Maxms CI A' MERE MAN m1 more 0000b by the i" w. bullet. and us till ll l , in ‘an, the bullet follows the bot- bottle BZZ/ ' The People's aper ' Covers Prince Edward. Island Like the Dew My" ' few-WM Read b W A ll hl d t makITFnhI-s soul ‘y. m“, be bu" wmld to conform to the heavenly MAXIMS DEA MERE MAN and forcing the qua-flu, lauded Ill! Iian, Turkish rglgll Ministers toniersnee 1‘ rk , July I1 Benin‘: Guarllul» "fling foreign minister. ‘ m“ .1 sea this morning . Turkish foreign minister .. a Menenafllc ollll ' ab ' rt llan embwl " ,,, a ‘meeting whlc h“, jar reaching 0011800" Italian am- Gui; yr-IIIIEQY prior to gppolntlfldlll as forcllll . 00 the IIQI Swen!‘ -. sr is known Ill Ill may ‘sat the time bf hll . . ent and has not Y" .. .14; Rome to take I19 duties. Ile ID ntli W" the Turk h Imwm‘ | report of the Italian tlosl before leavln! f" and probably was asa- . last - mlnnte lnfor . w. on Turkey lllll "l9 . In the Bal- i where Italian troops aro a. Fjnelpll ooenpation for- ore is llliliilii 2 I1 ‘The Canadian Press lrropesn rumor factories ‘Play- wit-h the greatest mystery since -- Hess landed in Britain l been working at maximum l production“ on the whereab- Mussolini durlrg the last l sol-amour, dlsprs-tlch said n was trying to enter Switzer- ‘dispatch from Berne. Switzer- - reported him in Madrid. story from Madrid said trav- from Italy reported ll Duce in s. villa outside Rome. . the one place where pre- ~- bly them are authorities who = where Mussollni is. was sil- IlTlSl-l 5"‘!!! IN DARING RAIDS NNDON. July 2’l——(CPi—Brl- ubmsrines operating in the rrsnenn have destroyed four and l9 other small vessels. in raids into the Aegean and the Italian coast. an 0t!- ti’ communiq reported t0- mng izvsnrs "Talkies-Eldon Friday ' "7-21-21. u "MUN-UNIT!!! Rlvdl‘ '3°X Socia I a “an, l and Dance, Pleasant mdsy. July sosn "Dance in Se Mil B Hall “may. July-villi, e “y n-al Blnce ions l-fsil Thursday, July 7-M~38-I0—3l Picnic Wednesday r-as-rs-so-ar-a-a-s “Dance t J1 m‘ weh.?or-.‘°3?sa5°ti‘3f” uy "It! Cream Social and Dance, “little: School, Thursday: , -..... i‘ hsocisl, Nortmlgglon . ‘ , l i- us of cliiilotilnnoqlfiit- hi: um "Wdigan ' ‘ 1th. Hogs every via d; , . Ind m?” "misfliii. Sand Icenis. at , _ . . W”. v.‘ 121st -Newsman Ross Munro Describes Wild Scenes . One Of Most Spontaneous Scenes Ever Witnessed, Is Comment. Irldsy “c; _'_ in roups of so, escorted to waiting ‘M M19!!!“ i-Ilme- tr ru which scattered them to var. Ind beds. TIE but lous camps throughout the coun- - B. Young, Clyde "BP- try. There were no officers BMW ‘mm, '-'"- 1.2M" miivhriixiktiiireM-vsgrho sign of an- twaifzloslsgmrlxtxflnjtga order amon the 1500??’ (15-13; H‘ lu-‘mh- Km"! 3°" ‘Si-Sofia Millie Italian relwftfld - ' ‘l-fl-lr. M, b; sd i0) s glaring diffarerehce "W "The Little o1 r" wool-m“ 1's; anhd iii: rlltiilfiewno wer: i u are "one. sat nus rm"- - r a . . . w v ew ex . {Admission y u’ a ‘and Llhterfill, obvlousl ales- ... ossrsisa. ‘In Outs. TALY’S FAT DQDOQO I! R088 MUNRO Canadian Press War Correspondgnf, SOMEWHERE IN SICILY, July 26—(Delayed)—(CP Cable) 1n this frontline town, poverty- stricken Italian citizens in the battlerscarrad main street received the news of Mussolinis resignation as Italian leader with shouts of “bravo. bravo.” Their exultation ran wild in a riot of joy. They grabbed the hands of my- self and a Canadian soldier, sha - in! them like triphammers. patted us on the back and cried out in a flood of Italian “down with Muss- olini. death to the Duce." The citizens milled around the main street, with the hulk oi a des- troyed German tank still at one corner, gesticulating wildly, lau h- ing and shouting. It was one of he most unexpected, spontaneous scenes I have ever witnessed. Ear in the morning Canadian war corres ondents heard the news over the BC and headed for the town. I found Sigmn, Frank Sisco of Cochrane. Ont., who speaks Italian fluently. He came along as an interpreter to find out what the local Italians thought of the momentous a ounccment. With Slsco, I stopped on the main street, which had been the centre of bloody fighting for the town a short time before as the Canadians assaulted the place. Bravo, Bravo We walked up to a group of Ital- ian civilians and Sisco asked them if ‘they had heard the news. They a . h n . Then he told thcm of Mussolinfs resignation. The group of twenty crowded around us, shouted to- gether ("brave, bravo," and clap- Ded their hands. A couple of youths said "Grnzzla, Graaziej’ (thank vou. thank you). This reception took me by surprise. I had seen civilians in ever town we had occupied in Sicly give the troops the "V" sign in the march from tho coast and sometimes cheer the invaders. But this was soma- thlng I hoped I might see some day but never really expected -a group of people in a Fascist country expressing whole- hcarted relief at the collapse of their dictate and the chance they see ahead for freedom. Sisco and I mncle our way through the crowd and told anoth- er group standing beside the wreck. 9d Nazi tank about the good news There was animmcdlate outburst of Jo and Slsco was nearly mob- bed. lie was hugged by one husky fellow and walloped on the back as if he were a newly elected party leader. He looked little embaras- CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1943 ivilians In Sicily Overjoyed At Mussolinfs Russians Move Closer To 0rel LONDON, Jul fl-iAPl-Bovlet troo stormed lghta "of swat tact cal importance," ushed the Oennans back with rip-hammer blows from position arfter 905M011 and brushed back repeated Ger- man counter-attacks today as they moved from 2% to four miles clo- sar on Orel from three directions taking more than 50 Dwulaie aces. Ninety German tanks were dis- abled or destroyed and 4i Gerri-tan planes brought down throughout the day on the long Russian front, a communique said. The Berlin broadcast communi- ue said "there was a violent flBht or the defence oi the Kuban bridgehead tin the northwest Cau- casus), on the Mills River (along the sca of Azov outside Taganrogr and south of Lake Ladcge (near Leningrad), while in the Donets and Belgorod, there was only local fighting. ’ AT A GLANCE ..Italy—-Swiss a gra h Agency reports new Italian reg e discus- sing armistice conditions with Al- lies, but Allied confirmation lack- ing; Churchill tells Commons "ut- most rigor of war" will uacd against Italy until she submits; Ron-re radio says Italian people have rejected Fascism. Siclly—-Canadlans push dog- gedly ahead towards middle of Axis defences; "ermsn forces spread all along Axis front in northeast corner of Island: RAF. shoots down 21 Junkers-M trans- ports over Messlns. Russian-Soviet troops storm im- portant heights, push Germans back in Orel region, gaining 2 1-2 to four miles on key city. Aerial-Allied daylight bombers attack industrial targets. airfieldu in northern Franco. Holland. Hei- gium after night raid by ltlosquitos on Hamburg. Southwest Pacific — American ground forces little more than mile sway from Munda: Salamaua. and Lne heavlipbombeli. Roosevelt To Speak Tonight WASHINGTON. July 27 --(AP) —PI‘esid-ent Roosevelt will make a, radio address of "major lance" at 0:30 0- m- - phi. A. D T.) tomqlrowand he in- dicated t/zxiay he would talk about the whole sweep oi the war effort, both at hcme and on the battle- fronts. Stephen T. Early. presidential “(contlniledjvhfv ge 4i HENRY B. JA\|E50N (Asssolliated Press sash Writer) A BRITISH PORT July l! — (Wednesday) - (Am-rile cream’- mass movement of war Pristine" ever undertaken by boat has been accomplished without a hitch. des- ite Axis efforts to sink the ships hat were carrying their Own 5°- diers out of the Medltfifllnflfi" "fimlfiisa convoy t"? "l" "ifléiféi. lfiofiiititt “limo w gritain recently best off 00th 43"‘ gran submarines and air attwh 0n way. The tar ets. of course. WE" m‘ big troc , none of which was fir‘ much nas scrgtchaed itbmlflllt e priso ers om action the did not barillh i".- bouig firs on by their own Ilml after they no longer were of m)’ value to the war machine them. Some idea t di ted b)’ W"! wnvot alriiiiilioatilein? rgciuired thIBQ “like prisoners were taken Milo" tobeoutofth WM‘. ll that wars almost littlfully m; " 4_v,,.¢‘\ 4w: 1411f, i s Axis Subs And ‘Planes Attack Prison Ships ' Italian Prisoners Pleased, Germans Surly; Many Moved From War Zone. photographers. Italian officer turned to lied officers and said: 't for your kindness." He then BBVB them a snappy s ture with the Ger-mans. All dressed, but their actions seemed tslian w tanght them to hold for the Allies- Iibr the mostpart, they were men who grew up in the youth movement — warriors WhO were made to believe they were in- vinclble and who. a yell’ Elsi were racin tOW oi exan rio with m h l d iardfiilfion. a 8P0 WES tn m. The, just glared into $22: ilk: caged vanimals followinl orders. lcal of the ma crity. He was Zngofggar-old junior JOIHOQI‘, wear- ing the sandy brown uniform of the Herman Cioering division and the Iron Cross over his heart. When a turned his ne ection he clenched. his flat! Ind mumbled something breath and quickly tumsd his back to the camera. l i ll th Jerries of tgtielllr-i) ‘(i333 hi3“. vgteran, "but they iitLk a hell of a lot munch" or mime w interview any prisoners. / secretary, described the speech as of a “m_t_tjgr_importance." 2 th -be ten unmatching uni- fg-Ainsednd linisfit shoes, but thB b1! majority had a broad lmlll f0!‘ the train an Before boarding alute. , It was an entirely different pic- them were much bell-Br radiate the hatred that Nazism ifiifi? triumphantly A1- Field Marshal Bom- el-» ' - and Here. t-hcuyndegra und o‘ rl mmles. conversation a- h tiff." ttls The first German cff one sbiP newsreel - phot in rspher machl -‘ under his hard and ' "They don't look as cone-pendants were not per- -silggestl0n that Badoglio may have War Situation Last Night By Klrlre L. Simpson. Associated Press War Analygs A formal warning to Italy that she will be "seared and scarred and blackened unless she breaks utterly with her Nazi overlords ha; been sounded by Prime Minister Churchi l. In effect, Mr. Churchill outlined to Italy the only terms on which an armistice would be granted. They represented by implication some modification of the “unconditional surrender" pattern mapped for the foo at Casablanca. They also confirm first impressions that the Wash- J ingion and London authorities are prepared to deal with the still nebu- lous situation in Italy now only on s strictly military basis. The Allies will make no political deals with a tottering foe. They deem continued Italian resistance futile in any event. They are prepared to take by force what they need to press the war vigorously on the prime enemy. Nazi Germany. hat does not include Allied occupation of all Italy. Mr. Churchill made that clcnr in his outline of the situation to parliament. It would be a mistake, he said, “to break down the whole structure and expression of the Italian state." " That clearly indicates Allied willingness to accept capltulaticn from the Barlogllo Government or any other government with authority to s eak and the power to maintain orderly processes in such ltallurfter- r tory as is not needed by the Allies to press the attack on Germany It contemplates no general disarmament. of Italian forces. no Allied pol cing of all Italy; but only surrender of "all the indispensable requirement we demand for carrying on the war against cur prime and capital foe, w ich is not Italy, but Germany." Mr. Churchill naturally did not specify the "indispensable require- ments” demanded of Italy, other than dlvorcement of the Axis and Ger- many. To have don so would have furnished Berlin with valuable rnil- itary information as to where and when the next Allied blows from the south would . It. is self-evident. however, that Allied commitments to the French in Africa and the people of continental Francs must dictate occupation oi Sardine and Corsica. Gen. Eisenhower's bombers are already moving In against Sardinia. from Sicily. Sardinia is one of the natural stepping stones to the south count of France. Churchill Says Italians Must Decide Fate No Peace Approaches So Far F rom‘ New Italian Government. f By Lewis Hawkins Associated Prcss Staff. Writer .\' T ' E t mi i Wattles. -. .0 x e- Air Services new Italian regime 0f Marshal Pietro Badogllo, Prime Minister . ., J l 37" (QBPSLN-Tafigiliioerliiegt ‘hi’: bee" Churchill warned the Italian people today that they must yet decide whether the terrible war b Hon. J.E. kiéihil. that. it Trflgimgi; that an additional all‘ serv power of the Allies brings them the Maritime Provinces -— 561M115 "relief from war and freedom from servitude" or a holocaust in which _ s 1 i, John, ’ Halifax fiffesflififiQkdiii‘ be put into 0091'- their penninsula will be “seared and scarred and blackened" from ration as soon as the necessary fa}?- ilitics are available. end to end. In a restrained speech free 0f vi , to be 099mm“ glontingoverihe “shame and ruin” of Benito Mussolini who often had have the sum of 5209.909 59cm 0n chiefly on nirPQTt facilities M been a target of his choicest barbs. ih-e Prime Minister told a crowded it ' b County, N-B-i glitiwgrlllelswl-eiilriitoment 1°!‘ wer" House of Commons that so far there had been no peace approach- Mm; the planes, the announcement continued. as from the new Italian govern- ment and he clearly implied that I Fewer Vehicles _ I Are Registered Allied terms are still the uncondi- tional surrender" of all Ital’. Appnrenty knocking down orrswa, July zr-tcri '—- TM to happen in Italy now Mussolini Dominion Bureau of Statistic: gal: ~__ ~- ~ e ~~~~--~~--. today in preliminary Yew e, (Continued on page ‘I Col- ti) 1,524,153 motor vehicles were :8 ““-“}""_— ' lstercd in 1943. 0 dean" c’! " s Sells Sugar Without a Coupons, is Fined BIIY been the Allies choice as head of an Italian surrender regime, M Churchill declared: "I know little or nothing or the new government. 1 express no opinion on it." But he clearly cKPTcsscd a hOW 1'01‘ “"1" ian surrender. "We do not know what is going f‘ 31 from the year before. All 9T0" h d i th decline. misfit? ioiriieiniiilaefi 1.216.950 any; anger automobiles, 283.77 tfllgmj- l5, 1B motorcycles, 4.01s Ibu5€§qum_ 3.592 gather; gate; pyraegglecnegsgr car m I‘ O mioavgl-aged die cOmPBW-d with 0 in 1941 MONTREAL. July 2'T-—(CP)— ‘BY pToi/inctti. motor vehicle N; Benjamin Elman, 39, wholesale mer istrations wer as follows, 71g; i ures in brac ets: 011N110 a (7391.94): Quebec 2224i" ‘m’- - British 13 B“ chant was fined $1,090 here todilili‘ _ Columbia 3» 3 by Judge Omer Legrand for as“; Ho) lng sugar without coupons . 30M above the Prices Board ceiling. (IMQL sulifctfhelgslfie’ 1,126“ George Reid, Crown prosecutor. (131. Manitoba 9314;] (96573). said the accused had been 608E893 £12873‘ scum 5a 8.7 (‘M's . New in "black market operations. 111W- Bnmswick 3.1358 (n 45m prince lng supplied between 4.000 and 5.000 pounds of sugar without col- 4n "27 lecting any coupons. , Front Line Quality "angina" For 50 years this lradéifiiark has ‘guaranteed superb flavour to the tea critic. _._.- ._ . - OOfiOOO- United Nations Will Demand Italian Bases WASHINGTON, July 27—(AP)— Navy Secretary Frank Knox hinted todny that the onrusiung Allies might demand strategic bases on the Italian PCIIlIISUIJ mainland for air and sea attacks on Ger- many, as part of any price of peace. In response to questions at his press conference. Knox said Italy possessed strategic positions useful to the Allies for "Certain purposcs.‘ He said bases set up on the Pen- insula would be extremely useful for an advance across the Adriatic sea and air attacks on southern Germany. While disclaiming any “exclusive information" On the situation Knox said "the appearance of things indicates probably some at- tempt at taking Italy out of the war," and expressed the opinion that “it will come in the reason- ably near future." In response to a question, he said he meant an attempt by King Vic- tor Emmanuel and Marsnal Bad- oglio, successor to Mussolini. Meantime the United States of- fice of war information went one step further in clarification of the official attitude of the United States toward the new Italian Re- gime, with the declaration that it s regarded as an enemy, the same as the Mussolini government. "This Italian government,’ an 0. W.l. official sad "composed as it is mostly of people formerly as- sociated with Fascism, declared as one of its first acts allegiance to Hitler and the Axis, and therefore is an enemy nf the United Nations, and the war will go on to uncon- ditional surrender." News Briefs WASHINGTON. July 27—(AP)- Mai-Gen. Barney M. Giles today svas appointed United States chief of air stuff, succeeding MaJZ-Gen. George E. Stratemeyer who “has been Riven an undisclosed assign- ment of extreme importance." NEW YORK. July 27—(AP)— Domcr. Japanese agency, in s, broadcast by the Tokyo radio, said Foreign Minister Mamcru Shi emitsn told the Japanese cab net today Japan's w“ D01 v will remain unchanged dfllllte any new ‘evelopments which may follow the resig. nation of Mussolini. The broad- cast was recorded by The A3. socinted Press. . NEW WORK, July 27—(AP)—A message received by The Associated Press said unconfirmed reports circulated in one European Capital toda that German tfOflps were mcvng through the Brenner Pass and takl Italy's northren provinces, Venetin, Lombardy and Piedmont. The mas- Bflfle added that the full implicat- ions of this report were not yet known. , WARTIIVIE CANNERIES Thirty-two salmon canneriés and 22 herring canneries were in oper- ation in British Columbia last ng up defence positions in a] 8 PAGES Do Remain In Mystery. By THOMAS seams, July 27—(A Italian frontier" tonight gime was “discussing the tice" with the Allies in lacking. believed" that Marshal sentatives to the Vatican- 74 anti-Fascist political anti-Fascists. In outbreaks Monday nine Fas- cists, among them a millitiaman, were shot or stabbed to death and.» 40 seriously wounded while more‘ than 100 were injured to a lesseri degree in Milan. The newspaper Corrlere Della Bern. said in an editorial:—- “Soon every Italian will be call- ed on for the dangerous honor of deciding if he wants to be a free citizen of free Italy.” Travellers from Italy said the Corricre Della Serials morning ecl- Despite the rumors and re- port, the " . seemed to point to a continuation of the war by Italy. The German - propaganda tone was almost flalmbuoyantly confident. Spe- clficaliv the Germans were st- temptin to reinforce embatt- led Sic ly with additional Nazi troops - - an insane move if 903cc was in the wind. ltion had been seized three hours after its appearance and suppress- ed "because it contained. an article considered inopportune." Fascists equ pped with rifles. machineguns, and bombs r- rlcaded themselves in bulldln on Pllnio Street in Milan tonigh and were continuing " oradic and hopeless" resistance, t e travellers told Swiss correspondents. The Italian army has taken over in Milan and is in possession of most Fascist head uarters throughout the city nlthoug sgme members had entrenched th - selves and exchanged shots with the soldiers. Similar shortllved insurrectlons occurred in Turin, Bologna, Genoa and other cities in northern Italy. It is Bbtllflhtfldjiflt Canada will need 477,000,000 bushels of oats to veer- Carry Out Day Raid LONDON, July 27—-(AP)—Wltll Germany's greatest seaport of Hamburg and industrial centre of Essen smouldering from blockbust- er blows by heavy bombers, Allied light. bombers, so swift they elud- ed all dcicnces struck sharply cv daylight today nt industrial targets and nirficlds in northern France. Holland mid Belgium, Air fields attacked included one at Trlcqueville, France, which was singled out by United Stntcs med- iiun bombers for a pounding. United States fighters flying at a great hel ht shielded a strong force of ra ders, lncludln twin engined bombers that attnc ed nb- jectives in northern Frmlcc. Among the tnrgcts of the extens- ive daylight rnids was Zcebruggc nil the coast oi Belgium. Hundreds of Allied fighters und light bomb- ers took part in the swoop that. found encmy fighter planes appnr- entlv unwilling to challenge tho raiders nvcn when vitnl nir fields were attacked. At Zcebrugge industrial buildings were hit nnri pilots reported they encountered neither Tightens lim- fink. Vcnturn lmrdbors oscortvri 31v l-uitfircs uttnckori Nnzi nirfir-lcls ‘it Cnurtral in Belgium mid Wocns- dmcht in Holland straddling hang Hamburg Raidedy Five Times In 48 Hours. I i By RICE YAHNER with 500- und bombs. Associated Press Staff Writer Other pitfires harassed the en- meet the export and domestic de-¢ mand in 1943-44. ' Swift Aliied Bonibers Elude Nazi a Defenders s On Varied Targets; emy with diversionary sweeps from Ypres in Belgium to l-lulst in l-lol- land. British. Dominion and Allied squadrons cnrrlcd out the attacks without loss. On offensive patrols this evening RAF. fighters des- troyed nine German aircraft against a loss of two lanes. it. was announced. In addlt on, a sca- plane was destroyed off Holland. In the roundthe-clock attacks bv the RAIL RO-AF. and United States Army Air Force to flatten Hamburg .swift Mosquito bombers dealt the ort und industrial con- tre its lift. punch in 4a hours last. night. The Mosquitoa. without loss to themselves, dumped duo-pound brim on munitions lants thnt had cscn cd the block usters and incenriiar es of the R.A.F.'a weight lost attack of the war that it Hamburg ablaze Saturday night and the dayll ht attacks by United States heavy ombers Sunday and Monday. RAJ“. Mosqultos also were over the U-boat and ship- building port Sunday night. The Air Ministry announced that nhctogrnnhs taken l2 hours after the Sunday night attack nn indus trinl Essen showed that l3 more buildings oi‘ the hard-hit Krupp Country Inscription Delivered, II-DO llall. ILIMIQ other Provinces I ILIJ. H.00- SILL HANGS n BALANCE wnfal May In War Whole Situation Is Still Shrouded F. HAWKINS ' (Associated Press Staff Writer) P)—The Swiss telegra- phic agancy reporfid in a dispatch dated “at the that the new Italian Re- conditions oi an armis- Rome, but confirmation from either the Rome radio or Allied sources was The Swiss agency said that it was “generally Pietro Badoglio and his aides had established contact with the Allies in Rome through the British and American repre- italian newspapers reaching Switzerland said prisoners had been re- leased during rioting around the jail in Milan by Italians Begin To Consider New Plans For Future BERNE, Switzerland. July 11- iAP)-Ending a two-day celebra- tion of the fall of Mussolini, the Italian people grew calmer tonight; and a movement was reported tak- ing shape aimed at assuring a llll< eral regime in the future, accord- ing to advices reaching here from” Italian cities. Marshal Pietro Badgollds ban against public gatherings was ig~ nored in several cities. notably Tu- rin, where representatives of the reconstituted Italian political part- ies were reported to have met last night and drafted a resolution urg- ing Badgolio to grant the "neces- sary permission" for full ex resslcn l-f public opinion in clevc opmcnt 0f the new Ilailolril mwlicy. These representatives, the re- ports reaching Berna said, express- ed the opinion that the present Italian regime was a temporary one, which an Italian diplomat stated was also Badgoliou belief. rnnrwna or-zrrrrsc. "rorrvo LONDON —fCPI — 'l'he BBO has st-aorted daily broadcasts to Tokyo. The how's goes out for l5 minutes on a number of short tvaves designed to cover not only Japan but the whole of the east- crn and southeastern Asia. Dotti Ltucii A1 fun PooR Fist-i FOR BiilNC. on A HOOK‘, You Do 40o 4! High tide tonight at 9.5a and tomorrow morning nt 9.05. Sun sets this evening at 8.32 and rises tomorrow morning at 5.40. Summerslds tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden - Leave 8.40 l-In 1.15 p.m. and 4.55 p-m- Leave Cape Tormentlne ll a. III 3.25 p. m. and 8.30 p. m. DAILY AIR SERVICE [EXCEPT SUNDAY! Charlottetown - summerside - Monctnn Leave Charlottetown 7.50 l. II 12.30 . m. 4.30 m. Arr ve Chm-lo tr-town 1.10 p. rs 5,45 p. m. 7.05 p. m. P. E. L-N. S. FERRY SERVICI DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYI Leave Wood Islands — 7.00 l. II and 11 a.m. and :1 p. m. Leaves Caribou - 9.00 a. m. an s-rs, buildings and dispersal areas works ivcre severely damaged and many were still burning. l pm. and I pun.