l- 1.2m Inning Guardian, handed III. Qsrtettetown Ilnldlnl. ‘Illa Cont; 3 Months May Finish Nazis , I IDNDON, July 18 — (OP) _ Nazi radio broadcasts acknowl- edged tonight that Gen. Mont- somery had carried his attack with British and Canadian troops east of the Orne river sud one com- ments asserted the war would be decided in lees than three months. “The wer now is in its decisive Hitler Uneasy ilver Prospect 0f llew Landings phase." said commentator Jesn ___ Paquls on the Nazi-controlled LONDON, July is _ 5gp) _ Paris radio "In less than three months we shall know if'the Allies have won or lost. On the east front its now purely a question of life or death. On the west front the Allies have thrown into battle all the forces they can muster- and the bitterest fighting must be ex. pected.” _ Gerrnen-oontrdled Vichy Uneasy over the prospect of new allied landings, Hitler has creat- ed a new anti-invasion corn- insnd in Belgium and Northern France and at the same time has taken civilian control in this region out of the hands of the military and placed it under the Gestsutl. A dual shakeap. announced in s broadcast by DNB, German agency, placed Joseph Grohe, 42-year-old high officer of Bit- Ier’: Elite Guards, as Gauieiter of the entire region and gave the military command to infantry Gen. Grace. The new setup ousted Col-Gen. Alexander Von Faiirenhansen, n fricnd of Field Marshal Karl Von ltundstedt. who had been commander of Belgium and llol- land since May 20, 1M0. and sub- seauently of Northern France. Hitler himself issued the de- errc, DNB said. and stated that the change took place today at Brussels. Von Itnndsiedt has been re- ported in Lisbon making round- about pence feelers. Grase's new command. white subordinate to eourmander-ln-chief Field Mar- sbsl Gen. Gunther Von Kluge, covers the area in. which the Nazis predicted a-seoolid Allied invasion "between Dunlrerquo and Ostenl." CODIIANBOB ACTIVE LONDON‘ —(OP)-— A Commando rroupof the Polish underground forceg on Jun 11 carried out a‘ k successful attefcx on Plncyow in! e s fiuthvm Polamli.h"rhey livid ‘the a wn or seven ours sett rig rec‘ N n f i100 prisoners, states a. report re- - e lfnimfi- ‘s”“““"" Twit: s. sry e essery w o recently at 9i had 121 deecendents. IDNDON‘ July m __ (AP) _ Red Armies of the south in a pow- (ldhillti EVEN-TS ceived by the Polish government here, erful new offensive have cracked "Ehow at Canoe Cove Hid-av. The radio ssid the Allies, with great artillery and mighty air support. had carried the fighting east of the Orne. and a German High PP nd okesman, Lt-Gen. Dittmar, declared that "the mo- ment has come when our last ounce of strength must be mer- Bhlllofl. es the enemy's superiority weighs heavily on German diers." One German account of the of- fensive said the Germans were nt- tempting a fluid defensive against 30 divisions’ which this version said Gen. Montgomery was em- ploying. Fire Chiefs Chitown At Three-Day Convention open German defences around the great bastion of Lwow in pre-war Poland, spilling through reeling Nazi forces for three-day gains of 501- f esting Sessions Held Yesterday. CHARLOTTETOWiQYCANADATwiSbivEsbAY, P0 Eli-FUL ALLIED DR laps Face “Great National “Crisisff Army ilonnanil is Shaken llp; Tojo Still Top NEW YORK, July is - (AP) — Tokyo announced today that Pre- mier General I-lideki Toto been relieved as chief of the Army owarshaku smxofhil ' High Com sup opens - mend in two dais in the face of what To o celled "an un- precedenly great national crisis." The navy. chief sufferer in re- cent heavy defeats in the Pacific, underwent a. similar shake-up Mon- day, when s. relatively obsc Ad- miral replaced the Navy Minister. The shakeup was announced in s series of broadcasts recorded by The Associated Press and U. S. Government Monitors. Other broadcasts told the Japanese peo- ple for the first time that Saipan had been lost with all its garrison and most of its Japanese civilian population. stressing ' the gravity of the cri . Toto Still Top Man WASHINGTON, July i8 — (AP) —Premier Tojo still is top man in the Japanese war ‘-' which apparently is being streamlined for uture clashes with Allied forces driving steadily toward Tokyo. This was the interpretation that For Eastern experts —- who can- not be identified by name -plsc- ed_to<_iayv_;or1_ the designation gf___6g: (Continued on page 7. Col. a) Guests Of Dinner Continues Today; Inter- Yesterdsy was a big day in the three-day convention of the Mar- itime Fire C eis’ Association now In the morning sit i0 o'clock. the convention was officially o ne-d by Prwkient Karl Walker o1 red- erictcn. N.B. The invocation was then offered by the Rev '1‘. E. MaoLennan otter which Premier J. Walter Jones welcomed the de- legates to the Province. rtls Worship Mayor J.ll. Bis-n- chard being unavoidably absent, acting-Mayor W. . wel- comed the delegates on behalf the City oncl extended to them the freedom of the City. lVLr. J.A. Webster, Chairman of the Board of Water Commission- ers also extended a hearty ‘welcome zzz/W The People's Paper the second lweep- " , pocket west of it. And it is [the door through u-liicli American forces can MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN . up" F , ____,,_..e-¢ ‘-~_._,________‘ _ Read b Covers Prince Edwardilsland Like the Dew l Spr. Oliver Ross, Georgetown, P. E. 1., is one of the Canadian des- psteh riders, who help keep open the lines of communication in Nor. mandy-(Csnadlan Army Overseas Photo). ___ War Situation Last Night i» A By Kirlre L Simpson, Associated ‘Press War Analyst German hopes of holding the Allied invasion front in France on a sector too narrow to serve as 1r base for major offensive operations have been blasted with apparent loss oi‘ St Lo to Aimcrlcan troops on thel right and a. British-Canadian drive across the Ornc southeast of Caen on the left, _ It is still too early to say whether a general German retreat in Nor- mandy is in progress. There is no doubt, however, that the reported loss ' of St. L0 and the cracking of the Ornc barrier repn-scnt Nrui reverses; tending to compel prompt re-adjusirnent of the front. German surrender of st Lo, reverted in field dispatches though not yet confirmed by headquarters, is significant. The liormany cross-roads town was a bastion for the now dangerously exposed Lessay-Countances reach terrain suitable for an immediate zrrlvnnce up tlm shallow Tire Valley. Whatever the sudden collapse of St. Lo may indicate as to a general German withdrawal. its capture was oi’ prime importance In the battle that General Montgomery. Allied field commander has been waging to get elbow room for larger our-rations. ‘ Better weather. permitting the full force of Alli/ail tactical nir sup- myg of noun,‘ 11-00“; to b“ brought inin nlny for the first time in many days, undoiibtedly had much tn do with the. Allies’ double suc- Qggg, Th; weather has gone against the invading nrmv more than ‘(i108 since the great adventure was launched it scriouslv off-sci. tcmum-"lf iv at least. the inectlmable advantage of almost unchallenged Allied mastery of the skies over the battle area. - id; Representation At Annual Meeting 1 Credit Union League Everybody Troubled young people need the thinking. suidsnce of JULYAI9, 1944 a Caen Through Wall 0f Dwelling A car proceeding east on Eus- ton Street eorly this morning, ap- parently at a high rate of speed, went out of control and crashed through the wall of a house at l-‘i Euston Street, occupied by Mrs. Roy McGee and family. Two or three persons, including a baby, were sleeping in the room where the car broke through the wall. A baby's crib was pushed half way across the room by the force 0f the blow but fortunately no one was injured. The driver, and possibly a com- panion, fled before police arrived. Before the car struck the wall it snapped off a lamp post crashed through a veranda. and City police were on the scene quickly and at once began search for the driver of the vehicle. Some time after the crash the car was still wedged into the wall of the building. From what could be seen of the wreckage it np- peuged to have been badly dam- age Details 0f Family Allowances Not Yet Worked llut OTTAWA. Julv 18 —(CP)—— De- tail, of the Job the government feces in paying allowances for some 3,- 500,000 children under the proposed fsanilv allowance scheme have not yet been worked out, bu; intentions m1- to deccntrolize the administrat- ion as far as possible, official sour- ces gold today. Estimates place the number of Canadian families with children under 16 at 1,500,000, but approxi- nut-zly half of them will lose what» over allowances they .1;,7.i.'1 through income tax adjustments and just how much each family will gain by the silowance scheme scheduled to come into effect July 1, i945. will depend 0n the income tax levied 1111:1121‘ the next budget. Net cost of the family allowance szhtmc, pmvi-cied for in .1 bill now bcl -e the Commons, ha 8r pin:- vzi at $200,000,000; 4111131" pcr cent oi Canada's Mr bud- a canadlm“ l means should be devised, either by gct- - but actually another 350.00%" German Are Shattered ,1§.;91y4p‘ since D-day, caught the Germans “"0 11W- Illilht Illl- lt-ttOl other Piovlnreo h U-BA. $5.0! bubeoriprioa llsllevord. ldJd races IVE IS OPENED I Lines Near By STANLEY BURCH (Representing The Combined Allied Press) SUPREME HEADQUARTERS ADVANCE COM- MAND PO_ST, July lll - (Wednesday) -- (CP) .-_Bri1i5h and Canadian forces appeared in excellent position early ,today for a continuance of the smashing assault beyond Caen, and news of the highest importance may be imminent as spearheads of the Allied armored forces appear io have pushed several miles southeast of the city. GAP TORN IN LINES ALLIED SUPREME HEADQUARTERS, July l8 -.. AP) — Marshal RolnmePs flank nearest to Paris was burst open east of Caen today in a great British-Canadian of- fensive and through the gap Gen. Illonigvimery hurled his pent-up force of armor across the Orne in punch inio 75 square miles of smoke-shrouded ruins l-eii by an unprece- dented battering by more than 6,000 Allied planes. MONTY CALLS IT BREAK-THROUGH This smashing blow, which Gen. Montgomery himself termed a “break-through", rolled southeast. across the flat country south and southeast of Cacn tonight with :1 power recalling the historic British assault at El Alamein in Eryn!- On the American sector to the west. American troops today captured the hillside hinge stronghold at Si. Lo af- ter an eight-day battle, forcing a German withdrawal of a mile to 1 1-2 miles and threatening a crumbling of tire Nazi positions westward to the Chet-boring Peninsula coast. HUGE AERIAL SHOW Using air-power as well as the artillery barrage for which he is famed, Gen. Montgomery, the Allied Ground Commander, opened the onslaught in the Caen area st dawn under cover of the greatest aerial bombardment since. D-Day-a crushing assault by 2,200 bombers of all kinds which pounded tire enemy with 7,000 tons of explo- sives and moved along just ahead of powerful forces of British and Canadian tanks and infantrymen. Gen. Montgomery struck at the gateway io interior France, driving into the heart of the Nazis’ strongest posi- away. Britons and strong armored and mobiloi dl giogandinz h) miles sout-heastwardv M0NTREAL_Jmy18 __(CP,_ J_ called at Supreme Headquarter mm “me m!“ Heavy fighting Eight with the t m angwCersz. ans caning ou e n ‘ . Vaucelles on the east bank of the‘ forces speeding out into the Caenl pl311’1—ODt‘l‘i, ideal tank fighting a . . _ . _ 1 Th9 new oiienslva’ ammmcad m‘ lldaltmigrizigliiiise“gfzlxéllifllc ‘by surprise, and the headquarters $108311 0i 111-901‘ ill Qlleb“ H1115! be l cl Montgomery‘ based on the defeat oi the Bio. tions, protecting the route eastward to Paris, 120 miles was resins to-l -" Orne across the river from Coon! t . Labor-Progressives country seven w l0 miles wide an ' I ‘the f%" snecml mess conferencg; legislature, told a political meeting statement so-l 1s well satisfied 740*‘ giemrlgilsbsdlrghll!Slifiilmfrinoiiiigtlrg w ‘h’ “ism” 111 o o t but drnlncd “W1 1m Prime“ P°P‘“°"E am‘ ‘he Until" NMWHHP" ova,” tonight. m" 9m“ ‘J95’ Walsh of Delegates representing Credit g” w mo” £1‘ $.15... tygaguryl made in the first day's fighting of Ho‘ sold that Labor-Progressive " " QWW‘ Tmmw- cemvbelwn Sillmlv Yeslmldfl- s - “k 1 this battle" cfirdld t 1 to ld ~- 1 1.19.1‘ Lwow. lone of the biggest rail ex g on behalf of the dele- ' UlllOlls 1mm all parts o: the Piu- ihygugh income tax, ll ~ - - do; sec c _shou declare g .__. terminals in Europe and control- Ragxmfhiek a predation o; me l vnu-e ottoman 1h».- anriual meeting‘ U51“; me moo.“ y,“ m get the, A“ “l F‘ Alamem, themspnes 1K1 Péddllléfig msupporp , ‘Picnic Lot e5 August 2nd. "n8 11M! ltfldlfll "W! silllihel" privilege of vistin the Province o; inc Pr: 1 ‘creriuvunvon Lea-J antmmwes 3, x n-m, .1 qdfl... "r1 0 tr I ~ | llze Llbilfll E0v0rllllle1li" i1 it would l 7494nab” giififineyisviifdmvln“midi-ill? asttgruem the %lw o‘ ch"- A d F d t‘ hzllildrlfiiimlitloi-‘lfcigm[lali/“Jdidlllili“u; Xrlhlglrngwmg iimm” I H? {Sims-i It looked as though the omen-l iiorxieéiilliii» (“region or Ilpriiérpsfi- - . _ _'_ f - H} r . n w“ p1 .1..1:<. 0 , . i ‘e ifil 1'1 mi n11 vet». - ..mme_ s“ WW5 5a,, m...“ Russian troops fwere within a; ioprtgm N181 business discussion. ii 8 zvnicoonnlo ulesltievtml c t l, ..nl,_éfqgs tggtt. “ma: ,5 appned m n, first“ 211153 hgrovebglgt 12¢ fligiiOthélgvgii sressm w“ and Mvfmr Qoncvrg lulv 21st. Olldiorq-l orchestra. pillar‘ of ttrhe fortress deity (in 611g‘ Mr. F. Gordon vgvlfiguog’ its: crlgzlttlfiglgcietévv ‘ital tear“; aintrkizifi; number of the other _i6 qtifiiélljiltlijlesv when Gen mbgomefy m 1942 d5. Mo? s... w...» iit-"l?€m°'is it» ‘ii-im- ' liY-‘iJ-i“ i? i-‘l emu t» Leaders Meet " “i l§;'.;“‘...*;.°.‘1“.‘$°‘.h‘32 .:::.f;“‘...:*:t' lily. July 10th. New Orchestra. Russian border on the Bug river. the W01‘! 0! We 111ml“. m“ i,gif‘gggfiffctmglfilliwfff1 present plans are ihnt actual, Am“ ' ' ANY NE r-ie-si. Clenrl Germany faced her srsv; hat gtpmo.‘ wellivfgrglgggfi; gt; we 5cm, 511 $1.05.; umu,;s' a5}, gpnt, lmjvnliilstrntlon, m; .;rc1§t~.~.111c=1tl i 'I_‘here was no lnlnltticllate {llscllo-l ‘ 0 WHQ n 1mm wean ‘tvlafir 12,1818": lg nearly five ears c. flflsmalont mo“ m“ com; An interested audience ‘mm flutes m me k»,-U\,,,,_Cc_ m “name ch11‘ cn undihe issuun: of Loon bit; sure oi the extent “the red - K CKS AQQU-f. A DIJIIW. . Wkly. e ussians hurl l sixth a r u t t m P l rcsmuuun me mpeuno (“amid m 1v cirmues Will be taken our. 0i i! through iront or the crouch oi 11.: RAH‘ luly 19th. Msllview orchestra. front into action at s time when mmmn" °i omw" ' p“ 5 ° a m" n” "mid" inaugurate a mklnbfnchip urn-w Llrovinciol offices. The plan will bcl penetration on the first day of bat- I5 7-16-3- five other Red Armies were llound- 1 A fl§vg,1;h@{;g°§,°;,“‘m‘“,§°$m‘§'§$1 "l§,,{f,‘fi°“f,‘,fig?,',, ‘fffidpghi; ,5‘ this loll i ‘ iwicr the supervision o! the ne-u vile-a word headdllsrtiegs woulfi-lhnot Q PQQR FI|SH f ...___ or . - ‘ . . . J t, used t dc an). in . “Dam. Vernon Haul 1..“day_ :25 aging; “"‘E“;:g""§n:£ lmmahne; Chief Daly of Sussex after which E. I. Federation of Agriculture held m‘ 5 ““‘° ‘eucsmmfl “f? 9”‘ H “'1 .y . Ne,“ M1 58:19, o; a (lfipscaefi; rdegglgnlnz or? July 21st. iidhllview Oroheotrn. m I fighting their way through the g Busing?“ ‘,°,_§‘“I,',‘e,w“§h.,§§,ld and i3: raglan “§.,,P"g°°_,{“ IYHII‘; ca? h " ‘m 11m‘ fcnsivo. k I I u 7-18- Q emonsir o. ‘c - e n . r. . . ac our: . , 1 . "i = '-Lrruugl um on 1c _ -- ‘£21m 5m" mm“ ‘h’ 5m“ luneguvfioxfiilqviiev “iv-a wait-av}; gesident ova tdhe Credit Union §n‘;{,;;‘(§’“,‘_, “,1”, p(;{}ni,l,gii1i'sttrgiaday' of 5111.13.11»? vcniihlei‘ u», C~ l-lail. Wd- “" cs W 9 , B8116 ill-es s. ... - ._, - . --_~_,-.; ,. -- _ . .- ‘ ' f. the Non aidy butt iron.’ ‘.1:- nesojiéihi-‘uly ‘iixiiimlivebsters Orgh- “‘_“_T'T'_“"" m“ m. “W 9““'1°‘1i°.‘°w3l H‘)?! Hon. W. F. A. Stewart, Minister] (ilfiirrimlcxiitngtfgirnlzvdibjili. ‘h u M |Donnmon Ploimcm c0£____'c" moons fouizlii. ‘in their Shirt-sleeves mm. 1-19-11, Crop Conditions anlu gains hwmfl-ivol-gtfwntfékiaj of Agriculture. delivered .1 brie-i‘ and Allied Dloncs were able go rage ‘mum mm, Continue Good ‘Jet's... "u Csnadafl: u “riiifrlilsgi “i1¥3l'1‘§a1-1“°“s.§¥§lll?;‘3 M“ m‘ "°'"‘" 1c "on d A ainst _iil§t“t'1§n§'iaaw§§1§§i Se“ or i e ‘"1 b M, Mclfil Bin!!- ' in‘ mvwgum‘ 7:55- ‘m? i‘; W“ Treasurer, ‘also spoke briefly on Inspector oi e g 3°“ Munm- c‘1“"‘“m Pres‘ w“ sumac ma. 1-10-11. orrawa. Jilly ie-(om-cror» ‘egugwvvmvlhflvlw- alt-otasfiwfi “Q2 the work of his department. 1 111s n10 1 lC~“'1‘@F-P°"d""- a" °Y°W1iE°=5°,§1.°’ "Dome m New eel-ta Hall rn- Silflmtlt msiidiihqitrijoiixiziiiriiili-E no no Majesty t e Ki - M, h, M, lmr", H” “Mfnti, $.51. ",‘,§,“',, I At Yanks iiihlkbzvtiigaiguniiiiiizrivjélgsilirigi “Y- JWY Diet. Webster's Orchestra. rein is d in certain districts. o“ a mmorm ‘"5"’ m. mug: i s "an iilfefaiirii. nt ‘tlieiehdvol 113.8 .14 it as “stupendousfl He said British 7'19"!‘ n“ mmmm Egig: ‘i’: mum“: fifu°'fh°f‘fi‘“w°"-r% Mciiénnan I-iis' iRoyo 11‘. Bergengren managing mounts-d to almost $290,000 . LLHUUN JG‘; “JP REUT gielgvyciawlié" "rmlery 515° “red —-- snorted v with _ ~ -- ‘s. ‘ . i215 ,- -.1~.~- * - -~' — ' - ee- "DBXIOO. Kinknra I'll-ll, Wednd- Miles of weekly summaries 0i 1'10 “WWW umtauqflnoé sgxfmkl} gigs; lksggciiahtiufrig‘: In’ 3°,’},',‘ms,_,,§,,§ flflifie yfégitilrig‘ ,l\L:-§;(@X:1]g.'nnrJ- MEHHPJIS or poniauisiit were! fly. July 10th, Mulligan Orclheigtrlni. sitfnltm the m“ Ftiesmimgi méfcsamfl}, m‘; 3gp: it; hgndqunugrg In pfidgsontf W12 thlesel\vcgvzl‘ crew H_ m ‘cannons-c: (110080 iiitiillst 1nahmgl I ' ' ' i W hi Mayor consin av an inter ti d- - “ “ v _’ "5'? °° ' "wima" 135 i" “MPH” < r: étt..cz."istt.."~"'*ss tween swarm“ °:°°“‘.“t ‘viii’ ““:a~ sgt- ‘i- "- 5m ' . t w o un on mov m N t A . ‘ ' " “ “r1118 4v 0 a P05 War 0 V needed for cereal crops. Pots Wakes- od Frederic on,__=_= ow“ m 013181;: fir): or mericavbflong to the ma, 5mm, some anawm confer‘: mat u way ‘mud u! 1y. Wednesday forenoon, and mo" Th edty. McCiuigan andq-Boyls. 2.7:!‘ IM "DR _ "Wham W m’ M a Allies Continue To Make Ham may. July no at new . G. Gr lhd liner-aid mus-a. "Palmer Road Church Picnic, Wed. A m 044, on Church 1 rounds. eparations made for s roe crowd. Oomel join us.’ l. u ii ' ' itish and th Afri ‘mo, ‘ r “a u“ w JPaase$‘f‘lis‘°;§3"§17“'°’“°l m pawns 1:10 “the serganl Allidi m, m "m... “£1”, Itaian com on the west and sa-I advance. bdeted their my“, m!’ m “V rieic coasts wer threatened to- bridgehead across the Arno four RQfl-“hm ' m °- night as Allied troops nmsheduniles of no bit- 74941 h e Oermsn defence linvier far no end molhtolned we! . can“ m‘ m e ucditin tiAetfsoe-othfriterlc; week - , ooun r-atvtssire. po "We included) ss follows: nuraun man donut?! nfviliq m; u» centre or the Its-lien Peninsula » honfe- - the Arno te 20 miles Ollt d! Pill bill if- In‘. beiisv __ -...... port are" nrrr-sf..<.......rmil” M . wilelottal Dance oil-menu .' thebulhofhistroopofromthreot- Puwcaneeilsd as Rollo Boy Tea m: the Adriatic coast. meanwhile, cned Livorne to h gro - m‘. brvnovsds schedulwne Polish troops of the British 0th yond Pisa, leaving a comparatively twdwlitlt dance W or army have made a cunplete break- small tome behind to cheek “if "Iv u“ 1%"”o!§'2£ lfl.’.l’s"‘lv'ln Waugh?“ #31225 fi-aiiliafi 111212? “St-‘m’ "stanzas-use. v-ie-zmoitvnoasiewsstaeeaeasn. ' e.1.\1?.1.\1.~. Gains On Italian Front northeastofLivormfromtheN is ‘efiillrox ‘v here that Field Alphonse Delardins, who organ- ised the first North American cre- unignb at Leg/lie, Quebec. in . u sequen v he i d firefly. "Keiilkllfli?" inaioligjilkii; __(Continuecl _on_page__'l._Col. 4)- At Your Service "SALAIIA" TBA 8: COFFEE If less must now go further it is doubly important . intment of a special committee ‘mp0 by all membe of the or e drive those in- l e 57 Credit; Union, to make dlviduals iterestcd in work of the Credit Uni W’ to buy Tea and CoEee by the "flavour" standard, vital to retain the co-operarlon and,‘ good will of the United States. Earlier, Ennanuel Shinwell, Labor, i had asked Prime Minister Churchill if he were aware that =i1cre ls con- siderable disqulet in British indust- rial circleg and elsewhere about the number of internationel conferences being held Mien: "we must be faced with a falt aocompli. preventing us from proceeding with our own in- tcrnntional policy." Replying to s. suggestion that the post-war civil aviation conference be held in Britain, Mr. Churchill explained that since other nations were interested in it, the venue would necessarily await further consultation with them. LIVERPOOL "MOONLIGHT" LIVERPOOL. England -(CP)—- Blaolrout regulations were llficd for the first time during the war here and ovcr an area. of three miles when the city's new “moonlighif system was officially tested. The lights are the brightest in Britain. 100 time; stronger than she "star- light" system generally used. Reported Missing l-liilh tide this momi t 10.31 and 10mm at 12.05. m‘ ' Sun sets this evening ‘at 841 anti rises tmnormw mornim! nt 5.31. mersidc tide Eighteen minu- tes later than Charlottetown. DAILY All! SERVICE S t. Geo e Robert Sims. 34, son o; r, 11 (Dlckl Sims of Mal- peque Rood. Charlottetown is miss- ing after air operations overseas ,on Jul l5, his father has been lu- fomi . He ig serving With flit Charlottetown - Summer-side - Royal Canadian Air Force and h“ Moncton been overseas since last October. Leave Charlottetown '1 s.m.; He h“ a brother, Gui‘. Billy Sims‘ 11.30 a.m.; 6 p.m. with a Royal Canadian Field Antil- Arrive Charlottetown 12.45 p.m.; lery unit in France and three Si» 5.45 9.111.; aao p.n1. m“ “t h°m° hem SUNDAY sssvrcs Sgt, sims lived for a number of W575 with m! Fammmher- Mm’ leave Charlottetown 12 noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5.15 pan. Lydia Sims at Remington. fOlWW- lnil the death of his mother. His Ch 1 m, _ I 0| v father has married sssin- L ‘flfi,c.,g°‘,'l§',,,.§‘;i,,,,,‘i“°' ————-———-~—— e . ttet ~ . . LIGHTNING FAT"- arlii”. osihfioevfifi sisoT-n oALwAY, Eire - (OP) — ‘We rerun’ sisnvrcs P. I-I. L-N. S. young men and two young women DAILY XNCLUDING SUNDAYS were killed instantly Ind "filler! ' Wood islands-Jam A. or 1J1 w” burned about the arms and; Leave ‘ it!“ "h" “F” “Y “Khmm” “i ‘hwi fisiésMéai-iiis-PL t.» a M 1 or were sheltering beeid s turf tank‘ P, M, 5,00 p, ' ' ' It II. nearetlort. l "