Terrifying Experiences Are Still Encountered In Flanders Fields 3! RODNEY ANGOVE VERDUN, France 1 AP l—One still get a fright in the till fields of Flanders, where some of the First World War's bloodi- est battles were fought. Not long ago a lone tourist was quietly s u rvey i n g the trenches. g wood. Terrified, the tourist d into a trench and splashed through water toward a I‘Jelter. A rusty British helmet crumbled under his foot. He found himself in a tunnel about four feet deep with drip- ping walls. He sloshed along in the stream—20 yards. 50 yards before daylight showed. e shooting was louder. but the tourist was re- assured—what had sounded like a ghostly battle turned out to be a Flemish hunting party near one of the ragged scars of the ar. It was in August. 1914. the first mont’l of the war. that a tightly - locked mass of more than 1.000.000 men moved in a giant arc from the Belgian bor- der toward Paris. The German army was pushing back the French. Belgians and the first units of the British Expedi- tionary Force. ATTACK MAIN TACTIC The French command be- lieved that the only way to make war was to attack. attack and then attack again. It 'iad no tactics against the terrible new weapon. the machine-gun. nicknamed the "reaper" be- cause of the way it could cut down whole field of riflemen. The French lacked barbed wire and their own machine- guns to throw up a defensive line, Besides, the generals be- :5 o 'Iieved Frenchmen didn't fight well in trenches. The Germans pla nned to weep just east of Paris and double back toward Verdun. en- Velooing the French army. But he French foot soldiers. mostly farm boys. clung stubbornly to their weapons and would not rea The Germans were 17 miles from Paris when French head- quarters noticed their right wing was beginnin: to veer away from the capital. The Germans thought they had won the game and could turn to mop up the encircling French, This was a major mistake. The time was ripe for a counter-aan on the expmed German flank. TROOPS ROOF. TAXIS It was ordered by Gen. Josen - Simon Gallienl com- manding t'le tronps in Paris. This was the battle in which he rushed 6.000 reserves to the rr‘"t in Paris taxicabs. The Allies pushed the foe across the soft. drassy Marne valley and might have won a decisive victory except for the prepared German defences alon'! the Aisne River. 30 miles north of the farthest advance. Frustrated. the Germans at- tacked anes. liral'zirlm. tryin! to cut through Flanders to the channel nnri Where British rein- forcements were coming in. The Belgians opened the sea gates and drowned men and mules by the hundreds north of Ypres. It was In the 'pres area that Canadians made a great stand. The Germans dug into the halfmoon of low hills south and east of Ypres and shelled tile prosperous. picturesque town of 17.000 into a pile of rubble 500.000 DIED Uncounted monuments and 170 military cemeteries today testify to the horror of the trenches around Ypres. Local historians say nearl . .000 men of both sides died in the Ypres salient. "Blown to bits" say the reco s. Commanders could think of no gay to break the stalemate of e day prevented epidemics from wiping out both sides. On bitterly-dist Pasachen- daele ridge in Flanders. the Germans released gas for the first time. The French suffered 30,000 casualties. CANADIAN STRONGIIOLD Bill. 62. a Canadian strong- hold. trenches, underground shel- ters and shell holes preserved a tourbt sight. A frightening reflects the story in zig- reta collection of photographs of the epoch can be seen in the nearby private museum. On Hill 60. neither the rich grass nor the poppies of Fland- ers can tilde the craters engineers, tunnelling as far as a mile at a depth of 100 feet, t . Suddenly shouts and blew up whole hill Emfire echoed from a neighbor- On the long French front. com- manders adopted reckless tac- tics to break the trench dead- lock ot 1915. 1916 and 1917. The tanks. which Leonardo Ds Vinci envisaged centuries ago. could have cut through and put the war back into motion, but un- imaginative military men-the . same who pooh-poohed airplanes l—resisted such new-tangled de. vices. I T'le only assault weapon re- , mained masse running men. I But they couldn’t punch through. and tens of and fel with I out changing the outcome of the :war 'n any way. FEW YARDS APART l At Vimy ridge in northern iFrance. the Canadians held l trenches only a few yards from the Germans. Small spring- powered catapults were enough to rain explosives on each other, The trenches are still there. res- tored to toy soldier perfection— o mud. no blood. no tangled rusty debris. Bu e worst was Verdun. possibly history's greatest kill- ing ground. where the Germans tried to wear down the French nation by systematically annhli- lating its men. They suffered equivalent c a s u a 1 ti e s from deeply drawn reserves. B n and 500,000 men died on the principal 1?.- mile front. The flesh and bones of 100.000 to 200.000 men were churned up with the clay by thousands of cannons. some- rmes rage. A million men‘died in an area around the Verdun salient. from Saint Mi‘liel through the Argonne forest. It took several Iyears to clean it up for visitors. IBetween the wars they came in tearful pilgrimages. more than I5.000 a dav in the summer. STILL VISIT AREA Visitors by the thousands still iview the area from the ZOO-foot American monument at Mont- faucon or the high Douaumont Ossuaire (literally “bone yard”) where human fragments were gathered in a central pile. ere the solemn saying. t‘ firing a week-s prod“. sale prices to hotel, motel, re- tion of shells in a single bar- sort operators- turn the tide in 1917 and 1918. But bled white and cried dry.} rance became physically and morally stagnant for decades. r “Nobody won the war." went: the costly French nuclear force} results partly from the Great'. The government says it‘ S ‘3 will their pride and. along with it.l their will to resist any attack. 10 The Guardian. Charlottetown, Thurs. 1115211964436??er - day by sponsor. Ne”... town Development Of Oil Sands Makes Fort McMurray Boom FORT MCMURRAY. Alta. $ (CPI—Development of the Ath- iu abasca oil sands has made Fort me . rr m tw . . h l. n , ycgmrlhilg nirgllesitbgl Edmog- rec°rded 177 years ago by ex'r scW‘III-k is going al'iead‘st layer film?" "memezfiflggx merry-eyed nun who mans e alder h“ 600 mm" through ton. morer PEI" Pond but “W‘s t°l pace on housing construction to no: u. . gm.“ new m hospital information desk in the “I North America and African Government plan n ers are extract it from the sand proved ‘ help~ relieve the acute shortage honor of her so "got We. 1 by. l "N lorking to model a stumbling block. . m w; . m 150 with the sunny“ mmicom “a.” “mfagm {we or FIRST nxnmmou townsite while the population of Now Great C a d i a n Oil r job seeker; mostly Indian; and 'r Even today. the justification of 1.250 wrestles with a lack of ac- Sands Ltd.. commodation, muddy roads and ness 25 miles from the town for; a plant using a hot water ex- Authorities estimate tile pop- traction process to tap an esti- ' reserve of. almost isolation. I help Frenchmen recover‘ulation will reach 5.000 in four mat ’ as development rapidly 700.000.000.000 barrels. The production target is 45.000l years changes the lonely area Into a The presence of oil was firsti 3‘0“. oil 196.000.000 industrial consort-{sec m. that an is clearing wilder-II ID I“ Hellm- ’ an "i." L”. 'himufi .3: on Golden Still: .‘ih'llfittffif‘am till” Sm" WWW- on oun . . , is railgrline. Wot:l is aroma 3e festivities“an :etmi—réubtlic on Sept 5 the motherhou“ rapidly on an - 0 see as spec a or we: in Camemne w way connecting both towns. em Patricia. who for five years . ' W de Mont- F. o urrIy's business ' , has acted as liaison between the :eal'Si“ mm“ 3‘ c‘31'3l’l‘liilon tion includes two banks. one “mom (OP) 3| m, Pr auxiliu-y and the hospital ad. or stel- Patricia and eightr el. a warehouse and liquor Me“ love. . party. “Em.” rs on. ‘ _ - other golden anniversary eel, re ll one FIN! Sister Patricia is better hunt; The Metis, arrive each week. Public Works Minister Fred Colborne says Indians Metis must have fair opportu» nities to employment 8 Iable to upgrade their skills, to pay for low-cost housing. ment ways makes ‘— — pens party was given lieu Nun Honored we... My”... nggugllugoggg 1 known to the public as the The golden anniversary sur- dl W I “I [also cab a gold bag filled with . dollars. “Now we c 50 my". French~Cansdisn I face and everybody love! More than 140 paintings and Construction companies in the area have indicated willingness ml to co-operato in providing em- her superior. Sister etchings by Canaletto will b. Public relatiillisehefsllfn: t‘ie hos'i “ted at Tommy! art 331' pita] could have. 19!? III October—the first ever - More than to members of the organized for the works of the her." says Marie de GOLF AT GREEN GABLES Cavendish Equipment for Rent at Pro hon. Take the opportunity to play Straight across No. 2 Highway at P.E.l. and NB. Tourist Bureau DRURY LANE STEAK HOUSE Aulnc N.B. A must on your trip at the entrance of F0 one of Canada’s finest courses. Beausejour. S. R. Johnston Ltd. I 1: - 4 ‘g . <7 “» 7 'l II CS V4 1‘ l , . / H i Ur—V AND NIGHT l7 SERVICE! For Your IPicnic & Camping Needs Large amounts sold at whole- FREE Tumblers Free P. E. I. Centennial Tumbn ler. This is a high quality give-, away with each $4.00 purchaser of gasoline. ‘ Agents for 'l‘ilden Rent a Car Service s. R. JOHNSTON erl llon’i let it happen to you. get Kilillili FILM here! McINNI‘S PHOTO e Britisa use of tanks in llarve numbers and the newly- jarrived American forces helped Que. Refuses 1 Responsibility lIn Maine Robles l QUEBEC lCPl—A spokesman 'for the Quebec health depart- ment said here province can't be Cleld responsible in any way for a rabies outbreak In 3 B The spokesman said the dis- ease isn‘t a problem in Quebec. where only one case has af- fected human beings in the last 30 years. was commenting on a weekend statement by Dr. Dean Chofloflefown's Most Up To Date RESTAURANT 151 Kent St. Phone 4-7635 FINA Station . an“ HOBBY SUPPle st. page” Rd, parkdaleflll Kent St. Ch town For Ice and Rental Service | Phone 2-1632 i NORTH RIVER Movies Rain or Shine Try Our Snack Bar 3 miles from C'town on the Trans-Canada Eigh- way to Borden. W; 9,! «at»! Tourist: ‘ InmaEGuIcIe lployment and on-the-job train- “18. auxiliary presented Sister Patri- 18th century Italian painter. ‘ L Dloi 4-8506 and place 3715‘] your message before confisflop thousands of I'OIII'ISI’S. candlegm Room "8" Parenteral THE rigs-IE???“ HOUSE snaggglmmms Stanhope, pill. ALBERTON P.E.l. u Handicrafts. Souvenirs . Gifts, Confections. Clgs. etc. OPEN DAILY 10 mm. to 10- p.111. CHINESE FO0D O Snack Bar Service O Full Course Meals 0 Take Out Orders BUYING FURNITURE for the FOLKS AT HOME? see Archer & MacDonald Ltd. Open ’tll 9 every night Pukdsls D'Rl \k' E AR HILth EN 8‘ WEAR 4W5 Situated up-town BAY VISTA ISLAND GRILL , MOTOR INN Queen St. Ch’town Route 8 (One Mile West Cavendish National Park) Idoonsed Dining Room _ and Lounge Dancing July and August Friday and Saturday nights. Catering to private parties. banquets, weddings. etc. Coll Operated Laundermat Zenith Park Motel 0n TCH Just Inside Cen- tennial Arch on way from Bordon Housekeeping and l‘SF. FURNISHINGS overnight accom- modation of reason- able roles TOURISTS and Vegetables S. N. KAYS fl Pawn-I 8t. Cli‘town FRASERS DEEP SEA FISHING l \k' N Milton’ Old Spain Fisher. head of the Maine de- partment of health and wel- are. who said neither Quebec nor New Hampshire is doing much to combat a rabies out- break. Dr. Fisher said there has been a rabies epidemic in Que- bec for several years. indicat- ing a lack of preventive meas- ures. Twenty-five cases of ra- had been reporte FOR ALL MacLEAN’S GROCERY Winsloe. r. E. I. year in Maine counties border- a ing on ew amp- shire. The Quebec spokesman said ii‘ wild foxes in Maine suffer from rabies. they have picked it up am As in the state. not in Quebec. SALESMAN UNION CITY,- NJ. (AP)DI‘. RIVER VIEW ESSO SERVICE 15 Miles from Borden CBAPAUD, P.E.I. Regular Dances ROlLAWAY CLUB CHARLOTTETOWN Mon.. Wed.. m. and Sat. Music by “The Ill-Notes" 9:30 — 12:30 Tues. and Thurs. Record Hops 0:30—12:30 Also Regular Bingo Sightseeing Recreational Flying Flying Instruction Aircraft Rentals ISLAND FLYING SERVICE PHONE 892-2711 Mom. Wed.. Fri.. Sat. 1:30 Casual Bowling .Mon. to Sat. “Automatic PI! Setters”. Manuel de V a r o n a. Cuban premier from 1947 to 1950. is selling automobiles part time to make en meet while he works days in an anti-Castro organiza- t‘lon. By day be Is nersl sec- movement In New York City. BEFORE the wool comes to Condon’s W Nights and Saturdays he sell: cars. Woollen Mill For the Best Shows on P. E. I. visit STAR-LITE DRIVE-IN 3 miles out at Summer-side r- EXTRAORDINARY FREE OFFER N m HARD-OF-HEAlRING Take Admtnge DOCTORREOOMMENDED PLAN . Baotou uys: “Try It before you buy It!” —__—""'| HOME TRIAL OF ANY ACOUSTICON I TRANSISTOR HEARING All) No Deposit ~— No Expenso '1. Aooustlcon 5 Ramsay Of This FREE No Obligations AFI'ER It has been to Condon's Woollen MIII Visitors Welcome . Yarns O Blankets Q Auto Robes . Island Torin Blankets blade of 100% VII'III Wool WM. CONDON and SONS 55 Queen St. Dial 4-8712 WELCOME . TOURISTS NORTH LAKE HARBOUR 10 Miles east of South Woodleigh 19:8; 9212!: In»... and?» Your Bank speedy es- Helen! Is the Bank d Montreal with two ofllces to serve you. Mall Branch—10H Grafton 8L. Charlottetown. across the street I r o m Confederation Centre Theatre. Inches- 12 — 3 p.m. nlnnsr 5:30 — 8:80 warm-r Receptions. soc-m hum.’ Inkswltbpdvstobatb. Did 894-1653 TASTE mm . Tokefllnoouv ford o n dolly ‘tll 10 DJ“- sc gins nus Path!" . A - I v v t D t A "MUST" ~v- : :a' visit Io . STRATHGARTNEY HOMESTEAD Museum—m Conveniently Located on Elm Ave. We're famous for British Woollen Dramatically Proves IbeI! Ch.flommwn Lane on Route 1 when (And 1. so easily my will: is always IVIIIIIIle. Prove to mil that with an! m 3 3m Glovfl" . U “H " " " ° - "" ' s NTAN h. a. m... .. u. m m Deep Sea Fishing mom Germany namsx. Na. .FIRSTAID mos .l'llfll .souvnmss SHme nova mums “mo-u. IOWI OTOCO. . Ltd. arm—man's. seams-nu . . gifts mm-mmnum . souvenirs . novelties. etc. "GIP'I'ABAMA" no rm'. up: datum Sweaters . Furs 9 Sportswear island fur-rises ltd. '26:wa om 2421’ T. G RA FTON 81'. __..__/ \ PHARMACY if” a Phone South R Replicas V M- l . A Glimpse of w - Cm. ' Sup lies CIInton Heights l" ing 5 R Pfi Britain In P. E. I. in ms ma. AND CAN an or en n9 CAUGHT—“WE HAVE 11‘!" g. y Located at Burlington near a M rkot 1924. . mile. from Cummh You can save at Remington. “on u a N‘ r as Queen It. on: em the on mm . Open Daily Except Sundays no. new”, 3559 RENT-A-TENT a. year . Deluxe 46 Peter’s Road . . Licensed mm"! (Route No, 2 to the beaches) I “In Room & Lounge canon sss-ms S O TV and Phone EX?” ' For Reservations "‘9 Jo ‘ ~ tor "'9". Shore Acres 3;; New London 3‘ Motel - - - ladles’ m Miles mm Consul] “Shims 0‘ "m" "' M 1" distinction 7 miles from Ch'town 3 . Souvenirs a the shows to be on. Room KDALE soon on .31. use at a Mo pm"!an PAR bad Campers’ Supply Store. Gills. Novelties “1:32 W . « ; for