leventy 104s _ York QHT p‘ LONDON. l-‘eh. 1i —- (UP ‘ flaard Bones. president of the j .- = peviaional Czechoslovak Gov- araras . and mem of 'eabinet, are ex ted to leave ' probably at Kassa- (Koaiee) in eastern Slovakia - LONDON. Feb. ii —- (C!) -. American and British '. ainnan have arri in Buchar- alt after being evacuated from Yugoslavia by lied Army troops, '1 the Foreign Office said tonight. ‘lhey had landed in or bailed out yer Yugoslavia after raids on -_ v and Austria WASHINGTON. Feb. ll -- IAP) - A pendill lend lease agreement with Russia con- " , taina a provision permitting eon- tlnaed ahifaatient of arms to the inlets a a defeat, 'if ltumia intends en g the var against Japan. B-naaian linature on the agreement ta Iosen years and occupation of cturétegie areas until the year , LONDON. Feb. ll —- (AP) — . rae l-ubliuradlu in round Saturday night thatnbont It Aiauiean and Bri nera Army in Silesia now were safe in Lublin and await- IM trans rtation home. No I Canadians were mentioned. ‘lie liaulle Soes 0n Mystrious Trip l p i. A. F. Mosuuitos Attack ilanover . wNDON. Feb. u - (or Reu- "m — A sirens force of nary. gfflsqlflios attacked m. Qenmn “du-"Bl While of l-iunnover last flisht. the Air Ministry announced, a! my some iso United States ‘Whats B/tbdtitidwglli‘ :1? c 2m mime“. southwest of Mariya Coming Events um“ h "'_' _ day. Feitifiiflry ““"1.§.‘,‘.’§,_ "M54"! "V! and dressed boul- try. r 1 lllui cigldfitmagurffcie.‘ “fibre-ti "WW1! hOI-s eve m D W Thursday Dilllmfvilgeaaiesliruer mm H,',',Y“$“'-|m¢ I Dance. Mt. Alxlzign "H! for bet gbstumes. s-o-iif "Bmokmd —-—-Mm _ u Btts vs. Milton £31m“. ilton Rink tonight. a-la-u. "m"! rty and d-anc n l-lsll, °' m‘ 11-- rot-n. loo‘?- "- £5.22‘, M“ M- 10th MW Fflbrulry res-ii.“ ’ P“ “ "m" ‘iffiilt liar. "institute dance and l lunches Wlitahire Ilaii fished N" ‘°- ' a-ra-ii‘ Seeds. All the latest bfit rieti . are..." rug “Gd llidum "flier-tel Notice: hoga e Th farm outfit: ore, an... a. m.: Bor- iti Iri Cale \ I and mm‘ FHNTJING Gennarz Towns Ripped Apart In Offensive B! I/OGER. GREENE (Associated Press War Con". ponden ) ON THE O Rm or KLEYE, Feb. 1i. —- (AP) -- meld . 1.. r.......°""="..mss we German towns and vy "wmtfi tatteru on a scale unrivaed in more the fiv of m" I1 0 Years war in 0P9. sloshing alone roads axle deep in mud, I travelled by jeep {Qday through the outer defences of the Siegfried Line to a high forest iifiifhfi?“ .“i"°..n"°‘“° i" s - u Anne of Clevesuay c “g w c’ For mile after mile I saw a panorama of destruction that ex- ceeded even the hard-hit villages of Normandy. "H thil il Germany the can have it after we take it,‘ said Gnr. Bill Milner of Sackville, N. B., as we stood in the debris- choked village of Numterricn, Just outside Kleve. Milner, who landed in France on lJ-Dsy, ssid he never saw such havoc inflicted by artillery in the long Normandy campaign as the last four days. Every house, shop and building in Wyler, Kranenburg and But- terden along the route to Kieve bore gaping holes. . Slate tile roofs which had not been actusll blown off by the massed artilery barrage that was the prelude to t is offensive showed skeleton ribs to the sky. Window shutters and doors had been tom from their hinges. At Nuetterden, a British colonel showed me through a big green camouflaged bunker, part of the Beigfried Line, buried undu- sod- dsd earth. It had a roof cf con- crete nine feet thick. “This could have made trouble for us if the Boche had tried to defend it." the colonel said, ‘but he didn't." . PARIS. Feb- ii — (Al?) — Gen. Charles De Gaulle left Paris last right on a trlrp which was des- cribed as wholly unrelated to the Big Three conference and, accord- ing to the latest reliable informa_ tion, the French leader did not ex- pect to be invited to the Black Sea. area. Aids of Gen. Dc Ge/ulle said the French loader has "no expects/tic " of attending the Big Three con- ferencc. But ll is expected that President Roosevelt will visit France after the meeting to assuage French dis_ appointment over not being taken into tho Black Sea talks. and w'll tell Gen. Dc Gaulle there never was any intention of depriving trance cf a full voice En all matters “f: til aw ‘De- a e .e pertinent said it had no informa_ tion one way or another as to whether an invitation had been ex- tended to Gen. DeGuulle. comment came from official Lon_ don quarters.) The question of whether Gen. De Gaulle would be invited to confer with the United Nations leaders has been discussed in ‘he French press for several weeks. virtually oil the commentators insisting that his presence at ihn meetuul of the chiefs of the Allied powers was essential if a permanent peace for Europe were to be evolved. Believe Federal Sov’t ls Nearing Election Decision drwuws, rub. u - (or) - After a week's a d the political situation following the‘ Grey North by-eection it is believed the Gov is ‘ing a decision on its course of action as timing of a general election. The decision may have ahead been reached. although it is no believed there has been an very ‘ ’ discuss 0'4 No n‘ CHARLUITETQWN. CANADA. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 194s ‘We ruSiituat Br xrnxu 1.. smrsoN. Aaaoelaietfreaa wal- Analyst Atainat the blaoirgronnd of the "Big Three’ conference aornewhere in the Black Sea area, the war In Europe ia moving toward a decisive peak. All waa y a, reuhiul from {he Swisa border to the Nader-Blaine from the Vienna Gap to the estuary of the Oder in the east. Within weeks at moat, perhaps within days, the world will know whether the end of the killing and destruction leader-ship is still able to fend off complete collapse nntll spring thaws halt the attacking armies. The time margin within which to shatter organized "‘ siatance and destroy the Wehrmacht ia perilously narrow. more than a month remains before rising temperatures will send the unprecedented snows of this winter rushing to the sea through every and southern Europe. That run-off is apt to turn fields and dirt roads into all but impassable hogs. tainly is among the factors on which the German lligh Command is "H" b" heavily to avert yet a lhittle while the aiern accounti river valley in eastern, waste awaits it. But that time factor also ia no Ila a vital element in the Ruaaiam‘ Allied military commitments exchanged by Messrs. Churchill. Roose- velt and Stalin aa the first business of their Black Sea area meeting. The broad directives they laid down for immediaie and concerted action Germany are based unquestionably on mutual agreement to strike boldly and in all-out force to bring the war to a military decision before the snows melt. g That was discernible in the disclosure that with the military opera- tions phase of the conference concluded, the three leaders and their advisory staffs turned at once to hlueprlnting plans for the occupation by the mighty armies and paeificntion of a conquered “ When needed they must be ready in sufficient detail and sufficiently flexible to meet any situation that may arise in Germany after the faii of the Wehrmacht or its dlsmsmberment and dispersion. “Superforts Raid Rangoon Area international At A _fi_lancc (Iy The Canadian Preali WESTERN FlDONT-Jiirat Can- adian Anny troops drive Germans lrconwwestern section 17!. Kiev: and into southern half of town; offen- sive in four days bored i0 miles through Siegfried Line; Americans storm Pruem in Eifel Mountains. EASTERN FRONT — Russians in iii-mile amash across southern Germany almost ‘ lircslau. capture Liegniiz, industrial centre, drive to within M milca of Dresden; 31-min» section of Berlin - Breslall trunk railway out. PACIFIC-More American troops and armor cross Pull; ltlvcr to at- tack between river and Manila Bey; dive-bombers blast Japanae. ITALY-lath Army troops repel limited - scale German counter-at- ilfilig in Serchio River valley and was coastal sector; Patrol clashes mark 8th Army front. AERIAL - American heavy bombers attack German motor [u] gun-age dmnp at Dueimen, southwest of Muenster; ILA. . Saturday Moaqultoa hit llannover ht. :URMA-Aiiied bombers carry out wldespre ’ attacks on Jaw one installations. British troops gairieln Mandalay ilrive. ii. S. Historian Dies At llalitax HALIFAX. Feb, li — ( John W. R685". torien and writer, died today af- ter a short illness. Mr. Regan at one time was cor- respondent here for the Associat- ed Press. He scored a notable beat in i008 when. leaving other "‘ at Sydney esponden‘ fig, hc chartered a shi flu want up the coast of Grc and to meet Admiral Robert Pea after his discovery of the North le. M; mun was the "author of "First Things In Acadia and oth- er works dealing with the history of Nova Scotia. llarbor Workers Strike Threatens ion of it the “ggiii i bs nu ' ca o ervers s are . divided in their opinions as to cetinl f Parliament will or ahould be held before the runs t on April 1'1, with ——— at rnaioritg ievinz there will HALIIlAX. Feb. if — (OP) — no sees but aneiection at the Threat of a strike by about 3W earilqt practa date. ‘nnlilo ees of the National Har- deienninlng the earliest inne- scre M" W" "Wham" tiosbie date the Government wiii wnight when they voted to alvl l! ye to take into ac- he Board another week to act on count the intenei f fighting in their demands for hi her pay. the are A mass meetinnbedabout engaged of‘ likely to be m or the w» "W" °" °° against the Ger-maria and the con atomic. IP11" °l°"'m' m‘ 3"“ sequences of holding an election at ml work. derided "I" l‘ ti" a time whicgnwouid necessitate Qfful Violin‘! Loan. ion Covers Prince Edward ..... .._ .. .I;" ‘ and Allied vice in the west and is close at hand or whether Nazi re - Not much It cer- that They may soon be needed. CAIBUTTA, Feb. 11 — (AP) — India — based bmrbcrs of the Eastern A Corn~ mar-id's strategic force blasted at Rangoon in Burma icday in a o0_ ordinoted attack. The 3-295 of the US. 20th Air Fume si/rudf alt Japanese military insha-llutioris, while ammunition, gasoline and oil stocks near the lcey cit-y were ailtelcked by the other bomber squadrons. Aground north of Rangoon, rc_ ief forces arrived just- in time today for a British commando unit who for eight days had blocked a Jop- enese force 10 times its own strength in hand-tqhand battle on a road leading south from Kaladan. Elements of the 15th Indian Div- is'0n at the road block made con, tact with East African troops pushing south from positions north 0f Kamila W. . Th; commandos killed more than 1,000 of the enemy. In deepen-to day and night attacks the Japanese attempted to crack o-ben the road block as their units to the north were squeezed into a snlull stretch of road north of Kungaw. British and Indian troops of the “ Island Like the Dew Advance_3'l Miles Along SS-Milc Front LONDON, Feb. ll — (AP) -—'l‘he Red Army in an explosive smash across southern Germany has m- most encircled Brcsluu, captured the big industrial centre oi Lieg- nitz, at miles west of that Sileeian Capital, and advanced up to 37 miles in iour day-s on a 99-rrule front lfi a still-rolling drive neur- ing the Saxony frontier, Premier Stalin announced tonight. Berlin acknowledged the fall of Liegnitz and said the Russians had reached-and were trying lo cross —the Bober River on a 22-m1lc front between Bunzlau, 65 miles WCSL of lmperillcu Breslau. and S-prottau, 100 miles southoast- of Berlin swelling Soviet \ Thosize of the offensive, apparently aimed at out- flanking Berlin on the south and cutting between the Reich Cflpiblil and imprisoned Czechoslovakia, could be gauged by Stalin: ccm- mendation of 5:. generals. including ions, and i5 artillery leaders who CilSLu ‘r themselves in the break-through. One Berlin conunentutaor said the Russians ha ng. concentrated a slzeable part, or‘ their assault armies" in the Steinau area northwest of Breslau for the powerful blow. But now the Red Armies inside Germany were meeting the reinfor- ced and rcgruuped core of the German Aluny. Daniel De Luce, an Associated Press Correspondent. wrote from Moscow, adding: “Marshal Zhukov with the hea- viest opposition sewis halted in- definitely along the middle. er. but his sweep toward the river's mouth coupled with Konevh pres- sure upstream are seen here as a necessary preliminary for the future battle of Berlin." In Bast Prussia, Marshal Kon- stantin Ftokossovsky was reported regrouplng his 2nd White Russian Army quickly for a thrust across the Vistula delta. to cut oil Danzig after his seizure of lilbirlg Satur- day. The 3rd White Russian Army meanumlc pinched in closer on Koenigsberg. 50 New Cars Buried When Arena" Collapses TIDRONTO. Feb. l1 — (CF) —- Fifiv new 1942 automobiles. valued at $00,000, were hurled under the wreckage of the Wlllowdale Arena in suburban North York. when the structure collapsed under the weight of SHOW Saturday night. 15th Corps meanwlfle fought to complete the occupation of Ramrcc Island, n natural springboard for a ZO-milo water crossing to tile town of Taung-up on the west coas: lws than 19.’) miles northwest of Rangoon. Capture of the town of Romree was announced Saturday Former Minister G) - '10. Halifax hls- a ilere Dies At 68 TORONTO. Feb. i1 — 1GP) -- Rev. Dr. William Henry Eedgewick. 08, former convenor of the Board of Home Missions for the Presby- terian Church in Canada who ser- ved late: in the some st for the United Church. died Sn urdsy after s short illness. Born at Middle Misquodoboit. N. 5., he attended Halifax Alfild€lgilv Walter Jouce of Ottawa. a daughter, and Mrs. 0.1.. Romsnaof valleyfield. Que, a s r. n. n. nocron 1711s NEWCASTLE. N.B.. Feb. 11 -- iCPl-The funeral of Dr. Bradshaw McKenzie. after a b tomorrow afternoon. A physician and surgeon g British White i Paper 0n Seal ‘ Mining Expected LONDON, Feb. ll — iCP) —-The British Government is expected i0 issue shortly a white prglcr ut- vnucing proposals for cleanup: with the coal mining; industry alter the war and it is uellcvcu the plan will centre on creation cf a new iucl‘ buurcl comprising equal represen- tation for owners. miners and state with an independent chairman. It is understood the Government has siulilcci and rejected other illiiliS nuvnncau by the miners and Robert Foot oi’ the Miners Assoc- iation. The minors have been de- manding nationalization as only means of reorganizinfl the in- dustry, increasing production and reducing prions. Mr. Foot in oing to the bther extreme has cu led for organizat- ion of the industry for national service under control solely r-f the owners instead of the state. The Government plan for a tilla- teral fuel board would be in the nature of a compromise solution. The industry would become in ef- fect a public utility whose activit- ies could be discussed in Parlia- ment since the Fucl Minister would be responsible to the Commons. ln the interests of economy the Government is expected to pmpose the amalgamation of companies ln different coalfieids to improve ad- ministrative efficiency no increase the availability of capital for mec- hanization. There have been sug- gestions, too, that the Government mav supply colliery owners with . he sod at boggieveille N.B. until i0- 30 end then_moved to Newcastle. ;.._._____._ mm} necessary plant and machinery on A1E_.AEEEQI."JE'BLJZEYJEBJ.XSQEm-_ the m, the Siegfried Line. 0h’tovvn Native Passes in Ali. S. MIDDLETON, N5" Feb. l1 — (OP) - Fred B. Armour, as. postmaster and general merchant Sfomah, N.S., died Saturday after being stricken on a Yar- 23 commanders of infantry lormat-himmhdianfflx "M" He" 11°"- He was a native of Charlotte- town. He had operated a store at Woodstock, N.B-, and a hotel at Alberton, PEJL, before moving to Nova Scotia in 1921. For some years he ran a hotel here. He was a former Middleton town councillor. Germany's Food‘ Situation May Becfonie y Serious LONDON. Jan. 1i -— (AP) British economic experts est mated tonight that Germany has lost roughly 16,000,000 tons of food supplies as a result of the Russian advances and said the food situa- tion withln the country might be tragic by autumn. They agreed. however. that Germany probably would be able to ‘stave off famine until after r "B. These experts said Germany's food situation deteriorated rapidly during the last six weeks because of disor anlzed transport and the influx o millions of refugees from areas overrun by the Russian armies. Germany has lost an eighth of the regular meat supply, a third 0i $11581‘. a fourth of the potatoes. a fifll. of the bread grain, an ghth of the milk and cheese and 1-i0th of the butter. an official of the Ministry of Economic War- fare estimated. Last Novenaber the Germans said their reserve food stocks built up from occupied countries were then seriously depleted and that Germany would have to face this winter with her own re- sources. During the last week the Ger- mans announced the sugar ration which had covered a two-month period now must be extended to last three months. They also said that a 10 per cent reduction would be mude in other rationed foods. ‘ Despite the reduction in Ger- many's total meat supillll. the Economic Warfare official said there was no particular meat shortage now since the Germans are killing off stock and distri- buting it locally because they are‘ unable to get grain feed for thel mels. "But the Germans are operating on a hand - to - mout basis by killing off stock without being able to maintain the source." he mid N. B. Seed Potatoes Go To South Africa SAINT JOHN. N.B.. Feb. i1 — (OW-The largest shiornent of New Brunswick seed potatoes ever sent to South Africa-ammo crates —has reached Capetown ln excel- lent condition. shipping officials here have been advised. The shin- ment was arranged bv the South African. Canadian and New Brun- swick Governments to relieve s potato shortage in South Africa. Elderly Women Carried To Safety During Fire SAINT JOHN,NB.F‘e. (CPl-Three elderly women were carried to safety and six families left homeless here yesterday when fire badly damaged two three- storev houses on High street. Cau- se of the fire was unknown and loss was estimated at $0.000 Civilian Casualties LONDON, Feb. ll — (Reuters) —'1'he Ministry of Home Security announced tonight that clvllinn casualties due to enemy air ac- tion in the United Kingdom dur- in»: January were killed or miss- ing. believed lled- 505, iniured and detained in hospital: use. 8 PAGES MAXIMG I OI A MERE MAN §§f-.‘.'i°';‘.2t‘£'2."l..’:° blail, $1.00, other Provinces l IJ.S.A. $5.0! Subscription Delivered. 15.00. By AUSTIN BEALMEAR ls flow of reinforcements was reflected on the 1st Canadian Arnlv front, where front dispatcheg 531a tough German parachute troops hustled up from Alsace were stiffening the sagging lines. The count of prisoners in this b31119 roslehltcé 3,500. r Army troops battling in the Reich's western mountains just east of Luxembourg a few miles farther south welded 10 river crossings into three bridge- head: on a 26-min: front. A lull settled over the remaind- er of the Western Front. The rampaging Roer River. normally a. tiny stream. was more than 40) yards wide north or Juelich on the United States 0th and British 2nd Army front as the flood. loosed when the Ger- mans destroyed the Roar dam system gates, raced cn. GERMANS BLCHV DA“ mr the moment, the British 2nd and United States 1st and 0th Armies, massed between Pruem and Kleve, were idle. The flooded Roer River along their front had risen to seven feet above normal north of and was two miles wide at one p , but reports to Supreme fiesdqusrters said the river was belivedto have reached its peak. The flood-Abused when the Germans blew the flood gates of the giant Schwamrrlenauel dam southeast of Aachen - had risen no higher upstream at Dueren and the water in the five-mile long reservoir had dropped 20 feet in 24 ilnurs atop the big earthen darn. trary to reporu that it had been captured, they hold one end of the dam and cqrltrol the other by artillery fire. The drive north of Klevc aloft: the flooded Rhine was sloshing ahead against little interference from the enemy, who seemed to be throwing everything into the struggle to save the city itself. Veteran German paratrooperz were rushed into the battle a. bfliifldilli and British troops fought into the western and southwestern outskirts. and bloodl- hand-tc-hand combat was in bro- 87955- . A front dispatch quoted pllou es saying the Germans xvere d12- ging trenches us fnr as 30 miles the enemv fears the broad rivcr will be unable to hold back the coming Eisenhower offensive. Empire Economic linion Urges New Tariff Agreements I m‘ JOHN DAUPlllNl-Jl-J 1 (Canadian Press Staff Writer) I munou, Feb. 1o —- i6?» _ Abrogution of all prc-uvr ierlfi agreements and negotiation of new (mes which do no‘. cunt-um ‘s, "mostJavored-ne-t-ion " ole-use ll ; r mznenri by the lump re Ecoq nomlc Union as the only hope of ay "fair dcsl" for British industry Midi agriculture when peace comes. l_ ‘The union, founded in i929 by‘ the outset favored protection fol- home industry by trriff udlvsi- meats. and imperial tor ff prefer ences. Its cost-war ohm tenure- sented in a. bociclet entiilmi Pest. War Economic Policy.’ written by Sir Herbert Williams. Conservative member of parliament for South Croydom. "The tariff which is sometimes a. weapon of economic vmr has never produced military war, while on the other hand the most- 11w cred-nation clause in commercial pears to outlaw commercial war. may be charged with the offence of having indirectly caused military war, because it wry rieidly PW- vents those economic enlistment-s which, if pcnnittcd, reduce the political temperature to the safety point," sir Herbert writes "In our judgment, the abrogation of the urlquai ‘ed mmt-d1a"aored_ nation clause is one of the es- sentials of post_war economic policy if future strife is to be avoid ." Other points in the union's post- war plan:- l. There should be a wartime "Ottalwa Conference" to draw UP an more economic policy: 2, An imperial economic scorc- "Treason... ‘.3. ,5... o, col. a) " ' behind the Rhine, indicating that ' treaties, which superficially ap_ P AN AMY STORMS INTQgKLEVE Reds Open New Push In South fiiczlizarnlcg fMiavgsci ‘ PAR-Is. Ffll- 1l_-— (AP) — The 1st Canadian Army drove the Germans today from the western section of Kleve and lnio the southern half of that fortress on the Reich's ramparts in the fourth day of an offensive that has bored 10 miles through Street fighting raged in a second pillar of the enemy's defences ‘I15 miles south where two U. S. 3rd Army divisions were storming the Eifcl Mountain stronghold of Pruem and threatening to cut it off from its road link to the Rhine. The I-"Xembiillfk radio said that once more German troops were rushing west- ward to meet an expected ail-out Allied sm ash, altering the current of reinforéements which for days has been rushinhg eastward to 111991 the Russians‘ Monty Pleased; With Progress ox rm; Coflfiskmrs 0a KLFVE- Gqrwsny. Feb. ll (AP) Field Marshal Mont- Eumery. commander of the 21st lfmy _Gi'0i.lp with which the 1st Canadian Army operates, tnld correspondents at the front to- dill’ he was “very pleased" with the nrozress of the four-day old Allied offensive into Germany from the Nijmegen salient. I “The hattl i . well," the frigid Magi; but of course all this mud doesrft help, does it?" The Field Marshal was stand- ing ankle deep in the black, "My mud that spread like n. g]. Kantlc hog wallow as far as the eye could see. _ All around him as he paused in a shell-splintered crossroads hamlet. massed gun batteries Awhen gen: thundering a crescendo. and and Canadian troops we" F-Wflfmlhs over the water- logged countryside. The Field Marshal. who drove to the front in his familiar low- slung. green open touring our. appeared in top feitle. Afirr his chat with emrrsponticnts. he gave only one order. Ti was “got those convoys mqvinl," AUHTOE; On Irish Music Dies In Dublin DUBLIN. r-"Ql. n _ .0... ._ Carl Hardenbeck, '75, mugjqj composer and authority; m p1.“ music. has died horc. it was av. pounced today. Hr was crcciiul‘; with saving from oblivion 111211."! Irish traditional songs. He um; born in London b i l" d -~ . hm‘ 49 yyears- u llf‘. m 1.. EARLY d) Bu) EARLY To ma; AND Your; Hrao Wu Never. tau THREE tints lfs METEOROLOGICAL OFFICL 'l‘\‘.-RO.\‘TO, Feb. ll 1GP) - Mini- mum and maximum lennperatures: Vancouver 42. -: Edmonton l6, 36; Regina ti, 36; Winnipeg 12B, l0; Toronto 26, 29; Ottawa l7, 27; Montreal 24. 36: Quebec 21. 30: Moncton 20. 3'1; Halifax 25 m. 1m Lord Melche‘<t, has from| so: Charlottetown 2a. to. FORECASTS: ‘ Louver St. Lawrence and Lake ISL John: Partly cloudy and a llittlo colder with scattered snow- ilurrles. Gulf, Bay Chaleur. North Shon and Marltlmes: Moderate to frcsl winds; partly cloudy and slightly colder with acutteréd snowflurries High tide this afternoon at l2.3 and tonight at 12.47. sun sets this evening at 8.23 ant rises tomorrow morning at 8.05. Nheqw moon February 12th, 1.2! DAILY AIR. SERVICE Charlottetown - S ' Moncton Leaves Charlottetown 7.45 A.M.. 11.30 A.M.. . EM. Arrives Charlottetown 12.55 PM- 5.30 PM" 8.45 P.M. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown 1.10, I EM. Arrive Charlottetown 5.20 5.15 PM (‘TIIARLOTTETOWN—- NEW GLASGOW (Daily Except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown 12.15, 5.40 Arrive Charlottetown 2.85. 5M