MAXI M6 OIL MERE MAN | it and Pros rlty use [flillbailtltllllzl of interm- the ‘:%[/ /// I ple’s Pa Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew What more valuable than gold?- diamonds; MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN than diamondyl-vlrtu". till-i‘ '-"-¥5-~="~1'-"“-"1'-»'-~'-'5°'~°~'=' '“ cnARLorraTdvvN, CANADA: nioNDAY. AUGUST 25,1541 citrate _ ‘mBlip};.;Q..;.;Y.,..%LI.....;...% at: U _ __k _ i. ., -Uillllllllll .. ,0 MAMMOTH TA NK BATTLEBRACEB ERITAIN WILL; JOIN t1.” is. A__<;.411vs T 1.4 PS Asks Boards of Trade to aid In recruiting OTTAWA, Aug. 24 —(CP) —- C0- opefdtiflfl of members of the var- lous boards or trade in Canada to mist in recruiting men for the Canadian Active Army has been isked by Defence Minister ltslston. write members of your organica- abb who are employees of iarsc numbers of men can materially help, not only by releasing for mili- tary service those men who apply. but .150 by encouraging employees p, join the army," the defence min- islet said in a letter addressed to ill boards oi trade. "1 am earnestly urging each cm- ployfll’ to examine tho lists of his QmpIQVEOS to ascertain those men who can be released....if tlie em- players in England can replace and readjust under the conditions there 1 flm sure you will agree it can be done here." The Minister called for “active tiforls by employers" to help the recruiting campaign. Employers rhculd talk over enlistment with their men who can be spared or have their foremen talk with ein- ployces and explain the duty to on- list. "I am sure the members bf your organization will tackle the job with rgor and determination." raid the minister. Beaverbrcok. In Britain DONDON. Aug. 24 -(GP) -'f.prd Bssvcrbrook, minister oi supply. ll‘l'.V€d in Britain tonight after concludmg talks with President Roosevelt and United Hates lead- lrs ln Washington On Anglo-Ameri- can supply questions. lord Beaverbrooks first mission in the United States has been com- picted. it was announced. He had gone directly to Wash- lmton from the Churchill-Roose- velt sea conference. BOYS BODY RECOVERED CAMPBELLTON. N. B.. Aug. 24 -(CP1--The body of nine year old John Gignac, son oi Mr. and Mrs. Sivret. Gigiiac, was recovered from the Restigouche River yesterday. l-le had been missing since August i'., feared drowned while recover- lug drifting pulpwood from the river. An inquest will be hell. Monday night. The funeral will b . held tomorrow morning. Coming Events Bate for Noticfeg-i-n this column 3 cents per word. l "Show-Morell Tuesday. L-l5-8-23-2i. "show-St. Peters Wednesday. L-15-B-il3-2i. "Wanted to ouv Clucken, Fowl island Cold Bwraire L-Zifl-‘I-O-lf "ice Cream, Dance. St. George's ‘ll. Wednesday. August 27th. "Come to the Dance in Elliotvale School. Tuesday. August 26th. L-BB-B-ZS-li. "Resznlar weekly dance Bum- merticld Hall, Wednesday. Aug. 2'7. Connolly's Orchestra. L-BBO-B-Zli-‘zti. "Dance Lorne valley Tuesday. “l?- Zfilll- Webster's Orchestra. LM-B-ZS-ii Mrnfltlcc. Orapaud Hall, Monday. d filial» 25th. Modern. Old Time inctng, st. Avord‘: Orchestra. L-bia-B-BB-Si. "Wanled to bu -Bologno Cattle ggfllll and Veal slves. nil ides 0M. write for prices. Isisn Cuid “brace 00.. ma. u. dBg;?islshi1f1.i:Y""rY0-ld°d aid‘;- iti 2B, Everybody, - . Y- IM-D-IU-Ii "Btlnlev Bridge variety 0on- Wt it new Glasgow Mohdgy, Au‘- “l 35th. if not. fine Tueidsl. L- 4-21-21 MCNGH‘; VII-i!- womexgvcfggtyflustiguaust rem. Baltic “use. ' ilolliisllfii: income w n‘ ’ grid“ m k c Dance. Stanley mtg,“ “f; b‘ Aulust L-SB-l-Bfl-ii. "Come he M“ H ar Dr. MaoMlllon. May- i<>ll~w.l“..3“.........“°“"'i-o.‘i‘d“ti’€ii ._ -. CODE ii Muse nee at Jas Premier King Booed Bl Troops Mixed vocal reception accorded Prune Minister on visit to repre- sentative Canadian units overseas B! D. l. B11111“ Canadian Press Stiff Writer SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND. Aug. 24-(0? Cable) —The mixed vocal recetption of cheering and booing accorded Prime Minister Mackenzie King at a sports meet oi representative units of the Ca- nadian forces overseas Saturday provided the chief topic of discus- sion at officers‘ messes and on parade grounds today. Long after Mr. King had left the scene to spend the weekend in the country with Prime Minister Churchill, the soldiers were laugh- lng mlschievously about the inc‘- dent, though none was anxious to admit he was among the ones who booed. Of those who claimed to have been in the stands and to have understood the reason for the‘ mixed reception. the majority slid; "The gang all want more action." Neither officers nor men who were asked what it was about, would permit use oi their names. Most officers summed it up as a "soldier-like lark" and of many commenting, only one was heard to accuse them of staging a. "poo.- show of discipline," What appeared to be a general vlcw on this matter oi discipline, was expressed in the words of one ctiptaln who said: '_‘You,can tell officers to forget politics in the army but you can't tell that toa sol- dier....these chaps are over berg fighting for democracy and the r‘gl't to boo is a democratic prin- ciple ...there's nothing in the M- my regulations to prevent soldiers from booing a civllian...." Not Malicious "As an indication the booing ivas not confdered “mallcious" one oi- ficer stressed the fact the men mix- ed thcir booing with "good-natured laughter." (Continued on Dace 3. Col 1) llazis claim 21 ships from Convoy sunk BERL-IN. A118. 24-(AP)—The German high command claimed tillllliht that Nazi warships and U- boats had sunk 25 merchantmen illtlllliflB 148.200 tons including 2i freighters out oi’ a. single British convoy travelling from Britain to Gibraltar. (The high command claims were broadcast on the Berlin radio with great fanfare while Prime Minis- ter Churchill was broadcasting. There was no immediate comment on the claims in London.) The 21 freighters in the Gib- raltar convoy were claimed to have been sunk by U-boats after sever- al days’ pursuit. In addition, a destroyer of the Afridi class. a corvette and a guard boat also were sunk, the announce- ment claimed and said only eight ships escaped to Portuguese ter- ritorial waters. British Sub Feared lost i LONDON. Aug. 24 —(CP) -Tl'le Admiralty announced tonight loss 0f the submarine Union-the 29th S-hce the war began. (The Union apparently was a new vessel. She is not listed in Jane's fighting {Mp5 {or 19403 An admualty communique said:- “The board of admiralty regrets to announce H. M. Submarine Un- ion (Lt. R. M. Galloway, R, N.) l3 overdue and must be in formed." French Anti; - N45. Wreck German Car First challenge to German army to carry. out hostage shooting threat. By Mel Most Associated Press Staff Writer vwHY, Aug. 24—(AP)-R»cpre- scntatlves of the French govern- ment in C.ernian-occtiped' Paris said toni ht there had been five acts of so tnge agirnst railways in the Paris area alone during the last tvro weeks. The statement by Fernand De Brinon. the Vichy government's Paris representative, came shortly after Pierre Pucheu, as Minister of Illlcrlcl‘. charged that Communist disorders were planned to paralyze Ithe government by provoking Ger- man reprisiils. Only a few hcurs before, advices were received frcm Paris that s. car full of Germans were inured in a trap set for them in the iris suburb oi Puteaw-the first chal- lenge to the German army to card-y out its threat of shooting hostages for such acts. In s. statement regarding the dis- orders, De Brlnon said the five acts of railroad sabota occurred in suburbs. most of wh ch are in- hebited by wcrkers. He appealed particularly to reli- workers not to endanger "thousands of lives" by sabotage. The last messo e of Marshal Pet- ain calling for col aboraticn with the Germans, De Brinon said, was well received by French and German (Continued on D886 l. Col 0) CI’ Manager ls Back from London NIW YORK. Aug. 24 —(OP) — J. A. McNeil, general manager of The Oumdian Press. arrived at Le- Ounrdin airport aboard the Dixie clipper Beturdsy after a business ..:..ii on n-uac“ Detroit buses, Street cars Roll again _ IJIIIOIT. Aug. as -(AD c fir‘ the first time in five days, biases and street cars rolled on ll e streets 0i Detroit tonight with bOY-h the striking American Federation of Labor and the Congress oi Indus- trial Organization ciatmlng victory in the jurisdictional dispute that shut down the system. Movement of the Detroit street railway’: vehicles began a few hours after the A. l". L. member- ship ratified s proposal offered by Mayor Edward .7. Jeftnei for end- ing the strike. The agreement was reached between city officials and considered l lost. The next of kin have been, _ l union representatives Bntufdfl? night. Balls of the settlement. it was disclosed today, was an election to be held from ‘l s. m. Tuesday to ‘l s. m. Wednesday in wtilch 5.400 street railway worloeri will choose between the A. l". L. and the 0- I- o. u a collective bargaining mul- The formula called for the election to be system-wide, including office workers. OHILD I ITABBED MONCIDN. N. 3.. Alli 24 - (O P) - Ovilla LeBlanc, 1i year old son of Fidele leBlsnc, was admitt- ed to hospital here lost evening suffering from s three-inch stab wound in the cheek, inflicted by i2 year old playmate who is being held at police headquarters on a pimp-go of assault doing letusl bod- , m... Will act if Nippon persists In aggression §.’.‘.‘;z':';i'i$i€t:: historic conference with Roosevelt. LONDON. Aug. 24 —(CPl — Prime Minister Churchill, do- scriblng Hitler as "fllrlfllflfll. startled and staggered" at the bloody oust of the German in- vasion of Russia, declared in a broadcast tonight that Britain would join the United State-i in action against Japan. the Asiatic axis partner. if the Ja- panese persist In aggression. In the speech, his first Dilb- lic utterance since the historic conference with President Roosevelt in the Atlantic two weeks ago, iLwas implied that. Germany ls too involved upon the great plains of Russia to turn now to another sphere of war. Mr. Churchill estimated that "perhaps 1.500.000, perhaps 2.- 000.000" Germans had fallen in the nine-week campaign and said that the invaders were re- taliating with literally "scores of thousands of executions" of Russian patriots. LONDON. Aug. 24 -(CP) --'I'he text of Prime Minister Churchill's broadcast sunday:— - I thought you would like me to tell you something about the voy- age I made across the ocean to meet our great friend, the President of the United States. Exactly whore we met is a secret but I don't. think I Shall be mGiSCYGQt if I go so far as to say that it was "someviere in the Atlantic." In a spacious landlocked bay, which reminded me of the west coast oi Scotland. powerful Ameri- can warships protected by strcng flotlllns and far-ranting aircraft. awaited our arrival and, as it were. stretched a hand out to help us in. Our party arrived in the newest or almost the newest British battle- ship, the Prince of Wales. with a modest escort of British and Canad- ‘an destroyers, And there for three days I spent my time in the com- pany anti, I think I mtlv Sh)’. 11’! comradeship, with Mr. Roosevelt. “l "e the chiefs of staff and naval and military commanders both of the British Empire and of the Unit- ed States sat together in continual council. President Rocsevelt is the thrice- chosen head oi the most powerful state and community in the world. I am the servant of the King and Parliament, at present charged with the principal direction of our af- fars in these fateful times. and it is my duty also to make sure. as I have mazle sure, that anything I say cr do in 1| e exercise of my of- fice is approved and sustained by the whole British commonwealth of nations. Therefore this meeting was bound to be important because 0f the en- ormous forces at present only par- tnlly mobilized, but steadily mobi- tiring, which nre at the (Vsposfll of these two maicr zfollillhtzs 0f (Continued on page '1. Col 4i Berlin reports 0f Soviet front smart. Aus. M —(AP) - A great encirclement battle was clslm- ed by p. u. n, mu prOPBBlTldI and news agency. to be developing today on the l50-miie sector be- tween Kiev and Gomel and man dispatches claimed increased civilian reinforcement of the Bo- viet Russian army. — Strong Soviet forces under Mar- shal Sen-icon Timoshenko, the ag- ency claimed. are being hemmed in between the left wing of Field Marshal Gen. Karl Von Run- stedt’: southern nifty group and tire right wing of Field Marshal Gen. Rdor Von Book's central army. Machine-gunning of M trains, destruction of 500 cars and disper- sal of i2 large Russian marching columns were cllimed by German fliers along the central front. The developing Klev-Gomel bat.- tle apparently was one phase of two widely-separated thrusts eastward claimed by the German high coni- mand ln the zones of meneced Len- lnqrild and Kiev, which coincided with renewed pressure upon two bitterly contested ‘ of isolat- _ n-l p-t-m-mo- wlunn and Odes» F Visits Province PRINCESS JUIJANA Her Royal Highness Princess Juliana of the Netherlands who paid a brief, unofficial visit to the Is'and on Saturday. Accompanied by her Lady-in-Waitilu; Madame Roell and secretary Dr. W. van Tats. the distinguished visitor ar- rived in the province by Wood islands Ferry. The party motored to Charlottetown and after lunch- eon at the Charlottetown Hotel left on return to the mainland at 4 o'clock. Tension in Iran near to Breaking point TEHERAN. Iran, Atlg. 23-(De~ layetll—(AP)—An ultimatum to the Iron government is expected from London today, the British Le. gntlon said, as tension over the continued presence of German specialists in this country grew near to the breaking pflilll. Slulltly casing the urtivlty of the situation with respect to Soviet Russia, holvc-wr, the Iran armv was reported by Soviet sourcrs to have withdrawn l2 miles from the frontier in the Caucasus as t to- ken of good faith in the desire to avoid comlficating border inci- dents. No similar withdrawal was re- ported, however, from the Iraq and Buluchistun borders, whence British troops might be expected should the dispute break into open The Iran government is making every effort to nsstlre the defence or its independence, officials said. but they manifestly vrere making Zion of forciun powers. However, Iran's latest reply t. (h: BriLlwli-Rllsriun demands fr: the expulsion of Germans was re- liitbly reported to ltuve been stand-pat statement that Iran a sovereign nation would dine‘ what foreigners to expo‘. The countlyv loin: since has adopted a policy of eliminating foreign residents who are object- ionable, i-egardlsss of their nation. ality, the note was reported to have contended. (British sources in London Sat- urdriv said Iran's reply was being studied. There were indications it hurl been found unsatisfactory.) The Nazis objected to are cm- ployces of the government; in key services and industries, but Iran's attitude toward the British-Rus- sian demands is that only small- scale sabotage at the most. is pos- sible lf they are allowed to remain. Duke of Kent .l\t Washington HYDE PAR-K. N. Y.. Aug. 24 - (CP)—- President Roosevelt and his royal guest, the Duke of Kent. enjoyed a quiet, placid Sunday in the seclusion of the President's country estate along the Hudson River. Members of the Duke's and Mr. Roosevelt's parties were in agree- ment thnt the visit of the young- est brother of King George was nothing more than what the Presl- dent had said it. would be -an 1n- formal social evcrlt. No reporters or photographers were perinliieti to enter the grounds. The Duke arrived Saturday ove- ning from New’ York, where he liud landed a few hours before at La Guardia Field in a Royal Canad- ian Air Force bomber from Osha v-‘l. Ont., after a two-hour and 10- _ vn|wvvf- (‘levhf warfare. - anxious efforts to avoid provoca-j Iran believed‘ Close to war ANKARA, Aug. Z4 —IAP) ._ Hope fur u peaceful settlement of Iran's dispute with Britain and Russia over an allied de_ mand for expulsion of u”. man agents was declared by competent foreign sources here i053)’ to be virtually abandoned. Directly in touch with 'l‘-l|l-;-. an—ihe modern capital of the flnclcnt kinedom linked by strategic trade routes with both European and Asiatic ltussiii, ‘Vi?’ "em?" Tllrkey. Iraq arid British India-these sources said they cXiu-ot British and possibly Sllvlct troops to enter [mu within a week. A Cfliliiun sou front was thus in prospect. Iran officers, with a defence force totalling about 150mm m0". lvnrc- siml in in" untiriput mg two drives from British-oc- cupied Iraq. Dr. Hark is l, Speaker at farm Conference NAPPAN, N. 5., AllE. 24 -(CP) -—Sevcral speakers stressed the necessity of avoiding serious mis- takes of the last post-Wm‘ lwfiod in attempting to settle war veter- ans on farm lands at a conference of anriculttiral workers of the Maritime Provinces at the Domin- ion Experilnenlal Station here Saturday". The discussion followed a report of a special committee of the Ca- nadian society of technical agricul- turists hold here lost week. R. C. Parent oi‘ tl-o federal ser- v‘ce in New Brunswick, said that of 600.000 enlisted men in the first great war only l0 per cent request- ed to be settled on the land. A to- tail of 25.000 were established on farms, he said. Dr. J. A. Clark of the Dominion Experimental Farm at Charlotte- town delivered a paper 0r! 105s Of farm soil through erosion. During the ensuing discussion. Mr. Parent described heavy annual loss of farm land bordering the saint John River. He said 40.000 tons of silt was dredged from Saint John harbor annually while the situation was four times as bad at Fredericton. Interpreting The War News, ___k___._, By John M. Highiowcr Associated Press Stuff Writer -_.__ Prime Minister" Churchill sug- gcszrtl some illiCl'C.~llll2 ltnswcrs to lilt‘ qucstlm "under: what (LPCUXHSLLUlCBS would the Un- llcci Status fight?" And in one respect, at lcrzst, his thoughts ran strikingly parallel t. those of an America; s-poltc mun. 1\'il'_ Churchill, in his broad- cast. address Suit-clay, made it clear that in Ins opinion the United Status would fight Jaguars-and thus probably be drawn into the general world conflict through the back door-if the Japanese press their southeastern military ex- panson in the Orient and threaten the Philippines. And he “corned the JBDRDQFQ that Britain would range herself alongside t.he ‘United states. O O t Another circumstance tinder the United States pro- bably would fight -ln Mr. Churchill's up arcnt opinion certainly shoul -would be in event of a mortal threat to Britain. The Prime Minister said that heretofore Hitler had picked off his foes one by one ranch a policy of divide and conquer and that for final vic- torv his policy net-tied but one last StlOCOKVlIi application, In brief, if the United States would not fight. crcn lirouczh Britain was falling, then indeed, Mr. Churchill impliPd. would Hitler be virtually assured of eventual world mastery U i O F A fcw dnys after Mr, Church- ill and‘ Pl‘(“i(i(‘lli Rvosovblt mot two “rs-ks two. lllv llllli"fi Stairs Srcrclarv of War, Hnurv Stunson. lrrrv-tl-ml l» llic nrnlv 0n ti‘lll‘!t‘l'~ lrosltitl" the lin- iloti Slaves. l-lc mid the country would fllzhl if ally cf its far- flung bdsilons of defence from (Cirmtlnur-d on page '1. Col 3t Monster 2.5- MOPXTOW, Aug. EFRE lsulucnnn I 135 NdzwTanizs A Destroyed In Battle Red Army coh-t-inues series of counter - attacks on central and southern front — Lines steady in north. (By Henry C. Czlssidy, Associated Press Stuff Writer) (Nlontlzhv) — (Al')—i\1nmm0th tunk ilililiCS ruffed today fliflllfl the Zlppffiiltiilflfi t0 Lenin- grad and on the ccnlrzll front before Must-luv where stiff- ieninp; llczl army defenders reported destroying 135 tanks .und routing: ll Nazi infantry division over a battlefield icarpclcd with German dead. l A frnntiine (lispzllch f0 the govern mcnt newspaper jlzvcsliu reported the fiery funk battles in which it said ‘Soviet crews fought like “real knights" of modern ma- chines. The Germans , _ _ concentrated lKlnglscpp, shell-torn town 75-milcs southwest of Lenin- lgrud which the Russians abandoned Aug. l8. But for six their offensive about days the Russian lines appeared to have siczrdied there. Fighting also was rtported heavy at Novgorod, 100 ntilcs southwest , of Lemllgrtltl. , The Russians also reported that Soviet troops Oil lllc control front. und in bcsitrutlrl Qflfhfiiiil lulrl smash- td or routed three divisions hammering counter-attacks. , The Izvestia dispatch described l one encounter of a Russian tnnk , tlnit with a column of 4O Germ- t an machines on the northern front. The Red army tanks, spriccd at large intervills in a triange for. mation, formed an ambush in a forest near a highway. At dawn. two rcconnoltring German tanks were destroyed by gunfire at 300 yards. Tilt‘. remainder of the German column charged clown the road and was dispersed by flanking i“ im ibnmb and slrufe Toss ‘with combined tank and liiflllt’ ut- fire, the dispatch sold. Many Nazi tanks were reported wrecked. In anorlel" encounter", the patch sn d. four Russian destroyrtl 3i German tanks, A dispatch to the Communist. party organ Pravda from the city “N," one of tltc approaches to Len- ingrad, said .12 entire civilian pop- ulntion had litkrn up military work. Marshal Klcntt-tiii Vorosllilov. commander‘ in the Lmiingratl area, twice has appealed to civilians to dig in for a fight to the (loath. A people's army answered with bar- ricades for street ilwhling and was drilling in Irzningrnrl. clis- tanks Communications llliiilltciinctl A Toss dispatch said communica- tions between Leningrad and the front continue to function (‘ffltiiéff- ly tic-spitt- Gcrmtin tlliflnllls l0 . rzlll‘. ‘r trains said the milwa, ore sup- plying 1r.- frnnt \vitn troops and nrlns. 0n ilio rcnirul front, the fort-es oi‘ Soviet Grn. Koncv ivrru reported to have routed a German (livisinn while Soviet troops in the Odessa region, although c-nrirclctl and fighting with their bricks to the sen. vvrrc said officially tn have (ic- slrnyctl hm itulnuniim ilivisluns. KoncvZs troops were sold to have broken caps in the German line tricks whit-h itiflictcd a major: dc- fent on l‘l(‘ Nazi traps. Titss. Sflvct News Aucntgv, slifi that. ‘to Germans trictl irllllliffllll‘ to close lllf‘ gllllfi, bril ‘ g up tflllkfi on lliliff‘ 7, Col 2i Ottawa writer Heads Canadian Authors’ Assn. V.\NC\'JII\"FIR, Alllt. '.!-t--ICPl~— Ainduo MllPilPiil of Oiiinva WflS rtxrlcttircl Prrsiricilt of lilLkcllilll~ (iiun Authors’ /\\'.~l‘(‘i1llil\ll ill llil- itunl coitvclttion llure Sllilll‘(iil_\'. Sir Charles G. D. Roberts was lc-clectcd linuoralgv president and vict- prcsldcntc are Ncillic Mc- Ciuntz, Victoria; Rolwrt A. Hood, Vfll\(‘flll\'(‘l'§ Robert J. C. Stvnrl. Ottawa: Dr. H. l... Stcsvatri. Holi- i.'l\, ulld F‘. G. lltw. i-Ttllnivllltlll. Lawrence .1. Bllrpro of Oltnwn is lru surrr um! llirll" F‘. llaskt-ll of (r:i..\~,.\, wrvtlarv, rulurnv‘. l\‘.\lll"'.i i,\..-ii- Allllul‘ S Binuliltll. (‘llliluzim "uni A. ll. (Tlirltll. ‘lknunln. ltvu Slruilge. "illllliilill. Ont; illxlrnltuitl (Ylrr, ‘Fulnultlt Perv)" Jacobson. Montreal; Roderick Kt-n- .i~:\tl_v. ktmirclll: Kuy smith, Brill- jinx, and Di‘. Lorne Pierce, To- rnnto l". t‘l‘llll\4‘ l'\‘l|lll"ii llu lutlt s. Khiil- , 2 30 P“ ' lfetcrans guard Concentrates at Ottawa camp. O'I"I‘.~'\WA. Aufl. 24 —(CP) -'l‘he general duty company of the vot- erans gunrd oi Canada which s to proceed overseas this year for duty at Cflllilfiiflll military headquarters in London has been concentrated at Lnnsclolvlie Park tier-e, it “as an. riouncctl tonight at national de- fence headquarters. The company consists of head- quarters B-hd three platoons of pick- ed men from veterans Canada units across Canada. guard of its duties overseas will be to pro. vide guards and pickets. air raid precautions and passive fence. air de- (fns is A. Swan. 0m TORObVITW. Aux. 2i (CID-Min- imum anti uluxunum loinprriitiircs: .32 '73 Fifi (i5 57 0ft 5i! 56 h" 51 5.‘. ill ~17 7i 5i (l7 60 Bl -=' sliolvers in occurred ' r . of the lmcos northern l Ontarzo. u in ‘l.l Ontario the Alter fair and warm I-fiph liriv this niwrrzoon at 12.28 mwl tomorrow morning at l. Sun acts ihi< evolving n1 0K1 and fists lvnmrrwv morning at 5.13. First quarter moon Alta, 29, i0.0i Fl til ‘Snmmcrsldc tide l8 mimics lat- er than Charlottetown. (‘APE TORMEXTYNI SERVIFE rStuntlnrd Tlmcl Leave Borden 6.45 A-M. 9.35 iLM- 1.00 IHM. 4.45 [KM 1.30 KIM. lmavc (Tape Tormentlne 8.00 A.M. 11.00 AJVI. 3.15 RM. 0.20 RM. 8.40 l‘.i\l. BURDEN‘ SUNDAY SERVlCE Lr-nvr lint-don 9.00 A.“ 12.00 noon 4.4.’: I'd“. 7.00 Pl“. Leave (‘iipo Terms-nitric 10.05 KM. 550 Pa“. 8.10 P1". ISLANDS! FERRY rid Islanilii 1.00 A.M. 00 P . M. 9.00 A.M. 1.00 PM i \VOOII leaves W 11.00 A. M. Ii. Leaves Caribou .00 P.