MAXIMS OIL. MERE MAN e—t@-n—a of four nail- ‘ lauded l!" s DQOOOG eavy ‘ma; current the wt”; 1| Freedom and the most “ma; are Justice. Mercy. M-m-gluorrllll. ‘I've dune, oss Munro Describes anadzans In Action ‘Men From Dominion Show Great Dash In Heavy Fighting. N. m” i.:::**s'"'....':.°" * d spearhead had “use: Enna i; the ....‘.'.'i'°.il Sicily. despIte stif vere Hail LA PRKBII. mifigmzs- (or) -it‘1cinr .. mqqsph communications y 4.. smraotrtlil La Prairie . .. n; s . flail damage reaching 100 . cent was reported in l nar- area. strelching from Mgtong MIL,‘ to. Mai-- IIIII 0 II u‘. ‘ ti?‘ of Portage La ‘Yralrie estimated at 80 per cent. iwliid caused eonsiderala, llam- . at Macdonald. -. h? ‘.. the roof of l NM" . was lifted and placed on house 10o feetlulalya": -. over l ' at the Mlcdonald sir- wae also torn lwly. Lsrge trees were uprooted It . lar Bluff and Gladstone. i .1 of stock was re rted In llie Ochre River dist! t. Three miles west of Glad- sllazls Prepare n Defence Line lonpou. July so - (c?) — slaw Benaczyk. Minister of Affairs of the Polish Govern. i. said today he had informat- thst the Gennans were re- defengoel lanes in mLu ‘it; ~ s n an . i-oug i» behind their present line in 1d his underground infor- ‘-- re orfed that all road. rail illlii one communication had ' libbended between Lubl ~ - and the rest of Poland that mass murders were bein tied by the Germans to ri area of its Polish population. l! estimated in the entire war liar l that 1.000.000 Polish Jews i 1400.000 other Poles were -~ by the Germans. ~ lu he event the fell of "lint breaks down the whole i" Slsicm. Poland mayuhave to ' "11 nrms very n. Ban- w told n press conference. "We Prepared." ‘l Tins av 1W5 ‘iiilluieer BritIsh housewives in "I Years of war made more than p ions of 1am, nine izvrnrs —ll— “runes-aides may. 1 n‘ -~ tildes-infir- River Thurs- - i-s-l-ai. Dance at French River i-lall. ‘ 147-11 “Dance in Seven Mlle Ba _ y Hall. usday. Julv M. 7-21-21 “i ..°::.::"..§.r'sl.s": .B"r.=- . n s - - 111v 2am. l-zs-is-z-i. "D1110 . P1 1 7-Tl-ll. m“ clam Social and Dance. 0W!“ School, Thursday. July 41- . “Vhloading car of BulirTuWheat "Ruiiw Dramatic Olub ' present " m" in Kelly's Oroal H ll m- ! Dance after. £31.11 I ‘i ‘Dlllel M . Mus‘ soat“5“1‘ nt§°““i tm. for Soiirisugloeplltd-l. I i1? drate ‘tons ...'J'dné'i1'.'.°“"i’i.el"$s°£ - B. Young. Clyde River. »‘ _'f-I'1~2l. 1 n <--_ tfitdhufhe Uttle ciocnopper". _ m" River Players. is - Thursday. July 20. 0.00 July !'l—('!‘uesday)—(CP CABLE) -— Dispatches in Lon- headuulrters in North Africa to- uched 12 miles German resis- By Boss Munro Canadian Press War Correspondent ON THE CANADIAN FRONT IN CENTRAL SICILY, July 25 —(Dg_ layed) — (GP Cablei-The Can- adians are on the march again in the mountains here. attacking east- ward from a hard-won stronghold. (Munro did not give the exact location from which he was writing but presumably it was somewhere northeast of Enria. where the Cun- adian forces have been operating for the last week.) Scarcelv waiting to get their breath following a four~day battle. the Canadians are driving on hard against the Germans, with artillery sup rt and with tanks. After a rapd consolidation the Canadians on Saturday opened an attack in an easterly directionw towards Mount Etna. whose snow-capped peak looms ahead. Zero Ilour Zero hour was i1 pni. and right on the dot the artillery opened up. Infantry followed 1n the wake of the bursting shells and the allied air forces bombed targets and straf- ed roads behind the German lines. road and through fields and orch- ards skirting the road. Within an hour they had reached their ub- jective in a fold in the hills. They overcame several German positions on the way to this ob- jective and met stiffer opposition when they circled around a town and bumped into Nazi positions on a slight slope on its eastern side. During Saturday evening the in- fantry battled on and the guns fired with few letups. Ever since rridav night the guns have been pounding away like this in darknes and daylight. it has been an artillery blitz on the 8th Army pattern of El Aiameln and Mareth. not on such a scale but applying the same principles of con- centrated. persistent shellings. , It has been the Canadian sun- ners‘ dream and they have forgot- ten their three long and tedious years of training in England in the excitement of ese last two Weekfl since the invasion of Sicily began. The Canadians are the only 8th in Army formation gaining yards at the moment. Their endurance and ability i0 continue attacking even after the lengthy and exhausting advance from their beachhead at Pachlno Peninsula are one of the big features of the fighting heft‘- I got an eagle-nest view of ves- terday's (Saturday's) fighting from atop towerlng..cliffs~where there are slit trenches on a commanding peak. . . .It has been practically my home those clays for this look- out provldes a view of the whole battlefield. Booming artillery constituted the zero-hour signal and Canadian 811118 with some British artillery b28011 methodically to plow the field with high-explosive shells. For the last week there have been a number of artillery bat-rages in the Canadian sector but this one topped them all in its intensity and duration. The objective was only two miles away and the first con- centrations crashed west of ihe town on sandy ground and kicked up clouds of brown dust. A couple of batteries banged sway at tar- gets farther on. The sunshine glar- ed‘ on the grey-white buildings and (Continued on page '1 Col. i) . ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC. July flb-(Tuesdayl-(APJ-Amler- ican and Australian air ., forces took the leading part in the war against Japan today with heavy intended to soften the ene- m ‘a defence on islands of the southwest Pacific- The Monday communique of Al- llpd headquarters reported e heaviest aerial assault of the Pe- cifio war on Munda, New Georgia Island but save no new: on around f htin there or on New ulnea. 'I In es to the west. More th I00 glance dropped 18d tons of be Japanese po- sitions at Munds, where American been cm ing through the jungle toward t e n. air base. Only one plane failed to return. Gasmata airdrome on the south coast. of New Britain Island. 000 miles west of New Georgia. was bombed by the Australians in the Awafdmislmh 36 and 20 cents. , “"5 ._ _,_, 1-21-11 strongest attack yet made there. >w/ W, . The People's Pape CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. TUESDAY. JULY 27, 1943 MOVES OQODOO Fighting Fails To St oxfl-w- Q1»: r -----"' "“"- (lovers Prince Edwerdilsland Like the Dew 900C601 op Cana Canadians In » liaill 0n Ruhr Halifax and Wellington bombers the Ruhr last night through skies pierced b_ thousands of IiBhts but consideraby lighter anti-air- craft fire than experience had taught them to ex t over that much-battered in ustrial area of Germany. Several squadrons from the R. C. A F. bomber group took part in . the heavy raid on Essen 11nd him- dreds of other Canadians made the trip in R..A.F. crews. Sgt. Dave Ferguson of Invemess. NB. saw three explosions -- "the biggest I've ever seen"—in the mid- dle of the concentrated 0W5 l!) n. t. J.J. Roach. of Toronto ma e his 13th raid on Essen and said: “I can see a future in this business now." Others on the raid included sgt. Ernie hogan of Boiestown, NB. Says Ila Marigny llad “Wild Look” NASSAU. BAHAMAS. July 26—— A olice official testified toda that Al red De Marigny. de oiiair yachfsman. appeared excited and had a. "wild look” in his eyes about the time the bludgeoiied and burned body of his niulti-mlllion- alrc father-ln-lnw, Sir Harry The infantry rushed ahead along a tat Oakcs, wns found July 8 in_ a bed- room of Sir Harry's rambling‘ es- c. Constable Wendall Parker test- ified at a preliminary hcarml for De Marigny. who is charged with murder of Sir Harry, shortly be- fore the prosecution won a third postponment over the objoollous of defence counsel Godfrey Higgs. The hearing will be resumed Aug The tall. bearded former Count came to the Central Police Station about 7.30 a.m. July a and in- quired about the conversion of an automobile into a truck, Parker re- listed. "He appeared excited,‘ they officer lsdded. “His eyes looked wild and his lips d_1_d not have l natural all" pearance. It was abount 7.30 a.m. on the same morning that Harold G. Christie. close friend and blISIHBSS associate of Sir Harry's and an overnight guest at the estate. found aha body on a partly-burned twin e . Nancy Oakes De Marigny. Sir Harr ‘s eldest child and wife of the efendant. smiled encouraging- ly at her husband as the prosecut- ion begsn to unfold some of the evidence which led to De Marig- ny‘s arrest. I London llas Alert LONDON, July 2'I—('I‘uesda )- (CP)~London had an alert of i1 Out an hour early todav during which a. small number of lanes ap- proached the Thames tuar and one or two came in the direct on of London. Gunfire was heard and search- lights were active during the warning. which was the first since July l5. RECRUITING srfiabs m- MONTREAL. July 20 - (GP)- Recruitiniz officers here said today hat enlistments in the army since nvasion of Sicily have been the -1i hest since i940. Manv recruits s d they had planned to Join the navy or the air force but chah ed their minds once the Canad an m ou far the first time since t ey open- e . Allies Step Up Air Activity In Pacific The radio station and grounded airplanes were destroyed. (An unconfirmed Tokyo dispatch broadcast by the Berlin radio Monda reported s raid by eight allied mbers on Japanese-held Wake Island in the central Pacif- ic. The enemy claimed two planes were brought down at a cost of two Japanese figh planes.) n the nor rn Solomons a U. S. bomber sighted eight Japanese vessels moving southeast towards ponese bases and attacked the bo the 1.000 anspo - Fighter planes drove off 80 en- emy bombers and abou the same number of Zeros whic were in- tercepted in an attack on Ameri- can forces on Hnndova Inland in the Central Solomons l few miles south of Munds. liightd Japanese?‘ fighters were destroys an allied loss of four planes. of the four pilots were resou War Situation Last Night came ir. awi t answer to the an "honorable" phases of any rtrmlsticc mus by Italian troops would be Russia's rolling summer of enslve. The Balkans offer the shortest, lockers at best. would ex move across the eastern Medlter through Sicily. And there are ever- natilun: in the Balkans are as ripe as s ready high and growing with every member of the anti-Axis league. Martial Reds Drive Ahead At Orel LONDON. July 26 -<AP) -—Red armies personally directed by Mar- shal Joseph Stalin captured '70 villages. gained six niiles and kill- ed 5,000 enemy troops today in their steer!‘ semi-encirclement of 11c big G-siman base at Orel whore thousands of Axis troops risk entrapment. it was announced tonight in liloscow. With Russian troops attacking Orel within eight miles of the city's IICYIAWIISIGITI . 3nd casts-m Rules. a special communique paid that other units had swept across the Okn River dircctlv norifi of the base in a ‘wide ivhceling mottsnril. threatening to cut the last supply line into Orel - - the railway run. nlng northeast to Bryansk. Tho German Rcdio Comments. 101‘. Cfllll- Ludivii! Sertorius. with an unusual display of restraint snid that the German defenders at Orel lmd been “keot extremely bu=\"' during the dav. I-Ie_ also commented on a massive Russmn drlvc b-rlo Irningrad and fiirifier smith in t e Lake Ladoga region saving thatit wasstill too carlv to fell whether this was only n “temporary phenomenon“ on the sari of the Soviet war machinc ivlilch is striking wi I1 nmmjng "ov-‘er in its first successful sum- ""'r offensive. llanucks Learn Precision Flving OTTAWA, July R.O.A.F. press release that Canadian fliers an R. A. F. 26—(CP)—The are learning with squadron in Britain the art of precision flying iii the dark so that pilots tan drop glider and parachute "troops" right on the '"button".when the time comes. T0 drop paratroops at night. the greatest precision is needed in timing 411d map reading. and l0 nights a month the R.C.A.F. of- fices are engaged in a highly-spe- ciaiised form of night map ‘read- ing exercises, Navigators must be abe to recognize in the dark landmarks such as woods. ponds and buildings. BLACKSIIIRTS REPLACED BERNE. July 20—(AP)—Advices from the Italian frontier reported toda that Blackshirt militia whic heretofore had been guard- ing the frontier had been eplaced by Carablnieri. i 510880 CANADA reaction to the Fascist crash is still to be qoziféavléaited lrnoment when Turkey follows her known lnclinail . n a no cy o prudence. and steps into the struggle p; a “now By Kirlre L. Simpson, Associated Prgg war Analyst ‘ With the fall of Benito Mussolini, the. Nari-Fascist Axis has started oiviyegglaiinflllbrtat the seams. changing the whole military perspective Summary removal of Il Duce by decree foreshadows early peace feel- ol‘! frtfiln Rome, in the Judgment of’ United Nations authorities. There is no 0t er loflcal explanation for the military-political upheaval which Churchill-Roosevelt warnings to Italy to seek peace or take the grim consequences. By every Indication London and Washington are busy behind the svcenIeds ‘preparing in advance the s eclflc terms under which an flrnflgllgg “T: c glranted if Italy sought t. Nor can it be questioned that those ....“..‘..‘"E‘é.‘i...'.‘.'.‘;"2i.'- £31211’ tiisiiif. ‘lfimii.’ "‘° “m” "f.°““°"'“""“ southern facade of Elmer's fortress of expefled m up“ of ‘he Whatever the political aspects of an Italian surrender, t)“; m1] be harsh. Bases in southern Italy I on ihc Greek Peninsula andestgleigtgafilrlgs Atlfntge Aegiean noiw garrlsoned . g, e use our ores... an,- t strike snifllyr and effectively at Germany and bring Increased aid i: surest road tn victory. The such key positions a II. mltchlng the Allied rowing symptoms that Nazi satellit or revolt asainst the crumbling Axis y. The news from Italy must necessarily step-up Russian morale, al- Turkish assesed. It might gllnal the new victory around Orel. OI]. "Italy Under Law LONDON. July as Marshal Pietro Badoglio .w-n- —- (AP) and a new cabinet, manoeuvring w curb ruled turbulent a martial law decree aim at both the Lib- erals who want to make peace with the Fascists left incipient revolt. Italy tonight th ugh the Allies and leadcriess by the exit of Benito Mussolini tiiii”. Greek Pmlnwsula ‘and the Island-studded Aegean are routes for coming to grips w‘ I i ZIZIiIiIIIGI" defence llnes on the continent. Evacuation of Italian gar. r sons out s dc Italy. or orders from Rome which made them passive on- se German troops in Crete to isolation and sw ft annihilation. Powerful British armies are already poised in Egypt and Syrlg to sweep iincercmonious and his 8 Americans Are Accused 0f Treason WASHINGTON, July 26—1AP)- Eight Americans accused of turn- ing their backs oii their homeland and joining forces with Axis radio propagandlsts were indicted today or treason-a charge that may carry the death penalty. Attorney General Francis Biddle. describing the district of Columbia grand jury's action as a warning that the United States “will not tolerate traitors at liome OI‘ u- broad." llromiseci that the eight will be brought to trial as soon as they are apprehended. Seven are alleged to have broad- cast regularly from Germany while the eighth-Ezra Pound, 57-year-old modernist poet who won some at- tention in international literary circles-has broadcast from Rome. In addition, to Pound, who has 5 spent most of the last 30 years a- broad. the defendants were ident- ified by the Justice Department as follows: Robert H. Best, 47. for- e mcrly of Sumter. S.C., and soii of a clergyman; Frederick W. Kalten- bach, 48. native of Dubuque. Iowa, and the Nazi's American counter- part of "Lord Haw I-Iawfl’ Jane Anderson, 50. native of Atlanta. ‘"- Gn.. who was introduced on Reich radios as a famous “orator? Doug- native who was bi Revere," Constance Drexei, 48. naturalized German alien and one-time free- lance writer who is known 0n the Axis radio as s. "famous American ioumalistf‘ Edward Leo Dalaney, a native of Olncy. Ill.. and onetime bit player on American stages who broadcast under the name of "E . Ward"; and Max Otto Kois- chwltz. a German native and for- mer instructor at Hunter College in New York \vli0 adopted the radio Alias of "O. K." Old Editor ReturiTs To ll Giornale D'ltalia LONDON. Julv 26 —-(CP)— The CGILOISIIID of Ii Giornale D‘Italla. for years semi-official organ of Mussolini and his Fascist govern» mmi-"EYS- ment. illbfls been taken over by sen- Dlspatches from both Stock- gfg.oAsne.f.wmafggifnm‘ the Bern“ 71°11“ "'5 MIN! - - "mum" Berdaminl founded the paper in mu! In rvlwria dim! from 1on1 mid directed 1t until 1924 when Rim"! ' ' 53m “lu-“wnm w“ it was taken over by Virgiiilo Gayda. "m!" 31'7"‘- Blfled i" "In" The Berlin announcement was 0d)’ l! he 5'1"!!!" '0 "ti? l" heard by the Associated Plvss. Germany from the country he ._______.____ ruled as a dictator for 21 OBSERVE 5T, aiupiyyg DAY years. STE. ANNE DE BEAUPRE, Que, The 71-year-old Badoizlio, 11am 0H9 announcement the official implie Mussolini had resignrd. ious offices in bomb-scarred Rom because of ill health. Dusk - To - Dawn Curfew curfew througfiou-t Italy nll public gatherings 11nd made th point in a special order of the iia that the Fascist militia - - som 250,000 men hitherto Mussoiinfs own private troops - cos "and with them, as the Fatherland.“ the Rome Radio. made no distinc tion between the Fascists and th Ipopulation generally, that the Fascist party and all stood for was to go out with Muss revealed tonight in a 01ml But despite the invoking of mil ltary rule - - and troops ilvcrc em mending dcmonstrntions peninsula. long sessions with the War John G. Winant and Charge D'Affaires at the Fbreign Office, discussed Italian developments. Demonstrations In Italy within Italy were varie . to Pose Pius XII was held in St broadcast g the Berlin Radio. Smoofiisaiiinq For MI your Bdkinq When you use M7 ed by King Victor Emmanuel to succeed Mussolini as premier last nght. established martial law in of his pronouncements. -Axis Radio broadcasts in elaborating or: the that he stepped out of his luxur- Badoglio invoked a dusk to-dawn banned considered ' Allied Terms To Italy Are Unchanged was part of the King's armed for- always. co-operates in the common work and intentions for the defence of The broad decrces, broadcast by suggesting it powered to fire on violators - - reports from the continent told of among the war-weighted people of 1110i Prime Minister Churchill éaclllrl a - inet here. Foreign Secretary An- thony Eden saw U. B. Ambassador the Soviet Imidon and presumbaly The accounts of dernionstrations A 80-minute gesture of homage Peter's square of Vatican City last midnight. said a German dispatch July 26—fCP)—S0me 15.000 Dil- grims from Canada and the Unit- cd States celebrated Ste. Anne's feast today at the fnmniis shrine raised in her honor here. Most Rev. Francis P. Keough. Bislio of Providence. R.I._ sang a Ponti ical I-Iigh Mass. nIGEiGGG at 5 , Cardi Villeneuve, .Arch- bishop of bccIn the sanctuary e were Most. Rev. Francis Bcckmnii. Archibishop of Dunkerque, who headed a large pilgrimage from the United States niiciwcst. and very Rev. Cyriile Gagnon. rector of Quebec's Laval University. Last riihgt. the annual torchlight . procession was hold on the hills de ‘ficf the shrine. About 12,000 took 3c poi-t. 0' < 8 PAGES dians The the spirit: "and now abideth faith, hope. love. but the greatest of these is eve." MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN enduring values are those of In Illhlllflpllllll Delivered, $0.00 I1". 04-001 othe- Provinces I ll-l-A, I500. UMORED AT VATICAN €3 Sicily e Italians Show Great Delight With N_elv Moves Some Sources Predict Italy Will Be Out Of War Very Soon. LONDON, July 27 — Reuters news agency di (Tuesday) —- (CP) — A spatch from Stockholm today said preliminary negotiations for an armis- tice between Italy and the Allies began in Vatican City Svenska Dagbladet was t last night. The Berrie correspondent of he source of the report. There was no confirmation. BERNE. Julv 26 --(AP)— De- monstrations of joy at Mussollnfs downfall broke out in many Italian cities last night, newspapers reach- ing Switzerland disclosed today, and although Berlin still insisted to- night that her Italian ally would remain in the war, in allied circles here the conviction grew that it was the beginning of the end for Italy, Oiie Italian source here said the Italian capital expected an armist- ice svoulci be asked and possibly obtained bv the end of the week, despite Marshal Pietro Bagdoglids assertion that the war would con- tinue. Although this appeared pre- mature. it would be surprising if some peace overtures were not made at the earliest moment. Apparently rejoicing in Italy was General. Coi-riere Del Ilcinc of Lugano. vvlilch has shown Fascist sympathies lr1 the past, reported anti-Fascist demonstrations oc- curred in many cities of northern Italy. Copies of the Cori-lore Della Sera o1 Milan told oi “_loyful" demon- strations at Rome. Florence, Milan and Bologna. At Como a huge portrait of Mussolini was torn down bv rail- road workers and placed on the tracks where it was shredded by passing trains. One report said that at Rome a vast crowd demonstrat- ed in St. Peters‘ Square for a half- hour shortly after midnight shout- lulf approval of the Pope. The dis- patch said the Poritiff had several private audiences during the day. among his callers being the Apost- olic Nunclo in Italy. Monsignor Borgo Nicinl Duca. Usually well-informed foreign ob- servers said the Saturday Vatican statement on the bombing of Rome was aimed directly at Ii Duce. In Italy the bombing ls considered the fault of Mussolini because he fail- ed to declare Rome an open city. Orders went out to every city and hamlet to remove all Fascist in- signias. The Fascist militia was in- corporated into the regular aimy. giving loyal Italians 1m opportunity B By J. F. Sanderson . Canadian Presslstaff Writer WASHINGTON. Julv 26 —(AP)— Allied terms for llic surrender of Italy have lint changed with the nistnissal of Mussolini. they remain unconditional surrender. State Sec You“? CQICifilljHilll declared today. While the whole military concept ‘of the war in Europe changed overnight and the combined chiefs of staff here surveyed the new scene in the light of expected peace offers from Rome. I-Iull ‘indicated that only by unreserved and uncon- ditional surrender could the Italian nation gct out of the war. Hull's was the only official re- action here to the dramatic oust- iri~ from power of Mussolini and 1115 Ffllol-ib Dirty and the installa- tion of Marshal Badoglio as Prom- ier. The white House had no oom- ment and the service departments were equally mum. Some Possibilities Unofficially. however. Washing- fon reacted as follows:- 1. Italy is expected to be out of the war soon, perhaps in n matter of clays. oertaiiilv in weeks. al- though the Gennans. Mic have been policing the country for months. inny elect i0 fight 1o hold strategic bases therc. 2. The day when Turkey enters ilv- war on the side of the allies -'--..\vs nearer. , 3. Withdrawal of Italian garrlsons from the Balkans-a, prerequisite to l)(‘fiC£‘-—f'illd the gaining of Allied sea and air bases along the Aegean, Unconditional Surrender Still The Word. may result in a concentration pf allied miiitnrv power in a drive 1m the Balkans this fall. following the precedent of i018 which led to the. fail of Germany's Satellite powers of that day. 4. If the allies are able to operate from northern Italian bases. Gcr- ntany will be bombed as it never has been before, with no part of the Reich or Nazi-dominated co\in- tries sa rom relentless sir» at- tack. Whether the allies will make fresh approaches to the Italian people. advising them again to get out of the war or suffer the grim con- sequences remains to be seen but there were reports here today lhat should be expected .unless the new regime acts quickly in approaching the Allies. ‘ Meanwhile. the machinery to gov- ern the Italian people and fecd them is complete. No lllt Throwing Although the-unofficial reaction herc is to regard Italv as a dying duck. perhaps on the verge of ran- ltiiliition. there-is no disposition in military circles to throw hats in tilp air or accept anything but the known facts of the situation. Hull exemplified this hltiiude Mien iic said that increased military" prom. filllf‘, ilesigncd 1o bring about ital-i irm rapitulntion. will rvsllil fVmljP- F. 5.IllS§0llli'i's dlstiiissal us iiidicniion that. Bndogliok govcniment mus: mnkc up its mind iii a hurry or prepare for intensified attacks on mainland centres. LnbLliba-QQ --~<- . to throw away their pfiariy buttons but still remain in the fighting forces. Those suspected of lingering allegiance to Mussolini were dis. armcd and arrested. (Reports from Algiers said 22 Italian divisions iii Yugoslavia and Greece and three or foiir in souih- crn France were ordered home.) The Germans were astounded. Every indication was that thev were caught by surprise, eygn though I-Iitlcr was informed of the crisis ivlien he mo: Mussolini a, week allo. The German view. as expressed here, was that what Iiappened in me Balkans would determine we whole course of the war. The Axis was irrepzirablv cracked. A defection in the Balkans could fllllfkil‘ miash German defences in southeastern Europe and bring about a collapse of Germany fa),- sooner than anyone hitherto eve! thought possible. Advices from Germany indicated it was difficult m see how anygna in_ the Reich could deal cffcctlvelv with Bqdoglio. At the minimum, the Nazis privately recognized that MussolinYs downfall marked the be. ginning 0f the final phase of the vmr. N<‘W5l)iil)€1's reaching Switzerland from Ialty said the Fhsclst salute had been nbolishvd and signs erect. ed throughout the country under Mussolini were being erased. Trains arriving at the frontier had been Si-flbbcd of their Fascist decorations. Reports that railways and trucks had been commandeered for with. nrawiil of German troops could m; be confirmed. WELL-KNOWN qumYnpsp KENTVILIIE. N.S , July 36- fCPl-James J. (Jim) 'I‘oney. 82, noted Indian guide and former counsellor 0f his tribe. died Sat- urday at his home on the nearby Cflmbflllkc Reservation following a short. illness. A renowned hunter and fisher- man, Toner was Widely known iiiroilgiiout the iifnritimcs and took part in all GllidPI‘ mccts. Diirliif! hi3 life ho was crorliicd with saving seven persons from drowning. ltS Ellblliik 4o DECENE YQURSEW (nan , in: ofnian. "~ vv.\.\.ow 8:55 High tide this evening at and tomorrow iiioriiing at 8:15. . Sun sets this evening at 8:33 and rises tomorrow morning 5:39. Summcrsidc tide l8 minutes later than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Prom Borden — Leave 8.40 a.m. 1.15 p.rn. and 4.55 p.m. Leave Cape Tnrmentlne 11 a. n1. 8.25 p. m. and 8.30 p. m. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAY) Charlottetown — Summcrlide — oncton Leave Charlottetown 7.50 a. In 12.30 . m. 4.30 In. ‘Arrve Charlmriown 1.10 p. m. 5.45 p. m. 7.05 p. m. . l.-—N. S. FERRY SRIIVIFE DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands - 1.00 a. m. and ll a.m. and 3 p. m. Leaves Caribou — 0.00 a. m. and 1 pun. and i pm.