\ e0 King William L. O. f... I106. Flhllton, will hold their annual >2W/’ ’ ThelPeoples Paper Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Goodness teii-eheitis MAXIIIB OIL - MERE MAN b must have some edge none. g, Illllisqloullslllfl, Qfisuwuilunslsmfwodnln. HITI. v mafia.- ER 3 Nazi D Are Bad! Canadians Advance In Ilainstorm . T B! ROBE MUNRO WTHI’ THE OLNADIANS SOUTH OF‘ VAUCELLES, July 20-10?) Coblfl-In a heavy rainstorm Canadian formations mode new od- venccs today over the muddy slopes east of the Crnc River omi fought their way ioz-lvnrrl area around St. five miles south of Vrtucclles. ' Earlier, Canadian troops cap- tured Hill. 67 three miles south of Vnucellce. Chen's inlllmtrlol sub- urb on the cost bank of the Orne. Infantry with tank support carried out the attack on this dominating height following a heavy Canadian artillery barrage. other places seized by the Can- sdlnns include Cormcllee, one mile southeast of Vaucellcs. Ifs, miles south of Vztucelles _ bout 1 1-2 miles cast and slightly nth of Flellvy Bur Ornc. which to the Canadians earlier. NavyAlvards Announced OTTAWA, July 20—(CP)—-The navy announced today nine a.- wnrds-including two Distin lllsh- ed Service Crosses-to o flcers and men of the Canadian Frigate Waskesiu for "good service in the destruction of an enemy submar- e." The sinking of the U-boat, which occurred last winter in the North Atlantic, has been announced previously The Awards:- Dieiinguished ‘Service Cross Lt -Cmcir Ja-mes P. Fraser of (29 Flinn St.) Halifax and North Sydney, N.S., vho took over com- mand of tile Wcskcsiu a few clays before the action. Lleut. J.I-l Lincoln of Calgary. executive officer of the lvaskasiu. Distinguished Service Medal AB Johan H. Richard 0f Port Arthur. AB. Thomas Stephenson of Tor- fl b l’ Ali. RM. Stoner of Bruntfcni. Ont. Meniionid In Dispatches Illeut. J. Farmer of Windsor. Ont . E1181!» Room Artlflcer (3rd Class) JG. O'Brien cf Montreal. P0. MJT. Fortune of Prince Rupert. 13.0. . Acting PO. Al‘ McGee of Ildcr- ton, Ont, Gottinszen St.) Halifax. In each case the citation read: “For good service in the destruc- tion oi an enemy submarine." The Waskesiu was the first Oah- ndgwn Frigate no sink c. German U- te . llle action took olace last winter dllrlll-Z the dark of early morrlinfl when the under-sen raider attempt- uttnck a convoy which the Wnskesiu was escorting. Depth charges drove the II-boot to the surfecm where it wns illuminated by star shells and seurchlights. toulcgvrurs "Show-Mt. Stewart Semurdafi. Bhows 8-10. 7-20- - "Reserve August 2nd for Chick- ln Supper at Wood Island "Deuce in Pr h RI Boll. Friday evening, illeuvql-Il-lt. "C ll f De is do Erase: gang, Jlgfivs 7;: nt Avlbany and Emerald. G. C. Green’, l’ a "Unloading ca: of Bulk Wheat Tbllrlihqv Fri . N. A Cutcliilfe. fiuederlegli. 13mg. is; m- oxie """""°é..ét°él‘ “if In Bill!‘ lb Rlliglbeilnflllu. 7-21-21. "Came to Stella Maris f-Iall. North s“. °“‘°....l.’f.‘S.i.'...i“’° ll ‘h. i? d” er ay e blsscst show of the season. 7-20-2I. Oonlwall Young People's lr service ew Dom- snl church service July Sister Lodges are Andre Sur Orne, whose wife lives at (639 5m y exploded weet of Kowcl, other fly- o o o at’ IVISIOIIS y Miuled ed into the stronghold o 'I‘rourn, eight miles east of Oaen, and threatened to cut it off from the south tonight in- vlcious, fluid fighting thst has bsdl mauled five of l8 G ml divi bl cking the road etro P2111. o" o Other British Canadian formations fanned out southeast and south of Caen along the high- ways running to Vlmont and Fal- alse, in a series cf drives aimed nt the heart of fiance. Dull!!! this third clay of the of- fensive launched from the long- held salient east of the Orne River. British forces first seized bflBvIiluWflY station of Trcarn, and an infantry column struck out for St. Pair and high ground less than a mile south of Troarn. It was not yet clear whether Nazi Marshal Rommel was ready to risk a. major battle on the south- east or was beginning a fighting withdrawal toward the French capital. But nowhere so far had he been able to stem the advance although he has lined up at least 5 1-2 divisions against this drive. At least l0 more towns and vil- lages in this arc east of the Orne were swept up, driving the Ger- mans back from positions where their guns might interfere with free Allied use of the docks of the great river port of Caen. With three more captured by American forces between St. Lo and Periers, this brought to at least 60 the number of localities liberated in eight days. This was no lightning drive, and Gen. Montgomery, the ground commander, was feeling his way into the open tank country cauti- ously. Battlefront dispatches des- crlbecl it as a. campaign of "meas- ured advances." - The German DNB Agency claim- ed Thursday in a report which lacked any Allied confirmation that "new Allied formations brought up to the front include s replen- ished Cunndlan 2nd Division which carried out the raid on Die pe." T is unconfirmed enemy report asserted that divisions of "Pat- ton's Army" (evidently referring tc- LL-Gen. George S. Patton of the American Army), including Canadians and Americans, are engaged on the invasion front. Allied Advance In Italy Continues ROME, July 20-(AP)—.Arner- icon troops battered their way s- cross the Arno River Valley on a. 25-mile front. between Pisa and Florence toduy while Polish and Italian troops of the British 8th anmlv pushed on b lured Adriatic p0 the other end of the battlefront. Bcwlldered by the sudden break- through thet yielded Livorno to alrny troops, the Germans re- treated across the Arno into the llne. Despite torrential reins. Allied progresses was general across the front. British troops of the 8th er- my fought through Dudda. l2 miles north rot Siena. and 20 miles from Florence. Mcntevorchi, on the Arno l5 miles northeast of Arezzo, was cap- tured by Brltlsh infantry, support- ed by eastern Canadian armor (probably the Ontario Regiment. Oshawa, Ont., or the three Rivers, Que, Regiment), Doug How Can- ndlnn Press War Correspondent re- ported. The captors of Ancons left Iles of enemy equipment behind t em to be sorted as they pushed on wh- ploslon, which took the lives 0f l2 mountain defences of their Gothic sub (FHARIDTTETOWN. CANADA, FRIDAYT JULY 21, 1944 Army And Navy Men Chosen To Lead Nippon rmw yoox. Jul)‘ no - (u) - Erlttépéaror Hirohiw in an dlngreced- en manoeuvre arppbren y es gn- ed to strengthen Jnpsnts military rule today named s general snd an admiral jointly to 1mm s new gov- ernment in succession to that of the fallen Hidekl ‘Ilojo. The two chosen as “oo-pxcmiers," Gen. Kunlaki Koiso. Governor- General of Korea, and Admiral Mltslunasa Yonal, who was premier in 1940 both have been considered outstanding proponents of Japanese expansion. and the official Jo - cse news agency Dcmel said heir task would be to strengthen the war effort of the Japanese people, apparently weakened by the series of recent defeats ct the hands of the United States. In broadcasts from Tokyo record- ed bv the Associated Press and the Federal Communication; Commiss- < conuiKa-éil‘péiehTcefei“ Find Woman Guilty 0f Manslaughter SYDNEY. NS, Jul l9 -— (GP) -A supreme Court ury here to- day found Mrs. Elizabeth Caffier, 23, guilty of manslaughter and another jury acquitted John Kea- gan, 2'7, the some charge in connection with the same case. The charge arose out of the death last February oi’ Marcella Caffler, four-yeer-olli daughter of Mrs. Cnffier. The child. was found dead in the Caffler home at near- by Bras cl'Or with bruises and burns about the body and leg. At an autopsy it was stated n. hemorr- hage of the brain contributed to the death of the youngster. Comments 0n Mount St. Bruno Blast OTTAWA, July 20-(CP)-—De- fence Minister Ralston said today in the Commons that so far it has not been possible to deter de- finitely lf the explosion at Mount St. Bruno, Que, July 6 was due to the use of defective mortar um- munitlon, although a. military court inquiry had laid the cause oil the accident to a defect in a. mor- concluslvely from the few frett- ments of the bomb which were found that the bomb which ex- ploded was defective." sold Col Ralston. Evidence indicated that the ex- army personnel. was not due to anv defect in the mortar itself or to improper technique on the Dart of the crew loading the u‘. “The elimination of these two possible causes of the explwlbn ports th exploitation that the cause was aedefeclive bmlb and the court so found," he said. Forest Fires Break Out In Halifax Area HALIFAX, Jul' 20 - (C?) —- Forest fires bro e out B8010 in the Halifax area today as provin- cial woodlands grew tinder-dry in the summer heat. Several houses are threatened on Oakland Point. near St. Margaret's Bey, 35 miles from here where fires started in surrounding woods. Another fire, reported under control Wednesday night. b10119 out again today on the Herring from Ancone. coupon, Juh! no —(AP)— nuu-| inn troops snashln a miles! throu h totterlrw German g the e firth moor offensive in l! duly leached t e central Bu river m. ght only 50 miles front t big mil citv of Lublin in the heart o Poland, and in the north other et forces were only n two-hour march from German out Prussia. Bled Army troop; for the first tins in the war appeal-ed ready to burst onto the soil of Germany P10- per In East Prussia, where n Mos; m said "a serious panic South of m5 new front: which ins Russian columns broke into the Emmm" "°’t‘.’.'é“.lli Rooks, on‘? 300 miles from German Slleeis s but 83 miles from tile '1“ “tk"i.lfil°"“ft'l.ai.i.>“°°s.i.“." a o Pnnrlficr-Marsha: Stalin nnounced I .m. RWlbOd. Rev. Harvey will bs the lpel-kel‘. ‘Ml-ii i in one of two orders of the dsy, Russians Only Two-Hour March From E. Prussia in simul Lwow and "uncmm o’ an" 53.1%.... broadcasts seknowlcdg-fl , Cove Road, near Halifax. The Red Army now has hurled perhaps more than 1.500.000 troops ninst an enemy tarleouslv loo-mile front reelin on s. wind from mppmflnhe; t0 Mountains. The two order; of the dsy snn- uunced sweeping R/ueslstl gsins which put Gonna in her gayest. hour since lite war an in l .On Wednesday Russian troops crossed the Bug near Soknl, penetrating into Gennen-ocoupled Poland for the the Carpathian first time since Hitler struck Russia June M. 1M1. Berlin said Bled ln the had reached Aluguetow. onlv s two- bom . fill; was impossible to establish a 3TB Tokyo War fellowship. clearly indicate rising dlsunliy with Whatever its motivation the fal The unexplained attack that sin responsible. , _ __ flgflCllltiWfll Estimates Are Before Commons OTTAWA, July l) (OP) several opposition members in the Commons today praised the Fed- eral Government's Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act and urged that its provisions be extended to the whole of Canada. J. W. Burton (CCF - Humboldt) and John Dlefenbaker (PC-Lake Centre) led those who urged ex- tension of the Act during a day in which examination of the civil estimates of the Agricultural De- partment was completed. "Now ls the time to make pre- ‘Situation Last Night By Kirk: L. Simpessuniseoeisied Press Wu Ansint. Btflll with flllll promise o! V1010?! l‘ l! the wru- lwws from ihhg fighiing fmnis on beds sides of the world. even nenrer and more glittering possibilities have been opened before the eyes nf the United There Is plain evidence ihli defeat ls gnawing at both end: of the Nmd-Nhpunose war Axis. l4 can be read In the fall of ihe Tnjo war cob- inci in JIBOB. Ii underscored Berlin discloeI-e that a bruised and burned IIIIQ bod narrowly escaped death whfle uisnilet his hand-picked inner circle corps of personal miliinry and naval sides. Just whit these far-separated evenis foreshadow for the reeling Axis msies cannot yet be adduced certainly. But that each ls symptomatic of sagging war morale in Germany and Japan alike h axiomatic. They In both. hint at impending internal break-downs which could hasten the dsy or Axis doom. Tojo’: fall unquestionably stunned directly from sharp internal dis- sgreerneni within the innermost. circle of Japanese military leadership of war strategy. It was an admission of defeat that called for at least an appearance of political harlkirl by the man who hurl Irrl Joplin lnio the war. and all his closest associates. Efforts of babbling Japanese ‘ me-frnnt broadcasts to covr-r up ihel schism with meaningless phrases about the nceessliv nf n Ivar cabinet set-nu could not conceal it. It was self evident of n. drastic split on war pollcles between the army and navy vrlngs of the militaristic junkers that rule Japan that n double-headed team of Premiers, one ull " ’ ' the other a General. replaced the fallen wnr lnrrl. "stronger" I of T030 is evidence that Japan no lees than “elvmuny is senslni‘. Imlnndlng doom. god Hitler is no less a symlliun ihut elm-e lg growing up in Germsny a desire for vengeance on the man Roosevelt Accepts 4th Term Nomznatlon CHICAGO, July 20 —- (AP) — The Democratic Notional Con- vention tonight handcrl a fourth Presidential nomination to Frank- lin Delano Roosevelt on one b11- lot which gave ltIl". Roosevelt 1.096 wwtesrcompared ‘wltll 09 for Vir- giniafs anti-New Deni Senator, Harry F. Byrd, and one vote for James A. Farley, who engineered two elections for the President but balked at a. third term. The Byrd support come mostly from southern delegates who had objected to some of the conven- tion's actions. Still undecided, as the‘ conven- tion settled back to \I\'i1lt for a radio acceptance speech from M1‘. Roosevelt was the choice of u run- ning mote to enter the arena with him against the Dewey- Bricker Republican ticket. Acceptance Spccch A Pacific Coast Novol Bose, July _ AP) _. President Roosevelt tonight accepted a precedent- smashlng fourth-term nomination paratlons not only for the reword- ing and rewriting of the Act. but) also to plan so that as soon as the war is over we may begin on of program calling for an expenditure t of at least $100,000,000 in each e13‘ few ycors following the war,‘ said Mr. Burton. The experience gained by op-l crating under the Act in the‘ drought areas of the Prairies would ‘ be of great benefit to all farming communities in Canada. Provisions of the Act could be used to aid in the recovery of marsh lands in the Maritime Pro- l vinces. ' , ' For the purposes of the Act. the‘ country could be divided into thrce zones, one for the Maritimes, one? for Central Canada and one for’ the western Provinces, all work- ing_unci_er_an__admlnistratlve ‘ head. (Continued on page 7, Col, 4) G Yank Navy Bombers Raid for President with the prediction thot another four years will llncl l the world at permanent peace and declared: “New hands will then have full opportunity to realize the which we seek." Give Inform ideals i 10 Important Enemy Targets Are Bumped LONDON. July 20 _ (AP) Nearly 3,000 American warplanes smashed into Germany from Bri- tain and Italy for the tllircl straight day toduy and pounded at. least l0 important objectives in the Leipzig, Munich and Frlcdrichshu- fen areas, rounding out. the great- est lllassed till‘ llSSilllll. evcr mount- led against the cncllly. Close lo 5,000 tons of explosives ‘were hurled down on vital war I targets in today's LWU-(llFCCilOn at- ltacks, bringing to about $5,800 tons the total bomblvelght rained on the German homeland by Am- erlc.m_ daylight raiders since the gigantic daylight offensive began 10 days ngo. A Major Offensive Describing lhe assault which began July 11, an All‘ Officer at Allied Supreme Headquarters sold it was o. major offensive, greater than that which dealt the Lulf- waffe a staggering blow ill February this year, when the smashing of German aircraft factories and the slaughter of Nazi fighter planes in the air ensured Allied air su - eriorlty over the beaches on - Day. The weather over Normandy con- tinued bad today, but Allied figh- ter-bombers and light bombers ranged to the south and east and hit transport targets. Weather Is Bud Despite miserable wcathe: whim made it difficult to observe bomb- lllg results, medium bombers struck another blow at ltonllncls dlvind- ling fuel and ammunition stores by attacking on important supply dump in Senonches forest, 20 miles southwest of Dreux. All mediums returned. Since July ll the U. S. 8th end 15th Air Forces have sent 8,600 heavy bombers and 5.500 escorting fighters roaring against Germany in 10 separate attacks on scores of objectives cf prime importance to the Nazi war machine. Describing the major daylight offensive, an Air Officer at Allied Supreme Headquarters disclosed that 8,500 planes, including 5,000 lllcavy bombers were sent against Germany In the post five days. ANTIDOTE FOR. SLEEP Mohammeclans first to keep owake during long religious ceremonies. ation Re l Petawawa Disturbances OTTAWA. July 20 —(CP)-— De- fence Minister Ralston, correcting information he had previously 31W“, tile Commons; on disturbances at Petcwalve Military Colllp. today‘ gave details of a court cl inquiry; which disclosed that ln three scum, les large crowds of up to 200 Sbedlcfs‘ gathered. y He told the Commons that while. _ large crowds were involved lllerci were few actual combatt-onis and the‘ total clomugeg were a bloody nose; and a. broken door panel, I Cause of the disputes seemed to‘ tvla. south to Llwcw on the a f-l-yliiig navy] ng nort the Bonln The attack four coastal small cargo ms blaainlr pmie base i hour march from Gel-men east ed the serious reverse on the front west of Kowel. saying. "the buk oi mum formations‘ crossed the. central Bug, leaving resr guards to‘ pmtect the mtmlt. Islands onlv 632 from ‘Tokyo States Pacific reported today. Islands WASHINGTON, July U-(AP) bombers, presumably from Saloon, attacked miles Tuesday, United fleet Headquarters was the first by lend- based bombers on the Bonln group, .whIch is well within the inner de- fences of Japan. The heavy bombers flew in at low level to etrafe and chi J1me and Hahn Jims. left 1i enemy seeplsnes wrecked. bomb Ohi- They veseels in flsmes,_ a ship sunk and several among enemy sea- nstallations. involve singing in French, the re-l lalivc luerlls of general service and‘ home defence trOOPB and personal; rnnticlu. l Must. serious disturbance msulltll when 200 men participated in n chase Wllllll ended with a door bc- ing brokcn open and a soldier re-l ccivlng a bl0Ody nose. v Col. Ralston previously had rc-‘ ported to the house there were only two disputes with two soldiers. in- volved in each case. The officer who had given him the original Infor- mation hud since clnplnlned its in- completeness on the Emlmfi (“at he lmd not then seen the proceedings of the inquiry. Col. Ralston said he had received a question on the subject only a few minute; before the opening of the house “and ln_m/y desire to, answer promptlv I immediately telephoned mv offices here who gave me the information which I forth-, with guvc the house. This infor- mation had been forwarded wt headquarters by telephone froml Peta-wown and contained nothing. showing that any crowd had been involved in the incidents referred‘ fol. Ralston 5.11.1 that in the is? Hi-Cchtinutltl on page 6, Col.’ It)" See No Change In Jap Policy After Shakeup WASHINGTON. Jllly 20 — (AP) ._Anlcrican officials agreed today that the Japanese Government shakeup is the result of the en- emy's desperate situation, but they cautioned thnt it evidently meant; no weakening of Jop resistance in the Pacific. Joseph C. Grew. who spent the 10 yenrs before the war as Am- crlcan ambassador to Tokyo, said in a statement issued by the State Department that the some old group of war leaders of which Togo is only one member “is still n power." While noting several encouraging factors in the sllakeup. Grew. who now heads the state Department's office of For Eastern Affnlrs, de- clnred: ‘<3 "It would be shorisightcd and ' dangerous to full prosecution of our own war effort to allow this change to lull us into any wish- ful thinking or false optimism." Undersecretary of War Robert Patterson, referring to reports that the Jnps might try to put. in s government more ngrcenble to the United Nations, said he was sure that “no one will bc deceived by any such manoeuvres. Tile chur- ncter of the Japanese lmtiorl and armed forces remains the 31019.; and is not changed in any way bv. s shift in government personnel‘? 8 PAGES BLAMES OFFICERS FOR Unprecedented Ghakeu Io Rep used coffee.‘ itely foiled. This circle LONDON, July 2l~—lFrlduy)-( 3:15 a..m.. today that "the officers miffed suicide." It said Col. Count Von planting the bomb-ls “No incidents have tlnuel, “and other guilty persons n he had survived the attempt of his highest advisers were were injured, one of them fa Germany the same fate as l big mistake.” ed," he added. “A small clique pi ambitious and stupid Gonna-n ofncers made a plot lo clllnlnale me and with me the state." Hitler declared in his ad- dreess. which lasted for six min- ES. He said than the bomb. which exploded but. two yank w his right, was planted b_v a Count Von Stauffe berg. n Hitler's revelation apparently was Minted]! directed at the group of juukrrs army yfflcers with whom he has long clashed. Only a few days ago their inm- nus leader, Flelri ltlarshcl Karl Rudolf Gerd Von ltumlsindt, hail been removed as leader of the western front. Hitler declared without further explanation that the llroup which tried to kill him “had nothing to do with Germany's people and her army. Hitler s to show the Cer- man be "e than, "I am unharmed and well. _ Furthermore. he spoke so tltat they might “hear lhe circumstances ,of this crime, which is unequalled in German “One of mv followers was killed." he said, "but I myself sustained only nllnol" IIIJUTIBS and bruises. "At u. time when our troops are fighting on the fronts. a small -f Gelmans tried to stab me in the back "But this time they have defin- is so small. ‘ and it nas nothing to do with Ger- mansV-s people or her army. “And fills time this group will be mercilessly wiped out." Tried To Rapoli. 191i This stab-in-the-bafl {noun- Hltler added, “emerged in Ita ysnd Germany in the belief they could repeat the 191B stab In the back. but this time they have made a bad mistake." He announced that he had an- pointed Heinrich Himmler, his Gestapo, chief, as idCA'1n' chief of the home army“. and ad- dad: am convinced that with the efforts of this small clique an at- mosphere will be created that is needed for the front after such an attempt." This was interpreted as meanlnl that Hitler was in a fight to the death against his internal enemies. Neither Hitler nor any other Berlin spokesman disclosed where t e ation attempt was, made, but the first announcement‘ during the dav Thursday was fled at Hitler's headquarters. Goerins Bueshs After Hitler finished apes-hind. l Gearing went on eloh Maine the sir 101M declared: Pu hr b waéolmme y . fenebem: at the order of a miser- a/ble c ue of former Generals who we“ because oi their Mil‘ The broadcast sold, "rlngleaders have either u slellflcnberz-tlle man Hitler among those who have been shot.” been reported from anywhere," the radio con- ll-Oll other Pnvlless I U-l-L ltb “.00 Illi- II hssrlptlon Dellsvord. PLOT Says Attempt Made eai: Wig CPl-{The German radio asserted at conspiracy has completely ccllopscxl." been shot or nee- sccusr-d of re being called to account." By J UDSON 0’QUINN y Associated Press Staff Writer LObDON, July 20 -_ (AP) - Adolf um... appeared on the German radio tonight andzlnnounced to his people that a group of German army officers preparing Germany or defeat as in 1918 had attempted to assassinate him but “unharmed and well.” Hitler took the air to reassure the German public af- ter it had been announced officially that he was slightly burned and bruised in the explosion of zl bomb while many gathered around him. Thirteen members of Hitler’s personal military staff tally, he disclosed. Hitler declared dramatically that the officers respon- sible for the assassination attempt “wanted to prepare for n 1918, but they have made a “All criminal elements will be ruthlessly exterminat- I lSays Song Was Cause Cf Frans WINNIPEG, July 20 — (CP) _ The Winnipeg Tribune today pub- lished a song entitled "Salute to a Zombie," which it. said was the "spark" which set. off a reported fracas at. Currie Barracks, Cel- gary, Tuesday, in which general service men end home-defence drsftees brandished rifles and bayo- nets. The tune is “Clementine? The Tribune said the song, writ- ten by three returned soldiers and s CWAC Sergeant, originated in the No. ll District Depot at Van- couver. Apparently the first of seven stanzas represents u so to be sung by dreftees, and t e other b general service troops. Thu frst verse reads:- ‘Tm s zombie, I'm a zombie, I'm a zombie, yes, I am I'd much rather be a zombie than an active service man." Another reads:- "Now come listen nll you zom- es You drink our wine, you drinl our beer, But. you won't tum active service "Yours s handcuffed voluntee ." Prisoner Starts Fire In Nova Scotia Jail HALIFAX, July 20 - (or) _ A prisoner in Halifax County Jail was overcome tonight by smoke from a fire he started in a pile of mattresses and I5 other prison- ers were endangered before the blaze was discovered and extin- guished by city police and firemen. 4i: Eflim‘ l5 " iwm. 11v: Mm Fellow i cowardly and bid - "The morn-er was saved by uro- vidence. These criminals trv now as a new Reich Government. or as usurpers and by wrong orders. in confuse the troops." Doeniil Aids Word dmlral Keri Dosnltz. supra-he naval commander, declared the new "stands firm" and would accept orders only from Irllitlcr and thc how's "own leaders.’ I-‘rst announcement of the ei- temot on I-fltleru life came from (Continued on page C. Cql- 4) The Wrong A Ilat LONDON, July 20 - (C?) — Immediately after announcing the assassination attempt against Hit- ler, the German home radio sub- stituted music for its next sche- duled program. The cancelled Hi h tid this “mm t new”. noon st 12.00 and Bun sets this evening at 8.40 and morning an. 5.33. DAILY All! SERVICE Charlottetown - ‘summer-side — Monc n Leave Charlottetown 1 lJI-I 11.30 a.m.; 6 pJn. Arrive Cbarlotteiown 12.45 p.m.: 5.46 p-nn; 8.40 pun. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown 12 noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 pm. Charlottetown — New Glasgow (Daily except Sunday) have Charlottetown I p.111. Arrive Charlottetown 5.50 pm. P. B. Ir—N. S. FERRY SERVICE DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Delve Wood Islands-ICC A. M. 11.00 A. M. 3.00 P. M. Leaves Caribou - 9.00 A. M. 1.00 P. M. 5.00 l’. M. ' program was a lecture entitled "Extermination of Bets." ‘siwfifliwmx-n w» .- »