_-_-_---__.i_ “TEENW I W kslure, Water Strut fixation. wins: sir-m. wmnn is reserved lor new: o, Wu interest, but advertising n ucwsy nature may In inserted L z celrib a word. slnctll N105“ m grlvnnce. '___.-’-——~——-———— - ins oavnnorun with en- “ft... 35c or ‘Taylor Drug Co. llelisingicn. JgANSI-‘ERRED — Mrs. Sims. , o; Lac. slms. ROAR. left - week for Pentfleld, N. B, to n he; husband who was trans- fieg plot-e from the Summerslde m Training SchooL-S. JTSITORS FROM SAN man- flsgo- Among the visitors to mgewnti-r, tile delightful summer pscrt at Sinverts Shore were Mrs. ‘P, Acqittstiipace and Miss Marlo 9' cggey or sun Francisco, Cali- formic-S- _(XINGRATULATIONS—MI'. W. g Forbes of Brace MacKay and mmpmly, summerside and Mrs. fol-Del are bciilg congratulated on the arrival of a young son at the "nee County Hospital 0n Thur:- day, DflYld Gordon. ..§ElVLY WEDS HONORED — w, and hit-s. flarold McIvor were m“ g reception on their return pun their honeymoon at the 110ml! y Mr, Mclvors parents, Mr, and m, T, A. McIvor. Fitzroy Street gjmmcrside. After a delicious sup- per nod bet-n served a very 9010)’- ‘ye evening was spent and the iirltie and groom received tlze best rshes of their friends for a happy muted life. Among the guests m the grooms aunts. Sr. St. llirv Faustino, sr. st. Mary Char- 150i St. Paul, Minnesota; MYS- Drscoii rind Mrs. Cfl-lflpbell- 515° lir. and Mrs. James Saunders of peetown friends of the bride. --S ilinsdaie and Vicinity Tie joint closing of Elmsdule, Dock, Hills River, Rosebank, Alma. lllilUBriEn Road schools was herd iii Elmsdule Hall on June 27th, with a large attendance of pupils liiil visitors. The 9708mm °°n' listed oi songs. duets, recltations, readings, drills and last but not least was "share the Wealth." Eacn school took part in the programme rod the result was a credit to themselves as well as their teacher. Ptins and Certificates were given tothe pupils winning same. Rev W. LPuterson very capably acted as chairman for the occassion. Alto- gether a most enjoyable afternoon var hcid and let us lzope this may bean antiual event for years to tome. LAC Charles Rix. Moncton N.B., lpent s furlough recently with his mother Mrs. Colin Rix. . Corporal Raymond Mokler of the R.C.A.F., at Moncton. N.B., spent the week-end with his parents Mr- gltl Mrs. Richard Mokicr, Ebb!- eel. The Tea Party. sponsored by m6 Unied Church of Elmsdals took litre on Wednesday last. A largfi the dinner served by the lilies. A neat sum was realized filth is to be used for church pur- 5S, llr. William Wallace and M!!! have accepted the g as Principal and Vice- Pfllvllni of Elmsdale School for the comng term. liiss Jcnll Wallace, Alma has ‘lined liu as teacher of O'Brieni Will. School for lchcol may, the coming lfss Doris Horne, Rosebank. has “in "Plloinied teacher of Kelvin hool for the coming term. libs viola Todd, employee of the "l"! Store. “urnmcrsidc. ha! lciurncd nficr spending her holi- llis a: ti» l ome of her aunt, Mrs. Charles Dunn. The condition of Mrs. Austin olirfrn remains serious, but her "lily friends hope for her speedy iffovery, hilt. Jackie Symthe has returned l"! home in Brockton. after a "lteasfui operation for tonsils in City Hospital Charlottetown. Ill! sincere sympathy of the flltire community is extended to bereaved widow and family of ‘ llte John J. McQuaid, station flint at Aibertcri. The honest, up- illit and obllging msnncr with ‘h ll! served the travelling wit. coupled with nu sense of ‘finer. will long be remembered by who hiid the pieusu of his “vliainiance. ‘gilllilfnlillatlon! are extended to Br- and Mrs. Howard Okhllnrnn. Mttkton. on the arrival at their ‘n? recently of s bonnie baby "mllrnhvistions lrc extended to he. and Mrs. Robert Brennan on "Ylival nt their home on July of a son, ,,___ .. 5.’ ESTERNGU The Guardian will be delivered In In; homo in llrncr Buy flak W's-oi or 10v m weak Phnllo m for this n ‘m your or er to 0 0y ieaponslbln for deliveries on you r V_____ DI Mn- Jvhn Pond. ll Church Imus-Prion m , SUMMERS“)! sue "mo! COUNT! IPHPIA Advertising. sholld u rm will: Mn. Pond. m guardian ml! "I “Wills! daily st ‘fr; d u" “nun”, “an. h Gollrlldl Drugs“ w "l" alllflfl. finial-sum cute. -—LEFT FOR nunr-zm- _ gale? Morrison of sdmmmiiffg or Dcbert this week to take flwrse or the brick work of the airport there which is being done by the Comstock Construction landrs Newfound- —VISITING AT sflgL-g-QN _ Mrs. m. l". Stone of Winter mu, Mass, and her grand daughter, Miss Elsie Patten are visiting at Cheltgn ‘he Kilo-its of Mr. and Mrs. C. B, Jelly st Bokay Cottage. _.s. —iEN’I‘ERTAINS AIRMEN’ WIVES-slurs. Utman. president osf the Airmerfs Wives Club at Sum. merside, entertained the members at hei- home on Church some; (or their regular meeting 0n mtg“ afternoon. The last meeting of the Club was in the form of a picnic at Stavert's shore where the la. dies had a. very delightful after- noon-S. Personals -—ROV. Fl’. Vi l, of Toronto, is gigilfingMliitsplrgotge-I, Mm 3°31“ Mllfilhy at her home in Middleton, P. E. r._s. —Dr. Brown of Boston is visit- ing his brother, Mr. J. A. Brawn flldsMrs. Brown of Baysidc Lot M —Mr- and Mrs. A. Rosebuck of “"10. N. 8., are spending their lwlidfly at Edgewater. —~Dr. W. V. Hazlewood and Mrs, Hazlcwood and family of 5t. John, N. B., are guests at "Edgewaf/er,» Stavertk Shore. —-Mrs. ‘I‘. A. MacIvor of Surn- mcrside left last week for Parry 5011M. Ont. to visit her son, Mr. Llilréimett McIvor and Mrs. McIvor. —-Mr. and Mrs. George Walton and Master IPrancis and Miss ‘Theresa. McCardle of Moncton are visiting Mrs. Walton's sister, Mrs, Charles A. MacDonald, or sum- mersidm-S. -—Mr. Roy Lockhart of the Trans-Canada Airways. Moncton, is spending his vacation at his home in Summerside-S. —Mr. C. Byron MacDonald of the orderly room staff, P. E. I. Highlanders has returned to Val- cartier after spending a brief holiday at his home in summer- side-S. -Mr. Jack Crawford of Van- couver, B. C.. ls visiting friends and relatives on P.E.I. Mr. Craw- ford is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Crawford of Middleton, P. E. 1.. and is renewing old friendships there after seventeen years-B. —'I‘hc annual picnic of St. John's Church sunday school. St. Eleanors was held this week on the lawn of Mr. Roy Tanton and wls very well attended. sports and games were enjoyed by the young Beopie and the ladies served a de- cioirg suppeln-S. -Mr. and Mrs. K. B. Jelly are, visiting on the Island with friends in Summersidc and also with Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Jelly at Chelton. Mr. Jelly taught in the summer- sido High School for a year, before going as draftsman with the Alu- minum Company of Canada in Montreal, on the way down from l. few days with the latterk par-i ents, Rev. and Mrs. Blcsedcll in New Brunswick-S. Congratulations are extended to Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Hardy, Rose- bsnk on the arrival at their home on July 9th of s daughter. Miss Getrudc O'Brien. stenc- graphcr in Montreal, returned to her duties on Saturday, after spending her holidays at the home of her plrmts, Mr. and ml. l. I. O'Brien. Mr. mil Whalen is s patient in the Prince county Hospital. Mid his many friends are pleased to lelrn that his operation for up- pendicitis has been successful- A son was born to Mr. and Ml‘!- Ccou-gs Gallant st their home on July 19th. Congratulations. Mr. and rim. Raymond Amer“ St. John, are spendi a short vsc- satlon in Alberton with Mr. Aheamk parents, Mr. and Ml’!- John Allen-n. A wedding reception for Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Murray. newly-WK” McNeil]. was held st the home of Mr!- ‘Ihomss Murray on June 30th. The spacious home was filled l» "Pl- city by friends of the nappy couple- They were the recipients of a large number of costly and useful ll"!- Mrs. Wallace Bradshaw. Bum- meraide motored to h" "W" l" Elmsdalc on Wednesday, returning on Thursday. She was the Bu?“ °l her parents Mr. and Mrs. Bl-lll McNeilL-I. ____,__.. Canada's mineral outlllll in 194° was lid per cent greater than in . “Q and constituted a record. 5 t Montreal, Mr. and Mrs. Jelly spent but the name." ition "is ‘on the threshold of dis- organization and mutual betrayal. The members of the coalition (the Axis and its stiltcllites) will soon be fighting each other." miltion decided to hold ision and encirc‘e it in order to count said. Early _in the morning squadrons of Soviet bombers flow over the bombs were dropped on the Fas- cists. made a desperate attempt to break through everywhere he encountered artil- lery and machine-gun fire. 2D German tanks and light arm. ored cars." lu crash out, and as often were thrown back, the account contin- ued. At the end of the second day the Russians went on the offen- 5.V€. men hurled units of division, tanks going at full speed crushed and machine-gunned the‘ Fascist range." ision. with more than 4.000 dead. more than 3.000 wounded picked up by Russian stretcher numbers of prisoners dozens of tanks, trucks destroyed, concluded. air, Lozovsky reiterated the Rus- sian assertions German planes have breaking through to Moscow and stroyed. they are having to operate from distant bases because those-at the front are under Soviet bombard. merit, he said. about repeated Russian bombing of Ploesti, centre of the Rumanian ‘oil fields, Lozovsky replied with a smile:- united and strong, he sai . last Monday, at least 100 Nazi planes struck at this camouflaged capital, but a communique declar- . ‘mung gun, 5nd balloon barracu- The SUNIMERSIDE “G AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE MONDAY -—-TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY Also ‘Passing Parade’ Shows at 7.15-9.15 Matinee Tuesday at 8 Su ivltvlrfiltslrm 0-94-0400000-0404 woo-awa- Moscow Reports (Continued from page 1) It is a battle that will be studied- mziny years.” Hinting at one detail of that home. the Soviet information bureau described the annihilation of a German infantry division (ap- parently one of two that it said Saturday were destroyed.) "The commander of oilr for_ this div. wipe it out completely," the m. "At the end of the first day the Germans no longer offered any re- sistance to the energetic attacks of_our troops. They were compel- led to adopt defensive tactics and dig themselves in. “At that moment our tanks and mechanized infantry completed the encirclement of the enemy. German division. Hundreds of "The enemy brought their ar- tillery into action, employing anti-tank and other guns, and the enclrclement, but "Our anti-tank guns destroyed Repeatedly the Germans tried "Our tanks and brave infantry- themsclves against the German infantry soldiers at point-blank That ended the German div- bearers. taken and and guns the Russian account Commenting on the war in the that only a few cceeded in hat most of those have been dc- The amount of fuel carried by hose shot down indicates that Ton. correspondent’; inquiry "Of Ploestl there is nothing left Lozovsky said the German coal- thc Red army is started By contrast d Renewintl the attacks ht l hlfa dozen broke $5.‘ “m?” innit mom patrol. It was announced that the Ger- man air force made 12 attempt! between July 20 and July 75 I0 raid Leningrad, blit that the Gel‘- mans were driven off OM11 “m9- Plane losses in these encounters were listed as 4i to B in Russia: favm‘. German Sulllfl! “Wu” r it! of German hillbilly dsgxfiicii. gifviet _ierritory were pro- senited by a soviet communiqllie in a letter fr.m a Nazi tank c0 umll commander. Maj. Meitzcr, for the headquarter-g of ilhe 18th Goring! tank division. pleading for the d ' pgfgf], of provisions under stroni escort. The letter will: said W h!" ized bl’ Elle!’ l5- beiltn rlgporled many "W"?! “t: pressed dissatisfaction at the shor - of food. described it a! im- possible u, t supplies on 1th: gpot and sai Russian P6055“! i‘ “proved so that they leave tcgcllier with T319 3'4 ‘TY. and destrcy their whole pit)?" Y- One Ukrainian guerilla group wall said to lnve killed 32 Gal-mandal- iicers and guerilln 1M1"? All 7 Ksndraticv was cited posthumously (m- ihnnd grenade on a Nazi head- qufiisilsn officers were killed nine wounded." the communique . "Kandriitiev himself verifi- ed in this attack." A Eovlct battalion was Mid '10 have repulsed a 12-hour Germgm attack by killing cr woundin! m Ye and _§ Alborton LAO. Alfred Gordon, o! ROAR. is home on furlough. Rev. Dr. W. V. MacDonald, Bor- xrl was a recent visitor to Alber- n. Miss Margaret Muchbonk, 5t. lmcsnors is visiting he: home hers. Private Amos Ramsay of the P. E.I.H. is home on furlough. Mr. Warren Lord, Charlottetown was s recent visitor to Alber-mn, Mr. James Broderick. was a re- cent vlsitor to Sununerside. -A, OPPOSITION TO (Continued from page 1) in the milit rv service" for "such periods of tme as may be nc- cessary in the interests of na- tional defence." But chairman Robert Reynolds (Dem-North Carolina), who cast the lone negative vote issued a statement today in which he said that the resolution in effect was "notice to the warring factions that Congress has authorized the Preparation of the armed forces of the United States to enter the present world war as an active, Dflfllolllfl-tlng, shooting ally of Rus- sia and Great Britain." The House of Representatives military committee called a closed session for tomorrow to draft its version of similar legislation, but the House was not scheduled to take up the proposahuntil it had disposed of another piece of major filglislation-the $3,529.200,000 tax Members of the Senate military committee who supported the ex. tension resolution said that the measure omitted any reference to a war department suggestion that Congress declare the existence of a national emergency. Instead, they said, it stated merely that the national interest is imperilled, and on this ground authorized the President to continue the services of all persons in the military forces as long as they are needed or until Congress terminates the Presidents authority. The resolu- tlon also removes the present lim- itation restricting tc 900,000 the number of selectees who may be in training at one time. Reynolds said in his statement, however, that the resolution con- tained a declaration of emergency "in that it declares that the na- tional interest is imperilled." Senator Patrick M03511“), (Dem-Nevada) predicted today that Great Britain soon woud attempt to invade the European continent, and suggested that Congress flatly forbid the use of American troops outside the west- crn hemisphere if it grants the President authority to keep the present army intact. McCarran said it was his belicf that unless such a restriction were incorporated "we may be called upon for another American ex- peditionary force." "It seems logical to assume,“ McCai-ran told reporters, "that the British will attempt to invade the continent while Hitler is busy with the Russians. 1f that hap- pens. the British will call on us for another A. E. F. we ought to forestall that request now." Roman Catholic Bishop passes ALEXANDRIA. Ont... July 27- fOPl-Most Rev. Felix Coutcurier. third Roman Catholic Bishop of Alexandria, died early today at the Bishop's Palace here following s ng illness. He was 66 years old. -Mcst Rev. Rosario Brodeur, re- cently appointed Csadjutor Bishop of Alexandria with right of suc- cession, was among members of clergy st his bedside. Bishop Cout- urier had been head of the diocese for 20 years. Bishop Courtourier had a disting- uished career during the First Great War. He served as assistant principal chaplain of the British Army in Egypt and- Pslestine and was awarded the Ivlllitory Cross while on active service. He was awarded the Order of the British Empire at the end of tlhc war. other wu- nuohincs. A Red army lrtlllcry detachment was mid to have put 1b tank's, two mine-throwing batteries. W0 heavy guns and two battalions of German infantry out of acticn in three days of battle. Soviet fliers, in s, series of sc- tioris, were reported w have de- stroyed a German tank column; burned 30 German planes and dam- aged 30 others in s raid on an sir- part behind the Nazi lnes. and wrecked 20 German tanks and 35 motor cars and silenced an anti- aircraft guns in the ‘S" district Saturday's communiques told p! heavy losses by the Nazis (m t-w central front. zv-“i (Continued from pogo l) _..i-|-__-__ -i_- HOPKINS PLEDGES MOCK BATTLE the war eeiifort." "Until now the 1e of Britain have not been told ai of the dc- talls of just “I181. help America has given you." he said. "The publication of the exact s- mount of material which has sl- ready arrived here might give val- uable information to the enemy and might jeopardize the lifeline stretching from Canada and Amer- ica to Britain. "Now that lltfelinc is much strong- daily, this time and sympathy. "People of land, monwealth of Nations! not fightin alone. Minister a that the endless use with the full efficiency of supply line. take sie lightly." "We in America may be rorism cannot destroy it. “Your Prime Minister miles; miller all the Hun i: only 2i miles frcm Dover and yet he and his pagan woy or life are 2.000 years away frcm Dover." Interpreting The War (Continued from page 1) of it opens. it is glaringly ob- vious that the Germans have badly miscalculated somewhere. Przbably it was the technical proficiency of Russian staff work that they uncer-estmat- ed. misreading the portehts of the Russian-Finnish war in that respect. Contrasting events of the Russo-Finnish war with tho_c of the first five weeks of the Russz-German conflic-t, the Red army staff seems to have achieved military miracles. Whatever the final outcome, the Russian retreat frcm west- ern buffer outposts to the Stalin iinc is likely to go down in military history as a. victory rather than a defeat. The bulk cf the Red‘ amfes deployed in buffer territory frcm the Baltic to the Black Sea-made good their escape, great as were their losses. They fell back on a frcnt 1.000 miles long and effected a retirement averaging 300 miles or so in depth in order to fight attain. There is no parallel in mili- tary history for a successful re- treat of that scr/pe. It speak: volumes not only for the mor- ale of Russian soldiers, amplv proved by German account of "fanatical" Red resistance; but for Russian staff work Moreover, the last two weeks of German battering at the Stalin iinc have not yet pro- duced a dangerous dent, except at Smolesnk. Even that bulge is of dubious strategic conse- quence. It is too narrow at the base and too great in depth to be of itself a formidable threat to the critical centre of the Red defence lines before Mos- cow. Japanese urged‘ To create new. Prosperity sphere TOKYO, July 27-(AP)-4apan's new Finance nls r, Matasune Ogura, gins ustriaiis m e the statement in an interview with the Japanese press while re- turning from the Ise Gra-nde Shrines where he had e to pray following assumption the finance ministry in the third Konoyc Gov- ernment July i8. Dounel news agency clfwlflied i“ following version of 081ml! re- mar :- "The freezing by the United States of Japanese asets and Bil‘ .- BRINGING UP FATHER Japanese-Indian and cr. No enemy action can stop the ceaseless tide of ships coming hero en with some- thing more rubs antial than hopes Eng People of Britain, people of the Br tish Com- You are Your Prime ed us for tools. I pro- mise you that they are ccming; mbly belt stretches from our western coast to this island to tlie middle east; that nothing will be allowed to interfere this "An enormous amount of war material which is eri route now will reach here safely. President Roosevelt premised me that he will p5 to ensure delivery of goods consigned to Britain. Our President does not give his word 3.000 miles away but today the Atlantic Ocean is merely a channel. A bridge of friendship spans it; a bridge of‘ fend vital towns, sympathy and admirafon extends from Washington to London and- althougth perhaps you cannot see this bridge it is so strong that all the power of darknes and Nazi ter- and my President are 3.000 miles apart but we no longer measure distance in ' that once marked the heart of Lon- lsh abrogation of Japanese-British, Japanese-t as Burmese trade pacts had been sur-' remains sound and stronB- -i' "‘ (F “ ‘ from page 1) n staunch fight, knocked five of l0 Canadian Bren gun carriers "out of action" as they stormed the barri- codes, but they could not compete against n planned attack that struck st them from every side. 'I‘hi| was the first cf s series of manoeuvres in which 1.000.000 home guardsmen will take part during the next two weeks. One of lcrlel ‘rho London mimic battle wu one of a series all over Britain to- day. At Reading, bombers roared low over the city and dropped dummy parachutists a: the signal for the biggest mock "invasion" in history. Regular troops sprang into action all over the countryside, testing the defence plans and endurance of the part-tithe soldiers. Soon the battle ranged from Not- tingham to London with sir-borne troops “crash landed" 1n fields and meadows. “Fiffli columnists" were discover- ed and “shot" in their tracks. Gas and hand grenades and smoke screens were employed as the horns guard, from plump veterans of the first great war to beardiess stripllflgs, strove realistically to de- centres, key factories. airdromes and other military objectives. The bomb-scarred streets behind St. Paul's Cathedral, the Bank of England and off Ludgate Circus into Fleet street echoed to tllc clat- ter of guns firing blank shots and all the bedlom of warfare as the Canadians, representing German air-borne troops pushed through the defences in one of their most successful manoeuvres. Deadly Serious Taking the exercise with deadly seriousness, the Ontario regiment used every weapon in their arsenal. After several feints they launched an attack from the north-east, past the old London Wall, with two com- panics commanded by Maj. J.S.P. Armstrong, Toronto, which burst through the final barriers. 'l"hc steel-helmeted Canadians swarmed to the doors of the post- office as a bugler blew llie ‘Cease- fire’ under the direction of the chief Canadian umpire, Maj. J. E. , Ganong, Toronto. The regiment was under the act- ing officer commanding Maj. Wil- 11am Hendric, Hamilton, Ont. Com- pxny commanders were Maj. Ian Johnston. Capt. Donald Mackenzie Qlpt. L. M. Crawford-Brown Lt. John Bowman. all of Toron Maj. Bruce King of Toronto was second in command of the regi- ment. On the fringe of the shambles don‘s financial centre-dt was bombed and burned during winter and spring air raids-the Ontario regiment drew up its lines for an attack that took an hour and a half lo complete. Bren carriers led the advance, rattling down the streets between piles of twisted girders and rubble. The chaplain of the regiment. Capt. C. K Nicoli of Oakville, Ont. took pm in the attack, letting offl some of the smoke bombs, one of 'thc.m beside s shattered church. He was sided by sgt. W. Haskins, Kirkland Lake, Ont. and Pte. J. W. Rudledge, Toronto, with a mortar platoon. Ambulances and nurses stood by but the only casualty was Lt. G. W. Bcal of Toronto who received l minor head wound when s missile dented his helmet. A platoon led by Lt. Robert BYOB. Toronto, plunged through the veil of smoke and reached tho objective first. Among the Canadians on the spot were Iz-Cpl. Jimmy Keith. Cpl- "ry" Thomas, Sgt. Stan Lamb, Ptc. Btan Knight. Pte. Bob Thornton. Pie. Prank Morrison and Pte. John Marshall, all of Toronto. The Can- adian companies maintained liaison during the whole battle by portable wireless communication and the final assault was described by Brit- ish officers as "a masterly synchro- nized advance." Thc chief British umpire said he could not snnouncs a result "for wo are striving to losrn lessons. not play games" but he paid tribute to the lpeed of the Canadian st- tack and its general direction. mlsed beforehand. "Th government therefore was left in position to make pri- atc counter measures and ere is no need for concern over the Brit- ish-Americnn steps. "Furthermore the reciprocal measures taken b Britain and the United States wil eventually prove painful to the two countries so long Japan's economic potentiality than 1,coo men and dutrcyins fl inilnibcr of tanh, motorcycle» communication - Smoke screens were laid by bombs. . l stratosphere, UATR DIAN DARING ITALIAN (continued-fr; g5. 1) confirmed by the special Itsllln communique issued lust night. This merely refers to explosions seen by the escorting forces from a difltflrwe to seaward." (The Italians, describing how light warships launched the attack boats nearby, said eight violent ex- piosicnu were observed in the har- bor and claimed: "One may be cer- tain that at least eight more Brit- ish ships no longer are able to go to seal’) The British account laid the Royal Air Force then 100k up the battle, chasing the remaining E- boots which were trying to “extri- cafe themselves" and sank four mo“ qr urcm, damaging others. Italian planes which at this point endeavored to cover the sea attack were routed with a loss of three Italian planes to one British. In the first great war the late Gabriele D‘Annunzio had some of his more fantastic adventures on speedboal; raids. The Italians once penetrated the harbor st Trieste with them and sank two Austro- Hungarian battleships and at an- other time attacked tne Austro- Hungarian fleet and sank another battleship. ll.ii.l=. FIGHTERS (Continued from page i) huge new four-motored bombers in the war balance was emphasiz- ed Saturday by the announcement of the first midsummer night bombing of Berlin and a daylight attack on the German port of Emden. Some of the heaviest and most powerful bombs in Britain's arm- ory were plumped into the heart of the Nazi capital by these big bombers operating in the sub- the air ministry news service said. but the major Friday night attack was on Ham. bur and Hanover. e attack on llnnden was de- livered by a single Boeing Flying Fortress on reconnaissance duty. Nine of the night bombers failed to return. There was no in- dication whether most or all of these were the smaller craft which attacked Hamburg and Hanover. Unwiiling to await the coming of longer autumn nights, once considered necessary for success- fully bombing Berlin and central Gennany, the R. A. F. created huge flashes in the very centre of the city. Authoritative quarters were sil- ent on both the altitudes from which the attack was delivered and and the exact type of four-motor- to ed bomber used, but presumably ' experience was bein utilized from the pioneer daylig t attacks on Brest last Thursday when Flying Fortresses unloaded from well over 35.000 feet. their bombs While bombers were over Beriimll s s AZIS (Continued from D880 l) from him, s, pro-British sour-q 561d. was gained Germany's genera] PIE-n gr a quick peace before Unir- in it were ouflirggssss followszh U - . la PD lo t e rals would fall divided m-to two classifications one to include the Ukraine under | German governor and the other ti: be divided up among K411113519, Turkey flfld Polaiiid. Riuman a'| wou d be a stri ion the Black Sea. coast. inxciiiidinn Odessa; 'I"urke_v would get c c. the Caucasus wherein lie ‘iirklsh minorities. and Poland, to be u. constituted in some form not fully inde ndent, would get back all the W111 ry R/llssia (xzcupied in seg- tember, 1939, and possibly more. 2. Japan wants Russian Asiatic territory from Vladivostok westward to Lake Baikal. It is not said def- initely that she ivill get it. Fozmer Foreign Minister Yosuke Malsiiokn once pledged Japanese entrance in- to the war (according to the out- line of the German pram but Ger- many does not vranr. her to fight now because of the likelihood it would bring in ‘the Uniwd States. 3. Ita is claiming Zluriisiiz, Eihi- Opla and control of_ Egypt but tine Germans oppose this (so the out- line goes) because their peace offer would stipulate that the British Empire be left. intact on condition Britain recognizes Germany a5 the sole great power on the continent of Eur-ope. Egypt, whose military protection is a British function, comes the closest cf any 0i the three to beng actual parts of the British Etnpii-c. Except for British influence Egypt is independent, likewise Ethiopia. althougih control of both is impart- ant for defence of British Mediter- ranean, near eastern and Airlixtn holdings. Tunisia is French African territory. Noteworthy is the absence from this outline of any mention of France.) 4. Once Russia is occupied as fa1 as the Urals Germany will offer lo recognize Britain: place in the world as a naval power and to ‘re- assure her Germany will restore political independence to countries of the north coast-Norway, Den- mark, Holland and Belgium. again France might be mentioned but is not.) 5. The German right to disposal of central and eastern Europe must not be contested. Germany will of- fer the Czechs a measure of iride- pendence but they will not be per- mitted to reunite with the S-lovaks. 6. Upon completion of the Rus- sian campaign Germany will halt hostilities on all fronts. Even if the British continue to fight, Germany will not respond for a certain r- iod. so as to make the point hat the war, if it continued. goes on under British, not German, miti- at ve. 7. Germany considers that for this plan to succeed the United States in the war ans count on certainiopinion in ab; United States to compel British oeptanoe of the proposals Hamburg and Hanover Friday night. another wave of fighters attacked air bases in occupied P781168. 1i TODAY'S WAR MAP Ju/{o/ /Z7' ‘as-raw ffilffi L v ' xuzwe/ mwzafyl’ i MLVA/XA; N Q IIIKIOI 15cm; admits-F U f” I00 A’? " 7X1‘ _' fdfidflVfl. [/17 .' II’TJMII ‘i Ina/an muewl nnmwlbfiu-n . We; to Moscow, it would seem likely (zllilatliludlllgflillilit of n’: Gigi-fame "I" W" "M" °“' ‘° "°'°‘°' husk has been stllbbed 0!’ "IP17"! ed in between Srnolens“ map shown herewith most 0f "w Smolensk is shaded u s. Russian pin. off and that Russians have crowd- gnd Durogobusk from the south. On the territory between DOYOIObII-‘k ""1 but ll Gennnn mechanized forces Ire In that ares. 53"" 0" 9085'“? "If "mmrmfl? "m" u“ infantry trying to come to their sllllllofl. WC 5'19"“ ‘W’: “amtw; tlon of the hope that the whole area Is domlfllllfll by I 0 "l v and the needle-like point of the German wedge BMW". Fllllil": l" the triangle between Nevel, Smolensk and Lellcl continues fiercely. German efforts to advance beyond Mogllcv and R-Ollchfl’ 115" lama 5nd the Germans are being held close to Orsha. By George McManul \\\_\ Q0 J5 >0’ ¢ 65 ‘l . f...‘ - I