HAXIMB I). HIRE MAN -—¢-_- will. m,‘ forget humbled an in] Guardian, Iouiloq llli, W" Iwo can; “Imtotown Glllfllllla NAZI truly‘ knonlh m! mice weir re u m ll iledicaiul CHARLOTTITOWN. causes, ssrualisv. ion. n. 1944 1/ The People's Paper LiNE l MAXIMS 07A MERE MAN (lovers Prince was time Like the Dew Read by Everybody Did ever a man try horolun magnnnimlty, truth, sincerity and mid trlut than was no advantage In om 'll'01l$¢ APPWV“: Fargily Allowances Bill llecls 2O [glam Warsaw lllied Bombers iillt In Force MNDON. July N - (C?) —— ym than l,500 Allied heavy bombers made two powerful raids liinst Germany's e bing oil sup- y today and R. A. F. four-eng- gd planes blasted again around (ink at a massive German rocket installations in Northern France. 42ml:- l lleavy Alcohol loll In Halifax HALFAX, July 28 — (C?) — "Block-busters" and "torpedo nice‘, warusne 5llDSLlf/\l$&> for the thin lun and iunirle Juice oluoltlon days. have taken at Est tiuee lives in Halifax in the t iliree ueeKS, City IHBUMIBJ- 111911 pid todfll’ . l ill addition local doctors said hospnai admissions of Dersuils lillenng irc-zn forms of alcrmuilsiln have reached a new and serious innculance calls to the waterfront section of llllS crowcied war port have lilCFUJSElCX steadily as the toll oi vlctuns oi the IIOI-Stllwlis mix- illrcs mounts. A highlight. of police investigation was the reilert or a llliil discovered in the downtown ' the citv stranung shoe s. hasockin-whiashoe a rink. The tiiird not..." ration in the ptonnce was upped to two quarts luionth early this month. but doc- tors say the trend toward the 0X- losive and deadly beverages may Ltibiidéd by the scarcity of low- priced beer. Beer costs 35 and i0 cents it ouiirt in Nova. Scotla. and l-blee dozen quarts is it month's ration. if none of the ration is used tor vvbie or hard liquor. liillilllfi EVENTS "Picnic, Cardigan, Wednesday, lllrlm 9th. 7-26-61 "Dulce. mine Valley. Almost ltt. Vvebsters Orchestra. 'l-29-2l. l "Show-Bradalbone Tuesdayb ,_ "Dance, Vernon Hull. Monday, l July (list, Millview Orchestra. 7. ‘mile are not buying weaner pigs 1111 _rther notice. ivestoek "Irketlna Board. 7-28-2i "Reserve Wednesday, Aug. 80. for United Church Tea at York. 29-11 "Mi- ' Saturday 9:00 P. M. Movies, Proceeds aid of lslzioii lniii. 7-29-11 "Ice Cream Festival, -Bintzo, WW. St. Jainies Church. George- Wn. hIOIlCiiIY, July 315i. 7-27-41. 0:511?‘ arrive-Car Inverness and Ga 5511110)’ Coal. Peters and 1111m- 7-28-31. "Opening Dance. gt. James Hall. zmmcrilelti, Wednesday, August‘ l1 ooccliii music. 7-29-31. "C. w. n. r -. ~ . “Y- July 29in iltmitv. Tsflllilllgglllllfil: '1 Ztl-ll. "Burma eiz s daily. Piiyl naili- tlt market p!‘ ces. Bflliilfil‘ ship them m us. Dillon d: Solllett. 7-28-41. “ice ci- i l cam festival, bingo, sole Jlllflafiokeslv dfllld dance, Tru- Aulun 2' . e nesday eyeéigiriggl, "amid Tea Part Manse 3,1121. St. Peter's Bay¥'wodnes- I "R1181. 2nd. Don't miss it. 38. E 553mm unit ii no ibwlwediiaii; ggiexilii "been. Swift ciilisiliiiii og..aé.i4a!. "Pllmer noiiTc-liui-cli Picnic "'“'.t"i-.n:-..li:i. °“..°'.‘“""' ' ml B 01' I t crowd. Comel ioln us. 7-194! evcmcken » wed-i?“ °" Y“ "W 1' twee rioiyii a uvguilo PM: aid of new church. 7-B9-ii. es "i mew-oil a “all 1 P.M. Nowliaven, 3: $12.00 a pair 3 lbs. each. Will llll lT Zl\l’tl\ifi Miles __-."\.,. LONDON, July I _. (a!) _ Russian troops racing up m; u, side of the istula River swept to within 30 miles oi Warsaw today, captured the bastion of Brest Litovsk and encircled three Ger- man divisions far to the east. and in the south toppled the fortress cities of Przemysl and Jarollaw grill Btihe trunk railway to German e a. "We'll soon be in Berlin." u. Moe- cow radio broadcast told the mas- sive Red Armies which rolled on through great holes torn in Ger- man lines on a winding l,000-rnlle front from the Baltic Sea. to the Carpathian Mountain border of Czechoslovakia. In a. late broadcast the Berlin radio quoted the German high command as suggesting that "e radical shortening of the German front" was under way. The two-day string of Russian victories were the severest defeats yet suffered by the Germans in this war. Lwow, Stenislawow. Bialystok Daugavpils, Rezekne and siauliai fell on Thursday. Three Missing Fliers Safe N. 0.. July M-(APF- Three of the four Ohio fliers who became lost in a. storm Wednesday in northern Maine have been found and apparently unhlurt. the Dayto n Aflirgrtaft Exchange armmmced oo- g . They are Ben Thyson. b6, general manager of the Eiwharigc. an air- craft sales concern; James Owl. 34, of Dayton, owner of a suburban‘ theatre, and Earl Ashelford, 30. oil Rockford, 111., an instructor at the Urbana. 0.. Flying School. Still missing is Kenneth Tidd. 35. 01 Dayton. R. (LA. F. Promotions Are Announced LONDON. July 2e - (CF) H. C. A. F. overseas headquarters iuinouticcd the following airmen have been selected for commis- sions: Nova Seotia - D. R. McGill. Truro; R. W. Burrow, Springhill; S. C. Miller, South Maitlend; L- A. Mailman, Colpton; L. M. Hill. Pictcu; W. Harrington, New Wat- erford. Quebec —- A. H. Beaten, E, E. Coughlin, D. W. Clarke. J- 311°)” . anon, D. A. McLellan. J. cotte, of Montreal. H. J. Gibbs. McMastei-ville; J. R. hgluillot, Beau- poit; v. Lncallle, aces; 6- R- Auman, Ilmaskamlng; J. J. B. L. Belley, Quebec City; J. A. Bour- diiges, Three Rivers; E. Q. Allen. town oi Mount Royal. Reserve llnlt Leaves For Training Camp The with Battery of the 16th (Rt Field Regiment luider cem- mand of Lt.-Col. bIW. MaicNevln. DCM., leaves today lor New Glasgow. N.S . Where the 86th and 205th Batteries will unite with iem. They will be iolned in New Glasgow by another Nova Booth regiment and proceed from there: Trucadie, N.B., for the annual training period. During the summer oamlD D6106 regular artillery tralriirg will be ed out tiling the members 3? the unitma gain practicable egpgrience. Measure ls ' Supported By Whole House OITAW-A. July E-Jw -.Iy lworded Vote of 138 in noiie. the Commons passed one iamuv allow. m bill on second reading 1cm Thciewunodemmdforavote flemi-heoeooettloiibutuiaxing Ovemment“ ona, militia recorded When Gordon Oraydon prom-u. dive Conservative house loader. voted for the bill there was n burst of applause from the Liberal ben- Aild lhlt r for John Br - km. W0." saidofir. Cvraydon. w Prime Minister Speaks In a lpcech winding up the at government critics who. said, MUM to stir up meiudice as Ewan the rest of Cezrado. and e o! Quebec . The N-year-oid bachelor Prime Minister untied in triumph when the vow was taken, and answering criticlsln from C.C. . leader Caldwell to effect earlier action should have been taken. declared it would not have been possible to get such an endorac-tion before. heard Mackenzie King. the social reformer and the political leader in action in both roles. As social reformer. he ex- pounded the doctrines set forth in his writings of 25 years ago-that the community alt large has an m- ierest in industry that it is not the concern of capital. labor and man- agement alone. " ‘ As political leader, he lashed out at his opponents in both the Pro- gressive Conservative and C CF. 01108. rs. men who left Posts nthepul cservtceinthenudst of war when men were needed to organize political partls and. look- ing in the C.C.F direction, men who lzrsvci about the country "seeking to destroy a government the/t has been sent here to carry on the wooocutioxi of the war. llootlon Before April? “I have indicated that it is not my inten" if I can pomlblv pre- vent it. and I think I may be able to do so. to deny to the people the right. which they have oi’ an elec- tion every five years." he said. "This parliament is not going to be permitted to continue. whether the war is continuing or nit’. beyond the five years oi’ its tenn.‘ (The five-year term fllhl 011i next Aim-ll) llo Prosecutions Says St. Laurent July H -- (C?) — Justice Mi St. Laurent said today in the Commons that his tie- partrnent has decided not to in- stitute action under the defence of Canada regulations ea Jacques Dumoulin. Libeml member oi the Quebec Legislature, and Jacques l Montreal newlbflipcrnian. Mr. $1.. Laurent made tho state- ment while replying to opposition members who asked that the Jus- tice department investigate speeches made by Mr. Dumoulin and Mr. Sauriol during Qeubec election campaign rallies. The Otmofiition members had 0X- ereeeed belie! that ports of the speeches were breaches of the de- First R. C. A. F. Pilot ins Victoi Cross TIE LATE FLIGHT LIEUT. DAVID IIOINELL, V. C. OTTAWA. July 26—The Victoria’ Shot down in flames into icy Cross has been awarded postlium-pvatcrs eflthe North Atlantic near ously to Flight Lieutenant David the rim oi the Arctic Circle, Flight 1:, "Bud" Hornell, 34-year-old| Lieutenant Hornell and two other i“i""°.i' 52"“ this“ "*5 zrssisrl ra“":.::.:.*r sr"..t"li*."“.ll::: u a ac on a ernian - ro e . c ,' lne after his R. C. A. F. flying boat who survived 21 hours pitching had been badly damaged by enemy about in a gale-lashed Arctic sca- cannon. The first V. C. award in soaked to the skin and numbed this war to a nicsqicr of the R. with cold-mil received decorations. C. A. F. was announced today by Flying Officer B. C. Denomy, co- Hcn. C. G. Power, Minister of Na-r --_ _-~ .—.-___—~ —.-_» ._-_~.—_~.:--- <1 tional Def for Air. t Continued ornpagel, Col. _6)__ | i l i Al‘ ‘Situation Last Night By Kirke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst The American ground-air attack in Normandy has rcnchul out to d: more than snap shut the Countanr-esi pocket on remnants 0i’ a German army corps trapped against the sea. it ls within afglit of cracking open the Avrztnelics gateway to Brittany, a logical next step in general Eisen- hower's developing‘ invasion offensive. The fnll of COIIlIlIIICP-S, already the S(‘(‘l\l‘ of street fighting with Nazi rear lruzlrlls seeking i4: hold open the slX-flllii wide escape i-i|rr'.il.:i~ dnu-n the coast nest of the town, was assured. Air nbcr-rvers rennin-ll rtmfirinili and chaos incident to German flight from the deadly noose so quickly and skillfully fashioned about tlicln. Other American arrvni- a ell to the south and east of’ (‘uuntnncem Male sector clear of the fee. fence 0i’ Canada reiwlflflflfll- IXTIND NET-AL SERVICE l nolunon -(CP)- Civil postal‘ service with Italy has been extended mllgme angtvatleiiirity. Hitler’s Balkan Front May Collapse Soon WABHINGTON. Jilly 30—-(AP)-— Adou Hitler today faced the crow- ing possibility of a collapse on his Alnkitr or? ‘mg ur ey m . be about to break relations w wodnd cuAct-liflilti in the near an my es but which might oulckllv iced to some time. Ankara laid is negotiating with the Allies to iret out of the war. Edward B. Btettinius. lr.. actinl United states secretary of state. said he had no information on ouch ere here . t Wm “gt '“il““lf.“. ‘t iiiiiir sci-xiii n 5 “ '“ fence wiui war. Al; the that B and; we do the United ghetto omega: would: leave Bulflrll will! encircled - lecture, dmendirll on Berlin's re- .i;"‘;‘°ii" “fiiffnuul.” ‘2i‘i'»§"<i'i‘.‘..“.'.‘.i one c . - 1&2; in gig. whole Balkan Penin- ' Greecue“ ed in» a glganti; trio for the ‘Nazis. bee; m t ere w 1 genie. .1 That may prove to be what the Allied field commander, General Montgomery, is wailing for on the ("lien-Orzo end nf the line. Caught between two fires, the Nazi commander would have small choice hut to run for it, leaving the road to Paris or to the Seine Delta. open whenever Gen. Montgomery signals his left flank nn again to mairli the break through advance of his right. It remains to be seen. however, whether Montgomery's immediate purpose lo to reach and force the gateway to Brittany or whether ini- panslon of his front on the left of his line below Caon will be his next move. His prime objective. whichever way lu- turns is to obtain new harbor and supply line facilities to nerve his expanding army group. Gen. ,1 himself has described the Nonvundv position as It stood until the developing American hrrilk-ihroucli all merely an Allied "loilgelnenl. area." The chance to expand it into a large enough zone for offensive operations vastly greater in scope than My y" Ilfldflllllff may pulsed io drive against Virc and Avranches could turn the (ii-ravioli leftl flunk retreat in France into n rout and sweep the whole Orne-Guif of It. i 12 PAGECSV loll. H.001 other Invlnou a U-IJ. DID iubanrlprlon llellovorl. I)! Yanlts Qfiing Roacl As suicide squads fought mainly transport iiub of the the fleeing enemy on the roa meat. Dispatches from th C f —held by British aned ‘vggnadiiilri forces — said westward movement 01 German transport had been spotted, indicating Field Marshal Rommel was taking the gamblg of moving forces westward from the Caen sector to meet the American thrrust. e Germans were seen “digging in for all they are worth" south of Caen in preparation for the next British-Canadian blelvs. . Headquarters in communique? No. 106 tonight made no mentioni of this port of the front. A front line dispatch from William Stew- art, Canadian Press war corre- lilorident. sold the British-Canad- ian front was quiet throughout the day, and activity‘ was limited to anclesultory exchange of artil. Americans advance fluid fighting spread over 20g square miles, probably the larg- est battle in western Europe in this war, front line dispatches laid, and the bag of prlsgngrg neared 5,000. Tile American; have buried 8,916 enemy dead in four days of fighting, the" re- ports said. Far behind the advance patrols, the battlefield was littered with hundreds of vehicles, and thous- ands of stragglers resisted the mop-up squads moving in to sol- idify control of the billk of the peninsula. An Impressive Array Associated Press correspondent Wes Gallagher reported American columns miles long were pouring down the peninsula in pursuit of the enemy. The American forces moved under drizzling skies in impressive array, and were taking surprisingly light tank losses. They swept. forward so rapidly they were catching German staff cars and messengers on the road. One rcpori broadcast by the To lnlancl France By JAMES M. LONG ALLIED SUPREME HEADQUARTERS July 28 (AP) Two eov _ . —- — sting U. S. tlrlitchoolumns smashed ‘M10 the northern edge sou westward io within 1S miles of AvranClleS at the western base of the Cotentin Pflgillilllfl in fl drive threatening to cave in all the enemy's western Normandy defences an open a route i0 inland France. of Coutances today and l. third launched back from doomed Coutancoe-once the western Nor- enemywquadrons of dive-bombers hammered columns of d south, littering it with burning hul-ks of wrecked equip- Mount Carmel Man Is Fatally Injured On Road ' Mr. Joelob Gallant. 3-year man 1mm Mcnmt Carmel died the Prince County Hospital. at Sum. IHBTSICW i650. flight iXOfll received when he Bradiml Irlanhine It was behevod time nook was fractured. 11w details of the accident were available un- nicdietely. Royal Canadian Motintoil Police are invest-inst v and ui imuelt will‘: be held this morning llowe Warns Against Anthracite Shortage OTTAWA. July 2B—(CP)—Mll.n- ions Minister Halve warned in a figment today “tabla-t hogse- crs_ co-opera y p a4; ng m- em imnjlFdlaiiely they run a "serious flak 0f b61118 Without fuel when cold weather begins, and said "Stub- stantlally less" United states and Welsh anthracite has been received it m nning of as compared with the cor- responding period of last year. The Minister said it will be nec- ceesariv for householders to ‘bum substitute fuels. and to make 3 the road. He was oonac-i picked up but died after an oper- ation id hospital. Hiswneisdeed. iBlinivingas-oa in eonarldthreedaaliiltnrmfivneaon is Gus Gallant at. home wink ~vwo daughters, Bernice and Madeline are also at nonie and the tnlrd Dar to provide additional supplies of icoke for Ontario. Quebec and the l Maritime provinces. Mrs. D. Araeinault lives at Rn-iont Householders iii these provinces Bait-S ‘ should order coke for at least a portion of their class “A" fuel needs while the additional limited lup- plios oil’ coke are still available, Mr. Herve said. For the balance of their requirements such householders will have to depend on son, coal, (Class "A" fuel includes U. S. anthracite larger than No. 1 buck-; wheahweish anthracite larger thanl blower 6511;. low volatile coal ini screen zes larger than ca. coke in dsiapeg lalrger than pea, giquettesfl, Nfi-‘glgm “fig-lg; cgkrltitllzg—'lthr an r0 eum co e in household‘ ., - ' 55 11 "1- Il-Ounceu tonight. that beginning sizesi _ liviondav the bee: ration in this Beer Ration In ll. S. ls Reduced Germans said the Allies were ready to throw yct another new army into the offensive. 50 Divisions (The German agency DNB said 2,500 American heavy tremely fierce" attacks ivitii ranches as the objective. Berlin dispatches to Stockholm put the total Allied strength nt 50 divis- ions and 3.000 to 4.000 tanks.) AV- fRohot Bomb Hits llifflWililll Restaurant LONDON. Jlilv 28 — tAPl — A robe: bomb blew up a rrovcr - of person; and t damage ll] the The flying b i overhead but . work as it flow i. Mnnv flyina bombs launched dur- ing the night and day unre inter- I ‘lcepted and sliol. tlolvn Di‘ lighters: and others were tlostrovi-rl liv niztiq aircraft. guns and balloons. the airl ministry announced,“ _ The Pl-opagatien of friendship, not only among individuals but among nations as well, ilras the keynote of International Gyro President Frank Nightingales brief address given at the Gyro ban- quet last night in the Charlotte- town Hotel. This keynote was further ampli- fied by Dr. J. A. MacMilinn. Presi- dent. of the Charlottetown Gyro Club, who was the ehlcf speaker at the dinner. Dr. MacMilliin devoted some time to answering the criticism that no social organization should waste either time or money in holding conventions while the world is at war. War, the spank- er emphasized, is caused by mis- understandings developing into tion: “If all persons in the world seed of hate world?" that all Gyros were under the sol bulk of from l0 to l2 tliarilfsdlililifl ions. were plunging south in “cx- i i . Maritime Convention Of Gyro Clubs Closes . hatred and he asked the ques-l were good Gyros, could over tho be sown in the Dr. MacMillan went on to state l Plmlmt‘ W111 b8 red-Heed for a four- ! ‘"91? 9911M from three dozen film“ i‘ "were to two dolen quarts ‘lire commissions brief statesmen; i Kaye no reason for the reduction ‘ hm DYWWIQMY it was the result of the heavy demand for beer durinp the recent hot t lForiner Banker ilere wee. her ‘_*‘ Regina High Schools WINNIPEG, J l 2B-—(O — ' Frederick G Burliyv 55. assisgint To Delay Openlng ivesterri supervisor of the Bank of _"'* Nova Scotia \vi:.li headquarters here died today. Born in Chetham, N B . he had been employed by the bank tor 40 tears. serving in Charlottetown. Halifax, Saint Jahn. NB . and Welland Ont REGINA. July 28-r.ci=i- n- m“ °1-' 39811111 hillh schools has een DWI-boned l0 dais uintil Sept. 25, it was announced today. to enable ers and lyillplls to assist with i harvest work. Says Liquor Holds Full Sway In Toronto llolrl Aeouf (its i-‘ELLow who SENDS ills Rueelzo. Betios BMK to HAVE flirt/i Vulcauizlzo ? EDMONTON. July 28—iCP)_ li A tovicatrd oii 1'0 ‘Hi3 street cars.‘ WAS NOT“! ARTIST CHARD. England —(CPI— ien I-‘issarro. Bl_ prominent artist and son 0f Camille Plssnrro, French Luc- lmnressionist painter, ha. dict! in this Somersetsliire town,“ High tide this aAxtiAi-vt. z..0t and tomorrow llifternoon at 0.08. Sun sets this evening at 8.32 and flea tenlorrow morn mt 5.4L Bimimerside tide teen minu- tes later than Cheri tetown. DAILY ALB SERVICE Charlottetown — Monctou Leave Charlottetown ‘I aJlLI emn obligation to cultivate friend- ship with all “irrespective of race, colour, or creed." His concluding remarks were greeted with warm applause. The new slate of officers for Gyro District No. 6 are: David iélflfllDOflflld, ltialiifjnx, Pfesident and ia rmnn n xccut ve Council; k k. a _ _ 11.30 a.vn.; 6 pan. {fgsih-(Seé-mofi mgrbgllgriénf Ali: 5311i“ ‘Cahxlottetown 12.45 pun-l worth. Moncton, Secretary-Treas- ' "m" ' 9"" urer. Several presentations were made SUNDAY any.“ Bumnserei ' at the dinner. The m2‘ -mile tro- Leave Charlottetown 12 noon. phy, given to the club " ‘ich trav- Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 pan. els the most BKKYEQZL. miles on Charlottetown - New Glasgow its way to a Convention. was wont by the Halifax Club. lCiiariotte-l town won it last year o: Dlgbyw (Daily except Sunday) Leave C‘ rlotietown l pm. Arrive Charlottetown 5.50 pan. N. S) The prescnttiti.» was re- . sponded to by Leslie Atkinson, Pre- P. I-I. l.—N. B. FERRY SERVIC! lsident, Halifax Club. DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS The club bulletin was won by the Cnmpbcllton Club and the sentiltign responded to’ bygon- l?!" .____ . .. -.__ (Continued on page ‘l, Col. l) heave Wood Islands-LOO A. ll- ll.0fl A. M. 8.00 P. M. Leaver 0 M A. I. 1.00 I. I. MI . . " N NORMANDY CRUMBLING