MAXIMS OI-‘A. MERE MAN 4| pends upon man to any new! llolfllm- n.“ new Duluth: Two 0am Iona" (Ea-din n., Iounded 1M1. .- if/ ///* The People's Paper Covers Prince Edwardllsland Like tlieDew //,/ ’/// "urge" _ ,,,,,..---" ""~v-.._______‘ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, sAruiinAYfuAYI 8. 1940 MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN The truest uii-itluin is a fruiiiii“ determination. Annual Snbecrlpllnn Delivered Sfitiu B! lllalh-PJCJ- $3011: Cnniiilie llllti LA. S-"ili. 1A4 rises" Troops iTake Up Ne w Prepa red Position Withdraw WFsT or Brussels To Protect Flank — Publig Asked To Keep Stout Hearts.. BULLETIN LONDON. May lB-(Saturdayh-tfl‘)-British general headquarter; hued the following communique early today;_ “Successful operations were carried our by u“; 33R yesterday“ Several enemy aircraft were brought down by ggnfl-nfl-cyaft End Sma“ arms fire in addition to successes of the Royal Air Fnfcg, "lllorale of the troops is very high," Britiii Place New Guards LONDON, Mav 17 -(CP Goblet- A stout barricade of barbed wire was thrown around tile grev stone adiniraliv iaiiilding. nerve centre of the royal navy. today. Khaki-clad --i (By Sam Robertson, Cana. dian Press Staff Writer! LONDON, May 17-(CP Cilbleb-Tdle War Office to- night announced that British troops had withdrawn to lllTlliireti positions west of Brussels but thiit the read- justment hiid been curried out without interference. tors \\.. l:i_v0i (‘tied rifle." lo - . rii across ieir illlOllidflllfi lllhlillpd The public ‘v35 “Ned up‘ Ii seiifixi-iiiiiv at its few mifftv on to kccp “stout hearts and HllTRflCES. cool hoards.” “Britain has faced like this before," said authoritative source. The \\':ir Office declared there was “no questitin 0f a (‘OHHDSQ or break-through" in the Brussels sector, where llfhile titficinis uicrc silent 0n rea- lflilS for tlic precaution, which WRS no‘. considered necessarv at flllV time in the. last war. it was, assumed, i0 be part of the "at the ready" fan instituted since Nazi parachute lroons were employed so successful- ‘ill the ll1\ ariou of the low-coun- ries. It eras understood barbed wire trotection xvii] be established -a- tests an ‘mind other kc- ovcriiinent. b ild- , _ his, H‘ d‘ g m u d I Allied and Belgian troops . i ta i r . . - ,. . , ras gsialbiidilatxl ddflllldlllg Lligydgivna- t had “wght hluu L‘ i" In“ tout Broadcasting House, homo of] lllt‘ (itlfmllllS east 0f tilt‘ ne British Broacicastiriiz Corporaq d“. in the vicinity of In“ .7 _ A - lon. _ "Tim-ii YiIIlI. Wartllne “lJtiring tilt‘ ni_-_;ltt of .\la_v _ iii-if, ci-riziiii iltljlhllilCllls to Of the front having heroine iii-- _. cessriifi‘, llll‘ l‘l~'.l7. \\'a< willi- “gmxowet May flzr-I-(QPI; rlrawit to irn< \\'\‘>l of S T?" 0y _ \ _ ii ' l‘ u" ;‘ _" qgnldi“ Airgrorxe h; hem liln>>il.-, il stud. lltis unil- ju>lnictit \\'-'l$ carried out ivitli- oiit inlcrtcixwirc." Folloiviiig the strategic witli» fixed at 3.500 officers and 41.000 llrmcn. according tn an order- gln-irounril tabled tn Parliament a). Ailiiiiirii fill Feb. 2a, the 0|‘- d. “ h ‘tlYlllV-‘ll, lirilisli troops now arc rsncstat the .t.rnth - ' . . ... mmmmrd Sh" be "l: ‘infxh inn: ill along .i t.iii.tl uhitli mum. nml ma" rnflud‘. m, p". runs to iiic s-uilli oi tlic Bcl- mancnt iii-live nlr forfl‘. ""9 F guilt czitiilzll. “Wm PP-‘PPVP. and such mvm- The ri-iistui for the withdrawal 2:‘ "I "m" "Fifi!" Flmlli" ivns said to hi‘ that. the Alitfcl coni- F Pcs attached to the ll. f‘. A. niirzid liad loriiiricn sillle tiny: ago "'"‘|‘""""'|-"- t-hiil. tlic (‘icrnian column which TT“‘— now has penetrated into Frarcc \ , could owing m the northwest, tio- ‘ ward the ea and atlcinpt a pincer ll1’l'~’l‘llll‘lll crushing the fc-nncir Bflllfll position. -—U- It was stat-ed that. whtlc the sit- llri t- on is scirtrlls it is far from crit- "Q for Notices in this en lumn ical. cents per word. l-Tuk",S_ML_ Stewart Monday No Reason for Dismay _._____L 39' 5 1b 3L looking hrcndli: at the situation "Talkies-AlarmTwiggy“ that llfls (i."\'f‘l(‘l‘rl‘(l in the past b-sia-s-ie-z», . .» ri-i- ill." Nzl/e invaded Hol- ,.T,_ —-»—€ la c. Bc‘t:.uni anti Luxembourg. aikics-—St. Peters, Wednesday. fltl1ll0l‘liflll\'l.‘ quarters in IflldOll ' L'513'5'l3-3|- f‘ll\lZ-lli’\.~!l't‘f| llicrc is ll')lilliIl-5I nt the t- .. _ f-“~— ,_ moment to cause dismay but clear tsiiie Cmm“’°"d°"c° clyflqshli‘ vsion backed by courage and dc- ,,.2,~5L_- P- uiircrs, all. Stewart. inn ‘Hfi-hla-IL i Continued inn " ire 1311701 a‘ I . m llflkP lillls mcrifni; Hup- "——‘“"' m” Lglgiilsil Cake Sale at. Mgoggr I . .. _ ,_ W , ,, British Press ‘urdaf’. ~ ome coo ng _-. afternoon at Holmairs. L-543-5-l7-2l. ‘(more Twelfth c ition at Springfield‘ ‘(Jjblye grid °" i'°"l=@1f- L-B7-5m-1l-lt3. "whit? 3PM dance cverv Mon- gig: d ldav night. o. K. Pres- " - b-zao-s-e-tr 'l*°it¢i'v Ire c Mm’,- ts ream and Dance. M M55‘, 2195111901. Lot 22. Tucsdav Faces Facts 0f Reverses LONDON, May ltl-tsnl-urdnyl- (CP CABI.-Ei—1'llt‘ press Lcday called on Britons. uiho did not. need much the grave war news. to keep their , g I chins up, work hard and not be- “tllmmiiize sat glcfns IllSl/llkllf: atflllhgbamygl-Ig iieve any wild rumcrs. No effort mid! show room was made to mzinimize the situa- . at 6 o'clock. ' s““‘{,‘_‘§§’-; tlon and nil the ncwsipii-prrs planed ,R -____ up on t-hcir front panes reports of ouxTiPflllc Bale at Blue Dot, German penetration m Belgium h" in aid of P. E. 1, 1105p;- aud Frnzicc lh. 4 to 8P M Heading its editorial “Bock To ' L-lias-ri-n-zi. ‘Taylor's’ w T m," h M"! pictures and V" 18*“. Iiradalhane Hall, n i - Victoria Hall May 2o. 55334-1741. ‘Concert f-“TT i ii Fredericton Hail. ,"e"'“Y M B o'clock. one or the The Wall." the Daily Express re- printed Lord Hale's immortal mes- iitzc oi‘ Avril l2. 191R. addmg that "in 1940 as in 1918 the mine Allies stand ruidy‘ to fight through terror to triumph." The paper declared that "every person in tlvs country who punks cu rumor. uilio open; lii- cars to eve r . r llrkciiiirioltetodiiiluCiggil tniralrirlrl] llror (lilval y! - tirits niiil opers his nmuded. Admlse on 15¢, tonlli to lii)-°"K l-timi is net-ping p5e5.5.1g.31.3|_ ltlers cause." ' L_545_5_18_31_2|. of n pep talk even in the face oft Conservatives J 0 i n Heartily In Liberal Speaker’s Plea For Action. OTTAWA. May l7 -—(CPi -—Ap- heals to tlic government iiiid Parlia- rncnt to spec-cl up Canada's war ei- tort and. at Llie same time, to pro- vide aiuiinsttifter rwar problems. were llL‘t\l'l| in the House 0f Coin- mons today from two vounrz niem~ bc-rs u-lio moved and seconded the address iii reply to the speech from the throne "Measures should be taken to oerinlt; viz-establishment. in normal life of those who were not afraid to ccmproinise their future to serve the cause of Justice and defend a threatened civilization." said Hugues Lnpciiile tLib. Lntbinicrei, movnng the address. Jtiines Sinclair tLib. Vancouver North; said Canada should “mobi- lize with ruthless speed evcrv re- source of this vast. country." in or- gder that. the Allies mil-flit receive isorelv needed war materials. .| Dramatic Interlude A dramatic iutcriurlc occurred bc- fore the address was moved when ,0imosition leader Hanson asked tht: Prime i\lllll5tl‘l' if lic had any infor- liiizilioii on tile grave war news which reached Ottawa in the early after- inocn ‘ Mi". Kill! rend an official com- munique iviiiicn stated German tor- (‘P5 lad, penetrated the Allied lines land that. "the situation is serious ‘but is not considered critical." _ Mr. Hanson offered the Prime lof the Conservative opposition in mitxfliiieaslirtis he might desire to ii _ u support gilppointment 0f jLt. Col. Fielding 'ls Announced , ___. i OTTAWA, Mar 17 _iCPi --Two iimportniit nillltarv appointments [and a number of others, the first .0! irianv cxticctcrl in the next iew iwceks, were ail-pounced tcdav by _Dcftiiiri- AIllll-Elfii‘ Rogers. _ | Coi. Afauricc A. Pope, until now ‘Jiiiiirttii- iii iiiiiit.ii-_v operations and ilntcliizcncc at national defence tlieadoiiarters. becomes Colonel Geri- ,l'l‘lll stiili at. (Jiinzirmin midtary _ll€€l»(l(lll3l‘lt3l‘$ in England and Col. R. |.-\. Fraser ot' Montreal becomes Of- lllCEY commanding the 2nd dA~IASAOAA_‘ lnl artiilcrv of tile Canadian Active Scrum Force. i Otlici" appointments to the 2nd gfllvlSillll are llic commanders of tiic. llircr- brigades of artillery. LL-Coi. l-l. P. Lloyd of Cobourg, Onto W111 'C0lllmill1(i the 4th Ficl Brigade. Lt. ‘Col. ll. F). G. Rooinc of Ynrinoutli. tN. S. llll‘ 5th brigade, and LL-Col. ll’. c. 'f‘css, of Vancouver, the 0th n . t. Appointments to auxillarv units include Isle-Col. P. S. Ficldiiifl 0f ‘Cllflfiflllvlfllvll to command the 2nd .medium brigade. artillery. Major W. A. I. Anzltn of Saint John has been made ucneral staff officer Grade 2_ assigned to liaison ilulitis at the general staff branch oi the 1st. division. Investigate Disturbance i At Regina lliEtllNA. May l7 - tP-Pl ~ Mili- tavv authorities toclav bvlliil lIWCS‘ titration iii disturbances in Regina last niizlit which resulted in damaizc of several thousand dollars. soldiers or several units of the Regina Garrison were said to have bccii included in the body of men which iiini-chcd from the Ct-‘ntffll business district and raided the Allst lull Kll1'llf‘ll. eleventh avenue festiitiriiiit; the German-Canadian club nail. tile Ukrainian Labor- Fiirmi-i" temple and ti DQ017001"- Briuarlici‘ C. ‘B. Russell. district officer COlllRlldllllZ, expressed rcflrfl 'todav and stated l'\'f‘l"v (‘"0" l5 be‘ iiiiz made to ascertain the rin lead- ers. "The necessary military iscip- llunrv action will be taken. he d!‘ clarcd. Tic heaviest damnrzc ocvllrffil Ii the pool room where John l-iesel. owner estimated his loss at $3.1m- | whit;- pi rrnwd of more than 40o sctdlers and civilians was tire-Will r\\"“"‘l "in disturbance was at "8 peak. it was believed tliiit onlr from ‘llti li 10o nit-it trnk niirl in iinier- iiuz the dammit-d buiidiiirrs. A rumor that. Nazi svinlllfllhil9f5 planned to celebrate Hitlcrs con- quest of Ho land was the apparent IIWLIVC for the disturbance- The rllmOl‘ wiu that a zroun of qN-mm‘ “Tu-m i)l'lli"f"l n celebrn- Hm] in llltlc-‘s Ilolliltitl \ rim-v iiiiil -i ii w". lillnfllpnt "ff Reizlun liml lll'f’(llf‘i0(l tlu- sivits‘ e wuu ti be fivillll from the owl 0m" liter-stall \vlt..tn l. uicck. i i i Formerly Of Charlottetown, Among ViCtIIlI-i Of Disaster. TRENTON. 0nt., May 17-(0?) -Tlie bodies of four officers of the Royal Canadian Air Force they died early today. The victims were:- Fiiglit Lieut. H B Jasper, craftsman J. R. Kean, Windsor, Ont. Their plane. e big Noorduyn Norseman, mushrcomed into Coop- er's Swamp near the tiny eastern Ontario Hamlet of Eddystone. about 25 miles west of Trenton. ‘The im- pact partially buried the machine in the swamp The crash occurred in the dark- ness before dawn. The bodies were found in the cabin. Farmers saw a fash immediately bcfoe the machine plunged into the swamp and "a burned-out para- chute flare was found hanging on a tree near the wreckage. The countryside was awakened by the roar of the low-flying plane which almost struck some farm buildings just before it crashed. Farmers said apparently “some- thing was wroni: with it" because "it made an awful roar." The R C. A. F‘. party from Trenton took charge and the bod- ies of the aimicn were brought- lierc for burial. with full military honors. tomorrow. An official statement issued at Ottawa said the fliers were engag- ed in a cross-country night naviga- tion flight and had left the R. C A. F‘ station at Camp Borden shortly after midnight last nights {OICWIHK their arrival from Tren- o ll. At Toronto. district headquarters announced the cause o! the crash ing Situation In By J. F. Sanderson Canadian Press Stuff Writer LONDON. Mav 17 — (OP) — Britain and France are face to face with the most dangerous menace w their existence as free nations since that dark dawn hour of March 21 191B. when the Germans launched tlze attack against. the British 5th armv which almost won the first izreat war for the Kaiser. German armored divisions have punctured or breached an extension of the Maginot. line near Sedan. penetrated deep into France, and spread like a fan. One of H1050 German columns has turned northwest. toward the English Channel. forcing the Brit- tsh forces defending Brussels to withdraw to prepared positions to avoid being caught ln g, pincer movement. In Its bald ofitllne that II tho situation tonlg t. There le disposition here to hide its grav- ltv but there are three factors inted to u emphasizing that II-ois not critical, far lees is it catastrophic. In the first place. French troops are holding the flanks of the break in the extension of the Msgfnot line. The line itself ends at the Luxembourg border farther to the ea . Secondlv, this bwak has been ac- complished bv the new technique of uslmt heavy tanks as battering runs while low- lying bombers help them to clear the was. Germans May Over-reach But no fleet of tanks however numeral can accomplish definite superlori v unless they can maintain uninterrupted contact. with their arfpnlgl base‘, fispecilégv for 3322a!‘- ie ir-nc ave rown troo in to the battle to hold the flan a and it may vet be shown the Germans have over-reached themselves just n; they di in the first flbfiatle of the Meme in ptem- The third factor the rroven superlorit, of the Al ted warplanes, particular y the British ‘to Ooerlngs vast armada. Clenine-n air ceauel- flea in the battle so far have out- niunbered tlie Allied losses bv three "ZEiiiTfiiiTFTiIBTF-“piyeh ‘c3137’ a graduate of and had attended school in PflllPf‘ Fillies Face Serious Menace Three Factors-F‘- "ls at present unknown," adding a court of inquiry had been con- vened and that, any further details would be released after were the in- brought to their station here for qulry. burial while a court, of inquiry Flying Officer Auld joined the opened into the crash in which R. C F‘. in January. He was McGill University Edward Island, where the faiinlv WiiinipPB; Flying Officer J. E. once lived. Pidcock. Montreal; Flying Officer mi G. E Auld, Toronto; and eir- Flying Officer George E. Auld had many friends iii Charlottetown who will be shocked to learn of his tragic passing. A son of the late Mr. George M. Auld. well-known wholesale produce merchant, Charlottetown, he was a gnu]- uete of Prince of Wales Col. lege and also of MeGill Unl- versity. where he specialized a: an architect and later became a member ofthe firm of Wil- sun and Auld. in Montreal. Shortly after the outbreak of war he offered his serviii-cs as a. mathematics instructor in the alr force. He was stationed at Trenton and attained the rank of Flying Officer. A brother of Mr. Auld “in; killed in the Air Force in the Inst War. There survives onlv one brother. Professor (‘lyd-e Auld above referred to. A sister Marion (Mrs Robert Beat) "flmlmm. OnL. also survives and an Uncle, Mr. Ernest Crabbe. Borden. An Aunt. Mrs. W. J. Robertson resides in To- ronto. He was educated in West Kent School and the St. James Sunday School in this (fity. lle ls 32 years old. The remains will be brought to Charlottetown early Mon- "W fivfifllng. and iutennent will likely take place Tuesday eve- ning. een Prevent- France From Being Critical. iiii" Raids Continued By R. A. F. By Pat Ussher Canadian Press Stuff Writer LONDON, May 17-40!’ CA- BLDJ-The Royal Air Force tonight continued its relentless bombing of enemy communlc - lions to hamper the advance 0t German columns, and the Air lltltnlltry announced the Nazis hld lost more than 1.090 nir- crnft since the invasion of the low countries was launched Me 10. ' dear/y damage wee caused by bombing rnlds on communica- tlone In Western Germany, on mechanized columns. units, transports and [issollne re- serves. the Ministry stated. It dented the German clulm that Allied aircraft losses have numbered 1.462 machines, say- ln| that the German lug-h commend "must have published their own looses ln error." The Allied loseq have been only n smell fraction of the German elelml. The eetllnnte of German loss wee lined on careful study of ell sources of information. the ministry said, but it wlrned that the enemy's reaervee "en- enn- elilerable and they for a time at least are able to sustain their effort." SPY-WATCHFUL DRUMMERS BIRMINGHAM —tCP) -- Com- mercial travellers are conslderinu measures to pievent. German sites moving about. the country as so "s- men u many did in the First. Great WM’ . l itol TWti cluiiiiiits KlllEli viiut LINER BtiMEii Island Member Of Crew Escapes Unin- jured. LONDON. Mav 17 —ICPl— Can- iflflvltlll (Ii"‘\\'lill‘ll of tlic Belgian liner tViilc Dc Briigcs were among hun- (iITKIS oi‘ i-eliigtirs from Ilfiilkllld and ilieluiuni who arrived in London on liiriiii after train today. ‘i Fiitv-tnrec $lll'\'i\'tll'.~ of the Ville Dc liltiuiis. lllt" ]fll'lll(\]" Lliiitiwl sLflhig liiwi‘ Prrmiri-itit llardiiiu. lll'l'i\'f‘(i in one ijltilli). 'llic,v told of tlii- rlr-allis oi tun (‘anzttliaii and Llvo Belgian sci-amen when tlie 11869-1011 liner was bonibctl bv the Germans near Antwerp 'l‘tics<la_v. and beached. The Cniinuiins killed ivi-rc identi- fied as David Dunn. about :.., 0 Hamilton. Oiit., and Daniel Duffy. .50, formcriv iii ltltinlrcal. iln Ham- ilton ii ivas believed Dunn was Dav- id Dunn. former steel companv of Canada cmplovei- who left. there taro mouths aizo to loin the Ville De ritecs.) Dunn. or Donn was the first as- sistant. ciiszineer. It ivas believed he |ivtis ow. -0iiic bv fumes flIlPl‘ the ‘honili explnsitins, Diiffv died in hos- ' tpitri‘ 24 llllllfs after the ship was nt- fttivkcrl. t All rt-fiizccs told of ruthless at- tacks f‘lll‘.l‘i* in the low (‘Ollfllflfls or 0n the rescue ships that. brought Simon Crabbe. third officer on the Belgium liner, Vlilc dc Brugcs, bombed and br-acl-ed near Antwerp this week. escap- ed uninjured. his wife was in- t formed today. Mr. Crabbe. f formerly a member of the crew 1 of the curfcrryi R‘. S. Charlotte- ‘ town. operating across North- humlierland Strait. joined the Ville di- Brunt-s two month: l ago. Both he and his wife were t formerly of Charlottetown. ‘.\Ir. , (‘rabhe lives at Borden. i tlicm v to Britain British and lrisii tiricsisi were among tiiein. i , Women Pnraehutists One nirin reported that parachut- isis wiin came down in Belgium in- cluded women. Tiicv used transpar- ent ceilniiliaiiii piirarliuies and were dressed in skv-biiie overalls. so that. tliev \\'l‘l'f‘ alintist invisible ln the aii‘. Tizov burned their parachutes as soon as tiicv landed. B inn \‘lDllililt"(‘ ticrainst. the in- va: was itidii-ntcd hv an Irish priest, llll‘llli)(‘l‘ of a ilartv of five from St Anthony's Collette in Tour- uni. l-lchsiiuiti. Oil arriviiiiz at a Belgian cimnurl port. the priest said. Ill‘ was shirtl- owed on suitpicion of llfllllfl a (ll<- RillSllPfl llflFflCllUll. . A5 he walked to cliurcli lie saw . . . 5 ,1 ‘s J m .n o’ f7 I on lllf‘ street, Footsteps sounded beliiiid iiim. keepinu tmce witlrliis oivii. llc knew he was bi-ziir: trailed. Ht» l'll'.l‘l'I‘(i lite cathedral. As 110 knelt in ilFilVPl‘ the caretaker“ come up. and nuiriiiiirori that. police Wish- eil in siwril". to him. He was iibic to ]\l"‘\:i Iii. lilvlllllv ,'lll(i tiiev retired. Tvlliiic liiiw ‘icrmnn planes re- .|t- i-ktid tlie (‘eelntz irrriups. 41 mothers liarl crouch- ‘ sir-spirit: children t0 l . c.. miracle that we were on. “There was ' lit’ . "It was fl hl_ hf‘ “Till u tffoutiniirirl on page iii. (‘oll7l ' women . ;wiili l)lll)ll"S llPlil clcsc in tlicir arirs tween a Hench officer and someone . ed into H“, fray E FIERCELY; PEGALNST NEW TANK DRIVF URtiEilPEEiliiFour Dead In mcANADATPlane Crash WAR EF H] RT Flying Officeré-eorge Auld, ‘Gamelln Gives Urclers To Stop Enemy Advance , Enemy Attacks Increase .51 Violence In Desperate Effort To Drive Home Victory. , lnulhfl- Mill’ 17—((.'I’)-—'l‘he Ii'i'cuch urnrv, llflilsi‘ ord- l ers from (rencral Gamelin to “(lie on the spot Fillllvi‘ than diiw iiitti ,i:ive further ground." resisted a (iermzin tziiik northern France toniuht in a clash fl(‘<t‘l'llll‘fl ll_\ tiii- \llll"l High (‘timmiind as "a veritable melt-c." Ilitlcfs invaders carried their \\t‘t‘I\'-f)l(l tiffiiii-iit- on the western front to a peak during the day with \lliiL'Ill iattiicks in Belgium and France in ii desperate t-{fiitt to ‘t drive homc a victory. i The (ierman thrust through Ilelgium struck ti! lli"i'~‘- ‘tscls, from which King Leopold's (iovcrnment Ostend. on the North Sea. The drive into France was directed throuuh a pm lcarvcd out of the battle-scarred northern plains. iiinrcrl iii DESTINY HINGFIS ON ]i.»\'l"l‘l.l-I "The fate of the lhithcrlztnd. that of our .\iiic~ uuii :1» destiny of the world depends on the battle in ciiiii-st-j <,. ,»-_. oral (ilzlmclin. (‘ommandcr-inflhicf of the Aliictl i"ii~i~ isaid in an order of the dzly. i “British. Belgian and Polish soldiers and ttirvl- iunteers are fighting at our side. British iuizilion ing to the cud, like ours. “Any unit which cannot advance should tiiiriifz‘ J's l2" l to he killed on the spot rather than abandon tin izzil: 1 xii ‘lnative soil which has been entrusted to it. \VE MUST ("ONQITER “As always. ztt grave hours of our history. lllt‘ \\Iil‘i'l of the (ll'(I0l‘ is today: Torsuticl‘ or dicl We must cons-iii r1“ I Ifrcnch troops barring the ivzt)‘ took their stiinii Jtiiilllltl {the Soditii-lfcthtil-Sambrt- tritiugle. driven it?» to lit Ill'it"s iinto li‘rauce lifter the German break through liiii F-t-iii-si- l’ front. t The Germans attacked on- . , . i ,. s, the west side of this bulge! yo"; W,“ "Aynenm; around Avcsnes and Yervins. — roughly 10'"and l5_miles from ‘Pmqmn the Belgian border, sti'ivingt,,1i,.},,,{, A. . to take control of the main jlfisivrl‘ iii _ northern highways. ‘i.3ils‘§§;.“§_... > ._ The bulk of the (icrmzins' heavy tank divisions lumber- , following iarmorcd curs and Whippet ' tanks which icd the advance. i CUQKOU c~.t>-l.-i... i ARE NOT" i l i Giant Tiiiiks NECE 5 5=h71“-~"ii French advices from the front said the giant miichin" cs were striking out in small numbers driving far from , their bases in defiance of old . , ' established military laws ,\_ {Z1 i s; Canadian Airmen Includes Eight Casualty List LONhfiN, Vrav lT-ICP OARl-Fii -—'I'iie Ar hiliinstrai lonisriit issued a rtruullv list that llll‘ltlflf‘\"l refit. Canr\aut<. t-lircr- dean. four missing and or» ivouitdcd. The complete list. included l6 killrd, three uioiund- ed and 98 missznsz in act-ion as well fir; ll killed. five woundql and ll] died on flPllVo service. 'I'l'ie list rliri not spcicifv dates. The Capacitors:- Plltvt-Otliccr A. F‘. Lcmaistre, pl‘(‘Vlt"-1l<l_\‘ rcprii-tctl missing. now renoirécd killed in action. His father lives in Winmpert. Pzlct-Oflicrir .l. T. Beriflvman. killed en nr-ilvc sci-vice: horn in Toronto. his family now lives in Wen-iblev. Fhielauri. Pilot-Officer L. O Rctzcrs. Iilevdmtraicr Sari’. "Wort rn actv" qirvlcc Potliicr. T C Reruns, lives at. Iilfi_\‘f1ll\lTl‘='t"l'. Corporal f‘- H Dxsnn. mlsmv believed k-“Perl: native of Mani- toba. famllv lives at Wemhlcy. l-‘riwianrl Pilot-Officer A. Vt’. .\I"li~llf‘\\'$ m unit. llflfll at lmtltbridoe. Alta. father lives at hfnnclon. N. B. Actlnz PWtbi-ltlmit. F! Parker. ntlci-lurz. father lives at Vancouver. F-Wvirist-Olficrr A. C Roberts; l i m» itiii. li‘i“iei' .l. J. Roberts, lives in‘ "iiiumi ll (‘ l l‘l""-'>(“'t" A It’. M ' Wll on l nevi" l F l‘ lrvl .i. Ollt . Iathrr lives at Waterloo, Ont. for protecting the flanks ofI advancing forces. How fur they hzid progres- tscd tonight could not be de-i t tcrmincd. t /. an _ ,__ ‘ ,__,,___._ __.-3£;'W \i t ,-\ir Forces Active l t (airman planes took oirir the _ ’ ___ i task of protecting tile iirnioicrrl ini- l viiinziii lint-cs lllltl tuiiulvti Willi Allied iii. i1l’l~‘ll iii iliiiiititclviblc‘ ,\lii~.iviiiim and iilflXllllill-ii 1' "lwl" ' doizfitiins, tiiiciis ‘q H British inirstitt planes nloiir were fllrnieon ‘a _‘.- _, __ __ __,______ \t'iiiit-oiivcr f‘ ‘ ‘. e-Tz: ...~ - l. . .. --.. y -. tCOXlI lilf‘(‘l on p; 4e 1.1, Col 3i fitiighllgl°li 4, p, .V\‘inniiicg i, .' ' . "Poi-onto ‘:7’ " Ottawa - i ‘ ilnternatzonal At Montreal Quebec ;. It. c Sum}, John ’,§ Li, i A I Ho l ax ' ‘,' i ance (Ill'.\l‘l()ll.€l.0\\'ll v _ <' iii‘ . FORI-ZFANI _ I i —-— Marriage i-rtirinil-is. viii-hi: filial t ‘ .'~; iis ' ‘i t (By The (anadlan Press) figa:i‘;w_1l“s‘,x“‘§_‘l!;‘m"? mm‘, [UL t Loxnos -n. r1. u. withdraw; to “ "1"" u, the west nf Brussels, taking up pre- ' iparerl positions: Air force announces _ _ ‘ liizlit $ll(7'i\l‘l'.\' it. ti" ‘ loll of 1.000 German planes; sltua» . , tlnn serious hut not critical in BeI-IXInnitclmi and cri\_ jizium and France; public urged to I'm“ shmwl‘ hlww‘, _ keep afoul heart. tmnnv secziius i» f n. » ‘ in“), Ylft‘ tlii. Infill-ill. rI\R‘§-—J\I"Pd Illllll command cr- ‘ and tiiiiiflltt 9' “l9 , tders every soldier tn die In his place; 5W1 -"""__ r‘ "YEW? Q , lrather than retreat. .l"-‘“»‘ '>“““"“ ' m“ ‘Li’, ‘, ‘. . i. . i Full iiiiliill M!" ‘~37 _ __ . , ,. BERLIN —.»\rmv command claims, $\"“'_““i'_ f" llflsnl“ mm‘ ‘l ‘J ' German troops enter “fllivwl! ancrlllilii (hmhlw “ ' trench Antwerp‘; northern forts. , - ~ i tram claims not cnnflrmod by Ai-l T" F“ "Rm ""4 Leave; Borden a 45 A \l. i n» i‘ u. l ROME —Ilalv, still on sidelines.’ itfmkpi Tmmmmn" H M A “ 1m sees relavalluw of British iiuntrn- ' '1' " P" ‘ l band control. ATIIFZNn‘ ~ Hrceec culls llp new" class of soldiers. < HI INF-fl § \TI'RII.\Y leaves lloiilett 44'» l‘ V Leaves 'l‘ttl‘lllt'llllll(‘ ‘Lilo l’ \l, tl\'l Y _ '21.“... me v;