MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN _—-—-— meditate on 1m owii eolflplll] toll not of other v Two Canto. llll Ill? mh§Hfi Allies Move to .Trap Germans Now Italy 1 n. William Smith White. Associated Press Stall Writer implacahly toward "it rnsln in Italy tonight the Axis. throat and the Ger- ilisasiei- since Septem- wers‘ Balkan front began to disintegrate. a new and decisive phase for the Allies lli ped to the Italian people riilllns iiiwn them the Germans and to aid the Allies in lint- ‘p high com in. lilli‘ when Ar the war thus ente a; west leaflets were drop bliave their revenge upon R IS STRATE 727%’ The People's Paper ' Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTFETOWN, CANADA. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1943 H ElC ammmmm lih i? Candidates Nominated in P. E. I. Election Severity-two candidates-the largest nmber in provincial history ——n0minated yesterday to contest the provincial general elections which take place here on Sept. l5. The Progressive Conservatives and the Liberals have each two candidates in each oi the fifteen Prince Edward Island constituen- cies. In addition there are four 0.0.1“. candidates running in Prince County, four in Queens and one in King's. There are also three Independent Liberals in the run- them down. u Italian, were ‘mtrucmd 1n bu}, tie orders" to give every assistance ' to United Nations troops and un- uw gerlno circumstances to aid any as. o These instructions. too. went out lo over the Italian radio. The Germans themselves appar- ently believed that huge lied . armies were on the move to s rin! a. cunningiy-timed trim- ell‘ broadcasts reported 200 ships. for- ming two convoys presumably -—-- laden with Allied trodvs Ind the" mason. Sept. s-(cri- equipment were swamllik toward no German radio tonight ngplil-nthelastoampalslliil i i" w mmmn“ M lull.‘ bawd- And the Government 0i Premlel‘ render-hours after been announced by the Bad- Marshal Pietro Bndogliouldliilxf qilo Government and Allied strong indication thttii. itawo wvh ietdquarters in North Airi- gilgtélklllllalgnggfalzisx 37mm Alcngflcaxjls ,3, B=gu.,'"~,-"="',,:;;" 1:3! ii..."eé..'i°.“.ii“i.s.iii.ir;i Enrol? mini‘: Berlliic florist-rod that , "Ejjilltfgm J$§‘;,;O;,‘_QH,Q§I the German government was Qgujters Sam h nrodamamm n; "l "“°'"‘"* “l m‘ ‘m’ m“ ‘Marshal Badoglio as heard by Al- abihfirlfo vim“ Emmn‘ giers radio listeners. Am d m“ . - e ‘These circles state that ,o§*1,‘;',,,§,i,‘;f‘,}$;‘.,;",§i,§“§,.., ghadow Mm“? h" “h” l"'°‘“"' oi German wer in Italv was 1h- lniary measures for the Iecur- dicawd by i e mo; ma; Badogiio l" °l "IQ ‘with "id l" 1m" signed an unconditional surrender in the prosecution 0i "l! V" iive davs before it was announced. i0 ilnal victory," added the There were p number of Bill;- lroulesst gestions as to who mi ht take over LONDON. Sept 8-(CI’l— the occu stion oi Itav and the estruction oi German lhi. Berlin radio broadcast an final liiiclll statement tonlsht say- strength there. 25 "the To the occupation force presum- ning~two in Prince and one in King's. _' (ContinuedbrlfPa-gviaflb-Col.‘ i)“ Tokyo Says Jap t Policy Unaffected new YORK. Sept. ILJAPI-A Rcme dis atch broadcast bv Yflqifl Tokyo sad tonight that olllciiil Japanese quarters declared "Jo en's war policy remains unaitecte by the latest development in the Eur- opean theatre " oi war. The Japanese determination to is unshaken. the Italian cap plete calmness.“ News Briefs \_______.__.._ LONDON, Sept doyi-(Ar) _ Britain received the news of the surrender iii Italy calmly last iiiilht. with the rnan-ln-the-street airing it l! a signal for the ePly "BB1"!!! oi the continent. There were nu big _ demons- trations in London-Nit 19"‘ eraily broader smiles. . 9- (Thurs- lvi" that since July ilgrmn government was pre- ably would iall ihe lot oi sgilln! v Itred for such open treachery the person of Benito Mussel‘, H- LONDON‘ Sept‘ 9_(»I-h,n.sday)_ In Italy's surrender) and gainst the day when ludgme?‘ m?‘ (CPl-A Reuters naws agency cor- "imlore took nil military mes- be Passed "W" W’ m“ “' Q‘ u... respondent in Stockholm quoted rc- IM required" all Italians. was an tillBmV Qmus, ports received there sod-do moi the The broadcast. recorded by All!“ and the leader ‘vhoangance Italian garison on the Island at‘ Associated Press. declared alfihullfgagllf-v count“ mm Corsica, off the SOUUIGIZI %asrtmoxf I ‘ihi. i i i It ill ' France, had overpowere er isli lust :5 ilrliliiini’ actloxs." ‘bigwigs ‘m; §?“}f,,,el,l"}f,;n§§§.°,v*§fg troops stationed with them. —-—-—————-—-— I Tur ey "—— UITAWA. . _ Pi-W t 11"" “me- R°°°"~“ ‘mm coupon, Sept. 9—(Tl\urs- Iniher lifts fillies“ Iliilsytsting len “m the foénlm: “midi”. wfilHBYALSXI ililyl~iCPi - London morning m-ioirirfioi Canada during illti ‘Mme’ m‘ 3.3"“: newspapers today nil-vied l" out week and has "further ngm- Cm‘ norm 0 0m ‘ ' Algiers radio report that Gen. immo- me unfavorable “on ‘m manna.‘ upmnauon h“ Dwight D. Eisenhower flew to ‘ s _ the Italian mainland EIIIIIIBY m We eastern “lmdnrem ‘he u” lmmwh” a M 16th“, and met Marshal Pietro Bad- pmgiarédaureau of Statistics re- in llitler o: Show film '55‘: o "o h, “my dlggugglon‘ on I krnsulnrl‘: $255.5“ “mean, the Italy's surrender. lmmah" °°”“l"""°" b” m‘ LONDON Se t i)—(Thursday—- l "'~ iifi EVENTS tutti: "i°i'.i"'“é§§1i.§"°‘iiJ-'- diarrhea“ m“ ca" >eui wirioir southern Franco may be the» German radio announce e lis t f ‘.i l F s- aw "-0- lnvflud‘ ‘ It??? ‘SOIDI/aéliltflgflflixxallzill She tlki M i, - A i name oi eh o Mussel n , cu erS hi. e5 “nay River TQfQFf, haflillflfil“ (iouxglggdib {all news agency said today. l ' before the last German is dill/B" C m0 s ‘ s_:mm_c _ vrolkles Eldon Friday. 9-9-1l. Eggzngifihzaiarllpahlgififv gllliglslepi-Ioig; S" the"; fiat-land wuso“, i‘; "For l r - ' hich to lied commander ' b‘ ' in the Uloylsele Bed m“. zggitlelyivgltr gglfsgl‘ Tintxhe Reich. Middle East, tnnl h; called . ~—- n new» n mo» i:::..°;::*:.".."s ...".":'".~... ‘Booking orders ior Bulk Oats ported in sessiga today Gig 0831:; d9; c“, "prism". and “uuoned ‘why 311w Wheat. Signed 41:; he knot y D10 m _ u,“ u“ M“, o; "my, “some. u Ime- 9‘ ' “~ ' has not et arrived. "Dulce. Johnston's River School. action and added: "Terminate host the United Nations. The Germs armed forces have become the ope enemies oi talian people an intend to seine your ships. "Take heed. therefore, that o t0 "Mannie lll-lail sou - “ll- Dlnee 2am at 30.88 igl- Political Meeting. Clifoiovrdzzls ~ A "m"! meeting oi’ the Wo- esslve conservative As- Wlll held‘ this (Thurs- MO ured. them to be capt "The forces oi i tlons are v__*_- Z (oontiiiosdirfris o col. i) ion ilities against do not scuttle your ships or slow the United Na- atching out to reeeivo n submarines. n d ll in the Mediterranean to sail of the German armed forces.‘ with two more nearing completion, some 25 destroyers and about 6i) Besides these. the Italians had a considerable number oi smaller craft. In his message, Admiral Cun- ningham instructed the Italians t a place saie from the interferenc: Canucks, Yanks, Said Landing Int Heart _(_)_f Italy STOCKHOLM, Sept. 9- (Thursday)—(AP) -Aliied invasion forces have struck Gneta. Civitavecchio and the Calahrian iown of Pizzo in an effort to cut off German troops following the capitulation of Italy, the newspaper Dagene Nyheier reported today in a dispatch from the Italian froniiei‘. An invasion fleet moved men and supplies ashore at Civiiavecchic, 55 miles north of Rome, the Swedish corre- spondent said. The harbor there previously had been used by the Axis to ship troops i0 Sardinia. NEW YORh. Suit. B-(AIW-Canadian and United States flrmlli "are landing at various points in the heart oi Italy." the United Nations radio at Tunis announced tonight in an IinIIllIl-Ilngulge broad- cast reported to the office of war information. LONDON. Sept. B—((‘I')—l'nited States troops were reported in a Reuters news agency dispatch from Stockholm tonight to have landed at Naples and Genoa and nn Sardinia. The dispatch quoted the Stock- holm newspaper Sveiiska Dagbladet. w... Situation Last Night By John ll. Iliggins, Associated Press War Analyst ' The knockout of Italy ripped pages from the Allied victory calendar but many days oi furious battle still may be expected in the Mediter- ranean boot before liii.lcr's hordes are erased. Tens of thousands oi German troops, poured into Italy, 1th the expectation ot making it a continental battlefield, presume ly remain in the northern area. reluctant in relinquish what yet remains of the industrial and agricultural riches in the region of the River Po. But rcgardles of where Ilitler tries to slam the ilmir against lil- vasion from Italy, his intuitive strategy will collide head 0n with the hard foot that eanii. he Peninsula clears excellent and var- ious routes for heavily concentrated land and air ofiensives bv Allies. Closing the Straits to bottle up the Adriatic, Allied naval power, will: a blanket of land-based planes. potentially is capable oi Jrikirig across the sea from Italy's east coast to Yugoslavia for- invasion thrlJs.s at Germany's "imprrgnable fortress." To the west a similarly air-protected fleet might cross the TYTPlIQ- niiin ant‘ Ligurian seas tn southern France. _ ‘ ' ‘i possibilities As an invasion And above all, (iermiiny must know that its war illhifillliltlllh arc far closer targets ior the Allied b fore in the war. There are signs. too. that the cracks that broke in the Aiils arm" with Italy's unconditional surrender niight spread to the restless kiina ivlicre Ilungarizms. Rurnaniuus. (Jonts and Bulflflflllls BMW B‘ ' ence of straining at ilieii German letters. v In addition to the physical gains from Itaiys coilall partner, Germany and Japan must have received n MW as depressing an the event is stimulating to the Allies. springboard are Visit- industries anil military ombe s. than over be- if '9' '5 n E 3 v: i g; d; an Axis hologicai blow The armistice enforced "at a moment most favor-a n underscored the statement. of Gan. Genrire (l. Marsh , o i army chief ni‘ staff. that "victory l." rcrialn." that n crashing, finish ng blow at German-dominated Europe is rinse at hand. “M New- Developments Are .Hinted at in Ottawa ._ B~(CPi-~'i‘lii: in victory cvrenioiiieswsct late today o'clock, local lime-came only a were ordered not to lake part iii few hours after Prime lhiinlsiifi" celebrations planned across Cnn- liiackcnzie Klnglviillflll u" Wllilill‘ ndn to mark the Italian capitula- n ‘rcivifillig lib“), "ll" OTTAWA. Sept. l“ m” three armed services ans to join l end of Canada to the other Whistles blew on Ottawa factor- ies at 5 pm. E.D.T. for the can- ccilation came too la-te for word to be sent around. People came downtown to ianncd col- cbrntiori on the mu. °“lv in be intcd because it was not tlon. All official sources kept siicnt when asked why the action was taken. High officials of the Extern- al Affairs Department went into conference in the east block on Parliament I-lill "will? gepteinbehwwth. Daongi " ' K _ d ~ 0 P. . r - - " ‘ b " i. d if ti l5ill1l>° u —-'- mxl; ‘ififgfiflnluofi i‘,',',,‘,’§.f°;,om 03f. held. ed Tuesday evening in nn auto- Ain unloading car N0. 3 Wheat. g, -- mid one (lemme deport. Air Force Public Relations was mobile Meme,“ a, Pb“ Hm died M deliver in ton lots Russel 0 ' f; a the first to advise The Canadian m Pr] C ( , _ - cnt informant e nce uun l! Hospital YES-ET u. Mt. Herbert. -9-2i. tps for" azf an s ~_ a--.T=T~_:-=_.—. o...“ m... on. ooioméion plans d” _ “Wanted to buy live and dressed ‘iowmi’ Ifigluigll; lliiimoiffg olhegonsllatiiiilfgli! i‘; 1-113 imir "itimriigriawu" 9'30 Mr’ afijiltprw cgndvigauzoie _- inn on ago Italian‘ peninsula imity-fiucjsgiiuliztlifi: grim.’ igg kw aradehoqthe eioemgg Maddie B) $1.2? om’ - ' 8-26-13. l B ‘flobANnwflogoxngdent Kg? s“§§‘,d"{§fff,°,,§ ‘dmsjiffn ‘:3; llldlflwllilific: wgmacacle‘ iiiimliiilllly begin Air Minister Power and ‘Air Dlilglmtlgleslllrclglllmgtd‘coroner Dr w "York 1511mm‘ '30 p“ AIfLIBeIg Pnl-IIZAIIIIQUOAIIIJIQERS, givgn to ycu by the United Na- l" u" "Pa?" gm" iinnglul°y lnarsshglll! ['0' Bremme" Cm“ m B. Howatt ordered an inquestfdnd ‘With’ In ' y‘ ' ' ' NORTH AFRICA. BepL- il—(AP)-— tions." were eons ere uno e y as l‘ a . a Jilly WM "mm l" Mill VlQWIKl s...‘ I..'§iii'.'f...“i°i°to.if‘°“”. " n-i-idm weigh»- Mir; ‘,§,':,‘,‘;,§‘,.°‘§,'3',‘,‘.“;‘°“,"$.33; i.:".u."::..:ii::"t.‘i" cits: ..ii’°t‘§§$"i.é°§.."l.i2i§.°..il§{.”‘i?;i iorhgopmg ygqygg,,gpi;;r,d, . . w re as e - ‘ r - _-__ 9 a “L is‘; iffiWiirfféii niiviu command- possibility that the Allies might "M" i» mlrk the li-ilan coo- the or»? on She rerrxigi 31:11:23 w, wm,,,m_._ and m, mm“... W, "lllibedlng c“ bu“ who“ er-in-chiei in the Mediterranean. obtain possession and use of both l""““°"- “m” at °“ ‘f fir," whom the _ adjourned until Wednesday, Sept. Nda, Bepigmbgg- Qflfrhujg- Admiral Sir Andrew Browne Cun- the Italian Navy and Merchant Th cancenauon o, m4. . anon °v°lltll~° "Y "° 22 at '1 p. m. nrid will then he held '5°£illhber our, grin’; i; g, ninghain, in avoid letting their Fleet. estimated st 300 vessels tet- D nay am and ‘irpmrce “m” 5"“ ‘m! °*"“°- in mo Poi-t, Hm nan q-he r0110... Bplllet. 0-0- . ships all into German hands and ailing 1.500.000 tons. y y’ y -i ing is the coroner's jury. Thomas . "use ___. sa immediately ior Allied tAlilfilléhtllilei-aléiqle‘ngirhlllle c Carrutloilers, foriéman; Georlge Bow- .. We Thanksgiving October ports. l B i’! ' I 8 B. a ncss, iester amer. Ear Camp- M Hot goose so Vie ' A essa . broadcast by tho that the Italian Na consists to- ‘ ' - b ll, I-i Y , W . J. De i. Church. w“ O-I-li. Unite? Regions radio in Algler day of seven battlesh pe, three air- Jo‘ n ‘he H°S+ o‘ Home Bu kg‘ s who Eamon 1-2,‘; 58.1; wry wafis‘. and recorded y the Aseoeiatei. craft carriers under construction. assembled last evening at 9.30 c‘- Press. ave the Italians detailed two heavy cruisers. both oi which clock a; me pflnce Comm. Hospi. instruct ons an to their course o are damaged, nine light cruisers m] m view {he} remain, or Mr, A, ‘v B. MacDcugrili another victim oi ,1 ( CANADA L CI Ll ll 6N6 .14 iieéi/ "/h- d WITH ITALY i} Rfiiiilflih STER T0 GER Critical Pha Ther than a ency. 10 PAGES MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN e is nothing better for a man n easy temper and complac- lulsaeriptlun Delivered, Ill-ill) Ill". "-00- ntiie- r ovlnree A U.l.A 85.00. NBS hi‘. so oi Battle i m. ANS 0i Europe Likely to Begin Strangest Armistice in History ,Set.il- (APl — Ngcrsxboxggclfiidenlt) Merill Mueller declared tonight in a broadcast from Algiers that “the strangest armistice in history has turrifil Italy into a bloody battlefield. "Instead oi a victorious P91159- Muellcr added. "the Allied forces face i. violent. long-drawn-out Dbl.- tle that has already been partially joined. Caught in between are ihe Italians who sought peace.“ In distributing Muellefs marks. NBC commentaehw» "This was interpreted as an ind- TC" icaticn that the American '1th Arrnv, whose whereabouts have been a secret ever since the Italian invasion, has landed in northern Italy and that a battle with the German forces may now be in pro- llress there." Aussies Advance in New Guinea A L L I E D HEADQUARTERS, Southwest Pacific. Sept. - iThursdayi - (APi -Australl:ins. breaking "CIIIOUEII weak Japanese patrols. are continuing to advance along the coast less than five miles northeast of Lae, New Guinea, All- ied Headquarters said today. The Japanese sent planes aver the New Guinea mountains to op- pose ilie Allied ope-rations and ‘Jive were shot down. The pressure on Salamaua south ni Lne was maintained. with sharp fighting‘ at Bnhclubl. five miles south of that air base. Synthetic Tires PITTSBURGH. Sept. 8—iAP»- The acting rubber "czar" of ‘the United States, Bradley Dewey, saying that "the spectre of coi- iapse" from the shortage of rub- ber has been banished by the ad- v vance of the government's synthetic lFiihDCl‘ program, disclosed iodnv ‘illilll grade crsatr- tires are being .- used fnr essential civilian use th . are "better i.lian all but the, lion Efilfif‘ firs’. line tire of n few YVCHYS i120 miidc from crude i-uh- Two PM i i i Two rif the seven persons iniur- the fatal accident who passed nwnv in the hospital about seven o'clock last night. J. W. McNaualit was present at ihe inquest on behalf o.’ the crown. The late Mr. MacDougnll who was a lifelong resident of Bideford was ‘l6 years of'age iit the time of Sept.8—-(AP) ie of In Port Hill Accident Badcgiiifs Government Made Unconditional Surrender; llostilities With Italy Ended at 1.30 P. M. Yesterday ByEDWARD KENNEDY Associated Press War Correspondent ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NORTH AFRICA, io's Government. —War between the United Nations and Italy ended at 6:30 P.M. (12:30 P.M. E.D.T. —1 :30 P.M. A-D.T.) today as Gen. Dwight D. Eis- enhower acoorded a military armistice following unconditional surrender of Marshal Pietro Badog- Gen. Eisenhower's announcement was coup? led with an appeal to the Italian people to drive the Germans from their soil, and a promise of help from the Allies in doing so. But there is a powerful German army in Italy, giving prospect of a gigantic battle and no hope that all Italy itself will fail like a plum to the Allies. There is every likelihood the Nazis will fight desperately to hold the country and that one of the most critical phases of the battle of Europe is about to begin. Badogiio in a proclamation called 0n Italian soldiers to cease fighting the Allied forces anywhere. but i0 “op- pose attacks from any other quarier”—in other words i0 fight Germans if they ziiiack Italians. He read it over Rome radio at 7:45 P.M. (lz-ifi l’..\i.. l5. D.T.—2:45 IKM A.l).’l‘.)—a signal to aliicii cliiefiiiins here that up to ihcn the Germans had not molested him. nor attempted i0 keep iiim from notifying his people. Possibility of Germain seizure of power in ltome was The military armistice. iippravcd also by Russia, actually was signed ill Sicily last Friday, on ihc day Italy was invaded. with tho stipul- ation it would "come into iorcc at a moment m0=t favorable to the Allies.“ "Tilill lltCllil-ll: has now arrived.“ ilPilliqliili‘i£‘l'S .llii. Alliczl l)lillll)0!'$ iinmi-dizilcly‘ 1\lill‘- (1l|i)‘v‘(3l' illl‘ Wlll'-\\'l‘fll'_\' Cllllllil'_\', Injuries Keith at licma and Clifford and Hubert of Waiter-town, kinss, in whom tiic sympathy of the entire community is extended. Fllllfiilli arrangements will be announced later. Mr. MiicLean was a son oi the late Mr. Lemuel McLean oi Arl- ington and was about 40 years of nae. At ihe time of his death hi- was employed with Toinlinsun and ('10., and wag returning from his work at the Mt. Pleasant airport when the accident occurred. Ilc mar Wanda Gregg of Tyne Valley, also three sons. Leiih, Chester and Thane and three daughters, Mur- iel. Clnra and Ruth all at home Also his sorrowful! arents to whom the sympathy o the comm- unity is extended. The funeral ar- lcal condition. Mrs. Keith Dougnll and Hilbert MacDougnli inc driver oi one car. fair, Alvin MacDougall, the other ear. and Dougall. hLs death. l-ie leaves to mourn five sons namely Beecher, James and correctly as Norman yesterdayl-S l pan. and leaves to mourn his wife. the X01"; rangements will be announced lat-_ el‘. Oi the injured two aro in a Cblb-i Chm“ Mac- The condition of two others is driver of , 5.45 n. m. 1.05 n. m. Keith Mac-‘ p considered in arrangements for pulling the armistice iniii effec_t_'—and since ihc allied command chose tonight as ilif: pl'0plil0llS moment for ii. there may be swift and decisive developments in the coming hours. (lmliiilfll! 111W". ' lets dc-Iliriit: that "bricked by 1hr miuhi cf ihi" miioc Italy now has the opuortiiiiiiv. cf taking vengeance on the GEPIIIIYI opnrcssor and of aiiifll! in the ex- Yll7lSlOli of tho oxii-rml encmy from Italian and " (Ccnifnizvil on Pzlgze n Col 2.x YOwRE ilicii Youth You ran Lonoea LooK * AighcPamss' ‘THE NENu Cvv._-. i.) fi G590. l '3 liigh iliic fills morning at 5.3l ‘and tonight nt 7.31. ‘ Sun sets this evening at 7.24 and lrises tomorrow morning at 6.31. Full moan Sept. l3. i140 p.m. Summerside tide l0 minutes later I than Charlottetown. DAILY Alli. SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAYI "Atllwilh- Summerslde — on on Leave Charlottetown 1.50 a. m. .30 m. 4.30 p. in. Arr ve Chnrlofieiown 1.10 p. m. l . E. I.—N. S. FERRY SERVICE DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Only one not iniured was f0ur-_ Y¢fll"°lil N011"! MRCDQUIIBll- Slit‘ Leave Wood Islands - 1.00 a. m. was discharged from hospital yes- nnd II a.m. and s p. m. ierday. (Her name was given in- Leaves Caribou - 9.00 a. In. and Ina.