{j Guardian. Founded 1007. ‘éwillltfetown Guardian. Two Cents. cnaaaorrarowu. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, sandman 1a, 1944 2n) YANK COLUMN ENTERS GERMANY . ____‘_____ _ Read by Everybody CoversPriaoe Edwerdilsland Likejbe Dew Irfeavy Fire Loss At - Scmmerside Yesterday y”; o: International Fox And Animal rese- Ltd. Wiped Out. ,_/,—_..e.__.__-_-_---- _, Summerslde had its most seri- ous fire 1n a number of years yes- terday when the three storey of- fice and plant building of the 1n- s. ll. ll. llpcns Fm New Term flint???‘ rlififiieiinmiiilarffiell. The fire was discovered about nine-thirty in the morning and almost immediately the whole structure was ablaze and dense clouds of smoke poured from the building. The warehouse pert was filled with fox feeds in dif- ferent stages of preparation and , Houston's University Weh- ‘d for the 1944-45 term yester- “y anfl the rector. Very Rev. R. y McKenzie. said that the en- mllmam for the f1i'st day was ll5llqhll\ more than for the cor- the total loss is estimated at $.- mponiling day last year." At 000. hour last night 177 stu- Firemen battled the fire for an hour and a half before it was brought under control and all day it was necessa y to play water on it intermittently. Only with dif- ficulty was the adjacent building, formerly known as the Soviet Cafe saved, but it suffered con- siderable damage mostly from ivatcr. People living there had to vacate with their furniture. The International Fox and Animal Foods Ltd. is located on spring street with an ell running out onto First Street. At one time a large building, formerly McNelPs livery stable also caught. Fortunately it was a completely calm morning or the whole busi- ness section of the to gléglslhSkllilfl been registered. the rer- w, mm, and it was expected that l me lotnl would reach 208 within l l d“ or to, corresponding prrlty Y closclv to the enrollment for the i last term. T]... tcziClllhg staff for the most part is the same as it was a rem" m, the rector continued. Tiler-c m two additions, Rev. Wilfred Iineau of Rilstico who is iakin: rharge oi the teaching of French mil Mr Howard Wight of George- town who is teaching in tile high uhool department. Canada lias licvr iir Transport Bd. ' OTTAWA, ‘Se-pt l2 — tCPi — Uompositlbli Cl Ullllailfli nLW iihfCe- i ill.\' lrurlspoi. ouard was un- noil ed icoily n; uoveriinlclll. ur- Clis prepared to a |;_ an invit- aucn to attend a ‘l-Ulitl aviation roiiicreilce Nov. 1 in tlic Ulllbcu sliitm‘. _ illlilitlons Minis-tel‘ iiowc. who has coarse of civil aviation under wn would have been endangered. The staff of the White Star Laundry located nearby played a hose on the roof of their building to keep it from catching. Mr. L. W. Hancock. manager of the international For: and An mal Foods Ltd. said that the loss was greater because of an un- usually lllrge stock on hand. The stock and plant are partly cover- ed by insurance. Mr. George Sheen is the owner of the building and it is under- stood there was some insurance ' on it. The cause of the fire has not been determined but it may have been spontaneous combustion. It third ‘en nunicnnens. a croivn con been nanletl onalmlaii of for a term of 1U years. Other members will bc: — All" Vice Marsnnl Alon Fcrricr. l0, Ottawa, Di0llC-'Cl'_lll the develop- ment of Canaan's -ilir trliilsnci'i. ya- km. appointed for seven years; J P. Romeo Vachon, 4e, iviont- leal, air lLlriB-Dort pioneer amelior- mu- “fills-ant glllpCrllltlillflltllt of inc eastern division trans-Canada. Air Lilies. BlPDOIXItCC for icin- 1111118 lillitilllifi EVENTS "Show. Ompaud. Tlaursdagzls apparently started on the floor. The building was of construction-S. Seck Writ 0f Helms llerpus HALIFAX. 59D!- ll — (CP) —- A writ of" Habeas Corpus was sought today for the release of a Royal Canadian Mounted Police- 4, man jailed b his commanding officer for in ractlon of the RC. l P. Act. "slim (‘Mme Cm” F"dj;1,-,_.,,!M'~rae Constable. R. J. Hannah. " had been committed to jail for 14 days with hard labor by Assistant Commissioner A. N. Eames here on four charges of violating the Act Fm,“ —intoxicatioh. absence without 9,1141 leave, using a police car on other than police duty and operating a "Chicken supper and dance. Lot 6 iiall, Sent. 15in. 9-11-31 "Dance St. Peters Bav 15th. Clifford's orchestra. "Dance and so lal in inkerman CH1‘ heiflllfintly- seliaoi Filfiiry, s: . ram. 9-13-21 - R- Rezan. K-C. apnea-Id to ,___ Mr. Justice John Doull of the ~~,___.,,i@ daugg 1n wilrglm-e Nova scotia Supreme Court for cilnCSdflY. . 13th. Sale the Constables release on the 0i llllltllts 9-12-21 ground the warrant of commit- —-- ment was had. He said the Oom- "Cllilldlltl Seal-lat Gharotci- mect- mlssloner had imposed the 14- in; "iliursduyv, scpt. 14 Crmlaud dQy sentence gpgglfyjng Hill 9-13-11 the time for each char g . Mr. Justice Doull adjolfrned the hearing until tomorrow. "Dance in Morell Hull. Wednes- day. Scot. 13th. Good musics. "Chest Clinic Sands ill bulldiliiii occupied by Dr. Smdliwoud. Scot. l4 - z to 4 pm. 9-12-21 Beurliing Expects To Go To Far East "Alberrv Plains Hall, Friday‘. 5am 15th Millvlew orchestral. Ll-tIlChls. r B- -ll i- " Mi . WINNIPKI. 569$. l2 -— (OP) — “luv Cream Fcsiival and dancc. Flt. Lt. George (Duns) Deurlllll. mi Bella Creek School. Friday . 1am. ..o- l Canadian ace who recently I608!- 13-1 . .A. ed his commisgéon in the R. intwomonths heioldenin- terviewer here today. m ‘Ice Cream and Dance St. Pat-i 1. gether as soon as possible of the flan School, FTltlhy, Sept, 15. ~ 11-13-21 routeJoJ/arloouvcr. "Unloading cm‘ of Buckwheat m ‘lily Thursday, Sept. l4. Bring has. Dillon s; Scillctt. 9-13-21 "R04- dogs. saiuiwlchee. tea and he cream at Stanley Brlrlge Bail. y. Sept. i4. Hag-Moe allusio- "Chick - vWutl gilveiruppllllli ?nd..']e3da:ecs€1a‘yn. l! 3'00!‘ D- m"!!! r 1S. Supper served at d u-iz-al on n; mum Trout. lolsivln. Sept. ll - (Al?) - I hive 1110i 00011 an area in which more than 1 flying bombs were exploded in one spot by an air attack. The nightmare scene is about l half rnils from Ceschulen Railway station near the Albert Canal southwest. of Diest. At 12.80 P. M, Sept. 1 a squadron ef rocket-firms Ly,“ DOUIlCCd 0!’! b Gifmln manned train of fort cars, each car bearing three fly I b01117"- wwlfllbltal dnlnce McGrogof-‘s - "choose. Montague. Saturday. . Webster's orch-elsérgi u- - leotemberie “Chicken Sam , a - Re- gguwnelltl. Bi gegfld gtfllgrkganles w "l Rustico all, Tuesday and “invader. 12th and 13th Sep- mbtr- , 4-12-21 "Plowing Match and Livestock , b, u, 10,0. Wigglgggugd 4'“- “l-h- Filly}; malllfs i€:.‘f°"..i..‘.l...“‘i. fir: the not l M” w w B“ tracks. ind then circled Emile-in 1' I n -' 5_ m‘ “l "n" gdgfl, around and around i _'* m lbombi‘ 535mm?" “wolellhdo "saw, _ ex los ves n 01' - Bhtslra Pggfitfardgflgi- offlbvebsioiffcget “fir? ‘lltflslllll "ab: mo,“ ~ reds orchestra. Your not even mam, n“ the “flan Mn. w Wild Scene Where Robot Bombs Explode on w so feet deep. nearly twice a! pibyking off - beet old time and modern o: "lull- Bee h . hlbiti master who witnessed the attle . 3mm, “m, ,,,_,g_,=,,1,',r danfc‘ o. i. not, believeable now “tang f, "Haw ant-it. 0-12-21 am dill/Hi the noise wee so llnion 0f Tvvo Pacific Forces Seen Likely Conference At Quebec- Gets Down To Hard Work- y c. n. naacrtnunu (c?) - went into Q Prime President Roosevelt conference today with their Chiefs of St f and technical war ad- visera. and once again Quebec be-l came the nerve-centre of that _, which ‘ Qllllllifbseptll-(Alfi-Arnaaterplan shaped for bringing Japan. at a not too distant date. to the same desperate plain. between the jaws of an Anglo-American military vise ns that in which Germany now stands between Iulalnn and Allied armies. That. is about all the information available on the confe I ‘fl Minister Churchill and their top ranking army, navy and a-lr expel-ta III-in to the bllllll 0! the St. Lawrence. It is about all that will ever be revealed except ll "l! conference decisions are finally diaololed In action. It ls reasonably certain. however. that the pattern of action in the Pac- lfie theatre itself is not immediately involved. That was already shaped. It is being put into swift execution with every Indication that. long before In Quebec can be taken. Allied forces will have forced their way into the Philippines, driven deeper also lute the central approaches in the China sen, perhaps even have gained bases the further steps now being War Situation Last Nigh z flood which has swept the Axislin Japan's Kurfle Islands. to the verge of destruction. Their plans and designs are known to be directed primarily at the early elimination. of Japanese might in the Pacific and the Far East. Little else can be said with certainty of the momentous meet- ing which opened Monday morn- ing in Quebec's Citadel. Long Range a lanning The i0 previous meetings be- tween Mr. Churchill and Mr. Roosevelt have planned military and diplomatic operations which did not take place until later and it can be assumed that the plan- ning here is long range. Arid it is certain now. as it was when they met here in August. mo. that their plans will not be made public in detail until they have been translated into action in the fiel It seems a safe assumption that a major theme of the Pacific nirlg will be the knitting t0- f G . MacArthufs Coin- $3.155 {an til: southwest Pacific. and those under Vice-Admiral ‘rd Louis Mountbatten in the utheast Asia Command, in‘ readiness for a combined air.‘ land and sea assault on Japanese mainland forces once the island- hopplng campaign has accomplish- ed its end. Complex Problems This will involve complex ques- tions of transportation and trans- fer of personal decisions as t0 which troops new in the Euro- pean area are to be transferred. and the enormous problems of records and 801111111191"- tO be taken around the World- In this connection it is con- sldered significant that among Mr. Churchill's advisers are Lord Leathers. Minister of War Tran- sport, and Lord Cher-well. Pay- master-General. For the Ameri- can conferccs this aspect of the gliobiem would be in the hands Lt-Gen. Brehon Somervell. Chief of the United States Army, Service Forces who is here to as- sist the American Chiefs of Staff. Churchill Anniversary This was another bright, sunny morning in Quebec and a hu- man incident began the day for the distinguished persons occupy- ing the vice-regal residence in the Qteqeh (Continued on page 7. COL 5) Evacuees Iiurry Beck To London LONDON. Sept. 12—(CP)— The flood of returning evacuees con- tinned to choke London railway stations today \vhl1e tilc govern- ment renewed its at: 1 to stay a- way until the ‘jall near" has been given. Among the tens of thousands rc- tluulirlg to the capital were many who hnd been one since the dairs of the 1040 tz and nearly ull were so laden with baby calnages. bicycles. h chairs. cots a-nid o- ther that they were un- able to ride buses from the station to theta- homes and had to wait for h2¥I_Ll' i495" - < l able," he said. "My house three is mile; away. You understand, Mon- si I thr miles away.” glee $5.1. fist‘. in the earth so deep the bi gest craters made by Allied Bloc uster bombs I have seen in France and Belgium. ‘rrein wheels were flung 200 yards or more from the tracks and wherg the ralibed had been there was nothing but a series of yawn- ing pits for a half-mile. Curiously enough, l‘; of the 40 cars remained on the rai in what appareyitlv was the midde of the rain. Their cargoes oi fiyin combs were . melted an zwiated by the tremendous heat, out. were still recognizable. ' titles of vvaaebOlllld metal balls about two feet in diameter. municatlo On a prevlou Japan must meet bzlbly stand high .____ ___._ an armistice h Great Britain Social 0r Premier E C. today announced E Low. national lal credit Assocl has been relieved ization of said, however. Mr tinue as Minister ber of the dnlctrv portfolio cinl treasurer. The of Mr. Manning would be coiblnet M .' J Kaufman police station an the patrol will"! Evidence at so bee. three of us could not lift- one, ha been hurled more than 100] yards from the rails. These appar- entlynucfdr-ltained the Rt Mobilis- LLETIN LONDON" Sept. 13 —(Wed- nesday) —- (CPI -— The Mos- cow Radio announced today that ded with Romania, with Russia. Stiles signing on behalf of all the United Nations. Party Organizes EDMONTON. Sept. 12 — Manning of libs in the provincial cabll der to devote more time to organ- the national party. He Mr. Manning sold it. . le legislature for Le duc. had succeeded . [my Minister of Education and he had himself given up tahe trad Pfémlef‘ said Hon. Gerhar. Minister of had assumed the dnltiee salary and although he will not be a minister of any department the cabinet would still "have the ben- efit of his experience.’ ' Amherst Police P) - After an lnvestlgat on of shar- ges against the town police, Mayor line force today they were on m- batlon- and any lapse from would bring wholesale dismissals. The mayor mule the statemen after a special meet council had invutlg of drinking and card-playing in the the hearln disclosed. but it was stu all mem- bers of the force W810; not The Allied threat In Japan‘: s trans-Atlantic a. day the ultimate challenge of ' -‘ 0n the Quebec agenda. 150_ German Planes Downed Yesterday Defence Of Reich. tacking synthetic Scholven-Buer 1n the Ruhr. as been conclu- and the United against heavy bombers edit (C?) - ihat Hon. lefldfl‘ 0! I119 5°41‘ Misburg, an ordnance depot at atlon u! Cflnflda» Frledrlchstadt and an engine 0f hi8 W0 WYW?‘ plant at Kiel. let. in 01'- after RAJ‘. . Low would con- wlthoruit portfolio. E Ans y’ Berlin lllt Jet-Plane RAJ‘. SS ee and 1n- beccnle Dwovirl- mg German)“ c_ l; heavy bombers municipal af- and said Mr. Low minister ‘lthout tory near Vienna. 1n direct traffic movi and medium told members of A ted oh a l"! and refklerlee top in gets lest May 1, waanot d joyriding involved. announced. when quantity is limited. China Se: from the Pacific ls too hnmedintn, ton perilously close to splitting Japan off from the whole southe II end of her conquest zone. for Tokyo not to have realized its potentialities. pilgrimage of similar Churchill told the United States congress that and Excellent were reported in the attack which was described as "ln great weight." _.There was no immediate report‘ of opposition but the mauled Ger- man alr force-saved last-ditch defence of Germany - came up again for fierce. stubborn attacks 1.000 States attacked targets scattered throughout Ger- mariygtfcr the fifth day. . . M fighters destroyed phases during raids on six syn- thetic oil plants, at a. cost of 43 heavy bombers and 17 fighters. a United States Air Headquart- ers announcement said. Tar ets of the Americans were oil pants at Ruhland, Bohlen Magdeburg. Brux. Hemmingstadt, strongly-escorted United which of the States 15th Air Force attacked the o; Wasserbcrg factory at Ulm, where the Germans are building new jet-propelled planes, and an airdrorne at Lechfeld where many of these planes have been seen. Other Mediterranean-based bomb- ers struck the Allach engine fac- groundtroops fightin nto Germany, 150 France-based light and medium pcd more than 200 on anti-tank traps Since file llies lneny's synthetic oil p By Kin-he L. Simpson. Aaaeeiaied Press War Analyst ll being bore rence on high That certainly is what Tokyo believes to be impending. lt- can be read l in the deeper-alien with which the Japanese are driving to link up n land l communication route through lonan and Kwangsi provinces to the South China Sea. Iflllh nature Mr. would conic V1101’! naval power in the Pacific. Japan has elected. under repeated and gruelling defects. to keep her fleet hidden. And ltJs u more power is released from the European area by Germany's impending ‘all. Ways and means of bringing the Japanese main fleet to battle pro- cleallenge now as British naval Enemy Air Force Out Again For Last-Ditch LONDON. Sept. 12 - (CP) — A great force of RAF. Halifaxes Joined today in the daylight pounding of German targets, at- oil plants at Wanneciukcl results X01’ almost mbera and 105 enemy Even before they returned, the Halifaxes went out, several hours Lancasters dawn struck Darmstadt and RAF. Mosqultos dropped blockbusters on Factories While. and American Britain-based Jllasrags were blast- Italy-based United their support of Allied their way itain and at Scheld, 32 Civilians Head Eactward aombers bdjr HS O rn Force 0n Garpet g;;;,~;gg;;,=g;1l;g,,, AMHERST. N. S. t 1.2 —(C Pilots said German roads near the bettleiines were jammed with eastward. mbers swept over the vaunted Siegfried Line with- out encmlnterlng a single burst of flak nor any enemy fighters. made riorlty by miggg Finest for laid" Qualityiof flavour la of prime importance 10-day the _ forward element thrusting well into before Light Ger- lants, tanks tar- rmany‘s oil production has been cut 61 cent from blessings aerial fleets. Allied Headquarters capturing the great Channel many Monday evening from Other American forces were at the Germain border at a third point, maxed in Luxembourg wthin a mile of (he Siegfried Line and Gen. , Eisenhower, advising inhabmantsl of the Nazis’ Rhur and Pshincland border regions to evacuate immed- iately. announced that “the battle of Germany is about io begin." Gen. Eisenhower made it plain the Allies were going to storm into Germany in strength. “Rear communications of rem- nants of the German Army retreat- ing in o Germany will be subjected to bombng as devastating as that which preceded and accompanied zhe Allied campaign in Normandy", .-ils broadcast message said. “Civilians are hereby warned that everyone who lives or works in the vicirrty of road, railroad or canal communications. of military de- po s, camp installations or factor- ies working for the Nazi war mach- ine-. must from now 0n reckon they will not be safe ficm high - level or 13V.’ level attack at. any hour of the day or night." southward in France the Ameri- can 3rd Army hammered out new bridgehcacis across the bloody Mos- clle River, cracking the Nazis’ powerful defences and at one point between Nancy and Pont-Ayiousson forcing a German withdrawal. Moderate Resistance i The invasion of Germany from; Eupen was 10 miles south and, slightly cast of Aachen Though< this reputedly ls one of the inosti heavily - guarded zones of the Sieg i. fried Line. first indications were‘ that the Americans made their move against only moderate rests- tance from a scattered series of strongpoints. Both here and in the Trier re- gion to the south the Allies were moving into Germany over routes tlon forces marched in. The Bri sh forces then marched ericans movedthrough Trier. The Bit‘sh 2nd Anny deepened its dent in enemy defences north of the Albert Canal. despite stub- bom enemy resistance. ‘and sent one the Netherlands. -Biltub,fqrwebmlmlcjhelahold- (Continued on page 7. Coll 5) 10 PAGES save-Iowa..- eastward from Eupen and the Am- i $11 Redhflil 0! MAXIM‘ el a l HIRE MAN \ 111; wunt in the III}. port of Le Havre. Luxembourg. llnll. $4.00: other Prowl”! k USA. $0.00. lnbsorbflon Delivered. .00. Residential- Rhine, Ruler Aregiwarned LONDON, Sept. 12 - (CP) — The American 1st ‘Army carried the war onio the “holy soil” of Germany for the second time within 24 hours today, driving at lent six miles eastward beyond the Belgian border city 0f EllPflb "M19 35o "u" m u" W!!!’ British troops operating with the 1st Canadian army gained an important victory by The second penetration of Germany was 65 miles north and slightly west of the invasion pathway northwest of Trier where other 1st Army units blasted into Ger- l Germans Report Big Soviet Nazis Predict 5% Capitulation Demand Soon ‘i: LONDON, Sept. l: _ icy)... The Nazi radio predicted ton ht Push that Prime Minister Churn ill and President. Roosevelt “will agadress a. capitulution demand to the German people from Quebec’; wialch woulgcfallid ‘h ‘ a rea v can a a I the Allies with their debland for lllldflfldli-lflhfll surrender have robbed themselves of the chan- ‘goes which Wilson had in 1918." said a. broadcast bv the trans- ocean agency. “During the next Few days the ‘Gal-finer: press will be busy rem n ng 1 s readers of the dis- crepancy between Wilson's orig- inal l_4 points and the ultimate vgflslzbbllllta: ggizliltal circles con- sider that a call to surrender had as little chance today as it had at the time of the Tehernn conference." :I Le ilavrc ls Important Prize J‘ Writing Thlesday from France wirlere he is with the 1st Canadian Army. Ross Munro of the Canadian Press said that the imuortarlce of the acquisition of Le Havre as a supply port cannot be over-minima- sized. 1t will out down Allied lines oi conlmunicdtion a great deal and the supply situation will raipidly be eased and improved as soon as the 90ft is fit to receive snlps. No estimate is available yet. as to Map-lip Proceeding In Southern France Rbwitsect. 12- (AP) -—TW6I1- W lhwlflllli trapped Germans. remnants of the 19th army. are be- 1H8 Bwilnd to bits and destroyed be- tween the Allied 7th and United States 3rd armies in pockets exten- cling from the Bdfort gum westward 126 miles. Lin-Gen. Alexander M. Patch's headquarters said tonight. Official announcements showed what danlage was done to port 1n- stallatlmls but German demolitions were heard Rolnil off during the few weeks and bombing y Underway t LONDON, Sept. l2 — (AP) — Fall of Lonrlza, guardian of the southern approaches tc East Prus- sia. appeared imminent tonight as the Russians announced im- provement of their positions south and southwest of that beieged Polish city, while the Germans de- clared gigantic Red Armies had begun the supreme drive aimed at breaking through the north Pol- h front. The Soviet communique, one of the shortest in months, told mere- ly of taking some additional towns near Lomza, from which the Red Army was only 2 1-2 miles distant Monday night, and told of a deep- er penetration into Hungarian- held Transylvania in co-op atlon with the Romanian army. It was silent concerning such a great northern offensive as the Ger- mans described. such a new all-out push was in progress. Russian silence would not be unusual. Moscow usually delaying such announcements un- til it has solid and general gains to publish. Nay Ration Freight Bars MONCTON. N. B. 12 _. (CP) - Rationing of ra-i way cars and the implementation of prior- ities mly be necessary if loading and euéiloadlng operations are not up. That was the warning sounded i-Ofllflht in a sta‘ released by Rand H. Metheson, manager of the Trans tlon C0 ion of the Mari Board of Trade. Addressed to the shippers advis- Ofy board. the statement was issued on behalf of T. C. Lockwood, Trans- pmit Controllernit revealed that the railway our situation in Canada. was expected to become more crit- ifl-l. Dfl-Pilcllllfly during Spetember and October have damaged some port areas, .or there were defences there too. iiazi Border Greased In Second Place l WITH ARMORED FORCE OF}, THE U5. lst ARMY IN GIR- tlie 7th army was rapid Dlrcrzress in crushin! German forces‘, west. of Beliort. Americans driving, northwest from Ves reachedi Port-Sur-Saonc, about 33 miles? west of Belfort. Between Vesouii and Gray. Americans advanced north of the Scone River in many places. PARIS, Sept. i2 — (CP Cable) -Tears in his eyes, the Mayor of devastated Caen pleaded today that Canada adopt his city, the once picturesque "Norman Athens" of which less than one-quarter re- mains. It was at Oaen that C adian and British troops broke the German line-described by Gen. Eisenhower as the strongest de- fence the Germans had on the front. The thundering battle. cul- minating July 9 in the capture of the German Norman anchor town, marked the greatest triumph sincc D-Day for the Canadians. To the Mayor's pleading, Maj.- Gen. Georges P. Vanier, Canadian Ambassador-Designate to the French Provisional Government, replied: "I, think I can promise Caen that some city in Canada will adopt Caen and help her re- establish herself." Mayor Yves Guiliou had told the Ambassador he had come totex- press Caen‘s gratitude for the sacrifices made by Canadian sol- diers to give his city liberty. Cap- iurc of the city, he said. was "the MANY, Sept. i2 - (AP) - Thei German border was crossed this‘ afternoon for the second time in. 24 hours by armored elements of the United States 1st Army. Following the thrust late yes-j terday near Trier. a second spear-i head today drove into Germanyl fromlupirilielglanlorder>city. l Mayor Of Caen Pleads For Aid From Canada lng Canadians of the close ties‘ between Normandy and Canada‘ because of the sailors who went from Caen to the New World three centuries ago, the Mayor urged that the city which adopts Caen send clothes and food and Cana- dian parents adopt some qf the hundreds of orphans. Serge Goguel, youthful president of the student body at Caen Uni- versity, asked assistance from Can- h boar and refrig- erator cars to make available ra‘l- my equipment for the handling 01 an increased flow of traffic over. sens during the next six months. Vial‘ Clan llow Busy ole ever m 1S to Long as lie liovrf an’ aw: on Me! High tide this mm-ygyfl u, 7 4. adlan universties in b the SOO-year-old Caen razed during the battle. Maj. Leonard Gille, President of the Calvados Committee of Lib- eration. said Caen wanted Cana- dians to know what gratitude it felt toward the Canadian regi- ments which fought for the city. Those figuring in the liberation included: Le Regiment De La Chaudicre. Lake Megantic. Que, the North Shore New Brunswick Regiment, Newcastle, N.B.. and the North Nova Scotla Highlanders, Amherst, NS. Tanks of the Sherbrooke Fusi- liers Regiment, Sherbrooke. Que, supported the attack on Caen and armored cars of the 17th Duke of York's Royal Canadian Hus- turning point oi’ the battle of France." After reminding l‘ -speak- arlglmtoni-gtlgt aktBQA-S. nlrig . t and rides oarovgvit 0.388.‘ 1 i New moon 17. 0.87 a m e 10 minutes lat er than . _ BAIL! All Ell-VIC! 1- ... .. institution. Moneton Leave l" lottetovvn 7 a.|n.l 11.30 a.m.; 6 pm. Arrive Charlottetown 10.45 Ill-i 5.45 p.m.; 0.40 pJla. SUNDAY SIIVICI Leave Charlottetown ll noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5.05 I-IIL Charlottetown - New low (Daily except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown l Arrive Charlottetown 6.50 P. E. l.-—N. B. DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands-Mo A. bl 11.00 A. M 8.00 JI- P-U. sars, Montreal, also participated. Crlboe.—0 “it MA.0L1.00 FEIIY BEBVICI ' \