Imxms . 01A MERE MAN i “m ls no tyflbt like i i r i “Mgr-minted- “l M freedom where lta edicts " -*»*‘\"- w‘: 11-... . cutout, Win- mu ¢-----"" "‘---..______‘ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody MAXI MG OFA MERE MAN lie ta not worthy of the honey- comb who shuns the hives because the bees have stings. era Guardian. Ira Collie qgggdhn, IIIIIOI III l LLlED ARlVllES CLOSING IN BRIDE Great Decisions Being Made In Fan... city. s... or sen, ' conference of the war between Prime u ion Churchill, President Boosev ll ter llluclzcnzle Kin aboun Nhcre. Among the Ilnks with the at Capital, the only walled elt in ‘anadn, are President of the United Slates and the Prime Min- » such as the St. Louis Gate p etured 116W. Th! thelrpost import mosphere of the d: in Old World at ln the flclal seat of the [ate was reconstructed to blend with the Norman at- elt, and Prime carried out also in ‘the barolliul Chateau Frontenac, world famous Cllnlllllflll Pacific hotel. which is the of- ster of Great Britain and the fl t hel CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. MONDAY. AUGUST 16, 1943 HEIDI Old Quebec original town, a motif which was conference, the sixth between tile d in Canada. land Potato roli Threatened Late Blight Two Ldeade-rs To Confer At Quebec This Week lhhhhl Contingent Of Canadian Aimten Arrives Overseas s BRITISH PORT, Aug. 15 _ (cr- Cable) - Britain - based n.0, b0 r Al‘. bcsrlber and fighter squadrons, already taking their full part. in the steadily mounting aerial tattoo the Allies are beating on Hitler's Eu- Iflnean fortress, received substan- tiol reinforcements in the recent arrival of hundreds more Calico. ian airmen and ground crews, Arrival of these battle-anxious airmen, announced by R. C. A. F. headquarters today. also will h 1p eed the training machine wh h is turning out replacements for the substantial R. C. A. F. forces trans- ferred during the last few months to the Mediterranean area and now helping to administer the Coup do Grace to the Axis in Sicily. Included in the contingent was PO. Wacie Ixlghtlzer of Charlotte- town. By Kirke L. SlmpaornAssoclated Press War Analyst The outer walls of the Axls fortress of Europe were collapsin in the east and south and its roof was newly pierced by dehsges of Alli bombs ml ihls mid-August week-end but lt. is on an impending new mobilization of Canadian, British and American military brain-trustees in Quebec that world a tentlon centres. Under personal direction of Prime Minister Churchill and nesldent Roosevelt, top ranking Allied air. sea and ground warfare Experts are gathering in Quebec to chart new war directives for the global struggle. Thcy are set to take time by the forelock again and map new blows at ll reels back from the defeats Russia, in Sicily and on the sea fronts. ecisions designed to lop months off the duration 0f the war on all fronts are to be expected. But. they will be disclosed only as each new Allied slash in the mounting cumulative attack develops weeks the Axis while the enemy st Strategic or months later. 'l'here are several essential factors tn the war- situation that tend to reveal in broad outline matters which the experts are considering, The means to achieve desired strategic ends now are available to the Allies as never before. ' Mediterranean yictorlea that have made Italy in a mutter of weeks war paralytic nt. ful ally are yet to be exploited. One of the latest tangible clues as to the aly is Saturday's Rome announcement that the Italian government had taken steps to declare ‘Rome an open City effect of the hammer’ of It without. further delay. However ,there was evidence that the Allies are wlnnln tn another Churchill and President nolmrell jointly that 90 U-boats had been sunk in May, June and July and that new ships completed by the Allies ln 1934 “exceed all sinklngs from all causes by upwards of 3,000,000 tons." This development supple- ments reopenlng of the short Medite mnem- route to the Indian Ocean phase of the war. Prime Minister and the Middle East. That is n matterof supreme consequence for the war planner, gather- lng in Canada It vl ally bears on the to do by cutting iveeks off the period otherwise necessary to organize and deliver new and heavier blows to add to Axis misery on any front around the world. And time. working now tn Allied pen in Europe as another grlm winter approaches for Naal invaders tn Russia Nazi blitzkrieg veterans are In full flight from Sicily. They are eon- ‘lcted in on German hands Instead of hell?" oosevelt an- time element of-wha: tney can holle favor, ls the kev to what filly hap- Jhlhhh hurchill Pays Roosevelt 3-Day Visi Mr. P. W. Turner To Head Chinese Relief Campaign Mr. P. W. Turner has been ap- pointed provincial chairman of the Chinese Relief Campaign it was announced on Saturday. The national objective is for $l,0il0,000 and it is understood that this province's portion of this drive has been set at $10000. This cause ls a most worthy one. For the past five years they have been carrying war against the Japanese and are now lined up with the Allied nations in the 1mg battle against the Axis powers. In connection with this drive of- ficials stated that there would be llc house to house canvass. It is purely a voluntary effort on the part of the province's population and knowing the manner in which past drives have "gone over the top" the committee are quite con- Hlent that equal success will ut- ielld this one. Likely the differ- ent service clubs , also charitable and philanthropic societies will get strongly behind this drive. Complete details of the drive will be forthcoming from Mr. Tur~ 8 PAGES Iublerlpllnn llellvarod, 00.00 lall. ll-W- otha- Provlnoaa I ll.l.A. ALBA N MESSIN A IHIHM milhhlb At Hyde Park Fighting In Sicily Now Nearly Qver ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NORTH AFRICA, Aug. l5—(AP)—British 8th Army forces have blocked the es- cape of retreating Germans in the central Sicily area by capturing two road junctions, and United States troops are only 27 1-2 miles from Messino, Allied headquarters an- nounced today. The Americans have advanced l4 miles to take Oliverl in their dash toward the evacuation port. of Messiah. The 'l‘aormina road junctions at Piedimonie and Fiunie- freddo on the east coast were seized by the 8th army. Al- lied drives speared dangerously deeper on the central front itself. The British coastal units were within 35 miles of Messina, having taken Riposio earlier. A dispatch from the Associated Press correspondent No- land Norgaard with the 8th army declared German rear- guards have broken off contact at all points on the east coast and were withdrawing rapidly toward Messina. Norgaard also re mad that i'*_—' Americans thrusting orward from. Randazzo had cut the north-southl inland road. but too late to tfiipl Germans fleeing on that route. This‘ dispatch apparently went beyond the official headquarters announ- cements. The battle for Sicily wan nearing its conclusive end. Americans in the north. Within 10 miles of Milazzo, shattered Ger- man rearguard action, while U5 warships sent a crashing barrage the doomed harbor, second largest port still in enemy hands. Other Allied warships hammered the Italian mainland port 0f Vibfl Valentin, the escape outlet on the south side of the gulf of Eufemia, and Allied air power poured a hea- from this Swiss city, approx- vy weight of bombs on soul-hem rnately 35 mllea away. Italy, unding evacuation boats ,1 and isembarkation points and l l he d ii°iii1.“%é'3..§3"¥2.i’.‘.°f‘°“‘ ' " llixon iiov’t To Ball-Up Agg Resign Tuesday LUGANO, SWITZERLAND, :.“.:~...'°-i'.“°"":r.i.r ‘t’: er a on e a - llek on the Elorthem Itrallan Illdlilatfm clay‘ ohf Mllfllzflgrflflill at nu f t Sunday night, tifoorseeeond gl- sfirl‘: fr: twonrlghgs Iillgdh‘ tho r nc. urs a n . The sexplosion of bombs was audible and fires were visible TORONTO, A . i5—(0P)—~PI'e~ WASHINGTON. Allg- 15—(AP1—iMr!. Roosevelt at Hyde Park f0?’ fronted in Russia with a greater and far more perilous flight behind the n" 1" the 11931" 511mm" The White HDIIS‘: announced to-. day that Prime Minister Churchill‘ m‘ bughh dmad “W139 or ‘he had been visiting with President; ' 1° ml). has maul; its appear- t l" the Province, with attacks Ill ieflilbns of in: Island, it was The = ~ i" _ .. . . Pfppignein gfiarggfléiilguggomx-IIS: Washington D-IOIB proceeding to Li" “like for the Dominion . -~ ' srunellt cl Agriculture here. 1"- Pculglli said the situation not cl-hlcal yet but it could be- in o. few day; if weath- are not favorable. Pflqueat and complete spraying , _ mixture - - copper ma: and lime is the only snic- -1’\°l>l>ln said nothing could ‘i llkillts cllce the blight spores "" 8 _l\‘Ol1 established. It is only ‘ 199mg healthy plants covered "1 DPQiCCHVO bordcau that lll border.“ 8 ~ Uni‘ . it was learned, al- has been making rapid dress in the lost l0 days. How- -" blight should strike hard "1111? iunners would be faced 111 an almont complete potato |"_' ééiilllrc as the tubers are only Zllllling to grow in many @15- dry Weflthfi‘ u needed for potato crop, Mr. Pectin said. MAY Fur-m PORT “Waller. “hodesia - m) inbtlfitsios representing Beira. ""119 East Africa, southern Northern Rhodesia and Nyss- file considering the possib- Mlvl establishing Beira. ss a free iillllllll EVENTS I $11!‘? and dance Breadalbanc 8.1m“ undefe city a Rome broadcast “'1” "sinuous Wednesds . s-llal "lbw Ors ~ baud Thursd . ‘ “I-itl-fll- Qmlbrtuae United Ohurch luhwedneaday amrnoon, . - . 8-14-81. mllgmluq" "th- webatvrIntlghlliétlinAull : a-ls-zi. E‘ i», “roars-n In " -~ u“ " "t" ‘siren “It -_ p‘ who‘: Church tonic. Ora- ‘.'~ ti?“ “" °"'.'?.‘i'.i: ilggb°°ihks :0 canning fruit and "i" as‘; ‘slid. EINDIN Roosevelt at Hyde Park, N.Y in" three days. i President will return to the_wilr conferences at Québegthis QUEBEC, Aug, l5—iCP)— Prime Minister Churchill re- turned today to the scene of the Quebec War conference after a preliminary " with rresldent Roosevelt In "I9 United States. Three minutes after he a1’- rlvcd at the Citadel. Mr- Churchill had gone to his map roam and was hard at work- Ile saw Prime Minister Mac- kenzie King during the morn- lnlg and at 1 run. unehcd with his chief of atoll. Field Marshal 31r John Dill. head of the Join staff 11115519" In Washington arrlvcll several days ago and is tailing llflrt 1h the current discussions, w the White House sold. The brief annuncenlent follows:- “The Prime Minister of GIT-Wt» Britain, with his daughter, hrs been visiting the President and B LEWIS IIAWKINS Assoc ted Press Staff Writer LONDON, Aug. lli-uu-u-‘rlle Rome radio warned the people of the Italian capital today not lo build false hopes that they would be spared further bombing because of the government's decision to declare Rome an open city. While nllied govenllneilts with held recognition of Rome as an explained that the Badogllo gov- ernment's one-sided declaration would glvs permanent relief from air attack only when the belliger- enta on the other aids agreed and all terms had been met by the Italian government. "It (the declaration) will be val- ld only when a bilateral statement is issued by two belligerent pow- ers." said the broadcast recorded b the Ministry of Information. " e enemy must be allowed to ascertain that measures laid down by international law are all and integrally carried out." The explanation appeared to be part of a cam algn of the regime cf Marshal ro Badoglio to disclaim responsibility for any fur- ther alr attacks on the bomb-scor- red capital. Meanwhile. Madrid dlnpatehes ted Spanish correspondents in me so reporting that the bomb- lng of the Italian capital had "ended or should end all illusions" conconiing Italy's continuation of 13mm s....... ' ;ti."'o.;.... City Still Undecided three days and has now returned to Quebec. "The President is returning to Washington but he will loin the Quebec conference lllis iveek." The White- I-Iouse announcement was the first official word that. the two Allied leaders wsrc at Hyde Park. ihe ‘Loon-acre R0 cvelt es- tate near the l-lurisol RIVSI‘ in up- statc New York. The rlnlc Min- istol" left Quebec last Wednesday llirzllt and was traced as far as Niarnra Falls where a censorship blackr-ut ellshrnlldorl his movement except fer a belated allllouncemrnt he was conferring with the Pre- sident "somewhere in the United States." It was the sixth time the two m'.*."=': strategists have conferred lll two voars. their last meeting having been in Mav. Illl the eve of the filial intcllsificaiioil of the North African campaign. There was a clear indlcaticn Saturday that the two vrcre torre- tllcr when they issued n joint. slate- mellt reporting ih~ Allies sank more than 98 U-bOflts during May. June and July-all average of one a rinv. The statement was distributed here bv the While H3115" but failed to mention Hyde Pork. the war. These statements were cryptic and undetailed. but Madrid dis- patches said the stopping of all military traffic through Rome, as the result of making the capital an open city, would indicate that tho Badoglio government did not contemplate a strong defence of southern and central Italy. Borne Is Key Point This view coincided with that of military men in London. who point ed out. that Rome is the key com- ‘ llnna link North- ern and southern Italy. The Italian government an- nounced Saturday night that it hall decided to declare bomb-bat- tered Rome an o n city, but in- itial British offic al reactionmade it clear that the declaration woul have to be accompanied by demll- ltarizatlon steps before the Ital- lari capital is removed. from the list of allied military targets. It was indicated that any official statement would have to come from Prme Minister Churchill himself, now in Cmladn. I IIEADS ARCHITECT! LONDON -— (OP) -—'I‘he Royal Institute of British Architects has elected Percy E. Thomas of Cardiff as president in succession t0 W. B. it huge lcods in 22 minutes on the man unques ‘ “.. will say, as Mr. objective. The Dnlcner on a 800-mile front as red columns pour forward to engulf and — lisolatei the] f0ftllgfilflikllflliltl0llSsaffql onlce ikmpreignaiblek German hedgehc ront n tlc cas e ryan . lmo ens an K ar ov. When the strategic conference in Quebec ends, its chosen spokes- months ago. that takingicnemv weight off Russia still ls a prime Allied o . .- Churehlll said of the meeting three from the way alters that. '- -l w» in n» Training ls _ LONDON, Aug. 15—(AP)——'l‘ak-[ mg advantage of ideal weatheri conditions. R. A.l<‘. heavy bombers, struck again last night at import- ant armament focterics of Milan as Mosquitos raided Berlin and the Nazi air fields at the French city of St. Omer were attacked by gutted States planes in daylight to- ay. Four-engined Lancasters hit two vital scctlulls of Mllfill, dropping Breda armament works, the Italian equivalent of the German Krupp Works, in the Sesto Sill Giovanni dsi-rioo-and on industries and rail- ways near the center of the oily, the air Ministry stlld. Crews said "sucks of heavy bombs went right across" the Bredn works and that well-concentrated tires flared up as high as 6.000 feet in the central district hit two nights ago. The nlr ministry said photographs showed "very im- portant war factories" were struck n the flrevlous raid and that fires were st l burning when the bomb- ers went over. The Milan attack was on a small- er scale than the last greet bomb- illg of Italy's chief manufacturing centre early Friday when more than 1.000 tons of bombs were drop ed, but the size cf the raid- ing orec was sufficient to impress the peace-hungry population that no letu wastn sight as lony as Marsha Pietro Badoglio keeps taly in the war. Flavour is the measure Ansell who has resigned. Milan Is Target For Another Heavy Raid Always Reliable "ill-did and Coffee. "Salada” gives the maximum yield in lino flavour. Trooeeiling Apao Tanned and healthy looking sf- icr their first week of the annual Reserve Rrmy summer camp. mem- bers of the 42nd reserve brigade group ure ready ‘tn move tutti the The Berlin attack u Mosquitos m“? “dmmed s “g” °‘ m‘ “m? was a continuation ofy the repeat mgdhmr ‘hf Befiondfwwk- u n performances of these swift aircraft “i, 919% 03c IGIII rugs ed pa, s m," the Mich capital‘ whose pew of Pr lice dward son an from p1,, momentarily are Expectmg me Cape Breton and Plctou and An- tlgonish counties in Nova Scotia, fig: §I,‘,',',‘§,,,.’,'_°m squadrons U! heal these members of Canada's “citi- zen army." are camped adjacent During today and tomorrow, each unit will be inspected by Brig- Ollvert. British forces slice Taor-' Gang,“ 3w Bmwm. D50, min’ ' Run!“ ‘mad’ i C.. Director-General of the Reserve POLITICAL - Churchill returns - ‘P to Quebec from vlslts with Roose- to the Basic Training Centre at Beach Grove and in a sub-camp in the ordnance grounds, Char- lottetoivn. '___' t D.A. Wl it . DS-CL. Di t "t slang/the C“"dhm Pu" gifelger Cummllndlrlg Millturysgig- m": L‘ M- flu," Push "M11" 28: trict No. 6. and this afternoon the 5 ° c“ m” Ammum m1" men will he inspected by Major- Russm _ SW1" ‘“'"'1" ‘"1" Arlxyiyhflmlllllfid of the summer li;gg=gg;_;gpy-ghygg;uhurlg Gefflf; camp is Col. on. Full. v.0. ADC. counter-attacks ln Kharkov sector. 3m“ mmmandmg "he "nfimfi ls [Xlitlltliiil OTTAWA, Aug. I5—(CP)— Men reaching the age of lll this year and married men up to 30 years of age now are subject to call for compulsory military service under an extension of _ the csllupable classes an- nounced by Labor Minister Mitchell over the week end. The new order dropped the minimum callable age from l to 18 but provided that men shall not. be served with notice to report for medical exam- ination until they reach the age of l9 Years and 81x Illlmthfi- The extension makes married men between the ages of 27 ""1 30 subject to call for the first time Previously married men uo to 25 were made liable to call, and as the classes go by dak of birth those who were 25 when the previous extension was made now are 26 and still liable to call with their birth-year ass. England llaided LONDON. Aug. l6 — (MOIIdIlyl — (AP) ~Gelrllan night bombed an English coost town and other south coast areas. Enemy planes swooped in singly at intervals of a few minutes. A church and air raid shelter were hit but casualties were believed light. At least one raider was shot down tzljglyldlellgalrliierx?‘ Y‘ Rum‘ M o fe T71 n U .. B oats AERIAL — II. A. F. ombers blast alrcra factory near Vienna. I i dl""..irt.";t*.l.nia.'r-nimfii? Sunk _In Three Months l SOUTH PACIFIC — American WASHINGTON. AUB- 15-4591" bombers raid Japanese oil . "s- Prlllle Minister Churchill and tlons at Balllrpapan, Borneo In 2.. President Roosevelt triumphantly 500 mile flight; l8 Japanese planes announced today that "a total of downed tn aerial fighting along over 90 U-boats" were sent to the Paelffitlaltlefrnnt. bottom of the seas durng heavy " fighting in May. June and July. At the same time. the American and British leaders declared in n joint statement, which indicated the two may have already met for their current war talks, that the Nazis still have large reserve for- ces of undersea raiders and that the Allies can expect continued success in the all-important battle of supply lines to Europe only if illemost effective measures poss- ible are continued in force and even improved in results. The statement sold that the fig- ures were prepared after consult- atloll with lilo British Admiralty. the United States Navy depurl- ment and the (Jourdan deeper‘.- ment of national defence for nav- al services. The statistics and tone of the statement seemed to make it clear tat the one weapon on which lilt- otlsotisfaetionsvithflfw lor had counted to keep his fort ress of Europe lmprcglluble had failed completely at the strategic time, due to the overwhelming suc- cess of Allied counter-measures. Out of 2.500 vessels involved in tho operations against Sicily and lll moving large numbers of relil- forccments following up the initial invasion. the report noted, only 80.000 tons had been lost. Moreover. it was disclosed that new ships completed by the Allies in 1943 “exceed all sillklngs from all causes by upwards of 3.000.000 tons." Principal weapons employed in crushing the undersea menace are escort aircraft carriers which take their alr umbrella right along with the convoys. long-rang: land based patrol bombers wllichdrove for hundreds of miles out over both the north and south Atlantic looking for submarines, and dew stroyer escorts which are modified destroyer types armed prlnci ally with depth charges and ant -sii-- craft weapons. raiders last . mier Nixon said turday his 14b- eral Government defeated in the Aug. 4 Ontario election, will resign next Tuesday and Lt, Col. George A. Drew. Progressive Conservative Leader, will be sworn in as Pre- mier the same day. Mr. Nixon said that he and “as many cabinet Ministers aa can make it" will meet at Queen's Park Tuesda afternoon "to say good-bye to t e Lieutenant Gov- ernor ond leave." WOULD TEACH ENGLISH BIDOIGIOLM -— (C?) —Mle1'n- bers of the Swedish Public School Teachers Association, polled on the question of makng foreign lanmlage an optional subject on the school cirrrlculum, voted 75 per cent in favor. The great moi- ority wanted to to h English. ii (Alias lioarn AN lor- STARE To SfoP AN ICEMAN‘. HE'S useo ‘to ‘EM - Higll tide this morning at 11.3! nlld tonight at 11.45. Sun sets this evening at 8.0’! ant rises tomorrow morning at 6.03. Lest quarter Aug, 22. 12.04 am. Summerslde llde 1B minutes lat/Bi than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY l-‘Jftil-IPT SUNDAY Prom Borden — Leave s40 a.n L45 p.m. and 4.55 [lJlI- Leave Cape Tormentlne ll a. m 3.25 p. In. and 8.30 n. m. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAYI Charlottetown — Summerslde - onrtnn Leave Charlottetown 1.50 a. Ill i230 p. m. 4.30 p. In. Arrive (‘hnrlnm-town 1.10 p. II 5.45 n. In. ‘l. I p. m. P. l3. I.-N. S. FERRY ssuvm DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAY! Leave Wood Islands -- 1.00 a. n and 11 a.m. and a p. m. Leaves Caribou - 0.00 a. In. an 1 pm. and 5 lam. . - -.--.-».-_ “say-u- n-amvam-qs