’! came after eight days of the most gruelling battle this continent has ever known. _Every'_strongpolrlt of the little Maginot fortifications l_n Southern Tunisia was in British hands, including the key towns of Mareth, Toujane and Matmata as We" as 6,000 of the Nazi Marshal's shell-shocked News Briefs ANKARA, March 29-—iAP)— Extensive battles between Yug- oslav Patriots and (rcrmrnl forces and the arrival of fresh German troops in Bel- grade were reported today in well-informed Balkan quarters. WASHINGTON, March 29- (AP -The pay-as-you-go issue moved today toward a climactic vote in the House of Ropresentatives, wih Re- publicans nnd Democrats striving ‘desperately to hold their lines re- s ectively for and against the Rumi p an. LONDON. March 29—(Cl"l — An Algiers radio broadcast re- corded by The Associated Press said today that Gen. Jean Marie Bcrgeret, whose resignation as Gen. llcnrl Gil-surfs deputy in command of civilian affairs in French North Africa was an- nounced March l8, had been ap- Pointed commander of air forces n French Wcat Africa. WASHINGTON, March ZO-(AP) ——Learlers of major farm organizat- ions are expectod to urge Pre- sident Roosevelt tomorrow to give food administrator Chester C. greater authority over United States farm prices. MANY A REPufAflON HAS BEEN Faacfuneo BY THE Sue- ol= THE High tide this morning u. sso and this aftomoon at 5 b6. Sun sets this evening at 1.34 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.43. New moon April 4, 5.53 p m. Qurlunqflidde tide le ‘mimfltl later than Charlottetown. CAR its!!! SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUYnAY Pram Border-lane 9.08 a-m. 11.40 a.m. 3.00 on- 4.80 run 1.0a on. Leave Cape Tcrrnentlna - 10.00 up. 1.15 run. M! p.m.. M! pan. ltll on. DAILY All! SIZRVICI (IXCIPT SUNDAY) Charlottetown samanaslda- Mona-too Igva-“Charlotuagn a," ‘,- on vs Ch lottetawn 1 mandolin. - Y" .-¢-;.<.n=-' r i