MAXIMS 07A MERE MAN i-t-i “main llf th destroy it h? the; The very things that create sthif-ll?’ and ch e-'~*'.:....'.'."r.:...'.:'.&r'~ pull!“ _ CHARLOTTFJTOWN. CANADA, OTUESDAY, sarraiviaaa 9, 1941 Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew §PECTA ULAR EXPEDITIUN GOES T Payment for Heavy London iiaid begins RQpOPtS Indicate Hit"- ler’s Capital Has Second Successive Night Raid. BULLETIN i NEW YORK, Sept. 9—-(Tues- dsyp-(APb-The BBC quoted a berlin broadcast early today to tiie effect that the Royal All Force bombed Berlin again dur- ing the night for the second nocturnal assault in a row. IDNDON, Sept. 8—(AP)-Brltish pilots. attacking in coldly furious commemoration of one of Britain's ic nights. beat at Bci'iin for hours last night and early 1o- day in a raid officially termed the heaviest ever delivered up0n Hit- brs capital. It was payment in the red, iam- iliar coin of fire bombs and explo- sives for the first mass air attack on London on the night of Sept. l-t, 1940. an assault of eight hours and 18 minutes that cost the Nazis- 65 Dlanes. lwenty Royal Air Force bombers and one fighter plane oi sqllfidmnl of hundreds which crossed tne channel last night in the white moonlight of Indian summer went down before German defensive lire, but this was the total loss of a great anniversary offensive that struck not only at Berlin but at Kiel and other far separated points in the Reich and along the occupied Preach coast. Four German fighter planes of htliose that went aoft to meet the ll. A. F. were shot down. . It was bv every account a thrust "oi mighty power sharply illustrating bow Britain's aerial ann. strength- ened bv American-built planes. has grown from a year ago to take the. offensive where it once fought ties- peratelv only to protect this island. Berlin itself. said the Air Ministry in t brief communique. was left glight. with a series of tremendous LIES. “We could see the place like a EigLs111d.fl_1§LllL11111S IDKHLSE (Continued on page ‘l. C01 4 Coming Events Notices in this I cents per word. lite for column "Show-Murray River Tlltlibdilyi L-5l2-9-9 -2i. "Show—Elclori FTidflY. L-5l2-il-9-2i. "Dance. Cardigan Hail. Septem- ber 11th. L-501-9-9 2i "Dance in Iona Hull, Wednes- day, September 10th. L-486-9-8-2i. "ivanted to bliv Chicken, 1W island Cold Storage L-2l9-7-9 "Dance in C. M. B. A. Hail. Verncii i-tlver, Thursday. September llth, Webster's Orchestra. L-504-il-9-2l. rwi <'f .“Bai'n dance at Cecil Camp- bell's Wednesday, Sept 10. Last dance, L-526. “Rrguiar monthly meeting La- dies Aid of Prince Edward island 11°§l1ital tomorrow, Cuiidall Home. i111 am L-521. "At Orwell Hail, Wednesday, 590i. 10. Drake and Ings orchestra. ibr war purposes. L-BN. "Credit Union Clzipter Meeting, B1. Teresa's. Wednesday. Scatemtcr ""111. L-fi -c-o-ii. Road Hall, tember 9th. 14-597-9-9-11. “Wanted to bu -—~Bui0gni! Cattle %t:1i: léigwllefll Selves, all grades swag.‘ Co" prices. island Cog-i “YWI Theatre. Montague. Wed- gmgr. Sept. l0. See "Torrid .Aiso dance after. 14-495-9-8-31. “Come to Instituto Dani-a. Vai- Yfltld flail. Thursday, September “Dance. Grahams m-‘gldv evening, Sen le 0R8 d t th “samba”! m“ ll e. 3mm“ fined at the home of Mrs “"11 111 "N11110- Ii-iitlo-D-il-l 111-11. Music. Steward. Steel. Li-ISH-ll-C-li. "The Annual nnm e Con u 1' to be held M; IKAAIFM Hafienlinoift om BAY. us. t l- llioiii¥tfnds§ “mbf; 1°11}. '1' 33° tori-gm pistons amnioc- ' ' P‘ ‘Dino, l when in normal times close to ‘ _____ ' "o" half of gargdliritbituminomusl coal? ‘Collectlhtt h Aibari a 1"°"““' "f Wm‘ "“°' line ' Y"‘uecbuiiunmiieami- totu-tgd distm“ ‘an’ m" u’. four rgonthssofwiigatiataiona. ""1 Week oe Write gage» A 0.011411 and a. o. "T11? Provincial Woman's Christ- melentoerance Union Conventtm Tea "W0 will Millan at five. Oratorio- 14. ad the central front. The Germans were smashed in a 26-day battle that. ended in a vio- tory for Soviet arms yesterday when of Yelnya, 40 miles east of Smolensk, an official announcement said today. This was the first time in more than two years of war that Hit- ler's men have been driven out of any major position once they had taken a foothold. Not only were they driven out but what is left of them now is in disordered retreat toward the west whence they came, the Russians said. Thus after nearly a month of silence on operations of Marshal Semeon Timoshonkos forces, the Russians officially told of what has been going on in that hotly contested central sector. On both ends of the front, meanwhile, counter-attack after counter-attack by the Red forces appeared to be relieving pressure on Leningrad on the north and Odessa and Kiev in the south. Report on the battle at the town of Xeinya, about 40 miles east of Smolensk and 200 miles west of Moscow, was issued as the fight for Leningrad grew more fierce. Schooled for years to be ready to die for the revolution, the Sov- iet proletariat fought by the side of the Red army to beat back the iron tide roiling toward Leningrad. 1f they gave ground, Soviet dis- patches did not mention the fact. 10C Jews become Nazi hostages VIOl-IY. Sept. 8—(AP)-—More than 100 Jews, including Pierre Masse, fomicr Minister of Justice, and. Theodore vaiensi. a former deputy, today were repsrted arrested as hostages by German authorities at Paris in new reprisaiS for growing disorders against the occupying power. Vichy no longer tried to conceal the gravity of strife in the German- cccupied zone or the fact that re- prisnls seemed only to heighten it. “We can expect to see street in- cidents multiply," the government news agency told the press of un- occupied France. The agency cir- culated an extract from the Paris "Crl Dujeimie" which likened the situation in the occupied capital tn open warfare. N. 8. man_ is Charged with murder HALIFAX. Sept. 8-(CP)—-Jolhn Patrick Mihan, 57. nearby Burn- side cnnlcm operator, was charged with murdering Vlalter Austin, 57- year-oid rt/rekcciper of Tufts Cove, N.S., when he was arraigned today before Magistrate R. E. Inglis here. Mihnn was not asked to plead and Sept. 16 was set for the opening of a preliminary hearing. Austin was found shot to death in a bedroom of his residence above his store yesterday. Witne=ses told police a man carrying a shotgun was seen in the vicinity shortly be- fore the shooting. Royal Canadian Mounted Police arrested Mihan on the road between l I Tufts cove and Bumslde, two set- east side of Halifax Harbor. He was held for questioning. Austin's five-yesr-old son was be- lleveg to have witnessed his father's dea . Coal fields still In slowdown grip In answer to a move started b? the Dominion coal Company more than s week ii o-susiperiding some 400 miners wor iiig in a few of the 10 collieries affected by the pro- duction curtailment-D. J. Mc- Donald leader of the group w adopted the slowdown. decla : carry on our struggle t0 the bitter end and Lf necessary W! will solicit the support of all (Can- tlements about a mile apart on the‘ Claim Red army units regained the town ll. S. freighter Sunk in lied Sea WASHINGTON. Sept. 8-081’) _.The State Department said tonight it had been informed the United States freiflhl" Steel Seafarer was sunk by an airplane bomb in the Red Sea Sept. 7. The department, in answer to inquiries, said the nationality of the plane was unknown. All members of the crew were saved. The information the depart- ment said, was sent to Wash- ington by the American minister at kCalro, Egypt, Alexander e. Nazi Airmen Strike at Moscow MOSCOW. Sent. 9—(Tuesdayl —(AP)—German alr formations struck at Moscow early 1063)’ for the first time since Aug. 2'7 and a Soviet communique said only two of the raiders broke through the capitalhi defences. An alarm was in force for three hours. The Russians said the only damage was to three dwellings and that it was slight. The two German craft. they r8- ported, aimlessly unloaded sev- eral small calibre explosives iind a few fire bombs. Nazis claim’ Leningrad is Surrounded Eizzgzliv WLTREMBLES UNDER BRITISH RAID 1 Soviets Great Victory Moscow reports routing of eight Nazi divisions. (By Henry C. Cassldy, Associated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, Sept. 9—('l‘uesdaY)—-(AP)—The Red army PP°¢131m9d today as its greatest victory of the war against Germany the routing of eight Natl divisions totalling about 115,000 men in the Smolensk area of JAI’ IN CANADIAN ARMY Private Shit-go Anton Kato is the only soldier of Japanese descent in 'the Canadian army. It took him six months after being first turned down to convince the department of national defence to take) him, and today there is no prouder soldier. He is Canadian born, a logger by occupation and now a member of the Forestry Oorps.___ . 1-; 7'- Liv Resolution to Constables Stems Webster and George Gregory were-reappointed to the City Police Force at a rather hectic session of the City Council: lust night. Tliey resigned at the‘ request of the Police Commission about two weeks ago and tivo new officers appointed to fill the va- cancies. A great deal of heated discussion took place before the vote was taken on the resolution to have the two men re-instated. The tivo constables ixcrc dismiss- so by the Police Commission ap- pointed by the City Act of Incor- poration. At a meeting of the Po- lice Commission held August 26 Constables Keith S. Joliiisoii and Robert Dalzfel were appointed u-mporarlly to the force to fill the vacancies. lvfembers of the Police Commission are: His Wor- sliip, Mayor B. Roy f-Ioimiiii. Couri. J. E. Stems, chairman oi the Po- lice Committee and Stipcndinry BERLIN. Sept. e-(Ari-Jrne] German high command claimed to- night troops backed by dive bomb-a ers have takcii the fortres; of schlucssciburB bi‘ storm, closing the Finnish-German ring about Leningrad. In taking Schlucsselburg, 2i miles cast of Leningrad on iiie Neva Riv- er and Lake Lacloga, the Germans were said to have reached the Neva “on a broad front." This would place closer to Leningrad on the east and Schluesseiburg itself. as the river runs from Leningrad to Scliliiessclburg. (The German radio said that Rus- sians put up desperate resistance at Schiuessclburg. A broadcast pick. ed up by NBC in New York said advancing German troops found the terrain strewn with land mines. The city was captured after a spec- ial German sapper detail had work- ed for l0 hours removing 1.800 of the mines. the broadcast said.) them much Two Fortress Aircraft missing LONDON. Sept. 8—(.CP)—'I‘iie Aii’ Ministry announced tonight that two fortress aircraft. giant Ameri- can-built subslratosphere bombers. were ‘missing from a formation which carried out a long-distance reconnaissance flight today. They are the first fortress aircraft to be reported missing since this type of plane was out into action sozrio weeks ago. Windsors to visit Alberta raneh WASHINGTON. Sept, it-(Am- The Duke and Duchess of Wind- sor will spend 24 hours in Wash- ington Bept. 25-26 en route to their ranch in Alberta, the British Em- bassy announced today. The Duke, who i; Governor of the Bahamas, and his wife, former Wallis Warfield of Balti- ian) labor unions. . ." more. will stay at the embassy a l Afagistrate K. M. itiartin. The P0- .ce Committee consists of: Couri. stems. cliziiririan, Couri. R. Chandler uiicl Conn. l". C Doiignii. it was after the Deputy Mayor. J T. Mac-Koo, who occupied the tiyiair iii tlie iIUSJiCQ of Mayor Holman from the province, risked for the adjournment. if tlierc was no further business, that Coun. B. Earle lVlklCDCilfild tendered the foloiviiig resolution: ‘Resolved that both Constables Stcriis Webster and George Gregory be re-appolnt- ed-at once." It was seconded by Conn. J. E. Blanchard. ' ifi>§§5 1.73m s)" Contract let for Island airfield Neating system OTTAWA. Sept. 8--(CP)-—The Department of Munitions and Sui‘.- blv today announced awarding cf 36.500000. The contracts. type of construct- ion, approximate completion datcs and contractors include:- Mount Pleasant relief field (Sum- mersidei, P. E .. $8.000. heating tvstems. September Reid. and Cam- bridge- Ltd.. West-mount. Que. R. C. A. FE. station. Nova Scotin. l $110,000. wood construction October. ‘Stewart construction Ltd. sher- j brooke. Que. R. C. A. F.. station, Nova Scotia. $70,000. wood construction. Septem- ber. Tomllnson Construction Co. Ltd., Toronto. B CAN FLU Ll Q EXBELS IN THE KITCHEN e17 Session Of City founcil Constables Sterns Webster and George Gregory carries despite opposition. 28 construction contracts valued atl H1530 Feeds conference Cpens at Ottawa Cn Wednesday OTTAWA, Sept. 8—(CP)-—Pro- posals for handling Canada's 1N0- stock feed problem during tiic com- ins fall and winter will be discussed at. a. conference of representatives of provincial departments of agricul- ture and farm organizations which opens here Wednesdav. The conference was called by Ag- riculture Minister" Gardiner who wants to get the views of all inter- ested groups before formulating a policy of assisting in the shipment. 0d feed grains from western t0 easliem Canada or otherwise inter- vening in the situation. Last year freight rate assi=tzince was given jointly by the Dominion and Provincial governments. At a recent conference here un- der ilie auspices of the Canadian Federation cf Agriculture a ivlan was submitted for fixing the prices of feed grains and limiting the spread between the price paid to the western farmers and tfiie 111109 paid by eastern farmers vvlio may through the winter and keep up through the winter and eep up thj-‘il’ ‘hQLREQQBRii‘£flf_l>9.f1f_fl@_lilli1fi- l l re-appoint Mayors discuss lleeonseeration Week program Norse LONDON, Sept. spectacular 2,500-mile smashed valuable coal mi the year. troops were withdrawn. removed. What happened also living there was not took control without German large. It was commanded by Some of the ships already T1115 was the second British since the ivitlitlraivzil before the lauded on the Lofoteti Islands in factories. of the expedition said, Gasoline Conservation Stressed At lVleeting‘ 0f Municipal Repre- sentatives. . Need of stricter observance uf tlie1 request ironi Ottawa to conserve‘, gasoline in tiie interests of Canada's. war effort was voiced and Liiiiinf-f niouslv supported at. a ieprcscniii- tlve meeting of Mayors and Conn-l clllors of the various municipalities of the Province, lieid last nilziit at ‘ihe Charlottetown. . The occasion was a dinner fuiic-i Lion at iviiicli Hon. H, H. Cox pre-1 sided. called for tiie purpose of uls- cussing oinns for coordinating t-f- forts in connection with the obser- vance of Rccoiisecratioii Week. Susi. Those present iiicliitlsd Mayor J. E. Campbell and Couri. W. E. Small- iiian Sunimersidc; Mayor A. H. Suiaiiivoud and Couri. it. U. McLean, Scuris; Mirror N. D. MacDonald and Couri. James Condoii, George- town; Mayor W. D. Johnston rlfld Couri. H. J. Hyties Montague; May- or J. W. Waugh and J. W. Wallace, Alberton: Coulis. H. D. McAlecr and Jcliii Gaudet. Bordon. 1 A message was rend from Mayor. Holman and Citv Councillors. Char-i loltetoivn, expcrssing regret at bc-l iiig biiabie to attend owing to other. business. I Hon. Mr. Cox explained that he had been appointed by the Provin- cial Government to act with the Department of War Services in con- (Continued on page 7, Col '1) 0r. J. A. Clark at Rotary convention CHICAGO Sept. B-—(CP)-'I'he Canadian Advisory Committee of. Rotary International, meeting here today. endorsed the proclamation of ‘ foeconsecration Week in Canada. Dr. J. A. Clark of Charlottetown. P. E. I._ announced. Clark. chairman (if the committee. said all Rotor“ clubs in Canada were urged to join in the observance of the week. Sept. 10-17. AA Interpreting The War News (By Kirke L. Simpson) (Associated Press Stuff Writer) 311K111? legion. racing against 1ml>€dirig winter to shatter Rus- sian resistance. tire on fresh n0- tice from Moscow that the war will 11.0 on regardless of y/hc fate of Lieiiiiigraci Kiev, Oti-cssii or even Moscow itself. Mass eviction of tlie pomiiu- tion of the lower Volga region obviously is in preparation for successive ‘new Russian stands if tlie Diiicprt" liiie £11705 way. Nenrlv 400.000 people. some 6o per cent of tlicin of Gcruiaii extraction, are to be moved for cnsltvrird because of retiortcd 1111111011111! of Nazi spies and siiboteurs. ‘ O I Above‘ oil. that Russian move. forvcuslllii: n tragic. iviutoi‘ iii.- Ltritiiugc for a wlitilc pchyiiii, spells out into Moscow: CCYtliiliiy that iiilf! real Nnzl cblective lii attacking Russia is Russian oil rcsourccs iii the Caspian field. It represents a clcnrin of liie ilround fur to the rra oi the present Black Sea front. iii pre- Daratioii for battles of next \'<“.il' i0 hold the road to that vital oil supply. 0111.)‘ bv winning access to the Russian fields on the Caspian can Hitler find means to rc- piace thebii that is tlie life blood of his whole vast war cf- iort. And it is apparent that the British and Russian leader- ship ia convinced that he is ai- fflfldy stmidil bleeding his oil __rese¥es aw _and.__must__find Nitler’s friend In So. America is Paces m Officially it was reported Tlicrc ivzts no iiiierfcrciice from on the voyage to bpitzbcrgen or at tlic archipelago itself, iticmberg 5? greatca MAXI M6 01A. MERE MAN It la the God-filled mind and il.i' mpatlietic heart that will play the t part in these critical limes. B; llnill Islands Prevent Nazis getting posses- sion 0f valuable coal mine Rumored entire force returns; in. l5 , _ __ ‘ 9-—(_Tucsdzi_v)—(Cl’)—(7zinzi- dian, British and horwegian troops have made a l. _Sea 1° 111° _N01'Wegiun archipelago of Spitzbergen in the Arctic circle where, it was understood, they ound-trip expedition by nes coveted by Germany. The announcement did not disclose when the errpedition‘ led by a Canadian officer was made. 1\or was it revealed whether an allied garrison was left on the islands which are ice-bound most of that all the allied Neilfll’ 111] 0f the Norwegian population was to the Russian miners disclosed. f hLQNDON» Sept. 9—-(Tuesdayi-(CD-Caiindian, Bri- ls hand Norwegian troops have occupied the Norwegian Z1‘? lpeiugo of Spitzbergen, 500 ‘IIIIIES north of Norway in ' e Arctic Ocean, to prevent seizure by Germans coveting its rich coal mines, the War Office announced today. _ A troopship escorted by British ivarsliips reached the island recently after a 2,500-mile dash from Britain and opposition. The announcement did not disclose when the expedi- tion arrived or how many men were 151111135, but the occupation force wiis said to have been left to garrison the a Canadian Brigadier. have returned to Britain and br°11l§111 1151511 11130111 1,000 :\'0r\vegiz_ins-—niiiiers and their families ‘—'\\'i0 ale to _livc lil tlieliiitcd l\iiigdom_ Many of the men are joining tlic allied forces, it was slated. (lcsceut on Norweginii territory .\.1zi occupation. An expedition March and destroyed whalg m] Gcriiiiiii bombers either The War Office statement said:- For various purposes it was i-e- 0011l1Y decided to send a military force to the Arctic, _ in tlic- course 0t operations which uric carried out _Wii.h0lit enemy in- tcifeiciice a landing was effected in Spitsbergen by mixed Canadian, Bmlsh 011d NOIWQEian forces under Canadian command. The main our. nose of the iandingyvas to prevgnf, the enemy from utilizing for their 01m purposes Spitzbergen with its riclificoai mines. " ‘eviflllsly a proportion f B tt .. bergon coal had been at (the pdi: D°5B1 0f i116 population of northern N°TW9-.\’. But it_has become known that the enemy's plan was to Seize all coal available including inat (Continued on page 7, C01 3) Nazis complain British Airmen Bomb civilians Of Attack, BERLIN. scpt. e-(Aiei-rzoors FWFQ 1/0111 from residential build- >11Es and streets ivci-c littered witn debris in an early morning mid on Berlin in vrhicivBritlsh pianos GPOPDPPI explosive and incendiary nninhs Willi ‘terrible detonations.“ the Berlin press reported 311.11g- naiitly tonight. (On iiir raids correspondent; send from Germany only those details Elven in official or authorized statement-s.) Aii official announcement. claim- cri at least 27 persons svci-c killed. A 11111111181‘ of others were injured. The controlled newspapers clung. RJO DE JANEIRO, Sc t. 8-- fAPl-Caipt. Fritz wie emann, former German consul-general at San Francisco. turned up here to- day and said he ivas in south Am- erica "on a special mission.“ Wiedemann arrived last Friday aboard an Italian trans-Atlantic Lati passenger plane. He declined to disclose the nature of his mission, A eio=e friend of Hitler iiiid First Great War commander of llir Fuelirer, wiedemann was among 5U Germans and Italians expelled from the United States and carried to Europe last July aboard the United States Navy Transport West Point. Wledemann said he would fly tn Leningrad — Not encircled LONDON. Sept. 9—(Tuesday) —t(‘P)—A dispatch from n sperlal correspondent of Reu- trrii News Agency reported to- 1111)’ that "it is certain“ the (terminus have not encircled Leningrad. The Germans have approeh- td fairly close only from the‘ southwest. but not close enough for practical large-scale shell- Buenos Aii-es Wednesday. i in]. Berlin Raid Appears Destructive; Germq ans Admit Violence‘ (Continued on page 7. Col 7) Annual Subscription Delivered. $5.00 P. IL l" H.001 Canada and U. B. “.00 0 SPlTZBEBfiEN rCanadians In Force Sent To 1British Airmen Seen in Moscow MOSCOW. Sept. B-rAPJ-An array’ of men in the uniforms o! Britain's Royal Air Force were pre~ sent last night vriieu the opera season opened here ii-ith 'I'SYl£1lkOW- sky's swan Lake Ballet. There was no immediate explan- ation of their presence. Fisheries conference Opens at Shediae SHEDIAC f. Pia. N. l5 Si-lii. 8- (Cl’i~iJr. M. M. couui. or Lift: Lx- lieiisiori Department ui Si. Plant | ' N, Xavier University at Antigoiiisii. S.. told fislierles supervisors < rnet here toiiai- for a four-day ierence that sacrifices imposed l on Canadian people by tlic \\Lll' t.- fort "may well be a blessing iii (lis- guise. “It takes a crisis to arouse tho people to a full use of their encr- flies and powers." he said iii his dress to more‘ than 100 supcrv from the Maritime Ih-ovinces Magdalen Islands. Plane captures Nazi li - Boat ‘IDNDON. Sept. 8-—tA.P)-—-'I'hI stiff-necked pilot and weary crew- men of an American-built l-ludso Lockheed bomber received olficl credit tonight ior capture of a tier- man stibmarhic in one of the most extraordinary air vs. sea battles of the war, and all of l-lltlll acre clifzel‘ t0 tell. about it The pilot's neck was so stiff no could not turn his head. It got that way when he circled over the U- boat for 3 1-2 hours after forcing its surrender by machine-gun fire at part of the crew trapped on deck. "I kept my eyes on it every r-iiii- ute." the'pilot said. "Then finally the (American-built) Catalina fly- iruz boat we wirelessed for came and I turned the watch over to them. Thev kept. watching the sub till the navy came." (Air Ministry rules prevented transmission of the names of the pilot and crew. The location and: time of the attack were not give but naval authorities in London sat they doubted it was the submarine which attacked the United States destroyer Greer near Iceland.) S and 411E Samar OF $UCCE$$ lSrrf Cotonou Toggprfll smut, 3-_i'Cl>\»-Min- lmum and maximum temperatures". Dawson 43 54 VlCiDTlR 5? 56 Ed mon ton l_ iijl Rrzlllit -1- _"1 Winnipeg 4b -)_1 Toronto ‘i-‘j i? Ottawa 4~ "1 Montreal 4T 7° i Boston 4° 57 Synopsis? fie weather has been cool in Ontario and showers. ha" occurred in srvnic di<li c‘ It ha! been cool over the Prairie IPTOVJK‘?! generally fair in Alberta Mid SM- kntclwvvan with light showers ir Manitoba. BOSTON. soul. 11—--1'/\P~~Po1"- cast. for northern Now England: Increasing cloudiness, continued cool miesdnv. followed by rain Tuesday night and Wednesday; slightly cooler Wednesday. i-Iigh tide thlififibftifnfl at rind tomorrow morning nt 1.10. 1.12 Sun sets this evening at 6.23 and rises tomorrow morning at 5.81. Last quarter moon Sept. i8. 8.91 pm. Summersidc tide 1B minutes lat- er than Ginriottemwn. BOEDEN — (‘APE TORMENTINE SERVICE (Standard Time) Leave Borden 0.30 A.iVl. 9.35 A.M. 1.00 EM. 4351M. 1.30 . . Leave Cape Tormentine 8.00 AM. pail AM. 3.15 PM. 6.20 EM. 8.40 SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Borden 9.00 A.M. 12.00 noon. ‘l 00 M 4.45 RM. . . leave Cape Tnrmentlno 10.05 A.M. 2.30 RM. 5.50 P.M. 8.10 RM. WOOD ISLANDS FERRY Leaves Wood Islands 1.00 AM» 11.00 A. M. 8. EM. Leaves Caribou 8.00 AM. 1.00 PM. 5.00 RM-