The SUNIM uAN fifth Street-Phone 189 (lHE WESQTE RN G ’f AGENT: om. John Pond, a: ci. sucilusasioe If‘!!! n; N we, Subscriptions b__ should be left with Mr; yo“, “he Guardian may M’ b“ I! 0f the following stores in Bell Bookstore, Water Street, Toronto Bakery, Water Street, The Guardian will be arm-n; Carrier Boy at 2o pa! do n give your order to the e. Water stung, Granville Street, er week. Phone 289 m“ n, _onslble for deliveries on your route. _‘“—‘"———1 ING cough rem d C11. KHlSillgLOne, {.335 —-_-_. s 1118181118 forks an make gardenigig This column is reserved for news oi lot-iii iiitere. t, hut advertising oi a iieirsy nature may he inscrteu at 2 ccnts a word, strictly payable d ma’ and Weediml light, -Sl-1i£D planted shallow today will b0 iin loiiitirow. Buy mangle. ‘ltlr- ..i..ii and Harden seeds at DANCE — The the a most enjoyab; "ded by a large num . Moore and Y were the James Francoschlnl, wealthy Ital. ian contractor, who was interned 8 NEH!‘ i180, has been "uncondition- ally released on compassionate grounds’ and is now a patient in a ’loronio hospital. Franceschinik "Plural against internment was heard last fall. when Premier Hep. burn. among others. appeared on and daugrh his helmli‘. The appeal was turn- ed down by llic department of jus- —li.BV- JOILN M. S LD INTO ISLAND C \:ry lilipftESlVe service before CJilQi'€,5,1lLlOli Rev. John M. a iuuuclcu into me West _ in Bellini United liliilihl U21 Frlrluy BORDEN -____ Mrs. Wesley MflfjLk-Qd i9? B95516. Borden were ne on Thursday, ' (fniilcli prcsicird and L visitors to iiltcl- hardy of Elmsclriiti and Mr. fiiirst ll Lcrird of Cascumpcc, mem- n-y Hanan and children 5llmmérfiide on Thursda visitors to - ii-li‘ special hymn" "__“" for tlic UCCiiaiOH. After tlie service g8 Sharpe and ‘LTJ-gh‘ R to spend the Week-e tives in Moncton, 1r _ . The churches in _"‘— “cs1. Cllpt) circuit arc Betliol, Cape m5‘ James M“ AT Was a visitor to c" or Borden’ Charloticzoivn on Eliccii is llie son of Mr. and Mrs. GUOP-LC Simon of Summerside, tne lent end family , ilAVllig rcsidcd in O'I.eary were Visit"! t0 number of years-S. ____ 0115 11ft! extended to Preston Dariach of HO5Dital on Friday, n. St. Eleanors-S. - Mr. Worbiirion wzflkrir has re- lli‘ll(‘l'i to Summcrsidn from an ex- sudxil visit to Si. Paul, M1nn.—S. “DDPII of Borden arr nds in Charlottetown, E8 LOVe 0f Borden left on Charles Love who is s N. R. at Pictou, N, Mr. and Mrs. A Mrs. Thos. Paqu -.\fiss Enid Lockhart has uriicd to her home in Summerside iicr an cnjoixabie visit with friends St, John, N. B.—S. . B. Paquet and et of Borden are --Corp. Eric Sheen of the R. C. . F‘. at St. John, N. B., spent the "eck end in, his home in Summer- ‘iie, the gucst of hi; parents, Mr. lid Mrs. George slieen.—S. ce Hatfield, Halifax, is visiting in Borden, guest and Mrs. Wm. Ozon. Mrs. WillianrMacLean of Brigh- , arrzwd on Wfldqeeday month's visit to li-rr par- and Mrs. Harry Inman 0f Augustine Cove. Mrs Athol Wood-side and son Lee have gone to Sydney, c, 13,, where they will reside for the sum. A BISHOPS READ (Continued from 'pa__ge___1_) Harry Edwards of Mrs. Maude Mac- cu spending a short leave at his mnc in Summcrsirle has returned S. c . staff of the Commis- Iligh School, Quebec City, t lrrr home in Summerside.-S. letter said. "and now our mi of Mr. Preston Forbes of Drum- Elchools (kmdergartens) must be cllcr, Alberta, will be e: has been given a. olorship at the school of Bnnff. Mr. Forbes is a grand- ni fr. \V. J. iWilCLF-“lll of Lot Kindergarten: are conducted es- pecially to care for youngsters dur- ing the day when their parents are at work or have other duties. Bishops said thcy had protested sharply against this stop. as well as against other anti-church tions. Cloisters and other Cirholic institutions have been conficciawd for non-religious purposes and church is virtually without a press, As an example of recent wide- spread "influences at work against religion," the letter ciied a book. without giving the title. in which it said readers were told Germany faced a choice between "Christ and it’ : Training School. —V. A. Robert Clark of the R. N.. sitnioncd fit Halifax, return- aftcr a plcosant " in Suniniciside. lhe Vernon hinillicn‘. Mr. lmrl boon spciidin; his leave . ilfllllf‘ in Old Hurry. '1 isiflillii. rind icii there " io sumnr-rsirlc. Hc attended w“ iifrs-si llirfifi nt - " the bciiiiiy spots of To combat such tendencies, boron; ui-rzcd that Catholics clicr- ish and nourish their symbolically make cnch Catholic home "a house of God." church had made wnr sacrifices in the interests of the German na- tion. opened cloisters and other in- the year, i939. some at not time. German hlm van Rlbbentrop in signing the agreement ny not to attach Russia. It le the some Von he some is Moscow: Kn Minister Joac th pledged Germn __ in-nircp who en June 7.3 summoned the in nnrl informed him that German! h"! 15"" "We of defence" against the Rueelen n" fffllltleru - ' ennlee which "threatened" RELEASED miliwfsfioi niIEFEéi-RYBFsQidiT. h°W ihwlfiilical students fought in the field and priests worked a‘, the front as chaplains and members of ambulance corps. mising faith. Heavy Battle (Continued from page 1) demolished. 500 prisoners of ivar." lmrccl positions “While rciieatlizz. they enrxrunt- ered a German moiorimd reszimcnt. zit-lacked it and completely annihil- ated it," the statement said. “A nit-i- jorliy of Germans. including the CQllllflilllfifil‘ of the, regiment, we're killed or wounded.’ The high command repgrted ciln a g.“ skins We“ communique tint nnousan s o ‘er- _ gian solldiers died in fierce figiliilllgi gggésttnitfbfmggmormgcgxnlziafhké _ own he Dvma River toward PO _ Canadian Government Department Russian uniis that launched the 0f P19163653’ counter attack in the Ostrov sect» , or were said to have driven the 18W dHYS liter ihere Was n3 irwbifi Gerri-inns back soufn of that wwn getting rid of those scalskins Buy- and destroyed r40 tanks and a e.s bid them in “considerable section o1’ motorized thun at otsk, 120 miles south of Ostrcv. infantry Another counter attack was ne- portccl to_ have held German trooizs ncar Bcrisov. 50 miles northeast; oi‘. Minsk and. 370 miles from Moscow. At Brobruisk, scum of the Bori- sov on the Beiiezina River the coin- munlque said the Germans "repent- edlv attempted to advance but all attempts were repulsed bv our troops with verv heavy losses to the enemy." The Berezina. has been de- scribed as dark with German dead Still rartiiei- south. stubborn Red resistance was said to be holding the Germans at Novograd Yoiynslc 140 miles west. of Kiev. Ukraine cap- ital. On the Bessarabian ironr. tn the cxiit-me scum the Russians linltod a German-Rumanian ad- vance toward Baltl. The communiques report on the sanguinary battle in the Polotsk sector near the Latvian frontier said that Russian troops are holo- ine fast alone the Dvina. and add- e .- “In fiizhtinz to advance towziid the rivt r thousands of German bod.- ics remained on the field and nu: - erous tanks and aircraft were rle- strcyed. A considerable part of ‘one attackintz troops found their Braves on the bottom of the river.‘ 61 Nazi Planes Downed The communique said that in air fighting Friday 61 Germanaflg planes were shot "ow" "d ""' clan losses were 29. Moscow iteclf iiiiri uii iili’ ftllu aniin. union itta ui an hour but no bombs were diwvdfl- o “A bl-iiiotoied Junkers B8 was no- ticed at pivot height. Rointij/OWB-Td Moscow from the southwes. mid the official account of the alarm. "No otiioi- enemy plane: e BM- The Junkers 88 was mush down bv our planes gfifr which the all . e ." “stirs: of mm t... the front. from the Arctic the Black Sea. declared Soviet bombers played an iIIIDOTWnt port in hold’ ing up the German advance. One formation was said for have "frustrated Fascist crossintl 01 I river. but the river itself was not amcd. “no flight commanded by CBDQ; Manturov was the first to take off. said the report. “It silenced enemy anti-aircraft batteries which cov- ered five crossiniz and ommed the enemy on the crossings themselves. Bombs were dropped accurately on the target. The crdsstnizs W611! 00m‘ pletelv destroyed and the enemy failed to force the river Guerrilla Warfare Stalin's call for intensive lruflTilll warfare behind the lines was ne- Dorted to have brought instant re- sponse from Russian Pen-stints Mid townsmen in icrritnry thus far over- run by Germans. Tess. Soviet news eoencv. an captured German soldiers told of "mm-edible" difficulties a column of German Rtisoline trucks had in at- temniiniz to reach the front. Hans Schmidt, one of the captur- ed soldiers. was quoted as sayliiz that because of sruerrilla activity German truck drivers try to avo-d night trips "Each hillrtcl: and cnch roadside bush were admitted bv the prison- er to have served as good cover ior Russians,“ Toss said. "The Gannon nan-v panama-II nu. ERSI AND PRDNCE C interpreting The“. W OUNTY CHRO UKR (Continued from page 1) Ohinese communist elements. There was a time rd. ‘flielr dream mtggration in China t! There are reasons w Jfllm will move to restrl lullnes of Vladivostok u P9955’ t0 fight Russia's forces -I~‘*irin attempt already is M’ to squeeze Russia out We!!!‘ sea outlet into t Murmansk. In ad- ition, Axis forces are t Sea. If Red force; both iihe Mur- are driven out of mansk area. and the Ukraine, what- ever remains of Russia in Soviet hand; will have only Fai- Eastern sea outlets to the world. With Vladivostok in effect blook- aded. Japan's cost] y puppet r i e in Mancliurla woul egm d become an in- ng Rusian objective. Its resti- a from which Japan e would offer reason- able excuse for a Ru=sian offensive ight receive the blessings of London and Washington. There is a powerful and Felt-sustained Rus- sian army in Siberia or atpt to be engaged in The Catholic church in Germany is "loyal to the government," the lettci- said, and gladly shouldered the burdens and sacrifices or the times. But it concluded such sacri- fices have limits-namely whcn it comes to the question of compro- Fence sitting is neither a. glorious i-ior comfortable occupation for p:l- iticians. statesmen or nations; but there are times when no other course seems open. Jinan is at that point now, for in addition to Russia, Tokyo must always keep one pJlicy trained on “the United Handy Humidor Pouch ‘I 5y! Some years ‘ego, ti strained than now, a. highly-pie authority in Washington, dominant figure in making, told ths he had. It was that some day, with the upbuildirig of the navy, foreign diplomats always wzuld see the shoulders of American confer- ees the silhouette of the American writer of a hope muster their forces for a counter- attnck and opened strong artillery fire from a distant position. A de- vastating onslaught was launcned by a zroun of our tanks. and the German artillery positions were plain view now fcr Ja- pan's policy makers. uncomfortable as it may ire, has its advantages in such. circumstances. Sealskin Sale Nets Treasury Tidy Sum Postscript to a recent notice sent "The fighting ended in complete annihilation of the German tank formation. Soviet tank troops had destroyed 300 enemy tanks. captured 12 long-range nuns and taken over Another statement which sued new light on the magnitude of the battle declared that a Russian iuut had been ordered to retire to pre- auction company in Montreal: “A shipment of 1.0.0 dressed and dyed Alaska Sealsklns was received from London, England, just. in time to be included in our ccming Sale. found to be very in quality. colour and size. They “CANTS A NAVY Texas said he hail asked Prefiidlblii Roosevelt to lct Texas own army, llT-Y)’ and air force, so it mutt] "stop" any nation or combi- nation of nations from coming into the U.S. from the south. The presi- dent rcplied in a leitcr to 0‘Daniel may, u", 1am was "breathtaking", but. that the federal government did not desire to place a hezivor load on Texas thfn that shared bv other states, the governor said. War-—25 Years Ago Today JULY ‘l l9l6—Br.tish forces cep- tured Leipzig Redoubt south. of When sale t‘me came around a fasi—and paid fofl the average rate of $36.40 | much the best price snce the De- ,- part-ment of Fisheries began mark- et-"rig in Canada, in i939, the Dom- inion's share of the skins taken in and about the Pribtlof under the Pelagic Sealing Treaty. These partilfuiar skins were part of Canada's share of the i940 "teke” and had been slfp for processing along 8.700 others. Another lot of the pro- cessed skins will be auctioned 1:1 Montreal in June. Until a. few years e30 the Cana- dian Government us"! in St. Louis. M0,. tne sirm handed over it by the Washington Govern- ment es Canada's fifteen per cent of the pelts obtained from the Pri- bllofs where, under the treat/y Ill seal hinting is done by compelled to assign number of tanks for protection of the columns. In spite of these meas- few German soldiers and car drivers found their izraves on the way to the front. The Russians t D al the drivers and. set lire In a. frenzy, the lank tsppen fire upon forests after fierce fighting, but were forc- ed out again by German counter- attacks, Germnii reserve concentra- tions in Bazentin 1c Petit and harassed by machine gun fire Offl/Y/AYII/ WW Th, prlncgpa] flgming fronts in eastern Europe are the United States. In 1933. however. Canilcia. decidcd to Under this 911m United States were shipped _to Eli;- land for CiTC sing nnd Kiwi"! ("Id then were sold on the London fur market. That ivorkcd vciyivcll for e. time but choc-mine condtlons in the European fur trade ultimately combined in make ii. unmzisiacrrl‘ Then the Canadian authorities decided to break new Emlmd- 7719i? someihirg never tried mans captured Riga 41ml brvliv counter-attacking Willi stretch of Bcrcsimi MUWPH Bflfflsflv Tm ‘Md Gem‘ n c-s likely it i! in oemian nouris- tr n! oommittlniz "wholesale atrocities" Soviet frontier towns and under their control. lit declared that (gefirmaae oecupifiili the £331 ofLom e“ rmimooers , .,, “s, n families out into the streets and; bgmfami-gifrf‘: “i; h" "M! M“ l suptected them to atrocious torturett; i e m . Th slashed defenoeless women time d O “ - and children to pieces. chopped o" etfllskinfl h" i‘ limbs and mused out thelrli ~ Tau said. i’ n5 received by Canada xwthstexidingrliilerk boast-in from the Un’ie.i Stairs undo" treaty continued to be sent to Lon- don for procesurig. for ihcrc is no Canadian rcmponv HilliPiWd IQ F10 that exactng work, but tlic finish- rcl polls uore bought back to ii‘»i"» . . tsi L-uL, n of ‘Vida ‘Emmy a c o e Dilllil on from time to i mc-nol-i the sk' 1h9__E°1'_1iL'5__1l1Y_ .i~ a “i! _}_ OUT OUR WAY "ts/ELL u= VOL) GET n’ PUFF-ED UP “n-nzu THAT i; _ __\‘\_\_ \\\\‘§\\EQ\\§\\Q\ \\&\\\Q\\\ Ne. - _ ‘iit-s"h-,i.\i\lm / ' TQAVEL VKDRH .- nfimi AND THEIR sky-soil yards- (fez/we'll) A6671” K414’ 9 O Pill!’ fi/{fl/Ud l‘ #010731’ 1 Zr-fiflilffll’ x Q O . Q fiV/JGCID ‘MM razrz/rz/ x/v/rawr/r 13714107 The Story of "The John can" ’ ' One wild night In i888, the burque"Jehn Gill", 92B ions, was running for shelter Into Waterford, Ireland, in the teeth of o January gale. The skipperhod no harbour charts end was confused by the two lighthouses. He might hove gone on the rocks if his wife hod not mode the shrewd guess that the lighthouses should be kept ln line. The "John Gili" was built of River John in ‘I881 and rigged with two Rosebud PI PB TOBACCO $5651.50!!! 1:010! L O Ml/flldfl O . J/lfl/AVIII’ ‘mm Oidl/Ff curry/arr‘ " l shown on the mp. The Bunions have mu-iy natural defensive positions between the sea. at Riga and Kiev in the Russian Ulkrlllz-tfizflainfena: follow the llwlnn river, the Borcsina river and the lower Dnieper river and ere will I Th Ger- Dnicpcr line is probably more strongly fortified than the Bereelna. lne- 0 across the Dwina river at several pointl, but hen the fresh troops. Germans armored force! mny h!" brill"! ‘gmglh n‘; a: region of Vitelisk and Smolensk. lf so, they appecr to have been wiped out or ctrlntltlgfl n1!“ mime counter-attacks. The main anriy of the Russians appears to be acting etrongy ere and BobruislnMinsir may be I salient in the front, but just soap, so TI-liG i5 me PEALEFUL MOUNTAIN NEST wuss; we ARE ro mite AWAY rue uaww nouns OF out: VACNflONiw I MUST o»: THAT oooa REQUtREB A err o: REPAlR/ww i-iMP/s’ A bee» PQOBABLN some NEIGHBOR‘S were». couepoooie! w IOVE! THE ANIMAL fiEM$ A gxabouf Prices‘ were e. good deal betwi- um m» stopping British snipe from avel- , that ct. each o1 the three suceod ling the seas, bv the we —and were offered for sale by auct on in Mom: the llTfli.’ The firrt Montreal lale, '11:‘ b M ve tidy sum mm m‘ late 39, was mode ately successu . Digggflonitcwizaymment excheauer to i sales but none of them 199W" ' thirty-six forty flaring: of i111: but. the average price obtained for was s. trifle imder $14, . With - Major Hoople arr our oi= eoizjrsw uses. Doeeie! NICE ooeeia THEY ARE =