A Maxims OI‘ A MERE MAN Innin- Jul» a id r the ma. ‘fir: 1311i. w 107/, ‘wlpvr M» . T '-~.____ _‘ When llfe shule one door God MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN -—.¢-1 another, v tows Cardiol- "up; (fulfills Io l; .4 l lunges Towards Blasted Naples Stout German Mountain lcsitions are Reduced. s NOLAN!) flfil-OAAIID . a (Assoohllofl Press Wei- .' Correspondent) linen HEADQUARTERS. [QRTH AFRICA, Sept flk-(AP) .11» British-American 5th arml‘. bfuil offensive, lunged ldwfllli muted Naples tonight. behind e eloleiit artillery and air will! ghich reduced stout Cannon niolrn- gui positions and blocks-i enemy just behind the “bitter 0nd " fl hting. n" and Porto Vecchfo. herding the Germans east corner of tli which they wcro irvin yentely to escape by air an R8- Bulking Vulnerable ‘filo vulnerability of tho Garmen- held Balkans to Allied attack t- ic was demons y a bold raid of BYliiBil boats which sank B ltion ship and ano- ir range. The British and American COOP! coder Lt-Genyltdark W. Clark ex- prssfiirgmtelore virtuaiéy efi aler- on y y em . period l b die SlrtiLIisB um captured Altamura, oortliwest cf Taranto. and Materia, ‘i iii°’tti’."“' °‘ "Sfiéi" ti‘ ‘ti? o arm. s mountain v u! oliveto-Citra. It miles east of Salerno. stu Army Barrel-alas? (It was reported from London that the 8th avlnol. believed to in- giide the ‘Canadisnh lsthgiflly 11:5! regi-cupn as -- ~ ' noses from Inc south to be ready for the next round of hard llgiiiitrfl- inc Canadians lieve not bcln men- tioned in action recently and. R0- cordiiig to IJJIPIQTI. are believed t0 lltiiot in close cont-int with olemy. Likewire there has beon_no teeent mention of the Canadian lit army tank brigade, refill?“ luioifcially to he 1c been with Gen. Clark's army at Salerno.) ._._..._. italic events McGiil en 0-1 bi. i "l-‘eed Oats for sale. Ulloyle. "Bulk Wheat to arrive. 0K B0 now. McGulgan do Boyle. 9-134“- "Due to arrive car Screen Coal- ll. R. Cummings. Vernon. 9-24-21. "Chicken Supper and Dance in 8t. George's Tuesday, September Nth. 0-23-41. "Dance, Lorne valley Hail, sep- lember 28th. Webster's Orolaesggraa.‘ "Concert. and enteri ‘ St. Catherine's Hall postponed until Monday next, the 21th. 0-24-21 "wanted to buy live and dressed Illckeiu and fowl. Paying-top millet orloes. Island Cold storage 00.1w. s-ro auspices Hoil! Oeorge o-ai-oi. young lg t Fr-deric- , ay. penile. no I valr "good iga eye: 0 lbs each. “iii lilo znie ler ones Knud girl-lemon, cdcricnii. c-rs-n. ‘G530?- Chicken Dinner served ‘until-l evening gopto be 20th In l‘ ma: alt-at. ‘Staff: “Bingo, Dance, c thine so i t . '1‘ H ll, "Wm Tuesedzy. gevlernger 1C8 iill. Mon "National Pilin Bo d M Wu: "i. Stewart Monday; ‘South Placa- "glil-Isuommngdm c Yl'i§-'7°’°i=i.l‘ l Z I I "I 1N“ y lilac-cl "0 i ii , tn mltilflieuiliai%e. lgggrluncl: u» i?‘ fithatl ‘Mfr “it's . . h uio septa. s-ss-os-ai. "m!" form big oi crane sale ‘i ilrin stock, crop, impelemonlc and ‘uwnmu Mid effects oi J. J. Meo- imvtfll. Vernon, Saturday Oct. l-Ili-li “Hear Rob 0 . "m"! iledlo ilwwor éii 'i~i"-.l‘-‘i"‘iioaéi»il iliffti i‘ v l‘ v ‘Mack. Admission so cents spon- "Qd i t . mmizl “l! ‘Ladies Aldo-Pushy‘ the C lnary lng o on w relationship ‘wa ered a , . Sir John Anderlon, _--.__. -_.__ WASHINGTON. Sept. 24 --tAP) —Admiral William D. Standley, u I Ambassador to Moscow. arrived in Washington late today to report to the State Department. The State Department announc- ed Admiral Standley was return- ing fcr forthcoming talks among British. Soviet diplomatic officials on war and post-war obj-actives. to the contemplated meet- f Prime Minister Churchill and President Roosevelt with Premier Stalin. consultaticn Montgomery m, .. ll. S. Minister to Russia is Nome about 1-. and Clark Confer WITH THE 5TH ARMY 1N ITALY, Sept 24-(AP Bernard Mongomery conf d Mark W hat the latter afterward de- scrlbedlee future plans and the the British dth and inc Anglo-American 5th es. The meeting, heid in Gen. Clark's headquarters, lasted more than an ay with LL-Gen. L . hflill‘. favorite black beret sweater, ap imistic. He said h’: ure, but declarcd:- "The mi army shi ings (about maroon. sent- tionive the up in the port on youth servic pa r. ‘File m» Youth after tho President Education, is. A. Three or the of recommendations, tn lo and ilnuatlon rant! or is chairmen, ives of outh 262d- . I itoilvelnsurio Bty Alan Randal Canadian Press Sta Raising of the schoo ) - Con. Sir erred to. Gen. Montgomery, dressed in his and a grey peered smiling and Opt- vJas unable to make any predictions of the fut- ia moving along veg well." en. Montgomery Suki he had correspondent $1.7m against his 811M000 pounds spending Christmas at tome, is United Kingdom ls bciiig added "lust. where we will spend it I don't know." lifdy Revolutionize Life of Britain’s Post War Youth 81R rt was prepared bl’ ti“ as Advisory Council ‘l2 months of the Board Butler, had Wt forward tho main considerations. important points, all of which ere in the form most ll'— fenden, headmaster of Uppingham, includes representat- eervices ranging from t nal essocéatlon of inhoorpe and public schools. ousen d: o! voila: mole undlngogyrhloh Chancellor of the Exohequxmed "l0 Brililh Govlrnii-icnt in yester. day's cabinet changes. lle "eds 8h- Klnnl-y Wood who died this week. Sir John has been one Mr. Churchill's most valuable counselled’: u Lord President orrcll since 1940, A‘ Moscow American prelim- five ff Writer mflh- (O P)l— Bi hteen oints w c may revo u- z nllfe oi youth were drawn officially sponsmed re- Britain after the war, published es a white 0i the equivalent oi e tax e: I leaving age attendance at day con- schooll until in with allowances to parents; imitation oi the workinl week. in- ciusive oi part-tune school. to 44 of fo rl's have mako EIS POUND AT DNIEP Anglon-‘America CHANGES MADE IN BRITISH CABINET LONDON. Sept. 25 -(Saturday) —-(CP)— Changes iri the Cabinet making Sli- John A derson Chan- cellor of the Exchequer, lord Beav- erbrook 10rd Privy Seal and R. K. Law Minister oi State were en- nounced today. Lord Cranborne becomes Dom- inlons Secretary. Law is a son of Andrew Boner Lew. Canadian-bum Prime Mini-l- ter of Britain in 1922. Sir John Anderson, who has befil I-Ord President oi the Coun- cll; succeeds Sir Kingsley Wood, who died this week. l The announozment, made from 10 Downing Street, said Clement Attieo. who has been Dominions Secretary, will continue as Deputy Minister and assume the office oi Lord President oi the Council. The Chancellor of the Exctie~ uer will be a member of the War binet. Lord Cranborne. who was Lord Privy Seal, will continue as Covemment Leader in the House oi Lords. He will have access the War Cabinet bo-th iii that cap- HBil-y nrld as Dcminions Secretary. Lord Beaverbrook, who was born in Maple, Ont: near Toronto, was Minister of Supply in 1941-42. Since then he had not been in the Cabinet. He became Minister of aircraft production when Prime Minister Churchill first form- ed his Cabinet in 1840. and for a time in 1941 was Minister of Stat/e. As Minister of State, Law will Pellet Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden. "Certain conseque l appoint- ments will be made known later" the announcement said, R. G. Casey, Australian who has been Minister cf state with head- quarters in the Middle East, wi'l in future be officially described as Minister of State resident in the Middle East. Nog Price Adjustment Considered orrawa. Sept. _24—-('JPl-Fe:i- erai uovernnienc actio-i Lu soften the shock to the farmer who finds his hog is overweight and who can drop $3 simply because the animal dresses to cne "sound more. than 1R5 pounds carcass weight. irow is bi:- lng considered. it was learned oo- have achieved wonders in eniailled hog production during the war years, has not so much been aEaizist the general regulation concerning the weight at which a liog may grade for the best price. 1t has been rather against the condition ilnier which a ight error in estimatlnB the weight of an animal is so sev- erely penallzed when the sole is made. A check on hog weights has been maintained by Canada even nurinE of Canadian bw-‘nn the l with met this year. i it almost impossible for them to grow into decent citizens, says ‘he council, whose first recommendat- ion is that "at the earliest possible moment this scandal be removed" and that e building program be car.ied out which will guarantee healthy living conditions for l young people. The reis ng oi the school leaving e without compulsory m ‘ - ence grants or allowances would be on parents. Working families with several chil- dren cannot afford such additional expenditure and means must be found of essistln the mothers and fathers of flmiies rather than of putting additional burdens on them Of the four weeks holiday recom- mended, it, was held that holiday facilities on e national scale should be rovided, and substantial grants me e h the Board of Education. hours end z minimum ur "we ave in mind especially the weeks hollda every your wgh many camps which the forces will The couiio , oi wh ch J. . o - no longer need," said the report Production who British Cabinet as Seal. He is an outspoken advocate of a "second front" Roosevelt Names 4-Man Production Survey Committee -President Roosevelt today creat- ed e. joint mittee of ers of the United States Arm Navy to advise the joint c iefs. of-staff on changes in the pro- curement programs zervices "in the light of war dev- elopment, and changing military strategy." said constant attention is required to ensure that, "our military pro- grams are ke-pt in step with alter- ed miiitzxry objectives, and that production programs are changed in accordance with lessons the battlefields and the assembly Z U erial and manpower," BIRD! IIIIII n Fifth Army’ In B? The Nazi flight to the offensive is an acooui llshed fact alo Orshe tu the sea-sin points. cross the wide stream between the Dnle ed in August, 194 town runs the trovsk crossing and the Rostov corner it and lii the Crimea. the whole southern wing oi t whole Diiieper Plateau ls itary distaste Vltcbsk gateway fortress are disaster there might have on cess breaching Lord Beaverbrook, Caimdian- born former Minister of Aircraft to the Privy returns M,“ Plateau lies in tho a circled Dnle harculean la i“ “egum cold hai- ens t-he noun traction for war maohnes. Time ls of essence for the Europe. a position to force the enemy time to fall and the Dnieper Plateau. Russia, nevertheless ,the Balkan that In Italy, and it will be the Allies Bomb WASHING-TON, OSept. 24- (AP) production survey com- fuur high ranking offic- and of the armed B GLADWIN HILL (Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON. Sept. 24—(AP)- A big fleet of R.A.F. and R13 Al‘. night bombers hit four big Ger- man industrial centres-diieiudiiig the important twin cities of Man- Ludwlgshafen -— alld again airfield the Allies‘ latest large scaifi u aerial assa its third straight production. Lurogiess The President in a statement 1mm maraudcrs rvlng es. "With critical shortages in mat- he 5m round-the-clook d. that we produce day. "we must see ‘I The p‘; osal As tiiiiajt lttlstetadloisl; onlyt what we greed and that the f‘??? Britain into armer ng 0c e . e u wase iinavolda lv present in war, ' simply because oi a minor dlller- g l; g y 1'; _" ence in weight there should be‘ a The: fmfrfna’: réfinxfietee will be foifllemlizlgi-Filrgilialhgfliiss “loll? igilligigliieliifoicriiie-mfigdiiiisoyéfllfxéilia composed cf two army and two against teglc target; such _' 5 ~' navy officers, to be named b (l1 th M d Al i t l mutual i"é’.2i'éif.l".'3i'i.‘i.“ll§;2 u... ................. ' ° i-it§§"l-i“?""~=1'"iii"§ii' , -—-—--_--_ roce a - it was dcfitililtclyi .n the‘ OVCPWl-‘fillai- fgg,,,',g,, if“ fin" on” ff“, m, class’ arid t e iui loss o Sdtgpp 5 . e rubber “m” n Mum Luca“ I? migledflimurfes “rid l.“ “lg Sept. l5 and on Hanover Hed- man o lec on .rom arme a. l _ “m!” ma“? “glhm “m, ii stage manufac rln , and final- ly against morale and admin- ‘ ‘ ' combined with ill- dustriel o jectlves), p; in the devastation raids on llarnbiirl- In Wartime Fishery Revenue HALIFAX, Sept. 24-(CP)--Vliiiie of fish landed iii Maritime Waters during August was nearly dollbie that of the catch for August. i912. Tonight it was announced that during the day R.A.F Mltchclis and phoon bombers attacked an" fields n northern France and Bri- tnny as well as the railway centre at. Amiens. The, were escorted by R.A P., Canad an and Allied the years when a major effort has ammu , - ed _ _ gh lanmd wclsht more“ figntc . Al; least. 20 enem fiillic- “flg‘,,",§,,"°,,;',‘3§° i3, m‘.‘i,'l,"“i‘;nl,l',l’d by only one-sixth. it was rel/filled crs wlcle destroyed and c-Znt Al- Ilpklngdom A contract for s15 (m0- m u“ "mmhiv “l?” °i ‘he M‘ iifld fiililtofs Wfl-‘c E~ ' ' ' partment. of fisher es eastern div- other German nigh; tgrgefs were historic Aachen, rienr Cologne, and Dormstadt near Mannheim. The attack cost 32 bombers, two less than that nf three weeks ago against the same twin cities. Four Canadian bombers were lost. Nazi night. fighters, strongly on the defensive, again used the tac- tic of dropping myriad flbresaiung the ingcing and cut-coming comb- the night almost re~ lOfl. Last month. the catch of 12.022.- 100 pounds iiod a landed vzill-c of $2,810,120 compared with 61367.‘ 000 pounds worth $1,562,549 in the some month last year. _ Cod lniidiiigs increased by 5.11.13.- 700 pounds in weight and $9o.l42 in~ya~lue,~- while swordfish, herrin! and sardines also showed increases in weight and landed value. e ei- lungs, making lobster catch was 6.900 ooundsiess as bright. as day, one pilot but was worth $339308 mdro villi" ported. ._.___?______ wgrtzmglzldlllllggounds INF-i" an "T" “mum, i“ "‘“““‘“' l, s‘ “m ”'°°“°°d a w AINT JOHN. an. Sept. as - venue rise o 176,034. Nova Scotia fishermen netted 8.- 969.400 pounds more fish durln! the month for aii increased value o S (OP)-- The 50th Jubilee celebrat- tion of the Monastery of the Good She herd here opened today with $632,268. New Brunswick snowed cele ration o! Pontifical Hi h Mass increases of 2.373.900 pounds and by Bishop P. A. Bray, o saint $439,869, with n. larger lobster catch John, me Mqnggtgfy 1g the Moth. El1>li_dii'i8_i.i_i\‘-_Qi_li£i bowl in value. er House of the Order in Canada DELICIOUS ALAIIA" "Many of them could be converted into holiday camp sites." In e section on religion It is aug- gesoed that. subject to the safe- guard of Rie rights of minorities, those responsible for running youth clubs and centres should experi- '6 TBA 8: COFFEE As a little must now go a long way, satisfaction Klrke L. Slmrgon, Associated Press War Analyst uleper before the amazing“ even that de ence llng l; Qfblklnx it critic,“ South of besieged Kiev, Red army guns are already Iflblflllg shell, p. less than 50 miles from Bel tserkov. the gateway l..'2?....."'°..“.'li‘ '.'."':'.'5'bl'l""' can“ ill"- M."- c l' c ei- eaii. main railway south of the mun h. and escape route for all German forces in the Dnlepei- elbow m- un", 0| A Russian lunge across the Dniepei- to Bel Tiierkov would threaten _ he Nazi army with entrapmnnt. It i; 5 fair conclusion that Nazi evacuation of the Crimean Peninsula. and of the IlIBMly in progress to escape a lllpremp mil- r. Nurthward up the Dnieper ,where both the Smolensk Bastion an! the tottering under mighty Russian blows, the Nazi situation is no less critical. The Red army hinge the enemy from the west of Leningrad to the Baltic and force Ger- man evaountion of all northeastern Russia. But lt is the peril to the middle Dnieper line In the Bel Tserkov re- gion that deserves greater attention because of the effect a fresh Nazi the situation in the Balkans and upon the European war as a. whole. It can hardly‘ n the Duleper line at t perotlon flight from the Dniepcr Plateau, would touch off smoulderng anti-Nail fires in Romania. and Bulgaria, The only Nazi hope of a slow- aced withdrawal from the half on- ll rains. By Moscow account it took rs to get men and guns through the ologgin the Dnle er for the ca ture of Poltava. in the south to Russians if they are to sprinz the Bel Tserkov (rap on the foe but the probabilities are that t i the Dnieper front at any critical point. That. ma back in reasonably good order from the With that clearly foreshadowed further German retreat in south pot is more than apt to boil over as did Nazis, who get burned when it. does, Nazi Industrial Cities R. A. F. Has Four Major Campaigns Going Against Strategic Targets. Russian summer most of the -inlle front from nlopei- to the Dniepi-opc- on the Don. It is the main sllDlIiY surge is promising to un- be questioned that Russian suc- at point, compelling a. Nazi ring- mud above ft will be weeks efore winter- iilfl llvint where it will provide hi! are not yet n time: Four Big LONDON, Sept. 24 — (OP)- Donald M. Nelson, United Slates War Production Board twice as great. NEW YORK. Sept. 24 - (AP) -- More than 40.000 employees of Un- ited States daii newspapers now are serving in t e arm forces, a survey by Editor and Publisher, newspaper trade publication show- ed today. TORONTO, Sept- M (GP)- Col. John A. Cooper, chairman of the National Jam t" mniit- fee of the Canadian Red Cross announced that during the first six months of this year 427.000 pounds of Canadian 1am were distributed throughout Great Britain. STOCKHOLM, Sept. 24 ~ (AP) —-'I'hc death in a hospital in southern France of Edouard Horr- iot, former French Premier, was re- ported today in s dispatch from Berlin to the Svenska Dagbladet. BERNIE. Swifrerland. Sept. 24 — (AP) —§omc 20.000 Ill- llans, both soldiers and civil- BULllETlN ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, sournwnsr PACIFIC, Sept. l5 —(Saturday) ~(APl— The zfrdi-ome at l-‘lnschhnffeu. New Guinea, has been oaptup. cd by Australian veterans of desert warfare who now are within three quartore of u mile or investinzthe Japanese cout- al base I elf; allied heed. quartere announced today. 3 Youthful Freshmen Enrolled at U. N. B. FR-EDERICYYO-N, sept. a4 -<c P)—Th1'ee freshmen newly enroll- ed at the University of New Brunswick represent n, U . B . record foi- outh. None older than boys usuaiy in High School, the trio are Gene 1-1. Peacock, 14, Rollin Dam, N.B., Electrical En- gineer rig; Eugene Fytcli, 16, New Oarllsle, Que. Electrical Engineer- ing. and his brother, Ronald Fytch l6, Forestry. Salerno Put Nazi Morale to New l.ovv down in history as the last glimmer- of confidence that Nlzl army and ‘party i-opagan- diets, were abo to str in the German pu ic, neutral tra- velylers from Germany said to- l e Nazi pro and; ha: waged the Salerno trio Into a cr- uian "victory" mainly for con- zuinptlon in the Balkans and neutral countries, lhgy said, but the news swept all of Ger- many. W en it became clear that the Allies were fili- from being hurled into the sea and in fact were stacking, German morale hit an all-time lovv these tra- vellers laid. ____________ CATHOLIC YOUTH CONVENTION SU N 3., Sept. 24 —(C?) —-'rhQ third annual convention of the Catholic Youth Organization in saint John Diocese, embracing southern and central New Bruns- wick, will be held here next Sun- ma lhl{kll’ill hope an Iluoorlptlon Delivered. 00.00 IllL “J05 otho- Provtliooe I IJJA. H.00- LINE IDRDIR Full Offengve Germans Near Dark Picture _ 0f Army Plight By JAMES M, LONG (Associated Press Stall i; Writer) ‘ LONDON, Sept. 24— (AP) -—The battle for the Dnieper River defence line began omiay as the Rilsslaiis surged forward in force along a goo-mile front on the eastern bank and knocked at the gates of Smolensk in the north and Kicy in the south, Moscow announced. The communique, however, wee more cautious than Moe- covv newspapers and Ger-non broadcasts, which told of Roll army advance; far beyond goints claimed by the official ulletin. German reporte said the madam had tried to cross the Dniepor can 1y one mile north of Kiev w the Deana joins the Dnieper b the soviet communique made n mention oi a crossing .nor an at- tempt to cross. The Soviet Monitor. iucoiwcctl transcribing a Moscow broadca of the communique first said t Dnieper had been crossed in the Gomel sector nut later oh itl of the communique tell of a. crossing of the Iput River, some 70 miles east oi the Dnlefier. Beech River Nevertheless, the Russians. eo- oordlng to Moscow reporta, were already at the river in many place! and the Germans themselves men- tioned an atoem ted Soviet cross- souh of omcl at a DCmX where the Prlpet River enters the eper. Another Soviet drive took Red. army iyltnin three miles c! I borders of white Russia with the capture of Tarasenki. broadcasts, painting picture of the NlIi the east, indicated tho Pllllll were evacuating tho in tho Caucasus, w ile fai- to the north the Nazis said the Rus- sians were attempt to "break through along the whole l1. Blackburn Press Staff Writer OTTAWA, Bopt. 24 — (O P) — Prime Minister MacKenzie King and his full cabinet played the of listeners at. today's morning and afternoon meetings of the Parlia- mentary Liberal caucus as members of the Senate and House of Com- mons representing all provinces told the government what was on their minds. “We are having a very interest- ing discussion of things as they exist throughout the country," Mr. King told reporters when the cau- cus adjourned for the dinner re- By C. Canadian cess. "Wzis the election date dis- cussed?" Mr. King was asked. "Oh, everything has been dis- cussed," he replied. The caucus continued throughout ions. have crossed the border into Switzerland since the lt- allan capltulatlon, it was an- >__ ’ today. By Eddy Gilmore, Associated Press Staff writer MOSCOW. Sept. 24 —- (A P) — The Archbishop of York, visiting the Soviet. Union at the invitation oi the Russian Church, said today he had found complete freedom of worship and had seen no indicat- ions why it should not continue after the war. "1 believe". he said, "that government feels the people tcrnhl-ionni cause." shop replied: "l most here. I am also quite sure depends upon quality of flavour. merit with informal methods of N- llglouz education. , The Archbishop said he the Russia are a religious people and that tho Riimian church is earn- estly throwing itself lnto this iii- To niiotlicr question the Atchbi- great. certainly believe freedom of worship exists, the ond f:ont tel churches can frecly hold sorvicesfd lid the evening and will be resumed to- morrow morning. At some stage Mr. King will deliver a signinixig Finds Freedom of Worship In Russia brought an invitation to Russian churchmen to visit Britain and that the invitation had been acc- epted, although dates end names of the delegates had not been de- cided upon. Further commenting on the re- ligious services in the churches. two of which he said he had attended, the Archbishop de- clared he liad been greatly impres- said he saw no in of the war effort. "The church is playing a statesman hos recognizer this fact." t l Russian dicatim that the 0i cliuzcli was being exploited as part1 ma,“ mo“! ave Charlottetown 1M g, q part in the national life,“ he con- tinued, "and Premier Stalin as a He said he had heard little sec- k iii his conversations. He may see Russian leaders oth- er than churchmen during his visit. Cl"i""="- "i" 1mm" '°' da- and Monday with the Pro "Ont at Smolensk and par- nlght that American war 5e fl x; l r y “up proflucuon m“ ye" ‘mum he grdesiliginlllf. J. Lane, Erode cio . toiila 1y on bo h flu l 1-2 times the ’ out- -——» ' put of Germany and Japan and next year probably would be Premier King Dodges Questions Re Election. up address, end it is expected mo! of the ministers will speak. It was learned unofficially tha\ several ministers were "put. on the spo ", as one Liberal expressed it. at today's discussions by those ex- pressing grievances over adminis- tration oi wartime regulations. So far no minister has replied, but they are taking notes and me later stages of the caucus will no doubt be occupied by their euplon- (Continued on page ‘l Col. 3) .iF Yo ' “ ' llllltlftflla lletl ' YPLAYHOU, ‘ ‘ - mom -wr(_g-,l.i_~ Wm,‘ .. . ma ‘lot-an f€“o'.4i'.‘°“"“‘ “ i“ Sun sets this evening at 6.58 mo rises tomorrow morning at. 0.51 trouser :2*:.f:.".*l":::.il: “that” °°"'l'°.‘§'."°'” m" as“ ew- ec- m “s . n er"ovou esn ." ' the Kiemlin, the Archblsho was a "I believe," he Zelda‘: "that this sii-"ime "' tide l8 minute; let; ddiffld éflifhfll-‘hf Bitfiibilite x till‘? current freedom will exist after! ‘him ChPTiMWi-Owii- curren n ezcs n re gon n o m w p," 5°Vi¢t Union. Replying to another question, he DeEIXYCIiRTRSUINEOYYllT‘ Charlottetown - sinnuierslde - 11.3 5.45 p. in. 7.05 p. m. FERRY SERVIC 1 r. a. n-n. . DAILY mc UDING SUNDAY and 11 mm. and l p. Leaves Caribou ._ I Ian. and I pa. P. m. .30 m, Arr ve Clilrlmtetovm 1,10 p, m Leave Wood Islands - 1.00 l. in Ill. 8.00 e. Ii. out