OIL 'MERE MAN 771/ MERE MAN ii MAXIMS OIL 1:29;“ was. u.» you on The Peomys Paper "m... 1...... .......,,. {gkdiuiplby olt er musical er ora- Htl GIIHIILII. Itbllllltl III?- l‘ WWW‘ °“""“" "'° M‘ ‘ s PAGES Jbfiétttltl’; ‘iillihfétfittt.’ "“~ “"- CHARI-OTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, OCTOBER a, 1944 ALLIES ADVANCE 0N 3 SECTORS OF FRONT RRlTlSH RETURN g IN TRIUMPH Tl) GREECE F Missing Bedford Airman Awarded Bar To ‘D. F. C. Death Yesterday 0f Conductor Peter M. Hughes Th: deathcccurred at 12.45 yes. terztny lnofhilli.’ nt his residence. 2:4 Queen Street, Charlottetown. o; Peter Martin flushes in his 60th your. Th: late Mr. llughcs was a na. tlvc of St. Marys Road. P.E_I.. and liltd been with 111'.) Canadian National Railways for the cast 32 years and had been u conductor on the island brunch of the svstcin for the lust '30 years Of a cheerful dis. position. with a great capacity for making friends. he was known to scores of oecvole at ‘practically IVGYY station between Tilinish and sou. IL! All‘. Hug-hes was taken ill lost May and was forced to spend some time in the City Hospital but went back to Work in June. Taken ill a. fain in July. he was forced to re. tnquish his railway dutlxs and was confined to h home ever since. He leaves to mourn the loss of a loving husband and devoted fath. er. his wife. three sons. Ambrose in the Navy. ovmrsezis, Clifford with the Navy at Plctou. and Rexlnald at home: and one daughter. Doris, at home. There ls a brother. John. in British Columbia. and a sister. Mrs. Maw Lotferty. in Boston. Mass. » ._ The funeral will take piece Sat. urtiay morning from his residence. 224 QUJLGXI Street. to the Basilica. Interment 1n the Catholic Ccmete- ry Saint John Seeks Used Snowplows SAINT JOHN. N.B., Oct. 5 — lCPi — David R. Entitli. civic dir. ector of Public Works. said today h-z woulriyinvcstiizate thc possibility of obtoiniuil- from the federal wnr assets corporation. tractors, r.r snow. plows no longer rcqulrcri by the armed services Thrcc citv tractors wrre drtmosred in n lire yesterday. Germans Renew Robot Attacks LONDON, Oct. 5 - (c?) Germans renewed their f". , 110mb attacks uituinst southern it. mind tonight ttrter srvtral days combs sailed low ovcr one town as hundreds of censors wntchct. its course blirutlizh Sezirchllznt brains and a barrage of anti ircratt fire. Canning-vents "Show - MEET Harbor South‘. 1.2 . "Show - Brndalbntic Tuesday. Dance alter. -o-11 ‘Dance V/iitsmre Hall. Monday. ct. u. 5:1.- of lunches. 1o.o.11l "chkke" 5m; and Danced Cardigan. Mondni’. October 0th l Webster's Orchestra. 10.5.31.‘ *- I "Hot goose supper. Thanksgiving l Oclobsr 9. Victoria Hull. 5 o'clock.l United Church. l0.2.3-S.'li “Come to Mt. Stewart United. Church Chicken supper. Vvednesv dill’. October 11th. 10-7-3. "Emerald Hull, Friday. Qct. ti. Ice cream and dance. Sponsored by Mrs. John J. White and Mrs 6- Green. 10.2.5.6-3i "In order to save unnecessary delay Hunter River starch Fae. 10W is receiving potatoes b up. Dolntment unly. {$4.61 "Hospital Dance, Mcdregorb Warehouse. Montague, Saturday. October {lth Webstcrb Orchestra closed Mon- Thanksgiving lnkora. 10-6-21 "Thldicgtore wlmll be day. .- . Boy. .1. F. MOH1S.K "Notice — Arrlvin gafnlallsgwfeilg: Boo ‘your Nqrlillfé- G O Clll‘ 9GB G. C. Green. Iinqterald. SD29 tf "We have in toek "Fm dfivlhs haarnessraflg: ‘ZYSJRft gyfk hflneu. work 00111111. brldleo. - P. Snlth k 00., NON-ii With- mii-e. 10-2-1-6 00A _." Aut c“§:1$"i1°yf§?f§§e°f§w§"$fav§ Wei. “Msfitfaii “$559113? I I , m Tinne- Oounyty n 1. OTTAWA, Oct, 5 _ Th‘ R- C‘ A F5 l-Olllflit announ- fedl the award of 26 decorations, .nc uding a Distinguished Service Order and Bar to m. Distinguish- ed Flyln Cross. to R. C A F personne serving overseas. The D. S. 0. was awarded Cmdr. 1;. p. Russell, n, F, w95""°11"i. Que» after his squad- rons obtained outstanding successes under his leadership, said the yo C. A F. The Bar to the 13.11‘, c, Went to Sqdn. Ldr. H. C Hralnor, Bedford, P. E. 1., reported M15- sing Sept. l9, for outstanding lea- dership and fighting qualities. F0. P. J. Roy of (339 Cameron St.) Moncton, N. B. was among the recplenls of the D. F‘. C . The citation which nqggmpan- led the award to 'I‘rainor sold: "On many occasions recently Sqdn. Ldr. Trainor hos led the squadron op a variety (if sortles and has displayed excellent tactical ab- ility and great resolution. On one Oooflilvn a very superior number of enemy flgh ers were engaged 111;] eight of them were shot down. One of them by Sqdn. Ldr. TTulnor who displayed great skill and determn- ation throughout the fight. This officer has shot down at least nine enemy aircraft." u. of Firm To Rebuild Planes? MONCTON, N.B.Oct.5—-(CP) -- Offlclals q} Clark Ruse Aircraft, Limited, at nearby Lakeburn declin- ed comment tonight on a report that the company has negotiated or is negotiating a contrac, with a foreign country. ‘ Stanley Brenegan, general sup- erintendent of the Lakeburn plant said, “I would rather not discuss‘ the matter at the present time." It has been reported here that the contract involves conversion of twin-engine Hudson bombers for commercial use. . Early lost spring Clarke Ruse dis- continued repair work on Hudson bombers when they were declared obsolete for military use by the Royal Canadian Alr Force. Now ft is revealed that a foreign country, reportedly South American, ltas purchased a largo number of the obsolete bombers for commer- cial purposes. Before the bombers could be used in commercial ser- vice certain changes in the con- struc ion would have t0 be made. Wing C o 1 ltiaritime Synod Concludes Sessions NEW GLASGOW. N.S.. Oct 5- War "Sftuation Last Nijgwht "'°‘Y_—“ m- "- By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst Even on lngomculo European maps. the Amerlcammade Ubaoh- Bezgcndorf dent in the Gcrmbu Slegfrl Line defences lust north of halLenelrclod Aachen looms oddly small for the importance attached to it In both German and Allied battle concepts. Its Indicated north-south base Ilne along the GermamNetherlauds frontier measures some eight miles at most. Its eastern apex at Beg. geudorf lies hardly three miles within Germany. Yet what is happen. In: or mcy soon happen within that meagre salient could write the name of some little German hamlet into history as the scene of one of the decisive battles of this war. The crisis of thefight is close at hand by every criterion. Its ll‘!- proach can be read into the desperation with which enemy commanders are seeking to plug the leak In the Siegfried defensive dike before I flood tide of American armor comes rolling through. FrontJlno advices confirm the impression that. shallow as lt still ls, the UbachJfeggcndorf salient has definitely pierced German fixed defences. Advancing tanks and foot troops are dealing now with extem. porized German defences, with foxhole stands and slag-pile gun nests. Mobile batteries rushed up lu a frenzied effort. have replaced fixed fortification: left behind In the 1st Army push. Field reports say the immediate trend of the American advance be. yond captured Bcggendorf is east and southeast. Coupled with the dormant and even deeper American salient south of Aachen reaching eastward beyond Stolberg, a rlrig of steel ls being slowly forged about Aachen itself and its German garrison. A second northward escape route. the AachemGladbuch highway, has been cut by American troops leaving only the multiple roads to Cologne open to the Aachen garrison for retreat. Capture of Aachen. or its mclrclemcnt. still seems but an Incidental objective of tho lat Army offensive, however. Judged by the terrain difficulties involved, its major purpose must be turn northward once a deep break through ls attained, striking along the flat lands of the plain west of the Rhine in rear of the AachemKleve segment of the Siegfried Line against which American and British comrades are exerting “m. tlnuous pressure short of full scale attacks. Serious undermining of that German frontier defence system from the South must inevitably lead to an enemy flight behind the Rhino it I self. and expose the Arnhemjtmmerlch Netherlands gateway to the north German plain to British assault. Thero were definite indie " that. a new British breakthrough drive from. the now fairly cunlolidatg] bridgehead over the main Rhine-north of Nijniegen ls close at hand. ( uzkensi-riigton Rd. Man Killed In Accident, Mr. William MacDonald Loses Life When o... vrOyerturns A_t_()'rwell Corner. Mr. William MacDonald, a far- mer Whose home on the Kens ngton Road is less than a mile from char- lottetown, v1.15 killed almost 1n- stantly last night when a car in which he was u passenger overtur- ncd at Orwell Corner, about 25 miles from this city. Mr. MacDonald's 1190K Was broken. it was believed. The car was‘ driven by his son- Canuek Casualties For This War Pass 42,577 OTTAWA. Oct. 5 — (C?) — The Defence Department an. nounced late today that Came. dlan Army casualties from the Kcnsington Rodd, who had gone to Wood Islands to meet Mr. Mac- Dcnald who was returning from Nova Scotla by the ferry. He had bccn at New Glasgow vlstilng r1's outbreak uf war up to Aug. 31 mother, totalled 42.577. Mr Godkins was linlnlured be- The announcement suld the yond a few scratches and bruises. Yeo ordered set Coroner Dr. I. ‘J. on inquest. The hearing was down for ll a. m. today. figure showed nn increase of 11,. 33R for the month of August. Latest figures for all theatres A fCP)—Tl1e 71st Synod of the ivlar. Iitlinc Synod of the Presbyterian lCIlllTCh in Canada concluded its {session lierctoduv. Speaking on tlm work of the l\lar.| ltim: rr-llolous education council. Rcv Donald MucPhall. Halli’ lilflflltd the- Synod to tnke a greater‘ share in the work of the council by inking an official place 0n the} board. "The moral citadel of adol I t m P‘ esccnt youth was nevr besiczcd as it ls today and nothinR can mean more to the church than bringirlrz , ! our youth todether tinder the it of Christ." c sold. Rcv 1'20 Purnell announced tho nDEnlnil of a new church at| Sackvillc. N.B . and thc Synod voted rxpresslons of zratitticle to thr- peonlc of the community. Rcv. AE. Morrison. gow. spcnkins 11f; the afternoon res. aion. arsed people be called church services on V.da.v. and that liquor stores should be closed on that day. PARRSBORO. N5" Oct _ (CPI — Fire toniuht destroyer. the 111 of J.A. tlrflhnrt. Ltd. here. with estlmui damage to machinery and_oguipn1_e_11t_._o1_l_l6_,0@_ _ QUEBEC Oct. 5 - (OP) — The Quebec Government plans to solve to “very acute" forestry prob- lem, Premier Duplessis said today in an address to the first annual meeting of the Quebec Forestry Association. The richest forests have been impoverished and now are showing trnces of “ruli1|" stead of ytfidufilflfl riches. "It is time to take a stand and we must act quickly. but we must avoid revolutionary methods. Wlict we need ls what has made our strength 111 1h pact. that is stsbil. it ofv regress. w. must not mui P mil c and concede forestry do- mains in en excessive way, for we and security Under pretense it! “p10.- mlut remain molten of our for- cats." Quebec Premier Plans To Solve Forestry Problem lo ti ly There were few details of the ac- cident avifloble. It occurred about 7 30 and it was understood that the car left the road and overtur- ned ln a ditch. No other vehicle W115 involved, so far as was known. The body was token to the Mac- Lean Funcrnl Home in Charlotte- town. The inquest will bc held there. Mr. MacDonald was about 55 years old. His w'fe died about 14. years ago. Surviving are two sons‘ and two daughters. One son, Gor- don, is with the Canadian armed forces overseas and another. Wilfred, is with the Navy and is statoned in Nova Scotla. A daughter, Mary, Mrs. Albert Gcdkins lives on Kensln - ton Road one‘ another. Miss Jesse MacDonald is employed at the Prince Edward Theatre and lives at 337 Kent Street. were given as follows: Dead. 1!.- 829: p-csumed ilcarl. 318; mlssln . 1.662. prisoners of war or intern. ed. 4.1": wounded. 24.657. The figure 911' prisoners of war Included 110 who have been re- pitta-fated or have escaped. Mechanical-Brain Aims Plane’s Cuns IIOCIIESTER. N. Y" Oct (AP) —Mnnufucture uf 1| "mech. a _ brain" guiuight whlfl Qlcctrlcnlly directs combat plane Illflclllllfillln flrc so us to assure bullsmye accuracy. adapted from n British design. was announced today by Eastman Kodak Coin. puny. The pilot need only dial he type of plane his enemy II flylnr. the range. the air speed anti altitude and kceu the enemy target n. gyrmcontrclled cliigle, tho company's statement ll 0 Stimson Gives ll. S. Casualties WASHINGTON. Oct. ll - (A!) -Wa1- secretary Btintson f1’! today that army casualties on all fronts were 351.298 Sept. 2i. The latest navy casualty figure of m.- 79 brought the tote! for the armed services .85. The 851B was divided as follows: 88.566 killed‘ 185,921 wotmded; 46.688 missing a lil.i!1_0_pi"lscners. It is a mistake to think that forests and colonization were "ad. vsrsarles" for forests should help the colonists but should not be destroyed. It might be n "good thing" to limit the annual volume of lum. ber cuts and to increase the ground rent on timber lands. George Rowan of Rawdon, Que. received the Association's forestry trophy and $100 for the best ra-t tlonal exploitation of small wood' t s. Delegates up roved a resolution urging separator: of forestry and ngricuitwre and urged greater en- couragement by tho Federal and Provincial Governments of re. forectation. in-law. M1". Albert Godliins, also of; ud domagc, said the loss was partially Push Forward Rapidly After Easy Landings Important-Fort Of Patrai Falls To Invading Forces. a, oizéEc-it aura ROME. Oct. 5 .— (AP) -— Brl. tlsn troops have invaded Greece. binding by uirunu sea 1n tne Pct. oponncsus. uusning iorvyuru rabid. ly and entering 1111a llliDUfLJlll. port of Pntrai n1 a triumpnain. return to the scene of their oitter iii-ll ac. feat by tne Germans. At Patrol. thiru anoint Greek ports, the invasion forces were only '10 miles west of ttie isthmus o1 Corinth. the narrow neck which beads (nrcctiy to Athens 11nd links the Peiopcnnesus to the rest of 1r.e Greek inauilnnd. (The Ankara. radio said tonlcht ‘that the Germans were 0VLlCllLi1lll$l l Athens and tnc rllIODUIUVJ-zllb. ntov. lllil hastily nortmvarn but 111.111. tiered by Patriot iorczs which ncic blowing up bridges and blocaiizg roads). Adds To Null Troubles Closely coordinated with lei-sci- Aliizd operations on the Albdillilil 6035b BUG L116 LIPCCK Ifiilallfl 01 by. tnera to the ‘south. and 60111111311 Wll-h the ltussian itpproucli 1o i301. advances of ' ittfs krone and tir. -rartisans in IUHUSIEWIII, lnis new. test invasion promises to speed the disintegration tit i-iitlers Balkan - positions. Aniictinoed only today by Allied force headquarters. the intuisiuii was flIYuH-QV _severu1 days clu it. be. gun with airborne landings whtcn llLL no ODDOSMAOII, one the tonnnies ran 111w iiimting only as they near. ea Patrol. ‘Inere they found a German liar. rison. believed to be one of the iew left in southern Greece. Sid Fear l‘, Associated i-ress UOYFIJuDJIIHCHL 1111111 the invasion forces. reported that the Germans made one ufier to surrendzr to the British forces. but had not been able to cctne to terms. ‘that was Monday-there has been no specific word since. A s lumphant Entry Up to that point. the invasion had more 01 the air of a tritiitrpliont entry than o1 a military assault. ‘me British soldiers were welcomed with wild enthusiasm by the nativcs who swarmed nround tnun with shouts and gifts of food. flowers and es. Escorted by fiflhters. parachute troops made the ltrst, landinss, es. tabiisninz airficlcls 1mm which abitilres wcrc ODLIIIIIIIZ by the lllIiC ;the scaeborne troops arrived nt it [small port 0n the west coast. not ‘niunv miles from the rocky island oi Ithaca. home of the lfflQlldtlfy Ulysses. There has been no hln: from hiadquirrtcrs of the size o1 the for. cc involved in"tl1e invasion, but it is believed to be inuch- 5111111101‘ than the armies which litnded in Sicily or Ina-iv. although obviously more ambitious than the comnnmclo u. nits which for months have been iabbint; at German positions filfill‘! tho Adriatic coast onbofle dly. $40,000 Fire Damage llt Moncton MONCTON, u s _ Oct. 5 _ (c P) —- Duinnge estimated at $40,000 was caused today when fire burned through the centre section of the New Windsor Hotel ltcre, No one was injured. The fire, cause of wh ch was un- determined, broke out in the laun- dry in the hotel basement and gave firemen a four-hour battle. Spreading through the centre sec- tion of the building, tbc flames were checked from moving toward the front of the structure by a fire- wail. City firemen prevented spread ‘c’: tho fire to the roar of the buil- n‘. . Gueltl in the 120 room hotel made their way lo safety s short time after the fire was discovered lfld many of them found uccom- odatlons in other local hotels or in looming houses. The acting manager of the hotel. Everett Ryder, who estimated the’ covered by insurance.‘ l New Mass llorror 0f the stand of the “Red De fended the tip of the salient bank of Nader-Rhine across fBelgian port on the Schclde t 11in troops operating near the 11' glam - Ncthcrlcnus border nort; ‘Antwerp and 'I‘L1:'11l1out threa. .e:l two German-held citics-Brcda, ‘J0 ntilcs ‘i . northeast of Antwerp. and lbti". 1’l iriiles northeast ct’ tit nvtl l4 n1 lcs east oi‘ nrliislt IOICDS captured 1111125 south of to cut off an mbt-nlllild 103.090 Ger- llhllls a‘1111.nn.~d in Western H511- ‘ and. 1 | ‘(he i\.IIIeriIiZ|lI 1st Army cap- tureil the fortified village of Bcggendorf in its pom four mil"s deep into Germany and toniilit American armor which sruck fortlici- cast wns lock- ml in the first grout tank bat- tle” cvcr fought on German vi .. The British 211d Army attack was lntinchcd Wednesday night on a six-little front only about two miles from the bridge across ‘he Ncdw Rhine tyhich the British 21' ‘if! dlvisior hilll battled vainly to capture. Fierce eitcmy opposition today brought to n halt the thrust, in ~—(“C0ltti11ll§ti on W’ _ _ 3,000 Murdered By Germans In .20 c.7651. t7 J5)’ ICDIIY GIIJIORE (Associated Press War Corrcs. pnndcnt) TALLINN. Estonia, Oct. 5—iAP1 _Eig11tcc11 miles from this capital is who: the Russians point to as evidence of tht- Nazi's most W» '11‘—-1.l1€ Klooflo la. _ the Russians say. Advflllévs by British and CZITIZIIF‘ Llie dlreczion of Punncrdciison, at" driven by LL-Gen Dcmpse from Arnhem. rive . .- ‘l? I. l l v l l Veterans of months of surface ac- tion in the Channel and in lnvas-, icn waters, officers and crew of the: of Charlottetown. (Back row): A. B, Tribal destroyer H home for leave. Here are some of the Prince Ed- ward Island ratings who were serving l aboard H. M C. S Haida during, her operations overseas. From left to right: Front’ Row: A. B Waldo Beck,_l_¥CNVR, Murray Harbour; were _ This comp “'11s located 1n the timber and cement country. uni/fie‘ . prisoners slaved to 1irodt1ce material for the enemy “or ma-t hln c e. _ People in the vicinity told cor. respondents this story: The Germans killed off the pris. onerswholcsnle when they learned the Red Army was coming and re- treat wns inprospect. It was Sept. 19~two days bc., for the Gwlillfillé. pulled out ofl Tnlllnn. They announced the misonors would be moved. always a bad sign in n Nazi camp. Prepared For Fire The first croup of 300 was mdrchnl into thc wolvcls. ordered to saw up yiilcs of logs into pieces. 11nd were nizirehetl into n field in groups of Jflfllll 50. carrying they logs. Thry were fort-rd to mnke| a rnftJlke foundntloit. and thenl to llc down on it. The Gcrmansi shnt thcm nll. A second lzroup formed another? layer on lop cf the first —- and were shot. When thcrc were six or seven layers of (lend. gasoline; was potircd over all of them and a; torch was itpplled. Ncvvsmen See Evidence This ls what the people told us --nnd tltcn wc went up to see. In a little izreen field about ‘l5 feet from the road and a half mile from the camp n moss of charred corpses “Herc about hnlf burned. There were nion. women and children. l sow the bodies of at least three girls who must linvc been lllldCl‘ l6. I11 the backs of their hands you cntiltl see what looked like bullet holes. Off to the Sldf‘ was fl slack of logs and nearby it crest pile of clothing, most of which bore thc stcnclllcd Slnr of David and pris- oners‘ numbers. In nnotlter pile were shoes and chlldrens‘ sliocs were numcI-oits among them. In ont- trlnce was n comnletcly burned building: An escaped vii-ls. oner srtld this was where tho Ger. mans drove n lnrlzc lllllllbfll‘ of ins-n and women. locked the doors. set fire to th; building and burned them alive. bodies lay sprnvrlcd behind a barb. ed wire ctvlostirc. Trtsn. 1m in. mate said, were shot down or bcnten tn ocnth. 1 o .nc1'oss the Netherlands bordcr In nnotltcr place a dozen or so‘ Canuck Arm ISLAND TIERIANS HOME Pressure Increases Qn Nazis“!!! Ho||and . _L0ND0N, Oct. 5 -- (CP) — Three Allied armies stabbed forward on different sect0is_of the long western front today, and pressure increased on the German forces remaining 1n southwestern Holland. British 2nd Army troops carved out a train of one mile southeast of Arnhem, scene vil" British 1st .t\1'rborne Divfiion lust month. They ex- ‘s men lo n point 0n the south Canadian formations of LL-Gcn. t‘1'erar‘s army struck across the Netherlands border in a swift push north of Antwerp, clearing an arc of Itmd north of that great .~.-~»---_._~___._ _. ._, ....,.,...._’~ S.A. Lloyd Grant, RCNVR, and Tel. Camille Arscnsult, R CNVR, both M, C S I-Ifildil’ James Forbes, HCNVR, Summerslde; are back in Canada, on the WHY? A-B P011 Mflcnfiflfild. RCNVR. ‘Monticello and A B. Clifford Fee- ihan, RCNVR, Mount Stewart. lGrant and Forbes arrived ln this ince l Prov R C.N i W Dinsmore) . y zcfilziances ast night.) Photo by U18. Photog. E.- North From fiAntwerpj ' l? SMALL-POX SCOURGE One out of cvcry l0 early Armri- By RO-Sgs-IIUNRO WITH 1ST CANADIAN Y. Oct 5 - (cc Cable) .— Canadian and British troops in the, 1st Canadian nrmv eXtefidfid the“ Rains tonight north and northeast f Antwerp and British forces 0D- crating on their cast ilunk DUSIYtg within four miles of the important junction town 0f Tilburg Directly north of Antvrcrp i116 Canadians swept ahead rnoidlv and were crowding the Netherlands. irontier at n ntunb. r of uomts (Allied supreme hendqitnrters re. ‘ports said the Netherlands bordc: was crossed itorth of Antwerp nm. added the Canadians were mcetin; light resistance in this area nroun. Putte. 10 miles north of Antwerpl Opposition was scattered 31011‘. the Catiaditin sector thi-ouflhfiul the day but _t,o the cast trhere Bri. tlsh and Polish elements are fifth’.- lnil. the Germans offend stiff re. slstancc with some 88.MM. nuns and infantry. Pol i1 troops 1i "(Continued onpnge 7 Col. 2| . it“ I 860 Enemy Planes] Downed By Canueks i l 1 l t OTTAWA. Oct b - (CPl-Cnn- adlan airmen have shot down 850 enemy aircraft since t-hc start of the war, it was learned today nt Air Forzc ltoadqunrtcrs The figure was based on a compilation of oi- flcinl R.C.A F ccmintinzques There has been no infcrtmtloti available on "Frolic-bits" or <lmn-‘ aged enemy planes tlot “So Small camp Rorspizms. c.1111- Oct. s‘ (AP) ~— Notified by the l-clc- grflPh office 11c 11nd ll collect tel:- grnm waiting. a financially‘ cmbnr- assod sergeant hcrr- borrowed the $1 30 due to rcnd this message from Thosc who csript-d said they were free becntisc of the haste of the Germans. , his wifc: l “Please send $10 hOmc immed- lately.” man colonists (lied of small-pox QVA i \ l. ‘ é“ \\_ Sous PeoPLt: HAW. ‘ill. (as DONKEY " EXCEPT RT! UTlES or A PATIENQZ :6 l-Ilgh tide this llflCfllhifll and tonight at 2 49 Sun sets q. . DAI Charlottetown Leave 5.45 p.m.; 1 Li 0L this eveniniz at 6.33 and r1. s tomorrow morning nt 7.05. LY AIR SERVICE sllIlIllCfinu: Moncton Charlottetown 8.40 p.m. ‘I l.m.| Arrive Charlottetown 12.45 p.111..- |!..'i0 run. ; 0 lhm. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown l2 noon. Arrlvc Charlottetown 5.45 p.111. Charlottetown - New Glasgow 1Dallv except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown l lam. Arrive Charlottetown 6.50 p.m. PEI-N. DAILY S FERRY SERVICE INCLUDING SUNDAYS leave Woolf‘! Islands-ll) 00 A.M. and 2 15 Leaves 4.15 EM i Caribou-Jill PM» Ind