. _ ___ h Modern and old time dancing MAXIMS OIL ERE MAN I a M i _-_-_ t rnllloo 0f ‘ ‘t: duty end ‘ 5 a high lnatlncé 1] “uncut of a w, lid goodnel. - own Gaarllaa, two Outta, Guardian, Ioualol [I1 and a apoc- "VIII"! in m. j. hi. v The People's "Ix-r" QP“ Iii-vi M‘ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLUITETOWN. cannon, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER s, 1943 t Selected their flavor upon the lersenea; of their expression, for though“ are ‘Irina of lugar or sou, that must ‘MAKING OIA MERE MAN thought: depend for melted In a drop of water, lunccrlptlon Delivered, $5.00 ‘All. ‘Lil'- otho- Ptuvlllrea I ILI.‘ U.” ~ LLIES ENLARGE ITALIAN BRIDGEHEAD GREENE ¢OOLOOO Germans Are Rep“ . . rolls-la TC-‘apture Another 90 ‘Localities. In Drive IDNDON. ‘Sept. be-(CP) -— Red t“ troops continued to develcp _-» Doncts Basin offensive today - advances of six to 12 mile. ~ captured more than 90 inhab- localities, a Moscow communi- recorded by the Soviet Monitor - tonight. Th: rscapturcd settlements in- _ _ ulated places and railway staucns of Ovcherikino f- Schegiovka, the bulletin said. Simultaneously a special Soviet otmcement said 400,000 Ger- ~ had been killed during thc ~ lan‘: summer offensive. in ~ h_Red Armv divisions now are ltsrlnit the invaders in flvc kc)’ tors along a GOO-mile front. lfonotop had fallen and Stalino ‘t loiminontly menaccd. The Soviet casualg announce- t- recorded. by euters, said ' in killed exceed 420.- Gemuln wounded ,500.0€0 and that f hmach nice north of r thc capture cf more than 150 tlemcnts and similar advances t"! “ported in the sector south cf 1051i. wncrc more than 50 pop- owhc tavern Dance Scvcn Mlle Bay. Wed- ‘Wil’. aept. B. 9-6-11. "Dance French River Hull tu- "ht- a-a u River Hull. "Dance in Emerald Hall Wed “m9. Sept. 5.11. I - -;:l. J f orders for Bulk .5 and Harley. Sighcu limit. u-l-Ll-l-iu. "Bcokui g til, t) Covehead 101.1. -B-ii. Szanhope F111“. QCPLQIIIDEI‘ B r t. Pillcr. bingo and lunch at m?“ f, "Mflhftllifi. Winsloe, on "PM. Sept. 8 by WI. Q-Y-Ql. "lllantcd to bu-y-llve and drcsscd ‘urns and fcwl. Paying to; 0° '1 Prices. Island Cold Storage -. Lid, B_ ll L .llris Hospital Dan , Mc- m“! Potato warehouse, tirednes- hl- Btatomber am. Two Orches- - Refreshments sold. O-B-li. l ‘York H ll " when 125i‘ lhursday, 8.30 PM. tute social. Sound "m" Admission l5 centsé a M ital Dance, Mc- Wednes- Orcnca- 9-8-11. "Bcuris HQ an‘ P011110 warehouse, hifipltember atn. Two efreshrnents cold. ‘wimfflihl Hon for Davis at méi‘.ifii‘.'.i‘°f‘o.‘llllif'fii? s“ Bllrnail. c-‘a-rt. Klhlh Count Plowing be held on t» e farm of ‘The B- c1 “hi? zglndbon. Bridgetovanujfii Iran p ' ca a ar t5 to 10 o raffle, 4-21, In!" mg ‘i- YOIIIIR plga et Freder- mnnimaldllt. Pa lng 812 a pair “of! 8s over 0 pounds each. bu)’ smaller ones. Also °l fat hem wanted. Knud ‘1- 0-0-11. plated points were freed of invaders. "South and southwest or ar-p kov," the ccmmu lulu: said, "ozr; troops on the offensive RQVEHCBLH on some ssctors from tour to sevcn kilcrnetera t2 1-2 to four miles) and captured several populated places, includin Bolshaya-Pavlovco. 3H0 Tarosov and six other populated places and the railway station cf forlchi. The town, which changed hands several times, has againf been captured by our forces." i Red Army men in the Smolensk‘ direction were reported righting on’ fort to improve their pes- itions. Tue communique sold 116 Clcr- man tanks were destroyed or dis- abled in the fighting yesterday and 115 Nazi planes were shot down. Two Island Men Wounded, 0nc Missing The names of three Prince Ed- ward Island soldiers appeared 13st night on the 19th lLst of Canadian vactivci army castmlties Suffered in Sicily. Two wercplisted as wound- ed and one us missing. Mrs. Station. I-Ie Scoiia and ltcjslmcnt. Pte. Gordon James Rvsvlls-Oh- whose next-cf-klzi is his mother. Mrs. Reuben Rogerson, 41 RilSsf-‘ll Street, Summirslde. He ls also ser- ving with the N.S. and P.E.I RE- giment. _ _ m Under the heading mlSfililg “'5 the name, Pic. Lawrence Qnfk. whose wife, Mrs. Hazel Cook refills at Ellersllc. He is serving with an infantry Reguncnt. COUNT ‘EM are 28_varlcties d Q! is serving with a ‘ Prince Edward Island Bio frogs in orth America. ffidden By WILLIAM SMITH WHITE . Associated Prue Staff Writer LONDON, Sept. 'l——tAP)—The Germans strove with nervous per- aistence todav oo break an enigma that stirred the imagination of the whole western world-the question of the exact whereabouts ondde- slgns.of hidden Allied armies of the Mediterranean theatre. The mystery revolved particular- ly around the American 1th Armv which had taken a long rest since ita Sicilian victory. and the Amer- ican ltfi Army, ion: trained in the Mediterranean theatre. Berlin's wheel of anx Ollll ape:- ulatlon had taken almos full turn in the four days elapcing since British and Canadian troops of the 8th army landed on the Ital- ian we. Yesterday the Nazis appeared to favor Southern fiance a: a likely avenue omon all the great. routes open to the llied command for the next a ring against the continent. To ay they spoke m their broadcasts of the "justified" assumption of an Allied landing farther up the coast of Italy. Such a landing would be mode Armies Are Worry to Germans BEER! llnlon of Mayors And Municipalities ls Formed llcrc At a meeting of the City Ummr cil last night presiided over by His Worship, Mayor B. Roy 501ml" a welcome was extended to Mfll-‘Of! and Town Clerks of the Province. and especially to Mr. 10W- ther assistant chief of the Finance Statistics Branch, Ottawa. Mayor Holman, who expre wish that the Mayors of 1 e muni- cipalities would form an organiza- (ion. A rmolutlon confirming m‘? 581° of a $38,500 debenture t0 Dom- inion Securities bv the finance committe of the council was reed- Mr. J.H. Lowther then 590i“? B‘ length on uniform statistics for all munici alities and the advantage to be erived therefrom. Due O lack of co-ordinated _ system 1h the Dominion and difficulty 0i dealing with each municiiiillil)‘ separately he urged all r of the aid that was bein them by Stet‘ b town. to avoid thu, and matters easier for comDBr ' conditions in towns and cities so that each would orofit by the others success cr mistakes. Co. R.C. Chandler, stated that statistics were not the must es- sential factor but ‘rather ltchcre was O letter were ing neglected here, because the totvns o'er: not considered as need- ing aid from Provincial 0r D0111- uuou Governments. Mayor J. W. Lidstone Summer- sicic strongly favou‘ Chflfld- lersldeas. as did Mavnr Holman QRBHQ! oriecl K IIHEJSBHS illfled I Wwgr-gffuation Last Night By John H. Wiggins, Associated Press War Analyst Nevu of continuing Allied gains front; is coupled with increasing throughout the world-wide fight- lndlcatioua that British and Am- erican chieftoins already have the foundation of a post-war plan which they would like to see put into effect when the shaky Axis framework eventually colla es. I‘. would beptsaut of character for sidcrzt Roosevelt, who now are in conference, to the post-war world should take. an be presumed that each could not about what forrn S ' y, it c Prime “inister Churchill and Pre- be without strung ideas afford to be caught unprepared should the Axis blow up tomorrow or a year 0r "l!!! two yearn hence. Even now, word comes from a United States virtually are agreed on at least temporary con high authority that Britain and the tlnuation of their combined chiefs-of-staff after the war. How far-reaching such plans may of Russlfs Premier Stalin, who may partite conference. Mr Roosevelt let council is nearer actuality and that its it be known yesterday on the reaction be depend largely to attend a tri- bc prevailed upon that a three-wav Allied us! objectives will be greater military eta-ordination novr and a closer understanding on present and post war politics. Speaking at that. world." While the Prime Minister was r loan era-operation. it these plans as of The Rome radio cast that Enrico Galeuui. o voticun official, is on the wov a mi-sion to take Italy nut of thc war . of the war against Japan Th: speeding up n broadcasts reported to the office of war outlook f told the Ylpuonese that the war optimism." Harvard University Monday, Mr. the smoothly running machinery of‘ the A star must b: kept operating probably for a good manv years after war—‘ for our own safety as well as for the security of the rest efcrring to continued British-Amor- is likely now that Stalin is as well informed of American-British military manocu out new peace feclcrs and speculation Us" Churchill observed -.-\meric:an chiefs 0f of the vres. to “Washington F“ ls btlllg felt by Tokyo- inrormation, Touvn radio “warrants absolutely no 7 lrrHospital After ' Accident at l Seven persmLs were in the Prime _ chairman, who then moved that B motion be put to the meeting for thc forming of a union of Mun", cipzlitics. ; The resolution that the mayors‘ cf Prince Edward _Is1and form, themselves in a Union of 1e Prince Edward Island Mayors and Municipalities and to work ou: Div-laws to govern thc constitu tzon oi same was moved by hiayor Lidstonc and seconded by hiayor W. D. Johnstone and unanimously accepted. The follow of the Union of P. E hiuhicipalltles. President, hiayor B. Roy Holman Charlottetown. Vicc-prerndeut, Mayor W..1, Lid- sionc. Summcrsidc. ing are the committee . I. Mayors and niclpalities of Prince Edward Isi- and. Hon. Treasurer. Mayor W. Tau- tcn, Albcrton. Sc:'y Treasurer, Mr. J. A. Full- erton, Charlottetown. I-fon. Scc’y, Mayor W. D. John- ston, Montague. Three chairmen of a committee to prepare a constitution were ap~ pointed. hfnyor W. Tanton. Mayor B. Roy Holman, and Mayor Small- tvood, Souvis. An advisory committee of threc. Messrs. J.H. Strong, Martin anal ’.\A.J. McQuald concluded the ap- pointmcnts. Mayor WD. the resolution. Johnstorie moved that the union of Prince Edward Island Mayors and hfuxricipalitics bequest and urgc the provincial government to crc- otc a Govcrtimcnt Department of Municipal Affairs to represent us and our citizens in all matters ai- fecting Mimicipal administration and difficulties. The meeting closed with the of- ferlng of a vote of thanks to Mr. J. 2i. Lmvther and all present wen: invited to lunch by Mayor B. Raj,- Holman. ._______._ SALT 0F THE EARTH The Indians once believed the- ccmurrlption of salt" hastened d h guards Gen. tire- ot the rear of Axis rear fallin back painfully before Sir ernard Montgomeryk less lunges in Calabrio. Seldom in martial history had such an immense and fateful rid dle been posed for a command on the defensive. Parts or all of sev- gn allied armies cast their men- acing shadows, the Nazis knew not where. These were units of the British 8th, 9th, 10th and 1st, the American 5th and 1th armies. and the newly-cool" French aces of Gena. Grout! and De u le. There was a strong and wide- read feeling here that despite c absence of any specific new evidence, Italy would be out of the wnr soon. The Italian News A cncy Btefoni reported that the opal Secretary of State. Cardinal Mag- llone, saw Pope Plus in audience today, followln a long meeting ylestcrday of al the Cardinals in aticnn City. In that first meeting Cardinal Mngllone, sold Stcffonl, was be. lleved to hnve lvrn the Cardinals information "a ut the activities 8 t t trend on. of tho Pope concerning Italy." County Hospital at Summefdiqtf last night, some of them evflfll-S-l injured. following an _ Eccldfillb °n o. dirt road at Port I-Iill 19st CWH: lug. Two cars COHIdEd, uppurentl) One car had o. Massachusetts licence plate while zhc other “'35. registered in this Province. _ In the Massachusetts cor were. Hither; MacDougall. the driver. A B. MacDougall. believed to be N5 father, Keith hIacDJIigQaII, Mrs. Keith MacDougall and Willi-ICC!‘- cid Norman itiacDougflll- In thc other car were . Alvin MacLezn and his brother. Havelock Mncbem, both from the Lot 16 district. The hcmc address of the PETS?!“ in the Massachusetts car was Mt learned immediately. . Of the injured at lens} W0 M9] considered to be in a serious! 0on5 ditlon. Mrs. Keith Moons-ace! a“ Havelock hIacLean. The accident occurred about 7-15 nCar the Church of rrnclend RP Port Hill. The two MncLean men were returning to their hvmfif {mm working at the Mcunt Pleas- ant c \ art. They are schs of Les MacLrn. Both cars were sold to be total wrecks. Extent of the in{urics stiffer-ed b‘; tho persons invo vcd in the oc- CldfiflbcOllld not he learned tonight ns theywsrc stillbeing examined at the hospital. I l I lf-ctcrmincd to Prevent Third War SOUTI-IPORT, England, SepLl 7—-(CP Cablc>——The government is determined to resist every blandishmenc of Germuiy w com- pel Britain by “cringltig and crawling" to devise a post-war policy which would allow a third war to develop, Labor Minister Ernest Bevin said today in an ad- dress to the Trades Union Con- gress. "It is not a question of revenge but of protecting the generation yet unborn." he said. The principle the government has accepted for demobilization is length of service, he said, and i: would not "submit to key men and others pulling wires one way or another, Industry will have to adopt itself to such a plan." Referrin to Britain er, the la r minister number employed in fighting, on the ground and in building and equipping aircraft "isn't many shor of our army in the last war." tThe strength of army, not including overseas di- vlsionl, at the Armistice in 1918 was approximately 4,000,000.) THEY'VE DONE A SWELL JOB! Thanks to Allied cucoeae on land, lea and in the air and also to our ahlpbuilclem and the men of ch, Merchant. Marina, ‘SALADA’ Tea-lovers‘ are able to enjoy a third more of their favourite beverage. Now you can use two 2 oa. toe. coupon: every three weeks ioatead of every four. '. Board cf . Steel Workers , announced today. Port Hill Steel Case to Bc llcard Today O'1'I‘A\VA, Sept. ‘l-ACPI-Hear- ing by the National War Labor an application by United of America 101.0.- for wage adlustmencs nc the Do- .minion Steel and Coal Co. plant. NS, and the Algomrt at Sydney. , ‘Ste. Home. Steel Corp. at Sault Ono. will be held tomorrow, The Algcma case is scheduled for hearing in the morning and the Sydney case in the afternoon. Will Refuse Vote 0f Confidence Says Caldwell CALGARY, Sept. 'l—<CPl—The (Io-Operative Commonwealth Fed- eration will refuse w give the Do- minion Government a fidence if the government should ask for it. .\.l.J. Coldwell, Momentary leader of the declared asc night. Speaking . at a tiblic meeting herc, Mr. Coldtvel said "we do not propose to be tricked into giv- in u government which th a vote ‘of ts by elections last mon confidence to cnrrv on with labor. financial. industrial and ag- .A riculttira‘. policies. "We will support the sending of reinforcements and supplies over- seas but, we demand that support shall not include confidence in the government," he added. Mr. Caldwell dcnlared that ro- lnforcemcnts of the army must be considered apart from confid- ence in the Liberal administration and in relation to the whole war policy. Mr. Ooldwell told of the “acute shortage" of certain kinds of inb- or, industry and manpower short- age "because this government had no intelligent plan for conduct of the war." He declared his party was decried and viewed with sus- plclon when it had suggested eco- nomic aid in the beginning. Passengers In Miraculous Escape in Wreck CANASTOTA, N.Y., Sept. ‘l-JAP) —'I‘hree crewmen died today as the Limited, streamlined owed CYflZIlY over four tracks when its locomotive boiler blew up us the train hurtled along o! BO-miles an hour. A rail- road official termed the escape of I13 passengers "miraculous." Three men in the nah were killed and seven others injured, none be- lieved seriously", when the Blist- bound Chicago-New York Queen 0f the rails left the tracks at 4:34 a. m. EDT. two miles east of here and 30 milca east of Byroousc. it was l vote of con“, lost all l cheap R ° II IISSIBII Death Toll tln Train Wreck Reaches 73 PHIHJIKUELPTIIA. Sept. ‘l-(AP) - Nine more bodies were discov- ered in ch; trutglecl, blood - spla - tercd w-rc age of the Pent‘ Vania railroads Limitcd early tzmght. zuising to ‘l3 the ‘.011 of known dead, in the worst United States ral‘. disaster since 1918. A total o.’ 123 were in hospitals arid runny .'. nth. .It’E\11Wf1ll0 Join‘. F Scars. Dis- trict Fedora‘. Bt eou of Investig- ation ngen- uxxchurgrz announ- ced that he h. mkcn possess- ion. '. or. and tests. of a burned out axle lcttrna‘. that trcnzsfotm-t-d the Washington to New York ex ss into a IIIBSS cf tattered meta, as it headed into a curve lest night. ‘I'm- F. B. I. Washington Office announced earlier today that sab- ctazc had been ruled our as a pes- aiblc ca z oad company snid to- fhat the last bodrs had been removed from the wreckage. "Fne task of identifying dead proceed- ed tonight in the c'.tv morgue. Many bodies were so badlv smashed ‘hat identification could be estnbiished only by rings or nicer-rd rcmxzrmts o‘ chthing. Qoarate investigations into the ,t‘."tll5t= cf the wreck were started b3‘ "he Irterstate Commerce Ccmmis- vblic Utility Commiss- r‘s 'I‘ht= nizht Y‘. . the Pl Citv Police urd the Cororte <‘ train since the uwck d 0-. , 1b,- fw“: ‘inc rizhf of at t1 cfvlork th morning, 1'.‘ ...' .s nitcr the crarkuo. Among ‘hos-r- who escaped unin- lurrd in the "lie-up wero Dr. Lin ' “ (‘hlite-"n author: Rm- wrcsiclant of ‘he rd newspapers. . .. ' . fv'c' C. T ~ 10!‘, wife of the Prc~ld~mUS 599C131 cxtvflv to thc Vatican, and Ice Tbacv. promotion manager of the New York Mirror. r___._.__ News Briefs WASHINGTON, Sept. '1 '- IAI’) -—The airplane won this summer's Allied battle against. submarines. and us a result German U-boats apparently are being equipped With more anti-aircraft weapons prelim- inary to a new challenge for control of the Atlantic sea- lanes. (YPTAWA, so t. '1 - (CPi-Jfhe total of official y announced Can- adlan (Activet Army casualties in Sicily reached 1,898 tonight with the issuance of what Defence De- nartment. sources said was expec- i-ed cc be the last compiled list of casualties from that campaign. 7- (CP , OTTAWA, Sept. ) -—Canoda's steel this year will be double the 1939 production, Munitions Depart- } ment. officials said today, but ', they added a warning that steel still is in short supply and cannot be released r l non - essential purposes. LONDON. Sept. 7 - lA.P\- ‘R. . P‘. and American bombers smashed r-:.:lu'i\_\'s and arrficlcis of kccupiorl Frmzrp and Ilrlgliuzr to- minv fcFowing a heavy night aff- lrlck bv the R. A. F‘. and R. C. A. F. against Munich - - brithplnce of the Nazi pony and railroad funnel to the Brenner Pass. WASHINGTON’, Sept. '1—(AP\— State Secretary Cordell Hull has turned down in brusque language an Argentine bid for United States lend-lease aid, declaring that Ar- gentina, in the opinion of the United States, "has indicated clearly that the Argentine armed forces will not under present con- ditions be used in a manner de- signed to forward the security of the new world." The refusal was contained in an exchange of letters with foreign minister Segundo Storni of the South American Republic, made public tonight at the state depart- ment. Swrni, in the letter opening the exchange, assurcd the secretary‘ of state that Argentine sentiment 1S “firmly opposed to totalitarian rc- gimes" and that "Axis countries have nothing to hope lcr from our government. The Argentine foreign minister. writing tinder the date of Aug 5. said his comments had the full approval of President Ramlrcs. He wrote that ho though‘, L‘. do- sirable to make direct contact with "your friendly flt)\'91‘SlI£‘IIt' coincident with thc trip of ‘U Argentine Lend-Lease Request Tamed Down M Via fifliihlfl‘. Summer Cffensive Control at Least 6O Miles ', Of Shclrleline Congressional ‘ " By EDWARD KENNEDY i Associated Press War Correspondent l ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. NORTH AFRICA “we reported 1185f Sept, 7-—(AP)—The Anglo-Canadian 8th Army extended its invasion bridgehead. in. Italy. to. a .width of at least 60 miles today with the capture of Palm] in a 10-miIe advance. while great fleets of Allied bombers struck by day and night at the ,Naples area in a concerted effort to wither the enemy‘s war effort in southern ltaly, ~ Deepening their inland thrust on the Calabri- an Peninsula, the British and Canadian troops pushed another 10 miles in the Santo Stefano wedge to Selle Dellantiova- The village is 15 miles due east of Scilla on the Asprolnonte mountain , spine of the peninsula. Palmi, fall of which the Allied command an gnounced today, is 10 miles northeast of Bagnara Headquarters reports indicated quite small. Allied fighters bombers which constantlv p almost complete absence of sub- stantial enemy troop movements. Relnforcements poured across the Messizu Straits, disclosed that Allied tanks and artillery continental Italy and that supp bases were being established on zhe mainlancL Softening Up? The air blows at Naples and its environs were so heavy and per- sistent they appeared w be a soft- emng-up operation. Possibly :1 prelude to an amphibious opera- tion. Naples is 195 airline miles north of Vesslna. Its airfields. Cana ado’: fifth Victory Loan camgxaign ‘opens Oct. 18 with a min urn leash objective of $l,200.000.000—a- ,bout $100 for each man, woman and ‘child 1:". the Dominion and highest goal ever set for any vic- tory loan. The announcement was mode to- mm, Finance Minister 1151M‘, =v1¢ day by who sold that in ad sales thc-re will be some subscrip- tions of Dominion of Caziadn Bonds called for payment Oct. l5. 51200000000 objective with an objective of $1,100,000 00 for last springs Fourth VIC“. loan which brought cosh subscri; Zions of 51.308.985.500. Mr. Ilslcjv said v that he is clanfzcle 12$ sfntcuxcvit "well tvithiu zhc , Canadian people to achieve this g0 . . "Although recent war news has been extremely favorable, I am sure that Canadians knoy: that a Ambassador Norman Armour to the United States. and to "set confidentially" the S1lllf\'l0l\ of the new Argentine govermncut "es- tablished as the rcstilt of the mil- itury mcvctncut, of June l." Storni said ihc "t t "itiuu" of the Argentine . of the United N». more rapid nnd sidcut Roosevelt ‘sn. gesture of genuine fricndship » word our pepole" such us provid- ing tirgotitiy herded uirphmcs. spare parts, armaments and ma- chinery. Such a gcsttirc. ho said would help "rs-store Argentina u: the position of equilibrium in which it is entitled with respect to other South American nations" Replying on Aug. 30 Hull tvrotc that "it is with regrci that my gov- ernment. mid thc itcoplc of the Ilnltcd States have born forcczi to thc conclusion that thr tmclnubt- i ed sentiments of the Argentine pow lple have not been implemented ‘w i‘ thc action chllcrl fur by thc commv- mcnts freely entered into by their ‘guvernnxent ln common with thc wwvernments of the other 20 Am- lcrlcan Republlcsxf. the enemy force in Calabrla wasg and t atr - led the combat area reported an- Headquarters I HOW WGTQ ODPTIIIIIIQ ill‘ is"! ' Thiruv-ttvo '_(0ontinued on Page 6, col‘? the chase of Canada's The tible POYIIDMI“ issue are 0 l forth ‘ along a tortuous road skirting precipices which run down almost to the sea. 45 Men Die In Hotel Fire HOUSTON, Tezc. Sept. 7—(A.P)- Fire sweeping a small, ancient hotel trapped and burned to deazh ~15 scrcamin . terrzfied men today. Forty-t me of them xiever got ou; of the threo-storet; Gui.‘ Hotel m midtown Houston. They died fighiingalto get down cl the one escape not ocked off by the flames. '0 (ii in hospitals ‘ Jared, several probably fatally, 51k . released after hospital treatment. In was Houston's most deadly fire and the costliest disaster in Texan since the New London school- house explosion which k 294 lit 1 i8, 1937. dons Fifth Victory Loan Opens Oct. I8 orrswa, Sept. 1- win-can- “m, m; coetlv eta-fizzle i: ahead. Our f hting forces are at full grips th the enemy and I am con. ident that Canadians at home will lend their full support hv the pur- Plfzh Victory Fonds e Mr: Haley's statement did My so. it was learned the Fifth Loan Whi tory Loan campaign will last dirion to cash l three weeks-And 53mg time as previous ‘victory Thebonds which will be conver- into the Fifth Victorv loan Dummioxi of Canada four- ond five-per-cent- bonds . l5. 1915. but called for Oct. 15 this year. MANY A fcLtowt Docsw-r car Manatee Because ‘the (onus ~~ 5 FATHER can't’ Arizona t c Q High tide {his etching at 5.14 and tomorrow morning nt 5.31. Sun sets this Melting at 7.95 and rises tonrorrow‘ at 6.30. Full moon Mondav sepf. l3. 11.40 pm. Sumrncrsldc tide 1B minutes later than Charlutictctvit. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNIIAU Charlottetown - Summcrslde — onrton l Leave Charlottetown 1.50 l, m 12.30 p. m. 4.30 p. m. l . '. (‘harlrvtetnwn 1.10 p, rn -5.~i5 p~ m. 7.05 p. m. —N. S, FERRY SERVICE INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands - 1.00 a, m, and l1 mm. and 3 p. m. Leaves Caribou — 9.00 a. In. and 1 p.m. and l p.u\.