OIL hsdssnlllsl g in cvgymflle Mums Maris MAN 1...?“ Qbsrlnttchwn Gnrllsl Ions! nl EE . Two uurdln, Ioundsd ill! F - Covers Prince Edward . Island Like the Dew CHARIJOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAZDECEMBER 30, 1942 13s callus Is Expected fr.» Visi Ottawa Shortly British, Japs i Cldsh In Burma Island Officer IONDON. D00 38-(AP)-8 clasn between British mg‘ Japanese Arrival Date In ILS. Not Made Public WASHINGTIDN. DEC. N—(CP)— "W" Wm’ President Roosevelt confirmed m- as miles o mo: Ansvlb. 1h- t“ fiw» ‘" ww- w-wwnsr swans e $§fiu.-,"“f§d,m “u? 1| gum; England, will com; to the United ~ z a» . o» ' I - down firmly on than soil-Wild cat-y" States soonéw 1 1n mdmon to depriving ms Jo»- Gen- De lie is crawled to Y - mess oi a valuable oasc from which m ms cAsfil-ure 01:3 ah W0 d ilvc the‘ El l» infield from which towunlsh fhl enemy along tbs Irra- acdv River 4mm scangoon to Mandalay. It was Omphfli-Rd, however, that tho cla-su at Rateoaung probably represented no more than a "latic- scals raid" by Gen. wavelrs troop! and that the main British offensive sit Ottawa also after his Wadlim- ton stay. Mr. Roosevelt told s plus con- ggena l}: expected to see tihc ne re soon. ‘fold there were his visit had been delayed at the rcqllh" 01 Admiral William D. Ileahy, Presl- dentlal Chief of Staff, Mr. Roose- velt nid that was not true, 1-10 added that De Gaulle hold not bw-‘i to homo India, HALIFAX, motion of (Ca-pt. Bur-net enl live service at the outbreak of the c5819 Wit-h Island High- landers iBlack Watch). He served with the battalion in various de- pots in Nova scotia and was lat- er transferred to the Prince Ed- ward Island Com any of the North Nova Scotia Hig landers at Am- herst. He went oversesslalith was shortly afterwards transferred ls liaison officer on the head- the Highland Brigade. Since then he has served as an instruction officer with the Flo-enforce- war, he then belh in 8 thc Prince Edward battalion in September quarters staff Divisional Infantry ment Unit in England.) EDMONTON Effective Jan. it was announced todiw Kins. chairman of the liquor Control Board. Coming Events 01 "Special Entertainment Stewart Friday, "TaLklcsF-MOXIWIUQ, Saturday, l 13-30-31 ' "Talkies-Semis Monday. "Farmers wishing "Auction and Dance Hall, Wednesday, Dece Illllvlew Orchestra. “Loading hogs 1 P. M. Thursday. Decem c c ——'___ key wéfifsylnhfglksiffvlfili"slllli until view Orchestra. "Notice-will not my Ill-in m Wt . Burke. Phone 1 "We are ‘l’? (ztgickens ggliggeiglflrlnrglsrlg‘: vtalue. We or wr o “iii Bwrssc. 1M. r "creimud Oreameries will unlosd Albgk Tlldlfl - srmers are sdvised to inks °ii car and save storage space. Hr oi oilcskc at and W 30m Fednesdly, nqvn. Mcliwen and ' l‘ .__...__. "Notice-Dui- in: Oinistsnss Iofld New Y ' a, gqguar has" AIM.“ mi n "Id A. C. (INCH. t0 li°8s advise McGuigan and Boyle 12-10 I20 80 at Oolvllic her-gist "D ed, Mill i m Céiislfiifiimuw bill“ 13m b u s dress- rllclinfiowlo filly pay- Ducks and Geese. prices.‘ ens Manny's-um" so. o. o (LA-PT. W. l. BURNETT Dec. 20-—(CP)—Pro several officers who formerly served in M.D. No. s and now are overseas has been ’ ncunced by Otto/we. The! m‘ e. an- his and , Dec. 20 — (C?) — 4, all Alberta liquor m] stores and llctnsed premises operate on an eight-hour dry blacks, v . will ' Alberta m. ib-so-zi. 12-30-2i. ship Vernon r 80th. 12-20-21. until so-m. 2-80-11 12-39-21 l 1'6- Island I-lI-tl II-D-IL Burma viousiy hm Observers Delhi, Gen. misc-u: um be ttcnd fwd it! hone or ers ovcr lir- is- Io recapture lsisrma and reopon rcocd t by firmlislismrpflio u.» smash mom already have penctrawd the Cinna- win River Valley w"? 01 Delhi, however, army etting eve day in bettervgassi on to 1133 the J_ snese consistently and successfully. ‘lmfébn e Vie.’ inclined to dis- tne Axis-control- tcd-sy at New Wavsll said merely his to a 9-?‘ n.v|.c.s, Iroquois ls Commissioned -.___. (cssfflmuurr-u" lulu‘ i ‘clue-n the 0b- the Ohm Q, bl! Mandally. it? Recent communion. ions 1mm New have mentioned vimous patrol action in the Chin l-li . In s statement delayed bu!‘ that his ‘trill hid 5°91‘ ‘ c . will?! Frpessfimit oorlvfergred earlier on m; day with two representatives of Gen. Henri Giraud. French 111C" Commissioner in North Africa. but he said there was no discussion then of the question of French 1m- I-Ie said he talked with Cifli- M- m. Bethouurt and J, L. Dubreuii about supplies for French troops lh North Africa. More U. S. Troops Land At Dakar IONDON. Dec. 29 —(CP) - The Morocco radio said tonight that s second contingent of American troops had just landed at Dakar. cupled the sirdrcme there. acres the southern Atantic from Brazil. was a development of French West Africa's decision in throw in her lot with the Allied cause. One contingent of American technicians and an sunny-naval mksslon headed by vice-admiral William Glassford, Jr., arrived at Dakar last week. A BR-ITIBK PORT DOC. a — s.» eras“ — no ‘we a pyllraxfifivgg on nelwushivlpaivelg: Kamhibnsisi. 's.‘§&'bv-r' buuv w‘ ms Royal Canadian Navy has been commissioned The actual on m deckmlslrerrt publishable, be said "u" assures; u: warships quarter- but it can the vessel now is at sea manned by sn And the m: ‘s officer com- m’ 1. l-Iolmesbs o. Omar. w. . . ellrnslahllsmw" from Victoria, 0., wok over his vessel tcrrupted sounds of st work made the c the more lmpr thels shi biliulxders D cning all minus, egg/museum. christened by ee °°“n”sls'unMsl,nl§swr-m-1sw of the “a In Mayor still to Th wu‘. m flord to th battle escortowork on Russian and dsmulr, the ind thg Hlldl b; cf lnhdcn. These have as oned. Iroquois is the first vessel o! the 8.0. Malta. convoys. 2C Injured‘ In Collision LAZ Twent ed wo seriously. Msua, Dec. I — persons We?! N Dfifblfl ' 11281 tWO C!!!‘ ill!‘ adi National Rcilwu s trains col- 11.131“ head-on tom s Issue. miles west of W - 3gb. Joe Bcsrpsllimut Ont, was have suf end severe internal wies and . I , of Windsor, a fr posslb s. fractured back. Brantfc eastbound movlnltllow totheslisineo s which Ill smfwmsm in both wlsbrakdslnsndsclnsrvrss rs- Fighting French To Resume II"! of t0 1'01” m. when Con trains Broadcast wlthmtioism tomv: boson-tannins 10'“; n“ bombs ,..a ............. "i... W Dlfllfl Elli Nazi Di; Bombers Joins Allies LONDON. 13cc. 29—(AP)-- French Scmsliluid was formally made s Planting French ally to- day by Gen. Charles de Gaulles national committee and it announ- ced that Andre Bayardelle has been sent to Jibuti as Governor to ad- minister the resources of the East African colony in behalf of the United Nations. I; was the last French African posession to be severed from Vichy-except for contested Tun- asiabtwherc the issue remains in o . To Command French Forces IDNDON. Doc. l0 — (C?) — Routers News Agency said the French Army Headquarters in North Africa announced today that. Gen. Alphonse Juin, former milit- ary aide to Gen. Auguste Nogues. Govcmor-Gcneral of Morocco, has been appointed conunandcr-in-chief of French forces in North Africa. Juin thus would succeed Gen. Henri Giraud who has Mlllaced Admiral Dsrlan as High Commis- sioner in North Africa. Juin was lc ‘s commender-fn-chfef Africa when the Armistice was signed st Algiers after the Allied landing last month. ll.A.F. Fighters Cross Channel Use New Type fl-(OP)— Bomb. IONDON, Dec. While RAAJ". f htcr squadrons swept across the ch coast in snow and win winds. two Ger- man pilots mac ine-gunn le in the and bombed along the southeast mills-h Air , communique ssfd: "Mosquito planes of the bombar commend attacked glsilwsuy o m srs missfna." tones i. describe? g ‘sliver fi French West Africa. and had- oc- . French Colony 3,, mate there. I I I patrols. bower’: read lslan east coast. I O I West of Sousse, _ Rommel 's Drive. .—.__ IDNDON, Doc. CO-(Wednsdcy) -(A.P)—The Allied invasion of North Africa and Russia's great second winter offensive have blast- ed Germany's hopes of enjoying a ‘creative pause" (luring ma; cold months, the War Office said ts third anrmal review of the WM’. Linking the British 8th Army's sumac in Libya with the Tunisian OEWDWIW). the Russian offensye and‘ the Japanese failure to oust the Americans from the Solomons, gale highly optimistic review declar- "Not merely was the oriental part-nor of the Axis fully occupied and on the defensive in his own sphere at the year's end, but the European Members oi ths Axis were themselves On the defensive." The year 1942 was declared to have marked s. "significant turn- his pass g of the general strategic initiative from the Am to the Un- itcd Nations, Axis Hood Turns First signs that the Axis "might be turning to ebb" came Aug. 31. the review said, when Field Mamshal Erwin Rommel tried em us ‘ul offensive in Egypt, but it was not until the night cf Oct. 23. when Gen. Bir Bernard Montgomery's 8th Army struck the Gemmns and Italians at E1 Ala. mein that "the United Nations may be said to have begun demonstrab- ly to captune the initiative." The defeat of the Africa (lorps. the War Office said, showed the world the first results of Britain's flood in’ tht sokle s to iod ...~...."....--.a sac. ....: ‘l three ear struggle to create an army ained and equipped to fight the Germans on even terms. Today, it said, British infen-tny is s “mobile master of varied and effective weapons, confident that lit has the measure of the enemy," “It no longer is ths plodding. nuud - encumbered P, B. I. (poor bloody infantry) of Pssschendaeis nor the ineffectual gallant-s swept back by tho weight of metal to the beaches of Disnkerqilse." In Tunisia __ID_i_scusslng the cunpaign in Tu- (P tinned on page 6. Col l) ______i___ Six Prisoners In Jail Break WINDSOR. Ont, Dcc. 2C --(CP) ~81): gisoners were reported to- night have escaped from the Essex County Jail in Sandwich. They were said to have slugged s gem. now in hospital. Details of escape wens not svsilsbie 1m. mediate . mint" in (be war on land-the l (By Klrke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst) Although the gains made by the BM! Army in Russia dominate the war news, there are increasing signs that the reunited Anglo-American Fighting French Allies in Tunisia will soon attempt lo break the stale- No Inch intimation can be rec-d in French or Anglo-American bul- letlns from the scene. They have depicted for many days only give-and- takke positional struggles for tactical advantages or slashes of scouting Nevertheless, there can be small doubt that Gen. Dwight Eisen- ’ is " _ ‘ " ’ that to crush forward in force to crack the Axis bold on the Tunisian foreland. This will be dons if possible before Manuel's army fleeing from hipolitania em join forces with alr. and sen-borne Nazi comrades rushed to garrison the Bizcrte and Tunis triangle and its shirt-tall corridor down the Tun- Doubt that. Rommel aims to effect that junction in Tunisia ls tap- ldly diminishing. Fighting French sources report hLs advance elements already filtering Into Tunisia across the southeastern border. If that is so, the remnants of the once vlotory-yvreathsd Afrlcsn Corps are strung out for nearly 300 miles along the coast of Trlpolitanla from the Tunisian border to the point 1B0 miles east of Tripoli where its rear guard is In ever-retiring contact The head of the steel snaks inching its w destination is still distant more than 200 miles from the indicated south flank 0f the Allied llne humming in the Binnie-Tunis triangle, I I I I Q Q Tunisian port on the Gulf of Hammamet which ap- pears to be the main objective of the French common’ ’ Henri Giraud, Allied advancs 111105 are less than 4o mllgs "om the m» and lnterposins between Rornmel and the Tunisian forelnnd. Third Annual War Review Optimistic by Gen. Turn Of Tide Came Aug. 31 With Failure Of Man Fatally InjurcdJn Mill Accident Mr. Vernon Parsons Of Millvale Dies After Being Struck By Belt. llvllr, Vernon Parsons, 26-year-old resident o1 Millvaie was izvaliy 1n- about noon yesterday in his father's mill in that Queen's Coun- ty commruxiity. He was sisuck or. the head by a. bolt after it broke and died a half-hour later without rmalrung consciousness. Dr. J. R. Nlilmuhisoli of Hunter River was summoned but the 1r.- jured man died before the doctor reached him. His injuries included a fractured skull, The young» yflln was married at Charlottetown on December 18 to Miss Lillian Mclnnls, a neighbor girl from Millvale. Rs was the youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. John Parsons. Following the accident Royal Canadian Mounted Police at char- lotteiown and Coroner Dr. I. J. Yeo were notlfied. Dr. Yeo decid- ed m inquest was not necessary. The mill is o, combination lumber mill and grain crushing plant. Surviving in addition to h‘s grief stricken parents and wiic are two sisters and s. brother_ They are Mfrs. Sheldon Stewart. Millvsle: Mrs. Jack Hagen whoss husband is in the Army smrl who is lrlicved to he residing in Monoion, and Elmer Parsons. at Flre/nch River. Funeral arrangements were not complete last night, Unable To Handle All Air Mail UITAWA . Dec. I) — (C P) Postmaster General Mulock sci ‘mods OomrneL-oisluqrgacfwpgst- ng ween e n n 0m and North America could handle p: cent of sir mail posted in iced Kingdom for gala?! in Canada and the United As s. it, , ltt in Oreatmgilitair? “'1';- e a" mm! rssfiuélmfiwfi°d ‘i.’ $3 sifb. statsment said." a a a ' hi“ . i NC “Alfll LAUQ£ 510% (LANAUA ruraupunuosr noun M's with the British 8th Army. ay into Tunisia, if that is its Col. Full To Command New Reservebrigade HALIFAX. Dec. N~(CP)—P‘or- matiozz of a new reserve fibri- gade-the illnd-has been md. it was minounced tonight by Head- quarters of Military District No_ d. The brigade will include all reserve units in Prince Edward Ishmd, Northern Nova Scccia and Cape Breton. Headquarters will be at New Glasgow, N5. Officer Command- ing will be Lt-Ool. G. E, Full of Charlottetown, formerly 1;; com- mand of the 17th (Reserve) Ar- mored Regiment. When organization of the new formation is completed, the dis- trict will have two complete com- posite reserve brigades. For some time the 36th Brigade has been functioning with headquarters at Halifax. will have full artillery complement. In taking over his new (MUCH, which will be part time only. Lieut. Colonel Full assumes the rank of full Colonel. A native of (Xiarlobtetovlm, Col. reaching Full has had a distinguished mili- tary career. He joined the 6th Signal Section here in 1909; and was commissioned in the 82nd In- fonts-y Regiment s5 g Lieiltenant in 1911. He served in 1914 with the Composite Battalion at Hali- f ax. Iin 1915 he jréned the 106th Bazt- talion as Captain and Adjutant and served with his regiment 1m- til it was disbanded in Bigland for reinforcements He served in France with the 3rd Canadian Divisional Engineers. first as lieutenant and later as Cfl/ptaln, and was mentioned in despatches in 191B. On the reorganization of the M!- iitia after the war, he was appoin- ted second in command of the PE. I. Light Horse, and commanded the regiment from 1926 to 1931. when he was succeeded by Lit. Col. F, I. Andrew. _ ' He was AD. C. to Lord Willing- dtyn, Governor General of Canada, from 1926 to 1930; A.D.C. at Gov- ernment House, Charlottetown, from 1931 to 1939: and is now AD. C. to the present Governor Gener- al, the Eurl of Athlone. - On the formation of the PEI. Lioht Horse as a reserve regiment last June. Colonel Full took com. mgnd, and has hold this position up to the present. Death Toll Set At 36 ALMDNTE. Ont» Dec. 20 — (GP) with the death toll set officially at 36 and all the dead identified, 1n- vcstigaticn proceeded to-nlghr, on three fronts into the Canadian Pac- lllfichRallway crash here Sunday t. esrdes the dead, 165 were in. ljured Most were taken to Ottawa y special train following the crash and Ottawa Civic Hospital Officials said two of the 7B wreck patients in their cure had only the barest chalice to survive. Inquest Jon. ‘I Dr. Smirlc Lawson, chief Coroner for Ontario, was at Almonu; and it was expected he would preside at an inquest called for Jan. '7 l-Ie will hear the reports of other in. vestlgaiors — police, C.P.'R. airm ll de- iillflry have been. and will cbntlnue to a e . of flcials and the bodrd of trans rt commissioners, p0 Identification of the dead was mmbleimd onlv today, when a body in an Almontc undertaking es- tablishment was identified as that of Pearl McNabb of Kendra, Ont, and Ottawa. Earlier another pre- viously unidentified woman had been recognized as Jean Oagnon, 2.3, cf Calabogie, Ont. Identification Changed One identification was changed Both brigades will be mobile and I .__ crouch beneath his foot, and so be pcdcltnled In triumph. MAXIM! OIL MERE MAN iii- lclnlilctlou IIII meet and master and make __._ _.__._ ._—_-u- lnbllrlption Delivered 00.00 Hall. “.00; other Provinces and ILLA. 15.00, Capture Railway ATE 01?“ ENEMY AT STALINOCRAD SEALED Of Key Center Is Big Victory Twin Steel Rings Closing Around’ One Million Germans. LONDON, Dec. 29-(CP)—A British military snurcl said tonight that Russian capture of the key railroad centre of Kotelnikovski means extermination of what re- mained of the members of Germany's 6th Army around Stalingrad. The Russian advance in flicted what British sources hailed as a “first class defeat” for the harried Germans. Koielnikovski is a key town on the Stalingrad-Krasnodar railroad about 90 miles southwest of Stalingrad. “Its capture means the chance the Germans had of along this railway.” B Eddy Gilmore Assoclalcd Press Staff writer MOSCOW, Dec. Sfl-fwednssdsy) —(A.P)—Russian troops have cap- tured Kotelnikovski, 90 miles southwest of Stalingrad, in the Onmshlrlg effort to reach Rostov on the sea. of Azov and trap a 1.- 000,000-msn German army stalled in the Caucasus and before Stal- lngrad. A special Soviet communique is- sued early today announced:- "Our oops occupied the wwn and railway station of Kotelni- kovskl. Large trophies were cs0- tured. among which were 17 planes and a convoy of tanks." The regular Tuesday midnight communique also announced tho capture of Tbrgovaya. 57 miles southeast of Kotelnikovski. and about 40 miles north of Elista, pro- vinclal capital in the Kalmyck ‘stopper of the Caucasus. Grect Goal Achieved Thus one of the great goals of Rusiau winter strategy had been achieved on the basis of addition- al information hers. The capture of Kotelnikovskl was a further blow to the Nazi hope of rescuing 22 dvlslons which the Russians say are tra between the Don and Volga. R vers north of Kotelnikov- ski. Other Red Army units have been hammering these 300.000 Nazis from all sides for weeks, steadily driving wedges into their hedgehog ositions and virtually severing 1 their supply routes save by alr transport. Second Steel Ring For to the northwest soviet troops that crossed the middle Don and veered southward toward Rostov were believed to be neur- lng a junction with those in the Koteln koviski sectaxizthlt is said sum a un on wou row s sec- ond Red Army T111 around the 22 Nazi divisions. Ah if these two Soviet columns converge st Ros- tov an even greater Gennan grmy would be cut off in the Caucasus, today- The body of a msn in the uniform of an army Corporal, ten- tetlvely identified as that of Cpl. G. O'Brien of Pstswawa, Ont, was ggltively identified as that of Cpl. bert Oliver of Pctawawa and Mon eal." The inquest Jan. '1 will be held on the body of Eldon Montgomery of Am for. Ont, one of the first vict ms to be identified after the disaster Cause oi the wreck was still un- known. There remained ihe bare. grim fact that a speeding troop train from Peinwawa Camp smash- od into a loaded Pembroke-Ottawa local standing in Almonie station. The local carried manv passengers srcturnlng from Christmas hol- idays at Ottawa Valley points. fiw nan-Aaron? HALIFAX. Dec. 29 - (CH - In s new departure for Nova Scotia, a woman has been appointed private secretary to the Province‘; Lieut- 0f W13. Almon, who recently re- ’. » a ._ will. enani-Gnvcmor. The Royal Gazette today announced the appointment Miss Andrey lWvrDonnld in 9h» position formerly held by Lt-Col. the Russians sold. ‘lhe middle Don offensive already has surrounded Millcrovo on the Moscow-Rostov line and has oy- passed that town in the drive io- ward Rpsiov, The Russian troops churning through snow and oper- ating undcr sub-zero temperatures were believed io be within 100 miles of Rostov on that towns northern MJDroachcs. Allied Troops Lose Hill 0n Road To Tunis New Threat Develops To Axis Coastal Road. IDNDON. Dec. N-(Arl-Allied troops have withdrawn from a hill six miles northeast cf Medjez-El- Bab on the road to Tunis "after inflicting severe casualties on the enemy." while Allied fighter planes striking clear across southern ‘runisia blasted and set sflre 20 Axis troop and supply trucks near the Libyan frontier, a communi- qua said today, A delayed cl aich from south- ern Tunisia sci American troops raided Maknassy, only about 40 miles from the custom coastal rosd linking Tunisia with Field Mar- shal Brvrin Rommelts Libyan forces. capturing I1 Italians and killing and wounding many others. The mission was completed after sharp street fighting and the reduction of numerous sniper positions. - Berlin acknowledged this threat to its consinl road by announcing that Unlicd States troops ruilcd into Guise. about 40 miles moi “The capture of Koiclnikovski is a most eignlfican success which even the Germans will not be able to hide, said the British military source. extermination oi’ Colo-Gem Hermann von Roth's 6th Army, or what remains of its 21 divisions surrounded near Stalingrad, because the onlyj getting relief through vrsl BULLETIN Dec. 30- (Wednes- LONDON llay- {CPS —Indlcation um the All cs plan to bomb tsr- s: in forms-r unoccupied once was seen today in a BBC warning to the French to keep away froim German headquarters, as well as factor. ies and railway centres being used by the Nazis, Local Alnnan ls Graduate WUWNIPDG, Dec. N -<OP) -, Alr bombers today presented vvft badges at No. 5 Air Observer Sdiool, R C.A F, included A. l) KeJy, Brfclgewaier, N. 3., and D. H. Machennan, Charlottetown. Staggered Business Hours In _Halifax HALIFAX, Dec. 29 -— (C?) —- SWBSEPIHE h01lrs of business for sev- eral ty. s of Halifax stores will g into ef ect Jan. 4, the Civic Transi Committee ordered today, to re- lieve the transportation burden on the city's tramways system during rush hours. Elxcc-pt on Fridays and Saturdays, store hours will be from 9.30 cm. to 4.80 p.m. for clothing, hardware, department, shoe, music. lurnltnrc and variety stores. Hours of other stores are not affected. The move, first of its kind in the Maritimes. wns given the flilbroval of regional transit controller Al- bert C. Wagner. WHEN Docfoue SAY Knssmc. $il0RfEN5 LlFE icusss furs: MEAN . High tide this afternoon at 4:69 and tomorrow morning st 5.05. Bun sets this afternoon at 5.8‘! and rises tomorrow morning at 8.38. Last quarter moon, Dec. 30. 2.81 p.m. Bummerslde tide 1i! minutes later than Charlottetown. CAB FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden-Luvs 9.05 n15‘ 11.40 1.1a. 2.00 p.m., 4.30 p.m. ‘l. p.m.. Leave Cape Tnrmenilne — 10-30 mm. 1.15 p.m. 3.05 p.m., 5.45 p.m. 8.15 p.m. SUNDAY SERVICE (May .1 to Dec. 27 Inclusive) Leave Bordon 9.00 p.m.. 6.45 II-m. Lenve Tormcnfins 10.15 a.m. 8.00 Il-III. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAY) Chsrloiiefown-Summcrslds- ltlrmclon Leave Charlottetown 8.30 an. 12.30 n. m., 4.30 p. m. Arrive Charlottetown 1 p. l5 (Continued on page l. Col l) 5.45 p. m., 7.05 p. m. nan-g; l I ‘i