t ‘ e Year Ago Today Allied Troops Stormed r Ashore In France To Come To Grips With Enemy. -—.—_;= , om. TA cutter .___ stripped - - German! of ion else for puree!" ie Allied oecnps ion. _. in Kobe~ dilogrforlilrgiddyalllm "i" . ‘s makes no mention of .. ya illhiing; showdown bat- - w cqsysn valley on Lueon, t “m, believed nearer. rs __| ese abandon four can“ riaipilirwns in Hung Kohl qhrmse within ll nrllss of i... . nnuee British troops _ flee miles. l 4n. hill ta e iii-in “VAN-link rgfliatloi: oflaeno‘ . tine dispute b! . , United Statel- ‘ i girl-Churchill announces "or to Russia of l3 vvarahlyl ' undetermined amount of mer- g ghlps to meet demand for of sorrelnderied 118:!!! til"; °oe ‘ Mia-o I Gl- _ fumed light Service Vote itortrti For _. but. A rrro. a s - (or) — R0 une o! “loam X1 United Kingdom voted in the rlo election. MBL N!!! 119W". - i election officer, today was ed- .. by cable. 0n this basis. few changes are u. ted in the election of can- 't‘- tes in yesterday's civilian vot- .'i‘he total armed services vote estimated at 80.000. Maj. Lewis . and if only 40 per cent use. t franchise it will make a dif- _ce of only about 1,300 votes in ' constituency. ‘ ming E zents . "show - Crapeud Thursday. /"1n stock, seed oats $2.50 per McGuigsn end Boyle. il-fld-loi. opsnce -- Montague Friday. I or. Orchestra. e-e-ai. Psrkdale Annual Tea and it» July ath- e-e-ii. -"O0i'nwail PlayQ-g time act ay in Kngstnn . Wednesday. Jtme 0th. 6-5-2i. "Notice - Lo di -t Al- i - mmdlywaduxxfienoflihf from "u until 4 c ock Friday. Funer- lli until nso. o. c. Green and A. ' Green. . s-i-tr ““Aunt Susie shoots‘ the Works" tented by Stanley layers int "' Burrow Hell, ivsdnesdny "it e-e-e-zi , "i" "lens Rivers" by Hunter "r players in North Wiltshirc ’ Wfltdnwdsy. June e. e-s-e-si ‘Uoioadi i ad tev shl st Binrgterufttiver rgdhdy alnd "PW- Bu in: second hand - R- L. Dckieson. fifiiotice: now unloading car es- , a I lee. heavy and light , Best prices off car. ('3. 0. is l. i "Victoi - i lltlonolrliiilmnglcidiid: mvgmgudaidi ll ill-ms for schools. tl m. -e-1i i imhhoois invited. “u u bu“ "mo: service -tn°.u."rl'éfi’ir°i‘é’tfi" I hols everv Friday for Preset Ltd. Phone collect t0 N. A. Out- D. L. Moc- l-fl-tf. ormandy Beaches J iet This June 6 1 S68! ' msndy which drove the - um.‘ tiu i renrsrritgirestiroutrhitwereedreem. that de when the are Discr lT BINDIN 0-0-1113 jitmdercho CH ..._ ETOWN. CANADA. wrtomzsoav, JUNE o, 194s .3; ‘c’ a?» r good Listen to one who hhself ls s MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN listener. _____..__. 1I-— 10 PAGES Mali. $4.00: other Provinces l Ill-L 03.00- Subserlption Delivered. 85.00. BY I08! IHINRO One yea-r ago today, June 8.1044, was D-DIY. Amliult tfWPs of the Allied Errpedltionao-y Pbrce landed in Normandy. Between the mouth of the Orne River and the boss of the Ober- hmug Psniustiln. advance fomustions 0i thfi British 2nd Army and the girdled States 1st Army landed from e sea and sky alon the sWe - 1118 bay of the Seine.“ en WWh the ma army were the 3rd ‘Alfie ‘Eli. l“ i?‘ 8n a e un er MaL-Gem. R..F.L. Keller of Kel- OWIIB. B-Q. Ind the 1st. Canadian Parachute Battalion of the Brttigi 8th Airborne Division -- tbs: Can.- adion Army's contribution to the second-front assault, launching One grylihe greatest campaigns in his- llurrloane of Shellflre Between 7:30 A.M. and 8 A.M., the Canadian and British infantry splashed ashore. supported from th see by a. hiuricene of shellflre the greatest bombardment ever to lmntmer a coast. To the west of the 2nd Army were American div- lslons —the 1st. 29th and 4th In- farttry and the 101st and Blind Air- borne. At Courseulles, the Royal Win- nipeg Rifles. the Regine. Rifles. the Csmdian Scottish of Brig. Harry Weber's ‘It'll Brigade with tBnkS of the 1st Hussars of London. Ont. totiched down. At Bernieres and Kenneth Black- The Queen's Own Rifles of To- ronto and the Resifnen-t De L1- Chaudiere from Quebec took on Bernieres’ West Wail defences. The North Shore (New Brunswick) Reg- iment landed near st. Aubin. Tanks of the Port Gar-r Horse of Win- nipeg supported e brigade. Ma- chlne-gurtners and he-lvv m crew. of the carneron uishleodere of Ottawa were with every unit H! well' as Royal Canadian Engineers and gunners of the Royal Canadian Artillery. At H-hour a. terse wireless mes- flaslhed from the shore to Gen. Keller! headquarter; ship lying of! (the ccost: “Under fire on 8!! beaches." 1.000 Canadian Casoaltlu aaoross those sandy beeches lewd with machine-min and artillery fire the Oeoiitdians raced from their lending craft. Some craft were blown up on mines or hum “l? 0Y1 underwater gibstacle; before tliv-‘i’ reach d th 019- All emorneing the battle rained gflmiy, ggvagely. along that precious strip of coast. Nearly 1.000 Canad- iains were killed. mlssins! or wound“!- Bllci’. the bedohhead we: s‘ AubTrJifl-wem cleared in bitter figm- e- 1r “use wet-as 9th, comm e 1' - - - which was . 6 "' was committed at Bernlerefl- ‘Rm Swflnpflt, Durndes end Glengtitfi’ Highlanders of Oomwell. Oflt- it" North Nova Scctiss of Amherst and 1mm and the l-lilrhlfl-ud blah rniantry oi out. out. veered through the town with tanks of the Sherbrooke Fusiliers. T8111" 6M infantry struck 11119-05- By night. a 811° had bee“ W" on the coast of Normandy. it had been won at heavy cost but ‘ad 116x13‘ w“ "mqWfidm, vii-ax}; of Nor- springburfl Gum‘. , t tn Rhine and liberated ‘éiébé’ N051. one W" “Mt °°‘“‘ piotn victory has been WW1- Vetersns Iomflllbé 1 f the are Division amhgergdmgnfiored Brigade h" “hereunto u...“ B" ' those terrib too, the rows of vmite woods at ‘Belly 5"!‘ buried comrades remember. crosses near the Mer whcrey this flrst_ snrgv-wrv issidind. --° w“ quiet. rheyve sewbwk W l“ ‘ff; areas arm W" ti" “m” "is driftins send roles "P ehell-plwed csstevnortee- Bwmy lung 1; aimlessly 1mm» souls of them. nasty "MI tiifi wire etresslo signs NM the rich soil IN! trenches egalrflt , Pacific Okinawa - o l5 MI The above map shows the area insults and quickly captured half of miles ' away. _As No. I 9i . i Ontario Seats ‘ Still In Doubt (By The Canadian Press) i TORONTO, June 5—The service| vote, to be announced next week,| seemed destined tonight to deter- mine the political future of sev- eral candidates in Ontario's elec- tion in which Progressive Conser- vatives swept 66 of the 90 seats on the basis of civilian returns. For instance in Wellington North Liberal and Progressive Conserva- tive candidates tied at 6.323 votes apiece yesterday on civilian votes. In York South, 0.0.1“. leader E. B. Joliife held ho the service vote might bring hm victory over Capt. H. J. Sale, Progrescive Con- sergvative. who led by 1.239 civilian V0 6S. The total eligible service vote runs more than 252.000 and 150,000 servicemen cast ballots May 80 to June 4 the average would be 1,666 for each constituency. i The Progressive Conservatives won six seats by margins of less than 50 votes and six others with pluralities or majorities of 500 to i,000. The Liberal party won two of its i0 seats by less than 500 and two lg soo to 1.000. The C. .1". took one of its six =~: . '11:‘. "in": _——i—.____._~:_- _ - . 2. (Continued on page 9. Col. 2) Women's Institute Board Meeting VICTORIA. June ii - (C?) — Mrs. Cameron Dow of Port Daniel West. Que. told the biennial board meeting of the Federated Women-A's Institutes of Canada hers today that "our organisation is being recogniled more and more as the voice of rural women." The I".W.I.C. president seid the organization was represented at a been compressed on Okinawa as the battle enters its final stages. Even since this map was made the American 6th Division Marines have push- ed ahead and yesterday reports told how they landed on Oroku Pen- A Tokyo dispatch admitted that the Okinawa situation was "most cri- ticsl" and added that unmistakable signs point to the enemys inten- tion tn Invade the Japanese mainland." r Indeed there was ample evidence that Allied might was gathering for the next phase of the war against the enemy homeland only I25 Bracken Places Farmers Unity Makers llalgor or any other." he seid in his conference of the Canadian Med- ical Ass ‘ “ l committee on epidemics. A 1 est had come from the Royal Commission on Educat- ion. recently appointed ‘b3; Ont- ario Government. mlt s of the Recording Secretary. Mrs. RA. Gates of Charlottetown, PB. 1.; Corresponding Secretary, Mrs. G.F.W. Kuhring, Montreal. BERLIN. June ii — (AP) - Gen; Eisenhower landed here at Tem- peihof Airfield at l1 e.m. today to attend the first meeting of the Allied Control Council for Ger- many and to sign a joint declare- .tion by the United States Great bQlbhél ‘I! gmyqmgibyvlarbsuakltllwivmmi Britain. Soviet Russia sndiPrsnce prooiliminl assumption of Govern- meint of Germany by the four vie- quueogete-___ rief. i Other reports given were those into which the Jap defenders have Naha airfield, largest on the island. BUNTLNGDON. Que. June ii-I (CP) - John Bracken. Prolressive. Conservative leader, said in an ad-i dresspreparsa for delivery at a| political meeting in this Quebec farming district tonight. that he believed that farmers “more than any other one group in Canada, can bind this nation together ine a new degree of emity and common purpose." “You cannot maintain national unity on the basis of perpetuating an inferior economic position on any section of the national econo- my, whether it be agricultural or first address of the current cem- paign in Quebec Province. “I hold that view that. in a country of the geographic and other div- ersities of Canada. national unity can be maintained only on the basis of recognizing the right of each section and occupational groilip of the country to s. square ea . ' Discusses Manpower While the major pert of his ed- drcss dealt with the problems of farmers, Mr. Bracken devoted s. section to a discussion of men- power _and said that "the Gov- ernment's war policy with respect to the call-up of men for the armed services has been determined by partisan considerations." “in thus bowing to political ex- pediency, the Liberal Government. by its discriminatory m npower policy» has placed upon the hench- speaking people of Canada an un- deserved stigma. placed them in the eyes of the world in a. discreclitable light. This reflec- tion on French-speaking people they do not deserve. "Young French-s eaking Can- adians volunteered or service in| large numbers across Canada. They at the side of their brothers of o- ther races. i.’ saw the Alouette Squadron of the Bomber Com- mand in England-there was none better than it. And the French- Canadian regiments have achieved outstanding records in battle. The names of the Vingt Deux. the Ma’ nneuves, the Chsudieres end the Regiment De Montrealstand J ._ (CQntInuedUoiLiJDIIQJAFL 1 '£>E_$Il-M____ __ TheToss jot You I Brothers Escape Vlhen (iariioes Into Stream Two Sununerside brothers, Inuis and Harry Acorn. were injured a- bout 7 o'clock yesterday evening and their cor demolished when, due to faulty steering gear, it catapulted over the “Sawmill Bridge" near York, and plunged upside down into two and s half feet of water. The bridge is at the junction of the Tracadie and Pleasant Grove roads. Unable to open the car doors Louis kicked out the windshield and dragged his brother, who was more seriously hurt. out of the wreckage. Partly because of his own injuries and artly because of the inability of his brother to help himself, Louis was unable to climb the ten-foot embankment when encumbered by his brother's weight and remained in the water. holding Harry's head above the surface, until the arrival of n truck whose occupants assisted By KIRKE L. SIMPSON i Serious as have been American losses afloat in person-i nel and ship damage off Okinawa, there is authoritative] word for it that measures to curb Japanese suicide bomb-t ing attacks are taking effect. i There seems reasonable prospect that by the time Ant-I erican forces are ready to move on against their next maj-| or‘ objective this enemy weapon of desperation will have: been written down to no more than nuisance value. That, at least, was the opinion of Admiral Halsey even before he returned i0 action with his mighty Third Fleet. His confidence is now echoed by Vice Admiral blari- Mitchel‘, until recently in command of the fast carrier task forces covering the Okinatva operations. He estimat- ed to a Washington press conference that. only one per cent of Japanese suicide bombers acually gel through navy air defences for effective attack and that every day saw the brothers to the bridge. The brothers were then taken to the home of e Mrs. McLeod. who lives near the bridge, and medical sid' was oaiied. Dr. I-LH. Pierce soon arrived from the City and attended to the in- juries of both men. Louis, who was cut on one leg end hurt about u shoulder. was allowed to be driven to Summensloe but Herr-y was tek- en to the PEI. Hospital where lest. reports were that he was resting’ comfortably. He had received a bad out over the forehead and sev- erai bruises. s The injured man was taken to Chariottetown- by Mr. A. B. Cut- iiffe‘s ambulance. l Japs Abandon Eourlowns In llong Kong Area By SPENCER MOOSA CHUNGKING, June 5-(AP)—— Japanese troops have abandoned four big industrial towns in the Bong Kong area in a contraction of their holdings along the vulner- able,- invasion -threatened South China coast, Chinese reports sold today. Three hundred and forty miles northwest, Chinese troo s swept within 2i miles of imperiled Liu- chow and launched a new encirc- ling threat to that former Ameri- can airbase pity. an American ari- nouncement disclosed. In an area 55 miles west of l-long Kong, the Japanese were reported to have-pulle out of Helping, See- glng, Su-nqui and Toishen. all lying! etween 43 miles southwest of] Canton and i9 ‘miles from he. South China Sea. Chinese reports said the contrac- tion of Japanese lines in coastal Kwantung Province had been go- ing on quietly for several weeks. but the reports were not revealed in Chungking until today. The Japanese also were falling back under Chinese pressure along China's East Coast north of the Japanese island of Formosa. Eisenhower And Mojty Honored IDNDON, June 5 — (Reuters) — est Soviet decoration — has been conferred on Gen. Eisenhower. A1- lled supreme commander in the west, and Field Marshal Montgo- mery, British commander in Ger- many. Moscow radio announced tonight. General Jean De Mttre p; nsslgny has been awarded the Order of Suvorov. the report added. The Order of Victory. studded with diamonds. is estimated to be worth I i ‘l that ratio being reduced. MANILA, June 6—(Wednesday) -Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nim- ltz in today's communique from Guam, delayed beyond its usual hour. for the first time omitted aili mention of ground operations on Okinawa and reported only scat. tiered air actions against enemy hi i and bases extending to the ma nland and Korea. (Such an extraordinary omission’ might mean that a special com, munique is in the offing, perhaps signalling the expected end of en. emy resistance on the island.) Dark War Picture l SAN FRANCISCO. June 5-—Ai dark war picture for Japan was; outlined by radio Tokyo todsy~i Superfortresses leaving sections of: Kobe flames, “unrnistakable' signs" of an Allied invasion _of Japan “in clue course of time" and the situation on invaded Okinawa “most critical." The various broadcasts, inter- cepted by tiie Federal Communi- cations Commission. also reported munitions production lagging and :he prospect of intensified air at. tacks on the home islands. Fires burning in the eastern part of Kobe after the U, S. Superforts smacked the city were “gradually being extinguished," Japan's Domei Agency reported. It had nothing to say about damage. but quoted a totally unconfirmed army com. munique claim that 56 of the raid. ers had been shot down and an- other 144 damaged. Rehabilitation Committees Meet KEIINTVIL-LE. N. S., June 5 -- (CP) -— Community bodies and citizens‘ committees have an im- portant part to play in the work of re-establishizig service person- nel in civilian life. speakers today told tlie opening session of the three-day conference of Veterans’ Rehabilitation Committees in the Maritlmes. The conference is I l i I t sponsored by the Department of Veterans‘ Af-a fairs and is attended by more hart 100 delegates from municipalities throughout the Maritimes PM. Smith. acting superinten- dent of rehabilitation for the De- pertinent in Halifax, stressed the need "for the community to take its share of the responsibility. The state can legislate and provide the funds for res-establishment. the man himself can put his best ef- forts into returning to civil life, but in the final analysis it is the men's own community whf provide opportunity." provided them by "reciiuing” on the ob. He said it had been the De- partmentfis experience that almost 100 per cent of the veterans would "rather work than live ‘on the JH. Read. district supervisor of counselling at Halifax. said he sl- wsye had fel-t that citizens‘ com- mitteee can be of great assistance to Department officials. With the present staff it would be im ibie for the Department to me ntsin contact with all ex- servicemen in the next .two or three years. and the communities should play their part by providing information so the Department could arrange training. At present there are four con- tres in the Maritimes where coun- selling services are available — Halifax. Sydney. N. 5., Saint John, NB» and Charlottetown. As more staff is available and as more ser- vice personnel return. other cen- iquent period will be the subject of Oh XXIII!‘ He said he was not afraid that" any discharged men would take, unfair advantage of any benefits‘ ,._ Churchill Gives Views 0n dispute By JAMES M. KING LONDON, June 5—(APl—-Prime Minister Churchill stood firm to day for immediate mediation of the Syrian-Lebanese dispute by Britain. the United States France in the face of a formal French request for a "Big Five" conference on the entire Middle East question. with Russia and China also attending. The action of the French council‘ of ministers in Paris in approving‘ Gen. De Geulle's proposal for a “Big Five" meeting will necessitate a formal reply from each of the four countries to be invited, but, there appeared to be little doubt‘ of Britain's attitude. . With blunt words Mr. Churchill‘ denied Gen. De Gaulles allegations of last Saturda that Britain had stirred up the yrians. “Far from stirring up agitation in the Levant States, our whole influence has been used in pre- cisely the other direction," he dc- ciared. "Most strenuous and suc- cessfui efforts had been made by the British Minister in Beirut (Beyrouth) to produce a calmer- atmosphere in which negotiations could be conducted for settlement of outstanding questions between sauce and the Levant States." Britain has no designs against the French in Syria, he said. Allies Reveal Occupation Terms For Germany . M..- l By JAMES D. WHITE l WASHINGTON. June 5 -<A.P) ;-Germany was stripped down to ipre-anchluss size today for the Epurposes of an indefinite Allied . occupation. Zones of sttprcme authority were; [allotted to Russia, Great Britain, iFrance and the United States. and a "greater Berlin" area was set a- side for occupation by forces of each of the four powers. Duration of the occupation ar- rangements was specified ln Joint Allied statement as being for |“the period when Gtrmany is carry-i ing out the basic requirements of! unconditional surrender.“ "Arrangements for the subse- a separate agreement". the stein- rnent said without further elabor- ation. The United States. Russia, Bri- tain and France disclosed the terms of the agreement at ll e.m. E.D.'I‘.' (noon A.D.T) and declared they: were assuming “supreme author- ity" over the country they beat in- to unconditional surrender. They made clear Germany will be stripped of arms and her Hit- lerian conquests and placed in complete Allied control. Of all Hitler's acquisitions only the Saar Basin which Germany won through a plebiscite remains even theor- etically pltrt of the Reich today. Germany was dividedjuto four occupation zones -— Russia on the east. France on the west. Britain on the northwest and the United States on the southwest. Provi- sion was mode for co-operstion a- mong the commanders in chief of the four zones on matters affect- ing ail of Germany. Zone limits were not further described. The agreement ordered Germany to hand over to the Allies ell arms and war materials, including fac- trgs wilihbe/ set _up_. ___ _torles and their gworkers ____ v l and tonight at 5.29 1'6 SUICIDEERAIDS rest Prime Minister King Speaks At St. John SAINT JOHN, N.B., June 5 _ lCP)-Pi‘lnle Minister Mackenzie King opened his Maritime Pro- vinces campaign speech here to- night with an expression of regret that he could not visit the other two Maritime Provinces and speak in Halifax‘ and Charlottetown. He spoke to an audience of 2.500 which filled a theatre to capacity and. said owing to press of work at Ot- tawa and attendance at the San Francisco conference he had been able to make only a few election speeches. The war effort of Canada vtal great and the contribution of the Maritime Provinces to it was great He congratulated the people of the Maritimes. "No country on earth has made a finer contribution to freedom in our time than has our Dominion of Canada." said Mr. King. HOLLYWOOD. June 5 -—- (AP) —Tll!‘han Bey, ‘Purkish movie acto was inducted into the army yester day. He is awaitin‘; dslgximent t4 a camp for basic training. isiti n’ ‘ilottotarui. (its NUMBER or tattoos ‘title ‘titu. (cine fo ‘(OUR Assistance billets ‘foo DON'T Nseo ANY .' ON . bu aftéi 1 METEOROLOGICAL OFFICE} Toronto. June 6-(0?) — Minimuifl and maximum temperatures: Van- couver 4'7. 6.3; Edmonton 46, '70; Regina 40, 80; Winnipeg 38, 63: 'I‘oronto 43. 60: Ottawa 45, b7: Montreal 46. 58; Quebec 59'. Sam! John 44; Monctmr 40, 55; Halifax 44, 54; Charlottetown 42, 57-, Yar- mouth 44, 59. Sydney 40. 46. FORECASTS Lower St. Lawrence; Moderate winds mostly easterly cloudy and. cool with a few light scattered showeis. Lake St. John: Partly cloudy xvitli a few light scattered shun"- ers not much change in temper- ature. Gulf and Bay Chaleur: Mode- rate to fresh northeast winds part- ly cloudy and cool probably a few light scattered shoivers. North Shore: Moderate partly cloudy and cool. Marltimes: itloderale to fresh northeast to east winds mostly cloudy and cool with a few light scattered showers. xvinds High tide this tuorning at 7.52 Sun set-s this evening at 8.42 and rises tcsncauow at'5.i5. New moon J-une 9th. 12.26 A. M Summerside tide eighteen minu- tes later than Charlottetown. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown 12.15. 5.45 Arrive Charlottetown 5.20. 8.10 CHARLOTTIJTOWN_ NEW GLASGOW (Daily Except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown l.l0, 4.00 EM. Arrive Charlottetown 0.35. 5.20 PM. n. s.-r. e. r. r-artnv ssnvrcs (Dally, Including Sundays) schooner: may l-SBPT. so Leave Wood Islands ‘I a. m.. 11 u. m» 3 p. In. Leave Caribou, I l. m.. l p. n». 5 p. m. (On authority of the Oil Con- troller. on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays durln May and June the l1 s. us. an . m. sailings will be cancelled ess there is evidence that the other crossings will not can’! the irpfficvkofferlngn, V, __ P.M. P-M. iminatiout-Againstfi’. E. l.IWith( Brackeu