MAXIMG GPA MERE MAN gang-n mm when he is ulouo. A wise mun i: never loll Alone ND ‘ii. din. ‘lwo Coulo- "‘"'°"°'°'“ m" Founded m1 Inruiul Guurdlum fut Gasoline Ration I Necls Holding Al gall t. iqlibed Army. killinl 22$’ gfiifiimstbbiirfii’ 5 - an Soviet high nncunced today on t-he sleze. ‘i attack in the north- or was repulsed 04111118 We re ‘Tuesday midniilhi» 00m‘ d “particularly were suffered by the fll lilfllfiwlvhglllun . nflgd yesterday. the command ii day oi , a where tare - 'l';l'd n Mon ay. llflllltlll‘l‘ltlivi'€bwl'n sector of the city run lilo Germans an: making their llliljill‘ assault. alurc than 700 Germfln5 lily M! ‘ hill use‘; yhtoe final Nam zlssuult had subsi e‘ B. 1/65- xoiriuy. A total of 20 Nazi tanks al- so irere destroyed in the sector \\lll(‘li includes a workers settle- Illfilll. Above the city between the Volfll. and Don Rivers the Russians still were hammering the German flank 1n an effort to ease the DRBSUIQ 0H Sizihnaradls garrison. which fought on from their bomb craters and balm-d buildings inside the city. More than 2.000 Germans were killed, and 49 tanks. l8 R1105 End 33 mortars were destroyed in the 1M!’- threc days in that sector. Although the Russians did not report any fill‘- thm‘ gains against the German llkillllfi they quoted German prison- ers as saying that some Nazi com- panies were reduced to as few as l6 and Z5 men. 'l‘he Volga fleet still was using its gulls on the Germans above the till‘, and was credited with dispers- ing or annihilating about two enemy battalions during the day. At Mozdok in the mid-Caucasus the Russians said their troops de- fending the approaches to the G - oil fields. some 50 miles m had lost ground temporarily in one scctol’. but that counter- bi "~ had restored their original .- is o lions. 1n another area on the same front the Russians said they d\".\ll‘O_\‘Cd ll Nazi tanks and killed 3L0 Germans in xepulsing several enemy attacks. Warns Against Loose Talk LONDON. Sept. 29—iCP)—~Prlme lvhnisrer- Churchill cave the House pl Commons a one-sentence warn- lnrz against loose talk about a sec- ond from. today while the BBC in a rxeneh-lauauaue broadcast advis- ed the French people to await calmly the Allied offensive "in the niakiig." 1t ,was manifest that Mr. Church- ill and BBC were not at cross pur- poses. for the broadcast was seen as merely another of a series of ap- peals asking the French to sit tight, and assuring them they would be told in tune when an offensive was on. To some observers the whole im- plication of Ml‘. Churchill's m. marks. which were notable for their omissions. was this: We have plans for winter and spring but e1 s keep Hitler guessing. Gaming Events Navy making a OTTAWA. Sept. 29 -—(CI’)— Ono hundred thousand tom of naiis-"an amount almost equal to tho woigbt of liaol required for ilha nation's gun production progranW-nnw are being med annually in Canada, the muni- tions and supply department the unnecessary use of nails now is probibifcd under an order which confines tho consumpi.‘ of all lypcs of stool in essential purpolu, we must restrict even permissibic to the burcst min- m m" Stool Conh-ollcr F. B. Kilbourn said in the deppri- mantel statement. ‘wherever possible", ails, so the demand for new nails would bo reduced and I nollcr amount of stool bo made uvullable for production of gum. funln, and ships. New Navy Appointments Announced. HALIFAX. 56PM 29--(CP)—Ne'w appointments affecting senior of- ficers of the R0 al Canadian Navy were aImQll-hc tonllllt by ill here. Rear Admiral G. O. Jones. R.O.N".' commanding officer Atlantic Coast since September, 1940. has been ap- pointed to Naval Service Head- quarters as Vice-Chic! of the Naval Stuff to date from Oct. 9. Rear Admiral I... W. Murray. R. C-N.. at resent flag officer. New- foundl forces. is appointed com- manding officer Atlantic Coast to eq date from Sept. 18. Commodore H. E. Reid. RCN. Vice-Chief of Naval Staff and Can- adian naval member of the Canada- United States joint board of de- fence. is goinz to Newfoundland as Commodore commanding New- foundland forces, beginning Oct. 25. Captain H. T. W. Grant. R.C.N-. Chief of Naval Personnel, is going w Newfoundland as Captain (D) relieving Captain E. R. Mainiluy. R. C.N.. who is returning to Naval Ser- vice Headquarters as Chief of Naval Personnel- Are Grateful For Red Cross Help WINNIPEG, Sept. 29-40?) _ Viscount Bennett, former Prime Minister of Canada, told a lunch- eon meeting here today that the Canadian o and people of Britain who have been helped by the Canadian iced Cross Society are “deeply grateful." Address ng the Manitoba branch of the Red Cross. Viscount Bennett said Canadians who worked for the Red Croes could be n~oud they were "vital contribution r wards the happiness of the Can. aclian forces overseas and people who had been bom‘ j out of their _0- "'I‘a!.‘.<ics-—Canoe Cove Friday. 9-30-21. "Talkies-MT. Stewart Saturday. 9-30-2i. "Dan _ s Iva A§§..C.‘S"“6§'°vil°l‘.‘. “wig-N "Dance. St. PetcrEBay. Friday Ind. Cliifordls Orchestra. 9-30-21. "Dance Georgetown Hall, October 151- Webster's Orchestra. 0-29-21. "Cmdlaan. Thursday. n tlonal 1m Board. ms sound Moi???‘ u "Georgetown Wednesday Nat- ic l F ' ' Mlclzics. “m Bond’ so“ 9-30-11- "Wfi Riiuire a uantitv of wcll flel d " Br3$e”3l»‘??i‘.ia°.“ - martyr "Protestant G,h . maze sale. ThllI8d.IrY\‘x°mOI'1l‘lllln$, lgldlllkh Building next u; prince ward Theatre. p.30.“ i .___ "The Potato Starch Factories t Hunter River and Murray Hubs;- fl- homes." Plan Local y Ratio» Boards‘ UITAWA. Bent. 29 - (CM _ Community offichla flitting as local ration board u-e to lum- thp plus of consumers for whom rationing Pfirlllatlons have created diff ultv ‘he Wartime prim; Board rovealodwodsy. An outline of the pmwrom fm‘ fiettinrr up more than 500 boards to uutconiumcrs in I-vgry loo-n. lty in morn direct much with 1pc administration of Canada's ration- iuc system” was ulveh by Donal Gordon Price Hoard chairman. to the Ffkccuiive Cowmlttee of the Caveman Ibderutlon of Mayors and Municipalities. Mayors and reeves of ennui-o; viii-are. boards are to be established will be asked to nary» n chat-men. Local governments will be asked fo contribute the part-Hm»- services of senior municlrwl offlcinl- to not and Trade as secretaries and io provide ac- f, are n nmmodniinn, fuv-"Winrs. a d °" °°°“ ‘°‘ m‘ m‘ ’°3f§’,§‘_-6,_ fulllMflfiflll m permit the bond I‘ o "n a “"_ -......r..a..r:¢~ with A O. Green Albnn and G oreeir-zrmsia. b-a-v-i -w-'r-1i-tr "C ll Picasso filmueongi - Fredericton, blflmqm": "Annual Chickc Supper at It. wtllrknrets, Wcdne py, flgptgm 1- 1f not fine Thursday. i “ llv of the mum Prcobyte a: are '...=*=..a*“s..<r~e.ril* Ootobnt om. pwffi,‘ I-N-N. b“ fiilifijlq Mute. MWM‘ Stanley Lewis of Oihwl president of the Federation. m- f; proved u» nlnn. r- mud u. "the first aim town»! th- lang-ovnrdna democratic nnhillmtlon of n- aoumm 0W1! facilities of local gov- emencnts.” , _._.._..__.__._.._ INTI-ll T0 SPIAK (Mom Ger-nun Broad- I-(AIN- liar will meeting flu in t party u (1 pm. A c c Nutzonul 80c Wednesday Borl (The lnnoimcemmt when ibo addnu would be mode. l p.m. e CHARLOTTETDWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER Unit To Be Good For 4 n-L-Zm-uad Gallons‘; Now scared... Urges Fewer Nails B6 Used Urge Western Fann- ers to Use More Dis- tillate in Tractors. 0I'I‘AWA.. Sept, 29—(CP)—Mot- orists in the provinces of Manitoba. Saskatchewan and Alberta will have their gasoline ration cut from ‘five to four gallons a unit. the MIIIHWJIIS and supply Department announced today. The one-fifth reduction becomes effective at the conclusion of tomor- row's business and will mean a further and unexpected cut for the thousands of prairie drivers who Will be reduced from "A" to the MW category which comes into effect Oct. 1. The reduction brings 111M146 DW- vince motorists. the last in Canada w enjoy the original five-gallon quota, to the ration level now in ef- fect in Ontario, uebec and Brit- ish Columbia. In t e Maritime Pro- vinces the unit has a value of three gallons. Increased demands from the northwest and heavy use of 8B5- oline in harvesting a bumper crop were given by Oil Controller G. R. Cottrelle as reasons for the cut. "The position in the prairie pro- vinces is acute." Mr. Cottrelle said in the departmental announcement. “The difficulty of bnnina sub- plies of Petroleum into Canada has ed and the war demand ration might be necessary. "Hcretolore the west has been able to obtain a measure of relief, by drawing on eastern refineries but this is no longer possible be- cause of the movement of petrol- eum products from Ontario to Que- bec and the Maritimes." he explain- “The rise in demand is greatest at the moment in the northwest where great quantities of petroleum products are bing consumed for the Alaska highway." Where formerly the prairie mot. orist with an “A" ration book got 300 to 380 gallons annually depend- ing on the size of his car. the re- duction means he now will act 240 to 325 llallons. Prairie motorists who are class- ified in the new “A.A" category which goes into effect Oct l will get a maximum of 6i gallons to do them until next April 1, instead of the 80 gallons they expected to db- tain with their l6 "AA" coupons. True Bill In Murder Base ST. ANDREWS. NB. Sept. 29- <CP)-- A True Bill against Tom Roland Hutchings. Royal Alr Force sergeant charged with murdering Bernice Connors, was returned by a. grand jury in the Charlotte Cir- cuit Court today. A possible irregularity in sum- moning members of two panels, from which a petit jury was to be selected. delayed further proceed- ings and raised a prospect that new panels might be ordered. This would mean an adjournment of the trial. Nrtv-elght names of those sum- .moned for jury duty appeared on the roll, instead of’ the maximum number of 42. ‘Mr. Justice CD. Richards adjourned court till te- morrow morning pending consider- ation of the matter. The grand iurv was out for a1- - mhsl: three hours and examined 10 witnesses. l-Iutchinvs. wearinv his nlr force uniform. pleaded "not guilty" in a clear voice. He showed no emotion ‘and little interest in the proceed- ngs. " up fikipa-Hvp n. Loan $l2.500.000 “SAINT JOHN. N.B.. Sent. 29- (cpl- New Brunswick’: minimum obiectfve in the forthcuninre third victoiv loan was announced today as $l2.bfl0.000. excludiruz allocations 0m subscriptions by corporations and institutions of ~ Dominion- " wide character. Mlrymum qunhw for New Brunswick in the first and second vlciory loans. roar-ant- ivelv. were Nlnfiflmo and slum. 0m. Both were heavily over-rub- scribed. ._.___.__._._.___.._.... ATTLII IN MONTREAL MDWIRIML. Boot. 29—-(C"\-— Rt. Hon. Clement n, Attica. Bri- fish secretary for rho Domlnlom. paid an informal Wait today to Montreal. Mal. Aitlee arrived unannoun- rorl by plane from Ottawa and did not meet with newsw-vnovmen. length of his sin-v Avid hi: future plum could not be learned. }W[/ ///» The People's Paper fnwwv" Covers Prince Edward ///;/// WAW‘ %>§' _..... ..~._____________‘ Island Like ‘the Dew Read by Everybody N-.- _v—4~' .. .m.»... .. u cough by them ready made. MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN —_-_—- Adopt; In the spcukln: trade been 4J- War Situation Last Night n Three Prairicjfr (By Klrkc L. Simpson. Associated Press War Analyst) If the Churchill bad on fng at all for German cars it Berlin exactly the effect Mr. Ch might otherwise have deemed possible. And urchili aimed at. lie has the second-front speculation has any mean- must be that the event itself is closer than that, possibly, is been an apt pupil in the school of Nazi war-of-ncrves technique. I l O t O If’ the Churchill comment is taken literally, it could not be aimed at the recent remarks of Wendell L. Wlllkle or Geu, Wavell. Neither dealt at all in the when or where or how. casts warning French nationals in Channel that an Allied offensive was “in t did not already have. mans much information they Nor could ri-iicrated British broad- the Nazi-occupied regions across Ger- he making" give the Mr. Churchill and Mr. Roosevelt have both said the same thing re- peatedly. They to know that in the British Isles. have been anxious for the foe as well as the home folks a joint force geared and’ trained for attack is mustcring 30, 1942 '.‘lork ~ Shoss To Be Rationed In ll. WASHINGTON. Sept. 29—(AP)-—— The United States Office of Price Administration toasty ordered the rationing of rubber boots and rub- ber work shoes effective Oct. 5. Effective at midnight toniuut all such stocks on the shelves were ordered frozen until the rationing beams. Then the goods will be sold on certificate only to men working on Jobs csSCTiiliil to the ular or to bubnc health and safe . I ll/ .. Women's and children's rubber north, and piles of equipment llicy abandoned were boots and ordinary rubbers. .arc- And now comes convincing evidence that the knowledge. for from L165‘ and gum“ are not affected by helping Nazi strategists man nerves. It prompted the Berlin assertion that American fronnshilts m.“ 5.x typgs Lon don now has dismissed that with the p90“ and rubber work Shges means? had been sunk in the Atlantic. words, "quite untrue." I I t 1 u Thcsc Nazi sea success claims, whether blown up as in the case of’ Arctic convoy happenings or made-ln-Bcrlin out of whole cloih like the American troopshlp lic ... easiness over sinking fake, are strong evidence of increasing pub- thc war outlook in Germany. Their purpose must be to bolster German nerves against second-front apprehensions or to oh- scure the clear evidence that Hitler's perilously close to bugging down for Queens “victor-gr? campaign in Russia is another winter. County Conservatives Hold Miciting _ M1‘. W5. Grant is elected president; HonYDr. ' WJP. MacMillan in Rousing address. Mr. W. S. Grant, Charlottetown. was elected ' of the sociation at the largely attended annual meeting held last night in the B. I. s. Hall, Charlottetown. He succeeds Mr. P. W. Turner. Charlottetown. Other officers elected included: Vice President, Mr. George Mc- Kay, Emerald, re-elected; Secre- tary, Mr. M. Alban Farmer. The executive elected is as fol- lows: lst District, Mr. George McKay, Emerald and Mr. Walter Ooady, Emyvale; 2nd. District. Mr. F. J. ‘Irainor, ‘Pyrone and Mr. M. J. Doyle, North Rustico; 3rd. District, Mr. Wylie Gibson, Marshficld and Mr. Russell Dris- coil, Mt. Herbert; 4th. District, Mr. George McLean, Lewes and Mr. JOseph Chisholm. U188: 5th. District, Mr. W. S. Grant, Char- lottetown. Mr. M. Alban Farmer, Charlottetown and Mr. George Grant», Royalty. Hon. Dr. W". J. P. MacMillan, Provincial Conservative leader, de- livered a stirring address to the enthusiastic audience stressing the seriousness of the war and urging an acceleration of Canada's ‘war effort. He scored the failure of Prime Minister King to take od- vantage of the British proposal to establish the British Common- wealth Air Training Plan in Can- ada in 1938 thus losing two val- uable years in building up the Air Force of the Empire. “Two years of that important work was lost because of Prime Minister Mackenzie ‘King's bung- ling," he declared. 0n that occas- n King would not cooperate with the British when they came to Canada to start the plan and it was “turned down by the dis- graceful action on the part Mackenzie King and his cabinet." l-Ie charged that at present Can- ada had a "bile-sided overn- ment" and was the only pace in the British Commonwealth of Na- tions "when they haven't united." He pointed to the example set by Great Britain "where they rcal~ fmed the need of a supremo all out effort and got the political par- ties lined up." I-Ie asked if Mac- kenzie King thought he had “n. monopoly on brains" because 0f his large following in Parliament and charged that "his only poll- tical future was tho future of hi! party." The present Federal Gov- - 0 l (‘Gmtinued on page_l,__qol S) Married Men MONTREAL, Sept. (CP) —Ellinl. M. Ililiii‘, rlircct. or of Notional Selective vice, staid today in an fulcr- vlcw that the calling up of l8 and lfLycar-nld youths and married men for compulsory military service l5 a “distinct possibility." He added, however, that pre- sent supplies of manpower for the armed forces are frr from exhausted. Recommend Break With Axis ‘BUENOS AIRES, Sept. 29- (APl-Jrhe Argentine Chamber of Deputies tonight approved a reso- lution recommending n break in diplomatic relations with the Axis. The vole was not expected to have any direct effect on the gov- ernment's policy of “prudent neu- trality," however, for the conscr- vative senate is supporting Presi- dent Ramon S. Castillo and is not likely to act with the Chamber, where a coalition of Liberals can outvote the Conservatives. The resolution was adopted after a long debate on foreign re- lotions. Find Man’s Body In Garden! At St. J ohn’: ST. JOHN'S NPLDJ Sept. 29 -- (CP Cable) - The decomposed body of an unidentified man was found today in the garden of a Bt. Jam's home, and police were mystified by the discovery. Mrs. George Show found the body under arme shrubbery as she returned to her town house after spending the summer in the enun- try. The man apparently had been dead six weeks 0r more. Police said they had no reports of any missing persons correspond- ing to the man's description. The body showed no marks of violence. It was dressed in civilian clothes. The man appeared to be between 50 and 60 years old. ‘ Join the osi o Home Bcikrs who- zb’ fathom its place or timing. is harassing (ir-r- ‘m. up...“ or [he rationing, I; af. of men's rubber | OTTAWA. Sept. 2B-(CP)— Wartime Pricvs and Trade Board officials said today there is nn immediate indication that rationing of rubber boots and rubber work shncs. effective in the United States Oct. 5. will be adopted in Canada, Production of’ all rubber foot- wear in Canada is under strict control of the Department of Munitions and Supply. with a- vailable rubber strictly ration- cd in manufacturers. Loss than three per cent of the rubber be- ilv! used in Canada is allocated in footwear for the armed forces and e ntiul civilian needs. t they require a high content of crude rubber and. because of a mounting demand among industrial and agri- cultural workers. The freezing order was designed io halt, before it began. any buy- ers‘ run on the stocks. ‘Th-c order was made public not many hours before most stores normally close ior the day. These types were covered by the 0I‘d!‘I‘I—- HlD-IIQlEZlll rubber boots. includ- ina all of hip. body and thigh hcichts; ovrr the knee rubb'r boots. including "storm king" hoinht‘ nll heavy short rubber boot... all lleht weight short rub- boois; rubber mics and bootees l0 inches or more in height: _. rubber pacs. bootees and Work slices less than l0 inches in height. Il/ews Briefs EDMONTON, —ltcvcnuc ‘Minister Gibson said in an address here today that Canada is producing 30 types of guns, nine types of planes, more than I00 typrs of military ve- hicles and’ cargo ships are being Sept. Zil-(CP) launched at (he rate of one every three days. HALIFAX. Sept. 29—(CP)—A mock air raid was staged ov-er Hal- ifax tonight in the biggest practice attack of its kind here since war began. STELLAR/DON. N.S-, Scpf. 29- iUlU-Thc Albion Mine. tied up for a week after torrential rain waters flooded out the railroad lending to it, was in operation today while other mines in the district, less affected by the clouclburst last week, were back on regular production schedules. MONTREIAL. Sept. 29—(CP)— Mayor F. H. LaGuoxdla of New York and Col. O. M. Blggai‘ of Ot- ioint chairmen of the Can- 10d wa. ada-Uniicd States joint defence board. snid tonight after their ar- rival by plane from Newfoundland where they toured defence posts that "everything we saw boasts well for us and dlsastrously for our en- cmics." a PAGES Much Annual lublcrlptlau Delivered. “.00 By lull: P. I. l. M. ; to other Pruvlncll uld ll, I. l. IIJIO ENENIEEEEOIECED T0 RETREAT IN NEW GUINEA ovincelsEnemy Abandons’ Equipment s Pressure on Port Moresby is eased; Allied Troops turn tables on Japs. (By Murlin Spencer, ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Sept. _ Associated Press Staff Writer) 30— (Wednesday) - (OPP-Allied troops in a swelling counter-thrust against the Japanese in New Guinea have recaptured Morvshy Iorlbalwa Ridge 32 miles north of Port and "our advance continues", a communique said t0day. The Japanese were reported retiring toward Nauro, l0 mlles to the seized by the Allin-d jungle fighters who coiisirli-rabl_y' eased the cucmfs pressure on Purl. Hloresby, The cnnmunlque said:— "IOl'.l)iil\\'1l. Ridge has been tau- turrd by our troops. The enemy lS TCilFiliQ in iho direction of NflllfO. l0 miles l0 the north. Quant. 0f supply and equipmen‘. were abandoned by him and are in our hands" Allied troops, the communique added, found that the Japanese had constructed fled trenches and barricades in anticipation of inc Allen coimter-drive. In this first allied ground offen- sive the Alllcd troops were using the same deceptive tactics of lu- filtrution and flanking movements which characterized the Japanese advance to Iorlbaiwa in a drive which began late in July from Buna on the northern side of the towering Owen Stanley mountains. The Allies were supported by zfi-pounders. by heavy aerial action. and by shorter supply hauls. At Ioribaiwgr the Japanese had been 83 miles from their main base of Elma. For weeks allied airmen have been poundin~ the Japanese l-mrzie line, and a spokesman suggested yesterday that these sustained as- saifis had crippled the striking power of the enemy's ground forces. In the oneraiions ycsierdav Allicd airmen continued to lend "valuable support, attacking enemy row" posiilon near Menari. dcstrnyin: six barges and two anti-aircraft positions m‘ Bunn, and rairlin: Salamaua in unner New Guinea with undeiermincd results. e Gillis Purcell Gets Appointment‘ TORONTO. Sept. 29—(CP>—J A. McNeil. general manager 0f 'I‘l1e Canadian Press, announced today that Glllis Purcell, general supcr- iniendent of the Daily Newspapers‘ Co-opcratlve. has been appointed assistant general manager. Purcell, 3'1, joined the Canadian Press in 1927 and worked success- ively in Winnipeg. Ottawa and Tioronm Bureaux. He was appoint- ed General superintendent in 1934. Bank Holiday In Brazil RIO DE JANEIRO. Sept. 29 - (APl-President Vargas wnigh declared a bank holiday from Sept. 30 through Oct. '1 throughout Brazil, and suspended commerecial debt payments for the same pet- A decree said the action W35 11g’)- essnry for economic mobliizaiion of the nntioifs resources which cari- ier today ivcre placed under con- trol of an economic eo-ordinutcr, Joan Alberta Lins dc Barres, a former minister to Canada. . Expect Major Move By Ottawa Soon OTTAWA, Sept. 2i>—(CP)-An- nounccmcnts 0f major importance "e helm; prepared by the govern- mfllt. having to do with selective service and cabinet reorganization. it was learned today. some of these matters were under consideration by the 50V- ernment. in cabinet council this were forthcoming immediately. Of first importance from an ad- view were cabinet selective Minister Mackenzie King promised to make appointments which would give in minlstratiyc point the appointments to the and the reallocation of service officials. Months ago Prime Quebec equal representation the cabinet with Ontario. At the present time but two. The ministries of Transport and Public works are open due to the resignation of Hon. P, J, A, Car- din as a protest against the gov fnlios. There has been no official in- plans to €ll€€l,_llll-i_Sllilil_tl_Qlll__blllrlnPlll__lfiilVe tlmntlon of Mr. King's _(Continued on pogo 1, col I) Ontario has six ministers and Quebec has Airman— Dies in liosgliial n Sgt. John Holland, 30, a mem- a ernoon but no announcements ber of the Royal Air Force died in llofipiinl here Monday, it was an- nounced lnst night. He was treat. the airport hospital and was removed to a hospital in ed first at the city Sunday. Sgt. Holland about New at the port“ _ ‘S311; noxpofqqn 1s his wife “W, image Wood Islands ..00 a.m-.li.00 lying; hero. Si c t th‘. a-m» 9-!“- countr about ihl-eee Plllnfilelllllz at; “m” (“lbw 9 "m" l vm‘ an‘! from <. gland. Also surviving are 5'30 um‘ two children. e son. from the airport Thursday ullr-r- n nnon at 2 u. m. Hon. Flt. l-i. R1- T. H. B. Somers will conduct. iha SQTVlCC. The body is rosiini Rt the MacLean Funeral noon Thursday, Home un came here with the first group of Royal Air Force men lo lake over at the airport Years ln 1M1. He was one of the regular pilot instructors Barry five v yIcars old and a daughter Pamela. crumenlis move to take authority "m, ‘mm H“ pnrema‘ Mr‘ mm to couscript men for service over- seas. Mr. Cardin held lxitlrpori- Mrs. John Holland are in Eng- land. Funeral services ‘will be held . _._.. ' _,_.~_______ i eavy Fire llamag) STE. ANNE DES MONTS. Que" Stpt. 29'—\Cf')—Wl1lLl-ldlllitdflaili- cs Lnat raged out oi control 101' main nours gutud ‘XXIQIK; man a third oi the illlif: Gasue vuluaebgf lviursulu Sunday and Monday". were checked before they swellt in- to the centre oi the villaue Fifteen liouscfi. a when. a small bridge. iour sheds and three barns icll prey to the ilunles. driven throughout the blaze by a powerlul wuid. in iiddlll0ll. a larae Quantity 0f finished lumber was GCSLICYCQ- Fust reports oi the ilrc reached. here today after disrupted wic- phonc and telegraph communica- trons hau been partially restored. The lumber, awaiting shipment. was the m-oryerty oi the COULUHLI‘ and Flls Limited. but the mill itself escaped the flames. Also untouched were the village church. a general store and an hotel. Japs Claim New Landings NEW YOYRK, Sept. 29 — (A‘P\— A Dcmel dispatch brcadcast from Tokyo tonight asscrtcd Japanese naval unils had made new land. ings in the Tanimbar, Kei. Aru and Baribar Islands north of Aus- tralia, thereby completing oc- cupatlon of the Arafura Sea area. Key vpolnis in those islands, how. ever, are known ‘to have been in Japanese hands for some time and. if any Allicd troops still remain on the Islands they are Only is- olated groups of natives. U. S. (J-ASUALTIES WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 -(AP\ —Thc United States Merchant Murine has lost 2,301 men dead or missing as n dizect result of enemy action in the war at sen. the Navy Department reported today. Making public for the first time Merchant Marine casually re- cords compiled by the Coast Guard, the Navy said there were 410 known dead and 1,891 missing up to Aug. 1. i No MAN CAN Ana 40 His Halal-n‘ BY daemon-re. on MHER Peoates , ‘fuse 0-6112 r.- lllszh tide this afternoon at 3.41 are] tomorrow morninfi at 3.09. d Sun sets this evenina at fig?’ l“ rises tomorrow mcrnnul at 6- .62‘ Last quarter moon Oct. 2. - mm. CAR FERRY SEltVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden-Drove a-m-t u.m.. 3.05 p.m.. 6.45 p.m., 9-10 pm. SUNDAY SIZRVICE (My 3 to Dec. 27 inclusive] Leave Borden 9.00 u.m.. 6.45 Leave Tormcnllne 10.15 a.m-. p-In. P.E.I.-N.S. FERRY SERVICE AIR SERVICE Charlottetown-Summerslde- Mnncion 12.45 p.m. V. p.m. SUNDAY SERVICE ill Leave (‘harloltcfmvn 12-45 pan. Leave Manchu 4.15 pJl. ‘i763 lmnvue Charlottetown 6.35 a.m.l la-nvue Summc-rsidc- 7.10 a.m.', 1.20 .m. Leave Moncfon ll a.m.: and 8.10 i5? .