\ . MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN caarietteteera Oaardlaa, ‘lava Ooata. “ma; tlaardlaa. Ieudea ill! AXIS DESERT FORCES IN FULL RETREAT ggyy/ The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew MAXIMS OPA MERE MAN Be Britain atlll to Britain true, F 51113318 flllilfilfgs united; or never u British h. Mann nmmi limos. o. "$11M, CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER s, 1942 10 PAGES Annual Subscription Delivered, ‘.00 B! Halli P. I. l. “.00! to other Provinnaa and U, l. A. IS.“ Ned Army Scores Some Success In Heavy Fighting 8th A1711; Is $245,800 Needed To Reach Island Objective Caucasus Anti BULLETIN ISTANBUL, Turkey, Nov. l- (AP)— Reports from Greece laid ton ht that the Germans are ruah ng three or four divi- sions of troops from the Rus- sian front to Africa to aid Field Marshal Rommel. Four tralnloads of Nazi troops passed through Athena Monday at great speed enrouie to cm- barlration polntg for transfer to the Island of Crete and then across the Medltcranean to Africa, these reports said. Fierce Battle, Italians Seek Burial Truce .4’ BERLW (From German lroadcaatd) Nov. 4 - (AP) - ‘i ean news agency quoted German\ military authorities comma truce to enable them to bar! their dead in The diarteh. ens Cairo, did not 1w ether the request aP- ried the whole of the Italian orcee an the terranean- Qattara front. New Glasgow Man Charged SYDNEY, N.B., Nov. i-—(OP)- Max Dalien of New Glasgow, N. 5-. was committed for supreme oourt trial today on two charges linger the National war Services (I Dalfcn was charged with ro- livslils to two Sydney physic ans that they lace in a low medical $111M?! ha brother Beryl Dalien for medical examination in con- iiiiiltlon with smiy call-up. wounsns uavaa cilia CILONDON - (o P) - Heard at erkenwell mum-Husband: 1 oi- fflfd m°n°y to m wife an she eclined it. Magi: rate: That giost amazing statement I have Wd in this court in l5 years. Comingobvents We the 1 With only three 1m a. P palgu, r ' gglidccxggiggataudsmbt 31.15045 , a uies re ease last niiiht from Provincial worse “m: en WWW. citizens of this province must subscribe $245.80) to reach the minimum obiective, and many ?.‘i£li"a."‘2€”.‘“?“o.‘§“ii.°°d.°°" "i" e s o m on. lu the ilijst two loans the island aver fillllSCflzldtiaclltsutzxlllltttlfillVtfi toy“: 1‘ze_ ainoun e ‘l e. fac gggkvinco wigs avavsfghoéig 1111 trout on occas us. e urge t en- listment iii Canada. in comparison with its population, Prince bldwaic lfiand ghouid out “form a greater e ort see that e boys are snu- plicd with the tools and weapons of war. Charlottetown, with a total oi $001,441“ is still $38,600 from its quota. The oblective set for the capital city was .000_ thtiutrgrnersideiuwliliéiu went‘ “gveui; e D’ on " es y cou ue ovcrsubscribe lI-S share oi the loan. Last uisht its lire-lid wtal was 832b- Fbr the Purpose of the cam n the province was divided. into urea units. The division was by counties. Prince, Queens, and Kings, Each was given a minimum objective and when tilts is reached the unit wiu be given a commando gar. Each unit will then send its B41891‘ the Canadian Army Overseas. This symbol of the third Victory 10811 will be uecd by the boys overseas in their fight for the freedom of wiatédiu no unit in this province fi ’ edwia reachln to! the lot, and without towns or city. W setting the can: o amal. benefit of larfe boost its total. la for the reat to follflw. Th! will K111 g lost night was $208,450. Fiance Count . outside Summer- aido has eubscr bed to dale 003.400. Queens Go outside Charlotte- town i111 has oon ributod 8500.550- liuhher Control In New Hands OTTAWA, Nov. 4 —(CP)- With- drawal of rubber from the Juris- diction oi the munitions depart- ment Supplies control and ost- ablishmeut. of a new rubber con- trol branch under Alan H. William- son, formerly supplies controller, was announced today by the muni- tions department. At the some LIDQ the dtfipart- ment announced that Mr. Wi iam- 1 son will also take over the duties of timber controller, succee ng A. S. Nicholson who remains with the timber office as associate con- troller. Henry Borden, co-ordlnator of control; and chairman of the In- dustries Control Boazd. will assume the duties of acting suppres con- tmller in addition to his other off- ces. 1A. Martin previously a deputy controller of supplies, becomes de- uty rubber controller under Mr. ll iamson, and J .A. Lunphrey and CLP. Kaye continue as Depu auppllea controllers. “ii-it. Justice Dept. "Talkies-Mt. Stewart, Saturday. 11-4-0. "r1 _ uninzoklziur. Myonmu’ “iifgfd: "ma. JEFF? . - - manila-ii. llw i —"—_— “"09; bloelqunx: oitdiimiiitoii’ Cw“ Mme 00.. mo. e-io-o . "Dan 1mm“ . u: etltohwebaterguéi-‘glgilelitf-Evfil. c-ng; "Qvrreotion-Dr. “l! in Cornwall "1 Hidly NOV. 6. M’. 7.30 11-541 "'5 to Dance French River Bell . soiffavoicaaslr’ "can. ‘OM loom "hi"!!! hon ea usual for the mm" om“... A. omit‘... if” ‘it’. é‘ "Mo. aiiiorsienli-e-v-ii-w-r-ai-u l1 lindioo/tt will United Church c Considers Action OTTAWA, Nov. t-(Orl-Jiu- tics Minister St. laurent and 0f- flcials oi his de rtment today were considering he possibility of taking action against the Canad- ian source who rovided Time, United States wee y news mag- azine with informs. ion on which was based a recent article on dis- orders at the Bowmanville. Ont. prison camp when Neat prisoners of war were placed any statement Some do a ago e Justice De ment oii cial aaid the name anadian who pirovlded with the informs on was to the de ertment. The ertcie drew from Defence Minister the statement that it contained "falsehoods" and ‘mialeadlng and damaging inac- art- the Time known Berlin Notes Great Activity lt_t__6llbraltar --»....... m... 1' m ow e4 ""i-‘=Ti~‘»”~’~-‘--"‘"‘ mums, m, gm “$15,313 a om: sap-mi today that close LBJ. Films. Silves- collection. attention was being pai n Ber- “4 _ to ial lilo mo u in harbor Of Gibflltlt‘ "He" M . This followed a Vichy broade Mn run diiiugoanfliiiovkaxilifi. of a a ton u us». ITlIn and 11nd,‘, 1m- yai- pug- Spanish town at the Gibraltar bor- Wflfl. 11.4.31 der, n5 that several mer- “UMM” _i_ chantmen easy-in: large $012:- Il M’! ' Film-w rrfsiyf"s.co.s"“"' ,'N",,.°'§ ehored in Gibraltar arbor, to- "iber uh am, m, g m gether with e battleship. an air- "W Dillon ezaoumt. -a-a. om} elffiei‘, 1e sutmen and 1e g lia 0b- UBS c0511”? the Jap-occnpied villages oi Mao- bisse and Ailey in Portuguese Tim- or, causing heavv damage. ness, an allied heavy unit bombed La east coast of New Guinea 17b milea Holds Firm In At Stalingrad Germans Continue To Hurl Large Forces Into Battle. By Henry C. Cassldy Associated Press Staff Writer MOSCOW, Nov, 5- (Thursdziy)—(AP)-—-The Red Army held its ground in Stalin- grad and the central Caucasus Wednesday and scored success- es on the Black Sezi front and northwest of Stalingrad, a Sov- iet communique said today. The Germans continued to hurl masses of tanks into the battle on the Nalchik plains, at the foot of the 18,0oo-fcoi Caucasus Mountains, and in the nibble-strewn- streets of Stalingrad, but the Russians repulsed all attacks, inflicting heavy losses. On the other fronis-morthwcst of two major Sick‘.- (Continued on page 9, Col. 4) E..E..|..-Naiive.,, . .. llies At Halifax HALIFAX, Nov. t — (GP) — J. gifiifizrlclg liiraser; '72, prominent a ax usness man an crmer minister without portfolio in the Nooiva Scotia Government, died here ay. Didi‘. Frgsei-Pr was the kownermoi av an aser, a. r ac ng firm. and a director 0)? thep Bank s: as: music." o p, an ince wai- a Companies. He was a governor of Acadia University at wo fville, 11.8. He was first e ccterl to the Nova Scotia Legislature in 1925, and was Minister without portfolio in the Conservative Cabinets of Premhr E.N Rhodes and Premier G. B Hai-ringggn. Mr. aser was born at North lake. P.E.I.. a son oi the late Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fraser. Aussies Phi? Towards Buna ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. Aus- tralia, Nov. 5 —(Tuesda l —(CP)- Overcoming strong rests ance. allied ground forces advanced farther to- day beyond Kokodn. in the Owen Stanley Mountains toward the Jap- held north New Guinea coastal base at Buns, the High command w rcpo" ted. Allied medium bombers returned again to Dllll, Harbor town and Lust night, under cover of dark- the airdronva and wharf area... oi e, a lap-held base on the north- north oi Buna. ilew ILS. Cains In Solomons WASHINGTON, Nov. t -(AP)- Pushill! the Japanese back. United 53m tihoroeba. have igifade newlgainfi a ng e ache; Cal-Ida cena diminish the enemy's threat Henderson air field, ton hi; drive toward the western end of the island where the Jap- anese had been most successful ln effecting landlnla the enemy has been forced to relinquish more than a score of pleoea of equipment to the fighting marinas and Anny troopl. Am the equipment captured were a ut 2o machine-guns, Navy said. This could mean that a number of enemy machine-gun meta had been wiped out in fight- ing west oi the air field. Also cap- tured. the Navy reported. were two email artillery pieces taken from their Japanese crews. VIII! IMIAIIIASIING ......."°'~ i-“PT... aaang or ter recorders court da when he sought to question a pr one: with a foreign-sounding name. Rimning unsuccessfully his repertoire oi Ituropean len alt-i. he finally turned to mg h ea e last resort-and found the prisoner was English- litllilll ' Sweeping Republican successes in 1 War Situation Last Night i (By Kirke L. Simpson, Aaaociated Pres; wai- Analyst) Above even the distant clamor of guns and bomb; in North Ari-in, W!!!" llflllca of an Allied victory of major scope over Axis foes are hourly brightening, rises the hub-bub oi post-election analysis in the United States oi returns showing wide Republican i e against the still dominant Democratic party. That the Roosevelt administration and ita management of the War has received a sharp rebuke at the hands of the American electorate goes without saying. lta party maloritles in both house of the new Congress will be heavily reduced. Many Democratic governors, state legislators and lesser officials have been replaced by Republicans from coast to coast and border to border, always excepting the traditionally Democratic solid south. A wealth oi new ammunition for the Axis pro- paganda druntfira attack has been provided. O I I U O Yet the fact remains that this wartime exercise by free men and women of the voting privilege which is the symbol of that liberty for which the United Nations are fighting, on battlflfields around the globe, has no direct bearing on the war effort except to demand its in- iensificntion. No American peace or appeasement advocate has bcfn elevated to office. There is no anti-war party. The election only reaf- firms at the source the national will for victory. It. is a curious circumstance of the off-year Democratic reverses at the polls that they came just iwhen the war clouds in Africa. in the Far Pacific and in Russia were showing new and hopeful gllrnmcrs of light for the United Nations. On all three fronts forctastcg of still ln- concluslve victories over the Asia were being savored. l O I O l O Allied complete victory as there There ia now no assurance of early war president, Wood- was in November, 1918, when another Democratic row Wilson, saw his party majorities upset. The elements out of which ultimate United Nation victory may be woven are taking shape, however. They are at present in the Solomons, on New Guinea, at sea ln the deadly tonnage attrition battle. in Egyili- where an Allied army that is a virtual United Nations‘ crtlsg section is rolling westward with gathering momentum, And in Russia, both at Stalingrad and in the high passes of the Caucasus range, winter is fast advancing to chill the ardor of Nazi attack short of crucial objectives. 0n both sides of the Atlantic Allied war industries are reaching new output yeolqjnonth by month to warrant expectation within a ‘twelve- month of‘ th quantitative ahd ‘qualitative. weapon-i . w: 6v" the foe. See Vote As Protest Against US. Gov’t Republicans gain much ground in Tuesday's Elections; Complicate problem for President Roosevelt. By F. J. SANDERSON (Canadian tress Stall writer) NEW YORK. NOV. 4 — (GP) - Suspend Barriers To Sub-Letting 'l‘u.suiiy s election made actual voting control oi the House of Representa- 50 Dgnocratf, 38 o as ve, gfmn coat in montana undeter- mined. Senator Jam (Continued on page Halifax Men the tlves a toucli-and-go affair tonight although the Democrats salvage enough seats to block the Repub- licans from naming a, new speaker. The Democratic Party also re- tained a. majority in the Senate, though the Republican flood-tide ripped wide gaps in the adminis- tration forces there, President Roosevelt's Party fin- ally pieced together a. bare mal- ority of the House membership to- night, but the Opposition had edg- ed so close that even slight delect- ions from arty reg arit might shift the ally 0n “floor ant roll calls. Wltn only eight house races un- decided. Republicans counted 205 seats. compared with 218 for the Democrats, two held by Provos- slves. and one each v American- labor and Farmer-labor lawmakers. The new Senate. lineup stood at Republicans. and th the outcome E M rray “mat Déznggcrat. held the ead in a. . The Republicans had made a net .1 9,60 4) Get Appointments OITAWA, Nov. t --(OP)- A - poiniment of J. Gordon Pogo, K. ., of Halifax and J. Gerald Godsoe of Toronto to naive as associate co- ordinators of controls under Henry Borden, K.O., co-ordinawr of eon- trola, was announced tonighg by the munitions department, Both are natives of Halifax and for two years they were in the same office together. The new ap- ieea now are in Ottawa under M arrenzemeirta made with their TBbectiva ' associates. the de mental announcement said. QTPAWA. Not. 4 ——(CP)- The Prices Board announced LOlLghl, it, had issued an ordei SLISIJGlI-Jlllg barriers to llie sub-letting of hous- ing accoilhiodatlon, whether set up by municipal restrictions or y Owners, in “congested areas" throughout Canada. Purpose oi the order, which is effective today, i5 to open the way to adequate use of residential pro- perties iii centres where wartime conditions have created acute housing shortages. It 31911116: t0 92 municipalities in eight provinces of Canada. and to "any town cr village situated within a radius oi 25 miles" from the limits of any city or town named. li.C.A.F. Plane iieportedmssing‘ HALIFAX, Nov. Prop»... I - CAI". aircraft with PM ' ian fliers aboard has been miss- ing from a Newwunu . since Sunday, the moi-id here ni ht. ttbfCh i! Still being conductgd 1°!’ the mlfihlne. the announce- ment said, No details oi its dis- lPDeai-ance were given. Those aboard the plane were: 15% i333 ‘wit.’ Tl“ ’°“ °’ - N. vne Road, Victoria. Sit. Leonard rbidman, navigat- or, eon of Zeda Feldman, B10 Aa- aumption St. Windsor. Ont. Sgt. Harry Cameron Beottie, Wireless Air Gunner. son oi G. A. B98010. lib West-minister Ave, ontreal West. Sgt. Lewis Gerald Robinson, Wireless Air Gunner, whose wife lives in Rue , Alta. Efl-SiCllll ‘Air announced to- uy7k$sy Fwd SAMBA" TEA First ilueen’s Conservative Candidates. Messrs. Walter Mac- Kenzie And Ernest Holm Nominated At Bradalbane Yester- day. Messrs, Walter MacKenzie, Springfield, and Ernest Holm, De- Sable, were nominated as Conser. votive candidates for the First District of Queen's at an enthus- iastic convenvfmi held yesterday in Bradalbane hall. There wins a laige attendance at the meeting. which was addressed by Hon. Dr. W.J.P. MacMillan, provincial Conservative leader, Mr. J H Myers and others in speeches which elicited warm applause. Mr. W S Grant, president of the Queen's County Conservative As- sccatiou. in a brief opening ad- dzess expiained the reasons for call- ing the convention. Mr. George MacKay, conveuor for the First District than took the chair, Mr. Cuyler Mathescn was appointed secretary. lllcssrs. A.A. Campbell, J. H. Myers and G.C. Green were named credentials ccnwnlttee. Willie the committee was doing its wozk brief speeches were made by Messrs. J A MacDonald, K 6., Samuel Kennedy, and L.T. Bea- on. Nomination; Following the reading of the cro- dentluls committee report by Mr. Myers the nominations proceeded as follows: For Councillor; Ml". Samuel Kennedy. Charlotte- town, moved by G Weddell, sec- onded by John Trainer. Mr. Ernest. Hahn, DeSable, moved by Wallace Stewart, seconded by W Howatt. Mr. L.T Benton, Bonshaw, mov- ed by A A MacDcugall, and acc- onded by W. MacNevln. Mr. Holm was chosen on the sec- ond ballot, his nomination sub- sequently being made unanimous. Mr. Walter MacKenzie, Spring- field. was the unanimous choice of the CZHVPDUCH for Assemblyman. His humiliation was moved by Thomas Boll-tor, seconded by 5.. MacKny and supported by Frank Myers. Fclowing the ncminatlons, the political situation, was reviewed by Hon. Dr. lVfacMlllan. Messrs. J H. Myers and W. Howatt. Resolutio Tm following resolutions were flfiopmd unanimously: “Elcsulvcd that we the delegates oi’ the First District oi Queens in convention assembled, place on re- cord our impiclt confidence in the lcaidcrsliip of Hon. Di". W.J.P. Mac- Milan. "In lils dauntless and ieflrlflsl though ccnstrnctlve criticism, he has burn nu inspiration to the Con- servative Party. “We earnestly look forward to the dny when he will again be tolled upon tu assume the Premiership of our Province. “Wet ulndge su Xli‘ .' isfoved by J. Ernest Haslnm. seconricg by Rcbcrt J. Stewart and silppirlfill by Nci. K. Salmond: "Resolved that we the delegates of the First District of Queens in convention assembled place our confidence in the eadership of the lion. R.B. Hanson, acting House Lender for the Conservative Pa;ty. we hem-Lily approve the aggressive stand ho ‘ha; taken on Canada! if t. mfiogeénby Robert Sltlewlfii. b N ii K. m0“ . aegroiildegioocyunze closed with "it r15 tlonai Anthem. him our undivided Four High Diplomatic Vacancies “”“§."3“ti‘.i... Canadian Press a. . (YITAWA, NOV. ,t--(CP)—l:l_'-(ll130 Minister MaicKenzza Kin! - “Y announced the filling of four big: diplomatic vacancies and lndicatew he would soon open further iie fields for Canadian Dlplcmwy- _ Ho announced appo W411i“ ° - Mai-Gen. Victor Odltm. loinier commander of vision OVQPcBiXS and Canadian Hi! Comlllissicilvl‘ to Australia, as first Canadian Mlmwr to Ch na. I DD, Wilgmss, 50. Ddputy Milla- ter of Trude and Commerce, a! first Canadian Minister to ihe Bo- e Union. Hwarwick Uhitman. 59. Mmlimfl ICDHKFTEY, as Canadian Minister to .e. Mr. Justice ‘T. C. Davis, 52, Aa- acclate Deputy Minister oi War Services, as Canadian l-ilgh Com- missioner to Australia, succeeding Gen. Odlum. Personnel of the new lexationa will be announced shortly and thi By C. R. In Relentless Pursuit Of Foe Special Allied communique tells of Capture of 9,000 Prisoners; Nazi Second in command killed. (By Edward Kennedy, Associated Press Staff Writer) CAIRO. Nov. 4-<AP)-Marshal Erwin RommePa Axis desert forces were in full and disordered retreat tonight across_t_he sands of western Egypt, pursued relentlessly by British forces and under constant attack from above by British, Canadian, American and South African air- men. A special Allied communique aald Gen. Von Stumma, Nazi aecond-in-command, had been killed in the 12-day, fight which preceded the flight of the "disordered coi- umns,” and 9,000 Axis prisoners had been taken, including Gen. Ritier von Thoma, commander of the Afrlka Korps, and. other topflight German and Italian officers. Gen. von Thoma was said to have been captured only, a short time after assuming his command upon the death of Gen. von Stumme. HEAVY AXIS LOSSES The joint communique announced these tremendoua Axis losses in less than two weeks of battle:- “Exceptionaliy high" casualties in dead and wounded; 600 planes; , 260 tanks destroyed or captured; 270 guns and, 50,000 tons of shipping laden with supplies. Allied air losses were described as “light," in the 12 day bloody break-through by which the British command hopes i0 smash with finality the Axis position in Africa. The British drive westward ciimaxcd days of artillery and aerial preparation which softened the Axis line, touched off an elaborate four-mile-deep mine field, and knocked out other fixed Nazi postions. CANADIANS ACTIVE (R.C.A.F. headquarters in London revealed the “prominent, part" Canadian airmen have played iii the terrific pounding ad- ministered the Axis forces. (An R.C.A.F. press release told of ceaseless sir activity by the Canadians flying fighters, fighter-bombers and torpedo carrying planes. They have engaged in troop strafing, bombed ammunition dumps and strongpoints and, blasted enemy shipping) the Md D.- m“ British infantry did a. heavy pre- liminary job before Gen. B.L. Mom- gomery hurled his huge tank forces through a gap torn in the Axis coastal flank west of El Alamein. ‘Ille same procedure was followed 40 miles to the south at the edge 0 the Qattiira Salt Skins _in an efio" to roll up the Nazi positions from both flanks. Hundreds of Allied planes pound- gd the AlllS supply lines as tar back as the Libyan port oi Tobruk, one o: the main intake points for much- neccied Axis suplll es hazardousiy ferried across the Mediterranean from Italy and Greece. coo Axis rhinos Destroyed u rio was the fldvimw so s De {he Allies this time n ground. Tonight Allied fliers still“ vma hacking at the LGLWYCG‘ of the“ fanny and we Nmngnswestwnrd ‘“'“‘°r°d MC“ Stremdngl Doba as “m” m‘ “m” “w” t red ‘m- mlles behind the Dill"? u amcin lino. . _ "ca" .2’; 22-12.“. fliggtllfi/iflslllgi! WVMI°°=J‘"~“°HE“ c ___-.;_..;:v--.-- —~ -— w (Continued on p889 3r 0°‘ 4) Filled about the end take up ml Are Ministers will leave of this month t0 King made the annorun O- prees conference in hi! Desi: Block oiiice. l-la said that he realized his selections for thew posts were already well known. Delay in making the appoint- menia had been unavoidable, but he assured the nswspapermen that delay did not occasion any prejudice to relitlons with the countries involved, bccaiise of the Jexistlng facilltrs for communica- tions between them. and because the countries conserned were fully aware of the mesons for the do ay. Both China and Rus=ia have al- ready established legations in 0m- ada within the present year. t?" Soviet Minister having arrvsd n- igiout‘ a. monmwagonarimhe Chinese i-n ster ear gltlllé also has had a Min!!!" m tawa or acme - _ m. Kl said he _w;eu;_lg_l_\_g_!_9_§'_\, {Continued 0X1 DUI! ‘l. 90X l) it. word, N.S., ENGINEER SHOT WEST CI-LEZZEICOOK, N5, Nov. 4—(CP)_Accldentol dis- charge of a rifle today killed Mal- colm J. McNeil of New Water- a second engineer in the merchant navy. An 11-year- old boy. Reginald VDoIorey. till’): ped the trigger believing i-he gun was not loaded. A PRUDE i lS N01’ ONLY EAsnx SHOCKED But is ALWAYS WiLLlNC. ‘f0 as and tonight at 9.14. and rises tomorrow morning at 7.45. l . i , Hum tide this morning hi. use ", Sun sets i this afternoon at 5.44 New moon. Nov. a. 11.10 am. l ‘ , can FERRY SERVICE mum: axcar-r soups! i hem Borden-Leave 9.05 a- l 11.40 am. 2.00 plum, 4.30 p.m. ‘l. p.m.. Leave Cape Torrnentine — 10.30 a.m. 1.15 pm. 3.05 p.m., 5.45 pm. 0.15 pan. SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. B7 inclusive) Leave Borden 9.00 a.m.. d." p. Leave Tormentlna 10.15 a.ni. mm. REL-NJ. FIRE! SIRVIUI Leave Wood Ialantla iue on. all ‘mite-m. lleen all l" li- i 5]‘ SIIIVICI "tliém SUNDAY) " Moneton Leave Charlottetown 8.30 a.fa 12.32;. m, 4.30 p. m. A ve Charlottetown _1 D- Iii I45 p. 1a.. 7.05 p. m. i; sum