‘ .‘ ‘Y "floor BhI MAXIMS OIL I MERE MAN 11i- gonevettooflltolaerl. , ._.. i‘ n uaudlal. ‘In Outs. A' ‘mums, landed Ill! RLI ewer Bakery Prod housewives Will Have o Pay Cash On Line A, Au . ae-(cr) - All ‘housegvlvcs are 0 0° wpa. on the line 01' B11‘ ucts after SeDii- 13 imd ‘ be sznaller variety for from. msoolggard announced in a ,. t today that the bakery . has agreed to a prwfflm ‘iiy manufacture thWllBh ... atlon of a. number of . products and credit sales. program is made effective My board order consolidating u; orders . ' . 1s .. I3: of the expensive v- ... fancy goods and consi - . more of the plain bread and .-.. which require a. low- .. output but Which hB-W nlitritlve value," the statement .. e new order bakers may .. products only for cash or ts or counters wh might in advance. The only ons are where goods are a common carrier or government and similar the casual program re and parlterhouse ' tlon . bur er affecting bakery ted the public will et drop er prohibits the mak- or rolls weighing less Ilia or . bread tvo Canadian Seamen iinners Of U.S. Awards ' l! Stanley Msntrop r t Ian Press Staff Writer t‘ AL.Aug.26— (CP)-- Canadian ships officers, Capt. ismoureaux of Montreal and officer Theodore Fraser, -- Island, Que. have been dec- - by the United States Gov- tior action which may have , the lives of a. number of All- ’ men as well as valuable war ~ Capt. Lamoureaux is home vs with his decoration - who lad whitc Atlantic Coast rib- llleflleavcs shortly to Join an- p. . lng along the recently he and Fraser sight- l t large mines, at least one oi "German. drifting on the wav- Iew feet from their ship. Des- the fact they were in waters I to be watched by srlnes, they notified the near- » tst Guard station of their very. v alter the mines were pick- tden Ilas W iluarrel Germans " <OLM, Aug. 26 - (AP) i-rsl Sweden tonight hid a. Issue to take up with Germany ‘ Yvportrd North Sea sinking Swedish itching boats by Gonnsn destroyers. " Swedish Foreign Office said , authorities had started a investigation of tn- "tor," told $30611 oi three otfser boats "a ‘hi? Bold. managed to elude n I attack that sent two down l mas oiflgleiimark, with g p“. V Bani": es. med. th Fore Offloo ‘I Govcmmgavt wmiaxld eon. flwtwcn-‘e “extremely serious" n“ iorst of a series of such M! w "will"! the Nests since std-dill}! lost in the sinking of m Submarine Ulven last lllnansvrllrs W" in M n run n ‘Hi-h- cllfiigrdb Orohastzigz: Cream Social Graham's .' m- August mi. n. ‘sari-ital! hq M Olub _ with. l’..'.‘.‘§,‘i..;..,=f“3.°§: "it: rat" n‘..':"::° ‘prices. Island 0,1,,’ t" x sax Whole In‘ ins BINDING Atlantic be QTIUTIY b9 the-n ekht ounces when baked. either as a unit our designed to be broken into units. Bread is limited tn 10 varieties ‘nstead of the present lo. Lower- loed ranges will be continued. board ss-id. but sandwénigi. are - additional varieties of sole bread not over l8 inches will be permit- Except for d hnuts, cookies and cakes, nd pastries will not be allowed less than eight ounces when baked. Re- tail bakers may, however, cut Coke-S and pastries into smaller units and package them for counts sales. Bran and corn muffins may be made in less than eight-ounce weight only {or over-the-counter sale by retail bakers or by res- taurants ii’ made on the remises. Sugar s ar substi utes may not be used in e top ng or lclnE of any bakery bro ucts except wedding cakes. but glazing oi coke.’- and ot er products will be Del’- mitted. Present restrictions on the sli- cing and wrapping of bread are con inued. and ed up by the Cosstguards an im- portant convoy oi merchant ships moved over the spot and the action of Capt. Lamoureaux and Fraser ls believed to have saved some of the ships from almost certain destruc- tion. They are believed to be the only Canadian officers to win the award. One o! the youngest b skippers on the North Atlantic trade routes he's only 26 - - Capt. Lamoureaux was also commence‘ by shi ping officials for his feat in sav the llfg of a young Nova Bootian seamen who was washed over the side by an Atlantic com- r. Capt. Lamoureaux said were trying to save one oi ship's lifeboats which had been smashed by the Atlantic waves when the sailor was washed over- ard. "We did everything we could to Bet him back", the skipper said. "But the night was tco dirty to get any We circled him in the darkness a couple of times. and then took a chance. I ordered one oi the crew to turn on the bridge searchlight and kept it trained on the man. "We lowered one oi the cargo booms over thqlslde and attached a mat. used for owering cargo into the holds. We turned the ship around and headed her within a few feet of the sailor and lowered the mat over his head. He manag- ed to hang on until we got him aboard. He is mighty lucky to have survived that nlsht." they the Change Time Cf Churchill Talk NEW YORK. Aug. 26-—(CP)- Prime Minister Churchill's sched- uled Sunday broadcast has been postponed and tentatively reset for Tuesday. The British Broadcasting -Cor- poratlon announced the postpone- ment today. Mr. Churchill had been scheduled to broadcastSunduy at I p.13. E.D.T. Thc exact time oi the postponed address will be an- nounced later. the BBC said. Canadian. i the ufebelts near him. , 271/ ’ The People's aper n-‘fflw- w ,_,,,.._.---" “--_.,,________\ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew . CHARI-OTTETQWN. CANADA. FRIDAY. AUGUST 21. 194a IDRDHI lhhhlfilfl Rhllhh Islander Completes 25 Years Service With The Y.M.C.A. Nelson McEwen. National Boys é"..‘3l§..§°°.'§.l§§'.%€..‘.1l€.é’..“%‘"" 0* ears sag/gee with the YM.C.A, y recelffldirlhiPrinoe Edward Island he ch Yet 5 early education in were tetown at the Model and (“w i319?!“ schools. and at Prince o I es College. He took any... $1111; work at the University of Blflhioba, and in 1933 received his ac elor oi’ Art; Degrge [mm MC- Gill University. After a brief at Vic is P "Bil years was the Boys? Work ecretary oi the Central Branch ii.'“'.~.‘.'.i‘.“.l."s“.'.""'. H= o cagadg in 193$‘ a ona Council of e an elder of the Unit d Church of Canada, A Mgsomefl member of the Board of the As- sociation oi Boys‘ Work Secrg- "T198 0f North America, as well as Secretary-heasitrer of the Can- adian Camping Association and was the first Secretary of the Can. adlan Association of YMCA. Sec- retarles. . Liberal Party Candidates For Charlottetown Hon. Marin Gallant. Egmont Bay. and Mr Thomas Linklettter. M-L-A» of Summerside. were nom mated last evening as Assgmbly- man and Councillor respectively to contest the Third District of Prince on behalf of the Liberal Party at the coming provincial cl- e n. One other nnma, that oi Mr. Napoleon Arscrmult. Egmont Bay. President of the East Prince Liber- el Association, was placed before the meeting for Assemblyman. Mr. Llnklettens was the only name for Councillor. Mr. GallanVs nomination was moved by Fred Tuplin and second- ad by Mricle P. Arsenault. Mr. Arsznaulvs nomination was mov- ed by Alban Gallant and second- ed by Gus Peters. Mr. Linkletterfi". nomination was moved by Frank I. Gallant and seconded by Harold Mill. Mr. Arsenault presided at the beginning of the meeting, Vice» President William G. Phillips tak- ing over after Mr. Arsenaulvs name was proposed. l-Iazen Phil- ips was secretary. The meeting was addressed by the newly no ' ‘ candidates and by Premier J. Walter Jones, GRAPES COME SECOND ' Next to grains. Italy's largest acreage is planted with Espes. Surprise Raid Takes Heavy Toll In Italy UAR/PERI. Lnrsb naioozfl_(uz_ shootng taly at "it , ground and from I mm .. "lttilliili tot“ 1013"} n31? w and splin be a VI GIIMGIIIOII tl F“ h "- fr‘: h f t . fl l build 2.2‘. .2d2§.'...°'l....'i'il‘."' m" At least at!!! obnemy planes were knocked ou American attack. ra total of aircraft ali- battle since last were wrecked 200 to 300 nd wounded were left on the field, it was announced at. Alled head- quarters. B60208 ITIOTO f termmniaukliligmeir lo m Heat flight at Inch low th theatre were greeted by friend- waves of the people as i813 ed alonl at less than l dtri l ~°nfimw "sfiat-“sfilfi ‘d’; in miles from ‘hm .0 ' Isis.) foe In war It is not permitted twice MAXI MS OIL MERE MAN If, lullerlpllon Delivered, 86.00 lull, HR 80.0w otho- Provinces O II.S.A. 8.1.00. iN PANIC HAS OTHER TROUBLES [IRHMI ucts ToBe 0n Sale After Sept. l3 Thousands In Flight From Nazi (lapital By ROBERT OKIN Associated Press Staff Writer War Situation Last Night ' B!‘ Kill“? L- 5111198011. Associated Press War Analyst Assignment of Vice-Admiral Lord Lflllig Mountbatten Royal Navy. as suprlemc Allied commander In Southeast Asia throws additional light on dec slons nude by the Quebec war council ior the Burma campaign. out other and earlier attacks against Japan are expected to flow from the Vienna‘ '- " strategy meeting. _ lhcre can be little question that Chlncse Foreign Minister T, V. Soung was called to Quebec to hear what was planned in the way oi Isn- msdlate aid to China-not. details oi the Bay of Bengal-Burma, opgy. aticna Lord Mountbatten will undertake. Only by sullhlemcntln th air- servlced American bomber command In China can quick help or hlna be glnven. It seems to be on the cards more than ever. Jicre are several othk deductions to be drawn from the selection of a. llrltish naval leader to command In southeast Asia. For one Ilhing, it tends to smooth Royal Navy feathers ruffled by the assignment of an American (sencral, Dwight D Eisenhower. to command not only British and Canadian troops but a large part of the British Mediterranean fleet during the African and Sicilian campaigns. More important. however. is the confirmation the appointment n; l sailor tends o give that the Allied strategists mapped operations a alnst Japan for the India-Burma front tlcslgned to speed up the cnnclus on cf the war across the Pacific once they are in motion. Just us the American- Austrnnan offensive in the far Pacific is designed for quicker results than a slow Island-b Jsland approach to Japan and the China 59B gateways. the coming urms offensive seems to look to ultimate and de- cisive‘ sea-air action in the China sea itself, rather than prolonged land ng. l)nce the Burma bastion of Japan's conquest zone is reconquered. Ill will not only mean reopening of the Burma road to China. It will aLso moss-sooner or later return of the British fleet to the China sea. Al! of that is still . however. The campaign Lord Mountbatten is assigned to pre re can not begin ashore in Burma on any great scale before October w en the wet monsoon ends. It was apparent from the preliminary feeling out oi Japanese strength In northern Burma "I!" the terrain is extremely difficult for major land operations. The obvious answer la combined sea-aIr-land operations. Cakes’ Widow Testifies I In Famous Murder Case BULLETIN KINGSTON, Ant, Aug. 2&- (CP) -0fflclais at the Fort Henry war prisoners camp to- night announced thnt “s. num- ber" of pr’ had escaped. Reports in Kingston placed the number at l7. A fcw min- utes later two of the men were report-ail captured at Dead Man's Eny. a mile and a half from the comp. How tho escape was made was not announced immediat- ely by camp officials. It was understood that all the prison- ers were Germans. Camn stuthorltilzs immediat- clv notified Ontario and Kinir- NASSAU, BAHAMAS. Aug. 26- (CPr-The widow of Sir Harry Cakes, testifying against the son- ln-law charged with murdering her fabulously-wealthy husband, dis- closed (luring a highly-emotional courtroom appearance today that n break between the two men caused Sir Harry to change ills will. With faltering lips. Lady Oakcs said the accused man-dashing. twice-divorced Alfred De Marigny —married her eldest daughter Nflncl‘ llsulnst the family's wishes. and then caused a rift between the young girl and her parents. Both the 19-year-old, red-haired Nancy and her 34-year-old lius- band sat close enough in the tiny Magistrate's Court to hear every low-spoken word uttered by the tall Witness who has aged appear- ancc since the bludgeoned and burn- cri body of her hussuilci was lounr) last month in a bed at ills sen-side v B. With Lady Oakes’ testimony. the atop Cit-y Police. and army cff- prosecution clunuxcd its lengthy irlnlg In the are». were asked presentation against Dc Marlgny, h, In", "u, Search who was arrested July 0. the day a1- . ier Sir Harry's body was discovered. Alter one inure WIIIICSS has optical‘- P\ n cu tomorrow. Magistrate meld. ,\ 3H8 uiit No Pilot 7 I 27-iFrlda.Vl will be asked by t-lc prosecution to commit De Marigny ior trial 1.01m , —-('¥llic Daily Ilcruld said that a German plane on a charge Oi murder. Sir Harry changed his will last February, the witness declared. soon after he learned that Nancy was pragmatic. The will has not been filed and Lady Oakcs did not reveal What changes her husband made. Y Sne and Sir Harry were "fright- without a llilol but With some fully upset" last your. Lady Oakcs unusual technical armor-tins was reported to have crashed on the Swedish Island of Born- holm In what brcsutnably was an experlmtntgl ll _ The newspaper speculated whether it was a radio-directed time, perhaps the "s-cr-t weapon" which the Germans denim-ed. "We knew thnt Alfred still was living with his former have claimed would be ready next. month. ' wife or whatever one Calls a dlv- orced wife." visit with the Oakcs at Lightning Kills 7, Injures 20 After a Bur Harbor, Mo, Do Marigny and his bride went to Mexico. WWW Nancy became critically ill OI ly- phoid fcvcr and required seven blood transluslons. Once Nancy was able to make the Marlgny brought. her to the Oakcs‘ homo at Palm Bench. 1i- was then that Lady Oakes discover- ed. she testified. that her dnlluh‘ tor was pregnant. Nancy had KINGSTON. Jamaica. Aug. 26- (CP Cable) - Seven children were killed and more than 20 inJured yesterclaywhen lightning struck a school braiding in St. James West- ern Parish. Thirteen of ma, in- lured remained in hospital today. A es of the dead — all young na ve children -—- ranged up to 1a, The building bum-so to the ground. and several of the victims were ‘lrf-‘mliftfid- The tfflqedy was Jam- undcrgo three operations about that time as n result 0i ft hiouth alca's worst oi the kind I YSEPI- n many infection. “As a result the pregnancy, had In be terminated,‘ the witness said, taking n sip from a bottle 0i medicine handed her by n lawyvl- “It was dangerous for her health and she lust wouldn't go throusll h n March 3 n De Witness tter from w . Nancy left liar parents and went to Nassau to Marigny. On Junc i1. the related. she received n ic self and De Marignv off from the Oakes family "until we reoelvul Alfred a; a full member of the faintly and had confidence in him. Askgli wlgztheruDde Moriarty was accep s reo e :- "Certarlnly not. I considered him com lctely irresponsible in the care of ancy and 1 knew he was try- ing t0 ingratiate himself with Sir Harry and trying to alienate Sydney STOCKIIIROKEB DIES IDNDON ‘- (OP) _ moi-mm Pfungst. B9. ‘father’ of the British gtoolgooxchanae. is dead. Members ..‘}f,m,,}’$”"{,‘, ‘itggmggJrlmownfi from the family." ping!” M...“ may” ~ 16v is Sir Harry's ill-year- C/KNADA , I accusations Nancy in which the latter cut her- - Stresses Serious Situation Caused By Late Blight Late blight continues to take a 116W)’ toll 0i potato vines in many Dims 01 the Province, states Mr. S. G. Peppin, district inspector 4 in- charge. Seed Potato Certification Service. Some fields are already completely killed with this disease and many are half gone. he in- forms the Guardian. Ii the vines have died, growers are warned hot to harvest these potatoes for at least two weeks, and preferably longer than that, as serious rot (it not total loss) will likely develop in such tubers with- in a few days. The crop should be harvested only on a bright sun- shiny day and the tubers left lying on the top of the ground for a iew hours in order to get dried of! thoroughly before being placed in- to storage or graded and placed into bags for immediate shipment. Mr. Pcppln warns producers un- der no consideration to attempt to harvest too soon or while the ground is in a wet condition. Observance of the foregoing pre- cautions, he says. will save "many thousands of dollars for growers, shippers and consumers." While the disease is now general lnruughotlt the Province, the cx- treme eastern and western parts have been less affected than the central sections. The infection started this year in the vicinity of‘ Freetown and spread west through Summerslde and Northam. and east through I-fimtcr River and Charlottetown to St. Peters Scme fields, even in these areas, are sill green but on the whole the situation is regarded as very ser- lous. At A gClance--. Dy the Canadian Press FRENCH-Britain. Canada, Un- ited Statcs grant qualified recog- nition to French Committee of National Liberation; Algiers re- ports say French greet move wioh txnqualificsl satisfaction. ITALIAN -—— Allied fighter; and bombers deliver smashing surprise attack on alt-fields at Foggla. down at least 26 enemy planes, destroy others on ground; 15 Allied planes lo st. RUSSIAN~ Soviet Steppe Anny advances 3 1-2 miles a; Germans retrcnt towards llnicper River. SWEDISH - Swollen Investigat- es reports German destroys-rs sank iwo Swedish fishing boats off Dcn- m Louis Mountbatten, new Alllcd supreme Commander In Sf7lli'llt'l'~£t""l Asia holds tmks with Actmlrnl King he- llcuzd can v-‘urd with slants for drive against Japanese n Burma. AERIAL — Mosquito bombers make “lnsomnla" raid on Berlin: population reported panic stricken with 500.000 fugitives already In Poland. . SOUTH PACIFIC — Australian and American troops less t-hnn a mile from Japanese Salamaua nlr base. suvmils or rm A BRITISH PORT, — (CPI Italian guards at a prison camp in Italy told British seamen prison- ers they would like to change places with them. it was revealed ark. WASHINGTON — LOH! RS by repatriated sailors who arrived U hero. New R.A.F. Surprises In Store For By star: RANDAL Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON. Aug. 26—(CPJ—Thc Royal Air Force, which developed the pathfinder bombing technique the saturation raid and the repeat saturation raid. has more surprises in store for the Germans, as bomb- er strength mounts. Observers here see the day com- ing. and in the not too distant fu- ture. when Bomber Command may carry out anything up to three or four raids on a single Gannon cit-y in a single night on a large scale, rather than on successive nights as was the case with Ham- burg. ~ " nly one thing is essential and Bomber Command has it-tha abil- ity to organize, said Sanford Lock< er. air correspondent of the Sun- day Graphic in sug eating multi~ pie single-night attac s on a single tnrget town. "Given the necessary machines nnd alrcrews. and both will be available before long. it can only be n. matter of time before such raids take place," he continued. Each night as winter draws nearer lengthens the period of darkness which. in addition to Berlin, harried by nuisan ce air raids in the midst of a wholesale evacuation of its population, met new wor- ries today with Swedish ire and Danish insubordination mounting in the north and the determined aerial smashing of Southern Italy increasing i In the German scrambled for transportation already reported to have fled capital n the south. bomb-shocked civiliaans to safety and 500,000 were to Poland. Heinrich Himmler, the new minister of the interior, was reported to have sent his new ministry to Prague for safety while other ministries were carting the archives to Vienna, Posen and Krakow. W. W. IIERCIIER (Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON, Aug. 16—(AP)—B0mb- ed and burned Berlin. harassed for the third night in a row by R-A-F- Mosquito bombers, was ton ght re- ported belng deserted bv itswpoanic stricken population with o .000 so capital, the BBC government was arranging to scat- ter ltself to occupied territory to the east and southeast. , Gestapo chief Heinrich Himm- ier’s ministry oi the interior a - parentiy was headed for Profile. t e BBC said in reporting the exodus of 500.000 to Poland. An overseas broadcast. declared the foreign min- istry might move to lenna, Che ministry of education to Posen and the labor ministry to Krakow. - Other sections of the fugitive population were travelling to the Baltic States and Austria. the BBC stated. Many Germans were said to be entering Poland reluctantly fearing for their lives when vic- tory by the United Nations free the Poles. Nevertherless Berlin school child- ren were reportedly sent to Posen dine and Lodz areas of Poland with teachers. Reports from neutral capitals declared Berlin “lives in real P011111’ and the damage has been catastro- phic. Berlin residents in constant pense by nuisance raids, heavy blows. forces a capital scurrying to their shutcrs for more than half an hour m the middle of the night. holm. Gennan travellers Malmo in Sweden said Templeh alrdrome was badly damaged. The first bombs dropped cause a short circuit on the airport The R. A.l='. campaign is to keep sus- between big bomber Mosquitoes of Hitler's With grounded the the One Mosquito was reported miss- ing. , A Swiss magazine in Berne. the Die Nation, drew a picture of panic the n capital. "The wiping out of Hamburg Is a terrible Phantom mlking Ber- lln a real rnadhousc." the maga- zine said. "The war of nerves has reached a. peak in Berlin hitherto thought Impossible. “Eyewltnesses reported (he Enz- llsh used new weapons oi arti- ficial fire, coal dust, sulphur and phosphorus followed by incen- diarles making a terrible explos- ln comparable only to coal mine fire damp catastrophes," it con- tlnued. Similar reports came from Stock- reachin switchboard and lights flashed on the field ald- the bombers in dropping their explosives. A film is being prepared for nat- ional release showing the work of.- the three women's auxiliary servic- es’. Recognize French Liberation Committee ADGIERS. Aug. ?£—-(AP)-—Brl-I taln and the United States have accorded the French National Committee of Liberation recogni- tion as a trustee regime for the French overseas territories which recognize its authority, it was an- nounced today. Recognition long sought by the French came just three months; after Gen. Charles De Gaulle and‘ Gen- Henri Giraud officially. brought their combined forces in-l to existence as one movement. The announcement. was made» Just 24 hours after Gen. Alphonso Juin. commander-ln-cliief of French troops in North Africa. told his soldiers. “the hour of action ls near." Political circles speculated out wvhethcr the action was connectedi with reported resignation of the‘. ,8. Undersecretary of State.‘ Sumner Welles. ‘ Germans availability of aircraft. is import- ant tc multiple raids. An R..A.F. commentator dis- closed some B00 aircraft took part in the repeat raids on Hamburg each night. leaving Britain from some 40 nlrfiolds. But. the sanle number of nirfields could accom- modato 800 more aircraft given another hour and a hnlf of dark- ness because lt. takes about half an hour to clear an airfield of 20 planes and an hour to bring thcin down on their return. Meantime the places in Ger- mnny most recently raided by the bomber force suggest the bombing is being deliberately syvitchcd from thr- dcstruction of German's heavy industry to {actorlcs where the finished weapons of wnr and the indispensable , llents of war- fare are being made. Earlier raids in the battle of the Ruhr have crippled Germmty‘; main sources of row material and heavy industrial output and now, it is said. the bombing of arm- ament centres such as Hamburg. Mannheim and N remeberg must affect the supply of weapons to the reserve dumps and depots on A reliable source said that the status of Robert Murphy special United Slates envoy from the State Depnrtnlelit, and British Minister Harold MacMillan re- mains the same, neither having been informed of any altered dip- lomntic accreditation to the na- tloilzillrornmittee. Au ounce, or seasonal. "SUVPORT IS Won-fa A ion ". OF ‘ii-IE {Mount lfilno "loll tlrlo this ‘coming nt ‘l2 nndfintrlrrht at i019; Sun sols this evcnlna at 7.4K nm rlros -tolnnrrna' morning nt Hi5. New moon Ann. 30. 3.59 pm. Summersldc tide eighteen min- ‘v3; l-‘pt- [Iv-q ffl“n~ln‘hsu‘wn_ CAR PERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — Leave 5.40 a.n-. L45 p.rn. and 4.55 p.m. Leave Cape Tnrmrntlnc ll n. In 25 p. m. and M0 p. m. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAY» Charlottetown —- Summerside —- on on Leave Charlottetown 1.50 a. m I230 . m. 4.30 m. \rr ve Charla ieinwn l.l0 p. m 5.45 n- m. 7.05 p. m. P» l-l. I.—N. S. FERRY SERVIF! DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAY! Leave Wood Islands - 1.00 a. m and ll mm. and I p. In. Leaves Caribou - 0.00 n. In. and which the enemy's forces rely. I p.ni. and I Lin.