MAXIMS OIL- MERE MAN ixii- sell confidence qnlllte to great undertakings. i‘ ‘yltmtovvu Guurdluu. Two Ooute, "m". guru“, Iounded Ill‘) DOOOOO l Italian Airmen Iiomplain 0f IIazi Treatment By Innis V. Hunter Canadian Press War Correspondent ALLIED AIR FORCE HEAD- QUARTERS, North Africa, July l6 ~10? Cablei- Region Aeronautica, the Italian air force, is becoming oillv a poor relation to the Luft- vaff . ltaylian airmen. captured in Sicily. don't mince words ng about ierly that the German-s use the most comfortable quarters, requisition all the technical and food stores and behave generally as if they were right at home on Sicilian soil. "Worse than that, they have liken our newest types of aircraft Ind given rus old types in cx- thrust‘. sad the Italian pilot of a JU-B’! mil-ll tured in 1940. "They a1 commandeered tools. Iisisted upon taking over our work- more and armorioe, leaving our mechanics to work in sheds." Evidence of the domineering at- .litude of the German 111mm; 15 found in Sicilian airfields where all ‘W19 1111111111185 01' the Italian peace- ‘lieds and to farm houses i Iiexiigiborhood. n e tal ans and civilians were all short of food-Amt not the Ger- “iil- Captured German ration limes have contained large stocks at Danish butter. Italian farm m-q. ‘W. Belsian canned milk and Ttvnoh sausage, Iiadets Graduate “YQISIDRIA, July 1O —-—(GP)——Ah- um u? class or cadets erud- omm Ofmw from Gordon head m ‘f,’ ‘Paulina school. most of taiem Int in tbs rgalfiagifansioignmtiivellneillrtg- 11$ list includes: y' llebec- J. B. B61889. Charles- KII“; W. I-l. Cohoon. Sherbraoke; “W. Mckenna. Granby. M gHDScotIa -— X. W. Boucher. 1' - "15. J. J. Marks. Halifax; ‘L- Made“. Glace Bay R v ctwnmilhflm. Hubbards ' ' 9W B _ ' . mm‘ sahflltlnfxgk G. D. Brad Prince Edouard Island — H J 1l¢WIlllam,Q'1m,-y_ ' ' OOMINO EVENTS kwmk-I" Mflllfleque Wednesday. 717-31 "Talkies Craoaud Thuradayfl a‘ , _ .,_ “Rona — y m“ hBgzteTea July ilstiltielrglt. "Talkies EDIE-EEOC n a 1m “”““Y~ m 141511 "10! Cream, Dance B rlngton “"1 Monday. July 11m. p'l-l‘I-li. "he Cream and-De c in New Haven 3011001. Jtl1y 191.1’: e 1-17-11. "Dance m Vail l-Iall Jl 311111. WebsterEneOrcheEE ' “y n 1-11-21. Dance Cardlg Credit Union m“- M°n1iay Julmlflth Webster's °““°~*im- ' y ' 1-11-11. n "Deuce tn i Hall Mount gtmmn» Jilly Ilifloglebstef-e Orch- "~ 1-11-11. "I" Cream Social d Dane “die Mano-v. Julyufbth. Mode- I-nd old time dancing. 1-11-21. ‘DWB form Mlflhllelll-Dilil- m United Church "The I'M A t Dram tic h Wm “I'll-l ill I so» as..a':’. a v loin. Goodcgpecisltiel, 1-1e- 1. "st. Teresa‘ Dram ti l b re- “Vtre Cosmos Ogartligyatpst. "H. Monday. July 19th. ‘l-IO-Zi. ‘Dlstri t . ' IN’. ' t l V u "NI-IN n llyld 8.3% lathe lrltle- VPlight Of Nazi Base Desperate Soviets Made Cains Of From Six To ,Ten Miles Yesterday, the Germans. They complain bit- ed t >zww The People's Paper MAXI M6 01A MERE MAN Covers PrinoeEdwardi 134w“ Q“ ;-w-v--"" “"'*--~._____“ Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody CiilARl-(YPTETOWN. CANADA. SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1943 1 . By Lynn Heinzerllng Associated Press Stall Writer LONDON, July 16 iAPl-Smash- ing through new German reserves 11115011! rushed into the threatened Oral area, Russian forces added six to l0 miles today in their advance on the vital city which the Ger- mans have been fortifying for a year and a half, The Soviet midnight communique tonight and a special communique earlier said the advancing soviet troops met ll counter-attacks with concentrated fire power and re- pulsed the Germans with l1eavy' losses. Previous announcements had told of ains of 12 to 28 miles on the Ore front. and one Russian broad- cast, recorded by Reuters News Agency, said the Soviets had reach- a point within 15 miles of the ciév as they pushed in from three s . es. (The BBC said the plight of Qrel‘ was so desperate the Germans were forming a "taxicab army" rising every type of truck and automobile to rush troops northward and east- ward to stem the Russian drive. The broadcast was heard in New York by the United States Foreign broadcast Intelligence Service.) The Germans were reported frant- ically strenglhening their lines on the Oiel-Bryansk railway which also was nrenaced by the Soviet coimtel" offensive. Renter's Moscow correspondent said Premier Stalin made a special visit to the Orel front recently where he personally directed the plans for the present Soviet drive. The German radio said Marshal Semeon Timoshenko is directing the Rilssian attack which “is now extended to the whole Orel bulge." The broadcast by Transocearrs mili- tary correspondent, Capt. Ludwig Sertorius, recorded by the Assoc- iated Press. adrnltted that the Russ ians had begun counter-attacks in the sector south of Orel. The Germans <llE“?5l6f1 that 11n- other Rirssian offensive was in ti: making in the Leningrad area. Famous Airman Reported Missing LONDON, Ju.Iy l6 —-(CP Cable) --Wing. cmdr. J. D. Nctlleton, who was awarded the Victoria Cross for leading n daring daylight raid on a U-boat engine factory in Augsburg April 17, 1942, was reported tonight as missing after a recent R.A.F. operation. ‘ Nettletnn. then a Squadron Lead- er. led one of the two formatlim-B made up oi six Lancaster heavy bombers in the raid against Augs- burg. The airmen flew more than 1,000 miles over enemy territory to I day. QQOODO Russian Troops Smash Forward In Drive Feed Grain Subsidy CYITAWA. July 16—(CP)—As an incentive to farmers in eastern Canada to buv western feed grains and store them on their farms so next winter's livestock feeding re- I‘.i‘i‘<§.°.“‘é‘é“.wi..“ “f “ti? m” °°“" ve n en w a a r- bushel subsidy based or‘: 11'. s11 g scale, thgd ‘agriculture department announc n ght. “Farmers in the eastern provinces W110 buy western feed grains un- der this Elan, will receive a three- cent-per- ushel subsidy for grain bought in July; 2% cents per bush- el for August; two cents for Sept- ember; lit cents for October; one cent for November and one-half cent for December," the department a . “Orders placed since July l will be eligible for the subsidy." Increase Farm Machinery fiunta OTTAWA. July l6—(CP)—-The prices board issued tonight a new farm machinery order providing substnutinlly-increased quotas for manufacturers and importers for the next 12 months. Announced by HJ-I. Bloom. ad- ministrator of farm nmchmery. the order provides for a supply of farm equipment equal in tonnage to approximately '77 pcr cont 0i the average of 1940-41 output, and re- presents an increase of about 130 per cent over supplies provided by the previous farm machinery con- trol order. It also establishes T911011‘ provisions on the basis cf 156 pf-‘r cent of the 1040 and 1941 average ouptlt. The board announcement said, the total fnogrnm pi-ovitlcs for apPYO-‘P imaic v ill) pcr cont of the zivcrafge total weight of machines, repairs and attachments supplied in the 1940 and i941 period. Reasons for the new order. Mr. Bloom said. were increased food production goals, loss of farm man- power and the short supply of farm equipment. Ratlonuig of farm machinery, put. into effect last October, will be continued to on- sure fair distribution and the mdX- imlu-n use of every piece oi new equipment. Mr. Bloom said consumers were unlikely to feel much benefit from the new quotas until the crop year of I944 because except for sundry lilies which can produced quickly a substantial quantity of new machines cannot be completed until late fall. MINE STILL TIED UP FLORENCE. N.S-. Julv ltl-ICP) —A union request for federal in- tervention in the 10-day lieu of Florence colliery was met by a ab- or department spokesman today with advice to the striking miners to "return to work immediately and then place their wage dispute before the war lobar board. No act- ion toward returning to Work was taken at a meeting of the local to- and indications were the mini! would be idle until Monday at least. ‘FOR. FALL CHILLS LONDON, ~10?» _- British householders will be allowed 560 blast the German base. Several Canadians were decorated Yvathfiniartgnlhe. "id- By Thomas F. llflvlllllll Associated Press Staff Writer BERNE. July 1s —(AP)-— The Italian Press tonight avoided direct discussion of the Churchill-Roose- velt call for Italians to quit 118119- ing 0r be blasted out of the war. but editor“); gave indirect confirmat- ion that the Fascists were well aware oi its importance in a nation which is alarmed even though unin- fonmd in detail of ‘the bll/tlfi 1H 1 . Slfgle Rome radio in an overseas broadcast declared the Italians would fight on, and said that the real and true decision in 5101 "'will be reached in the new batt1¢ which has already vmiflllll ed on the Cami-eta P1111113) In ‘Tribune expressed confided“ that the people were ready to lilht w the end "foo- the future. honou- and their nshts" but did not sneak of editolk offmn “a ‘tlIiley EndW-thus leaving the open for the end to be brouwt about whenever the people or the armv decided the end has arrived. This same newspaper. however- afiairmed that despite Mavy allied pressure "not a single (German) soldier or plane" hnd been sent from u_ e a r. u. IJHL the Russian front to Sicily. (‘The Italil-n DNDIIIM Axis Reaction yTo Ultimatum ly driven between Gcnnanv and Italy". pounds more coal during the next four months than they have been allcwsd in the past three. Btefnni mactod quickly. declaring in a broadcast to North America: "The spirit of the Churchill-Roose- velt messagc accords perfectly ivith the ferocious egoism of the Anglo Saxon. The Italian people at this moment do not hear these enemy messages. There are no Darlans in Italy. The German radio broadcast an "unofficial message" whim quoted Berlin sources as saying that the Churchill-Roosevelt message was "typically Anglo-American, making political capital from certain mili- tary initial successes in the false assumption that a wedge could be Another Berlin broadcast, quoting Dr. Rudolf Fischer, Diplomatic Correspondent of the Transocean Propaganda Agency. said that "at this moment when the situation might easily become crucial for the is 5 000 Anglo-Aimericans, Roosevelt and Churchill are requesting the Ital- ian people to stab in the back their soldiers wit: are defending Italian soil with li~eir lives." Popolo D! Roma told the Italians ihev "must tzrit their teeth for the moment.“ " use no other assist- ance is D0"'l'.)lE except that from fen ally who is compelled to continue to fig-ht. on the eastern front. Ro- bert Farir cci. editor of the Rie- gime Fascism, bluntly demanded a e; r0 and surrenders soon. might be impending. perhaps relatlvcl in ffentral Russ a. not Sicily. segment of the victory pattern. west. It came in perfect integration. and east flanks of the Azov coast. War Situation Last Night By Kirke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst Allied fl hti f d Italian mainsland‘ ‘rlasEl-Eielzhtw 3:1: iseltrlEltlttlstt-Mm‘ m SM tunl ultimatum laid down by Prime M nlster Churchill Roosevelt. It is obvious that Italy risks disaster unless she surrenders_ The pace of the Allied advance on a 100-mile front sweepln In risoners by the thousand, accelerated as the first week of the greatgsea. erne invasion ended. It stirred speculation at Allied headquarters in North Africa an to whether an attempted Axis sen evacua" Yet the events which held out the greatest promise oi‘ ultimate and early collapaeqia“! the e Moscow-disclosed Red Army pnce attack on the Nazi Orel salient, protecting the main German war com: munlcatlon line in Central Russia, filled in for high Allied strategists a Following their u u l to M of the drive for three!dayfbsntilrtheymgdifidagbltigwrdgs: Eggctflféetflféhlff ‘ES-t finite: OIIJCCl-IVCS to indicate its strength and purpose. London and Wash- ington alike had been hoping for a Russian offensive synchronized with the Allied drive into Sicily and the again stepped-up air attack from the Nazi propagandlsts, admitting Russian gains against the northeast Orel salient, described them as attacks for relief of Itursk. There is strong evidence. however, that the recent Nazi mass attack on the Iiursk bulge from Orel southward to Belgorcd wag 115g]: llflllflfily )1 relief attempt that failed. It was calculated to forestall Ibo very Russian offensive that now has opened and is definitely threatening the ‘Bryansk communications key to the whole Axis front in Russia from htcisk to the Taganrog Axis anchor point to the south on the sea, of and over the deeds the vir- to buck up wit and President o! Sicily xls in Europe were taking Lace LONDON, July l6 — 1GP) >011 the point of a sword, Prime M111- ‘lster Churchill and President Roosevelt today offered harried Italy the choice oi "Iionorablc cupituintloir" or utter dcfcntr-and the world watched eagerly tonight for any sign of a crack up in Mus- sollnls regime. Few expected an immediate gen- eral uprising in a land ridden bv Blackshirt Militia and _Gcrman Gestapo. But as time goes on and Allied armies drive cioscr to the heart of Italy, the High Command hopes the Churchill - Roosevelt words will bear fruit among a boo pie already bereft uf empire. pounded by blockbusters and re- trcnting before invasion. The message to the Italian peo- ple was beamed to the beleaguered peninsula from many broadcast stations and showered in printed leaflets upon Italian cities from Al- lied planes. “At this moment the combined armed forces of the United States and Grcnt Briiiiiir tinder the com- mand of Gen. Eiscnizcicr and his deputy, Gcn. Alexander, 111C carry- ing the war deep into the terri- tory of your country," the message said “This is the direct consequence of the shameful leadership to which you have been subjected by Mus~ solinl and his Fascist regime." Almost as the mcssafle went out. Allied bombs were laying the Ita- lian cities oi.’ Naples, San Gio- vanni, and Foggla in ruins. Huge ncrinl bombs drove home the \v0rds of the Allied leaders:- "Mussolini carried you into this war as the sntcllite of a brutal dear trovcr of peoples and liberties. “Mussolini plunged you into this war which he thought Hitler'- had alrendy won. In spite of Italv‘s great vulnerability to attack by air and sea. your Fascist leader sent your sons, your ships. your air forces, to distant battlefields to aid Germany in her attempt to conquer England. Russia and the world." The spokesmen for the armies nf Democracy reminded the des- ccndants of the Romans:- "This association with the de- -'—-—-—- _L_____._.__€. "fCrTntihued on page 11. C01 3) Would Enlarge Insurance Aet UITAWA, July l6 —(CP) —'1‘he House of Commons gave first read- ing late today to a. bill to amend the unemployment insurance act to increase to $2.400 a year the salary limit of those coming within the soope of the act. The present limit 2, . Labor Minister Mitchell presented the amendment on the recommend- ation of the advisory committee of the insurance act administration. ‘There was some cliscafssi I on the preliminary resolution and some opposition to the increase because it would draw in permanently-em- ployed low-salaried persons who could never hope to benefit. Mr. Mitchell said recommendat- inns had been made that the inc- v-cnse be to $1.000 and he personally thought it should be, but the com- change in Italian military leader- Ih-ID- _ . . Italy Given Ultimatum Allies Offer “Honorable Capitu- lation ” Or “Utter Defeat”, Rain Slows Forest Fires In Nfld. ST. JOHN'S.Nf1d., July l6 —(CP Cable) - Overnight rain somewhat slowed the progress of disastrous forest fires in the Bonavista North District today. but it was not suf- ficient to overcome the flames which had already roared through one village and threatened another. Firefighters were still concentrat- ing on saving homes and house- hold possessions as the fircs con- tinued out of control. About a dozen separate outbreaks were raging over a 15-milc front. Already the village of Trinity Settlement had been practically wiped out and its 250 inhabitants evacuated down the coast in mo- torboats. Reports received here yesterday said the nearby com- munity nf Warrham was cndnngcr- ed and at that time had Inst scvrn louilclings to the flames. Nn flir- tlier word of Warchams plight was received todav. Issue Ration Bards To ILS. Visitors Prince Edward Islands five Local Ration Boards are busy these (1085 issuing temporary ration cards in visitors from the U.S A.. to mem- bers of the armed forces sl-limdiili; more than a five-clay furlough in the province. and to farmers em- ploying trainsient labor. In addition to this work, mem- rs of these Boards are still winding up the canning sugar 08m- paign as wcll as attending to other rationing details. And now thBy art‘ clearing the decks for the N0. 3 Ration Book distribution camtmltll which will take place the last Week in August. Two new members have been ad- ded to the Montague Local Ration Board. These are; Mrs. - Parks and Mrs. Howard Vickerfioll of Montague. ____________. OROP REPORT weekly crop rc merit of agricu ture of the Cah- adian National Railways. l-fnil has been reported at scat- tered points in western provinces but total damage will not be very large. Practically all wheat is in shot blade, with a fill’ percentage in head. Coarse grains show variable con- ditions, moisture is needed in some parts of Saskatchewan and Alberta, Where some burning lms aplleflfvd- Pastures and livestock remain 0d and pest damage is not cxtens ve. SHELBURNE. N.S.. July l6 - (GP) -Kcnney MacDonald, 54-year -old farmer cf this tnlvn, died today of injuries suffered Wednesday .lo11:\l Anthem Canadians- Receive Oolors- At Ceremony By DOUGLAS AMARON (Canadian Press Staff Writer) SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND, Jilly 13 —‘ (CP Cable) -- Veterans of the Dieppe Raid and soldiers fresh from Canada paraded today before the King and Queen as the Royal Regiment of Canada and tho South Saskatchewan received col- ors. The ceremony was the first for either regiment and rarely has a finer show been seen in Britain. Not even British Guardsmen, who tralnocl the Canadians. could find flaws. The King, wearing a Field Mar- shals uniform and the Queen, vzearing a mauve dress and a mauve hat on which was pinned a diamond Maple Leaf, inspected the troops and talked to many ol them before the colors were yoresented. Most of the troops ixcre newcom- ers to the regiments. which suf- fered severe casualties at Dieppe, but a number of officers and men who returned from the raid on the French seaport town were there, many with their decorations. The soldiers were drawn up 011 the pnrrirlc around when the Royal party arrived. As the King and Qilccn stopped from their car and ixnlked to a reviewing stand, the Royal Standard was unfurled. The King took the salute while the 11111111111111 bands played the Nab, I After tho commanding officers-t hazl been introduced. the party moved onto tho pnrndr- izrounds for the inspcctlon, ihc King lending the \\'n_v with tlio two Colonels. fill!‘ from Toronto, tho other from hivlfnrt, Sask. Thc turn Pndrcs. Capt, H F‘. Ap pic-card. London. Ont. and Capt,‘ R. I... Taylor. Winnipeg. were pro- scntccl in the Kim: and Queen, who then mnvcrl to the centre of the field for the dedication anti pro- scntutioil ceremony. Attending the cercmnirv worn‘ Vinccnt hfnsscv. Canadian l-liuix: Cnmmlssloncr, Lt. Gen. H D. Gm Crcrnr, Commander of a Canadian Army Corns. l\fa_I.-Gcn. 1.. . (Tommy) Bilrns. a Divisional Com- mander, and other Irish-ranking Canadian officers Veteran Ottawa Newsman Dies OTTAWA. July 1G -\CPi —I“1‘ed Ccok, veteran news-jlaperliinn and former mayor of Ottawa, died early today at the age of 85. As one of tho oldest living par- linmtntmy ccrrcspofidcnts, “IJLSO cxpcricnce in Ottawa \\'(‘lll back to the time of Sir John A. Mncdonald, he was considered an authority on early pclitlcnl history and despite his advanced years he was active as n. lIlEmbCl‘ cf the translation staff of the House of Commons un- til_rec_entl_v.__ Naples Is Big Italian Port May ‘War Effort. ALLIED AIR HEADQUARTERS, North Africa, July 15 — iCP Cablcr -Adopil11g the R.A.F.'s tactics of crushing, burning 11nd blasting 0110 AXIs iluiustrial city at :1 time, the grout Allied Nurtli African bumbcr force yesterday‘ turned its fury on Naplcs. the clllcf seaport of Italy, and transformed it into a blazing inferno-perhaps knocked it out ns a major factor in the waning Ita- lian war effort. Wnvo after wave of R.A.F., Can- nclian and American bombers dc- lugcd the strickcn port with thou- sands of explosive 11nd inccndlnr bombs. shattering its royal nrscnn. demolishing acres oi’ harbor and industrial installations and wreath- ing the city, oncc famed for its beauty, in smnkc that billowed 20.- 000 feet into thc air. Allied headquarters estimated the damage to bc ns great as that inflicted upon the Sicilian port of Mcsslna during the pre- vious Z-l hnura, u-hvn an area two miles long and n mil:- wlde was gouged from the heart of lte harbor section. Canadian Wclllngton loombcrs took part in both thc Nnnlcs nuri Messinn plnstorlngs. The wing. transferred to North Africa rifts-r a brilliant rcwrd against; Gcrmnn tnracts. (>l\(‘l‘£l\!‘.< as n part of Mal- Gcn. Jimmy Doclittlcs strntcglcnl nlr arm. Monuwlillo. ihc aerial tlrfcnccs of Sicilv nppenr to he nnpronchiiizr ‘Allied leaders to surrender ulédfazing Inferno After Raid I hold this to be the rule of life. too much of anything l: bad. luoae Mail, 2 PAGES rlptlou Delivered. “JD 84.007 othe- Province: ll ELLA, $5.00. DESPERATE FIGHT RAGES FOR CATAN IA Oogmflrel FalltOf City Would Threaten Whole Qf Sicily Catania Reported In Flames; Allies Advance All Along Line, ALLIED H EADQUARTE RS RICA, July 16—(AP)-A IN NORTH AF. desperate battle raged late today within 13 miles of strategic Catania fall of which would give the Allies control of much of Sicily without the immedi ate necessity of occupa- tion, and threaten the Axis defenders with another Cap Bon disaster. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AF- RICA, July 16 -- (AP) — Allied invasion forces, sweeping over 12 new towns and increasing their, totril of enemy prisoners to more than 20,000. ad- vanced along all the Sicil British 8th army, which ia-n front today with the includes Canadian for- motions, slugging its way against German ar- mored forces to a point within 15 miles of Catania. Encountering units of the Herman Goering division north of Lentini, where they had gathered to attempt a counter-attack, the British-Canadian forces under Gen. Sir Bernard Montgomery hurled them back and inflicted severe losses to continue their northward surge up the Island's east coast to the edge of the Catania plain. Aitcr dumping hundreds of tonsl of high explosives on Sicily and} the Italian muiillund, Allicci illanes dropped leaflets bearing the mos-i sage of Prime Minister Churchill 11ml Prcsiticilt Roost-volt, who told the pcupic lhc tinn- 11nd come "to, decide whether Italians shall die for Milssolini 11nd Hitler-or live for Italy and civilization." Hundreds of thousands of the‘ leaflets, carrying to the Italian maple the virtual illtlmntum of the‘ hon-y ornbly or be blaslecl out of the war, fluttered clown from skies now lar- gely dominated by Allied air forces Although British gunners have smashed the first-line (Itllks of the Goerlng tiivision, the 15th German armored division was believed be- Canadian-ran into s‘ bbom resis- tance at ,Vizzini, abou 25 miles i11- lilllfl from 111i.‘ Ulisi. coast at a Vitul road Junction on the (‘JllCt line of coinmuniciitiuit. I0 \\'lllL‘ll the on- eniv had iniluii Luci; _Thc 101111 cinillged 11111111; several tunes before iL u s llilfilh‘ brought securely 11nd Allied ($0111.01, giv- 111g the invn command of the central high f. " the ciisu-rn unu u" ' \ 11f the Axis. A flirllivr nth 1r . 11 \.1‘1/.- zi111 would lllllll(‘(lll'(‘1$’ me iijf‘ L110 towns of lilllztcllo and Scmdlli at the WCSIEIII cmrnncc :0 the Cata- nia plain. VlZLIlll 1s on 1.110 line the Can- adlftlls have ll)11t)\\'1‘f1 siiicc nlldlllg In Sicllv at PIWllIllQ Fenian-din lng held in reserve for further at- N0 miimntc \\'.l.\' .11. ‘Libit lflillgilt tcntptg to oppose t)“; onrusiiing 8th of the propuliaili of the mole than army columns, 20,000 prisoner.- capltuczl “lynch The 15th division was said to be bod bvcu token 11v ‘be Canadians a collection of units originally des-l bill 111K‘ 11111111101‘ 111001110111)‘ “d5 fined for Timlsta. Organized lifter subfiiiiilllfli- Nlullv 1' ulldoilbirri- the fall of Tunisia, the lllllts wcrc 1v \ IR‘ Gull. Afllllli 1.511011 the name of the old liith Dllivcl mitt his >1." ' 111v Itnlzirn division which was wiped out in Ziliiiil i1l\'l-~-’-‘ll I'll i311‘ iiiilliis North Africa last May. 05 111i‘ C1111 _ Earlier repel-Ls 531d the 15th; lflcn. §If)llt|.{lim(‘l‘_\' said 1n an inicrviciv 'I‘hilrsda_v with German armored division had cn-i tered the fight against the British along with the Gocring rilvlsicii but confirmation was lackinu , Other Allied 1roops—prosuinnbly Be Knocked Out Of municatiuils and shouting up evcry thing in sight. ‘ “Vcrv fcw i-ncmv aircraft were seen during the day and fcw n‘. tempted to iigllt, nltllollgir our lighters and Immbcrs flow thick and forth at will," said n11 Alllui nimoirnccutcnt. Dovctuiling ulith the (‘casclcss m1 1 slnught from North Africa, Am ‘ cricnn Liberator bombers of ihc Middle Enst Cnmmnnd struck at the foot of the Itnliml mainland, sctting forest flrcs with incon- dinrics nncl ripping npuvt thrcc cnvmy nirficltls at Fngrzia. Mam‘ planes were airtight on tho ground nncl dostrnycd in a repetition of tshenpre-invnsion aerial attack on c v. Big RAF. Lancnstcrs flow the long route across the Alps to pour bombs on communications lu Northern Italy as the Allied ncrinl arm cnbrnccd thc whole unhappy Peninsula. Thc Italian I-ligh Com mnnd communique indicated that GPIIOI! was tho object of the Lan- cnstrrs‘ bombs. ‘Tho tinvllght bombcr blow at Nnilll-s came when fircs still wcrc hlnzlii: from a night nttzlck bv tho Cnnnrllnn Wclllngtons. As tlic uncscnricti Amcrlcnn bombers crisscrossed the famous port thrv wcrc lumped by 23 enemy fighters. of which their gunners (lcstroycrl four. As they ralnccl thcir bombs down on sclcctccl tnrgcts tlic smoke from limlllncrnble fires rose until the last two waves nf Forircsses were unable to observe the results. lied bombers and fighters swept. milltee had decided on “A00. when he fell from a hay mow on his farm. complcic cullnpsc as clnucls of Al tthe island, demoralizing Axis oom- E 71706111111111 t! >.. IfS CHEAPER f0 Hlvr. A tliuclifas. 0N Youa HANDS 1111a to hart’ A Soti-iu-Law on His Fast y High tirlc ilit< morning nt 1012 and irinlulil 11f i118. Sunsets this 11:1 111111: :11 RH rulcl ri<cs tomorrow lJfillllllii n’ 31ft. Full 11111011 Jnlv l7. n21 am. Summersidc tiric l8 minurcs Int- rr than Chnrlnttctmvn (‘A FERRY SERVICE Drill. EXCEPT SINDAY From Borden — have 8.10 n.m. 1.45 p.m. and 4.55 run. Leave Cnpc ‘Tnmiritiinc il n. 111. 3.25 p. m. and 8.30 p. m. DAILY AIR Sl-JKVIFE (EXCEPT SYNDAYI Charlottetown - Summcrslde — Wonctnn Leave Charlottetown 7.50 n. m- .30 m. t..0 p. m. Arr ve Charlotte-mum L10 p. rn. 5.45 p. m. 1.05 n. m. P. E. L-N. S. FERRY SIIRVICE DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands — 7.00 l. n1. and ll mm. and s p. m. Leaves Caribou — 9.00 a. m. and lpdmnudlpm. Q-"tz-‘rr-"ei - <r‘