m.’ ‘mun 35 milsglgissl: city's no ethos o! air W's "gig?! we been abandoned by the - m“ Amos flesdquarters anxious- . gs wdsy. n lo - American 0th Arm!- blEiwArAnel-ican tanks and lnisntry- < have smashed their way .80 . mp into German defences no - ; “it oi Salerno, iront line [inclined which n; mad; ill Si! llIYl t sentrated B!) ' "m1 artillery deiences in the tain coun oi the Sai- grno beschh e Am lean forces hold the eastern llmkeot the 5th Army line W s east to Ad istlc t ‘Titnfollh above the ‘Oisrito Iii-vs: Rue hundreds oi square miles oi in Allied anglers Italy are now ‘no "my wastbs HUI‘ IIONIIP isl since the Allies started the invasion oi Ital . with cutstand~ ssias not from ever! ' ~ sector oi the fighting ironic. ‘The initiative is i141‘! i" "i" nds," said a mill Retinal! ______.__.._-_- (Continued on page ’l Ool. l) liilX It Allies’ early assaults on In southern Italy, and northward up the Italian boot, extensive demolitions carried out by retreating German iozces were the principal barrier to rapid advances by Canadian troops taking part in the Italian mainland. The Germans avoided pitched battles, playing a shadow-boxing game. The Italians just did not. want to fight. German engineers blew up this bridge to hinder advance oi the Allies, but Canadian engineers in the ioreiront oi advancing troops rebuilt it in less than iive hours and the Canadians rolled onward. ZT/Z/ The Peop le's Pa per (lovers Prime Edward ilsiend Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1943 9'. . s... iiIld (Canadian Army Overseas Photo) next Thursday I043. it. was. he “First: holdTn circumstances enemy run against us everywhere we him storm as long as he wunts to; hold adamantly and wait and see will) tines out iint. . “Second: Absolutely attack in all nary. lit that moment a year ago Nasl troops actually were at h ItosnmePs army girding for s. new s in the Arctic .'l‘he Dlep continental iortress ha were taking a grim toll oi Allied sh At the hei ht of his successes, Russia's 8,800, enormous cost to 230,000 square V Iga. o At no time since that September oi his spokesmen had any word oi c with glib phrases. A G another in Tunisia. and Finland In Corsica, the the Vichy Regime and restore iree to smash across the Channeu st Be A dosen German cities Allied shipping has been us kill in U-boats has risen to d‘ ive For l2 months Hitler's taunt oi been put to the test, and always it oi the struggle s hold even the Dniener line in Russia try T“ stand is dubious. ahead oi it. News Briefs LONDON, Sept. zv-(Mon- flgy) -(QP) .-. American hea- - . . . W“ n“, Super Explosive UONDON, Sept. 20 -— (OP) — rm Britons, one oi them a scien- tlst. working with the others to perfect s dpoweriui new explosive. were kilie in an arsenal shortly beiore the outbreak oi the war. but. their work, ending so tragical- ly: h%d to provide the Allies . with X, s secret explosive more deadly than B BOSS MUNIIO (Canadian Press War Corres- pendent) WITH TIE CANADIANS IN ITALY, Sept. 22 — (Delayed) ~- (CP Cable) Canadian troops have advanced along dusty, snaky roads nearly 400 miles irom the beaches on the Messina Straits where they went ashore early Sept. i. Now with British 2;»: American iorces they are pressing on the irts oi the mne the Germans y will choose ior the main The capture of Potenza iollow- lung action oi 0th Army tanks and sntry against s iorce of Ger- man paratroops drawn from the Salerno Bay front showed ‘that the Germans were not going stand on the Potenza line. . (Potenza is an important com- munications centre 00 miles east oi Salerno. Its iall was announced in an Allied Headquarters com. munlque ept. 22.) The Nazis appeared to be aban- doning the line oi mounthins run- ning due east irom Naples. Possi- bly their new line stretches from Naples northeast to Fbggla, cen- tre oi s chain oi alrdromes which is on a plain where armored units i “wire not wasted." the Ministry n The names. hereiniors with- . held for securittvercseons. included those. oi F. C. wis. the scientist. and Cmdr. P. M. Long. Admiralty Ordnance Assistant. The othtr rm two iectory hands. RDX, which stands ior Research Department Formula X. is being roduced now in ever larger quan- tics in Canada and the United States. Scientists here tried ior id yearned msnuiscture the su uploslve. succeeding only in i It. liiliililu EVENTS "Talkies Mslllfliue Wednensdzsly.“ cm“ d” W “- ' lAaamli li‘°l1.i'o%“"l°'“ ixiiaw ~ are y e sn s w t {m 0"" m: nu‘ Mo??? ia ly regular Allied front extend: ing across Italy irorn Salerno Say Canadians Advance 400 Miles in Italy 0h ' . to hi’. l-lfi. t‘ Show Mt Stewart nil 041M "r ds si- au- x»... ‘To""3oJY‘° "°' oil-an "Bulk Wheat to arrive. 300k sew. ldeGulgan a mo. I-id-l0i. "ghiokm ‘a i... son-o. in ,. “m” ‘in. m‘ ' u’ pom-st "Dance. borne veuoy mu. Sep- Sees danger of flanking u Orchestra - NDIN i=8}? i; Grave View of Allied Cains llonvoy Attacked, Reaches Port IDNDON. Sept. 26 — (OP) —The Allied convoy which Prime Minister Churchill told the I-louse oi Com- mons last Tuesday was being attack- ed by U-bonts oven as he spoke has reached port. it was disclosed today. The battles outcome has not been Bnnmlllced by the Admiralty, but a Berlin claim that l2 destroyers and nine merchant ships totalling 46.000 tons were sunk was viewed here as an exaggeration. The Germans said the convoy was attacked while en route to North America. M . Churchill told the House that the Allies had not lost a ship to en- emy submarines in the North Atlan- tle in the (our months ending Sept. ROMAN WALL IN DANGER GRIENHEAD. England — (OP) - One oi the British Roman monu- ments. Hadrian's wall, may become s W" “will? llhless the government takes measures to restrict the work of two-quar lng companies in this sreiiwil ls being undermined. moves against defences V iiyeld st ltheims, France, late escort-which included R.C.A.F. ‘Spitfires — returned without oss. - A L L l E D HEADQUARTERS SOUTHWEST PACIFIC. Sept. 2'1 th eat- Z1." bo%'o'|'::na"lto¥:' in infan- tory oi sir wlriare. Mrs. Donald MacDonald, Dre- sident of the Rice Point Womens l te and Mrs. Sadie Mac- Dougall. Canoe Cove. were 81195‘ delegates at the annual meeting oi the P.E I. Tuberculosis League last week. They ‘represented the Rice Point Womens Institute- JOIIANNBSBUIIG. Sept. N — (OP -- Reuters) -Ahout three tons oi industrial diamonds. valued at more than 815,000,000 have iust been transierred to Canada. The Siiijlltlilllt! are believed to be the largest and most valuable In the history oi the industry. IN . ITALY, Sept. 20 -— (Dela. ed) —(A Victor manuel. Premier Marshal Pietro Badoglic and his government are in s southern Ita- lian town which in effect is the provisional capital o! Italy. The King arrived here Rome almost two weeks ago as the Germ were marching on the et- ernal city. . 980i. 20 -- (Delay- — Germany is moving mosrine r Balkan tworthy that n a oatuerrgfmfitntil: ill-gin“ a If less must now to buy Ted and ltiuber zeta. Wehster Fad-L m South its _ “GHOII It. Ifljwvlr ooln..la fin‘ . “m, ,3; (an-rifle: ' sun Writer) filfy would aiiord lit-friction ior """‘ — maroon Set se-(Ar) l t Mainline umupewdm; @ I'- pgw “u. °' may, ills-b ' s’ grs. view aim the tglnvgiom m lksns. w . ‘You, tion ior new The lav government's in- REW- "W" °"° n; n - mu deiences in iormstion y out n“ " ‘ Italy i daisy“: fit rilla ioross have beaateu oif 433w“? l"! 1*" m‘ “a mu °' ‘immune. dispatches polo oi abut. m3“ mu hold “d2 “m, ma‘ “mm . m the German capital indicated or snack. mm“ " - l4" , ndents in Ber- their u oalsv deiehces allinlt ,, -—- lin said strong concentrations o! Allied attacks have been lvfld "m"!!! Pill MW" Allied air and naval icuoes on - Partisan armies it sai st. Stewart llohds: ‘Iues- and u» Allied-acid por ion i hting around ll : weer-mow: o: have aroueeu iears there some and sum has been "when n: Cardigan m- that s in he Ieghorn to the pe e's liberation arm . but t-fl-ll area oi that‘ r not coast is s Swiss o patch irom mi apest ,, as; early pomleiilty said Saturday that the Yugoslav nkors Wednesday m- 0n German leit iisnk, the cam ign u from the "as. em. as. l.i .m. "The Little - ilmatohsa mo. Allied fuel-ma s e to a lilo-ooh. mil- il>rams ‘l “pooh” °' ."°" '3“sa"h‘ “iiillfi s" "'23" °£“'1‘l§l..l.‘¥’il.a°§.“l" _ a Ill jflfl m Il ' ‘I m“ ‘e-m-sl 0% 34mm. rn- lied commend. By Kirke L. Simpson, Associated Analyst This wed holds s bitter anniversary ior Berr Hitler, In“ w he ogened the annual Nssi winter rellei csml) ll rlin by announcing t t “we have the battle oi Stalingrad was st its hellhl- e Vol a. Alexandria. was in dire peril w)!!! tack along the Alaincin line only 60 miles a\vay. Great losses had been suffered by Allied convoys to R raid to test the western deiences of the cost heavily in liie. In the Altsntis U-boats st“- tler held 100000 square miles 0|’ qquare-mile ares. Today, Bitlcr boasted as won by the Wehrmacht And the floundering Nazi armies now s-re has been an endless chapter oi defeat they have sought to ex erman army and all its racer was lost at Italian Allies have dese another Nari-held state lighting now with the United Nations ior iree- om. Balkan satellite states are in near revolt against their is ready to eut her unnatural ties with Be ing back in the southwestern Pacific under preliminary Allied blows. bridgehead ior an Allied invasion the most poweriui armed iorce the‘ l‘ ie in bomb-blasted campaign that has only star-ed on its deadly work o1 destruction. At s" ng the Atlantic irecly ior lllilllths and the figures. hwuit and see who will tire first has as nd back-tracked where it did not surrender. It has held nohing yet, however urgent the orders from Berlin. Its 8N1"? l0 - a m most defence ms. to hold in the west against the ' storm oi Allied attsck by air, sea and land piling up ior action, is still Sun ca.‘ s ‘communique I"- Clouds oi Allied bombers and nouns earv y. n hte t o u. hund a Both the bimbo‘! ""1 "W" tiiroua iiiflooi m: otter-risers. —(M‘.onday) —(AP)—The advance t n ‘I f b0 h byrAusg-alian troops‘ onomgnasga fivveraedglb?‘ Spiteieires? in ore "(ti lsrzi...apzaer..rlz*zl.s...a... - m-oo -»=--»- om»- Guinea. has beri slowed, Allied "filminbe" m, [lgmm _ m" headquarters ‘comm: today‘ upon layer — went over at al- saw rook. Scot. zs-(srl- gfigfi‘, "‘§"'""l "m 1°-°°° ‘° m“ . ee . :5‘: fimrgtlnawflw: ‘imp. To veteran coastal observers it =-- some» w» ~- fl-n- ."'- "":...v.l...;l'..":.'.:.;".1; new to h th Gesfipo nL-ZZrrlKSorlFVe-g i... . dfifi” d“ At Your Service scorers at: further it is doubly important Eco by the "iiavour” stander‘, IIIIII ight Press War IGSP drsited a very simple program" or what must be held, that ll, let "15 do not intend to advance, and let circumstances where attack is ll”- use N azi those go s have dwindled st miles. Almost all the "living slIflW" ior his greater Germany is loslt along the Dnllll". not the an sepia. I‘. in 5W3? talingrad, a him anll Italy is just speech a ear ago has Hitler or hecr to g vs the German Nssl masters rlin. Japan is ml- oi France to villi France is in the making. In Britain world has ever known is mustered in itseli. ruins in an Allied air been the Wehrmacht which tirefl or any line in Italy on which it ma! lilcuds of Allied Fighters Gross Channel LONDON, Sept. 2B -— (AP) - sky over the Channel to assault Nusi objectives in Northern France today in one oi the greatest operations oi the crush- ng Allied air oiiensive. Watchers in the Folkstone urea power yet seen. Countless iesthery vapor trails etched in the sky, became s tangle oi skeins as the iorma- tions reached the enemy side oi the Channel and challenged Nsrl iighters. While the sir ileets ve the continent a brisk born Jsshlng in demonstration oi the over- whelming aeriai might achieved in three years, the British people, irom King to commoner, paid tribute to the R.A.F.'s “few” who won the battle oi Britain. For those who were on the re. ceiving end oi the bombs in the battle oi Britain three years ago this Sunday was a day oi thanks- giving ior their deliverance. Leading the nation's observ- ancc. the King and Queen at- tended morning service at St. Paul's and during the aiternoon stood outside Buckingham Palace and reviewed s parade oi civil deienee and sircrait workers, snti-alrcrnit, It. A. F. and Dom- inon air iorces. .. N. — (OP) - The Brigades Union confer nee decided to ask ior s. raise of l0 shillings (I30) a week in basic rates oi ppy ior iirernen. The ic rate now is Cl-ls-d (011m). FOBMII. FARM!!! DIS! SUSIZX. 11.3.. Sept. 26-40?) —Jesse '1'. Presc . iorme 80. prominent tanner “and well knowri . st his home here 1 _ llllLES FROM POLISH B There's no Stopping Them Petty Oiiicer Steward Reigh Mac- Ilean, RCNVR. oi Charlottetown, P. E. I., and Spryiield, N. S. who was recently promoted to the rate oi petty oiiicer at an eastern Canada port. More than 2 1-2 years sea time to his credit MacLesn joined the navy in September, 1940. lie has served nearly all his time oii the west coast. Buflilm LONDON, Sept. 2'1 _ Mon- dayl-(CP) — Three German capital ships, the _ Tirpits, Soharnhorst‘ and Lutsow, are reported to have been sabot- aged by their own crews in the Alten Fjord oi Norway lbllow- ing disclosure oi the surrender, oi the Italian ileet, a Reuters news agency dispatch irem Stockholm said today. The dia- mtch contained no iurther do- Second Hunting Fatality In N. B. PEHTCODIAC, N. 3.. Sept. 26- (CP) - The second iatallty oi the present hunting season in New Brunswick occurred near here ear- ly Saturday night when Bliss Hicks. 56, Petltcodiac, was shot by another hunter who authorities id- entiiied as Frank Keith. Hicks was hunting with Charles Henry Smy- the, Jr.. an employee oi the rall- way shops at Moncton, when the former was mistaken tor a deer. A coroneer. Dr. P. Mcl. Atkinson. was summoned from Moncton and an inquest will be held here Wednes- daylight. By EDWARD KENNEDY (Canadian Press Staii Writer) SOMEWHERE IN SOUTHERN ITALY, Sept. 2i — (Delayed) — (AP) - Italy's conception oi her present status as an ally oi Great Britain and the United States and virtually a member of the United Nations has met with considerable coldness on the part oi British and American soldiers. Although London and Washing- ton appear inclined to make eon- cessions in this respect to the govermwnt of Marshal Badoglio as an eiiective way of fighting the Germans, most soldiers are outspoken in asserting they do not want the Italians as their "allies." OUTSPOKEN ARTICLE This view was expressed in s remarkably outspoken article in the British 8th Army-News, oi- iicial newspaper oi that army, the 8th is made up of British and Canadian troops. 0th Army News demanded that the Italians not be treated as s; but be made "to pay the price oi their iolly." The editorial ollowed the pub. lication oi greetings from Premier Bsdoglio to the 0th Army. In this essage Bado lio said: commander. o ilcsrs and troops oi the 0th army I send greetings. In the common struggh which awaits us, Italian soldiers will march aide by side with British comrades avalnst the German oppressor for the liberation oi Italian soil and for iinal victory.” 'I‘he 0th Army News, replying to this. said that the men oi this army were entitled to express their own views on this subject. “Italy surrendered uncondi- tionally, Badogllo tells us why Italy Bflve in." the paper said. SOME COMPLAINTS "What do we iind now? The Ita- lians are our allies. They there~ iorc clnlm to exorcise inde-pendenoe in internal niinlrs. A soldier who Y. line was imperilled by 8th Army Cool Tocvards Italians as “Allies ” MAXlMS era MERE MAN Ilow great is tbs merit oi ilvinl open little. lwhssligttou Delivered, ".00 Illl, I035 other Provinces I ILIJ. 100. RDER II shhlhl rward Towards Foggia Airports Smash Forward After Capture Of Smolensk By EDDIE GILMORE . (Assiciated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, Sept. 26—(AP)-Smashing on af- ter the spectacular capture of Smolensk, the Red army northwest of that former Nazi stronghold fought on a line barely more than 100 miles from the Polish border today and Pravda, the Com- munist Party organ, declared “the gates to the west are open." The Russians were making sensational pro- gress westward along the line of the Dnieper River from its Smolensk sector to its big southern bend at Zaporzhe. 0n both the west and east banks oi the swinging no oi the Dnieper in the Smolensk ares the Red Army iilled out and consolidated hun- dreds oi positions. From ca ured Brovsri, which commands the hllhws. on Kiev‘! outskirts to sporshe, the lted Army girded itseli for the iiiicult task oi storming across the mighty waterway. There was no indication that the Russians bad yet crossed the river in ioroe. although patrols may be ieeling out the defences on the wen- ern bank in some sectors. Russia's victorious Ited Armies oven-en m more villages and reached the east bank o! the Dnieper River semss irom Kiev. the capital oi the Ukraine, the Moscow lundayxmmtmiquo lieu‘ News Agency qu Moscow reports as saying the Ger- mans were fleeing irorn Kiev "lire rats irorn a sinkink shlD"~ iiicially that some Tyne Valley Visited by Violent Storm Berlin said o Russian units already had crossed Th. ma“ com“ the Dnieper Iuven. which the Ger- mans had counted upon to serve as o‘ w“. vmw‘ "9" QIPMM t? a stout deienoe barrier, st several ‘ in . ... said the Russians had broken through to the River near Kiev, Kremen- weatoi a violent alecurwal stun‘: elrlg some butnoilieswerelostnowwsssn - one injured so iar as could chug and Dnepropetrovsk, key learned. 901m; along a mo mile gtremh, ‘rho residence oi Tho (One German broadcast recorded m fitglfilok but} no ilre magiwed b’ m’ “mnm PM‘ “u mu" the roof an torrential rain which ian parachute troo s were dropping behind Axis positons and it was m obvious the entire Dnle r leg/er Bricks were knock“ . e cms “g chimne at. the residence od Edison Soviet offensive; which began July wmimé and ‘ “we u.“ “em-by i2 and h already r ined more w“ ‘pm 1mm W9 m bottom Th, than 130. nulls m C! 0! Wffl- bolt also stri ped the leaves irom WWO another smal er tree. The Dnieper is the last big nst- e storm was described as one ural deienoe barrier beiore the Pol- oi the "most terrible" in the mem- lsh border. and Moscow dispatches ory oi the oldest residents oi the said the Bed y was making l- sensational progress from Smolensk to the Zaporonhs area, on the River's bend in th. community. It beg about 3 lastedanhom‘. B comparative latent rumbles of heard in Simmer an ning could be seen but there was “Somfiooofi was caused to tele- phone lines ‘Iyne Valley. EXCESS PROFITS TAXI] PORT OF §AIN,-.'I‘rinidsd, S099. 26 — (C? Cable) — An amend- ment has been ‘ duoed in the Trinidad Legislature to require British-owned oil and sugar com. ponies operating here to pay ex- cess proiits taxes. At present these concerns are paving taxes directly to the United Kingdom Govern»- ment, and they were exempted irom Trinidad taxes as part oi the colony's contribution to the war o . army could sequestrate what it wanted in cars. typewriters. print- ing presses or paper. Now that Italy is our ally, we have to be very careiul and in some cases pay ior these things. “Many Italians in fact are un- cler the impression that because they say, ‘now-wyure‘ your allies,‘ they are going to spare their country the retribution which a Just vctory normally demands oi a dgiemeil enemy and which a deieated enemy expects to make. "W all due sympathy for Ita- lion su iering under their self. chosen German friends, we should get their minds straight on this. "The Italians who sincerely cheer our troops today when they enter a new city also cheered Mussolini..." SIMILAR VIEWS Similar views are being express- ed here by American oiiicers and men. although the ieeling in this regard perhaps is not quite so pronounced among the Americans as among the British. Many sol- diers also assert ths showing made by the Italian army in Airics proves they would be oi little use as combatants in driving the Ger- mans out. This scorn ior the Italian army. coupled with the imct that many oi their comrades were killed by Italians. makes many soldiers bristle at the idea oi having Ita- lians as "allies." Finding Italians in charges oi civil administration and uing decrees which indirectly aiiect the Allied iorces also seems strange oMlY t. Mt VHF‘. KFAT CHECK BOOK Ms As ‘(limits ‘was in: ONLY , 00K lie WEEK owuao 41" "“‘T'd3‘“““"“"”" ' ’ Inn‘ he‘ laiilisuhagrnlng at 10.0) am se this evening st d?‘ and wishes to change his British oc- cupation money flnds it hard. ll not imnnseible. to do so. Tile Ita- lians are qulbbllng about the rnte oi 400 lire to ihe pound sterling. ' "Before Italy was our ally, the to soldiers who thought they had flu; defeated the Italians once and ior N,,'}°','§‘,‘Z,‘.,',‘,“’5,'“°'““: qfsifihh - All. ' some. nssmsus roo (def n 99%,?‘ Ofiicers of the Allied Military Chariot .. gimmqrflflg _ Government oi occupied territories, an“; who came here to administer the Leave Charlottetown 1.5a g, u country and since have iound their i230 m. Add m. u: izatlon sidetracked while Ita- A ve Chsrlmtetown L10 p. m, “an glficials conttiroll oil/til‘ power. 5-45 I III. ‘Ml p. m. ew e are resen u. eas one _ _ high A.M.G. oiilcisl has resigned 55%,} fgcflvlgggff asufllggill and others lounge about saying: n I“. hhn“_ 1" Y5 "Well this is s pretty comic war mg u “t... . l .- "- We came here to do a job, but we u“. -,-_ ind we are not allowed to do it.” 1 "u, g .,-, P‘ P” ‘n. l. A