.wi5aci|5ic Raid Alarms lolcyo a direct threat to the secur force of the OIL MERE MAN m Isllhl, ‘flilmqutiadlnn, Inna. I21.“ |e's Paper /// 7/, "fl-w- %>w r ---"’"' "“"--___--- \ Coven Prince lldnrdilslond Lire the Dew CHARLQ FIETOWN. CANADA. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1943 Read by Everybody A thin h n or t oft re- sted w h ifnntfflnrrlfiilnti. earned. MAKING 01A MERE MAN 10 PAGES In]! lllllflflbllou Del cred lime . noo- other Provlueu e u.s.s, um. “electrical stonn swept over ‘my parts of the Province yester- gy, In some sections it was lowin- “iiicibbiliilarigs were r orted to ‘ by luiiitnlns in no dmiosad k in Well- hout dam- “Xt Summerside hail stones. said h be as large as marbles in some “m, covered the ground I d pained for more than n. ha the district apparent. hit by the hail was ' me. l0 miles west of Summerslde. 114m grain crops were sold t0 be tty well thrashed out w of e glass in win . Lou MacMillan ent Miseouche farmer. had anes of Bless broken- were damaged also l fell in many rte o! u Province, accompanied R1115‘ flees by torrential rain. In Charlottetown the dwellln of Kathleen Hennessey on i111 tric WASHINGTON, Sept. l.—-(AP)-—In l the Javanese homeland lim has IDACHES to Tok o torn. for thc Tokyo ra o so. .- ‘Tnc enemy could have raided the was struck. ofri a powerful teak bombed and shelled Marcus Island. outpost guarding the ap- Avenue was struck and her do. tel‘. Miss Joyce l-fennessey l a. shock as she was closing dow. Not for away the res d Wellington, Company sin cause had t Hogan The lightning scorched the urn electric burned e chair but did to the building. No one‘ Arsenault nn The bolt entered the _ roof but did not cause fire. cials of the Maritime rtcd that 20 e burned out rin- idep the repo transformer fuses wer in the Charlottetown urea, cipelly in rural areas outs citg. uring the storm the corner of tory Avenue col known for sure struck by llghtn heavy r brought dow Linemen electric circuits r ,. few hours. i Some Damage Caused _ln Miscouche Section Green lo irno. Prince Counw d Gaudet a large tree on Longworth and Vic- . It was not it to fall. UnLed S y . The raid obviously had axatrong psychological impact on the Jap- malnland lf he wanted to, so the ie of Japan must further eolldifv the defence against the enemy." from e broadcast Japanese communi ticked at davn, Sept. 1—Aug. 31. was lied the land by naval guns A navy department test force raid had been planned Iiimairur in progress" Whether were considered a part Marcus Island. Japanese owned. lies 9 radio base and the southeastern approaches to t heln Woke Island. 1t is an air and location holds dominance over T0100 area. Marcus wow statement here a few hours later said l1 against Marcus for Sept. 1 and _ the phrase in "progress" meant that the Islan being battered today or simply that manoeuvres following th of it was not expialne . 00 miles northwest oi ene e of its strategic e becaus raided once before. March 4. 1942. Wit First word of the raid on Marcus. only 1,200 miles from Tokyo, came ue. which said the Isla lngton time, It said, "many enemy planer raided Minamitou Shirnauflidarcils) at dawn today. and the enemy carrier "is pre- d was still a assault 0d W88 Soviet Speaker Discusses MOSCOW. Sept. 1—(APi -—Ger- nany has inflicted-on the Soviet inion damage amounting to billions t! dollars and on all other Allies "ill about half that lnuch, Prc- fessor Eugene Vargs estimated to- day ln a lecture. adding the Rus- llans would claim reparations to lirevent the Germans from having I hliihcr standard of living than t countries on which they in- flicied the damage. M a matter ot economic neces- litl’. said Verge, Hungarian former B the University cf "Wllicst reparations should be {hit bald to the Soviet union and ° er countries which suffered oc- fllbation and then to Britain and hilt United State; where the relief ‘liiot needed immediately. e sxscified that Russia would got claim reparations as a punish- ent for the defeated powers: ‘ovlrwsaid i0 roars of work by 5m skilled laborers would he the X01‘ e dams e." sea-noun r0 user hale Sues Canal is 100 miles IN CENTRAL ASIA mglglasalltln has an ares of 201,- CCMIIIC EVENTS "my daily good second- ntn r - "a- this. iinPEiiil "t" “$5.72 "Dug" g9" . minim: lldpeuéllffa. is ‘grill.’ e-ai-a-a. “Iaiierttinrnent and Pi Social mm ° a“ ngmflhey lmi, Sopmmbeg-‘fl-ta. ‘ shadow of but may be dawn of e new life, wet Prices. Island Col storm ifidiiifii“ W- - . H-witn such“: be er u n o glilflhflpgl of the upon all those w us in love and new “i gmkégtailnt: loilglllvl and ‘geese: we u “llrlahwwn Institute Dance e-i We: mi. 1r “Ila. Hunt/oping BINDIN“ they lieve reduction of German standard of provide 1.500 million marks e Po broadcast. c . those countries hen others by the trend war a admon instead rather strong - ' is "hlkiek-Clnfie Cove may: a ‘ Th, ' f ' powerful and the end con ued: oo n fifth ycer of th He said the labor should lamented by reps n money. goods, nes and other deliveries. Var a asserted Assoc ated States would have fun since for the would be disarmed and d of large arms budgets I-Ie also suggested that the living would yearly W81‘. 0H9 payments. MONTREAL, Sept. l - (OP) Inspector Josaphat Brunet took over ccmm Canadian Moun isicn here, silcceeding Supt. Royal Gagnon. who becomes oi the _ Reginagvislon. Pope Pius Appeals For WorthyPeace IDNDON, Sept. to the leaders i ’° sin? any‘ given of encour Pontiff the and of ‘he ted Police "C" div- fi th ing today. would en such‘ a peace. ished against s war and ore of the immense bent under e l0ld of row. arctic» "l?! n r . ° sllillllfbl‘ and and a reoons conf Damage I Caused by Nazis ment t0 Germany and DBYIHEIIC l‘ D0!‘ cent H l- (AID-Po of t worthy resssd hope an year oi the d in "a l4- for time." and confl cor end brotherly truction. idence loved sons .. '0 d no feel united in IIOIK ‘ved a win- ence of Street appar- wire Elec - was lng or whether titre‘ h leétric wlrcts. am e o e‘ d wigiin a lty tates my- be sup- Russia lvestook, machi- after today Roy al head "actions which aging confidence inflame hatreds anew and then the determination in ro- re rred f9 the leaders of w .. ’ peoples,’ od- feated, would not endanger ie the H let, e not the destruction, ng and the thorough and we im- and Canadian Wrens Arrive Overseas - UITAWA. Sept. 1-(CP)—Arrival overseas of the first Canadian Wrens was announced today by naval service headquarters. Twelve ratings and two officers were in the arty which has Just landed in Br lain for duties with the overseas Royal Canadian Navy establishment. These first members 0f the Womfins Royal Canadian Naval Service to be selected for overseas - duties included Day writers, tyiiists, stencgraphers and clerks. hey will take ovcr Jobs at London headquarters which have been gglédled by British Wrens until Says Canada Must Co Part After Victory t QUEBEC. Sept. -— (CP) Finance Minister nsley said today that Canada must be Pmllflfed M" ter victory to do its shore in bringin about an international prosper ty. in developing trade be- tween countries, “possibly even in helping other countries develop themselves to the point where they can trade effectively with us and with others." Speaking before the 59th an~ nual convention of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canaddlnt the Chateau are pushing with efforts to for such international rictlo . “What I wish to emphasize to you today, however," Mr. Ilslcy added, "ls . . that we must od- vance with the some vigor and energy gfjer the \var that we are now using in the war itself. “We must pursue better housing with the same effort and effec- tiveness that we are devoting now to price control. We must con- ceive and carry out social insur- ance with the same boldness and thoroughness with which we have raised the income tax for war purposes. We must have the same courage and faith in financing useful peacetime development as we have had to apply in financ- ing the wur. We must retain ilic confidence that we have gained in the war. and shake of for- ever the frustration which fell upon us in the 1930's." The Finance Minister made it clear nt. outset of his address that he could not discuss the re ports of the National War Labor Board, saying. "It ls obvious that the Govern- ment must give ‘the most careful consideration to them before com- ing to a. decision on the import- ant recommendations which I un- derstand they contain." He spoke after J. L. Cohen of Toronto, Labor representative on the National War Labor Board. hrid urged publication of his own minority report on the Board's inquiry into labor relations and other lnbor matters, as well as the majority report of his two colleagues. Mr. Cohen told delegates that every moment during which the government “delayed institution of an effective. a soundumd u Just labor policy is a moment cle- dicafed to the enemy, fl. contribu- tion to defeat." ds e. i! A. peace. our fatherly apostolic ben- e edlction. While he did not mention the unconditional surrender ultimatum under which the Allies are waginl; war. the Pope again and again urged a spirit of compromise. He did not specifically identify those countries whose present ma l prospects are poor. nor did he mcn- tion Italy, the belligerent to which his phrase would most forcefully a he min his view mward any sated. or n lhlhhf Anglo American preparations for Marcus Island. 1.200 miles southeast Japanese mainland itself Just cast at the very moment A Japan's haunting fear that American The depth or that fliers who fell info Jil not for their riches but in keep Washington of a. ncw and revolutionary bomber will It is not an cue Island that based planes. Ami that, early future. Co Against ALLIED HEADQUARTERS Southwest Pacific, Sept. l — (AP) —-Jap:mese air force units in New Guinea have been forced by Allied raids to fail back 200 miles to bases 550 miles from the Salamaun airdrome in northeastern New Guinea. ' Today's Allied communique‘ snirl heavy damage inflicted bv recent attacks on ivcwak. 350 miles northwest of Salrimaua had caused ‘he enemy to base at Hoilandia The Jzipnlicse all‘ force, designed to support the forward areas in New Guinea, now is “dangerously removed" from the ground garri- sons, Allied Headquarters said. NIP LOSSES SOAR Nipponcsc losses at Wcwnk soar- ed to more than 360 planes as ll result of n 92-ton raid Monday ivlien 20 to 25 craft were wreck- ed on thc ground. The com~ munique sold the Japanese have been rushing reinforcements to New Guinea from the Netherlands East Indies, the Philippines and Formosa. Allied nlr attacks on Wcwak have destroyed great quantities sup- ies intended for Snlamnua. threatened with capture by Am- ericnn and Australian ground forces. Another victory over Japanese WASHINGTON. Sept. 1 —- (AP) -Prime Minister Churchill of Britain arrived at the White House lnte today to spend several days with President Roosevelt. While the British leader and Mr. Roosevelt will continue some utilises of the war talks started at Quebec, White House officials said that the Prime Minister's ar- rivnl here did not represent the laeginning of n story but the con- clusion of one begun in Canada. Mr. Churchill's visit, officials snld, probably will not be entire- ly of a business nature. since the President hopes to make it partly social. Mrs. Churchill accompanied hcr husband to Washington and their daughter. Mary, wns due later to- day from the southern States. where she had been inspecting war facilities. The Prime Min- ister and Mrs. Churchill came hcrc by special train from Quebec- Presldent Roosevelt met them at ihc station. What was described as a small. informal family dinner was sche- duled at the White House to- night and, in thc absence of Mrs. Roosevelt, the President's daugh- ter-in-law. Mrs. Elliot Roosevelt, probably wil ‘cs the hostess. .______.___-- ENEMY SHIPPING LOSSES LONDON Sept. l — (OP) —-'l‘hc United Nations radio at Algiers said today that 140 enemy vessels were destroyed in one months operations in thc Aegean and Ion- ian Seas. . victo s have no fear of ai e Pontiff began by that a few started he Then, he wor ‘ leaders had l d f slid. ‘lilieaiicrair and did not go deep into he rte" N- ear of the war," fifth "even ihoae who tinue . “S38 DO rel strength." he said," "need recalling deys before the war ace, 0 the ids l ache-d their cars but did not enlighten the mink? e I . "Today on the threshold of the he con- reckoned on swift war operations and a speedy end victorious peace BLQEE.“ template notnina but ruins" u to for thing but grief and con- By William T. Peacock. Associated Press War Analyst Japan appear- to have the litters as s result n: the well-advertised . , "hes Mmmu-r chunk"! Dili- it-the war against her. hrNcrvous anxiety is clearly reflected in the c at on that American sea and air forces which bombed “m; That is n. far cry from themboggt‘: Tokyo used to voice that the ancse homeland was safe from attack-a boast which w,“ pain bump]. raiders came winging over 1 ago. fhe quick reference to the mainland is another symptom, too, of fear was expressed in the execution of _ sun's hands and in the in Chinese villages wh ch sheltered others of the airmen, Many of the far-flung Islands which Japan has occupied were seized _ Allied uirpower In this light, it ls probable that neither the sztrztil-ni of Aliicd seupoircr nor the frank talk from Quebec, London and an early, n large-scale campaign In Burma is as Ominous news for Tokyo's war lords as the word from Isolated raid from sea-borne aircraft Tokyo has to fear. but sustained air attack from land- judglng from Gen. Arnold's statements, is in store for "l! Battle~ Continues to Churchill Arrives in the United States Capital ting and lhl|fllfllnQ"—-a5 Prime Tokyo radio's shocked de- shelled raided the Jap- of Tokyo, could have months hcr rifles. some 0f the and destruction bombers will return to siftughter remote. Marcus Island demon- Gcn. Henry ff. Arnold that use in thc near future. be in such as hit Mar- Jap Airmen air units was disclosed by a spokes- mun at the South Pacific head- qarters, who said American fight- ing planes destroyed 36 Zeros ivhich attempted to intercept n raid against Kahlil airfield on Bougainville Island in the North- ern Solomons. United States losses in the Mon- day’ battle against 50 to 60 enemy planes ovcr that important Solo- mons bnse were described as very light. The spokesman for Admiral Wil- iiam F. Halsey, Jr», Conunnudel- of South Pacific Naval forces, also reported that 227 enemy planes were destroyed during August in the Solomons. >- NEW JAP PLANE The South Pacific Headquart- ers announced the Japanese were using a new fighter plane, culled Type 3. in not area. for the first time. The new plane has s. liquid- cooled engine with more speed and power than the Z~:i'o's air- cooled, Radial engine. Also, it is believed to have more armament and a self-sealing gasoline tank. "But so far there 1s no reason to believe they are grcntly sup- eriior to the Zero," the spokesman sad. Local Soldier Seriously Ill Word has been received by Mrs. Ethel Rogers. U per Prince Street, of the serious i1 ness in North _A - rica of her son, Capt. Allison» Rogers. Cupt. Rogers Wns formerly of the Prince Edward Island High- landers nnci was mentioned in press reports recently as being in fiction with the West Nova Scotla Re- giment in Sicily. Escaped Nazis lire Reoaptured NEW YORK, Sept, l —- (GP)- Thrce men believed to be the three remaining escnpcd German prisoners from Fort Henry, at KingLon, 0nt.. are hold by au- thorities at Clayton, N.Y., the Canadian Press learned tonight. Nineteen prisoners escaped from the prison last Thursday night and by Saturday night i6 had been rounded up in an intensive manhunt that centres in the King- ston area. At that time it was believed some of the esottped men would try to reach thc United States across the St. Lawrence River and n. boat patrolyns se*t_up. A check Smooth Soilinq For Mi yourBokinq W hen you use M Convention SE NAZI RETREAT IN DONE bhhhhfi Hail With Electrical Storm Causes Conservative For 4th Kings ‘The convention of the Progres. slve Conservative party of Fourth Kings was held in the public hall at Murray River yesterday for thc purpose of selecting candidates to contest the district in the Pro~ vinclal election. The meeting, which was largely attended. was presided over by Mr. John J. Beck, Charles F. Richards acting a5 59C. retnry. Mr. Murdock McGowan, K11. mllir. was nominated by Med Johnston, Murray River, for Coun. cillor. This nomination was sec- ("K166 by Alex. Vanlderstine, of Murray Harbour. Mr. Malcolm MacKinnon, of Brooklyn, was nominated for As- semblyman by Norman Stewart High Bank, seconded by Malcolm MacDonald. I-Ieatherdale. No other names were brought before the meeting and the nomin- ntions of Messrs. McGowan and MacKinncn were made unanim- ous. Short speeches were made by the candidates, after which the Hon. Dr. W. J. P. MacMlllan gfl. dressed the meeting. outlining in his usual able manner the dir. ferent planks of the Progressive Conservative platform. The following resolutions. mov. ed by Charles F. Richards, sec- ondcd by Austin Bell and gllppql-L- ed by E. H. Stewart. were adopted unanimously: Thnt the delegates of the Pro- gressive Conservative convention of Fourth Kings express our con. fldcnce ln the leadership of Hon, 501m Bracken. the new leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of the Dominion; Th!" We eXfiress our absolute confidence in the ability and leadership of the Hon. Dr. W. J. P~ MflcMlllim. Provincial Leader; That we express approval of the Progressive Conservative Plat- form ftS set down by our leader, particularly that plank in it which refers to the improvement of our secondary roads; That we express also our con. fidence in our two candidates who are to contest this 4th Dis- trict of Kings end promise them our unanimous and utmost sup- port in the campaign. The convention adjourned by singing the National Anthem. (IPTTAW Sept, 1 _. (cp)_. [he Dom! on Buregu of Sig. lstics said today tlmg u. nlmafeg of the ap lg crop. in ntarlo and British Columbia have been revised upward since July, but that the gain had been Some. what offset by s reduction in Nova Scotlfl. “JR/ONTO. Sept. 1—(CP) ——Tor- onto and surouncling district police wnlght were searching for three rncn who shortly before llocn today rubbed the Royce und Sym- ington Avenue branch of the Bank of Montreal in West ‘Toronto of $12,549. OTTAWA, Sept, l-(CP)-— Should pressure on area; guf- ferlng from a. shortage of hous- ing increase, it "might be lico- cessary‘ to consider regula- tions restricting the movement of families to these areas, the real property administration 0! the prices board said tonight in appealing to all those whose work takes them to " eficlency housing areas" not in bring their families with then; STOCKHOLM, Sept. l — (AP) —-—German Gen. Hermann Von I-fnnncckcn relaxed slightly the drastic Nazi military dictatorship over Denmark today, the Gor- man-controlled Daillsh radio said. but refugees arriving here said the Danes were continuing their Some 5,100 C than 35,000 men in killed communique disclosing st Continuing advances almost everywhere up to, Smolensk front, ranging tanoe from four to seven miles. The Moscow war bulletin said the Russians routed the German 111th t‘.°'..fili“.is‘é.‘f."“i‘i “i Al? a agan - fllcted heavy d feats onmtiie 304g, e 306th and 336th infantry Ind 1 h des- tank divisions. "In these battles our tmo troyed 21A enemy planes, 53 tanks, 494 guns of various callbres, 1,500 machine-gum. 3.000 tnmks, 10 fuel dumps and 29 ammunition dumps," It added ‘IICQS and men were taken prisoner. ‘Allies Switch ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, North Africa, Sept. 1 —- (AP) — Suddenly switching - mer assa is to Northern United States four-motored bomb- ers delivered e mighty blow to railroad yards at Piss. of Tower fume yesterday. while Bri- tain's big battleships Nelson and Rodney led a thunderous shelling of the western Italian Toe. The bombers on a LOCO-mile round-trip, poured explosives on the centre of fie ht srds at Pisa and the elec rifi system handling at act 96 trains daily between Rome and also hit the nearby San Guisto airfield and Piaggio aircraft factory. Pisa lies 1'70 miles north of Rome. The raid gave Northern Italy s dose of the concentrated destruction poured for days on rail-facilities and airdromes in the southern port of the Peninsula. The famous tower. completed in 1350, and other historic monuments were spared by the bombers. Assaults on southern points con- tinued. Bombers from the Middle East smacked Pescara on the cas- tern coast opposite Rome. Leading the cruiser Orion and nine destroyers, the battleships Nelson and Rodney boldly stepm- ed into the southern end of the Messina Strait and bombarded Itri- BASIN IRMRIR Pimagc Germans Lose 35.000 Killed aptureci cl IQOSDONI 59F"- 1 f" (CF) —_ A death trap A°5°s Y the Red Army s encircling drive to the zov ea shore west of Taganrog cost Hitler more alone, with 5.100 others “Ptured. the Russians announced tonight in a eady new gains through four key salients along a GOO-mile battle line, rolled the Germans back and in some places well beyond. the battle line they held at the end of the first nine months of war with Russia. Large Bird is Source of Interest A lame bird. laid by some an eagle. was attracting consider- able attention in the Queen are alert last evening. Flor n, time 1 y“ be on the steeple of St. Paul's e Rood Church. '0'? was an em an it was s large owl. Boos 0! dlfficulluto g ' w" Some said i others that Hammer Blows to North Italy lion. Cr. W. J. l‘. MatMiIIan Speaks lit Clifton fortbethirdpolftgl eemgh s row the Liberal n43».- in u" "Ht district of Queen's were absent from Clifton last The meeting was addressed by the Progressive Conservative can- didates, Messrs. E. C. Holm and Walter G. MacKenzie and b the leader, Hon. Dr, W. J, MacMllle-n. There was a good attendance, many former Liberals tiendlng n well as supporters of the Progres- sive Conservatlve Party, Dr. MacMlllan in the course of his address dealt with the plat- forrn of hie party and received s. Splendid reception. Mr. George McKay of Clifton was chairman. The next meeting in the cam- [anilgn will he tonight nt Hope ver. we ‘F YU’ <~ lirin coastal defence batteries with their 16-inch. one-ton shells. meeting only feeble shore resist- ance. The warships also shelled the area near Reggie Calabria and near Cape Pellnro. They knocked out at least one big enemy coastal gun. The shift in strategy for the big bombers appeared highly ef- fective. They met only 25 enemy fighters, and shot down six them. Many fires and a gigantic ex- plosion in the gasworks testified pn§sive_resistance. LONDON, Sept. 1 - (AP) Allied plnncs. serving notice on Hitler that his fifth year of the wnr may be his most bitter, fol- lowed up Tuesday night's hail of bombs for Berliners with air at- tacks on raliivrty yards in the Netherlands and a Nazi sea-going barge ofi thc Dutch Islands. Hundreds of RAJ-I and R.C.A.F. heavy bombers tore ihrougli XI powerful German fighter screen in the night assault to rock Berlin with rt 45-minute deluge of block- icvciilng explosives that ngniu gut- ted sections of ilic Reich capital and left flames visible '70 miles away. The Air Ministry indicated thc second concentrated assault on to the precision of the bombers. sBerlin_is Rocked by Deluge of Big Bombs Berlin in eight rinbyis equalled thc LBOiJ-ton Aur, ow. Forty-seven bombers. eight of tliom Canadian. and one lighter were lost in the latest Berlin at- tuck and in auxiliary night as- saults_on nirflclds and other tur- getE-ln ‘France and the Low Coun- tries. Today German heavy artillery in the Bouiognc urra hurled shells across the Channel. ' Tho /iir Ministry said "great damage’ was inflicts-d mi Bi-riin Berlin acknowledged "coiisldrr- ribln damage." Returning crews said ground defences ivere comparatively in- effective but night fighters were bothersome. with’ ..,1' MAKE 313,; Ycua outcasts. - cont. your. _ Yo‘ 0011A Kate AWAKE. and tomormir morning at 1.5a. Sun sets this evening ni. 7.36 and rises tomorrow morning at 0, . First quarter moon Sept. 7, 5,33 am. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAYi Charlottetown — Summerslde — Moncion Leave Charloiictoun 1.50 a. m- 12.3w. m. 4.30 m. A vc Charlofeinwn l.l0 p. m. 5.45 p- m. 7.05 p. m. P. E. l.—N. S. FERRY SERVICE DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands - 7.00 o. m. end ll mm. end 3 p. m. Leaves Caribou - 9.00 e. m. and I pun. and 5 pn- i High iitic this afternoon ng 1.2.’!