OIL MERE MAN “f: 12.5%., slandtfl. vol-owl pull! pl. truetoourhrdtobop- t versy or sweeping es- miog: ‘filllfflll. sacred name of Illv _‘é/ Read by Covers Prince Edwardilsiand Like the Dew Everybody Dotlletbingyoufelrtololnd the death of fear 1| absolutely eer- lain. MAXI MS i \ u ‘ l ’ Mom: MAN’ Guardian. Iounded 1 . ml -(‘nl. Ronald Cameron (‘ D.. has been (fhapkzin (Ro- "l ilPillih- Col. Mac- ] rn in Antigonish ml was educated at College and ersify in Rome. lie Cross lral- for "personal lill- Battle of Amicns. a gfuplnin ill “mmmn hop Nelligzln. Overseas Photo). Woman Abdlidons Cilildrcn In Barracks h lbouts ill . l to he the wifc of al lugellllt-nllllor overseas, who left lixchlld ll lat nlllit-arv barracks ll ll lhc woman entered ‘ follow-Jud by six child- ln‘! ill fro frcnl three years kell “I’ll be buck in u than disappeared. illfi EVENTS ill it's‘ t "Dance, st, ill‘, SflliClllber "Shnlv ~- Bholv 8 and Teresa's Hall. Firi- lst. 8-31-21 Mi. Swzvari. Saturday. l0 P. .l. Zi-iii-iii. "Dancc iii Sch VlUW hln Friday "m. sfiiliulllilfll‘ 1st. ' 8-31-21. ‘Jb-"lflili Sale at Rogers Hard- scl br- llw-lon Baptist Church. iliflilbfl‘ .. . 3.30-1.31, l “Dan '—— . _ w. Orwell I-lall. Monday, Member 4m. Millview Orchestra. 9- - . l u l Pantry sille at Hfllmiilfs, Sat. h" 2"" by Kingston w. I. 8-301 ml MeGrcgors Saturday. Vlebsferls Orch-I 8-30- »), _ , piglet‘ D 4- mraembl amen, bionttlguc. 2nd. "Ire c» l ___ mm Hulfihnl llllfl Dance. Vernon . . tvedrlcsrlay evening "pfmb" Ml. AllfilllfuS c.w L, . 9-1-21. u _ ‘——'-— hybsaffjr lflllkorll Hall, Wednes- l .11.. ll. Refreshments, 9-1-5-21. ____ l“ Norm Wiltshirc Hall 1"» l Music by Chur- Y Grlhll. 9-1-11 It -—-_ ifivsccrn" hilly. "Allnt "mazsiniclnber 1st.’ IND "ill-l???- "llillrl- » “- gmhw M Illll-ilnl- Shipping Club “h -- hoes Lllonday, September pmffm 1 till 4 p, M, _ a ' 9-1-1. Convention. ' "Annul T““ g 0:01;}: Dislrict inl, . “WrchlllPEiWMWn. » B87 gmllllliiietown Guardian. Two Cents. §oviel F Hungary Appears On/ (Veiggae Of Crack-Up Is clililihi 0f. 12-Day Push By W. W. Hercher IONDON, Aug. 8i — (AP) —-The Red Amy's dusty legions Swept into the capltulated Roman- ian capital of Bucharest-winning a Breat rail and air base for an over- land drive info I-iungsr and sou- LONDON, Aug. Si - (A P) - Hungary, new keystone of Adolf Hit- ler's sout“ ‘ n defenses, seemed on the edge of s crsclcup as neigh- ,boring Slovakia fell rapidly under the control of Czechoslovak armed forces and Romonian and Bulgarian peace delegates waited in Moscow and Cairo, lee tiveiy, to sign terms of cepitu ation. Moscow Radio said information had reached Switzerland that rail- way strikes had broken out in Hun- Bulgflmian border ln l. BO-milc advance south of the captured rt 0f Constanta. Other So et columns had turned today 3:111 Germany-and a o zllschcd CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY; SEPTEMBER 1, 1944 battle fronts there to out-date Gen. for; it reached print. were proportionate. with captured or ruined. Night By Kirke L. Sbnplon. Associated Prue War Analyst A patio-m of Nazi military disaster in France fest approaching an utter rout is unfolding before the world no the figures pour in fronl the Eisenhower's I . . pitulaiion of enemy losses in men and fighting equipment since D-day In Normandy even be- Those official Allied figures put enemy Pfitoonnel losses sl. upward of 400,000 men in fiance between lune 0 and Aug. 25. His material losses pllnbl, tanks, gnu of nu sorts by the thousonld The estimated equivalent of S6 German diviflons has been destroyed, 8 PAGES llEADLONG NAZI RETREAT CON orceis Reach Bucharest, ton lllail. 00: th Jill-LA. 05-N- Sublegtlonobefllvend m , $6.00. TIN UES Amiens thigh-lit»; Ydanics f 5 Mi. From Belgium ALLIED SUPREME HEADQUART ERS, Aug. 31 -- (CP) ing at breakneck speed through the plains of Picardy, across the Somme River after capturing the Cathedral patches said American troops have stabbed info the outskirts of Sedan, five miles from Belgium on a historic invasion route between France and Germany. Matching their speedy thrusts against crumbling or non-existent German re- sistance, Canadian units struck one-third of the way across tile l-Iavre Peninsula from captured Rouen and seized a town only 17 miles south of Dleppe. The sweeping Allied advances carried through French territory which was the - British forces, driv- ight held a strong bridgehead city of Amiens and field dis- - the next regular meeting of gary and traffic on the three main The report said the country was "on the verge of s. general strike." The United Nations Radio at Al- giers said German troops Occupied all strategic int; Budapest and that all buildings in the Hungarian capital were guarded by German machine- gunners. Hungarian newspapers carried rus- tomary last-ditch appeals but also mentioned the growing peril from "military deserters. escaped pris- oners ofwar, enemy mercenaries. criminals with no homeland who are capable of anything, Partisan: and saboteurs infesting thm ads." 'I'he extent of the criss in Aus- tria and Bavaria-which are next in line if Hungary falls-—was hid- arrests in H1055 regions. Council Discusses Jnstallation 0f iiioai Scales The highlight of last night's special City Council meeting. over l which Mayor J. E. Blanchard pre- .si<led, was the discussion which i followed the reading by the Mayor l of a letter received from Messrs H . R Large 8e Co., city coal dealers. l The letter follows: z “Charlottetown enjoying ‘Old Sydney coal, taken from our sileds, is '75 cents before taking the ‘ slack out. “From the attached schedule 0f prices you will see that the coal dealers of Charlottetown are hand- ling coal at a ridiculously low pro- lll, and if the City elects 1W0. additional city scales causing us‘ inconvenience and subsequent den lay. this will add lo our overhead and there will be but onaflli-Efllfil" ivc. and that will be application toi the Fuel Controller for DCTHIlSSlOII‘ to raise Charlottetown coal prices in line with other cities. "At the present time the 990912 0f Charlottetown are saving approxi-. nlzltcly $50,000 per year in ‘ rices over that of other fillies in, he Maritiniles." n 1th (my, The specs mee ng 0 e | Council was called to consider the| request of the Canadian Lesion to have its city grant of $75.00 increa- scd. After a brief discussion. it was decided w lzrlmt the lesion lm ill-l crease of wailglégfigifh Wm make, the new gran . . Coun. P. G. Gay then introduced a notice of motion that he wouldhatta Council, submit a resolution calling‘ for the substitution of Eastern, Daylight fim 9" AiYLiEBE_ A’ I By mo; Munroe ; wllll The 1st Canadian Army 111 Rollcn, Aug. 3i - (CP Cable) - Historic Roueh thundered today‘ with voices of free men. stilled b! four years of German occuplmm. 3i. ss liberating Canadian troop! W911i’ through the narrow, cobble-stoned’ strc . Ciztiiians poured into the streets by hundreds B5 infantry from essteml and western Ontario and the Mari- fmes entered the ancient port in drizzling rain. i 1'11“. milled around our scout car, paraded with libeflliloll Em‘ blomg . - fEd, white and blue, rosettes which had been ""5 f" u“, day . .. gave rosettes to the Canadians and tossed flowers 1n the pau] of the mud-streaked, soélden liberators. mthusiaszn seemed to increase like a snowball as the Canadians gyroglgssed utihroléggin til‘?! town - - ame as e e Arcs condemnation and torture explored Canada Ind ti" l pi. tie. Groups North Haven. Bonshllw Instl- l l llif‘ smmbsr uh. Lon: Ctcekl ' around ,our cal- when we stopPedi 501°" Pmlred ‘mm , told Us thg Qmnen garrison had. sgeuéxh 2335;; fiféivfigilne which family lefl. the night before and thercl 0-2-11. were only I 1"" "lllm! '“Y‘"'°" lines into Budapest was paralyzed. had in official n. f! z: I: :l n. O '1 2 w ii O é i w: m i m t. reports, however, told of widespread s; the y u, d-aw and let Big Celebration As Rouen Is Liberated handful in the eastern Part. of civilians who swarmed were not badly hit by bombing but northwest of Ploesti, chasilllz the Pelmflilllil Gennans nine miles be- great oil centre along the ing across the Predeal Doss into Transylvania. A ZO-salvo salute from 324 Mos- cow victo cannon marked the col- ‘lapse 0f t e Germans in Romania and the entry into Bucharest. . Second Ukraine Army units under Gen. Rod-ion Y. Mhlinovsky. victor at Odessa, entered the “Little Paris of the Balkans"- so-called because of its gay atmosphere and archit- ectural imltation of Paris-after a 30 mile march southward from lhc ‘burning Ploesti oil fields, wrestled- from the Gerlnans yesterday. The‘ entry climaxcd a l2 clay offensive begun in the Iasi sector, 200 miies_ low to the northeast. The victorious entry came three' l}, aln years and six weeis after Romania S =_ 2 I! rp n. .- :r a Q E w :1 D =- =- F9 > we o a s1 C 194i. Bucharest was the se: llied arms, and the first by the Soviet Army. As in the case of Italy. Romania's government had quit the Axis. as- ked for Allied armistice tel-nu, and declared war on Germany before her capital Was entered. Marshal Ion Anfonescu. pro- Gennan premier ousted a week ago. ls reported to be a prisoner m King Michael's palace. Nearly 600 miles to the northwest .lng on the approaches to Warsaw l captured the rail city of Radzymin, only ll mil€5 northeast of Frags. eastern suburb of the embattled Polish capital on the Vistllla River, the daily communique said. Nine other localities were seized in this flanking movement above Warsaw. ing four divisions supported by swarms of planes and tanks, and said they were beyond Rndzymin in the effort to seize Warsaw and‘ make a break-through across the Beds Talk Tough i With Bulgaria MOSCOW, Aug._1ll — (AP) —! Russia got tough with Bulgaria to-i it ‘cs knalvn that if,’ Sofiab leaders want to save their, country they had better get mi the war against Ccmluny with slpecd and energy. Report Bordezillici Has Been Occupied Lloupou, Aug. a1 - (c?) —The French Forces of the Interior ann- ounced today the capture of Bord- eaux, last great port in Southern France held by the Germans. T119 F. F. I. previously had de- eluted the city occupied, but later said the annaun nent was pre- mature. o —-l in the city. But thev didn't ‘use the, word "Germani They Called the enemy "Boone" clenching their. fists a! they snarled the name. l French Maquls were all over the; city, guiding Canadians. hrough As lighti German opposition was cleared.‘ tricolor; were thrust from every‘ window. In the side street hundreds of people gathered to cheer and the Seine‘ Maquls moved up and down the Alleys looking for‘ snipers. ‘There were some but it seemed only a But Rue down m the cathedral, was empty Martlsnvllle, leading‘ except for a Canadian platoon ad-i vsncing ‘ously. From a. side risoners, Polish troopfl. impressed destination. mo (.114; German army and to, i???“ fight a. rear-guard action. They. Fonner F. D‘ R. hug given up after firing a few- Joan of shots. ' ‘"I'his the first real enemv we: is h ‘hit far." said L. Cpl. Aime Per- and the bimhplaca o‘ u Balfiisviss?‘ rairgo of hlqtindflii otnLM Kl dl hi were es. nes c m, t e reggtiiocdalxllveltlrngierPtlggxsuglggn‘ Aglltffit.‘ N. 5.. and Malcolm Lar- liberated July 9 after s. bitter bat-i kin Yarmoufh. N. S- Wlih ' The sections of Rouen we saw s suburb on - cut to pieces or trapped in coastal fortresses in Briianny. And to show for it all the foe has only the prospect of an alr-ilarriell, tank-worried escape across the lowlands of Belgium and Holland, plus the prospect ni‘ an Allied crossing of " n frontiers through the Saarbrucken gap per~ haps within davs or even houn. The last lingering doubt of the completeness of the Allied victory in the north vanished with Gen. Eisenhower’; disclosure of the Allied take ill prisonrs, enemy casualties and equipment and British puncture of the potential Somme defensive front at Arniens. two by the British two-day drive from Seine bridgeheads to cross tile The Nazi retreat front between the channel and the Oise was cut in I scene of bitter battles during four years of (he First Great War, Canadians Advance At Lightning Speed Fran; the bridgehead at Amlcns.’ where the Canadian corps of the} First Great War helped w achieve s. annual-ling victory over she Ger- mans ln August. i918. British ar-‘ mcr plunged on l0 miles eastto. Corbei 56 miles from the Belgian! border, and sliced off almost half the Germans’ robot bomb coast. 'I'l'le armored formations were un- another big Russian army attack-i Berlin admitted the Russians had} broken through German lines, us-t flat Polish plains toward Germany)‘ ‘ at noon. I watched lto the sidewalk street the Canadians led out eight; more interested Somme at Amiens. coast east of the southeast and now within 30 miles the double-fronted sweep. _. the swift shifting of the American Paris tn the Oise front north It is aimed seemingly to cut through to ih; channel Calais hurnp, through the heart of the Nazi bomb installations, while flanking American first rocket army columns lo the or less of the Belgian border extend Ptfhfllls the deadliest Allied threat in the north, however, came with 1st army from the Seine fheatrs he. and east of the city. It has taken over -lhe whole northern face of the huge American bulge eastward between i means that the 3rd ls being concent faces of the bulge. And that way bcyonu cond mrmer Axis Capital taken by Dlzlrr lie the roads that converge on the Saarbrurken gap some 60 miles lies the southeast lunge to a Junction with the io the east. That way, too, e Oise and the Loire previously held by the American 3rd army. That on the eastern and southeastern captured Reims. Chaions and St. Franco-American 7th army rampaging up the Rhone valicy from the Riviera, and already reported on the Franco-Swiss frontier near Geneva. C. W. L. Convention I Concluded Yesterday ‘ Mrs. J. Austin Murphy Of Emerald Elected Pres- ‘ ident To Succeed Mrs Of Charl ==‘="-—l Civilian Supply Situation Shows i OTTAWA, Aug. 31 -- (C P) — Donald Gordon, Prices Board Chairman, said tonight in a re- pared address that the Cans ian Clvillilll Supply situation shows no signs of rapid improvement and individual co-operation in meeting the situation should be continued. Speaking over a Broadcasting Corporation Nation nal network, Mr, Gordon said thatl little in the way 0f metal materials was freely available for civilian pro- duetion. "Soms aluminum may shortly be released, but on the whole we can- not expecl; much immediate im- provemcnt as war pl duction is still at a high rate," he continued. “We are making a few washing machines. some stoves and electric irons and a few other household appliances. but it will be some time yet before this production reaches any sizeable volume." Food Picture Bright The food picture was encouraging and a return to moat rationing was not expected unless unforcseezl ov- ersells demand develops, with the shipping to carry it. “In the case of milk h Soviets llo iiot Pause In Bucharest JOSEPH MORTON BUCHARFST. Aug. 31—(AP)~ The Russian army entered Bucha- rest from the east and northeast today and moved through to the west. the direction of the Bulgarian frontier. Standing in the heart of the city u motorized Soviet column speed through he streets. Dusty and perspiring, he Russians wasted iittl ng peurulil e timefiwuv in Iettino to their mronss. a Physician Dies LUBBC. ME.. Aug. 3l—(AP)— Dr. Eben H. Bonnet, 0d, who was first called to dia nose the polio- myelltis with w ieh Pnzsidcn at hisl . home in i021. died tods . When President Roosevelt nd his . G. Parnell McMahon ottetown. Thursday morning's convention activities began with the celebra- tion of Mass in the Basilica by Rev. Louis A. Dougan. Chaplain of Charlottetown Sub-division. Memb- ers of the League received I-loiy Communion, and the Intention was —"Our men and women in the armed forces.” at 9:30 with the Diocesan Presl- dent. Mrs. McMahon, presiding and ' reciting the League prayer. Roll] call was followed by the presents-l tion of sub-division reports. These, revealed s. vast amount of work done along educational, charitable and patriotic lines, with due at- tention to spiritual endeavors, and were duly commended by I President. Interesting discussions were held, in regard to improvements reccm-f mended in the educational sys-l tem of the Province, and the fur-' therance of the Girl Guide move- ment. In connection with the lat-_ fer, the message of the newly-ap- pointed national convener, Mrs. McMahon, was read by Miss I. Arsenault, Diocesan Convener. Con- , gratulations were extended Mrs; McMahon on the honor conferred‘ rai lfcof " Officers Elected , By Baptist W. M, S. WOLFVILLE, N. S., Aug. Ill-_. (CP) —- Mrs. Warren Eaton of Wolfvillc today was elected pxcsid-l eat 0f the United Baptist Womcnb.‘ Missionary Union of the Maritime} Ilffl-ovinoes at the annual meeting, ere. Mrs. Jack MacLeod of Summer-I side was elected vice-president; for Prince Edward Island while; Mrs. J. l" McNeil, also of Sum-I merside was named provincial trca-I super. Other officers for this plo- vince includc: provincial secretary, Mrs. Edwin MaoFarlane, Bedeque; mission band superintendent, Mrs. l T. G. Ives, Charlottetown; babyl band superintendent, Mrs. Harold’ Schurman, Central Bcdeque. War Began Five Years Ago Today- By The Canadian Prose At 5.80 A. M, Sept. 1, 1930, Adolf Hitler, vowing to wear his uniform m victory ol- death, sent the Ger- man Army across the Polish fron- tier-let. four points to open the Second Great War. At 9 A, M, wall-saw and five other Polish cities were bombed. Poland capitulated in six weeks. Today, five years later, German armies are reeling on four fronts, seeking peace but able to obtain from the Allies only one kind: "Un- made annual visits their summer home, Dr. Bennet always was among their meets. l conditional surrender." ' from Gennny. Some field accounts Business sessions were rcsumedi me - tleficlds der command of let-Gen, Sir Richard Nulzent O'Connor the Bri- tish tank expert who was captured in mbya and subsequently escaped from Italian imprisonment Plunging through the forest, free-wheeling American armored units already may have leaped the banter of the Mouse River, just south of Sedan. where German annies broke into fiance in the war of 1870 and again in l0- Hcadquarters had no immediate ‘confirmation of the report that Sedan was almost reached but lat- est accounts from the 851d the Americans were sweepinll north- east frclm Rclms, Loon. Chalons- Sur-Mame and Vltry-Sur-Marnc on a QO-mile lront, unchecked and scarcely hindered by totally disor- ganized Germans. '8 Second Threat to Germany The thrust near Sedan was the second aimed at Germany itself. for it was announced ezuiler that the United States 5rd army the old Msginot-llxle and B7 miles aid this olumn was fighting only l0 miles 120m the Siegfried 11116 in Germany. _ Even these sensational accounts apparently. were behind the 8011181 strides of Allied fighting 010118 8 winding 270-mile front. Patchy communications hindered the receipt of field dispatches, and even field commanders were repor- Argonnc 1 _ _ had’ reached St. Dlzicr, 40 miles from, l ldgtgomcry ‘ls Appointed Field Marshal LONDON, Aug. 3i — (CP) —Gen. Montgomery, whom many consider Britain's best general and who is certainly her most spectacular field commander, tonight was appointed Field Marshal Supernumary by King George. The announcement of- the app- ointment. effective comorrow, came only a few hours after Gen. Eisen- hower revealed that Lt-Gen. Bred. icy had been given equal status with Gen. Montgomery as field commander of an army group. However, unofficial sources em- phasized thc Montgomery appoint- ment had no connection wi h this and had been planned for some time as recognition for his "inval- uable service to the Eimpixc." Neither will the appointment in- volve precedence in the field, these source; said. ery, whose rise in fame began at‘ El Alameln on the western desert} lute in 1942. and who at present is, commander of the 21st Army Group_ ted idling at their headquarters for want of word frcm the fast-striking,» i columns. Even the German rear-guards more often than not were men W110 lssaycd behind to surrender The last Gennun resistance south; o; the Seine had been rubbed out and the Somme and Marne lines u- long which he might have made a [stand already had passed. as haclf the Aisne. Allied troops were hurdllnlz in hours and days First Grllt War bat- whlch were contested through four long bloody Wills The Germans were helm! ""0"" , comnieicly out oi’ France. buzz- bomb coast and all, and back in- to Belgium with such astonish- ing speed as to suggest that they were thinkin only of defenlllnll their fatherianki. _ fl d The British strike into AmlenSl retiring astrldc the Somme was ihflTl-‘illfi lightly-held country against Clll\l moderate resistance or none at oll Just been appointed commander-in chief in Palestine and High Comm- lssioner for Trans-Jordan. . which broke the German 7th Axrny| in Northern France becomes the 14th - living British ficlrl marshal. Be- cause army regulations specify there shall be only eight field marshals,_ he ls officially listed as the latest] of six supcrnumaries who achieve; full title when deaths create vac-l ancics. Other supernumary field mar-i shals are: Prime Minister Smuts of,‘ South Africa; Viscount Wavell, vice- my of India. Sir Alan Fkanclsi Brooke, chief of the Imperial Gem‘ eral Staff; Sir John o. Dill, head i the British Military mission in. Washington, and Viscount Gort, former governor of Malta who has i Field Marshal appointment; an: bestowed either in recognition of highly‘ meritorious service on the e of battle or as an honor for British generals with long, and disfing shed srrvice. Gen‘ ocunnor-s mnkmm Slmnhi; Veteran Lumberman slashed through scattered nockcl .‘ leaving them to be moon-rd 1m 151i- or. WOMEN'S PENSIONS Canadian women W11? “Picfails receive pensions at four-fifths i119 reign-sums)?"- Dies At Ottawa OTTAJVA, ADE. 3i — (C P) -- Adam Francis Prime. B5. formerly an active figure in the lumber in- dustrv in Ontario. Quebec and New- foundl 1d. dlcrl__h§_re_t>oday. _ ll Enemy Claims V-I ' Weapon Is Mobile _ ‘ 5 Germans Switch To New Sites As Dozens Of Buzz-Bomb Roosts Fall To Allies. By RICHARD KASlSCliKlJ LONDON, Aug Zil-(AIH-Flying bombs possibly aimed from the low countries dropped in Lozlodon and southern England wduv while the Germans uncorkcd a orrzpagandb campaign boasting the V-l‘s mobility in an apparent ottmlpt to offset the news that dozens of rob- ot roosis have been captured bv British and Canadian armies in_ once. Sweating out of the wor’s last}, mile, British civilians were cheer-, ed by the Alli-ts‘ sweep through rob- ot llmd across the channel, but thov also noticed that today's per- iodic barrnlzes although on u re- duced scale came frcm the most northerllv sites so far used-m ex- treme north France or Belgium and possibly the Netherlands. Dispatches from France said that in addition to dozens of launching sites already captur- cd,at least 100 more are exported to be grabbed hetwecn Le llovre and the Somme. But Prime Minister Churchill's! warning still held-the buzz-bombl plague wold not be counted esend-i JT 3l\l’\l\lf\ hi "V-l is not tied lo llxczl bases and ls being adapted to war move- ment" it said‘ "Bunkers and earth- works capl-ured by Anglo-Americans are only empty shells. Vital parts of equipment and the secret V-l lt- sclf nowhere have been captured. It. was obvious lhc Nazis are ad- apting their weapon to new con- dtlons, preparing to reduce its weight to get longer range. Can't Work Miracles Britons noted with satisfaction the BGITILSiIOH by propaganda min- ister Goebbels that the Nazis’ pro- mised new wonder weapons have been delayed and ills acknowied e- mellt they could not work miruc es anyway. The bar-rages today seemed redu- ced generally as the direction of the attacks ch Some flying bombs coming through overhanging clouds and walls of defence fire singly and in clusters. flattened houses so buses and a village church. P in By moss smxno ' WITH THE 1ST CANADIAN ARMY NORTH CiF ROUBN. ADS. 31 -— (GP Cable) -—- Canadian col- umns struck out toward the robot bcmb coast from Rouen at light- ning Speed today, reaching Duchy 1o miles northeast of the Seine River City, and Totes. 15 miles due north on the road to Dieppe. Other Canadian units m "l? German snipers in the ancient-city or Roach itself German opposition was extreme- lv llzht and the enemy evidently has withdrawn all around RKYUGIL Thousand of Runs flooded through the citv as- tride the Seine 40 airline miles east of Le Havm, as the whole populat- ion llned the streets and cheered thelmsel hoarse. I through the city with a Canadian column late in the after noon and we wheeled along a roed leading north. It was clear sailing for the I0 miles I travelled. i .________.._..__._. l l Polish Premier linfollis Terms LONDON, Aug. 31 — (AP) Sten- islow Mikoljaczyk, peasant-born Premier of unhappy Poland, today unfolded his terms for reaching an accord with Russia while guaran- teeing the country's sovereignty. He appealed for British and United States backing as s "test case" in- volving hopes for s lasting peace. His program called for formation of a coalition government as soon as Warsaw is liberated, with equal representation for the countryfis five political parties-including l-he one which i,- the mainsprlng for the rival. SOVlct - s nsored national liberation comm ttee. His appeal on the eve of the sixth anniversary of the German invas- ion of Poland was made at a press conference during which he called anew for increased aid for patriots within the battle-gripped capital. The 56 year old Gen. Montgom-l Wafcll MY Foam Fol-KS l! Iclligvglnjgige lchlsi 616mm. “s0 il G - is l a. an l- a - odTligt Gcslrxlxgiinvssehsyrusllpe N , Sun sets this ever-ling at 1.38 and horpcd ma» captured sites in] rises tomorrow momma at 6-22. France meant iitllc. 9nd. 3-45 Fall moon September ‘Summerslds ride cightcell minu- tes later than Charlottetown DAILY All! SERVICE Charlottetown — Snmmerside — Moneton Leave Charlottetown 7 o.m.l H30 a.m.; 6 p-m. Arrive Charlottetown 12.45 pm: 5.45 p.|n.; 8.40 p.m. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown fl noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 p.l'|l. Charlottetown — New Glasgow (Dolly except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown I p-lll. Arrive Charlottetown 5.50 pan. P. B. I.—-N. S. FERRY SERVICI DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands-Mu A. M. 11.00 A. M. 3.00 P. . Leaves Cnriboe — 9.00 A. M. 1.00 wmnllasoonl.