MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Fear not. the eomlnl of life's end y“, like the sunset, it too come. mus-i fi_.»- . __ Inning Guordlln. Founded 1J8‘! inzis tosi: ‘i.’ s. M0 VES TO Y Extend areas lo which ll. S. Ships can go New Ruling Permits Uncle Sam’s Vessels To Carry Supplies To Portions 0f Brit- ish Empire. WASHINGTON Sept. 15—-(AP)- flialicw move lo accelerate the pglitngliinst the Axis, the State Department tonight announced a ruling liv Attorney General Biddle peririittlng United States ships “m. grins, munitions and pas< ers to many areas of the far flli5ll Empire. Under the ruling. the ships may go to all parts of the British lim- lte other than the United King- lom, India, Australia. Canada. New Zeal-ind and the Union of South llrica. the Neutrality Act, when enl finds a state rif war , American slil s must llcli nrry nis and munitcns to tiie belli 9l‘(‘lllS. On Nov. 4, i989. the Piesldclit issued a proclamation, recognizing a state of war betiveizn Germany on the one hand and the United Kingdom. lndia, Australia, fanadn. New Zealand and the I'll- pn of South Africa on the other. 0n Aug. 27 the‘ attorney general as ' l ti * terms of_tl“e (Continued on page B, Col 8) Iierrillgc says ilo truth in llarriage rumor UHAWA, Sept. i5 --(CPI — lion. W. D. Herridge, former Can- iillin Minister to the United Suites tonight described Washington re- 1 pus he plans to marry Mrs. EWSJ- l belti Carrere Barbour as "\v11<11‘.\' without foundation." Mrs. Barbour is the divorced w'fe oiSeiiaior W. W. Barbour of Nev Jersey. WASHINGTON. $0M. 15-40?)- ‘fhe Washington Timcs Herald said ltliay that Mrs. Elysabet-li Caijrcre Barbour. divorced last week -1‘im senator W. W. Barbour of New Jer- izy. will marry William I). l-Ierridgc, oi Ottawa, former Canadian Min- iler to United States. Mrs. Barbour, who won lier di- vorce decree in Laramie. WW.- ‘#11! {ll-en custody of her three children. leclarcs Soviet Artillery superior MOSCOW, sept. 15 --(AP) — "fill-Gen. I. Kamera said today in Pravda, the Communist party or- I111. that Russian artillery is so nuch the master of the battlefield 11111t even the Germans are forced 1o admit "not only its quantitative all! also its qualitative superior- y. The general. attributing recent 119d ariiiv successes chiefly to ar- “lhrr. uilch he called "the gob 11 modern warfare," said a three- 1111! battle in the first week of Sep- tember cost the Germans 4.000 kill- 111» 15.000 wounded. 30 field guns "111 11111011 ammunition. taming Events n-os- Notion In this 8 canto our word h“ 11" column “Wanna w b om k nwi 111m Cold Sims‘: li-llli-i-ci»: . “sight-china Boas Tuesdays and canal. "m" "ifflifi-llflttii. "Chicken supper and dance St §,“{"°W'= H011. ‘Thursday, Septem- "- L-l46-9-l5-2i Crupeu u i Annual Chlcke s r th . Qlllilce South unllla 8.555.. ‘ln h: B“ “fl/seepage: septeinbii “tar. "fnmm romoococ Stan - L-oz-a-ls-io _ ° "Meslhiz of misi-lottetown badi 1111“ also ’r.'l'"s.*...°""1 I n flllfi "m1- L-loa-o-io- i "at" the uni’ mm a rnu.£:o:"l:zl.§'“§ll1r* t‘ . , a CV5“ ""- Bsnteiiim loci. L-ItWyQ-Id-li. "Wlhted to nu --BoIogna o ‘tie an 11nd Veal galvea. iill grate: gm“- Write for prices. Island Cold ° . tf égilnQll/im ho a Albnné and M, hi1 dimers idiiv lve us ghlrlottetown Gunrdlau, Two Cents, Argentina to Expcl Nazi liingleadcrs BUENOS AIRES. Sept. I5— (APl-The Argentine Congress voted with but one dissenting voice today for the expulsion within three days of the ring- lcaders of Nazi undercover organizations including the German Ambassador, Edmund Von Thermann. The Nazi envoy was not men- tioned by name in the ouster demand. but the resolution censured him‘ for abusing dip- lomatic privileges, in a form that holds liim persona non grain. in Argentina. In was the first time since the wai-‘s outbreak that an Axis envoy of top rank has been the target of such drastic action by a neutral nation in the western hemisphere. Von Thci-munn himself said defiantly yesterday that if he leaves he would have to be askcd fo go, that he had no intention of going voluntarily. Informed quarters said the Foreign Office was taking the position that the ambassador should go on the grounds of personal lndiscrctions, thus preventing a break in German- Argcntine relations. Finns report hig Fires raging In Leningrad ‘HELSINKI. S090 15 — (AP)-— Finnish arniy correspondents ciuiiiied today that great fires have been sct inside Leningrad by a steady German artlLery pound- ing which is creating deadly havoc lii parks mid streets crowded with refugees from outside the city. _"'l'iie explosions reach our ears ivitli a continuous muffled rumble,“ one wrote from the front "There are many fires and the conflagrn- tlon is spreading. The whole sky is already ablaze. Ari endless dip has begun ili the doomed city." A railroad engineer said to have fled from Leningrad was quoted as saying that the shells were tak- ing a terrific toll because the re- _ fugecs from outside the city we.v unable to find raid were forced to live public parks and the battle raged. Spy-haddi-i-g Job, evidence shelters and and sleep in squares whilo NEW YORK, Sept. l5—tAP)—~An ambitious assignment in espionage _gct.ing details oi startling new United states war machines- ivils turnad over early in I940 to Freder- ic}; uiiquosiie, ulic of l6 defendants on trial cliar ed with espionage conspiracy, a. w tness testified today. Duquesne, a. middle-aged, narrow- shouldered, pauncliy, olive-skinned nntive ot South Africa whom one government has characterized as a "spy for the last 40 years," watcned wltli nervous interest as the govern- ment introduced document after dlgcument listing his alleled 8611111- t lilo assignment the sovernment contends was given Duquesne was presented iii court on a microphoto- graph no bigger 1111111 11 P05111811 stamp. Enlarged ,lt turned out to be 18 paragraphs of minute details oe- manded by the Gestapo on the tests, production and deliveries of devices oi war. William u Bebold, naturalized American who testified earlier that. he had returned to £118 1111114111 States with instructions to build and perate a secret radio for spies- and that he did so as a counter-es- plon agent for the Federal Bur- eau o Investigation-identified 14.0 mlcrophomgrnph which, he said. he delivered to 0110110611‘?- Ths Gestapo wanted to imow about the production, ca city, number of employees and del veines of each aircraft plant in the Unite States and the P?!“ C°111W11Y 1" Mll/‘itillilih ti lwaa 1n or es in e e ra Brooklyn Fbderiil court. l0" PR0- erick Ludwig, named by t e overn- nieiit as a master spy. pie ed not guilty in Manhattan to another es- pionage conspiracy indictment and was held iii 150.000 brill for tfil-l Be . 22. He was char!“ "1111 W?‘ .tlc ting in a conspiracy to acqul In transmit to the German 30V- ernment information vitfll i0 11l- D- ‘minim 0110!. Talk Revision U.S. Neutrality Act Trickle of lease-lend material to become flood;- U. S. Navy begins active convoy duty. By J. l1‘. Sanderson Caniid an Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON. $9111.. 15—(CP,)— Material assistance from the fields and factories of the Unibed States actually in the hands of the foes of Hitler still remains a trickle but President Roosevelt in a message 1° 601181685 today promised "the 110w will accelerate from day to day until the stream becomes a river and the river a torrent en- Blllflng this totalitarian tyranny which seeks to dominate the world." Up to Aug. 31. sx months after passage of the lend-lease act, act,- ual exports or ordnance, aircraft, thrills. 51111111. food and other war- time necessities totalled $190,447,670 01119 0f A total appropriation by Congress of $7,000.000.000, Seventy PQr cent oi’ it went to Britain and a sitstantial proportion of the bal- ance to i116 Middle East. But that figure does the whole story. Actual transfers or war supplies under the lend-lease ‘101- 1110513’ t0 Britain. at Aug. 31. totalled $246.394.3'7l which indicated that nearly soccooooo worth await- ed export across the oceans. The report was submitted to Qflnlzrqss against a background of discussion among the President and Congressional leaders of a revision 0f the neutrality act; and announce- ment by Navy secretary Knox ma; the US. Navy henceforth will guard all lend-lease carvoes a5 far as Iceland. Knoxs declaration, apparently in- 1110811118 that. American ivarships l Wfluld convoy British and other car o ships most of the way gcrcss l 1-1, Atlantic. was made at the Am- -“-1'1<!."n Legion convention in Mll- Wapkeq with these words:_ Biennial: tomorrw, the Amer- 1°51" 51311.1’ W111 provide protection 115 fi-flqllhfe as we can provide It 1C1‘ $111713 of every flag carrying lend-aid supplies betnveen the Am. . lean continent and the waters ad. lflfivnt to Iceland. . These ships are ordered to cap. 11111! 01‘ destroy by every means at 111911,‘ 111351155111 Axis-controlled sub- mafm" or surface raiders encount- fjfd in these wzit (Continued on page 7, co] 3) lndo-Ghina French Ignore Jap Soldiers SAIGON, lrrench Indo-(l lllll, 5911i. I5—lAP>- To the French- man ln IlldO-Chilla the Japanese 501111111‘ has become “the little man who isn't there." Of course, he is there, and h. large numbers. sent into this ll€lp_ leged "British intentions" agaznst 11. He. is, as the official pronounce. merits put lt. the giuirdian of 1n. do-Chinws sovereignty and lnde. pendence. But the French merely lgnor-e lriiii. There is no rudeness, no outright dlscourtesy, no obvious contempt. The French simply don't see the Ja-panese. It- 15 the only weapon left to the At vFrench. All over intro-China you see the French walk past Japanese sentrics. with fixed bayonets, without so much as a glance. Not a head is turned when the Japanese roll past in their cars or stroll in groups through lre streets. St. Gatherines plant Still strike-bound ST. CATHARINES. Ont" Sept. l5 —(CP)--Production still was held up tonight at the McKlnnon indus- tries plant here as the number of workers who accepted the invi- tation of Munitions Minister C. D. Howe to return m their job was too small to place the big plant In pro- ductlon. Normally the plant employs o- bout 4,500 men and While 600 re- turned to work today as a strike at. the plant entered its fifth day. only I'll of tliooa reporting were engaged in departments affected by the strike. Nazi shipping ls blasted IDNDON Befit. lit-(CH-One vessel was left s iking and another hit this afternoon when the Royal Air Force blasted at German lng off the Frisian Islands, the Air nistr German s lps in Haugesund, Nor- IIY. also were attacked. not tell. less French colony to forestall lit-J announced. J Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Suddenly on Libyan front Great Activity Pre- dicted By Early 0c- t o b e r A s H o t Weather Passes. CAIRO, Sept 15——(A.P)——Til6 heaviest fighting in many vizeeus was reported from the Libyan front: today as the terrific heat of the western desert neared its sea- sonal end and British quarters predicted "boiling" activity by ear- ly October. General headquarters announced that two Axis armoured columns struck 35 miles into Egypt in sud- den thrusts Sunday. but were routed back into Libya after los- lug considerable numbers of men and machines 1t was the first offensive move by Axis forces in Libya for many weeks. The two columns crossed the border about 30 miies South 91.45919“ QEPESIQAQY 1m 1'92"; (Continued on page ‘I. Col 2) Hanson, Drew Get together By Harold Fair Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, Sept. l5 —lCP Cable) _Hoii. R. B. Hanson, Caiiadan Conservative House leader, and Lt.- Col. George A. Drew, Ontario con- servative leader, got together to- day in Mr. Hanson's hotel suite for it long talk in which Col. Drew out- lned the results of his survey the last. few weeks of the British scene. It was not expected that (".01- Drcw will join the Conservative in- spection delegafon, but Mr. Hari- son was anxious to learn ivltat .-he Colonel had discovered from his various sources of lnlormatlozw Afr. Hanson said Viscount Crati- borne, Dominioiis Secretary, pro- mised i-im sit their mOrfllng con- versaron all possble co-opemtion alid expressed a desire to provide access to any information the Ca.- nadkin opposition leader might want. He added that at a luncheon giv- en li‘s party by Hon. Vincent Mas- sey. Canadian High Commission- er, he had a "most satlsfaotory" conversation with Sir Klmrsley Wood, chancellor of the exclreriuel‘. concerning Canada's economic gon- trlbiit‘on to the commonivcrallhb war effort. Chocolates which Mr. Hanson brought for Viscount Bennett. fcr- mer Conservative Prime Minister of Canada. were delivered throlll" M'ss Alice Miller, Lord Bennett's. secretary. Nazis claim lied Counter attacks fail BERLIN, Sept. l5 -(AP) - The German armies claimed 101112111 they had beaten off repeated Rus- sian couiioei- attacks supported by aheavy tanks in a great and con- tinu ng struggle yard by yard for possession of powerful modern for- tifications of Leningrad. More than 500 motor vehicles were claimed to have been destroy- ed in a new German aerial thrust east of the Dnlepci- River. that is, hundreds of miles soutii of the Leningrad front. D. N. B., reporting on act‘on of the ali- force, claimed also that a Russian armored train and six transport trains were halted by bombardment and various artillery positions knocked out of action ALIENS SIGN UP IONDON-(CH- Trousanda of friendly Germans. Austrian; and Italians resident in Britain, men between 10-65 and women to 50. have voluntarily registered for war work. Blossn CA ADA (JHARI-OTTP-ITOWN. CAN-ADA, ArUEsoAv, SEPTEMBER 1e, 1941 s! HIS DAD IS A GENERAL staff oi‘ the (‘nnzidian army. b Pctcr Crcrzir is "l’ctc“ to fellow tre, Brlintforll. Sm of hlflirr-Gcn. ll. D. G. Crcrar, he's a classic ex- ample of ilic nvniy‘s policy of grant- ing no commissions unless time has been served iii the ranks. Nothing to report 0n anniversary 0f air battle LONDON. Sept. l5~1CPl—, I‘lic all" and home ministi-lcs which report on air ac ‘ . slililtcd . zinniver. _ of tlic QYPZHPRl airl battle in history totlnv with a laconic "there is lIOIlIlIIg to rc- port_" . In a great miles-high aerial zone "which reached from Lon-y don to the channel Hurricane and Spitfire pilots fought the waves cf Nazis in day-long batt‘e on scpt. l5. i940. which resulted lil the shooting down of 187 German planes. By C0l1tl'.l with llic qutei skies over Britain today. the Royal Air Force made numci- ous offensive sweeps ovcr the ‘ channel and German-occupied; territory, tho air ministry said‘ " Interpreting The WarNews l _..__,__~ l By Klrke L, Associated Pres; One sgiilficriii: aspect of the peace talk cmenatlng from FJllfllld is tliat it coincides so clo=cly with the opening in Mziacciv cf thr c-corucrvd R114- slan - Britfn. - American cm- fcrcnces. T-izit ra ses the poss- lbilit-v that poiitfco-dplomatic developments stemm m: from tlic Mosmw meet ngs may be even more immediately‘ effer- tive in aiding Russia than the expected Anglo-American cciri- mltments tn accelerate Lhg flaw of armaments to the Sovleti Finnish find nos i d sruss peace formulas wVli the R115. sians is clearly indicated in the statement of Vnitio ‘Tourer, cabinet member mid powerful litlcal leader, stressing “good CD95 Oi’ 8C6 lIl lire nearegt future." A thow-"h ins sting that Finland was not “rs-paring to desert her Nari ally. he con. tended the‘ h country had none but ck‘ nslve purposes and was not in any way aligned with ‘the Nazi-Fascist orbit so far as 1-1" 81981 liar‘; L: concerned. Simpson Staff Wrllcr Tanner's most significant ut- _lernnge_._ri~ . (Continued 0n Page '1, Col 8_)_ Smooth Sailinq ForAII yourBcilllnq When you use 14%” His father ls chief of the genernt‘ u privates nt the basic training cen- 1 Livers 1'i1_ ll. S. Legion Reverses stand 0n foreign war Give Enthusiastic Re-i ception To Knox An- nouncement Of Con-i - voy Plans. 1 lBy J. Norman Lodge. Associated Press Staff Writer) MILWAUKEE. Wis, Sept. 15- (APl-The American Legion met today in its 23rd annual conven- tion with its members prepoiider-l antly sympathetic to reversing: their 20-year-old stand against f United States participation in for- ' elgn conflicts. h With challenging vvcrds from Navy Sccretarv Frank Knox re- souiirliiig in their curs and Willi President Iloosevrlt declaring in a n. ssagu that he knew the country _ could count on the Legions con-l tiiiiled interest and co-opexatlon, lii whatever Iics ahead. those sol-l diers of the first American Expedi- ‘ lionary Fo"ce applauded ever,- iii- -’ fcrciicc of intervention in the sco- ond great war. 1 “Br-ginning tomorrow, the Am- ‘ crican Navy will provide protoc- tion as adequate as we can make 1 11 1E“T..§1“P§_21_€"“ ' 11:115.?!‘ (Continued on page ‘i. Col 3) fphone calls set Off Zagreb blast 1 ZAGREB, Croatia (Via Berlin) Sept. lll—~11iPJ——Ullll‘£lC0(l lelcpiioie calls put through to two sccret llLilll y t-rs ill kiagrcbs central telephone.‘ 1 0 liili‘ revealed (uni t to; st‘. Oil ‘ ol four bombs which \ _'_ .lll)l'3 tliali 12 German soldiers. , Investigators said that the calls from outside the postal building in‘ some \\'a,v rule-used the bomb mech- anism, but. those responsible have not l)(‘.f‘ll found. Tivo eiiiploycvs of the exchanges night shill flrd, lSave more, spend Less, llsley asks the explosion _ OTTAWA, Sept. 15—(CP)-Fln- aiicc Minister llsley tonight lip- pcnlcd to Canadians to save more . and slocud less because "none of} us can leave it to the other fclloiv 1 to bear our share of the treliiciitl- . ous cost involved iii this titanic struggle for freedom." Mr. llsley was making one of a series of Rccoiisecrntion Wcck ad- dresses by clibiiict ministers, heard over a national iictlvork of tlic l Canadian Broadcasting Corpora- LlUll. To pay for Canada's war lllid help provide Britain with the dollars she needs for purchases in r the Dominion. the Government would have to borrow neariy as much as it obtained in taxcg "This means that we must bor- row from millions of persons in Camida—frolii everyone \\‘ll0 can possibly save out of his income.“ Mr. llsley said. "We are that now to some degree; there were about 950,000 subscribers lo ,tlre Victory Loan and tlicrc liavi: lbeen more than 1.000.000 applica- tions a niontli for war savings certificates this summer country. But we cannot rest upon tnnt success and more from now on. “That is what 1 would urge upon each one of Ybu tonight. "Save more and spend less. "Canadians, as producers, nre of the ivlir with energy and spirit -ln the armed services-in the factorics—in the fields. But that is not all we must do. Water is major loss In Bermuda fire HAMILTON. Bermuda. Sept. l5»- (OP Goblet-Damage estlmatcd a1 $10,000 was caused today by ii firc in a two-storey wooden hlllldlllg at the United States defence bnsc cs- no casualties. A major loss was that of 10.000 gallons of water used in quelling the flames. Bermuda's water supply has to be collectrd carefully during rains or imported from the 11.8.. and an acute shortage has been developing recently. wmYliToii n Fnbjicv r LONDON~ 1C?“ -- Bacon wit‘. on ration may be "different in ciil and fatnes" the Food Ministry warns and customers must not ev- pect to get. "on all occasions the kind they are accustomed to." ‘is PAGES 1 1 . effort .11'1"'11 1" hu-c with nrcnt iii-mg, doing 7 - “Our Victory Lorin u-as a grep". ‘ achievement for the people of this , We must save more ‘ throwing themselves into the work John Ra“, w“, “final-l fcilling the suspended man back to tabllsliment near here. There were ‘ MAXIMS 1 01A MERE MAN A brother, alas, may not be n friend, but u friend vvill always be a brother. —- - ~~> ____ _ _ _..____= Annual Subscription Delivered, $5.00 U! 1111111 l’. 5-11. $0.00; Cuiiiuiis and lJ-S. $6.00 EIGHT VESSELS IN nncric cllisii ACCEL§RA TE WAR SHIPMENTSlancling Try 3n Of liflar boils up Baltic Island Is Turnicl Bacfc Five troop-jammed trans- ports included in German losses in far north. 1.1- _ .\l(l.\‘('()\\', Sept. lliv-(Pucsdiiy)—(_\l')__ 5.,“ lei bombers have started heavy pounding of Axis Black Sea and Danube ports with rlilds on Con- 513111" ""11 311111111. 011 the Rumzinlan coast, and GllllllL-illfi oil port on the Danube. the Foviel in- formation bureau reported today. MOSCOW, Sept. 1li-(lhiesdziy)—(Al’)--Sinking of eight German vessels, including five troop-jammed trans- ports. in the repulse of a Nazi landing attempt on the Bal- iic island of (lose! and in ii clash in Arctic writers was zin- nnunccd today by the Russians. Iii the biggest of the two engagements the Soviet in- fornizilion bureau said four transports and two destroyers ivei-e sent to the bottom by Soviet naval. zilr and shore- unils which smashed the Germans attacking Ooscl. an ls-V lurid off ESlOIIlZI ivhcre Russizi loft strong forces-i after ivllhllrziivinlr from the Estonian mainland. _ The landing force vzas wiped out, ilic communique ‘did, and two transports and several torpedo boats among several others were badly damaged. Ill '1 c Arctic, off lllc far iiortli- 1"" 9111 l101‘1 of Pctscimo. still another E , I iY-“llhllfilt was (lcclared sunk alone ' ,.,,,, Th, 0e91,, Drastic cut in clash occurred list Friday, bu; ma date of the Arctic sinklii-zg was “n; given. GAI1l1111'C1111.\' out to FlllEISll Zlllyl‘ ernizin effort to launch large-scale mmrnuons m m, Bias,‘ sea-on the l wllsillncrrors. sent. I5—(AP)_ South m? Rm n“ for” hmwny 3A sue img 48.4 pt. cent reduction in pzlSSvllgvi‘ automobile production iwnmml (301151111118 011d Sulilia. off for Decvliibl-r‘ ims ordered by the i120 Ruiiirilifnzi cozist and G,ql;.¢,j_ (,"' of Production lfciliglnlent K1 50ml‘ gf/Vi’ Tlllflfilll SOUICES l .1 .i . , .. ‘ The mfnmelag m. Odwsa‘ Siren? , ; l\(. k413i fill men deeper. ‘h. suwynqod by Swlom M the Black 1 s lull-fill be expected for Jan- shn m.“ “We rgpnrtbt, m have’ i119 lino succeedng months of .~“»1111>11"'1 "doubled German and The curtailment after the fir-tit f the year p:-ol>:ibly' will take the m of a lcvclliiig-off process, {p ming prcducl‘ ii approximately l’ - the figure .\])"ClllC(l by the OP. .\l. for Dcl-tiiiber—204.fi48 passen- cr-z" cars. as compared uwlli 390.823 in December, i940. A MAN WITH A j WOODEN Lee. ‘5HOULD haven Rum 1n brooch uh. ~. it ivas do Jlqfivflll‘ lly ycstcninv 111M the ficrlririns are 1051111! can: trol of the occupied Russian “e35 by stripping ll‘.(’ll‘ rczir garrlsons to i fill 2021s milsctl bv criormoiis lossis I I 011 '11“ f hlllipj liiics. Torin morning communique colifuicrl its report of western front fichfinp to i‘; stool: mirage -.=tu‘i“orn bnttlcs all along zhe llllP~—\\‘llll'.‘ last night's official mi_ Y1‘111‘1"'111"1‘1 stressed the situation 111'k o,‘ the lilies. , Red Quciilla actii-‘tv. i! iva< de-' clarcd. was becoming so much more effective that skeleton Nazi “"95 °<‘(‘1'1‘.1‘111L’ 52 communities had l)\"(‘ll annili .'i1t"i'l nlttl several G!"'lll!!ll (“\'" ‘mi. pg, m mu” 1"‘ 111" 1'0‘ 1P1.“ 1111i‘. been forcorl to 41X C: “WW1”: 1111‘ Ell"l‘lll.'1.< in control. Lh-llil! sum-i M. \\'h(\1‘(\ 11.15. Ifotitnruwl rill uiiszc 7, col 4) ‘Will re- < ! l m. nsié‘ s s11» “t TORONTO, sent. 15 —<C1’1 — yfiinmum and maximum tcnivfm- employ Slow- l llll .- - »-- ‘ d I llziiv-lvli 331 37 l Victoria 5i‘ 57 1 ll‘. H u 31 G7 - -—- '“ Wniriipeg 43 74 NEW \\‘.~\Tl?l'll-‘()IZD. x. s. givpt. Ottawa. ‘11 117 l5 --lCl‘\~ All innit-rs Sllslwlitléd Moiiirciil 1111 31 for slowdown activities at Doinln- Boston 1'10 3° ion coal coiiipaiii, No. 12 cohicry _ liorc will ho l'\‘-(‘lllllli1_\'(‘(l by the ‘Ssvnoigsbt’ The ‘we.il;;flrh£1§§ company ii they sock return tn an???) a“); “m, 5mm“ their jobs, acting miiic manner!‘ v15?!“ nmqhern‘ dmr- ;A._ Lmm w "au- 5ll0\\'f‘l‘.< have ocrurred in ii i (Crciieipil Manager if. J. Kelley , 1c parts of the Prairie Provinces of Domiii on Slrcl llllLl Coal Cor- \v ‘.1 no‘. m11¢11 611011111‘ 111 1W0???" poratlon, Dominion coals parent 111"‘ company, said at Sydney 84 men of BOSTON svwh ,S__,AP,_WN_ N“ 12 “"11 1"'°§‘“"°d u“‘1““‘1‘_'°s cast for northern New England: Vfllllllll\l‘ll_\' at the company office Madly cloudy, occasional mowers and had been l‘l-1.ll'('{l on tlic uir- flllr‘ slichlly cooler c st and north lvolllzl rctum to ans 'I‘1l(‘. at WMHQSGBY dci-staiidiiig they full production. lHc said the company filkl _ ghowcrs, slightly cooler. High tide this morning at 5.07 and this evening at 7.00. Sun nets this evening at 6.10 and rlscs tomorrow morning at 5.40. Nf'\\‘ moon Scpi. 2i. 12.38 a. in. Siimmeralde tide l8 minutes late!‘ than Chnrloilcinnm. BORDEN — (‘APE TORMENTINI SERVICE was noi- ‘ work. More than 200 have had their ‘lamps stnppcrl since tlic company bcuan suspensions in nn allvlnpt to cud the IS-iwrvks‘ sloivrlnwii ill its l" Capo Breton pit."- 1 (Standard Time) Leave Borden 6.30 A.M. 9.85 KM. 1.00 Pa“. 4.45 RM. 7.30 EM. Leave (‘ape Tormentlnc 8.00 AJVI. £1.00 A.M. 3.15 P.l\'l. 0.20 EM. HAO SUNDAY SERVICE 4 4l.eav:‘l!o;d)t6n‘,9ia0 AM. 12.00 noolh . . 5 PA . . . . Allnxrwlflglq B; 5P1“ 155m?‘ Leave Cape Tnrinentlnc 10.05 AJL .1 u Lciloluii. .19. dlcll llPlv to-_ 230 n)“ 55,0 P_M_ 810 p_M_ niuir at the hi-Kllll of his (laughter, lMrs. William MI)’. m‘, lie was brrriil woo“ LqLAN-ns FERR‘ at» liiildivln Road. P.l»2.l., and for 35 [hm-H wnmi mung, 7,00 5,“, ynars \v:is_nii the staff of the Mar- 11.00 A, M, 3,00 [p], i. me Penitentiary at Dorchester,‘ Legvg; (Jnrlbou 9.00 AM, 1,00 lug N-B- coo PM. ialiiuwni roall Native passes l .... y‘ . b? vii i! l l. .131