is In For Stand MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN m w“ Y" g n Uuudlun Two Cents filgizdflliilarrllii. {unaided HIM. BRITISH TH RE ___s F eacl-on Attack ' Against Everything smog-q carries with it Maginot Line Repulsecl Government K511110115 Tours For Yet Another Refuge. i lazis Cremate lead To Keep Morale llp ilUCilAR ‘ '1". June 14-40? HA- yA51_\,;1\1.1-:s returning to Ru- mp; l n1 Ptland reported to- night that. ilie Tlurel Re.el1 will pm: K110“ nrw vast: nave been it; battle loses along the west- znritorln are IOFOWIHK and burning t-he dead, reported. Thry sa:d 01 this .rl in Nazi-occu- s. tween turned into n t r Grrmnn weunded. 'lll?tl leaders went to ‘,1 in rule at. licmg» 11v s oi the grim- "(l tlte t".~ll tl has lle Nazi leg ons, urees said that. t.'1c r1 the Nazi 1 a. lithe Flanders ioiittle were enor- llflii. Coming Events 11,- lltc for Notices tn this c n I u m I Icents per word. i. ' .. s .;__ . . ' J "_..._.__: "l.O.D.E. Rose Day Tuesday. L-589-6—15-3l. "Dance. .' (leorges, June 17th, hikes 01» . m. L-562-tl-l5-li. "l" flrtiru and dance, Fort lllhisttis scnooL June 17th. 11-586. "Recital ‘iv pup ls oi’ Miss Rena "M. Zicn 11a 1, June 24th. 8 I‘ M. L-Stil-G-lh-ll. “Wltillce tome Valley Hall, Tues- l.Jl1nc ll $11, Webster's music. 11-559-6-15-21. "Ploy ‘Meet Mv Wives“ in #3011 Hui. Monday, June i7tl1,l ‘t 5- \- P- U. L-sor-rs-is-ii. _ ._ p. "Reserve November 7th for Bu ml Udlcs (mild Christmas tilt Ten. Ea hxCliarleltctcun Eflfllilfll Cake . Juno 15th c! 110'- "M L-SiS-tl-lB-ll. "Rhone iim-rffliom ‘ - . for Ice Mm - ~11 (‘true River Illlll. L-575-8-l5-li. l! ‘ "_“" llifli- 1- -- >.- m“ Filthy" ‘ljtlgleilzlgll.l.\t hli_.‘.ora _ L-576-o-1l-fl. u ‘i llayleit. D M, “odomfléllcg June ism. Chep- “ 01d time dances. wmm‘ 25 vent-a. L-572-6-16-ll. “w” hi"? l; number of good hllkifintndrllskrllalso for stiturlday. m‘ to "coo gtlgiireal va ues. 11-564-0-15-11. an?" d d an once. st. Teresa's find"! 17th. Webster's Or- 11-517-6-14-21. 0100 1 Ba "l! to Orrinize celebr t1 t “B, _ a on n mi?“ 2533130 anniversary of vne. L-ooa-a-as-e-i-a-1ii-aa-2a-ai. "Dun '_—_ hm“; 3nd Ice Cream in Stan- HkB t d , h. "W" in aid gtuinityirdltliile m L-blfl-fl-ll-Qi. I #4.- ‘lhave changed MuKenzieb u alyslllfignntolgg Mgéldllyl and ' HG l. McLeod. Btlnley Bridge, .. IrfiM-O-lb-IB. hmd Prosrnm at. New Olss. Ehfhmu o. ln Church Young Peo- ‘hfmh Bundoii. Juno 1e st. It 11-542-8-14-21 from , Salel ' L-fittl-tl-lfi-it. . -. st TOURS, France, June 14 ——(CP>—The main armies of France fell back tonight he- low their abandoned. invad- ed capital, digging in for a stand along the Loire, while to the east a German head- fm attack against the Mag. in_ot Line was thrown back with "tremendous losses." , Purl-s. the city of light_ .“l1a Ville LumierrW-wag under the shadow of thr- Swastika and into the dusk {the grey-clad troops gouge- ‘stepped through its desert- ed boulevards. ' _All but. broken under the lmightiest assault ever ,thrown against men, the {ipoilus who fought the main battle of France, coiinter- lattacked with a desperate fury as they withdrew under ,‘~.:1zi pressure. 1 The capital. from which the Government long since had grille. ivas ringed by the Nazi armored units and in- fantijvnien. 'l'ours, the new emergency scat of the ministers. was bcing zibzindoncd for yet an- other the far southern seaport of Bordeaux. (Continued on piee l0. Col 2) Cromwell ls Critical Cf l Legislators l l ATl -\N'l‘1(‘ ClTY. N. J.. June l4 “ H. R. t.‘ tunnel. Stairs 11y Mini tLr UlLlCd r war b."- _\. Jackasses that s oi Co <1 1:5." e . “in have o1 any are rcsgoiletibe t ll“pl'e-ptlrc:l corol- ially and menta iy. a... u.._-< 1.9 1111.11 gave 111cm the i side as to “that was B01118 e a year ago, but 1'9?- to mislead WASHINGTON, June i4— (AI')—-Prcsidcnt Roosevelt fo- day openly scoffed at any llit- ler pledge to refrain from in- vading the western hemisphere, while his aides announced plans N —-——_ $32‘ Brothers. amiss Bell ' mldll. June 17th, Mount. ~ esdsv. , ~nluradsy J 1 ,_ J . une 20th, E mira it. Jontmihgfgéapatrilue. Satur. 514-6-l5-1l. for training 10,600 men an- nually for a huge army air force of the future. At a [lrcss conference, .\lr. Roosevelt was informed of a ncws dispatch stating that liit- . lcr had called any idca of a western hemisphere invasion rcfutrc- presumably ‘ 10' l g" I/ ///- The People's Paper cnARLorTETowNfcA Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew . Read by Everybody Nina; SATURDAY, JUNE 1s, 1941i" ile; what. we are matters all. MAXI M6 OIL MERE MAN What we accomplish matters lit suuusi iinusrrliltlnn Delivered $1.00 l!) llislh-IHICJ. $0 001 ("Bnillln and $7.8, ‘QM! -1iiii“iii*i1ii1 *i’ ti ivoios some WITH BRITISH l Stirring Chapter Add- ed to Sea. Annals When Sinking Craft (‘Amtinues Fight. LONDON. June l4 —(CP> —In- dication that the Italian navy may be playing a game of hide-and-seek with the Allied fleet in the Mrd- admiralty announcement that. “no enemy has been sighted so far" in the southern waters. 'I‘.‘c announcement pros made af- ter an: her stirrinz chapter liicn a ‘ed in l)“ s11 naval l1's-‘ tory by the armed merchant. crus- cr SJClSiOtIll. which went. down‘ tuktn: a gitm revenge on her sub- marine attacker. bfWtalv vessel was sinking when guns man- ncrl by incn uast. drip in wa cr were believed to have accounted for the ntfncltcr. Even \\‘il(‘ll s‘: tad to be carried ever their hctds lllfll aboard this former anchor Mo keep them dry. the Royal Navy‘ 1112"", Caledonia. served her guns. l 'I‘i1ey were notsilenced except by the waves which sent clouds of lsieam up from their healed bar- rels. Got Submarine Two offieerw and ‘our seamen were not saved. but their rescued c_o_in_r_aclt_i_s bel‘ 1eti_ll1.v got" ‘hel (Continued on page 10. Co] l) Roosevelt Scoffsl As Hitler Starts ToMakePromises U. s. Senate H-a-s-Befinite Plan To Aid Allies With Planes. “grotesque? tioing to the unusual length of authorizing direct Iiuoialion. Mr. ltoosevclt said in a tonc of pointed sarcasm that Hitters rcnizirlrs “bring tip recollec- tions." Those fc\v words he thought sufficient to the sub- jcrt, slaving tliut flu-y cuulll lic enlargctl with dates‘ and tlic llfllllPs 11f countries going; hack over :| IWTltHl 11f \'l’ill'.<, fie did no: elaborate on this. (Continued on page 13. Col B) _ l In the foreground H. M. S. Susseifs guns; in the lterixmean was seen tonight in an; had l s r'""k by a torpedo. the . ""5 F ‘J iIEIverything Goes To Aid Frenchmen l Bv Bernard Laeoste [lavas Staff Writer LONDON. Jung 14 — (CP- l lluvusi —l-1vlilc|u-c that the l "Ilatlle oi‘ France" has become also the “. itt'e of litullalvrl" was sren tonight at English where a new British ex- . nary force and huge quai ltles of material iverc embarking for France in ful- fillment of Prime Minister (‘hurt-hills pledge of "immed- iate and m ' ' ." aid to Brit- ain's belting cd ally. Roads trailing to the coast were jammed with long lines of lorries bearing wai- mater- ial of every description. At one point I saw an imposing column cf motorized equipment preceded by a motorcycle de- taehivcnt. Soon after the column fil- ed ‘by there appeared n proces- sion ct’ gigantic Ionics. nll gleaming new and bearing var- Follotviug this pro- .e another hearing rials for bridgcbtiilrl- ing as IIQIIIPTS, floats, rafts and steel beams. The peace of the countryside nr-ar the coast was broken by the roar of urntnrs in Klan‘. 1 transport vehicles. And ming- ling with this din was the shouting imd singing of bronz- ed. grinning soldiers with flow- ers tucked in the chin-straps of their l-eimets. In the skies there was move- ment and rlln as escort planes droned nurl wheeled above the hezir-‘s oi‘ the columns rolling a- long on the highways. In one large coastal elty I saw lim- upon line of lorries. motorhed columns and trans- ports stationed on docks where giant cranes were loading ar- tillery. radio trailers imd llzht t'rucks into the holds oi’ trailing ail . 1'5 Later. in the same city. I saw a succession of troop trains pull Into dock-side depots. llrge compulsory Evacuation 0f British Children LONDON. June 14-(0? Cable) ~~lmn1ediafe compulsory; evacua- tlo11 of all children from London anrl other bu: Llfllilslliill towns of Britain was 1 1:1 today by Fred Copeman who underwent. 300 air raids as commander of the British section. international Brigade. in the Spanish elvil war. Ccpcman told a Notional Baby Welfare (ltzuiicil met-ting culled to cut-Adel" the ilrcbleni, that "thLs is llie biggest question we have to lace 1n this (wouutry today . . . for if lame numbers of children are killed in this country‘. that is the thing ‘which is going lo break the morale or the people qukiker than anything else." raccoon THE GUNS background, cruisers at speed providing s. picture o! i _. ..___f_ . ,, ferin hock. ROW EVE SDURCE IN America. Col. Conrail; I Named To 3rd Division tzwva that. L-ieut-Col. F. B. Conrad. of this city, has been appoiiitczh sccond-ln-coiuinand of the 81811111" lers in the 3rd Division. Col. Conrad's war record well merits this recognition. He left for. France in the last war as a guiuitrl in the 211d siege Bnuvrv ill-‘ltliiv From June, 1916, until Ailgust, 1£li8,l he served at the front. o1. Con- rad won the Military Medal at the battle of Hill '10, and was promoted, to Lieutenant 111 1918. Since u .0 Signallers, being in command of local unit No. 6 from 1929 to 19117. For the past: 15 years, he has been operating a. wholesale produce busl-i ness in Charlottetown. Col. Con-l rad is well known in swirling circles‘ having been actively connected with the Charlottetown Golf Club and the Cliarlottetnivn Curling Club. lie’ leaves duties in Ottawa. The Guardian‘ joins with his manv friends flu-oi 1111,11- out the province in (‘Ohilfflllllflllllgj him on his well-(icservcd appoint-l mcnt. and 1n wishing 111m cvci§v1 success 1n his new post. _ International At l Glance TOURS-Main French armies {all back below German-intruder! Paris; -l1eiul-oi1 assault on Maglnot line, hurled back with heavy Nazi losses. LONDON-Hitler ‘peace offcns-i tve" predicted in few days; Britain 1 opens war-chest vilile to buy all war materials; twelfth of Italian mer- chant Ilcct captured or sunk; Al-| lied fleet butters Libyian shore; nirl force raids fro": Nnrivny tn Attica.‘ tlllmngihg the German battlrship Seharifizrst; whereabouts of Itali- rsl ilcet, in Mediterranean a mys- ry. MADRIDQ-Spanlsh forces occupy Tangle-rs. neutralized international zone, "to keep order.‘ NEW YORK-American shippers seek means of sending Vllhl‘ oiuitcrt- als to Allies In U. S. siilps despite neutrality restrictions. | BELGRADE-Pro-Gcrmnn fon-n- ,' er Premier freed from mountain; exile its Balkan nations secn woo- ‘ In‘ Germany. OTTAWA-Prime Minister MM- lienzle Kin says all material and economic s ren th o! this continent will be sent. thout. delay to help France. OFFERS YAFIIT T0 GOVT TORONTO, June 14 —(CP) - Fred Hammer, race horse owner and member of the National Yacht Club. has offered his $351101! yacht. to the dominion government. toi- the duration of the war. Hammer owns Worthy Duke which will shoulder top lmpost. I17 pounds. in tomorrow's feature» race for Canadian Joreds at Dui- L ~~ " l Caiintlain tiuue nnti industry for . reading in tile House of Umllmfllli toting his department. controlled by the Dominion Gov- At the expense of home in North In the momentous decision that the tide must be turn- ed in France within weeks at most, the mcnt made it clear they were going all out to obtain post- hastc guns and ammunition. even of First. (lrezit War vin- tage, to supply Tommies streaming back onto the contin- ent on return tickets from the disaster of Flanders. British Govern- STAKE EVERYTHING defence, Iiritain coupled all her stored-up economic resources with manpower, staking everything on a fight. in France behind the abandoned city of Paris. The British decision was a sudden turn from the long war plan aimed at starving out Germany-as was done in 1918. Government sources disclosed that war funds allo- cated for years now are released for spending in weeks. In effect it is an economic blitzkrieg to meet the piled- up Nazi war stores and men Omcia, advice has come Hanoi.“ France and to offset, as best it can. the loss of 75 to 80 per steel producing plants, now in German- cent of France's occupied territory. Most French ammunition south and thus still in Allied The Government now is more concerned with obtain- ing war materials already fabricated in the United States rather than in pressing for new manufactures. Obsolete though they may be, the United States’ left- overs from the last war are sought tirgently to replace the war he has been active with the‘ arms lost in the historic withdrawal from the Flanders pocket. SPEED KEYNOTE Speed of delivery is the keynote of the new campaign. The weapons sought are those that the United States slmrlli‘ to lake 111i 111-" 11w‘, manufactured toward the end of the last war to replace those obtained by the United States from the Allies. Specifically mentioned are American 75s, capable of piercing big German tanks, and the American-manufac- t tured British linficld rifles. Authorizes Mobiliza Trade & Industry l’ p Virtually Unli-n-iited Powers Conferred On Gov’t In Bill Now Before House Of Commons. OTTAWA, June i4.--tCP)-Vir- tualiy unlimited powcis to mobilize war purposes, arc conferred upon mu govt-mount in a. bill glven iirst today. _ lion. C. D. Howe. Minister of- Muiulions and Stipply. introduced tlic bull which amends the Act cre- l-lo said it 1ivou.d give to liitn as minister, "ail tho ))0\\Cl5 l could think o1," to place Canadian iiitluslrv at. the maxlnuuu of efficiency and capac- il ' y. Some of the new provisions have already loecii cnnrted bv orders-m- eoiineii pureed under authority of the War blcasures Act. Creation of war industries by private interests, but. financed and ernment, will be s feature of the new pout-rs niid work is already uiutei \\.l_\ 4.11 some sutii industries, 111111111111}.- explosive niut slicll-llliziig plants nlrcaciv annoiiiicctl by tlic |_il.t‘llillil'llt. llurinv. llebate on the resolution preceding the l>i‘l, Mr. Howe de- jjivltéoiiliniicirl’ on page 13. Col 7) _ . cured hls belief that no Canadian company workmtz on ws-r contracts pressing ever deeper into plants, however, are in the hands. -.n lScore Bomb I a lllit 0n Nazi Battleship LONDON, June l4 -—(CP\ bomb 11:’. on the 241.000 - man bat: ‘ship 5:11. su ..iul aitarks on Ilétiliili tmllllllllllllililiOfi forts in Etiroix: and All? tllilltftlllfuCd today by the Al The admiralty announced at the fleet air aim bombed Gernmn naval units in "Hordltcziii fjo." 11.1 t-nc coast. of N 1 ., a1." ' a heavy bomb struck the horst. “abait the funnel" also probably lut by ailoili The R. A. F’. bombed Fort ruzza near the Egypiiaii durinz llllllliS over Llbfiil, extensive damage. From Union of South Africa, trounced that. South African p - s scored direct hits yesterday .11 Italian military camps !n' - q Cfliisimaio (Klsmayu) area. of y- alum Somaliland. Italy again raided the cent- 1i hfccliterranean naval base at .‘.l .. Coll-sin‘: some damage in th rxv and restdenttal quarters. - gtfieniazllsyolartil Italian ‘raid of 1_ e momen ‘n, Somaliiand. o“ B“ “ The nlr minhstry announced tire loss of five planes in an aerial n5. 186k on German bridgebends of the Seine. A British plane also ~ lost. in heavy night bombing tacks on Nazi communication from Rotten to the bfawinot line. In these raids the R. A. F, H; ed at. German troop con" tlons and columns o.’ m‘ fighting vehicles, freight, _ 1‘-"*1l\\'fl.\'-§ and other mlliiarv dull lives. Ammunition dun-ins to... 5‘ ploded and woods occupied b‘. CTlCmY set afire. The Frenell mmlslri‘ announced similar on armored columns and (7,, communications. R Y TD B A T T L Take Lid Off War Chest To Buy All Supplies In Sight Battle For France Becomes Battle For England-Fight To The Finish To Crusl1 Nazis. LONDON, June l-l—(CP)—Bl‘ltillfl tonight opened full wide the war chest treasured against the abandoned con- ception of a “long ivar” and ordered the immediate whole- sale purchase of every tool of battle available L1 >4 ,_ a EVERY DAY is ‘Movi N6- DAY ' 9mm ‘me AUTO sac more ear-men. tion 0f has made s profit in excess of five per ecnt. No Objection to Principle No objection was raised by any member to the principle of the proposed nieastirc. but. the minister was urged to make sure inciustrics esfablislictl by the government. would be sublcct to parliamentary control, that labor rights be maln- tained. and 111111 there he no gov- ernmrnt financed competition with private interests, Aicmbers on, auded at. the np0tl- ing of today .1 sitting, the Prime Minister‘; declaration of Canada's ‘unwavering support. of Franco" and his enrlorsntion of the pledge given Premier Reynatid h_v Winston Churchill yesterday. Mr. King read a similar lllfllse whim he sent to TORONTO, Jone 10-(091- Minimum and maximum tempera- tux-es. Dawson 4b 69 Vancouver 4a no Ednlonmon $8 65 lit-gins. 61 T3 W imzpeg B" 2'1 Iozonto hi 68 Ottawa, 42 138 Afonlrcal 47 68 Quebec 3t! 61 Savior. John 4.‘ 69 Halifax as 69 Charlottetown 4'1 64 FORECAST Maritime Provlncesi Moderate winds; fair, not much change in temperature. 81740178]! Thunderstorms have occurred in Nnrl-srern Ontario. While in the lower lake region the weather has been fair It has been generally fair and moderately warm in the prairie provinces. High tide this rimming at 8.04 and this evening at 659. S1111 ' this G1" tlli? at 1.48 and 11m ' mo: g n‘ 412 Pull moon Jlllle 19. 7m prn. Sumrmerside t-‘rle 1R minutes lat- er than (‘ilmrlet-terirwn. TIIF. (‘AR FERRY SAILINGS Leaves Borden 9.45 A. M. 10C P. M. 445 P. M Leaves Torrnentine 1100 A. M. Premier Revnaud today. Mr Hour 1111.1 i, t|1ll\litlli\'|' 11.11 st: p.~1 would be t.1l.~i1 in en-uit- tin- coiiiplctitui u] lull, iuliu- svatjni.‘ being built. by 111v liuiiciln .'~‘l1.p- Lvtltliiliii! (Tolulinii). lill I)lt'\li:l'|ll 4f which IJames FTuiu-cscliiiil» liad been detained as an enemy a'len. 3.15 P. M., 6'20 l. ‘M. (A S. '1") SUNDAY SEIHIFE June 16th to Scpu 111111-1" W11 tn- clusivt-"A Moves Bnrilin 9 A. ‘NL '1' P. W. Leaves Tormenlirie, 10.1 A. .\I.. 8.10 P. M. ( A. S. T.) gr ~76..;{......{.;.. 115;; $176.; YT’ 7-(~—»u'»‘ Q w