... 4 MERE MAN vrrrllvlllehn . dissonance» fy-zw / i h 9's Paper r 4 v . \ w '1’. f’.._7',"\!__': ‘\ ;~.~ <!vw<~'qw<V<\\ Read by Covers Prince Edward Island Lilly? i119 119W, BTXUOUX MAXIMS ' or a, MERE MAN in precision. conciseness. dignity of style, varbal felicity, the great writ- ers of ancient times have scarcely been equalled. ---~ ~ I - - 1 Areal“??? Reds Advance On Central Front .... Hold Firm Against Nazi Counter Assaults In Donets River Area. ILS. Wllllllill l8 Charged With Murder GUYSBORO, N.S, March 36 — (CPJ- A charge of murder was [Qdgad tcday sirrst Bertha Jack- son of nearby Blrchtowrr. held in connection with the death of her‘ half-brother. Ernest Jackson, on fifgjch 1%.‘ She aépearestfar apro- fllfy ear .. 1i ll. Magistrate Smlilgr mihr plpéydne? us, and was rent up for al at the May session of Supreme Court. The 45-year-old Birchtown farm- er died in hospital at Antlgrnlsh u s. frqmgt wound inflicted by o IZ-guage s o gun. A coroner's Jury rittin! her-e March 14_ returned verdict that inflicted bv us’ 35-Ysar-~ holi- elsler, who also acted as his house- 3m keeper. A harg of din V, l agalngt Mifss Jac aid; hgnygtrd s)‘: had been “h ld Ill uyaboro j since. The o pipe wigs ohgrrgefl nary ear 1g. L‘ murder at tlie prelim with. In civil ""5", i.'°"illlli mi~ iidiidlflpl°flsi2§ Civil Ber-v 9e I 4994i ' W I l tb [coin lfifilgtl, 182g?“ ‘ n" e abed ‘in tn‘ ‘ ‘émm e o - Icnons for Tglgederic with? (Igd. or-ov X, one . _ i that; 1114:1161‘. viii-dill! were as- llslilllolrl to, Ottawa. Qt, , liiinments, by rovinces: Alberta uirrii-r.eicr*= is» 02o‘ 0 ll . , 8W C , , ' “ am. tilt??? Boys Burneiiln Forest Fires TREINTON. N-J. March $- , Gillie Fire Warden loroy S. llales, sold topilght two poys ere burned lo rieat . another is mfisha; ‘and a fourth was seriously burne gs two uncontrolled forest‘ fires swept eioellxlgnfli Atlantic and Gloucester es. Poles said residents of Pleasant “"15- a hamlet o; is to 2o house's about 20 mi es northwest of Atlan- iic City. were evacuated from their homes. The fire raging in that vi- iliniiy. Poles geld, ad already destroyed 700 acres o woodland. Three homes on the outskirts of ilranklinville. Gloucester County, were destroyed, Fales said. but iilcir occupants escaped injury. ___________ coming Events T"? "wftfor tPa t, Si. int loser s cohfgnt thrlsrxliezrigog; n "Trinity Y-RU. two. one-act flirt Heart: Hall. art Wednesda , ‘rah 31. a-sr-so-ai-ri. u _'—"— "iiiiiltasliewggglhtiion, Demmanmtlm " ° worse” baked beans " "11 f i bod "l ‘floral: 20f: n psi-l: “Fawn ‘Fir-Traced y‘ night hr I ma“ 359, and Change-at’? l'l‘ll; weir for ill also . .. ., o wound pdod been i“ umgfiogr- ‘. o IQNDQN. 03 ..- Quarter; Lima" h a(galr)rst ‘olerislrs ou do wiped tligwiimifidififitrah Emu??? s . " i‘ ‘ ldl fl ‘ t N i gums:- gbSilllllgtl ofruthé! “nets Ritz- use‘: “tlhiit” ‘°““" The ew régntralldfrlcnl; alris an- unc i n ' mun- 1216 recorxriied ‘alayntfre‘%oviet Mon- itor were said to be south of Beiy. hié“iiiéi‘.irit°=il..‘it“°"°“'““' v 8' . . B l ll W ld Rus- t?“ “iiidihiiwii? "33"": "a; m o z es eas Smolens , in a’ frontal ‘assault sup- rtng the northeastern wedse in gen ensk's outlying deafence gait. 6 l‘- than‘: h cggture cl. ‘hats’ Z“$i3.‘é’."°‘£i§r.’°‘t"‘ i=1." r w - flanked from ‘the “rear ‘latter-P's up oi nee army men olole across a river. r Fournenemy trrsfik 30 "matching:- u s, _- a r , a guild wyi‘ ‘glen? was Odptutflg who: o] go or laur- we i F; i? t (i; glimuiirgcillve av: d? flcul? te aln.‘ blit- t e co _ - munl ue su geared part of the R - soh r ..qr="iv¢ c ‘we-solid u their h rd-woa courts!" lb ergo sweet w rgch to in; by; ltuea nod Approximately 1.100 Germans It?" re ,."'~?=i killed in illtilgaettliflll tobrea Russian positions ween Belgorod and Chuguev in the Kloarkoy sector of tho Ukroifre during today's lighting which fq% the Germans still using a co derolrlc number of tanks- llig Air Future For Edmonton EDMONTON. March 26—(OP)— ommissloner to Canada. ilk! m- day ‘iiiidmonton is going to be one ofthe moat important cities in the a-orldl froénalthet standptgint of air ‘ave l‘ ansp ." Interavllewed heirs‘ 1% 591d " ir trays] hrough the north may swl_ter and safgr lrohr he‘ ‘r er- icas to Ru la‘ lrlna an Ida say topastern rope itself." In his opinion, Mr. MacDonald said. some ol ilho most important happenings in C nsda weretelring place ill U19 llQrt Wfidt. Nazis lllooring Entire fioaiital Am In Holland LONDON, March 0B — (GP 03B lD-{Phe lfitlggalandsthlntforgg- a on serv a lr cdasgilfizreb “lo ‘ ° e t f ll f abstracts; *r'%'s.r.r2.'i§=r§’ t e ‘Germans ‘wlio are “wt” kin t_ qusonda of buildings and erec r g coeltal defences.‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ a ‘Ti’. ‘fitifiéméiiflkfihléi’; Jfi... gs Mia) horuei d been destroyed r hi the Hdluo lone. A Net erlalrczg so llld on Feb. 23 t at e ermans were rusgrlrng fortlflcialasna of the first n a ua v n from ‘ylre Wfiague, 1 uidooo . ' x hiya-rs it .- . d cl elgian ar lloaltlr flounoll - To Moat March 30 OTAWA, MANY! IO-(OM-Thg l?“ ‘hhféiltmll-l‘ he ‘of till Dominion O lb. gl ~ ‘ll- I- Wllllrowr mo! .. " ...r.i.r..h.' 10:: "i7... a h up: r , ll it. . I Q I l . - I12. a * 0V l . . it'd" "chi firs" i-a-r-st. vmlifiwsa" alcolm MacDonald, British High f alt e omen-r. b t! o . Ethnic in... oirARLof-Tciidwsif CXNXrSAfsATURDAY, ilt/IARCH 21, R DENTS INHPATCHED or MARETH LINE‘ 194a i Mustang Planes Attack Railway Targets Bv llav Concerning N iirbi Operations. kONDON. March Zgx-(Staturcétay; - - from 1'8 95W M! Q11 9 Ere guin- tllgtrigt of Gsrinany last pi ht. it was annoillw? tcda . lrlwi d bo bars and ana- dlan Must ngs o the army co-o - eratiorr command yestetday strol- ed and b0 bed locomotives, canal pargeshnd n electrical transform- er station‘ at various points in cc- cu led Elli-ope. o aircraft was lost. ' A Belgian typhoon fighter pilot of the R.A.l=‘._ in a sweep over the Low Countries shot, down a Junk- ers 52 not. far from the house in which he used to live, the alr mirr- istr announced, - e pilot, flyl with a Norwe- gian comrade, ha already dam- aged a Dower barge transformer and two locomotives when he slghte the his German troop car- rier p one. "I was almost out of ammuni- tion," the pilot said. “when I saw groidunkers 52 low down Just after n g off. ‘I went behind it and rl ht down o the deck to avoid ben seen. t. en came up to about 25 yards at ust above rooftop height. ere was a. r urt of flame and the plane broke n two. Qne of the ocp pugts polled qrrt, but his para- chu idnt open.- lrlwl d plots scored a direct hlt on 1% gs s on a. French riv- er, litre r mlplstry said. w News-Briefs IQSC, ll , - l1 more out ship. the llied Com- mon announced to er. OTTAWA, March 26 — (GP) — T c Revenue Department ordered to, ay that all employers. on or be- ore his)‘ 31. must furnish each of th ir rnployees with a form show- " H” ‘éivfiqlllhwhfii Elite? ng c For year an?! thle amdunt of t; ducted or with old 1h re- spect of that salary or wage. QT finlCPl- l; announced iiimtmrl merchant» o loa- y reg‘ “t ll r il . n T e; q er M l rot t. h. r . pa‘; use a. tuular com- mu y which n short an - ill‘- ho Board Md lt h d wli - 2.5.. llffdh'ld"..‘.“tl.‘tl.f."lill thesllue per tailor: had been abu LONDON. Mar h 2ii—tCP) -The Algleridradlo sad in a broadcast record‘ by The Associated Press that Gen. Georges Catroux. fighting French delBEate General to Syr and Liaison man between Charles De Gaulle and Gen. l-lenri Giraud. grrlved in the Algerian Capital t0- M" fcBlgblgllCfiglhft March year-old“ ybe er ible lor a " ‘eta (gr-lye " in the wrili‘ e lad fa ii or; Iii I bll l]. rorluood I ‘the New Brunswick leilslitur to- day by John W3. Anderson. Minister of Ilublie Works. rgfw‘i'ltiilrtfi“'fi'irrwair_ioai“vié te upe f_ Vous 1 r°l fir’??? s? hi; c iirged roln th afymdeafieopy about o-ooo hid been overseas. Funeral lit Sir Edvard llootty tor-nu -‘ no eluervloetbhis - hioh left M4110 0|‘ 5% t t tlo th greed 8n lbtrarrxil a been‘? ti?!‘ tharlnega 0nt., where birrlel Ill ‘get for Night Bombers _ Siberian laberles are an impel-tan sf Night WorSituotion By Glenn Babb, Associated Press War Analyst The major short circuit tn the Untied Nations‘ war- effort against Japan persists; the sarnc is true of the Axis war on Russia, Tokyo and Moscow have given renewed evidence of their present determination to rcmtain at peace by renewal of their perennially troublesome fisheries pao . Again Hitler's moat powerful and successful ally has given notice that she ls having no part of his crusade against Bolshevlsrn although six years ago it was the Japanese military clique, now in control of imperial Loud, was the gldllit "llgrlt at" the aptl-comlutern treaty which led e c-powor s m ry anoe. The fisheries pact fixes the terms on which Japan le permitted to lend Igor fishermen into the far eastern territorial waters of the Soviet sunion, a. right. granted by the 1905 treaty of Portsmouth. The indications are that the Russians held the whlphand ln the par-lays which led to this accord initialed in Kuibshev Thursday. For the second y or in succession the Japanese iriadtho p?" an extra fee. Tlhe ac or n e apauese ood supp y. Fiill Wiles the place of meat ln the Japanese diet and in normal times llkinpf; cent or! izrrprexirf thfi firth; supply comes from Rlissgrm watgis, c e y aroun v _e lunch “a eninsu a. .Under .war .con on; . a source of food is probably of more Importance than ever to the Japanese people. for years on slender rations. It is llllderslurrdabla that neither Japan nor Russia wants to take on Members Miss Chance To Iiear Delegations Failure to give prior notice of de- legations appearing informally be- fore the Legislature was strongly criticised in the House yesterday by Hon. Dr. W.J.P MacMlllan. lead- e'r of the Op sitlon. Dr. MocMi lair voiced his com- plaint when the l-iouse met at 11 a. m. “Before going into the orders 0f the day." he said, “I may say that I do not like this plan that ‘has de- veloped here lately of culling the members of the House to an emer- gency session. I think some other arrangement should be made to meet those delegations. They should have an appointment. I missed a delegation yesterday I would like to have heard; that ls the farmers ol the Province. I think the members should be given prior notice to hear these delegations, This morning. when another delegation started to deliver their message, there was hnrdlv a quorum of the House. I would sirguest that in future We be lven :1 chance to hear these de- cautions." No reply Was offered to the 0D- ltew rnlll ry commitments a; this time, when each is engaged in a fight for life, at the Jflfllllcse appear 4o be even .m0re anxious than the Soviets to avoid war. Duo reason undoubtedly i; the lear- of air assault. The Japanese Command probably feels that on the east, south and west it has pushed the United Nations beyond the range of effective and intensive sir at- tpok; it llllllfis at least that it can hold the ever-growing American air power M70111! that protective cordon. ‘ But in the north there is no such security. There are bases around Vladivostok from which bombers could reach Tokyo in less than three hours, Osaka in two. War with the Soviet Union might mean that these would be placed at disposal of the United States. lt might not, Russia's penchant for playing a. lone hand being what it is, but in any case the Bed Army also has an air force of terrible striking power. For the United Nations it undoubtedly l; an advantage to have Russia free to concentrate on Germany at this juncture, probably out- weighing the immediate gains which would come from ‘a Russian-Jap- anese war. But it has lts obverse side. As long as the wily Generals and Admirals who direct Japanese policy are content to leave well enough alone on the Siberian frontier, Allied hopes of obtaining Russian bases from which to blast the cities and war industries of our oriental enemy are dim. udget Speech» [In Legislature Premier Budgets For Surplus 0n Qrdinary Account And Reduction l In Over-All Liabilities. Dominion Government in like r ‘his or; current!‘ account 70f three yeRrSiIBitfé. 1942 Frag ltllb. nd etreduconof 20,- moe n ewao xsa- d $ lllzvrvttlonn glld fiscal heed subsidy, to the amount of $788 450." Mr. MacPhee: " ould it be pro- per to add the $56,000? I gather you are taking the revenue you would have if the Dominion hill stayed out of the provincial field. and you are taking what you are getting from them, and calculat- ing the gain to the province in that way. But this stabilization in re- gard to liquor revenue of $56,000 is that based on this car's sale fig- ures? lt can't be a a n in revenue." Premier Campbel : "It is not ne- cessarily a gain in revenue. It is payment from the Dominion Gov- ernment. l see my hon. friend's point, It is not quite in the some category as the other payments, but it is something similar to the gasoline tax guarantee. On the other hand, ll we receive those '_ rom the Dominion, the prpvincla l! l A su lipase h q ted f b P r was ge or y rer er Tlgane A. Eampbell in the legisla- ture yesterday. Current revenue for the year 10 3 the Premier estimate at 22,8864 , and current expend‘)! ure, ncluding sinking urd, at $0, 75,200, Wit out aking sinking funds in- to account the estimated surplus would be $271,956. Total revenue was estimated at $2,528,865. Adding sinking fund u, - propriation of 61,000 it woud amount to $2.7 .885. Against that amount the Prem- ier‘ ‘udgeted for an stlmated over- all expenditure ol 2.588.109. leav- in an estimated reduction in lla- bl ltles of $207,756. "Under the Dominion-Provin- cial tax agreement alone," he said, "we shall receive from Ot- tawa in 1043 $012,713. Deductlng the tax and subsidy concessions o $516,000. we shall have a net bene- fit from the agreement in the form taxpayer is. pro tunic. eved of certain payments." r n 130mm; n (mey, g $399,- Hon. Dir. Macmillan: Pi-ie won't i” scrgireilqveimognc “ish.rs.s.sr=ia.“;:;....-- ffilkfl neqrr benejfinof 21,; Email.’ Mr. MacPhec: “lie won't have to ion money of $732,450. Llauor Revenue is year i. e ls an edditio al m memsmvxviric the Domlln- igqntinued on page 3, col 4i CHARGED WITH MURDER. m" TULSA. Okla, March IB-(A )- ~ die e ~11 tome» o:l:;'.';"..i:"h“.""i's "M. rr for the Tfi-Pls. of stelllllziug yga d mt i‘ ~h 21f?‘- l‘ p-“ovfnclal lquor reve n'ues metal“ shmuryvi)’; M slgfwfi ‘l " “Wleif- “RR which Simmons. as, wi ClO-KXIgWn ‘burg:- "ld PM" 1V Will. 101' woman durln a sgrufgie in Mrs. c alfifi" ‘lggofgégrfségan ‘Eigicw: Howard's hote room ast night. Jot allloiilll W l We hall No "ppm No ‘U115; wenfrogiaqtioot H; slop tv- -—-— f "-“°"°l110¥Lww.,rah 51943311; pearly," wreglwidt at {$179531 an of; p1§§§a Th? amounts rials mermoned, at t a ll I009 l d - end of the prose t th 0 v- “y: "No I “u?” w“ 0w ipce will have‘ rncelvggd frxlm who to '— t, tie , h.» t or. ‘lilo’? “mi... 330.1% '- xresds , March ll . _ ank you . DELICIIIUS "hill-did M a little must now 5o a long way, satisfaction depend: upon quality of flavour. position lender's suggestion. Pre- ‘mler Campbell announced receipt. of a communication from the Lieutenant Governor, enclosing e. -copy of an order by the Governor General in Council approving the provincial statutes passed in 194i. The Prerrricr then tabled the Ik- timutes for the veor 1943 and moved that the House go into committee of the whole on Supply. l-fc concluded his budget speech at 1 pm., when Hon. Dr. MncMlllan moved the adjournment. Th~ l-Ywuse adjourned until 3 p. m. Monday. Capt. Wade ls Honored At Dinner SAINT JOHN. N.B., March 26 — Captain Jimmy Wade, veteran Maritime commercial pilot was guest of honor at a dinner tender- ed him by uiemlrers of the Cmmon Council and the Saint John Air- gort Committee and friends here to- oy. Mayor C. R. Wasson presided and James D. McKenira proposed a toast to the guest of honor. Captain Wade referred modestly L0 his share in a recent rescue mission, which, however has been described by those in possession of the full details as “an epic of heroism and adventure." He disclosed that the rescue at- tempts are being cmtlnued. Wade and Captain John G. Moe, United States Army Air Force set out from Charlottetown in December on a rescue flight in an attempt to reach an American plane forced down. but they tro were forced down and for five days remained in a rubber boat alter their plane had sank. British Plane Flies Low Over Rome VAL-ETTA. March 20-40?) — A Britrsn intruder plane from Malta flew low over the suburbs of Rome last night and muchlne-guimod a railway station only a few miles ‘fjrom the city. it was annoiuiced to- ay. "On the way we passed over the Tiber and the Pontine marshes, and I wished that the big buliirog (Mussolini) was there," said the pilot of the British plane, s. wing commander. "Although it was very hazy we could see flashes of electric trams or trains in Rome itself and the buildings of the city." Farmers Not To Receive Fuel Wood Subsidy OTTAWA. March art-toe»- Munitions Minisier Howe told the House of Commons today that the tl-a-cord subsidy on fuel wood, an- nounc d some time e30. will be ayabe in dealers recognized by he coal administrator, lint not to farmers cutting and sell ng direct in consumers or on wood cut by c munity effort. e minister said there had been some misunderstendl f h o is statement on this suhfect during the debate on fuel March l6, The coal administrator would recognize na dealers those who had been licensed ‘by the prices board on or before arch 5, and those alter da licensed if the coal ad- ministrator so rues on the basic of essential production n ds. Farmers cutting and seling di- rect to consumers would be re- ceiving the ceiling price and not the dealers‘ prlce, the minister told quarstlonere. v urroa mvss-rQr-irrou SAINT JOHN, N11, March 26- (0P)— coroner's jury tonight found t at newly-born by girl longer; dead n Market Sip here _ s da morning t-tnc lo its eath “ y a [Tllffilllkli skull b person or persons unknown" an recommended continued police lil- vostigltkm. ‘lob lull, .00: other Pmvlru-ee and 0.5m 8:. no, rlptiou Delivered, 06.00 8th Army Troops Inch Forward As cNazis Vleaken British Recover From Set-Back - Earlier In Week. By Daniel De Luce, Associated Press Staff Writer, ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, IN NORTH AF. RICA, March 26—(AP).—lnfantry of the British‘ 8th Army inched forward into fortifications of the Mareth line under a hail of gunfire today whio American forces 70 miles away fought grimly to‘ keep Marshal Erwin RommePs flank pinned to the; Tunisian Coast The seventh night of Gen. Sir Bernard L‘. Montgomery's attack on the deep Maretir belt of minefields and piliboxes backed up by concentra- tions of armor and artillery found the British forces and the enemy still locked in a. struggle re. miniscent of the First Great Weir's many "battles of position and attrition." There was complete absence of information on the situation in the El Hamma area, wheref and into the rear of the Mareth line. But continued heavy attacks by the Allies’ western desert air, force on enemy armor in the vicinity of El Hamma; indicated that the flanking British force was holding its initial gains there despite its long sup- ply line. ...‘.?“.:.:*::*s'.::ii°.:“.i.tr cu ' Shake-lip Reported In lliohy Gov’t mile; from the Axis supply port of Gabes. were meetfrr ‘an "extreme- ly dense anti-tank efence system". but that they had captured the height of Djebel Tobago, domino/t- ing Gabes. There was no allied confirmation of this report.) There yet was no indlcati that the Germans and Italians defend- ing the formldable fortifications were cracking under the 8th Army's sledgehsmmer blows, but the de- creasln pow r f th untem- NEW YORK MP?“ '9 “' attacltsglauncieied Cb Magahaclolhwln iArhJr-l" mini" mm“ quad Rommel attested e effectiveness ' w“! ‘n’ w“ imflfh" a‘ my‘ of the British assault by ht and l" w" P m? “i” " "5"" w- “" .‘i.°:"...:f°..‘;“'l.';‘°'°t...“2f Today’! allied communique lave force ministers ‘has “sighed. the first llldlCfltlOfl U184’. S11‘ BGID- Th; bmgdcggl, r-gcordgfl by 0rd’: Ilshtern had rocovertad com- The Associated Press, did not pletely from the setback ery suf- ye the reason for the Vichy r fer-ed last Tuesday, when great abinet reconstruction, force; cf German tanks and ln- Jose h Barthelmy had fantry threw them back to their been yultico Minister, Admiral original positions, and were slash- Joan Marlo Abrlfll was secrflfll’! ing forward again. ‘If NW7. Ind Gen. Jean Fran- “Th. Momma ma” u“ tn“ goiefilgzifnakyn the lecretary of "bliody en agements and hand-to. hand fight g" were in progrege at | “"3"” “L’§‘°‘,‘," l ‘all’. firs“ Wm“ ‘km! u" Ml-"m a-‘v‘l’.l regixine, andevino lost that the resignation o! l4 mem- bers of t o Vioh Di lomatlo nd eonau at serv 0S5 n spain ad contributed to the tension. Liz-Gen. George S. Patton's Am- erican forces. meanwhile, maintain- ed ,their trlrsestgsotrgrst Rlz-lhllmel: esca e oorr or m --—-————i—-——~_ fiptéic ‘g grit): tan-QM Lgmllfiy MEATLISS wean-amp a a e Bards, some I) ‘_“"' ii t); t (3 _ NIW YORK, March 26—-(AP)- m a m“ c” u“ The regional office of price ad . sht'ii‘iii’".ié“l.t'arié.,iizfirs“? La Guardra o For Army? 000.000 pounds of beef r deliver; Monday as harrassed New Yorl housewives dolefully faced a meat- less week-end. No worm lS So g,’ifl’ig,,‘;z9i‘-.‘é,,griiigé°fiy gfbglg; GREAT A Cossie As w... .. ...r°ri.*.r :1 7.'§’J.ih.§.'éi€i 4o Ruth‘ foe Cesare sue items order d ecting La Guardla of Nltxelw York to enter the army it be held in the war department await? ABQUT HER< in official clearance. s ritten b George Dixon, the E\-F " story says t e order commands the 1 Ma or to report to Governors Isl- an next week for a physical ex- amination and that the President has suggested that any physical de- flecits the Mayor might have be a ve The President also has prepared pers nominating Le. Guardfa. to e rank of Brigadier General, the News says, adding that where La Guardia would serve was not mad known but that war depart- , men officials said “it was a cinch that the first assignment would be Africa." High tide this afternoon 3.11 anl tomorrow morning at 4.26. Sun sets this evening at 7.20 and rlscs tomorrow morning at M0. Last 0.02 p.111 OAR FE RY SERVICE DAILY E (‘EFT SUNAJKY Small Mining Tovm ‘ ls flbioot 0f lloax quarter moon March 2a TgASIp, Que... March 126 —(C;l— e‘ tny pottery ‘c ay m ing ._ Prom Borden-Leave 9.05 mm. ;::.t~.~.:: lll‘.‘.i°i.t'£2§l‘;3l:§di2§°i"5 p4» ---. o» m - o». ay. A mne Sirpern n en sai ‘ " | __ “m, a report that miners were trapped‘, ‘r35 czii‘g$ramea:n'l's_u N” was started by a hoax telegram g" . fro a former employee. ‘ ‘p mills telegram, purporting to ezmc but’ n q ‘WK-E from a mine Superintendent. said ‘EXCEN 5U‘ bAy, the miner and a purty nf his follow workers, were trapped in the (lilt- illn s. " e haven't had so much as a Clllrluttemwn Somme-rallie- nllflflh heave Iapllflfllfll IJO o. n. '*n.o.~9.ik.:~._._r.-...__. . .. cave in around here for years," raid | _ Ml U. I.- IM o the Superintendent. daring units of the 8th Army had struck far around \ n. ._.... —¢vri4->~=0 noaaeérpa-f