- mrshlo in this colmcryf‘ _______..__ ‘July u. (Note Postponolrunt). MAXIMS OPA MERE MAN n-n-in t hiob is deferred flflqauuea m’ not The Pe j Olsriomtoul “ll, In" Colts ljlllll Ouurllal. Ioullof 1M1 lifFaFlE-NSIVE IIIIIA Allied Troops Win Victories On 7 OO-Mile Arc In Pacific Area Latest Details Expands Victory In Kala Gulf To Nine Enemy Warships Sunk. Scots Guards Make Great 28-Day _'_l'_rek LOZDON. July 8 (Thursday) —- (CP) —A great 28-day. two-mile trek by a battalion of Scots Guardl from Syria to the Malelh Line was disclosed today by the War Oiilcfl- The Guards travelled by motor transport with other units and lost only seven or eight of their hun- dreds of vehicles en route. They arr- ived in Tunisia in time to play I leading role in the successful Men- denlne battle on March fl. the War Office said. First auth-entic intimation that some of Britain's army in Iran hall moved into Tunisia was elven July 2 in a letter published by the Lon- don Daily Telegraph. The letter described a move of the Royal W!" fliers. a London battalion. accompanied by an editor's not/e saying "many such letters have been reaching friends from the men various units." The note added that "this is the first public reference to tho lolrmcv which has been permitted bv cen- llo Results Yet In So. African Election JOHANNESBURJG July 'I—(CP liABllEl-South Africa's 1,250,000 civilian voters went to the P0115 here today to help settle one big issue-whether to continue the W81‘ IS they have been fighyinE it 3°!‘ the last four years. or whether to return to opposition-pledged neu- trality. The opposition is advocat- iIlB a republican fonn of 80V"!!- lnent and an end “of the British connection." The results will not be known for at least two or three weeks, as the mall ballots of 150,000 soldiers and sailors, who cast absentee Votes must be assembled and taken to Pretoria for counting before the civilian boxes can be opened. _______________ To Study Civil Defence Mere SAINT JOHN N.B., July (crn-Lc-col. 6.0. l-lowlett, ilwll. and lvlal. s.r'.lvl. Moodie. commander of the clvll protection branch of the Provincial Police in Hrlllsh Columbia, arrived here io- illly to study civil defence meusuns in this district. They will also visi ‘léanctcn, Halifax and. Charlotte- n. CCMING EVENTS "Show Crapaud, Thursday. 7... Of.- T21 7-7-2i B ,I‘1'ld , “y l-l-“lil. "Show Canoe Cove, Friday. "Dance, St. Peters "h. Clifford's Orchestra. "Be 1 l t u Glasgoew alilsrglllf, P“ a "ha-ell "Ice crap-m fsstiylal and dance p: Alllston School. wednesdayhJélllyi “Kensl con, Talkies, Friday aim. Jul? o. 0.00. l-a-al torigestelrvo Thursday, Jlgy 65th B6 ll‘ II - ‘on ab“ and dance at my?" nl5°-““°i.l..‘" .3l“"’"iiif"li‘ "l2" n , , us O- WYL. ' T-PB-li. River. Unloading bulk wheat. Price I150. lso have full supply flour. hog and poultry feeds on and. R. L. Dickisson‘, m "At Hunter "North Rustico- Bee Charlotte- WWII players in Stalls Maris Hall ‘ii-ll Q1 the Barlke River. CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. THURSDAY op|e’s Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew , JULY 8, 1943 MAXIMS OIL. MERE MAN Worth makes the man, and want of it the fellow. luusoripflnrl lnllvorsrl, saoo lhll. 81.1w- nzha- Prowl-lees l u.s..\ $5.00. 8 PAGES YIIIIIJ Nazi Admits ll-Boats Meet Plenty Trouhle NEW YORK, July 7- (AP) Rear Admiral iluetzow, German Naval expert, broadcast from Berlin tonlghlc that the Allies now have the upper hand in the U-boat war. His broadcast, picked up by BBC. was recorded hen: by CBS. "The bat/tie file German U-boats have to wage has become -very, very hard and the enemy at present has the upper hand," the BBC quoted Duetzow as saying. Plan Conference To lliscuss National Youth Program ALLIED HEADQUARTERS .IN AUSTRALIA. July u —-tThllJ‘sd:iy) -—iAP)— Allied landing troops have won two beachheads near the Jap- anese air base of Munda, Gen. Douglas MacArthur announced to- day lll a communique which also expanded the naval victory ln the Kula Gulf to at least nine and possibly 11 enemy cruisers and de- trnyers sunk. Victory all along the 700-mile no of the Pacific offensive was re- ported as the drive entered its second week. Australian jungle filghters seized a vital hill on the approaches to Salamaua, New Guin- ea, after the Japanese defenders had been pounded from the air by 106 tons of bombs, and allied fight- er planes dealt more crushing blows against challenging Japanese air forces over the Solomons. In a pincers movement on Mundo. American troops landed north of it at Rice Anchorage before dawn July 5. it was disclosed, the same date that American warships were shelling the nearby Balroko Anchor- age. Other American troops landed at Zanana six miles east of the Munda airdrome and now have made contact with the enemy along OTTAWA. July 7—<CP>—War Services Minister LaFleche said today in a statement that provin- cial governments have been invit ed to have representatives at a conferenc here Thursday and Fri- day of this week to discuss the need of a National Youth program. "While many organizations and individuals in several provinces have been directing their thought and effort to the flcld of youth training, which is auxiliary to their educational systems, there is some reason to believe that there would be advantages in a wcll co ordinat- ed plan," the minister said. “In the United Kingdom the promotion of social and recreutive work has raised standards of lead- ership and encouraged participa- tion ill activities to a point where it is estimated that '75 pol" cent of the youth of Britain are associat- ed in one way or another with youth organizations." Latest accounts of the Kula Gulf victory accented the lightning char- acter of the blows dealt the Japan- ese ships in the darkness of July 5-6. Within five minutes after four or five Japanese destroyers were, encountered, all of ihem either had been destroyed or set aflre. Fifteen minutes after American warships came upon light enemy cruisers, the group. estimated at three and possibly four were “sunk or afire", the communique said. Victim 0f Tug Sinking Lived llere Formerly Gen. Giraud In Washington WASHINGTON, July 'I—(AP)— Gen. Henri Glraud came to Washington todny for military talks us the French committee of lla- tionul liberation, headed by Gir- aud and. Gell. Charles De Guulle. acted to relieve Admiral Georges Robert froln his command in me French West Indies. From Algiers the committee 111' vested Henri Etienne Iioppellot, now in Washington, with extraor- dinary powers to negotiate wlin Robert lo." the return of lwlllrtllllqlla and Guadeloupe to "the unified Elnplrc," meaning their alignment in the fight against the Axis. It also appointed Brig-Gen Henri Jdcomy to supersede Robert as commllndlllg offlccr ill French Guinea and the Antilles, which ill- clucie Martinique and Guadclope. This indicated that the Admiral is ex acted to surrender his one-mall rue of the two islands. l-loppellot, wllo has been Giraulfs diplomatic representative here was not available tonight for com nlent. He was busy with his chief whom he met at Boiling Field, along with Philippe Baudct, act- ing chief of the fighting French de egatlon, and United States Army and Navy officers. Whether I-ioppcnot would go soon to Martinique was believed to de- pend on Robert's readiness to step out as the Vichy French High Com- missioner there. Vice Admiral John H. Hoover, U.S. naval commander in the Caribbean, visited Robert a‘. Fort de Franco last week to obtain his vle_ws. It was learned yesterday that Nor- bett Aloysius Trainer, who is listed as one of the men lost ill the sink- ing of the tug Erg in Hallfax Tues- day, was s native of Charlottetown. He went to Halifax about a year ago. A son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John J. Trainer he resided formerly at 1'13 Water Street. Mr. J. J. Trainer of the Post Off- ice Department here is a brother. Three other brothers also survive. Leo T. Trainer and Dominic Train- or, both in Vancouver and Alphon- sus Trainer, in Seattle, Washington. The accident victim was unmarr- led. Sir William Rothensteln. who for 15 ygprs was principal of the Royal College cf Art. has presented to the RAF‘. 122 of his drawings of mem- b-crs of the services. Heavy Bombing Aimed At Disarming Enemy t CP) —The and gradual ucing nounormuly '1 — constant llammerlnfl reduction of armament - towns in the great Ruhr alley and Rhlnelalld of Germany throws the work of the RAJ‘. Bomber Comm- and wll-h its thousands of Canadian airmen and the Canadian 3101119. in- llouse 0f Commons To Sit Mornings UITAWA. July L-(CP) —Pll'iln@- Minister MacKenzie King's motion calling for morning sittings of the House of f‘ mmons from tomorrow until the session ends was adopted today without ‘ ' or “ Cologne, Wuppertal, Bochum. Fossil. Dusseldorf and other centres - - brillls forth the true aim of what only recently hasuoome to be generiilly known as etratesio bo bing. villl-llthout further digression. that aim is to disarm the enemy- Tllig is the aim of the bomblllfl lon. Beginning tomorrow morning the House will begin work eaob sittlflG day at 11 A. M. E.D.T., (noon AD. '1'.» instead of at three o'clock afternoon. offensive as discerned by the “Dim! _.____ - flgeliht efflmimii" mm““° N. n. womlrlv "r0 Mas-r Theroffenslve has not been dirac- FRED 0.1.0 _ o?) ‘ed ‘mama the 09mm people w -The misnnlrllii Jgynvlntlor: of gighlen ‘them or persuade them 12a mo New Bmmmck women“ 1mm ‘°“- Th” Gmmm‘ m‘ fries will be held here hm Wldnes- i*""{";,e§"§r‘§ fglgvugymllgimgf day and Thlusday, with delegates a: hgva been “much more cold- "i’“5'~‘“““3 n5 immdm“ i“ m’ ls president. realms; JOEY-Fool. s)’ Rlvflvsfirl "Ifisfilz-Fdi” ead Near lflgpnda A lS COSMNG NAZIS YIIIII) in Beachh l w." Situation Last Night l By Kirke L Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst Conflicting Moscow and Berlin versions of the origin of the three- day-old battle on the Orel-Belgorod front in Russia make wholly clear alllryllperle aspect of what may be the most crucial conflict of the war in if’ it ls what Moscow says it is-the beginning of a long-awaited third Nazi attempt to Blitzkrieg Russia out of the war-it has been launched under a significant change in German pro a-ganda. technique. It is being pictured to the German public as a efens ye fight, not a Nazi offensive. That has one dlstlnc advantage. If Moscow is correct and the Nazis have started a new power drive but are checked short of any decisive re- sults ‘ngaln, the result silll can be Nazi-heralded at home as a victory. Certainly there ls_ yet to come frnm_Berlin any coho of fho buoyant confidence of impending complete and flnnl victory in Russia which was so marked ln I941 and 1942. That might mean at Germany military rlnlfitaflilhllll, not Herr Hitler and his propaganda crew, are in the saddle s me. So far as the developments on the OreI-Belgorocl front are yet re- corded by either side, they lend full color to Russian insistence that another Nazi attempt to smash through to the Don or beyond is in pro- grcss. They tend to boar out reports that substantially half of the more than Zilfi Nazi and satellite divisions on the Russian front are concentra- ted on the southwest approaches io Moscow and the Orcl-Kursk hinge betumon the central and southern fronts. The attack seems a ihrec-pronged drive. Its left flank appears based on the Orcl salient. its centre pressing against the Kllrsk sector and its right surging eastward in the Belgorod area. Some progress in each urea is Russlnn-admlited or German-claimed. The essential fart about this battle. however. ls that on this July '1 the Nari thrust is still more than 100 miles distant from the Don at its closest point on the anniversary of the Berlin claim that Voronezh had been captured. The north and south pincer jaws are even farther away, froln 125 to 150 miles. By any reckoning, there remain not more than l2 weeks of certain gloruflghiing weather for the Germans In that section of south Central uss a- Thai. limits rigidly the time on which Nazi Generals can count lo gain any final results in Russia. . For that reason if no other. the Orol-Belgorod drive cannot yet be Ze-iaiggavn as a full-scale Nazi offensive, nor its real significance be ap- 30th Annual Convention Of‘ Women ’s Institutes In Session At P.W.C. [Restrictions 0f Sale 0f . “Today. as never before, our out- look must be expansive. Whether or not we like the idea, we must accept our place in a war-torn world, and that takes thinking. lalannlng, and executing our duties ill the most intelligent wny of which we are capable," said Mrs. Eclllh W. Gates in her presidential address at. the opening yesterday of the 30th annual convention of tile Prince Edward Island Women's Institutes. “We must not be satisfied", Mrs. Gates warned, “but must think more and more to prepare ourselves Coal Expected OTTAWA, July 7-— (CH- To ensure equitable distri- bution of available coal sup- plies. the government soon will announce restrictions on the for the peace which is to follow. When war broke out the country it‘; ‘fodaczul’ l" w“ lnmed 112T.‘2.2.2515ul‘;i%.“§*3.ii§“.i“l.%1 ,“*,,3*‘,'°;""g" l; n“ - "a men called iilc Associated Country game flflYol-li; ' ogallidcoaioctllry: Women of ‘the World, of which we Ruth“, l; was believed coal are proud to be members. We be- huyols might be limited lo a long. too. to the national organlza- percentage of their normal tlon (the Federated Women's In- supplies for a year, with the stltute of Canada). It is only through allocation left to individual pzovlllcinl. national nlld illternatlon- coal Goal"!- al understanding that we shall C031 Will-I'M llllihllfm?! have been working for some weeks on dcfnlls of the plan for restricting coal sales. Early in June in an address to the Canadian retail coal dealers‘ associailo In Toronto one of- ficial predicted some action would have to be taken. The association at its meet- ing adopted a resolution urg- ing the government to restrict each consumer to 70 per cent of’ ills normal hard coal re- quirements, as a means of con- serving limited supplies. There was some belief in Oi.- tawa that the plan to be all- nounced shortly will be some- thing along that line. iSeek To Raise iSunken Tug Erg reach tile perfect harmony of race. color. and creed. We in our homes “nil... Oifinilililes cmLilfigiPcllf’ Two Thirds 0f Duesseldorf ls In Rulns LONDON, Jilly 7—(APi-TWO thirds of tile central arcnsof Dus- seldorf containing the clllef bus lness buildings have been burned and smclsllcd by R-A-F- raids. tilB uir ministry news service announ- ced today. Dusseldorf is regarded as the leading commercial city of western Germany and the administrative centre of scores of stool, heavy cn- ginccrlng and armament firms op- (‘Jililllg 1n tho Rhine and Rllill‘ HALIFAX, July '1 ~10?) —-Wl_llle Halifax Shipyard Limlied officials were searching tile Ullllcd Slates areas. Eastern Seaboard today in an effort Photographs taken after the to 10m“ a dcclnnpfesslon chamber great rnicl of June 11 showed that able w dcscend “mm. nearly 300 among the buiidilllls d°sil°Yed W“ fcct of writer to lift tile sunken tug tho Stalllnus, the administrative Em _ _ wmb o, 19 drowned shur hcadqunri-"AS 0t i‘ 1mg” pmt OI m? yards employees - - follow workmen Gerlimm Sliéelit mgusgaibtglrlle ‘r0233 today decided lo give up half a day's scrv cc so s cs ' be ed -s “mil. interfere SJfiOllSly with the opera- m‘ me m“ me“ tlon of plants throughout Ger- Capt. A w. Humn’ examhm, M masters and mates at Yarmollth. many. angugfiliggligal‘? {.§;“‘§,,,‘f,{§§,,§f,’i,’} N.S., is expected to arrive liege armaments and 42 of its factories malgteffgzggaggdx half] hi? plsfiillssrtilgf fflillcmfgrgtlégesinlcliixgdilg a preliminary inquiry into the colli- ' ' sion. dnce," the News Service said. Join the Host of Home Bakers who- H1530 CANADA III / F L chi-gen- Province. Mrs. Robert C. ‘Ihomll-loll illecline In Employment OTTAWA, Jul 7 —(CP)- A contra-seasonal decline, of 1.3 per cent in employment at May 1-- the largest decline in any month since the outbreak of war aside from seasonal declines at Jan. 1-— vsrls reported today by the Domin- lon Bureau of Statistics, with the explanation that lrl it "no doubt" reflected the return to the farms of “unusually large numbers of workers." in the logging indus- try. Based on the 1926 average as 100, the general index of employment was 178.2 at May l compared with 180.6 for April 1. There was a gain of 6.5 per cent from the index figure of 167.4 at May 1, 1942. ‘tile smallest increase in the 12 months conlmrison lli a lengthy period." The seasonally adjusted index fell from 191.3 at April i to 185.0. The 13.590 establishments furn- lshing information to the Bureau reported the release of 23,769 pea"- sons, reducing their staffs to 1.788.- 320_nt May 1 from 1.812.089 at the beginning of April. The latest reported aggregate of weekly salaries and wages was $54,663,148. compared with $56,421,- 311 paid at the beginning of April a decrease of 3.1 per cent. The per cnnlta average fell from $31.14 at April 1 to $30.51‘. The May 1, 1942, figure was $28.59. ls Ranged HAMILTON, Bermuda, July 'l —- (AP)— i-Iarly Sousa. 23, convicted rape slayer who enjoyed a, brief per- iod of liberty yesterday when he e5. coped from the Hamilton jail two ilC-llls before he was to have been hangcd, was dropped through the trap at 6.15 E. D. T. this morning. Sousa, :1 Bennllda-born Portlugeso was convicted of raping and mur- dering Malgaret Staplcton, daugh- ter of an English clergymen, two years ago. Four Airmen From S’Side Station Rescued HALIFAX, July 7—(OP) —A_fte'r 24 hours afloat in a rubber dinghy in the Guf of the St. Lawrence, four members of tile crw of an air- craft from an R.C.A.1=‘. station at Sulnnlorside, P.E.I., were rescued yesterday through the combined eff- orts of the Canadian air force and tlhe Canadian Nay)‘. Announcement of the rescue was made shortly af- ter noon today by Eastern Air Oom- mand Headquarters in Halifax. The aircraft was first reported missing Monday afternoon after 1t had developed engine trouble while on a routine flight. "Ilhe Eas- tzem Air Command statement said that the plane attempted to make the Magdalen Islands on one engine. It apparently fell short of its ob- jective, however. No mention of the fale of the plane was made in the R.C.A.F. statement. Names of the four rescued alr- men who were said to be none the worse for their advenlure, are: Sat. C. B. MacDonald, Kansas _ .: W02 J. C. MCKZLV. Mone- i011. N.B.; and Sgt. W. F. Watts and Sgt. C. J. Turner of Sydney, Aus- tralin. Search for the mon was organ- ized and directed by the flying control and air-sea rescue S01‘\'lf1%| of the RCA F‘. The dinghy was located by two air force planes fol- lowing an ill-tonsive search over the Gulf waters. They were picked up by n naval vessel and brought to port. Tile crew members are bring re- ‘llrlled to the f lions V -__.____ Fig/liter Dwindles On A L. LI E D HEADQUARTERS, l North Africa, July 7—(AP)-—Gcr- luau fighter opposition dwindled prccipitntcly on Slrlly yesterday’ ulldcr illc violent tiny and night hammering by Allied plnncs, lndl l eating the enemy llnci lost most of ‘ his land based aircraft on tllc isl- and and was badly in nerd of ra inforccmellts. Heavy four motored medium nnd light bombers n11 joillrri in tho roulld-thcrlock effort to swoop tho enemy cntlrrlv from almvc the Mediterranean island llftllkilll! southern Ilnlx‘. The nlnin forgot was the homb- pocked Gcrbilll airport and its four subsidiary flellls in southern Sir Fifty bombers rlilarkcrl from middle east bases dumping more than 283,000 my. 11s of lm-nba on runways nllrl cllsnrrsnl an‘ . "citing large fires. From Frcnch Africa, TIIIZ grinding German ta savage Russian resistance drove into an addition- el “few villages" Wednesday near Belgorod at the southern end of a. raging 200-mile front, where the tle fury during which lines and trenche maintained that the Russians were the ones launching the offensive, but late military that lilo Gel-mans, "originally on the defensive," an all-out attack. had made "deep penetrations" gorod despite ported by very artillery forces." serves and material to ed numbers of aircraft sent in from Jliliase Nazis Make More Gains Reports From Both Sides Indicate‘ Fierceness Of Battles. LONDON, July 8-(Thursday)—(CP)—T1-lo German Anny h; three days has suffered the most staggering losses in its history- 30,000 dead, 1.539 tanks destroyed or damaged, and 649 airplanes shot down-and has failed to achieve a. major break-through b) its gigantic gamble in Russia, it was announced early today In Moscow. w LONDON, July 8 — (Thursday) - (AP) - R nk and infantry assault against Nazis had captured two towns Tuesday, but the Germans still were unable to achieve a majol: breakthrough, the Russians announced today. The German advance was made in great on. s and even entire villages changed hands time and again. The Russians said their troops were counter-attacking late last night and “are now fighting to restore the position." The Russians said that elsewhere along the fiery front the Germans were stopped. Until today the Germans had Coal Controller Resigns Post last night Berlin radio commentators asserted llow were waging The Gumans claimed their troops‘ OTTAWA. July 7 —— (CP) -Ood Controller J. Meg. Stewart has rc~ signed and will be succeeded by E. J. Brunnlllg, dlrector - general of the ammunition and gun production branch of the munitions department Munitions Minister Howe announ- ced today. The lvtlnlsfer expressed regret at the resignation of M!" Stewart. Ha said the seriousness of the coal sit- uation meant that, the pressure work on the coal controller had been steadily increasing and “for business reasons Mr. Stewart ls lul- forolmately unable to give his full time." ‘Ihe new coal controller is an en- gineer who, during the last war, supervised shell production for Can- adian and United States companies. He is president and general man- ager of Consumers Glass 0o. In his new post he will lyacome chairman of the mnergonc-l" Coal Production Board. If BWNGS A‘ PRoT-‘if AS CHEN Wu out‘ RoNoR the Orel sector as well as at Bel- ' the resistance of "4001100 crack Soviet troops sup- strong tank and Bolh Berlin and Moscow said the Germans were rushing re- the front line, including aircraft. The spec- ial Russian communique, record- by the Soviet Monitor, said the Germans were supported by "large other fronts." Fierce Air Battles A German broadcast recorded by Tile Associated Press suported this statement, asserting that a "very large airfol-ce" had been concen- trated against. the Russians and that “air force battles now going on over the Kllrsk region are s\lr- passing in extent and violence everything hitherto experienced during lilo whole eastern cam aign, “The Germans," said the rans- ocenn report, “are tilrowing more aircraft into action than the An- did in the fight lo-Saxons ever or Tunisia." “Never before were German soi- diers better trained or better ulp- ped with the latest arms han those troops now fightln the bat- tle of Kursk," said the Berlin broadcast which finally acknow- ledged that the Germans were go- ing over to the offensive. This confident German comnlit- ment on the strength of its forces was threaded with notes of caution. however. "The Soviets, on their part, are also sending into action tanks of a new type,“ the Nazi war reporter said. "The battle of Kursk there- fore means the first clash of new Gennan and new Soviet weapons. .4 The efficiency of thcsr new yrs-a- pons \\'lll show llsrlf in due course." Overworked doctors who attendi British Civil Servants got the gov-l ernment to extend a period of sickl leaves from two to four days before; a merll 1 certificate is necessary. I High tide this lliifllllllll“. . and lomorrow morning 4 Oil ‘t . i Sun sets illls evening ill ll ~18 and sl > rises tomorrow morning at 5'32. ' ' First quarter moon July l0, 12.2! zcz y Pn- i Sumnlcrslrlr tide 1R nllnlzlrs lat- er than Charlottetown. bombers llit mnmullitlon dumps, CAR FERRY SERYICE adlnilllstratioll buildings, hangars mum; EXQEPT SLQNDAY and flvc llllldlng strips. l RAF. Wolillllgtnns bombed Gor- ‘ From Bordon — Lcnvo 0.05 a.m bllll Monday lllgl.t.. ' i II- "l- M"! 4-55} "1- _ Exports at holultlllnrtcrs, poring. ifflvo Chill‘ 1_"l'"'l‘"1"‘¢ 11 ‘1-"1 over reconnaissance photos which ‘ 3-90 P- m~ and (L39 il- m- plcturcd the lrrnlclldolls clcstruc g -- l ~ tlon, snid tllc task of rubbing Gcr- only M“ shR“£E hlnfa ilvc all" ilcitls from tllc map (EXCEPT SYNDAYl was nearing completion. Five Allied plant's were lost yrs- (‘llurlnltciown -— xummcrside — M icrday; they shot down ll’\1f‘(‘. The "mm," score for tho llorlhlvr-sl Africn Air Force since lllf‘ full of Pnntcllvlrlzl Leave Charlottetown 1.50 a. In craft dcs~ of 83¢ 12.30 p. m. can p thus rosc to 2'15 Axis . m. .- ive (‘lmrlnliciown 1.10 p. m 5.45 troyed at an rxprllrlllllro planes. A headquarters infnrnlnllt D- m- 7-95 ll- "\- said rxprrlrllcc sllolvcrl that more _ F l__‘ q FFnRY QERVH- planes v ctr: dcstrovcrl lllll‘flllliflln:\l'l"y' ‘IX-(znrlnxul Srxnyn- than aloft ill nttn .~lll'l1 as tho current. ours in S iv, lnolllllln! int-av» Wood Islands — 7.00 n. m that the min n1 attrition v:.l-~. six‘ and 11 a.m. nml :5 p. ln. l nr seven to one in favor of tile Al Leaves Caribou — 9.00 a. In. ans lies 1 pm. and l p.m.