OIL MERE MAN ii; lle who derives the advantage ought also to sustain the blrdlli. i} e1” - gprlstmewa lleerdlee. {we n earths. lauded I, mo III [E y‘ IIIIIII ilaps Flee Leaving Behind "Quantities of Equipment i gum. HEADQUARTERS IN ment as they fled north. Qnly one 5 PACIFIC. , o food trail leads from the captured _ 1|-('I‘uesday) -- (AID-The bafietmwudlf th h ld d u even e ou ucc -- hi" “Plum sflmmm- la reaching Lae. lheulr fateflsppeeer- ’ Quint!- "W mu" mmh "l ently is sealed because the entire ' newly-Won llldmmb area from Balamaue to Lee is un-Iers announced today. whqy QnQINM‘ n all lll fol-hill “We have captured ealemaua." dllll 1M0 "it I'll-Ml tbe communique said. ,has a useable _aea anchorage “gm- southgrn gore" u, m Samoa Harbor. close ursuit ‘of remnants of the Ilghteen mllfl HON-hellf- 0! Slll- cnemya disintegrating troops. t will "Our northeastern: end western teotd. aided by all‘ bluwl- forces (at Lee) are greduell in- All!“ “m”! mfll" mill!!! their Pressure. our eavy lllllll 05 m0" l-hlll 3.000 miles bombers in direct support attacked vlILbombe-d the Wllvflmllt and enemy defence inste‘ ‘ions with - ‘10340335517- Dlllfill C0"- lii tons of explosives. causing ex- tensive dam e at Emer 'a southeast of Salamaue. Ja anese Dldymens. Aaibridge on tile mill: bombers attacked the arbor valley road was destroyed end rev, filled-held Morobe New Guinea, eral gun ‘ ‘ ' silenced." In the Solomons, Americgn bombers started fires and explo- sions in a new raid th is l ted Janene elr base ofmlllllme u _ today's communique said the M, mused only minor dam e. the Japanese abandoned 8a e- - . leaving behind much equip- ‘Statemerzt On Canadian Army Reorganization “on i awa. pt. 1s - we» _. ,_ ,5 m’ m‘ o‘ mmwe Salons to be employed for that ter Ralatonb statement on Milli Features Ollvlolllly. operational tNOns in Canada are employed principally in with the ‘ ‘ of the Atlantic and Pacific coastal "fll- Wlllflqllelltly. the meln feat- urea of the reorganisation will in- elude:- (A) L. ed; ‘ ‘ 1n local defences e-t strategic points, hsvlr-s Nlard to their relative im- Portance and vulnerability. (B) The 7th and 8th Divisions now on duty in Canada will be 1d and the 6th Division will be partially disbanded. In substitut for these division; It, 13 proposed to retain e composite ormetlon of three brigade mups Huh olbl-ble of operatln ndep- endentl . These tzoops will be ad- minlste and trained under a modified divisional headquarters. (C) There will be organized 1n eastern Canada a “tra lng brig. ldé group . This training group will have a cadre of officers, N. C. O.s and an administrative staff. The rank and file will consist mainly of NIIIIOICQIIIEIIL; who have completed the regular basic and advanced training and who as 1185i gfuthel: pgptalratgolr; Igor over- se s some e e e group for an additional and more advan- rxvte: rthe geénteorelhstrsg- of both coastal ‘ e of ~~ the mam there has been aviation of-the-Japenese from Alglllilns and the increasing ° - in - It. 4b lumps-n ea has mh the tinaance of Russian successes increasing menace to Hitler, destruction of the Axis forces lforth Africa. end the capitulat- 0! lllly- ‘rhese successes inten- - the threat of further offensive . ~ lions against the Axis both in western Europe and in the v terranean arse. Iilile these developments do ~ "MW ihc threat of enemy c- In certain forms against t is “mil "luv reduce materially 1min"; any possible operation "me decree of probability and the ‘ M! tyne and weight cf any " Wtfsllons have been apo- " - In the I appraise- the n te personnel the reo - ganizaticn will have the following effectsa (A) All personnel of age, up); and medical cateBOYY suitable for l reinforcements will be absorbed into units or training or other establishments. (B) General service men who are below category for operational dut- lfis Will. as far as required, be a, - sorbed in less active posts In can. ada for which their physical cat. - esurv may be suitable: (C) All personnel not of an age, rank or medical categozy suitable for operational duties and who all Mt required for less active posts In Canada will be discharged to :esume civilian occupations and thus Improve the manpower sit. ltlltztlton for essential civilian activi- """"""°" In the numb Illllllli EVENTS lcs-Crapaud Thursday. D-lli-Zl. e stew a ,moa .Clff'ord's cirotrtiatniy B-H-Zly. llowatt‘ Mill m, in ~ ‘"18. lsluylutigtinlniglifiillr; l "Chicken supper B and .st. c ' , Ember fllxrles Hall, lqlqegday W mi °“li8"h.hf“h%.;.1y. 3-14- l. . ‘I'm-o to Sch I. day. 17th‘, sponqzoreidfi by tute D-ld-l . , l0 Cljlflkll B PI lb. l 5111. aedne “lyfl . in Morell Hall Tuesday . ljth in aid of Senator- orde Orchestra. O-is-QL. The general result will be:- (A) To provide a reduced thoroughly efficient body of oper- . (Cgitiiiiid allele '1 0311f“ ll-(AP) —LI- fl law to buy llve and dressed [if p.33. hilt. " m‘ ‘°‘ nnii liiirgitiymlfbettleahl at o u. lfo Cesare steamed into Malta to- de to oin four other surrendered be h , leaving only one more unaccounted f . The Roana. one of Italy's newest and largest. was "a. "Yaw"... ‘or .. e s unre 'Isbe edtobeeitberthelligmro m sched ed m In Rn, but. eoeordlng to don authon. ties. roulbiy not yet com leted . end ether at Trieste or Poe, or he battleship Oevour. The 28.000- dm_tonCevourwasio bgghp tIeh Mediterranean t e ‘h- rentolnllltnatarehe was re- ported to have been refloeted. but was regarded by British nav- v- m col stones Iwil-tf. PIOII 1- lluh Withstand 30D Depth Charges A BRITISH PORT. Sept. l3 - (CID-Altar l6 months of Medit- erranean adventures. most of them under comm Lleut. ACO- Mars, DS.O.. D.S.C., of 5t. John's Nfld., the British sluomanne Un- broken has returned to her home The Unbroken made her laat four Batrola under an English aklp ut Idout. Mars. who common ed her for l3 patrols. was on the deck to welcome the ship's company home. Withher return. the admiralty gave a resume her wartime career. a career in which the Un- broken. one of the smallest British submarines. torpcdoed two Italian cruisers. sank or severely damaged 000 tons of Axis shipping and withstood 300 depth charges attacked leave Tripoli with Axis troops and equipment. Lieut. Mars escaped detection by torpedo boats accompanying the transport and 26 minutes after firing his tor ecloes the transport had dlsappeare - The ast of his many successful attacks in the Unbroken lasted less than five minutes from sighting to sinking. His target was a tanker es- corted by three destroyers and car- rying fucl from Rumanla to Tun B. "We found ourselves allnost in the midst of Lieut. Mars said. “I whipped nround in a. circle and let, off a salvo of torpedoes. One hitlend the tanker was not seen aga n." Bermuda Buys II. S. Seed Potatoes HAMILTON. BERMUDA, Sept. l3 tCPl-Two thousand. five hundred barrels of seed potatoes have besn ordered from Nova sootia by the department of agriculture following a. recent visit of Inspection made by E.A. McCallan._ former Bermuda director cf Agriculture. to Nova Scotla fields. These potatoes will be lanted here as soon as they arrive. ut Mr. McCallarfs report Indicates that the seed plantings north were un- usually tardy, and rospects for the Christmas Irish p0 ato crop here are not bright. ring plantin s, the de- require a ut ano- er 3.000 barrels of seed. In ac- with recommendations made by Mr. MoCallan, this seed will be sebagos and Irish CObIlIQY- No garnets will be imported-nor are any likely to be imported again. Allied Ainnen Active In Italy ALLIED, HEADQUARTERS, NORTH AFRICA. Sept. l3—Whlle the bulk of the Allied Air Forces were in action in support of the armies around Salerno and in the south, Allied bombers from the Mld"=. East command started soften ng up the Dodecanesc Isl- ands of Italy which lie in the east- ern Aegean Sea. Just off theTurkish coast. Rhodes, the largest island and kingpin of the a." ‘ was the main targetr-"""" The Germans, possibly drawing on their home reserves, threw 90 to I00 fighters against the Allies ln the Salerno area. but their er. forts against the beaches and shippln were described as weak. The Alles shot down l8 planes “niinigit “fit D os were preoccupied with roads leading w the shin-no bridgehead. intent upon blocking - rier and a numbe asaa f (3 _ Phi tggvagd tr§lm§r$¢i$ismo:'t§'£t'§'s. British Fleet Units Freed For Pacific Action al authorities es a tote-l lose for wer puvoses. Into alette Harbor the 23.000 ton Giulio Cesare led e procession of four destroyers. a seaplane cer- r of submarines. They anchored under Malta's s alongside a fleet ra m capital ehlpa on down wh |evc themselves up earlier. In all, et least $0 Italian warships were In allied ports and neval au. fhorltles awaited word of other ar- rivals from a score of Mediterran- ean bases. _ ‘ Freed for the eve booming ea- aault on Japanese see commun- ione was e powerful fleet in- the British bettleehlpe Na‘.- ne . Anson. Howe, War- silent. neee cleen.up m sooner than had n anticipated. r-a-ww-I’ -_._____________‘ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLUTTETOWN, CANADA. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 194s III!!! ATTLE RAGIN G bllbmllbfifi es Capture Salamaua. 0n Island n 8y Kirke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst The first crucial fight of the battle of Italy is told“ Salerno bridgehead south of Na lee off all southern Italy from the massed to check Inshore. _ aala at one sir German reco ition of that three; is flbVlfllla in the t. Gen. Mark W. Clark's efforts I0 expand his positions place at the rcefen to cut force; ‘being where Allied troepa ollc. Al. the town of Salerno Itself United States 5th army troofis not only are estrlde the main rail lines runnin to bath the toe and heel provinces. the several Iener reII connections which bread the mountainous spine of the Italian Peninsula to Join the Tyrrhenian and ceea southward down the alia boot be have set foot on the I t of ‘ al Adriatic s. At Salerno Allied forces are less than 80 miles airline from the Ad- riatlo coast. The British dial. Ia moving swiftly up that coast. 8th army's right wing, already north of Brin- presumably to form -.| junction with the American 5th army and esathilsh a short line across the Peninsula from the vicinity of Na Ies to some done, Allied-soiled elr menacc Io the Nazi war industries Grecian-Slovakia not now reachable from Britwn. Immediate Allied of Naples on the Tyrrhenian coast to lllfi This seems now to be the Insula line from a point north eses In sout ern Ita he Adriatic. Once this ls y will become a deadly a, Austria, Hungary and Int on In Ruman: objective. A trans-Pen- Adliaiic would be the shortest and would afford local coverage for the vllnl airfields along the lower Adriatic coast already falling into British hands. But Allied plans may net call for e front HIM fur north. In any event, the campaign does not suggest any Allied purpose 0! attempting to occupy all Italy. Its o the southern portion of the boot In and her Balkan satellite; and, a; e the seizure only of closer air attack against Germany diversionary’ mcusu c, There are clear ben made. German alr power also either from Russia or from meet the vnenance in Italy. to force withdrawal indications that some such transfers alrcadv Mlle is being wlthrdawn the German Industrial home from tn To that extent the Italian Invasion is already bjcctives fire more likely to PWVB order to bring up of Nell troops from RllSSlll- In greater strength exert-hing,- a strong influence on military development; in Russia at a crucial moment. Reds Lay Siege ‘ 'T0_l_3ryansk w By JAMES M. LONG (Associated Prerss Staff Writer) LONDON, Sept. iCi-JAP) -— The Reg Army has laid siege w the an- I218 t C-lBBdBi of urynnsk on m8 west bank of IIIE uesna ltlver after plunging over the bodies of 1.093 Germans to reach the east bank and cut four 0i the five ‘dunk rall- ways feeding that Axis strcnsllilld. Moscow (IISCACSZG tonight. A Soviet communique telling of the SXIIBSAI through me lrllnflullled forests east or dryansk foreshadow- ed thc early capture or that Pll/lll or the Axis central and southern fronts. "uur troops have come risht up to the town of alyansk." smd tho cunlmlulque recorded here by the Soviet cnitor. The bulletin added that Gell. M- M. Popovs troops lllid overrun the vital railway network on the east- ern side of the uesna. Stlzlllfi llfl- soners and equl ent the Germans were unable to ake wlzh ‘hem in their xngnt to the high west bank- While Popov's troops Ivore sIOIm- lng through dryansks outskirts. the communique said. other Rusian armies stnl were racing through the Ukraine toward Kiev and the Dnieper River. . Aside from the heavy German re- verses south of Baknmacn and be- fore Bryunsk, the Russians Said their troops overhauled and cut down 1.5m of the enemy soldiers fleeing from the Donets B85111 W980 of Stalino. and killed hundreds more in other sectors. But the frontal assault on Bry- ansk, pivot. of Gennanys battered central and southern fronts, was the high point of zhe Russian com- m . ‘The successful lunsc made it likely that Bryanak would be lllll scene of the next great Russian victory to keep Moscow's batteries booming their triurnphal salutes. OPPOSES FOURTH TERM WASHINGTON. Stlbt. l3 —(.AP) - Senator Guy Gillette (Dam IA.) said today that the election of r-tcsldent Roosevelt to a fourth term as President of United States would be a "threat. to dem- ocracy." "I am definitely opposed to e fourth term." he said. It la not a question of r ition Io President Roosevelt. Gillette said, but rather a matter of prin- 0 I? e. "I would oppose a fourth term for my own father," he told ro- P1122‘: , _, , _._..______ To Lower Retail Prices In D. S. WASHINGTON.’ 599i. P) --General - manure.- Bcwlcs of the _ mnlstrnllol. ted-ll nnnuulltflfl l1 sweeping price rcducfiloll pro-gran d signed to lower the cast of in! to consumers ll. the U - f1 States by 2.3 pol" cent and cllfot substantial savings in retail fill-es oi potatoes. lard. apples. vl‘=\'~!-'°=» and othnr prodlnts. The roll back would be accouaa pllshed through a $109-$900 government program of transport- ation subsidies, government 010p purchase and resale. and in the ‘C1159 of peanut butter and pmbflllllf Hild- rollback subsidies within the fin- "ml Five Dead In II. B. Accident s1‘. STEPHEN. NB. Sept- 13- (CP)~Steadily increasing since a terrific, head-on collision of two motor cars yesterday. the W“ °f dead stood at five tonight and two other victims were reported "very Hazel Edmonclson, 18. 0i 50ml)‘ pmpton, N.B., died late today. The death of James McLaughlin, Hon- occurrcd this nlorning. Mrs. Herman Amos and Harry McLaughlin, also i3 - (A Chester of I-ioneydale. were killed instantly and Herman Ames died last night. Of the survivors. those in most serious condition were Keith Mc- Laughlln, l4, and twmyaar-old Doris McLaughlin. The condition of Mrs. Harry McLaughlin and Jean Ames, l4, was reported fair. The other victim. Gordon King. Kingsclear. was placed aboard a train today for Montreal. where he will undergo a knee operation. King and Miss Edmondson were the only occupants of one car when it collided with the other. driven by Ames and carrying seven passen- gers. The impact on a straight stretch of a hill at Brockway, 30 miles from St. Stephen. was so as‘: that both cars were demol- COF "sauna" why”, ” FEE _ Milton, P. E. I Office of Price lady Read b Everybody bee lle who offends against Heaven MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN none to whom he can prey, becrlpllon Delivered. $5.00 ill. ‘MW- ofhe- Provlnnoe I ll-IJ. I5.“ AR NAPLES HIBMRH o: Ilo New Markrs In Dnt. Next Year ' TORONTO. Sept. l3—(CP)-—I-Ion. George H. Doucet. Ontario minia- ter of highways. announced that no new license plates will be issued to motorists In this Province next year because of the steel shortage. "Vehicles will carry a windshicld sticker to be su plied when tin: licenses are purchased," he said, adding that 194a‘! plates would be used "necessitating a change 1n the system of issuing permits." Milton Airman Awarded D. F. D. OTTAWA, Sept. l3 - (C P) -_ All‘ Force Headquarters tonight an- nounccd award of the Conspicuous Gallantry Medal to Flt. Sgt. A. w. J. mrden, of (100 Ferguson St.) North Bav Ont. who safely landed a crippled bomber with full oomb load after a hazardous blip reqm- tly to North Africa. Larden had never bcicre landed an nircrdm His award was announced in a list of 32 decorations granted mem- bers of the R. C. A. F. serving over- seas and made public tonight. The list included awards of 26 uls- tlnguished Flying Crosses, five Distinguished Flying Medals and the award of the C. G. M. to Flt.‘ Sgt. harden Among those receiving the awards were:- D. F. C. PO. J. D. Dickson. Hampton, N. B. PO. M. W. Coles, New Army captured Crotone described in latest frontl both sides had suffered h commanding the whole their artillery. "Very heaw fighting continues in the area of the 5th army at Saler- no." Gen- Dwight D. Eisenhower-s “PO. Coles has completed manw sortles against targets In Germany,- Italy and occupied Europe, and re-I cently has participated in attacks on the heavily defended area in the Rhur Valley. His work as cnptalni of aircraft has been consistently, excellent and he has achieved some fine result." r_._._._ News Briefs ,______ . IVASIIINGTON, (AP) -—Japan'a has again felt the blast American bombs. with the fouril; raid on the Paramush- lro Islands area at the north end of the Island chain which makes up Nippon. SAINT JOHN, N.B., Sept. 13- (CP)—“Although the danger of invasion has definitely lessened. danger from alr attack ls still with us.“ said Brig-Gen. Alex Ross. di- rector of civil air raid precautions for Catladzt. in addressing A.R.P. personnel of the Saint John Dis- trict tonigl\t., LONDON, Sept. I3—(CPl— Lord Strnbolgi. Labor pecr. as- serted tonight that "a curious and unexplained delay of ac- tion" by the Allies after Musso. Ilnl’s fall had lost part of the edantages of the Italian cap- Itulation. OTTAWA. Sept. l3—(CPl— Captured German airmen are not so arrogant now as they once were but they still think Germany will win the war. PO. Karl K. Glldner of Sudbury, Ont. a fighter pilot just back from North Africa. snl-il today at n press conference here. NEIV YORK. Sept. I3—(Al’)- Widespread fighting bcirveen Italians and Germans in Italy was reported in radio broad- casts today and a Nazi procla- Sept. 13- homeground matIon from Rome said “scri- oua clashes have inkcn place wit the cit " Famo Commander wasr-rmomn. Sept. 1a _ (A P) - One of the most famous of Germany's U-bont commanders now is a prisoner of the United States Navy plucked from the wat- ers of the south Atlantic after he lost a duel with an American pat- rol plane. He is Lieut. Friedrich Guggen- berger who, the navy said in an nn- nouncement telling of his capture, la the man decorated by the Nazis for sinking of the British aircraft carrier Ark Royal In the Mediter- ranean in November, 1941. The submarine - plane duel which preceded Guggenbcrgerz- capmrc occurzcd off tho coast of Brazil at a tkne not specified by the mw. The Natl skipper was one of seven men picked up by a surface craft from n life raft which the plane dropped after the battle. The navy‘s account of the bat- tle was In llnc with recent sIorIr-s f.om the sea fronts that. tho “my dimlshing numbers of Gannon un- dersea raiders encountered are dia- us rNamzi U-Boat C0mmlllllque said before noon. "The Germans. are resisting desperately; our determuied thrusts to break through their positions." The British and American units not only held doggedly to their, hard-won bridgehead 20 airline‘ miles south of Naples. but managed I l0 push into the nlountalns. Much‘ fighting was 4,000 feet above the sea. The enemy was ushlng re- serves toward the batte area des- pite day and night ummeling frcm sky-ruling Allied ar fleets, which were cha longed bv large German plane formations. Dtspite the mounting fury of the fight, its cl‘- max was not In sight. Canadian rankmen? (London reports say unit; of the 1st Canadian amiy tank brigade have probably been 1n ncnon in the last few days In the Salerno area. The brigade fought scattered act- lOIIS_ll‘I support. of Infantry attacks in Sicily. There has been no official word of the exact disposition of Canadian units in Italy.) Lt-Gen Mark W. Clark's men encountered stiff tank opposition. The ferocity of the German defense attested to tile Importance the en- emy attached to the battle and suB- gested that the Nazis were trying to hold open at all costs an escaiie route for their scattered forcesdn the southern third of Italy WlIlClI Gen. Sir Bernard Montgomery's m‘- lny was herding northward at an accelerated pace 8th Anny Races Ahead Gen Montgomery's closest elem- ents were I40 miles south of Salerno nml were racing ahead without, oven Iniiklilg cataract wlzh the on, cmy. This Anglc-Caxlndlun‘ force“ appeared intent upon mnchltl’; tile- S erno area at tile earllcst DlWSlbll! l a . moment. to shut down the jaws of trap clutching at enemy forces be Iwegn them and the Salerno b1 ldEP- hen . At last reports, the 8th was uu-ll north of the bottleneck tho Italian toe between the Eufemla and Squillace on the west coast. Another arm swiftly negotiated the 3i) miles between Uat-anzaro and l Crowns on the east coast _ "l "10 toe and captured the fairly ant harbor at C_rgtggg__l_ Is Prisoner Guggcnbergefs command, the navy said, was a “new German submarine hcavlly armed with anti-aircraft guns“ and when the navy's patrol plane headed in for her bombing run over the U-boat the Nazi vessel sprayed a stream of fire into the air, including trac- er shells. This heavy fire, however. did not deter the navy plane from swooping down to a level only 50 feet over the turning, darting U- boat and letting go a salvo bombs which hit the deck straddled the boat to port starboard. The blast llftcd the U-bcat from the sea and when the plane circled back her crew saw cry; llln , discolored water and l5 swimming on the surface. plane dropped e life raft and an- othor plane came up to atrol over the arva until the a:ri\'e of a sea- plllne tender. The tender, the navy said, found seven Germans aboard the raft when it pulled alongside. lncludin the U-boets commander. and and playing a tendency to stand and fight when located by aircraft. l number B m. o; summer-side ENFAKHIH uinea. Nazis Throwing Large Forces Into Conflict — ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NORTH AFRICA Sept. 13—(AP)-The most violent battle of the whole Mediterranean campaign around the British-American bridgehead at Sal- erno within 15 miles of Mount Vesuvius, while in extreme southern Italy the British-Canadian 8th raged tonight after a 30-mile advance and another British force beat up the Adriatic coast from Brindisi toward Bari- Both sides were throwing tanks and reinforce- ments prodigally into the crucial Salerno combat, ine dispatches as hotter than any fought in the African or Sicilian camp- aigns. The combat rounded out its fifth day and envy casualties. The Germans were ensconced in high ground. allied bridgehead with :—-——-- _;i tone. a town of about 10,000 has chemical works and is an important, railway junction. It is ll0 miles from the extreme tip of Italy. s91. zure of Catanzaro bv the Bah army was announced Sunday, Total Dasualties In Sicilian Campaign orrawxa, sept. 13—ICP) — Th1 Defence Department today flllnwqll‘ ced the total number of casualties m the Canadian (active) army III the Sicilian campaign no Scot l0 was 2.387. _ officers 1n the list numbered 1'71 and other ranks 2,2 . In detail the list showed 36 cf- ficers killed and died cf wounds. 123 wounded and l0 mlssmg or prisoners of war. In other Yllnlnl 438 were killed or died of wounds, 1,641 were wounded and 137 missing or prisoners of war The department's announcement 582d the figures were based on m- divldual reports received from ovar- seas by the records office at nat- lcnal defence headquarters and were "subject to checking and cor- YGCI. I1. The 23rd Sicily casualty: list, issued on Saturday brought to 2,262 the of Sicily casualties of- llfllflllfy‘ reported to date. LUMBER SURVEYOR DIES LOWER NEWCASTLE. N.B.. Sept. l3—-(CP)—'I‘homas Staple- ion, B2, former well known lumb- er surveyor, died here yesterday, He lived in nearby Chntham clura lng lnost of his lifetime and was one of the best known residents of the ltilramichi district. FIVS DEAD THE‘- MAN wi-Io boas ‘faunas D NON. " l1’ CAN'T Bi: \ High tide this morning at 11M and tonight at 12.17. Sun sets this evening at 7.14 and rises tomorrow morning at 8.37. Last quarter moon Sept. ll. 3.00 tide 1D inutes later than Charlottetown. DAILY All! SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAYI Cherlotteiowvlh — Quntmereide - on on heave Charlottetown 7.00 e. III- l2.30 . m. 4.30 m. A ve Cherlnletown I.I0 p. ll 5.46 p. m. 7.05 p. m. P- E. I.—N. S. FERRY SERVICE DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands - 1.00 L m. and ll em. end a p. In. Leaves Caribou - 0J0 e. la. and I pus. and I pl.