.e..é...l>.l.... _ ‘A island CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, i} ..-Q WEDNESDAY. MARCH 1. 194s ..lST Ecol Cross In Ch ’town Breaks Former Records lleceiplts Cf First Day's Collection Reported Last Evening Total flew Suspect ‘ls Ileld j Ski-Trail Murder Ind! 0 — (OP) —- ~.. millvselstlgation o! Q19 lid-trail th we: of nine-year-oid Jchn ‘west was picked up in n lillthceastcndhomeoiaa howgrapher. Police said 4am You been seen on Moluit ,l_ close to when you Boo- ., w“ stabbed with s s Pole. . several occasions takiill Phi-ll!“ . children. ' ld th_ had learned the ‘eglaiuin trig habit of teams - o1 children and then tell- . B" Qu . inted hour on Mount Royal to the prints; and that some cases th parents in at he . en had been indecent-ll! t ut- wos found on s l‘ d .ths side. His hands were bound ... his back with ski strap! he had been indeoentlv at- ed. Police said that a picture l..".2.’.i‘.‘.“’€§i“‘...l".‘..l“i“.?..“€ p‘ __________ .0. M. P. Will ilot lit Drummondvills AWA M - a" 1...’... 3mg. $1 will Canadian Mounted Police ‘ us, that the force hsd one loath la which in find new sullen lll Drummonslville. Qua. sod ha believed that st least tem- _ rary accommodation could bo alum In that time. Ha slid the R.O.M.P. detach- ment would not be withdrawn from Druoanondvilie, scene oi a melee Teiitl when the police and Army Provost Corps began luunolml up lliovudwwters and call-up delin- qzell . The commissioner was comment- la; on a Drununondville news cis- pltch which said that (lesion Rin- of the Union St- . tinned last n en m. Ri et; owner I of the . ,ssid he quarters had been Ifliar military purposes. Coming Events _ ' “an pi. a»... Si, h‘iia3.°‘§?..r“$6°‘l""' l-m... .5- 8-7-21. I h my“ every Thursday lllilnv. Pee dl Fraser Ltd. Mer m. i-as- wnl . __'_' ‘ mgylkllani s flltlaoohlers will hold 1lnan‘s. Satur- lli. March 10th at 8 P. M. 3-7-21. "Assam Shingles w arrive. n nlrl repairs this B ring. let l! surely you. n. 1.. Dlgkieson.“ "WW hogs at Vernon for Davis s. “ch ‘Elgar. germ. afternoon. orders for “P l Aubrey cu 5-1.1. lo. i4, e11, sl, m, m, s1 "Webe- snd De Afton Iul. Wednesd y. shuii-ii lh id " ' ‘fits-ironed... Rise Point w l‘ Ml fine. min-my. S-‘l-li. ‘NW in sioo bulk a . ts "llmber four wheat oiomsrglve a I ilflwwhgkaiblggléglelageéllulgsg “Ylr- ' s-a-sl. —- loadin h st Al- "Tldly. ion 08th. from ll oclock Friday. Emer- G. C. Green sud A. 8-0-0! llflkofl will also d - Lunch served to all. . I20 derllinilter r sioluolfl w géliqg) . Percentage Loss Of R. A. F. Bombers Cut Almost $33,000 _.__- The amusing total of 33.00131 was i ss the first day's col- lection for the Red Cross campaign in Charlotterown ly enthus tic meeting of the workers at the YMCA. lust even- ' vvss mad f s o0. l {rhoam tile seven dlvillpon: lull: this e Spe Co 10.00 received so far b rom ladies’ organizatior over what the same unis gave last d ly received committee. this gent sum from Charlottetown, Mr. . T. Ho! man reaorted for the Commando Commit e that .00 had come 1n to his commi tee, $282.00 more n had been received b the some committee last year. his is all from individuals throughou (UP $100 or MacNutt, and a Dvision were pgesent- ed when the results were tailed, o. 4 Division having exceeded the ob active set for it to a greater ex nt than the others with a total of 200 per cent. . D. McLeaNs team, No. 1 of No. 1 Division, won the prizes for the high team on the day's results. having turned in ass per cent o! the objective set. The other mem- bers o the team are: W. M. Rowi. A. H. Mould, Major Alex Knox, D. M. McGuire and Louis Stewart. The rlnal supper meeting of the Charlottetown will oe held Thursda evenln8 it 0 oclock and the vi onsl commanders are sll confident that the ‘city collec- o y" "..i‘.?.“‘".‘°‘$.‘.i“. the are co en a e filiayldtotillwtll oéceed the great recor se as ye . The amount reported last night is several thousand dollars ahead oi that reported the first night last ear and is a new record for Char ottetovm in charitable cam- paigns for the Red Cross or for any similar orflarlization. Major Norman Lowther resided last evening in m5 "i"! h! DY and breez manner. There was fits good- ulnored banter among the divisional ' commanders and competition to better the other fel- low‘s record is keen and lively. One notable subscription men- ight was 0100.00 re’- froln the Parkdale Wqmens ceiveziw Insti u . , Charlie Chamberlain m, gthgrfng with a. number of gran: so s, Jackie Doyle st the ianc an chairman lmvthtl‘ 01'! all or the whole cream-ration expressed thanks for the excellent mp er p well served h th lfllllfll oi Red he Cross Cori m; the splendid uls A... lamlnligsshaflrid ‘radio wlgestgrday Mr. h lee MacDuif. the collector o! Brookfleld. m “the: s‘ ‘" ‘k co l-urbw iigsiérict. ~Llst su r e McDuif bro ht in I ~- shllws how o“ WY "l" l°b "n ”° done in the country, when the col- lector gets to work at once. Other districts should emulate ns examvlv- OPERA SINGER. DIES HOLLYWOOD, March 0 -- (AP) _Mr-e. Marie Rusaek iillgifhznieé‘ wrspou, March d - (CP) -- percentage ices of RAJ". bomber; mapiwhcd against enemy to!!! h“ been reduced by approximate- 1y 40o per w“ ° 5 Archibald Sinclair. Air seer y said today. but he disclosed that bewgm April 1 and Sqit. U llbt ye“, Bomber Command alone sldfered u .- rnore than 10.000 ollilsl- éhe Ill‘ amalgam in OMDIOTU- ma‘ ' {ffdaflfjfiwss of R.A.1".snd Am- ea- M“: °"'.?"::'2:..’".l . PUD . “M an to l.'l gt your snd to 1.1 the first two men he ms ssirblous 1910. Deeoribirri‘! 3;“ 2g “m; . . G uvs ndiloed ion to such an sl- ble reserves sle listed." debate which folio m.“ Mongggue, Labor member shll “In”, Under TC All‘. is that Vise ewiaton. for Civil Aviation l et deal with may‘ an" szeslrlshlo to at s tremeiidous- him had ll‘ kind. sold: "Al- for Ger- rsl- oontrollinl WW!“ l_ ilhurehlll Pays A Ball 0n Germany I! WES GALLAGIEI. Assléeluted Press Wot b orrespoudent JUELJCH, Germany. March 3- (Delayed K OensorJ-Prilne Min- ister Chur paid s csll to Ger- man today in a long-awaited per- sona triumph. Hitler was not on hand to receive The 70-year-old Prune Minister walked into Germsnymthrough the shattered Siegfried e. once e symbol of the might of Hitler w o four years sgo was promising to sit in on. Mr. Churchill looked around the ruin: of this“ ciety-tlhe mos com e since 5t. Bo-withouet‘ vlzibie 31?: plessrurol; bend ssidunm l : “risers o en round here all?» the k it took considerable argument by Lt-Gen. William Simpson of the United States 0th Army who act- ti...'."..'“‘i’.°.l ‘° .“°°" w or rem v e Rhine ‘gal! at ‘ er are oo o can ° tank sud r villi» all t The tour included an of the dragons teeth and of the Bigffried Line near l an inspec on oi the jump-o- on the Roar River from the 9 Army's cpresent drive and a lunch in the tadel of Juelich, tie severi- century-old German stronghold which fell early in the offensive. With the Prime Marshal Minis-oer were Montgomery, Sir Alan Brooke chief of the ‘ Gen- l Staff, Gen. Simpson and two 0th Army C013)! commanders, M Gen. Ra on .5. and - van C illum, Strip-Tease Dan er 6°“ Qi§F1l=B°P§°Y° .._.__. IDINDON. March - Home Sec l’! '€F."‘°.....'°“ “fitméfih ‘i’? s p- er s - omelet: to deetxh with Ktsrl Gusto; Hu n, Amer can para rodpfll. the . murder of s Inndon taxicab driver. it was announced tonight. Mr. Morrison refused l reprieve for Hulten. The two were sentenced at 01¢ Bailey Jan. as to be harmed Marah 8. Hulten. 0Q. formal-l? 0f cam‘ bridge, Mass, was the first Amer- loan soldier to face a cailliil charge in the historic court. Their conviction flglmd tthxei murder of Geolue "0 - B driver known es "the man with the cleft chin." Strike 0f London Ilock Workers J1‘. B The Canadian Prep) LOlNTDON, March b-A strike of London dock workers which began six days ago assumed even more serious proportions today es a port official announced that ' out up to yesterday- Union representatives meeting last week-end had llrged the men to go back to work today, but the ‘s port official declared: “There is no prospect oi the men coming in today." To meet the situation the Gov- ernment laet night assigned hun- dreds of additional soldiers to the i moving , r in; to 3,000 the number so eng ed. The main vievance of e strik- ers ncerns the system of hiring the men and the treatment of ab- senieee. . A. '1‘. unnox Boyd. parliamen- tsry secretary to the Mr Minis- try intervened to say thst there been no secret deals of any There had been confidential talks and the House of Commons wouldsoonbesbletodiscums white paper on the matter. he added. An appeal for better und services to Ilvdffifilfgfl tgoiasir saengen sme rem . er glbcDonsldf Nova. Raglan-born conservative. who shorted that this was u field where ‘Britain hsd foiled sndwwlliere bar “American a their pert in the British Cg: monweeith Air m. der which “not fsr abort 000,000 mlnkfimnlilsd been trained in so hibsld said ei-lloh girls munbere of the Women's Auxili- iflwfi “OH guess st when. when and iww the aumed. nevertheless. that his trip planned st Yolts. Iiunl German west-bunk defence front. fence llne along the out bank too Oder Valley. Allied crossings of sector to the north. Wisp 0f Smoke First Sign 0f Trouble 0n Ship h 0 -— (OP) "Klimt Wll heavy ' 1e t. .. , The shilfs third officer, who re- fused to give his name. told the following awry o! what ppemu: “It was a very small f st the stsrt, j a wisp oi slacks. nothing to get excited about. " was standing under thebrldge assisting the first officer who was y humdiugers. blew the side out. The first officer jumped out oi the hold and he was no sooner 82f] than it seemed to blow all to "Rivet-l. rockets. cargo. streamer tape and everything were flying all over. Ono rocket skidded right under my feet. "One sailor shouted that the en- line room was clear, so we ink the men got out there, but there were from seven to 1e men in the number three. hold, where the ex- plosion took place. and we don’ now how many of them got out." IODDID IN IUIONTO call second explosion wallet containing I100 by two thugs early today as he off s street-car. l-le head snd both eyes were blacken- . --—-—-_-_._. ILOOD NEAR TORONTO TORONTO. March 0 - (OP)- Several families in suburban Long Branch were msrooned and work- ers unable to get to today when the ltobicoke River gverran its banks. flooding two or‘ lSituation Lost lyilsilllfilmedotelhelsWsrAlllyll Allied sud Russian lrmles alike are rapidly consolidating position in readiness for that “one strong heave" which Prime Minister Chur- chill eaye could end the European vvsr. y ‘known i» any but hishsst commend elrclse. however. for more than I Itistobesssuuaodtllutfdnfllurekillhndtllelhinecroninlll lnindvvhcuheulsdotissststemsnteuhissurprisevveek-eud vlsltfo the American snd Csusdlsu fronts In Germany- liodltiou snd was somehow related to Russian-Allied M!" 000M101" disintegration of German left bunk organised resistance all the vvsy from the Roselle to Arnhem token defence of the left-bunk bridgehead at Cologne was indicated. An even more startling fl-mlle forward lunge by 0rd Army tanks to within striking dlltsuee of Coblenu on the Middle Rhine was report- ed it the some time. Ttmesns that the 0rd Army's fast moving armor is vveil sstride super military highways vmt of the Rhine, virtually spilt- ting the Slur Basin sector off from the collapsed northern end of the The breuk-throlllll flown the Moselle clearly treat behind the Blaine throughout its whole length. That will afford the Allied High Command opportunity to lnssk its intended main prosa- iug points from the foe by felnts or sir and illl III Nmlllfllllflll 0! ulsuy points simultaneously. It will The Coblens ores of the Rhine Valley toward which 3rd Army tanks are charging is a vulnerable sector. There ta flat ground on both , sides of the stream sufficient for east-bank bridgehead operations. An east-west super highway lateral crosses the Blaine just north oi Cobleus. It is the western end of the military road that spells eon- trsl Germany to the Dresden region in ills east and beyond and along m which ltusslsll columns have been pushing toward Dresden from the aould prove more immediately disastrous for German hopes of singing s. final last-ditch fight in the great central plain or the Bavarian Alps than would a breaching of the Rhine front lu the loun-Cologne-Weeel Fear 5 Dead Following Vqncouvevr Ship Blast i; Missing And At Least Injured; Cause Of Explosion Not Known llfisoovi? °°° "Y mile suffered bruises to his face snd it Help The + Red Cross Nigh T.» mus factors. are un- lsst big push will develop. It is also to be us- vvus more than I IlIN-IQJIII B!‘ has set in. Little more than s indicates a German re- certainly stretch the enemy de- thin for security. the Blaine in the Cobleus theatre VANOOUVIR. March 6-(0?) - Iive ‘Persons were believed killed and x missing today after a eer- iee of four explosions in the 10,000- ton freighter Greenhill Park at the -crowded docks in downtown Vancouver blasted out thousands of windows in the adjacent area and rocked build half from the we rfront. The casualty reports were with- out official continuation. They were based on newqvaper checks and because of the uslon no conclusive figures were available several hours after the blasts which urred just about noon (Pacific Daylight Time). At least 10 injured men were tsk- en to hospital. Scores oi others sufietrlcd minor injuries from fly- ing ass. An official of ths Csusdo Ship- ping Company. limited. opera of the vessel. said: killed that we know of. Only four persons are missing and the not have been on the ship.’ did not know when the com- pany would issue s mtelnent. About 100 lnen were on the Orsenlllll Pork or the dock when the blasts occurred send- ing flames several hundred feet into the air sud scattering debris for blocks. Company official ssld the was be loaded with tinplste box shoo and general cargo. Frank Hibbs. a crewman ch the freighter Bcwnesa Park which was doc nesrbyi said in an inter- view the Greenhfll Park was "car- gm surgpowosr. rockets and Smoke poured from the holds of‘ vessel Inlet. Vancouver's harbor is three miles the blasts. Later she was taken thIDlIh the first narrows into English Bay near the ocean wherc was believed she might be sunk in deep water. Reports circulated along the waterfront that further ewlosions A lllnber barge beside the Greenhill Park caught fire. the inlet where merino firefighting (Continued on % s, 551. s) the vessel as she was towed into feet- un-srd IORONTO. March 6—-(@) — a Wllior fill/Bel. B0. was beaten Ind m. robbed of his Bhe was towed into ill 10 PAGES No p without MAlflMS OIA MERE MAN regress vvss ever uasde incurring opposition. lull, an; other Provinces o u.s.s. 0M- lubuerlptlou Delivered. $5.00. A RMY New DrivpeaRevealed By Allied C ,,—_=__~.-._ Bracken To Speak Tonight OTTAWA. March 0 — (C?) -— John Bracken. r _ vu Con- servative national leader. will de- liver an address over the national network of the Canadian Broad- casting Conporation tomorrow night, it was announced today. The half-hour address. entitled "Sacrifice. Security and Respon- sibility." will be heard over the eastern network at 9.30 p.m. A.D. The address will be delivered on free time provided by the CBC io allow political leaders to express their v ews. Fleeing Nazi Troops Bombcll By Lancasters LONDON. March 6 - (GP)- I.A.F. l-snossters tonight blast- ed the Rhine liver town of clogged with fleeing troops. a follow-up of Mosquito raids on the same town during the day. Tile attack on Wesel was in aid of the let Canadian y, rap- bank Mosquito pilots, who reported during he afternoon that Wesel was choked with masses of Ger- man soldiers and hundreds of veh- were out tonight. dro - ping two-ton block on Berlin for the 15th consecutive nlgltx. ing the da . RAJ‘. hea- vies kept the of ensive against Germany rolling into its fourth stra ht week with a daylight at Gannon oil targets. A force of approximately 200 Lancasters hit the Selzberaen re- finery and the Air Ministry an- nounced tilat a successful concen- tration oi bombs on the target had sent columns of black smoke rising above the clouds. Mosquito bom ers also smashed a‘ F-‘errnah 2""- and transport at Wesel on the can‘ bank ol the iJflllle this l;l......._... The United States 8th oir force rested aier sending an average of more than 1.000 heavies daily a- gainst the Reich's rail and oil tar- gets for 10 successive days. Serious Floods In ll. S. Midwest CINCINNATI. 0-. March 6 — (AW-The midwestb most disas- “m; trous wartime flc. l swelled slowly ‘ ‘ t toward levels reached only twice before in history. closing war plants by the score and sending thousands of lowland dwellers scurrying w higher ground. From the Ohio River's head- waters at Pittsburgh, down the Ohio valley to points on the Mis- sissippi. rain-fed flood waters cau- sed city. state and federal agencies to mobilize all th-Jr resources. Cincinnati. hardest hit major city. reported the Ohio River at 65 18 feet above flood stage and river men predicted the rolling. muddy stream would rise another five feet. The huge wright Corporation lust outside natl closed at noon when waters from Millcreek, an Ohio tributary, isolate): all bzlgtowo roads in the urea. ear , 1 9d e the planhywhich lilllleTuiafsys ell- glnes. ‘rranmortotion was paralyzed on both sides of the Ohio River in West Virginia. Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana. and other public ut- Aeronautical Cine in- htles staggered under the flood- conditions. The record level for the Ohio ‘TO-N in 1907. $100,000,000 in property was lost in the flood. Lunken Airfield, Cincinnatfs municipal airport. was inundated. The Miselnipai was lislng to- ward flood leve as far south as M his. Tenn. rlcultnral coun- ties n western ennessee faced inundation of several thousand acres of land snd provisions for evacuating families from lovrland communities were made. ---____i.. BRITISH ADMIRAL DIES "ma. fi7i'&‘l€“"'%r n o rey - Y ce-admiral of the 0 e and admiral of the northern patrol during the Ores o Flflll t War. and a rmer -chiei of western ap- commander-In - ‘roaches, died here last night aged that covered 32 miles in two the Moselle. southern outskirts. (A broadcast from London re-i corded by the National Broadcast-i‘ ing Company quoted BBC cones-- ndent Hark Gillard as report-f the Hohenzollern Bridge t- 0981i . Thus, Germany's fourth largest city and the greatest enemy in- duatrial centre that has so capitulated was in Allied hands on the 12th day oi the powerful of: fensive from the Roar River. Ton ht its beaten Nazi garrison was be ng driven southward toward oils a narrowing cor- ridor along the Rhine's west bank. North of the stricken city Amer- ican forces cleared the Rhine all the way yp Neuss. opposite Dues- seldori, except for a small pocket near zone, virtually ending the fighting in that sector. The only other enemy bridge- headon the west bank of he Rhine between Cologne and the Netherlands frontier vials at Wesel, and it had shrunk down to an area less than eight miles wide by six eep. A d‘ ‘ “ from 21st Army Group headquarters said it had lost all but is nuisance value. British and Cllllillln big sans were shelling some 10.000 er- nnn troo in the constricted ct an trying to knock out heir escape bri es across the Blaine. British Mpg pushed 1 1-2 miles up the lssum - Wesel Road today and snliroohad the rail town of Alpen. only six lnllu from Wcsel. Canadians gained two miles southeast of Sonsbeck and cleared tlhe weetem fringe of lonninghst-dt Forest. The United States 3rd Anny. meanwhile, since the start oi slashing attack from east of wo- tured Bitburg at da/wn yesterday, had captured more than .500 Germans, including a corps com- mander, and had reached s. point only; 30 miles from the Rhine. To- nlg t tanks were rePorted smash- lng on against disorganized and sporadic resistance. Weather. not the Germans, was said to be impeding the advance. A news blackout still prevented disclosure of the exact whereabouts oi American spearheads. ‘Ighe Gennani garrison 01k 001C336 pu ulpsurpsngvwea re - once as the United States 3rd Armored Division and 104th In- ry smashed through to line Rhine near the cathedral. at llle western end cf the Hohenzollern Bridge. u. afoowl Budgets For 1945 Surplus (B The Canadian Press) FRIISERICTON, March 0—Esti- mating revenue at $13,072,567 and axpenditurte at lsiitoilibilg, wit; o co uen aurpus o $3 .729, ro- vincial Secretary-Treasurer J. J. Ha es Doone brought down his bu et in the New Brunswick Leg- islature today. No new taxation was announced. Last year. revenue amounted to $12,001,231! and expenditure to e12,- 609,l33, leaving a surplus of $82,- 018. However, tobacco tax receipts now are included in the general estimates and this results in no (Continued on page we}. l?“ British Have Very Accurate Bomb Sight LONDON. March 6 — (CP) — Sir Archibald Sinclair d ‘ today in the House of Commons that the battleship Tlr itz- ride of the German navy an “ in h-cr time the toll heat ship ai- ioat"--had been sun by a H.000- pound bomb dropped from an R. A F. Lancaster "with a British bom-b sight oi extraordinary com- plexity, ingenuity and accuracy." The Tirpitz was slink in a pin- point ottack off the coast of Nor- lvav last Nov. i2 and subsequently it was announced that Flying Of- ficer Walter Daniel of Rivers. Man. was the man who dropped the clan-hand By AUSTIN BEALMEAR PARIS, March 6 — (AP) — Cologne fell swiftly to the United States 1st Army in the climax of its great eastward drive today as Gen. Eisenhower lifted the news blackout on operations of the American 3rd Army and revealed that its armor was racing toward the Rhine in a break-through days. These developments, coming when the United States 9th Army and its British and Canadian allies had vir- tually completed occupation of all German territory west of the Ruhr, shifted the big punches to the middle Rhine, farther south and opened the way for the Allies to push the enemy out of the area west of the Rhine and north of The Supreme Allied Headquarters announcement of 'the capture of the bomb-blackened Rhineland Capital said that only sporadic fighting continued tonight in Cologne‘: Stalin Announces Tremendous lied Gains In llorth LONDON. Marci-l I - (Alli The lst White Russian Army in ‘db-mile advance that ourpture more than 500 German towns in u single day reached the northeastern mouth of the Oder River today and destroyed the reeling enemy! last chance for an effective flank- ing thrust against the central Soviet salient aimed six-Berlin.- Premier _Stalin announced the tremendous northward drive through Pomerania in en order o: the day. disclosing the capture of Oarnmin on the Odel- delta outlet stream of Drievonow. 37 mHel north o! Stettin: Treptow, 2i ' northeast of Ksmmtfl: and in the same region the big Germm SEFOXIS-points Freifenberg, Guel- zcw and Plathe. -1 ‘Nun a Prvrsfalau Crosses ‘fir. Starr-f HE Horas 4o def (M: ' BRAKES ‘ METEOROLOGICAL OFFICE. TORONTU. March 6 - (OP) - Minimuln and maximum temper- atures: Vancouver 33. 45; Edmon- ton 18. 36; Regina 10B. l0: Win- nipeg 14B. l5; Toronto 36. 3'7; Ot- tawa 20. 35; Montreal 33; Quebec 84, 32; Saint John 27; Moncton 23. 40; Halifax 29. 41; Charlotte- town 27. 38. FORECASTS Ottawa and Upper St. Lawrence: generally fair and colder. Thurs- day. fair and moderately cold. Lower St. Lswrencrsnd Lakv st. John: Fair snd cold. Gulf. North Shore and Bay Cha- leur: Strong winds; partly cloudy and colder with scattered snow- flurries. MARITIMES: Strong winds: cloudy with occasional light show- ers or snovvflurries and becoming somewhat colder. High tide this morning at 5.10 and this afternoon at 4.41. Sun sets this evening st 0.50 snd tomorrow morning at 7.27. March 13th. 11M B-ummerside tide hteen tes later than Charlo tetown. DAILY All! SERVICE minu- r- .. - MOIIGMD Leaves Charlottetown ‘Ml A-DL 11.80 A.M., 5.05 PM. Arrives Charlottetown 18.85 PJL 5.30 EM» l.“ PM. 0 SUNDAY SIFIVICI Leave Charlottetown ".15. 8.05 BM. Arrive Charlottetown 3.". 0.10 P-M CIIARLOTTITOWN_ NEW GLASGOW (Dally lxeepi Sunday) first bomb and scored a direct hit on the battleship. Leave Charlottetown 1.10 4.00 EM. m? m rls. Arrive Charlottetown