ti“ We‘: Mlle my ton. ~t~ , and fowl. r a» .~ mica. island cellular-é _ - s-ae- . n MAXIlll_ 01 1' MERE MAN mebettariabeknawnasaiaier “yuentaautaiaaallslwll. u‘ ourllaa. fie thala- Gugflga, laulal1li _ ed Army Cu per h Covers Prince Edwerdilsland Like the Dew Qllll’, Like fire. fear is a great and nec- MAXIMS or a MERE AIAN servant but a ruinous inlaid. iii-Reds Ignore Nazi Story i r ggmun, 8e it - (AP) — oemians fgaLr that eormentra» of their forces ill oi-llfii‘ W" w w, which include Italy, may Hi Comm d l- ilt thm w lne of. 531a £1 dispel-fill 0 m Spill . r River. will! . perlin sai spacial 4cm to the United States cearrm l-‘rlday to report on he “progress of the war." WASHINGTON, Sept. l4 - (AP! ‘three United States vessels. a .... and two submarine rs have gone down in action the enemy, the Ne. _ - t reported-today, b! i_n_ ~ the number of the craft. loa -. the United States entered the WASHINGTON, 80M. ll IAPI —Chlna is constantly’ re- etiving peace pro sa rom Man and the 16,7211 become lowe led pressed‘ . V. ti!» Chinese l-‘oregn Minia- t today. CAIRO. Sept. i4 - (AP) —— The . tinformation from the Balkans ' l’ is that the Germans have the - tien under control despite the tconfusicn caused by the Ita- uiliirtloe. and will have to be m of their positions by All its: Time Lest by JYITAWA. Sept. l4 —(CP)——De- lilies in the number of strikes ll time loss through labor dis- ifl Jilly. as compared with t. was reported today by the Department. in July, there were 42 strikes mliliis 15.984 workers with a loss of 06.971 man days. This ‘iiiilllicd with 5e strikes involving Iiii workers with a loss of 140,885 "ii till’! in June. 1i" lisures recorded for July. iiliowed 68 strikes IDVOIVIDI = workers with a loss of 53.- Ideys. strikes, involving 1.893 "I. were carirled over from slid 33 began during Jilly. "9 49, disputes. 3C were term- _ during the month. . one involving metal %_______ UULDIIFR 1.0858 LII! mm. N s sept i4 - to ‘Tlomberdier Clarence Favier. ~ Westville, N. 8.. lost his life Y when fire destroyed a h‘ It a military outpost near mile dashed into the blazing an sttemot to save some vai- n liiiilbment. and is believed t ‘I been asphyxiatcd. I 75M l-faakon of Norway took the at onl??? :."..:::.':r= "i r (p; Fll IIIIAIIICEVEIITS "Ct Wed- LII-ll. Peter‘ , a cronies‘? e-lietii. I to buy llvs and dressed . Sept, a Wang“ take etar lunc ea them. IAXIDZW, lent. lowin: the Germ o! the abandonment f! lladeogcow declared night that. the railroad north of swift mechaulsed flatlands of the southern red baune ried back hall way from Odma. Elli Nfsis fought torch squads to fire very o l’ e co of this newest Prichernomorsk of the land bri ge to the Crimea but listed haiiovka and Bolshsya Mikhaiiovka as among the towns captured. “Béethclr sweeping“ trlnl 0f Retreat at Bryansk la-(All-Iol- an announcement 0f B had cut. tne Crimean Melitopoi by a thrust across the Ukraine. r now has been car- Rnstov the German an- kle Nani withdrawal Bryiirisk summer offensive. A Reuters news aeency dis tch from Moscow sai es Red Army arc Brgsiak while the ga time for their or blow lip could not. be advance north Crimea, on e southern ex- e lone Russian l t of Muriupoi, the sea of Aliov port, since its capture weeks agi. Melitpo. is l8 miles west oi the Dn eper River and 108 miles south and slightly east r etcovsk. I055 Hill] CWO O1 D1119?- gave no details ve deep into the lain directly north mmuni Federovka. Malaya Mili- stuns Age For Civil Service OTTAWA, Sept. l4—iCP)—-F‘uced with a need for 80a full-lime and gut-time civil servants, officials or atlorial Selective Service and the Civil Service Commission announ- ced today that married and slnBlB women aged l8 i0 55 now are ell- gible for part-time empliiymiiiii lii the Civil Service here n. stcnographers and typists. The announcement said the women clerks be paid $35 to 05b a month net, cpending r three upon their experience, and one~liali hours a day, six days s week. Registration will start tomorrow. The part-time positions will be re- stricted to residents 0f greater Ot- tawa to prevent further housm, congestion, played full-time in the government service will not be to take part-time jobs The salaries workers, .135 or e50 per month will be not, not b through income through ccat-of-iiving bonus. and Women now eni- allowed to resliii paid to part-time iect. to deduction tax or increase report, - tori-The Beard I40 of ‘Prado and the Ministry of in~ formation have issued a booklet costing sir cents in which dress experts give hints on how Brit- ons can save clothes coupons and ‘bleu vivell dressed. The book is en- ifl0d to be in Halifax 3cm Thurs- e gk__l.'l_o_and_ Mend." COBUDD infh CHARLUITETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1943 I. S. 5TH ARMY FIGHTING GRIM ARRHRI IHREQB ll". I an New Potato Prices Fixed For P. E. Island Maximum retail gees for new tatoes in Prince ward Island ave been established bv the War- time Prices and Trade Board. Mr. Ewen Nicholson, prices and representative for the Board gwrovince, announced yester- day the retailers selling to the con- sumer must. not charge more than $1.23 o, bushel or 36 cents a. peck. He pointed out, however, that there was nothing to prevent a retailer from selling for less than this a- price. allowed a from a nts a bushel under the new order. Concerned About Fate of Pope Pius BERNE, SWITZERLAND, Sept. i4—(APJ—A dispatch from Chins- so on the Swus-Irallsn border to the. newspaper Der Bund sand today Roman Catholics were concerned a- bout the fate oi Pepe Pius XII. who was reported in be pracilcally a prisoner of Nazi Fiid Marshal Gen. Albert Kcsselring. , It added that the German "Oops! so far had respected the neutral territory cf Vatican City. The dis atcii said that when the Allies beg then- march northward “one must certainly suppose that German forces will be concentrated around Rome and will fight to the ast.’ The newspaper said Catholics were discussing the pc§ibiliiy that the Page might leave the Vatican if ec Rome bmes a battleground. The Cardinals and other high curchmen in Rome were said o have withdrawn into the Vatican when the Germans occupied the capital. Cardinal Luigi Magllone, Secretary of State. conferred with the German Minister, the border dispatch said. To Reconsider Time Change SAINT JOHN, N.B.. Sept. 14- tCPw-Mayor C. R. Wasson said toduv that. the Citv Council will reconsider. on Thursday. a decis~ ion to have Saint John revert. to Atlantic Standard time on Oct 7. Obiectioris had been made that. the proposed chanile would put the citv out of step with other com- munities in the Maritime: and elsewhere in Canada. he said. T0 VI T HALIFAX SAINT JOHN, N.B., Sept. 14- iCP)—Brig..Gen. Alex Ross, di- rector of air raid precautions, left ihere todny for Monctsn and plan» day to Sllllgily. Dominion Action on Education Advocated QUEBEC. Sept. sures should be ately’ inward implementation oi at- leasr. five to I! Education m; government ma» show till be consolidated ‘is inquire n». the w be level of e the hil P)-—Mvia. 14-(6 taken “immedi- the Canadian n to rem deficiencies are should be provided i“ w" pieces piia ll d com. that To numb “the from sparsely aet- w l’ Gill sciioola which" lhbllid H0! M n. g 33' up 0f‘ ' the inion... u‘ should be ed- mlur. “Ihiii. it shoud he h “hm and the offerinaa in t utrlaatlsfaotoryemefiynancm ‘Gov Survey conducted for» tlwthe school conditions. . . . . Perhaps a basic real estate tax oi l0 or l5 mills on a fair investment could be agreed upon as s maior means Vi ks it applicable all over land. . . The dole ates voted to carry on the work 80f this committee and asked that its future personnel bu left to the incoming executive Dr. J5. Thomson. general man- ager of the Canadian Broadcast- ing Corporation told the delegates to the three-day convention that. education was the keystone of poet- war reconstruction. He said "the oil-operation cf no. tions to preserve civilisation is the onl alternative to world-wide sn- arcIIy. Buch an attainment. in the last resort. can only emerge out of public enlilh . The task essentially educational. reachiny into a new attitude towards the teaching of history, geography, lit- erature and science itse " RB. Les-n . educational ad~ viser of the CBO. asked the con- vention for approval of a plan for settinfi up a national advisory counc on school broadcasting. The suggestion was approved Dr. G1‘. McNal o Edmonton. deputy minister of the Alberta De- partment of Education, said the Advisory Council on vocational ed- ucation was provin of great value pro ams o several federal ministries n their plans for post. war rehabilitation. The delegates were tea guests of the Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Eu- erui Fleet, at. Spencerwood, the eriioi-‘s home. ts Vital Nazi-Held Crime I est ight By Kirke L Simpson. Associated Pres. We; Ami"; 3-101! shaken by the Allied invasion of Italy, the Nazi high com- mand obviously is combing its perilous Rllsshn from [up ruse-mes go be] strr the southern wall oi the now vulnerable fortress cf Eurogc, .\o other explanation of thv: surrender of the Dry-ans]; sstion, an- chor of the whole German line in Russia from Smolensk southward to the sea coat. a ‘ - Only on that. front can Nazi commanders find seasoned troops competent to meet the British-Csnzldizin-American atiacks in Italy. And under the relentless pressure of a Russian offensive that gains niomentiun with the vveeb, only a drastic shortening oi‘ the ‘, from il_l the east can furnish the manpower now urgently needed in ltsly- i SvvLss reports that u to 10 Nazi divisions are- beinz hurried (Willi Russia _io prop the lta zen-Balkan front may be exaggerated, Therc seems little doubt, however, that the Berlin-announced "evacuation" of Brvansk means that previous German plans for a slow and order]; with- drawal to shortened lines for a winttr stand have been completely up- se Without its Bryansk pivot. the German front in Russia east of the Dliicper is of little value. either defensively or for future offensive oper- ations. It is too long to be held against Russian winter attacks with the forces left to llitler by the campaign in Italy and the throat of Allied trans-channel onslaught. Only along the west. bank of the Dnieper from the Orsha bend ii the north, west of Smolensk. to Kiev can the Germans find g strcrgi natural osition so shortened as tn release heavy reserves. Russian forces already ave driven a dangerously wide and deep salient into the Ger- man front south of Bryansk along the Konoteip-Kiev railway", 1t; spear- head is reported less than ‘i0 miles from Kiev in the Nflhln sr-ctar. The Russians are threatening Chesriigov junction, beyond the lnwcr Desna. and even the Gomel escape gateway beyond it through which Nari forrcs rbeiiricting from Bryaiuli must reach the haven of the Dnieper west n . Tiler seems small chance that the Nazi retreat in Russia can halt even along the lower Dnieper. Evacuation of the whole Dnlcper Piatear. within the great southern bend of the river. seems certain. To attain?! to hold the whole Dnieper west bank from Oisha. through Kiev, hr:- me-iirilug, Dniepropetrovsk and Zapororhe would extend rather "i!" shorten the front. It represents nearly 800 miles measured from the Drlicucr mouth to 0 .ha. From Kiev southward to the Black Sea the Bu: River appears to 0i- fer Uic most. likely defence line. It would shorten the Russian front b)’ some 200 miles. about one fourth. Canadian Army Move Discussed in U. S. House Death of Mr. By J. F. Sanderson Canadian Press Staff Writer WASH! Se l4 - (C NGTON. Pi~ h , Pl -_Action by the Canadian Gov- icmment in disbandlng two. full | divisions and part of a third. z-e- I pzesenting 20,000 men of the home defence nrmy was projected into the centre of the United States political siaggl idOd?Y when‘ Cong- ress renssem e rom a sx wee s Mr. Herbert N. Murphy, i3, prin- ""55- Cipal of Quéen‘ squar. 531.com Senatorsvand Cfornglrcssrmfin Ire- Charlottetown, died vestcrdn)’ M lllrilid l“ ‘H’ ° Ic“ e5, Co‘ the Charlottetown Hospital. He ilfid. Eli With llic lPiiYIiQdiiiiE will 0 0°‘ been ill only a comparatively short: czding whether fathers should be time, m5 dean, v.11] (gcme n; a great § inducted into the Americanharhicd‘ siicdck ta marry. b t Pm iforces. These gppcseéi, agd there r. a urp y was om n - q are many. seize on aria it's par- miire ISIZL’. . near Gcfrcfiilrili- iii} tizti demotillzation of the home de- 1900. l-le w. educated n: the Diilllir fume force as a heaven-sent hr. 5°ll°3l "ll Panlllulfe “d ‘ind “b gumcnt in their fnvor. St. Dunstan} Unlver .. ilravdunt- inglgzigii his bachelor of arts nearer: n ‘ . He taught for two years in Cam- pion College. Regina. and tiicii re- turned to his natlvr-kxnrovolnce £12023‘ gig; gficglpnlmtzirf sé;graXe;Y-e§;~\_s he; i; Balflviililrfiiti disbandmcnt of was an inspector of schools m, i 8 h i 5101i d‘ v King's County and for the past five. Rcllrlescntntiic An .ew J. Mal of W“; w“ a member or the tench-y Kcntinky, cinlinaan of the House mg staff of Queen Square School: cf Representatives Committee on He became principal about two‘ Military Affairs. summed up the ycalrs ago when Flt. iimalaériiiisrlilligé arziifmtant bIlLlss vvnvz~d f th Ca urn, w o succcae l o} “ tie-re no nee or z-sc F‘ MacDonald. went on coil“? "P! tminizd mcn (of cannon» in the vice. fightng front. f th U it d N t- Ht.- ierlws to mourn his Wife i°i" ions, than it ‘Isodiifigliifxlilig“i152?- merly Miss Agncs Pal’. NBWDQTl- “ml stand whv there i: n new to m. "i" clilldi°ii~ Gem“! m“ 3' Jim“; duct fathers in this cnuntrv." ‘We 6- “Sim” 2 "rs- “mi m‘ an Representative Harold Knutson. son. Michael. our l manila = , _ Surviving also arc: three sisters‘. RP-lilblifliii- li-‘lluied ' _ 1B chci Mrs.» u _ ‘Biieiil? §I§§Q§§IH11SI“§‘,Y,_ If Cminrln dcesnt nccd any nroi-c Mrs. Puroy. Mcscham, Sask. I dys) Mrs. Condon. Paninure Isliinfi- His brothers are: Terence. " Adam. Dartmouth N S. _ Niagara Falls, N.Y.. ‘Binzcnc with! QOIIQEEISIQ-Yi Army. and Jerome, Wind is in Making (In Ottcvva hfonday’ Defence Minister J. L. Ralston announced that Canada would reduce home i defence operational military forces §\I\' about 20.030 men through dis- (FFIEEETSE-i coii‘ s)“: Says Higher liog Prices Arc iicedcdi A L L I E D HEADQUARTERS. ‘SOUTHWEST PACIFIC. Scpt. 1:3 ‘iwcdllesfiiii’)—iAPi~TIie bulk of iii? JiIDnnesc garrison routed from ‘the air and shipping base or 55L nmaua. New Guinea, has been Necessitv of some adjustment o-flgsgilrgéveizfllinlg isgltiéterfig hog prices if the volume of produc- 1 “on m go be mnmmned was “rah , _.i:i|i8 9s fnce certain nnnihiliation, “d “may at a one day National“; ed headquarters announced to- HOR Conference held under the “v auspices of the Canadian Federat- ion of Agriculture. Representatives from all nine provinces attended the meeting, which had Fred Downing of win- 1353s its chairman. UXTAWA, Sept. i4 ~ (C P) Another trlum h i r . i‘? Proportions seamed) ittintellic ‘xi-lanai:- ‘time? l8 miics north of cop. hold; bnLlllilll. as enemy strong- of forcéigilengsteanlzlefgreeiat that weight air base. o hm’ b!“ F CANADA IHE All PURPOSE HOUR dmcnt of tile 7th and 8th div-I Air Offensive is Resumcd i IDNDO . Sept. l4-(CPi-—-The'. Allied air campaign against thei continent from Britain gathereclv monienlurri again today with a’. zacks for the szcozici 1}‘ if‘. u ' by squadrons of Typhoon fight bombers or. sizippizig off the New i erlarids and a foray across the Eng- ‘ lish Channel at dusk by medium! bombers. The operations followed s brie! ' are after an rich:- iuli in air d; Forsces Food lShortage After ish troops seize Bari- Sept. 14—(AP)—British fought hand to hand ton ' End of War - bridgehead as Field Mar O’I‘TA\\'.-\. SBPI. i~l — (CPi — slgilllam M35355’ Pammenuwy imade a supreme effort to cretary for (he B gg- _ <._ .4 of Food, said here trout? llfinfgfrleb- .the Sea‘ 5"" “ l°°il Siwiliise after the war. ‘ and added that producers should have zidfear of _n_ qqliipse 0g d... Illliifd Wen hOSilIlIIJS end. Lord Y, __ 0.. and the en..re British people tc Canada fcr what this country was dog“; 1n sllooivlnc foodstuffs f0 the United Kingdom. He said that not only iind this flow cf food from Con- ail"- iiililfivi Drill‘ an adequate diet for the Brztlsh consumers but also provided them with a var- lfil’ so essential in feeding for‘ battle. tTlie German overseas News Ag- ency broadcast Tuesday night n rc- port that Canadinru "with many, ranks and motorized infantry" ure taking part in the bloody fighting on the Salerno hrideghead.) fighting. iTlie broadcast, recorded in Lon- Rcferring to the food confer_ Jion by Reuters News Agency‘. said encc at Ho: Sprincs. vs. this sum- l the Canadians were fighting "On mcr. where i-l nations studied food the northern flank of the Allied supplies after the war. Mr. Ma- bridgehead" and asserted that they bane‘ said producers of fordstuffs had been encircled by German ShUiLd never twain be the vir- counter - attacks and "now are iims of speculative chance. exposed to heavy artillery fke on ‘ z both flanks". ‘bllfiifi market or a . lie-rs‘ mar- (The German report said the kc‘. but a balanced market." he Canadians had driven west after iflll- landuig at Salerno to gain control of the plain "where ihev might, have deployed greater t k forcesi C. C. F. Leaders to Meet in Regina and whence they ml t have, reached Naples." i iThe account claimed a German: RFISINA. Sept. l3 —(CP)-Lead- crs of the C.C.F. from all parts of the Dominion will meet in Regina counter attack threw the Canad-i fans back on Vietrt, on the coast of‘ at the end of the your to attend a meeting cf the National Council» the Gulf of Salerno about flvel and a four-day national center. miles southwest of Snlernol _ (A London port Monday said it was believed units of the 1st ence of provincial representatives, of the Party. it was announced to- iilii)’ hi’ Aid. C. M. Fines, President Canadian Army Tank Brigade. which fought in Sicily, might =0! the Saskatciicwnxi section of ,ifie C. C. . with the 5th Army tit Salerno. However, there has been no official Allied report that the Canadians are fighting at Salerno) (Also from, Berlin came the statement that LL-Cicn. Mark W. Clark's IOICQ consisted of the Brit. ish 1st. 46th and 56th infantry alv- isions and the British lst tnnk division attached and the Anteri- tw f h _ _ can 36th nnd 45th infantry divis- 006’; i 9 lmiilsii’) of l-lealtiis 3.- ions and the American lst tank a amncottntzes will be ready for division. No mention was made by fl-viiniiiicl at till‘ end of September i the Germans of the Canadian is! Tho (‘Oiiiiilos Will be rented to‘ tnnk bzicnde. units of which were IMTITIICPTS ‘for y$'i.50 a_iveck which in-lsnidlin lnncion reports Monday ns flit?! mid llvht ‘RICE. IVORIbIV being in nction in the Last Guns Fired in I , i . . . i Provincial Campaign i. I drying Tcomiis. president of tiie_ in this Province, who WES.‘ mam corracns orsfisn LONDON. - ten» ~11“. M, iBV C.P. Special Correspoudenir After n short and quiet cniiip- qiarty sign the 72 candidates in Prince ,l'llliliiilg for Councillor in the itii Exiivard Island's gcncrnl clcctlaiiiiPi"iiicc District agniiisnl-lon. Hor- iiast. night awaited the verdict of ace Wright. minister iviiinmt P011- tlie voters who go to the polls tc- folio. and Heath Stronif- Cmiieii" morrow to select 30 legislature ntive. -' members. Fifteen Councillors and the Though the contestants in the same number cf Assemblyman are field made up the greatest num- nlccicd to the legislature. tivo from ber in the province's history, a each riding. The house is unicnm- small vote was looked for as the erni and functions of both types of electors (141059 between representatives are identical. bu; J. Walter Join-s‘ Liberal Pnrty, different voting qualifications are the Progressive Conservatives Nqiilffid l0!‘ Each- undcr fomier Premier W.J. . Ycsierdal‘ “m3 lost IiiKhi ilieffi‘ MacMillnn and a scattering of . WI! llilli! iii "K will’ 0i’ Piililli! ll!‘ C. F. and Independent Liberal can- tlvitics by any of the contending (“dates groups. The campaign virtunilv Harvesting activities were 5x. came to an end Monday night, 0U pected to cut heavily into the tot- i" as any nubile “vocals uric n] 0i bniiogs, This mo, m‘; ,\ mnL concerned. and yesterday tin- or factor in cutting clown, through- “Ply leiidei‘! deiiflifiil iliiiiiifielveo oiit the brief campaigning peflmL or the most. part to consultation on the customary election fanfare. 31th mtmb"! °I ma" minim‘ one. Premier Jones was in the rural nrcns of his constituency last night. and members of his party hcrc said he was not ex ected to deliver any addresses. e s oke Monday night at Pownel, wiere he reviewed his party's platform and expressed confidence in the outcome of the bnllotting. Dr. MacMlllan Confident In Charlottetown opposition leader MncMillnii likewise was confident, uf the result. "I feel sure there will be a ciinnge of overn- lnent tomorrow." lie told tie Cn- nndlsn-Prcss last night. In the brief campa grl since the Sept. i5 dissolution of the legis- Three Cornered Contest ‘Thirty etitrants from each of ilic major rties were in the running while t e C.C.F. had nine men en- tered and Independent Liberals were seeking three of the seats. There wen: no four-cornered con tests. l" ilie 0th Queens district. where he won by 35 votes in the i939 gen- eral election. Premier Jones was OPDOBICI this timc by M.W. Wood. n Progressive Conservative. for the Councillor's sent, Dr, MncMllmyL running for_ Councillor in the 5th Queen's fidlllLf’. iind n three-com- ered fight on his hands alrninst Simon Pnoli. Liberal. and W. (l. Rollinlts. 6.0.1". laaasllpaloa Delivered. ID-Ol N-I~ otls- Pruvllews I UJJ 03.00- AITLE HRQH! ailroad i Nazis Report Canadians In Salerno Area ItaIy-British-Atnerican 5th army in desper- =ate fighting with Germans at Salerno bridgeheadi iGermans made some gains: Berlin broadcast claims Canadians with many tanks and motorized infantry fighting around Salerno: British-Canadi- an 8th army takes Cosenza in drive from toe; Brit- By WES GALLAGHER and American troops ighi: with elements of three crack German divisions on the Salerno shal Albert Kesseiring drive the 5th army into During the day and into the night allied war- ships poured out everything from machine-gun bullets to shell fire to help protect the narrow beachhead extending 24 miles south of Salerno and the entire 5th army was engaged in a grim Salerno Sea) incessant Dogfights The air was streaked with in- cessant dogfight: as the Germans hurled more and more fighter bombers into the battle. Allied planes. 150 miles from their near- est stable lending field. bombed roads and railways leading to Sul- erno, strivinv mightil to delay o! prevent German rein orcements. Geri. Sir Bernard Montgom- ery's 8th Army was beating swiftly up the Italian Medit- rranean and Adriatic coasts, "uh-checked except by demol- liions. Allied headquarters an- nounred. ‘The pace of the British and Can- adian from» was mold because southern itnly was only lightly de- fended. The rough nature of the country and the effective demol- lticns probably will ilfciflii Mimi- bs gcmerv ioining the 5th Anny’ for a vreek or =0. The disposition and strength of tho 8th Army in southern Italy are military secrets, though it has been reported ttlic veteran cana- dian lst Division which fought in siclly makes up part of the force. Apparently advancing inland, but lsittorly along the west corset. the lfclntpomeri- Army has made less than hnlf the distance from its lnndinr ivlaccs to Salerno where the 5th Army is tinder immediate. itwcvnlii nressuze. llfcanwliile, Allied sea strength was given a trmiendoils boost bv the arrival of more ltalian war- ships at Malta, bringing tile total to T1- These included five battle- ships, rich! cruisers. 27 desire!’- ers, i9 submarines. s seaplane car- ver, a dozen toruerlo boats, six cum-cites and othcr craft. REPAIR-rec its Mensw Arc: ., iNSuLT "tidal! - K's Desse- liigh tide this afternoon at i220 mid tonight at l. o'clock. Sun sets this evening nt 7.13 nnd rises tomorrow morning nt 6.38. Last quazter moon Sept. 21, 30¢ a. m. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAY) Charioiteiawlgi — Sulhllilflilio — oncion Leave Charlottetown 7.50 a. m. 12.30 m. 4.80 In. ‘irr ve Charlo (clown L10 p. m. (5 p. m, 1.05 p. m. P- l2. I.--N. FERRY SERVICE DAILY INC JIDING BUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands - 1.00 a. m. and ll a.m. and I p. In. Leaves Caribou — 0.00 a. In. and "Qliiliil the U-c-P- irroup was gfCdritiiiued onlpakdtozTtfiTiv-IV): l p.in. and 5 pa.