ar Confer-e L Roosevelt To Come 3T0‘ Canada For Talks 1'1 Three-Hour Session an ilrltish and Canadian cabinet of the war" and censors n D. Roosevelt of the U conference complete . ii was not known what will he Iiinovements or activities between now and the time the Neither was lt known here when Mr. Roosevelt will come. but it is l The huge Quebec Hotel-the Chateau Frontenac- rincipei conferees and their assistants ‘advertised as closed until Aug l1. f days only. fircger in its entirety for the Iii! Churchill inched iiuohec 1i -(OP)- n“ Mic", in a story today from its sags that c Minister Winston hurchlll yesterday at newspaper glint correspondent mi! his train y, s. Canadian National Itali- iunction on the south the St. Lawrence River, fimiies south of Quebec. libs wry says that Mr. Church- lvss met at Charny Domin- Provinciai and civic I end then drove to emu the famous Quebec bridge lat spens the st. lam-once. it-tol. lirew To iirn Government 1030MB, Aug. II-(Wl-Ltw til George A. Drew, Ontario Pro- ive Conservative Leader and cf the lar est group in the vincial legis ature. announced ayehe accepted the invitation nant Governor Albert Ma 0m to fonn a government. iio date was fixed for the new Erma-lent to succeed Premier en's defeated Liberal adminis- intion, Col. Drew saying it would ti“eari_v next week at a date to be between m. Nixon Ind mysel "Ooi. Drew's announcement fol- liled meetings at Queen's P"! ltiveen the Lieutenant. Govemor and Premier Nixon and the P"- Iusive Conservative leader. ’ ‘The government will be a Pro- ve Conservative government.“ l. Drew announced followins i110 interview. "I believe that "P 27-point program will win sull- Wri 1n the legislature ss it h a ‘Iiih the people of Ontario. .-" halo oumrv ro rapbmo IONTREAL. Allg. 11 —(CPl — 17m men and a women, who med for a time as enumeratu... iii Montreal Cartier Constii/ucn . a federal by-eiection was hid lest Monday. pleaded gulltv W" i" charges oi “paddinv" el- iliorsi lists and were ordered to "Se" for Jvdizemeni Aug. i0. “'9 W". Max Ruben. Henry "°"°li1""l'. Leonard Sullivan and charred '1 "Walmass. were mun-uh“ on the lists the of reooie they had reason Phi-icw should not be int-rams. . ~9- ‘Talkies-Murray River Thurs- ~ s-io-ai "Tlillu - Eldon Friday. v “Illlt 10th. illione. Act, Al BPIIIe u at“ Picnic. It. . Wednesday A "Annual am-Crape "mildly Ausust is h eid ' lrmourie in "tun cums? dance of wane‘ "___. f." -1 ma. iuvsr School, Juan's niiiituts.1'mha'.'1s.ii‘fi%' -.ariusn warships extended Allied ihsscqne w malglssut ‘iiiusy mcsy 19th for Church. l-II- "Dm" Sourls Potato Wars- llth A i“: o, so“ ilst. Two Orchestras essivo are Monday 93".?‘ in aid sf u oasis.’ ‘s-io-is-ie. Canadian Cabinet War Committees Held. Iy C. It. Blackburn. Canadian Press Staff Writer Aug. MUCH-letters of take def to shape telly when s three-hour session of the rmitted announcement that President ted States will arrive here later 1s make more about present- Quebec BIO-Ii. w“. Johnston's Itiver shoal "M "HWY-Rotati- lot a ‘f-‘ffféi: John's s'-1o- '. at Blood l I-li lee Cream Social "j nt ofdtarevtl _ hcevllg Hospital. msrgslgi- val establishments of llam- 7 Conser- we holding a 22/4” I ~- The People's Paper Covers Prince Edwordilsland Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1943 TURN T0 NEW AIR nce At IHIIIIF hlhhifihii To iicadcd Famed island Battery in Last War ' Death Last Evening of . Lt. Col. Arthur E. . Peakefi. ... _.,,, u, m... of Joint British and the eri-pertite war conference ‘Ihe death occurred last night st his home at Elmwood. North River Road, of Lieut. Colonel Arthur C. Peake, officer commanding the 8th Medium Battery in the first world war, and one of Prince Edward Island's most distinguished war vet- erans. Colonel Pcake was in his 72nd year. He was stricken with para- ysis about five years ago, and had been confined to his bed ever since. A son of the late George Peaks. of the shipbuilding firm of Peake Brothers. Charlottetown, Colonel Peake served his early years in this business. l-le was also appointed to the command of the 8th Medium Battery, which he took overseas from this Province and which dis- tinguished itself in action on many occasions. Colonel Peake had a fine record as s. competent and experienced soldier, and wns very popular with his men. in whom he took a keen personal interest. In his earlier years he was an active member of the Masonic Order, the Oddfeilows. and Sons of England. His religious affiliation was with St. Peter's Cathedral. After the last war he engaged successfully in farming and fax ranching, until forced to retire through illness. He is survived by his widow. formerly Miss Muriel King. of Port Arthur, Ont: also two sons, Lt. C01. George Peaks, who took the ath Medium Battery overseas in the present war and is now with a Canadian Artillery Reinforcement unit; and Capt. Arthur G. Peakc. at present on the staff cf the Royal Military College. Kingston. Ont: and twn daughters. Mrs. C. N. Biss- ett (Alice), Westmount. Que. and Mrs. E. E. Spencer (Muriel) of Montreal. There are also three surviving brothers. Mr. Ernest Peaks. of Chalottetown. Lionel, in British Columbia, and Weston. Montreal: and one sister. Mrs. Edwin Alt-ken. Montreal. to all of whcm The Guardian extends sin- cere sympathy. The funeral arrangements will be announced later. AT A GLANCE lly The Canadian Press war c ttces surveyed “thewhcle Chu ‘~ perllalttod to he slid of Mr - Resident Today's meeting, officials said. was uni us in that it brought t0- gather t e British and Canadian Prime Ministers and their cabi et War commit‘ in part. for t e first time. m British war cabinet was re- presented by Mr. Churchill who is British Defence Minister, and Sir John Anderson, nerd president, 0g the Council. Mackenzie King's lo-man Canadian cabinet war com- mittee was complete but for the absence of Agriculture Minister Gardiner. What was " ussed at the three- hour session. and what is being done at the continuous conferences 0f the combined chiefs of staff which continue indefinitely at the Chateau, must remain only sub. iects for escalation. But it believed certain that they dealt wiil-i the ssibility of further use of Canadian forces in whatever new assaults may be launched against the Axis fortress in mmne. and discussed the pm lfllyed by the Canadian First Div- Ilia; fr; Sicily. i! liter question of grand stra- il-‘BY ls believed to be subject of the deliberations being carried on 17! the chiefs of staff‘. and the more remote but apparently vitally 11" question of agreed plans for POM-Will‘ Problems is expected izere to be the main subject of the Churchill-Roosevelt talks. I-‘lrst Public Appearance Mr. Churchill made his first real goblin appearance this morning. eviously he had been glimpsed briefly by l. few pcopis through a limousine window as he was driven to the vice-regal residence in the old Citadel from the railway sta- tion at Charny, on the St. Law- rence River south shore. where he left his train yesterday afternoon. Shortly before noon this morn- ing the familiar figure-long cigar, black homb , gloves and cane, confident smiic and fingers in the “V-for-victxiry" sign-appeared for a few minutes within the walled quadran ie before the main en- trance o the Chateau when he ar- rived for the cabinet meeting. Many ictures were taken o Mr. Churchil and Sir John Anderson standing with Mr. King and his cabinet colleagues on the steps, With Mr. Churchill and Mr. Kin each he ing arrange the group g t0 POLITICAL — Churchill confers with Canadian war leaders; An- nounced Roosevelt coming to Que- bec later to round-nut tripartite talks. London hears optimistic talk that Bvritish. American leaders will shape "vlctcry-this-year" assault on Europe. RUSSIA - Russian offensive on him-mile front digs deeper into Ukraine, cuts Kharkov-Pollen railway. rnaahee Bryansk and Smolensk. and may hm be any until President Roosevelt has arrived to complete. nOne even make the conference Possibly there wiii be then. Calls 0n Godbout Mr. Churchill and Mr. King lunohed at the Chateau and this afternoon drove to the 86-year-old is isiaturc build s to call on Pro- m er Adeisrd bout w with his cabinet colic ues, briefly with the via inrs in the ex- ecutive council chamber. Earlier the two Prime Ministers drove out to Bpencerwood the sub- urban ‘ of _ ‘s Lieut- ensnt Governors. to call upon Mai-Gen. Sir Imgcne Flset, the present governor. Mrs. c urchill-who accompanied __u _ ntinucdln_page_’l_0ol. 1) Allied Naval Forces Shell Italian Coast "the patterns of things to cornc". s. hltzlreiy has ltaly'snaaa‘rbour- ug n; navy uppes n a poorer light than when a sf us. lloynl Navy's drum and a eouapany of desire red their broadsldcs to the Casteilsrumars shipyards, lighting. huge fires In the dock ares w Ieh were seen by raid- ers seven miles away. SlClLY — Eighth army advances seven miles. takes Guardia: Royal Navy smashes shipyards near Naples; and railway bridges at Cape Vaticsno: serial pounding of lan- ilasso, Messlns area continues. AERIAL — It. A. F. and It. C. A. F. strike deep info Germany to un- load 1.500 tons of bombs on Nure- embers ss aerial sttaek diverted frorn_ basis ijndust Ies_of Rhur to SOUTH PACIFIC — Japanese still hnld out st Bairoko IIu-rbor on llzsw “ -' but ' closing Iy Daniel De Luce Associated Press War Corros- pouden ALLIED rmmllMl-‘YIIR-B- uoivrn A-mro . Aug. n —(AP) Mitt-lg: - a w‘ bom- north ‘domination of its!“ fltllllflttolhinin hoursofycstsirdsy witha N as fer y nature's moved wletfl u" Shore gins. some much heavier than those on the British warships replied without effect reveali the shoddy stats of Italian ooesta y defences which are responsible for protecting hundreds of miles of coastline. ' the southern corner of the Quebec Begins By Klrks L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst Sicilghiia the Soiifmliorirgdflavllet-Zliiiif h" but“!- mt an in Bu.“ Atlantic. The King-Churchill meetiar: i‘: ' m’ m" ‘m h ' ‘m’ °' Churchill "m, 51g“ so. military decisions of supreme consequence. lass The hour and the forces are at band for bold and aggressive strokes to clinch the dawning victory and clinch it soon. It i with th w and mofilnlglltitrgzilllll isear-iiafilgoiigcal, that éhehAillct-l war Csaptaili: and rebirth in freedom of the old. q “ ° n" ‘mm u’ m“ u" Before them will be a European war map utterly chan ed eve from '1" “P5141901!!! prospect it showed when they last met oniyzthree gmnths ago. Ital‘ is a- collapsed and oliticall - ur ed mighty xls arch. a liability, ngt an asslgtptogiquzi campaign in the Atlantic, last high card in u“; "ma. cue-r... . e x aa e rsmcwoe-k is wavering from the Balkans to Fin- Ifizt war industry is a bomb-shattered shadow, melt, Cumulaflyg vi! t ows are bleeding Japan of ships and plgflgg “m; mflnpgwgn o“ u Illlilbl. of all. in Russia a “CIIIEINIUIIS and pending Rer Army slblfilfiv“ 5 1'01 1"! W991“ 1191"" Wflshllllton and London deemed it pos- cnnfinliriee I110I1tAISlBKO. That must be the primary circumstance that ‘he l (‘ihscnlew hli ed battle directives and strategic concepts framed in 156"“ durc III-Roosevelt faee-to-faca grappling with war roblesns. I t lb e victories in Africa. Sicily, the Aieutians and the ar Pacific "rle o i e consolidated and their war-shortening potentialiriies realized. er; can be no delay in pressing new Allied attacks, olnrmmlcdinic maior moves to bolster the Russian offensive and kern it g u. rlc on csslv into the coming; winter when Nazi battle prowess fails o s ouest ebb must stand first on that Allied strategic conference agenda. Vi hatever Allied-moves can be soonest and moat CIICCIIVQIV im- lalilemeiafied as major diversions tn draw more Nani planes, [ung gnd dly. on!" the east must claim first Allied attention. .\ e risks to aid that mighty red summer drive now are warranted. ‘Huge Crowds Attend Old Home Week Big Show Continues Today With Bigger And Better Program. s”, 3 To Be . ilay 0f Prayer se ment of the once ermany. The U-bout Nazi hand, has been J, Walter Jones expressed his op- inion yesterday of the Old Home Week and Provincial Exhibition program now in full swing in the course of a brief address to the overflow crowd; and that is Just what this year's program is shap- ing up to. Yesterday from eoriy noon un- til late at night a colorful. holiday crowd srvarmcd through the big plant viewing the many attrac- tions that are to be witnessed. The show rings where judging was in full swing were crowded as in- terested spectators followed the judges activities as they went over minutely the cream of the is- lands horses, livestock and cattle. Competition in th different classes is very close and as the judges stated yesterday the qual- ity of the stock on display this year is even better tliun that of the ast. Bil Lynch's Midway was in full swing and the crowds that milled around the various usement booths, sideshows. etc. were find- ing something new. something different evcry minute. making it next to impossible to take in them all in the one day. The harness racing program was witnessed by an overflow crowd that taxed almost cvery available bit of space. Four classes were run off and the race fans witnessed one of the finest after- noon's sport ever seen hcrc with thrilling, blanket finished marking each and every hent as Island- owncd horses added two more vic- wriea to the pair they chalked up on opening day. Interspersed oe- tween heats was a full vaudeville program that again drew down weli-meritsdmpplauae from the gathering, Night Show Even more thrilling. colorful and spectacular than the openini; night was the consesus of opinion expressed by another huge at- tendance, many of whom were in their seats last night as earl as\ seven o'clock for the night s 0W. one of the fig features of the Old Home Week program. ' In addition to Monday h1il11i-B show th Paramount Revue 0! New Yor that were unavoidobity detained due to transportation di ~ ficuities were seen in two D61‘- formnnces yesterday. Beautiful young ladies. gorgcouslye attired went through in_ti_1_gate autifuiiy u _________._ ___ _on_pgss col. s) tw- Join the Host of Home Bakers who [U530 CANADA LONDON, Aug. l2 —iThurs- My) - (CP) ~ The Kha today directed that Scpt. , [Olllth anniversary of the start of the war, be observed as "a national day of prayer and tie- dlcation." An announcement from Buck- ingham Palace said, "It k the desire of Ills Majesty the King that Friday, Sept. 8, being the fourth anniversary of the out- break of war, should be observ- ed as u national day of prayer and dedication." Teachers Oppose "Freeze" Order SAINT JOHN, N.B., Aug had been received Federation conference here. The telegram to the Labor Min amendment or repeal of order-in which the teachers point The Minister was asked to mee Conference regarding the Prime Minister Mackenzie King. _.________. KILLED IN ACTION N. B.. Aug. by his mother. Mrs. ChMhlm Head. Sgt was killed in action overseas years of age is survived .535. In in, Quebec and the imminent ' ' ' Allie . ll - (OP)— Up to late tonight. no reply from Hon. Humphrey Mitchell. Federal Min- ister of Labor, to the telegram sent him by the Canadian Teachers‘ later contained the text of a resol- ution sdopted by the Teachers‘ Ped- eration and which requested the council P. C. 4862. This is the ordetr ou . "freezes" them in their professions. a delegation from the Teachers’ resolu- tion as 50011 as possible. A copy of of the resolution was also sent to OHATI-IAM. 11 - (CP) —Aooording in word received Barrieau, . Hiiaire Bill'- rieau of the Royal 22nd Regiment on July lli. Sgt. Ba-rrisau who was 2d his encircled city to cut one of the parents; six brothers and six sis- BULLETIN MONTBEAL. Ailt. ll —(CP) -.Prlme Minister Churchill passed through Montreal to- night from Quebec enrouta to unannounced destination. A six-car special train carry- Inl the Prime Minister and Ills party was given rlght-of-way from Que and stepped for l9 minutes at Park Avenue station in M s north end. 999 Axis Planes Are iiapturcd ALLIED HEADQUARTERS NORTH AFRICA. Aug. 2'2 —(AP) - The Allied Air Command said today that 999 Axis aircraft had been recovered from captured Sic- ilian airfields. Included in the booty were 262 Measerschmitt 109's The IHBJOTRY of these planes were wrecked when found. but o. “surprising large number were still found serviceable" and were flown to salvage centres, it was said. Mass Break From Prison (lamp Foiled "rat/minus, but. Aug. 11 _(CfP) Officials of the German poison blows in Ruhr and the where camp at Monieith, 40 miles east of Timmins. from which Eckhert Brosick. 22-year-old German para- chutist, escaped Sunday. said today guards had uncovered plans for a mass escape of prisoner-of - war from the camp. Brosic. believed a leader of the esca plot. is said to have escsiped through turmels. dug laboriously - by prisoners with shovels improv- ised from tin‘cans. His break tip- pad off the plot before the mass exit could be made. More than 100 food kits, which months to put together. were found. They were made up of food from their own supply and from parcels sent them through the Rad Cross. Praise Work 0f First Division ALLIED . NORTH AFRICA. II --(CP Allied Headquarters today paid tribune to the work of the Canadian lat Division in Sicily, saying its per- formvance had been exceptionally ne. fi-le said the division had sueeed- ed in cracking meow tough nuts in the central sector of the Allied line which had resulted in the enemy showing lack of c-‘iension. He remarked that the division had never seen action before and said its bro-ms "rose megnliiclently to the occasion and greatly distin- guished themselves." JEIVPILS FUND CLOSED sfmsisx. N. ‘B. Aug. 11 4cm -- After raising more tlhan $4.600 the Canadian Jewels Spitfire Ffiinci has now being closed. ‘The Jewels Spitfire Fund was launched in i940 with the aim of assisting in the purchase of a Sritfre for the RA F. hr Mrs. M. Dixon. of Sussex. and n group of ladies with Jewel IIIIIIIES Contributions came to the fund from all suit-ions of Canada and géoam several estates in the United - es. ARTIIRS t LONDON, Aug. ll -rAP)~Ru5s- ian forces advanced to within 'l l-2 miles of Kharkov today and shot a column southwest of the almost last German escape railways in a sudden wheeling movement that carried them to within 96 miles of the Dnicper River bend. By cutting the Kharkov-Poltava railway at Fodyanaya. 40 miles west of Kharkov. the Russians thus narrowed the escape gap from Kharkov to about 60 miles in ihe south. a special Moscow communi- cue indicated. The advance toward the Dniepcr ihcatened to drop clown behind the Germans in the Donets Basin, where largo Nazi forces are dcuioy- ed from 100 to 200 miles southeast- ward of the new timist. Soviet ainncn nircndy wcrc blast- ing German-held railway stations. an official said must have taken p MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN Ufa I probation: Iertsi anen was made to solve the solemn prob- iean-right or wrong. Ilbeariptlau Ilellvssud. lb.“ Iall. bee» eths- Provinces a U.I.A. $5.00. 8 PAGES STRATEGY HENRI BMMAEIB Take flap: Germany Is Raided 3rd Straight Night By ROBERT N. STURDEVANT, (Associated Press Staff Writer) _ LONDON, Aug. 13-—(Thursday)—(AP)i-Hcds vy bombers spilled more than 1.500 tons of ex- plosives on the Nazi Shrine City of Nuremberg Tuesday night, and Berlin radio abruptly quit the air just after midnight Wednesday to indicate that the R.A.F. was hammering Germany for the third straight night. German planes dropped bombs on a south- western English coastal district early today. These retaliatory stabs have grown infrequent during the summer as the Axis air force has been put more‘ and more on the defensive. _ ‘ The blasting of Nuremberg disclosed e.‘ switch‘ in Allied strategy, aimed at destroying Germany's finished products centres as distinct from her al- ready devastating basic industries. Convinced that the 1on5‘ .heavy ineland the Reich's elementary ma- terials of war are produced. have all but put an end to the enemy's flow of basic materials. the R.A.F. bomber command has decided to concentrate on the manufacturing Medals Awarded Retired Army lion UITAWA. il-fiis-Q- deuce eeinmuuasdtev nighttheavwurdodlle 4 Berviccbifedalie ltlretdredmesn- bsrscfifhe permanent force of Canada. Thermal sswardsdblfi goodeondimmegl: and Mrs hemdisotiargedtopaisionatter Blqggersssrfloe. hum“? Johnflgrisrnmoyll bsssass Anlliorvhllalifear: from the Nuremeberg ruins, and that (0,000 persons were ruads homeless. still burned in the city Wednesday night, it ssis. Ony a icw hours aftl the IA. It-RACAJ". planes d their shattering cargo u: uremberg. Nazis held their annual ais before the war. an British lit?! of ic warfare explained lie ass of the aerial assault on Germany. He said the enemy's prcduo tion of consumer goods barely was keeping pace with the raid dam- age and said the Germans a edtobsdirclyinneedodo ing. Th, latest. or second s the campaign to knock the out of the war actually began two nights ago in the heavy attack on Mannheim-Ludwigshafen. he said. Les ighfs raid was the sixth of the war on Nurembers and much the heaviest it has under- gone. Halifax bombers the R-CAP‘. bomber grouup too art in the raid. and other Canad ns flew in R.A.F. and New Zealand squad- ( yal Saint Jnhu, N.B.; and Harry Hunt (Royal Canadian Army Medical l!" Corps). Quebec oth- AMHERST. N.S., As]. Il-(OP) —Asavml Offla tvnior coal cosisumers in Montreal would possible i! m outlet and facilities wcre provided wash. N S.. f mines hers. e mantel development fiction was told today. Mayor A. . Mason and 1B. Poul. superintendent of the Qum- berland coal and railway company mm gged establishment of rtlhe oujtlet - itu Th. 1w o! a“ ensure a shcr. c gap l 8M1" lg!‘ tn the Gulf of . Law- ll offs vc pointed _ ‘mliih-riiiu or - w- wu i38°s."..“i.'°2‘t't.i“ h “difdmféfii. here “.22 ‘iti..f“.‘i‘"°1“ 3h’. "?“;‘°..”12i.‘i; . e en enn :1 autumn it will be bie to {BDAD split-HEW iin in darkness. Siixlteencbomdiiers vwfiretlost.‘ gna- i of t em ana an. e arge as i 5 0F time Laeow ' 1 iifaouuo may... t» ‘Home u- ills at the German capital. from which an estimated 1.000.000 wo- make th entire roundtli-igabc Ber- ‘vi H '1' = ..-, as a ahoncui r ANY i- \\.\.'* trrtcfs left blazing. the crewmen said. with a bright red glow tinting the clouds thousands of fcet overhead- YOUTII IS DROWNED SHEET HARBOUR, N S.. Alli. ll _(CP)~ Robert L. Marshall. i6. drowned today at Malay Falls about Fall Of Kharkov Is Expected Shortly trains, and troop columns south of nine miles from here. while work- ing with a log-driving crew. l-lcl l-ligh tide this morning at 1.08 and tonight at 9.04 - lost his footing and was appar ‘ f Sun sets this evening at 8.17 and 558 entiy carried under raft by the swift current. Kharkov, apparently in an effort rises tomorrow morning at -- - to cut off the retreat of aizeable F011 1110011 N18- 15- 3-34 llam- Axis (one, based u; Kharkov and. Summerside tide i8 minutes later in the Donct; Basin. Lxnzovaya, Bar-i 111"" Chfiilmwwwii- venkovo and other stations on the c“; "may sEnvyca vital Kicv-Stnlino line were at- “any 5x951»; guyqpay tacked. the bulletin said. From Borden — Leave 8.40 rum. Capture of the Hamlet of Cher L45 p.u|. and 4.55 p.l\'i. kasskle Tishki brought the Russ- Leave Cape Tnrmcntine il a. m. fans nearer in Kharkov frorn the 3.35 p. m. and 8.30 p. m. northeast. Russia's i. ird argest . city, Kharkov. lying on an opcn nfigkycs§énsui1irAvgfn 1mm“ appeared dmmed’ m’ t}: Charlottetown — summersid... — Russians were now ’i l-9 "m," Leave Charlottetown 1.50 a. m- away on the northeast. 20 miics on the east, l2 miles on thr- north, 30 12.710 . m. 4.30 , ne. ‘irrlire (Jharhliciown I.l0 p. m 5.45 p- m. 7.05 ll. m. miles on the west and 22 miles on the southeast. The Germans hurriedly brought B m |__N_ g3 FERR‘: slmvwn up several tank divisions in an ni- Dmry [picj-Lupmg spNnAyg tempt to break tin- Sovirt drive on Kharkov. said the Moscow mid l-"nvc Wood Islands - 7.00 a. na night communique. mcordcd by tho "lailzez-lg-‘rllgguiil- m. Soviet radio Monitor. 1 Wm n"! s N‘ 9m " m’ “"1