_ f s. ~- 4 swims J _ Msxrus i , or A - ‘ ' or A i z o MERE MAN MERE MAN °l m-zwsswrsdr: W W“ sir" ':.":.-'.::c ".':’":.'::o'°'~c.. m c-mukhiracvs-t: A Read by Everybody rm: Covers Prime Edwerdllsiand Like the Dew qummgsn Cecelia, ‘In Outs “n,” “wit”, router ill! uu ."'l D AIR IBLOWS TOU YIIIIIU CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1943 lebeerlptlon Delivered, 80.00 lhll, H.001 othe- Provinces I U IA 8 PAGES V§IJIII VIIIIAV‘ CH NEW TIIIIZ PEAKS IIIICW Italy Expects Invasion Battle To Begin Any Hour Uneasiness Grows In AT A GLANCE n; The Conedlnn Preee ' wga can Ant noun-note‘.- l CA5‘, pound Cologne end lhm- hwg; U.5.A.A-F. attacks Neel-oo- eupied France: Britain's new ty- hoon is converted into I. fllllmf‘ Camber. 4mg“, l; Nazi sub- ‘|% hove been ‘ii-Ardent lnlo home h” lbl t rve ll oom- munloome eyentzesnsnd miniature pweg glint-l- MBDITEBRANEAN - 100 U. l. bombers lttlck Leghorn. Italy. de- gtgoying e light cruiser and tour “no llslpl: Axis invasion nervous- ness increase. PACIFIC-Allies ettoek light h?‘ sneee null vessels nesr Solomons and mid Itch. lUlllA-Ied slrmen better "Ill nu denim end supply denote in 010i section. LAT! TRAIN ARRIVAL - Due to difficulties in mainland connect- ion; the late trsln did not arrive until 12.! this morning. There were l0 M80110"!- CDIIIIEMEVEITS K 976K100 — lldon Bldoy. 0-20-21. A River grating‘- rrbuwe lever. Mlle Bay July l. 6-29-21 “Greenfield W. I. Rstlval and Dance, July 1st ti-30-ll. "Don't forget the lawn Party at lombaw July 1st 6-30-11. "Pslmer Rood Church Picnic Wednesdey, August 4th on Church grounds. 6-22-5i. "Vlcloril Wednesday, Alexandra Thursday. Free sound movies, mt- tonal mun more. s-ao-u 1*‘. -. . "Alexandra f ursdsy- Free Bound ovi - ational Film Board. -. fl~30-ll. "Sale quon _ 0nd seed potatoes and se ~ fled. John A. MacKinnon, Chum ll. 6-30-li. "Kensington Tulkles, Wednesday, June d0. 9 P.M_ c-3011 “Dance Summe-rffeld Hall Thurs- day. July 1. Auspices C.W.L. 6-30-11 "Concert and dance at Wilimlre Hall. Priory. July 2nd. Proceeds for P E.I L l-l. overseas fund. Spon- 6-30-21 sored by Reserve Army. "M99010! of the Conservative electors of Htpe River uill be held in the hull. Friday evening, July 31'"!- All interested please attend. Candidates will be present. s-30-ll. "DINE at "The Tower's" Res- tcursnt. Malpeque Road. one mile Mm Gisrlottetow... n Wed “Billy's and. 1,11 holidays. 0-30-ll. "Come and hear it. O. A. F. en- lnrtel ers present a Variety Gon- cert Travellers Rest Hall, Fri- dly. J 2nd at ll P. M- Proceeds for Gree Fund. Sole of lunches. 30-ll. ' v‘ Tomorrow being Dominion Day "ll l public holiday the next issue It the Glltdloll will be an Friday. III: l. ___;-.q:-_.~.,-...., o =, I Enemy Rashes Defences In Italy, South France Italy; Heavy Raids By Allied Planes Continue. B FRANK BBUTTO Assoc ted Press Staff Writer) ERNIE. Switzerland, June 20- (AP) -— Axis nervousness increased today amid ever-growing reports of intense defensive preparations both in Italy and in France's cen- trol Rhone Valley where Nazi Field Marshal Rommel was report- ed concentrating an estimated S60,- 000 troops as a barrier against Al- lied attempts to reach the Ger- msn heart of Europe. Italy expected the start of the battle at any hour. said the Gssetts De Lausanne, adding that the Italians believed an Allied fleet. is ready to attack the coasts of Sicily. AYWYK! Lyon. on the Rhone river in France, each morning German troops wearing diverse uniforms. including some of Rom- mel's Africa Cor s, are seen. said u Lyon dispatch the Tribune de Ganeve. Rommel himself was re- Alileil headquarters in North Africa. June 29 - (AH-Reach. lng for into North Italy across the width of the Mediterranean. 1C0 United States heavy bomb- ers hove dumped hundreds of tons of bombs upon the maln- lsnd port of Leghorn, spreading destruction in the hsrbor, rail- way yards and war plants and leaving the whole area covered by smoke so dense as to be im- penetrable flve hours after the lttack. This raid. thrown lmyesterdny without the loss of n single plane, hit an Itsilsn light cruiser end four cargo ships and left one of Italy's oil refineries shine. "Little opposition was encount- ered.” lt wu announced. While the port was shuddering for the second time under great weights of Allied bombs, Allied medium bombers and fighters resumed the almost unending unlshment of Sardiniun air- elds. In the whole of the day's operotione l2 enemy planes were destroyed sgainet lwo Allied craft st Sicily, too. won again under attack bv fighter-bombers bos- ed on Mails. ported stationed in n chateau ut Montciore, where he freduentlv is said to set out down the Rhona Valley tc inspect “vast aviation fields under construction." Frenchmen going to work at dawn in that sector were reported attracted bv "unending lines" of artliierv and tanks, tzlvmu rise tn an opinion among the population thst a new campaicn in France is in prospect. the dispatch said Unenslness grew Italv. said the Gazette do Lausannc. and cer- D rcbii izidiv 651.72)": Local Airman ls Commissioned‘ HALIFAX. June 29 --(CP)—Bgt Pilot John Alexander Lawson oi 165 Euston St., Charlottetown. is one of a group of Maritime airmen who have received commissions in Canada recently. the eastern elr commurisnnpuriccd _tonzght. WASHINGTON, June ZlJ-JAP) —In a. red-hot uarrel, Vice-Pre- sident Henry Wal ace accused Oom- merce Sccretsr Jesse Jones today of obstructin mportent phases 0 the United S Les economic warfare Berlin Radio Calls Med. iio. 1 Invasion Front By E. C. DANIEL Associated Press Staff Writer LONDON, June 29 --(AP)- The Mediterranean, where allied fleets and forces were reported massed for an onslaught. was described as Europe's No. 1 invasion front today by the Berlin radio. The Paris radio said the extent of Allied concentrations indicated that an imminent blow would not be slmed at Italy alone. The German D.N.B. military commentator sought to pin on the allies incendiary bombings employ- ing the "inhumane use of phos- phorous" slthough he did not ment- ion the showers of phosphorous in- ccndlarles dropped on London by the Luftwaffe during the blitz. This reference to phosphorous suggested another step in what might be a German effort to justify the use of gas~nguinst which they have been warned repeatedly by Prime Minister Churchill and Pre- sident Roosevelt. In other broadcasts. ell recorded by the Associated Press, the Ital- ians talked of five possible allied thrusts into southern Europe — through Italy, Spain, 'I‘urkey. South- ern France or the Balkans-and the Germans repeated their unconfirm- ed report that United States war- ships hscl reinforced the British fleet at Gibraltar. The D N B. commentator said the Mediterranean "undoubtedly has become thc theatre of war of first importance. . . The enemies of the Axis probably here have al- most reached the maxfmum con- centration of their submarine and surface naval forces and their land and air forces." The use of rkiosphorus. he con- tinued, had led to such hatred among the Germans "that the im- pulse of this feeling for the uccel- eration of measures of retaliation would not be under-estimated." He asserted that “squadrons of retal- iation will have to speak s more decisive word." nioEiFidT Cut lnjreccc NEW YORK. June 29 -— (AP) — Riots of serious proportions werc 1?. ported tonight to have occurred in Alhcns und three 0th " Greek cit- ies as a result cf we’ ;rl'(‘i1[l Ameri- can bombings during which leaflets were dropped and signed by Pres- ident Rcosevelt and exlllfcwnfl U" hope that Greek liberation is not far off. An NBC correspondent reported from Ankara that the serious street disorders cccurred at the Greek port of Salonlka. target of nn Allied air raid Friday. and at Larissa and Voi- os as well as at Athens, where near. by air-fields were bombed Sunday. He said hundreds of Greeks were arrested and many were shot by Axis occupation troops. Fritz m rum‘ OTTAWA. June 2o —(CP)—0nc man was killed. four badly burned and between l5 and ‘l0 less seri- ously burned when fire broke out shortly afternoon today in the Dominion Industries Ltd., Cordltc plant at Nobel. Ont. the Munitions .J l th t Wall co woiwiltyongi relrinol co “and nrls- i Departmentjlnnounccd. Red-Hot Quorrel 1.. U.S. Gov’t Circles Vice-President And Commerce Secretary Hurl Angry Words In Almost Unprecedented Feud. who heads the B n.w., said Jones "f led dlsm ' rlor to and immediately after d States entry into the war, to carry out instructions from con- gress and the war production board to build up rvcs of strategic materials wh h this country must - ZZU was _ m or *~ ~~»-- --- .. .. ----- statements" end called for s con- one plied with this state- greulonsl inveetlgstion. men - F The cls , climax to a long- “The release given out by Mr. 0|’ smouldering feud, was Vlrl-"llly Wallace todey is tilled with malice without precedent. in view of the Payers’ Convenience r» u» benefit t: and», lid other: whose Dominion the the governme t d th sharpness of are language thxéy usgd mlnlstrs i. confronted President Roosevelt with t hi” at row et to occur within h of eel family. 0 row flared into the open high places the two men occupy ln e dey sitar wsr food ad- r Chester C. Davies re- ed in dingreement with lstrstion Dolley, the m" h” T“ suddenly 2 Mama-llghffgk: d‘ First Wallace in a statement to a ‘m I " “l “w e senate conunittee, accused Jones. pr t. n , ‘m f?“ '7"- who aleo heads the reconstruction u", h’, ‘an m d?‘ 1",‘: flnence corporation. of “obstructi- mt m. "wf" "I" I‘ onlst tactics" of hemstringing work 1th b0! f i f 3. sheriff? swift.“ $2533 end misstatements. He makes two serious charges:- “l. That R120. had felled in the oucchue and stockpiling cf strategic and critical materials. The facts are that not more than 10 ts for t use hove been initiated by B.IZ.W. "2. 'l‘het .l".O. snd I hove ob- structed sn delayed programs of development and procurement in- itiated by .E.W There has been no serious clay by us of any vital l the statement in detail and be glnd to have a com- mittee of congress fully investigate the facts." [Air Cadets To» ‘Take Courses HALIFAX, June 29 - (GP) Practical courses for more than 700 members of the i5 Air Cadet squad- rons in the Marltimes will be con- ducted at eight R.C.A.F. and RAF stations within the Eastern Air Command between July 1-10, it was announced tonight , During the courses, the Cadetsl will live at the stations, sharing the i life and routine of the airmen. They also will follow an instructional schedule of subjects taught at init- ial training sdhool. The assignments include: No. 60 (Charlottetown) and No. 45 (Glace Buy) squadrons to RC. A. F. unit. Summcrside. P.E.I.; No. 39 (Svdncv). No. 46 (Sydney mines), No. 53 (Summcrsidv) and No. 101 (llfoncton) squadrons" to RAF‘. unit, Charlcttctown: No. l6l (Saint Johm squadron to RAF. unit. Pcnnfield Rlilgt‘, N. B. Reminder To Germans LONDON, June 29 -(CPi-Ger- mun broadcasts claiming that the. R.A.I~‘. hurl dnmnped or ricstroy'ecl' i Cologne Cathedral inst. nighti prompted the Daily Telegraph to- night to print on page one, ‘under the heading "damaged British Cathedrals". a list of a few that the German air force hit in the Baltic of Britain. Thcy were: Si. Paul's. Westmin- stcr Abbey". Coventry. Norwich, Ex-i Pier Canterbury and Llandzlff csthcdmls and Bath Abbey. Fish Shortage War Situation Last Night By Glenn Babb, Associated Press We: Analyst The B.A.F. 1nd United States Air Force are letting n. new record this month for tonnage of bombs dropped on Germany and u the totals rise there is a corresponding increase in the volume and bitterness of Berlin's anti-bombing ||l agenda. The nation that introduced to a horrified world the spectacle of cities destroyed by mass bombing now finds the spectacle appalling when the cities are German. With time for another blockbuster raid remaining before the month runs out London dispatches indicate that the RAJ‘. bomber commands June total will be at. least 1,000 tons above the May record of _l2,000 tons. ll. has also been a. month of unprecedented activity for the Britain-based American bombers- The cries of indignation and charges 11f KKIWRCIY grofidcust by Berlin are purt of the proof that the Reich has been hurt a y. But it would be a. mistake to accept them at face value- Doctor Goob- bel's propaganda office has a. double purpose in spreading, magnifying and dlsiortin the story of what has been dune and is being done to the Ruhr and o er centres of German war industry. Within Germany the effort is to steel the will to resist and arouse hatred against the airmen who have turned Germany's own weapon. the bomber plane, against her. At the same time the German radio is trying to arouse beyond Germany's borders oi’ revulsion among the softer-hearted of all lands against. the use oi‘ this terrible instrument and the experiment to determine whether bombing alone can make a great power capitulatc. There is a very definite hope that an a peal to the humane Instincts of Britons and Americana will be more e fectlve in warding off’ the punishment than the thousands of fighter lanes and anti-aircraft bat- teries with which Hitler has ringed the Ru Ir. For the Germans know that men like Air Marshal Sir Arthur Harris and General Eaker, the British and American Bomber Commanders. are, not. boasting when they say that this thing has just begun, that therc will be a steady rise in the power and destructivoncss of the attacks and that the peak probably will not come until autumn. 1n the German outcry there is a sinister note. not entirely new but more insistent than evcr before, said one trnnsoccun broadcast: “The expression ‘reprise! air fleet’ was heard for the first. time during the .asl few da '5 by transoceznvs military correspondent in quarters doub less well in ormcd concerning the plans oi’ the German high command." What this "reprisals air fleet" might be is not disclosed but there is more than a. hint here of a rcsdincss to try the weapons of desperation. if ll is gas, the Allies are well prepared. Second Spy Admits _ Guilt In Nero York“ NEW YORK. June 29 -(APl —1o1so a Staten Island resident, had Erwin Harry Do sprcttcr, 69, stood supplied Lchmitz with information; before a. U S commissioner toddyfconcernlng defence plants. _ _ . and admitted he hud been part of‘ De Sprettcr was u specialist in: the espionage system feeding the heat radiation and allied engineer: Nazi high command with United ing subjects rind as a consultant‘ States wnr secrets. to firms holding war contracts hludl Th°lti‘"s°“°li' a Geffnrfgfigyg‘; ‘:§°‘§'§‘P §f,,§’°.}§,;“ WASHINGTON. June 2o _ (AP) c9115“ mg ellilffinegrtxlésé‘ Fredermd Iormavon h": tuméd ova} to “h, -Intc_rior Srcrctary Harold Ickcs. as gmhrgitttzomg?! Wstgtcn Ishnd vhtory‘ mitz at secret meetings the F.B.I. 115mm“ °°'°"dm‘“°r' “Famed m‘ gisrderer and air raid women cum-r said and added {o it his ob- fljyfhat n Shiligjm 1°‘ hglshu ‘f; .‘ . ' ‘ . 'ncr seems l0_‘-' n .e nle Lehmuz. etmglied 9‘ sky-xix‘. Eleatgg lsfryagoii; girgggpanclinggsjzcigsspré? States. He said reserves of frozen gumY 395 “P” t° ‘m m" CY“. ‘:1 m bus ‘shign I5‘ fish have dropped to 54 per cent of wumme mp0“??? Ac!‘ U c Ralf‘, "if; gm t e y ‘ last. year's level. “indicating a prob- UE 91°m¥“~551°"ftrt dvgargfb Om", "2 hgfinrforx: érdm. Do sprcmefl able 511011321‘ of fish during the Epflicifll llstfi 13c 15D‘? qccino: 05.1w “Ionic ‘vim hi“ Own b‘, “flan; winter months when cuuhcs are ciixd inorthglzégw olirielimitz yaester- in invisible ink bctwecn the tyocn- lhghlllang mm Storage mscrms are day. If convicted on the charges, written lines 0i‘ apparently innocent many law“ upon‘ the men face penalties of from 30 letters sent to “fricnds" in neutral vents in prison to death. ,coutries, and the material was for", s v Brig. Foster t ELE. Conroy, Chief of the New‘ worded from Switzerland, Spam; York Office of the Federal Bureau and Portullfll w Germany. Conffiyi °l _I"_"@-‘lEliB“_-_§Md D°__S_P§?t.t_°§-. 5,9,1.“- OTTAWA. June 29 —(CP)--Pro- motion to rank cf Major-General of Brig. W. W. Foster. D 8.0., 67, of Vancouver, recently hpp-Cllifcd Gardiner Defends Manpower Program ~—— m‘? —* surf... izmzztrivzi. announced tonight by (he Defenlrv Department. The promotion is effective from May 7. the dnln when he assumed his duties as commissloncr. ‘in ihc nnrthwcst 110st he is attached w ihc privy council office lo prfivifit‘. 035,1‘ lisi=on with tho war commitlcc n! the Cabinet tn which he report-S dirccllv. Ho ravent ovcrscns with the lsQ Ff‘!‘.'-l(ll'§lil divbion. but owls rccnllcd in i040 to tnkc crrumnnri of milk‘ By C. R. BLACKBURN (Canadian Press Stuff Writer) OTTAWA. June 29 -— (GP) Agriculture Mlnlstcr Gardiner to day told the Commons .his 194i forecast that Canada could pro- vide 1,000,000 mcu for the armed forces and still produce essential munitions and food was approach- ing realization. ‘ Close to 700.000 men now wercgln tho forces or tho merchant marine and more would be lllfllddd now liew Potatoes Arrive in Cnt. LONDON. Ont, June 29 —ICP)~ Prices Board officials today H11‘ pounced that two carlcads of new potatoes had arrived here from m“ m“ m“: period "r prepay“ Virginia and now are in the hands mrv district Nn. l2 (Regina). In gitixlircwilziasoi/ihrnrgsglilg: iigufwgjg of wholesalers ready for disivlblr} FlfibflillYV. 104?. hr was mmninicd~ House members to get throu h the Pnrliumexiiury program an ‘Set on, tion. The shipment was the firsl‘ in command M D No G (Ilnllfuwj of this year's crop received here. and last Jiillll i vas named rhniri Officials suid wholesalers would man of fiic Ms -n nfficmns‘ scicct- "train-busting" _ Northern France by daylight rind the Air Ministry said oneCanadiun pilot. riddled six locomotives WllllC two R.C.A.F. fliers shot up iivei more bctwccn them. ; COO-bomber ruid that pulverized 600 acres in Muy, i942. bore the brunt of the double-barreled night as sault which cost 25 planes. includ- Bomb Weight Dropped In June Isllecord Cologne Is Hard HitAgain; Blows HaveNot YetReacheclFullStrength-i- i BJy Rice Yahner, Associated Press Staff Writer LONDON une 29—(AP)-—Grcot fleets of R-A-P‘. and R.C.A.F. bomb- ers battered ihc llhinciand industrial city of Cologne and the U-boaf: centre of Hamburg last night to hit a new high in the devastation heaped upon Germany's war machine in a single month although June still has two nights to go. Observers said the raid on Cologne was comparable with the previous heaviest attack on the Ruhr in which more than 2.000 tons of bombs were dropped. Other waves of Allied planes roared over- the Channel late this after- noon ztnd evening. carrying the wsr’s greatest sustained bombs.“ of fortified Europe through its 11th consecutive day. At i) p.m. tonight, coastal watchers reported a formation of heavy bombers heading across the Channel toward France. R.A.F. fighters also renewed their operations over island Born ‘Doctor Dies In iilluincy, Mass. i Cologne, target of the first 1.- QUINCY, Mass, June 29 —-_(CP) —Funerai services were held here Sunday for Dr. William D. Square- briggs, 70. native of Charlottetown. and for 25 years an instructor on. the faculty of Harvard Dental School. Dr Squarcbriggs, who had practiced here and in Boston 40 years. died Friday. He came to Boston when 20 la study dentistry at Harvard, and lster set up e. practice there. Ho was a member of the Boston dental society Surviving are his wife, formcrly Clam Colman, .1 daughter, Jean, s. brotlicr Sfanlcv of Brookline, Mass“ and three sisters, Mrs. l-LB. Smith Rnslindaic, Carl Ab- bott. Orlando, Fla- and Mrs. Martha Bruce, Hclliston, Mass. Stockholm dispatches said the Cologne mid blasted German hopes ‘that new defensive mess- ures in Western Germany might force the Allies lo slow up their aerial offensive. 111g two Canadian. The RAJ". also laid mines in enemy writers last night in the de- laycci-ncilon warfare that. accord‘ 111g to an Air Ministry-Admiralty announcement. has sunk at least 400 Axis vessels. Huge Fires In Cologne Huge fires were s rend through- out Cologne and, athough clouds prevented an accurate assessment of the damage, the tone of Ger- main complaints about. a "terror" attack indicated that it was equal- ly cs destructive as other suture- tlon raids. Germany reported, without Al- licd confirmation, that the Cologne Cathedral, which lifts its spires out of a cluster of railway. industrial and business targets, was hit bv high explosives. Germun propaganda has con- centrated on such stories of dos» truction of churches and other cul~ tural objects uncl losses to the "civil iaopulntion." The rcgulur communique of the German High Command spoke of "heavy damage" to the cathedrul and reported that property was destroyed in both Cologne and Hamburg. Tried to Rebuild The nir ministry sold the Gel“ mans began nn intensive effort to reconstruct the damaged indus- BACK JPO-WORK PITTSBURGH. June 29—(AP)- —A back-to-rvork movement gained momentum in some sections. of the United stntes cool fields today. but an estimated 139.000 miners con- tlnued on unauthorized “no con- tract, no work" stoppage and ano- ther blast furnace-the l8th—wc.a shut down as coal supplies dwind- led in war industries. A few new walkouts developed in some areas. Over the country, how- ever. the number at work was 16,- 000 higher today than yesterday. Li“ (vs ALWAYs OMANS Pumice: {o Cuaucv. HER Boy tvlcs of Cologne immediately of’ ' - ' icr the LOCO-bomber attack inst: )\/\\_. your. I \ Ilccnnnni mice, it snid. showed. that the crnmns “had not tlic V . slightest intention rvnn up tu it few months. ago of moving inclus- tvlcs from districts in and nround the Ruhr“ Even some of the smallest factories. workshops and i“): m“ l“ ‘m’ m“ “i “mm” to th d r: es cl - " lb d 4n i n- .<1 1 1v. n- m were said u.» E32?” m business or on the Aid/sari: fcgiirdcelnstltutgioaridnbut osocme 1,°.§1,,§‘,_§,.,“,,",'“T‘,’,5,1, gafmlsfiqyvligjc? llmitjtanililclii igbilijllv. Cos Mxf Gardiner, who h,“ 10g; i, would be left for civilian consumpt- sonmm thebprfsenttwoféhsulgd hwués 10n- n e "v 2 " °" " " ry l/Vh NdZl ship for those who took their y Pgtrliotllstfn ‘seriously. Critics ogofiléov ARRANGE HARVEST HELP n m n s ru man's manpower ‘"- _ had alwu s fnllen back on scettcr- REGINAJRHB 29 — ‘cm — A" i Re- ;'.‘.‘.‘.i“§%3i8y£3.’lli% ‘liilishfiiurs. during e harvest season so that they can be available to assist in d lndivl uni cases of hardship but lt was the net results that counted hand Canada's results waro the admiration of and e source of ecn By ALAN RANDAL amazement to other countries. 221mg? y ogfefliiégrriiscultlrlixle clzmh (Cgnmflfln Pray,“ Sh" ‘vmcr, Mr. Gardiner spoke this nfter. mm“ o! Re m! board o’ trade‘ LONDON‘ June 29_,CP CABLE, mo“ “m” Han’ R‘ B’ Hanson illmpbyers wlIl be ufggd to an“, g —-Tbcre is general sgrenmcirt hc-rc YOPlI-Bliflblllyi h"! vacant, ‘mind! m coincide wit!“ that Germimv has temporarily '-- -_~"""'_‘ the harvest given up her large-scale U-bont m.- » ' tacks against shipping in thc At- lantic, recalling her undcrscas craft to home ports But the Gemran assertion that ls being done so that the submarines may be used to at. tack Allied invasion fleets ls doubled. For 50 years this trade-mark has guaranteed superb flavour lo the tea critic. Rather. the move ls seen as one effect of the heavy bombing olfcn~ slve against Germany. The U-boais have been summoned homo, it is believed by some authorities. lo us- slst heavily-raided shore nrcns, Subs As Power Plants The Dally Telegraph's naval emu respondent points out tlmt the nib- marinc is cupublc- of performing ur anizcd by ulv attack: it. (‘an cit ier as u communications base a power plant. .\ :-i (u lwo dutics iuvuhuible in ixrr-ns dis- Wimlewflvfi‘ "been If’ High tide this morning at 0.45 and tonight st 11.07. It is recalled that Brilain ex-i ploilcd her submarines in 1926 dur-i lug the gcncral strike. Then the; Sllbs formed n communication link around the country with thcir wire- lcss sets nnd ixmdon tvas supplied with meat because the submarines nt the Iondon docks provided elcclric wcr for refrigeration and lift mac inery as well as for the dock gates and cranes. In emergencies, the United States has used uavnl units for similar purposes on tho west coast and ‘thcrc is n0 reason lo think the xwrnrans are not astute enough to oflt from these examples. i‘ With their U-bcnt campaign go- ling none too well recently and in- ivaslon fears mounting, it nppczlrs there was good basis for the theory that the submarines hnvc bcen re- cnllcd lo help ofisct the disruption caused by bombs. form on esscntlal communications link around the coast of Germany, Ilflliilllil. Iiclgium mid France. or up ‘navigable rlvcrs, und bu lmrrl l0 ,ku\><'< off 1Ji‘(‘uu.<i~ flu-y would b.- isilCil smnil targets. us u ])()\\".‘l' "plum, onc U-born. Cllll produce lclrclric ivmvci" oquoiiup; 5 511131] ‘more power who; Sun sets this evening at 8.50 and rises tomorrow morning at 5 l7. Nrw moon July 2, 3.44 AM. Bummer-side tide 1a minutes later than Charlottetown. CAR. FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden - Leave 9.05 mm. l p. m. and 4.55 p. m. Leave Cape Tcrmentlne l1 mm, 3.05 p. m. and 6.30 p. m, DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAY) Charlottetown - snmmerslde - ncton l. Ch ltte . . 12:0“? méggllloa. 1 so " m rr ve or o eto 1,10 us p. m. us p. us." " m‘ r. c. r-u. s. scan senv c DAII. INCLUDING QUNDIY: nnidelllko-Irvindindnisnpfhrn? 1'” .' n‘ caves Csrlbo _ 9_ _ n“ u‘ ‘ N: 0O a m. and I