_~ MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN wafiualllamtwaflaaae, "fluflaardlllslblllellfll CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, AUGUST 20. 1943 MAXI M6 01A MERE MAN we must lake decisions and loll‘! to Ill!‘- _ “Oxhglucation is but commenced Covers PrinoelEdwardj Island Like the Dew 6 PAGES Subscription Delivered, 66.00 lfin- "-09-, other Plnvinru I U-IJ, 85.00. T0 DESTROY ENEMY BY F IRE, SWORD Little New Forces Mediterranean Front Eisenhower Is Congratulated On Successful Campaign In Sicily. i p, lalmsa o next blow will come we i i associated Press War Canaan the walls of Hitler's laulbpegaflzlll- pcn tress. (The United Nations Radio at if AIVIEEB. Algiers told the people of occupied m conquest of Sicily have Joined ulna heavy m! panes in the swelling bombard- ment of the Italian mainland, it en disclosed today. from inndon Gen. Dwight D. lgnhower received m from the King, from Quebec n meme s messge from Presid- scosoveit congratulating him on he successful conclusion 0f leiiim campaign "in accordance 11th the timing and planning of lie Allies." _ Ills majesty asked that the All- y! commander - in Chief convey "to my Brltim and Cafnadian mop; special assurance o my we in their share of this vic- New Forces Massed In forces were massed at strat- lluropei’ congrstulat- i Doubt Massed On or the second successive night to perfect their pre-invaslon preparations and that the time of action might be near.) Civilians emerged from eaves and tunnels in the huls about Mes- olna where many had lived duflng the Allied bombing that was to free them from Gennan dominat- on. Aerial “wrecking crews" chased beaten Axis forces across southern Italy, bombing and machine - gun- 111118 trains, truck convoys. small ships and every other type oi tran- sport in which German and Ital- ian survivors oi the battle of Sic- ily were extending their getaway. Arflllery Duel British and American field bal- tenies maintained their duel with enemv coastal guns on the extreme toe of Italy. The Axis 15-inch guns were hurling 2.400 pound shells ac- ross Messina strait. ‘The lighter but qie points all along the Allies‘ 2.- more rapidly loaded Allied guns M mile Mediterranean line. smashed beck. There ls little doubt that the "Montreal Sliipbuilders Aim At Kaiser Record , _. MONTREAL, Aug. 19-40?)- lieliaugiiion To load Invasion ‘i LONDON All. ll - IUP ab??? .G.A. Cook. d Iver‘; an ard correlpon ent . auebec. cabled today that III-- I. A.G.L McNaughton, oom- Illnder oi the Canadian arm! Ii Britain is likely to be the lln to command the invasion In and an announce- Iitnt to his effoct "is DPWIMQ erence" betweenePrisne ier Churchill, and President ve lrief Water Famine In Halifax HALIFAX. Au . l9 — (CF) — ‘thousands of llaligonisns were de- lfllod oi water wda and res- taurants and hotel d ing room! 1m forced to close down H the Milt oi a serious break in a water mlsiicctlng large sections 0i City watering trucks-long unused —Isre brou ht info use to serve l! nee ing water most. Some lndlltries were seriously hampered. (his large hotel employed a, garden N“ to obtain water i neclion not affected by the break Mn. Restaurants hungout signs “filil-"Oaood-no waiter." ed ws r a we; reps 1m this uneiiiogri. h Tllllrllsgl gonarfiany unrr u ‘h. no un o ‘hlrkey dnvlo-flerrltg. wlllh an average value 56mm: rvriirs I VII!!!" Canoe Cove Fr . s- -n. i Jinx»; Mount Stewart Satur- - s-so-u. "Place in sums rnu Monday ‘Wilt 33. aid of, was work. O-IO-li film-till luvs m llilcitvnao “l- 00°60 River. l-li-iii ‘mfv, Iaieeba l-fgllnan’: sn- ‘NWI Institute. y e. u _ , ““'-n lie-union n Illmar bu? "Pm" “““""a."i’.‘.& ‘ “"4111: meaflld la ao-sl. , -_ ma‘ allllm Festival and Dance, - Wednesday, A ust “‘- 1,‘ min: am fine night?»- A 511w Workmen at the United Shipyards aimed their sights tonight at the shipbuilding records oi Henry Kai- ser, United States builder. after breaking all Canadian marks by sending three l0,000-ton ivelghters down the ways within four hours and placing another in the water in the record time oi 39 days. The previous 47-day keei-to-keei laun- chlrm record was held by a Van- couver shipyard. An it was a. Vancouver man, H. R. McMillan. director of wartime merchant shipping who watched hometown record tossed to the four winds from a shipyard which a few months ago was a marshy swamp. The three ships were christened Fort Moose, Fort Cov- lngton and Fort Romaine. Not content with,thelr achieve- ment, ‘John Rennie, shipyard man- ager said his firm was out to beat another Pacific Coast mark“... that oi placing the ship in com- mission in about 50 days. The pre- sent record, also held in Vancou- ver. is B9 days- Efforts. he said. were also un- derway to turn out the most eco- nomical ship ever produced in Ca- nada which would be the most economical in North America as ships could be built much cheaper here. "We don't intend to do this by cheap labor," he said. "Far from it. Our hope is that our objective can be reached by Just a little more aid from our employees. It can be done." NFLD- GIRLS JOIN ARMY LONDON. Ont. Aug. I9—(CP)— About 50 Newfoundland girls have arrived at No. 8 C.W.A.C. Basic Training Centre, Kitchener. for training that will fit them for duties across Canada and abroad. it was announced at District Mll- itary Headquarters today. Two hundred more recruits from New-_ foundland are scheduled to join them in Kitchener in the near fu- ture. Most of the recruits are from St. John's. The majority oi them were stenographers in civilian llfc but there arc a number of store DEERE or Is Wounded Private r Freetown, P. E. L, now officially reported wounded in action, July Spencer Clow of I943. Further unfo- atlon is lo be forwarded from Ottawa. 25 Killed In Blast KEARNY, N.J., Aug. 19-" (APJ-At least Z5 persona were reported killed today m an cX- plosion that wrecked a mm" building of the UWIBIIIQQIW‘ Nalrn, Inc, Plant here. 1M blast was followed by ll"- lleadquarters of the lludson County Police said the bulinml cnllgpsgd willie between 25 an“ 30 persons were svorklnz "5""- None had been brought out l- live. the police said. The blast ivas felt through- out Newark Metropolitan fir" and many windows were 5h"- tered in homes suurroundinir ‘he sprawling plant. Firemen from Newark and Kearny fought the blaze P! rescue workers dug throuflli "l", min; searching for U" v c ms. Federal bureau of investigat- ion agents immediately Ho?“ off all the streets aurronndlnr the area and barred nowimln a s eetators. . nghepcnngoleum-Nalm Com- pany is one of the world's bli- gest producers of Llllillfllm and had been worklns "n W" orders. _L. Canadians Look Beyond llieppe SOMEWHERE LN ENGLAND. Aug. 19- so? CABLE) - The first anniversary of tho bloody ‘WWW nalssance in force" against DiePPe was marked quietly today In Ca"- adian army camps in England. The Canadians were looking far beWnd Dlepw. Hundreds of men who 1008M °n the beaches at Dieppc one your s80 today are in North Africa as re- inforcements for the Canadian 1st dlvlsion. Oi the 5,000 who crossgd lo the French post, 633 were woun - ed and 1'70 killed. More than ~50!) Dieppe men are mlssmg or 01'1- rs. will? is clear now that Dieppe was not a dress rehearsal for invasion oi Europe-It was, however, an 1n- vasion rehearsai. The lessons it taught so dearly have Paid 01f! in the brilliantly-executed lnvus ens of North Africa nnd Sicily that fo - lowed. ' ..Preparing for the real thing while the Allied hiilh 9011mm“ meets on Canadian soil under Prime Minister Churchill and Pfe- sident Roosevelt to determine the next step. the Canadians did little talking‘ about Dieppe today. Plans ecn mndc to mark the an- niversary this week-end with pray- clerks and school teachers as well. Red Troops Confin-ize Kharkov Cains At IONDON. Allg. lb-JAPl-Rus- sian troops sealing off Kharkov for on gained from three to Ivan miles ay or; three sides of ll g .400 Germans hurled alainst t em in vain coun- ts . Moscow announced to- w‘ war work. l-Io-flfl-il- inst vriiecira cthan "s'5'°‘i°uul'ii<'='iiii“°°i9 “Ion A unmwn 1 ma len to the onrah lulu“. .. d I fillers pre- arm on the west, norinwes man “m, lama "M!" l" and sou east aides of the oil'- ' won’ mull‘ fills/‘“'“ uliifiiliiifiiii‘. ‘IP33 1:53.35; I'll-Wit nous-ted on tbs adss of the ‘Uk- er and church arades. I raine stronghold in the fourth great battle for the prise railway t . ‘llhe bulletin, recorded by the Soviet Monitor, raid that more than 30 villages had been seized in the parallel drive impcrllllng the Cler- ‘ lantlc by air to go nto seclusion in the conference headquarters, Tonlgnt QRRRRI dhmifilifilifilé New Allied Bl War Situation Last Night Zia-n] Bl! Klrke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst QUEBEC, Aug. 18-—Aslde from President Roosevelt's heartfelt salute to the valor, skill and teamwork of the Allied forces poised In conquered Sicily fur another thrust against Europe, little was to be gleaned of’ the doings of the Quebec war council tonifht beyond the fact that ii; cun- cluslons are almost ready for Churchl i-Roosevelt ratification, o ‘- ’ ’ toward ' “ up the ‘“' l threads of the problem tomorrow, at least so flr as they are 08800118! now to weaving the new military victory pattern bein shaped. It was for this urpose Foreign Secretary Eden w ipped ovcr the At- Edi-ns American counterpart, State Secretary Cordell Hull, was en roll" from Washington. That will aomplcie so far as known the personnel ul‘ the war strategy board mapping new and aggressive blows against the Axis in both Europe and Asia-to seize the opportunity offered by fav- orable developments in all war theatres since it last met in Washington threc months ago. In his message of congratulation to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. Ml‘- Rooscvelt touche on a factor of utmost importance to the Quebec 51m- ieKY planners. That is the teamwork achieved by British, Canadian, American and French foRes-under a single command sci-up. Iiihulevcr is being Allied-planned here for the near future in (he Asiniic. Mediterranean, European or any other ssiblc wur theatre will certainly follow the organizational pattern the highly successful French African and Sicilian campaigns. That makes the selection cf cornmamlcrs-in-chlef for each other theatre, to match Gen. Eisenhower's over-all command, an important probable item on the Quebec agenda- Iinih in his case and in that of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. the dir- ectives placing them in command of co-ordlnated grouml-sea-air oper- EYIQiEBWiEa ows At Axis Soo Liberals Pick Candidates In First Prince Mr. J.A. Bernard of Tignlsh was nominated at a convention at Tig- Ill-sh 1w nlzht m contest the first district of Prince for the Liberal Party at the next provincial election while Fred Ramsay of Montrose was nominated as councillor. Mr. Aeneas Gallant, who rc- presents the district at present as flSSCIIlbiysruaIl 10st out when a ballot‘ was taken. Two other nurnes were suggested for ussemblyman and three in addition to Mr. Ramsay for councillor. Mr. lam McKendrlck. pre- sident of the West Prince Liberal Association presided. Hon. George 1-1. Barbour, Min- ister of Public Works and High- ways was guest speaker. The newly nominated candidates also spoke! brief I Ninety-five delegates were prc-, sent from 19 polls, it was reported. ntluns sprang from the Anglo-American combined chlefs-of-staff group which ls the corc of the Quebec conference. Announcement of who is to undertake in other theatres the command that Gen. Eisenhower has sci brilliantly carried through in Africa and Sicily is likely to be one of m! few factual disclosures as is) Quebec decisions by Messrs. Churchill and’ Roosevelt when they are ready to talk. It is calculated to reveal detailed , plans of attack. The Allied answer in Russian criticism of lack oi an Allied Wtsiorh i attack to match the red drive ma be rur hcomln here, or develn from Britain even before the Quebec d rectives are completed and ratlf ed. In effect, hi. least, Quebec forms a. distant third angle to the Allied attack menace pointed at continental Europe from Sicily and Brit n. . Reports Heard Nazi Cov’t Leaves Berlin Polish Arm Awaits Ball LONDON. Aug. i0—iCP)—P°l8hd. despite military losses of nearly 1.- 000.000 men since the war bcgfln. revealed itself as a wp-rsnkins fighting power with announcement here that another great army a- waits the call to arms. In the first comprehensive nc- count of formation of tile form. the Polish ministry of national defence By LEWIS HAWKINS Associated Press Stuff Writer LONDON, Aug. l9—(AP)»-An unconfirmed. roundabout report said today that “the whole G81‘- man government has left Berlin," and the Nazis were also said to be rushing troops from their Atlantic wail to defend bases in northern Iiaiv. The transfer oi the German gov- ernment from Berlin was reported in a Berna, Switzerland, dispatch, quoting Hitler's Voelklscher Beo- bochter, broadcast by the United Nations radio at Algiers today. Open City Moves in London revealed that 80.000 bal- Micidle East smaller force of thousands in Bri- tain. Armed with the latest wen- pons. the men have been trained to perfection in mechanized and motorized warfare. Some of them received preliminary tralnins In C .d . ‘Illtilmglundcr-in-chief 0f th Polish eastern army-its 01116191 title-is LL-Gcn. Wadvslflw An- ders, ihrice-wouildcd hero 51 who distinguished himself in the battle of Poland. For the most oft the men he leads were in the t ick of the bloody warfare in Poland. The Polish forces also include 4,- 000 Polish girls known as 905ml!!- Fuel Problem is Discussed SAINT JOHN, up. Aus- 19- (CP)—AILCI‘ conferring with a del- e ation of lccai fuel dealers, the cty council decldud today t0 59ml telegrams w mveral Ottawa oi- ficinis, requesting that they do eve lug in their power to make oval able here the large number of cool handlers re uired to assure de- liveries oi coal efore the Rrrlvfll of cold weather. Copies of ihc tele rum will 80 i0 Hon. Humphrey Mi hell, Minister oi Labor, Allan M. Mitchell, dir- ector of the unmnpioylncnt in- surance commission, Arthur Mac- Nnmara, director oi National Sel- K.C., re ional superintendent f0 the Marlt insurance commission. ‘Ilhe telegrams will ask thBt 131G need here for 81 more men for C081 handling b2 lven priority over all other industr es. AIBIERS, Au . i'l—(AP)-Gen. Charles de Gau e announced to- day that 430 French officers ofjlze army, nav and air force, in 40 genera s. had been relieved of active command on the Bflllmdl QLI-llgil‘ age. bastion oi Bryansk farther oscow hes said Russians were grinding down scores of German tanks and thousands of rfiserve lnfantrymen thrown into that the red army was rolling a- head with reaier momentum, and had receive an order "tottpm the ~'z/.~.<i1 ' German defeat into a rou There was no a-mpliflcation oi the report. Such a move might be intended to save records and or- chives from bombing or, less like- ly, might be a first step toward seeking "open city" status for Ber- lin Recent neutral reports said some German governmental offices were being moyed to Vienna, or possib- ly Lin: or BTfiSlBll. Removal of the ulhoie governmental force would be a stupendous transfer, for it is estimated that 1.000.000 of Ber- lin's 4,300,000 people are connect- .cd with civil or military govern- ment. Berna reports said a substantial part oi the government, including many sections of the Foreign Of- fice, High Command. War, Navy and Home Affairs, had been trans- ferred to Vienna since Aug. 1. A German Legaiion prcssbullel- in issued in Borne toclav said Ber- lin had no illusions about the bombing fate in store for tile cup- ofir Latest . I I Bhurchllilsm NEW YORK. Auil- 19 —— (AP) ~- Eimer Peterson, NBC reporter in lsondon, said in a broadcast io- nlght that Greni Britain is chuck- ectlvc Service, and to R-P. 1151MB)’; have been asked, Just before es o; me ungmploymenn depnritlure for Quebec:— "W i Join the Host of Home Bakers who -' HEJA §ASA M / s: L? u n ac ad M4661], g ling over this iatrsi Churchiliism: The Prime Minister was said “tic; you offer pence terms to Gemlanyf". "Heavens, no!" he was quoted as replying. "If I did, the Germans would accept immediately." People of Britain are anxiously waiting for blg stocks of Algerian wine to he placed om the market. Thousands of 132 have been brought rica in ballast. aiion drums rom North Af- Kinross Soldier flies Overseas PW- $811193‘ Ewen MacLeod. son of Mrs. A.J. MacLeod of KinrOss, P-E-Iw has died Overseas, his mother has been informed. l-le was SBTVIIIK with the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps and was ser- ving at No. 1 Canadian Hospital In England when last heard from. iI-Ils name appeared yesterday on the 341st casually list of the Way for the Canadian Active Army, 1s- sued at Ottawa.) He had been overseas since Oct- ober, 1942, He was 41 years old. His mother did not know that her son was lii. It was believed here that he died from a heart con- dllililll. Bllhmigh dew-lid were not known. He is survived by three brothers and three sisters. The brothers are: Edison on the home farm at Kim-ass; Leavctt in Qu cy. Mass: and Russell in Plttsfleid, Muss, The sisters are: Nursing sister Kathleen Maclleod. with No. 6 Gil-Wally Clearing Station, Over- seas: Mrs. Wilfred Fumess, Ver- X1011; and Mrs. Ernest MacLeod, Org-veil)! m . ro- er John Cameron Mac- Iflod. was killed during the first. great war. His father died 20 years ago. Rev. Ewan MacDonald. whose wife was the late Lucy Maud Montgomery, of ‘Toronto, ls an un- cle. a brother oi his mother who before her marriage was Miss Christie MacDonald. Strike Looms In Stellarton STELLARTON, N.S., iCPl-Two Steliartorl doctors, whose absence from town while attending a Reserve Army camp precipitated the threat of a coal strike here, had not returned home tonight as the deadline set by the miners approached. Because they claimed there now remained only one doctor for the 7,000 persons here, the lllillPTS vut- ed last night to strike tomorrow morning unless ihe two returned home in the meantime. They left enriy this week for a two-weeks‘ camp in Charlottetown. The proposed strike would af- fect 1.200 men employed at the MacGregor. Albion. Acadia No. and the Allan shaft of the Acadia Coal Company. U. S. BAUXITE IMPORTS The United States gels 93 cent of its bauxite imports British and Dutch Guiana. Aug- l9- .1 per from Take Over Aerial Drive HIDDEN Plans Being Prepared At Quebec Now AlliedFig/iting Services Will Give’ Enemy News From Conference. _ _ QUEBEC. Aug. 12-(CP)—The military plans being prepared at the Quebec conference are de- signed “to bomb, burn, .and. ruthlessly. destroy, every way available to us, the people responsible for this war,” Brendan Bracken, British Minister of Information, said here today. A The plans, now being drafted in the inner re- cesses of the Chateau Frontenac and the Citadel, yvllliibe disclosed to the enemy only on the battle- ie . “The time will come,” Mr. Bracken said, “when Hitler, Tojo and their tribes of gangsters will get the news of what is being done in Quebec-but they will get it from Admirals and Generals and Air Marshals and their fighting forces!’ One thing the minister made abundantly clear, “when we have rounded up Hitler, the whole might of the British Empire will be given over to beating the Japanese who are a ruthless and sav- age people." iiediumBombers Mr. Bracken met the press to- day, 24 hours aitrr his arrival from Britain with Anthony Eden, Brit- ish Foreign Secretary. He was vague on the reason ior his flying journey to Quebec, but, on the subject of the war as a whole, he was vuiubig but restrained. "It is going well," he said, “but it will be long indeed and hard” The Information Minister is full Ln face, fairly tall with a mop of graying red hair, He wears steel- rimmed glasses and, like his old friend Prime Minister Churchill, llns a slight lisp. He made it plain that he came LONDON, Aug. l9—(CP)—R. A- F. and American medium bombers took over the aerial offensive against Nazi-held Europe K005i! with a da light battering of Ger- man airfie ds at Polx and Amlens- Glissy in France. The Americans swept over Poix and Amiens-Glissy and the RAF. planes followed up the Poix raid with a second pounding of the Axis airfields there. RAF. fighters joined in sweeps over northern France which kept the skies over the Dover Strait dotted with a shuttle relay from early morning to evening. The medium bombers downed one German fighter against no losses. Fighters added six more German planes downed-and lost six. A joint British-American com- munique said bombing results were good, It added that R..A.F., Domin- ion and Allied Spitfires escorted the bombers. Local Soldier ls Wounded Gnr. Neil Wilfred MacDonald, whose mother, Mrs. Louise Mac- Donald, lives at ‘l8 Gerald Street. Charlottetown is reported i0 have been wounded during the recent fighting in Sicily. He is serving with the Royal Canadian Artillery’. Gnr. MacDonaidls name appear- ed on the third official list of ca - ualtles from the fighting in Slci issued at Ottawa. Hull Expected At Conference Today Will Complete Powerful Array Of Experts. QUEBEC. Aug. l9—iCPi —'i‘hc| expected arrival here tomorrow of. Cordell l-luli, United Slates Serra-J tary of Siaic, will complete the‘ powerful array of exports ur- rounding Prime Minister Church—| ill and Presidon‘. Roosevelt to aid| them in reaching decisions on staggering war and post-war prob- lems at their sixth war conference. Some of their decisions may a1- rendv have been made and others are expected to be conmleied in the next two or lilree days. What they are. in relation i0 the war, may not be known until lift-y are translated into action by tho combined British and American forces, the forces o rating under their direction, and y the Russian and Chinese forces strengthened and silppnrted by the decisions reached here. On the political and economic, side there may br sptcific announ- cements of policy in some degree, particularly in roP-tion to peace aims and agreement on tho Allied plnn of civil government in coun- irlcs liberated or conquered. Probable Decisions In brief the decisions are expect- ed to cover:- 1. Plans for an intensification of nltncks on land. on sen and‘in the air in nu effort to hasten riowzv- fall of the Axis powers and libera- iion of Axis-conquered countries. ________~ _.. (Continued on PIN b, cm 0 to Quebec as a guest, not to usurp the functions the Canadian, American and British Informa- tion officers attached to the con- ferencc. As an old newspaperman, he ad- mitted that news of the confer- ence “is scarccr than water in the Sahara" and expressed sympathy with the men and women assigned to cover it for the press of the world. But, because of the portcnt- ous decisions being made, that was the way it had to be. EARLY COPPER MARKET Tihe Roman supply of copper In’ chiefly drawn from the island o Cyprus. ’ w 41in SUCHER 1S Nof . , ALwaY on - l ‘ins Business i zap or {as i - Flsiun ~ i High tide this rlfiernoon at 3.10 and tomorrow morning at 3.36. Sun sets this evening at 8 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.08. Last quarter moon Aug, 22, 12.04 am. Summerside tide 18 minutes latcr than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY I-‘rom Borden - Leave 5.40 s.rn. L45 p.m. and 4.55 p.m. Leave Cape Tormentine ll a. In. 3.25 p. m. and 8.80 p. m. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAY! Charlottetown - Summerside - oncion Leave Charlottetown 7.50 a. In- I230 . m. 4.30 m. Arr ve (‘imrln teinwn 1.10 p. m. 5.45 p. m. 7.05 p. m. B E, L-N. S. FERRY SERVICE DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands - 7.00 I. m. and 11 a.m. and .'i p. m. Leaves Caribou - 9.00 a. m. and 1 pun. and I pm. a pnnausnsnn