MAXIMS OIL IIERE MAN batik» ‘Hsoltrleoffilflllllbeefllll | gm w: Guerdlel. ‘I've Cont; ma, ' v Ieunlel usv 600 >I/'%/’ The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward? CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 1942 //»/ //.’4 .- Kiisi Read by Everybody Lfsianl Like the Dew 8 PAGES Be strong and quit youryelvgg m“ men. MAXIMG 01A MERE MAN u! llllh P. B. Annual dnbsnrlptlon Delivered, um I. 80.00: to other Provincial and U. l. Iii-OI T111501" RUSSIAN FRONT IN DIRE PERIL EhadoW Armies’ 0f (iccupiedwLands In Action Threatsjom Sil F” ‘g fields, where the mctorless, e_nt Shipsr-Forg Second Front? Annual Meeting Of Exhibition Assn. Lt-Col. D.A. MacKinnon is rue-elected President; Big Show to be held again this year. The annual meeting of the Char. loitetcwn Driving Park and Pro. vuicial Exhibition Association was held last. evening. Reports or me Pmldcnt. which appears DClOW. 11nd sfiflfillfy-Treasuier J. W. Boulter, geiredread and very favourably rc- It‘ was considered that the Asso- Ciflllllll year had been a succmsful We Collfildelillil the unusual condit- ions. Complimentary mentions were mideregardmx the efforts of the dfiCCliitlOtlAlll holding exhibit-ions aha nrovuling such ucod recreation as 01d Home Week affords. Aitcr the election 0i directors the rcitram for Old llome Week and rovincial Eixhibition this year was submit-tool and highly commended. The management have gone to great effort. to put on a realty worthvchile vaudeville and racing program to- cther with a. better exhibition than l SCIISOII. The tollowlng are the directors ‘(cZJSt-frfifihi-Tiig-fiitooi s); -_..___._ _, Coming Events Ids for latices In Ohio edema I cents per worl "Talkiel Eldon Friday ‘I-ll-Ii. "Talkies Morett Tuesday. ‘MB-BI. "Talkies Cardigan Wednesday. ‘bis-ll. "Talkies-Courts Monday. 7-15-31. “Palloiob-Montagu ‘Murder. "Navy Blueg." its? “Due to arrive our bulk f d Whigs. Booknow. MCGIMRMIRU "Festival and Dance t Uni gem. July 2mm m m“ of a2“ rosl- 7-15-16-21. P"C° of Peg". st. 000mm wit“ dkran. July 20th,’ "QWOOUM hogs ovary Friday. m" 1U! with Leslie McDowell, cricbll. l-IO-BO-twtf. ‘C Omen 1 at Pownal W d tarsrsasi.“ 1"‘ m t!“ "Demo ~ lshool ‘Ihurs- llv. .1 ' an‘ ' ‘Utah 1o .12» gtritlth nnéitléufilcficofaltlinmu: W996i I00‘ Red Cross. g-li-li. "gauche: hop u usual for. the months. Lint your has "l A. C. Green Alison . . green. Emerald. {mural-giant v "Women's Institute District Con- JfiIIIIlOII North Wiltshire. Thursday. hm!’ 18th. Meetings 2.30 and B. Box chm. is-ts. f "Dslns to 1m." Bee this liyel "Ce on July 17th with the Isiah Amateurs at Crapaud. no p, 111g." orwrhc District Convention for Bewcll Cove. Eldon. Mt. Buc an. lle River. Wood Islands, Pipette. ‘WI-own Cross will be held at. Bol- ast Halt. July 17th at 2.30 9,11%. u “The Garden City Dairy will be closed at 1 P. M. every Wednesday lltcrnoon commencing Julv 15th until further notice. Kindly send 1°"? orders in before l0 A. M. to mélreudeiivery. o cglg-mMmoelkiécd l‘ noon. c o 0.. Ltd 7-15-11. l1. variable, an average yield d hi3‘ Record Surplus In Newfoundland‘ SI‘. JOHN'S. Nf1d., July 14-40’) —A record-breaking SllfDllLi of 8'1.- 211,000 and unprecedented revenues 0f $23,204,296 for the 1041 fiscal year were reported by Newfoundland Finance Commissioner I. R. A. Wild in his budget address tonight. Ex- Ddllililfiilllfs for the year totalled $16.- N0 increased taxation ls proposed for the current veer. Mr. Wild mid. and a war revenue tax import duty of seven and a half per cent will be removed. Last. year. the previous all-tame peak. the vernment had a surplus of $100, from revenues of $16.- 6283.000 and expenditures oi 315.500.- Q m Crops Need More lisin In Nsritintss OPPAWA. July i4-—(CP)—-A few secticns in Eastern Canada are showln need of more rain but. cro condi ons on the whole are “beng well maintained," the Do- minion Bureau of Statistics report- ed today 1n the fourth of a series of seven telegraphic crop reports. "Nova Scotis has had a. few help- ful showers. although they have not. been sufficient to check de- terioration of pastures. New Bums- wick was better supplied with mots- ture. and pastures are be’ng maln- tained. Although bhc hay crlop bets 5 - lng obtained in Nc-va Scctio and vields are being harvestzd in Brunswick..." In Nova Bcotia further rainfall is badly needed to improve pas- t-ures which have been drying uo, and to bring along the late-sown crops. I-faying ls earty and well un- der way. strawberries were a poor crop, but tree ruits including alp- ples arc promising about the some as last year. 1n New Brunswick hot-weather crops including corn and tcsnatoes have been making slow growth. The potato crop is progressing sstls. factcrilv and spraying is earlier than usuel. Norse Suits Te Adjourn July 25 UITAWA, July 14-(CP)—Prlao Minister Mackenzie Kinli to the House of Commons today of party leaders in the set an objective of maggot} by the end of mist . scilitetc early adjournment. at moral‘ guidi- flit.‘ cu: I DC next Saturday, and next wee , afternoon even-In! sittings would be held if the Home B-Dglhfl . e House would a ill Weclnosdly evening ay this week and was expec lo It on mo or ovenlna a ml _._...__._...__..__-- IIIAV! BIGIBTIATION innit - - N 28.- men, wean‘: a-nduzlilildren have been” iii-poses 2nd National Ian. Ministry of inbor Service since wsr be- _ r re istered for various t") Ilinl in glider tactics, being rushed at British alr- troop-carrying planes are seen In ever ’ ' 1 numbers. Liberation ls Nearer Than Nazis Expect NEW YORK, July 1_-i—(AP) -Francc was told tonight by Interior Secretary Haorld Ickm that liberation from Germany would come Bonner than the Nazis expect. “The eternal spirt of Franco mocks the efforts of the Nazi assassins and the Fascist ruf- cns.” Ickcs declared in a | eech prepared for a Bvzstille sy mass meeting sponsored b)’ ‘Franco forever. “France's Cal- vary will oorns to an end--ar.d than the assassins think." Words written by Thomas Jefferson are as irtzs today u! they were 127 yours ago, Irkos asserted, quoting them as fol- lows:- "lt is impossible that France should rest under her rrscnt oppresslons and humilntlons. She will rise In that gIEIf-tlilil strength which cannot be an- nihilated. and will fatten her fields with the blond of her enemies." Ickes declared that however long and bitter was the road ahead "the United Nations will restore freedom to France rnd to all the other lands that are under the lash of the Axis." Already France Is "straimng her muscles" Intent on brcakng her chains and springing at the onsicr of Munich," Ickcs gold. "And Hitler's F'en'.‘h pur- pets and stooges, trafiora all, have good cause to fpar the nsngeanw of outraged hvrch patriots on the rbvy of vitrory. For the day cf liberrtlon will also be a day of just retribu- lion." llrgcsllmbulance Brigade Here The possibility that the Germans might try a landing here or make some commando raids. was one nf the arguments advanced in favor of establishing a St. John Ambulance Brigade in this rovince by Lt-Col. Gerald Allison, ircctor of the St. John Ambulance Association and Brigade, Ottawa, at a meeting the Charlottetown Hotel last eve- ning, It was also possible that re- verses in the battle of the Atlantic might result in casualties which would have to be looked after here. he added. Col, Allison was speaking before members of the Provincial A. R. P. Co ttee Charlottetown sub-com- mittee A. h. P. the Canadian Red Cross corps and the st. John Am- bulance Association. gm. 1-1, H. cox, chairman of the ovinciral‘ AIhR. P, (lzgnmltfblLbfg- e 308a WES i. - dnutoedhed “by Lh-oci, n. o. Johnston. MD" Honorary President of As- Work y done here by 1 tra-i i ""°".l.".‘,“°é‘oti‘ “my ‘essecntllg of forml are Con nued on Dill . r Destructive Hail Storm Visits N. B. mrmorcTETo-lv ti-toto _ most destructive summer hail storm in years struck a seven- mile ares. centred around st. Mary's, Kent County, late today. Stones the sine of eggs fell for l0 minutes, ruining crops and bite - ing windows. One farmer counted am d panes on his property. fifty-two windows were broken at n neishborlns farm. No one was reported injured. W 1n Nelson Nazis Tighten Defences Along English Channel Rising Tide Of Anti-Ger- man Violence On'The Continent. J. We: Gallagher IONDON, July l4—-(AP)—'l'he “shadow armies" of France and other subjugatcd lands observed the Bastille Anniversary today as the portsnt of an Allied invasion, while the Germans tightened their Channel defences and Gesta c ex- ecution squads worked overt me. British bombers roaring over Northern France, Paris and Vichy, dropped 5,000,000 tneszages from Iibreign Stieretary Anthony den promising the liberation of France and aid to Nazi-enslaved millions. "We know." the messages read, "that we and the people of France will again be brothers in arms." Rising Tide Amid rising anti-German Vio- lence and sabotage on the conti- nent, s, Yugoslav government spokesman declared today that 700 Croats had been killed by the Germans in reprisal for the assass- ination of the Gestapo chief of Zagreb, a Major Helm. He was killed by a hand gren- ade thrown into his car on the main streets of Zagreb, a supposedly “safe city" in Yugoslav a, and Cllilital of an Axis puppet govern- ment. ‘The Gestapo guards ran amuck after the bombing," the spokes- man said, “shooting at everyone mflvlili! on the stteat and hurling hand grenades through nearby windows." , Mountain Front The closest thing to an Allied second front in Europe has been establLsfied for some time in the Serbian mountains south of za- greb where 100,01 Yugoslav pat- riots undcr Gen. Dr-js Mihailgvich or» war-doe a war of at‘rii.icn a.- gainst German-Italian troops. Frame her=elf was reported free of majcr violence m m; arm-l- versary commemorating the storm- itlontinuedoinpa-ge ‘Tfccl Aussies Block Axis Armored“ Counter - Blows CAIRO. July 14—(A.P)- Aus- tralian desert troops repulsed Axis armored counter-attacks aimed at regaining the dominant coastal ridge at Tel E1 Elsa-Hill of Jesus —and the R. A. F. stepped up operations today against masses of tanks and motorized equipment in the enemy is bringing up around E1 Doba. Sixteen large-scale R. A. F. oper- ations by fighter-bombers support- ed the ground forces defending Gen. Sir Claude Auchinleckb newly-won pOSIfAOIIS at the north_ ern end of the Egyptian battle- front. The serial swarms were reported to have flattened the approaching Axis tanks and motor-borne in- fantry in mass operations beam- ning yesterday, Wooden Ships For Inter-American Trade m ured. ASHINGTON. July l4-tAP)— A Rockefeller. co-crdinator of litter-American affairs, announ- ced today formation of the Inter- American Navigation Corporation w to acquire and build sailing vesscs for inter-American trade with s. loan of llll to 10,000,000 from tle Reconstruction nance Corporation. Rockefeller said the new corpor- ation's program calls for construct- lon of 100 wooden sailing vessels in the other American republics, The work is to be started. ha. idLv ss facilities are found. The ahps will be of less than 1.00- tons dead weight with auxiliary engines. He estimated the 100 vessels be able to carry approximate- y 1.000.000 tons of cargo a year and would aid substantially in maln- tcnanco of inter-Ame PI .- THE All PUR T‘ War Situation Last Night (By KIRK]! L. SIRVIPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) The Nazi war hggernaut has rolled another long stride down the Don to bring Stalingrad on the Lower Volga as close to investment as is Moscow. In the Rzhev urea, where the Germans arc alrcad per Volga 135 miles from Moscow, s Nazi dent is admll- sians. Down the Don, the foe has p In 1G0 miles of Stalingrad and the astrlde the Up- ted by the Rue;- ushed on beyond Boguchar to with- Lower Volga. He is almost in sight of a success that would split. Red armies of‘ the Southern Ukraine and Caucasus from their cclmratlues to tlie‘nort*h and east. Short 0d a miraculous Russian resurgence In the south or a suc- cessful Russian flanking effort from the Moscow central front. there seems small prospect that Marshal behind the Don-Volga line, Russian accounts make no effort to conceal Timoshenko can avoid being driven official bulletins as well as press the seriousness of his plight. Even escape behind the Hon-Volga lim- fnr Russian troops in the Don-Donet basin and svcst of ltostov in a sweeping general retreat must. be regarded as problematical while both rivers goes on unchecked. i e e the Nazi push southeastward down e e O Which way the Nazi war machine will turn if It reaches its indi- cated first goal along the Don-Volga line in knife Russia apart to the Caspian seacoast, isolating the Caucasus. ls still a. matter nf conjecture. It would seem to depend upon which is Hitler's most Iirgcni. need-tn reach oil soon tn replenish diminishing reserves, or to shorten his llncs in the east to conserve manpower for meeting an Anglo-American at- tack from the west. U. S. Navy R eports Japs Lost 20 Ships Gives Details of Month-Old Battle of Midway; Enemy Losses Included WASHINGTON, July 14- (Al-‘U-The United States Navy an- nounced tonight in a. resume of the mOlnth-Old battle of Midway that the Japanese had 10st 20 ships, in- cluding four aircraft carriers. sunk or damaged, plus 27-5 aircraft de- stroyed or lost at sea and 4.000 men killed or drowned. The official communique. first com- plete review of the historic action issued, said that American losses were the 19,900-ton aircraft carrier Yorktown, “put out of action," and the destroyer Hammann, which was torpeciocd in the clos- lng stages of the fight. "Our total personnel losses were 9d officers and 215 enlisted men." the communique said. In a description of the course of the battle which started JuneBand lasted throu h June 6 when the enemy was n full retreat there were numerous refezenceg to Amer- ican planes either being shot rlown or fa ling to return to their bases but no total of aircraft losses (was g yen. The Japanese, it was disclosed, had collected an armada of hpprux- imately 80 ships for the grand as- sault on Midway. vital outpost of the Hawaiian stronghold. The enemy apparently decided to turn back, however. at the first evi- dence of strong resistance. The naw/ said that the Japanese retreat be- “(odntiiiuetfcrfpsgs "i." Col c)“ Island Nlan Aboard Plane In Accident MONTREAL. July 14 -- (C?) — Names of four men. burned and lnjurtad when their Royal Air Force ferry command bomber crashed at nearby Lachine today, were an- nounced today. None is seriously Capt. R. V. Van San- tgn, 26. New York. pilot; Sgt. Carl Oainowski, 22, Winnipeg. second pilot; Arthur R. Mcwilliums. 21. l-‘iriticc Edward Island tliomctown unavailable), wireless operator. and illiam A, Rowe, 20, Rosemount. Que, navigator. The aircraft was destroyed by fire after the crash. No other details are available. HELD ON ROBBERY CHARGES BT- JOHNKB. Nfld» July 14—(CP Cabkfl-Slxtecn- ear-old Angus O- Leary and Fran Butler were held today on charges of bank robbery in connection with the June 30 theft of 2.300 from the Royal Bonk of Cane. a here. The money was mm ed from the tellers wicket. Police said they had recovered more than 00 per cent of the money GY EN: rican trade. pinging, f_i-_om_s_oecho_ougid_e;the_c.lty. POSE FLOUR Four Aircraft Carriers. $500,000 Fire Brought Under Control’ MIDLAND. Ont» JuIy_14—- (CP) -- Firemen tonlgh‘ brought under control a. huBB $500,000 fire in the centre of lilidlimd that destroyed 1W0 small naval craft and a 1MB“ building at the Midland be" works, as well us the Collo- dinn National Railway! station and eight houses. Midland firemen, aided I?! me departments from Barrie, 0mm, and Penctangulshene and hundreds of volllllllwl‘! checked the flames as they swept eastward towards tho Midland Shipbuilding Com- pany where other naval "9961! are under construction at this Georgian Bay port. Tons 0! water pumped from the hlrbfll‘ were poured on shipbuilding company buildings. Ag flames, lashed by a hllh wind, swept Into the all‘. hlm" drgdg o: persons climbed to the roofs of their homes to i ‘ xparks. ' ' ‘ "Y" were started as far away’ I" the martyr‘; shrine, two miles east. of here. The fire, believed to have started from an overheated heihm In the boiler room at 1110 Midland boat works, quickly’ spread to a large bulldlns where two naval craft arc un- der construction. Expect Huge Wheat Crop OVITAWA. July 14--(CP)-'I‘rade Minister MacKinnon told the Can- adian Press today that; reports from Western Canada indicated it 400.000.- 000 bushel wheat 610D mil-Elli? be harvested, while elevator storagfi available probably would not ex- ceed 200,000.00!) bushels. Mr. MacKinnon said this caused the likelihood that. considerable 1942 wheat. would have to be stored on far-ma. The minister said increased wheat storage on farms "would not be l» burl thing." hut stressed that while a 400.000.000-bushcl crop was pos- sible the actual bushelage harvested might b0 lessened by weather or other factors before all the crop was gathered. Put ‘Down Rising By Fierce Hurs NEW DELHI, India, Ju-ly 14——(AP) —Parachuic troops of the Indian army were credited by military head. quarters today with breaking up a murderous campaign of rapine and train-wrecking by the I-Iurs. a tribe of bearded. fanatical Mos- lcms who have spread terror in Sbvl Province. near India's turbulent northwest frontier, Hundreds of Hurs have been ar- rested and 2'1 executed by military I authorities. A major stiongliold nf the Hurs was taken by parachute troops who dropped dmvwn into the Mnkhf Dhund. the “honey swamp" The parachutlsts‘ only casualties were two heat prostratiom and one Qrllned ankle e To Important Soviet Centers‘ Press Continues To Call ForSecondl Front; Warns Serious Danger Threatens l/Vhole Country. 19 Graduate Nurses Obtain B.N. Degrees Nineteen rsdualo nurses. from three Islan Hospital schools of Illllsmir, “Hesuccessful 111 obtain- ing their Registered Nurms degree, it was announced last night by Dr, I. J. You. Secretary of the Board of Examiners. The examinations were written July 1, 2 and 3, The successful candidates were Iraduates of the Prince Edward Isl- and Hospital and the Charlottetown Hospital in Charlottetown and the firiiéice County Hospital at Summer- The total mark possible in the examination was B00 and a uiark of 4B0 was needed to pass, Successful candidates in rdeg of merit, with their marks in rockets are as follows: Mary Shea. Indian River (726). Minnie MacPherson, New Pea-tn (702). Catherine MacDonald, Pisquid 11st. (698) Frances Steele. Casoereaux (692). Evelyn Maciilunon. Trscadie Audrey M. Campbell. Alborton (686). Jean Enman. Charlottetown Myrtle Cairns. Greenfield (6 Hilda. Cotes, Milton (673) Cordelia Harrington. Sarina Vai- V 166a). Muriel T. Yeo, North 8t, Eleanor’: (004) . Constance MacFarlane, lvyedeoue Melva. Lund, Bethel (654). Evelyn MncEachern. Cardigan (631). Eleanor Phillips, Arlington (607). Charlotte Gordon. Charlottetown (603). Josephine Greenan, Klnkoza (594) Bertha Thompson, Dunstaffxiatzte (583). _ Dorothy Baker. Kensinzton .5131. Tax To Stick 0n Penny Candy UITAWA. July l4-—(CP)—A de- termined but fruitless campaign to induce Finance Minister Isley to exempt “penny pieces" from the 30 per eent tax on candy was a 1115:11- light of today's disccttsslon by the House of Commons in ccmmittee on the budget resolutions. The appeal W115 made by Conserv- ative Ilousc Iicaclez- Hanson and others 1‘(‘]1‘.‘(‘<(‘l1llt1g government and opposition forces, some arguing on behalf of those “ho make and sell penny packets and some on behalf of the chief customers for this type of sweets-tho small children. Mr. Fslcv cnirl he could not "get worked up" O\'(‘r tho nrtztmtent. that. chilrlrcn would be cll-‘z-zlmlnntcrl against mid he bclievot the makers and sellers of ctuwlv would be able to (lispnso of all that count be pro- duced under the strznr rationing regulations. The tax is on tlir- mrmufactuwrs.‘ level and if passed 1110111.! to the cnnstimrr would mean that a penny: stick of randy mizht have to be sold for two or three cents. Mr. llslcy did not believe this. would work n him - strip, ‘It meant. about. $500000 rov- cntic on the pcniay pierce: alone and the who'd cmvlv (or was expected to yield about 37.000000 a year, Hanson To I Continue 14-—-(CP)---.C0n- OTTAWA. July lervatlve House Iczicier Hanson considers himself "duty bound‘ to continue lending tlu: olliclnl oppo- sition until Rt. lion. Arthur hieigli- en announces his titans, ‘llic Cuna- dian Press was informed today, Chosen National Conservative Leader last fall, Mr. Mcighcirs at- tempt to enter tlic House of (Inm- mons and take over leadership thrre was unsuccessful amt Mr. Hanson has continued ic lend thc Gilli-wolv- ativee. a task which ho utul-sriook following the gcticml election of 940 (683). 70). Wlitle It was nmtle clear iozlav that. Mr. Himmm ls‘ ])l'(‘]).ll'I.‘(l 1.1 carry on until M1‘. Mai '-ll’ll In". owkcn the fueling st llvtl to be that some (lecisloit buuriin; on fu- ture leadeisiiip would bo lflutlfi .0081. (By Eddy Gilmore, Assoc- iated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, July 15—(Wed- fl€$dill’)-(AP)_-— A crush- ufg German drive imperilled nearly 600 miles of Russia's front. early today, but the Soviets said the Red army, still is fighting savagely in tlie_Voronezh sector after killing and wounding more than 35,000 Nfllll the" h 10 days. The Soviets said their troops were taking hammer blows both at. Voronezh and Boguchar to the south in the 17°" Valley. At the latter point the Russians again re- treated _to new pqsitigng after being almost trapped In a Nazi oncirclemeng n. tempt. Besides the enormous oss- ualiies suffered at Voron. "h, the Germans were said to have lost 157 tanks, 341 anti-tank and field guns and machilleglllls. and hundreds ofmsllllgliv gvagons. 9 9 id n munlque dids 3g: Hwrfihlnyfifi. "lgvnnt changes in the fighting Vt ch extended to thg Rghev n”, nolrathtwilslt or Moscow. u er I. to minimlzi: tliesogrglristylhg t??? 1111mm. Instead soviet commenta- tgrs emphasized the peril and call- 9 "D911 ill llie f . 0nd front i; ‘the swegtopen a we "The bottles on the eastern "on; are the battles for New York m4 London." one Moscow radio an- nouncer said, MlllliDle threats were lng fast to hlghl dustrial, strategicol and psycholo- 810111 objectives from the rim on the north Caucasian ares to Moscow front itself. Headlines flung atop the mast. heads of ne-‘tvspspers told the m4 ("my that serious danger threat-- ens your country." and pleaded for ever-stronger blows to stop "the oft-rushing enemy)‘ ‘OTHERS of both Communist party and runny-Pravda and Red develop- ImPOrtent in- Star-urgentl_y_sounded the 59¢- (Continued on page 3, C01 3) l S - WHERE CANNIBAIS Now use V\\0QE‘($ roe. APPtattzt-zas High tide this afternoon at 12.24 and tonight at 11.36. Sun sets this QVOITIIIIZ at. 7.44 in‘ rises tomorrow morning at. 4.27- CAR FERRY SERVICE DAII." EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — Lcnvc 9.25 a.m., 1.00 p.m., 4.45 p.m., 7.55 mm. n-m., 3.15 p.m., 6.45 p.m.. 9.10 11-m- SUNUAY SERVICE Leave Cape Tormentlon -— 11.00 (May 3 to Dec. 21 inclusive) Leave Borden 9.00 a. m., 6.45 p.111. Leave Tormcntion 10.15 mm» 8.00 pm. P. E. L-N. S FERRY SERVICE Lcavc Wood Islands 7.00 n.ln.. 11.00 a.m., 3 p.m. lmive lfaribou l a.m.. l ll-m- PW’ AIR SERVICE 5.30 p.m. Cbarlotieinwn- Snmmerside- Mom-ion Leave (‘harlnitciovm 0-35 n. In.: 12.1’; p. m. c Summer-side 7.10 n. rn.: 1.20 l7. - Leave Moncton I1 a. m.: and 0.10 p. m. Dally except Sunday.