OIL incur: MAN int-n. ,4 p so cosy to forget me unenl- pIGIQd. w >zz////~ The People's Pape g Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edwardilsland. Like the Dew Freedom discipline. MAXIMS ‘ or A HIRE MAN b achieved ihrourh min; Guar glarloftetcwn Founded 1B1. "diner-n. a... ma. alanorrcrowu, CANADA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER s, 1944 Report Russians R LIES lNVADE ' ‘ UGOSLAVIA LEADING WRITER. J. A. SUTIIERLAND ihPclixersiBzly’. P. 15.1., one of the S . Prince Henry. y. along with her slstcr p Prince David, both Landing t mother ships. were Canadian ships reprgg. lnvasion of Southern ace. Prince l-lcnry carried Can- and Americans to the beach- l 1t Asvlul 2on1!’ “'0 tlil at illc orionto iias Station lperators Arrested TORONTO. Sept. '1 — ( CP) yal Canadian Mounted Polic y announced that l3 Toronto rvlce station operators have been esicd on charges of “depositing ‘lilltflfllt gasoline coupons in elation bank accounts." They lied lllill at least six more ar- . istare expected “before the day all.‘ ESCAPE!) NAZI PRISON lDVlllOY, sent. '7 —- (DP) ctiolvan, New York Sun dent who escaped i alas cant after ecl in France by the linens. arrived in Dondon today l» m Paris. bllllillill’. about the He said he had no Germans‘ tatnlrn’. of hlln “except for the ‘ky looa" he had to eat. lllirllltfi EVENTS "Show lvlurray Harbour South. “Hur- B-l-Bth och. "Dane May. Soul. 3th. llfl. "Cluckrn supper at St. get‘: llail ‘Tuesday LiZtb. e Town Hall, Georgetown. Webster's or- B. Mar- evening. 9-6-41 “Wine Traverse, Monday. sept. - Pro N, lanes. ‘ll 30 infill"! Ilv- to." . — he: 1.5L B_ ‘my’ Ml. 5CD! cvics 3 Film Board B 3i :H°5Diliil Dance MCGYGKOYS {£000.50 Montague. Saturday, “Livestock lttet. , t, ‘MP sou. “Film; stations. ior ‘shipment 231v: l-iall, t, 1 ~ wwwllin. "Annual "hicken su . \' ~ 131791‘ filg-eg5l- James Hull, ' “H5511. Stpt. 25f. Webster's Orchestra. 9-7-21 Marketing Board will ‘ each until further notice, at local 9-7-21 u i 5W1 Supper and Dance, ELI summerfield, Tuesday. Norboru Women's l 9-8-31 I1. and Summer - i: 8-15.21 "Hunter River to s m kgislrdilgcr Freetown, 11v iorcnoon ,, Dlay: "Aunt Tillie Pa in York Hall, Friday, . if not fine Monday. 0-0-8- 2i 5°! Producers Freetown - fill-l Kensington excl-l until further no- vslbpamsm requiring oils eer- lflase arrang t u ‘mgil- Livcstgclcwo a" hrI-lvestock follows: Monday P. H‘. Melville. Uigg, 0h in Market-in} 9-711 M. Marketing Board lliglngshnis “"1111! week of sept. M -. ll‘- l limllflfl e. Cardigan, El- P Morell. ""8 service supplied at prac- ‘lpcsl points. Consult! ROME. Sept. 'l — (AP) - Al- lied land troop be an an invasion oi Yugoslavia s wee ago, penetrat- ing that country from the Ad: tic Sea to the west in iii-O an with the Red Army t the east. along frontier. it was officially disclosed ton ht Au Allied auction with the Russians wo d be the first oi the war. The statement did not disclose how for luluud the Al- lies were. nor did it give any de- tails about where the lauded for their much throng moun- ' Yugoslavia. Whether Canadian: were participating in the ground operations wu not nowu. The Allied troops, hbwever, are operating "in the north," the statement said, and have cut en- emy lines of communication. Allied command units have been raiding German-held islands oft the Yugoslav coast between Albania and the port oi Flume for months. A Junction of the Russians and Allies in Northern Yugoslavia would seal off most oi Yugoslavia, all oi Albania, Greece and the German-gsrrisoned Greek Med- iterranean Islands — an ares about 155,00 square miles, the size of California. It also would open invasion paths into southern Austria and Hungary, outflank the German Gothic line protecting the Po Valley in north- ern Italy. and probably open up the short Darclanellcs Strait ship- ping route through the Black Sea. to Russia. Br. Frigon To Head 0 B B OTTAWA. Sept. ‘l - (C P) — Dr. Augustin Frigon, a tall, well-built man with a Wide knowledge oi radio, today was appointed general man- ager of the Canadian broadcasting Corporation. The 55 year old. Montreal born en- gineer, who joined the CBC as as- sistant general manager when the corporation was formed in i036. has been acting general manager since last November when Dr. James Thomson resigned to return to his post as president oi the Univer- sity of Saskatchewan. Appointment oi Dr. Frigon to l nounced by to the Dost of assistant manager. On behalf or tho LaFlesm announced thfll Ernest Bushnell, general supervis- ur of programs. has been promoted r0 the position of director gener of progams. Dr. Frigonb- appointment caused little surprise. From the time Dr. Thomson resigned after a year's service, Dr. Frigon was frequently mentioned as the most probable SUCCESS . Friendly and generally well-liked both in and out Dr. Frigon speaks with authority on matters pgft§1ljl§il_1/0_l'5,d1°-_ Killed In “To Test Halifax Tax Base in Oourt HALIFAX" Sept. '1 - (OP) — Representatives of the city oi Hali- fax and the Canadian National Rail- ways decided jointly to submit s stated case to the supreme court oi Nova. Sootia on the disputed ques- tion oi whether the city can tax C. N. R. property here. Agreement on the court reference was reached at a hearing before the civic tax appeals court. Parachutist Alarms Sounded In Germany NEW YORK. 8e t. ‘I - (AP) — Radio Atlantik, andestiue Ger- mon-language station the location oi which has never been officially disclosed, said in a broadcast re- corded by NBC that parachute troop emergency alarms sounded today in many cities oi the Ger- man west wall region. Single air- borne landings were reported. the general managership was Sill" War Services Minis-l tel- LaFlcche, who also announced! the appointment of Donald Manson. chief executive assistant oi the CBC.‘ 1.. oi political circles, Provincial conference to ZBBJIBlI-Nazis in Balkans In Serious Plight By W. w. nuuouau LONDON, Sept. '1 - (AP) —The German radio said tonight that Russian troops fanning out across Bulgaria in a. drive toward the Aegean‘ Sea. had reached the area oi Demotika, which is inside Greece on the Turkish frontier, while other Soviet forces north of War- saw had hopped the Narew river at a. point- only 26 miles south of East Prussi . Moscow's communique did not even mention Bulgaria, which ask- ed for an armistice after Russia declared war on her Tuesday, nor did it mention the Yugoslav front where a Rome dis abch said the Russians were floo lug into that country after capturing Turnu- Sevcrin at the foot oi the Iron Gate Rapids on the Danube. But the Germans in the Bal- kans, estimated at 260.000 men, were clearly in a dangerous and almost hopeless position. The Yugoslav radio already had announced a Junction with Mar- shal Tito's Puriisans and the Rus- sians east oi Belgrade, Yugoslav capital, and Allied headquarters in Rome said Allied land troops now were penetrating the country from the Adriatic Sea. in a drive to llnk=up with the Red Army. \ - -~_ From both London and Washing- ton coma hilats that. illtt Aallcs luck for an early end of the war against Germany, Writing from London James I". inc. Associated Pres staff writer said "with vlctorv over Germany generally regarded as a matter of weeks. Prime Minister Churchill probably now is holding lks with his ministers prepara- tory to a “win the peace" confer- ence with President Roosevelt m Quebec. And in Washington Secrcflllw of War Stimson said he believes that Germany has “lnsufficieiltstrength for the brolonized. defence’ of the Reich. .Hc expressed this somewhat cau- tious prediction cf carlv vlclorv at conference todav in which than: “The great bulk of the German anny in western Europe has been destroyed 01' crippled " A great part cf the German for- ces in France are “bewildered and without. much trope." b More than SOLHVIO German lzri- soners have been illkeli in France To this sunllnary oi uood news. however. Stimson attached a cau- tionary corrlnlent "German army discipline is hold- v up and we must ailll frst cut 89mm!‘ the product: of ‘the last clcsprrazc mobilization efforts of the cal COIDOx-s tion | government." Douglas Supports W The Sirois Report REGINA, Sept. 7 (GP) Premier T. C. Douglas said in an interview today the Saskatchewan C.C.F. Government would support any move at the next DOmi1lll01fl- lllll 8- ment recommendations of the "each Greece I | The shape oi the vut and .. in; more clearly defined with every And the first official hint now peninsula as Brittany wu sheared or Berlin. it is I. IJLI 1.4a flanked by Russian penetration of Allied frontal mass attacks. I ____.._ leeway Opens Sirois Report. _n 231 Jap Prisoners Mutiny LONDON. Sept. 7 -— (OP)— TWO hundred and thirty-one Japanese prisoners of war were killed and 10B wounded in a mutiny in an Australian camp Aug. 5, it was dis- closed mnight in a statement issued hem from Prime Minister Gui-tin oi Australia. . The Japanese. armed with mess knives and baseball bets. rose as- Uppcr Rhine. [lo-ck For Early Encl Of War In Europe Battle For Presidency PHILADELPHIA, Sept. '1 — (AP) -Gov. Thomas E. Dewey plunged tonight into the active phase of his battle for the Presidency of the United States with a declaration that the New Deal Administration is “afraid of peace" because “they are afraid of a continuance of their own failures to gct this country going again" “The administration knows that the war, with all its tragic toll of death. debt and destruction. is the only thing that saved it.” he said in a prepared address. "They are (loudly afraid that they will g0 back to ' resumption of their own failures. That is why they are afraid to let men out of the army. Thar is why they say it is cheaper i0 keep men in the army than to let them come home." The Republican Presidential no- mince opened his speaking cam- paign in Philadelphia amid all the political fanfare that ordinarily characterizes a peacetime election year. Beginning with a ticker-tape parade through downtown streets. Mr. Dewey and his retinue set out on a round of conferences. eet- ings and rf-clsgltiolls that woun up in Convention Hall for the first of a series of major speeches. Repeatedly he lashed out at the Roosevelt regime as a "tired. ex- iloustcd. quarrelling and bickering administration." He played on the ihemc that its replacement by a "fresh and vigorous" govem- ment would mean an early return of servicemen from overseas: when the war is won, and a revival of prosperity through free enterprise. Declaring at the outset that he was not campaigning against an individual or a political party, the 42-year-old New York Governor s . "It is a campaign against an administration which was con- ceived in riefeatism, which failed for eight straight years to restore our domestic economy, which has been the most wasteful. extravagant and incompetent administration in the history of the nation and worst of all. one which has lost faith in itself and the American ainst the guards in the early hvursl people." oi Aug. 5. All but a, few who es- gefied were rounded up by night- l . o: the dead, zo committed suicide, Run by ha SYDNEY. N. 8., Sept. '1 - (OP) Hospital authorities tonight an- ced the death oi triplets born lull 0r strlmsllldtlon, nincl yesterday to Mrs. William Purcell, by stab ing. five from other self-l, wife of an army officer- gr-qm gm- inflicted wounds and two threw thefselves under a train. The state- ment said that l6 of the wounded also showed evidence oi attempted casualties were light but One officer was murdered by a party of Japanese during a search for the fugitives. A t 900 Japanese took part in the mutiny. Eighteen of 20 sleep- inc huts and two administration inns were destroyed _by fire and imide were found o. dozen Japanese bodies. LITTLE VARIETY ‘The Vccchio brid e at Florence is llncd on both si es h 0f goldsniths A d l id . ieimfgr hundreds oi yoga. up u 15X. \ War Situation Last Night tack designed to crush Germany into lubmblion before winter is becom- tors ran-lain cloaked in secrecy for security reasons. Allied drivel toward s. junction in time southeast to lop off the Balkan lu the east. Russian forces capitalizing on gaps cut in the German defence front keyed to the Nsrew River, pushed deeper into the critical Vistula-Bug triangle north o_f the confluence of the two ruaior Polish streams northwest of Warsaw. The curving Bug front is the vital link of the German line defending the Danzig corridor approach to the Baltic plains that lead northwestward to, German frontiers but is already out- Serock. Red forces are reported driving into the narrow Bug-Vistula. Triangle itself to complete the break-through. It would mean a. return to fast manoeuvre operations in the cast over terrain well suited to tanks and even deep raiding to the enemy rear by Cossacks. It must mean, foo, Gcnrnsn retreat in the east to ill- prcparcd German frontiers to stand flnui siege pl the retreat from France and Belgium has exposed the western borders of Germany (o developing Official reports confirm the creation by American armies of lilossclle and Mouse brldgeheads within striking distance of German "west wall" defence lines although the exact positions of most advanced elements is sill a guarded lmattcr for military reasons. There seems no doubt, how- ever, that south oi the indicated Mosselle front between Met: and Nancy, American and French elements of the Mediterranean invasion arlny may have linked arms with United States 3rd army comrades clnsc to the Elisha-Allied nut-cracker at- officlal bulletin although some sec- comes of simultaneous Russian and away. ‘ into the roiling r enemy lines on the Narcw north of ll. c. ll. r. Awards OTTAWA. Sept 'I—(CP> - Air- forcc ilétiillll-LBTLEIS announced ' night the award one Distill- guishechservice Order and ihrce Distinguished Flying Crosses to members of the lt.O.A.i-‘. overseas Th! Rccipi ‘-='.— D. S. 0. Flt. Lt HA. Walker, D.P‘ C.. whose wife, Mrs Evelyn R. Walk- er. lives at Shawvlle, Qli-i D.FC Flt Lt. G H. Thring of Rock- wooo. Ont. P19. H flu Morrison of Toronto. W0 W.G. Forsberz of lclcetouwi, Sask. _ Walker received the D S.) for displaying a "high degree at skill and courage" in his operational dilties. Mull. = mi u.s.a. no. snmrlmilfiwneiltmmsnol" ‘ u lLlES BEGIN BATTLE FOR GERMANY Fierce Resistance In Opening Phases LONDON, Sept. 1 - (or) - Til; United States 1st Army struck down the high road to Germany tonight and battered to within 16 miles of the Belgian fortress of Liege while the British 2nd Army pushed out reconnaissance patrols from Leuven (Louvain) to the vicinity of the Albert Canal. Fierce resistance was encountered bythese armies and the American 3rd Army in the opening phase of the battle for the German homeland. The capture of Sedan, historic invasion gateway where the Germans broke through in 1940 to win the Battle of France by outflanking the Maginot Line, was all- nounced officially with the liquidation of an undetermined number of Germans long since by-passed by the 1st. Army. Secrecy cloaked the push into the Netherlands by the British 2nd Army. The British 2nd Army front can- not be accurately defined owing to the blackout on its progress but it apparently extends eastward through Antwerp and into Holland to an undisclosed depth, then back into Belgium to a point near Leuvcn. The 3rd Army front now extends from the border oi Luxembourg 55 miles southward to the old Lorraine capital of Nancy, which also was reached by advanced elements. The lst front nms for 75 miles from a point south of Leuven in Belgium to Yonco, l0 miles south- east of Sedan It billged into {he Ardenne; Forest. where the Germans were deployed strongly but with- out the artillery needed to check tank thrusts. The German stand is considered an attempt to buy time while the Siegfried Line is manned before the Allies launch their great blows. The battle for Metz, last fortress town between the American; and the Soar border, was fought in a high, chill wind which followed p, morning rain. The officer directing the fighting on this sector declared his tropos were across the Moselle south of Meta in stay. and there would be no repetition of the setback suffered downstream. Allied Headquarters said it was apparent that earlier reports the Americans had reached Liege and Aachen. east of Liege and two miles inside Germany. were incorrect. Monty At Brussels LONDON, Sept. '1 (GP-Reu- g ilclren Ca lled Up As Germany Prepares‘ Ditch Defenc By ulcnlifin KASISCHKE l LONDON. Sept '1 _ (AP) —Paul Joseph Goebbels, Reich Plenipo- tentiary for total war, conscripted beleaguered Germany's school chil- oren and Red Cross workers for war service in the "fight for our very lives" today as Nazi props- gandists pleaded with soldiers to fight a desperate delaying action to thwart an Allied victory before winter. "The Allies are striving to win by autumn and they are trying to make the German people believe they airead have won th war," Goebbels sad as he orders; a na- tion-wide mobilization of children and slashed more services and non- cssentials in u barrel-scraping man.- power drive. Women Replace Men Into the German army went wo- mcn to replace thousands ofvmen of the Wehrmacllifs medical staff who have been given guns for front-line service. The German Red Cross was prac- tically eliminnted to send "tens of thousands of men and women" into armaments industry and “fur- ther LETlS of thousands" as sol-' dlers to the front. ter) - Field Marshal Montgomery paid a call on the Mayor of Brus- sels today, ssid the__B_;ussels_ radio. kHeavy Rain By ROSS MUNRO WITH THE 1ST CANADIAN; ARMY IN FRANCE. Se t. ‘i-(CP, Cable) - Heavy rain fel todo-v in. the Canadian army sector ln ihel area of the Dover Straits ports,‘ temporarily bogging down the Can-l radian drive on Bouiogne. Calais and' Dunkerqu-e. prevailing, an-ny headquarters re- ported no changes at the front dur- mg the clay. Earlier a Canadian reconnaissance unit advancing from the Calais-St. Omer area leached a noint seven miles west and southwest of Dun- k division Crerafs armored fishtlnt! ‘lnder Lt. -Gerl command reached Yprcs. fsmiliar! to Canadian and British soldiers during the First Great War in first penetration across the gin-n border by Canadian forces Surgeons Work In Open In Burma SOMEWHERE IN BURMA, Sept. '1 - (OP -- Renter) — Working _ln the open by the side of the MYlV kyina airstrip during the recent battle for that Burma town. sur- geons under Lt-Col. Gordon sea- grave used litters set on packing cum for operating tables and had umbrellas held over them for pro- tection against the sun and rain, authorities disclosed toda . Of some thousands o Chinese casualties operated on during the battle less than four per cent died. About 500 British, American, Kacllin l and Japanese casualties were also "Selfi- the Bul- army With the worst weather in weeks‘ 7 Bogs Down Canadian Army Drive Braeken To llun in Neepawa, Man. RLETON PLACE. Ont.. Sept. (C?) — Progressive Conserva- tive Leader John Bracken. who has been witllouta seat in Parliament sincc he became party leader two years ago, has announced his in- tcntion of running as a candidate in Manitoba's Neepllwa consti- tuency in the forthcoming federal election if nominated. Mr. Bracken made his announce- ment last night in an address be-. fore the Lanark County Progres- sive Conservative Associaiionfis an- nual mecting. He said:- “A number of largely-signed petitions have reached me from Manitoba, including one from Ncepawa. Canada is still a de- mocracy aud one does not dictate tn constituencies whom they should choose. If, however, the nomina- tion convention in Neepawa should favor me as a candidate, I would be honored by such s. choice and would accept." (Neepawa constituency now is represented in the Commons by F. Donald MacKenzie. Liberal mem- ber who defeated two candidates- one Conservative and one New Democracy-by a majority of l,- 850 votes in the 1940 general elec- ilons. Mr. MacKenzie won it from the Conservative member, T. G. Murphy, in 1935.) Mr. Bracken said he had been asked to run in different seats in every province in Canada but felt he should seek a seat in Manitoba, where he had been Premier for more than 20 years before his election to the Progressive Con- servative leadership at the Winni- peg Convention in . “Nothing would please me more than to run in my native province of Ontario and particularly in the County of Leeds. where I was born." he said, "but I felt a res- ponslbilltv to my adopted province of Manitoba." wssnmoron, Sept. s - (as) - Virtually all processed foods oth- er than canned fruits will be retur- ned to prewar non rationed stet- us in the United States in l0 days. the White House announced today, and a war food administration OA School-age children who are not receiving education because of evacuation of their schools will be called up for war work. Those ,cquivalent to Canadian high school ISEHlDYS who are not already in war work because of health or other reasons will be employed as lead- lcrs in evacuated children's camps. l‘ The Prussian Finance Ministry, last of the still existing Prussian State Ministries, was dissolved in order to place its several hundred officials and employees at the dis- posal of the military. Its func- tions werc taken over by the Min- istry of Finance. Cancel Periodieads ' 0f the approximately 1,500 per- iodicals stlll published n Germany, a majority have been cancelled. Travelling shows and shops fol- lowing fairs will be closed down. The decree against actors appar- ently took care of those who es- caped the recent theatre black out. In his weekly article in Das Reich, Goebbels found comfort in the fapt_that Germany's plight was similar to that of Britain and Russia earlier in the war. Nazis Make Hurried Preparations For Last- e Of Reich. Large Business Property Purchased 0n llueen Street F. W. Woolworth 00.. Ltd. have purchased the large property on Queen Street now occupied b the Wright Shoe Co, Carter an Co. and the Jamiesou Drug store. This building was part of the Monaghan estate. The new owners propose to tear down the present structure and to build a larger and more elabor- ate one on the same site. How- ever, as the leases of the present tenants do not expire for a year or more, no immediate construc- tion is contemplatedOther handi- caps to earl building are the priority regulations on steel and the h h cost of other building material. Nazis Appeal To S. S. Troops l LONDON, Sept. 7 — (CF-Reu- ter) A call to 5.5. troops to gain every possible day for the defence of Germany was broad- cast by the German forces radio tonight. “Every day gained now amounts to a reinforcement of our national strength for the defence of the Reich itself," it said, "It is therefore the duty of our soldiers in contact with the enemy i0 delay the enemy's movements to the utmost.” Don't MAKE FUN or Alltisfoas ‘Cause You MAY BE one ‘foun- SELF Sons DAY! Britons Told‘ Flying Bomb ilrdeal Qver LONDON, Sept. '1 - (AP) —Wd.l' torn Britain, after B0 days oi pun- ishmenr. from Hitler's blindly des- tructive robot bombs. was told of- ficially today that the ordeal has ended and that the oftthreatened V-Z reprisal assault was not likely to be serious. "Except possibly for the last, few shots, the battle of London is over‘, declared Lt-Col. Edwin Duncan Sandys, son in law of Prime Minis- ter Churchlll who was in charge of the defence against the tying bombs. With the formally - declared end of the assault, censorship regul- atlons were lifted to disclose that a total of 8.000 robot bombs were launched against London and Sou- thern England since June l2, but that only 2,300 got», through. More than 5,000 persons were killed by the bombs which did land. The systematic destruction of robot launching sites by bombers was highly praised by Col. Sandys. “Targets including launching sites. storage depots and communications in France," he said, adding that more than 100.000 tons of bombs were poured into these targets. cost- ing the Alli-es 450 plane; and 2,900 airmen. Evacuation oi women and child- ren from London has been suspen- ded, but the government cautioned tonight against a rush by the more spokesman indicated that additional meat also may be made ration- ireo soon. _than 1,000,000 evacuees w return ‘i here until bomb damage can be re- paired u-lorni t . Last quarter moonfiept. 9. 0.08 l1 Summezside i. 18 minuterlot- er than Chu-lo town. DAILY All! SERVICE Charlottetown - Sulmuercide - Mouoton Leave Charlottetown '1 um: 11.30 can; d pan. Arrive Charlottetown 12.45 p.u|.: 5.45 p.m.; 8.40 p.111. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown 1| noon. . Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 pm:- Charlottetown - New Glasgow lDally except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown 1 p-ln. Arrive Ch-rlottetowu 5.50 p-Iu. P. E. L-N. B. FERRY SERVICI DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands-TM A. I 11-00 A. M. 8.00 P. . hovel Caribou -- 9.00 A. M. l.“ P. M. 500 l’. M.