f The \ ‘yybole MIR at tm with. rdlnn, ‘In Cont; 'fi""'",§f,:,'arf:.reunsea us! 1"“ doctrl differ-m If l0 >,:/'%/’ The People’ aper n} CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1942 A ,500 NAZIS KILLED-IN ‘NB Read Like Dew // ’ I/ - / -’ 311' p »o-><**“ (lovers Prince Edward ; Island Everybody “gap lneee ls n ‘h ‘m. qu o sprinkle upon o on t with: o few drone on yourself. o“ MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN that y list Names 0f 19 Cana rljvnwdersea Frilghters Would GTQN, Aug. S-—(AP)— on Lake, 15-year-old inventor or undersea toriltedfl hint/5- Wdfll "m; up with a counter-invention ‘pen tie said would take the sting out of the Axis submarine men. m p, United Nations shipping. Lake told a Senate subcommit- trc that a secret silencing device ht had perfected could pave the a fleet of submarine f Kahlil. which could elude planes, ships and other undersea ‘my; with case. Stating that practical to it was "entirely have a submarine which is silent," Lake expressed m opinion that the enemy is rating utidersca freighters. Interest in Lake's testimony ming the committee's attention my m a flay from the cargo- platte possibilities it llad been “ohm; 101' the last week. ‘LSIJO-ton Loads ‘II-re eidcriy but active inventor from Bridgeport, Conn._ advocat- ed the billlfiillg of undersea car- gtmarriers capable of transport- lng 7,500-ton loads of bulky sup- plies, oil, tanks. guns. munitions and men to the fighting zones, to supplement those transported by me proposed cargo planes, Lake ticclared shipyards could ronvert to submarine building the- little material, machinery and equipment itscrl in the Liberty rtilps and "still have some steel leit," The yilrds themselves would retliéilre no conversion at all, he u ._-'-In response to = tlltl‘ the uiidersefie '6 built c-l concrete. but that use of that material would require “con- siderable experimentation and would prefer steel." Lake estimated the cost at $2.- lln000 each. and said that while é hie for oming Events r-Q- Notion in tlrla I cent: our word column "Taikies-Crapaud Thursday. b-Zl-2l "Talkics—Malpequo Wednesday. a_ . "Dance in Brcokvale School Tatum ruitht. August 4th. 8-3-21. "Tlllklis and Dance, Bum “We Tuesday. 8-3-2l "Reifllve Thursday, Aug, s m1 Wn party at Kingston. 8-4-6. "My Shoe Shop will be closed until August 15th. P. G. H tel , Kensington. 3345i MEDance. Vernon River Hall Wed- e fr "Y. August 5th. Webster's Orch- i i- 8-3-21. "Fortune United Church Lawn g“ 5W5 Chili‘. Wednesday after- °°ni August 5th a-i-ai, Ritlce Cream Festival in Wheatley -r Hail, Wednesday, August 5th. 8-1-3-5. wlallauco. Vernon River Hall. orchnrsilfll’. August 5th. Websters estra. 3-1-11 ."Fauivai and Dance at st Pet- fls iiaroor bCIIUOI August 6th’. 8-4-2l- u ‘W C1IYI T ’ Wu-wwu““r‘l.. unfit, fi‘..".-..'1i.“‘i‘i§: o-r-ai. "who one. come all North “W0 Picnic. Auaust 5th. v-so-a-i-r. "cwW-"IB hogs every Friday gfezleltlllst with Leslie McDowell, r cton, ll-IO-fll-twtf. "Deuce. 'I‘raoad.le mu Friday liuzust 7th. Orchestra music. ' 8-1-91. “Crapaud Wedncsd gm -, a . August m §kdgargya Church P chic. ._lf "Bllvins Irish M m’ oss at Neufrase ‘inundated or bleached. Paul "Dunc: in Fr h w“ eno River Hall. u Fiddle?“ “h- “any, to Ti“ The Fort A tu Play in fffifiwrzek n . hilday, I" rt Dance after, 8- 4i. ‘Um h 5t Patrick's School ‘ t Allfllldt 51h, “i "M. August atn. Aus ices “Millu W r. apr-rr. "Klhkora Hall Indian Rive mglzigflglub presents mlendid gunman,‘ gchegaLn-g. August 7th. "Tue Cream-Fcmai game and Edition booth. Preston dogmas Quin" flair-etch, Wednesday ev- 4 _ ‘mvminlatvgzbfibonsorcd 41-251 e Cream Festival and Dulce u" Foil xis U-Boats Put Caution Asidgyrges WASHINGTON. Aug. 3-H?) -The allies should cast carr- flon aside and hit Hitler now, Senator Claude Pepper 10cm.- Fla.) said tonight In urging he immediate opening of a second front. In an address to the Wash- ington industrial union council rally In support of o. second front, Pepper said "the Instinct of America today senses that nothing we can do is go danger- ous as to do nothing." Crltlclzing those who use the word "Impossible," Pepper said: "The genius of America has been its unwillingness to ndrnll that anything was impossible. No mountain was too high to scale. No vein u» deep in the bosom of the earth to be inac- cessible. No stream to wide to span. No continent too difficult to cross. Americans did not risk whether It could be done. They did it.’ infantile o“ "h"? ,' .-,-... NEW YORK Aug. 3 -- (CP)— Axis-dominated European radio I stations tcday gave fresh currency to a totally-unconfirmed and German - inspired rumor that Prime Minister Churchill has t flown to Russia. The report originated Saturday in a story issued by the. German news agency, Transocean, under a Lisbon. Portugal, dateilne. It said there were "unconfirmed rumors" in Lisbon that Mr. Churchill has flown to Russia “to explain to Stalin the British attitude t0- wards the Soviet demand for es- tablishment of a second front. There is neither an confirms. tion that Mr. Churchil is on such a trip nor even that such rumors are “prevalent" at Lisbon, as Trrmsocean said. The story ap- peared to be typical of Axis ef- forts to gain information, Verdict In Sahoteurs Case WASHING/DON. Aug. 8—(AP)— President Roosevelt received from his special military commission day a verdict ln the case of the eight alleged Nazi saboteurs who landed in the United States from German U-boats. Although the President is not ex- pected to announce the findings for several clays. the wording cf a com- munique issued by the commlsslflh seemed to indicate that. some. if not all, of the men had been convicted. ' Few U-Boat Attacks In Caribbean Sea IALBOA, Panama Canal Aug. s-iAPl-Rcar Admiral ford Evans Van Hook, commandant oi the 15th Naval District. told a press conference today that during July the Caribbean had been par- ticular free of effective enemy submar nc attacks. The Admiral met the press oodle- cuss the effectiveness of the coh- voy system which Washington has announced was instituted last month after raiding U-bonis sunk l! Unit- ed States vessels In l2 dbl’! of early June. 4 2r. Japanese Airmen Are Under-Dog's Aug. OHUNGKIENG, 8—(AP)— 50mg of Japan's best fighting nir- men made another unsu ul attempt over Hengmng tcdll’ W wrest mastery cf t skies from Americans in this region of China it was resported by Lit-Gen. Joe. eph W. tillwcll’; headquarters. The outc today's film was described as "favorable t0 Americans", but details were withheld for release tomorrow, Japanese filers vainly tried tn do today what they failed to ac- com lish in a bitter 30-hour batte ‘lhursdny and Friday. In that first tussle l’! Japanese planes were destro and four others probably busted out of action. American observers said that obviously the Japanese were trying to wipe out. the tough Am- erfciin air Outnort in Hunan province. mic 2 llufslng Sisters Are Included Information Was Sup- plied By Persons Aboard Exchange Ship. OTTAWA, Aug. 3- (CM-The names of l9 Canadian prisoners of war at Hong Kong-two of them listed as wounded——were announ- ced by the Canadlan (Active) Army in its 121st overseas casualty list of the war. The rlsoners included l2 mem- bers o the Quebec Royal Rifles, four of the Winnipeg Grenadlers, two nursing sisters of the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps and one man listed under "force headquarters.” The names were understood to have been supplied by persons reaching Portuguese East Africa. last week aboard a diplomatic exchange ship. (After Hong Kong fell Christ- mast Day, the Japanese announ- ced the capturc of 1,689 Canadian troo . On that basis, 296 of the orig nal 1,985 officers and men who reached the Crown Colony (Continued on page 3, col. 3T’! N0 Rationing W 0 r r i e s OTTAWA. Aug. 3—(CP)-Mcm- bars of the armed forces living in barracks are among the few Cana- dians who don't have to worry about tea and coffee rationing. If soldiers. sailors and airmen re- ceive su in their own quarters they must have rationing cards. the same as the average civilian. But Wartime Prices and Trade Board said today those living in barracks do not need ration cards. Official hases of supplies for the armed orces are not rationed. This is an extension to coupon ra- tionlng of tea and coffee of the ar- rangements which have been in ef- fect for sugar since July 1. Nazis Clamp Down On Death Notices LONDON. AuZ- ll -— (GPh-A severe censorship has been impos- ed by the German occupation authorities on death notices ap- pearing in Netherlands‘ newspap- ers, according to the. German- controlled Amsterdam newspaper De Tild. The censorship decree was is- sued, Dc Tijd stated, so that the Netherlands people would not re- ceive an "exaggerated" 1min‘?!- slon of the results of Germany's "protective- occupation" of Hol. land. Previously. it had often been ossible to ’ duce from the word- ng of an obituary advertisement that the person whose death was reported had been executed by the German authorities or had died w. in a concentration camp. Sharp Series of Daylight llaide LONDON, Aug. 3- (CP)—-Bri. tain and Germany span-ed by air today with a series of sharp day- ght raids. For Britain R. A. l", Spit!!!“ attacked freight trains and. barilefi in the German-occupied Nether- ds. ‘The shot up locomotives of severa freight‘ trains and hit three barges off the Netherlands coast with cannon and machine- glun fire. In addition the British [erg peppered coastal g-unposts and German army camps. For Germany Nul airmen made hit-skip raids, bomb and ma- chine-gunning scatterc towns in northeastern England the mid- lands and along the southern coast and causing casualties among crowds gathered at resorts for the annual bank holidays. bsistence-allowemoe and live’ gpanese Little djans Held By l War Situatiotl Last Night 1' (By rum-n: L. snvrrsou, Asltoclatcd Press War Analyst) i Moscow's claims that Russian ' Feat Don bend to the rlm of the alto-Lakisha???tlrlrldnzglhlsgtrti-‘r: Caucasus are holding well seem conftfimed even by the Nazi w" bum gnu; but Berlin reports another advance southwest of Salsk It says d crman “tank nrun " has ush e ' u ' upper course o’ theyxubanllnivzylrlrypw Bclaya Ghnta to approach the If that is true, a. Nazi spear-heard is within 40 mlles or so of 1h; great bend of the Kuban where it turns west to empty Into the Sen cf Azov vln the lakes of Tamnn Peninsula. The Kuban furnishes Russian defcndb of the Caucasus with n strong 200 mile front eastward from the sea to the Kubsn bend and covering all approaches to the Maikup oil fields, The obvious Nazl attempt in driving sullthweslwgtrd from the Salsk area via. llelaya Glinta is to turn the Kuban line from the cast before Red forces can rSachJt f0: a stand. vb II O Berlin's mention of the upper course of the Kuban as an import- ant objective leavee little doubt that the rfvcr plays a big part In Russ- ian strategy. Moscow now reports that Cossacks of the Kuban as woII as of the Don tribes are being thrown into action. They are the shock troops of the Red army of the Caucasus, reserved until now. The Im- plication ls that Marshal Tlrnoshenko is preparing to make a stand on hls left flank above or upon the Kuban. as his centre has braced from Salsk northeastwnrd to the Don bend and his right along the Don to Voronezh. The Imrnodi ‘ danger point, however. is on the left-centre sector of his indicated line. The weak spot is east of the bendi of the Kuban at Temijbekskya. There is a. 50 mile span of open steppe country there, suitable for mechanized operations, down which the Germans are driv- lng in evident hope of turning the probable Russian front along the Kuban. o o o a The Knban River is an defence front not only because it covers the Maikop all field. the only Caucasus nli source as yet in jeopardy; but because It also offers protection from a. Nazi flanking IIIUVP from the Crimea across narrow Rerch Strait. Even should the Nazi thrust from ‘Belav Glinta reach the north or east bank of the Kuban in the vicinity of t e bend. the river has strong defensive possibilities. Its defenders. facing nortlreastwsrd below the bend and northward above it. would confront the foe with difficult bar- riers well served with roads and backed by the Caucams foothills. Southwnrd. the terrain of the right bank. toward which the Germ- ans are pressing, grows Increasingly difficult. South nf thr- Krasnodar- Stavropol railroad after it leaves, the ‘Kuban at Tomijbekskvu to swing on a wide southeaslierlv circle. through ‘he stovmvs. n confusion of small streams tribularv to the Kuban drab?! the rkllt bank. __. , . _ Britain, 194i - - Pébplé Keyed For Victory m’ ”§5.'Z..M§l§§'°uliir’§i°°"“d |ntgr||ationa| At A Glance LONDON, Aug. Zi-MIU-Aftel‘ (By The Canadian Press) AI 1. nearly three years of war. Britain is like an nrmy post in the front line, working efficiently within sight of the enemy and amid rulhS of battles now past but not easily forgotten Looking at the face of Britain in this dangerous summer of 1942. but find neither the “merrie Eng- land" of childhood nor a nation weary of war and work of the Axis prcpagandists, It is pulsat- ing with life and energy-doom.- 000 fighting for their lives for the second time in a neration and giimpsing a fair uture beyond the smoke cif battle. People on Movn Britain is black with the SMOKE of the war factories and crowded. Wherever I went on a recent tour there are Pe°D1e lmlfhfililnl- The trains are packed by soldiers. sail- Ors and airmen going on leave, by people moving to nevw jobs. oing on vacation or travelling on usi. ness. Most of the holiday travellers were flouting national appeals to “holiday at home." Take a look at Britain . . . I went first to Grlmsby, a fish- ing and stripping port on the northeast coast. Grimsby men were not driven from the seas by the invincible armada or the fri- gates of Napoleon and the Ger- TcontiriueTa:o‘rTT_—_’ pigemtfiii)" Two Women Injured In Traffic Accident BATHURBT N. 3., Aug. 3-(0?) —-M‘1ss Alice Nelson and Mrs. Ilher- esa L. Helgason are patients in hos- gital here as the result of an auto- iie accident at Bass River, N. 13., when a oar in which they were msengcrs lunged over an em- kment. he driver. J. M. Lavoie, esoa with vislb lity RUSSIA — Reds defending stand firm m Caucasus. WESTERN FRONT British bombers grounded but. reconnaiss- ance planes find I2 acres of ile- vastated buildings in Dusseldorf; Nazis stage hit-and-run on Brita-in. EGYPT —- Patrol skirmishes, ar- tluery action, air raids occur on desert front; R. A. F. concentrates on Axis supply convoys. FAB. EAST -— Japs forced back in attempt to blast American air base at rlengyang; Chinese recup- turc Tsingtien In Uhclflang province. ralus INDIA — Gandhi warns discon- tented elements may welcome Jap invasion unless Britain grunts bri- medrate “Independence? Publishers Meet At Ottawa UITAWA, Aug. 3--(CP)—Neus- paper publishers from across Can- ada came here today on the invita- tion of the Labor Department to study government plans 101‘ dealing with national selective service. and went fully into the country's needs in manpower to provide for the fighting forces and essential civil- ion work to make possible a maxi- mum war effort. The publishers were addressed in m; (Qrenoon by Labor Minister Mitchell. who told them of the manpower situation. Later E. M. Little, director of National Selective service, e . lalned plans for meeting the situation. The meeting continued in the at- ternoon when a general discussion a shaking up. with due Weight the power of their o, p, [any waggh- uwn uerla blows at the Reich. en the slits. mistook e. covered ensued among the publishers and Brltlbh 0mm“! lmlilllnced m“ bridge for} house and drove off the officials of the selective service or- reconnaissance photographs taken mad, , ggnizatiqp. alter the heavy raid on D- dorf the night of July 81 showed 12 acres of buildings along the waterfront demolished. terrific damage caused in important in- dustrial areas and big fires burn. in: l2 hours after the bombing. WATCH PARALYSIS SITUATION IIREDERICTON. Aug. $—(CP)- The New Brunswick Department of Health is keeping a close watch as the threat of another epidemic of infantile paralylls Krows in certain sections of the province. Dr. CW. MadMlllan. chief medical health of- ficer tonight warned cltimns to take early precautionary measures which might serve to prevent the disease from assuming cpldemf proportions in New Brunswick this year. Dr. MacMlllan issued his advice as tho number of case; mee to l0 2H8]!!! Counts Most "snr. on" TEA. Queen Elizabeth’s Birthday Today MONTREAL. Aug. 3—(CP cable -Queen Elizabeth will be 42 to I Queens Canadian Fund has cable-l 20900 Pilllhds ($381100) to London. Her Majesty extended her patron- age to the fund at its inception more than a year ago. Slisired by John G. McConnell, Montreal. chairman of the fund, the fdlluivluz message was sent to the Queen:- "‘Directors of the Queen's Crin- lifliilll Fund extend to Hcr Majesty, patron of the fund, their loyal duty and best wishes for her birthday. To mark this occasion the Queens Can- adian Fund is cabling tacnty the-its- and pounds sterling to: the relief of British ivnr victims through the 10rd Mayors Fund. At the same time the directors thank ller Maj- esty most earnestly for her interest in the Queen's Canadian Fund and they assure hcr confident! that so long us the need exists, fie people of Canada will continue their gener- ous support of the fund." The $88,000 was gathers-d in do- nations from nil parts of the Dc- mlnon from children with their pennies to business men with sub- stantial cheques. Bhaloult [n Saudi (By Henry C. Cassi?” As- ociated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, Aug. 4- (Tuesday) — (AP)—Soviet troops fighting in the Don River elbow 80 miles north- west of Stalingrad and in the Salsk-Kushchevka area of the western Caucasus were reported officially early today to have killed more than 9,500 Germans in a successful 24-hour stand. In the area of Kletskaya northwest of Stalingrad the midnight communique said, two Russian units killed more than 1,300 Germans, Ac and added that the Red l] peasant army still was dealing “counter blows ag- MONTREAL‘ Aug 3 _ (Op)_.. BIIISI. BIICITIY tanks fllld mo- Judgc Edouard Archambault. in {prized infantry) Court. of sessions of the Peace southwest o‘ Kletskaya m the today freed Rene Chaloult, Lib- eral member of the Quebec Leg- islative Assembly. of charges laid under the Defence of Canada Regulations. Tile charges against Mr. Chalouit arose out od a speech made here on May 19. Judge ‘Archambault, , in ‘his Judgment, said he “unhcsltatirigly coitticmncd the speech as a viola- tion of article 39 of the Defence of Canada Regulations.” but in taking into consideration, article 39B. "certain circumstances and also the pOSslble doubt as to the question of good faith, the accus- ed is liberated from ‘all accusations in the complaint." (Article 39 B of the Defence of Canada Regulations, provides that “it shall be u defence to any pro- secution to prove that the person accused intended in good faith merely; to criticize 0r to point out errors or defects in the govern- ment of Canada?) The complaint against Mr. Chaioult charged him with hav- ing uttered statements in a pub- lic address before several thous- mid persons, tending to “cause disafiection to His Majesty: hin- clor the success of His Majesty's armies as well as those of the allied nations; hinder recruiting and training and discipline of His Majest-ys armies, and tending toimpair the securtly of the state and the successful prosecution of the tvar." Tsimlyansk area of the curving Don. the Russians said the Get-- mans still were throwing tanks and men across the river but the communique indicated the Soviets are standing firm. “On one of these sectors," the dhihruuhlque-said , ._f‘.tbc- cranium; threw into batte several dozen tanks. The Germans lost up to 650 officers and men killed alone." In the critical Snlsk-Kusli- chevka areas. 75 and 50 miles re. spectivcly- south of the Don, the “m5 apparently were swaying back and forth. The communique said 400 Germans were killed in the Salsk region. and another 800 in the Kusltchevka sector. "During the day one big pop- ulated point changed hands three times." the communique said of the Kirshchevka fighting. This toll of 3.150 Nazi dead (Continued on page 7. Col '1) Russian By EDDY GILMORE Associated Press Staff Writer MOSCOW. Aurz. 3 — (AP Throughout Moscow, Ivan Ivsm- vicli-tlic Ritsinn counterpart of John Jones-read an increasing dis- piny of "second front" news from Retailers Must Not Accept. Loose Coupons anything else in his newspapers. The Communist Party newspaper . Pravda carried on its foreign news page five stories on the possibility 0f a second European front and al- though thc foreign news section is the buck and not the front page of Moscow's four-page newspapers, it was this section to which readers Lirncd quickly. A favorite item seemed to be the story of the telegrams reported re- ceived by President Roosevelt urging creation of a new western front. One of Prnvdifs articles, entitled “Hitler and his allies." dealt at length with the diversion of Ger- man reserves and the troops of Germanys vnssal states to the Rus- sian front, and declared:- “Thls serves further to weaken the European rear of Hitleritc Ger- OTTAWA, Aug. 3 — (CPl-Jllhe Wartime Prices and 'I‘r:ide Board tonight reminded Canadians they must not detach coupons from their tea and coffee ration cards, except in the prcscnce of the T}!- tailct" from whom their supplies are bought. For the ten and coffee ration- ing, use ls made of the “A-B-C- D-E" coupons on the top of ration cards previously used only tor sugar Under the coupon rationing of tea and ooiiec which went into effect. today, each person over 12 years of age is etititied to one ounce of tea a week or four ounces of c0ffre—‘but not both. mhhy- "Cotipons must be detached by “More than ever before it is ne- thc retailers or his employee or by etssury to exert and merge all the the customer in their presence,” efforts of participants in the anti. said a DOHRI statement tonight. Hitler front in order to thwart Hit. "Retailers must not accept loose lcrs bloodthirsty gamble and ‘his coupons They are also required plans of conquest." to check the customer's ration card In 1,119 arttctm pravda 53rd mt. or cards for are. because children ler had "reduced to minimum 1mm’; 12 radar of fie are Hurt‘ , strength the occupation troops in owe any ra on o ea or co ee‘ Frunce _ samemmuutrlen‘ 53nd ‘an “my.” , Belgium Holland and Nor ren ers so zig ca an co ee have been advised they will have coggmxxzgnsid 3331:}: to surrender too. and coffee ration divmom Md ‘ ‘bfen m1“, d f coupons to their suppliers in order nnhcekmd the ° mm égtrfiztégtlkfffiw “MM” of ma” the Russian front, Thr- retailer Mil have fc give h , a quantity of coupons equivalent to the poundagc of tea. ccfft-c or both that he is ordering Special provision is made for re. tailors who have less than a nor- mal stock of tea or coffee on hand. mans had about way.) Pravda said Hitler also board hv August- i0 for rt special 111s permit lo brine their stocks up to ary, Italy and Finland, and a normal level. A-rFu-rr 2c DAYS . NASSAU. Bahamas. Aug. fl-ICP (‘whit-t Ad'lfl 2Q days, 4'7 survivors cd rt tlsipatch Marshal Erwin Rmomvl in Africa. Bahamas whore they were tzrthP-rl of a powt-‘fui line cf coastal forti- Tlurrsdrry from a lifeboat and raft, ficatlons and of the dispatch of Si: n Six were lost with the rhip. two flied (Elite Guard) units to France was at sea and blah.‘ of the survivors no more than propaganda and de- were placed in hospitals oeption. , _, population of Oslo 70th brithday of their exiled king today by wearing fiowcrs in their buttonhclcs, even though the Ger-- man authorities controlling Norway Britain and the United States today Yeflflrdi-‘d the "i i“ "1 "w" llem" seemingly with greater interest than Wl-‘itrdtwn- 10W Countries to i.oo D.In., 4.45 p.m., 1.55 pm. but declared that is these had been replaced by other a.m., 3.15 p.m.. 6.45 p.m., 9.10 9.1m forces. He estimated that the Ger- 26 divisions in France and the Low Countries, ex- clusive of troops on guard in Nor- had They may apply" in writing to the drilwn hdflvill’ “DON the troops 0i Axis sni/clllies Romania. Hung- 1th.. withdrawn occupation frores from a.m.sp.m. Yugoslavia and Crete that had been Intended as reinforcements for Field 5-39 ll-lfl- Tlie News Aizvtiry Toss distribut- fiult- lined Geneva of u iorprdnoti fwiicthtcr arrived lo- which salti German tnlk of strong dnv from the Ackllns Islands in ‘he forces capable of reprlling invasion, 1245 n ‘.4 Annual lluhnlrlptlnl mirrored. u.» U! lull: P. l. l. “.00: to other Prevlnnolnnd U. l. lI-Q Change or P - - osrlrron mo:row nnd to mark the event the Germans Oojtlnue Ta 1),”... Heavy Reserves Into Battle R. A. F. Flier . Killed In N. S. KENTVIJLLE. N.S., Aug. a-(0p)_ A‘ Royal Air Force flier was instantly killed this afternoon when a twin- mutcred aircraft crashed in wood- EQ cf-‘tllllify about two miles from here. He W84 the only occupant m the plane. Name of the pllotisoeing withheld pending notification of his relatives in Britain. The aircraft was from the air- field at Greenwood, N.5., about 30 mile-S West of here. The pilot wag on _a training flight gt the time officials at the field said. Called of the crash, which occurred between three and four o'clock, could not be learned until an examination is mad; of the machine. Mr. Justice Maclean Buried At Ottawa‘ OITAWA. Aug. L-(Glfi-Primo Minister Mackenzie King. cabinet ministers and men prominent in judiciary and legal circles attended funeral services today for Mr. Jus- tice Alexander K. Macl-sari. "presi- dent of the Exchequer Court of can. ada for almost two decades. Mr, Justice Maclean, '12. one-time federal cabinet minister and form- er member of the Nov Scotia. legib- lature, died here last Friday nftt Ion hiness. .‘ .. , .. ., . ‘l A fogmerschoolmctqnt. lwv. arcw- - man McLeod. Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Canada, con- ducted the services at Mr. Justice Macleanlo late residence here. t Burial was at Beechwood ceme- ery. IDNDON —(CP)- Vlsooarnten Sriowden told this story: A German prisoner in ‘England was very |l.I and a blood transfusion was re- commended. He knew his condition was serious but he refused to allow the transfusion, "thinking that his German blood would be polluted by that of an Ezigllshmari." 2nd Front Grips Interest SPOCKHOIZM. Aug. $—(AP)—'1'lne celebrated the . file Home Stomach lloius Muca Moat. on Lotto 41am 0a SEQ‘ F A "fig- r ,.\ v QR" ‘a /g'+~ ‘\td High tide this afternoon at 5.3! and tomorrow morning at 5.27. Sun sets this evening at 8.24 and rises tomorrow morning at 5.48. New moon Aug. 11, 10.28 p. m. CAR FERRY SERVICE BAIL‘ EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — Leave 9.25 L-lll- Leave Calm Tormentlori —l1-W SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 u: Dec. 27 inclusive) beavc Borden 8.00 n. m} 6-45 P-III Leave Turmcnticn I .18 all!» 8.00 pm. r. a. L-N. s nan! BER-VIC! Leave Wood Islands 1.00 mm». 11-90 Leave Caribou 9 pm" l b-m. NI All! SERVICE Charlottetlivrivzrééférrmersld Leave Charlottetown 6-35 n. In-l Leave grlrnmerslde 1.10 n. In: I-fl "r35" Moncton l1 n. m4 nnd 0.10 o. m. Dally except lining.