MAXIMS OIL 'MERE MAN done. We fudge ourselves bv what we fccl capable of doing while others iuiige us by what we have already lilocrilng Guardian, Founded i887. Charlottetown Guardian, Two Cents. Place German _ Casualties Close To 0m Million , . ALLIED SUPREME HEAD- QUARTERS. Sent. '36 — (AH- German casualties on the iveszt- ern front-in killed. wounded and captured or troopl hope- lessly cut off — were estimated tonight at close to 1.000.000 since li-ilay-ivell over twice the en- eiiiy fnrce now believed to he lined up along Germany's west- r-rri frontier. The figure included at least 100.000 klllcil, well over 200.000 badly wounded. more than 500.- 000 captured and the remainder sealed off ln holi-lnut ports along the channel roast and on the (“iywi Islands. Relief Conference Ended Yesterday By JAMES McCOOK MONTREAL. Sept. 2S ...- Tile United Nations and Rehabilitation Administration Council today completed c. 10-day session here with the hope that when it mccts again-within a our it will be in a liberated land w ich has known the benefit of. the as- sistance it can give. Representatives of 4-4 nations table in the gathered about a Vindsor Hotel heard L. B. Pear- son, the Canadian chairman for the second council session, say that with the cooperation of mem- ber Governments UNRRA could do iis_ part in “leading ravaged luim- fllliiy out of the swnnuasnnd waste lands of post-uni‘ desolation up-lo a higher level where lflllfl will no‘. be plunged evcrv generation into blood and suffering and savagcry." Delegate lift?!‘ delegate declared faith in a similar ideal-of UNRRA as a symbol of U fled Nations ctr-operation» Wllitll - ould lead to‘ Wv <1 liiirmimr in the future. Hou By John F. Chester LONDON, Sept. 26 -— (APl Prime Minlst/Ji‘ Churchill promised a sharp crackdown on Wfll‘ crimin- als; and tiie llousc of Lords debated trcatmeh. 0f a. post-war Germany today as Parlamcnt reconvened in! what some persons have called itsl “victory scssioll." 1 Asked whether neutrals had been properly wuriicd against harboring Wdl‘ criminals and ivhct-her Adolf lfiiler in particular might escape, Mr. Churchill told the I-lcuso of Commons eiuisticiiliy: “It is not our intention to allow the escape of thcso mcn to be effected without exerting almost evcry resource ivhlch s] civilized C0lllllfy can contem- :i c." He added, however. that Spain was not among the neutrals which al- ready have promised to refuse war criminals asylum. Mr. Churchill. chccreci n5 he re- C0 "Show -—- Canoe Cove Fiéldn Bil in EVENTS Zifl ' Show -- Criipaud. ThUP-‘(ill)’. 9-27-21 ' "Dance — Plcesrint Grove l-Inil,1 Friday, September 29th 0-20-21 "Chicken Stroller. Bingo and Dance. Fort Augustus Wednesday, September 27th. 9-26-21. "Dance. Vernon River Hall. Wednesday, September 27th. Aus- piccs C. W. L 9-26-21 "Dance, DcmTigh School. Mon- day. October ziiu. Special music 9-27-21 "Dance. Mt. Stewart Legion Hall. Wednesday, September 27th Don Measerb Orohcsira. 9~-27-1i. “Dance, French River Hall. Wednesday night, S'Cj)ii‘i.llbC;;77l1l;. "Dance in Morell l-lnll, Wednes- day. September 27th. (ioodnnailisilci. "Chicken Dinner. New Glasgow Hall, Wednesday CVEIIITIR. Sept. 27th. Serving 6-41. 0-25-2i. "Unloadin car of grain today. N. Aubrey Cutciiffe. 0-27-11. "Alpha Rebekah Pantry Sale Saturday, Sept. 30th, 2 o'clock at Holmanu. 9-27- L‘; "Social Service Rummage Sale. 01y Name Hail, Friday. September th at l dciock. Donations receiv- at 186 Powniil Stmet or phone "Mt. Stewart, N.I<‘.B., Movies se Of’ Lords Debates Treatment Of Germany ' further consultations with other gov- 11- distlnctpn in i943 He said he fav- ored destruction of the Nazi state Germans lloollnoil To Surrender Channel Islands Enemy N117; Agency Says Canadian Officer Sought To Discuss Terms. LONDON. Sept. 2e - (or Cable) — Thr German News Agency clai- med tdhl-y that a Canadian army mfllflr “who also is a member of the Canadian Parliament,” attcm - wd to obtain the surrender of r e channel Islands yesterday, The Agency said a German speed. boat met the Canadian major, who Was on a British warship, and ma; the speedboat then sent a radio mes- sage to the Channel Islands com- mander saving the Canadian major wanted to discuss the military sit- uation with him. The agency added that the com- mandcrs rcpl" was that he must decline the meeting. The Channel Islands, eff the west coast of the Cherbourg Pen- ill-Hula. have been under German control since 1940. -___ Mal- Alan Chambers, Liberal member of parliament for Nanwmo COR-iutllehfiy. may have been ihe officer who attempted u; bring allfivt the surrender of the Chan- nel Islands. So far as it is known Maj. Cham- bers. attached to lst Canadian Ar- my headquarters, and Maj. Hughes LaPolnte, Liberal member for Int- binlere. are the only members of Parliament in the battle area. As a staff officer, Maj. Chambers, who served with the lst Canadian div- ision in Italy before receiving his present appointment, could be cal- lcd upon to make arrangements with the Germans. Mai. LaPoihte. son of the late Justice Minister, Rt. Hon Ernest LaPointe, was last reported serving w.th a.‘ cembattant unit and it is not believed he would enter into any negotiations with the Channel Is- lands garrison. turned to the capital from his Que- bec conference with President Roose- velt, llrojcczecl "a joint conference 0f all the United Nations" to dis- cuss such permanent peace propo- sals as may grow our o: W85h1ng- iun's Dumbarton Oak; conferencep but added that no committmentsl have yet been reached. Touches 0ft Debate Irvine House of Lords a sharp but inconclusive debate was touched off by Lord Vansittart, leading Brit- ish exponent of a hard peace for Germany. who demanded to know “who is going to occupy what" in a defeated Reich, and suggested that a no-fraternizaticn order to be issued to all Allied troops in Germany. He urged that it can be made clear “we entered Germany, not as friends. but as conquerors, bent on reducing the German nation to sufficient spiritual humiliation and mill ary impotence to make it im- possible for them to behave in the same way again." Lord Crnnborne, government lead- er in the House of Lords, replied that the hrltsh government could riot make a unilateral answer without eruments, but that the Allied aim was “not a slave world," even though "we cannot hold the Gannon people (as contrasted with the Nazis) en- tircly izulltless for these continued aggressions." Lord Selborne, Minister of Econ- omic Warfare, announced that oven after Germany's defeat the govern- ment would continue the blacklist "against thousands of flmis in neu- tral countries" as a means of con- trolling German commerce and hit- ting those who shield German pro- perty abroad pricier the 1039 trad- ing-wlth-theenemy act. Taboo Different View Lord Strabolgi, s Labor party lender. and the bishop of Chlcheaier dlffercd immediately with Lord Vhusittart on the Dost-war treat- ment of Germany. Lord strnbclgi asserted it was necessary to live with the Germans somehow and that the peace set.- tlement should not be dictated "on- ly by passion and emotion." Referring to ihotngrnphs of Un- ited States solders in friendly po- ses with German civilians in occup- ied villnges, he said they should be reproduced by the mlllioha and dropped all over Germany in reply to German propaganda that "we are advancing to murder, rape and destroy." , The blsho of Chlchester argued that distinc ions had been drawn by Russia's Premier Stalin in 1942 between the Hltlerite State and the Gcnnan people and that the Brit- ish government had endorsed the and punishment of war criminals ‘Joriday (changed from Wednes- ‘IIY , . / 0-21-11 but that the countries of Europe Ito check the drive. plain for nearly 10 days. autumnal rains intervened. ovarian plain. lllpl‘! War “Situation La; N By KIRKE L. SIMPSON ‘ (Annotated Press War Analyst] A curtain o! oileucs drawn by Gen. Eisenhower over Allied open- tloul in the Brabant Gateway area in East Central Holland to North- ern Germany has all but blacked out news from that seething front. It leaves the fate of gallant British "Red Devil” airborne advance units In doubt despite Berlin radio claims of their complete liquidation. It seems certain.’ however, that Gen. Eiscnhowcrs security move was dictated by other considerations. The cncmy certainly know all about the situation at the Arnhem portal where the British daredevil: have kept I. stubborn toe in the Brabnnt door to the north German The silence order has some other significance that probably bodes the foe no good. It obviously was intended to deny the enemy knowl- edge of a swift shifting of Allied forces for a concentrated power stroke to end the stalemate in the Netherlands corridor and gcton with the business of smashing the Nazi "west wall" defence Targets picked for massed heavy ‘ mbcr attacks in Germany tend to bear out that assumption. They included communication hubs of the Nazi supply line for the Netherlands sector of the "west wall" front like Bremen, Humm and Osnabruck. Within that ISO-mile radius east of Arnhem lie the rallyards. road junctions and river crossings through which supplies and reinforcements move up to holster the desperate German effort to stave off an Allied break-through into the Not many weeks of good fighting weather remain. Berlin broad- casts reflect Nazi hopes of holding out at all costs in the west to await a winter stabilization of the battle lines. The Allie‘ high command in Europe also clearly recognizes that time is running against it; that a and immediate effort is in order in the zvcst if the victories lu France and Belgium are to be fully exploited. Gen. Eisenhower's call to millions of enslaved foreign workers In Germany to get into action further testifies in his determination to push on before winter. And if he succeeds in cracking through the "west wall" anywhere within the weeks ahead the British force ln the Arnhem are: must be given much of the credit for it. ight l system before Han - sweeping Covers Prince Edward r Island Like the Dew cnaizcorrcrowiv, causes, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1944 Canadians Squoiize Nazis Into Calais WITH THE 1H1‘ OANAMAN ARMIY, Sept. 26 — (CP Renter.) - Almost all the German posi- tions southwest and west of Calais now are iri Canadian hands and the main body of the Ger- man garrison has pulled back to the town iise . Australian Troops Are Cautioned Japs Will Not Crack Soon WASHINGTON, Sept. 26 —(APl - Australian troops, cautioned by their commander in chief against any hope that Japan will crack soon after Germany's fall, were told today that in New Guinea and the Solomons alone some 90.- 000 by-passed enemy troops still must be eliminated. Gen. Sir Thomas Biamey, Dep- uty Allied Commander in the Southwest Pacific, made the as- sertion in a broadcast speech. a summary oi.’ which was released here by the Australian Army In- formation Service By Fire 8th Army Crosses Famous River ROME, Sept. 26 — (CPl --Brit- isli 8th Army forces on the Adri- atic battleground have crossed the tiny but famous Rubicon River against strcng enemy opposition, while along the "coast Canadian infantry and tanks have smashed forward to capture Bordonchio, nearly six miles beyond Rimini, gilicd headquarters announced to- av. Amercari 5th Army troops ad- vancing toward Bologna, major enemy communications centre in Northern Italy. smashed three heavy German counter-attacks. in- flicting heavy casualties on the Germans in their futile attempt The Canadians who captured Bordonchio, next big coastal town after Riminl. broke through the main body of the German lst parachute division after an ex- tremely hcavy barrage. during which the Germans suffered sev- ere casualties. Surplus llay In Prov. Worth B. Much M_oney Premier J. Waiter Jones, him- self one of the outstanding farm-- ers of the Province, is confidentl that P. E. Island farmers preparing to press all the hay thcv‘ profit on this surplus product when pper Canada markets could eas- ily be $20.00 per ton. This, the Premier emphasized, would mean a clear profit t Il nd f of a million doiilarsfa am.‘ Polish Army llead . To Be Relieved 0f liis Command LONDON, Inndon will be revised slightly within a few day; unless some un- forseen factor intervenes. it was re- ported tonight. ‘ The changes may come before) Prime Minister Churchill addresses, parliament Thursday. l President Wloiwslaw Raczkie-l wicz, facing the Sltematives of ac- cepting the eabi et ndate that. the general go in the interest of. harmouv with Russia or finding‘ a new government, decided reluct- antly to sacrifice sosnkowski. 5 re-g liable source said. . Racskiewicz‘ reluctance was deep-i ened by the knowledge thathe him-; self might bethe nextvictim of Sov-‘i ies demandaos aresultofhlscou-i victlon that Sosnkowsklhad done an efficient job of reorganizing the Polish forces and his belief that Sosnkowskrs dismissal in hi. en- : "(cdiiunuéa' affairs "i." cbif To ' la danger the fighting forces’ moraiel i woulll1iviih ihc lflillllfil mcci make no mistake by immediately! hlilfillilll‘ lloards of f) I have for sale. The Premier stated, ciism 1 .. that. in his opinion. there were inc ‘l '* 50.000 tons of hay available for ex- ' 11nd iiitcri . , port in the Province and that the of thc hfni-izimes. This airports, factors greased and sold to American ori location. rcfcicucc middlc ‘Nizctl done to save either the adjoining stacks of hay and grril ' Large. Barn Destroyed At Keppoch Fire yesterday afternoon "ll l’ th' ll .. grime“ »i»<»i=-,,q,=-,Oi,-i;~§ the fire was: caused by a spark ave bee“ or “ e eeae ' from the c.‘ oust pipe of the trac- -——-—--——— tor which ' siuiplylng the pow- ei' for ihc ill shing outfit. Though the pumps; from the Charlotte- town Firc Department arrived twenty minutcfis lIfltCl’ the blaze R t h started. thc re ind progressed so rapidly thzit nothing could be s ll. The main barn was 40 feet long and 25 fcct iricle with an ell which W as 1Z5 feet by 20. 5: Will Attend Special Maritime Air Conference On October 3rd at 10:30 a. . ' there will be . ssion dealing with com- mcrcinl ah services us they affect the M "itimc Provinces. This spe- icinl scssi u is in connection with N. S., spc-ci 1,1110 meeting of the Mari- tim gnrtniicn Commission u will hc llflfi in Trade. of ill!‘ subjects to be opal cost of in thc tourist industry and the vantage services iinii vclopmcnt. of Tunvcl Bureau speak on this subject possibilities for development in the lllabrltime Provinces. tlon o!‘ aeroplanes, facilities for the Canadian at Ottawa and is understood that in to representatives from Jones. will attend.__ AlwaysfReliable "SAT-ABA" TEA 8: COFFEE Flavour is ‘the measure of satisfaction with Tea Ind Coflee. “Salado” gives the maximum yield in 1 des- troyed a barn, two stacks of hay, iwo of grain. and two of straw, as well us the threshing outfit, on the farm of Joseph Kelly of Keppoch. lhc barn or It is said that nc small insurance on The dwelling house. aiz-d a considerable the barn, suffered conjunction 1v ing oi the‘ ancillary its de- Mr. D. Leo Doian. head Government addi- 58V" ept. 26 — (AP) —i erhl P. E. l Boards of Trade. Pre- Gen Kazimierz Sosnkowski will be. micr .l. W.--.1¢r~i~ relieved cg commander-in-chicf of‘ Carl Burke of the Maritime Ccn- the Polish armed forces and the‘ iral AITWfLVJ, anti B. Graham Rog- cabinet of Premier Stanislaw Mlk-l crs, Supcrvlror ni the P. E. I. Tra- olajczylcs Polish Government ln1 vcl Rlircriii. Captain Quoting “latest intelligence re- Everybody ing men and material. transports came down on a The unarmed transports in the lst Allied Airborne Army had a thick escort 0f fighters buzz ng on their flanks and no enemy plan/es challenged them. in the convoy headed saicly back .0 England, belying ilic German radio which claimed in. 6 P M 4.1 P M. E D. T.) that the German air force had broken up an flltflllpt to reinforce the corridor. 'I‘hird Column Advances Meanwhile the British 2nd Army sent another column cast towards Germany, pulling up tonight on ports" on the number of enemy troops still clinging to areas in. New Guinea and the Solomons. he said that while they are no longer a threat to Allied progress "they are still 90.000 fanatical Japaynese who will fight to the at .. All the powers concerned. Gen. Blsmey added, "agree that the Japanese conquests must be wrested from them. We cannot do that by ivishfully thinking that Japan must throw in the sponge because its allies in the European Winnipeg Paper Between Soldiers WINNIPEG, Sept. 26 — (OP) —The Winnipeg Tribune today said‘ that "clashes" have occurred be- tween Generai Service troops and members of defence units stationed at Camp Shilo, Man, in the last: weeks. Most of the clashes have. been fist fights i “The use of small aims and live. ammunition in one lniiahili has 1990b‘ reported to the Tribune, but in-l vestigation does not bear thzs out.” the newspaper added. saying! “Rather blank cartridges apparu entlv were fired, and bv the Gen-i eral Service men." l Brig. R. A, Macfarlane, District, Officer Commanding M D. l0.i denied the Tribune report I-le told, the Tribune: l "I think your report Ls entirely,‘ iwrong. My camp commandant . was in my office yesterday and he did lnot mention. any such trouble‘ Some of the men stayed up after lights out, but they only made fl- lot of noise and sang. It was’ purc- mutine milltiirv affair ' , Tahe Tribune said it sent a staff‘ investigator to investigate reports, .missionecl officers of the Active‘ Army. The Tribune investigator said he had been told that a "lot of» trouble" was started by C.W.A.C.l personnel. who "start things" by calling th home defence men “Zombies? The letter from the two non- commlssioneri officers. signed “two roud Canadians", and published the Tribune, reported a recent cash, and said in part: ' "General service soldiers became1 absolutely enraged that they had| to live in the close proximity of hundreds of mcn the same uniform as they‘, but unwilling to fight for Canada. "At the apex of the demonstra- tion the non-active personnel be- came ‘momentarily active.’ firing. let us put it mildly, numerous shots in the direction of the demons- trators. . . "The ‘zombies’ were fortunately very poor shots and therefore no iasualties occurred. . ." the Meuse River at Boxmecr, 13 miles south of Nljmegen and only three miles from the Netherlands- German border. A front dispatch from Ilnll- and declared the Germans ivc-re throwing thousands of men and all available armor and mat- erial into an all-out effort to stem the thrcai to the Rhine and emphasized that. "there is no i minimizing of this battle. 0n it rests the WIIOI¢ success of the campaign." There still was no word late lo- night, however, of lhc fate of ihc British Airborne “Red Devil" div- ision ivliich has clung stubbi. to a little foothold on the nor. bank of the Ncclcr Rh lie for nine days and nlghis. A German broadcast, unconfir- med by Allied sources, elaimcd that the valiant little band 0f British skytroopcrs finally had been liq- uidated with tho last 6'30 surrender- ing th's morning. Allied Supreme Hcridquarleds clam- ped a security blackout of news av-l er the ciiiirc battleground in Hull- ancl to keep the Germans from gaining any useful information of the fluid struggle racing around the gateway to the German Illdlli‘; irinl Rhur Valley. The British pres: described the situation of ihe hclch- guered Jirnlicm force as critical. At lEflSi three times German ar- mored nlld infantry attacks had severed the thin Allied supply line between Einoblovcn iiiid Niimirccn. lhe vital hrtcry along which rel forcemcnts were being s’: ved . ward Arnhem. As many tmcs Br ' tanks and self-propelled guns iizirl smashed the enemy back and cleared the highway. Use I-Ioardeil Fighter; In their determined effort to halt this Allied thrust toward Germany. the Germans struck with ‘ hoardcd reserve of fighter plancsfl A single flight 1P4 Fcfikfl-W 1f fighters attacked 13"" Nijmetgcn, and unih down on the bcsicgcl Jbornc :om- mics at Arnhem. Si. lhc attacking Nazis at Niimcgcn \\_'.".rc shot down by R A- F 501151115 a“ forces Y1 F11‘ '75 swp‘. dis-lb: trouble at ShllO after u hmiymd TNPhQYmS- ‘ 1111111195 0i 60m‘. received letters from two non-com-i ~ ' ' ' cs, both domestic in the economy will include governing their construction, types of construction. aids to navi- gation. and general facilities for fiifurl- air inmmcrcc, with special the requirements for towns and distrlc A special iicin to be discussed is ;¢..........;. ;.;;"......1*.(e..‘. .. s ll. S. Tightens lip 0n Argentina Washington, Sept. 26 - (AP) -—1 The United Slates tightened screws, on Argenxina today with two moves thinning trade between the iwo countries to a trickle. The State Department announ- ced the first move-a ban prevent- ing American Ships from calling at Argentine ports after Oct. 1 At the same time. it was learned. the department instructed thc foreign economic administration to restrict export licenses to Argcnzina to a minimum. Second Escaped Prisoner Arrested Clifford Ross McLean, who es- caped from the rince County jail Saturday night was back ill custoriv c.iri_v this morning. Tic was arrcstcil by West Devon Police arrived Summcrsidc with the prisonci about i o'clock this momma. fine flavour. 10 PAGES.‘ K SOMEWHERE IN HOLLAND, Sept. .There were Germans near and-lhc smoke There was no flak and all planes? 0 l MAXIMS OIL HIRE MAN- worlaintotheoiuisottlod. By A. I. GOLDBERG in the Eindho grassy pasture and began to of battle was clearly visible when MIILSLM: th P via l USA. 85.00. Sobscriptiononegvexil. PLANES RUSH SUPPLIES T0 FRONT LINE JEEPS, MEN, WEAPONS UNLOADED lN PASTURE zii-LAPF-American transport planes late today poured jeeps, men and ivezipous onto a forward airfield here in the first land- ings with supplies for ilie harassed forces ously supply uml reinforcing" of this ilflilivliflfit- has been done ven-Aruhem corridor. Previ- _by glider or by parachut- l the disgorge their loads. The first planes were emptied and inking off for their British bases by the time the last planes were in through the nzirruiv, uncertain corridor. lMauzfed Nazi Divisions Fest’! Back In Missing Soldier ‘is lflegzorted Safe Elociiioi- h ‘c riirrivcrl the f"l tclcgixim: "rlcircc iiou‘ l l i! Mr and Mrs Harry Andrew, St. pu ihiuslji‘ reported missing l, has now been officially reporleri safe and wounded in hos- pital izi the Uni cd Kingdom. Nat- urc of wounds (if-scribed as shell fi-zicmrrii v. als. Both icgs and rain shoulc Mr. iiuci Ali's Andrew have also rec vcri . hm German Rail Yards l liarai tilt Again i ____ 4 :16 (GP) — iL-lllti >ucccssive day ap- proximiiiiij,‘ 1,200 American heavy hcil targets in Germ- more ihn 3,500 ions; 'cs and inccndiarlcs‘ cud railway yards! Jatullisci \\' Baltic By w. w. IIERCIIER LONDON, Sept. 26 — (AP) Yielding more than 500 towns and villages to the Russians, the mauled divisions of the German Northern Army Corps fell back on Riga tonight for what may be their last stand in the Baltic States. A brief Soviet communique re- ported that Red Army forces took more than 0 places in their drive to clear the scattered and ‘ disorganized enemy from the west coast of Estonia southwest of Tallinn and pressed on clown with- ir. 45 miles northeast of Riga, tak- ing 300 places in Latvia. Riga, last Baltic capital in en- emy hands and a valuable nava. base for the newly unfettered Red Baltic fleet, is closely threatened bv the Russians six miles to the south. and only a narrow escaps corridor leading westward along the sea remains to theiGennans. The Soviet communique also announced capture of Turks. in Southem Poland l2 miles from the border of Czecho-Slovakia, am nine other communities in tha mountainous frontier region. The Russians were silent con~ cerning other fronts, but the Ger- man radio said Soviet pressure on the Hungarian border from Ro- mania "vas increasing with sev- eral attemprs to cross into Hun- gary from the area north of Arad The Ankara (Turkish) radio said the Russians had crossed the border norzhwest Arad and ivcre l5 miles inside Hungary. v sllllplios ivithou’ i -- cncoiiiitcri - fighter opposi-l PLAN Ill‘ lion and l'lllll‘ _ through cnlyl —- —- ‘spottv pair-l lak. F NAIROBI, Kenya - OP) _ . ——- ——— lvfasailand, the important cattle i lraising province of Kenya, may , M-l- ‘have a new school of husbandry i. | [tgfy Hgmjfs ‘Officials visited Larok, which Accepted Victims i l 0f Drowning Accident Full nillirii; ionors were given! i ' s of the victimsofl .cicnt at Coleman} uiiluy evening. The funeral of Tpr. Wallace Den-I is w ieicl ll l 30 P M. at 'he * Church with Rcv. of the United‘ lg, assisted by Rcvv. .:l Capt. J R. l ucnzni Chaplain. The . WflS draped in ihe Union Jack, ivnl. carried from lhc ' church through iii "B" sQllfiflYOi-i of the '| rcgl. ilteservc). Fol- i-e at the church the cccdcd through lhc: _.@ .L| ._>.m,,ficld Cemetery.‘ service at the grave was con-l 1. n i011 ry ‘c. o up la: Church i: The ducted by Capt. Sknner. As thcl {coffin utis iiiiiriril into the gravel Ithe Last Post was sounded and a firing purl)’ ilrcd three volleys. Tpr_ Dennis lczivcs to mourn be» sides his parents. Mr and Mrs Nelson f)¢i~::i\. fir.» broihfrs and. two sisters. 'l'l'ic,\' are Hcrbcrt ov-| cystitis, Ira iii DEHCYL Military’ camp, iBc in at irrmc ziiicl airs. Dermot! l h/Iclcrin, Milo. | l The funeral of Sgt. Crirficlrl Rnm-| say Vifls hold u: It liil P. M wizh ser- vicc m me home of his parents. iltci i: (‘itiuch officiated assisted lby Rcv. C O llirwlctt and Capt. ‘_.<kiiiii<r. interment was in the .l{i:i'.t.=-iur.l C<‘llii‘ii‘l‘_\' and ihe com- niliinl scrvii-v unis carried out by chpr. Skinner. The same military- houors were, accorded 1n this ill-W ncral. Sci. Ramsay lczives to mourn his lpnrcnls, Mr and Mrsr Dali Ram- 511V, niirl mic sisii-r, Mrs Roberta Sullicrllzusl, iviiipulc, Muss Thr- sninc piillbcnrors all members y attended at “r were: Trps. Alva .lcll_v, Alllsun ~ n. l-lzlivin Diinan us The band from i Duvul i. liuriu‘, 1.". i rind Lli\.\\'1 \\l Royal CnnfldinniBPilClI Llrovi‘ lhiliiiui: Ccliirc ilvas Mounted Police in the vicinity of, ‘ mi b_\' Llcu. in oimulu cc mid was commanded niiili. ‘The escort, com- ~‘ pvud i1 "B" mmigiiinx", was under . lhc nlmmniizl ‘iii Alzijoi" J R Mur-i An intensive search had liccu ' l‘ii.\' m‘ i the “f! llilrlfl’ W118 Chm-l underway for him sincc lic cs- , lllilllflfil lij. lrcrlild MccFnrlzine.| cnped from lhc jail Satiu-iiiii- l). '.' i. hlfilidfiilli- oificéll night, in f‘i\l‘ll]).lll_\’ willi Alfirii c - i, ii:.- lilli Armored‘ Yco. 'l‘lic laitrr siirrcudcrcd in ltc. , prcsciil. hutliorlilrs ni Summrrsldc Wm- . ‘ oi Tpr. Clllilikl Brooks day. Police wcrc using a police \\'i]l ~ ii (‘v1.13 at 1 l‘ M. st dog in tracking McLean-S. i Wellington. Hill and. tonight at ‘l 40 rises tomorrow morning would be the site of the new school and have discussed plans and sub- mitted recommendations EDUCATIONAL FILMS LONDON - (CP) — A series of about l2 educational films is being made- for the Minis ion by the Ministry of Informat- ion The first five, already under- ‘ way. are of a general type and not j limited to a classroom subiect in the try of Educat- TIBITOW 591158 PioPls ‘silo tut lN Ql-ASG houses siiouio em: IN (HE DARK ,' h tide this morning nt 526 ‘ ' s 4e and at 6.50. DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown - Sumneraiilo - Moaeton Leave Charlottetown 7 11.30 a.I.; 6 p.m. Arrive Charlottetown 12.45 9a.: 5.45 p.m.; 8.40 pm. SUNDAY SEIVICI Leave Charlottetown it uooa. Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 pan. Charlottetown -- New Glasgow iDally except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown l p-Ill. Arrive Charlottetown 5.50 p-ul. P. E. I.-N. S. FERRY SERVICI DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands-LOO A. M ll.00 A. M. 3.00 P. . Leaves Clrtboo — l.” A. M. l.“ P. M. 5.00 P. H. Sun sets this evening at mat-i i‘ .:':;:._...;:.~.: = .-.; f»? as.’ ~1- .