MAXIMB 01' A MERE MAN ____. hum! iii thlev a i" fine,‘ but outside the: p out in each other’: dc- - mmies ' faw- ‘ dial. ‘Iwe Ocutl. "w" unuhuudod m1 dusrdlllh ' ED LACKE 727/’ The People’ aper (IHARLUPTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY. ssrrsmssn i4, o... Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew The nearncss of God is not proved b)’ l! 605)’ HWBPBIIESs that He ls closi- to us but by n, constant adequacy lo a critical situation. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN l k , I Charlottetown Men On Board Torpecloed Ship Jyaphic Description Of Tragedy ‘y Henry OWeill. Land Japs Small Groups In Solomons WASHINGTON, Sellt. 3—(:\P) ._'l‘hc United Ststcs navy dis- closed tonight that a few “small detachments" of Jopl- nesc troops had landed on is- fl’ > d B Censor ‘Pascal oyo Allied ship in n Atlantic was de- » =0 by Henry O‘Ne . ' ' muwtwtown man, who said . aboard the vessel were “ollfpllnklgllri efforts of the ‘p, gave themselves were ham- .‘ h, the escspe of ch01“!!! l pom the ship's refrigeratl!!! ,, powered by the torpedo ex- ... ti. Charlotte- " §l’,l'l§"§..lvl.‘l.o%.§‘tbo vessel- ,‘} . Gallant Mid Jack walker- ' t‘: mother received word losi- ,, mo; her son was enroute ~ h... O'Neill had no word 0! .r '5 fsie. r did he know of the rescue lands of the southeuster nt who apparently was Solomon group but that mur- by pnQLhBf ship. They Ines who wrestcd that area from tho chem several weeks ago were hunt n; down these groups. The communique rqlfiflllll this action followed hy c. fcw hours on sunounooment that United States submarines in tho western Pacific elsewhere than in the Solomon theatre had sunk five enemy ships. including s Japanese light cruiser, and damaged three others. This report brought the totsi of Japanese ships sunk or dsmsged by American subma incs since Dec. ‘i to 99. The Jspanese were matching their amphibious operations in m; Solomon urea with what the nBvy called "periodic nt- tack" by aircraft. Ono such nt- tack occurred yesterday, the navy said. when eighteen on- cmy bombers, accompanied by fighters, raided American in- stoliotions at Guadalcanal. That raid cost the enemy "l?" bombers and five fighters and the damage to American Poll‘ tions was minor, the navy slid- rliuhg together st breakfast .. u... iopedo struck. and 0 Neill m; see Gallant ufter that. slumped to our feet immedi- ," O'Neill suid. "1 could hardly ’ what it was. as 1 Alive!‘ V’; it was possible I Wtllllld be ‘Uhlp that would be hit. qgrbbed my iifebelt, which n my feet," he continued. Then ‘mic a bee line" for the deck. he reached the open air. ‘sillhe was "choking and gag- irom the refrigerant fumes. I. deck. he said, he sow a mun '=. no llfebslt. "He was sobbing lid. "I haven't got my belt,‘ " .1 said. "I said twice, ‘Don't hfl in there.’ I haven't seen him iii the lifebosts had already o sway. O'Neill said. He slid d trope ladder and spent what ullod "s nightmare of splashing din oil-covered water" before Iupicked up by a. lifeboat 15 its later. ~ water was frightfully cold- ~ _l ever got into." the Cher- ~ -~ - survivor said. bu: wu visible, he declared. rough seas and s. heavy wind the boats frcm reaching V Ii warship picked up other . i k ss well as that of O'Neill uii the ship went down in 20 Fire Prevention Week Oct. 4-10 vorr were landed at on east ~ Canadian port. UITAWA, Sept. 8-—(CP)— The ‘ lil is s son of Mr. and Mrl- week starting Oct. 4 has been pro- » l O'Neill. Gerald Street, glsimed "the prevention week" in loiietown, Gallant, 23. is l son csnsids. it was disclosed tonight In. Carolina Gallant ho"e. in the Canada Genetic. ' llfliiiher is dead and his Statistics showed that in the isst ‘< lives in the 8.5. 10 years. 466.000 fires in Canada had destroyed insurable property valued st more than $269,000,000 and taken 2,785 lives. ___-_--—-—-i—— FOREST FIRE SUBSIDES rserved six months over- Ilih an artillery unit but was "o home more than a year lithe time of the attack, " "iWIhi. he was in inc the Charlottetown boys lmnDEflfOibN Se t. 3--(CP)-- A to rt to the’ Neg Brunswick Force Service tonight seld that n. fire nefll‘ the village of Bhiuoessn. Gloucester count. subsided late this afternoon sf er villagers and ‘ii AIR. 1.05358 ' N. SSept. 2—-(OP)-Axi5 W durins the first three - 0i the war wcrc listed by ". sources tonight ss 8.915 czews had fought the fiumes 51MB "“ diilirfiyed so against 0.- yesterday. “"111 aircraft lost. hake-up In tish- Cov’t hing Events RID, BClTl-HO Sllllfi‘. d m? lificier will)’ l!‘ r- Vernon Kali lib. Mlllview orohesullludfilfil "°""““" orig-time rb ' "i in Vli lion. e c. ebstcr. 9-4-21 . m. °l1 Dance in Eldon Hall .Mlliview Orchestrs. Danc- J"! 9 o'clock until one. I-i-ii m; ,1 cnlv authorised Dl-rt . “"110 West Royalty Two import t cs nstit Ssturdln‘; S: u” we" m than $16030 in prizes st »i°""a".u:r"*= our - own. p m ‘Mic and relreshmenis- 0-4-31 8t P f - emu dramatic lub i d l, "fililgeibplglsv ldrllsh- e u. 86in. 10th. Georges hsl lice 3e I a Vi. '1 st Ions Hall. His _> 0-1- Millvierw Orchestra. - W- o-ul. c lacing Col. ‘Gfisrss as Minister of of the Falsnge was raised u. cobine rsnk and Riven to Manuel one of Franco's osrli successor. elevs . (APP-Ramon sWtbrhErer-in-lsw of Gen. Francisco Franco and KNOW“! ' o ... ....;. ‘T. no. .....-- auroral. o§.‘.'.'..°.f.'."8ii‘.l"w..."'“°“" “nil oer verd- was succeeded as m In Gomez Minisier b Count 1i‘r%<]7.l:li¢°gdtums_ e Moi-cs." ‘t-i-u- fa, C ' B 01d l dnev screen Sllp orllriidplrgllg £2 All”. poll- WM" Bung ' lscc chief oi the polity rmsrn orb» Ibicnke. 5min! at churns o, Gent ‘Jose gaff.» resigning and aglenun Inter- ior. The position of vice-secretary’ More Figueroa, succeeding Jose Luns Me- s. lflleen. Vsrels. who resigned. W“ cot co-workers. 9-4- leader of the Codi? aprripcr} rivtoit in the nriv dsvu o e {J1 whém rwoiitindid TFoisiT‘ 1.7151“ i): New Tolicy Is Adopted For Canada “Acute Shortage” said To Exist Across Whole Country. UITAWA. Sept. 3—(CP)- The Wartime Prices and Trade Board tonight assumed rigid control of the beef cattle trade in Canada, naming the government-owned War- time Food Corporation as sole ex- porter of beef cattle in a new policy aimed at meeting the ‘acute’ shortage which the board said now exists "across the whole country." The Food Corporation "will. when necessary, buy cattle in the domestic market to support cattle prices in Canada." The boa-rd disclosed in its un- uouncemeni. that Canadian packers have been required to give priority to military requirements for some time, “yet notwithstanding this action military requirements have not been met." "Accordingly," said the state- ment, "the board has carefully re- viewed the whcle situation and made recunmendations to the gov- ernment, which decided upon a complete change of policy. making Wartime Food Corporation the sole. exporter and st the some time assuring not less than ceiling prices to producers. "This should remove any incent- ive to hold back cattle st one period and press sales at another. "Thus, while the new policy may not restore beef supplies immedi- ately. the mnovul of any abnorm- al incentive to hold cattle should result in resumption of the custom- atlyhfiow of murketings." . e board's sweeping action rc- presents o definite change in policy ‘wmr wioflow Gable Finds Arfny ‘Plenty Tough’ PITTSBURGH, Sept. 3—(A.P)— cisrk Gable is finding his army role “plenty tough" but in the opinion of his Pittsburgh room- mate he's proving he can “trike it" --despitc a daily lineup of femin- ine autograph seekers. "They are thinking oi moving Gable to another wing oi this hotel," sergeant Hyman Gross- msn said in a letter from Miami. where he and Gable ore or. an arr corps officers‘ candidate school. "The reason is that there are too many entrances near our room. Tnere are loads of women every morning watching us march- looking for Gable." Cause of United Nations is Cause 0f Youth Itself By Richard l... Turner Associated Press Stslf Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. 3—~(AP)—— Appealing to young people every- where. President l-looseveit said t0- ciay the cause of the United Nations is “the cause of youth il-Wll." that youth must fight the battles and bear tho responsibilities of peace to follow. The Axis offers the yourilfl‘ 5w- erstlon nothing "except death. he gggrbad, while victory for the Unifzd Nations means “s new life that can be lived in freed-Om find d d f’ Juilllrfiefiglosevgftfnrgrlladc these stato- ments in s mid-day address to the Intcrnsticirsl Students, u dung i0 s represcn ng a to": """°.':- '.'.'.i...'l.'.’{l.';'.; our; gentile; ti‘: world around bi! radio- But ho said. the sir was doubtless “morloulhw 1115;101:230: whowgnirvrgr "rest ess youn ' der Hitler's heel" might. be listen- mlljwl... his speech. the President took occasion to refer scorniullv to the "handful of men and women. in the United Stator and elsewhere. who mock and sneer st the four; freedoms of the Atlantic Charter. He sold these “little men of little 151m m. quoted with gleeful ap- provsi by the press and radio of our enemies." h tsinod lso s spec- “"‘°"'°°° 3L" “do? ‘n: U ted St tc my. B Mxrlxrine Co: 1.5 wherever they might belfilbuwkiiow stlhsi the road wh h has led you to the Solomon Isiah s. or to the Red Sea. or to the coast of France. is in fact on extension cf main street, and that when you fight snywherc alon the road you are fighting in the cfence of your homes. your own free schooisuyour own churches. your own ideal-l.’ Viscount Bennett Leaves for Montreal BACKVILLE, N. 3., Sept. I- (Gill-Viscount Bennett, former Prime Minister of Csnsds. left by train for Montreal this afternoon fonowjng a week's visit hero with his brother, Capt. Ronald V; Ben- nbl-lé motored in Newcastle, board. in; the trsln st that point. the of War Situation Last Night (B! Kirire L. Sllnillflll. Associated Press War Analyst) Some Axis tank columns in Egypt have give d. f ti. ii being at least. to Allied defenders. and an unexlplgl-ggd‘ Jagrlhnesee :2 it'll’! usrcmsiusth The situation In the critical Stalingrad area was somewhat obscure as these words were written. A N i rt is Vi h h we c from the southwest had bee: oilgn uvnothe: div‘ at the Germ“ e miles to within seven miles of the city would represent u critical penetration cf Russian "He! i! trlle- The Vichy propaganda unit of the Goebbels machine has never been s. trustworthy ne.ws source,‘ howfver. About seven miles west and southwest of Stalingrad stands s series of small hills which mark the high est points in eminence that forms the dividin watersheds at that point. They line between the urnish Russian defenders with strong a barren and rocky Volga and Don outposts covering the approaches to the city from both directions. u If‘ they have been taken or by-pussrd by Nazi oolurnns, Sizriingrods s us on is very critical. No other strong natural barriers between the enemy snd the innter defence lines arc discernabie on the maps. Nazi Tank Columns CAIRO. Sept. 3—(AP) — Under constant bombardment of British artillery. German tank columns fell back today fr m pert of their newly-Won pcsltlo b. the west- ern desert and Br lsh tanks and armored cars im edistely retook the abandoned strongholds. Both ht the front and in the rear. the Axis has been under- seine British and United States nir attacks on a scale unpreceden- ted in the western desert, plus the continuous cunnonading. British tanks in taking advan- tage cf the German withdrawal thus tightened their hold on Ger- man armored columns will now are gripped in a tightkhilig" vise moving in from three sides, Reports from the battlefield snrd the Germans left nine derelict tanks. Two were unusable, six were blown up by British engineers and one was towed in for possible use by British forces. Several minor clashes were re- poricd on the southern sector of the front but the El Alamein area remuincd quiet. The major battle for the Nile still is believed to come, The allied sir campaign con. tinued with undiminished vigor. Reports from the field sold l4 en. emy planes were shot clown yes- terday to u loss of l0 hllied planes. British and United states head- quarters announced that medium bombers of the United States sir forccs aided the R. A. F. by suc- ccsslullv attacking the enemy m the daylight battle Wednesday de_ straying and damaging enemy vehicles, British officials described the bomber action as of “recorci" pro- portions and said satisfactory re- sults were reported. This aerial action, plus the fury oi’ the artillery fire which broke out, every time the Africa corps showed its head. appeared to have forced Marshal Erwin Rommel into o. role of caution. Trucks Haul Water T0 Fight Forest Fires STEILARTN. NS. Sept. 3—(CPl -Trucks hauled water to the woods outside Stellarwn to fight a series forest fires throughout todsv. and by tonight fire rangers and volunteers had the flames unzicr control. Patrols of forest rangers were tndintnined throughout the night as new outbreaks cropped up 0V3! a, LOCO-acre ores, but danger to homes on the outskirts of this town hsd been averted. Residents who yesterday removed furniture from the homes moved their be- longings back today. The fires have been burning since Sunday. Allied Bombers Blast Japs (By Muriin Spencer. Associated Press Staff Writer) ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Sept. 4—<Fridoy)-(AP) —Allied bombers, blasting Japa- nese bases in the upper Solomons for the second straight day, dom- oged two enemy sesplsnes and storied large fires with four direct hits on fuel dumps, a communique announced today, ‘The seaplanes were hit st Falsi, the fuel dumps destroyed at Buka. and enemy installations at Kieth also were attacked “with unknown results," the announcement said. Boll Baclclflgy]! News Briefs OTTAWA. Sept. 3-—(CP)— Defence Minister Ralsion an_ trounced tonight that Col. Henri Dcslinsiers, 0.5.0., imd been appointed a. deputy min- ister of national defence, and that LL-Cul. George S. Currie, D.S.0., M.C., has been ap- pointed an additional deputy defence minister. 3__ OTTAWA. Sept. fCPi-An external affairs department spokes- man sold here today thnt because the Canadian and United Slates potato crops are irarvestcd about the some time, it is not expected here that many Canadian workers will be allowed to cross the infer. national border into Maine to help harvest the potato crop in Aroo- stock County next week, OTTAWA, Sept. 3—iCP)- Labor Minister Humphrey Mitchell annflunccd lute today following a conference wiiir labor representatives that a commission of’ three [lrrsmls will be established under the industriul disputes investigulinn act as soon us possible to in- vestigate wage disputes which threatened to cause strikes in tWo big basic steel producing plants in Sault Ste. Marie, 0nt.. and Sydney. N, S, Find Huge I. R. A. Explosive Dump BELFAST. Sept. 3 — (CP)-A heavily-armed police guard stood in readiness around Lisburr. courthouse today when five men. arrested following discovery of a huge explosive dump of the out. lowed Irish Republican Army were brought. before s magistrate. The men were brought to court handcuffed and their car was fol- lowed by a truck filled with police armed with rifles. The defendants were remanded for trial Sept. 1'1 in a. formal proceeding with no signs of attempted disorder out- side the court. Meanwhile, police continued their drivc to stamp out the threat of the I. R. A. attacks on British nnd United States troops in North- ern Ireland by combing out sus- pects in the nationalist districts of Belfast. In raids beginning before the blackout lifted at 5 am. 56 people were detained for questioning. following disorders yesterday that grew out of the execution of Thomas Williams of tho I. R. A. for the slaying of a constable. War—25 Years Ago Today (By The Cnnudisn Press) BMW‘. 4. 19i'1—ltalians repulsed Austrian attacks on South Cars); 1,600 prisoners taken. English easi- coast towns bombed with 21! casu- alties. Scarhorou h shelled by German U-boot. crman army ursucd disc snlsed Russian army lceing cos]; ._om Riga. Smooth Sailinq For All your Boklnq When you use H1550 ‘lI/‘iNAlJIi M7M Fire Damages Grist Mill At Weilingtold at Wellington yesterday Fire of forces has brought s lull on the China and Pacific fronts. caused cQn51defflb1e dagnagg 1,0 me B. . t spot o.n th: United Nations war horizon. Grist and gal-ding M1115 owned by Samuel Barlow and Son. The fire was discovered at 2.30 p-m. A bucket brigade was hastily formed by tin;- citizens of the vill- age and by about 3.45 p, m., the fire was out. Wsier wds obtained from the nearby Ellis rllver. The fire started on the roof or the main building and was believed caused by sparks from the smoke ack. it quickly spread to the Jord- lng mill and the water tanks How- ever a prompt response on the part cl Lin- residents 0f the ccmmunlty soon had the fire under control ‘The roof of the main building was almost completely deslroycci. ‘The othcér buildings were slightly dum- uue . It was impossible to find out lost night the amount of the dam- age 0r whether‘ there was insur. mice. The nmnngement express- ed greiiiuzlc r0 the villagers and llle people of the surrounding dis- trict without wilcsc help the build- ings would likely have been corri- pleiely destroyed. _s, Actress to Seek Recognition 0f Sonl HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 3-(AP)— Conslunce Bennett said today that Peter Bennett Plant, now 13, was born to her filld lier former hus- band, the lute Philip Plant, and that she would seek court recog- nition of the fact, 'l‘lrc actress snid she would ap- peal the Yhlirzg of a Groton, Conn, yrrcbatc Judge, based on a state- ment of Mrs. Mae Mahwuririg Hey-ward of New York, Plums moilrcr, tlrni Miss Bennett adopt. cd o. bov, Dennis Arthur Armstrong 1n i930 and established his frame as Peter Bennett Plant. The court held Peter has no claim to Plants ate. "We have made no claims on his father's estate," Mr. Bennett said in a statement. “My son was born before my divorce from Philip Plant. was final and it is correct that I did ‘so through adoption proceedings, having been advised that such pro- ceedings would make impossible MW custody fight over our child. “Peter was not represented in this court action and I am forced to appeal this court decision," No Ilmlrease In N. B. Beer Prices FREDERJUPON, Sept. 3—(OP) -The tax on malt announced in Furlcrnl Minister of Finance Ilsleyis budget brought down in the House of Commons in June vslll not in the chse of New Bruns- wick be passed on to the consum- ers of ulcs and beers, it was leom- cd here this morning. In an auth. orized statement, R, G, Fulton, chairman of the New Brunswick Liquor Control Board, stutccl there would be no increase in the prices of hlcs and beers sold oi. the boards retail stores throughout the province n5 a result of the federal tax. The increased cost to the brewers, due to the imposition of the malt tux, will be absorbed by the Liquor Control Board, he add- ed. 8 PAGES Annual Subscription Delivered, $5.00 B! lhllr P. I. l. “.00; to other Provinces and U, I. A. SEQ River W-W .~. n .- D NORTHWEST OF STALIN GRAD gid Control Is Assumed 0f Beet Cattle Trade Peril-Tb- Volga City Is Much IncreaseJ -~—> BY HENRY C. CASSIDY (Associated Press Staff Writer) MOSGOW, Sept. 4—(Frlr.i,a.y)— (APl-Msssed German tank; and infantrymen have cracked the pre- viously-imlxznmrztble Russan me northwest 0f Stalingrad and for- ced the Soviets to retreat there, Whilfl other German forces. con oinued to edge closer to Stalingrad from the southwest, the Russians reported today, Fleet Base Threatened A Russian retreat northwest of Novorossisk, threatened Black sea Fleet Base, also was zocknovlledged in the Soviets’ Thursday midnight. communique. The break in ihe Russian lines a-bove Stalingrad represented the first gain for the Germans ihcre in some, time, The Russians herd stiffened after being folded back to the approaches m the Voigu city. The peril to lire key Volga City lirus increased by the hour as the Germans closed in slt-"aciily with both arms of s. strong pincer movement, _ The communique said the first attack by German tanks and in- fantry was hurled back by Soviet artillery and anti- tank rifle fire, leaving nine disabled and burned German tanks and about 400 dead on the field. wo hours later "the enemy re- sfiegd attacks on our positions and p = d our units back," the com- munlque said. The extent bf the German E61“ was not disclosed but it is known ifiat the battledn that nrca is he. ing fought c-n the northwest ap- proaches to the city. Strong Bid For V1610”- In s strong bid for victory the Germans yesterday iiircw masses of planes, tanks and troops against Stalingrad from the south- _.__,:__:___ _(_Cgr_r_t_igued on gge '1, Col 4) Fixed Prices For Feed Grain OTTAWA, Sept, 3—(CP) — formula establishing maximu selling prices for feed grains was outlined tonight by F. W. Present, feeds adminislrator for the Wer- iimcs Prices and Trade Board. Specifically, me order provide that the maxinlum price seller's point of distribution s. which any person may sell f 8min Shall be the sum of:-- l. The laid-down cost at point of distribution, not to exceed ceiling prices for coarse grains fixed by Lire Canadian wheat board and. less any rebalcable amounts auth, orized by the government or any government agency. (A previous announcement, made jointly by the prices board and the agricultural silpplies board, authorized a draw- back of eight cents a busticl 0n western wheat bought for feed use m Canada after Aug. l.) 2. The seller's normal mark-up, not to exceed that established by him during the basic period, in; eluding his profit and cost of proe cessing, mixing, handling, retail. ing and other services “to the ex. tent that such services are per- formed" by the seller. Feed grain for purposes of the order includes wheat, oats, barley. rye, Indian corn, buckwheat and. flux, whether whole, ground, crushed, cut or used in feed mix- tures for livestock and poultry. Another provision of the order effective Aug. 31, prohibits sale of grain intended as iced for live- stock or pxzultry if it contains more than the maximum limit of foreign material allowed under the Can, eds. grain act for lowest statutory grade of such grain, Warship Production Keeps Pace (By Noland Norgsard. Associated Press Stuff Writer) romaou. sem- 3—-<AP>—-‘\- "- Alexander, First Lord of the rklxd- nriralty, announced today Mt TB Britain's shipyards 111*" m“ °.“,.' 1y made 9°“ the R03“! Nalds “dmnlcdlf 3162?’), N lglsessuilgxmdlrllle ships an l1 a losses have risen to the highest rate of the entire war in the as ths. twlon ‘h1g2 or two wershiP cilmgw‘ ies new construction excfcded losses and at the some time villi“ 15 really o. new fleet of corvle S. £0,943.10 and gun-boats and Hg - ing craft of sll description as been built, Mr. Alexander told B luncheon audience on all“; réltlilgg anniversary of Britains ecu ofl-Ivémdid nOt say in who‘ “w!” ies Britain now has more tonnage than when the war began- Tc date the Admiralty hss an- nounced the loss of 423 wsrshlpfl, BIll()_llg'___\Vi'ilCil were iifieilfiflk’; ‘QQIliYJPd Queer“;- @932. Huge Columns of Smoke Over Bombed Nazi City Oiibwaldll m“ "W "melmd ‘Wei R.A.F. - R.C.A.F. Bomber Fleets Fly~ 450 Miles to Blast Korlsruhe. (By Louis V. liuntcr. Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON, sepr. a-rcr Cable)- R. A. ma. c. A. F. bomber fleets in strong force flew 450 miles 111W occupied Europe last r1181“ and blasted the upper Rhincland city 0i Knrisrulic so severely flint t0- day c0lllmns of smoke towering s hiile-srid-u-hnlf over the riliflfi 0i the key mil city were still visible. Returning Canadian fliers told of making their attacks in bright moonlight, added by the 810W 01 giant fires. Pilot Bill Duncan of Mid. , , reported the fires were visible for 100 miles, "The whole town was ripping," he said. Heavy anti-aircraft flN which met the nirmcn hit nnc Canadian- mmlned Halifax bomber imscverul places, two pieces puncturing the ill-cs of one landing wheel. How- cvcr, Flt. Sgt. Charles W. Palmer of Dundnlk. Ont, landed the plane without mishap. _Thc attack, in which eight bombers were lost out of forces probably ramging upward from 200 planes, underscored the coincident promise by Air Minister Sir Archi- bald Sinclair that allicd sir forces would smash repeatedly at Hitler's vital rail systems and thus col lapse his war effort. It was the anniversary of Bri- tain's declaration of war three years ago amid fears of imminent air raid, but the German air force made only smell-scale sporadic attacks on limglond today at the cost of three Nazi planes. The United States Flying Fort- resscs were idle but Mal-Gen. Carl Spsatz, commsndcLin-chici of the United States air forces in the European theatre, announced decorations of many Crew mm?‘ bers in the first seven successful raids made by the big four-ens!“ ships wiihout loss. Gen. Spaatz handed out four Distinguished Flying Crosses and 20 other decorations. Residents of England's southeast coast. well remembering the keen air-raid fears of three years ago but by now accustomed to tho roar of aerial attack and counter- sttack, were awakened twice dur. ing the night by British bombers sweeping across the channel to piosicr German installations on the French coast. The new German bombers which come to Britain on the lust night of the Wat's third year got a hot welcome. Six approached the cost coast nnd one was shot down ll. sea. Another was brought down on the shore, and its four crewmflfl gave themselves up lo n small boy. who gave ilrcm ica ilicn turned them over to the horny Ella-ii With Losses MUST BE AFTER HIM HULL, England —(CP)— The‘. Germans haven't made o tcrpc-ld, yet with Thomas Samuelson! mm: on it although they have fir.‘ plenty at him. The 63-year-old merchant seamen has been torped- oed eight times, three times in this war and five in the Inst. WHEN BROADER Hlohwrws ARE Bum ihdiomsfs WM. sflu WAM Your». sure or “file ROAD this evening st 1.05 gnu tomorrow mroning of. 6. Sun sets this evening st 1.33 and High tide flies wmon-(yw morning at 6.25 s. m. New moon Sept. 10, 11.53 mm. id tide eighteen min- utgnrllzlxrlflsllfon Charlottetown. out FERRY ssuvrcz DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — Leave 9.25 mm. 1'00 “m1?” "%'."..l§l§o'.'.'3"- 11-00 ...§f“v§i.-. Till... m um- w r-m- SUNDAY SERVICI (May 3 to Dec. 2i inclusive) 9.00 . ., 6.45 p-Irk m‘: Bghmeniine‘ $.15 s. m. 8.00 II-lm E r. s. I.—N. s runny srmvlc rug. Wood islands v.00 IJIL. 11-00 . .. p.m. ‘nlleavc Caribou t a.u|.. 1 o-m. Ind no M‘ AIR smvrcs Chorlottetown-Sommerside- M 0H. on LQQVQ Charlottetown 0-35 s. m.‘ 12.45 . m. [also Summerside ‘L10 u. m-i L" ltllglsvo Moncion l1 s. m4 and 6.10 p. m. SUNDAY SBRVTCI Leave Charlottetown 12.45 p. us. m Leave Monctou 4.15 p. l 14..