cl A ‘HIRE MAN ‘Ishuewhswisusswlist kncwslstruswlsdom. nut ZTZ//’ The Peop e's Pepe Covers Prince Edward "yr" ' a »---_.__-' --_ ‘ah ‘h Read by Island Like the Dew History bravely and warthily. MAXIMS I _ or A MERE MAN ‘IIIDINI ans is live I Gurdlnu, Innulal III s".'.'.'i.'.f...... ourslu. ‘an cries. ALLIES ADV CHARLOWETOWN. CANADA, SATURDAY, MAY 1s, 1944 ANCE 3 MILE S’SIDE AND PRINCE COUNTY G0 gvui J0 N- B. And Manitoba Go Over Top In Loan Drive Loan Standings By Counties sanding b Co ti i the Vlc- jorsy Loan dare 15:3 b-ooks clos- ail for tho flay yesterday: Prince .. $1,519,500 - UAYB PADBES NEEDED QUEBEC. May ll-—(CP)—gntha mfmmlqlll todarv s. e rrohblshf-‘ID’! P111000. Cardinal Vil- lcneuvo ca. Padres are badly n ed by arrnedforoeaand asks all Roman Catholic priests "fit for so meritorious a service" com- municate with him. "Talkies-March Tuesday-s n m "TaHes-Bt. Peters. Wednesday. 5-13-21 "Rummage Sale at Y. M. . lily 30th, 0.30 p.m. 5-13-21. "Sea Frbdericton (Flay at Wheat- ley River Hall, Mon , May; 15. m "Reserve Saturday. June 3rd. Pantry Bale st Holman. Ssturdno‘. tric May River Institute. 13th. Nort 15-13-111. "Dance-Orwell Hall Monday. Ma-v 15th. lidillvievw Orchestirula u .".§.“i“'f.'...'“'” "‘."'“.‘2..F.E“§§ ac , w open o grstp potatoes. 5-3-101 "minimal Sal ‘Iriniw Social Hail, today, gaturday 0.3) P.“ u "Expect to be unloading car choice feed oats soon. Booking or- ders. MacNelll and Acorn. 6-12-21. ‘Sale of f00d and aprons in Zion or schoolroorn Saturday, May 20. at I p.m. 0-13-11. "The Vernon River Players re- nt their lay in Cardigan all, onday. y lath. Dance. 5-12-21. "Emerald play Seven Mile Bay Hail, Monday evening, May 15. 5-11-13-15-31. " 00401171 csr whole barley and barley meal today. N. Aub- IW Gikoliffc. 5-13-21 "Sunday evening service of story and song Comwall United Church conducted by the Youna People's Society. 5-12-21- "Be. the Graham Road pla in ranch River Hall Monday, ay 0th and Wiltshire. Miday 10th. 5-l3-1b-l8—Si "See “Silas smidge from ‘mrnip Ridge" by Marie Players in St Pet- sr's Buy H011. MAY l6. 88051321118 "All interested in New Glasgow Cemetery are riiguested to meet in N Cl _ ll t aso P. M. rilnofih ml. “ 5-12-21. "Duo ivw-O . l d coal and cglosT-Boundigtogialfitéc- butts. 5-13-11- "See “Hus for P0908115" undi 'WhOdlli'11t" by ME. llferbcrt Y-PIJ. ‘rueeaay May 2on1 at the Protest- ant Orphanage. specialties. 0-18-11. sap- lottatown Baptist Players Recent "Oh Promise Me!" three act cmedy-hit Bonshaw Hall. Miw sour. Spectaltlas. so i l 35c. can... aso. ‘éifé-‘il-si-u. "Farmers Attention: our hog marketing propsm announced in this ps i- for the week of May 15th wil be carried out as adver- . h the exce tion. that we expect to he abls to ake car of all hog offered for shipment our l gia- Livestock Mar tin a . 5-12-2 . "Farmers are asked not to brinl along an hogs that can be carried for a fur her week at home without oins overweight. Also, s reprieve another two weeks should be Iflnted all old sows ‘latedmféir e Y l h . 3354f" "“""°° i-n-lf rues-egg Mn i? 3 Qdflnthellithd-aoroftbstdrlve. . boar decided tomes: third lace a. e CA.' is-is-u. ‘ “Pantry Bale at Maritime Elec- the ' national health bill. All _. fififififlglrflfiurin; the Crimean OTTAWA. May 12—(GP)—With ths lfthhyofcsnvsssinzincm- Ida's Stat-b Victory Loan complet- ed. officials of this national wnr fiance committee tonight we“ s. waitln: returns to learn whether gths current loan would equal the record of last iiutumrrr um. m. W‘! loan. when the minimum ob- icctive of 01.300.000.000 was exceed- Thc Sixth Victory Loan, n mlllmhllffl. objective of 51.310.000.000, Opened April 24. and subscriptions up until this morning totalled $1.- 106-740100. leaving a. little more him 043.000.0110 to be subscribed to reach the minimum objective. 011 t-hQ 17m day of the fifth loans three-week campaign, sub- SCII-‘Dtloris amounted to approximat- elyiq $81,000.00. wk 0W and Manitoba were added to the list of provinces which have attained their objectives. Loan officials, however. are imaibla to decide which should have the honor of being re- Kiwdcd as third. immediately be- hind Saskatchewan and Arbor-tn. Telephone calls were received sim- uiituicouely from the loan chsinnen of the two pirovinoes and it has D e- = The iota-l purchased by the armed forces tonight. stood st well above fifth victory loan fig- . R.O.A.F. la n“... were 015,021,560. Every command is “over the top." Health Insurance Conference Ends oTrAwA. May 12 - (cm-s three-day Dominion - Provincial Conference on health insurance was concluded here today after all provincial health ministers and their deputies had completed study a draft national health insurance bill which has been under study by the Commons committee on social security. The conference was held in cam- era. but pensions minister Mac- kenzie. chairman of the meetin s. told The Canadian Press that t e discussions were “most harmonious and err-operative." “No finality was attempted." said Mr. Mackenzie. "Rather it was an xplanatory conference dealing with lie salient features of the draft revisions of the draft bill were dscussed- such as the amount of contribution. the possibility of Blllbflfklhflllpflfl such a com rehensive scheme all once. or e advisability of put- ting such a scheme in operation by degrees. "The cost to the p. vinces was reviewed. The cost of the scheme was discussed and compared with various schemes ‘now in existence in various parts of Canada. "Every province expressed itself as in favor of the preamble of health insurance." said Mr. Mackenzie. The financial provisions of the hill will be discussed at the forth- coming general Dominion-Provin- cial Conference. said Mr. Macken- ze Before conclusion of he confer- ence, Roy Graham (L-Swift Our- rent) appeared before the delegates with n recommendation that public simaicria or hospitals be estab- lished for persons suffering from arthritis, rheumatism and similar crip ling dileases where they would reoe ve free treatment. successful treatment being given arthritis sufferers at Bsnff, Alts., and believed that such services should be generally available throughout Canada. Mr. Graham said he had observed w“ War ways to Bolus in the first ground Europe. long in I rind upon the Balkans as well. in the Balkans. That seems to be on fer the east front In Romania. Britain. That is I. primary objective southern defence perlrneten . News Briefs ADVANCED ALLIED HEAD- QUARTERS, New Guinea, May 13 — (Saturday) — (A P) — ' ‘ heavy bombers fought off 80 Jpplheeo and shot down at least six Wed- nesday In pressing home a 902 ton bombing of Truk, kc! enemy base in the Central Pacific, headquarters announced today. FOWEY, Cornwall, Eng, May 12 — (GP) - Sir Arthur Quiller - Couch, British author known to readers of his novels as "Q" died 9000i’ at the ass of 00 at his home here He had been Ln declining health since March when he was knocked down by s Jeep as he was taking his daily constitutional. WASHINGTON, May 12 — (A P) ,- Destruction of a Japanese destroyer and 1S merchant ves- sels by hard hitting American submarine battering steadily st Jlpaneue lines in Pacific waters was announced by the United Siutcs Navy today. IONDON. Mil? 12 — (A P) — The full sCBlQ Allied offensive moun- ted b 0e Sir Harold Alexander Y n in Italy today brightened invasion hopes on this soldier filled island. with everyone viewing it as a ure- iiminary blow to an assault on the European fortress from the west. New Lineup In Italy NAPLES. May l2-rAP)-—Here is the new lineup of Allied troops af- ter re-irroupini? in Italy for the all- out offensive against the Nnzis:- Allied 5th army-shifted south- westward from Cassino area to the coast and attacking in the Gari- gliano Valley area: also assigned he Anulo beaohhesd. 00 miles up ut separated by difficult. rra . tinny-transferred ririatic Canadian 1st corps-not specif- ioally located in dispatches and pos- aiblx still holdini! the eastern Ad- ris c sector. Last Axis So mp0 ,M ia-uir) -'nui Rjifhmfwiplli out the last Axis remnants trapped West of sevasto- p01 on Cgpq Khei-sines today. ending five week old Crimean cam In Ro- m..aa"::“ ".- -. us...» 1.1.2.. 1.. W“ Crimea Is Wiped Out than 00,000 were killed in itin M day camps‘ which begun April 8, said the broadcast recorded by the soviet Monitor. A total of 01.00’! enemy troops wss captured in the campaign, inc uding t General Scheme, corn. the German 5th Army, m m1] psrenfly was oven Awe...» the broadcast report W" Wine’ Soviet Information Bursa-iv ' said Russian planes and shlP8 o; the Black Bea ° 1"?“ “Si”. 1.3mm shi inc ud n! l‘ ' l din barges which u Em‘ “w” “n”... ti. for supply l9. M tli 20,000 Cleflflfln! . ognejguanflgm killcd in U!!! “fill 5.5 i Rom th any bottle which toppled ‘*- v|s%po1 last ‘hiesdsy, and IIWN Moscow ss-id. ‘oative thot s b battle was raging on the west bs of the Lo- wer Dnestr River. the ltussian com- Germsns were i munique said 4.000 and killed and 100 enemy tanks des- troyed in a two day repulse of heavy Axis attacks northwest ol Tirsspol. German attacks on the bridgehead were obviously an attempt to erase s valuable Soviet jumping off case for the next big it perha timed in 0n A1 ied assault in the west. ‘Situation Last Night A’ They are obviously faced with inch-by-lnch ' hands and foot they gnin, however, the struln on enemy reserves niust increase, the enemy hold weaken not on Roms alone but on all the Italian peninsula ussisn , conjunction with . By Klrke L. Simpson. Associated Press War Analyst Allied troops in Italy sra again knocking thunderously at the gate- phaaa of the triple-fronted United Nations campaign to crush the walls of the Nazi fortress contingent of against natural nests. With cvery with g Pushed to within gun range of Rome, that attack could force the Nazis back into the inner walls of their continental defence system. It could materially help towlrd an early Russian hr '- “ nugh In Rnmfmla. to bring a deadly squeeze from the east upon harassed Nazis the cards in view of the concentrate-i Allied sir pounding of Hungarian, Romanian and Bulgarian communicat ions targets. There can be no release of Nazi reserves in the south to hole- Nor can the German high command hope now in shuttle divklons from south to west against the impending Allied lnvrislnn “ cks from of the hssault in Italy. That attack is In no sense z felnt. It L; a full-scale nffenslvc by every indication and holds within itself a. grave threat to the whole Nazi Five Nazi Synthetic Oil Plants Are Bombed Pre-Invasion Aerial Offensive Goes Through 28th §t_raight Day. LONDON. May 12—(AP)—An American sky-fleet of 2,000 bomb- erg and fighters smashed through swarms of German fighters today to attack four synthetic oil plants in eastern Germany and a fifth in Czecho-slovakia. This t. mendous blow at sources of the lifeblood of Hitler's mechan- ized armies marked the 28f: straight day of the massive Allied air offensive an followed night- time poundings Boulogne by an R. C. A. P‘. force and other night blows by the R. A. F. across the channel. The American daylight raiders which struck at oil-producing cen- tres shot down 150 enemy planes at a. cost of 42 bombers and 10 fighters D‘ Leading Citizens 0f Charlottetown Aid In Drive Victory Loan Head unrtcrs wa the scene of a rally o many of 0111s‘ 17011110 spirited citizens yesterday morning who were determined that Charlottetownwould not fail boy; overseas in the 6th Victory Loan. These gentlemen came for- ward voluntarily and gave of their time and energy to make a special canvass to raise the amount of sub. scriptiong and they met with a good response. The daily average cf subscription; has been about 030.000 in Charlotte- town but through the efforts of these patriotic citizens the amount of sub- day totalled $1000. . The City is still behind but it is hoped through further efforts it will reach its objective today, which is the last day. Those inking part wcrer- Hon. G. H Barbour. A. B. Belcher. R. R. Bell, JP. Crockott. T. Roy Cud- more, A.B. Fisher, W.D. Gillie, J. P. Gordon, W. S. Grant. E. T. gs, G. Gordon Hughes, E. C. Jo nsiorie, Hon. W J P. MacMil- lim. Hon. T. W. I... Prowse. R. D Quigley, Lt Col. K. S Rofters. George J Tweedy, K C.. J. Gor- don MacDonald. E D. Nicholson, and J. A Webster. W-AR. PUT FIRST BLACKPOOL —(Cl'-‘l- Prodiwf- ion of Johann Strauss’ ‘A Night in Venice“, tried out liere preliminary 1.0 l UmdOn 0179711118 hi! n banned from railroads by the mini- etry of was" transport. The depart- ment stated ti-iot transpmma the sot and properties 0Z0 miles was “Hiflfllfll? P1151"- scriptions in Cliarlogaeto ll yesier- m Big Push 0n ‘Today In King’s, Queen's Counties Summerside and Prince county as s unit went over the top in the 6th Victory Loan campaign yegtgy. day while an all-out effort was be- inil made to put the Province past 1% . .000 minimum objective. As e books closed yesterday victory loan officials at headqusi-g. ere here announced that the Provin- cial total had reached 833774.000. By districts the totals lest night were: Summer rue $510,450: Prince Count outside Summerside, $703,- 050: Charlottetown. $887,050; Queens County outside Charlottetown. $391350; King's County, $276,300. The people of Summerside were advised the town had reached its quota when whistles, siiiens and bells began a clamor at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon. Ait the some time the Sixth Vicwrv loan Pen- nant; was hoisted to the flagstaff over the tovm hall. At Charlottetown officials at loan headquarters said: “All honor to Summersicle and to Prince County as a whole both having exseedcd flicir objective late yesterday af- temoon. “Congratulations are due both we morn and salesmen 1n Ielwhlni! their minimum objec- tive. which. no doubt they will greatly exceed before the campaign closes Prince County has set, an Blfflmplfl t0 Queen's and King's to reach their objective before tonight. w h must be done before the Province as a whole will go over the fnb." Headquarters reported last night that salaunen in een's and King's Counties were ‘working like beavers." to put their respective count-v in the lead when final re- sults tell the talc. Fornier Minister At S’siile Dies TORONTO, May 12—(CP)—Al- bert Edward Dyment, as, ast pre- sident of the Ontario Hoe ey Club and former chairman of the Cari- ndlan General Electric Company. died today in hospital here. Mr. Dyment had been a hospital patient for about two years except for a brief interval. He was Liberal member for Par- lligonéient for Algomu from i896 to Mr. Dyment was a former presi- dent of the Incorporated Canadian Racing Association and his Brook- dale Stable was ion! prominent on the Canadian turf, his entries V171- lllTliZ flu- historic King's Plate on four occasions, in i903, i004. 1912 Mid 1921. Says N. S. Lagging gln Adult Education NEW WATERFORD, N. 3., Mil-Y iz-uvPi-Nova Scotia ls bringing up the rear in the matter of rennin: and adult education. according to S. Thompkins of Re- n. e the poorest ads," Dr. Tompkins told a meeting of the New Water- ford Bcard 01 Trade inst night. ad- ding that St. CflLh1Illlf5' Ont, led the Dominion cities with uii aver- age of ulna books per caulta per year while Sydney. N.S.. footed the list with .2 books per capita per year. “The whole of Nova scotio. is lit- tle better than Sydney." Dr. Tom- pkins said. "This absence of read- ing and adult education has its re- porcueeions in Nova. &otia too. To be growlers and izroucihers only. complaining use our industries our wealth, etc, are being drained by central Can-ads isn't enough. It it our own fault. "We have no brains. We don't lnniovw anything and the smarter peoplgfaaemot slow to take advan- e .’ . Tompkins said that "Prince Edward Island with a population onl. about one-fifth of ours has a boo ours." population twice as lame as Expect Frigate llere Next Week ‘Ilia new fri ate, H _ Charlotietownis schédultgd tgarriee in this port some day next week it W85 learned yesterday. wmie the ship L‘ hem.“ 55 planned to enter- tain the officers and men 0m Q1 the main events will be a ginner m; the entire ship's company given in m“? 110m? b)’ tiie City of Charlotte. WWII. A bi! naval Parade and the usual exchange of courtesy vigiqg be. W99" ships officers and Govern- mental and Civic officials 15 expected Y0 be fflllowed by Public inspection of the new vessel, War Services iMinister Lands i Freedom Cf Press AWA,_ May 1l—iCPJ- Wur Services Minister LaFiec-he said today in the Commons that "there 1s a free Dress in Canada, and there 15 110B Y-he Sllilhtest intention. so far as the government is concerned, of making it less free or not free." Speaking during resumed debate on the wai- estimates of the War Services Department. Mo]. Gen. Lsmeche said “the people of the ilemss do much towards censoring or exercising sound Judgment rezard to nuitfers that can be pub- lished. and to that extent they Rreatly assist censorship." Gen. LaFIeohe spoke after the appropriation sct aside for censor- shi a debato on news art- icles. newspapers. censors and cen- sorship 0f private mail and tele- phone conversations. J1‘. Pouliot iIr-Temiscousta) vnened the debate and said that “as long 8s it is the business of the censors to prevent information reachinl the Dublin in order to cre- ate a. sanctimonious atmosphere in which our infallible men may alt on OTT democracy in t . “I a isaflfoe w th me. but on the other hand members o! they should be criticized. t to my izrcat surprise I sec evidence of scissors having been used in the re- ports 0f The Canadian Press an the BrltLsh United Press. “The newspapers attach little im- portance to what is said hero in Parliament. though they devote full pages to reports of the debates and discussions in provincial legis- es .. tur . Clarence Gills (GEEK-Olive Bre- ton South). who followed Mr. ouliot on the floor. criticized a Mary 8 dis- patch of the Canadian Press which said coal miners of the Sydney Mines. N S.. district were on a nl of $160,000 in retroactive wage increases. touching off a debate on e tem Before the debate on the press be- gan, Trades Minister MacKinnori announced that the Canadian wheat board has started mailinil wheat producers cheques in pav- ment of their 1940-41 participation certLficafAs. Cheques to cover oar- tictpation peyznents_for____i_0_sif (Continued on P080 7. Col- 4) PORT ARTHUR, May, l2 ~03?» -The tasty smeft, a fish whose natural hcme is salt water, has‘ found its way to the lakehead fish-i oxrnen said here today. A large number of smelts from fve to nine inches loniz were caught near the mouth of the McKenzie River, i8 miles 6115f. of here, Fisher- mcn say that this i. the first time smelt. have been caught rienr the lakeliead although‘ they have re d infiGeorglan_Biii‘- Given Axis By JOHN M. HIGHTOWEB Associated Press Staff Wrlter I WASHINGTON, May l2--(A.Pi—- Allied radios pounded the peoples of Axis satellites tonight with a pre-invasion ultimatum to turn against Germany now or abandon all hope of saving themselves from "disastrous consequences." Issued jointly by Great Britain the United States and Russia. the ultimatum was directed alike to Finland. with which the United States is not at un-ir: to Bulgaria. with which Russia is not nt war. and to Hungary find Romania. The United States government thereby apparently served notice on the people of fitillmd that ii. has reached the end of its policy of setting them apart from the other German collaborators. sis apparently intended the same kind of warning to the people of Bulgaria. "These nations must decide now.“ the ultimatum said. “whether they intend to persist in their resent. hopeless and calamitous no icy of opposing the inevitable Allied vic- tory. while there is yet time for contrlbuteio that Allied. Trooos 1" dented tcly regroupcd indecisive battle months a , o... sf? Allied commander in Italy. said in an order of the duly to his troops the treasury b riches. we have no ° u‘ and south." he added. the final destruction of hard. bitter and perhaps long." d in: what may Drove the decisive glgw of the Italian camiwzn told the day that. he was confident “we carmuand will destroy the German a .. msnder of the 8th army, warned than. "the defemcs We now are nt- taoiklnk fish army has encountered in the present war. Our success will only be achieved throuzh a hard-fought encounters in which the infnntnv will have strong artil- 8J1 war correspondent with army, sol lnion, . formations took part in the attack. He ssid the 0th on the riirht Associated H mu Fess Correebonrient Lynn e r n: a discs from the 8th army front wrote that been; - Illl. NAPLES. May 13—(Sal-l "Pdflyl — (AP)-The Alliedj 51h and 8th armies punched] out gains as deep as two and . three miles on Friday on the first day of an all-out offen- sive originally described as the first “of the final bat- tles” lo destroy the Germw’ ans, it was learned early to- ay. At other points of the: strongly fortified Gustavf Line the Allies were blocked by furious resistance after launching their big push at 11 0’cl0ck Thursday night on a blazing 25-mile front from.‘ Subscription Dslisvsrl. “.00 “.00: other Pruvluras I U.I.A. ll," ls In Fu|| $vihig Newsman Tells 0f Push Across Rapido River A By DOUGLAS AMARON WITH THE 8TH ARMY 1N IT- ALY. May 12-(0? Cabler-Tough defences of the Germans’ Gustav Line yielded to a mounting British 8th army offensive todav as Allied forces consolidated pos tions won across 2h;- zurbulent Rapids River near Cassirio. Progress across the 60-foot stream during the first day of the Allied onslaught along the southwestern Cassino to the Gulf of Gaels, 1 section of the frontllrie in Italy was Sharp German counter-ai- tacks in some instances also eliminated initial gains. The exact localities where the Allies penetrated from two to three miles could not be divulged pending an offi- cial announcement. many under rage ever laid down in the Med- itteranean area The Germans‘ resisted strongly onsll sectors. The 5th and 8th monies. comple- the bloodfv and of Caseino two struck jointly. Harold Alexander. the at the assault was the first blow ‘ m1 battles on sea. on land air to crush the enemy t and wast. from north "blows are Nazis Lt-Gen Mark W. Clark. herald- bth army troops in an unis of as. Lia-Geri. Sir Oliver Lease. com- are the stronlest the Bri- series of d the tlsh O Douglas Amsron, Canadian Yress the 8th d British. American. Dom- Indinn French and Polish army was fiirhtinil flank of the 5th. the battle appeared to be iloina fuv- orably late in the day. Nazis Recover Qlllflllly The Genmsns recovered quickly from the earth-simian barrage that accompanied the attac . The Nazis used flame-throwers st mzinv points . and counter-attacked sharply n51 Qgpoffllllfbv offered. Allied offioefrsj appeared satisfied. however. Milli . . l Pre-Invaszon Ultimatum: Satellites terms short of complete and uncon- ditional surrender followed by se- vere armistice terms. , Oii the other hand. if they geti out notw. the promise was they would receive more favorable treat- ment ln direct relation to the con- tribution they make to Allied vic- tory, either in a military or psycho- log cal way. The joint statement completely by-passed the satellite govern- ments, to which various appeals have been made in the past. and was directed to the eoples of Fin- land and three Ba knn countries. in that respect it was an npPC-il for revolution against the govern- ments if they persist in an alli- anc with Germany. Atcr the statement was issued concurrently in London, Washington and Moscow at ii a.m.. ED.T., the office of war information said in New York the full text would be presented on all news broadcasts for fivs or "six hours and an abstract would be carried on each broadcast for the next 24. Military authorities here consid- ered it significant that the state- ment was made shortly Bfffiffilll-‘d forces in Italy, with s tremendous i ry. vglhe implication was clear that l if they persist in working with Germany then they must expect no ‘ northwest of the stronghold of sino, where the troops encountered London scoutmastar, has Wm pints of blood transfusions {slow because of difficulties in lay- ing down bridges but by evening Allied infantry was established on Allied t Lhrghiiefibrn banks of the river. fiercest fighting developed C8D crack German paratroopers. The battle raged around three hills, two of which Allied troops controlled and a third where the issue still was in doubt after an enemy count- er-attack. Enemy opposition along the Rs- pido was limited chiefly to mortar, machine-gun and small hfms fire. a. tribute to tbs accuncy of Thurs- ' clay night's counter-battery bar- rage. Only moderate shelling was reported and was directed chiefly against bridge positions arid supply roads. A number of prisoners was cap- tured in the southern push and other troops brought in some enemy paratroopers. Famous Reconnaisance Flier Is Missing LONDON. May i2—(CP Cablei- l Wing Cmdr. Adrian Warhurton. most decorated reconnaisance flier in R. A. F‘. and known to hi.‘ parliament as one should condemn md bu“ “eedmn “w” ma!“ m a " 1 - d 1 W b rt- mke-fih strongly u‘? gtrotglagalg Pix-ope and hasten the peace for us owmrnl, adigpggwdsrlilzlaiaehga ar u W [flak-CS mem B E 0 ' ii ' ' ' _ ' f, m.» m- euro» h» c- ...l"£llf"£§‘.-.°c°. its‘ m- “ ‘s "° “m” W“ ‘mmuéuflmt added that "the fighting will be and the American D rnc His photographs. frequently taken un- der the greatest personal risk, hsve saved many Allied lives, according to an official report. In November. i942. after having for five days. he turned up at M81 tat with an apologetic ‘sorry I'm a e." Well-Known Montreal Lawyer DliiAt 66 been missing u lVLa. 12-(0?) —3-. BAT... v MONTE I... Cailder. Kgéavigefill- ’ l, QWYBT, Q3... nulls Westmount toninht sf- wr an illness of week! H0 W" 66 yearn old. his home in two coupon -<o1>)- A-I". been»; durin 100 blood ‘ . the flint authentic- sited record of ioo transfusions h Britain. the folks WHO have Liciif OF {macs seven SET file WORLD on Fine! High tide iliiii afternoon at 2.40 and tomorrow morn at . . Sun sets thLs evening at 8.18 and rises tomorrow" morning at 6.33. Last quarter moon Mnv l0. 0.11 . M. Sumnierside Pido l8 minutes lakr than Charlottetown. DAILY AIR SERVICI l Charlottetown - Summeraiila —- Moncion Leave Charlottetown 7.85 a. m. 12.00 noon. 0. . m. Arrive Charlottetown 1.10 o. m.‘ 5.45 u. m. 7.05 p. m. ‘ SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown l2 noun. ‘ Arrive Charlottetown 0.45 n. us. r- s. L-N. s. FERRY sruvicli, DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAY! _-_, Leave Wood Islands-TM) A. Mr‘: ll.00 A. M. 3. . . Leave: Caribou-Slit) A. M. 1.08 l’. M. Durin v ‘ May and ‘Still; the M0 mow of strength. launched an ni- ‘iricktto break the stslemats on that iron . day. Thursday 11.00 A. . sailings will be cnnccll “. eiiday. Wednesday an L M .00 P.