MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN 1g hgtl: mil; ll lblenntoo throw 3W; y] . .gg;fj;;l°“'~i Ali-i "'-""=~‘i The People's Paper _ I W50 h O H. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ‘Charlottetown Guardian, Two Cents. llornlug Guardian, Ioundod till- FHARLorTErbwisfcANAbA, FRIDAY, ocean/innit 2o, 1940 12 PAGES ' By All-Iii PJLL, 81.00; Annual Subscription Delivered, $6.00. Canada and 0.8. ".00 1152110111 llAZl PLANES usrn 1o FERRY iuyinsi Britain To German Warned I Watch For Invasion Churchill declares would be dis- aster to suppose danger has passed. (By Hugh Wagnon. Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON Dw- 19--l-\Y)—Wlnston Churchill thi . . inls Wflfllllll i” m” filth“ ‘"531’: “Watch from 1101:‘: hoiir 52:11:21- snd menace" of German Invasion. "It would bo a. disaster if anyone supposed that th d 1h gupremc danger, the mortal dangers, are passed," he deeclariickillrettii Lin: H0050 0f Cflmmolli. rimming for the wartime holidays. i/fhey are noti. . . the winter season offers some advantages to an invader . . . It would be a very great lack of prudence, a [Mk or pm. denco amounting to l. crime, if vigilance were relaxed in our armies at home." The Prime Minister used this occaslo to h inn only a half-armed nation fighting nnrnnyitzif, ,,°,,",§,,:,h.§“w'::',§"f; i941 become well armed, with the help of America‘; one“ subpuun and W 4m" "w British conquest of the Italian armies of Egypt ' "The British army," h, “m, showing its quality." "has at last had an opportunity of Tho year 194i he predicted will 1; ".1 ' .. other theatres on ‘terms of modcrate effiiilltyninshnuythggs ,.',',',;“,°,:'°“ 1m merit, if not in defence of the British Isles themselves" m" p. Admiralty Blocks plot By Italians (By Harold Fair, Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON, Dec. Ill- (CF (‘ablel-Jlhe Admiralty tonight released a document found by British seamen in a captured Italian subrna :1!!! in which Italian su V ‘ command- m warp l trusted to attack “ci-rtaln Spanish merchant lliips without warning." Informed sources said Bri- tain thus had thwarted an Italian plot to stir up Spanish sentiment by placing the blame for such sinkings on Britain. 'l"iie Admiralty said the or- der was signed “Mario Fulan- olla, Vice Admiral command- llg submarines," and rend, as lrfinslatedt—- "Inform units under your command that ships flying the Spanish iia bciongingdo In Particular, the Prime Minis- ter noted the slackening in Gei- man air attacks in the past few days——-e. slackening which, he 531d, 0118M Hilly be “in preparation for some other form of activity." Our defence of the beaches 15 complete. From the north of Scot. land around the island, enormous masses of guns, machine guns, fortified posts and every device of defence have been erected and they are guarded by large bers of well-trained men." But, he said, Britain will not; sit, coinplacently behind this fortified line of beaches as France sat be. hind the Maglnot Line, Again, he warned: “Hitler-I should certainly deprecate any comparison between Hitler and Napoleon, I do not want to insult the dead-wields gigantic powers and is capable of wielding it in a IilLlTl- ruthless manner. .he has great need of doing something now. ur at any rote in the next two months.“ Churchill Cheered Mr Churchill was cheered peatcdly. In Egypt and Libya, he said. the British find Imperial army, con- tending with odds as high as five to one, lost less than 1.000 dead 1'6 - Tbarru and Pinllos , companies leaving or coming from Casablanca (Morocco) and sailing towards Lisbon must be attacked without warning." The order gave details by which the ships could be iden- tified. Lloyd‘s register says Ybarra owns 21 ships and Plnlilos has nine. Informed sources said an ef- fort to stir up the Spaniards was the‘ only possible explan- ation because these ships are 11:11 assisting the British war l . These sources believe the It- lllans would have torpcdocd the ships without warning and then raised the cry of “Bri- tish war tactics." Almost 103cm Canadian Military Vehicles in use OTTAWA. Dec. l0 —-(CP) —Ma.j. M. M. Evans, technical staff of- ficer at national defence headquar- ters, ioid members of the Engineer- iil Institute of Canada today that "molt 10.000 units of the 4'7 types 0i military vehicles produced 111 Canada are in various parts of the Wfllld. serving with the Empii-eb: mules. Mll- Evans added that many more thousands are in service cllnfldfl. while almost 00,000 are on 0MB? for Bouth Africa. Coming Events ._o_- " ame Do l Redl .20 Boner Hilisboro. ye a n” ‘flhglo Plains Concert postponed . . mber 331d. ' L-5o7-i2-20-zo. "Wm Ieightiaer co Water ltmt. " “ma. ‘gblllgfgzelrlféodfid poultry. all . Trv us. _ L-751-1.'-23to Dec. ..i "Wloedowbaiuc School WW. December 20. [1-197-12-9-31. d"W¢ have advanced ices on "Md chldcen and fow, sell w In for satisfaction. H. L. Dlckieson. 11-036-12-18-31. to Concert. "The Alberry Plains school Cen- mrt postponed till December 23rd. b009-l2-20- “"11 meeting will be held at Rov "mans. Iiriday Dec. 20th. to ar- T"!!! about getting Pownel Rink l irted and management for seat! L- _And Collier L-596-l2-20-2l. , »For decision (Continued on page l0. C01 4i ll. S. Battleship in collision mow YORIZ Dec. l9-tAP)—- The United states navys 28-year- old zdJOO-ton battleship Arkanfifli- carryiin 500 naval reservists, an? the out oumi colller Melrose. 5.14 tons. collided today off the New Jersey coast. the culller going t0 the bottom after a ill-mile YEW W a Brooklyn drydock. The warship Pfvceeded w 1h“ Hudson River anchorage. mnlls only some paint and with e smashed lifeboat. A naval boardof inquiry W35 chllcd to investigate the crash‘. which oxgurrred off sea Girl B11011 4 am. . Capt. George E. Tobin o! N10 Melrose gave this version:- "The s y was clear, the water smooth as silk. The battleships grey paint made it difficult to sec her. Before we knew it the Ark- ansas rammed our port aid!- ll must htave cracked our 015W im- dei" wa er." The empty Melrose proceeded for drydock with the Arkansas following. Capt. Tobin said she rnn aground about half a mile from the dock and slink. Earlier reports snid she had been beach- ed. Youth waits In slaying nilrsnono. Kv. Diw- 19- (Anggms father dead from P0556‘ men's bullets. 15-year-old Cl-W" Buchanan. Jr._ waited in a jail cell tonight for [.he law to “$1351: whether it will Pm“ ' 1 m charge against lilm in the s3)’ of a constable and the wounding o twgcllngoxlsihty attorney waiter B- Smith said he would questionakthe (my ugaiil l"llll)i‘l‘0W befoie m J18 a decision. f: added yzung Buchan- an denied firing all)’ 83191-5 but 1i. “mi. he was armed when arrested wt‘ i or Wheeler. ‘a. qiffilf lillllitklriflialéii rigtllll here. g-iniito led 50 armed offceis 11nd cliizrne who caflv 10118!’ Captured the youth's fatally wounded father. ' ' J 3. Clyde William Buchanan. 4i‘?- I‘he Allied iorees Fihifiypt, inciuoin Allies In Action Against Italians ,.». g tioops l British Italian Thai hi... Make attacks 0n lndo-China BANGKOK, Thailand. Dee. 19. — (AHJ- Thai warplanes ziieue dawn attacks Loony on seven points in‘ fwencn Inuo-Cniiizi. a cuiiiinunluuc snici, curiying “lCDl‘1s‘i\i" bcniulixgs deeper into Indo-Chiilese territory than at anv time since the 1on1:- standing border dispute entered the stage of intermittent hostilities in mid-October. _ l The communique said besides bombing Vientiane, cunltal of Lacs State. and two other Mekong bor- der points. the planes raided Muanllseniz. an Annam protectorate town 85 miles inside the Indo-China border and onlv 160 miles south- west of Hanoi. and also three other, points at least 60 miles inside Indo- Chino. The communluue indicated io-, day's raids were in retaliation for‘ ihree ejleged serial viontlons of the Thai frontier last Sunday when‘ Bangkck officially reported tl~e French Inrlo-Chinese dropped mCre than a score of bombs. 30,000 Italians Prisoners; British Lose 1,000 men LONDON, Dec. 19 -(CP) —-War Secret y Anthony Eden announc- ed today at an otlrseas leaillle luncheon honoring officers of the Canadian forces that up to Dec. 16 at least. 30,000 Italians were tak- en prisoners by British forces 1n the western desert fighting with a 10m of only 1.000 British troops, killed, wounded and missing. 1M1‘. Eden said the number of It- alians listed by him as prisoner "is a conservative estimate." He added that the “recent bril- liant victory" by Gen. Sir" Archibald Wavell, commander in chief in the Middle Bast, was a “simple lesson." that "given equipment and training there are no troops anvwhers in the world superior to those of the British Commonwealth." Mi". Eden said the "Canadian forces in England have had to un- dergo a harder ordeal than any other troops in the British com- monwealth." lie added: "I feel sure that the Canadians will have their chance in bottle. but it would be foolish to speculate when and when . . . there can be no final victory without the army and the Canadians will prove worthy of the men of vlmy . " .____....____.._ FATALY INJURED GLACE BAY. N. 8.. Dec. 19 -- (GP) —Russell Petrie. 8i, of near- bv Dominion died in hospital io- nlght of s skull fracture suffered today when he lost control of an automobile in which he was dz-lv- tng to his work in a coal mine. The oar, skidding on struck s telephone pol- icy pavement... I Prepa re Last Heavy Blow In Libyan Sector Move fresh T5355 forward for battle against trapped army. Biv Eric Bigio Associated Press Staff Writer CAIRO, Egypt. Dec. l9—(AP)— The British command brought up new troops bfeore Bardia tcday for a 11st hfavy blew in that Libyan sector, and declared offic- inlly that the rear wing the Italian army trapped there is fac- in imminent, capture or annihil- ai an. The road to the west toward the important Fascist bnse of Tobruk- the next objective of the desert offensive and lying 80 miles west 0f the Egyptian froniie was under intermittent bomb fire. and in the Mediterranean the guns of the Brlt'sh flzet commanded the route of retreat. The Italian position in the whole area was termed "precarious" by ‘.he Brl eh high command. . any Italians were cui off about Bardie was not stated of- ficially. save that their forces were described in o British general head- quarters communique as “numer- ically superior" to the lengthening columns which had boxed them in. and were believed by some to be perhaps two divisions. The British list cf Italian cap- tive-, was lengthening. Thosesorted. counted and in hand a; permanent prisoners of war numbered 31.5%. said headquarters here. and to thzs number will be added the “several thousand" still being brought forth from the battle areas. Total Bri- tish loses-killed. wounded and missing-wars, cfficielly put at less than 1.000. _ Royal Air Fbrce reports indent- ed that the earlier heavy Italian flight observed toward Tcbruk had vtcontinued on page 10. Col t) __._______ Firms may be Penalized for Abnormal bonuses O/ITAWA, Dee. 19 -—(CP) Firms paying abnormal Chrisimas bonuses and deducting them from tax returns may have their deduc- tions reduced by the taxing auth- ority, according to provisions of the Excess Profits Tax Act, Finance Minister Ilsley said today. 'I'l"ie some is true in the case of lax-paying companies abnormally enlarging payrolls or spending ex- tra large suns on advertising. pro- motion or slmiliar endeavors as a means of reducing the residue of profits. ""11 "'9 l-di-efl b105, Ausiraiza, New Zealand, India, Poland "Id FT" French detachment!» I-re ridding Illllidly to their extraordinary captures in Egypt, Th; glzg or the Italian force defeated is indicated by the cspturg of a corps commander and [our commanders. Above is a picture of some of theIndian troops engaged, dashing t tt k d h _ ling difficulty, in keeping up with the fleeing Fascists. o a ac an w ,. divisional British bomb Nazi-Fascist Communications May be Seeking Break Rail Tie Link- ing Axis Countries. tol, By ALFRED WALL Associated Press Stall‘ Writer LONDON. Dec, l9.—-(AP)—In a British campaign which informed Loudoil quarters said wns intended to uestrov communications between Germany and Italy. Mannheim was bombed last flight and esirlv today in the third successive i1l2l1t1t~ as- sault while other pilots ranged to the south to strike at Milan and Genoa. dustriiilly important soutliwesien I German cltv which lies ut the enn- iluence of the Rhine and Neckzzr 1 rivers, and is a kev iunciion of the, ‘river-rail routes to Italv for steel" from the German Ruhr and coal; from the German Saar-was offici- ally declared to have set off mam‘ new flies amid the smoking rubble left in previous raids. The cltv said the Air Ministry, was under intermittent assault from earlv last 1112111 to the hours lust before dawn todav. Among the results announced were these:_An oil receiving depot probably hit. a railway lunctkn struck bv an entire stick of bombs. _ cause of the great The attack on Manl1e1m-an ln- ' fires left beside a rollwnv station. direct hits on two warehouses and on industrial buildlnos in Ludwig- shefen across the Rhine. a bomb Ann-k and lr-fr erupting iii a suc- csajfljggf brilliant exclusions- m, wig“, m jvotbillfb Irony. the |set XUZLOIXSII’ a-mwe- s 1111;.‘ factory. the docks in fie- .noa. LIELV. an airdxame i“ '" "r Italy. r-o 3;; Germlm .- - "iir base a1 UIH‘_Z3AV- Prat. < ‘ “Ed among thy targets nit. Four islanders To receive orders In Priesthood HALIFAX. Dec. 19 —(CP) Thirty-two candidates will be rais- ed to various orders in the Roman Catholic priesthood here Saturday by Most Rev. John T. McNully. Archbishop 0f HB-lifflx- Among those who will receive or- ders are: Deaconship-Rev. Leonard Mc- Kenne, Central Bedequle, PEI; Rev. Eric Robin. Charlottetown; Rev. William Simpson, Johnstons River, PEI. First minor orders-Rev. M18115- tine Kelly. Auburn, P. I. L; RW- Willuid O'Brien, Elmsdalc, P. El ._.__¢_-—-—-—— SEND FOOD T0 ITALY TORONTO. Dec. 10.—(CP)—'I'he Crech Consulate here today Nflélvfld s, dispatch from the Cuchoslovak Press Bureau in London. stating that all cattle and plan reoulsitioned bv the Nazis in Moravia are belnk sent to Italy in an attempt to re- lieve the f shortage there. muirhicti [7111 Buiunq Bricud Ministgv d;\c_lv-"-"‘__a large area wosl Rumored (iov’t ' Plans Minister For overseas OTTAWA. Dec’. 19—(CP)-R.e- are current in Ottawa ma; 1e Government is considering the BPDOintment of a permanent min- ister for overseas, to be giahqned in London and to sit with the British Government ln dealing $3152)?‘ affairs concerning the It is known, however, that Prime 1 Minister King has heretofore taken the stand that such a liaison is not considered necessary. as it Huge Transports Rush Aid To Albanian Front Fascist lines still sagging as Greeks continue was ln the First Great Wm", n¢_ zidvnncc- in‘ communication facilities since the: i time. I Any minister so appointed would‘ have to refer to the home govern- ment for all expressions oi opln.‘ 11m or policy which he might make- . tothe British Government. 1 AY- Pfefient a consultation be- tween the British Prime Minister] or any of his cabinet colleagues fatn be arranged with Prime Min. s er _Mackenz1e King 1n a platter 0i 1111110385 by trans-Atlantic tele- phone. That was impossible in The ‘dangers of (trans-Atlantic gm-‘Slngs. 11S Sharply emphasized y the narrow escape of Munitions Minister HOWe in the past week has brought to the forefront spec: "lfltion which started with the war on the appointment of a perman- ent; overseas minister in London. Hon. Vincent Massey. Canadian High Commissioner in London, acts as the liaison between the Dominion and British Govern- ments but it ls rumored that since the incident of the Western Prince attention 1s being given (he m...‘ of maintaining a permanent min- ister in London in addition to M1". Maaey. Veteran designer Suggests fleet 0f Cargo Subs WASHINGTON, Dee. l9 (Al?) — Simon Lake, veteran l designer of submarines, said fo- l day that a. flrct of 10ft cargo 1 submarines could luml 51.001100!) ions of goods in Britain each year-and foil the German U- boat raiders. “ Nine-million tons. he said, ivas lust twice as much its all the supplies shipped from the Unit- ed States to the British Isles iii 1938." Lnke said in a statement that a submarine to carry 7.500 tons could be built "fit only slightly greater initial cost" than sill‘ face freighiers of the same ca- pacity and that the operation cost per ton probably would not exceed that of regular ships. Ilo estimated the rost of I00 such Submarines at 87.00.000.000. Nazi Specialists counter-invasio Yugoslavia, lrciiiieifl. Dec. STRUUA. Albanian —»1Vllli that ‘Al. f eis of 111g Ilzillun reinforcements the Adriatic to lmillefrfint fis her hard-pressed ally. Concurrently, Greek fightinu in cold so fierce hundreds of were reported found frozen death, were sulrl bv from patches to 111111‘ ATHENS, Dec. lliu-(AP) The Italians have Pull-rum is sitlliltl-‘il. in ri-tri-ut to (flilinziru, in lllllllii, a (inveriimf-nt 1111111 iiniiouiiccfl tonight. Ilc suiil the and that the Italians [iuslieil oi‘ 'l‘cpclcni. Pillvrlni» lliiy is north of the ~—,—:::.—_:T_:~--— _ 141 1.110 IQ-JAP‘ ' mUUlTIPS reported tonight Gemiun-plloted lJunkcrs zill- transports were ferry- across iiie Albzinlun Clr-rnu111y's aid to lTo enlist %,Enroute to lP.E.l.; Wants that abandoned Palermo Buy, on ivliich Porto - their Al- spokes- Fascist-field town of Klisurn was under fire were |.l1\(‘i( to the outskirts slrolriziv port of Santa Quar- zinfi (Porto Edda) which fell to the Greeks several days ago. The Greek coinrnanfVs night- ll’ communique sziid that over tho whole lighting flfff-"Titaiic of more prisoners hail been taken. EH33. 21ml Pclermo. The some advices said the Greeks fvllflvvd tlieii" customary tactics of uulil rlomin. , _ been ‘unnppcfl 11p, lost the Italian real"- do 1:1)"; _ ; ocfupniion 111111;’ l ' 4111s nearby" hnfl guurfl irm them, The nsslnnincnt l1'ei1::p01"is bun’ ' "Dill!" 11 of 1hr‘ troop monument usefl in (Coiliiniiefl on page 101cm 4 Canadians ‘With R. A. F. Get awards LONDON. Occ. 19.——~(CP Cable)- wcrc named to- l list of awards to the Three received lilo lllriilllillllsilCfl flying cross and. the fourth the distinguished flying‘, Foul" Canadians nlsht in a Royal Air Force. 111v’ 11.1. Tiler are:- \Vinc-c01nmunder Joseph Cox. of Arrive in Rome LONDON. Dec. 19.—-(CP) — The British Broadcasting Qcrboration. Quoting a "neutral OUSQIVBF" in RQWP- 581d tonight lame numbers 0f German anti-aircraft gunners and other German armv units de- scribed ns "specialists" have arriv- ed in Rome. Italian officers told tho pout-ya] observer. the BBC said that. ‘ihic-Jo arrivals‘ are the beginning of a Ger. man attempt to reduce Ifnlv the status of an allv to that; of a, vassal." The B.B.C. also Quoted. Rome re- ports ivhich said the council of the Fascist militia today passed a re- solution calling on Italians "to form a bloc strong cnouali to meet all trials around 11 Duce. while one of the greatest crises in nlsinrv is nearing its conclusion.” Former President 0f Finland dies; liad quit post HEILBINKI’, Finland, Dec, 19_ (AI-‘l-Kyosti Kallio, former Pres. ldent of Finland, died nought of a heart attack a few hour after Risto Ryti had been elccted to succeed him. Kalllo was 6'7. Finnish Republic. was brrn 10. 1877i, in the village of near ihc eastern cnasl of Bcthnin. To him fell the prseldcnlial guidance of the national recon- struction now under way Kallio suffered o [acting president. Onlv was named Prudent. bv college. ital Hopi Kili'o Had riled. biil. lat-er from Helsinki said that. his tion wiui considerably improved. from ‘ Kalllo, fourth President of the‘ April Niemelfi. Kyusmn. Ont. Flying-officer 111W» Cllviui. Vancouver "Pilot W" Toronto. 1's IP11 C‘. Cox, (Tm-ion llle DFC ivci-e amn flefcrrcfl "Potions. 115+ which contained Trvitilcnmln! lNazis come ‘Back for ‘Brief raidsf LONDON. Dec. ‘i9 ——(CP) —-Ge_1‘- czune back for a brief tonight alter ‘giving the city n 88-110m- respgz- £51m, John lillglll moss forays b60011 105'- 361)‘ [Charloggemwn lmhli raiders Ills-adult on London "the longest bonibless period ' i-PIIIUEI‘. an than 600 hanLn towns of Kllsura, Tcpeleni of German to curry troops to Al- il‘Lli‘-—\'»'fll1id represent an technique of Poland, 4) Arthur Chamber- Officer" Archibald Phiunl Keith Dcvcli, of and Walsh received Devcll the DFM. Thev 1G airmen named on n no ‘llcncc tho reasons for their ileum-e wcic not immediately their Fascist foemen: ~c fils- forced Italian u-ltliclrznvnl from the strategic Al- i YARMOUTH, N.S.. Dee. lil-JCP) —.'£uvenioen-vca1"-o1d Marcie Pale, of Brookllne. Mass. ivlio wants to enter a Canadian ambulance corps, arrived here todav from Boston. She is to spend her Christmas va- cation in Prince Edward Island and she said that while in Canada she ivilkinvestigate the procedure for ectimtr into n corps for service in Canada Or overseas. Interested in mechanics. she can drive a truck and make minor rc- palrs. She has a light delivery truck. ivhich she hopes to be able to hand over to the Candlan Armv for ambiikmce use. Marcia. accompanied bv her fnthcz- and two sisters. left here for Saint John. N. 13.. en route to O'Le:1rv. PEI, ivhere the-ii" mother has ripened 11n their summer home for the hclkhvs. Flour Mills go 0n 24-hour Basis; Big orders VANCOUVER, Dec. 19 —(CP) - Flour mills in Western Canada have gone on a 24-hour production basis lo cop: with huge orders. from Chinn resulting from \1"ifhdi"11u"al oi the subsidy on American flour by the United Suites government, ac- cording f0 millcrs in Vancouver. The inlllers said that since Willi- draival of the U. S. sulmldy" o1 7C cents a barrel to Tidewater Mills in Wushliigf-mi and Oregon lzisl lilfl aim ..i. even basis with ihe Ii- ,mei"ic."in product, Chinese order: lfor Canadian flour have totalled lmDM-h. P159111‘! Canadian flour or ‘ 100.000 barrels. 1 Mons. | l TORONTO, Dee. l9——(OP)-—-Mlifl mum and maximum temperature: 1111 xvson 7B Vicwrla. 43 Lunlcziton l3 5 Re c.1111 3 1 Winnipeg 15 Toronto F7 Oi iawa 31 Mon Lrcal 29 Quebec g c“ l Halifax FORECA 5T Soon after 110ll(lOl‘i'S sirens rais- fd their wall, gunfire was heard 1n the capital's outskirts. The all-Clem" sounded before 9.30 p Spurlwl by ilic p ,ll1-e \"lllS may have been 111-1 is u. xi ziflvziiilzige 0f i0 bolster st illrzlll- raiders. its pznvc the om- . m. axsibillty that Maritime Provinces: Moderate ,fresh winds; partly cloudy a ‘becoming milder; snowflurries ,llght rain at night or on Silhlfd sa vlug . vcnclh 101" a musici- stroke, dill-is 11f London's all" drleilecs - .. . interlude their bulivarks weather _ rcnson for the city's Synopsis: The weather has bi mild in Oninfin wzth light rum snowflurries in some dhstricis. has been fair w‘1‘.1 cnszdera "above nomial temperature 1111-0111 p. loot the West. heart. attack last August and Premier Rislo Rvti 1°" took over his ilutirs. late-r lwconlulu l today" Ryll _ (wt-1- whellnlng vole of Fliiintidls rglfiClnliil . 7. DNB. reported flat ivorfl mildl- \\i1lf‘ll lasted since lost vrrs) ‘ rc- ' . ., Fpifllfiiblllles of leading Finland 1:1 i Mm“ '\ Nmmg‘ her war with Soviet Russia and first r obsvrvcis said the Cirr- innils, like other coutrneutnlvnn- lions. llrkrxl efficient dc-icing ,mcc.lr.1111.=1ns on their heavy bomb- l T11 'l'11c1"i.- vie"- 111-.111\' ulio believed the (‘iexlnnns mail" have diveibed isknnc u! their bwlnlxn sinking force to assist the llard-nirssr-(l Italians. A ])(‘\\ll)llli\' also ll(l\'il1li‘l’tl \\tl.\ lllul 1.11m" inielil bc gathering their forces for a serif-s of crippling blows --[‘.<‘1‘l1lil1~ willl glOHDS of 500 or more planes. I-lgh tide 1111s afternoon 111 1 and tomorrow morning at ‘:31. Sun sells this nficrnosii. at and rises IOITIOYYKWV 1110211211‘; 7.35. Inst quarter moon Ifwc. 21. p.111 Summerside tide 1H Hid-bits or than Chailoiteiouh. THE CAR FERRY SAILING‘ Leaves Bord-n 94-5 AM. 1.001 Iii-arcs Tormeiltine 11.00 A. 3.15 PM.