AUGUST Z6- 1946 Black n “i In shorts. wearing a Dresiieret that t=t§"‘i7l..‘."'-;-: :15! "w 1 Montgomery was t .e mgst ‘h’ on the Bri rh This 1s the way his trademark an q- strapped to his hi cuous flit!" my,” how frequently he scorn- “; cqmforts and rode in the fron d ured vehicles Bucky! hard coarimloence In them- ls the thing." he would say. “You can do anythifl! "Morale m], m army lf its morale is high Your troOP where they“ l" (“my in battle. on success. Give s; and their morale is Morale the troops suc hgmgd, was physical fitness. d t tch his men in defnt giant‘: hegciimof Dunkerque and Lhe um,- fgfgt)! it. He was one of the t thgloomy in the early part o e war. in England he began helping list to slot away in the to build up the British Army. Played No Favorites 1n December. 1941. he was 81V- Eastem Command. He ordered a quarter of an hour's ysicai training at '1 a. m. daily (o; all headquarters officers and clerks under 40, whlle all ranks up m the South with the trou s. D His soldiers had. unlimited con-\ hm h, w“ ma“. Monty’, on. ""325i..‘ii.§LM.‘32i’}..’i‘3.."if£“3§=.25 ma»- h~ he“ w» e"- to - once a week over a course ap hlted b the General, who fre- po y himself. He: lic- stand- qllelltly covered it lieved "there is only one mi of ritness—the standard o tot/ll W81?" In message to the army before , Montgomery campaigns in terms the men could understand. His approach was much like that instilled ti.r:l.;:l:l;:..:.'::l"i..i:.tr.:.;.Sills With Illegal important actions. dramatized the of a football coach. He the enemy- "iiet us make the enemy. face up to and do a first class Dunker- qua on the beaches of Tunis," was one of his famous phrases. Every ready to praise those un- der his command. he once ex pressed doubt if the Empire "ever magnlficgntt t possessed such a fighting machine as the Anny." Later. when he To Rebuild London Sity Ill 30 Years I! RICHARD TOMPKINS Aug. Il-(AE-Bt. as the-centre of e is now pert Seer-lilo many of owners of the "City", laater London's boroughs. may KIM aesitimenltaliats, but prac deal ltlealists foresee relief for W510 wnlzestion in the new plan. This district. only a mile square. was founded but the Romans and its street 1 to s tolhwlhlin t l “u! B osolfheodltoman ltls the market place of o. I-mnlre Within its gates are m: fink of England. Lloyd's and the 1:20;: gtacltthange, tche Fleet Btéeet e graa new en es. above all.‘ ‘gld St. lad. rising Fl 1's u . _ R will be the first of the Lon- to _be reclaimed and city runners. envisaging s new metro- llolitan area. say the more the div is modernised the more it ‘ boroughs mm wnrfls devastation. will remain as a world centre of commerce and ‘ From a traffic viewpoint. the 13x11?" is referred to as a heart or “blah are numbed sch out some w. workers and about tlilcles. It is planned to divide "it Wolfram of relief into two Fillies. 1946-65 and 1065-75. The road system is planned for double the amount of traffic. Two new routes will run from Falcon square to London Wall and from ‘he Guildhall to s new Junction s: Cannon and Queen Victoria ml A special route or two arms. m 1°" Mdt. will start at l-folborn "Ila and Aldgate and meet at Uvenm st. M inner distributive "Ida. 04 feet wide, will be pro- vided for mixed truffle. Old "warn routes will be wtdmed. "fltlfllrmind Parking Planned Underwood nerki mace also '5 59111! nlann d. n‘ ‘the at. Pau s precinct-feature "'9" lmgram-yzill be opened 0a to Garter Lane and Pater- m Row. the choir school re- “ '- lt the east end. with the top l-tldsata nlu becoming mainly to the west ‘Vintner's alewpthuel’ uplift:- o I o "t" 0! a new u Q hm provide s site for a nat- ‘nuumsnorlal. Th0! NI’ itll “It man Itflking a M y an ....g..~a-==t-- e ran t u "one of most cher- the dem- l. F. lllttsllesss It Sill . OPTOMITRISTS l Delsilstr ls tbs fit- slsssas for tbs N mist le- s must be in that frarglte =1 ‘ii.fiil‘..‘.t.i"il.l; depends high." t essential of a sold- was that he "should ight of battle in his eye.’ entlal to morale, he com- manded the British invasion for- 60o ces in Europe. he llad equally en- thusiastic words of praise for the gghting quality of the Canadian orps. into which and out of 50.000 ~THE CIHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAA eret Recalls ‘Hard-Pass Virtues Handled llun Surrender Relegation Just as Field Marshal Mont- gomery exacts rigid discipline of his own men. he knows how to keen a defeated 0I1EfflN-—€V9n the arrogant Prussian-in his place. When a delegation from the ' German High Command arrived at his headquarters on May 3. 1046. to discuss surrender tenns, Monty set them back at the out- set by letting them know he hadn't. been interested enough to ifsm the purpose of their mis- s on. "What do these officers want?" be demanded as they came up to his caravan. General Admiral Von Frieda- burg explained he had arrived to negotiate the surrender of the German forces in the north. so as to save "soldiers and valuable pewio .from being ravaged by the Russians" Curtly Montgomery told the delegation he would accept only the unconditional surrender of all German land. sea and air forces in Northwestern Gemianly. Hol- land and the adjacent islands. The Germans stalled for time. Montgomery asked von Friede- burg‘ if he knew the current war situation. He _ssid he did. But Next day. the German troops 1n the area surrendered on Mont- gomery's terms. Two days later.‘ the total and unconditional sur- f render of all German armed for- ces followed. llelies Warning; Jewish Immigrants JERUSALEM. Aug. 23—- (GP)- Salling alter a warning she would be bombed. the British troopship Em ire Heywood cruised the Me iterranean- today with another illegal Jewlsh immigrants bound for detention in Cyprus. Naval headquarters received a telephoned warning Thursday night that the ship would be blasted soon. She was in Haifa harbor, where 2t hours before three swimmer-saboteurs had blown a hole in the side of Le Empire Rival, another troopshlp shuttling deportees to Cyprus. . The Empire Heywood a week ago was forced to return to Haifa when refugee passengers damaged it by igniting two small gellgnite bombs in the hold. There still has been no indica- tion whether the death sentences of 18 Jewish members of the Stem gang. an underground organization. would be confirmed or commuted by the British commander m Palestine. The underground threat- ened reprlsals if they were ex- ecuted. Strike Moves In Direction ’ 0t Settlement DETROIT‘. Aug. IS-(AH-The nine-day-old Great Lakes shipping strike moved in the drectlon of a solution today following an reement between tihe National ritlmo Union (CJ-O.) and two carriers. N. M. U. members in l8 posts ratified an agreement with the Standard Oil Company of fnd.ana calling for g work week of 48 hours at sea and 44 hours in port. Seamen were directed to return to their posts aboard the com- pany's five tankers, . A similar offer from Bethlehem Transportation Company of New York. which operates 13 bulk frelghters. was accepted te-ita- “V91? lhd to N. M. U. leaders re- commended s ratlflcatlon by .he 2.500 striking seamen. The union ls also "in consulta- tion" with other operators jf the nearly 4C0 American-flag vessels on the inland lakes, N. M. U. pro- sldent Joseph Curran said. He did not identify them. The walkout began Aug. 1d with an N-lVLU. demand on l’! operators for a reduction of the wot-l: week from 50 to 40 hours. The union claims to have tied up 132 vessels. The Lake Carriers Association in Cleveland has said that only, d d d d d d d d d Sea‘ Visit As Defence Move INHSTS ALL KNOW . WHATS GOING ON Iield Marshal Montgomery's tn- sistence that everyone in his army know what was going on is illus- trated by a storv told of the bet- tle of Alamein. Mont. stopped at a Bren gun site and asked two men: ‘fmeyou in the plicture? tzzyou know 110W the batt e is go " a hwhen the prgateeh admittetli t ey were fogge t e Bmere and explained what was halnpenlng in detail. Tanks on a ridge. "They're Rom- mel‘s. Watch than closely. 1n half an hour they'll retreat bo- oause rm throwing in an armored brigade here to cut them 01!. D0 you consider that sound M61105?" Next day. he visited the pair again to bring them up to date. llllll Reconsider Penalty lilauses Against Strikers orrawa. 1m. za - (OP)- Amendments to the order-ln-coun- cil providing for government con- trol of basic steel plants are un- der consideration by the Govern- ment, it was learned today. It was considered likely ~ unity; 0 clauses which provide g lne $M-a-day for strikers removed from the order in a move to encourage 15,000 strikers to re- turn to work, The order was passed July 10. five days before a strike was call- ed by the United Steelworkers of America (Cl.0.) in plants of the Dominion Steel and Coal Corp, Sydney NB», Algoma Steel Corp, Sault éte. Marie, Ont., and Steel Co. of Canada, Hamilton. The Hamilton plant has been on artlal operation by non-union emp eyees since the strike started. a small fraction of its 31S vessels has been affected by the walkout. The agreement with Standard Oil, binding through i947, con- tains a clause permitting an open- ing of wage talks in January, 1947. Its terms, as outlirurd by the union, area- l. A Brhour week at sea with Sunday the overtime day. 2. A 44-hour week in port with Saturday the overtime day after 12 o'clock noon. 3- A 40 instead of a week while a ship ls laid "*' fittt" out. 4. Overtime pay of $1.15 an hour for entry (beginning) ratings, 81.20 for middle ratings. and $1.25 for skilled ratings. (The current scale is $1.10 for all ratings.) Terms offered by Bethlehem are identical as to hours, the NNLU. said, but the overtime pay scale on bulk frelghters will advance 44-hour up or would be Military observers see the cur-- rent vidt o! Field Marshal Vis- count Mon-tgomery to can“; a; one link in s. chain of measures 1° WWW/Q Emltlre defence org-i solutions. v It is anticipated that on the Imperial Chief of Staff's trip he‘ will Rather information on defence . matters in this country, as well as sulmly Canadian military su- lhorlties with information as to developments in Britain and else- where. g This prospect is regarded as an outgrowth of the Commonwealth consultations in London last spring. which have had the effect of strengthening military missions Md develolllng freer defence con- sultations as between the United Kingdom and the Dominicans. Britain Ls keeping the Dominions informed on the progress of im- portant experiments with rockets and other new weapons. Among these are the developments of airplane speeds heading for the LOOO-rniles-sn-hour objective. After his return to Britain from Canada. the Montgomery tour may be extended to other areas of the Commonwealth. Whatever opinions he gathers on the state of Commonwealth defence will be added to data already assembled for Empire consultations by 10rd Alan Brooke. his predecessor in the post of Chief of the Imperial General Sta-fl. Greetings Zinc! Best VVis/tes to a Great Military Leader Viscount Montgomery Johnny’: lllayfair Tea Room from a flat $1.05 to 81.10, $1.15 and $1.20 by ratings. A ROYAL I TO A DISTINGUISHED ‘VISITOR’ “FIELD MARSHAL VISCOUNT MONTGOMERY Harry AI MacDougall "BETTER MENSWEAR" 143_ GREAT GEORGE STREET Charlottetown - u s i WELCOME P. E. Island i%%%%%%%%%%%%t%%diil. icomc And The Empire,‘ Forces He Led, HISTORY HAS. RECORDED MANY RANK HIGHER THAN THE RECORD 0F VICTORIES ACHIEVED BY Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery He Has Earned Our Gratitude‘ I Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery From the Battlefields of the Desert’ [C Th8 Fertile Fields 0f Ngrmandy anfl’ .on Into the Plains of Germany He’ Led Our Forces to Victory. .WELCOME —- THR ICE [WELCOME CENTRAL BREAMERIES LlMlTEDi SIIARLOTTETUWII —- SIIMMERSIIIE "— SOIIRIS With‘ all Oilfe? Citizens of the‘ Province in a‘ Hearty Welcome‘ to Our Distinguish}; Empire Soldier Leader of Empire Forces in Africa, Italy and Northwesti Europe. Viscount Montgomery Had No Equal, DeBLOIS ‘BROS. h h h h i i h l i d llllllls a FRASER LTll. l ~