i111 will “111 1111: uar with the help action. which tnc Ministiy describ- i1! the Uniicd States. 1 . m as he be _ difficult. buts large number of the gaseoéicnét“ yew $31k“. cufmé’, bombs were sccn to explode in the mey.l_e M laugh a Crowd as mam target area, causing iiianv fires." 1rw1111 our hclp they'll wi1i.” iins was mkoi. 1- s." 11d Hie H1111. ll l f. hymn“ v ct for Washington k>_ .5 c1111.» per worn, ‘ I 1 Investigate “_ L-si-i- 1-21. f h 11' "ism iWUnLii i o a 11¢ your order 3 1 ,_ . Daily delivery ug-Wk mccut Saturday, Island uvqrlufizlkctc 111 Mmvhw H,“ Thumb Deaths of two babies in Halifax 11081011. Monday, 8130, opened to inquire into the finding “Garden so w be eds. All the latest to be a. minor. l Iugcaiamgue "°“’~ A1111“? V086)’. Coroner Dr. F. V. Woodbufi‘ 511d gé%3r1§§i,di,‘§1“'“m- "b10111" 11st 111111; into Halifax Harbor. Police fihbfiWiink o; Hmsbom m m corpse 18 feet onto a pier. They said dNid "we out wh "Ikmuel 0N i1 Hum“ masweli loading hogs L I u I ""111 r111.11i;"i~::.r11=.1.... Kins 111 111 ILL‘ ‘-'-—~—- amnfiffk thlirfarketing Board _ ——— 13111. 121111111111 wh" cmmiwww" ' ROME, no. 111-far) —Physic1- u: “c”: Sam arf every week 1m; amending 10mm- m 111101154 and round he went with menon hi? h ‘Uvesioe . ‘ w compm” hfiomlfgellflil this mornin MAXIMS OI A MERE MAN -—1-- n u by believing In, lovinl. Ind “flinging iiiimltsbls ideals that nun growl I11“- >‘/'%[/ /// » The People's P per MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN War must be declared on all cus- tom which has not the sanction of conscience. di ‘I Con“. mtiudiigaiei-lfrofia-sqsnr D Eli. A. E Fliers Stage Longest,_ Fiercest _i_4ttack Invasion “danger zone” blasted Throughout night; Western Rhur bombed too. LONDON, i-‘cb. 16.—(CP)——Thc Air Ministry tonight announced terri- g bomb attacks by the Royal Air Force on the industrial western Ruhr mi the German-held ports oi Rotterdam, Calais and Bouiogno - a “mp1; of tho Channel "invasion coast" that some said was the longest uid fiercest yet staged by British bombers. The alinrks occurred throughout Saturday night and into the early w“ of today. The 75-mlle-long “danger zone" of the Flanders coast n; under almost constant bombardmen through the night. Nazi ruldcrs caused two night alarms in London and towns on the nrtheast coast had their longest raid of the war Three German bomb- m were shot down during the night. Bum-r swuu 11w. 111 acuviw over Britain was confined to attacks I . . by single Nazi aircraft. of which one "o was shot down in the sea off the P south coast. Bombs were dropped an three places in London during a - I ' d f l briei air alarm. Some damage i0 ll houses and u small number of cas- llaiiiBS ivere reported in London and East Anglia. 1n the Bouiciziie attack, the Air biiiiistry said. ‘many large fires were started uiid iutcr aircraft acre abc to ciistiiiguish the bursting oi their bombs in the flames. At Rotterdam, airuroiiics and an unnamed inliinu port were among the targets 111 tiic western ttunr lty Seth Moseley Associated Press Staff Writer Feb. llY-(AP) — " President Roose- ed us "a COIISICK-Iflble attack." .160“. 1mm, 31,19; cm 1m; “urouiid iiuzc iiiude ciiservatiorl 111a cominuniuuc said. Five RAF, prunes were missing from these offensive operations. iioiidoncrs saw lif-Zlllfii‘ planes drive away one uernziui 170111591‘ which swooped low over the capital. Correspondents from the south- east coast said one Junkers bomber reiurning to ilic continent from é day‘ raid on England was hit by anti-aircraft. fire. and dragged itself across the Channel sky. Smoking. it "WM ' .1: pct mat help?" i-lop- 11 not be a stalemat- ‘ 1 _ - Qpifiiong ihsapilcnred in the distance ovcr crvziiicns I made 911D" G115 Nl-‘l 1.. 111 England and ~- "lilllfllllilltfify and .1. I wa c1 l1 i‘ re- the nirtraeigstffoinpihe Gown“ l°“g"'“_mie films Shelled Nazi Guns Active . CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, FEBRUARV 11, 1941 iParliamcnt lie-opens After recess OTTAWA. Feb. i6 —(CP) - In the midst of forecasts by would au- thorities that the war is about to enter upon its most critical stage, members of the House of Cflmmons gather here tomorrow to resume work after a 10-week recess. At 3 p. m. ABT sittings of the second session of the 19th Parlia- ment since Confederation will resumed by the Hou-e. Member-i of the Senate are not scheduled to us- semble until March 4 unless some- thing happens meanwhile necessi- tatingmimmcdiate action in the red cham r. _ Most important of the legislative measure; lcnown to be in prepara- tion for ihe remainder of the ses- sion are those having to do with fi- nancing the war. Whatever purely legislative pro- posals the government may be pre- paring remain to be disclosed. The speech from the throne at the op- ening Nov. '7 gave no indication. Estimates for the ordinary admin- i=tration of government. apart from the war effort, will be tabled at once, possibly the first move when the House resumes tomorrow after- noon. It is known efforts have been made to pare these non-war expen- is expccted to be well under $400,- 0.0000 At the afternoon sitting it is ai o expectcd a detailed account of war developmcnis since the adjournment will be given by Prime Minister MucKeiizie King.‘ It. is possible the Prime Minister will take this opportunity to give some outline of whatever new war policies the government is fonnu- iating. A debate may re ult from this presentation by the Prime Minister. or, at least, a discussion in ivhich Conservative House Lcz-icici" Hanson and other group leaders will take part. Debate is also pos iblc on a motion i0 be made at once b_v the Prime Minister to give priority through- out the remainder of '21s session to government motions and orders. cl- ‘niinuilni: the customary time rriven for discussion of private member re olutions. Early action is expected on the establishment of an all-party house committee to examine nnr‘. report 011 war expenditures. This ivus pro- mfsed lust fall after it was mqucst- 0d by Mr. Hanson. 1 11-1-1- my». 11:; is; zialrzr: “i; E“$h*"h;, A damage were reported, M" desperac-eli’ 111 Observers nn the Engiish side of‘ _ the Channel Suiurday night saw.’ t‘ i0 111W them solfi- the iusiics oi the cxillssioiis and , need is material," _____.A_____ former secretary of commerce — 1111.11 11v. l| 1 ' titled. liiey have wonderful lead- ' (Comimwd 011 P586 7. Col 3) "1110- Cliuirhiil is a great man. Tiwspirit of the men in the atrv»: Ilid ih ' tonfide e 50"‘ 1111s afternoon. Wis rnicniiizu-s rmrzivn 1ilRifHfiiian _-<ci=1- M111. R- A- F - craft followed ea- ‘ v 1.011 in court casxs, is . it“ unsuspecting German and on ~ - - - "Hg Lvents sent it down in flames. me M —o— 1;‘_";'_I;_;.L --- Nlnlri-s in this cuiumn 11' fiiiliiiiil) inn, poor prim‘ 1 strawberries. _ Gram)‘ __ “"59'1'25'“- HALIFAX. Feb. i6 —(CP) - 20.11, “m. Dumo _ County were under investigation by L_31_§e_‘}7_u_ police tonight. n 1,“ ——-——- Royal Canadian Mounted P0 09 . Special meeting auxillgxy announced that an inquest has been Wn Hotel. Initiation. of the body of a new-bom child at L-26. head oi Jcddore several days ago. Police 1.1111 the mother 1s belleved st 1n vegetilblfld. Send for The inquest. was adjourned ivweek. 11-354- police are investigating: theéldfiov; " _“'__' i th bod, i b by: 9 a Kinkora. Bali - Bingo and fibii-ytli), at ins mvoifthaof l; sewer run- ‘1 following Monday ‘had m wait- 11 day r111 s. tide low L‘m'2'"'19' enough to permit them to 'ift the a. _._.__ ‘Mt’ Qifibcrt Thursday otii ‘i w“ held by Wm‘ her to operate or '7' R- Munmlfiresident. aa-a-iv-ii. Former Spanish '01” every ‘riiflgléy’ e "My. Y t - tod . as "r ind suDDort solicitgdxf paifgltil. {$1.21 giilliisiiiiiiircavainaii he iii k “*- Friday when he suffered n mo“ g m" Markeiing Board can heart attack. He is at an hotel here. Q1151...‘- ""1"‘ Potent factor in His second daughter. PflflW-BI '1 ' m“ "'v“‘1"‘b1¢ ‘ 1'10?!- Maria. Christina arrived from Turin 1%: ship- a buiietinmfiundav eveninl "111 g ._.11i.1‘».1.1*7.f.2ff2?"..‘.'.§'firitish Fighting Planes Stalking Nazis By Night KEEPER OF PANTRIES WINSOR, England —<CP)-— Char- lcs Watts, who JOlIIEd the staJ at WIIILISOI‘ Cistie ntarly 60 ycars ago. 11nd for years was kccpcr of ihe loyal gfld and silver panlrics, is dead at ‘l5. LONDON. Feb. 16.--(CP) —- The Air Mlnlstiw‘ news service indicated today that Britain has developed a method by which fighter pilots can , r: 9- 11 locate 11nd follow invading planes by night. l-ieretofore the biggest problcmol night fighters was to find their ad- versariw and then keep them in sight. In s. description of tho shooting down of three German bombers over Britain last night. the Air Ministr news service said: "A Heinkel 11 was spotted 16 miles from the English coast. The fighter (Pilot got into the enemy’! tail an began a. process 0f ‘stalk- ing‘ which kept him going rorind in circles for nearly i0 minutes. I The Air Ministry's news services comment today was the first in which the night raider "was reported ' potted" and consistently. suc- cessfuiiy followed by a tighter. The Heinkei pilot. the news ser- vice said. apparently WM "HBW-‘IYQ are British fighter was on I k. wflw fighter lieutenant foilcued him as the enemy crossed the coast at nearly 14.000 feet." the service said. “Then he closed in and save the Heinkel s long burst. The Heinkei dived and was lost tosirlhl- "A little later the pilot saw a batch of incendiary bombs appar- ently being iettisoned. and a minute 6r two afterwards there was a huge orange flame as the aircraft struck the ground and was burned out . . . 1. '1'"'l1“€“ “° l"? ihifiiéii Silk e D o was us _ - turn.‘ said the Lieutenant. Round tail and he suspected 110i" R~ Rot into position and as we 8M1!‘- Dnoi, “med his)! iiross the channel 8 . flangrhelnrhnner must have b"!!! kiiléd for there was no return fire _ _ _ T1113 night fiithtinz business 1s becgminz rather ifasclnatin! ed forces and the outpu of every Spanish Town; MADRID. Heb. i‘! — (Monday) — (AP) —More than 200 homes in the Bay of Biscay poi-t city of San- iander were destroyed by fire swept by a. high wind and the flames still were roaring early today dis- plte a 24-hour effort by fire-fight- ers to check them. Radio reports from the hurri- cane and fire-stricken town said the fire started in an explosion aboard LISBON, Feb. 17-(AP)-A sudden hurricane, pumetmcs blowing at 125 miles .n hour. crumpled houses, killed or In- jured at least 184 rsons, and sank the girnt Bri ish Airways flying bout Clyde in the Tagus River Saturday. Twenty-five persons were re- ported drowned at Alhandra. l0 miles up the Tagug River when a boat sank during the hurri- cane. Nine persons d'ed in Lis- ditures to the limit and the total -_. M" “m; 150 ‘were lnjure‘; pm. perty damnse was estimated at rllllllfeds of thousands of doi- ars. an oil tanker in the harbor. The winds picked up the blaze and dough a greater part. 0f the cit-y as iize-flijiitcrs rusiic .1 tlicre frcm as far auay as Madrid. 125 - mile wind causes destruction. l‘ mmunications with Bantsnder were cut except for the radio calls from a ship in the harbor. Fh-agmentary reports received here by radio said fears were felt that the conflagratiori might be a repeti- tion of the disaster of 50 years ago when half the city was destroyed in the explosion of a shiploiid of contraband dynamite. Firemen were seeking do perately to control the flashes. and most in- habitants had been removed from the blazing areas. these reports said. Thus far only three deaths have been reported. Among the buildings reported de- stroyed or ablaze were the custom; house, cathedral, market houses, and many buildings alum-g the boulcvrxd de Pereadii skirting the waterfront. Another disaster attributed to the storms sweeping Spain occurred during the night bet-ween San Se- basfin and Bilbai where three coache. of a pawcngcr train piling- ed into a river with at least 26 per- sons reported killed and 37 injur- ed. sonic of them seriously. Hurricane ivlnds blew off roof- tops. uprooted t. 'cs 111111 (lisrupted clcci-ric servic. 111 Burgos. Ofiier form riuniige was reported from such widely nsoparc 1d points as Sr- villc, Pamplonu, Clrdoba anti Alga- ciras. LONDON. Feb. 15—(CP)—- War saving is a "great double-barrelied .weap0n-\vhich "helps to bring vic- tory now. and prosperity at e end" of hostilities. Rt. Hon. Ernest Bevan. Minister of Labor and N11- tion Service. told Canadians today in n broazlczist address. "The greater wiliinnness which the people show in placing their surplus cash, large and small. to support the war ffort. the greater is‘ the evidence of their faith in ultimate victory." Mr. Bevin said in his speech, broadcast in Canada over a national network of the Canadian Broadcasting Corpor- ation. Is Sensible Thing But it WIIS "not merely evidence of faith-it is a Sdllsible thing to do," M1‘. Bevin said. "Use your money now by lend- ing it to the state to win the war and you create a great national credit for use at the end of the ivar. iviizcn will enable you to get trade going again quick y. "What we are saving here will help us to buy goods from Canada at the end of the war, and what you save there will enable us to soil to you, and will materially con- ' tribute to maintaining a steady price level for primary producer and inaiiiifiictiircr. "So, i1. is a great double-barrclled \\'£‘2i|JL>ll. It helps to bring victory 11011.‘, and prosperity at the end." Mr. Bevin was speaking on be- half of the Canadian war savings campaign. “I1. is a. great privilege to have this opportiiiiitv of addressing the people of Canada," he said at the start of his talk. “This war has produced a com- radeship throughout the British commonwealth. Whatever tendency iiiere might have been to regard ourselves as separate entities. Hit- icr lius put an end to all that. and knitted us together in a glorious common cause. "One gets a marvellous thrill to see the Canadian boys here stand- ing on guard waiting to repel the invader should he are to attack. It is difficult to find words to ex- press the thankfulnesa inspired by this great act, on the part of the sons of Canada for the preservation of the British family of nations. "The other day we welcomed the pilots who had been trained over he plains and hills of our coun- try, comin to take ther lace in the front no for the de ence of civilization. "Added to this was the splendid speech of your Prime Minister, Mr. Mackenzie King. telling us of the tremendous increase in our arm- 1was bcini: mane now because war- War Saving Is Double - barrelled Weapon Bevin Says ' Developments Linked with iFar East tension LONDON. Feb, 16.—(CP Cable)- Iniormed sources sziid tonight flint as ahirecauticiiurv" measure’ Bfifbii consuls in the Fill‘ East are adva- ing British nationals to leave. if Dfkilblfi. It was pointed out the suzfzestion time demands on sliiupiric make it necessary to flii0\V time for c0111- pleting evacuation urraiiizeiiieiils- WASHINGTON, Feb. 1_6.-—(AP)— The concern of_tlie United States over the tense situation iii the Far East; was emphasized Saturday by conferences of state secretary Hull with the British. Australian and Netherlands envoys. _ Viscount Hadfax, the British am- bassador. and Richard G. Casey. the Australian minister. held an hours joint discussion with‘ l-lu1l nftcr which Dr. A. London. the Nomi-r- lands’ Minister. conferred with tire Secretary of State for 30 minutes. SHANGHAI. FY21). 16—(AP)——F0r-I clan military observers said tonight that Japan had established the izu- cleus of a military air base at Suin- on, southern French Indo-Ciiuia. and that this was potentially one of the most important of Japan's rc- iiiuam, Samoa As ll. S. Bases Pacific Islands. as naval aviation “lookout stations" was recommended liouse of Representatives naval com- mittee Saturday after it heard se- cret testimony from the navy com- mand regarding the Far Eastern situation. The committee's recommendations were made ‘in approvmrz legislation authorizing expenditure of ap- proximately $400.000.000_ for ex- pansion of many ekistuig naval shore bases and establishment new facilities. Funds for a iarae c a President Roosevelt earlier in the week. There was no discussion of the Guam or Samoan projects at public sessions of the committee. but Ciiuu- wiien the legislators went over the program with Admiral Harold It. Stark. chief of naval operations. Another crisis Lctms at 0 city Another critical period in the French govciiii "iit of Prcniici" Pe- .>.t summer. zip- ui‘ the near lu- y 111g ., with hint. that stun 1111112011 would be "uisored (iiailiiiflil utcd press stuff cor- . . 100111 1:1 VLhy snid that it was bcuevcd iiicre 1111.11 Mar 11a‘. Petaiii would step zisirlr: iii the event of a ucai p je cal by political circles oe- r Afiml ' Pierre ll('il 111111. rise to specu- ltlursiiul Pctniii might ~ and perhaps ies ‘1 in the Vichy i".‘glll1(‘ to inu-ryzciv Lava}. _ said they believed that 111 n11 cffnrt to gri Laval ~1vi1o urn v —buck 11110 1.11s cabinet Ad- l rnirnl Dnrfnn would offer iiim the rico-Iiiwuiiicrsliip. he Premier's post. 1111151115111 Hollaiidcis “will b;- maiie i0 under- trriiglpczple" the‘ ting 0n com- fouiidntions of u. s Nazi governors in 8PAGl3S ‘if wasumown. r1111». 16.—(AP)— Development of Guam and Sauios, unanimously by the United stabel part oi the work were requested 1.y, man Carl Vinson told ncwsincn the, subject was tiiorouuiily Qiblolkld‘ Jean , Trit iiilgllCil 111 Eiusope. siand ii..cess:iy for order, discipline jbeene Br ugh Emma LhelefoggJgyis mndnrliy "ml Dub“ Spmt 5'5 possibility 0f an actual Japanese 1 (Continued on page '7, Col 3) pi lsciy r sc 1 .11. miic BIGIO oent acts in the Far East. Saloon, near the southern tip of; Indo-China. is less than four hours‘ r flight by modern bomber from Brit- ains naval stronghold of Singapore. The Japanese made no demnn<1s._ on Indo-China and used no force. but siinpv sent army crows ashore from cruisers tied up at Saiiwn 011d then landed bombers at SAIROXII modern-weii-eauipned airwort- 200 Blackshirts Escape from 1000 ATHENS. Feb. i6. 16-—A Greek Government spokesman re orted tonight a battle in which ony 200 Italian soldiers of two battalions totalling 1.000 biackshirts escaped. Greek forces. the s okesman said kind of etfuipment from your fac- tories. wh ch. together with your response to your war savings cam-j sign, is no mean contribution to {he great objective." Bi0§50M . It il 1.11.... 1m nam- J ant you. Alfonso had shown "siiuht "I10" ' If” meat.” more tiri in: but it ts mostniiitsrnstlnrwortr’! stopped Italian nttac s and then launched their own offensives at two points on the Albaniln frflnt- HGdGXMt sectors were not iden- e . Assncizitcil Press Staff Writer CAIRO. Feb. lG.PiAP)~Il.c-0cui1— 111111011 c1 the strutcuic Ethiopian- Suinurso frontier post of Kurmuk. ncur the hcuiiwutcrs of Llic Nile about ‘.300 iiiilcs ucst of Adis Abdba, was announced today by British general headquarters. l British airuicn and their com-i 111C108 from South Africa continued w their SilliLSiilliR aerial preparations ‘pfunc for further land advances into Eri- ‘growing Far bust cflils. LONl)0N -—Nighl 111111111- can 10- i ‘mic, iolloiv invuiihiq pliincs, There was no oiiiciui report on ;Ministry indicates invasion p activities on the North African hinsicd throughout u-r-ek-i-nd; mi.i-‘ front where British troops last weine tary objectives bombed 111 Ruhr. CAIRQ-Iie-occupatlon of strat- Ethiopian-Sudanese siiaii East Airica. hundreds of miles ‘post of Kurmuk announced. ATIll-INS—~Oni.v' 200 Italian the Italians abandoning Kurmuk dlcrs of were being pursued into Ethiopia. 1.200 lilar-kmiris rsciiiic They were said to be only a 51111111 battle with Greeks. NEW YORK — lliirrv Hopkins. Egyptian Sudan. just across the President liousrvrivs returning S11E- Ethiopian border. was taken by the clal r-mi-aary in Britain, says lim- ltaliziiis inst siiiiiiucr before the pirc ivill win war. trca arid Italian Sonialilaiid. ‘Ilic British forces now lioid 10.000 square miles of Iialinii Sonialiiand. reported driving toward Tripo capital of Libya. Eritrea, Ethiopia and Italian Somaliland make 11D It- from the Libvan front. Uneificiaiiv it was reported that rcc. Kiumuk. which lies in Analo- Briiisii troops started their Ens v African campaign to (ii‘l\'€ the Fns- , cists from the continent. Ago Today 111:1; 17_ 111111 R. . .111 i rcc- 1n the Caucasus advanc 11g on 1111b‘.- crinn. Turk <11 almien 32rd iii 1 west r-i i‘ bunbril B.1...sl1 11" 0;» b.s KlJi-(l-Aililfil. MiilflCiillnlfl (icr- 1Bcvin tr man and Austrian cmsuls at Ath- savings ens arrested. itish Occupy Strategic Post Frontier center 200 miles West of Addis Ababa falls to South African Troops. lnternatio Annual lnbscription Delivered, ".00 _ By Kalil l’ l. 1., H.001 olllllll nnl U. l. ll-fl VRITISH LAY MINEFIELIJS T0 PROTECT SINGAPORE Hurricane And Fire Take Toll 200 homes bur-tied in Move Comes As Tension In Far East Increases Mined Waters would prevent Surprise Japanese attack against British key base. LONDON, Feb. l6—(CP)—Apparently suspicious of I Japanese thrust in the Far East, Britain announced today she had mined the sea approaches to Singapore, her great Oriental naval bastion. A brief Government notice to mariners gave no ex- planation for the minefield at the tip of Peninsula. Officials also were silent. It came on_top oi‘ a week of anxiety in the Dominiona across the Pacific, and the Sunday Times warned Axis- aiiied Japan that if she took any aggressive step she would find herself cut out of the post-war foreign trade she needs to support herself. Japan, the newspaper said, “couid not expect that we could trade on the same terms tomorrow with a country which fried t0 stab us in the back today." liriiaius announcement of the mineiieids said :—- "i_‘hc British (iovcrnmeni give notice that the following urea IS dangerous to navigation-all the area hounded:-- “On the north by a parallel of 002 do; .-es 4i north; “()n the cast by a meridian of 104 degrees 30 east; “On the south by a parallel of 001 degrees 35 north; “(in the west by the coast of Nizilziyzi. "Rimes will be laid in the above area without further ' _ .. is wishing lo pass through the area must apply t0 British naval ziuthoriiies at Singapore for the route. Any vessel disregarding these instructions will do so at its own risk flllfl peril." Perhaps sitrnificzintLv, the Sunday Times editorial fore- -shzuiowed the mining announcement with this recollection of the Russo-Japanese war of 1904-05:- “She (Japan) gained an immense advantage at the out- set of her hstoric conflict with Russia by entering Vladi- Ivostok harbor without a declaration of war and torpedoing zit anchor the fleet of her unsuspecting enemy. “She has not forgotten that stroke. Nor shall we forget Dw-jnz the PM‘ week tension 1n_ ' creased shzirmy over the possibility Mums h,“ cnpnharauon Wm, Gm" ‘of an iinmmciit southward drive by _ Japan is known to hold ambitions forubroadciiiiii: In that. cnsc- ‘t iva." said, Admir- SOP l’ , . , 111 Dnrlau \\"o11"i ntivcmce himself to §§§§§§“.‘,§"§§?e,‘,‘§§ lflng_égfingfld ‘i g DJfi/lifilils in the Axis h -—-——~— reaiy, o ervers presume s ewould N IIOLLANI) jtinic any offensive of her own LONDON —(CP)~— So 19-ycui'-01d".%s1'Qa1 “m ““‘“‘""" 1 DIES OF INJURIES FREDERIUPON. Ficb. 16—fCP) — .11“ 6111mm w 11cc Gerald McArthur, 18, of Victoria e iMills, died in hospital here today 11' gof injuries suffered Frida when A‘ 1h: was hit by aid Cooper, Lincoln. N. B a car driven Dori- McArthur was riding a bicycle at the time of the accident. Skidding on icy pavement, the car overturn- 1ed and knocked him over an em- e bankment. He never regained conscioulncm. Cooper suffered minor injuries No inquest will be hold. Tue Brsr Pam" or M091" Soios 19 Tat: END- At A Glance. t. he: to Singapore in face eglc IiONDON-llisclusc lliiignrln fiiil—1 ed to nssui» llriialn she would not‘. nld Hitler ln Bulkiins. War—25 Years if h: ‘ii p.111 si lnu. (‘mini and S divhlons wen lhrcaii-ncd. ‘ — (‘him-so govern» 1 LISBON -llurricnnr kills or in-‘ jiilcs I81: sinks llrilish lying hrut. .- (‘I l-z mend rcuchui pent, 75 n1 li-s Z‘i0f1~."i- “magic. LONIIO. —-L:\bor ‘Minister Ernest‘ ' ( undo in hrnadrastwar "doubie-barrelled weiv TORONTO_ Ab. lit-fOPl-Mun- unum and maxilla. temperatures: Dawson 8 19 Victoria 38 52 Edmonton l9 I17 Regina 9 23 Winnipeg l0 211 Toronto l6 ‘l’? 0i tniva zcixw 1'1 Montreal 6 1.0 Quebec :1 2i Saint John l8 23 Halifax 24 34 1 Charlottetown l6 80 FORECAST Maritime East: Strong winds or sales; cloudy and cold with snowfall! or finrrles. Synopsis: The weather has been ‘niodcratcly cold in Maui .b -S:1skrti-chcwa:1 nnd mild 1n Alberta. M dcraiely cold weather has pre- vniled in Ontario. Hitlh tidt this ddtcffitfn lit 241 and tomoiTow morning a‘. 325. Sun sets this afiemoon at 530 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.57. Last quarter mom Fob. 1B. 3-177 11m. Simuncizsidc tide 18 minutes iii-t- er than Cliarhtteiown. CAR FERRY SAILINGS Leaves Borden 9.40 AM. PM.’ “is 4.1-1 Leave-S Influential. . .15 e. u. the bialayan light r1 and