l MAXIMS 01A prim MAN F _ i M" your nelghbdrvs: wnlltgifivuii ill HM- 2% The People's aper ' Covers Prince Edward ilsiand Like the Dew fil Read Everybody should be busy; none should he a busybody. MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN Gumbo, Founded I881. u" Gnu-flan, Two Centl. .¢ en“ A, cnaiuiorrarowu, CANADA, MONDAY, AUGUST ‘t, 1045 Man-ls Held in Death 0f Bennyjinns g pinion Of Murder Surrounds Death Oi , a Well-Known Former Gh’town Boxer. s pmjqmfn (Benny) Binns. own Island boxer, for- . _v of Charlottetown cams hi; death in Souris, Satur- nfght. at the home of his . r-in-Iaw, J. Wilbert Chev- A large knife was found near . body which lay on the ei thc back porch until at one o'clock yesterday ... a. coroner's jury sum- .... by Coroner Dr. A. Ken- .. of Georgetown viewed it. ' body was then removed; to underiakefls establishment. There was a considerable ntliy of blood on the floor the porch and a severe gash the throat of the deceased. in Charlottetown about 34 ago. Benny signed up for ce at the outbreak of war. go- overseas as a member of the y- Corps in 1941. He was - married. his first wife pre- ulng him about five years J Jan th Army VITA. Aug. s _'(CP) - Lord Louis Mountbattonfls I uaricrs announced today that original Japanese 38th Army, i ~ has been seeking to break -_ a British cordon on the alaydlongoon road to join i» enemy forces in Thailand. been "almost completely des- announcement came as llarlcrs reports said the toll Japanese dead in the British. battle of the Sittang River in - Burma had risen to more . 10,000 . illtclal communique drscribed virtually" destroyed Japanese - as the "remnants of the Im- éming Events iuhow - E; River Tues- B-4-2i. "Dance, I .- no. m“ Han‘ “$352 310W. St. Peter's Wednesday. , 8-8-21. ‘i w. Morell ‘Iuesdey. 8-6-21. 5 ‘ rve Wednesday. for niznisir Picnic. 7-23-30-8-6 “loos creek Baptist Picnic. ,' wiel- Allllust am. s-e-ii 7 ___ ‘orb United Church annua. ~ tdnvsdav. Aug. 22nd. 8-4-6-21 Allfillli. ‘Flinn Kel-llghCross. Wednes- _,- ucusi sin ._ a-i- , "Dam l night. in Ems-raid Hall. Mon- Todcls Orchestra. 8-4-21. . iiiizusfnotii. Golotiscglouglithucn- \ 8-8-11. ‘o’; (élcflgégil and“ Dance in -New pun em. ' 0nd“ evs-xltlyigi.‘ in McLean's Wednesday B-ll-TUG-l . "Boobs niru». lllithousc. Sourfii. t. tnsow ‘“““_ “on Rlggd “glance lville Institute Aumm’ 8th. - -B-' . ."Dance, Cardigan y l-iall. Wed- Aususi 8th. r’ ' Webste s ‘" 8-6-31. "Tints Players" New“ “mm. ~ “Distress. Murray River b "why. August om. spon- v omens Institute. 8-O-2l "vuhmml hjltlTevery Tuesday 1 l In: 51 Fraser Ltd. Phone immélfl service. I. N. '- Crapau W t-lt-Bath-MOIL-tt. “WWW i?" t, Davis i. rr°§§..“£ll,“"t§f;:l tf. dgflg," Bishop Boyle's letter said, ‘I nod "ll our cai- of wheat "Qgenlhrtliiaigillty is much we espccted. lfetli h“ agar-our quota. 8-4-21 .| Gampaign A I Leo Herbert Cheverie, one of six brothers who served or are serving overseas, and who is a brother-in- law of the deceased was arrested and placed in the jail at George- town Saturday night. It is under- stood Cheverie will be formally charged with murder today. G, R. Holmes, who ls acting as Attorney General in the absence from the Province of Hon. F. A. Largo has ordered on autopsy on the bod of Binns today. The ate Mr. Binns was well known in Charlottetown sporting circles previous to removing to Souris after returning from over- seas about two years ago where lie had suffered a serious leg injury. A well known boxer, at one time Benny held the Maritime amateur middleweight championship. Later ,ranks. where his every appearance i usually drew packed houses. j An inquest will be held on Thursday. perial Japanese 28th Army which was vciy badly mauled in Arakan by the 15th Indian Corps com. mend-ed by Lt-Gen. Sir Philip Christison." During the fighting in Arakan, the communique said. the Indian troops inflicted 3.300 cas. ualties on the 54th and 55th div. lsions of the Japanese 38th army. There were indications that the , death toll of enemy remnants at. tempting to break across the Sit- tang River to Thailand might rise to considerably more than 10,000. uncountcd "large numbers" of enemy bodies were floating toward the sea in the river's flooded waters six miles north of Nyaiuiglcbln. 90 miles northeast of Rangoon. Near the river banks. British forces met tough Japanese oppos. itlon in the Nyaunglebln area and Zllfmllcs upstream, British patrols clashed with the enemy east Penwegon and inflicted casualties. In tho lower Slfiang area. Ad. mlral Mounibnttsifs headquarters said, Allied pnirols ran into deter. mined encmy resistance cast Abya. 22 mllcs northeast oi Pcgu on in»; PeguiMrrktfibl-ln railroad Aiior four attacks. the British troops cleared Japanese positions on the rail line curvlnl round the Sittang estuary. but encountered artiileryusupllorted Japanese 0P- position in iii-e southern hall of I village two miles first of Abili- Supportinc ground troops. $19191- flre fightcnbombcrs attacked Jill?- anesc positions in the Sittang River bend, whle a Sunderland flying- boat, on armed recorialssance in the Gulf of Siam damaged two enemy coastal boats. tum twlmmasted sohooriers and 10 other enemy W!" sels. S. D. ll. Fund ‘Great Success ' _____ Th r d m aigll being coo- ducteed iixriioncga t e Catholic 190W‘ lotion of Prince Edward Island and Magdalen Islands for St. Dllllitfllli I after in College, Charlottetown. now standfi illi; $424,717, according to a loll-H‘ .by Bishop James Boyle read yes- lterday ill the Simone parishes ' and missions comprlsim! the 911"‘ I lottetown Diocese. Special Gifts workers re rt he graduated into thc professional i ‘Charlottetown. Another communique reported that ’ J i Japs Olaim Raid 0n Okinawa ______ “*'N ":3 (By The Associated Press) SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 5- The Japanese claimed today their night bombers had stag- ed a surprlise raid before dawn on Okinawa, and caught planes lined up on two fields wing to to wing and set 15 large fires raging. The unsupported Domel dis- patch broadcast by Tokyo ra- dio and records by the Fed- eral Communications Conmalb slon. said the bombers "suc- ceeded in scoring accurate hits on the bases." Another enemy broadcast said Japanese planes caught a sub- marine cruising on the surface oi‘! the east coast of the main island of Honshu Saturday and sank it. Veterans Expected This Evening L It is expected that the Island iwar veterans who discmbarked ycs- Iierdav from the Ile dc France at Halifax will arrive ‘in the city this evening. They will be greeted by representatives of the Citizens Reception Committee at the station with the bard of the 17th Ar- ,moured Regiment in attendance. ilisted as sailing on the Iie dci iFrance did not arrive but will veryul ilikely be on the next iroupsiiip; iwmmiol“ was": S , . I16 . OTC B" fulfil’? L/Cpi J. H. Ledwell, Sh} |Pctcr's PEI; Pte. RA. Savidant. ;Summersidc; l. L. H. Stanley ‘and A-Cpl. R. Three Maritime Liberal Premiers Are Optimistic OTTAWA, Aug. 5 — (OP) -—The three Maritime Liberal Premiers arrived here today and in brief interviews expressed "moderate 0P- ilmism" in the Dominion-Provincial conference opening tomorrow. They said tncy would not iict as a bloc but might find themselves in agreement on many topics of mutual concern. They might meet each other in informal discussions routside the main conference buti gihls would not mean they would ‘act other than independently. f O co Premier A. S. MacMillan . Nova Scolia said he wanted _ l study the Federal Governments, brief before making any pronounce-- merits on his province's attitude on various topics, but there were some questions affecting "Blucnosc welfare" he wanted to see answ- ered satisfactorily. These ques- tions had to do with the general economy of the province and cov- cred the wide range of public wel- fare. industry and transportation. Premier John McNair of New Brunswick, and Premier Walter Jones of Prince Edward Island hclcl| much the same view. Mr. McNnir.| youngest of the three Maritliner - is understood to be seeking increas- ed federal assistance to be used! for the extension of education; welfare and social services and development of natural resources industries. Premier Jone: Mr. Jones said he was especially interested in finding more mutt-- able transportation faculties and rates so that the Island's srofli supplies of field crops, fish. c6185; and other produce may be mar- l The i i, l f $121,139 and ihe will‘ "5 ian ghi; poarishes and missions report, 803.578. f’ Bishop Boyle's letter stated tligii l the total figure. $424,717. W“ m“ ° ‘ up of reports oomini b0 him “P {f Friday, auaust If. and m" i final total of the fund wou l 9| h id be increased considerably W 9" u‘ ports made by the workers at i225 meetings on Friday evenl"! h d this (Monday) evenin! 1'9"? 9 him While the camimlif" Holly" continue in the parish" “limit; sions until evefY Perm" gee“ h“ subscribe to the fund ha" wow terviewcd by the V0111: that we ers, Bishop Boyle "i k would bulk of the camPRiK" W“ b, flnuhed by Friday evenint- h "While we can all rcj ll t 9 magnificent results achieved will g m t when everyone Si“ Owlpfllgizxfltibersn who is earnlnf! wages or has other "Wm" h“ been interviewed b our arm Sh” volunteer workers n.tl‘le D!_ the and mlsslons-2.% 51'0"“ keted more economically. , It was learned the Premier he1d| little hope of obtaining federal sanction of a land connection! with the Island and will be coii- tent to arrange for better ship facilities for the immediate future. rect or otherwise. which would develop cheap tidal water power in the Pettlcodlac River below Monclon. N.B.. for dis- tribution to all Maritime Provinces. are believed to be shared by tho other Maritime Premiers. Ono thing Mr. Jones is certain of and that is "these conferences should be annual affairs so than we can keep each other in ioucb with our special needs and require- mente." n; rm Canadian Press HIAUGUE!‘ d. i941. - German fh Command laimed 805,000 Russian sodiers cac ptiiiedhslnce 1x13: camps an toget er w 13,145 marinate oil-planes: Russian uni: and 9.032 ad were esti- mated at 3.000.000. A Russian sub- marine sank a German troopshlp fl l t t i will far exceed tho 17"‘ “grin flguiie of 043451173 r Lin the _ The following personnel who werc| . Smith, both of-r } ‘L7. Germans See Canadians En ter Berlin Not long ago. these German civilians were promised the world and its goods. Hitler assured them the German army would parade the sirceis of the Allied Nations’ capital-a Here, they mutely watch British and Canadian troops marching into Berlin. headed by the renowned “Desert Rats," the 11th Hussars, who came to Berlin from Holland. 'El Alameln the hard way. via Sicily, Italy. Normandy. Belgium and Inquiry.‘ ilnto Death 50f Well-Known Prince County Resident A coroner's jury was convened atSummersirle yesterday to inquire into the cause of the death of Mr. . O. Gallant of Egmont Bay, whose body had been found about 6.30 Saturday evening pinned be- neath his overturned car on zhc side of the road about a mile and it half west of Wellington on the road lending‘ to Egmont Bay. The body was discovered by Mr. Joseph Mnddlx of Urbanville who happened to puss by. The car was on its side on the left side of the road and Ml‘. Gallant was pinned beneath it, Medical help was sum- moned but hr Wfls dead. CHI‘. The inquest commenced yester- da at the Compton Funeral Home bcrorc Coroner T. D. Carruthers. l It is assumed that for some reason lieihlid been SBCTEWYY 0f 111M 006W: mmuo“ “here Lucy Maud Mmn" lost control of thc car and whcnlfrom its beginning about twcllfl’: acme" “WW h" it tipped over hc fell out. He iSlYBBYB Iago believed to have been alone in iheheslsne r ithe Egmont Bay Dairying Assuci- Crokcil, president of St ation. The jury then deliberated and decided that an autopsy would no! be necessary. The inquest new stands adjourned till Tuesday cru- ning at 7.30. Jurors are: Mr. John E. Ga bell. foreman; Harold Chester Palmer. Amos George Cameron, Joseph and Jack Schurmzin. Mr. Darby. KC. iorney Generals department. The late Mr, Gallant was well known in Prince County for his association with the Egmont Briy and Mont Carmel Exhlblilon. He. mp- Mrl l“ W.F until last year when he . He was also president of the Wellington Co-operativc Store tlll last year and up to the iilllf‘ of his death was the president of The body was identified by Mr. i ution. Frank Dons-cite. Hunter River. I-Ie is survived by his wlfa iho son-ln-inw of the deceased. The _' former Emily Arsenauit of Egmuiii. only other witness was Dr. J. CJBay, and the following sons Simpson who said that the body and had found bad bruis- es about the head and it would appear that ihere was a fraci-ureiMrs. of the skuli_ but he said that he could not determine that definitely without a more thorough examin- Olaim so,ooo Troops Killed By Japanese By SPENCER MOOSA Cl-IUNGKING. Aug 5 - (GP) — Official Chinese reports, released as Gen Chlaiig Kai-Slacks troops converged on the airfield at Ling- ling, tonight, asserted 50.003 Chinese had been killed by the Jap- anese cnwerlc missing from e urea of the recently-liberated citv of Kanhslcn. 340 miles north Bong Kong The reports said the Chinese re- sidents of Kansion district in south- ern Klnagsl Province were killed or. disappeared during a six-month Japanese occupation. Kaiihsien. site of a former advance base of the United States 14th Air Fume.- was rewon by the Chinese W0 weeks ago. No details were given. but a sim- ultaneous Chinese central news dis- patch alleged that up to Julv 81 more than 1.000 civilians had been murdered in the Yangttze port of lotions-westernmost Japanese bas- hfid he had daughters: Ben. in Moncton. N. B." Gurlli. Mrs inndo a superficial examination of Cpl. Frank. with the R.C.A.F Scoudouc, N 13.; Alta; Julie. Ottawa, . Lofebvre. Montreal: Mrs. Stanley Gaudet, Egmoni Ba Eulalle, Mrs. Frank Doucettcql-Iiiii ‘ ter River. tlon in central China. The report asserted the Chinese died of "poisonous injections". for- cibly administered bv the Jap- anese who clalmed they were in- oculations against meningitis. hina's widespread fronts, national troops their pressure on the ripproa Llngllng and battled on lllC ila of a "floating pocket" of on or ginal force of 20,000 Japnnpsc troops withdrawing along the [Xftll River from Kanhsicn to Nanchang While bitter fighting raged on ilwc approaches to_ ‘Iungun. it mil west of‘ Lliniziing, Uhliicsc fur-cc; approaching the Hunau Prov 1r c xiii-case city irom lhe sciuhutw encircled a Japanese-held szrong- poflat on the Hunan-Kwangsi mil- “in. Chinese high command said that the rail town of T-ilunz-Klaz-l. 84 miles southwest oi Llngliiig, was completely surrounflcd two davs ego and the Japanese uarfls‘. . Illflb being attacked. Chinese loiuarl units however have by-llfl-Sfed Tillj nngklang and are balding neai Chufmhaien, 38 miles southwest oénlrnezglnliilrgirin-n miles io the norlh- east. i-rie Japanese uulllok m1‘; "é southern Klangsl Province ion-u‘ Ngnghang made further anins. the high command admitted Following in the wake of the Japanese. 6f?" Chiang’; troops reocciipled lxifi- hui, 106 miles south of NRIIChHIlF! yesterday. offic- ‘ sui t Blended for Quality "SM-ADA" train sr COFFEE - ' Mach/luster represented the At-i - -J C Murphv. Mrs s. Intyre all spoke briefly ln apprec- Orash Takes Toll 0f Four Lives fBv The Canadian Press) HAJILTON, Aug. 5 — Four airmen died today. the reault of a mid-air collision between two ninnes from No. I Wire- lrss School. R.(‘.A.F. at nearby Mount Hope shortly before IIOOII. Three were killed outright and the fourth died in hospi- ‘fill tonight from severe injur- s. The aircraft involved were a Harvard and a, Notggmgn and were believed to be on a, rou- tine- flight in connection with warriors training at the time. It was the first major accl. rlcnt at the big Mount Hope School sincc the R.C.A.F. took it over from the Royal Air ITYorce about a year ago. No. 33 Navigation School was former. 1y operated on the site. .\'.-imcs of the four victims xvi-ri- not released tonight due to R.C.A.F. regulations con- cerning notification of next of kin. Confirmation of casualty messages was not expected un- fvl Monday morning. A court of‘ enquiry will be openeld into the crash. Ooiivention Will Open This Evening The annual diocesan convention 8 PAGES I ' the handicap of di Mall. 84.00; other Provinces A U.8.A., $5.00- Subscription Delivered. use. Leaflet Tokyo radio Japan Sunday a enemy cities with tacks. _Tlle heaviest raid re said 100 Superforts hit sakl, Shibukawa and Ma lilaebashi was one of 3 tack. Other blows were listed ers, and 80 fighters strafed airfieiids in more than a score tacked the lumber nabe, on the Kyus three factories an '31s gioliyo ragio co gllie li-iomiglangn Wuillligd bénzasfiixéceg l! staged on a proper scale, bur, waxed confident that Japan's boarded airpawer would smash a hitting .01" til;- Catholic Women's League i \\‘1ll omit in Charlottetown at six , oclocl: this evening with a banquet int ilic Charlottetown Hotel Mrs. l J. “istihii Murphy, Emerald. is p. .11 national president, Miss Aim of Vancouver arrived Saturday and was treated yesler. r day to an afternoon tea at the par. lSil residence, Summerfleld, by the , ladies of the St. James sub-division. Prior to the tca, Miss McMaster was driven to “Green Gables". the i i world famous iiilnnc" stories. . Miss MacMnster was welcomed to lstlmfllfiflidid by the parish priest. ill” Rev. Father Murray, and was i also cordially greeted by Mrs. C.W. Jamm 4 Division. and her committee. l T1153." who assisted at the lea iiicludcrl Mrs. James Lawless, Mrs. .A1bt‘l‘f lvliirpliy. Miss Mamie Mc. Wilbert Lawless, Mrs Alfred Curley. .Mrs J B. Crokcn Mrs. M. Mar- ;tln, Airs. Emmett Clow, Mrs. J.T. ‘ CHI-ii and Miss Lillian Murphy ' Miss MncMasicr, Mrs W J.P, W.J Mc. MacMillnn, and Mrs. iinilon of the courtesy extended - fhcm by the ladies of the St. James { subdivision. Miss McMnster was born a Crcignlsh, Nova Scotia, and ed ucaicd at Mount Si. Bernard Coi- lcizc Antigonish i After teaching some years in her i i iivc prcvincc she came west to 5 Rilllllllfl, ivliorc sh." accepted a D05‘ ‘ ‘ion on flic staff of St. - the hcmc l Universitv| rof Saskatchewan and was choscng i for the post. of dietitian on 1‘ thé. ;iiomc economics car of the Bet- .irr Farmini! Train" which 001K941 i ihi- prcvince on a lecture tour Miss blob/faster is a Clhfiel‘ member of lhc Soroptimist Club iof Vancouver. and as its bresidcnt fin 1934 attended an internatlono t I""1ooriiihuedworfrdgé to colfal" Gih Division To De Well Trained KINGSTON. Ont. All; 5 - iCPl ‘Advancel - Maj..Gen. Bert M. Hoffmelster, commander of Ciiil. 1 lif\'_< 6th DlVislOn destined for PllClllC service, told a draft of officers and other ranks here that the division was Zoing to be an ali~stnr team" — one of the best equipped divisions that ever went into battle V The Pacific commander was speaking to a draft of 3O officers‘ llflil 900 other runlg; who will pre- cede the main body 0i the division to the United States. When the division nrrivcs at Fort Brenkin- ridge, Ky., the advance party will be recalled from the American units‘ with which they have been training and will form the instructional cndro of ilie division. i "Canada is still very much at war," (‘ran Hoffmelster said. "You lmvc a vcrv seriour, job on your hands Yours too. is an extremely ifllpflfifilli mission You are ROI!!! lo tho Ilnitcd States not only to broom.» instructors of the 8th Div- isffil‘. ijili. in effect Canadian amb. iissadors. Tl l; exp-Fried the Bih Division will go to Fort Brenkinridge early next month for training. l the invaders and lead m the Mikado to ultimate victim}? o‘ Ooi the Asiatic mainland Chinesel troops encircled the Japanese-held} railroad town of Tajungkiang 23 miles northeast of recently-raga- ken Kcwcli-ln in Kwagsi Province. and farther north oiher Chinese, units captured I-Ianshan, lmportw Bill hlshway town in Anhwel Pro-i vlnce. I ‘The Japanese have met further disaster in southern Burma with| the "almost complete" destruction of their 28:11 army, Allied head-i quarters announced. I The Nlppoiiese Burma force has lost more than 10,000 dead in cf-i forts to break through the B1: ',=.ri and Indian troops’ line on 111g Mandalay -_R»il1'll3{00l'l road, and cross the Siifiing River to flee! info Thailand In fighting at Ara. kan the Indian troops inflicted 3,300 casualties on the Japnnggg 54gb and 55th divisions. n official Chin -; " 50,000 lIihflbiWhiS otisetligeliézlinhgiiels district of southern Klangsi Pro- vince. former American air base recently rctakcn from the Jap- anese. were killed or missing in the Nipponese occupation which lastcul less than six months. See Soviet Domination Of ! l Eastern Europe i WASHINGTON, Aug 5 —- (AP) —-New problems of Anglo.Amer- lcan relations with Russia nrc ex-| Pooled bl’ ‘ diplcmallc aufhorltlesl here to arise from ilie Big Three} decisions at Potsdam. On the basis oi‘ information made available to dale. ilic situation set up at Potsdam is regarded hcrc flonerally as follows: The Bis Th1‘ 2 decisions empha. size a sharp division between East- ern and Western Europe They tend to confirm, "rVlIh British 13nd Am- orican recognition, Soviet domlnaa tion of all ihc Eastern European countries ranging from Finland in the north to Bulgaria in the south. Greece evidently remains in Brit. ainfle, sphere of influence Tho- prorblem of Turkey and Russian access to the seas through tho Dnrdrinelics is not totichcd upon ‘This may comp to be looked upon as some experts hrs-e are already suggesting, as reversal of the em- phasis at Yrilin only six months ago The late President Roosevelt. Winston Churchill and Premier Stalin agreed in the Crimea meet. ing that the political affairs of eastern as well as western Europe were a concern of all the Zrent powers The division of Europe made at Potsdam follows p lino running north and south from the city of Stctfin, which now is given in P0- land, to the city of Trieste, Italian metropolis which Yugoslavia is claiming from Italy East of this line are governments which have come to power, cxccpt for Greece, uiiih the nciiva assist. R11?!‘ of Russia. President Truman ported, three Honshu Island cities-Talia. ebashi-from 10 pm, to midnjgm 1 enemy cities forewarned of at- Kyus-hu Island by 140 Okinawa-b ’ lolm: 2 JAP CITIES RAIDED BY SUPERFORTS s Warn Of Coming Fire- iBomb Attacks Tokyo Radio Boasts Of Japan’: lloarled Airpower. i By The Canadian Pres; claimed 320 American aircraft staple few hours after B-29s showered 12 more leaflets warning of coming fire-bomb n. not immediately con-finned, as an attack on auburn ased fighters and bomb- from lwo Jima which bombed and Tokyo and nearby districts. Deepilg minishlng typhoon weather Saturday of medium bombers from Okinawa at.‘ and alcohol producing city of Tan. hu east coast, starting large fir” in railway facilities. riceded Sat- _—;- -. Pleads Guilty To Theft (By The Canadian Press) SAINT JOHN, N. B, Aug. 5-Ian' Nicholson, alias Stephen A. Mosh. er, a native of England but having no permanent ad ress ln Canada, pleaded guilty Saturday to a charge of car theft and will ba sentenced tmnori-ow after an rm. usual chain of events. Owned by John I. Robertson, for- merly of East Saint John, the car was stolen from its parking placa here last October and registered in Ontario. Recently. Robertson was walking along a street at Svd- nay, N.S._ when he spied the c-ir which Nicholson had sold for sand in Donald Cox. a taxi driver. Nlc‘: oison was arrested at Iroquois Falls. Ont. 1 Mans Mines \.U¢K m sun NUMBERS B01‘ if {Alias ‘five ‘i0 idAKE Pl iBy The Canadian Pressl METEOROLOGICAL SERVIC Toronto, Aug. 5 _- Minimum an maximum temperatures: Vancouver 54_ 75' Edmonton 78: Regina 57. 0-‘; Whnlpg 61 '73; Toronto 57. 74; Ottawa , 81: Montreal 58, Tl; Quebec hi, Moncton -, ‘ Charlottetown 59. 74; Yarmouth 5-2. 65. " FORECASTS Lower St. Lawrence and LakeSt Moderate northwest winds; imrliy cloudy; nOt much CPIBHBQ l" temperature. Gulf and Bay Chaleur and North Shore: Moderate west and north- west winds: partlv cloudy; not much change in temperature. Maritime Provinces: Moderate west and northwest winds; portly cloudy; probably light shower: near Cape Breton; not much change in temperature. I-Iigh tide this mornlnlf M 9-41 and ton t at 11.24. Sun se this evening at 8J1 In! rises tomorrow morning at I51- New moon August 7th. 8.32 P. x —~ Summerside tide eighteen Leave Charlottetown 112.15. 6. Arrive Charlottetown n20. l. CIIARLOTTITOWN- NEW GLASGOW (Daily Except Sunday! went to B‘l‘il‘.l (i‘t('l‘mli1f‘(i if poss- i M!" Ulllflflmwlffl L"- 4-0. P ible to obtain frcc movcment of r-"pnriz-rs. biniiiv-sinvii and ill? like in and out of ilio Balkan area lie silccecdcri in coffins rm oarrd statement of hope that frcc r0. poriinl: would b.- pi-rmlliril. ' official recognition of tiio Pu government's promise tin‘. fo coming clrrfiorvs cmld b? ' Arrive Chnrlottetown 235. 5.9.0 Pg N. S.—P. E. I. FERRY HEIWI (Daily. Including Sundays) SCHEDULE MAY l-SEFI‘. S0 heave Wood Islands ‘l s. nu. I s. mow I u. Ill- Lesve Caribou, l s. n1., l p. n. covered by Allied ncwspapermm- Inn.