e sUMMfisTDE G AND PRHVCE COUNTY CH SUMMEBSIDI end 1m ssh-snotty» “WWW-s. should be left with sun Pond, Guard]!!! m: M bwrhéuglllv lthgny of the following m... u, _. gmkstore, Water Street. “m. pottery. Water Street. rho Guardian will be delivered to any home ta um . ' WI’ Weill. Phone i280 ‘w, you! order to he boy roitponslbls h; gaunt“, on "m, nu“ Boy at 2o pa day. or 10c ... column is reserved for new: d “m: interest, but advertising d. nghfiy nature may be inserted .3 cents s word. strictly plyitbla h advance. ___ -E.‘l~\lliEl. STEW KETTLES and . r enamel cnokinff Dots in at- give colors. Quality and price “t Brace's. 14-261-8-12- . 4101115 fresh candles at Tay- wu; co, Kensingtfin. ..iiU1'iNG local Barley and cats . at 'Iiie Shur-(sain Feed Mill. . ztoii. L- 237-8-9-li. .sl.ATE surfaced fire sa-fe asph- .. shingles ill attractive modem m, Price low at Bruce's. | L-281-8-12-2i. _s_--j-———j~— BURNED To DEATH gnJFORD. Que, Aug. 11 —(CP) four-vcar-oid girl was bum- tn deuth when f're, causing an ‘mated $10,000 damage, destroy- ihe farmhouse and out-buildings Arthur Coderre about one mile in of here. ‘ The victim was Claudette Cod- Idaufiliitll‘ or Achille Coderre grand-duughter of the farm f. ivs Era PROVES FATAL ‘IRURO. N. S.. Aug. il--(CP)-- ten bv a cot about a week n80. . Elizabeth lVicVarlsh died in phat hero today after a. heart .1. aggravated by blood pois- g. Surviving are two daugh- . Mrs. B. McComb of _I.ondon. l., and Mrs. J. M. SuJivan of Glasgow. N. B- ig “Program (Continued from_ pflBiL l)____ '1, Hon-ever, realizing the im- tance of live stock produc ion. tProviuciai Government - hid. u the co-operntion oi Federal l Provincial officials and the riticial Exhibition Association, - on tiio Lve stock show again rear. He was sure this would l great success. The exhibits of o iiizh order and the a.- ~ merit nnrt of the program 9Y0- ti for the v sitors would be a .. one, he said. I is brief address was listened Y0 . the rrcnicst of interest by tne e audience. Afternoon Program Between [teats during the racing ram the Grand Stand audience entertained. amused and thrill- hy several high class vaudeville tOniy a part of this program ti be given because the rain - it too hazardous to use the ii acts such as the Five Elf/ins ~ Mills Bros. Hawever. those seen l tops. Included in the acts was revue of ten beautiful girls — <- Canadian Rockette-s. in HiBh- ii costume dandng to Highland The Four Del Rios were with- qiiestion the finest of tumbler! tseen here. Happy Harrison's - of dogs, pcn'es. monkies, etc. I150 806d willie the May sis- ,tiie well-known Rubber Girls‘ unbelievably elastic. Al and i Harvey made s big hit and turgid to gve more. The down- ~ 0f rnih toivards the latter part ihc races prevented other num- ' iltifig shown. Evening Program lie evening program. which was hive started at 8 o'clock. D. S. did to be cstllcd off as the rid- t-ng was unsafe for the show its and the sfage was so wet lit was not advisable or safe iiitberiormers to work. ft rain- liigt n? until coo D. s. T.. then '" o . ' The Midway ‘lite crowds visited the m‘dway evening and ma}; up for the intment oi seeing no oven- ihvw by visiting sideshow... thir- rldes and in other ways amus- themselves. Toiiay and this evening "Willing is set for |, tremen- ‘ bis vaudeville show in con- " n with the horse races this °°Yl and b'.g evening show to- i. ‘there is no doubt but the " lament of the Etlribition have "mo. that surpasses any they km even and with good h" iiiey will pack the premi- m Live Stock Show bflms were practically all -' last evening, the last, arrivals ‘- "is oi cattle from Mr. Ur- fmill. Miscouche. There were t of visitors around viewing liile and horses yesterdlyoldi‘ lter Jones‘ world chunploii “me in for a lot of favourable ~°"’»- As remarked. previously n‘?! ihe best animals in Can- , l m" part in the competi- ‘Mm! commences this morn- ‘i 9 o'clock Daylight saving ‘ l e horses in the horse ring mill.“ of the main building: m." llie cattle ring south 0f "will bulldinv; ofher live stock Mmity to the barns orsheds. a Ible accommodation is pro- “ for wltneislng the iudging of ‘ llld (gulp, HESTERNG AGENT: Mn. John Fond. I1 Church Street-Phone m s IOI-I-l-Ii. Come ill and 8845 DIAN PBINLI COUNT! Gnurlles Drugst , UNI Gludll. Cgmtinyhi/‘ligl: Siunmersid oy for this serving -“IIEAVY" H crease in value. orseiiymwlfgriiég ‘gt Brace s. L-261-8-l2-2i.' -—\AR.SENATE OF 1.1M lead. Hydrated Lime. Berger’? p232 Green obtainable at Bruce's. L-261-8-12-2i. ea lin ' l-mDles in made i0 measure ‘Quit? your fall suit and 0Vgggifgmdshtlfgrli and Macfnnis, entrance Waiti- Street. Summerside. L-i99-8-8-3i. —F0lt SALE-Marina Beauty Blwi). Kensinkton. Good business yearly. Must be sold before Sept. 1st on account of leaving Ken. smiwn- Apply Mrs. Albert His- cott formerly Myrt-le Brooks. Ken- sinEtOli. L-248-8-9.l3 ‘Potain To Force (Continued from page 1) democracy was dead- in fact nev- er had lived in the North Ameri_ can pattern. He aligned France squarely be. hind Germany in Izer fight against. Russia, a fight which tonight found German legions piercing deeper into the Ukraine in wring, Peflain called “gigantic tasks in develop- merits to the east (he strongly ric- cented the phrase) in defence of s. civilization and which can change the map oi the world." What course the collaboration will take was not stated. Tlze Ger- man-controlied press or Paris hng been clamoring for weeks, however, f0!‘ Joint German-French defence of Dakar and other French African POBIOBiOns and s general milPary as well as economic and political CO-OPGFB-UOH with the Nazis. Cflllflboffliivli. Petain observed. "is a. long-term labor and has not. yet been able to bear all its fruit." To implement his decision, the man once heralded as the hero of Verdun, who was culled upon in France's last desperate republican days in 1940 to leud the new reg- ime, designated Vice-Premier Ad- miral. Jean Darlan to take full control of the French military structure. V Wednesday & Thursday Edward Small pmonts TbeSON o MONTE CRI§TO LOUIS HAYWARD JOAN BENNETT Also “News of the Day" Shows at 7.15-9.15 Matinee Thursday at 3 SUMMERSIDE m... Tells: f» (Continued from _ page I 1) broke cloud. Below us was the sea, blue as blue could be, and far I thought of the things I want- ed to think about for a moment 0r two. Then I thought of that bud oil leak which might make our gun turrets‘ unserviceable at the target area. The wireless oper. utcr was working desperately to repair it. His wedding was only a coupe of weeks ahead and we ivunted to come back for it. Pilot Was Cool Objects on the coast grew big- ger and bigger and I went for- ward to the bomb-dimers posi. tion. Max patted shoulder as I passed him. Boy, he was cool. He had refused to turn back because we were leading the formation and there was a Job to "Look at that ack-ack come up," someone said. Ahead of us the sky was clutter- ed with little patches of anti-air- craft shell bursts. We crossed the coast and headed across the little peninsula. toward the drydocks of Brest. "I'm going to try the run-up from here." Max said over the ihtencommunicating phone. “But we're 10 miles off the tar- get and wi'l be there two-minutes early if we make our move now," I told him. "That's all right." he argued. Darlan long has favored work- ing with Germany. As he thus told the story which (‘YEW foreign correspondent in V.chy knew and had been trying to get out to the world for weeks pas, Petain unexpectedly inter- rupted himself to appeal to Am- erica to understand. asserting that there was "no reason to fear a decline of French ideals." Speakln in the strongest terms. with weig ted words. he decfared that the age.old quarrel with Ger- many must give way to a larger perspective which "by our activity caiippen up a reconciled contin- er. .' Frankly, he stated, "that is the aim" towards which we are head- g. Tho old Marshal who made the armistice with Germany last June in a plea for a "soldier's honorable peace" and then became chief of the new French state, opened his address in this fashion: Grave Things “Frenchmen! I have grave things to tell youi "For the last several weeks I have felt an ill wind rising in many regions of France. Disquiet is overtaking minds: doubt is gaining control oi spirits. "The authority of my govern- ment is made a subject oi discus- sion; orders often being ill-execu. "in an atmosphere of false rum- or; and intrigues, the forces of rc- conatructfoh are growing discour- age .' Then he swiftly made these points:- l. His government has not yet- succeeded in carrying out the aims of the "national revolution." 2. He has increased the in- fluence of the anti-British Dorian. concentrating all military powers in the Vice Premier's hands de- spite the admission that the Ad- mirai has been misunderstood and not always given a fair chance by the French people. 3. It is necessary for France to collaborate with the Germans in making s new Europe. 4. e internal set-up in France has been reorganized. eliminating members of the senate and the Chamber of Deputies by "PPR!- aing their pay and suppressing sll political wtlvity. B. All ministers and high func- tionaries of the state must swear personal allegiance to Petain. With Italy. too. he mentioned in passing. “our desires are to escape from these provisional relations (the armistice). to erelib mo" stable ties without which the Bur- opesn order cannot be construct- Pl ed. pug nurse's difficulties and troubled mind-i; he said. d0 ll°~ "it: ‘l'°‘i..'°l2..8l.'.‘.'.'“.3ii%."‘°"‘ r u o o - {m c“; rt °;":.'Y.:::";.:.".' u n - fir?“ 1:0." correctly. in imPOBiHB one. JUST THREE FOR. BACON IDNDON - (or) - "We he" M pqtfljl coupons but the bacon and Arid he was captain. "They're not_ bothering us now and we've got a good chance of gettiri in." "Okay," I said. “Steady ahead. Target." Below I saw barrage balloons at about 6,000 feet. Something was burning on the ground-probably a fighter aircraft. It happened like a flash. Got Three Me 109's "RaLa-tst-tat-tat-tat." went the guns in our rear turret. "1 just. shot down an M23109." called the rear gunner. "1 didn't even have time to report it." "Heads up," cried the gunner leader. "Here comes two more." "I've got one." called the rear gunner of n0. 3 aircraft. “Lets have less people talking at one time." Maxie ordered. "Give the unnery leader a. chance." "Al right, but I've got. an M8109 too." yelled no. 2 rear gun- ner. Below us I raw a parachute open. One of our victims had managed to bail out. Someone re- ported that one fighter had crashed on the ground. Now we were doing violent eves. ive action. The ack-ack was com- ing at us. The target was desper- ntely near. ‘ “Broomphi Broomphl" went a burst right beneath my face. I put on my parachute. "You'll have to do a 90-degree turn left to make it." I told Maxie. "Quickly." He wheeled her and the formation followed. u "Leg, ieit," 1 called. “Steady. The target was coming down the drift wires. I , "Dropping. dropping, g0.‘ I hol- .cred and the bombs sailed out. 0n the last turn no. a had slith- ered abovs us and his bombs near. ly hit us as they fell. "Bombs gone." I shouted. 0V6! A "Good Show" Iiqood mow," saitkhfe-xle. "Now let's get out of here.’ At that moment I knew that we had missed the Gneiseniiu be- cause I had felt a slight skid as we came out of the last All"? turn and straightened out. As we dived and turned I saw the bombs bursting slightly to the left and beyond the target. At ielastdweu had helped to mess up t e oc . The shells were break}!!! l" around us. We 80F 1""- slapsy Maxie was so cool. We landed at on airdrome in the south of England to refuel. I crawled out, had tea in the of- ficers’ mess arid lay down 0H "l! grass-to try to think about home and other far.oif things. But when r closed my 1g" “i=1 BURDEN DANCE Thursday Night NEW noiuit oncnasrali BUS LEAVES" SUMMERS")! .€§:‘ m “In.” gm- you," radioed Wellington bomber. from: fgiolgi‘ awrad short cf fueléiggl AFTER Till DANCE with empty m tanks. LK-Ii-i-"k ‘ fling an crew just landed AT 1H5 RETURNING cculd see was s. map of Brest. the gaygofks and the Gneisenau. goodness l. ot 0f peo {e lot her that day. p The next day s friend from Montreal and I were playing golf when we met Maxie and his wife. Did you have much trouble yesterday?" Maxieh wife asked, looking at. me a little anxiously. "Oh. we had some fun-f’ I started. "Don't believe him." potested Mule. “He's sri awful line-shoot- er. It was very quiet." ll. S. Army Bill Passed by Close margin A118. illr-(AP) WABHINGCION. -By the breath-taking margin of a single vote, the House of Re - i-esentatives tonight passed t e arm service extension bill. Wth the chamber tense and hushed, Speaker sam Rayburn an- nounced the result as 203 to 202 for the . Dewey Short (Rep-Mo.) from the Republican committee table. im- mediately demanded a recapitiiia. tion, which Rayburn granted. The recapitulation, a form of recount, showed the same result. measure. Representative In its final form, the bill called for an 18-month extension of the service Gniigigdsimen, reserlvisfs m t e e parsonne. n e case o ahead was the was‘ °1 Fmncm draftees, it means an extension of their original l2.month term to a total of 30 months. Maritime l.0.0.F. Meets at Truro National and army of draftees, Aug 12—(CPl— TRURO. N.S.. . six hundred delegates gathered here today for opening sessions oi me on the the 84th annual meeting of the Grand Lodge, of’ Oddfellcius in the Maritime Provinces and Newfoundland. Independent Order ‘rho Grand Lodge Degree was do. writer-red on 46 candidates tonight. Earlier the Junior Degree was con- ferred by Lodge. No. 8. Fredericton. NB. the Brunswick Junior Victor I... Taylor of Glace Bay. N.S., was elected Grand Patriarch, suceeding W. E. Vincent of Kent- vilie. N.S.. while Mrs. Agnes Coffin of Montague, President. cf ceeding Mrs. Ircttie Rhedenilfif- chosen suc- P.E.I.. was the Rebekahs. Other-officers included Grand High. Pitest. A. H. Wood of Fred- ericton. N.B.. and Grand Treasurer. I... M. Robmson. St. Stephen, N.B. Keep Minarsfs In the home. VPERHEATE ND Famous Legless =___<fliQ1Jed_!r9m_r=ss i) kle" because he was so short. He W88 Credited with shooting down 30 German planes. nine oi them in one week lost eptember. His plane was wot. down in flames over Britain and he spent three months in a hospital with severe leg wounds, a broken arm and burns. He underwent l5 operations, left hospital to be decorated at Buck- ingham Palace. and then returned fcr a. 16th trip to the operating table. Both Lock and Bsder ranked high on the list of R. A. F. greats, Lock as one of it's most brilliant combatants and the 31-year-old Bader as an organization leader. Although Reader's greatest quality was flying leadership. he itras credited officially with l5 enemy planes. Like Lock. Bader was heavily decorated—the D. S. 0. and D. F. C. and bars to both. Only two other men in the flying service held all these medals. It was back on June l9. 1940, that Bauer. who was British-born, took over the all-Canadian squad- ron which had been badly battered over Dunkerque, and finally led it through some of the fiercest and numerically-unequal battles ever seen in the air. From these, Bader, who resented being described as legless _~ he had "artificial legs. thanks"- emerged with the D. F. C. It was men of his fighting calibre and the Can- adians he led into battle against almost overwhelming odds that Prime Minister Churchill had in mind when he spoke of so much being owed by so many to so few. lt was due to the'r iyork, and men like them. that the Germans chose io stay on ilreir own side of the channel during daylight. Former-Canadian ___ (Continued from page 1) activities or the India congress party. The Jails were so filled with political prisoners that the‘ party could not hold a. conference for two years. Gradually, the v‘ceroy eased the restrictions and as the disorders disappeared and the tension sub- sided, the people of India began to learn the lesson he had been preaching all along-that if trey rihua THE TOILER - PUT T0 THE TEST- wanted self-government, they must search for it along the lines of coh- cillation and constitutional changes. iOfii‘II—lIIV@.1 r 1Q Lin. . TIPPIE AND “CAP” STUBBS HAH" HE'S FOUND BORN ‘FHIRTV YEARS ‘POO SOON So well d'd Lord Willingdon teach that lesson that it persists today and, although the people of Indie. are Just as determined as ever to achieve self-government. they have abandoned strong-arm measures in favor 0f the Wiliinidm imlicy of conciliation. Lord Willingdon was one of thl moat popular gcvemors-general. Canada ever had. Ho succeed " 10rd Byng after the constitutional crisis of i926 and soon was exhibit- ing lite genuine interest in Canada and all things Canadian that mark- ed his term in Ottawa. He was s. confirmed believer in tho future greatness of Canada and the Canadian people, an earnest admirer of their virtues and a stout proponent of Canadianlsm. He is succeeded by his only sur- viving son, Viscount Ratlendorie who was born in 1899. .~" llr. T. H. Hunt (Continued from page 1) town studying there for two W811 He then went to King's College. Windsor and matriculated from there in 1882. He continued his ed- ucation there and graduated with first class honours in 1886. and be- came master of St. Peter's School. Charlottetown in 1888 and con- tinued there until i904. He was ordained deacon in 188B and a. priest in 1889. During the time of his head 111115161141“! of 5t- Peterh School, he acted as curate to Canon Simpson of St. Peiefi Cathedral. He was granted a degree of doc- tor oi divinity at King's College in i902 and became lecturer of H" brew and divinity at Trln‘ty College in 1904 to i907. He afterwards returned to King's College and was appointed Alexan- dra professor of King's College. Windsor and Halifax in 1907, con- tinuing in that office to the PTQS‘ ent lime. Dr. Hunt. was a qu‘et reserved man and very learned. and many noted and learned men in Canada were his pupils. He had a very kindly manner and was beloved b," both pupiLg and professors. His passing will be mourned by many people throughout Canada. He spent his summers at his old home in st. Eleanors with his brother. Richard ‘and his family. Rklrnrd Hunt passed away only a short time ago. In his native village he was loved and respected and had many friends who will miss him. He. never married but was much loved by his brothers children '.n whom he took a great interest. There are left to mourn one brozlr- er, Rev. Wlliam J. Hunt, secretary of Edgehlll School, Windsor. N.S.. _cd. Last. April lie became associat-i two sisters, Mrs. F. M. Webster, oi Halifax. who was with trim when he passed away and Mrs. G. A. Spink of Charlottetown; also his slster-fn-law Mrs. Richard R. Hunt and his nieces, Isabel, Mrs. Bomers, Jessie, Mrs. Arthur Jones and the Misses Frances, Mary and Janet of St. Eleanors to all of whom the deepest sympathy is extended. The funeral arrangements have not yet been decided upon. The body is resting at the Compton fun- eral home and will be taken to St. John's Church. St. Eieanors today. His brother, Rev. Wm. Hunt is ex- pected this evening-S. Popular Pilot (continued from page 1) structor at Mount Allison Univer- sity, Snckville, and Charles, now undergoing military training, and one sister, Mrs. Wilfred Wheaten, Sackville. Captain Anderson graduated from the Middle Sackville high school and studied engineering at Mount Allison for two years before going to Charlottetown where he took up aviation under Captain Waiter Fowler of Canadian Airways Limit- ed with the Trans-Atlantic ferry service. He made one round trip to England and he left Canada on ills second early this month. The cable to Mrs. Anderson read as follows: "Regret inform you that Captain J. J. Anderson has been reported killed in flying accident in United Kingdom. Further de- wt ': \"-li be telegraphed when H-. vailable." It was signed by Wing L..llill.illl.iCl' G. J. Powell, Flight Siwrintendent, R.A.F‘. Ferry Com- mancl, An announcement of the accident ivas made at Montreal at the head- quarters of the Royal Air Force ferry command, which recently took nver from “Atfero" the flying of bombers to Britain. The an- nouncement gave no further de- tails aside from the death list as follows: R0 J. B. Drake, New Westmin- ster. B. C. HO W. G. Kennedy, Tichbourhe Ont. Capt. J. J. Anderson. Charlotte- town. BO H. C. McIntosh, Agmcourt, Ont. R0 G. Laing. Halifax. RO R. B. Brammer. Toronto. Capt. H. C. W. Smith, Montreal. R0 W. K. Marks, Stratford, Ont. F. Eng. E. G. Reeves, Roslyn Heights, N, Y. Capt. G. T. Harris. Kansas. Capt. D. J. Duggan, Wintrop, Mass. Capt. H. R. Judy, Dallas, Texas. Capt. J. Wixen. Los Arigeles. HELLO_l'D LlKE YdtR OPINHOM ON MY NEVNI UKE_F$ pLAYlNfi ACCOMPAb-HMENTS UARDIAN l RONILCLE Capt. J. J. Raulsione, Longbeach Calif. Capt. W. M. King. Arkansas. Capt. I. R. B. White, Ayr. ' Capt. P. D. Bradbroke, London. R0 H. B. Green, Bristol, R. H. D. Rees. Uarielly. South Wales. R. G. H. Powell, Derby. Capt. J. E. Price, Geelong, Aun- traiia. R10 A. A. Oliver. lwindori. Eng- land. (A London dispatch reporting the crash, led to belief that the plane had been bound for this side of the Atlantic. The report said the plane, described as of the ‘Trans- oceanic" type, crashed into s. hill- side Just after leaving a British airport.) Interpreting The War (Continued from pggLil Odessa toward Nikoiaev but its 855cm whereabouts has not n indicated. If these two forces effect a ‘unction north- zgst of Odessa t e city is doom- Loss of Odessa would be less of a blow to the Russians, how- ever, than would the indicated trapping of Red armies West of the Bug. The German break- through southward down both bunks of the Bug behind them gravely menaces all Russian forces in an area 200 miles or more long and almost 100 wide. This area constituted the south- ern flank o! the Russian fron- tier deience line along the Dniester. ‘There may be a half a million Red troops still in that trap and they. not Odes: are the real German objective. I I t O Odessa itself was captured by the Germans and retaken by the Russians during the First Great War. Its fall would not ren- resent a decisive vlctcry for Hitler's legions if Rumian ar- mies defending the Black Sea flank made good their escape. Even with the Bug River de- fence lihe of Odessa outflniik- ed. the lines on tine Dnieper be- hind it offers opportunity for a new Russian stand. The num- erous mouths of the Dnieper and its marshy delta lands form a. powerful water barrier to any Genntiri advance overland into southeastern Ukraine or the Crirriean Peninsula. Lacking destrvcfion o-f Red forces in the Dniestcr-Bug trait. the fall of Odessa would mean little in a military sense. Hit- ler's forces still would be hund- reds of miles short of the front reached by the Germans in 19- 18. At that tme their line ran from the Baltic north of Narva to Rclstov at the tread of the Sea of Asov, c~verir~ all White Russia ahdjiitficraino. i By Westover r OUR BOARDING HOUSE J-fiwituam} MY WORDJwic-seel: AM lN A PRETTY PtcKue!»-.'ti-u:'-. WEALTl-N wtoow EVIDENTDI HAD ROMANTiC Dizeieue on JAKE, AND NOW Tl-lPT 1 HAvE TAKEN OVER Hi6 MODNTAiN euros Duruzsgn-ie is QHOWERMG ME NiTi-i cov GLANCES.’ Irr-ta-sj. a “n . 17...»... seen Mooee- ' , respect: oi=i= TACKLE, - MAJOR.’ TAKE LEFT ‘tow Lanterns AHEAD oi= A RABBW! w. iT- Tl-NNG?» GET TOO TOUGH, OF couszsiavou MlE-SHT Cl-ilLi- ‘rt-re APP/MR av DROPPlNC: stout: sroze - TEETH nwro "rue r 6ALAD more! HE COULD PRETEND 5: Bi‘ lizlivind .. ..- - IT hbssmTgb THEJJK THEY ME INTO aEQAMDRPIJSiRADIATE HAPPlNESS GREET YGR FRiENDS wm-i A _ PLEASANT SMILE-- MY LAND! WHAT ARE You DOiN’—-'i > PRACTICIN’ FOR our: GLEE CLUB! <. I»; rsa-ui -