| MAXIMS or A p - i MAXIMS MERE MAN P . °' * ' --_- ' MERE MAN Blushing is both virlln‘: and vir- tue‘: colour» ‘ - . - Brave actions never want a st trumpet. \ ‘ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew g oIl Guardian, ‘Ive Quilt cur-lotto! 0LDS Fruit IN STALINGRAD CHARLOTTETUWN. CANADA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1942 8 PAGES Aanual lubeerlptlon lrsllroron. ll-IIO l! llallt P. I. l. “Mill lo other Province: and U. l. 85.00 irifish CQIIVOL Under Attack In Mediterranean‘ 5W0- Year Records Broker!" At Show Judging in full swing,- Thousand; Here from the Mainland; Another Big program today O stock exhibition holding sway. The track was in great shape by the time afternoon roiled around and some oi the best racing oi the season, featured by close om] o,“ citing finishes, took plooo, Two accideits occurred during the afternoon performance, The first was a runaway horse which record breaking attendance, mo largest crowd in over 50 ears, iueniied ihe Provincial Exhi ition md 01o HCIIIC Week program in Ciiarloticioirii yesterday after- mn uni evviiiiiil- Not since the EIIIIDIIIOII Grounds were opened h i889 WAS there such a gather- ing ior tile Big Fair. visitors frcm nearby Nova threw his dl th 5min and New. Brunswick at- around the trackvzild enggd iilgcgg tended ni large numbers and running into a tree to rage a, 5 iii (hers hero also many from other n; oi Ciiilada and the United States. Anti as usual there was the tusiillllilft‘ crowd from all sections o.’ this province on hand to view that resulted in slight injures. The second accident occurred when Gerald Gallant, who is said i0 b61011! to Dartmouth. N. 8., was struck by ii horse when he at- the Judging of ‘the Livestock. tern ted to run across tho flack raich it.» interesting horse races whle o. race was finishing. Appar- ' l bi-t-u-een heats with ently the boy thought; Q11 the ttih cl . nets of vaudeville. And igiln Billy Lynch's midway was istoppiiig place for hundreds more. The Horse Show s nsoi-ed horses had rounded the turn but one racer was farther back than théhréeslt 3nd he stlrtelgkghghboy, , s was rus P, m, ii iiic Lhurlottetowii Rid as Club I. llospitsl and was later rgported was one of the evening's attrac- to be suffering frcm a broken this. x ‘ 1d a1 x m b‘ collar1bone_ e r..i_v vas c or e A oh an; \\'ili(‘il got underway early‘: : Y: yesterday morning with the livc- (Continued on page 3, COITST- In N.Y. Hospital iliile From S’Side . All Alison aircraft oli a went oli-l tllu will. u. “t. NEW YORK. Aug. llt-(APF-Dr. Jacob Gould Schui-rnsn, as, who followed morethan 28 years of WWW as President oi Cornell University with a distinguished diplomatic career, died today at Memorial Hospital. l Resigning from the university in 192i; he became United States minister to China. After (our years in the Far East President Coolidge hauled him Ambassador to Ger- miiiiy. a post lie held until Decem- Missing routine iAAD UIJCII linsslllg sills; e-LLHJUH, olllullll.» (it (Al, ber 1929 - alipuli. suiu last illglli. jun“ ‘ hi‘ “““"“ “ “rt” U‘ “~13 Dr. ScIlurni-tqliistsiilccgisluiifrmgig: hillt _ , - . _ _ ‘ “° °‘ m‘: “"‘“ “"1 iiutled a tililipalgil amcili; AiiierL kilns u. .lic L‘.I\.L LAALAA ilruil... c1“. .. . ' . to raise SaOOODO for a new btieiln 1' -..tu .i' l .. ' - ,5 - . ' w“ uffllcnieuixh file-rm‘ L W“ M‘ lllfxlli€lllilfé bllkixldlllgh at h Heidelberg ‘ "VHS y. w ere e ad been a o ll‘ .. _ - ~ A Lt suiu iui int llslii. search student n: hilt. ~.. - ‘fUi ior the . pane iiiit iclilluhuttéusuciiiss. my... TB? first 3101M display of the ilillrs iitsliilii, ooh-c... were bl‘ e Anhucan “"3 and [he German t national colors after tho First ' Great War occurred on May i4. i928 when the freedom of the city "o v-i-iru. lint contact Wltll m: °f Hmdflbcill W85 extended b0 him iiluniiie ltUUJl. ~l..w iuesday altei- mid m9 uliii/eisiiy liifirc awarded tun. LllLiU liao oeeil no lliuicntion mm m‘! ilPiii-"iiry dellifl 05 D00- iili to lillit time tiiiti, tile lliaciiiil-e- W1‘ of Political Science. its iii uiiiiculty. While Sfilyilig as head of Cor- . nell he interrupted his work to assume the presidency of the first United States-Philippine com. w I mission ill 1899 and to serve as TRENIUN, N. 8., Aug, lL-(CP) minister to Greece and Monte- —liutul'. DUlfldll, an, oi synnyvilie. llcilro during the last year oi the ii s-qiuis ltliltO tuuav when he was Tait administration. loin. o; u uusct-iioliip, eiciaioi- in Dr. schurman born in Freetown, ‘n3HlLCi luuiiuiy liiic. l-ic liilcl P. E, I., May 22, 1854 was the iii" iii work m the louiiurv only iiiilleluln-law of Brig hon John ' uizs. M o ' ' . dmalrixx. Aug’ lg_(cp)_su_uck mgggru. er. now stationed in Wash tilt UiOéJJI‘ lll\'t3bi.l_'>l,tlt'.0l1 rtv (my one lit. purl... u. a pluiir. MIG btlltlUU 110113, “HCYE ML: PALUIL '1' ii o" $311275. HS Another daughter, Mrs. i) a truck outside his home tlirvi- Barbara Petro Pavlovsk ,._ _ ._ _ ' _ ‘ y, Wife of the ugly lnoiiias Lxillls was kllltd British army Major vladlmlr "W- Petro-Pavlovsky, is a passenger on the Giibshvlm. the diplomatic ex- , chiliiBe ship carrying United No- c ' tioiis citizens from the Orient. s Other survivors are his sons, Judge Jacob Gould schurman, oi the New York Court of General Sessions. and Geor o M, flchiug lOlIluu man oi Bedford I-Iflls, N, Y, and l diliishttr. Mrs. Robert I-lawol. of Washington 12 Funeral services will be held at ' ~4 P- m- Friday at st. Matthews Church in Bedford, Westchester $124“ County. N. Y.. and interment will -be in the church cemetery, "Picnic. West Point Wharf, Tues- 8t —u— ‘W to llollt-u n. mu ‘ I Cont: our word hrggiaioyies-Mofltague Fridagc "Tslkies-Sourls Monday. iii. August 1 h. 8-12-41. s , "Dance in Brookvalo School y. Allgllsgil-l; 8-13-2l. I \ “Dance, Fortune Hall, Friday. iiisiisi 14th, 9.30 to 1 o'clock shrug). 8-12- l. "Talkies Eldon Friday, Devil UITAWA Aug. 12- oi the Air with Jamx Cag- "ti. Pat O'Brien, 8-13-11. nected "Trucking h usual for the Miiiiiiibd 901109 lilmmer month?“ tilt vour hogs the militar call-up ‘mi A C Green, Albany and G. . have been with Royal ,_ --- P. ms tod I Livestock Marketing Board ....But ,,°,=<iinr hogs at Charlottetown and Justice Minister iiiiviiiiy and Friday oi this week. said the force has met "filing service on request. "armed resistance" ii-i2-2i. call-up notices or in dealing with u __-- deserters from the armed forces. E Truckmen-we are (Premier Godbout, mph-V the services oi iliiiiiiiretl to hnul livestock from the effect that H. O. M. P. ha liiiii to shipping point in the fol- “iii! localities, Souris, Elmira. Mimi)’ River. Murray Harbor. aiiirll. St. Peter's. Peakes station cntly malicious". "d Mt. Stewart. Communicate tion was "likely to open to liverlng call-up notices "to ‘giliiriéy. Livestock Marketing oi the . in t. the poo le B-ll-fll. gIaQilebecfl p (OW-Two shooting incidents in Quebec Prov- ince whioh may have been eon- eniorceinent of regulations u . . nvestlgated, Commie. Mn. Emerald li-o-v-ll-W-T-M-ti sioner s. T. Wood oi the R. C. M. ,,_ , d both the Com ‘ssioner tee 6t. Laurent with no to the girl h; he had bought her ‘ .whlle serving {mm hei- father. When I questioned Mr. Bolimhour on the sumo day. he replied that he had sold ills rliiiiuht- in Quebec, or ior $75 cash. At that time ilcldsilaf: truckmen said a news story from Ottawa t3 "by selling h". I would vrt i of- . met "armed resistance" while de- say the least" was "false and appar- Buch a declara- w, create dis. iii our Charlottetown oiilce or union in the country and to raise "1 "Dresentetive in your com- the people of the other provinces nos Axis Raiders Loose In So. Atlantic Area Carrier Eagle Sunk In Battle; At Least One Enemy U-Boat Ac- counted For. (By Drew Middleton Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON. Aug. 12 —- (AP)-In- dications that the Axis is startinfl a strong surfacemaider and sub- marine campaign in the South Atlantic were reported by inform- ed British naval sources today while the Germans said a great British convoy now is under attack in the western Mediterranean. The Admiralty announced loss of the 22,600-ton aircraft carrier Eagle in the Mediterranean and said at least. one enemy submar- ine operating in the same area already had been sunk but did not refer to a convoy attack. Later the Admiralty said 930 "survivors including Captain L. D. Mackintosh. the commander, had been accounted for. Agiarent-ly most of the men were saved, for the peacetime complement of the carrier was only 748. Capt. Mackintosh, the heir to 125,000 acres of highland in Scot- land, previously had served on three other aircraft carriers, the Courageous, Glorious and Hermes. all oi which have been sunk in this war. The Germans, reporting they sank the Eagle 'I‘i.iescl:ty with ioiir torpedo hits, said she was a meni- ber of the convoy escort which included the bulk cf the British Mediterranean fleet and was en route east from Gibraltar. The Italians claimed they had bit anothonwarsllip. in convoy. The Eagle, started in i913 as a battleship ic-r Chile, finally was completed as ll British nil-craft carrier in 1924. She was the fifth carrier lost since the war began. Britain is left with five C3i‘l‘l£‘l'S_ Two more, the implacable and ln_ deiatigable, are due for comple- tion this year. The sinking oi the Eagle was conceded by British sources as a sore loss, since convoys iil the Mediterranean have to depend on carrier-based planes once they are out oi rellch of sllore-bnsccld light- ers. The extension of Axis offensive operations into li-ll‘ South Atlziiltic was noted by iitlviil sources as a further step in the hot battle oi ued oilipaigc 3. C01 2) Well - Known Captain Passes’ ‘mo. REXTON. N. B. Auz, 12-40?)- Captain A. J. Friis-ci‘. 84. one oi the best known residents oi this Kent County village flied at his home here this evcillng. For many years Captain Fraser took his schooner to ports ill Elst- ern Canada and was well kllCiiiil i~ Nova Scotia. Prince Edward. Island as well as this province. I-Ie had fol- lowed the sea ior upwards o’ f“ years. rrtlrlnir from active work only two yciirs ago. Sold Daughter, Got Overcoat BANCROFT, Ont... Aug. 12-(0?) —rrovlnclai Constable s. Palmatcer testified in court here tcdny u‘ 60- year-oid farmer in North iiiistliigs Uountv was willing to sell ills l2- yeax-oid ctauglltei: ior $1». WW-ild which an old overcoat was accepted as down payment. _ The constable arrested William Keller July 22 as he was aplliyilill for a marriage licence with liil youthful brlde-to-be, Kellar appeal- ed in court that day and pleaded guilty to a statutory charge involv- ing a 12-year-old girl and was sent- deitnite and one enced to one year year less a day indefinite in the i i mato . miiiifegiifiiiin ledryto the arrest. of o hrs father, John Boumhour who Bwas charged with aiding and abetting Keller in connection with the oiience. After listening to evi- dence today. Magistrate J. L. Lloyd reservgd Jusdgknsgnt until Sept. 2. in B°“'“ °“' told the c t ble Pairns f‘ onsquiellar said. he had a right SCHOOL FOR. FORGERY LON Fogariy. go;- post office forgeries. Jury Finds Death Was Accidental In Mcileill Fatality War Situation Last Night (By JOHN M. iuclrrowun. Associated Press wai- Araalyst) The chances for a successful conquest oi the Tllla 8i area of the Sol- omo rise to no wav lmljm ‘ e a ' ° n" For "m "lgmoh b tire] Progress of the war. death 0i ivir. Malcolm MacNeiii who conflict are now bel d id m; y “Mn the final outcome oi’ tho W85 111i by i1 our August lion, was and I m n8 9c cd on the battlefields oi Southern Russia, ‘mmluuefl ie-‘iifiiidfly at 9.30 a. m, at rom ere the news is grave, the Macbeun Funeral iiolllc with ' e e the vcruict that the deceased had A victory in tho Solomons would i coiile to his death accidentally when ‘o I‘ m‘ w” ‘own-d (l) Seoul-m‘ Kifiwk by a cur driven by Albert flie lbllroaches to Alli-rill! and iu su l lin f ti. (2) furnishing one starting point for ti]: Iuture: geilgiial limit: Mgfnleoullffiliilerviéeu ‘$5511 0d I)“ gfltgiiumdoi-lilgnslalzwlug. the effectiveness oi American preparations to Coéonerllbr. Ira. J. Yeo and may," M’ hes." the" l" "mull! ObIWi-WOI dbslilto the relatively great cost Neill]: Cxasiloivevlgileiicf’ LsIalaidJ. in men. ships and planes necessary w accomplish them. But the enemy's Walking iibvui vv trims alone the objectives and the allied stakes in the battle oi the Caucasus are fur- “m” “um m5 11°11“? WW1 m6 d9- reaching and, at worst, may decide the ability of the Russians to keep ceased and his wit“ 9“ m‘? “WY W the main strength oi Adolf Bltler‘| armies engaged until the crushing Church “h” the accident “curred- weight of British and American power can be thrown into decisive action The deceased “m “dyed OVBTIJ-“ght against ‘hum with Mi. McNevin ailcl the two . , , , , , $311115?!‘ witliUhj/lrs. lVlcNevln were A Russian defeat in the Caucasus probably would mean that a They vii-eye] oumilhe ‘i-‘ilghttloharfikiiusiiille large part of tho Red forces would withdraw north and east of the Volga oi the road with Mrs. McNevin to- River, where their positions would be almost entirely defensive, for the Wflrdi tile Centre and the deceased time being at least. The Germans, having gained a huge wealth oi nat- m)" i" the guiwi- whim U163’ Heard ural, resources, would need comparatively small forces to hold the Russ- ‘he 051' Fmnmgi Mr- McNevm W931 luns behind the Volga. and the bulk of their strength could be turned “*5 “m5 m“ "d Pulled h" W" in “ma other dlrecthm of tliehvnyi. Mr. MacNeill then foil While none outside the German high command can know its in- llistclfelg/End “WP.- Abmm a mmute r i r. McNciin heard rile brakes tentions, it seems probable that once they had occupied the Caucasus, of the cm- and a mud and when he the Nazis would turn their military might against the Middle East. They turned he 5a“. (he flggnaggd lying might strike at their objective either by heavily reinforcing Field Mar- to he rigli 3L the car with his shfll Erwin Rommel’; African army in Western Egypt, or by moving ' "- through the island oi Cyprus into Syria, the conquest of Cyprus being (Cmiiiiilled 0n D886 7. C01 5) necessary to give them secure supply lines across the eastern Meillter- Wm‘? ranggn, i News Briefs I I I l l O Yesterday's news, insofar as it bears on these long-range possibilities, was not good, on the whole, Although British military men said Russia's resistance was stiffening on all fronts, Moscow dispatches said German mechanized forces driving down the Rostov-Baku railway were approxi- mately at the half-way mark between the Black Sea and the Caspian. In the terrific struggle in the Caucasian foothills, the Germans men- accll‘ the region of Pyatigorsk and the Grozny oil fields beyond. This, combined with recent developments elsewhere, imakes the picture ra- thcl‘ bleak. If the Caucasus and all that it stands-for in United Nations ‘Interest iii yet to he saved‘ or even partially savcd,.it would seem that" tire‘ Russ- ians or their British anrl American allies must produce quickly resist- ance so effective as to fall little short of a military miracle. ALLIED llE ADQUAILTERS. Australia, Aug, l3 — (Thurs- diiyi-(ciri/ ‘iilicil bombers attacking the Japanese harbor of ltabaul northwestmf- “the Solomon Island actions have left a large Japanese ship in a sinking coildition and set three nthcrs on ilre, it was an- nounced today. London Reports Russian BOMBAY, Aug. 12- tAPl-The upheaval of riot and bloodshed which has marked Mohandas K. Q I I Resistance Stzffening ‘tactics: in its fifth day today, although -—l'_‘— _* gunfire twice resounded through I Bombays streets where violence Allied Planes has been at its height. PORTLAND, Mm, Aug. 12- A E. Wal By Alfred l Staff Writer . Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 12—-(A.P)-—Bl'i- 7i h -—I iuillillf: shipbuildcrsl, h“ “bray sducis declared up B b F W use orclcnrs sons rucie (hi; hi.‘ Rikssials resistance is liiio firsiiurvlssciils hiiuiithin Am- stiliezliilg oli all fronts and that El‘ N. ii “i °_ Hi5 l shill! Soviet attacks at vol-anew and buniiuv iii n niichiv response , v m, hum, w WC“- m»; to the dcinunii i'_0r more ships desigzlte si/zeping yNazl Willi which to iieiit the Axis. claims of victories on the souuh-ern front. These military sources, who de- cliiicu to be identified, dscounted German victory clams as g.eai.ly exaggerated. ‘Ihsy said further that spccial aZilIOllllCt-ylfwlliafi often are made by the Nazis for political ef- icct at tic-me and sometimes are nor, factual. _ The Gciman high command fig- llrc of 1.044.141 mo Anny piison- era in the spring and summer CHUNGKING. Aug. 12—iAP) —lt was rumored here tonight, without coilfirmation, that ai- lled warplanes bombed Formosa today. This Japanese island nfi‘ the east China coast is one of Japan's principal troop staging areas for offensive operations. nounccd tonight. Nazi City __ ' Sigglggiiivllolaslqive ltfimzigrwl-l-l be granted a category “A" LONDON. Aug. 12-—(CP Cable)-- Inquiries have been ilildertaken by the British Government in the hope of ascertaining from Tokyo iiow and when the Japanese will scllcl forward s fiill list of pris- oilers of will" and civilian internees now in their custody, it was an- campaigns was calle hig-hly im- gflsnune rmon Mo], on ‘he PYOiT-ibie" in "kw c‘! the pmven I same hasis n salesmen who ndiililiif-‘SS 0i Miifehai- _s9m5°n drive pnsscngiar cars, it was Thicsiicilko in disinsus-n! his announce-i today by the Dc- aimics from Geiman trfllfi- partmcnt of Munitions and Persistent mention by the Gef- “"”'““ Supply. Until now, all trucks mails oi heavy dieieirsive fighting BY 5 5 Siimim‘ have operated on commercial (Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON, Aug. 1a - (AP) - Picked Bomber crews who circled over the Gemini city of Mniiiz from start to finish of ii ilcnvy in (he Rztiev area 130 miles ncrih- category ration hooks. west, oi Moscow aroused unofficial sprculation in London that the ussiaus might be undertaking a R counter-offensive in the hope of (Continued on page 5, Col. 6) Cupid And The Stork Working Overtime OTTAWA. Aug. IZ-JOH-Cupld and the stork worked overtime in June this year, scconilns i0 e "i- pori, issued today by the Dominion Bureau oi Statistics, Births registered in Canadian cities, towns, and villages with a pspulation oi 10030 and more to- oiiea 10,618 n. June, deaths 4.229 and marriages 8.294 compared with 9,234 births, 4,433 deaths and 1.695 marriages in June last year. This was an increase of 15 per cent in births, eight per cent in marriages and a decrease of three per cent in deaths ' raid last nigiht in a technique of R-A F‘. observation described to- night how bursts oi hundreds of tons of bombs flickered across the target like “lights of o. pin table" an started more fires than they could count. The air ministry news service's report of the stories related by these speolallv chosen observers said the bombs, including more than 50.000 ‘inoendiaries, blasted and enilanied rtant centre an.l handles most of in the Rhine- the city, an im river port whi the grain traffic mains area. An R..A.1". commentator saio the raiding force was made up of "between 250 and 400 bombers." Hundreds of high explosive bombs and thousands of incendinrles loft a lll,000-!oot pillar of smoke over (Continued on page 3, Col. (l) Outstandingly QQQ_ DON‘ - (cFi _ Micheal iiiiogeo to have oiieriiicd n "school for forgery" with branch- es throiiizhout East London. was sentenced to three years in prison Nazi Fliers Attacked ? NEW YORK, Aug. l2-(APi—— The BBC reported tcday that a group of German filers drilling in Jean Bouin Stadium, in suburban Paris, had been attacked with llancl girilidcs, iwo oi them killed tin-d eight, scveicly iiijuiod. Tile broadcast, heard here by clBS, g-ive no souicc for (has re- port and did not say who was held responsible foi- iho attacks. BBC also said that French pol- ice had discovered a dynamite cache near Clormcn-Ferrzincl and that all police leaves in that area had been cancelled. "W" lLS. Forces In Indian Region WASHDIGTON, Aug. l?r-(AP)- Americiiii i\l‘ll'l(‘fi forces are in India solely to prosecute the war against the Axis mid liiwe been warned to avoid scrupulously any participation in lnterilal troubles there, the state depiirtnioiit said tonight, Tlii- iirosi-iicc oi American forces 1 h, f M~_ i p] __ iil Iudiii, iil(‘ (loiariincnt revealed. is {},§;,{,,,9' 53's? ' 1 primarily to nu Cllllin. AREA But Germans Punch Another Hole 1o South‘ By Eddie Gilmore (Associated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, Aug. 13 — (Thurs- day) — (A P) — German troops have punched another hole in Eus- sian positions astride the Rostov- Baku railroad in the Cherkessk area, but uhe Red army is holding firmly on the approaches to Stal- ingrad, the Soviets announced early today. “In the area oi Cherkessk our troops have retired to new posit- ions," the Russian communique said. Cherkessk is 70 miles southeast of Armavlr and about 200 miles from the Rich Grozny Oil Fields, and the Germans thus are con- tinuing their hard drive south- eastward along the northern fringe of the Caucasian mountains. The R/Ed army was still lighting heavy defensive battles in the Maikop oil fields wcstofCherkessk, and also at Krasnodar on the Kuban river 60 miles northwest of Maikop. Nearly 2,000 Germans were re- ported killed and 22 tanks des- troyed during the last 24 hours in Nazi efforts to bridge a waterline (probably the Kuban) in ind Krasnodar section. the Russians sai . The apparent German goal in the west is twofold: to leach the Soviet Black Sea ports (if Novo- rossisk and Tuapse, A railroad from Krusilooal‘ leads to the former, and another spur from Malkop goes through 3,000-ioot mountains -—-- .________ _(Contlriued on page 3, COW) Marines Land 0n 3 Islands WASHINGTON. Aiil- 12- (AH-The United States navy reported tonight that marines have landed on three islands in the vicinity of Tulagl. Ill the Solomons, and now are ungngcd in consolidating their positions. A communique said: "i, Operations in the Solo- mons are still in progress. "2, it has been confirmed that the United States lilar- iilcs have landed as scheduled on three islands in the vlcin. ity of Tulagl_ The marines are engaged in consolidating their positions. Supporting naval forces have been engaged i" bitter fighting, details of which are not yet. available. United States army and Ains- tralian aircraft are continuing attadis on enemy 1511M“! fields and shore-based alr- craft. "3. There is substantial evi- dcncc that. the Jaliimcse had planned and had well under way the development of an cn- cmy base in the Tulagl area. "4, Until more details are available it is impossible t0 elaborate further on these opt-rations, All available corn. municatinil facilities are over- taxcd by urgent messages con- ccrning operation." Clark Gable Private In li.S. Army Now LOS ANGELES, Aug. l2--(A.Pi- A nervous Clark Gabe put aside the wealiii anti fame of Hollywood today to enlist in (he United States Army as a private. What may be the last. public ap- arance for some time of the dol oi thousands of feminine movie fans took pl-sco high in the federal building, with half a floor roped oif and guaidcd to insure privacy, Gabe listened intently its (‘.01. Maicom P. Andniss road the army The screen star's hand was shaking noticeably as he raised it to say "1 do," in a, half-faltering voice. “I hope you will serve with lion- Ol’ to yourself and your coiuitry," Col. Andrus; said whrn ii» was over. "I welcome you into the United States Army." "Thank you. sir." Gable replied, with a wide smile and a hiiiimiiake. ‘file screen star, 4i, and ivroiuoti by the death of Carole Lombard in an airplane accident several months ago ns she concluded a bond-selling tour, ivns to loavo tn- anil thru- iriilnlug. iiftfl‘ which he (‘liiilvx lo enrol in offic- Iii the (‘\'('lll. oi disturbances where N35 (tnuikini, Schooy they are stationed they are nilllior- "I iim very hrippv about. it all." 17ml to resort to (lefolislve measures he sakL n! have made “Dpnflikn only. “should their safety or (lint oi other citizens be endangered" own personal American do my very best, i0 be a gilnncr and I'm gring to Theirs nothing else to say The not... into the 03-1150 t. Heavy Fighting Continues Without’ Letup In The Caucasus Area c L‘."— "fir >*}'.—_':1 In nEnglancv HON. O. G. POWER. LONDON, Aug. 12-(0? CABLE) — Canadian Air Minister. Hon. C. G. Power. [Flying his second visit to Britain within a year, arrived in 5'1???" “fay iitgr i; fartnighfs iil- c ion o un i m Royal Canadian Atin Fsfrcffipan n‘ “The Air Minister stepped lightly from a twin-engined transport plane at an airport in the Londoll area. after a short hop from o, trans-Atlantic air terminal "Sumo- whi-re in Eilglnml" when; he 1mg arrived earlier at the end of an ocean flight. ' Iiescribing his Atlantic fllght a; l 81'5"!‘ "TD." Mai. Power said hfi eXlierted to spend 10 days or two weeks in the United Kingdom viii"!!! C nadian squadrons. Manhunt Continiues For Two Germans FREDERICTON, Aug. 12——(CP)_ NevwBrunswic-ks ivldvst manhunt continued todnv vrithoui any dis- closed success for two German prisoners who escaped yesterday rom an internment canlp near here. Police of adjoining provinces and the state oi Maine also were on the alert. Mounted Police. army patrols, members of‘ the Veterans’ Guard and the civilian volunteer coriis were participaiiiii: iil the search, aided by the Mounted. Police iloiz “Cliifcfi Objectives oi the hunt were Heinz Wlrtz, 22, Nazi scamaii. nntl Gerhard Kllocnfol. 2i, civilian in- tel-uee, who escaped yesterday aft/Jr- noon. Qvifiz A NUMBER or vii: 'Sociiii. Scour Aui: ‘IREMBHNQ on {HE Balance High Lido; this afternoon at 12.11 and at midnight. 5111i not; this evening at an and rises wmoriow morning at 5.59. First quarter moon. Ailil- 19- '7_30 am. can FERRY SERVICE DAIL‘ EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — Leave 9.25 1.1m. 1.00 p.rn., 4.45 p.m., 7.55 prn. o. Leave Cape Tormention ~11- a-um, 3.15 p.m.. 0.45 n-m» 9-1" 11-"- SUNUAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. 27 inclusive) _ i) , 6.45 Dim- Boaiclgllgglln: “i645 1-in- B.00 p.m. P. E. L-N. S FERRY SERVICE Leave Wood Islands 7.00 a-m. 11-99 ‘Jfloaacpilxjiirihou I mm» l D-lfl- ""1 5.30 pm. Am SERVICE Charloitetnwil-Summi-rxlde- Moncton Leave Charlottetown 6.35 a. m4 12.45 . m. Lenyo Summerside 7.10 a. m9. 1.20 , III- ’ Leave Moneton 11 a. 1a.: and 0-10 p. rn. Dally except. Sunday-