‘.7 lsnali. "l1 noon. llaellweu b Jul" "Guardian, reueee ma oaueiaa. ‘he 0w“. Charlottetown V WETSC NTINUE MARCH CHARWPTETOWN. CANADA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20,1945 2.7/1” The People's Paper Covers Prinoe Edward I sland Like the Dew NAZI DRIVE German Ardennes Drive Proved Costly Failure Italian Reaction To iihllrcllill Speech ROME, Jan. i0 - (C?) Minister Churchill's declaration support broug today that such an attitude might easil dlrlve Italy toward com- mun or back to fasclnn. The Socialist Party organ Avanti said ll refused to believe that Mr. Churchill's words expremed the opinion of all Britain. rounolv - (or) - Brig. ran. ltowitt, X-rsy therapy and physical fitness expert, gives this advice on how to keep fit: "stop watching n" others Play gamer and start play- ing them yourself." Coming Events "Buying live and dressed ooul- try. Paying loo market orices. ls- lsm-l Cold Storage Ltd. ll-l'i-t.f. "M14108 hogs at Fredericton. Fridagg January 10th until 11.30 and lvillc. January 19th until 12 llocn. D. Leslie MacDowell. l-lil-Si. "Load l-logs every Thursday for Davis Fraser mo. Keith Mc- "I-lockey at Milton tonight. Brcokiield vs. Milton. Game starts at 8:30. Skate after. 140-5 "Auction and Dance. Vernon H!" cvery Monday night from 2nd to February l%th in- -l9-2i. "Rlcélvill! h0g8 at Crapaud ‘V91’! Tllosdfll! llntll eleven. while “m! l! passable. R. N Dawson. l-H-Bliil-bf. "Open to buy 50 thrifty feeder Digs. 70 to 100 pounds each. Live_ stock Marketing Board. ' l-IO-fll. ‘I 4X18 Hogs for lihvis s; F755"- LW- Tlle-Bdfll’. January 23rd. Moi-all. Dingwell dz Rolssétoor. s Hogs for "Loadi Fraser Ltg" Tuesda . Janlgif-Svmasrgz, Five HOTBCI, J. J. kin. qo-tf, “Loadinii Hoks for Davis d: Fraser Ltd. Tuesday. January Zird, Bouris. George Dinswell. l-20-tf. “loadin hogs at St. Theresa Monday aternoon January 22nd. Contac our agent for service. Jos- eph McCarthy, secretary. 1 l -20-l "Livestock Marketing Board loading hogs at Murray River Monday afternoon January 22nd. D. Ray Brooks, Agent. l-flil-li "Due to arrive shortly, car flour and mill feeds: also car wheat 0m. whole and ground. and choice barley meal. Booking ord- ers now. McNeill and Acorn, cllldlsan. l-20-2i “Farmers Mt. Albion vicinity. Iloading ca! bulk No. i North- lhl Wheat. Mt. Albion Station Saturday and Monday. Jan. and 22. Bring empty bags. Andrew Mllrnashnn. l-ao-zl. "Livestock Marketing Board loading h s at all usual shipping Points d g week of January 22nd. Same days. same hours. Consult our local representative for service. ‘ l-20-li "Farmers Millview and vicin- "y? Ted Crane trucking hogs ev- "y ‘Tuesday forenoon to Char- lottetown. Poking up along pave- ment. Please teie hone when re- lilllring service. vestock Market- lna Board. _ l-ao-ll Farmers. Please Note: Th more hogs we have to sell each {Wk the more money we can get ack to you in our weekly returns. “lift ‘€.'..'.'.i‘°'£§. i’ “if ‘if’. e er. vee c Marketing Board. Vl 20-1! "Livestock Ma ketiu Boa d ‘gamed hoes at ‘lxfreoadlfe Btatlgn until i at Pedford‘ d alternately fDIIOWUTQ ‘n ‘h°"l"00 further notice. . f n Alfred MacDonald, Agent. l-M-ll. 8 __ ._.__ Loadin h n. , Janu- P ‘as ftlowsflnidlgmerside p. m; Renain ton till 8 ha; traitor“ ‘l-czas 5 hunter luff. Friday QIIGIQY. ¥______ l-m-al. B! EDWA-ILI; KENNEDY RENE QUABTDRB, PAR-la. Jan. i9 (AP) — The Germans’ Ardennes counter-offensive has failed “and has not seriously aiieotod our own A detailed official review of the operation was released. " he German plan was the eon- ception of Hitler and Von Rund- l sleet. one both are equally Moon- sible for its failure." Headquarters long statement which lee, from Dec. l6 to Jan. 11. m.’ enemy drive apparently was intended to reach the Mouse River 5n two days. cross it in the Liede- Namur sect/OI‘. and by ihreatcnlne es of communications force an Allied withdrawal from Gernlar. soil in the Aachen area, Headquar- ters said. The Germans also hoped to drive to Antwe and prapamtiorla for future " Allied rleadquartors R Stras-boTrg ls lmperillcd By _ llcw Advances By AUSTIN BEALMEAR PARIS. Jan. 19—(AP)—The Ger- man come-back drive across tile hine in northeastern Fran/y,- as- sumed ominous proportions today as 10.000 enemy roops broke from their bridgehead and Joined up with other forces on a solid 7b- mile front that seriously impel-flied the city of Strasbourg. Virtually all the SOD-mile Western Front. was aflame. AI- lled and German armies raced to see which could get their stalled offensive rolling first during these critical winter months when Germany is fac- ed with crushing blows frma east. and west. Fresh. wind-whipped snow fell alo many sectors of the battle- fron preceded by rain in some places. Footing was uncertain and fog grounded almost all tactical sir forces. rp‘; thus off Allied division; Belgium and Holland. it was added . (The let, Canadian Anny is finoflg Allied formations ir. Hol- nd.) The statement said that. although the battle of thg Ardennos was not at over, “its pattern is clear and l, is possible to estimate the extent o! the German failure." ‘The enemy now is attacking us in ths south." 1t continuod- "He may be expected to make full use cf the advantages which the Sieg- ilried Line confers on him —- a. first class natural and artificial defence tom - short sul lines and m fsrlotioism M113 yimbucs his soldiers "no: certain of the advantages on which he relies are transitory _—(Continued on page ll. Col. 4) Jep Counter-Attacks 0n Luzon Repulsed SOUTHWEST PACIFIC AD- VANCE COMMAND, Jim. 20 —— (Satulday) (AP) -- Japanese counter - attacks near Rosario Wednesday night were repulsed. headquarter, announced today. Rosario, on theleft flank of the Luzon beachhead, is on a hlghfipg, leading io Baguio, summer cap a1" the Philippines and likely f and at best will 1m only dunngigrat of Japanese military officials. the winter months; These are the of our superior mcfoil-ity and above i Rosario, six miles inland from restriction bv weather of the "Summons. has been the scene of all of our overwhelming air power. "H, ha; paid a. very heavy ce for s. relatively small gain in imc. and has not seriously cffectod Oil!‘ own plans and plorrrllom 10f future operations. " or the ss'lal_ Allied casualtl0s in the bulge fighting through Jan. ll, 18,418 were listed as prisoners. Al- lied headquarters llad nrlnounocd yesterday that American casualties during all December were 74.788. including othr sectors 0f the West- ern Front. (Tilers has been no an- nouncement of British casualties.) In addition to German losses in personnel. of which approximately two-third,“ were. killed or seriously u- wounded. and the remainder cap- tured. tho Allies destroyed a mam of enemy motor vehicle; and other equipment, including more than 600 tanks and assault guns, Headquar- ters said in its review. It was disclosed for the first time that a reverve airborne dlVl-ilvll W86 flown from the United Kingdom to the Ardennes front fr.- the early “is ing planes which also important pert in 8111791 . iewing played Al- lied planes despite unfavorable weather, the statement said that prisoners testified to the erect ef- fect their operations had ‘n limit- lm-movemmt and cuflw fuel, food and ammunitl-n supplies. ilaliantry Mo. To P. E. Islanders included in an announcement yesterday of awards for lantry 2° in action u. fifty-six officers and other ranks serving with the Can- adian Army overseas is one Prince Edward Islander. He is Pte. (Act- ing t.) Harry George Refuse. and he has been awarded the Mil- itary Medal. Pte. Rafuse was born June 0, i910. at Georgetown, where he rc- sided at the time of his Inliatment in the Army. He has been serving overseas with the Canadian ln- fantry Corps. His mother. Mn. B. Refuse. resides at. Georgetown. Announcement is also made of the Military Cross being awarded to seven ' f the Canadian overseas on loan to Army serving e the Britldl rrny'| defense head- uarters. including Lieilt. John mliison Mcfntoah. of ‘rignlsh. P. No News On‘ DeGaulle Attending Conference WABHINGTDN, Jan. 19 -- President Roosevelt told a press conference today then was no news on French participation in meeting 8 d tend! invit ti mgnfndlfilarlea ‘d: all"! i: ‘I’? part0! inonthav . his soldiers "RT-is the g coerlulittee bitter fighting for days. The Am- ericans yesterday were reported or. the outskirts. with naval guns shelling the citly. Tho enemy was strongly en- trenched in the area. One front- line dispatch predicted the dig- ng-out, job would be as difficult as it was at Peleliu in the Pala-us. To the southeast at Binalonan a small Japanese tank un’t was des- troyed a: the Americans tlehtened their grip on the main Manila- Baglllo highway. now in American hands at half a dozen places Binaloluln. when two highways intersect. was captured by the Am- ericans 12st Sunday. Says Veterans Protest Return To _ Bettiefronts '5. ‘TORONTO. Jan. 20 —— (GP) —- (Saturday) -— The Globe and Mall in a newspage story today saiu a number ul general service personnel now in ‘Toronto with iivc- our; service overseas to their credit e “vigorously protesting their expected imminent return to the battiefronts." The paper said many of the men insisted that if they go overseas again it will be "manaclod ond un- dcr armed guard." They said what they believed to be their re-em- bar tlon medical ex nations were "a joke." The soldiers were some of the five-year service men pennitted to leave the battlefields before Christmas and returned to Canada for a 80-day leave. They claimed they were "receiving unfair treat- merit." Twnty-nirle men in one group told the Globe and Mail they thought five years service was c- nough for one man. “especially when there are thousands of fit sol- diers. both drafteee and 0.3 , who have never left Canada." Major complaint oi the men in- terviewed bv the poorer was they have received no medical examin- ation since 1909 and that "what aliases for a medical today is a o e." A spokesman at military quarters said: "Proof that our doc- tors do more than sit at a desk a look at a man. comes that the oases of 25 D01‘ 0811f’ 0f Th6 men home for Christmaaulsetgvg have been referred to specie Globe and Mail Quoted a nlnlber of men as saying the stood. before a medical oficer o did not examine thom. 0M" Mfg: An estimate made by will involved 01 f0 ‘you; goo men who had de- their unwllll-HIPP" l9 0' you”; again. tho story ea d. ______..._ 3551p _ England — (Q) — mgr-seer)‘; of ihe noroulh of u! ‘"1 be conferred 0n the Duke of Well'n8l0l'-'5 Reslllfllll l! 6mm“ appfOV/Qg a finance nd . in the fact \ War gwituatioh Last Night i Read by Everybody ACROSS RHINE GAINS FORCE 12 PAGES ONB Rellrgai From Polish Soil Rjpid ' By Kill-ICE L. (Associated Press as a rout. suspicion. point. He noted this Nazi propagand "The Ge are making every wise to refrain from committi the in Germany within a few months. the ' attack A“ being carried out. anticipated or _ for. forces. C Rumored Zombie Difficulties In Three Provinces b (By The Canadian Presor OTTAWA. Jan. ill-Christmas week disturbances and cases of men going absent without leave, possibly involving between 1.000 and,2,000 more men, were reported today in Canada's home defence army. Men involved in the cases i brought to public notice in Lon-- don. Ont, Calgary and Quebec,l:lre| cng those home defence con- scripts rlrafted for service overseas. The reports of absenteeism Quebec~lvilerc it was said draft- el- were virtually running the camp-and at Calgary were only a. few llOllfS old when similar re- urta of men A.W.L. were passed y censors at Regina and Vancou- ver. _______~__ QUEBEC. Jan. Ill-finall- Valcarilcr Mllitdry Camp were normal "in nli respects" and presented no disciplinary prob- lems beyond the minor cases "encountered in is large camp." Regina reports said more than 600 home defence army men duo to go overseas after Christmas and New Year's leave at their homes in Saskatchewan iailed to re ort ‘flor duty at their home prov ncc e . n; group of 1.100 oi’ these men were given leave and 400 failed to return. Some of a second group of 400 are still A.W.L. Pacino Command headquarters issued the first. authoritative word of the absenteeism with a state- ment that about 20 per cent of the British Columbia members of home defence army unite. station- ed in British Columbia until last December when they were mo to Eastern Canada, iailed to re- port for dull’- Vancouver authorities gave no actual figures but said: “All we know is aplflgalmntely 20 per cell! ”'o'e—rl_llnueéi_on_poie__ll.___ * Te s e Refreshing Beqe recommendation . aeinlenl orlgleawd We The _' 17G. . H“ '?“ W" "'“‘ will er the wzlr Canada. maintain a Royal Canadian Naval College and major bases m Atlantic and Pacific coast as well as normal R. C. N feel the today help themselves at reasonable pri- ces to the greatest surplus crop of onions Canada has ever produced. h inion Bureau of statis- that holdings of Can- adian-grown onions at distributing centres only at Jan. l amounted to 20,021 tons, against 5.871 tons at Jan. l, 1944. The has mode onions more plentiful in eastern Canada than eve tics imported SIMPSON War Analyst) a attitude and added: effort to Soviet armies to too much." LO Jan. l9 — be well stile in in represented against Japan Atlantic convoys Caution born of hard experience leads high-placed British and Am- erican military circles to view the stunning progress of Russian ltrmiu In Poland as due to a. sweeping German retreat in the east rather than Shattered and uvwfWhQlIIIBd asvthe German armies on that front appear to be. they may yet possess the power and the skill to stand again In defence of the eastern gateways to Berlin. It has happened before. military leaders point out, in Ruaala, in Italy, in France and in Hungary. The very pessimism reflected by enemy propaganda broadcasts playing up the force and power of the vast Russian onslaught ls viewed with An excerpt from the comment by the British official war Inter- preter In Washington, Brian-Gen. Ilorace S. Sewcli. is very much In optimism in Allied countries (over Russian successes) and in the face of this it la Despite this burnt-child reaction in Allied military quarters as the Red Anny attack plows on, the situation for (he foe could become gravel‘ within a matter of weeks. forecasting the end of organized opposition No Allied political or military leader has yet elected to put that Into words but. that undercurrent is detectable even in formal warn- ings against over-optimism such as Gen. ScvvelPs. It seems incredible that the Germans could have effected the with- drawal of their major forces in Poland leaving only re ‘ the " ' _, utter German confusion In some sectors discount the not wholly orderly retirement to the borders of Germany has been or is ar-guards to meet ’ reports of ion that a Even if that was the enemy purpose-and unquestionably the main Russian assault must have been expected by the Gennans in Poland- by cvery present sign the attack struck with a power. force and speed and possibly in a direction the German comma ‘ in the east had not It has moved too fast to believe that. the Germans have managed the bridge and road destruction and mining essential to rear-guard stands to cover withdrawal of main ‘obfscusses ROIQOfRC. N. ' YfiPdcific War Effort i "DON. (CP) -- onadzvs hard-hitting young navy the the Southwest Pacific once the need for North ended, Navy Minister Macdonald said here today. 119.5 This was but one of a series of He said the C. N in the COT‘- . C. Nmare largely The Minister said alsrg‘ that aft- hopcd to . V. R. divisions. for the present, he said: our greatest task announcements made to a press conference by the Minister who has come from Canada to dis- cuss with the Admiralty Pacific war participation. matters. . . hoped to work closely with the Royal Navy Pacific but indicated illat Vettcs. which fol'm.an part of the R unuseable ill the Pzlc among other Southwest important. on the is the German wan-guarding the supply lines between North America and Europe over which some 000 tons have been escorted dur- —- ing the o'er." 16,000,- Mr. Macdonald had a word too t... Big Supplies 0f Unions This Year OTTAWA. Jan. l9 -— (OP a rlculture department. n inviting consumers bountiful before. quarters of blllltary District on the submarine situation in No. 5 (Quebec) in a statement the North Atlantic: "Tn date. tonight said that conditions at submarines are not nearly so menacing as ill 1941-42. although they are greater than six months Of course the situation ll‘. n‘ is unfor- . _ Dealers in eastern Canada have large supplies of onions on hand, said 1o t CPOIJ _ . Gall 0n Every German To Help Save Homeland ._____ “LONDON. Jan. lo - (UP)- ed .Berlin. Gbrman spokesmen tonight called upon tvcrv man to save the home- land— ‘somehow or other." “We cannot vreveut. the Rus- sians from faking this or that town of Poland." said the Ger- man military radio. ' he im. portant task ls to bar the en- emy's way into the Reich with sufficient forces and means." “All that. matters now," echoed the Deutsche Algemelne ' "is somehow or other to bar the road into the Reich." Gommends Type 0 0. W. A. 0. Recruits From P. E. Island “Young women of the splendid type wllo have enlisted from Prince Edward Island are the kind we want in the Canadian Women's Army Corps. and we want more of them," said Col. Mary J. Dover, chief recruiting officer, C.W.A.C. who was a visitor to Charlottetown y. Col.‘ Dover citod, the daily, casu- alty lists fromthediyattle fronts as evidence of the fact, that the war "is still with us" and that more recruits, both in the armed forces and the auxiliary services, will be needed today for Col. Dover leaves Moncton, to continue a tour for the purpose of stimulating recruit- ing throughout Eastern Canada. She was accompanied here by Lieut. Judy Giles, of Halifax, who will remain in Charlottetown for a few days. Farmers Ask For Standard Time REGINA. Jan. l9 — (C?) —The Canadian Federation of Agricul- ture today unanimously approved a resolution asking the Dominion Government to cancel daylight saving time regulations and revert to standard time throughout the nation. The resolution said it was the opinion of organized agricul- ture the prescnt regulations were a cause of “great inconvenience" and in many cases of actual loss to farmers. Ghllrchi-llfldcts 340-To-7 Vote 0f Confidence LONDON. Jun. l9 - (GP) —- Prime Minister Churchill won a 340-to-7 vote of confidence today after Foreign Secretary Eldon rm- ounced that President Roosevelt and Premier Stalin would be asked t0 loin in creat/ng inmediate infor- national machinery for dealing with problems arising in liberated lands. Ml‘ Eden disclosed that tile ao- neal for creation of machinery with eetll in it to deal quickly with political problems be laid before the forthcom- " meet irw "Big Three He made the diaeleaure at the close 0f a two-day war debate with a blunt demand that the House of Commons show whetherwwe have your s . .. or not. " said he wanted to show the world that the Churchill Government was not "tottering." Mr men's call for a vote of confidence came over the protest ofamlaltglolvpefubornleenbere international would ea putting them th t, tech- rgjlly the llaflxfllrl; .92‘; .3‘. ll.- (Continued on page ll, Col. 5T RETIRED DOCTOR DIES 75. wido- retired p scian and ed today llf er an - tac of neumon‘ He practised m. Addy was n of the New Brun- al Soclcty and the Nrw edical Council null n fellow of the Royal Cflllfiill‘ of Sur- icons and the Americal Collette 0‘ “IIQOHI. l l H! won the Disti "ushed Service Or- WhO fihlltod the Government with l!“ frat are rather than lor its wealth. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN we want our country lo he we must strive fdr its wel- -__-_ yf-q... _,___.-q Ihll. 84-00: other Province: a n.s,a, "M, Subscription Delivered. $5.00. Moscow announced that more massive offensives, ca and Krakov, and clamped zl Province. munique. It was the 1st Ukraine Army. one of five powerful Soviet armics estimated at 3.000.000 or more mull. that reached the frontier of ln- dustriolly-rich Silesia with illc capture of Praszka, 50 mileg gqgt "U10 Cilllltal of Breslau. These "0013 also toppled the six-way road Junction of Wlelum. 12 miles northeast of Praszka. and also 225 miles southeast of Berlin. Scoring their greatest, gains of the year. the Russians captured 2,750 towns and villages as they ripped through collapsing German lines on a twisting BOO-mile front from the Baltic to Budapest. Ill-k tonight D.N.B., the Ger agency declared: "The resent Russian winter oflens- ve will decide the fate of Ger- many. lrhas entrenched anv- thing hitherto known." l 0n the eighth day of the gigan- tic push the Russians already had swept 150 miles west of the Vistula River-more than a thir of the wa to Berlin-and the Soviet tide stil was rolling and being “l... forced hourly. Soviet bombers were lashing Breslau and Berlin said it was the reatest air force cver sent aloft y the Russians. Entire German divisions were being cut off and killed on the snowy plains and in the mount- ains of central and southern Po- land and tile forests of East Prus- ERL LONDON, Jan. 1o l Unofficial reports tonight said. that the Red Arnly_ had already plunged. across the Ger- man Slleslan frontier and was fighting on the enemy's beleaguered homeland, less than 22a miles from Berlin. the Russians had opened two piured ihc bastions of Lodz huge pinccrs on East Prussia in a great new break-through inio that ancient German _The Red Army's first contact with the border of the maln body of Germany, from which Hiilefs legions in- vaded Poland to start. the Second Great War Sept. 1, 1939, was announced officially ill the midnight Moscow com- n; Verdictwg 0f Manslaughter In Murder Trial Florence llllizsbeth McNeilLChar- IOWQWWH. was convicted of man- slaughter in the Supreme Collll Yeiifidll‘ after a trial which, bo- ginning Wednesday morning, end- ed at 3A5 yesterday afternoon when the Jury brought in a vs;- Ct °Y "Not Elllliy of murder but suiliy oi nlanslaughter with u. strong l-ecommendati The date for the sentence was sol: for Feb. 1. She was tried on ills (lhllliic of having murdered IICI‘ husband William (Ryan) McNclJ on Nov. 14 last. by throwing a knlla which struck him irlutig qck. Ha died about twenty m uts 15111‘ in the Charlottetown ‘Hospital. A few minutes after court open- ed yesterday morning. R. R. Bell‘ counsel for the defense. rose '\‘.l made a strong appeal on behalf of the prisoner. He told the jury that, were it not for the evidence ;T65T.i.§il'?él:§i?l=§§??68l1*5‘ ‘ sle. in the north. Budapest. ruin- ed Hungarian capital. also was on! the verge of complete liberation. I The Soviet-sponsored Gel-mam National Committee in Moscow a-i gain called on tile Germans to ‘revolt against Hitler." saying: "The German defence system in. the east has crumbled-never ;.~.~i; has the German Army been all such a catastrophic situation." - Greatest Day of Triumph Premier Stalin announced these victories in five orders of the day..- giving all Russia its greatest sin-! glc day of triumph: . 1. The capture of Krakow, anc- ient Polish Capital and southern‘ ancilor of the shattered Warsaw- Krakow line 43 miles from the German frontier. 2. The toppling oi‘ Lodz. Pol- and‘: second city and a big llldllf." trial centre. 70 miles southwest of fallen Warsaw. 3. A new invasion of llorillorln and northeastern East Prussia. 4. The fall of Dzlaldowo. on the‘, Warsalv-Danzig railway three lllil- es from the East Prussian iron- tier 5.‘ A new oilcllslve West of Mill'- in Lilo Carpathian nloulltnln region cast and southeast vf 101ml Krakow. Rllssllllv infnlltrylllcn stuck up crudely-painted signs reading “Tlllsl Way to Berlin-tile road to lili- ler‘s Nest". and "This Will’ l0 "-19 Lair of tile Fascist Beast. Moscow dispatches said the 11-3. nve days should tell whose nflnl z o i Allies in the west or the Rlllfllll in the east. Youthful Colonel Awarded ll. S. 0. i OTTAWA. Jan. l9 -— lCP) ~31“ of the youngest Colonels in the Canadian Arrnl’. lib-COL ° Payeon (Tommy) Thompson. 24. son of a Winnipeg alderman, ha: der. it was disc osed toni ht when Defence Headquarters isllod I list of awards "for gallantry 1n w- ion" to 56 officers and men. No citations were given and the theatre of operations was not iden» ed. The list also included bars to tilt D 8.0. for two Lieutenant Colo- nels-Donald Frederick Forbes. . Sydney. us. and new Bowler’ 30, Ottawa. Japs Ugfilywood In Ship Construction SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. l0 -— (AP) — The. Japanese Dolnei A- gencv reported today ‘the fir-ii plywood ship" had unloaded its first cargo at Tokyo llnd hailed ply‘- wood croft. lls "the brlllllt hobo (ll our wartime maritime transpor- tation." Thr- brlmrlcast was record- ed bv ill’! Federal Communications Commission. . Tibflbvflufd.‘ l1... ‘ flu are going to reach Berlin flrstthc‘ n SACKVILLIPS MAYOR r. c [TE-E E TED SACKVILLE. N.B., Jail. l9—-lCP\ -May.'\r H. A. Beale and six of Sackville's eight alderman were Y." elected by acclamation today. 'I‘\\'a vacancies exist in the Town COLT‘ maining aldermanic positions 1.. be called for shortly. MARY A LAD kilo (ONSWERED HIMSELF ‘Hlrfl HRS BEEN Costco err BY PMRRHAQE f 4 . EILJE, ICP) Minimum nnd maximum tenlporll- Vancouver 27, 45; Edmon- ton 16B, 6; Regina 18. 23: Will- llipeg lb‘, 26: Toronto l2. 24; Oi- tawa 5B. 17: Montreal 4. 25; Que- bcc 2B: Saint John B; Monctoll 7. 22; Halifax ii. l9: Charlotte- lllwll ‘.5. ‘.20. Forecasts: . Lowe‘: Si. Lawrence St. John: Fair and c Gulf. North Shore and Bay Chaleur: Partly cloudy and cold with scattered sliowfl ries. Maritime Provinces: Partly cloudy and cold with scattered llnnwflurries. ' High tide this afternoon at 3A1 and tomorrow morninll Ri- 5< Sun sets this afternoon at 5-50 and rises tomorrow momlnK and Lake moderately B. . First quarter moon January 30 748 ‘Sunlmel-sid tide eighteen minu- tes later than Charlottetown. DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown - Sulnrnereld Mom-ion Leaves Charlotte-sown .30 A.Mi 5.15 EM. Arrives Charlotiriown i2 Iii P M. 5.45 P-M. 7.50 P.M. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown 11.30 AM. and I P. M. Arrive Charlottetown I P. M. anll 5.15 P. M. CTIARLOTTETOWN - NEW GLASGOW lllally except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown l P. M. Arrive Charlottetown l.“ Ll TAM. of lneroy.’ '