MAXIMS MERE MAN’ 1:211 OI A , mgqyhstreooeuoosldnet. .,----,,,,..::.:::.-'".-.m-..°.-.-'~ i ...____ I ll. L. B. Iirants pillage Increase J11 Steel Workers Sept. C—(CP)— Labor Board it has Joar at March ll last. . Workers at the Algomn Steel Corp. plant at Sault Ste. Marie. " 0st, who were receiving more 11 the base rate of I5 l-Z rents at March 28 last have been granted a _ ‘ increase of I l-Zdcents an hour, the ss . B ALAN ItANDAI. Canadian Press Staff Write 1 IDNDON. Best 9—(CP)—Ger- llllll’. after sendin bombers out l" limp 250 tons of mbs on Cov- lllill’. invented the verb "to cov- Ilinle.’ now it has gone home tc host in the ashes and ruins of such s as Hamburg, Dusseldorf, Co- t. Essen and other centres of German war industry. The Germans thought they had In the world something when "*1 dropped 11,900 tons oi’ bombs {alwbritaln in the third quarter oi .But when the _British bombers time out for the return m“ m" dFODDQd more than te that tonnage in the second fllllfler of i943, Just how the RAF. caught up hbobllssed the German air force "lb Wllllase dropped. is shown almgltlloaing table issued by the RAF Ger. tons tons t?“ if’? er. . Miluarter 1040 2,150 gyiim {if quarter 1040 2.500 11,000 m Quarter 104i 2:100 11,000 haiquarter 1041 7,200 1500 quarter 1041 8,000 1,1100 quarter 1041 4.000 e00 n“ and patience have often RepggtAGermans Decide to Stand on P Plan to Fight I I 1T0 Last Man to Hold No. Italy B! EDWARD D. FALL (Amociated Press Staff Writ") LONDON. Sept. 9-—(AP)—Ad0lf Hitler, trapped in the centre of his ownwaver fortress, was report- erence today at which it was de- ded to reinforce the Po River line in Italy and fight there to the last m an. Apparently detennined to make Italy a blood battlefield despite her capitulat on, Germany moved s y se important com- munication centres and strategic goints to offset gains already made y Allied landing forces and appeals to Italian forces w turn against their former Allies. Berlin announced that Italian troops had occupied the vital Bren- ner Pass and, with announcement that some key communications were held by Italians "loyal to the Axis," o» .- way traffic between the two coun- tries was halted by the Germans. In Yugoslavia Too Germany also s quickly into action across the Adr atic, occupy- ing the Dalmatian area oi Yugos- lavia’s southwestern coast in an at- tem t to block any Allied invasion oi t e Balkans through that Bill-t- way. The seizure. e broadcast said, was carried out with the aid of Croat puppets. Other German broadcasts ack- nowledged that Italian troops al- ready had turned against the Ger- mans in some parts oi Ital . but claimed that the Italian in rnal situation was generally under Ger- man control. Reports from the Balkans said that Italian divisions which have been used as occupation troops were being disarmecl and replaced by German divisions. --~- Swiss Reinforce Frontiers Switzerland rushed reinforce- ments to her own frontiers today to await any eventuality. and dis- atches to Madrid said the Swiss ad mobilized about four-fifths of their frontier forces. Adispalch to the Borne news- paper Der Bund said strong Italian formations were drawn up W hill a few miles oi German roops in northern Italy and near Venice. Allied forces which landed on the Tyrrhenian coastline ivere report- ed in Berna to be moving north- ward with an advance guard of Italian troops. Milan, Turin and other northern Italian industrial cities were said to be completeléyémunder Italian con- trol. with G an troops leaving those places. Reports Bombs ilropped 0n Rome quarter 1042 3.500 25o i" ‘limiter 1942 12.300 1100 -—— bl Quarter 1111.2 15000 e00 LONDON. Sept. a-(cr) -— The u‘ quarter i942 5.000 n Italian radio reported tonight that ii1“i““" m“ "~‘°° "°° ifém“§'$ii'i‘ili“e‘fhé’l“fiiii'L““hi’33‘l’$l u ' E .. m" ""3 °°'”°° ”°° 1M1?‘ "a"; .111. 01111" ti.“ u u, _ ug. an e e a ans e- lloppgsd gymttile welfiggtvjgfxlé°mgg clare the ca ital an open city. $ii'nrliuln u” m the end °f fagihe $112101; cgilitltllwgn ‘OB-iii? $5 I l ‘ 1°55 than ha" the "lo-MW sounded in bnie and several bombs It'll 1 RA "nosed hv the home-based - F- 0n Germany. 00111119 svsnrs "Dance. Johnston's River School, m‘. September 10th. Dancinf .30 to l P M II 0-1 . COM u!“ ;_ Wlll eeiiveimiiingtdir 1N1‘: a “rihmi MW"- Mt. Herbert. o ' IJ-‘CB-aiei. "Cornwall re t th i e my In Wm‘ D sen Cl‘ PHI ' llrlember iaiiirlithiiaiiich’ siiiili-“iii “Chicken 9a r B o and °'- "l1 Alma '11 a. on "llllger iSth. Mule iei-vso 1% - O-l0-2i. first $21.1 "" .."":: ~31- Bvwman. . yi-l-S-wll). ,..,,w “tira- and fowl. r 111 s w , amizdilrloes. Island Ool-dy Swill! _ - s-ae-u. . “Mn l M lirliuwfeniaiiililigr, ‘iseéil 11- -1o-i1- 1. . , .__ ‘lhmsmuoreiinu Bete - tlrugfhiaiiflfi I - o-s-si. , ___ “Ema Pr! sept ior ice C,“ Bogf-‘géfiiyabingo, gores *3 “ma. ""13: Ste a Mar ""96 to bu! live and dressed g werewdrppped. By Gladwin Hill Associated Press Stall Wflifl LONDON, Sept. O — (A?) — In crashin synchronisation with the new Alied landings in Italy, rec- ord iieete oi British and American aircraft battered Nazi ports and sirfields In northern I-‘rsnoe today and in doylongloperationsalso for- med on timbre a for naval and landing craft that filled the straits of Dover in an unpame en dress rehearse‘ oi o. arose-channel invasion. Under the cover of the mightiest daylight air fleet ever sent out min the Sritlsh Isles, combined operations launched naval vessels landig? barges and all other man- ner invasion craft in the bigg- eat and boldest exercises oi h kind ever held. A night and {tjiintly lg ry nited tales Army Headquarters summarising operations against the continent. said Allied planes flew more than 1,000 sorties to hit multiple targets, including the issued Paris area where, it was announ- ced. Flying Fortress downed enemy fighters The channel invasion show, mock wow: Perhaps reality soon, clim- o-io-ii. 11121111. Intense Air Activity Over Northern France led dwellers were convinced the in- ° ling German airiorce to the aerial ill Nerd. ‘v’ per "rltga we" ‘vvvw-wvww-x‘ Covers Prince Edward l Island Like the Dew CHARl-OTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 194a IIIIHII Read by Everybody Iieeeased Ch’t0wn Soldier Awarded Military Cross THE LATE CAPTAIN MACDONALD, M. C. News that the late Capt. William Kenneth MacDonald. R. C. A. M. C. had been awarded the Military Cross was received yesterday by Capt. MacDonald's father. Mr. P. J. MacDonald, Charlottctvxn. 'i‘he news was conveyed in the follow- ing letter from Major J. G. Mc- Carrol, secretary oi the First Can- adian Division Medical Society Canadian Army Overseas, dated Aug. l9: “ Dear M1‘. MacDonald: “On i2 August word cam Ic me that Ken-land been killed n act- ion, whilst" in pcrioimaiice oi hi! duties as R. M. O. to the Seaforth Highlanders of Canada. “Ken and I were classmates at Queen's and I miss seeing him, as I do all members oi the Div. Med. Society. Words are little consolat- ion ior the loss oi your son. but the thoughts of all of us are as yours and we join in your sorrow. "Previous to his death, which was instantaneous, Ken was recomm- ended fcl‘, and awarded, the Milit- ary Cross for his bravery and dev- otion to duty. On several occasions iie wcnt forward under heavy enemy machine gun and mortar fire to attend wounded men. I-lis regiment will miss his work and example. When the end came. Ken was forward looking lifter a woun- ded mnn at an outpost." "Deepest sympathy oi all mem_ bars oi’ the ist Canadian Division Medical Society goes out to you in your bereavement and my pgfggn- R1 Sympathy at the loss of a friend is extended to you." "Sincerely yours". Capt. MacDonald was born at Olive Head. PEI, 0n Feb. 25, 1013. He graduated from Mount Allison and Queen's Universities and ln i940 was appointed to R. C. A. M. C. with the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corns with the rank of Lieutenant. Prior to olng overseas he served on the sta i oi the Rid- eau Military Hospital, Ottawa. He was among the first Island soldiers to be reported in action in Sicily. News oi his dcath in action was announced only a short time ago. The late Capt. MacDonald was a brother of City Councillor B. Earle d MacDonald. axed the eighth consecutive day of terrific aerial offensive which may form the final prelude to assault upon Europe from the west. It was accompanied b far-flung operat- ions reverberat ons of which rock- ed buildings six miles inland in England. - Co tremendous was the muscle- flerring demonstration, carried on under the noses oi Nazi coastal de- fences, that many British coastal vasioii oi France was actually un- der way. But a terse official summa y said onllvs: "full-scale amphibious ex- erc es were. . .most successful. Valuable lessons were learned." And as iemarkable as the man- oeuvres was the almost utter ab- sence oi resiatance by the dwind- coastal onslaught. Allied bombers, many unescorted. droncd through the skies almost 1ipopposcd. Targets oi the tremendous day- light assault included an aircraft engine factor near Paris objec- oulogno and st. Omer i1 Lille, Beaumont-Sur-Olsne Lille- Lille-Vaudeville, Vltry-En- Artois. Abbeville-Durcat, Mono - Breton. Bryon-Sui, Merville e11 n France, and At coriyde in crack. British and American side Ls di sistaiicc. to the north. targelm-war industries, oli vast German battle units, too, narrowing defence lines. now to the war in the Pacific. hapa joined by the Italians in some Drdldifigll‘ strength ls suffering telling ac Japan ‘o draw replacements from Increasing by Japan in the last from outlying dcnserl liric of defence closer War Situation Last N doubtedly toward the harder uu er core of Ar President Roosevelt remarked, rather than easier during the long months to come." fields, rnllltnry installations-are w rnunli closer striking distance of bombers based on Italian airfielils. But will be grouping tighter and deeper about Difficult and costly as the Allied route to victory ma render of Iialv definitely is a. long step toward that goal. tion oi the Allied sea strength in the Mediterranean may be diverted e . Continuation of the staggerln losses of month may force her to retreat faster and faster Islands and likely lead to establishment of a much ""1- llu Tokyo Jtseli’. ig By John H. Wiggins. Associated Press Staff Writer The Allied vice is squeezing harder on Hitler's Europe, compressing ‘ the Natl-held fortress into a. smaller-and from now on tougher nut to As the Russian end of the vise continues to push on relentlessly, the Ing northward through fallen Italy un- concentrating German rc- Swift Allied landings along the western coast oi the boot are brin - Lng closer a test of that German mettle near the valley oi the River o the war will become "iou her Obviously, A lied Ithln be. the Bill‘- t least a I10!‘- Wbilc Allied forces are Swflfllllnfiflp‘ the Tyrrhenlan l... 002st. l1"- , Japanese military, naval losses in the south and southwest c. The heavy reduction in Nlpponese air strength apparently ls forcinK other-and thus weakened-fronts in an effort to hold what remains in New Guinea and the Solomons- 0 mer “ ‘men _ are w ' e siliinply lines faster than Japanese industrial capacity can resircngthen m planes and men suffered HospitalsmSliolritl-Staffed Situation Is .I. L. Cohen’s Membership With W. L. B. Ended lO/ITAWA. Sept. 9-(0?) —- The cabinet at a meeting this after- noon dccidcd lo ‘terminate Mr. J. I... Cohen's membership of the Nui- ional ivar labor hoard} prime Min- ister Mackenzie King announced tonight. Before the cabinet at its meeting this afternoon was a letter from Mr. Justice CP. McTague, board chairman. which said in part that "Mr. Cohen's attitude is completely inconsistent with the principles upon which the national war labor board was reconstituted in Feb- ruary of the present year." Expect New Manpower Regulations orrAwA. Sept s - <0?» - New regulations tightening the 11e- strictions on 10b ohanilfs a” 9X‘, pected to be announced shortly, it‘ was learned in official quarters 1.0-‘ l1 . $911111. oi the changes are 110t- likely to be made known until com- plcte instructions for their enfor- cement have been sent to the more than 200 selective service offices throughout Canada. With new manpower resources at 1i low point, emphasis now is be- ing placed on increasing the effic- iency of labor employed in essen- tial work. The new regulations are understood to be aimed in this dir- ection. by checking wastage through labor turnover. Arthur MacNamara. director oi National Selective Service, said in an address in Ottawa today that there is at present a shortage oi some 70.000 workers in "A" prior- itv jobs and an over-all shortage of 100.000. I-Ie so also that the only re- maining labor pool oi any sirc is among housewives and others who do riot ordinarily take employment. in many centres. particularly lar- ger cities. selective Service has been urging the employment of married women on s. part- e basis to relieve shortages in certain t_y__pes_oi_w_ork. 5111880 CANADA iielgliji. l Reported llljoiljgher Dreadful’ OTTAWA. Sept. 9—(CP)-—A. J. Swanson of Toronto, 116198334 Y9" presenting the 1'25 members 01 the Ontario Hospital Association, said today before the seventh flllrllwi meeting of the Canadian Ilosilli-lll Council that the staff situation o! hospitals is "rather dreadful at PW- sent" and that "somezhinll mil-ii be done to give uslsome relief in the way o personne .' Delegates represent Hospital Associations and Counci through- out Canada said (luring a (1180116- sion of hospital operation under war conditions that industries are “robbing" them of Bmiliilyees- End that Selective Service should aPPlY 111s “teeth” 0i its regulations W overcome this situation. Suggestion was advanced“ that liCSDltul employees should be m0“? or less frozen" in the capacities ill!‘ which they lind been trained. and that wilgc levels should be establish- ed so hospitals would n01; hill/e W compete with industry in obtainin! help. Dr. J.A. McMillan of Charlotte- town, representing the Maritime pital Association, said his a-s- sociation's hospitals had clbllllillllll- divert hospital workers to Other 00- cupations.’ New Brunswick nad experienced a Sl-per-ceiit increase i_u HVEFIISB daily patient census, while the iii- crcase in Ontario, Manitoba and Prince Edward Island liad vflrlfid between l8 and i7 per cont. In Al- berta, Saskatchewan and Qllebefi the increase ranged between 10 911d ll per cent. Argentina's Foreign Minister iluits Post BUENOS AIRFS, Sent. 9~iAP)-' Segundo R. Storni, retired vice Ad- miral who was a nro-DQmOCFBtIC member of Pedro Ramirez’ Gov- ernment. resigned as Foreign Min" ister tonight following dlscioflllfé 01 atlo al exchange 0i letibr! glltsfimCorgell Hull United Bil-MC Secretary. withdrawal oi the bluff old oi- ficer came as the Argentine Press. profiting by government authori- zation to comment on the di lo- matic incident, generally criticsed the Foreign Minister for havlni a position to receive a ublic admonition from States Government. It came with reiectioii of l! bid for United States lease-lend Rid i0! Argentina, the only American coun- t which still maintains relations w th the Aitis. Smooth Sailinq For All yourBokinq When you use M7 Germans Close Swiss Frontier LONDON. Sept. 9 _ (OP) --'ihe Germans closed the French-Swiss frontier today even as Switzerland rushed troop reinforcements to all her borders. The Germans posted additional troops along the French border and ordered that all persons seeking to cross must have visas. There was no explanation for the German action, but it may have been taken to conceal trocp movements 0P PO-Sslble disturban- ces in France. Canada IIas Big Flour 0rder OTTAWA. SeDii- 9 —- (OP) - Cannda has started a determined effort to provide the United King- dom with about 1,000,000 tons oi flour, an order twice as large as that announced yesterday as hav- ing been granted to Australia, ghéide Minister MacKinnon said o . ay. He told tiie_ Canadian Press that Canada now is "working on" the order, t0 supply the flour to Brit- ain as speedily as Possible. Every effort is being made to increase production of Canadian flour mills dmeet the unusually heavy dem- an . Ii plleared th t blllldiglg up largeastocklsidliiilnilouif and some authorities speculated that these supplies will be held av. ailable for use in feeding the db- erated countries of Europe as the war proceeds. Reds Rejoice at News of Italian Capitulation BY HENRY C. CASSIDY Associated Press Stan Wm," MOSCOW. Set. 9~1AP)—News oi Italys capit. atlon was rcceiv. ed Jubilantiv in the Soviet Union, where it w attributed largely to the Red filmy?» victories on the eastern front. It was interpreted to mean that the; way now is open for the early gale“ "11’ Gemini’. The broken ngaisncahrgrp’ Iisgsitiiilheflsguvemment “E m tfatmfgpillt,’ sPPPOach- ves a Italian surignder? explaining ‘he "It is 11 1- Sogsiet ‘frlfilctmlfile £11151: ‘gill s cgirlltiltit; en ° Picked It ll exiézrtninated. a an "Oops were ‘ e victory i m n“ izavs our allies 1011s pgssihis ofigfif ‘unity t0 land troops in Sicily.” Mllssfllllll "Pllealed w uinei- on gull’ l8 and I9 for arms, Izvegtlh aid. but the Germans were tied up on the Orel and Bffigorod fronts and were unable to spare them Reports of the negotiations and subsequent surrender oi Italy were fully Published here and the dis. patches underlined the fact that Armistice conditions were approv- ed by the Soviet Union. No ofiicinl comment from res. ponsible Soviet authorities was im- mediately available. AID FROM MOTIIERLAND NAIROBI —- (UP) — Windmills from Britain are being sent to Kenya t0 Bld the colony's extend- 0R I nerve Awake my soul, stretch every MAXI MS OIA. MERE MAN and prflss with vigor on. lllsoeriptlou ll"- “.00 Streaming Ashore; La By EDWARD aI surrender. Allied reinforcements still streaming ashore. there last November, "are forces and prisoners have dians went ashore there. London.) Before the troop} struck shore near Naples ree waves of Hascati, 12 miles outside Rome, in a. neat culmination of events tha has staggered the Axis both pol- itically and military. Other bombers from the Middle East also dumped 150 tons 0f ex- BY CLARK LEE Representing‘ the combined Amor- Bl WITH GENERAL EISENHOW- ER AT AN ADVANCED pected to meet strong, skillful and sustained German resist- ance, despite Italy's uncondi- tional surrender. plosives on the Floggia expanses of airdromes less than 100 miles east of Naples to facilitate the big am- phibious operation. Navies The landing occurred a few mom- ents after 4 a.m. (i0 p.m. E.D.'I‘ - ll p.m. A D.’I‘. Wednesday) undo!‘ cover oi a powerful barrage laid down by the British and Amer- ican navies, This terrific rain 0f explosives smashed wooden hills overhanging the invasion coast. and u bindings ed dairy and stock-farming indus- ry. By William T. Peacock Associated Press Staff Writer-"- WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 - (AP) -Itsly's surrender was interpreted by Wm- Iciriiry Hoary Stimson today as an omen that ether Ehr- ropeans wlll rise up against their Nazi masters and welcome the Al- lies as bringers of freedom, once the- opportunity develops. In a prcrs conference discussion, Stimson 11.x not say whether he thought 1111s possibility extended to the German people themselves. but lie made clear that he attach- ed major importance to the "moral factor" of Italy's capltulaiion. It comes" he noted at a time when the Germans iicld a gr at part of Italy and so iv '1 act oi e- iiance which may bring harsh Nazi ieprisals. "Ilhe significance of this to us," he continued "is that It demon- left__grgat_cgiunfiris_of_smoke__os Other Europeans May Emulate Italian Move Likely to Rise Against Nazi Masters When Opportunity Develops strated, in my opinion, the under- lying sympathy of the people for the cause of freedom. and that they recognize that we. that our forces. represent the cause of freedom." "That is an omen of great im- portance, an omen of great hope for our future campaigns. shows that the people oi Europe recognize the cause that we re- present." In other observations on me war, Stimson said the Allies have com-' inand llie air over southern It- aly, and the ground forces landed I11 the viclnllv of ‘Naples are mak- ing satisfactory progress. How- divislons. a larger force than any . in 'I‘unisia or Sicily, in Italy and their is no reason in believe the Italian pen- insula can be occupied without thO‘ T. Italian ' ever, ilie Germans have i5 to 20 » considerable head fighting. Delivered, IILOO 1 other Provinces I ELLA. I500. 11.1.1125 10111312 11111110111110 AT NAPLES iver Linc Battle With Nazi_'l‘_r_oops Reinfureements Said to be Still rge Force Involved KENNEDY Associated Press War Correspondent ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NORTH AFRICA, Sept. 9—(AP)—Strong British and American for- ces under Lt-Gen. Mark W. Clark hammered out a. bridgehead near Naples today in a dawn landing that overpowered a number of stoutly resisting German troops embittered by Italy's uncondition- were reported tonight “Operations are proceeding satisfactorily." said an Allied communique of this landing one- third of the way up the Italian peninsula. The troops led by Con. Clark, United States hero of the submarine mission to North Africa that paved the way for the successful invasion in contact wIthCerman been taken," the bullet- in .added. “The disembarkation of troops with their, guns and vehicles is proceeding according to plan!‘ (Whether Canadian units make up part of tho allied force at Naples was not clear though one London dispatch Thursday speculated that Cann- (“The flags of Canada are In all probability going forward in that area," wrote Associated Press Correspondent William Smith White from heavy bomber had destroyed the u“ Am“ mm!‘ 91mm‘ k German militgry nerve centre at m? “m? m‘! 1 ‘m nwman" I An idea of the lilo ol the Al- lied foree woe gained from a Canadian reoonnaiseeaeleigdrllot who said the convoy tion to Na lee covered a see surface of l, square miles "swarming with l" ‘invasion fleet." lstrlb “if rife semi iii-guru“ sum” C Q ‘D “M y’ ' ‘n Amainaomiies south of NaplesJ-Dd also acknowledged that Ital ED OMMAN o Marshal Badoglioh 0rd had ‘Sig? 94h‘, M,,,,PA,,,‘,',,§,T,; clashed wi German forces yar- forcel which landed in the Nap- £13‘ c‘??? Maia? r Pfinghmg h‘ "m ‘m’ "“"""“‘ "'° “- sociated Press said issuer-g had "occu led Brenner Pass" — vital etween northern Italy and Germany-on ‘Tuesday, 24 hours be- fore the delayed announcement of ltaiy’s collapse, however Ls Iml- u“ d _ I 1 _ expected to facilitate the iiltl- m lgsjgsly 1312:; ivhgitlisicilot thgom“ mate Allied victory. Imus,“ were pro-Allied or DN- ‘ '“_‘ German. Adfllilflnal Landings (Italians in Madrid reported ad- ditional Alile_c_l_landings__h_iad been Continued on pug; '1 Col, 4i ’ , ‘fi-IE-Y l "fats-ammo 81.1mm ., l; Places Shame‘? WEAR ‘RIIBBEHS High tide this morning at 6.42 and ton ght at 8.46. Sun sets this evening at 7,22 and rises tomorrow morning at 0.31. Full moon Sept. ., 11.40 p.m. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUND Y) Charloitetowrsl — summerside - on on Leave Charlottetown 1.50 a. m- i2.30 . m. 1.30 m. Arr ve Charloieiown l.l0 p. m. 5.45 p- m. 7.05 p. m. P. E. l.—N. S. FERRY SERVICE DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood islands - 7.00 l. n. and ll a.m. and I p. III. Leaves Caribou - 9.00 a. h. ml I p.m. and l p.m.