MAXIM-l OIA MERE MAN n-ni-i The aalle matched a elel, malhnliotitllrolherlwn from nelt. >1} '_ nltllll rouoaa sen. "d" a a o-‘raiaa. 00h- QIMH" Iwa The People's, Paper >‘%// Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Rob not God. nor the Poor. lest thou ruin thyself body and soul. MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN CHARLUFFETOWNyCANADA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1o, 1944 civic ELECTIONS HELD YESTERDA Y Water Commissioners And Coun. Butler Re- elected; Messrs. LePag e And Rogers Elected In Ward Four. liay Discontinue Rationing 0f Meat OTTAWA. Feb. 9 - (C?)- il“"if.‘..‘lllli'tfi."-'lll ‘#32131 m! in the iliacontinuance in Canada camel. rationing and ties! BY- “ian. Miiilatera brief atonement followed a review bv Alrivlll- tnre lilinister Gardiner of the Canadian meat supply situation, in reply to a, question by John Blackrnore, new Desnocra leader. as to whether the 8"‘ emnient would consider per- anittlng Canadian ‘rodiuiiigraé: dispose of some United Stltel. Mr. Gardiner gave the House figures on aha lnorelaea in slaughtering w cl; ahflrilkefi a p n: smog an conga ato e made it diffiou to hand e. not the prices hoard ln I statement later ‘ nielt- - control situation would have to be reviewed ‘in relotio in the needs of the United Random." "All n regulations will remain ln force so lemmas the needs of the United ngdom oontlnle Ind provblon for the neoeaaary transportation arran- would eon be worked out," board aolil. §..l!@li.=s.j.-lla=ov0r - ._ $86,000 In Loot ii Ibb. O — (W) -- . Police toda ey had recovered about 080,011) in war and lotion bonds rtod stolen here l0 automobile of l- They found ey Paul nhisnm-ie, "l, who will be or- toniorrow on charges receiving. The war and corporation bonds and mam-once liciee had ‘liéilifitiillnao toailpgkuliieddlok- . ex . United some force co- ipiant here. ked bv Mr. his wif Wine ape-r‘ t-huntina. "me "Dance Orwell Cov i-lali. Wednesday, lees-nary 10th. bio-oi. "list- R0 it b0 h. Mills vi. Vxetylioylsgy. i-‘illl-tli ‘Ila an. l“;i’w'.“‘%»ui,"£§"n€‘°"“z a m’ nouilfltioo-Caunmdmié offlBulk glrheat mmfld. . . C. een, 2-10-21. “Le Y of Lunch: cggwl-Ilflnce and Sale rusty 11th. M) School, zlfidfi» ‘z "Mock mu s Scouts t River. meal. swine; iitzil "Vplentlfid f-Jiiicrén Riverlrmle’ tmshmenu-IY. F0 ruuy . s;s:~c.:::.5£Tii - in I , r Fibruary 21st. 3.3. .- , "An _~— . on. $t¥l§°°‘s"$‘m%fi.,"‘°w1ll“b - M. ' Monday, i108! for Davis a Broadsi- Hashim. i‘ m‘ list 0 moms. “slit. "rs ‘i . Wmghntksmbogltdefuim" med n "Won. c. n. sump ea __'_—'_ ‘ gfiiitrllifooli.‘n’l°rif."ii$ so lbs. ‘not’. attfi’. N“ W i-i-ii. h I01‘ Vi] fi s... ...‘§'*';.l::;;i Sims“: til ololiifriifil‘ “m” ,. .3; Oil all" %r every as W ‘iii-put. No- 4 feed om at blues."- slates ‘It Book order i-io-a-e- b-ao. "Notice-Jim ‘this week car ‘M m‘ Pi rowem, lhoernda hrni T. lqiine ' nrioee. . Ward 4 West Tbtsl Civic elections yesterday resul- ted in the 110-9181101011 cf Messrs. J. A. Webster, G. D. Wright and W, D- Glllis as Comnussioners of Bew- era and Water Supply, the rc-elec- tion of Mr. T. Andrew Butler as Councillor for Word One, and the election of Mr. W. Raoul LePage and Mo]. Thomas B. Roses-a as Councillors for Ward Four. for Water Commissioners with 650 votes. Mr- Gillis was a close rec- ond with 649. Mr. Wright polled 543 and Mr. David L. MacKinncn 211i. There was a close contest in Ward One, when, Coun. Butler defeated his opponent Mr Joseph A. Mclslmo. by 90-92- ln Ward Four of for- mer Coun. R. O. Chandler. finan- oe chairman durin the past two terms was unexpec d. His oppon- ents were new men in the field" his former collea e being the late Coun. J- E. erns. The voting was LePsge 329, Rogers 190, Chandler l 5d. Previously elected by aoclamatlon were Dr J. B. Blanchard as may- or, in succession to Mayor B. Roy Holman, and the following council- lors: Dr. F. C. Dougaii. ward Two: James T. McKee Ward Three; B. Earle MacDonald, A. T. MacKiii- non and Percy G. Gay, Ward Five. exception o! two terms has repre- sented Ward Two since 1906. Takes Oath Today The 01th of office will be admin- istered to Mayor Blanchard at 11 o'clock this morning in the Sup- reme mm mom by Mr Justice A. “rtfilr uit e 0t thv .”l‘h Council will be sworn in by the Mayor at the first meetlr; of the new Council this evening at 1.30, at mltloee will be appointed. The election returns were ann- ounced at a meeting i: the City Hall last night. at which the us- uul exchange of congratulations took lace- Retlrlng Mayor n. Roy Holman med; a. brief address, in which he h ‘ fee citizens of Charlotte- town for their support during his term. He heartily congratulated and welccm his successor - elect. Dr. Blanchard, as well as all the members of the new Council. He also expressed sincere regret at the defeat of Coun. Chandler. Mayor Blanchard then voicing his appreciation of services rendered by tlie retirins Mayor. and conaratulatinz "i" Councillors - elect. Couns. Butler. McKee. McDon- ald, Gay, and MoKinnon. who were present, also spoke briefly. connvnssiousns or sswuns AND warm surruv saseegeeesssc slum Eaizzasaasse-ss "moms ésssseesseacaee IWIPAA ‘Esussfssssssse IIIIPAA Bfllfi Ward 1 East Ward 1 WC Totals fies: mm 1552i E I-IIIOI 8S8- » Yugeslavs Forbid lilng To llaturn zonnou. ll-‘eb. 0- (OP) — The fr” Yugoslav radio reporfod today that Panto-sans meeuoa recently 0° had approved g resolution "forblddinl to return to Yuiwsllvil- Tho broadcast said the session had sent tel rams to Prim! Mia‘; later ch . t "0"" and Premier Stalin urlliii Twm 1mm of the vuaoww Mil“ , committee aautvhe only Rovflmme" in that 001i! - ma’ w a Kill m tale do mfrgkm ‘i u. s93... mur- ‘ s44. Haber, had c! the W00!- lev liberated ten-finitel- dl . :- me ‘mm n“ “g Co" iToronto by James Clark, for near- Se; "ma: Mr. Webster led in the balloting - 0f Education Elected In MR. W. R. LePAGB Propose Line In Persia Eden Says Britain Has N posal; U. GhargesPoorLeather In Service Boots OITAWA, Feb. 9 — (C P) — John Beckett well known Ottawa shoemaker, charged in an inter- view-line that» lnforior- leather and too much paper was lacing used in army and air force boots. Mr. Hackett was supporting statements made last week t1 1y four years s. member of the ins- pection board of the United King- dom and Canada. who was quoted by the Toronto Globe and Mall as, charging irregularities in the pro-, duction of “thousands of boots"l for the Canadian Army. The news- paper also published a defence dc- partment counter statement. t0 i; ll. S. Garrier Answers Story 0f Sinking WASHINGTON. Feb. 9 (AP) — The U. S. S. Ranger, in answer to fictitious Axixs claims that she had been sunk by a Nazi sub- marine mode a during raid into enemy dominated waters off Nor- way to account for destruction of more than 40.000 tons of Ger- man shipping, the navy disclosed today. The Navy told about the raid in the first report of war activi- ties of this aircraft carrier which has cruised throughout the At- lantic protecting convoys. carry- ing planes and pilots to the HEM- lng fronts, and playing a cart in the invasion of North Africa. The strike into Norway's waters, the Navy sold. was carried out last October. six months nftcr Hitler hurl announced that the Runs?!‘ hail been sunk and had decent.- ed Light, Qttg, Von Bulow. the "vine commander credited with the feat 0ntario llas ilhief Director to li'l T“ B. The pom that a sweepills recrlWflT-fiywh of the administration d Off-lit? L" pnrtment oi‘ education iollowins ii officials said here today consump- b thorough study of the rofiii-lrflnmm tlon of alcoholic fucc lotions is in- hfiflwm“ ll: b"; h“: of than. department constitutes 9 creams-in, with . arrested fol "when Bluelfgfltom won.‘ be time major stop in the Ioilfimmfiinni‘; drunkenness itlid suffering from m my their hands a‘ "bum- program to put fresh vigor" acute alcoholism admitted to the when may read u." The dowmen, the provincial schools - lhoepifnl almost dolly. Three 1, 1n the aluminum“, “mum his statement added that Dr. Alt- oronto deaths have been blamed pummmmrv oommnwes‘ h." house "enjoys the confidence of 01L thejotloxis. u,“ m. wait Ontario causal-looms 1M la well -"'" ~-- — -- . "1 , and favorably known hm!- the whole and his eincel- lent articles on Oanadianeduootloa connnnnd rdiwct abroad.’ Bishop Nelligan Asks For Prayers OTTAWA, Feb. 0 —-(CP) -De- fence headquarters said today in a statement that Brll. O. L. Nei- an, Principal Roman Catholic 0 aplaln at Headquarters. has appealed to Roman Catholic men and women in the armed forcu to join in a prayer crusade for early victory. = Ward Four S. Senate Demands Probe. eign Secretary Eden the House of Commons today that Grcut Brltuixi has not yet approved States pipe line from the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean and u- grecd with inquiring members of parliament that tlie would be profoundly concerned a- ggit any proécct tsso deeply a ec_,__ i‘ _ erea _. " ‘ilifemlligterf o or amiht Jvfiibleed anxiety on the possibility that thc| United States might iicquire Sov-| orclsnty over territory to be oc- cupled by the projected pi c line. gate, Conservative, asked Eden for a. statement as soon as 90581010 011 tho operations of the horelgn Oil Concessions Committee of the Un- ited States. declaring "there are a great many rumors" committee servutivc, if it would be necessary ish Government _ pipe line could be laicl, Eden said with all the governments concerned, would be required." followed publication of ‘a quoting officials of Slllldl Arabia that there were strong indications that Ibn Saud. ruler of the coun- try, would proposaL plans for from the _ iterranean led today to a Senate demand for n Corigessional invest- lgatlon of federal petroleum de- velopments in and outside the Un- ited States. Mar. Fisheries ’ Officials Meet varieties of 4151-1 and YODOHUUBHdDJr- ons tier the fish inspection not nre be- visors of the federal department ct fisheries iii annual The meeting is expected to continue until Friday Halifax, chief supervisor for custom division of the fisheries de- partment. lvfnriolme crvlso elude: TC. Collette, Neweastc, N. Justason, Block's Harbor. and J .J . Larabee. Charlottetown. MAJOR T. B. ROGERS s 011015;}; n Gulf Area 0t Yet Approved Pro- LONDON, Feb. 9 ——(AP) — F01‘- tndlcated lli proposal to construct a. United government At the some time Art ur Cole- about the Asked by Arthur Maison, Con- ohtnin concurrence of the Brit- bsforc such n was “obvious that consultations i discussion parliamentary story T110 approve the piuellne WASHINGTON. Feb. 9 —- (AP) The United States Eilvemmems a. 1.250-mi1e oil pipeline Persian Gulf to the Med- IiALIFADL-llolofil-(CP) ~Plaus nprove the calming of sevcmi l1 to bring certain products un- g studied here .~;v Maritime super- session heie The chairman is Col. A.L Bong’, i f: fishery alip- rs attending the mcetii" iii- ; L.1-1. Parks, Fredericton; FXE. N B..; ronosro nos provost PROBLEM TORONIU, Feb. 9-10?) -— Jail liot Debate In Commons (By FRANK FLAIIEITY) UITAWA. Feb. 9 —(OP) Canada may ship 1,000,000,000 pounds of bacon to Britain this year as compared with a con- tractual obligation to ship a total of 000,000,000 pounds in the two years 1944 and 1945. Agriculture Minister Gardiner sold today in the Commons. Drawn into the Throne Speech debate by an attack on the gov- ernment's farm policies by T. C Dvllslus Weyburn) Mr. Gardiner told accumulating surpluses of meats and the pro- blem of obtaining shipping to move increased quantities to Bri- tain. Old-Time Argument The debate had been expected to end today but it suddenly flar- ed into an old-time political argu- ment with members pounding their deskks in applause as Mr Douglas and Mr, Gardiner, both from Saskatchewan, argued across the floor. Mr. Douglas, Saskatchewan C. C F leader, started out by de- manding federal action to prevent further postponement of the Saskatchewan general election in which he will lead his Party" The discussion warmed when Mr. Gardiner took the floor and accused the C. C. l". of tak- ing its ideas from National So- cialist countries which had ap-. piled the principles of regimenta- tion and control to create full employment. M. J. Colclweii, C. C. F. Nation- al Leader, said the Minister had no right to call members of the C. C. F. group National Socialists. Mr. Gardiner replied that often parties had to accept names glvzii them by their opponents and ask- ed what was the proper name for people who wanted "National S0- fillfiilaliiik 9f, e1s!y.lh1nr_ 111,0»: m. . The Agriculture Ministers first remarks on the meat question were made in reply to a question from John Blackmore; new demo- craev leader. It prompted anoth- er question from Mark Senn (PC- Hcidimand) to which Finance Minister Ilsley replied consider- ntion "can be given" to doing n- way with meat rationing and meatless Tuesdays in Canada. Mr, Gardiner said later that a C. C. F. speaker had said the time had come when hog production was down. But if marketing of hogs con- tinues on the basis of the last three months “we will have close to 1,000,000,000 pounds of bacon to send to Great Britain this year. even with the great marketings of hugs which are going to our own market at present. Douglas Critical I ‘U i? ‘I PAGES or Situnion a Nit By Kirke L. Simpson, Aaoclated Press War Analyst Attrition ia taking auch a tleltdly toll of Germany in southern nufiSil ll to conjecture that a wholesale Nazi flight into Iturnanla may be im- pending. By Moscow account, nearly 30 German divisions have been chewed up i" llllmilbml"! b!’ Ml"! ‘filmed in Dnieper bend nooses within the past .:'::".:::"....'“ w" -—e o nneeenanes ndt Ki' It . tre end rail hnlwhave been loat. . e r W‘ n: mm cm There seems no warrant for a continued German stand in what ta 51 l9" l" N"! Wlliiil-‘hn l" u" Dnieilfl‘ bend. The situation calls alum] (m- la general (lermun retreat westward while the limited and gravely men. need routes still at Nazi disposal east of the Bu: River rcmuln open. Tliut would mean _a doninent of sizeablc Nazi forces cut of! uy the Russians in tlie Crimea, in the Nilmpol pocket and in the Cherknsy hag. let failure io pull out without delay might see even more lfllllitClllg Russian eneirclement traps developed. There is only one escape route still open to German troops in the Krlvol Rot, sector, and Russian columns to the south are rlrivin‘ W951. warrl to lay-pass hrivoi Rog itself and reach that line, the railroad mu]- lng soufhwcntward to Nilfolaov on the lower Bug River. That Cflliflpg ehnn. nel is menaced also from two other directions. Th; eastern flank of the second Ukrainian army iii the Kirovlorod nren in the northwest ls with- ln striking distance of n critical junction. Dolinskaya sand capture of this would snap the escape line 30 miles west of Krivoi Rog. Long idle lliusslan troops across tin river from Khesoon near its mouth are within 40 nallcs of Nlkolsev itself. A phenomenally early spring in the southern Ukraine prolaablv has upset Russian plans to close in on Nikoisev Jopplng off all enuthnr-rr communications for German forces east oi’ the Bug irr the Dnieper bend. A more serious blow oi Nazi manpower than even the present double entrapment at Nikopcl and near Cherkasy is easily conceivable unless the German high command orders prompt evacuation of the whole region east of tlie Bug or even the Dniester. There seems no logiea| r1154,“ for _ hanging on longer and every reason to get out before it is too late-and before wobbly Rumania falls out of th¢ war. Eomblng or Invasion Coas_t__l_s_go_ntinued House 0f Lords t l’ ' Vilfniles inland Bombing Britics - LONDON. _ steady bfllilbidlg of lhef-rc/liétlvmllial‘ vssion coast was _c0nvi£lu~€ new by RA F and United feta es '. w.‘ Y‘ ~11 rem“- shqpg at Tergnier. mi waft l d S issons Rfiwfifle 5%, $1?“ “ma? Aigerlcau bombers returned without. 10$- Tha Tar er attack hi) mil“? summed t e ns who hag coupon, Feb. e- (c?) - Vls- W" . . .1 ,, 1,. count Cranborxie, mlld-uranneied 5051i"! "éleoilxgmlonfiilth: {'35, gew Dominions SQqreLLi-YY. today denied tu kg “Mo? ma“ 20o mediums clwrges of tndlsouuininate Allied wee . led many returned wmv bombing by two ciergyincn mam- took part lie encounter Mm enemy bere oi the house of Laiglds and 35- gig“: r211“? pom n8 V0 Y ' ~ . ww- w a "we n»- srwcilltas per and suitable targets with ‘human 1m‘ medmms mane Sim. crossing aim with more crushing and "blows alums‘ me p35- cfiectduntié mini ViOfDl'Yai3v:l€%§il:i;'L gemggauu: area Lor ‘rsiiooriie, 0 u ' ~ _ . @- ieaoer in the 1411118, said that as a » Qliefall-‘lgixilifiediigfibfigalk-‘Jfit aguéfil; result of lt.A.i:‘. attacks on Essen We" w" m“ vuwam. until weather forced ill-age! we aimamnent works. covering an area W'- "fuunulgé Itlfiscgmifiel T511,“ or two square miles, escsmed dam- 7g? 5° "ofmrcntt one R A]. iigclano the concernuznas been vlr- gmniéilveews remrujd 51155,“; “gums; “iiilvigtlofaigblntrfenactngii intensive Iwo why g1=1x1'\§§_c:=§§g=Y§§-Muv, attacks made uguuist i-ialmmum last c“ 5'“ p ' Mr. Douglas criticized govern- ment agrlculturc policies, He: twlttecl ministers for not speak-i lug in the debate and sold prom- lscci social security measures were! indefinite and of little value fill view of Liberal promises dating‘ back to 1919 and not fulfilled. The proposals were qualified by statements the government would consult the provinces, when it was known the provinces had not, the financial resources to underq take social security. Mr. Gardiner said that every year since the wnr began C members had predicted a calamity would strike agriculture. Despite reduced manpower, agri- culture hnd increased production 48 per cont and every farm pro- duct was sellln nt higher-than- parity prices. e said that if Mr. Douglas were a farmer (he is a _ V“ (Continued onpag Ilsley To Table Main Estimates Soon AfFeb. 9—lCP) —Fln- OITAW ance Minister Ilsley said today in the Commons he expects to table the main estimates for the 1944- and 45 fiscal year within "a. very few days.” He gave the information in reply to a question by Gordon Graydon, Progressive Conserva- tive House header. “sic-ENE JTTiroitr IDNDON, Feb. l)—-(CP-R8lit6l'S)-— Prime Minister Churchill's corn- mittee to investigate the use of “mp” - — seem to me to go a long way beyond summer cost uerinany in the neim. day T011008 Avlfggmeym “all? three months no less than 400,000,- Elma L, em “w,” and new ooo man nouns and immense re- m 8 11°“ l m RAF _M_,,_ . _ i - slmport sweeps faltfifig gzrnizng§c ‘y w “mm $23115,“ 1o s: Canadians returned "This could have been achieved W l° - m 1d f n wed 1:5 s; signer ww titan oy me method rag" 151$" éigryigfiny ‘in; 1,1,“, . m. "We would ask the Bishop 0f Tlmidfi’ “mm by m‘ R’ A?‘ , Cliicheswi" not to consider the "i “imk m‘ “l” “m” “u” arft feotory at. Lim- 1‘ imaus who are suffering irom "id MW“ w" . these raids but also the Russians. "35- NM“ "z m‘ “m” ‘Mam “a. Poles, ‘Czechls. Bggiaiis, giprwe-l lml- _v _ ians, ugos avs, ree's, ‘ETiClh " " gnu Danes whoh are enduring 111;‘ BB9!‘ EXPOH "P002118 LOICPBADlG ungins an. the nalios u ‘$551,153 Gallons i cvrrilwil, n». 0-10?) flares; l the arrrues 0i the enemy." cries in Canada are 0x110“ n! the United States. West Indies- North Africa, Ceylon and bstvlb ll NDON. Fflb. 9-10?) -A for- mer Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of Chichcstei‘ onticizeo ‘ Allied bomb oi Creiman cities some of the beer which, by gowljll" ioday in the house of Lords. _ lmont order, they Me restricted "Recent attacks upon cities lilzlrfmm roles-ulna for consumption 8i Hamburg, Frankfurt and Berlin home, it was learned rodeo’. , In 1943, exports _wea-e 5.051.153 what hitherto has been the de- Igallons compared with 't.530.6§i_i" ciared policy of the govemment and 1042, a. dextreaoe of 2.lil9~l‘-‘3 ill-ll?“- the l. h command," said Lord Alnhoug Lang of Lainbeth, who on Dr. Cos- exports to the United States inst mo uni-don was Archbishop 0i year were hiaher. The bTGWGIiO-v 942. sent 2,324,108 gallons across l-hf" church lino, against 300,013 gallons in 1942 —on increase of 1,961,495 gallons. An excise department epokesmcm told The Canadian Press the brew- erlee are peprni ted to export B1111 they brew a-fror filling the domes- lc quota. sot in December. 1041, at 10 rper of the amount manil- the year ended Nov, Lang Canterbury from 1926 to 1 The former head of the ian tlcizod what he "to eillllt a Iron Totoa rd Red Centre Of Krivoi Rog a line runniiu to the northwest LONDON, Feb- fl—- (AP) — RUB- _ sian forces stabbing toward the through the limo-ion of Dollnhovka, lion on centre of Krivci Ros infblat with the new breakthroughs the aoianhern Ukraine have reached! of the last week in the Nikwfw - to within abht miles of that forrt- and with the ftonersl deter ion med mnninl city in a. 14-mile ad- of the German s e position, vanes, iloaeow -' tonight. that thin thread of auwiy seeanec while other Soviet lmite to the doom . nor-oi have killed 1,000 more oer-l rile mu of NIXOPOI, so nuns w southeast, in a dis- lubaeripllon Dalievard. “.00 Illl. 84-00; other Provinces A ILBA. lhfl AVY FIGHTING lN CASSINO AREA h total exports decmaseu ‘ lilllies Seek To gilelieve Pressure At Beachheali (By lllilVARl) KENNEDY] ALGIERS, Fell 9 —- IAPI ___ Ferocious crag-to-crag fighting raged on heights overlooking Cas- no on the main Italian front today as Allied troops opened o. (‘l-Slrflllgl-ll assault 10 relieve beleaguered Allied forces in the Auzio Briclgehead 50 milcs away ‘The mam 5th Armv l5 slugging violently at the Czlssllto defences, declared _tlie German-controlled Vichy radio. “with 30.000 mou, 400 tanks and ‘powerful artillery" lnsidc Cussmo itself Allied. troops fought into several more fortfied buildings, but after a. of fierce house-to-houso Ill“ Nazis still held about three-fourths of the stronghold and their liiie of supplv was un- broken The ancient Bcncdictinr Mon- astery which overlooks Cnssimr und hundreds of square miles of surrounding couiitiqvsidc has been. liifiYl 12v the American artillery, An army T19\\'S|)l{i?l' suit‘. Italian. prisoners venom-n that 2.000 u- g-lian civilians had taken ill the hfonastcry buildings. hc long-delayed break- through It Cussino can come I none foe soon to serve Allied , strategy, From the shell-pock- eil Beachhead south of Rome. I Daniel De Luce of the Associ- fited Press vn-ote that "no one in the Beuchliend is under ii- iuslons as to the lrimness of ' the struggle now unfolding. t Anywhere ln the area you are , liable to be shelled. bombed r or sirafed. l Soc-kin’ in relieve some enemy pressure against ‘Sic landiuu forc- es, Allied planes heavily bombed. and slrufec C-erriian positions n- round the Appian Way Town of 14 miles northeast (it to huvc converted into n powerful fortress. ' German attacks 0n the Beach- licad Monday night und T111: - day morning were described nu the hottest since the Allied lami- iug force assumed the defensive six days ago. The Allies lost some ground, but in counter-attacks 11-- gainczl a number of vantage poinu. Mass funeral services were hclil. on the Bcuchhciid for tllc 27 vic- tims of Mondays air attack 011 .1. field hospital. Todays Allim communique said the hospital tents were both bombed and inn- chine-gunned by German plane-s, indicating that lhc attack nus lit‘- ilcved to have been a dcliberax-s one thy more than one ciicnzv cr . i British forccs to tiic south mi .thc Garlgliano River from l‘(‘gl5‘- ‘cred small zalns against strung }GCl‘li1i1l1 opposition 11cm" Casio?- forte. Activity on 8th Anni‘! Adriatic End of tlie front cor,- tinued to be limited to sharp pv- trol clashes. Iii . Alllecl planes flew 1.500 sorties yesterday" without incurr- ing a loss. pfllilldlllf! cncmy fro-m ‘concentrations, airfields and rail yards over a wide area. l [DNDON —'CPi-- ll-irfjwGell. ,WilhcIm Hniisivcn, lnvm-Zor comin- ‘cinder of the Norwegian forces in iBritam. has qualified 05 a para- trooper. lt was disclosed here. Hg is H7 and became Norwegian command- lcr-ln-ciiief in 1942 if fosfs . iiotllmt to fmnK i it tout As You tow-f ‘fluul-l 00f Louo i - ‘ ///’1/,/\ v ll‘ i o o ¢$- i \ q High tide this afternoon at 1.10 and tomthl. n‘. l2 40. Sun sets this evening at 8.10 and rises tomorrow meaning at 8.08. Last, quarter moon Feb. 1'1, 4.41 . m. Summersldc tide l8 rninutea lat- er than Charlottetown. DAILY All! BEIVICI mena in tlie tightened vise squee- 10 lapped Nazi dlvisi no o . o on retreat in the vinc In A ovc cap- tured Mbnziy the use took B13 River and Khereon at own of ludushraoye, 14 miles the mouth of the Dnleper, twin northwest of Apastolovo" lii a new southern anchors for the 00min threat the door of Krtvoi ees ront lin Rog. y towns and hamlets were The last several weelm have been o; m-qi 1n this d; e a-rno the oleckest of the entire war or the Germans in Russia. have been able to eep the and their alans at lean five miles from their la_at ntlveav NWMIII Krivol Roe- pllqht from Btonla 11o the Black Bea has liown steadily f“ llite-neton - Leave Charlottetown 7.35 a. an- l . 4.30 p. an. Arrive Charlottetown 1.10 o. m. 5.15 7.05 p. nl. SUNDAY SERVICE heave Charlottetown 18 noon. l Arrive Charlottetown 0.40 n. na- ch -fhe' Nazlrare sail!‘ ~