MAXIMS or a HIRE MAN J llltga plteutths “s” ‘%5j& y!!! n azis IIIIIIJ Italians See Allied Invasion In ‘y ROBERT E. BUNNELLI Associated Press Staff Writer LONDON, June 1'! (AP)—ll‘ront- y“; supply shortages born of Allied sir attrition were reported today to have forced the Germans to call off a scheduled Russian offensive. while their unhapp Italian partners looked anxious y at what the Rome radio described as a fleet of “many landing craft concentrating from African coasts toward Pantcllerin." On this same cheerless day for up Axis, new difficulties were re- d in Rumania and a Turkish diplomatic source in Beme. Swit- lerland, said the Turkish Ambas- ndor had been‘ recalled to Ankara from Nazi-controlled Vichy in ro- iest against Gestapo restrict one upon the embassy. .111 anti-Axis Iraq, Premier-Gen. iiuri Pasha Es Said was reportoll in a Berlin broadcast to have issued ui order of the day to his troops. calling sttenti to an approach- iria "hour oi decision and active service." The Berlin broadcast. re- corded by the Associated Press, quoted an Ankara dispatch as say- log that this development made it lble that "the Anglo-Saxons in near future will launch a_mil- tary action from the Levant. "The Germans. after a quarrel of iish mmsnders. decided not to ihk another all-out drive against dis Russians this summer. but were unable even to carry out a limited offensive in the Oral sector sched- iiisd for June 1d because of short- ages, said -s foreign source with U.S. Coal Dispute Remain Unsettled WASHINGTON. J1me 1'1—(AP) .111; war labor board adjourned late today without reaching a de- rision on the underground trllvfll pa issue of the soft coal wage dis- w . The four- public members of i-hc board planned to confer further to- riiglht on the case and the board vi resume its deliberations at 10 am. tomorrow. No official source would eXvlnin the reason for the delay, Earlier to- iisy. board members had expressed the hope they would reach a vote today before adjoumment. CDMING EVENTS —|1_ "Dance-Prench River Hall N110 18th. Lou Holmes, lsgusic. "rcomeatodn. lékgoncerjt in ne , a , une lll-h. y t '1' ‘ ‘i-is-is. "Dante in Sea View Hall to- lllshi. under auspices of Malueque hoop. 6-18-11 "See "The Maid from Missouri" ll Fort Augustus Hall, Friday, June is, s l8 ii, "Murray Harbor Shipping Cillb ‘Mfilliit hogs Monday nfterl-ioo". lune 21st D. R BIO ks. S 6')’- ay o 6-15-11. "Free Sound Movies, Hunter liiiei- Thursday 1 P. M. and 8.30. New‘ ivilisnirc Friday. a and aso 7- 1i. ilational Film Banal.“ 31 inn Monda 21st Ill store will c use T5... oven rig at lll oclock except ssturda and "I? Wednesday at noon untl fur- l-litr notice» G. C. Green, "Noticg_ "All d Freetown lldi ~ '“ _ n u 0\!l:.E€l1‘ll'ORtiOl‘dll11y in Bede J. Community wit and Wednesday, 1nd 23rd at 2.30 and .00 P. M. “Freetown on Thurs ay. June , ll 8-00 P. M. and Friday, All‘: 26th at no and aoo r. M. m. lllion is absolutely free and m‘ Program lasts about 45 minutes mgdw ich refreshments will be For income Tax Payers’ Convenience F» u» baueflt r Iail You and others w)‘: .02“. ‘uni "l9 Tin of- _ i"! l. Q Char ttetown 1O I. I. list to m u“ Ina ssni. Making Axis Partners Have New Worries. Designing Big Cargo Plane In Canada OTTAWA. June l7 —(CP)—- Munitions Minister Howe told the House of Commons tonight that the work cf designing a four- engined plane for future Can- adian transport work has start- ed but that production is at least two years sway. Mr. Howe made this state- ment after he referred to a now cargo-carrying plane cf “Trans- Oceanio type" which was being made now and would soon be coming out of s Canadian fac- tory. His Parliamentary assistant, Lionel Chevrier (Lib. Stor- mont), declined to comment on the Minister's statement but elsewhere It was learned that this cargo-carrying plane is a version of the Lancaster, now being made at M-alton, Ont. the first to be teat-flown soon, A reliable Informant fold The Canadian Press that it l! the intention to turn out. some 'Lancastera with mmlncflflfl fuselages-lnsfoad of bomber ‘inelagea. Yesterday Mr. Howe said outside the House that the Mal- ton. 0nt.. Lancaster plant would supply the planes for Canada's new Trans-Atlantic air service. scheduled to start early in July. Presumably it will be the commercial version of the Lancaster that will ulti- rnaiely be used. After referring to the plane of "Trans-Oceanic type" now be"'~ ‘""lt Mr. Howe ssld'— "But we are doing something that has never been done be- fore. We are designing a nlane wh'ch will be all-Canadian sml which we think will be the plane M the future.” The Minister was answering questions about alroralt pro- duction from .I.G. Dlcfenbaker (Pres. Con. Lake Centre) who questioned why Canada ‘tas not exuaridlrw. aircraft nrodnrtlnn andsettinr info nrodustlon of cargo carrying planes. li- Bishop Wells To Visit Maritimes OTTAWA, June 17 (CD-Brig. G. A. Wells, principal Protestant chaplain of the Canadian armed forces, returned today from a three» week visit to army and navy chap- iallis in Quebec and the Maritimes. Bishop Wells said he was “very much impressed" by the work be- lng done by the chaplains. During his tour he conferred with chap lains. visited new chapels, and held confirmation services. Plane Crashes O i . .. filneal _ o. his: 2.2.22: or... a C.A.P'. here were kfiled this aftcfllwli when their training lane crashed at Pacific Junction, b miles from “'35s of them killed was PO. Louis Raymond Bissvn. Hull. Que. who was thrown clear of the machine when it crushed. The name of the second lliiltlm. lilo l Canadian waa not. released this \\i. I, The Pe CHARLUVFIUUWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JUNE 18. 1943 UIIIIIJ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Inequalities- Must Be . Corrected B! JOHN LeBLANG Camdian Press Staff Writer HALIFAX, June 1'1 (CW-In- equitlss in Canada's economy must be corrected after the war or "half the people will drift into commun- ism and the other half into Fas- cism.’ Hon. John Bracken declar- ed at a public meeting here tonight. “And then we would have war again," the Progressive Conserva- tive leader told his audience in a hotel ballroom as he reached the half-way mark on his 10-day tour of Nova Scotia. Mr. Bracken said the country's major practical problem of the post- war period would be that of keep- ing up the level of the national in- come. Canada must try to achieve in peace what she was achieving in war. He felt the Dominion had no na- tional ills that could not be reme- died by co-operation. "On this tour of mine," he said, "I have discov- ered a thousand problems, for each community has its own peculiar conditions. “But I know now that the heart of the nation is sound and, while there are many sore spots, it has none that can't be cured if we can get. the feet of the nation under a common table." One object?» that could be reached by this means, he asserted, was the achievement of the long-sought Canadian unity. The new party leader came here tonight from Truro. He stopped overnight at; that town. and earlier today s nt several hours at De- bcrt mi itary comp. hear Truro. What he saw at the vast encamp- ment is a military secret, for press representative's accompanying him on his tour were not permitted to‘ enter the establishment with him. Tomorrow. Mr. Bracken will head for the Annapolis Valley. heart of the province's apple-growing in- dustry. Prom the orchard country, he will round the western shoulder of the province and swing down along the South Shore through Eastern Canada's major commer- cial fishing communities. Mme. Chiang Leaves After 3-Day Visit By JAMES McCOOK Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA, June l7 (CP)—Mme. Chiang Kai-Slick, who has seen the lung horror of the war iii China, today left with Canadians a warn- in that the Japanese have sub- st tutcd cajolery for brutality and now appeal to Chinese, as eopla of the same race. to aid hem in fighting westerners. The wife of the Chinese Gener- alisslmo spent half an hour at a press conference today, before hcr departure for Montreal, and packed that half-hour full of precise facts and first-hand information. She pictured the Chinese people- "my people," she called them warm- ly-as filled with the-will to resist even after years of war. The press conference was mic of the final appointments of an no pointment-filled three-day visit to the capital. Mme. Chiang came here from the United States. where she arrived about six months ago for medical treatment. She asked newspapermen in the resence of Prime Minister Mac- enzie King. to tell the Canadian neople how much she had enjoyed her visit. Mme. Chiang spoke of "my peo- ple" as the most reasonable n the world. eager to learn of the imple- ments of agriculture and the cod production methods of the western world: but, at the moment, anxious for the implements of war—air- planes, big guns and other weapons guill- ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA. Jilly l'l—i1lP>- nan. Mosquito Bombers "In the Malta force-one of Allied ‘sir arms whi n have in a Malta communique, while head- quarters here was announcing that bad weather had rmlnde l-Yll ""1 nonadrilhwfilgfuthenirabwxtim?‘ u or men _ "om m}: and re- more area, only routine Pll-‘mi connaissanco waa P091510 Willi’- day. “fit (Obnifilldé on E6 3) Bad Weather Curtails Aerial Blows At Italy The M ultos hit the railway sidlnga an docks of Termini-Im- erese. a north Siciian port, with h bombs and cannon fire and t . At sea, an Axis des rover escort- ing a convo was fiunncd and there was a brli ant ash mam; s minesweeper also waa raked with f . To the id Axis lanes previousi re rted shot downpin hea Allies of ensivc air action over onday night and Tuesday a headquarters announcement ay added five enemy craft for a total some d l1 in that period. _ _._->--w-_.’.__ 1 ——~—-—--- _ --_-- =4 ' (Continued on Page 7 Col. 4) testimony to the great and planes over both ends of the Axis. a pledge of victory. do! their raids of Frlda shot down at least bases and facilities- coet of 24 bombers. lustrated is shared full slnn front indicate tha This ma. been withhc d. the scrubs. ITIIIIIZ CanceIOffensiVe Because 0f Supply Shortages ',’,l.@'< 10 PAGES ight By Glenn Babb, Associated Press War Analyst News from two battle zones half s world apart brings convinc growln superiority of Allied airmen an o other factor in this war is so sure Over Guadalcanal in the South Pacific American airmen on Tues- met a great Js anese air armada, prohsbhyl centration of aircra t in the Pacific war, and Bombers for a loss of six planes. The 1340-1 toll s caks for itself. it waa one of the most devastating air defeats by any be Word of this battle reached Wnsbi tary Henry Stimson was disclosing that and Sunday on some of Germany's greatest bases 50 and probably 170 German fighters. This was noi done without cost. for in the Friday raids on Wllhelmshaven and Cus- haven eight heavy bombers were lost while from the Sunday attacks on Kiel and Bremen 24 fnlled to return. This five-to-onc ratio in planes means that more American airmen were lost than German, for each of the big bombers carried perhaps l0 men. But the bag of enemy fighters must. be considered more or less a bi’- roduct of the raids, whose main objective was destruction of vital enemy Stimson said it seemed likely that even the Kiel- Breruen raid was "as s whole decidedly advantageous to us" despite the the greatest single con- ot down 45 Zeros and 32 gerent in this war. ton about. the time War Secre- nlted States heavy bombers, in These happen to be American triumphs. But the superiority they ii- by the R.A.F. and recent reports from the Rus- the Red Air Force also has become more than s match for the once invincible Luftwaffe. explain why the expected German attack ln Russia has As for- the Japanese, General Kenny, United States Air Commander in the Southwest Pacific. said three months ago that apparently Japan's “first string team" of the ulr had been destroyed. The evidence now is that the second team also has been disposed of and Japan is sending in Greece, starved almost info col- lapse a year ngO. llow has a guerri- lu army fighting me Axis one pre- pared io nelp her Allieu dellvcrers when they can come. This story of Greece's comeback is the fifth in ii. $81165 On [1113 Sllllfltwll 1115108 1116 Balkans. By FRANK J. O'BRIEN (Associated Press Staff Writer) ANKARA, Julie i7 — (Ad?) — Greece has secretly organized a nation-wine urmy and lg llgliLlIlg back at ner conquerors without waiting for Allied support, Axis forces, scattered behind de- fensive ramparts from Crete to Greece's northern borders, watch- ing constantly for the ships and planes of an Allied invasion fol-cc, nie hampered, nalrleo and haunted by ille gliosu oi me little country alliey thought they had killed in lil- Greece, with British aerial support, had repelled ltalys invading forces wnen Germany, with Buigar help, kliiied ner in the back. "inen she was subjected to a program of cie- liberate starvation for more than a. year, until she reached a state approaching permanent collapse. But, during me last year, the ghost of the Greece which defeated ltaly has arisen. Andart (guerilla) forces were organized at first in scattered localities, their on a re- gional basis. Tney specialized in annihilating blows at military convoys on the mountain roads, in blasting important railroad and lllgIlWflY bridges, and in attacking Axis munitions dumps, airports and CHCBXILQHIEBLS, - The". last May 20, Andart be- came u national movement. Its re- gional leaders met secretly and or- ganized a high command which i-Dcrzltcs through five divisional cunlillundcrs in Macedonia, Thrace, Central Greece, the Pcloponesq anq bDlIllS. Crew's Andarts. operato sfipccgrsately under General Mari- iwith food conditions improved 9 a. if. C.W.L. lie-Elects Mrs. P. J. McCarry HAMILTON, June 1'l—(QP)—Mrs, P. J. McGarryof Kitchener, was rs. elected president of the catholic Willllelfs iii-flue at the concluding sesilon of the 33nd annual conven- tion of that body tonight. Other officers named mcludgd Mrs. G. S. Marceau, Quebec, Second Vice .. PlY-Blddflli Mrs. Frank P. Ncil Halifax. fifth Vice President. Creek Army Ghost Is Back To Haunt Axis Guerillas Organized-On Nation-Wide Scale FightBack While Awaiting Invasion. 11.8. Airmen Win Victory Dver Japs WASHINGTON. June 17 (AP) -United States airmen knock- ed 7'1 Japanese planes out of "in sky over Guadalcanal ls- land Wednesday in one of the greatest and possibly one of the most significant air battles of the war In the South Pacifig Only six United States aircraft B" missing as a result of the engagement. A Navy Department communi- nue today announcing this l3- to-l ratio contained no indica- tion as to the Japanese objec- tive in risking so large a force of bombers and flgflterg in m; Southeastern Solomons. where they have been consistently de- feated ln the air. Enemy planes shot down dur- ins the encasement consisted 0f 32 bqmbfll’! Ind 45 Zorn fighters. The total strength of the enemy force was not re- ported. Way Ciearediilo; Steel Settlement OTTAWA. June 1'1 (CP)-C. H. Millard. national director of the United Steelworkers of America (0 1- 0-) said tonight after a meet in! of officials of the U.S.W.A. with Labor Minister Mitchell and other labor department officials that he believed "the wav has been cleared for a satisfactory settle- ment of the wage adjustment prob- lem at. Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. Syd- ricy. N.S.. and Trenton, N. s. Labor Department sources said there had been "a very satisfactory meeting“ with union officials but gave no details of any settlement proposals. U-BOATS inhuman UJNDON, J1me 1'1 - (CP) - An informed British observer said to. day that Gormanys submarines were ‘Wink s0 badly ma/uled in the Atlan- tic that they were being withdrawn l-° 5°" when! ihev can set a. meas- ure of protection, There. he said they likely will who would not per- Drflvc to be troublesome. The observer, mit. the use of his name, said great 51mm“? Bxainst submarines in tho Bast weeks indicated that the U. be ag-‘elnllnd ‘been measured but not 1 King George Inspects Ships In lllediterranean ALLIED l-LEADQUARITERS. DI NORTH AFRICA. J1me 15 —(D€' layedi-(AI-V- The King today 1n- spected units of the combined Bri- tish and American fleet. in the Mediterranean and met some of the war correspondents who cover- ed the rout of the Axis armies in North Africa. Hi5 Majesty met the correspond- ents aboard a British warship. Thirty of them stood in line and introduced themselves as the King ‘walked past them, stopping to ask questions and recognizing many oi’ the names he heard. "I know your name very we11,." he said to some, "I have rend many of your dis- patches." The King spent more than an hour among detachments oi sailors and marines lined up between ware- houqis and the water front before he boarded an American warship 1o TOVIPW the personnel. Wearing the uniform of an Ad- miral of the Fleet and decorations which recalled his part in the First Gl"£’£\l War when he served with the Royal Navy in the Brittle of Jutland, the King boarder] an Am- erican battleship to spend about 20 mlnules with the men. As he was piped over the side a spontaneous “God save the King" rose from the rinks and three creeks echoed over the harbor. As he left the British ship, moor- ed alongside the American vessel, the Bl'il0i‘lS"fC11DWOd the traditional Royal Nzivy custom of waving their caps above their heads as they cheered the Royal visitor. Before visiting the warships the King was received by Admiral of the Fleet Sir Andrew Browne Cunningham, naval commander-in- ciiiof of the Mediterranean. Sir Andrew presented vice-Admiral H. K Hewitt and Rear-Admiral J. L. Hall, U S.N.. as well as Rear Ad. miral Sir Clinton Danhy of the Royal Navy and Gibson Graham. chief of the British Ministry of ‘Transport. His lvfaiesty also inspected mem- bers of the Womens' Royal Naval Service many of whom had been on tolflnedord ships while en route to North Africa. Brief an? LONDON. June 18 -(Friday) .- (CP)—A London postofflce was hit by “oil drum" bombs early today during a short-lived German air attack on the City's Metropolitan area. Earlier reports said some persons were injured when a building was struck. Shortly after the alert was sound- ed. one explosion was heard in the area. ‘Iris all-clear followed shortly. Raid Dn Germany ? LONDON, Julie 18 —(Friday) - (CP)—Berlin overseas radio trans- mission was interrupted at 1:43 A. M. B S31‘. (7:43 P.M. E.D.T.—8.4r3 RM. A,D.T Thursday) for "tech- nical reasons," Reuters News Ag- ency reported. This German radio silence usually i; the forerunner of allied air raids on the continent. PRISONERS WORK LETHBRIDGE, Alta, June 1'1 (C P)—Abullt 5.000 prisoner's of ivar now lire helping sugar beet farmers through ll critical liibor shortage in Southern Alberta and are doing a "good day's work," Col. E. S. Doughty of Ottawa, liaison officer for the federal department of labor. said today. Study Better OTTAWA, June 17-(6?) —Re- venue Minister Gibson told the House of Commons today that while there is no possibility of u man earning less by W0f1€lll§ more under present tax lows, the epart- merit of National Revenue is mak- ing studies with a view to finding more satisfactory ways of taxing overtime earnings, li Mr. Gibson and Munitions Minister Howe denied statements by C.E. Johnston (N.D. Bow Riv- er) that absenteeism was cailsrti by the tax lavrs taking away nll or more than the extra money earned by working longer hours. "There is no combination of cir- cumstnnccs llllfllll‘ the ilrosr-nt lnws which ponnlizcs n 1min for work- ing infiro," said Mr, HLIWI‘ “It's im- possible fnr a man to work more and ciirll less. A man cnrlls more if he works more." Ho said Mr. Johnston did not iln- dcrsiand the tax laws and asked hernias MAXI M6 OIA MERE MAN Vice kknowing she is ugly, pills on Expect lubserlptlan Delivered, 80.00 llll. "M; other Provinces l ILIJ. IIJI- PRIOBABLE FIIIIIQ Details To Be Released Unofficial Reports Indicate Canadian Ships Part In Battle. B SCOTT YOUNG Canad an Press Staff Writer LONDON, June l7 (CP Cable)- The most encouraging news of the war from the battle cf the Atlantic is expected to be released soon in a. statement considered certain to include an account of a Canadian escort group's outstanding success in one of the greatest anti-sub- marine battles ever fought. When these details are releas- ed the public will get the best news so far from that sphere of the war-a sphere still dom- inating Allied strategy despite the rising flood of evidence that amphibious operations elsewhere are imminent. The fighting record of one Can-i adian escort group in particular ‘is; expected to take a major place ln this heartening account. The dc- talls are not expected to come right up to date but will cover operations this group had just completed when I visited its ships at a northern Ireland port about a month new The announcement. it is confi- dently predicted, will give battlc honors to some Royal Canadian Navy ships and others o crating with Canadian groups an usinr; some Canadian personnel. Included in the account will be names fam- ous to followers of the exploits of Canada's livelier-weight navy whose conveying record is one of the bcs» of any of the United Nations. In short, the announcement is expected to be one of an important: victory at sea-a victory in "h" the R.C.N. took a full share and for which it will receive official all‘ probation outsléilllliktgll? li- llilii We‘ i n e war. vklgiislayorxilyeeofgicial indication of ti‘: statements signifiqince comes the release of a 81399611 mm" by Air Minister Sir Archibald Sinclair to RAJF. men in North Africa dur- ing his visit there with the Kins. that submarines sunk or damaged last month generally eqllflllm ‘he number of new ones Germany W15 able to send to the trade K111565- Says- Canada llas Room For 35 Million TORONTOJJunQ 1'1 (CM-Can- ada has room for 30,000,000 people, Canon W. W. Judd, general social service secretary for the Church of England in Canada, said in an address here today, urging that Canada take her “fair share of refugees." Canon Judd was addressing the 50th annual conference of the Na- tional Council of Women. who earlier heard Hon. J. L. Ilsley, fed- eral Finance Minister, ask that Canadian women use their influ- ence to restrain urchase of non- essential commod ties. Dr. George Davidson, executive director of the Canadian Welfare Council, and Agnes Roy, assistant to the super- visor of national housing registra- tion, also were guest speakers. Finance Minister Ilsley asked that Canadian women establish two new social codes: to make it a social error to buy anything unnecessary or non-essential, and to make re- demption of victory bonds and wnr savings certificates "not the thing to do." Method Of Taxing Overtime ‘him not to make statements "mis- leading and dangerously mislead- ing" to workmen without looking into the law carefully. “There are erio h destructive stories abroad now without havin them spread from this House o Commons." said Mr. Howe. Clarence Gillis (C.C.F Cape Breton South) said where income tax was deducted at the source on weekly enrnin s on the asis of overtime pay ghe actual deductions sometimes res lted in a man rc- cieving less t an he would if no overtime were worked, "At the end oi the year you can get a refund if you can get hold of . ono of those forms and get a cou- pic ui lawyers to fill it out for you." lie said, Tllc system niilitatod against, the 1 whole basis of seeking increased war production on an overtime ‘(Continuedl on’ Page}? Had Big BUiiETiN Lommli- June 18 (mas _ Yi The Roma radio in s. brood- cast recorded b)‘ Reuters Nrwg 31mm" S?" only iodsvili-is frontier of T“, ewe southern Cologne ls- Bombed For 116th Time By RICE YA y ~ associated Press Sitzanwrjtgr was pound d - ° Y“ night by lgfllllli9rfllhslflllgg ;éf:i)i'n3€?b€i'$. sent. to flatten any dustries céloli lll inc vital u-m- 11k banks U! tgélfglyigaeted nlollg the Other pre-inv i I up all three siaiificinfirfkélfgfiggf convoy and attac ed rail transport an the continent in earlv morning svgggliin and Alum?‘ Pl-lnvs kept continueg $11M durmg me day m the Axis. 8 Punishing blows on w...“”.'"$¥. éimmlil“; e - _ tackcrs met racolmpgiiiltisgélciy- that“ anti-aircraft fire but that the Ger? glgzfiegflll lll! a good many night; e Air Ministry . Ply that RAF. bonilijgrguggigsiilgd oblectives at Cologne and else. where in the Rhineland," but m; 2min: twas undoubtedly carefully come ° destroy reconstruction in municntioris. ammunition plants, chemical works, power at? tions and other war-important op- erations in the industrial city. The foray by the HEAVY bombers, coming after s. Tuesday night bunk ll: the hammer blows on German ....‘i"'.i;h.$°ii..“. '1'“ owl”? W“ 0s , - istry said. e r Mm Every one of the three ships m ilie vonvov caught off the coast of Holland was damaged, one so so. Vere]? 1t Aorobablv sank, by Ty- Dhoons an Hurribombers. iii: W162 Psoasfniori CRlE$ ' LEAP Firm’ AN‘ Loon in the 11.nov, High and tonight at 12.35. Sun sets this evening at sin Mm rises tomorrow morning at 5,114, Full moon, June iii. 1.14 AM Summerside tide l8 minuzlp- imor than Charlottetown. tide this morning n‘ ll o; CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — lonvo 0.05 a. rn. I rn. and 4.55 n. m. cave Cape Tnrnlrrliinc-ll :\.m 3.05 p. m. and 6.30 p, m. 1 DAILY All! SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAY) Charlottetown - Sumnicrsllle — Monricn Leave Charlottetown 7.50 a. m i 12.30 m. 4.30 m. Arr vr Chnrln lrimvn 1.10 p. m. 5.45 p. m. 7.05 p. m. l N. S. FERRY SICIKVIIT". INCLUDING SUNDAYS loave- Woorl Islands -- 7.00 u. m. and 2.30 p. m. Leaves Caribou-KOO s. rn. 4.30 p. In nlv’ ( i \_.~__ i-T ~r we,»