todsv s stream o‘: ‘tunnm e msreshitt . MAKING — . - OIL MERE MAN scm7 Ohllettoto Guardian, nun-e 0:54am. rear-Ti?“ Allied Soldi i-sc ma. Supplies, Suns And Troops~ Stream llorthwarll I IDWABD KENNEDY (Allocated Pr:ss‘)Wsr Cortilpil _ en ABLE HEADQUARTERS. Ale- G1l8 06G. H—(AP)—TIIO G0!’- lnans‘ first natural defence tlgle in under nllh s" rs bridged the strea hem- m nnan fire. Allied and tcd to expand sgsinst desperate enemy re- Bo murderou: was the aerial cov- er given the s tacking troops that fsntry was pinned down to lfl defensive positions north of the Volturno md not s sins?! gout tank wss able to loin the lilt- ere was no exact information how isr Allied vonizuiirds hid ptii- _! ted beyond the river. but an c!- glii announcement a brids aesds h been f y established ndicsted Allied troop! had pitched northward for enough to ensure em against - counter-sir in osvy-Nsdfii" to i hot nimtb Vol- , m o northern shore 311w were 'falling back ... ~ i -°...‘5'l"'......° mucous The c: undoubtedly will make delay the in- mgnp" sithapermit the Ger- msm toqiold Rome as ions as pos- siblo.; , (A rlin ‘ osdcast said seaborna Britisgetroops, em loyine leapfrog 3% / The Peoples Paper (lovers Prince Edward _-islai'i'<i Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1943 Red Army Smashes To New Victories iisw ll. S. Plans ' Dwarfs Fortrsss WASHINGTON Oct. I4 — ( )—A new United 39!"! super-bomber I10" hlnling explosives sud hsving viii-l! greater rang: than an! BIN-lll l|?|lll0 now is in pro notion- n unspecfied number of u" new sir giants has been dell"?- ed to the American arm! Wm” in the int few weeks. \n increase rste of output il sclseduieid for this Infill"!- ipyggln; than consolidated Llnersto snd lnl fortress, the new dreodno ht of the shy ls reckoned “lll 1° bringin th w Shins bo The pilne is identified ll "ll From revlous Iiiililfll "°' ~ r nso thug Offiiiilll flpngt c???“ i“ th n81 I'D n! ll “m” ti‘. before lsu. This ores-im- phly i; because of the time re- qlrq] to sttahfuil-scaie lifii- auction, train crews. and 01- iminate any “hill!” Whmi m“ m" I’ in the early modelet Borilliulo Boosts‘ Tax 0n Liquor rump-ran BERMUDA. Oct. l4 (or casup-‘pesplte protests that “mm 1, me poor man's drink," the “ finance committee has ib- trodurcd a tariff bill crllinxwigf me land I m" ,0 p§§°§§§§’~f;f;]‘, “mm, 15x35. iwqntinued on page s. Col. i.) effrcfilévehcriiiinieasédgi: nu Rnéct “mks but only liquor in bond L%dst’:€€,s'shipmenw_ HQWQVQ? Surgeon Is Dead ffifiifiiishfii” ooliliiivhgifiiilng about "i" ' r w t Indies mfinou- o“ u __ (c?) _ ligmrnonths supply 0 e5 gym owner , 63, one of Britain's most rillisnt surgeons and vice presid nt of the intcmstlonal cari- eer u on. died today- llusjsia Aoospts Balloglio Sov't Moscow. Oct. 14—(AP)—Ru§- sla's acceptance of Marshal Ba..- cgiiop Iieiian government ap- peared tonight on the eve of the three-power conference in Moscow to have removed one of the main sources of irritation between the Soviet Union and Groat Britain and the United States. The three notions’ joint declar- ation accepting Italy a: a co-belllg. erent. recognizing the Royal Italian Government nnd accepting its co- operation against‘ f‘ mum! We! published prominently in the offic- ial press. Detailed Soviet com- ment was not forthcoming immed- iately. but the statement was tak- en generally as s welcome clarifi- cation of atmosphere. The R ussinn presslareviously had Ipe at. concealed is ike for such res as Admral Darlan and silo. and frequently hos riticlsed tie Allied military government oi occupied territories and the policy of maintaining for- nBi-l opponents in power in occu- c territories. coming EllEiiTS ‘ "Talkies-Cones cove m4 _-m_ oom"°"‘°l'¢t€.'"“ m“ Bflisliid“ "lslkies - u rt 8st - do; lhews Infill! To." io-le-“rrl. ‘Miler-be lou lfmdsy. Halogen?“ en. idle-ii‘. "A 3'17?‘- seugr“ m! Tm’ m" 1 io-is-si. gtdeurfi mugdv Woiirliwem well. u lo-ll-li. "Don't . the ll It J A. NMTNI It ll live an dressed p-o-‘iint-i“ 0.13???» w’ o». m. +21 “Dllioeuin see View Iisii imi- . m. ER “6'-asi‘i’ii‘.‘ii..“fil“°° "lo-lul- big Auction his. Chinl . lp-ls-ii. il- BINDING Price of rum will be raised 1P0!" eight shillings (about S100) t0 s}: shillings slxpence ($213) ii- q“ bohffiiile wllllsms. member o! iii“ legislature. and proprietor o! the 1'1 club here. said other liquorsb 50m! stand the increased taxes. ii poor man could not afford to pBY more for his rum. Otherniiielligiig expressed the opinion italdwfzildrmk better if ‘the 99°!‘ m“! 5 so much. Soviets Exert Great Pressure OLM. Oct. li-(OPF-A picture of the 0785"!" “my 15 exerting‘ 0n ‘B? retreating Gtfmans w“ Q3; ‘he day in one first dlspfiiciiher an“ Nazi front line to rcrwh "9 c°rd_ the Gannon, withdlawal ac m“ m planpol§g§t$otc~ A Wfll’ f8 -“‘ "Sillontly rain-soaked trrmetdifir: “M13 will. s. a - . for that. They are drliiiimldihfg machine and mortars an c win; t eir heavy ammunition bQf-ie-‘fnfsnd eqmpmentfor many days revealing he Red a night noiseless retreat. . .now the is; talion has reached the new p0! on. .. ted nldier sink The exhaus ale‘? n“ be m i! Pl‘!- pressing be- ue are close at our bleels snd won't ellow us my rest- Australia ilas iioel Problem YDNIY t I4 (OP Cable) ._sI|l]ln¢ ‘c091: stocks in Australia have eeused the lggfiiiiiftilit “hi: sidersbic concern P0! °n ' in; metal-lofted to strikes and {ml e In 4pm of utlcns under nstionsl scour-ll’ "Emil-Will. B-PP‘ esle to e ... to produce mo? cool and threats oi further if" ° measures. lone lfinimi‘ today folm it nec t0 Iii."- ounoe e. drastic coal re oninl pitii to build ill! stocks. lie announced that the sown; ment hos decided to red oe we consumed by rsilwsys sn industry. ing ges and electricity. o; and in msk mher decisions include prosecut- ion of all mine workers absent from 3 ithour. excuse end further Yiisaehnoai of mines. .. By JUDSON OQUINN’ Associated Press Staff Writer LONDON. Oct. 1t—(AP)—~The Red Army captured the Dnieper River bend stronghold of Zapcroshc today. sealed off Melitopol for early conquest and cut its railway link with the Crimea. and in a new break-through north of Kiev smashed three German divisions. Moscow announced tonight. The fall of the east bank indus- trial citadel of Zaporozhe opened the way for a Soviet landslide southward into the Crimea where 100000 German troops risk ell. circlement. Front dispptches said Soviet units already were pursuing German remnants from the broken Zaporozllc-Melifopol line. Huge quantities oi equipment were reported to have been aband~ oned by the Germans around Zap- orozlla and inside that city whichis near the site of the giant Dnleper anl Marshal Premier Joseph Stalin announced the capture of Zapor. cuhe in an order oi the day. hailin: it as one of the enemy's “decisive strongpoints" on the lower Dniep- er. \ The broken German armies that had manned the Zapcrozhe-Meli- topcl line were threatened with an- nihilation in trying to flee across the niudflats between the lower leper and the Sea of Azov lust at. ie the Crimea. There were no lltuurnl defences left to them until they reach the safety oi the west- ern bank of the Dnleper. G . Radion Malinovskvs army took Zaporozhe. a city of nearly 200,000 five rnilessout site at Kichkas of the S 0.- 000 hydro-electric works and dam which thle Russians destroyed RSI; T significance was noted by Stalin who ordered Mos- cow's 224 Victory Cannon to fire 20 salvoes. one oi the heaviest. sol. utes yer. given a Russian triumph. A Tass dispatch broadcast by Moscow also said that a steady stream Russian troops were reaching the western tip of the Tarrlan peninsula oi the Caucasus across the twc-mile-wide Kercll Strait from the Crimea. Quota Set For S’sillo, Gh'town The victory loan quota for Char- lottetown. Summerside and for Prince and Queens Counties out- side the urban centres was revealed yesterday. - The town oi Summerside is being asked to raise $550,000 and the re- mainder of the county, _000. Charlottetown is being asked to contribute $975,000 and the remain- der oi queens Count . $475,000. Queen's County wl be broken down into objectives for districts which will be announced later. A conference of salesmen _will be held at Montagu today. It will be attended by Mr. W. H. V. Dunbar, provincial vice - chairman and Mr. P. W. ‘Purner, provincial chairman of sales. Nazis “Admit Loss or Political Prestige BTOOKl-IOLM. Oct. l4-(AP)— An authoritative German period- al. Heinrich l-Iimmlcrk weekly Dss Schwarze Korps. openly ack. by {IUWFGRGG today that the Nazi re- r a e in Russia had resulted in "a tremendous loss oi political prea- tige for Gernlsny"—“a loss which now troubles many of us." also stated that Germany hui suf- fered s serious economic loss in being forced out oi the fertile grain- lsnds of Russia's Ukraine. Although these frank admissions were cc led with an assertion css oi prestige had beein l nroplgan ists were struggling with the problem oi explaining two other important setbacks; the opening by Po sl Azores bases to Britlin and Italy's becoming s co- beliiltrent o! the Allies. wsrr-cd- worse Korps Germans that if they were unable to intcnaifvfcricultursi production n s: O c m r the losl 0f the Ukraine bread-bos- ket. the effects will be felt fully sf. m- nexe year's harvest. < The loss oi prestise resulting from the retreat in Russia. the rnsaosine contended. is balanced bv o creased we: power,derived‘l?v "But even these fruits ripen slow ." i observed. "The loss of pres Ie w h now troubles nlsnv us soon will be forgotten when strategic advantages which have logo’ worl through T: shoricndinlr of ion sppesr. en an a vsnce in prestige will saeio occur.” ti!“ no expect that plastics can W" Read by Everybody 8 PAGES The but itself never minds the sermon. MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN bell coils other; t, church, lubscrlpllon Ilsllverod, ll.0s loll. use: otho- Provinces o ll.l.A some . S. PLA ES FIGHT IN RECORD BATTLE "lslalalan emulsion ross ifolturno River In Force Strike Heavy Opposition On Daylight Raid 62 Allied planes lost to 104 Nazi fighters; War plant bombed. renew their In Italy's the 1' ‘ der combined 6th and 8th ds to Rome are Russian troops battiin Dnieper. meanwhile are w thin less t Nazi esca e route from the Crimea. trap for invaders caught within Russian (lossack oavslrv could again Russian penetration to the head that the Ge defeat to the grim story everywhere centre of tho whole Velturno-Biferno cistancc to indicate u. Tiiot tends to ma (e a 5th army those harrl-lvon trnns- e bridg Bi] Relmln Morin A. P. War Correspondent i ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Al- giers, Oct. l3 _ (Delayed) - (Ami - The Allied 5th Anny crossed the Voiturno River today. British and Unit-ed States troops surging forward behind a terrific artillery barrage. pierced the Ger- man defence along the river and within the first six hours had pen- etrated well inside the main enemy positions. '.f‘lie Allies struck jlgt before dawn under a. tornado of shellflre from scores of heavy guns, which had opened up at 9 p. m. It was a brilliant moonlit night, with a. cold north wind howling- The air qulvered with the sound of explosions, both from behind a shell burst. You could see red und when the guns fired and ahead when a shell burst. You could see red and yellow lights winking all over the plain. They seemed no bigger than match flares. But each one was a heavy shell addressed to some spec- ific object. It was on annihilation bombard- A month short of the 25th anniversary of "‘ First Great War, Neal armies in Russia. and in ‘Italy appear doomed to mains to mpede a quick march to Pereko it. Suhsi once of fail rai rain south of the Dnicper bend available for s war of movement in whldi east and west of the main road crcssin moves rather than frontal attacks. Fann By Kirke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst surrender in The I Di’ . h Eoi-friégyrlhglmlrait l; (iflllllbilng to its cnllapgg un- e ore . m“ its invtment and capture 3T wining? Ge n ho Ii: anti frontal Allied attacks. The pe of long de- . It is questionable even now whet er the enemy stand north of the punctured and outfionkdd Voitur- no line is more than strong rear-guard notion to facilitate escape of the main Nazi forces deployed across the scninsula from entrapment. at Melitopol, south of the great bend oi the hon I00 miles of the only remaining No formidable natural obstacle re- that would make the Crimea a ns make the ter- figure. ‘first the Nazi situation in the south is critical cannot be doubted. _ of the Perehop Isthmus connccii tho Crimea must inevitably also force evacuation of the whole of the Dniepcr plateau within the river benill. It vvoni south as lvcll as from the north and out. Russian bridgchesrk on the rlght bank south of Kiev and cast of Krenlenchug already menace the main supply route for all Nozl force; in the bond, the Bell Tersarkov-Dnepropetrovsk railway. It seems impossible h h command has not already from both the Crimea and the Dnieper iatieau to add another chapter or llllgil wit d be vulnerable from the begun a withdrswrl id ng for trio German pu ".ic m memories oi The First Great War surrender are revived. Alhed seizure of the vital Vinchlaturo communications hinge h ll: line in Italy Is reported from Nazi- controlled sources in France but unconfirmed as yet. There is no doubt. however, that convergmg 5th and 8th army columns were within striking distance of the road iunction Thursday and had not met sufficient re- Nazi die-hard stand in its defence, crossing of the lower Voltumo both ‘Hospital Ship In Halifax With Wounded From lied. HALIFAX. Oct. l4 —(CPJ- Wounded United States from the early campaigning in Lllwa and North Africa and a large group ofCanadisnsinvaliderl home ironl Britain for various rea- sons arrived here aboard ihe Ca- nadian Hospital ship lady Nelson. which docked late today and be- can discharging her patients. There were no Canadian casual- ties from the fighting in Sicily and Italy aboard. although it had been rumored beforehand some might be arriving. All had come from base hospitals in Britain presum- ablv as part of a movement to empty these hospitals in readiness to care for wounded from the Ital- ian fighting. The Americans had been taken from field ho‘ in_ North, At. Among n group of Mnriiimers rcturnin were several from Prince dward Island. All were invaliddd back from Britain f)?‘ B g‘ at Capua look like out to right from eheads. the Allies would threaten to fold up Nazis just north of the river against the sea on one side and s- gainst the Volturno itself on the other. Newsman Tells How 5th AAfmy” “Crbsséil “Voltzirno Local Airman Seriously lll A P.E.I. airmail was listed as seriously lll last night on the 705th casualty list of the war issued by the Royal Canadian Air Force at Ottawa. The man was Lac. Frederick Leigh Gates, whose ncxt-of-icin was given as his father. Fred Gales of Charlottetown. l-le was reported "seriously ill as a result of injuries sustained in a mom-cycle accident." He is serving in Canada. Five Airmen Are Awarded Ii. F. G's _...~. merit crcatell smash gaping holes in the enemy's depth defen- ces for 5 or more miles beyond the river. And ll covered the floor of the volley like s. blanket. Allied commanders had had to flliure out how to pet tho heavy material close enough to the river to push it across quickly without allowing the Germans to spot it. They accomplished ll; and but for that shrewd planning and ex- ecuti the bridgehead probably wouldn't have lasted until dark. An equally difficult role was as- signed to the bllrzincers Thair lob was to span the river with bridges so that armament too heavy to be ferried across could reach the other side in time to support the. infant- ry. I watched the soldiers scampcr across the flat and disappear inside a drifting pail of man made white smoke We lay there waiting and strain- inlz our eyes to sen thrcuch the smoke screen. It wasn't. long after- wards thzlt a runner came and said the crossing had been ef- fected lmd the troops were moving forward. BEE LIMIT T0 PLASTIC! MONTREAL. Oct. 14—(cP)-—Di'- LR. Mchaffle. manager of the re- search and develo ment depar- ment of Canadian ndustries ifcd. told a service club (ll-Jpn!) t0- ds that the L ‘ ‘ ydol-i re lace steel and structural mater- "Despite stories that we rniiiy 0X‘ pect to live in plastic houses, drive plastic cars and even fly piss airplanes. the chemical p6 does not support those extravagant clcims,"_ he said._________ __' Z liod OTTAWA. Oct. 14—(CP)-—Ail' Force headquarters late today an- nounced the award of five Disting- uished Flying Crosses to members of the R.C.A.F. overseas and one to a Canadian serving overseas with the R..A.F. The award winners: F0. DB. Williams (RAF). Saskatoon; P0, F. E. McLaren. Ottawa: Flt. Lt. W. R. Petitt. Brampton. Ont; F0. J. E. Bell. (37 Golden St.) Saint John N.B.i PO. G.W. Gabel. Didsburv. tAalta; and PO. SF. Garland. 0t. wa. The citation for F0. Bell read‘ “This officer is a navigator of high merit. He has completed a ifitke number of sortles and his af- forts have contributed much to the successes obtained. On s recent m~~ ciisicn during a flight to Berlin an electrical storm was encountered. Displaying great skill E0. Bell un- errlrikiy guided his pilot to the tar- get which was successfully bomb- Bd- This officer has displayed com- mendable courage and resoui-ce."_ Postal Employees To, Seek Wage Increase OTTAWA. Oct. 14—(CP)-—Jack Cochrane. president of the Ottawa branch of the Canadian Postal Employees’ Association. said today that between 650 to 500 of its mem- hers will meet here next week to " e nuv for wage increases averaging $300 a year. Cochrane sold the demand will pi based on an opinion among poet- a employees that the minimum salary of toe s month is inade- tio quote. and that staff control regu- try lotions and other factors result in remaining for lone per- employees s in rsrv cspscitiy a Join 1hr Host of Home Bakers nvho- LBSBU cannon " i HUD inf/smirk A; I nl months ago. alld had been cared for in Britain since. The Canadians included men who had been in lured in accidents in Britain or who were invulided home because of sickness. Brig. Sir Frederick Carson. a » in-iiingctonwOnt. ~ returned to convalesce in Canada following a motor transport accident in Syr that cost hlni a broken leiz. Brig. Carson. a graduate of Royal Military College. Kingston. has been attached to the transport di- vision with the British command iii Iraq and the Middle East. This is his first time home since 1938. Returning aboard the Lady Nel- son were i1 few Canadian Army Nllrsinrr Sisters and some member: of the US. Women's Army Corps. The U.S wounded were being lirilogded _tonlizht.__n_lhil_e_the (Continued on page '7 Col. 2.)_ iMany Canadian Homes Need Repairs OTTAWA. Oct. l4--(CP)—There are s lot of Canadian homes that need repairs. the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today. In. formation gathered in the 194i census showed that 27 per cent of all dwellings in the Dominion are in need of external repair. To come under this classifica- tion houses had obvious need of re- pairs to foundations. dilapidated roofing. churn-lay. in need of at- tuitlon or stairways and steps ap- proaching the main entrance in need of repairs. The proportion of homes in need of repair was considerably lower in the large cities than in rural communities The farm home per- centage wss i0 as compared with 20 for urban dwellings. and this proportion declined steadily in larger communities. Provincial percentages of dwell lngs in need of external repair were us follows: Saskatchewan 40: Al- berta 37: New Brunswick 37: Man. itoba 32: Nova Scotia 2'7. Prince tario 23. and British Columbia Z3. lfoep League 0f Nations Alive IDNDON. Oct. l4 — (C P) — Keeping the framework of the leag- ue of nations alive, the British libnplre has paid its member dues up to date and l4 other countries have brought their installments up through i942 to the credit side of the ledger, it was learned in Lon- don toil y. Six countries of the British Em- pire are included in the 1943 paid up members, but the amounts they paid has not yet been published in Geneva. Canada is currently pay- ing her installment. RAMIREZ GOVT IIAS TROUBLES MONTEVIDEO. Oct. 14-—(AP)— The Ramirez government of Argen- tine struggled through a cabinet crisis tonight omld indications it was having difficulty in determining a definite foreign policy. The problem seemed to be whe- ther to change Argentine foreign policy to active support of the Unit- ed Natlons or to continue to be the sole South Arr~rlcan republic to maintain relations with the Axis. The crisis was nlcclnitafed by the resignations of three ministers un- ' jAnd Kesselring Edward Island 26. Quebec 25. On-- Field Marshal Gen. Albert Kessel- derstood in favor s break with the Axis LONDON. Oct. 15— (Friday)--(CP) -_ Unit- ed States heavy bomb- ers reached deep into Germany yesterday to smash the important ball bearing plant at Schwe- infuri: and lost a record number of 60 bombers while knocking down 91 fighters in what was probably the fiercest single air battle ever fought. Escorting long - range fighters accounted for another .13 aircraft. l. boosting the total of en- emy losses to 104. Two of the American fighters were missing, boosting the raiders‘ total losses to 62. The size of the attacking groups was not announced but Unite States army headquarters referred to them as "large formations-"t o w It w in months at the industrial city in south-central Germany. The heaviest previous American loss was 59 bombers on the Regen:- burgh-Schwelnfurt shuttle raid to Africa Aug. 17. The Berlin radio. in a. broadcast recorded by the Associated Press claimed that 70 British-American planes had been shot down during the day "over West German ter- ritorv." The heavy assault was the first since the Oct. 10 attack on Meun- eter. 40 miles inside Germany. which climaxed three straight days of one of the war‘s most intensive. bombardment ‘ including the record long-distance smash of Oct. 9 against eastern Germany. Poland and East Prussia. Today's raid broke a lull in Brit- aimbased operations by both the RAF. and the Americans. R. A. F. and R.C.A.1". heavy bombers have not been out since the night Oct. 8 when they struck heavily at Hanover and Bremen but RAF‘. Mosquitcs raided Berlin the night of Oct. B. D- Report Rommel In Disagreement STOCKHOLM. Oct. l4-—lAP)— ring was reported today in have been recalled as commander 0L German troops in southern Italy lifter another clash with Marshal Erwin Rommel. commander in northern Italy. who was said to have assumed charge of defences throughout the country. Kesselring was transferred to sn unannounced post and a German general named Stzunel placed in command of the Rome area under RommePa orders. said the report carried in o. dispatch from the Ge- neva newspape La Sulssy. A announcement today said lVluESOlhll had received Rom- mel st Mussolini. "government seat" Tuesday. wh may have been in connection with the affair e exact background of the new dis ute between Kcssolrlng and ltomme over the best means of halt- liiR stcadv Allied gains in Italy was not determined. the Swiss dispatch said. but their rivalry dates back to the African campaign. ulst- ss commander of German forces in the entire Med- iterranean basin. was Rommers superior when the "desert fox" first l-rrrlt to Africa only as a General. But Rommel refused tn recognize his authority. it was sold. and "oileri up impressive victories which took him to El Alameln in F-gvnt mid won him flu baton of n field mar- shal. eoual in rank to Kosselrlnil. gm of River, n. rial Plans For Loan Drive m; Fi Final plans were made here yes- terday, at s conference of Queen's County salesmen. for the cperiinfl 0f the Fifth Victory Loan cam sign on Monday. sessions were hed Bi the Charlottetown l-lotcl. Mr. W.D. Gillis, vice-chairman for Queen's County presided Ari instructional talk was given by Mr. W.H.V. Dunbar. vice- nhairman for the Province who pill- lirled the various prospectus ii-rid application forms. l‘. P.W. Turner. the Provincial chairman of sales went over the sales procedure. ,Mr. Gulls also presided at s lun- cheon: Grace was said ‘by Rev. W. T. Mercer of Mount Stewart. Mr. E.W. MacKinnon, Provincial chairman in an address said that with the same enthusiasm and ef- fort ls was displayed in the founh loan campaign by the Queen's County salesmen there would be no oulty in reaching the Obifliiivfl diffi in the forthcoming loan. ' Mr. A.L. MacPherspn. chair- man of sales for Queen's County also addressed salesmen on matters Charlottetown. {tater instructional films were shown to the salesmen. Altogether it was a most enthu- slastlc meeting and augllrs well for the success of the campaign. Mr. N .W. Lowther, chairman for Queen's County was uniible w b! present at the session and Mr . M Bagnall, organizer for Queens was also absent, through illness, much w the regret of the meeting. Hunter River: Mac- ern, Victoria; John MacKsy, Emerald. R..R.; Geor e Madman, North Wiltshire; A . Simni Crapaud; Cedric Simpson. R; James Smith. view: Earl Jay. Mount Stewart: L. T. Boston, Bolisllalv; A G Put- marl. Eldon: and from Charlotte- town, R..E. Hyndmnn. R.T. the- son. T.A McAvinll. J A Mclsanc, W M. Bears, HM. Simpson, M C. Stewart. Col C.C Thompson. Stewart Ives and N211 MacLcod. l- IT'S Buuflxl. (o SHoof Llffui iiacplfs bur MINK tom's i Seam f0 at: A NECYLSSITY High tide this lifternonll nt l iiiid tomorrow morning lit .09 Fain sets this evening at 6.17 niid rises tomorrow morning at l6. lost quarter mOon Oct 20. 9 43 p.n-l. Sunimersldc tide l8 minutes iait‘! than Charlottetown. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAY! _ Charlottetown - summers!“ — Mom-ton Leave Charlottetown 7.35 a. In I200 noon. 1.30 p. m. Arrive Chltflflllclllffl i.l0 p. m M5 p~ In. 7.05 p. III. l’. l2. i.-N.S. Ferry Service "H"! lvlrlllding Sundays. At an suction in aid of Mrs. Wln- Leave Wood islands-loop mm ston Churchill's Russian fund six ':..is pm. pairs of silk stockings drew 5i Leaves Ceribeo 12.15 p-m. I-ll gulneas (om). Ml-