MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN starl- The primal duties shine aloft like “lpgoggggown Gurdlu, ‘Iwo Cello, >:7%’/’ The People's aper II/ '/// Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ewctmrl". Read by Everybody p lhgerness fatigue. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN lll Pill!!!“ bell-Illa: CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, FRIDAY, Auousw 21,1342“ 500 PLANES RAID INVASION COASTIINIII lieds Continue y? Like Veterans, Says 0f Canadian Soldiers Newsman Ross Munro‘ gives eyewitness account gssfllll’. on Dieppe; Praises cool courage of Commandos. RC5; Munro, Canadian Press war COI'i‘(‘$iJOll(l€lli. and only Can- gdtall neup-palilml‘ NPOYW!‘ Wh° priced 0n the French Coast with the 7.10095 1-1 Wednesdays com- m...“ raid, described in mu My Wm“ he saw. Munro is single, g3 ozieizvzi-boru, graduate of uni- wf-guy’ of Toronto and before go- 111g overseas wcrkecl in Canadian m; uurenu in Toronto, Win- njpeg, Ottawa, New York and Waduugi-on. BY ROSS MUNRO (‘mpflinn Pres-S War Correspondent (Cppyrigili, 1942, By The Canadian Press) WITH THE CANADIAN RAID- mo FORCE AT AN ENGLISH EOUTH COAST PORT, Aug. 20— (OP CABLE,» _- Back from the gym-i gjulllcd benches of Deppe, info this port wilh a. b111,, Lczzdinz-crufl Flotilla which brought scores of batte- worn Canadians to England again alter the spectacular combined opclfltiillls raid on the French COHSI. shock troops that stormed the formidable defences of Deppe in l. '41 thrust. from e sra lab- climbcd up on the dcck l... nlkrd slowly to trucks that fork 1mm ‘.0 a reception cam-p a few miles mvny. 1 ed e d No Fanfrn There was no noisy fanfare for ‘c mm inc warriors. , 5uiICf5 and soldiers cf. the do. just gunned a. weieme and put g fiicxvrily hard on the shudder c-f the tired raiders, V, This? lvrre the men with cm u! in H20 dusk of ‘lklceday Fir s‘"cr"s of Frmrc. . - runks had flair-nod. ‘ck cf the official com. u ' were high " umin» to this port . .u|.c:l with them, m"n v .:vi , en cnughi- in _- fivrium fi"e. They len- (I"l'\‘ Ti "l them ‘pm amfliicnrcs Nd nrvvvnivc lmirs a"d lock "f"? Pl.’ in Cnnatthan army hp:- p-v... Tlh u-is purl of the price the ,_ (Coutluuwl ouypuge 5, Col 4)‘ lilar-ZSI-Ynears llgo Today (By The Canadian Press) ‘AUG 2i, l9l7~l3yng clicked ‘All BF-‘Jfii Third Army. Beau- “Pll. AlcheLIc-Pstit and Cour- ceies iailfll Canzdcns carried “Pll/nlvl Loni. wcsi 0i Lens. Frnzch cypzured Lulsgny. Frank- iun, Cilllulli‘, hfnuzneim and Trsvos brmtrd. Coming Events _U_ Noun-- in lllil I renln p»: word “Reserve Wednesday, September lilo for column d for annual tea at York Hall. D $214" who was 10st or who may i} "Wildcy Lodge Nb. 21 r. o. o, I. “W: iouighi. Important business. .21. "Dr. w. o. llogg will be ab- lfnt from his office from Aug. 24 "l A112. 2cm inclusive. 8-2141. u Come to the ice cream fes- Aval, M1,. Albion Hall, Monday, "K115i 24th for war work. 8-21-21, kfirsrmers citentidn-"Take u or l,“ W’ i5 n. radio programme Qalrfin- (Sur ho Bonus slogan is e an gel. l". Livestock Mar- “lml Bmrd. 0-21-11. _ __._._. o ‘Limb sales this week through ‘All’ organization will net the “PM 23 cents per lb. carcas m 811i for top grades, or aqunl to WmIlJ-u 1-2 live weight-ao- m k"? to barons yield, Livestock l e ins Bond. 01-21-11. Board d, Marketing m, ‘,1! hoes st the followln Aupllns points during week o Ext filth-Monday P. M. Mon- s, » Gordian. 121mm. Bflllrls, -. Fflfrs. Murray River Mel- Ulzs. Mlllview, A\b6l'b0ll_ Mivgfl’. Northam, Wellington, . uche. Tuesday forenoon- °"’“l°ti¢lown. Wllishire, Hunter "P. Bradnlbcne, Kenalngwn "m" 3 D111, Arrange for mm c service with our local MBm 01m furry gall‘: plows 0N supper; is ‘n6 lei. and ll pfvvlntavlvlilie New Type U.S. Tank ‘I BERNR SWITZERLAND. Aug. 20 -- (AP) - A Berlin dispatch to Die Tat today mid Amcriclnl in the eons- mando mid on Dleppe tried out for the first time a special weapon described u n one-man innk "containing high explosives in five s!!!)Ir- nte compartments." It said the tanks were direct- ed toward important fortif- ications and ndvsnced alone with explosives set eff by on electrical timer. This was taken to mean that the oper- . aior left the tank before the v explosion although the dis- patch did not specify. The Berlin report clslmed many of the tanks were ex- ploded nrempturely by Ger- man gunfire. I French-Canadians Heroic In Fierce Battle 0f lllcppo “l1! WILLIAM STEWA '1' _ Canidian Presetfltnff rltsr EIQMIEWHIlRJ-‘l IN ENGLAND. 5110- 20-40? Cable) /%B firm. French-Canadian troops to fight on French soil in this war, initiated into battle in an inferno matching anything bheir fathers sew in the F; st Great War. saw Gennans kll. c4 nudes whom they had taker, tprlstner, they said on their re- urn. The? ‘were Les Fusiliers Mont R°l’Dl—Qu-cbec Commandos trained for the big mid with the English- sjmnking Canadian units which also get their baptism of fire at Dieppe. It was thsie. they said with nar- rowed eyes, that they saw a. Ger. mun party order 12 of their com- rades ‘whom they had taken prison. er f0 about turn." Then. trnev said, the Germans shot the men in the buck in cold blood. Thrown Info Bot Spot u The French-Canadinng were floating reserves’ of the raiding fovrce and, as the operation de- Wiflpfid. they soon were thrown mm n spot where the energy and initi. utlve they had shown in the raid- "18 E Mrs on Britain's friendly Cngsi uiltls need-ed. uc was p. hell-spoc-g mglgh for nil the skill their long training had given them. They landed from their sea-going craft on a fire-raked beach in from. of the French town; lvllsht urmlnst creel Odds and. just as did every Canadian on the Op. emtivu. sequined themselves “up heroism. In a camp from which familiar baltlcdressed fiwrcs were missing the boys from Quebec were buck today 1n their wartime English home. There will be no names m mu 8W Y. Mlany of the Fusiliers did not come back from the bench 1t ("We No one knows for certain "P- Ileroes Made Men who were iher sew French Canadian heroic madgmfrsf fncl just, about every man who wen; ashore, The saw the Padre lrnorfnp ma bull“! fire and speeding Along the bench from one crumpled figure to Rnother. adminisferlnc no 1m rilcs of the dhurdh in which all the Frcnch-Cnnndlnns belong. nroiyc-‘lrforfirher Vi?“ enndmmfaned 1m ° . e r ashore, p u so"? "Fflher, you shouldn't wet lmo ibis." the officer yelled, but the rot; was on his way with work o . Pork Shortage In Halifax llroa IFAX, Aug. I’) - f0?) - A pork shortage has deveoped in Halifax, and may many soon: AM restaurants were without. nun end many without . Heavy Oahu-lien mipments w Britain were believed responsible for the den-rill on pork products. along with the fact thei. this is the "between n" for kiliinl hogs. While the major packers did not cmnmeni. on the sltunflon, ll. was 1 u» Ill would u m. FAWN-rm n32” Initiative In Soviet llandsl For 400 Miles Germans Make Slight =Gains In Caucasus Area. (p; llenry C. cwlov. Associated M05026? Sig? vgfltzllgriday) (APl-Jrhe Red army‘ defondlnl Stalingrad was repor d officially early today to have wiped out s. German force which had crossed the Don river while other Soviet. units fought. off constant German attacks inside the Don bend if- self southeast of Kletsksya. In the southern and western Caucasus the Soviet: acknow- ledged slight German gains ag- linst Russian defensive forces fighting east of Pyctigorsk in the Caucasian foothills and south or Krasnodar on the railway leading it the Black swport of Novoros- ‘e Battle dispatches from four northern sectors, however said the Red army held the initiative in increasingly hard fighting. These were the Bryansk sector 21o miles southwest of Moscow, the vyazma salient 130 miles west of Moscow, the Kallnin-Rznev sec- tor northwest of the capital and the Lake Ilmen front south of Leningrad. » These sectors are on a 11m of over 400 miles. They were hit, 54p- panentl , in a. series of sharp. in- dlvldus assaults while the Ger- mans concentrated their main force in the south. llicNaughtoNs 0o iiicnt SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND, Aug. 20-(0? Ccblei- Comment.- mg on the Djeppe raid, Lh-Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton, Canadian army commander, said tflday’! “The combined sea, iandand air forces of the United Kingdmn. the United States and Canada nnd the Fighting French have struck a heavy blow at the enemy and will do if again and agnixi until the Nazi pest is crushed out of ex- lstence." May Increase Tea Ration OTTAWA, Aug. 30—(OP) _-'I‘he}' qualified their statement with two Or thee wartime "ifs," but inform- ed sources said loduy an incrcnse in the tea ration of one ounce a week for each person over l2 yours of age is something to which Cans- dlans may look forward with a da- grce of opilmivn. When the increase may con-c de- pends on the success of Unfit-d Nations ships in trsveslng 6,030 miles of hazardous water from sources of supply in Indie and Ceylon. they said, but if supplies do reach Canada in some qumuffy the ocurnge and skill of Allied hlerclmui Seaman will be reflected itn more frequent- and stronger- ea It was undezstood that the onc- Sh ounce ration was a minimum, au- 801- Sh‘! W“ named m" 5 37m nounced Aug. l after consldornfion contain. Mid. m0 “Bill! Elld- I5 u" of the stocks on hand and the ship- lng situstlon. l-Ied the ration not been set low, swcks on hand Wwuld hove been depleted rapidly without any certainty of their bslng re- placed for s considerable time. "If was considered best to sei- the rltlon low w spin out supplies 1Y1 glghl; u aqultablv as pomlolc nnd may, unwary] adjustments lafe~ new arrivals made this Docs-bio. one official said. "The rnifonlnz of w» could not be accomplished without the ration- lmz of coffee because the difficulty in obialnmy the normal sumvues of tea would have placed an in- tolercble burden on coffee SVICIIS lus buyers sought the more ncccptable substitute. "But while coffee has been ob- tained closer io home than the tee tsken frrm Indie and Ceylon. its procurement is not without diffi- eully and it does not follow that increases in the coffee rachu are anv mom probsble than those for tea." Island Airmen Are Graduates. RIVERS, MAM, Aug. 20 -— (OP) _ Air observers graduating from No. l Oenlnl Navigation School here wds included: Prince ward ifsiacd —LJ. MacKinnon 0o (men; . . mum, Olllrlothklwn. p To__Hold In Stclingrad War Situation Last Night (B: Edwwi l " . Alsoclaied Press Wu Analyst) The leemlg certainty that both the raid on Dleppe sud the Sol. omon Islands were more samples o! blows-io-come emphasized "19 11838111513 vllor with which American forces us being whipped into shape for l 43 style offensive wnrflre. The Rangers who received their baptism of fire with Canadian, British, and French comrades-in-arms at. Die e will teach their tactics to still more American fighting men, says nder-Sscretary Robert P. Patterson 0i‘ the War Department. Such post-graduate instruction is established and proven practice. Already army tank men are passing on to the armored forces at home the benefit of first hand experience with British forces in the North Af- rican desert. Pilots back from the southwest Pacific are teaching front line air war tactics to neophyte fliers.‘ ‘ _ ‘ I _ Almost every offensive poniblllt open to the United Nations out- side of Russia calls for teamwork be ween ground, air and sea. forces on an unprecedented scale. it is now apparent. For tho combined‘ aerial and amphibian operations demanded for victory American mcn-in-arms are being trained 5| intensively ll were the Nazis and Japanese in ud- vancc of their conquests, and very likely in greater numbers. Just what is bein undertaken and nccom lished has been disclosed only guardedly and p ecemeal thus far. The angers were not heard of until they ac uully went into action at Dleppc. They are n relatively small vanguard of the American yernion of’ the‘ Commandos. Y Incidentally both the Inn other popular names for the: onck outfits. mandc‘ to the British Empire. A new unit of combat engineers being trained in the Pacific north- west is known as the American Pioneers. Ultimately there will be a suitable nickname for the newly-unsalted special service command which includes n " gent of Csnldinns and is to- be nvule up entirely of hand nicked ' ' ’ and non-commissioned officers. w?‘ 1nd marines hope to win soceptance of leaving the term "Com- Brazilians Seize Nazis As Hostages BULLETIN SYDNEY. N. 5-. Aux. 20 - (cpp __. workers, at the Syd- ney Steel" Plant” of the Dom. inlon Steel and Coal Corpor- ulon voted overwhelmingly toda in favor of a strike t” emp seize demands f"? high" DIW- fn a strike vote stalled by W? Sydney steel workers’ llllIOil, Lhc plant's employees wslstprcd 3-014 ballots in favor of p strike and ~13 against. The union has a mem- RIO DE JANEIRO, AllB- 20- (AP)— German nationals aboard two repatriation ships were seized today in the harbor here as hos- tages for interned Brazilians in occupied France as Brazil announ- ced the 105s of her sixth ship c» Axis torpedoes in s new outburst of U-boat. raids and‘ allied counter- action in the South Atlantic. A presidential order declared me Germans must remain in Brazil “as hostages for our coun- trymen held at. Compiegne." (The Nazis have a. concentra- tion camp at (mmplegne for Am- ericans whose countries are at war or have broken relations, as Brazil has done with the Germans.) The hostage order excepted only bership of about 3.700. those wit-h diplomatic status among the Germans awaiting repatria- tion Via Lisbon on the exchange ships Bage and Culcba. The hwo ships had been scheduled to sail I Ross Munro 0nd ab?! Wylltsflweillié bgltibiviiilreingelgrisvlir; I I flared up. I Dlflllllfl Story "Departure of Germans who had exercised any diplomatic functions h-ere should be Dfifinitbed," Pre- Canadian Nevvsman Saw Hot Action In France Then Rush- sident Getuiio Vargas‘ order said, but there was no mention of how they might get home. The sixth announced victim oi’ recent submarine attacks was the small coastal steamship Jacy, sunk yesterday off Port ltacsre in the northwestern state of Bahia. The submarine commander for- ced all on board to abandon ship in small boats. than sank the Jpcy. While th is announcement Paper. brought s new crisis to the un- * By n. z. BURRITT (Continued on Ipnge S Col 4) _ Canadian Press Sm“ “vmfl To Launch Ships For Royal Navy VALLEJO, Calif" Aug. 20-—(AP) -The United States navy said today the first warship built in this country for the Rflyfll NIWY would be launched at the More Island shipyard Saturday. She is l-l. M_ S. Benstinck, an escort ves- IDNDON. Auc- 20 —<CP Cfibifi‘, “A fall, unshaven YOHQZ man but. into the Iondon office of tho Canadian Press ell-fly WIS "mmmgv dzopped his khaki-clad figure in from of a typewriter and begun poundinq out the Journalistic assault. More than 12 hours infer Ross Munro, Canadian Press Wnr Cor- wgpondcnt, was siiil banging away at his machine, putting on paper an eye-witness story of the dramn- n tic operation which already hfl-‘f earned “he reputation ns ‘one of the beet stories of the war." first of 80 being built at More Island. The ship wls assembled Ii Mnre Island from parts fabricat- ed in Denver. The Benstinck, corn- pleteeid l several ngomhe undilzglvd n2: ch u o, was u u I942 lend-leue mu. °"° °' m" p "I'd sly if was one of the bfiql. u stories of the war," said Robert Bruneile, chief of the Assoclai-ed ° Pzeu London Bureau. "Certainly there has been nothing since the bombing of Inndon." The story was cabled in full to SUGAR. BATIONING CASE! SAINT JOHN. N. 8-, Alli. 19- (cPl-The first. cues here in- volvlng violation of auger ration- lmlzl rqgulatlorgdwerglhlzalrgaagegg: pc ce cour e and William w: sh pleaded sulltv 21° "Vxfilifidb ftféfj 03f“ "I" w chargfl of scllinl sum 1nd "I l '*- " ,;, l’ ncccptin coupons before their Munro 1m WM 1m sled “Wwne valid dl s for use. Mlllbifi" 5- "N" "- w. Palmer imposed fines of 012.50 For hours on end the each. Crgwnhgrosecufor William A. Ross "l o" r fifibiilnuekd "onpcze 5, Col BY“ pending in the girovlnce. Immrini Oil property nrw is under will’, ii. is announced Officinliy Farmers Receive tory of Canada's purl in the Duffie? Department. m“, u of 1942 for fertilizers to be on postures. meadows wheat. the Department. said. s PAGES” Annlunl Subscription Dellvenq, Q5,“ .7 Isllu P. l. l. “.00: to nihu Provinces end U. l. ll-I Auteur i Sector Biggest Day REGIZVIENTAL BAND rnsrpcron Muior ‘F. W. Coleman, 3.0.5,, who was recently ap ointed a5 in- specter of Regimen ul Bands in Canada has lmd a long nnfl dig. tinguished career both a; a, mu- sicnui and a soldier. i}: ls a grgd- u-"tc of. the Royal Military School of Music (Kncllcr llail); a "chm. flute of the Ifoyul Academy of Music and an associate of the Roiyal College of Music. Major Co emnn’s military gEfvifg 1; m, less impressive having had 3| years service m the British Regular Anny and the Canadian Pennanenl, Force. 'News Briefs n ALLIED nmnqumvrcns, AUSTRALIA, Aug. 21 —-i‘FrL dill’) -- (AP) — Allied bmu- bns scored hits on the target are-n of Muobissc in the cen- lri‘. of .I:|.pnr»;9se-hei1l Dutch Timur yesterday and "lprgg explosions indicated that fuel or ammunition slumps had been hit." a communique an- nounced lfiduy, "All our planes returned," it added. WASHINGTON. Aug, 20 _(A1>> -— Wvnreil L. Willkie announced lodny mm. he would leave in abcut lhrre wccks for the near cgsc and Rlll=<fa 0n a trip lo “pzrfcrm cer- tain scrvicrs for the govcrrmezit." VANPOUVYK. Aug. Zfk-(CP) -_—A (incision by the United hi-uivs government regarding i110 building of u railway in Alaska is expected within n month. Prcmicr Hart of Bri- tish (fnlumbiu said in an in- tcrvicw hero today following his return from Edmonton whore he look part 1n a cg"- fcrencc (list-asking pqgsihlg routes for such n project, CALGARY, A112. 2O —- (CF) _. ed T0 Put Story 01p gsgisligxciinn of nn eviction gaso- p Hi of. n crsi rf $1,030.00’) on in Alberta. The Alllcd wnv sunpiv corporal- inn. hnrkcd bv thr- British. United Stairs is undcrlnkitw- in“ may be ccimtlr-i-ed liiis winlcr, and Canadian unvcmmfllis nrc-ircl uhfch OTTAWA, Aug. 20-40?) —'l‘he of Agriculture an- ounccd today that about 175.000 farmers in the five eastern prov- inces and British Columbia have whcm Wm, Canadians, received subsidies so far this year ashore go,- neafly “me hours from nder the government's plan <f uylng subventlons on fertilizers sod on feed crops. The subvcniion policy is being ontinued until December, 1043. Subsidies will be paid in the fnl. used and fall Amount. of the subsidy allowed is bnscd on 30 cents for each unii. comment of nitrogen nnd l5 oonls for each unit of phosphoric acid and potash, farmer on a percentage bnsls. This works University of Toronto student sat ‘fut "t $2770 “ m“ 1°’ m“ mfml“! div ‘0-12-0" to S300 a con for the ‘4-12-0“ and "2-12-10 " On signing n fcwn giaflng hhey . will use bhe=e fertilizers on feed crops fnrmcrs amount of the subsidy off the price of the fertilizer when making th~l~ purichirtses. The seller of the fertiliz- s - CANADA g THE All PURPOSE FlOUR ~ (APl-Thc announced today it is producing s new . rubber in hundreds of articles. Base for the new plastic give n full co-ordlnaicd story 0f i245 is ethyl from cotton linitrs or wood pulp. the Dieppe area. common natural gas or are allowed the trepnld by fine Dominion NEWfiIfA-STITC‘ A WILMINGTON, Del., Hercules Au . 30- Pow er Co. plastic which could replace everyday cellulose manufactured soil. and alcohol from from fermented farm products. Battle. LONDON. Aux. 20—(CP)- Weaiesi. daylight aerial offgfistfy: 0I_the war, n00 Allied fighter plgngg raided the invasion wast of France today while flying fortresses comb- ed i 6_ fvnlens railway yard-s. Previously the Allies have um". ed flhe number of planes in a sfml- lcr daytime operation to about 300, The Widespread attack, foo, was a continuation of the day Line 115g of the huge American four-nrr-ored bombers, a. recent innovation The fact than no: a single plane was reporieddqst and only slight fighter opcposition was encountered was regar ed by British authorities as further indication of the severe mauling the Nazi air force took lll battles over Dieppe, In fact, same quarters in London believed the German losses yester- day included at least onc-tnird of the Nazi fighter strength in the western occupied zone of Europe. Four Canadian squadrons. in the forefront of yesterday's titanic air duel over Dieppe, were in action affair: rod? XSI-tfrting the flying, sses o mens. A communique announced thut one German aircraft was destroyed during one operation but did not indicate whether it was shop down lbylntaeracanadian or by one or m, The Opeflfltms extended. from u llpbotheD Frlé-rnch coast u. .11 ve un erque. lJireobhiwwcr-e scored on num. axons targets attacked by the raid. All Allied planes returned safely. _____.____ Strikes Loom SAULT STE. MARIE, 011i... Aug. 30 - (C?) -— 0.1-1. Millard, Can- adian National director of the United Steel Workers of America. (0.101 said tonight. “any prog- pccc of cverung a. major stoppage 1n {if leusi. a. large purl, of cam arias basic steel industry i; glefld- er indeed." Thp steel workers of the Aigoma Sfoei Corporation Plant. hero and of the Dominion Sleel Company M, Sydney. he said. “are no longer uulhuc to have their rilfhi-s ls ciizzcns of their nefds as workers lgirored." Communique On Air Offensive Is Unilertaken’ Not A Single Plane Lost; Evidence Of Mauling Nazis Took In Dieppe Germans May Be Forced To Shift Planes From East A SOUTHERN BRITISH PORT. Aug. 20 _. (c?) ._ The smashing Allied triumph over the German air force over Diem» in which zoo “Wm! craft were destroyed "l" (“milked will force the Nazis to divert bomb: and fighters from the Russian front to Wealcrn Europe, g observers said m- Tbese observers, who mupt remain lnonymous, dgclay-gd the German losses consisted of Bl planes certainly destroyed, 38 probablgd‘ shot down snd 0 ma.‘ The mounting strength of the R.A.F., the R..C.A,F, 5nd the United States lrmy all‘ “F!!! Dllls the new assurance won at Dleppe by Canadian “WK troops. British com. "undo! ll"! U. S. rangers make if imperative for the Germans to strengthen the zelatern sir frontier, it w“ No second front can be "Boned on the continent with. out n mass of troops experien- ced in operation; gimp" u, Dlvlllle. these observers said. Casualties were believed to have been heavy but not u hi"? u they might have been. The teneral feeling was thst the next major operation. which everyone expect; to b; on s similar gcalc, would be concluded with less loss and with even greater success. 145th. ANNIVERSARY ULEMENTSPORT, N. s, Aug, 20_'(CP)-A Special service today marked the 145th anniversary of Si; Edward's Church here. Th9 church was consecrated in 1797, edwiv agigilgsil bggldililk. construct- snllfitqnds‘ Dre Lnyalists, "n Diegpe Battle LONDON. A118. W-(CP) —’I‘he allied mu on Dionne was de-Wrlb- ed tonight as “o. successful dem- onstration of co-ordlnation of all three services" in the first oom- prchenslve issued by the combined operations headquarters. official communique “Despite mu. heavy opposition [he fumes were landed on all beaches together with some tanks. They succeeded in desiroldnl; 9W0 batteries and 9. radio-location station inflicting heavy casuchies upon e enemy forces and in sinking two small vessels, and in bringing back anumbcr of Dri- SOHCTS. "our troops, the majority, 01 remained dawn 1nd were then re-embnrkcd in navel vessels which throughout ch15 pQflCd were lying close off the French coast assisting our landing forces heavy bombardment. Tanks which had been Iflfldfl Ind some of which succeeded in break- ing into the town were ordered to be blown u-p and destroyed before our troops recmbnrked. Aots Of Bravery “Dining engagements on shone ihcre were numerous ccis of in- iducl bravery by our forces. Throughout the landing extensive sir cover for bot-h ships and land. lng forces was. provided by air- craft from all operational com- mandl of the RA F, from the United States army air force, the no al New Zcaland air form, and Poish, Czech, Norwegian Belgzun and flfhtlnz French squadrons. “Wrle the principal objective of the air operations was to give support. to flu- lundiug and covcr to the forces during the lsnd m- gagemcnt. and to navel croft, tiicre in fact. d-:vclcp:d one of the greatest a‘r battles of the war. The cnnmunlqixe sold:- “Rnporis now received from force commanders mnkc it possible i0 combined operations of the raid in as} .. _ h w .=._.l‘__°‘°.—Z"_IZ°—_'__iLJ-l—~- (Continued on page 7. C01 3) CoMMuTERs COULD sAvE 'l’lMv_ BY EATING. 4HE\P\ BREAKl-‘Aei’ BEFORE Qomc. 4o BED High tide this evening at 1.30 In! lnmnrrow morning cl. 6.54. gun pen; this evening at 1.58 and rises tomorrow mornln! El 5-99‘ Full moon Aug. 25, 11.40 9-m- UAR FERRY SERVICE BAIL‘ EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — Leave 9-15 l»!- l.0l0ep.m.. 6.45 7.55 3:: u“ sve spa onnen — - Lin" us p.m.. us p.m.. no pn- BUNDAY SEBVIUI (May S to Dee. 21 lllfillfls, 9.00 5- 9'.’ m‘: Boaflf-‘Illsentio: "m" I'm" 8.00 pan. We‘ P. |-:. L-N. s nan! l!!! M," wood Islands 7.00 MIL. ll-W lmbgeavenénslrfbol a “n. 1 e-m. n! 5'" "m AIR SERVICE Chsrlotieiown-Summereifle- M Leave Chprloftlbitawn 835 s. mJ "m3; Snummcrside 7.10 a. m-l LII "Li?" Moneion ll s. Iii-l lnl l.“ ‘wk... except smou- aw.) \ni~ln inf»..- “ ....c-. .