MAXIMS 6i A MERE MAN _._-1 locus by llll llle with Illa l" (mm day to day revealed 01S- dlaclp- God to fhflqnllclown Gulrdlln, Two Couli- Iomng (iunrillln, Founded Ill! s} Russian Fro]: n "ENRY C. CASSIDY Associated Press Stall Wrlwr Oggow. Aug. 29- (Saturday) and; Nazi armored spearhead nhvnst of Stalingrad wiu re- "ed fighting for its life today "may encircling Soviet mortar ,, anti-pink crews, while a Rus- coinitiuiiique said the Red ylllil was battling the Ger- in lll(‘ outskirts of Rzhcv i. e offensive west of Moscow. The mltllllglll. communique indic- ted little change in the cfltical m irourirl Stalingrad and deep the Cill us. but ..aid several ore local is liad been overrun tho effort to reduce inc Rzhcv- yiziiia-Gzhiitsk triangle ‘held by . Nazis west of this capital. (The German high command llll admitted counter-attacks by i. Rusians outside Stalingrad and lined 135 Red Army tanks were iroyed o: captured there ‘laure- n In the centre, at Rmev and itiiwest oi Kaluga, the Germans ‘med thcy had broken up Rus- - "ntioiis for attack. They iii that stivng Russian suiiclied a new on- .-i the arcn SCUBA of Lake d0gii,on the Leningrad front. Tli-g- irmaiis asserted this was repuls- .- ‘Fieze seemed little question that i immediate plight of .1.e Ger. ifanrxunrd above Stalingrad was serious 01in, One Soviet. gunner force was ierlwiih WLcckIng 16 tanks and out more than a battalion tlfllilry with artlllrey and moi». iie. l“ the war up to the Don geliead rind beyond to llie tile-trampled sector southeast oi (Coitiifiiiedv on page isfgoi 4") t iigs Suit Against he Associated Press CHICAGO, Aug ii F is - (AP) _ founder oi the "Ko 51'". <1 clarcd today the "‘ flliinst iii: Associated Press, Wllll lohowing 3, comp“; m with the Department of the Chicago Sun," sful “prove to be v, most- important strokes alttdcni oi the Press in history l" “in Journaksm." Papers now being pub- - - all lhfll may be launch. - iiie iuiui-e." Field said, “will f” “"56 l0 the news gathering ilitiec of the country .. ‘Km! 060's treated as s public ‘Yangon to all al‘ke. it will . s° be Possible. a6 it was in i- lllth ceiiluri, Im" mgn of Jrtiicbnffllllirii to embark upon ....i"..r"r r new-ne- .. Wtsabllillgliokcd to death at irlniimiticn a monononsuc 51114180 Sun is not being flight? “Wit because it i. sore, '1 rii- a3ailel>£mndltu1e' m supple‘ ~1--“.-~2fii;.ii.'i’°".“it" u ~ -. i :. an .. “t? félileiniiiionnl conditions . m cities the news centres e m!“ UM" 1‘-’ss favorable flfifigjlllfeel-crenew piribllca-tions they , $5M in iniiincySW born llifd an Faces liming Evcnts _o_ "Y Non. | u, "In-PI". 110ml: column vol-knee harm mmbsr m. C..l’ééi‘§’o£§f:§§: -2c- . M b-womew ii “h, s Institute n.m.... PB Hall on scotembe: 1st.’ “l. "no ‘Wm h. salllltd cooéned Chicken, Olkl, intense: zirld. or: llilllv vrgegilemy‘ l-I-i I a .;.1_I°°s§3;§e%nb°:nd Dance Mhutra. l” “lite, Bring sac , . ~__ ‘Th! M h l oneruarlloryi ‘ti?’ c, “I only until . "novice Murphy ill. 501MB aileron ‘o-u-n-o-o. c‘ ~ County mug m diivtown, vippnsaf‘, 1- 580mm: ly ‘Al. ‘ ‘ilt.iif"t.°i.‘l.l l1. Bridgetown. m c.2941. -""“‘°"llns?;i—riii_sns l ‘light-salt. s...‘ a Mamféfiq a i’ Nazi Tanlcmen Hard Pregsecl 10,000 -Ton Ship Every 1B flay: “RICHMOND, Cnlll. Aug. 78- (AP)—- Benn l. I 1' master shlpbulldél‘. llllfllll d u: y that within a mv mobile ll yards will be launching 104000401. freighter! wllllln i doyl after their keel: are laid. Kaiser made that prodlctlc In a spflech jllst before the re cnrd-brelkltlg llbefly lite}?- "John Fitch" was launched 2». days‘ after kccl-llylll]. Thll broke a record esflbllllicd yesn tel-day in one of Kaiser's 0m. gon yards when construction llmc was reduced from 35 days to 26 days. Al the same time Kaiser dis- closed lhat he again would pre- sent to the government plans for building huge urge planes. Mfl llieppc Casualties Now llumlicr B14 OTTAWA, Aug as _ (op) _ The» 16th casualty list issued by Che Canadian army since the battle of Die-ppe, made public late today, .e consisted mostly oi wounded whi the 15th list crlier in the organ“; ,- pcrted a num of men kil action. . The 16th list contained B8 names, including those of 77 wounded. while the 15‘h list contained 62 , including those of 43 kill. ed in action. The 16th list brought the un- official count of casualties fro-m the battle of Fer/be to B14, in. eluding 154 dead, 522 wounded, 121 missing, 11 not diagnosed. one in hospital, four suffering from ex. nosure and one with superficial in- juries. The figures are sublect to c margin of error for possible re- petition oi names The number of men reported dead ard missng by the army sine» the =tart qt the war now stands st 1 045. Warns lic Major Japanese Defeat WASHINGTON, Aug. 38—(APl_ The newest Japanese setbacks ll1 the Solomon Islands were described by one of the hi _ chit authorities in the United Sta es cdey as only minor victories for the United Nations. Beck of this temperate analysis was anxiety lest the count be ted to believe that u trcmen ous de- feat had been administered to the Nipponese. The authority, who did not wish his name used, displayed a newspaper which proclaimed, Japanese offensive crunched," one said it iiiustfated his point. Soviet Resistance - Critical Threat Written For the Canadian Prom B’ Moi-Gen. Ill Chlflll U"!!! IDNDON, Aug. ZB-(CP CaDlel— Russian resistance is facing its most critical threat of the war and so far has lost nothing oi’ either ill cpl it or its level-headed planning. Ilia German advance on staun- grad has moved at great cost w‘ Field Marshal Pvdor Von Bows resources and It now has been uti- “ nounccd that for the last two weeks the Russians have been making a ove in fciccintahu central secwr. L! counter-attack was lillinched on a front of more than 10 miles northwest oi Moscow and smashed German positions for l depth of aoiniiu. In ndllion to heavy casualties, the film h i hm Mill‘?- amii out rive oi- to m mum. M" I pflfl. Gunter-Inn t ...°.l"it‘li.".ii'..it°°.lt itiflfavt 0min -b v wasn't um K- ,.:" and: arias: r fir!» communication time of l and the c s m still, om 1m t c ru , lll [fill XII’) . “galvanic, mo: n i latrines e iii [airing c mi llfllll zY: hf/Z/a/ The Peop e's Pape Riiiiiziiiiiiiiziiiilfibfiwfiwfillfil iazis Stung. SencLBombei-s Against England Shut Efforts Puny Compared Willi Allied Raids Hitler's War Machine Hit Hard by British, Canadian and Un- lted States Planes. lR-(Saturdafi- the stung delivered to Hit. hundreds cf LONDON, Aug. (CP)—Applirently triple punches ler's war machine b the . A. It’: blgges bombers and Amer can Flying Purtresses, the Germans last nsbt and early to- day swept across the North Sea and blasted several points along the northeast coast of England- Naui bombers in short but sharp attacks also hit one town in East Anslla. High explosive and lire bombs were unleashed by the raiders and four persons were reported killed along the northeast coast. Six persons wane said to ‘have been trapped under the debris oi l smashed building in one town. But the German raiders appear- ed tlny beside the mighty efforts of the British and American’ air forces Thursday night and Friday. While the big sluggers of the RAF. heralded the opening of the fail bombing season by blust- lng the Baltic port of Gdynlfl. I01”- iner pride oi’ Poland, and Kassel, Prussian locomotive-building centres other bombers hit at German ship- ln , pfihile no R.C.A.F. bomber squadrons went on the Kassel- Gdynie. attack, one Canadian pilot scored o. it on an enemy ship in a convoy off Guernsey and left it in a sinking condition. RC A. F. Spitfire squadrons which es- corted the Fortresscs on their day- li hlnaltackon an airplane body g§a1lt’tt'magltc,~uecr ’ Albert, in nnce‘, score one prrbnble and also clnmaacd several Nazi planes in heavy fighting Qiher Brztlsh and American Spitfire squadrons and fast Boston uitackxombers swept. the invasion coast from Calais to the Seine. No Fnrtl-cesou Loot ‘Ilia Fortrcsses returned from their sixth attack of the var. still without having lost a plane. One 1L0 A F fiihier was lost out of the two escorting squadrons Canadian fliers who emerged from the fighting wili a score of one probable victory and damage b0 several German plants said l-he o position for a few mlElTlPS ivas almost. equal to that encountered over Dfeppe. Thirty bombers falter-l to return from this and the Gdnia P10 If the usual less of ab:ui the per dent was experienced, this meant about. 600 planes fork Dart. NICO-Mlle Trill The film-mile round trip to Gdvnia i“s1il'€d in heavy b‘ns's on it base which has been used by TContinued kin-house 3. col m: Bomb Japan Base Back In Chinese Hands B SPENCER MOOSA (Assoc rated Press Staff Writ/er) OHUNGKING, Aug. 26 -—(AP) _. The big coolie-bult cirdromc at Giulmien, within threensnd-a-hall hours bomber flight of Japan, was mporled beck in Chinese hands tonight after three months of oc- cupation the Javanese and the Chinese sad they also had driven {heir way back into the walled n. 03111.;- second most. important air base in (‘fiieklang province, at Lishul, some 65 miles southeast of C uhsien, also was said to have falen to the Chinese counter- thrust. which in the last few weeks virtually has wiped out the some f the Japanese Ma and June gsrnpaign in the hekiang and Kl ngsi secto r. is (xiinese dlspcidicc from the i l. said Gen Chlafl K11- Eli ‘a forces battered the way into (fliuhsien at 4 a m. to a and were engaged with the Jap- iisnce han-d-toJi-end ted recs m»; walled do enoec of Chub- sion first were creamed. N’. B. CONVENTION mmoicmomu. Auiffaolioi-i‘; A committee cf the conservative party in New Brunswick today set pt. ll la the duh for a provincial convention he ~ to name a con- scrvative lender for the province. i-lu h Mackly has been Conservative leader in the legislature for the past three sessions. The lend- er ici- the province. Ito. Squires, resigned nfle: the provinciclgencis. election of 1090. I (I -.e.'t._ /// ’/// 31f Read b Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew War Situation Last Night (By Edward E. Bomar, Associated Press Wai- Analyst) Throwing almost the ifull strength f the! th I l, h fllht for Stalingrad. the Rllulane leemounabliar rioipdi-rennzlirrzrilililnt? Iortce: to cope with four Nnl steel finger! which daily tighten the lnvadero‘ nip on the north Caucasus. Around Ncvorossisk on the Black Sea coast a new liege battle ll be- Klfllllhl to shape up, but elsewhere the Axle columns are pushing on un- checked. Their progress and direction deserve o. share of the attention focus- figmlzrxllttshlreihtgldlglcl Slltlillgfll: b55131 Sttatliiingrad. ‘Willi the‘ engmygs advance n e co a o e grea moun an arr er tc the Baku oll reservoir, a new phase of the Caucasus campaign ls nearing. u gflblzfimhgat eventual?“ Probably least noticed of the wheel ls a detachment of undetermlned strength which has “If! Ffllllflllly through the marshlande of the Volga delta. region almost due eastward toward Astrakhan when the great river flows into Cflslllan Sea. " This force was last definitely reported ll Ellsla, 2.00 mlloe from A l - khan, but may now have halved the remrining distance to the ‘Iolgaa and Caspian below the Stalingrad battleflc d Most spectacular progress has ‘ ’ by the Rmslap army paper ‘Red pm.‘ Brazil May Bring ll-Bcats Under Control By J. F SANDERSON (Canadian Pros Staff Writer) WASHINGION. AUS- 2B —-(CP) — It was the Gennan submarine that brought Brazil into the war 0n the side oi the United Nations d it may be Brazils declaration brings the menace the long reaches oi the Atlantic Ocean un- k I der effective control. e531‘ Naval observers here believed 9°“ N“ that when President Getulio Var- gas brought Brazil into the war he sealed the eventual doom 0f the U-boeit in the Atlantic by prcvld. ing the United Nations with bases for plane? simd naval craft in bulge ~ comparavey narrow waters - been madebye second column strik- tween scum America and Wes; heads thrust out like s the ing southeast dmvn the main railway purollcllng the Caucasus barrier Amen range toward the Grozrry o1l.flelil's With the Malkop field all-cod vanced 500 or more miles, cov n main Nazi advance eastward tower at the fringes of the Grozny nll area, moving forward from Russian tanks, armored trains ad in it: woke, this detachment has nd- been dpQ-pplng ghafply "ad ‘hi cfiphm- Submarine sinklngs off the Can- ian and American coasts have for the ast. month 0r six weeks, largely _ cause tine naval and air forces "Mn" "Plmsm"! of Canada, the United States and and "m" dehnces- Britain have been able to organize ponlbly twice the distance of the Stalingrad. It ls currently reported These two advance elements i to th -. . odds semingly favoring the smsllgl-einllafiiitazceforcc almiliilsliaignhzgitilllhlililt? lgrfifetgobg and convoy um“ Turning aside from the advance toward Gtozny are Nazi forces seek. ing to win control of the high passes over the Caucasus before fall snow Caribbean have been makes their use difficult. Berlin's report that Nazi Alpine troops had scaled l8.47l-foot Mount America To a lesser extent, slnkings in the 14 PAGES W“? Good men as well u other; haw their narrow views and llllbcrnl pro ludicec. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Annual Sublcrlpllon Delivered, [[00 ~ - ~- -_---.-._i B! Mall: P. 1E. l. $4.99; to other Province! and U, S. A. use; viii" CANADIAN STESELMPIANSTS: - Down ls Threatened In‘ N.S. And Ont. Labor Minister Mitchell Issues Warning; Men At Sault St. Marie And Sydney Seek News Brief: LONDON, Aug. The NazLconlrollcd Vichy radio tonight broadcast, n, Stockholm dispatch claiming the Germans have reached the Volga River at an un- specified point in the fighting before Stalingrad. 28—(CP)— WASHINGTON. Aug. 2B——(AP) —A United States navy 5pQke5- man said today that there had reduced in ,, ,, {h e cod b t u s m been no reports of any new e 5am tggyl have omcmgged actions in the Solomons area where Elbcros put a. monetary spot! ht on the advance of a third column oh- sharply 11m; m5 been due large vicusly seeking to seize Kluk or Pass, westernmost of the three main 1y yo innfgctive pail-m in the scum routes over the mountains. ‘ . Military men suspect that the immediate objective Atlantic nnrl the absrnoe of the convoy system. making those third WfltCYs an idtai hunting ground for O o O oi’ this force ls the lack Sea port of Sukhlun an part of an attempt. tc encircle U-boats the Russian troops to the north. Control of the pass and the Ossctian n the U-boats can be driven military highway which traverse: it would give the invaders a menacing from 1m;- isst, unpfoleqfgd water foothold south of the mountains and heavy fighting can be expected be- open to them, fore any such aim ls realized. _ the area between West Africa and Brazil, it will make The fourth advance, southward toward the last stretch of Black Sea nn appy¢¢i,1.b19 djffqrenge to m6 coastline remaining ln Russian hands ls the move which promises w dc- velop the stiffcst opposition at the moment, The Nazis, it is believed, intend to establish a hadl meeded Black avsiiabie m the shits Sea shipping and railway supply line for vcn 11°"- °1 N°""°§°l5k- F"!!! Nm/"YIYSS- harbors and bases which will com- purpose must have the naval base lsk a rail line extends northeastvvard to Stalingrad, rts of the ,, ‘ ‘friction of is plan a pears wi course and duration of the war. Brazil's declaration oi’ war makes d . BMW! "m 5- “"5 h" ‘he of the Unltcd Nations“ valugbl: Bl"! W ‘hi! "file plctlncrit West African bases sucilsi . - a rcctowfrwmrBavh r t. It "m. and wm- ii the dis- finiy 1.8m miles nurse-Y. Sthe hump pcrsal of the Russians Black Sea. navy. Ncvnrossisk, however, must yet of 13mm and the Affirm, (mash be taken and large Russian forces are reported digging in for a back- llke lhe siege of sevnstcpcl. tclfhc-sea " ' Battle For Milne Bay Is _ Degvelioping ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. Australia, Aug. Sll-tfiaturday) —-tAPJ—1lcuvy fighting between veteran Australian and newly- lundcd Japanese troops the tortuous jungles surrounding Milne Bay in Southeastern New Guinea. was reported today by Allied Headquarters. A small number of U.S. ser- vlce troops also were in the area. whore the Japanese first landed early Wednesday. Low-flying Allied bombers were giving heavy support to the defenders by attacking the Japanese positions. MELBOURNE, Aug. 28—(CP)—- The battle for control of Milne Bay, New Guinea, where c. Japan- ese landing force came ashore Wcdnssdciy night, was developing along the lines of jungle warfare totiight, while to the northeast an uncompromising life - and - death light- was in prospect for possession of the Solomon Islands. Military observers said they thought it unlikclv the MLlne Bay operations would. turn into a Ditch- ed battle, since the topography did not lend itself to full-scale fighting, but that the Japanese shock troops would try to exploit their jungle ex- perience as they did on Malaya. Control of Milne Bay, on the southeast tlp of New Guinea,_ would give the Japanese a base ori.y 420 miles from Australia. Gen. Sir Thomas Blnmey, com- mander-ln-chief of Allied land forces in the South Pacific area, expressed the belief that the Al- lies would be successful in repulsing a Japanese attempt to loin forces with lthle diapanese in the Kckoda area. n an . He also said that the battle for the Solomons “was not a slllslfl 11¢- tion but a battle which has reach- ed the aggressive stafle 111d mu“ be fought out until one side or the other is defeated." ARCIIDUKE DIES VIENNA, (From German Broad- casts) Aug. 28 - (AP) - c ' m1 k .1 - aer. death of Arc u e70. 1551111911835: r dinand of Austria. of Austrian smiles on the d Y slim and Italian fronts in the First Great war, was announced lode? Au]. 3-40?) —’l‘he condition of Willard Umphmy. m, injured in a plane crash yester- day near Fort nirfleld. Me. actor! the international boundary from Andovcr, was reported serious fn- night. A passcnfir, (iilroy simdpnvu. 45, or Caribou, c, wnA injure lean seriously. Both were in hospital n Fort nirfield. Um y, manager- of the Carl- bou a rpm-t and operator of a flying school here, was pilot of the smsl allllflfi.‘ lie remained unconsciouc Airman Injured snpovm, HT‘ Brazil's navy is small, consisting of two 19.000.ton battle-ships, two lcruiscrs, nine destroyers, four sub- marines. eight mine layers two mine swerpcrs and 15 nuxiliarics B_‘ 2il's air force also is small, con- sisting of only 400 planes in 1940. But hiinrlrrds of landing ileds have bcen built ln recent years and progress made the con- struction of air bases for Atlantic ~--——— pat in". n n Bi". ' s military forces are small. mo, and probably ill-equip- ped for modern warfare but her natural rrscuices are incalculable. It will be in the field of providing s raw materials for the war ma. chines of Canada, the United -—i States and Britain that Brazil CAIRO, Aug. 28 - (AP) -— will be most valuable to we Unit- Torpcdo planes of the R AF. have cd Nations, and in providing alqaemnifutheii‘ steel fkishdat a330- bascs for avol and air units. r a an cruiser, ea quar rs -— - announced today, while the dESGTL ' battle preparations of German and . British armies won't on behind a W I screen o minor no ions The R. A.F'. lorpxio plaiws found the cruiser, of the 7.84'l-tcn -——~—~~-— Guiseppe Garibaldi class, in the OTTAWA. Aug, ..R-~(CP)-—Mem- watersoff Anti-Kythera Island, hers of the first class of women's northwest of Crete, and attacked Canadian navnl service are ex- under licavy sntlnaircraft fire late pccted to arrive here tomorrow Wednesday night. Nearby an oil from all parts of the Dominion. tanker or lar e merchantman was The women. who number ‘i0 attacked and elieved hlt. will bcein classes Aug. 3-1 and will Rec°nmflssaxlce U"! 114*" Hwfnlllg be required to stay in the Laurier disclosed a slflkllll and burning Avenue training establishment Ship — either the cruiser or the here for the probationary period memhanlma" " b9n°l1lh l1 30' of one month. mu” P511M5m°k9 "mlhwfj-il» 0f the If found acceptable at the end lilaraq~ 3W‘) 5111511“ 5311i“ were of that period they will be en san ing y. .i ’ .. ; .. ' {Benire 1231i Alamein, 80 miles west nsmd m} the iumilon‘ o Aexan rin, British patrols twre grabbing‘) llieLssGernian ‘diesel: imfit Name N-B. Potato rec nna mice ra s, ‘sun- - a y - ing German working partie. .h Ibxport (Onlmlttee were believed preparing ad .i..cd bases. I-“RFIDERJCTON. Aug 38 - ————-i- i301" --; kflléilflllllillfflltby} the New runswic Qvcrnmcti o i1 tiirce- map ccminilwe to advise the leci- ern special products board con- ocgiingt fxportéitiontgf Céfllillfll se poa oes rom a prov nce was announced today by Agricul. WASHINGTON, Aug 2n_.(Ap)_ lure Minister A C. Taylor. The President Rosevelt indicated today Cflrllmlltlce COKIIPYl-scs E M. Taylor. that Americans might. be asked to Fredericton, secretary 0f the New do without meat; one day n week to Brunswick farm settlement boird; save shipping space for war cargoes. Charles W Clark, Woodstock, and Meanwhile the Foods Require- l-lemian J savage, Grand Falls. ments Committee of the War Prn- The advisory committee and Mr. rtluctlonselioalrd, healded by vAqrgricuii- Taylior willngo ‘to Ottnlwa foridls- ure ore a Caude ckiir . cuss ons w 1i iie spec n1 pro. uclc studied the mrgat situation with a board, set up in 1941 to re ulate view to allocating available civilian export of Agricultural prorucls. supplies to eliminate inequalities in Early this month the board's distribution among various sections Jurisdiction was extended to rc- oiMthe gcgiérsietryit (“semi I m M ggxljgilitcm of certified seed potato r. vc , n c - c . less do s at his rem conference. --——--__ malde i clear lhagtnhe possibllli‘: is stll under study. th no n ca- l»- - w» - no i» War—-25 Years ruched. muvrw/i. Aux. 20—(CP)-Meet- “ T d l days f r Canada, similar to o o a lc visualised for the United States by President Roosevelt, cp- peered s. dLstant prospect, food 4 administration officials said today. (By 1|... mnnnisn press) —-———-———- AUG 29, ICU-Italians advanc- WATIF-UHORTAGE 1113557‘ ed on the Biiinsizza Plateau, Ger- ENS mans continued their offensive in Rumanin All was comparatively MONGION. N13,, AuB. 28 —.— quiet on the Western Front. Monolon‘: facilities for supplying -__ water service have reached a point AUG. 30, inii~ciermans attack. where no further heavy demand id Qi-itim iirni" Epohy. Austrians can be met, Mayor l-TW. Storey Wlllldftw further on the Balnsizza said night, The city is seeking a Plateau Premier A. F‘ Kerensky loan rcm the Ftedcral Govern. rccslablisficd the death penalty as mom magnum m extension t0 fl. discipllnnr measure on l“ . Russian Fron . the last activity by the enemy had been announced here on Wednes- day. LONDON, Aug. 28—(CP)— The German radio heard by Reuters News Agency tonight claimed that German forces now striking across the Kal- muck steppe: in the eastern Caucasus now or; within 40 miles of the Caspian seaport oi’ Astrakhan with the 0c. cllllatlon of Linelnoyc, Registration 0f Women To Begin Sept. 14 MONTREAL, Aug, 28—(CP)— Registration of’ the first group of women under the National Selective Sci-vice plan will get underway Sept. l4 and last. for five days, Mrs. Rex Eaton, as- sistant director of National Se- lective service, Womens Divis- ion, said today. Only women in the age group 20-24 will bc affected. Registration is compulsory. Those who are to register are: 1. All unemplo ed women, married or slnglL‘, whether pre- viously employed or not. 2. All employed women n00 holding unemployment insur- ance registration cards. 3. All rloiiirstics, scli l!‘ ,- ers such as proprietors, owner: n1‘ small businvssos, nurses, pro- vincial civil servants, teachers, and those employed by indus- trinl and charitable institutions, excluding members of religious orders. Other age groups will be call- ed upon to register later, Mrs. Eaton said, Wllll the registration split into small groups to facili- tgtc analysis of the rtgisrmtlon finds, and to avoid congestion at. registration centres. After registration of all age groups has been completed. women in each group will be called for an interview ln which they will he givcn suggestions as to where they can best serve. While the registration itself ls mmpulsnry, there is no in- tention of using compulsion lo nhlirin labor, Mrs. Enton said, adding “l nm convinced that wnmcn arc willing and ready t0 be told where they can best nerve." Recommend New CBC Head‘ OTTAWA, Aug. Z8—iCI’l-— Appointment nl‘ Dr. J. S- Thomsnn. president of the University of Saskatchewan, as general manager- of the Carla. dlan Bromlrastin Corporation was recommenfle tonight. by the CBC hoard of governors. l-le would take the place of Maj. Gladstone Murray, who has been appointed hy the Board to a new position u director-general of broadcast- ln for Canada. The recommendation will go to the Dominion Government for action. It follows u report of [louse of Commons special committee on radio broadcasting which suggested the governors con- sider finding some position other than general manager lor Mai. Murray. (YITAWA. Aug. 26—(CP\-"Tkt— iers ircm Britain" broadcasters. Saturday Aug. 29 JCBC 8 to 8:30 n.m. ADTi inrluilc: (Prince Edward Island) Charlottetown: Bdr. I... A. Dig- Ill-ll Wage Increase. (By Fraser MacDougaYL Canadian Press Staff Writer) SAULT STE. [MARI 001-. Aug. 28—-(CP)—C. Millard, national director o. the United Steel Workers ' America, announced lonigh] that unless ho ha: beeq given assurance by neg] Sunday night at 11 o'clock that demands of steel warlo- ers here and at Sydney f0‘ wage increases are met th will cease operations at. S“ OTTAWA. Aug. 28—-(Cl’i\ Labor Minister Mitchell said in a formal statement tonight 1.11.11. all! stoppage of work to enforce demands for wage increase: c... gainst. the decision of any w" labor hoard would constitute n. strike against the government, Cflmmflflllns on the situation at Sauit Ste. Marie, Ont., when union officials are preparing la set. a 48-hour deadline for a lav- arable reply to their demand: for wages increases in lteel plants at Sault Ste. Marlo and. Sydney. N.S.. Mr. Mitchell cold the wages stabilization order-in- council provided “severe pens]. lies" for "any such action‘ and that the penalties would be en- forced. o’ciock Monday night.” Mr. Millard made his am nouncemenl. in a statemcn-l at a social meeting of tho stewards committee of tho Sault union, a local of the U. S. W. A. The setting of the 48-houl, deadline brings closer ihd threat of strike to two of the three huge primary steel- producing plants in Canad! —that of the Algoma Steel Corporation here and of the Dominion Steel and Coal (Continued on page 13. Col B) -, Iv WHEN ‘ft-iv: blirvfis AWAY -1't-u: i. DISHES P\\.E UP’? 1118i. tide thtiszafternoon at 12.50 d t ' ll. 8 . ansrllliogilgiltllls evening at 1.44 and rises tomorrow morning at 0.18. Last quarter moon Sept. 2. ll-ll R1“, cs1: FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — Leave 9.25 n.m.. 1.00 n.m. 4.45 n.m. 1.55 n.m. Leave Cape Tormentine — ll-W a-m., 3.1a n.m.. v.45 n.m. 9-1" v-m- SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 w Dec. 21 Inclusive) Leave Burden 9.00 s. rn.. 0.45 ID-llh Leave Tcrmcrrlinc 10.1 o. Ila 8.00 n.m. P. E. l.—N. S PEER! SEBWCI Leave Wood Islands 7.00 n.m.. 11-" m" 3 pkTriimn c n.m.. 1 n.m. m0 xlaeavc 1 J11- 5 p AIR SERVICE Chnrlottetown-summersldo- M on Leave Charlottetown 0-35 o. IIIJ 11.48 . m. Leaye Summersirle 1.10 o. 111.2 h“ , m. p Leave Mnnelcn l1 n. m.: and B.“ SUNDAY SERVICE Move Charlcltelown 12.45 p. lb Leave Manchu 4.13 p. m I