l imimage liall. Batisrday. April 3 P. M. anlll Iaasllal. WIIIIII III, nulaoaaoewa Gandhi. two Cantu» lleivy Fighting At Ghengslen __. OHUNGKINO April 8-1}- aanslllllery flslit in the sua- urbs and on two si es of Ohengh. den. wherl In ling an Picn- ing-i-iankow railways once crossed to form a atra ilmctlon‘ was announced by the O eae y with the Japan’: apgealrrantl mat; the Allied on ano- of north Gilligan cun- munlca ions. The enem strengthened his forces which ad crossed the Pei?- lng-l-lankow railway It miles sou h of Chenghsien and sever, fightin is in progress near Sincheng, wes of the ra wa . ‘lhe roadb which the Jap- lnese established across the Lun- ghai railway 25 miles west of Uhellshslen also was being firmly twig] by the enemy despite heavy ES Little Girl Belle Dt lnvestltute OTTAWA, April 22 —- (C?) A little five-year-old girl, whose brown rlnglets fell to her white dress, was the belle of an investi- ture at Rideau Hall Saturday. when 62 persons were given orders and decorations for distinguished ser- vice to Canada by the Governor- General. She was Carole Hooey of ‘roronto. and she curtsied gravely to the Earl of Athlone as he gave her the Distinguished Flying Cross which had been won by her father; the late 1'20. G. . i-Iooey, RAJ‘, Then ail Aide led her back td her mother. Amon those who mounted the Dale all; ovrie tbs Governor-General were vel. .a . or servicemen lvliliiihgliid liiiat ived long enough to receive their de- coratlons personally. other; d1. mlfllfll Welt him-ranking officials of the three services and the Gov- ernment. Mrs. Janet Hendry of Little Long Lac, Ont., received the senior award M the inveetiture when the Governor-General gave her GWYBe cross won by her son, the late Cpl. J. Hendi-y, R.C.E., when he rescued several persons from .Ma.ry's Cathedral as Archbishop of the Rae ARIGHBISHOP WSULLIVAN His Grace Archbishop J. A. O'Sullivan leaves today for King- ston, Ont., where he will be in- stalled on Tuesday evening in Si. Kingston. His Grace is travelling to Mone- ton by car. accompanied by Rev. R. V. MacKenzle. Rev. F‘. Mc- Quaid, Rev. A MacDonald, CBSR. ill? “if! ‘" ow ~. will Moncton: t‘. Rev. G. Rt. Rev. J. A Murphy. Rt. Rov. A. A. MacAuiay, Rev. K. C. Mc- Pherson. Rev. W. v. MacDonald, Rev. P. McMahon, Rev. Louis vallashaa. Rev. w. E- Moiisghnn. Rev. P Walsh, Rev. D. J. Mc- Neill. Rev. C. J. Pitre, Rev. L. MacDonald. Rev. A. L. Binnott. v. '1'. P. Butler, RevL. J. Ayers. Archbishop O'Suilivan'g well message to the Diocese of Charlottetown was read in all the churches of the Diocese yesterday, . MacLellan, I bombed and bumin b ii in muss. losing his iii, "dug"... It appears elsewhere in today's Guardian. Believe Red Armies Plan New Offensiv ooiliilo EVENT "T0 lffl b 1k b8 l . . "Willem V; ‘Baylor.’ "Due m arr-lv-e-A-pril 37th. ear oi horses. A. M. Wright. M811: time. , 4.31.31 another car victory "lb arrive Registered Seed Oats. book now. McGulgan and Boyle. 4-i7-l0i " Sale. Holy Name 384i. _"'Klndly note the undersigned will not be buying Ho until fur- ther notice. E. C. Ne son. 4-34-2i. "Fannie kindly note. We or wee not be m’ 1 Abril mliidmioiusvvsu and Rust M. i-aa-ai. "New in stock, rise meal, ache 1M1. 011 Cake, Crushed Oats, Seed Oat-s. reed Oats, Bulk Wheat and Ground Wheat. McGulgan a Boyle. -2i-ai. "Flour QM per bag, all first fllllllly brands. heavy stock clover. "nwlhy. mixed on hand, riced is "M! competition. H. L. lckieson New Glasgow. 4-22-Bl. Win-a All the labial. {gabestw lend for free ‘at Olkolcgu‘ o. Arthur ‘film, "Bee the Vernon River Drama- i3ni’.'“'iiu"i°“$§dii'1iii? W. “h”? a . Dance after. 5" pi-fl-ll van Mile B‘? Dramatic fluent ‘ s House of garter" la Bevan mid Bay Hall, talnolday night, April as. l 4'.’ i? can.“ ilfll I atlmmm giver Ball. ail" ‘troop. P: ovarseausiufund. ustieo orchestra. 4-24-21 m "Nill-lae -x ill Iotbsl It either Md 0f an: a a getting: "lla- ' " '4-:a-ad-zs-ai _ .__ m ‘hometown’! bméor Davis s ms- llt. Hurray Hal-ho Belle River. his. riiursda ' of its shortest Millet rted will i 0‘ mar-id ' man soldiers LONDON. April Z3—(APl - A Crimean dispawh said today the Rod army had captured a summit overlooking besieged scvastouol while the conviction grew in ‘Glfiswi rcoo no importan gee on the eastern front. .But both an German dispatches noted increased Soviet aerial act- ivi v of a type which usually pre- ceces malor ground . Th JRAHSiBHI were strikim: roop concentrations. lley rail junc- ions and other rear-i The German contra‘ avian A superhuman efforts by Ger- Since March 4 the Russians have announced the killing or capture of approximately 450.000 ‘Axis t and this number probably will ex- ceed 500000 when the Crimean tal- lies are completed. Sixth Victory Loan Shield Dn Way To Prov. OTTAWA. Aoril 23 - (OP) -; Shields bearlnllt the wlnled "V1' insignia of Canada's Sixth Victory 'i’.§'.l.'...°"...“""" it'll ...'i°°°"“.'lt p suopor ve w ‘.000.0Wa.roon theirvmyio each of the nine ' overhead in formation to lend a e J P. McMillan, loader of the I first Victory n. be tt ddb i"i..-.°i“° ’ A . m tional Anthem. EZZ/fl’ The People's Pope‘ g Read by Everybody Gevors Priaae Edward Island Like file Dew Gadyliaslaftasgreataelsgdi MAXIIB OIL HIRE MAN for iudgueut. CHARIHFTETOWN. CANADA. ‘MONDAY. APRIL 24. 1944 LL S LAUNC li-Wlai-‘Siluuiapllioi-fliast nigh? By Kirh L. llmpaou, Associated Press War Analyst beeps for the final bloody scenes about levaatopoi spelling the end of the disastrous Nazi invasion of southern mania, there was something approaching a lull in the Volt red army offensive on the east front in Europe toward the week-end, but it boded no good to the foe. It obviously covered ' , ' for new ' ‘ l ‘ from the east timed to ' " with Iva“ Anglo- ' ’ ' blow: from the west. The patfcru of two such Bullion attach is already clear. Invasion of the Balkans via. Romania and the Danube Valley south of the Cur- paihians is in progress. A tbree-pronged Bed Army convergence on the Galati gateway to the great DanubI-an plains that hold most of the Nazi natural oil supply is traceable on the maps. North of the mountain bar- rier a Russian break-through vla the Lwow gate into the flat plains of central and western Poland would even more critically affect German military dispositions. During the week a significant change in Russia air ‘eclinlque to match the impending spring change over by the Red Army from the of- fensive-defenslve to the strictly offensive became apparent. Russian bombers turned to a limited form of strategic attack well behind the en- emy front. They battered at such Romanian communion!‘ . hubs as Constanta, Galatl and others in the south and at Lwow and its vital road and rail connections in southeastern Poland. Soviet bombers also ranged into Latvia on the Baltic flank of the long eastern front, however, to hammer at two critical rail junctions sup- porting the German front north of the Pripyat lo the Pskiw gateway to Estonia, Coupled with Moscow announcement of a heavy Nazi counter- attnnlr frustrated on the. Nurva Isthmus of Estonia. that Russian air raid points to an impending resumption of the Red Army drive in free the Baltic states of the foe. Speechmaking And Public Ceremony Marks Opening Of Sixth Victory Loan “with CIliada_ l2 c for her greatest ef ort in The .‘—'_’.'_' mr kaya sgnéiya -.-.'~- ~. -/- . may prove to be the decisive yo: 3M?” i?!“ éfifhntlélé; G323 ' 0' ......... ~ Nazi liirioree One of the Dominlons greatest heroes of the last war, Brigadier Milton F. Gregg, V.C., will address a gathering at. the Charlottetown Hotel at i p.m. today after Lieu- tenant-Goveriior B. W. loPage is Going Well ll ti i giiniiti lsdiiiii-‘iis isiiniimp“ s“ °“ LONDON. ahrii 2a - larl - Publlc ceremonies held later at Tl" Allin”! Plmlliil!" to destroy the German airforee -“ss a preliminary to destruc- tion of the German ability and will to continue armed resist- unce" - is nearing fruition af- ter a veal- of history's most sav- age air fighting in which the Luftwaffe has suffered a major Allied announcement said today. A desperate German colnter- plan to quadruple fighter produc- tion has been smashed and "for three successive months the German fighter force has lost more planes than its plants could manufacture." the Air Ministry and United States Airforce Head- ousrtera said in an extraordinary the war monument will slgnaliza the beginning of the campaign in Queen's county and will feature the resentation of the plaque sym- boli rig the pledg of the Province to reach its objective of $3,000,000. Brig. Gregg, V.C.. will address the opuiace and because it is the irst time a wearer of the Victoria Cross has ever spoken here thous- ands of people from the city and surrounding territory are expected to greet him. A dramatic note will be intro- dtlced into the proceedings as planes from the R-CAJ‘. circle grim tone of warfare and impress l f i - tléoeiiiriiigirminiiiiegoriinceviceoiy int statement detailing the "Bum-m strateplv and progress of the 1 carupa gn. cel-Jegaggnigleatctnc uiiiggument Til’- °"¢"ll"- WW0 I "ll"- scene will shift the oi-aftdn 0081;,’ II “Mi vet a complete an”; ‘up, o; the proving“ one . the announcement said. Bufldym when something but is reaching its climactic will be seen. His Honor Lieuten- Pill"- ant-Goverlior B. W. LePage, Pre- mier J. Walter Jones and Dr. W. Gardinal Dies From Pneumonia BOSTON, April as — (AP) — William Cardinal O'Connell. who rose from a humble beginning as son of a New England mill worker to become a prince of the church and Dean of the Roman Catholic Hierarchy in the United States. died Saturday from Bronchial pneumonia. The Cardinal. who was 84 years old, died at 5.46 p.fn.. EDT. Most my. Richard J. Cushlng. o position. will hold a ubli draw- p ch of thegl shill have iii: wrsieiiwhi f h l th v ege o urc asng e p Bonri, in the cam- f1. e Rotary Club luncheon wfll leaders of all parties, civic officials and representatives of every service club and fraternal society in Char- lottetown. It will be presided over by Hon. T. W. L. Prowse. l’.'.i""°"‘ifi‘i".°‘l"' ‘iii '5" ” era w nro lice rg. regg. Capt. N. W. Lowther, chairman- of the Queen's County Commit- tee, will preside at the onument and will ‘ Lieutenant- Governor LePage who will speak }},','§,“{,,‘},‘§,.,P‘°,,‘,‘;°“:,‘§f'm 01:‘ m? Auxiliary Bishop ct Boston who “diva “p, m‘, h" Wm m,“ was named temoi-ary administrator “plum m. -- o; w, of the Diocese for an indefinite In“, ‘M “f; m. m u, griod, announced that a, solemn f,“ .0 ~ - h Mass df nequieni will be celebrated for the Cardinal at the It- will be delivemo in be latter by a O.W.A.C. serpent and a Naval rating escorted by a guard of honour composed of S0 men from each of the that‘ services. Br . then ba intro- duee by t e chairman and will address he citizens in support of the loan. The ceremonies will be concluded with Benediction, pm- nouriced b Chaplain Brain, R. 0. It, an the singing of the Na- Cathedral of the Roi Cross next Friday at l0 a.m., . Interment will be in s. chapel at the rear of the Episc al resid- ence at the express wsh of the Cardinal. Suspect Fire-Bug in Truro Blazes mono. NA. Anti D-(gh- Incendlariuu was ted a Baburdalv ht fire that damaged a dance ‘mac's second dance hall fire in owo ts. The first firs demote e llbriuu a“ " .322 f.'..‘}‘."‘°i.i’.'“' “Milt one . o bio. will.» broke out at. the hall. Pro-Invasion Aerial-“Cffensive Continue Departure Df Archbishop For Kingston Diocese Local Man Leads Fighter Bomber Sqdn. IDNZDON. April Z — (OP Cablel —-An armada of "well over 1,000" H. A. F. and Canadian planes hammered the German industrial cities of Duesseldorf and Brunswick and tile Leon railway yards in Northern France Saturday night, the Air Ministry rinoun J wdgy, iwhile Allied bombers continued to |smash at Europe today with litt- ilgecsk; from British and Italian ba- Six squadrons of R. C. A. F. heavy bombers were included in the mlshtv force which struck devas- 1511118 blows at Duesseldorf and Laon. Brunswick was blasted by an all R. A. F‘ fleet German radio warnings late to- night indicated that history's great. est sustained aerial assault was continuing. Meanwhile the Budapest radio said Budapest and Bekes. a town near Transylvania were under Al- lied attack Both the Budapest and Belgrade stations then went off! the air. Last nlsht/s operations cost 4.2 bombers. nine of them Canadian. Today a force of between 500 and ‘150 United States heavy bombers based in Italy carried the unpre- cedented Allled attack umn invas- ion threatened Europe through ils seventh consecutive day. with hammer blows at the Austrian air- craft cent-res of Welner - Neustadt and Schwechat and the airfield at Bsclvoslau. all near Vienna. Meanwhile hundreds of Allied medium and light bombers and $181M‘: bombeiis CIOSéZCG the Chan- QL. 9'. . 9!’! ._5 NB!!! Mil-BY. . blast coasts anti - invasion de- fences. The cmss channel offensive was possibly the biggest of the sort the_Allles yet have attempted. Fighter - bombers and fighters plastered at least seven German ai fields in France and Belgl-im. damaging installations and parked Planes at s. cost of seven fighters. American fighter bombers escor- ted bl’ R- A F. and R. N Z. A. l" Spitfires mt Namur. Belgian railroad centre. A Canadian squadron of Spit- fire figl-iter bombers led by wing r. George C. Keefer. Char- lottetown. hit an important railroad viaduct near Le l-lavre twice in the milmlllfl. Unable to see the damage because of smoke the squadron re- turned in the afternoon. found a sap in the middle of the bridge. and brrnbed both ends for good measure. It was the squadrons first bom- blnll mission since the outfit u-as equiPllBd far bombing duties. Says Ilse Df Gas By Enemy Likely TORONTO. April 23—(CP)-—Lt.- Gen. A.G.L. McNaughton, former commander of the Canadian Army overseas. said today in address to more than 2.000 lax-servicemen that there is "every reason" to ex- Dect. that Germany in this war will try a surprise similar to use of gas at Ypres in the First {treat War when the battle "might have gone decisively against us." Gen. McNaughton, 57. making his first official visit to Toronto since he relinquished the overseas - arnLv command last December. spoke at Metropolitan Church at the rung service of the 13th Bl al Convention of the Cari- adian Legion’; Ontario provincial command. FilliiS_li0|li Goins lildden in Geller BRJDGEWATER. NS . ADril 23 —<CPJ—A copper pot containing ll gold sovereigns has been found in the ar ofbaAloM-sgandmejd .v nous owe. - veer-old fishemaan. Be was dissing l" from the cellar for weighing onaier pots when he made the frid The 'arm hasbeen abandoned foi so many Years that reside-nus of .tic district were unable to say who lb ins’ owner was a Fireiilestroys 10 PAGES In". Will Reorganize Navy League Br, Mr. D. H. GIBSON MR. I. B. GILLARD _ President D. H. Gibson and Managing Secretary H. R. Giliard, Toronto. of the Navy League of Canada, will ar-i rive in Charlottetown on Wednesday, May 5, i0 organize a branch in Prince Edward Island, the one Province without a branch-correcting a situation that should not exist. hAnti-Invasion Forces Said At Action Stations LONDON. April I - (C?) German anti-invasion forces in the Netherlands now at", "at action stations," the Nazi propaganda machine proclaimed today in its campaign of second guessing on where the main Allied blow will fall in the west. "The fortress of Holland is rea- dy ior coining events." a broad- cast trarisccean agency dispatch from Amsterdam asserted. To Flood Holland "Necessary preparations for flooding Holland have been per- fected. in case an invasion at- tempt is made in this area all vehicles, tanlrs and guns will get stuck in the mud." The tub thumoers of propaganda. Minister Goebbels. who have said} the Allies are rig history's‘. greatest. invasion armada for an assault "any day now,“ hustled a German war correspondent to the microphone to reassure the people‘ that all is well along the Atlanti | urall. i "All kinds of defensive and of- St. AViifds Auxiliary firemen. fensive tactics have been foreseen; formed in connection with civilian in the west." he said; "Germany, defence work, responded to the ai- 1B 681m Ind wwared. l airii but it was soon seen that the i blaze was bigger illan they could Different Tana handle with the equipment available and a call was sent to Charlotte- town firemen Effort; to save the mill building were futile, however, and all that could be done was to prevent the ilnmcs from spreading to other buildings iii the vicinity As ll, was John Hogan's dwelling caught fire and the dwellings oi.’ Frank Burke and Charles Jackson Scott Mills At St. llvards Blaze Late Saturday Aft- ernoon Causes Heavy Losses. Damage estimated unofficially at between $7,000 and $8,000 was caused by a. fire Saturday which destroyed the Scott. hiiils at St. Avards. The fire broke out late in the afternoon. It was believed to have originated frcni sparks from the exhaust pipe of g diesel e ine used to supply power at the mil. The sparks set fire to dry grass near the mill and the wooden building was soon ablaze The great aerial assault of thel Allies produced a different tune.| however, from the German-con- trolled Paris radio's political com- Said he. "For a week now. the war has. come to France. It is a. new kind; of war but it is nothing comniiiezil to the threat: which hangs heavily". l to ._ ; were scorched Damage was not on us, , , (he days come great, however. our Cathedrals will not be worth Tile only thing siived from the more than a bistro la drinking mill was n set of platform scales. house l French civilization will us and ilmc| nnnifledjnjgazef 1.32.51; all” bllmlgs." Bracken Emphasizes State ’s Responsibility To Its Youth HAMILTON, April Z — (GP) — John Bracken, national leader of the Progressive Conservative Party. said here tonight that, the respon- sibility of the state to its youth is "very great—greater by far than in any generation prior to this age of science and ma nee." RANDY. CBYIDN. April 20- (AP)-Britlsh forces have fought the Japanese invasion of India to a standstill in toot ‘v the nnvhlh inviting social chaos, he Kohima areas 811ml. PM youth is said in an address prepared for delivery to a youth rally. Speaking on “a charter of rights for youth," Mr. Bracken listed l0 which. he said. it is the lity of the state, in co- operation with the home, school and church to carry out. 1t is the state's responsibility to see that its youth are well born. maintained in health, developed in character. informed in the useful and steadily are strengthening their positions with the efecl-lve aid of Allied aviation, southeast Asia headquarters an- ‘ today WITH THE CANADIANB 1N ITALY. April 23 - (C? Cable)- Soldiera of the Canadian Corps in Italy ovorlubacribcd their ob- jective to more than 00 per cent, rain $4,008,550 for the Sixth Can n Victory Loan. . u,“ fln°flffffng‘fi”" m‘ “lined m —-— r dditl ,tn snoiildiieia s zoomou April 24 - (Monday) m,“ Sings?“ eilihnr, radon-climb» Wig) 1- ‘Ggman {Eiders tcauseld l! 80h‘ 9 IOU 00M eary u} ‘ad '—“ 1 Q6953"; 1 today. and bombs were dwivped at giirnpiiaiun '2. liver-i‘ opportunity m1 .. sting asid expected "t aev ffibThofoillUhoilfl-wggm median estimates on damage or “m. m“, W“ ‘M311, 1n me °"“‘ °'- community and a little more they can." The record shows. Mr. Bracken said. that the state has carried out mesa responsibilities with "all foo little credit to itself." One third of all the deaths in Oanada each year are said lo trace (Continued ca can ‘l. ooi. IT- MOSCOW, April l! -- (AP) — Andrei J. Viahlnsky, Soviet Vice- Cornrnissar of Foreign Affairs. announced Saturda night that revised Soviet ocud lions for an had been a oe the Finnish Gov bring- lsn nonetheless: u bubaarlpilon Dolloverl mentator . . d ' like headache tablets... I “If other Provlueaa l lLl-l. 0th DRIVE lN NEW GUINEA Land D_n_Both Sides Di Japs llollandia Base Third lsllflfli-ngs Near Alt-ape Airfield; Many Japs isolated. By C. ran; McDaniel ADVANCED ALLIED HEAD- QUARTERS IN NEW GUINEA, Au- rll 24 — (hfoiidayw-(AP) ~Po\v- erful United States Army rces. moving the ground front 500 lllilEJ up the New Guinea coast. landed un boil: sides of Hollaiidla Saturday lviiile Gsii Douglas aiacartlillr watched from n bcinbiirdiiig cruiser, llcdiiqilflflflli announced today A liiizd assault team landed uii- oppcsecl 150 fillies lo the saullieesc to reach the Ailape airdrome. ’I‘li':se ilperalioiis. covered by great aircraft carrier task ilQlpEd isolue 140000 from the Solcinons lo New G n, Under the guns S the navy, the American [fCCps landed with sight losses on the beaches cast and West of the Dutch New Guinea base of Holiandia early Saturday mcrii- lng. By noon they had driven iib- out two miles east from Thnamer- ah bay and the same distance acst. front Humboldt, Bay. Their objec- tives are three airfields lying inid- way between the American beaclr heads. This is the first reconquest of Netherlands territory since the Na- zis ovcrran Holland in i940 end the Japanese swept through the Netherlands East Indies early in 42. The assault troops, whose land- ings swept the New Guinea front 500 miles up the coast- from the Madang sector, found no land min- Qs and few obstacles to inlericie with rapid establishment of three beacliheads ‘ Driving inland at Holiandia. the American sllOCk troops met weal: Nslstsnce lliiich they quickly oin- ed out or overrun, leaving to foil- owiiig forces llic job of llflllfflllZiilkf arid smashing a few pillboxes. This longest lunged amphibious blow of MacArthur to date by- passed the bulk of the Japaneo 18th Army on New Guinea estim- ated at. 60.000 between hiadaiig and Holiandin. It also iighieilcd ilie clivelopriielii: of some 80.000 more Japanese holding out oii New Britain. _l\f?\V Ireland and in the Northern holo- mons Probe Sulfa Drug Deaths TORONTO. April ‘.13 -- ICPJ Chief Coroner Dr. Smirle Lima-via tonight mmouiiccll inrcsllllalioils are under war lil connection Willi. the death of two persons here l0- s. Rose Goodman. 68. and AC. Dewi Wyn Williams. 2i. volunteer a r , <5 <-< a1 x: lreserve recruit iii ihc R.A F died in hospital today _ Dr. W.L. Robinson said Mis. Goodman died as a result of sul-I faoiiaene poisoning and Wlliarris eath was attributed to sulfath- iamle poisoning . Dr. Lawson said the dcailisiiriillt to i2 the number who have died in Ontario in the last \‘l‘lll' from sulfa. poisoning “Sulfa is a 200d drug and has worked miracles _whe_i_i used under propci- prescriptions. said the chief coroner. "But the lime has come to acquaint the DllbllC it is not something that can be takers 4m:- Ptoete who Rankin lime HONEY 1o BllRN the Nor in: ONES will Billiti L. l . l High tide this afternoon at 12.44 and tonight at l. Bun sets this cveliini! at 7.50 and riefi tomorrow moming at 5.60 rst quarter moon April 30. 8.06 am ‘Summer-side tide 18 minutes late! than Charlottetown. DAILY Al“ QEIVBCI Charlottetown — Burnruersida — Moucton 12.00 noon. 4.30 p. in. Arrive Charlottetown 1.10 a. us $.45 p. us. 1.0! p. m. SUNDAY UIRVICI Leave Charlottetown ll noon. Arrive Charlottetown Ml p. l. have Charlottetown 1.35 a. us '