MAXIMG OI‘ A MERE MAN 1-in- ........"' "tr: and" "l i oluinltetawn (Incline, fwqfl-u, NAZI RETRE K851! Loan Subscriptions Comi i’. E. |.; TDIBI spurted Ahead Yesterday bl beerl ti In tlrlzlwlrrghliiillled frog-zap: m, a c ‘liireiiieeted with tiie d v: rruiie i’ “keep them ooruinl a Ir subsorl that ivory ldollar possible be Ill- vested Ywerday‘; subscription; l- mmmp u, 02,100, somewhat higher- than the total for Mon- s", i; b g he Provincial "g1 u. $2.14 .50 . The quota l! 3,000,000 and only four dlyl remain in which vo also it. In the race by corrn ies ior the trophy offered by the Pro- M vernment Prince County is still lendinr with 75 per cent of the objective wh- sorlbed, but Queens County i! moving oloser and lslt Ilfht had attained 1o oer cent o! he quota, King's County has 61 0 ; Q ee e “Currrlottetowfl. szs .900 . ' Cllllllty, sussso (Miiltml. AWA, Nov. 2—(CPl—Nat- headquarters for Canada's 116.014 st the some stage the last a. Anticipating a "somewhat less- er" special names total than Jlai of Monday. loan officials estimated the cumu stive total would reach ‘igvwobliieaiigiyovsvnitiht ' wlretfmgi; totalled. The totafnow stands It $11,002,400. (DClltTllcfi_PB_I;— e. c613)“ lloore 8r idcleod’s Subscribe $25,000 lo Victory Loan The well known firm Moore .0 McLeod Ltd" always progressive in its ideas. em! ever loyal to King and Country have rnsde a magnificent con- tribution to the nation's war tffflrt in subscribing the am- ount of $25,000 to the ‘Fifth Victory Loan. It is co-operatlon lllch as this which warms the heart of the Victory Loan Corn- rnltt and helps lrr the fight for freedom. Who will be next? lliiIllitiwEVEiiTS “Talkies - Orspsud Thursday. "Talkies-Canoe Cove fluidity-m -Z- . "Rummaize Sale. United Church lllll. icons. November 0th. iil "Ulqunrsde dance Iona l-lsll. Wtdnerdfly. Nov. 3rd. IDHiDQ-S-Si "Talkies-Murray Harbor South. "ind-v. Matinee 3.10. Nizhlt "Bean supper nix-Dance in St. Arldrevfs l-lali, Wednesday even- lllr. November 10th. 11-4- "Unloarilng Old Sydney Screen- ld toll at Milton B. C. Webster. fill-since, Nat. Andrews Scélggla. l! , , lllurlc. y ovemher ‘ ll-8-li- “c, Ind dfliiiiiniiv $5°£sv§“i’§-'i‘3ZZf "- lord. Albany. 11-M- U"-lust arrived csr fresh cement. n] _ . 3091-‘??? iiii“".°.ii“ésf‘“" 55'5". “Wasted to buy live and dressed aggl- uid fowl. Plyilla w: m" Lwprlces. Island Cold 345-2’ "Tn-t of the season Hot Chick- " Dinner. ye etlbles and old fash- "Il plum policing served in new goleroogwrrsu Wednesday eveninl a». mcssmmsatl" ‘m’ u" '-""‘ _ y,l-§ltts'm;l::sbai, “We”? ‘hi2 sthubm m], ll. holder who has more than a the ‘bl- >2Z/ The People's Paper Emergency Measures To Restrict Coa OTTAWA. Nov. Z-(CP) — The "Willi-WIS department announced tonight that l5 an "emergency" created by (he 000i strike deliveries of coal householders now are restricted not more than one ton to a custo- mer. with no one rmlttec: to bug coal for his home i he has enoug to last l6 days or more, The new order, issued by coal controller E0. Brunninzr, resclnds a previous order 11114362‘, which householders were sslrec volatile chase high quarter o1 their re- qulxemcnts. coql for one Under the new order. a coal deu- ler ma not deliver coal except to the fol owing:- l. Another coal dealer for resale. 2. A rail carrier for his uwn use. 3. An industrial plant for its own use. i. Ship's bunker 5. To a. private residence for con- sumption therein, but onlv i! th quantity of coal on hand is less than 15 day's supply, If] which case no: more than one ton may be de- v red. B. Any building other than an in- dustrial plant or private residence, but only ti’ the coal on hand in the building is less than l5 days supply. in which case not more an 15 days supply may be delivered. 7. Any person holding a special permit from the coal controller" the order also said that over-y coa dealer may deliver. omi every per- son must accept for consumption, any type of coal which the ilealcr has available, provldina it is suit- able for the customers heating equipment. 8.500 Western Goal Miners Still Idle CALGARY, Nov. Z-(CPi — At- tention of 5,500 striking coal min- ers in Alberta and British Colum- bia. tonight centered on Ottuwfl where officials of district l8. Unit- ed Mine Workers of America, con- ferred with Labor Minister Mit- chell Robert Llyett. president of dis- trict l8. headed s. four-man dele- gation of union officials to Ottawa. and until he reports back to hi5 head uarters here little charlie ln the s lke situation was expected- The men struck Sunday mlcnlflhfo protesting what unlonwleaders c811- ed the “dilly-dllllylng of .116 W" labor board in meetlnil demmid-i for $2 a day wupc incl-case, time and a half ici- sixth dav of work and holidays with 08y- ll. S. Dual Strike Still Not Settled WASHINGTON. Nov. 2 _ou=>- Without explanation. United Mine Workers Union leaders lonlllhl Pl" off their second chance to solve the United States’ paralyllnz cOal strike as some Union miners declared they would ignore President Roose- velt's order to return to the pits under government operation tomor- row. U. M. Wfs policy ccmrnlti-Be PO-St" poned a scheduled meeting tonight a few minutes after President John L. Lewis emerged from his second meeting of the day with Interior Secretary Harold L. Ickes, boss of the mines under government oper- ation for the second time this year. Neither Lewis nor Tckes discussed their two meetings but lckes promptly issued an order forbidding dealers to deliver fuel to any house‘; days’ supply of coal in his base- Dargo 0T Apples Beaches Britain N, N . 2—(CP CABLE) —i'~li?o1tiDi:inlsfcgvLord Wvolwh W" day announced n cargo of can; sdlarr apples, first instalment ° l3 pected before Christ- mas, has arrived in Britflifl- 1 The initial shipment will be d s- lrlbutsd in Scotland and North imglaiid where home-INTI" “PPM are scarce due to transportation difficulties in movrnu 07°95 "m" the southern orchards .____._____ 60,000 Brazilians To Fight Overseas z: lights and several planes on I Sales iiepublicans Lead In ll. S. Elections WASHINGTON. Nov. 3—-(AP)—A tlde of Republican votes but Joe R. Henley in as lieutenant Rovern- or of New York and sent Republic- flllS out in front in every major con- fest-exccpt the Kentucky lover- norshlp-as retums were counted tonight from today's off-year elec- o hi. In Kentucky. it was a race as close as any the Kentucky Derby has produced. With 451 of t precincts reported. Democrat J. Lvter Donalsnn was leading Repub- lgssm Simeon Willie 36.200 to 36.- Lt-Gen. William N. Haskell. n5. Democrat and American Labor party omlnee. conceded the vic- tory 0f anlcy. ir state senator. in led to lnarrzln Democratic lenders had counted on to offset up-state Republican dis- tricts. and returns. from E303 of the 8.978 districts in the State flflWl l-lanlev 1.228.985 votes to 1.102.498 for Haskell. In New Jersey. Republican Wal- ter E. Edge was leirdlnlt Democrat Vincent J. Murphy 167.910 to 88.763 nn returns from 704 of the State's 3 647 district s. Still to be reported. however. was most of the vote in the Democratic stronrzhnld of Jersey City. Former Ambassador Wllliam- =0. Buliitt. who had received support from President Roosevelt in his campaign for Mayo of Philadel- ulilri trailed Republican incumb- elit Bernard Samue. 03.895 to 118 507 with 440 of 133 p orted. All four of these contests had been closely watched for possible straws rhowlnu which way the wind is blowlniz in the 194-1 Presidential campaizn precincts re- News Briefs LONDON. Nov. 2 -- (C? Cable) - The Air Ministry annolr-ced tonight the award of the Distinguished Flying‘ Cross to three members of the R. C. A- F.. F0. George Dodrl of lbennlc, Mum, F0. ll. T. Mos- slp of Thorndalc, 0nt.. and P. 0. J. ll. Ashton of Barrio, Ont. WASHINGTON, Nov. 2 — (AP) — Frank Knox, United States Navy secretary, praised war correspon- dents today fol‘ a “very unusual job,“ saying “this war is better re- ported than any war ever was" OTT IWA. Nov. 2 — (C?) - Defcnce Headquarters a ced tonight that men and women serving in the Canad- ian Army will be nbie to dil- play their artistic ability at I Canadian Army art exhibit to be held st the National Gallery here next February- LONDON. Nov. 2 — (OP) - Poor flying weather over Europe aided battered Germany last month, it was disclosed tonllfht in YEW?“ 0" British and American bombing operations from British bases. So bad was the weather that the R. A. F. was held to nine big night at- tacks. with a consequent decline in bomb tonnage dropped for the second successive month. Air Manoeuvres Last Evening __._. A "catch as catch can" demons- tration was given over the centre of the city last night by an army searchllght and a plane from the local R. A. F. station. Cltlaens were thrilled as the plane went through the various mizneouvers designed to shake off the tcll tale beams from the powerful aearchllght. Honours appeared to have been even and the plane retired intact- Bolh parties to the demonstration had the rlvile of bringing the people o Char ottetown a forceful argument ln favor of buying Vic- tory Bonds to "Speed the Victory". With the necessary quantities of planes. sesrchlights snd number- less other necessities, our men can drive the Hun back to his hide- out snd return to us as conquerors and Heroes. If conditions are st sll favorable. them will probably be two sear-gi- l6 {ob again tomorrow fli|ht when cit- zens will be able to see sn even our "Iqgz-"Qi" _._--/' "‘--. Read by Dover's Prince Edwardiielond Like tire Dew l ‘i?’ _-' ' —" fin inst night. that o oration seems to have at Nikolacv on the lower Bug. Niknlirev the Russian 4th army s arhe d preoa us si The Rusdialrlip lclne. They have been out-guessed Tho most gigantic annihilation trap parcntly ls being set for them. Driven home. these two lndlca connection with Germany. It would Russian attack. It must enforce whole southern Ukraine cast of War Suao asigt Al Moscow advices picture the situation, hrmsoh sian sack in the Dale r bend-east of the rldor now up r inc dental It seems to Russian [rand strsie h‘ at turning the south end of ths%lz ' fence front. along the Russian Bu; between Kiev and Odessa, before the (zerrnana east of there can reach it for a new short-front stand, With the Lrlrnca sealed off by Russian scgure of ‘liarad routes to the Pgleinfllllfl- en y-Baese a fast-nrovin d urnn a rning st Kherson on the lower nie y Br Kirks L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst A bold. swiftly executed mission attem t to e t u. h | rl ht or of the Nazi mint mt of the Kiev-Orig“; u“: l}'iiss.‘ls"s,"vfii..p n; it ls obvious that m“ stra- nll the way from the Blank Sea in aims st rrnuhlng t e e t toqhu Baltic. The now closed Crimean trn and oven the still open Rus- vol Eog-Nlkopol esca o cor- the soot g indicated de- c . per, and 40 miles bgyond that . ls a. Nazi communications hub for in rear of the battle "Ml in the Dnlcper bend. It was less than 100 miles distant last night from a . In Russian hands N kolaev would unhirrse every possible Nazi r0515!- nnce front east of a llne between Kiev and efforts to picture the entrapment of Crimean garrlsons as merely the b0- ginnlrlifi‘ of a prolonlged slegmhThey mull! be aialzlginetely cut off except for 0|‘ ICB- OPTIC IOU‘! t hiust toward Kherson and Nlkolaev ls blitzkrieg war- fare patterned to the Nazi technique at its best. It represents instant ex- lik‘l‘.il'l.il.l.".'°“‘i'éili'°.i"i‘ a:*'~..~;i.:r.~ was" c“ - BI’ II l1 V 0 . Tire Germans are again getting a tagte of their own military med- as well u ouffought by Red Generals. dessa. If. would mock Berlin the history of war records ll” its converging jaws are plain, although the northern prong west 0f the Dnieper south of Kiev has been inactive for days. It down the Klev-Zmerynka railway as the southren prong pushfnz up the Perelion-Kherson rouic is aimed at turning the lower end of the Bug lint. ted majonliusslan blows would lop the whole southern third of the Nazi lines in Russia off from any direct l!!!" ls poised to stab expose Odessa to a lund-and-sel prompt attempted Nazi flight fro-n thl he Bug, abandoning the troops In the Crimea to their fate as the trapped armies before Stalingrad and Tunisia were abandoned. Acoustic a HALIFAX, Nov. 2—(CP)—Gei-- man U-boats have come up with a new weapon. an “acoustlc" torn-ado that tracks down its victim by the sound of its propellr; accordinz to men who believe tl..v have seen the nicw projectile in action. For security reasons. censorship up to now has permitted no men- tron of the fact the existence of the audio torpedo has been suspected by the Allies. However. they have been aware of it for some time. and it is believed effective counter- measures lillve bcen but into effect. Newspaper men first heard of the acoustic torpedo aftcr the bia September U-boat outbreak that marked the end of a. long stretch of comparative clulct nn the At- lantic. It was in this series of attacks on convoy ships that the Canadian destroyer. St. Croix was sunk, alonil with British escort ships and a number of merchant s p Naval Men Convinced Naval officers of one of the Can- adian escort shins in the scrap told The Canadian Press on landlniz at nn Atlantic port. they were con- vinced acoustic torpedoes had been used by the wolf pack of subs that stalked the convoy for days. The torpedoes it was thouuht. carried a. steerink device actuated by sound. Once it picked up the (Continued on page '7 Col. b) P. E. I. Chartered Accountants Buy Victory Bonds The Institute of Chartered Ac- countants of Prince Edward Island those Wizllrds of fillures. who know lo o dccima. point what every fr.- vestrient wfi pay. have subscribed the smont o their reserve funds in Victory Bonds. k This is not only expert testimony .0 the value and safety of these Bonds. but is an evidence of loyal. tv and faith in the future of our 3910i!!- Cerman U-“Boqts V“ Using Torpedo Noiu Red Newspaper Says Decision 0n Second Front MOSCOW, Nov. Z—lAP)-—Im- portarit decisions pointing t0- ward opening of a so-calleil "second front" in pe by Britain and the United States were made at the three- conrerence Just conciud , the government newspaper rzvestia indicated today. In the first official Soviet clslonr reached st the till‘!- lzvcstla made it clear- that the Russians, who had neon fl"!- sln the importance of a ‘"0" on front" against uerrna . were satisfied with these d9- clslonl. "The first thing upon which unanirrrorrndecislon was reach- ed," “id lzvestil, “was R008- nltlon of the necessity for hur- rylng the end of the war as ‘h! rnost important question be- fore the conference, m "The unanimous "II of the neoessrtyb to adopt luri- sures now to fin: "Willi"? to her knees by blows from the east and west will accelerate the hour of her final defeat." At another pout the news- paper said that unportant mil- tary decisions looking tilwflfli s ceding the of-euslve uselnst itler had been rnlde at ti" conference. Both British and American circles in Moscflw M31011"! that the Russians were lltis- fied with the milil-flry dedlllilll! taken, and llu doubt the All‘!- erieau and British conferefl mos certain assurances W their Soviet friends on this "h" inertia devoted s. three-enl- rrrnn front-page editorial t0 Sh‘ accomplishment of the tflflffl‘ enee. raising it as n successful oorrtri ution towardaigtiil’! as‘? a secure peace, a achievement trr collaboration among the three 110""- COF 0W '° Ionolilt gevlegste to rittcnotiié ‘ta-lacu- ‘will-m Sfifll: Bnsll was w" overseas to fight on the side Mtg-lei; united Nations. an m,» “mum m service m ' mom thrilling exhibition of men in action. ‘ "sinus" MW’ 7M FEE out” Everybody CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1943 8 PAGES AT iN RUSSIA lS NEAR rrrllt crock the shell MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN who would uni, the kernel luleeriptlol Delivered. IB-Dl Illl. “J03 other n filled I I'll-l. U.“- ROUT BBB!!! ng Is Urgent Plea ll. A. F. To Give Demonstration 0f Bomb Attack This iafternoon RAF. planes will use flour bus in their row-level bombing attack on ens pmlhrlcl, B thcry at Victoria Park. The Ack- AC uunners will no throuuh all the motions of fizhtlmz back except the actual flrlm. It will he a full scale air raid in miniature. A feature of the show. which ls belnlt tllycn in connection with the Fifth Victory Loan campaign. will be the bombing of a target in the "fiddle 0f the Cricket Field. Tho airmen will endeavour to hit the tarzet and irmlte it. vThe actual bombing will place around three o'clock and roads leading to the Park will bo g d to cars and other vehicles rom 2.45 until 3.30. The pgglflq may travel on foot. however. to s point whore they will rgcl; a gggd view of the demonstration and gag without any risk of damage lo themselves or to their vehicles. Patients At Sanatorium Buy Bonds- take the Patients at the Provincial Sane.- torium yesterday sent word to o Victory Loan salesmen to call. He did and four of them bouilht victory bonds. That is the spirit which will brlnlz victory. The salcsmnn could not help ex- nresslny surprise. After rllL he said. patients s. sanalarillm would hardly be expected to subscribe to the loan. But there they were. One bouzht a 8500 bond. two bought £100 bonds each and another a 650 0nd. The incident evidently cheered the salesman. And it had a good cf- fect on other prospective bond our- chasers too. They could not help thinking if persons unwell could buy bonds "I zuess I'd better add a bit to the amount I planned to purchase." u. s. And u. o. Loan Totals HAIJEAX. N. S. Nov. 2-—(CP)— Fifth Victory loan subscriptions m Nova. Scotla tonight totalled $29,- 920,450, against the provincial quota of $2 500.000, it was announced at loan headquarters for the province- Today's soles were $1,566,650. SAINT JOHN. N. 3.. Nov. I -—(C P)— New Brunswick, aiming at s victory loan objective of $23,500,000, passed the $20,000,000 mark today. when subscriptions of 0908.700 rais- ed the total to $20,013,200. Only one county, Carleton. has reached its quota of public sales. Westmore- land has a percentage of 07-5 in this classification, and the other i5 units range down to 41.8. VISITING BAN CAUSES LOSS LONDON — (OP) - The swank- iest hotel in an English town rec- ently placed under a vlsltiu ban is losln nearly 11,000 daily. lth- out a sn le resident, the propriet- or decld to hold on to his rta of 60, including a seven- lece band, until the reshgicvtlonjs lfted. (By Louis V. Hunter War Correspondent) WITH THE CANADIAN FORCE (OP Cable) — Ten of the l4 Ger- man tanks knocked out in the blit- tie of Termoli Oct. 6 - the bigg- est Canadian tank battle of the war -fell to guns of the Three Rivers Tank Regiment, of the Canadian 1st Army Tank Brigade. it was Per- mitted to be disclosed today. German Mark 1V special tanks. each with a. 75 mlllli-netre gun and a new armor shield around the turret. were smashed by the Three Rivers tanks in a daylong slu|fest fought at polntblank range in muddy fields and olive groves sf- trr a cross - country forced drive of 40 miles. The Canadians lost only tanks. Previously the Allied tanks in the engagement could be identified-on- lv as nth Army tanks. An English tank regiment accounted for four otfo the enemy machines in the oc- t n. two ff yed from this district Soviet F OYCQS Racing iAhead By JUDSON 0’QUINN Associated Press Staff Wrifcr “ LONDON. NDV- 2—(A_P)—Rcd Army troops fighting to collapse the German southern flank have raced 40 miles past recently captured Perekop, the northwestern gateway to the scaled-off Crimea, and seized the important Dnieper river crossing town of Kakhovka, Moscow announced ton- nlghf. 'l_‘lre advance across the marshy Moguls steppe placed Russian troops within 30 miles of the Dnieper mouth port of Kherson, while the capture of Gornostiayeyka. l8 miles northeast of Kakhovka, broug hi. death t0 several thousand Germans who were killed by gunfire or forced back and drowned in the Dnieper river, lque Nazi groups isolated north of the Slvash Sea. by the spectacular Rus- sian victories that had trapped other thousands of Nazis in the Crimea were pressed back to the sea and " liquidated." the wsr bulletln said. Bearing north toward Kherson and Nikolaev. the Red spearhead. which ls almcd at cutting the Naz- took Kalanchak. 20 miles north- west of Perekop. and Bolshavo Mayachki. 3D miles east of Khar- son. Capture of the Block Bea town nf Skadovsk. 40 miles west of Per- ekop and the some distance south. east of Kherson. nave the Russians control of s lame section of the north coast of Karkinlt Bay, which separates t northwest coast of the Crimea rom the mainland. This advance in the wmmunl broadcast by Moscow and recorded here by the Soviet Monitor rcduc- ed stll further German chances of outing rm escape corridor lécr their trapped troops In a. Picturing the German defeat in the was as n rout. the communique sold the battered German forces were being blasted giant and dsv by the Soviet air force. The communique said "large numbers" of Germans were tak- en prisoner. Corvette Frontenac Under Quarantine 315651014, o_nt., Nov. I — (C?) — Dr. D. B. P111081’. Kinfiion Med- ical Health Officer, today announ- ced that all officers. and ratinll o! the corvette I-l- M. C. S. lirontcnac. have been placed under a thrfle day quarantine following the die- coyery of s. young sailor aboard suffering from scarlet fever. The s-i ntenac was commissioned at a ceremony here, Oct. 2'1, by Navy Minister MacDonald and WM awaiting the completion of outfitt- ing before leaving for an East Coast Canadian port. Another Queen's Dounty District Dyer The Top Tlhe Ayoncale-Cherry Valley — Vernon River-Grand View North district of which -Dr. 1-1.5. Mao- Leod. Vernon River, is the chair- man and Mr. Harold Martin the salesman. is the second rural dis- ti-lct of Queen's County to exceed its objective. Subscriptions recei- now tots 900 or 110 per cent. of the ob- Canadian Tank Unit Won In Big Battle $20. jectlve 0f 81_9.000. The battle was fought near the iAdrlatlc coast just after the right wi of Gen. Sir Bernard Mont- "8 1N ITALY Oct. l2 — (Delayed — gomery’s British 8th Army fggeécl $1.1 mo; l its way across the Blferno on its way northwest tows-rd present positions ‘ri- no River. brlgadier commanding its‘ famous Irish Brigade which the Canadians were supporting in a success ui attempt to repel the last of several vicious German counter attacks was so leased with the Canadians’ work that he presented a tank squadron led by Maj. Jimmy Walker of Cap De La Madeleine. Que, with a pennant. It was the first time i-he brigade had bestowed such sn hon- or on another unit. Tankmen in action included Capt. R. ll‘. Newton. Quebec, squad- ron Battle Captain, Capt. R. 1-". Major, Montreal. second in comm- snd. Llelifs. P. Price, Sunnybrse. N- athwart the p brigade 545 P" ‘"- sald the midnight commun- Ailies Attack Dore 0f Nazi Defence Line ALGIITRS, Nov. 2 - (AP) -_ Launching a heavy attack on thl core of-the Gen-nan defence llne across Italy, the Anglo - American 5th Army has captured "importanl positions" on towering Massico Ridge and Maltese Mountain in the face of fierce enemy resistance, the Allied command announced today and i: spokesman di-scrlled the Nail wall as "severely shaken". British units 0f Lin-Gen. Mai-I Clark's amiy advanced four miles in the Mediterranean coastal elem to seize the town of Casanova, his): on the steep slopes of Musico Ridge. Some 40 miles inland Amer ican troops, fighting forwar thmugh rugged. rain soaked terr- alrl. won i: good part of Matese, the peak that dominates the Upp- er Volturng Valley. _ Continued on page ‘l Odi. 4i Ill‘ liavy Does Swell Job In 5th Loan HALIFAX, Nov. 2—(OP)-—Wiih ships at sea continuing to swell vic- tory loan coffers. rm: navys At- lantic command went over the 02.- 000000 mark tooev 1n Canada's Fifth Victory Loan compel . Quota for the command was fin,- Naval craft at sea have contri- buted more than $269,000, while H.M.O.S. Cornwallis. iruge trains ing base in the Annapolis Valley shows bond subscriptions ol owi $212,000. flu. Rims or Avveaelfr " ARE EASlER 1'0 been il= You have Au unsatur- Hlgh tide this afternoon ut 3.54 and tomorrow morning at 3.05. Sun sets this afternoon at 5.47 tomorrow morning o! .41. First quarter moon Nov. 4. 11-3! J11 Summers“ tide is minutes later me than Charlottetown. DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown -— Summerlldu — Monclon Leave Charlottetown 7-35 l- Il- l2.00 . 4.30 m. Arriigonchsrloiteiown l.l0 p. m. 1.05 p. rrr. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown l! noMI. Arrive Charlottetown 5.15 p. Ill- I. E. l.-N.S. Ferry Service Dally including Sundays. [cave Wood islands-low Ian. Leaves Caribou 12-00 p. n 4.00 p -_ . 8., and Rennie Reggie, saint John, 2.00 p. rrr. N- B. 9/