OI L MERE MAN ii I -o ' O flghtlodsulloalvslesa. _l a, pies Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew _-i Without labor noihliig [Hill-j i MAXIMS ~ OFA MERE MAN ___ t __|_s— g --'-'--' 1-w- ""--°"" ciiaizwrrsrow-ivfcaisiaobl. ‘ EL RET EATS THROUGH THURSDAY?‘ unusually 2s, 194s 141;: fiBlast ‘Shatters Several Ji/indows No One Injured,- Citizeris Are Excited By Occurrence. Ilig Increase In P.E.I.Production Cheese 8i Butter so increase of 8.! _ com, in hi‘ Iiffiductlon and .4 per cent cheese productim was achieved yssr by Prime Edward Island 0111170811. ED011811 Mr. W. Roger- soii, Dominion dairy produce grad. q st yester 's annual meeting ei the PEI. ii-ymears Ausocig- lion. The i048 butter production was 3.533.306 . omn- Ked with 2,644,614 lbs. in 194i, eese production last year wgg M11973 lbs. as compared with 106.70! lbs. In 1M1. Mp E- 6- Helm. DeSsble. was re- ected president at yesterday ‘ ‘s session. Other officers elected were: vice accident. Lleut. .1. J. MacDonald, lenflnriim: retary - Treasurer, I. (i. Wright; au tor. J. G. Dennis. Directors named were: J. Uricoln Dewar. New Perth, for King's Bounty: Walter Buntain, Ruatioo, Queen's and C. E. Gamble, n. for Prince. president ltolm was in the chair Ind follflwink his opening remarks the financial statement was sub. fitted by secretary S. C. Wright. e activities of the year were lien reviewed In a address In Bolas. ln the afternoon vie addressed we m. . w. ‘Parn- ailiaics chairman of the National irlnancs Committee, who urg- ed the daIrvn-ien to get solidly be- iind ariv financial drives to raise tuids for Canada's war effort. Matters pertaining to the cheese ustrv in general and the Cheese rd In ‘particular were dealt with In a talk U? Mi‘. W. R. Show. iv minister of Agriculture and Ii was followed bv an interesting lime demonsnmtion given by Mr. (Continued on page ii, col l) _.___.________i mprQhQflIlVQ the < meeiing P lerman Radio Stations llff llir WNDON. m. at -(CPl— The lei-man radio station Deutschland- llilder and llhe Kalundboro station i Denmark wont off the air to- WM. possibly indicating another A-lnf; strike at northwestern Coming Evnis "Talkies-Montague Slturday. 2-24-41. "lislkles-Sourls Monday, u‘ m h Due to arrive: hulk oats and lk wheat. Book now. McGulgan "id Ber-e. a-io-ini "Free Sound Movies. National 711m Board. t. Stewart, ‘will! York Tuesday. Sprink Park v cdnesday. Parkdole Thursday. ernon Friday. 2-20-1. "Willing hogs this week. Albany as ii’§.‘v‘“i.ani‘i‘"fi’§3°“‘..m. “hi”? "tn and A. C. Green. "Reserve Satin-d ftc co . {lnigfll I'll-h sale of ‘hem: corgkirllg Immflfkiluxaifiigcles. Pnscilla zqzrgiifi. soc , onus: .‘l{i.'t"ii“i.'.?%t€.’.“"' a-io-aa-sl ecu 1“ r i "firs: ahihillsdlhotsfhtfnllmwm "liiv- Fulton Warren North ""- ' a-as-si. "Media 1m hogs at prls "r M l than? or an d». Bilafioadfim "Card Part in sid of Altar Soo- t.st. ' - it, sasrhmuarif; s- - . "Home in oi Andrew's a r-n ‘Y’ "hi"! it! at eight - ii. 32th“. Lunéiliyin ~= silt-it‘. Meal-vats. "its _ s- u ‘The annual t M m. . m” “S's mu infill: Dairying O0 will u“ _ y on ‘mead _ Xumlgdlii “Alhgitrons iIPIcni-l! re ulllrlliiellllsdr° o a "New. ' ‘a-‘u-is-si-i-ei. A (Passed by Censor) Au explosion shattered win- dows Iu several houses on the Mount Edward Bead, about o mile from Charlottetown last night. No one was injured but lsi two houses plaster was brokers In addition to dolfllgo loos to windows. The explosion occurred at a- bout 11.26 p.ru. About uu hour later and after considerable search a bole ten feet across residences of Mr. Gordon Warren and Mr. Pres- ton Beck, on the Mount Ed- ward Road. Later what was taken to be two unexploded bombs were also located not far awsy. The Royal Alr Force and the lloyll Canadian Mounted Po- llce were Informed and Inves- tigated. A guard was left on the apparently unexploded bomb. Residents nearby were told that they need riot vacate their houses, however. Ru ll Alr Force official. made no s tement. The explosion shook bulldin in Charlottetown and many oi - Irena were inquiring as to the cause. Plans‘ were heard clrcll around at the time and u- though air force officials mode no statement It was believed two machines landed at the airport here sud that a third when was In tbegrou did not» laud although It for a tilueultgwal-belleyed ‘the bombs were dropwsl from the tlslrd' machine wlilc seemed to be In difficulties. o planes were understood to he from a base in Nova scotia. Members of the Royal Can- adian Mounted Police had not returned from investigating and the office had no statement to mule. Group 0f Canuck Troops llome By THE (JANADIAN PRESS Headed by high-ranking and decorated officers, Canadian troops with experience on the world's far- flung baltlefrouts are now back in the Dominim. res to take up new operational duted hero. Wearing the D.S.O. on his khaki tunic was Col. Arthur Hayward Fraser. the coihmandin who led the al Reg ent of Canada on the arge up the DI- o beaches. fie was enroute to l. We. With him was Brig. J. P. U. Ar- chamboult. director of organisa- tion for the Canadian army bs- fore going overseas, now returning to a t in Ottawa. A ecoi-ated air force officer was F0. L. L. Sharpe of Saskatoon. 23-year old sci-upper who von his spurs In the African campaign. Besides the D.F.C. this youthful flier also wore the insignia of the order of the flying bcot. and i-hl badge of the Caterpillar Club. Two other air force acraopers- better known in the rink than In the skies-in the movement were: Warrant Officers Gus Eichel of Indian Head, Sank, and D. M. Su- therland of Moose Jaw. Sask. Eichel, a sImon-pure worker. re- tired In i039 to Io mic the M!‘ force R5 undefeated amateur light- hesvyweight champion. Suther- land, a professional. once laid claim m he welterweight title of western Canada. a United States army aerierll m; in the movement, along with a Netherlands rear irll. 50th odm h aded for Washington. but 3:; refused to divulge their iden- tities or their missions. Farmers In’ _I Lively, g Heated Discussion a Li l , heated discussion f WY ‘emnati of the praise Mob- or. an illzatlon Boards policy took place address gl- last night followin an ven by Mr. B. P. rial-tier. Monctoii. inteudsnt of Un- srn oymsmt insurance and No- tional Selective Service at the meeting of the P.E.I. Federation of Agriculture held last ailm- The President, Mr. J. J. Trainer of Betlfcrd was in the chair. Mr. Hartley explained how Se- lective Service endeavours to rc- lieva the grave situation facing farm labour today. lle briefly outlined the set-up and polity o! National Selective Service. which aims to have woidrers and poten- tial workers, placed so that the? can be of the atsst advantage in the war effo . Mr. J. Bunbury. disapproved of the prac- tise of giving permits to farm help for winter work on tho mainland. He did not believe farm work We! orial". ‘ Capt. J. L. Read, Borden M»! objection to stating that boys should not he deprived of earninl a. dollar In the winter while the work on the farm was slack. R. Allison Profiitt of Freetown, vigorously protested against the "tantalizing" methods V! M"; llizatlcn Board which hounds young men till they do enlist. ln the name of common sense. Mr. Proifltt asked “if they're not look- ing for rmanerg. jobs for them- selves. WK; doesn't the Boa-rd grant the youn men on the farm indel- miie pos ponement? ‘mere has been the highest per caplta enlist- ment in Canada from Prince Ed- ward Lsland for times were so hard in the Province they Well strait vuayi I Form Party OTTAWA. Feb. M -(CP)— Hon. P. J. A. Cardin, questioned on per- sistent reports that he was about to form a new part v which would include the l4 members -wh0 sup- ported hlm in last night's vote on his sub-ame -‘ ‘ lo the address in- reply to the Speech from the Throne. said today that "any move of that nature would depend on circumstances." One Quebec member sitting on the op sltlon» side said, however. that I wiu his "understanding" that Mr. Cardin planned to form a new party. ‘This member declined to permit use of his name. Churchill llas Pneumonia But ls Improving LONDON. Feb. 24 -(CP)- A bulletin from 10 Downing Street disclosed Ibr the first time today that Prime Minister Churchill has been suffering from pneumonia. Announcing that "there ls a general improvement In the Prime Minister's condition," the state- ment said "the pneumori' a clearing but his temperature has not yet settles?‘ Previously it was announced that Churchill was suffering from acute cutarrh. He had been in bed since last week. Fllll! DESTROY! CHURCH TOWER OHIO. 14.8.. Feb. It — (Om- Fire of unknown origin to- day destroyed the Union Church here, used lointly by the Anglican and United Church conrreaations In this village near Shelburne. The loss was estimated st 00.000. ‘Plane Flies 2,000 Miles With No One Aboard WASHINGTON. Ibb. M—(A.P)— ‘mis Is the story of a United States army plane that flew 2.000 miles with no one amdb, 32m after m or“ passengers called out bl- osuoefil flutter vlbsatlons throat; oiled to r mi in te ‘l’ '1'"; -e ant m. off the night of‘ . Ougromflslgiéielflf‘: SoutlrATtorics. "Ahead-d were the ‘u; 0g , two ngers, and considers pll W" feet. wh h de lwld In . alliltudsversnpidlyhiirlaglane clm - mo jettison- sd ifil-filawslfifipi n. stop m’ it'll? nil‘ villlliilll own- “i 311g“ emapllot turned beak to- S O . "when the pilot thought he vu over the coast, he ordered the others to ‘use their parachutes Then ho needed the ohms wt to sea, set the automatic pilot for level fl ght so the craft would not become a menace ashore. and ball- ed ou . Shortly after noon the ncrtday Mexican authorities reporiAd s pllns had crashed In the m t- alns of northern Mexico-a report which gave the air transport oom- msnd a first-class mystery for several days, because no lucli pposed to be In that part of the world. Men on foot finally memo the plane and an investigation ro- zerlsl numbers wh h I en- 5K4" the chm a cued oii he“ s... Wllbf Jimll. MJLAAJ’ -War Situation Last Night . I) Klrks L Bllllillon, Associated Pffls War Analyst Iveu before the full scope of contributing causes of an air-harried Nod retreat In Central Tunisia become clear. bhors ls reason to believe that It marks a major Axis defeat fro! ‘ with mounting potentialities of disaster. - Overnight the trench In Tunisia altered lncalcislably In Allied favor. Rommel, the Nssl desert fox. bids fair now to be caught In a trap of lsls own making, assuming he still ls in command in south and south- Contrul Tunisia. lls risked and lost much to mohlrws little. O Q I I U ‘filsst he must retreat, once his deopsraic surprise move to deal the thinly-hold Allied centre u crippling blow hid stalled against Anglo- ‘ resistance, was obvious even before his backward race to Kassaerlno Gap started. ill; only hops lay In a quick, complete break- through to the Tebessa junction key which threatened to unhlngc the whole northern end of the Allied front in Tunisia. The thrust failed by s perilously olose margin. It ls the nature of bold and rlfly military soups such as the Null commander attempted, however, that I they fall. the last case of the attacker l. likely to be worse than In the first from which he oougiht to escape. Rommel staked much, perhaps the fate of the whole Axls Army In Tunisia and control of the Tunisian tip, on that massed tan]: effort to break-through to Tebssn or beyond. To hlm as to every aggressor loot Initiative h a loot battle. O O O O I I First Impressions of his retreat suggest Kauserino Gap as the line where he hopes to stand on the defensive. Yet there seems no logical reason to expect that. Once the British 8th Army strikes all-out galnsl tho Axis rear guard iholdlng the Mareih Line front to the south, the heaviest armor and most seasoned crow; available to the Axis command- er would be urgently needed there. Implicit in Manuel's attempt to withdraw his Kasserine Gap spear- head, once he realized that his drive at Tebesso and Thain had been foiled, Ia his expectation of heavy British blows In the south. Eye-witness accounts tell of the skies above his narrow, mountain flanked escape routes filled with American and British bombers. That retreat seems certain to prove more ‘costly to the Axis In men, tanks, guns and trucks than the advance. It obviously is a salvage operation. A stand on greatlyshortened defensive lines In the centre, possibly back to the scene of the Initial Axle break-through at Fold Pass, might permit disengagement of tank forces ‘s hack up the Mareth Line. Yet even to reach that point would be difficult without disastrous losses under the furious and sustained Allied air attack now in progress. l I O l l O This is admittedly looking farther ahead than ilhe news yet warr- ants. Romrncfa immediate purpose In retreat rnlg-ht be only to recall the dangerously ’ elements north of Kusserlne Gap while he made _. “ for new blows. , “e-crthcleas, li. I; an admission of fall e. This may be a prelude to a greater . I ll rlfllt _ . I _ l"" _ , Thist tip sssd vntrol of ass-traffic flgroasglaiths Mediterranean I retreat In’ Tunisia for "waistline Is wim m“ '1 for both‘ sides, not south or central Tunisia. Soviet Army Still Surging Westward Topples Several More Axis Strongliolds In Race Against Spring Breakup. i LONDON, Feb. 25 —('l‘liiii-silsy)-——((‘P)— This Red Army surging westward over a 300-milc front In a race az-iinst still"! mud W"! Telluri- ed early today to have toppled several more Axis strongholds drive toward Poltavu and Konlop. Ukraine rail junction, guarding the approaches to the Nari Dnlcper River line. The lrgulsr ..’ ' ‘ , " ' ht Moscow . ‘_ recorded by the Soviet Monitor sold another large populated place west of Kharkov had fallen, reported fresh gains In the effort to encircle Orel. hinge of the southern and central fronts. and told of the trapping of two Ger- man battalions (approv-‘zmately 1,800 men) in the western Caucasus. The Bunions sold those two battalions new are being annihilated after refusing to surrender. Heavy German counter-attacks with ta-nk and plane support were acknowledged in the Donets BRSln. While claiming the repulse oi’ most. of these, the Russians admitted German units had driven a W668i! into their lines soifthwest of Kram- atorsk. This town is about. 50 miles north of Stallno whence the Nazi Cotton, Leather Tires lire Tried LONDON. Feb, 24- (GP) —COI2- escape railway runs out of the Donets basin ton and lcnlhc" tires for bicycles- “flrteen German m,“ were and pcssiblv for automobiles-are destroyed in the ‘lighting’ but m‘, tliahrelmliiixtest in sbstltutes in Great bulletin did not tell of the final outcome, The locality seized west of Kharkov was not identified. The communique said 200 Ger- man bodies were counted. and large quantities of war material ca r This Soviet column was wl hln 50 miles of Poltava on the basis of Soviet dispatches, and another operating from Krasnogard to the south was at least 10 miles nearer. Nor did the Russians mention the progress of their troops driving to- ward Dnieperopetrovsk on the Dnlem River bend. These units had n reported about 30 miles from the river in an effort lo trap the exposed Neal forces In the Do- nets Basin far to the cast. In tho Maloahrkhanfolsk so miles south of Ore, the com- munique slirl the Russians were fighting for ssession of another large popula place. and had killed 200 more Germans, in this area also was announoedin yesterday! mid-day Cflmlllllfllfill: Dispatches said a thaw was - lng in the Ukraine, and the comparative v ueness of the So- viet midnight ulletin indicated that muddy roads might have slack- ened Red army operations. The new tires. made bv ministry of supply scientists. have been tested successfully, the press as- sociation ieported today. Efforts to Improve the cotton tires to make them suitable for automobiles are now underway. At. nrcsent their are not stronc (‘VIOIITYI to stand up under high smcds. Report Birchall Is_Jap Prisoner .___. SEATILE, lbb. 24--(OP)— Sqdn. header LJ. Blrchall of the R.0.A.l“.. who dlstin d hlm- self when s Japanese air attack on Colombo, was beaten off a year sgo, is s prisoner of war, It was reported in a letter received by Mrs. George J. Ga on of Seattle. The letter, rece ved yesterday from her brother, Roland Le Roy coffield, was Written from a. Jap- Nl"! Prison cam-p at Ventsujl, Ja- . It was the first dire msnfamlly had received n3?“ since the outer Aleutian Islands lwfiléé as IOOlOI‘ Occupied by tho Japanese June, CANADA THE All. PURPOSE FLU To Present Budget Tuesday UITAWA. Feb. 24 -(CP)- I'l- nanco Minister Ilslcy told the House of Commons today me bud- Set will be presented next Tuesday. Seldom. If evenhas the budget been presented so soon after the opening of a session. Last year It came June 23 and in recent years the date has usually been in May or June. Through the early presentation the government, Mr. Ilsle said earlier, hope; to assist Ind vlduals and firms in planning their act- ivities, by letting them know how they will be affected by the gov- ernment's financial propcsais. The nature and extent. of tax in- creases und the means chosen the government to apply the "pay- as-you-go" principle to the income tax are among the principle feat- ures of the budget which» will affect the average citizen. Saint John Editor Receives Appointment SAINT JOHN, N. B, Feb. 24 — (OP) —- Frank X. Jeimnls, Editor- ln-Chief of the Saint John Tele- graph-Journal and Evening Times- ln the h Globe, has been appointed chief public relations officer for Canada in the directorate of Iiifoimation (Army). It was learned today. He has already taken over his duties with rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. Col. Jennings served overseas with the artilery in the first Great War, from his enlistment in 1914 until the end. He received commissioned rank ln 1917. Nazi Leaflet Shown Commons otrrawa, Feb. .94 (obi-A copy o! German propaganda dropped over England following the Dieppe raid was displayed in the House of Commons today by Rodney Adam- son iPro. Con. York) as he urged "a complete examination of the Dleppe action" at a Secret session. Mr. Adiamson said he had re- ceived the illustrated enemy mater- ial, dropped over British lines in the southwest of England, through the mail. “I did not know that any of this material had been sent to Canada, but the mere fact that It is here makes It important that honorable mmibcrs of this House should be given in secret session a complete explanation of the Dieppe action," e said. Wants Equality 0f Service (YITAWA, Feb. 24—(CP)—Juhn Dlefenbaker (Prog. Con. Lake Centre) said in the House of Com- mons today the opposition would insist on equality of service In all parts of Canada. He quoted figures provided by the government, showing that the percentage of enllstments to total mule population by military dis- tricts ranged from 37.9 in MD. No. 6 Nova Scotia and P. E. 1.. down to 9.6 In MD. No, 5, Quebec "An examination of these figures indicates that there is not equal- ity of service in Canada or any- thing like It," he declared. Other speakers were Rodney Adamson iProg. Con. York Westi, Maurice Laloiule (Lib. Labellci, Jean Francois Poiillot. (Lib. Temis- couatal, C, E. Ferlarid iLib. Joll- ette-lfAssompilnn - Montcalm), and TL. Church (Frog. Con. Tor- onto Broadvlewl. N. J. M. Lock- hart. rPi-og. Con. Lincoln), asl- KASSERIIV _ a PAGES Chase R 24—(AP)—Comhined British Field Marshal Rommcfs Ian Kasscrine Pass and on the withdrawing through it. The big guns were giving of smoking Axis transports a the opposite end of Kasserine Hundreds of Allied planes and Allied ground forces began hitting Rommel! forces Yesterday morn- ing, inflicting the first major set- back on the Axis troops since they lashed out on their offensive ll days ago. The the Allied artillery hastened the Axis retreat into the mouth of the pass. The Brit h-Amerlcan aerial smash by far overwhelmed the in- itial German Stoke efforts in trief recent fight at Faicl and the Allied‘ efili was continuing. Willi the coming of daylight yes- terday, all kinds of Allied bombers began to shrew explosives upon the retreating German column. (A Reuters News Agency dis- patch reported from Allied head- quartcis that aside from the losses inflicted uprm the enemy in the Kasserlric volley, which is wallcdby SUM-foot ivsuratains a battalion of 1,000 Italians had been trapped In another pass leading toward Salani. about ‘HI miles northeast of Kasserine. The dispatch said that French Moroccan troops allowed the Italians to go In and then sealed one exit while a. Scottish re- giment closed the other. LONDON, Feb. M-(CP)-R:os- sertlng his confidence In victory. Hitler today promised a “mobiliz- ation of the spiritual and material values of Europe" such as never before witnessed for war. but hint- ed that the struggle might con- tinue for years and that there still are difficulties on the home front. OTTAWA. Feb. 24—(CPl~ A qualified source, comment- ing tonight on rumors ranching Ottawa that the cut In beer supplies may be cancelled. said lie considered such a step unlikely but could not soy pos- IIIVBIy nothing would he done In the future. MARCmINE. Mo. —(CP\- The young fellow In cit-y court. charged y with passing worthless mocks. was‘ fined $17.95. l-le handed the judge joumed the debate. a check. It bounced, too. Pa rach utis ts Dropped In LONDON, Feb. 26—(Thursday)—- (OP)-The Danish radio reported early today that a number of parachuttsts" had been dropped in Denmarle, but gave no Indication of their nationality or whether they had been captured. The statement. broadcast from German-occupied Copenhagen and recorded here by the British min- istry of Information. said that some Danish residents had sheltered the arachutlsts ‘Provided facilities or erecting ra lo transmitters, and supplied money and information to the agents. The radio linked Christmas Mo- eller. former Danish commerce minister who escaped in Britain last year, with tlie narnchutists. This indicated the paracliuilsts were Danish agents woiklng against the Axis. Ish sources declined oom- mcnt on the report. Reuters News Agenc in a Stockholm dispatch sal today that 28 Danes iici-itsed of Illegal iic- lng parwchuitsts. llllfl been given tiv t~- such as sabotage. printing imdergmund newspapers and ald- j jail terms ranging from six months Q l0 years Are Denmark Bennett Backs Cov’t Stand LONDON. Fkeb. 24 —(CP Cable) -- Viscount, Bennett, former Prime Minister of Canada, today support- ed the Government's plan of pro- ceeding slowly and with caution in regard to Sir William Beveridgos sweeping social security proposals. Speaking In the House of lords. Lord Bennett said; "it is nonsen- sical to talk about plans of social security Unless you have a country to live In and unless you have peo- ple among whom to live." The whole question of social ae- mirlly‘ deiwiiils rm victory. he saiil. “and we should be thinking or limi- we can \\'lll this war." The (luv- ernment has iiuiie as far as lllllll~ unkind should go at the monieiii and "we dare not pledge this iii- Illblcrlptloss Delivered, I100 ‘In, “.00! fllhBI Prllflllrca isnil UJLA $3.0M Situation In Tunisia Shouis Change For The Better. _ LONDON, Feb. 24—(CP)--Reuiers Neiis » ported tonight from Tunisia that latest irifni dlcaied the bulk of the Axis forces are reircatui; i. Kasserine Pass, leaving only a rearizunrd Io lmlil mouth of the gap against furious continuing nlli» from the outskirts of Thala today, Iizinii. defeat in Tunisia, and tonight allied zirti of explosive steel into German positions 0m o -i i‘ t. t-LJJ ti... 'll‘.li i By WES GALLAGHER Associated Press Staff Writer ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NORTH AlPlllifA, Feb. FEW and American for ,. k columns iiiin iii ilie I beaten rezir-g u. ard ll .l “ columns in the Germain tank columns twisting through the pass no chance to l‘i*r~i viii! ri-iorni, and hundreds of allied planes racing overhead loll ll'llll - all nd dying" (iermzin sol: .. the way from Thala’s approaches to Feriziiin fzit‘ Slilllll oi’ Pass. INTERMEYTE 5‘ “i By THE (".“\'.\fl!.i’-\N l‘ NORTH 1773K“ ' fort-cs tliriiwn In l' \ in iviihin vlirw- rwi borrlcr and nrc ri-vrn .- w hack through l{i'llil.“l‘l'lf' '. l‘ "as . viyviiilha I ~ - , RUSSIA -— Silvia-i n‘ kralne advance on i wiarrl the. Slocum"- meet Sllffvnr"! V1"! o - ~ slvr-s In conii'_~1~,l llIl\'.l,l!"J iw-r "f Kharkov. SOYYTIIWESTVRN’ PVJW-"C - AllIrd bombers form- .l:in ism-ship ashore, flllfflfllffi two other rim-ships and vi mcrrlinriivrr-n Iii raids on Rahniil area, Nwv Britain. WEFTFRY FRUYT y (lcrvvirirt- controlled Danish r-iilln ri-iwrls landing of viar-whviu-r- sud vim- vlctlon of Tiznv-s .'\"!"l"i"" of hqr. boring arid nsslsilnr tin-m. Force Japaizcce Warships Aground AUSTRALIA, bell. " --(CP.>——- Allii-il b-' Japan-so warship 1 mciged two fllllL-l‘ mercliantmnn a: lino.- tem, an Allied noiiiiced inclriy. It Wfls the ' on Rabniil slii, communique iolil hits on a Jnti w cruiser, and N‘ non merchant YPF‘ "is. (‘ullllll ‘To MMZE MONEY i- . ' Mafia. i-r FIRQT ‘. ___,,__ ____ High tide this af‘i"""“i and IIllll(ll'l'O\\‘ llli .‘"l" " Sim sets ti. < i". ‘ rises iomorr0v' l‘ 1' _‘ ' _§ v‘ Last QUHTICI‘ llli) ll .i'i. ~» ~ pm. CAR l-‘rmgi Iiflfllfl i‘. DAILY I w! i" "- ~‘ From “(W111i lIAIl a.m 2.1m mii- l" m . 1 I‘ |l> i ID- [km-e (‘fgpp Tvlnii '1!‘ r _ ..m l.l."i yam fit?» ll" 7i 5‘ ii-l" 8.15 n-m. DAILY t|‘.\‘ i '. . (‘hi-l :‘ \ ‘it t Vifll-Y.‘ Leave (‘tin-z Ii'li|‘.\ll limo n m III ture when we do not know what it will be.‘ 11.301. m. 4.30 p Ar vr (‘Iinrliiticiown l a m. Ml p. m. 7.06 o. m LI