Berlin For Conference Land Rash In lily Fire Area h 509.5: ..- um _ a - Worm“ i’ authorities have ropogsgd- afiad’ out more lend elsha is that radilm or “e un- s re from era mo. had rein coral! ad by . ll of its! - ls. oth groupsaf dwan army fitv-Zifiififiiifi ~uk“'i»'5fi”a°‘l’.°.”n’i"vl‘2 Events ....*ae?'T"'-'rm-u h Kidd Iliad Iliu- iwmod mule. 7-10-11. "Clair and nanee. "The in» - “mail l "fiance Seven Mlle 3W 3811 IoflIdI/y. July 18. Good music. 7-16-8 ‘ "rune: Road rionto Wednes- '- August aano, church Mo... _ " = m 7-13-41. ~~~.:....=:-.~;-.-. .. are . la» July ma. i-ia-ai "muf.u§”ialt'ii“b‘vmuviulo.orsw°d' a n ‘Th. uurpnv. v-u-n. "Paw s hrsn in stock. we spare n small lots. Livestock Agency. 7-14-21 "Holy Redeemer Min- fls as linkers, W csdsyi "inlauioeorosmsooislm Bell. Wednesday-q ‘guy "Danes in L dale Col-loot - g.‘ July l7th.m-Mac1ntyre‘s7%c?l- "rt-y smut Picnic. Wednes- aw. mi? lore. Suwa- s-aHMh "lee Cream and Danes Avon- School. m???" ‘nix-kg? §.-‘_“--°'M""*=- I U . . . ,nneru a o Green NHL "Danae lilnmarhol loll. Mon- §".i.'*w°“saur scar; u, ‘ r-is-io-al. "I and dance. New Ilaveii. , Monday, July midi‘ "Corns to the Payh P1611" Ii a Ps ter’ Shore ednesds. it“, u rig? no: Friday. 7-16- _i _._ "landing u ev sunny Davis s. film- i. . Phone . p ‘a-ia-sat-nsoin-u. "What about your calves? Do- Ram}... ".:...' ‘la-lash: ur — tbe tail. livestock helium "Pon-Ilonour blended feeds are still the choice of ers who sientmestirthairmon . Ind amt“: “uni "Ihdrodaofehlekm wars have ‘swing away from other feeds. to are now uains Pen-Honour d and with satisfaction. Live- Pesd Alonso. r-lt-Ii "he daner in Sumnlariiold . . wlo sponsored as ask“: i931» Asshslt Shingles. Bony W31 l!‘ “d! i!) ‘W3 tminance; surrounding the death of ‘$13.2’. 1'». s... u, Connor's Store 11:30. BIIIJIN. July l0 - (W) - Prime llnister Churchill and Pre- sident Truman arrived today to meet Premier Stalin in the Pois- dsm conference which mill‘ 511°"- on the war against Japan and de- cide the fate of Ihirope for years to cone. President and State Secre- ta Byrnes flew in from Brussels after 4 pm. They had spent gium dlsembsrking from the cruiser Aillllltl alt 11.1.0 am. (6.10 a.in.. SILT.) at Antwerp ll! Churchill arrived at 6:10 pm. with his dqilghter. Mary. a u-apsport p ne. The Prime Minister, who had been holidaying near the Franco- Spanlah border town of Hendaye flew here from Bordeaux. He step- ped out wearing the uniform of a cavalry colonel and smoking a big cigar, to be welcomed by Field Marshal Montgomery. British re- presentative on the Allied Control Council in Germany. n “Had ‘you a good trip? asked the Piel Marshal. " "Yes, very pleasant indeed. ro- pliad Mr. Churchill. The Prime Minister then took the salute from s guard oi honor onaposed of eontingents from the RAJ‘. regiment and British H"! Omadisgi troops before driving off Field Marsha Montgomery to idle British sector. Expect Stllin By Ball Premier Stalin was expected to come to Berlin on the newly- o ed Moscow-Berlin railway. ‘Imorrow the three men will meet in the Berlin suburb of Potsdam En Kaiser Wilheinrs former castle. The Pacific wsr is bound to figure prominently in sions but Russia's attitude may_not me known for some time after the conference concludes; (A Tokyo commenmrv broadcast Sunday said "the conference will be centred on Japan" but sought to dfldountrit’ in advance.) Twenty-six Allied fighter planes patrolled the Berlin sky through- out the afternoon and outgoing traffic was suspended at the air- port. With Mr. Churchill was Clement Attlee. former deputy Prime Min- ister in the British Coalition Gov- ovrnment vrihich served through most of the European war.~ Other Britons were Foreign Sec- retary Eden; Field Marshal Sir Alan Brooke, Chief of the Impe- rial General Staff; Admiral of the, Fleet Sir Andrew Cunningham. Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles Por- tal. Chief of Air Staff.- Lord Lea- thers. Minister of War Transport: Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Ted- der, who was deputy commander of Allied Forces on the Western Front. and Field Marshals Sir Har- old Alexander. Montgomery and Sir Henry Maitland Wilson. Police Probe Death arr. n.1, July is - (CP) — Iocai police have opcncc an investisation into the circum- LAC. Jack McMillan, R.C.A.P., whosg body was found about 1 o'clock today on the beach of the 8t 0101:: River behind a. garage on Water Street. LAC. McMillan. whose home is in Benton, Carleton County, had been stationed at Depart, NS, and liar; arrived at Milltown Saturday morn- in! to spend sleeve with his sun-t, Mrs. Vennis McMahon. He left his aunt's house Saturday night to do some shopping and did not return. ell. an employee of . Ely the gagage, noticed the body when he looked out the back window of a’. K N10 ' lriaoatapolntaboutnau way be- II garage at noon today. It was twee the high and low water about 10 100i- above h. "-19-. 32’."" "Collsetin .livs hens next ‘rues- ' o'clock. Cavendish cw Glas- gow up to 1a noon. n. 1.. Dlcgiiioizil. \ "mill lines of Pen-Honour feeds in stock: Pig starter, grower fhiehor. chick starter. grower. fstionor. l mash, m. do. w cost. eon dering value. Liva- stoek Peed Agency. 1 M M "Port-Honour blended feeds are manufactured st our warehouse Charlottetown. So-we know what's in them. and what rs can m out of themtxnd when you stock - we both can satisfied. Liva- Peed _ _ r-ia-zi "no prairies Convention It, I . o 's Cr . St. Ma ‘s Woman's Institu yfield Hell. ‘mes- “i” s 5 =5 fort to organize an interim Indian Imup of 30,000 wives and children of Cfliflltllsn sea icemen are wait- 111s to Canada. and steadily increasing. Mei-Gen. 11W. Brown the Canasdinn Red Cross Society,- said yesterda I1 ren have crossed the Atlantic to make their new hcsnes in Canada. Present movements are slow be- A once the b been returned they lire eXPwM in “i of thanks for inviting him to visit Paper" y a byEverybody (lovers Prhee adv-mimosa Like iheVDew A had neighbour is as cvil as a rood noia vantage. srsxms 0' -L MERE MAN t an hbonr an ad- a Fag Delays Arrival 0f Hospital Ship HALIFAX. Jul 1O - ._ A thick fog which coverégnthis area yester ay and today has de. layed the arrival of the hospital ship Letitia, carrying 815 sick and wounded servicemen. The Ietliia It is ted f . dicationsexgligt the Iibiip iii: he"? eflriy tomorrow. More Butter For Americans How WASHJZNGCION, J 1 15 _ — The Office of Price}; Adminiggl: “ml Wdfly relaxed ration restric- tions as the affect butter an. bouncing th until further ‘mo... 16 red points" instead of 24 would be fieeouirec: Der pound cheese. oleomar rifle and . _,____________________E orraws, July is - tcr)_. No increase in Canada's butter ration hssbeeneontemplltod, a llrlces board spokesman said tonight. r.—_-__--- < cooking fats also requirg y 1,, under the United stave Hawk) s rat oning e some time the Agricu t Department ounced an fusing’: insly acute sugar shortage, with less than 1.000.000 ions available for the last three months of this Ye" WmDl-Nd‘ with £833,000 pound; made available to civilians in the same period last year. Barn Destroyed At Parkdale Fire Saturday night destroyed the barn and badly damaged the house of Earl Gregory at Parkdalc. The City Fire Department, called at 11.15 responded quickly but upon arrival found it was too late to do much else but save the dwelling. Bripps Proposes Self-Rover nment For India How By GLEN WILLIAMS LONDON, July I5 - (AP) — In the wake of the failure of the Simls. Conference, Sir Stafford Cripps proposed Saturday night that immediate steps be taken to give India self-govcmment under a constitution. Sir Stafford, who carried an un- successful plan for post-war Domin- ion status to India in 1942, urged that elections be held for a new Indian constituent assembly which would draw up the constitution. He said: “We should, I believe, decide to skip the temporary readjustment of the Central (Indian) Government which has become impossible ow- ing to the views and fears of the Moslem League and go straight; ahead with the permanent solution." - Earlier, the India Office had announced that the Viceroy, Vis- count Waveli, had terminated the Simla conference, called in an ei- Govcmment with greater Indian representation, after Indian lead- ers had failed to reach "a requisite measure of agreement." Iany Serviceman’: Wives Await Ships UTTAWA, July 15 -— (OP) -—-A ‘l for transportation their number is e. assistant commissioner of Y. Since 1H2, 14,3118 wives and o 11d- causs of ah ing difficulties but of the troops have spec’? ulxmMeantime thgh 111011108 con nus. grow. e army alone, for instance, them were 8'13 marriages in Juno. CHURCHILL THANKS SPAIN MADRID July l0 - (Reuters)- h r Churchill has sent t e Spanish authorities a measale Spain, a reliable informant stated sy. Mr. Churchill said he was oblifl- ed to decline the invitation because the object of his visit to Iienday! , was to enjoy a rest. l"! because neither he nor his Wife was scheduled to arrive last nighm them its citizens were willing to mi Returned lien liiuests 0f Honor At Hotel Dinner Forty-three men of the Navy and Army recently returned from over- seas were entertained at, dinner at the Charlottetown Hotel Saturday evening by the Citizens’ Reception Committee. Invitations to 100 men had been sent out but many oi those invited lived in outlying dis- tricts and could not conveniently be present. Seated at the main table with Mr. Leo Bradley, chairman of the Committee. were Coun. P. G. Gay, representing the Mayor; Dr. W. J. P. MacMillan, O.B.E., president of the P. E. Island Red Cross Divis- ion; Colonel Wllliam Leggeit, pre- sident of the Quebec Red Cross Division; and Capt. N. W. Iowther, representing the Provincial Com- mand of the Canadian Legion. The dinner opened with the singing of "O Canada"~with A. P. Doucette at the piano. The toast to the King was proposed by the chairman. While the speakers st the main table drank the toast in water, the members of the armed forces drank it in vendor's ale, bottles of which were placed before each guest. Chairman Bradley informed the of welcoming them back home and advistd them to join the Legion. He assured them the veterans of World War I were willing to see the younger men come in and take over more of the control as the organization grew, by the addition of thousands of younger men. Councillor Gay welcomed the boys on behalf of the City and assured do all it could for them at all mes. Several of the men, including William Murphy. id. J. Evans, John Costello, and Ernest; Fardy ex- pressed their appreciation of the excellent dinner provided, and "especially for the beer." Dr. MacMillan paid a warm tri- bute to the fighting men of Can- ado and said one of the world's greatest military strategists, Field Marshal Montgomery had stat the Canadian soldier had no sup- erior. He praised the Red Cross and, amid much applause, remind-i ed the men that most of the com-| forts provided them on the field of ttie h been supplied by the loving devotion and labour of their wives. mothers, and sweethearts. He concluded bv assuring the men he, as leader of the Opposition in the Provincial Legislature, was at all times willing i0 efend their rights to the full extent of his ability. Colonel lbeggett spoke__very brief- (Continued on Page 6 Col. b) m D- U‘ W Y \ Ghennault Resigns Air Force Gomlaand KUNMING. China, Jul 15 — (AP) — Mat-Gen. Cla re Lee Chennault, who has resigned as commander of the 14th United States Air Force, said today he had been shocked deeply by what he termed adverse criticism of the armies and Government of Chino. "recently made by irresponsible’ persons at home." “I think it's about time for Am- ericans to cease to be so concern- ed by the mote in our neighbor's eye.” he declared in a statement. Gen. Chenliault, former leader of the Flying Tigers announced his resignation yesterday. saying he could remain until a new higher United States airforce command is installed in Chun king and then return to the Un ted States and retire from the army. His statement said that China's armies and President Chiang Kai- Shelvs Government were "no more faultless than any others." "I have been a witness of eight years of war in China, and I have the deepest admiration for the Gen- cralissimds (Chiang‘s) courage. foresight and unwavering lo alty to the cause we share." Gen. C en- nault declared. "I think it's time for us to re- Warm Welcome For ‘Returning Vetlerans ‘ilislwormorereturnedvstm- Saturday evening had no reason to doubt the wanntli of the welcome pulled into the station. Them few moments as the ropes which were to be drawn across the plat- form to give the men breathing 8115M l5 they got Off the train, were not put up until hundreds of wait- i ism relatives and friends had surged iaoross the platform to meet their lov ones. band of the 17th Armoured Regiment began playing long be- fore the train came to a stop and continued while cars secured‘ by the Red cross as well as those supplied by individuals, began whisking the men to the Canadian. Legion hall. Members of the Citizens’ Recep- tion Committee were busily engaged for s few minutes seeing that the war veterans and their relatives man had sitting accomodaiion in the car; provided. L Refreshments Served At the Legion hall refreshments were served by _ ~ iaries of the Navy and the Legion and everything was done that was possible t0 give the heroes a real welcome. Only a comparative few took advantage of the entertain- ment ae many of them lived out of town and. being met by their par- err-Ls or wives, felt little inclination men he was glad of the privilege: to remain too long from homil- Those who did take time out to go to the Leflion included Silt. JR. Dohcrty, New Haven: L. Bdr. D. McPhee. Clyde River; Ne. J.H McPhee. Clyde River: Sigmn. SM. Ma-thcson. St. Peter's Bay: G111‘- P.A. Lanigan, SourL-a (had been prisoner of war); Pte. James Smith. Hopefield: Pie. GH McKlnnon, 24 Kent Street. city: Cvl. E-J- N018“. Sourls: Gdsm. wl-I. Chaisson. Souris: Gdsm. O R. McLeod. New Wiltshire; Pte. JJD. Glllis, Mont- ague; Pte. A Dixon. Gas/pereaux: Gnr. P. Jarnieson. Sturgeon: CD]. AB. Poole, Souris; L Cpl W E Porter. Murray River: Pic. M Mc- Leoq, Montague; Gnr. H.J Mill- iqnrl; nllfi Gill‘. T.L. Morrison, 23 Pqwnal Street. City» Airman Rescued From Dnt. Woods NORTH BAY. Ont, July l5 — (OP) — His position indicated by from a forestry observation tower, Flt. Lt. H. McDonald of Sydney, N.S., was rescued Friday HIE-ht m the Northern Ontario bush coun- try, six miles from where his plane crashed Thursday in Willow Is- land Loire, 36 miles northwest of Temngami. McDonald, piloting the R.C.A,1=‘. l Anson u-alnin8 plane, bailed out just before his machine crashed. The other member of the Anfifms crew was still missing this flim- noon but hope was held that he too would be found since he Parlwhuted from the disabled plane before the pilot. McDonald was picked up on the‘ sham of Diamond Lake, about three _ miles from Willow Island Lake. by: forestry pilot Carl Crossley, former Air Fbrce flier, who flew the un- injured airman to Tcmagami. lit-cm there he was flown to North Boy. Wreckage of the Anson. first re- port“. missing ghortlv after noon: on Thursday. was found Friday b)" forest rangers at Willow Island Lake. Most of the plan;- was sub- sfcoir-tifiiieoio; Pig? '6 Col. ‘ a) " Leopold Hot To Abdicate IDNDON, July l5 - (C?) -'I‘he Brussels radio today quoted Bei- gian Premier Achllle Van Ackcr as announcing King Leopflld had d9" cicled not. to return to Belgium but was not abdicating at present ms who arrived from overseas which Ireeted them as their train, was some confusion for s.‘ found each other ano that. every. the Ladies‘ auxil-- smoke from his campfire. spoiled: was." By LEIF y. Still; other Produces d: U.B.A., $5.00- 217"? ERICKSON GUAM, July 16 -- (Monday) — (AP) — The United States Fleet continued its “series of heavy attacks" on Northern _Japan Sunday causing “widespread damage” in both carrier plane and surface bombardmenis a commu- niquc reported today. Ther ‘Hokkaido, were shattered a heavy shelling and 1,000 planes from the fleefs carriers hammered Hokkaido and Northern I-Ionsliu for the second day. ver the China coast Saiurd cendiary bullets in Hangcho Heavy bombers touched Kareno in continuing sweeps i Two heavy bombers flying far ovcr Malaya destroyed six enemy planes and damaged three others on Juantan airfield north of Sing- apore. Other navy and army planes ran- ged the coasts of Indo-China and China. shooting up railways. Ileavy bombers also struck enemy aid fields, supply areas and trans_ port in the Dutch East Indies Isl- and of the Celebes and the Ham- maheras farther east. Large ' Explosions, Fires More than 1,000 tons of shell; were fined into the industrial trans- port and harbor areas of Muroran curing Sunday morning, the com- miinlque said. ‘Very large explosion and fires" ivere noted; the Wanishi iron llvorirs was devastated with many blllldiflizs demolished. or burned. l- An open hearth blast furnace and chemical plant and warehouses new heavily hit and a coal flqucfaction nlant- including gas and storage tanks-was aflame. Many others fires were observed a. ;loni=: the city's waterfront, where iillllldillg of small wooden ships had tbcen rushed by the enemy, lBeriin: 1 Carrier planes‘ operations againirelallltd- WVSIE seriously hampered by ad-l verse weather. Preliminary reportsi showed 54 enemy ships were 51ml; or damaged during the early morn. ‘lug Sunday. Four enemy planes were destroyed aground and one damaged. While carrier and surface bomb- ardment results were being totalled. 50 to 75 Superfortresses lashed an, oil refinery on I-Ionshu. The carrier airmen sought our! nirflelds and shipping. The nigh: flying 13-295 struck the big oil re-I fmery at Kuddamatsu for the sec-l 0nd time 1n I6 days. hitting the Nippon 011 Company plant near Tckuima. Bones To Send Germans Packing BY ALVIN J. STEINKOPF PRAGUE. July I5 —— (AP) ._ President Eduard Benes said Sat- lllllfvfly that Czechoslovakia could wm remflvllli-l its unreliable Ger- "_‘~.{m_ “ml HINTS-Khan residents \'.i.illll a few wsoks if the Big Three approve at Potsdam. Nothing less than the transfer of 2.000.000 t.» 2.500.000 Germans- Bnd Rbflllt 400.000 Hungarian; can 955K111‘ mo country a reasonably secure future, Mr. Bent-s said in an exclusive interview Czechoslovakia, he added. is do. iermined never again to try un- workable compromises with Ger- man minorities as it did in 1969, when the Germans showed their allegiance lay across the border I Ontari0_Wom;n~ 102 I Years Old Today Premier Van Acker indicated both royal decisions were sublefl i" change, and said the cabinet would member that we owe China an im- llense d y '1 i i,.,,_> _. "i! , ___,_____. ._.-....". hpilflifl, Q___, .7- 1'lth. usiness rneeti at h sonnet-smash ad ever contemplated crolsill Pyrenees. Utmost in Quality was spoons-arr.- meet tomorrow to discuss the will» ?'-‘:1...91f.i.=ii _ . . . ._-_ WAUBAUSHENE. Ont“ July 15- (CP) —- Mrs. Pilomine St. Amend. mother of l5 children and midwife to more than I00 mother,- in pion- eer days, will celebrate her 102ml birthday Monday in this little Georgian Bay community, 90 miles north of ‘Iioronto, where she lived 40 voars with her son. Daniel Eight of the centenariarfa eight. children are alive and at least 2'7 of her descendants are serving with Canada's armed forces. Her hus- band riled in i918 at 84. '42 Model Cars Off Ration List In U. S. WASHINGTON. July 15 — (AP) --All remaining new 1942 passen- ger ailtomobiles - round 6.000 in the United States - will be re- moved from rationing to clear the wny for now models. it was learn- cd tonight. Rationing restrictions are being drawn up. however, for new models manufacturers are just beginning to produce. i i More than 40 fighter-bombers from Okinawa swept, o- ashore with near bomb misses and left it blazing from in- Suo boatyards and attack bombers blasted rail yards at {The non-froternizaiion policy was relaxed Saturday to allow British. nd flaming after yestcrday’s ay, forced a small freighter w Bay, south of Shanghai. off violent explosions in the across Formosa lrlrrnrunolilif at A GLANCE Delivnnl. ".00. JAPAN) CONTINUE Enemy ‘ Defence From The Air Or Sea i_.___*_. 1 Two Women Injured In either aerial or surface, ii. siiitifas no Japanese defence,‘ Two of Japan's biggest steel mills at Murogzin, southern Miss Louise Martin o: 1mm Slew???“ W85 Still unconscious at s rlnce Edwardlsland Hospital gslllrly today following an auiomn. Be accident at Eidonsliortlv af- Er noon yesterday. Mrs. Waite; ‘155- ‘brmflly 0f Kinross was also a patient at the hospital but her condition was not regarded as seri. ous. She received a bad shaking up but no bones were broken. h The women were injured enrouto ome from attending Church. The"; were passengers in a car driven by SlXlClBii’ McTavish. The vehicle went info a ditch and overturned when the steering mechanism broke. The driver and two ofhcr passengers were uninjured. The accident occurred on the main highway a short distance north of hilly! at Raider). d rs. ss an Miss Martin were taken to hospital by N. D. Mac. Leon's ambulances. r (By The Canadian Press) ' PACIFIC - Shipping targets blasted in American naval air and warship strikes against" Japan; Super-fortresses hit oil, supplies; Australians on East Bor-l “(and five miles from Sambodja oil, 5- . CHINA - Chinese recapture Ksnslen nir base. make new gains, on road to Kweilin, drive to less] than 120 miles from Shanghai on| cast Coast. BURMA - British troops seize initiative in Sittang River bend sector. GERMANY — Churchill. Tru-' man for "Big Three" Potsdam meeting, Stalin also reported in fraiemization restrictions BELGIUM ‘-- Leopold decides against ubdicating but won't return to Belgium. INDIA — Simla conferenco to draft new government fails. Hon-Fraternization Policy ls Relaxed IDNDON. July 15 — (CF) — Canadian and American occupation troops in Germany and Austria io talk with adults in the streets and in public places. Up to novs, they could speak only to children, The penalty for viol- ation was a $65 fine, Almost identical statements by Field Marshal Montgomery and Gen. Eisenhower disclosed theI policy change which had beenAde- bated in the las’. month by British and American leaders. _ The action cante as Gen. Eisen- ho\ver's headquarters announced that 50.000 persons had been arms‘- ed in two months in Germany in a de-nazificat-i-on program by United States nrmy srcuriLv forces operating in the American oc- cupation zone. The announcement said the arrests were continuing at the rate of 700 daily". Even berm-e the fraternizatiou: ban was officially modified. Amer-- ican troops were holding hands with frauieins in the cafes of BOIIIYL, where Russian ruins control. The Russians never had an)‘ rrtllllflllfil) against talking with Germans. The new rules. howevcr. do not say soldiers can date frauieins. Yanks Approve SCI-IIERSTEIN. July l5 — (AP) - Relaxation of| the non-fraiernization rule with the warm approval of Am-i Ind lend | vincc. GERMANY-i and tonight at 4.55 Mrs. Ross is a widow of Waiter Ross at one time prominent in farm organizations in this Bro- Miss Martin is an sun: of Mr. K, M. Martin. Charlottetown city recorder. Both women had been living in Charlottetown dur- ing the winter but were spsndinp‘ the summer in the country. MEXICAN MINING Mexico's mines account ilor rarly ail- l-ialf the world production ver. Mi. fishes-wen i ARI NO T ---\_.....--- - METEORODOGICAL SERVICE, Toronto, July 1o — (CF) - Min- imum and ma mum temperatures: —Vancouver 5;, 65.; Edmonton 45. 67; Regina 62, o0; Winnipeg 56, '79; Toronto 61, 64; Ottawa 5'i_ 65; Mon- treal 58 63; Quebec 59, 63: Mono- ton 63, 77; Halifax 53, 68; Char- lottetown 57, '79; SXCIIEY 62, 83: Yarmouth 59, 60. FORECASTS LOWER ST. LAWRENCE: MOd- oraie to fresh northeast to north winds; fair, not much change in temperature LAKE ST. JOHN: Moderate northerly ivinds; fair, no much change in temperature. AND BAY OHALEUR: Fresh in strong northssot and north winds; cloudy and cool with scat.- tered show-arr NORTH SHORE: Fresh to strong northeasierly winds; cloudy and cool with occasional sltoivers. MARITIME ‘VEST .~'\_.\'D EAST: Unsetfled with occasional rain and some fog: strong southwest winds shifting to northwest and north by night. - High tide {his PHPTIIOOII at 416 Sun sets this evening at 8.44 and met; rises tomorrow IIlCtTflifllZ at 5.28. First quarter moon Julv 17th. M crican‘ troops today. They defilfiftd‘. 3.01 A. . frankly that the rule never had beeni Summer-side tide eirhtcen minu- enforceable and had been violated» tes later than Charlottetown. ever since it was put into effect. ‘There was a noticeable excitement umong German girls as the news spread quickly through this town on the Rhine. They had many smiles for the soldiers. Their at- titude was summed up by .buxom. 22-year-old i-icdv Bauer. who said: “Now we can be decent and walk around in daylight to talk to Am- ericans. We dent have to sneak a- round to see the bov and alwa s be afraid of the military police.’ One soldier, however, whose views were shared by some of his friends. said: “The generuh order has taken nil ills fun out cf fra- iernizing. Ii -was fun when you lmd in slip around to scr- n girl. You did it because they said you couldn't." 5P- SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown I215 545 RM. Arrive Charlottetown 7» . P-M» CHARLOTTETOWN NEW GLASGOW mail! Except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown 1.10. 0.00 EM Arrive Charlottetown 2.35. 5.20 RM- N. s.-P. B. l. FERRY SEIWICI (Dally. Including Sundays) SCHEDULE MAY l-SEPT. 30 Len; Wood Islands ‘I a. m., ll a. m" 8 s. m. Leave Caribou, O a. 1a., 1 p. m. I- ,i .._..._...-__. 1.....- _ . _‘_....4_-.-_¢-‘_.._....~.- Am»...