MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN 54m who has the 1110116!- Muney is but a means to an end: what the end is depends on the per- é I ll low 22:10:: final-dial. Ionnded IMT NAZI STEAMROLLER IS SLOWED BY RED Guardian. Two Cont; Covers Prince Edward Read by Everybody Island Like the Dew By striving to do the things that can't be done we are able to ter the things that can be done. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN do bet- CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. THURSDAY, JULY a6 .“1942(~. ' S PAGES Annual embers-lotion Delivered, Co.“ B’ "u" P- 5- l- “.00: to other Provinrn nod U. B. 86.00 ARMIES _ _c_ _r Discuss Japanese Question In Commonslioviets Begin e a 'T0 Pat Reserves River-Rail Region Where Russia Fights Invader ,.,i-.V~°' Tegemog pa“ MorlupoI - v¢x ..__._._,___. LONDON, July 30-('I‘liursdayi- Marshal Semeon TlIIlOSllQflkO Vovglllllovgvud Vorgahilovllf Kammk x allovtkaya 5997'" ‘ Tiklwiehk , Tlmullevlkaya lfrepotkln ~$§Slavyhmkdyl “l Wm“ ‘y. Krasnodar @ l MILES j .. 63M llvlalmyzhl fl > 5O loo I "J Knot“. ORONEZH~AMN _ ‘ 3'5"‘ 5,, o,“ Televeye p55,», Noveklloporllll Ahhlll". . ‘ Oeirogoztlsll Buiulllnovka Bolswils I T RU$$|A "mm, ‘ ' “"°m'7' I hum”. ollahilevka Oflamovnkayl i V°l"ll‘l Y°"""° mulling-m ‘ llcllaaxcv ,, mudf“ manna-la,- ‘ , I 3 ." qéeolfi . "nmonhy, gvasllenalraya Olirhovka ' . , e Ieloya-Kolihe flunk." “rmmvfi Svaiovii-Luchkl ltlehzaya Mlmml‘. “rum,” aoolivanewra ' ~ Doolkqle l on R. I Madynbuak ol‘ omanqvekoo l To Oolplen F 7. u - RUMANIA (CP)-The Berlin radio claimed lo- had been split. 4 N _ ify that the German fo.ces in There was no cOIiIlIIIIB-llflll 0! Ml! ham“ h“ been laam“ m‘ selm“ loilliirm Russia. had out the sxul- report from any other source- iilgrad-Krasilodzlr railroad in Llle Tile railroad is lust 15 miles from Caucasus-Doll region and tiiat Red a curve on the Don all its Close-ii. Mill; Concerned:- Anotlaer Raid glrlflimburg__ [I SYDNEY. N, s.. Jilly 29—(CP)— Aboui 1C0 carpenters and bricklay- 01's_.it the big steel plant here r:- fllIllilPii on strike toiliizht. wiiiic uii- ioii oiliciills conferred witii the strikers with a view to conciliation. Coming Events —"- Nlnlliar In lllll ll null: uor Wllfll Rllvr fur column "Talkies-Montague Friday iihd siliiilill)‘. l-29-3i . WUTMTIKUTNAQU 1484‘. Road Scho "Bilbao. Sinnctt 7 29 2X Wolroncd July 31st. "Dance at Darlington School. Wednesday, Aug. 5. 7-30.11 "Bliillo ilildw-ERITCQ Kelly's Cross li-iii tonight. 7-30-ii P"Col!ecting iiogs every Friday. Please list with Leslie McDowell, edcricton. b-lfl-flo-twtf. s"lce Cream social, North Tryon ciloul. evening Jury 30th. 7-25-30. “Dance in summerfieid Hall. Thursday. July 80. Auspicer all“... “ W“ ‘“ 33f.“ ‘33€i‘."°.‘iii- a eve . m: daxlce. i’ v l-ao-li. "Come one, come ail. North Rustioo Picnic, August. 5th. T-SO-B-l-l. "Trucking hogs as usual for the lummer months List your h with A O. Green Aiban and G - Grub. Emerald il-e-l-i -w-'r-iu-li la "Bee "Aunt Tliie Goes to Sea" lh North Rusiico ail Friday ev. "hi": July at. Presented by in- dliin River Dramatic Club. 7-29-81 "Livestock Marketing Board ‘idiot: hogs at Charlottetown ‘idly. July ll. ill heat market ‘lee paid regular y. Farm to ‘Plllhi 904M trucking service on all-n can." (By Drew Middleton, (Associated Press Stuff Will") coupon, July flib-hi-Pl-Bis. i1 . . Lllif-TTTCLOHZG British bomb- ers, implementing their command- ». i. . .. . i0 lm-"iirzc Ciennany from end to end, poured tons oi ex- liii»; .-..;. i.i_.iiolary bombs on Hamburg last night and left that great port and U-boat cradle cover- ed wii-n flames. n, C, A, 1i". crews participated and were visited before the take-off by the Duke of Kent and High Com- missioner Vincent Massey. Mr. Mas- s:y waited at the field for the fliers [.9 return, when he welcomed them homo. During his visit, tho Duke _ talked with several Canadians. Tile raid was the second mall smash at Hamburg in three nfihis- An R. A, P‘. commentator it was “very successful. even more lo than we antictigated." He added at. the continuing bombing raids on such a larlie scale now are calming the Germl-ii 80V- cmment "increasing concern. While Hamburg was mil "hill" the massed bombs of perhaps 600 planes, 2 of which were lost. Brit- ish lighlers attacked German com- mugitcptons ital‘ western EMOD! n - ong ra . ngle aircraft of the bomber command carried on the air wu- fare today with attacks on tau-g? i: western Ger-litany dill’!!! tho ' moon, British authorities said the ion of 32 bombers was somewhat hitli“ grfljgnlnfiflé ulrnido booalll of the light of a near full moon and a strong cncentrut on airtight‘; erertover Germany: boob-R 6M4 po . Famous Archeoio ‘st Dies In Jerusalem JERUSALEM. Jillv l9—(AP)-8il‘ Fiindera Peti-ie, British arclleokazist noted for his work in Egypt. lfll st ni lit. in the Rovernment hos- pital. e was 89. pi?- NAVY-MINDED FAMILY smvr Joml. up . July 99 - (GP) _ Nuvv-criinded ir the word for the family of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Oobham, Saint. John. As if four sons in the navy are iri- rufficient. two other: are pian- ning to follow their older brothers soon. m“ CAUCASUS '5:ol-oe3 point, which is slightly east oi" the Tsimyansk fighting Elf-ill, wilerc the dBYS. 1 u. Bandits Get $43,000 In Bank lipid-up. VANCOUVER. July iii-iii?)- Police searched tonight for two armed men who earlier today es- caped with 343.000 from the Bank of Montreal branch at Prior and n1 Main streets after gagsinll and ty- ing up the four employees and forcing the acting manager. n. W. Harris, to open an upstairs‘ vault containing lie cash. Police sal the robbers. sarbed alike in khaki coveralls and wear- lng black masks, broke into the bank by sawing through a barred rear window sometime duirig the night. They waited until arrival of the employees. Then they threatened each‘ with a sawed off shotgun and a revolver. W. 0. Neville, janitor. was 8- ged and tied up when he arr ved at 8:15 a.m and later forced to ad- mit. the others when they arriv. ed shortly before 9 am. Mr. Harris, W. Marrs, teller and accountant, Miss June Phillips. stenogra her and Mrs. R. L. Clarke, edgerkeeper, all were ad- mitted by the janitor. "They tied us all up and put us downstairs in the vault," Miss Phil- lips said. "'I‘iley made Mr. Harris open the vault first so they could 1n IQt the ITIOTIOY Oilb." Wool Returns Lower Than 1941 figures LEIHBRIDGE. July 20-(CP)— Thc lethbridge Herald said today returns from i042 wool ehilllflm" no beginning to come in and gheepmen rcceivin ltttlfllielit l" h... satisfied with hemrim which no running slightly below those o1 last year. some wool growers, the paper said, are considering applying for rt wool to the Un- ited slams where prices are sub- stantially hillier than tlloee PW‘ vaiiing on the Canadian side. w)“; Qplgury l-ierald, in a die- prrmr from uthbrldge, said one producer who shipififl HWY“ thousand fleeces has received 22 “m. g pound, whereas the average lui. year was from 2! to 20 cents a pound for practically all the wool arowu in southern Alberto. 8.0. Members Claim Some In Defence Areas Will Be Trouble Howard G r e c n Says Unless Japs Are Moved With- out Delay. OTTAWA. July 39—(OP)—Cla1ms that. Japanese were still at liberty in protected areas o1 British Colum- bia and defying authority in work camps were ilriade in the House oi Commons’ todav by me" . from that province. There were demands that the British Columbia securities commis- sion be relieved of the responsibility for removing the Japanese from protected areas and that the gov- ernment administer the problem di- rectiy, Howard Green (Con. Vancouver South). who initiated the debate on a. motion to go into supply. urged that Aug. l5 be fixed as a deadline after which no Japanese could re- main in a protected area. He also orrawa, Jul 79-40m- Labor Minister M tchell told the House of Commons tonight it was not. the government policy to place British Columbia. Jap- anese ln internment camps and he was “not afraid" of the sit- uation in Vancouver where some ' remain, advised the establishment of one town, suggesting Wainright, Alta, as the site, for concentration of all Japanese. Labor Minister Mitchell, in a re- plv which was interrupted by the- six p, m. adjournment, said the se- curity commission had done a mood Job and that on the whole the Jap- anese problem had been well hand- 'I‘llose rembining in the promised areas were irlainiv women and rllil- dren. said the minister. it had. been no easy task to move ‘some 16.000 Japanese away from thecoast. The discussion came near 11h“ end “(Continued onpage 7. Chi 6) Farmer Fatally Injured In Fall Mr. James E. MacCallum, 74-year- old farmer of Harrington. died last evening from injuries received ill a fail from a load of hay on Monday. The aged farmer was unloading hay when the accident occurred. He was pulling the trip rope when it broke and he tumbled backwards to the ground. His shoulder and spine were injured and medical aid was summoned immediately. The man was unconscious for a. time after the mishap and was tak- en to his hcme and put to bed. Since then he had been under con- stant care of a doctor. However. he failed to recover from the fall and succumbed to the injuries last eve- n . ‘Tile remains are resting at. the Cutciiffe Funeral Home until noon tomorrow, then to Harrington Church for service at 2 p. m. Inter- ment Wiilsioe South Cemeto y. Funeral For Rev. Alexander Fergusonl OTTAWA, July 29—(CP)-Rcv. Robert Johnston, minister of Knox Presbyterian Church, conducted funeral services here today for Rev. Alexander Ferguson, minister of St. Andrew's Church who died of a heart attack last Sunday while surf bathing ncas Cavendish, P. E. I. The body was entrained to Mon- treal for cremation, Dr. Ferguson's ashes will be scattered over the 8t. Lawrence River. Drapedwiththep loandwllilto hood of the doctor o divinity re- cently conferred upon Dr. FEITLUSOB by Queen's University, Kingston, Ont, the casket was escortod Knox Church by members of the Kirk Session. 298 Nurses Arrive In South Africa OTTAWA. Jilly N - (OP) — Two hundred and rlinet -cight Ol-ll-Odil-R of s00 recruited or the South African military nursifll War Situation Last Night (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) Hitler's first objective in his drl Russia before Anglo-American ' oampai gn. The rich Caucasian region has been all but cut off from the rest of Russia. The knife edge of German attack is within less than 50 miles of the Volga in the east and has cut (lei-ply centre and the West. Thus the Nazis bid fair to obtain a stranglehold on the neck of the Caucasian Isthmus from the Black Sea to the Clu- plan. 0 O I Isolated in that manner from again. O O l Seemingly inevitable rupture oi‘ the Russian front from the Black Sea to the Volga if not the Caspian Sea doc-s not mean imminent Ger- uf the whole Caucasian chances for prolonged defence of the main llaku nil fields. still more than 600 miles south of the nearest Nazi spearhead beyond the Don, are man occupati good. Dark as the Russian outlook is with the Lower Doll line lost or at best badly cracked, these factors offer some cheer. Till-y also may fig- ure In whatever revision of Anglo-American plans striking power can in ingly close to attainment within ices than six weeks of tho onset of the O O I the rest of Russia, Isthmus, however. forced by the German advances in Russia. For there is another Russian asset tn be cnnsirlcrrrl. Even If separ- ated from the rest of Russia by a German break-through to the Volga, the defenders of the viiol Caspian nil fields ran still count on the nl- lied supply line via fir» Prrdlln Gulf. Tron and "IF Caspian. They could not get weapons and munitions from Russian industrial “f” _ n Brlflsh and American supplies might enable them tn continue n foot- 191691‘ CITEZIgQTIlQnlS “VJ,” Ina.’ south of the Don in the the Caucasus would be left to leisurely Nazi dissection to obtain the oil it holds. Moreover, If llitlcr reaches the Caspian down the west brink of the Volga, he will have established virtually tile complete southern half llf a strung defensive short line across Russia from the Baltic to the Cas- pian. German seizure of Leningrad and Moscow would complete a 1,500- mile holding front for his armies, as compared to the 2,000-mile front along which they now are deployed, and permit him to turn westward Russian may have been centres but Pilofs ‘Terran-- ewifiuh l8 ll! Adigh Assie LONDON, July 30 — (THURS- DAY) — (OP) - German nivs- ance raiders flying sirisiy iiiiiifkfil London, the Midlirids and East Anglia in full moonlight. early to- day, dropped a few bombs in the greater London area and hurried away under the fire of new. 806M anti-aircraft guns which were Still firing when the all-clear soiirtccci. ‘Iile bombs in tile Lcncioii area were the first sinrc o few iziccii- diaries feli in an outlying Phil! June 3. Scattened attacks in the Mid- lands and East Anglia were on a small scale, similar to raids two nights ago when it was osiinlawd betwee . 50 arid 70 planes crossed the coast. The raiders, as they did (‘ally Tuesday morning, ran intc_ Bri- tain's new secret anti-aircraft guns, already described bv the Berlin radio as "tile pilot's terror.’ Taking advantage of good vxsib- illty, British night fighters took the air over several areas to iri- torcept the attackers. German bombers raided an arcs in the west Midlands, scattering fire bombs. Other raiders, taking advantage of the full moon, ivcie over two districts of East Anglia. Alarms sounded in Lfliidfiiii M931- day night in the Capital's first night alert since June 3. Anti- aircraft batteries were iii GCUOTT but no bombs were dropped in the Monday alarm. Henry Ford 79 Today, Jl 29—-(A.‘P)-Hen- ry lllxobsgziyve his 79th birth- day anniversary tomorrow at P‘??? w th himself but distressed at e ai ht of a. world clevotinil "105?- °l its energies to destructive effort. For-d mme; to the beginning of his 80th y-‘ear unshaken in the con- viction t at beyond the war‘ lilies an era of prosperity uhPB-fhle ° in the world's history. Asked how it felt to be 79 years old, Ford indicated he had for- gotten about his birthday unhi- *1r‘<"(" servic. have arrived scfcl in South versary- ,, , _ hero lo- “Goliy,” he said. thats right, ma‘ n w" mnmm do have anotherhbirthday colmilrvillt- ' - dduitht "overs s- 93: ifblfifiewrifiiiltiirz m?” His abpeaientceh confirmed ' i, t f .ii t sloop o npmflmlnuv’ m and‘ ‘m the lirfasahloliciggre, ‘x9211; lg as straight. l 0f Boilih Africa. who llld Rolfllllfldl travelled first to 0N0?- Briioizl and then to South MIM- Warns Against _ Hasty Marriages IDNDON, July N - (OP) —A warning against ill-considered marriage. of BritLdi girls to Am- el-ican or other foreign soldiers in ar-iuiri was issued today by Dr- George Bell, Bimbo of Clilchesier. He advised Pariah Priests before aoceptill marriage notices to ob- Lev that the We fvliie, NB, to become tuin Men assurance prospective bridegroom is in- marrlui and of lolmd charector. holds close to his ls a. reed and about 138 accuséomed weight of poun s. I! mg participation in the arms production task helps shorten the war by one day. he indicated. the effort will not have been in vain. ACCEPTS CALL HARTLAND, N.B., Jilly 29 —- (OP) - Rev. Harry G. Taylor. Oxford, N. 8., has accepted a call to itie Hartland United Bflllisl- (Iiurctl, succeeding Dr. G E , who will leave Aug T0 for editor of the Maritime Baptist Ollumh publication. Nazis llavel New Tactic “Mot Puik” BERN , Switzerland, July 20 --(.\l’) file Germans have a new milliury expression for wliuf. they an: trying to iwcom- plisil in Russia. They call it Plltld Marshal Gen, Fedor- Von Buck's “liiost pulk." That is the name the Nazis are using to describe their lat- est tztctics, as different from blitzkrieg as the airplanes of the second great. war and the last. It resembles in some degree the positional tactics of the first great war, with tanks and mechanization added. It counts on slow. massive pressure ra- tllcr than lightning thrusts, It gives careful attention to de- frncr- against flanking or rear attack. “Mot pulk" is newly coined German slang for a motorized formation up tn 300 miles in cir- cumference, with tanks at the outside and infantry, artillery and supplies in the centre, all motorized. Tile Germans regard the "mot pulk" as nearly self-sufficient as a fighting unil.—-but vulnerable if attacked by heavier-equipped mechanized forces. Its biggest advantage purportedly is its eteilmrollcr potentiality. Mot pulk is a combined abbre- viation of motorized and pulk, a technical expressed long used by Nazi aviators to describe flying in solid formation. Pulk is used bv Scandinavians. particu- larly Laplandcrs, as the word for sledge. INTERNATIONA AT A GLANBE Western Front-Germany Into Battle Line vo to destroy or immobilize might!‘- MOSCOW RCpOTfS In Positions In Past 24 Hours; Heavy Fighting Continues. tervene is appa . fated Press Staff Writer) (By Eddy Gilmore, Assoc- MOSCOW, July 30_. (Thursday) - (AP) - The Russian armies of the south were reported throwing re- serves into the bitter battle against the Germans today and the Soviet Wednesday midnight communique indi- cated the Nazi steamroller had made little if any pro- gress in the previous 2i hours. While dispatches from the battlefield said the Russians finally were beginning to but their huge manpower reserve into action, the com- mimique merely said that with the enemy were fought in ' the Tsimlyansk and Baiziisk areas of the Don and Cau- casus and on the northern end of that flaming from ln the Vororlezh area, On the critical Caucasian battlefront at Bataisk, 15 miles south of Rostov, the Russians said heavy fight. lng continued throughout the day. Infantry troops de- fending one important p031. lion. supported by tanks and plant's. wiped out about 2,- 000 German men and offio. ers. The communique announ- ced for the first time that the Germans were attacking west of Kletskaya, 120 miles northwest of Stalingrad and well to the north of the Don- Caucasus battleground, Kietsk is wcii soutfliyllf Vgrrcxlntegll. (Prolils int.’ of a. new front might indicate the Germans are attempting to gring adnortlier-n arm across the oxilliithigivofllglyilm against Stalingrad, “In the iii-ea southwest of Kiri.- sknyrl fierce fighting is in progress.” the (‘Ommlliiiqlie declared. “Soviet troops are hoidlntz iiD the Crerman push and inflicting lieavv losses on tlicm. One of our infantry units as- =¢ah= Famous Musician Hall Stradivarius Purchased liere MURRAY BAY. QUE, Jilly, 29_.. (CH-One of Canada's best known men of music, Luigi Bomaiieiii, 5'7. died today at this St. Lawrence Rilcr North Shore summer icsort. l0 days lifter he suffered a heart at- tac . Rlomaiiellih skill as a violinist and orcilestr leader gave him a career that. eaw him playing in tho streets for pennies at the age of l2 and later in life engaged in the ilobby of raising thoroughbred horses. With an orchestra flint featured both dance music and syillpliony, Romililelli played at the King Ed- ward Hotel in Toronto for 23 years. Prior to his appointment in i923 as general musical director for the United Hotels in Ciiilndu, lie had com. been general musical director of the l‘ l p, h, m, scum-d’; Allen chain of theatres. blhiiil‘ ‘tgllgowglcifvman people for» llzomancili giayed for the present first time Invasion expected. Rnuln-Siiffcncd Red ITIIIV ing and ueen of Eilgiaml during their Canadian tour iii i939. A colossus model Stradivarius vio- sumd ‘n u" Faun,“ m“; Mud‘, lin valued at 525.000 was his prized before Nazis but inflicts heavy cas- uiiltles. ilosscssioii. It was pilrcilnsed in Prince Edward Island aild Roman- elli railed it the "Prince Edward nermam._n A]; ‘h,’ g-mbur‘, Stradivarius." bl b I -huildl centre nec- g s“ marm‘ n‘ ' n he was tiic soil of Callie-ritu- and ond aerial blasting; loses planes. Fgypt-ILA-F. and 17.5. hit Aria ships. hicrsa Manila. To- bruk and Axis transport: hi the desert. (‘Trina-Chinese drive laps back ‘ ' [KI h l - l ills de Kwo on C ell lIII town h“ night Sam n w“ new! railway nml are attacking WRIT. lrrdlnn Front-British from Burma report rr-ililrlrawli most of 8, Born in Bclleville. Ont, in i885, Joseph Romalieiii. a musician who came toCallada from Italy. In hump", i922 lie married Selina Stanley in London. Beside his widow mid a (‘iilsrlltc-r. he is survived by his Ether. four bzotheru and t-hree m- rl. (Several musicians in Charlotte- to them that a Stradivarius violin |i1d bven piircilnsed here. But o 7079M" brother of the famous mlisicinil coll- ar M" firmed the purchase had really been troops made llfft‘ it cmlld not be ie-i-“ii- *1 C. C. F. Leader 2c 1 M. J. COLDWELL TORONTO. Jill 29-(OP_ J’. Coldwell, cizlitylieader in) via House of Commons, today w" elected National President, of m. W-Opfiraiive Commonwealth lied.- eratiori at its convention hero Three other members of the part; were nominated but declined to context the presidency, Attack Bases i At Suda Bay, CAIRO. Julv 29—(AiP)—il\. A. l and United States air force bomb- er attacks on German and Italian Supply bases at Suda Bay, Crete, and on battered Tobrid: were re- Portod officially today while desiiib- ory artillery drills provided the m %or {action on the Egyptian ian ron _ British and American air force although operating on a recur; scale in the battle aipa, hit shipp- ing and taucks carrying material by wilich Field Marshal Erwin Rom- mei hopes to build up his romeo m; gflgenewed assault towards Alexan- Piiltosovlir 0a oPfiMiSM Mares fioov Rename. - \F You iinvl: ‘icon REM PAID l} High tide this afrsrnoon at 12-3! d i it n: i."~i. “suhwguif this evening a8 7.30. and rises WITTOLLW mcriiiiiq at 5.4L Lust, quarter moon Alli. 3. 7-04 D- mSiimmersirlo tide cl liteen minute! later than Charlotte own. can FERRY SERVICE DAIL‘ EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — Leave 9.25 mm- l.00 p.m.. 4.45 p.rn.. 7.55 pan. Lopvo cap; Tnrmcntlon -- "-0. a-m., 3.15 p.m.. 0.45 n-m-l 9-10 0-m- SUNUAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. 27 inclusive) Leave Borden 0.00 n. m. 8.45 Ian- Leave Tonnention 10.15 m. 8.00 p.m. P. E. I.—N. l PERRY SERVIC- Leesve Wood Islands 7.00 a-Im. ll-W . .. P-Ill. "Bu" Carillon a an. l u-an mil u. ‘m’ am slnwlcn Charlottetown Jummerslde- Moncion Leave Charlottetown 6-35 n. m4 12.45 p. m. Leave Summer-side ‘Lil a. III-l LII ‘t LT-ave Moneton ll a. In-t and 0.10 from (‘lrlndwin Valley. apparently o4 who was the former owner of the p. nl. because of malarial conditions. instrument, however.) Daily except Sunday. c. *4? .\ a -\ lli . \ i3» if.» a? .1 i ‘t? F mi ~< ti y. ' i- u‘