root's-m “my...” our SKlPP u AND Like the Dew p , t p pjplieadyiivrybody. ,. Covers PrinceEtiwsrd Island ‘shrimps. . roar so, 194a EW , ESCAPE IN COLLIS Qiialeiiislaliiisl U. NsAiiolliic UEnerUQOYH commission Oivesf Up Struggle Says Russia Intends A To Absorb _ Victors Of Second War Qoming Events "Rustico Chicken Iuppeg g Bazaar. August 3rd. , m "Reserve ‘ Wednesday, A lrd for 8t. Andrew's Picnio. “w” "St. John's Church Picnic, Crepaud. Wednesday, Augugg 10m, "Ice Cream and Dlndq 1cm Heli- ‘hleedayaeusust 2nd. ' "Brae Pariah Picnic. Wednes- day. Aiunist are. '.' Ice Qeam, woos 1|. lends School. August 2nd. "Dlncitiulieiwtown Cross School, Tuesday, August 2nd. "Ray Little Concert. lpme Valley. Tuesday. August 2nd. "W" W“! Films to Ganihup Photo Studio. "arlcttetown. "Dance, Moreil East School, Monday, August 1st. Good music. “Ray Little at Bonahaw Insti- tute Hail. Monda . August 1st. "Ice Cream end Danes, Cardi- gan Head School. Monday. August Fina-optics’ Church Picnic. Ausust 3rd. Supper served at a o'clock. w»... i; saaaiisoiimitifvt. Iohiiol ru¢3d.lslgllllh_pidrt Good inus c. v "Picnic in Green itcad Wednes- day. August 3rd. Meals served. Dance after. "Movies. Bonshaw v tonight. "False Colors", starring William Boyd and l-iopsiong Cassidy. "Dance in Fort Augustus School Wednesday, August 3rd. Burke's Orchestra. "Ice Cream Festival and Dance. Mermaid School. Thursday. Aug- ust 4th. 1n aid of new school.’ "Show Morel] every xuesdady, Friday. Saturday. 0.00 P. M. A - mission 100-SM, ' "Benefit Dance. st. Teresa's Hell, Wednesday, August 3rd. Web- ifAi-‘s Orchestra. , _ \ "Dance in 8t. Peter's Legion Hall every Tuesday night, Cliff Peters Orchestra, "See the great Comedian Bdb Hope in "Where's Their Life" at MacDonald Bios. Theatre tonight. plus Popeye. "St. David's Church Georgetown. Anniveriary Wednesday. August 8rd, s xiii. up If not: r1 "Now -in plods. Diphane s _ay materials and liquid DDT. Bea on 8.- ldacRae, Shur-Galn Feed Ser- vice. Mill, Winsioe. Phone 2210. "Reserve Tuesday evening, Aug. 2nd. for bingo, iismbursm. ice- cream, etc. Victoria Branch Can- adian Legion. . Meeting Cambridge lei-i. Monday. August 1st. at sac. i be shown. Mr. H. J. Ilsetionafd. Dell‘! Bil rintcndent will speak on "The, aadiinl it! Dairy Products. i ‘whisker manner in Pleasant new school. Wednesday. A 0rd. Aid of school. Dalia! in e to 1. Jimmy MacDonald's Old Thee Orchestra. ~ "Iilarshdeid Presbyterian Church Aid will hold an iee-cream s. ~'- “r:- in even l. .‘ - seyaad tee alsouservad. 6mm". Aug. iitis for Junior cream Exhausted il- By JOHN B. OWEN WASHINGTON. Juli! iii-MP»- General Omar N. Bradley Wlmgd ‘Ivosrw today that Russia "u bent upon absorbing the exhausted victors" of the last war and he outlined the broad defence strat- ely behind the European arms program. The army chief of staff said Leave l-Tor Pstswawa Army iiamp Today Fifteen officers and seventy men of other ranks of the Prince Ed- Wlfd Island Regiment (17th Reece) commanded by Col. A. W. Rogers ‘left by train for Pet- awawe this morning. At Petewawa the men will have e brief training in armour period. They were accompanic‘ down to the station this morning by the regimental band. Leaving from Charlottetown and taking part in the training are “l-leedquarters" and "A" Squadron that the program is baaed'on the assumption that the Uoitedlstates. which is able "to deliver theatom bomb" would handle strategic bombinl. while the European Partners would be ready with ground forces. Testifying before the House of Representatives foreign affairs committee, Bradley endorsed the administration's plan to spend 01.050.000.000 on arm! aid for non- Communist countries. And he pic- tured the need with these words: "In the place of the vanquished foe has arisen this new aggressor, bent upon absorbing the exhaust- ed victors. . "The spectre of another would- be master attempting to enslave our presently Allied people! has given a sense of urgency to our lens." . Bradley did not name Russia. . The witness listed five broad recommendations of the joint chiefs of staff of the armed ser- vices for the arms program. He laid the following "faciora" were assumed in event of atilflifl “First, the United States will he charged with the strategic bomb- ing. -» . "second, the U. S. Navy and the Western Union (Britain, France. Belgium. The Netherlands and lluxarribourgi Y naval. powers will conduct essential "envelopes-silent including keeping- the sea lanes clear. Western Union and other nations will maintain their own harbor and coastal defence. “Third. we recognize that the herd core of the ground power in being will come from Europemid- ed by other nations as they can mobilize. "rain-tn. nnslsnd. France and the closer countries will have the bull; ofihe snort-range attack bombardment and air defence. We. of course. will maiiitain the tec- tical air force for our own ground and naval gcrces and U.S. defence. “Fifth, other nations. depending upon their proximity or remote- ness from thrlwlllbli "l" Qt conflict, will emphasise appropri- ate specific missions." - Bsrlosdlsst Increase OTTAWA. July 20 ~40?) - Carlossiihgl continued a recent up- ward trend during the week ended July 23. to 14,500 cars from 73.810 cars for the previous week. but vlll lower than the 70.433 cars a year ago, the Bureau of Statistics e- por ed today. Increases over the 194g fiflires were shown in load- ings of grain. ores, gasoline and petroleum. Decreases were noted in loadings or livestock. pulpwood. lumber and woodpilll) and P9P"- BRITISH WEST INDIE! The British West indies , ess- ‘fingers with hammers." aald. the from Queen's County and "B" Squadron from King's. They will be joined-set Emerald Junction by "C" Squadron from Prince County. NO NEW FOREST Fill! FREDERICTON. July 20--(CP)- No further forest firerwere re- ported by New Brunswick forestry officials after another day of heat and high humidity. One reported yesterday was still burning after aweepi across l5 acres or more . N .B . , 47-year-old Expect Marii; ' Swelter Commodore Miles Given Shore Pest ,--.- UITAWA, Commodore GR. Miles of ltothesay. former com- manding officer of the eiroraft Carrier Magnificent. has been ap- pointed naval officer in charge of Montreal. naval headquarters an- nounced today. lie was ordered reprimanded and dismissed from the Msgnificenth command when he was found guilty by a court martial responsibility when the l0,000-ton ship was stranded off the east coast and suffered damage to her hull. The Magnificent now is being repaired ins. Saint John. N.B.. drydock. _ Headquarters said Ccmmodore Miles was twice cited for his sea- manship and courage during the of old burn near the south branch of the Tracadle River in Glouces- ter County. - ' _P.E.I., N.B. And Nfld. Only Provinces Polio - free, 1 an Bases la staph; nun ‘Fears- 1047 Epidemic May la Repeated-L‘; Nudist; Turn To With Sandpaper“ DENVER, July 29—(AP)—Eiiriy arnlvala issA-lieaataflohalasiudlgehoassm-J-g vention were busy today-sand- papering benches. " The Colorado Sunbathlng Al- sociation will be host to some 400 members of the national group next week in Dear Creek Canyon. in the mountains near Denver. Local nudists thought they had things in pretty good shape until they took a second look at the 60 benches built for open air meet- ings. The benches had splintered. Some of the nudists put on their clothes and came in to Denver for sandpaper. ~ Volley bail courts have been laid out and a throne built for crown- ing the king and queen of the con- vention. Rural electrification administra- tion workers era‘ stringing power lines into the camp area. “My work gong keeps dropping their tools and smashing their foreman. "They can't keep their minds on the job." oaoiirrns rors nrvoaois , LOS ANGELES, July 00-(AP)-- When a men with a pretty wife iefules to hold her on his lap. that's grounds for divorce. That. was Judge Frank G. Swan's ruling Thursday as he granted dancer Dorothy Lee Redford a div- orce from Charles Redford, avia- tion executive. She testified Redford shoved her off when she tried to sit on his knee while they were watching ions fall into six groans o! ialmd-i- WASHINOTON. July l0—(AP)-. More than 100 Chinese aeised control of the United States con- sulate-generai- offices in Shlillhal today to wnforcs back pay de- inands against the United States Navy, the State Department re- ported. - An official subsoil to the no. pertinent se t at the Chinese invaded the offices at ‘RN are. (Shanghai time). locked the gates .__._.._.___-------- "Reserve Wade Y. Aug. i0. for Kinisora dilckehqsupper. < “Palmer picnic. Wed. Aug. 20th. "Coma to the ‘regular danee in leashes! every Tuesday slant- "Cerae te iee cream sod dance la flartsviiie loader. August ist. Good Shanghai Mob Seizes _ Offices Of U._ Consul television. at 8.80 pJn. and prevented the consulate staff from entering or leaving. ~ The Department was advised that the police refused to inter- vene and that the Communist Military Control Commission's Ai- ien Affairs Bureau also failed to take action to restore order. The report came from the con- suiete-genersl. John Id. Cabot is tire consul-general at Shanghaibui officials said ti!!! did not know whether he was present personal- ly. i-le has been trying to return ’ The beaiegers were desorlbdd as . Second World War , “although since again when he brought two destroyers, hit by the enemy, safely into port. ' By The Canadian Press The toil of policmyelitis cases in Canada rose to 377 this week while the death toil climbed to 1s. " ' A Canadian Press survey today showed10nterlo~far~ tLoL .001”. op WW1. time last year. casasT British Coiilmbid 5'7. Melli- toba l6, Alberta ll. Saskatchewan five and Nova Scotie three. New- foundland. Prihce Bdward 151104 and New Brunswick so far have escaped the disease. Deaths have been most numer- ous in Ontario, where 10 are re- ported. The polio has also claimed four victims in Quebec, one in British Columbia. and one in Man- ltoba. complete figures were not avail- able for comparative totals last year but some health officials be- lieve the earlier outbreak this yea-r is due to the late spring and early summer heat waves in Central Canada. Eleven new cases reported in Montreal yesterday brought that city's total to 56. with two deaths. In Toronto, there are 40. resident cases and 67 non-resident cases while 53 of British Columbia's 0'! cases are reported in Vancouver. CASES MOUNT IN ILK. ‘LONDON. Jilly 29 -(Re\iters) — Mounting cases of infantile paraly- sis have brought ears here that Britain's severe polio epidemic of 1947 may be repeated this year. Latest figures show that the curve of the new outbreak boars a marked resemblance to that of i047. ‘There were 112 notification for the week ended July 16--an in- crease on the previous week which listed 13 cases. _ But a. spokesman of the British Medical Association said today that a seriously high incidence of the disease is to be expected. there is a definite possibility that the curve will flattel out. "one reassuring factor is that. up to the present the large centres of population are not au-iouaiy in- vcived."~ The general picture of the out- break shows that there is a relat- ively gh attack rate in small and isolate communities, mostly in the west and south of Britain. In 1001 the outbreaks were main- ly centred in the, molt densely populated areas; Infantile paralysis ‘has always reached its highest levels in Brit- 'a.ln in the autumn. MOIsI HAY II GUILTY filflAflO. Jilly I --fAI) - A St. Louis doctor says the common ground mole may have something to do with lpraadirig infantiil paralysis. Dr 1.1.. lteetor of W University. lt .i.euis, says melee have shown unusual luscaptillity to the polio virus in ieboret , inoculations. Writing in the archives of patbolofl. Dr. Rooter said a study of the habits ans sacsrlphie dis- tribution of the ground mole shows the animal may he a aet- urai host for poiloiayelitie. The mole is fcunl ta almost every country in tsqiicel apnea. he said. Thus. "if e siesta eeliaeimis feuad to he the alfivoir al the disease. ole may anticipate that it will be ~71"! 9 '-(@) r- Sunday at least. Heat h IIIIIPIEDUI. imes Will Again Today HALIFAX. July :9 --(cp) .41‘)... Weather Bureau said tonight the Merit-imes can expect no, relief 1mm the current heat wave until hll shim- mcrcd-over New Brunswick for m"! dllis. over Prince Edward Is- land and Nova Scotia for two. Record temperatures were tallied Willi’ It Sydney, N.B.. where the mercury hit 92, hottest July 29 silica 1N4. and at Halifax, where an 8'1 was the highest July 29 readim on record. Newton. N.B.. and Blissville 81111011- N-B.. recorded readings of 94, hottest in the Maritirnes. 1t was 00 at Summerside. P.E.I., grid 09 at Charlottetown. Weather Observer Warren Burns at the Charlottetown Experimen 1 Station said yes- lofdly‘! 80 above temperature was the highest recorded here this year. Record for the Pro- vince is 08 above. Six deaths. all in Ontario, were attributed to the scorching heat wave. Violent Electric Storms Residents of Peterimrough, Ont, received sudden and nct-too-wei- come relief from the hot spell to- day. A torrential rain storm. ac- companied by high winds. flooded main-street stores. -tore down hydro lines and‘ lashed district grain crops. A vicious electrical storm lashed the Ottawa area today with winds of up to 65 miles an hour felling fliLJreeahnti snarling communications. The height of the storm lssted_ filth-mm; ~ Jill» cit-y. .. ‘ telephone en telegraph nes were disrupted and two Ottawa radio stations were put off the air brief- ly. New Records Made NEW YORK, July 29—(AP)—A mid-summer heat wave steamed. the eastern seaboard of the United States in record temperatures and humidity today, pushing its death toil to 72. Cool air from Canada (Continued on Page 5 Col. d) By J. M. ROBERTS, Jr. Associated Press News Analyst If the American Administration's European acl moment program is carried out in full, the Atlantic Pact countries will have an arm- ed force of little more than 3.- 000.000 men-not as many as were used by the United States army alone in the last year of the rc- cent war with Germany. Arid half of these will belong to the United States, with only about 100,000 of them in Europa. The United States Army coo- LONDON, July 29—(AP)-—- Informed European diplomats expect an American to he nam- ed bcss of the armed forces of the 12 Atlantic Pact Allies. Thoy said today the question probably will be discussed in . the next 10 days when the Un- ited States joint chiefs-of-staffs confer with European mllltIg leaders in Frankfurt, London, Perla and Vienna. slats of approximately 077.000 of- ficers and men. with only 10 com- bat divisions. One of these is in Germany, four in the Far Pacific. The Air Force has about 420.000 men to handle 5,000 planes of all types, including transports. There are about 1,300 B-Is in storage. ‘The Navy has 102 combat ships in the Atlantic. 02 in the Pacific, and 000 iii mothballs. with a total manpower of 400,000. lurplus equipment from which arms for Europe could be drawn immediately includes 10,000 tanks. There have been estimates that .ail told there is enough ‘surplus for about six divisions. Under the military assistance program, this surplus will go mainly to re-equip i.000.0ti0 men. the crmai force maintained by zmnrd, France. Belgium. The Some but net much will ge to other treaty countries. Dill” lees-u yuan. Will llesiii-ne When Big Five Rowers Agree LAKE SUCCESS, July m-(AP) -ine United Nations Atomic En- "IY Commission gave up toda a lhYN-iteer struggle to agree onahn- ternationel atomic control. It put the deadlock squarely‘ up to the hi8 five powers and Canada, who gr? beginning top-secret talks Aug. The commission voted 9 to 2 to atop work until the six countries can find some basis for agree- ment. a Russia and the Soviet Ukraine voted against the majority. Their delegates demanded to know why the majority wanted to "kill" the commission, stop its work” “lock the door and throw away the key." Dr. H. R. Wei, Chinese scientist and commission chairman for July. responded: “Time is running out. The atomic armaments race is on. It is the duty of this commission to fell the world that the work cannot be done now." , ‘- He then informed the commis- sion that his government had started the wheels roiling for the six-country consultations. Soon after Wei's declaration. the commission approved a resolution put before it July 20 by Fred- erick i-f. Osborn. United States de- puty ori the commission. The key section of the Atomic Energy Com- mission (made last year to the U. N. Assembly in Paris) still exists; that these differences are irrecon- cilable at the commission level and that further discussion in the Atomic Energy Commission would tend to harden these differences and would serve no practicable or useful purpose until such time as the sponsoring powers have report- ed that there exists a basis for agreement." _ This‘ ‘V0831?! aerondd tilme ‘the - issrhsaon, as stop e or u-. , roirsfersiiiseatyea? it ausponsv ed activities until the GeneraLAa- sembly could review ,the situation. BOB-N AFTER MOTHER'S DEATH SALINA. Kris, July 29 —(AP)— A baby boy was born by surgery at a Salli-la Hospital Thursday night, 30 minutes after the death the Benelux Treaty countries- lands and Luxembourg.‘ The Administration has made it clear that. without an actual war American troops al- ready in tin-ope will not be re- creed. Defence Ieeretsry Louis John- improve equipment only for for- Iurqe em of the mother, Mrs. D. Allen, 20, I from polio. The boy, weighing five pounds and 10 ounces. was report- I ed in good condition. Atlantic Pact May Put 3 Million Under Arms support without jeopardizlngltheir economic recovery. There have been guesses that at the rate of aid for the first year and counting on revival of the European arms industry. e European defence force of some 40 divisions will not be properly equipped before 1054. ' , . These figures are the best an- swer I know to the fear in some quarters that Russia will take the program as a provocation. Russia is believed to have st least 4,000,- 000 men under arms, not counting internal and external police and defence forces which probably comprise several million more. Her air force. although perhaps inferior, is not a great deal ameli- er than that of the United States. By RICHARD K. (TMALLE! , July U — (AP) -- The Berlin air lift. biggest Western weapon of the cold war, will go into storage starting Monday. British and American officials announced today the greatest air freight operation in history will be reduced gradually until it is cut cut entirely Oct. s1. * Hr nearly a year—from June 20, i040, until the Russians lifted the Berlin blockade May l4 -the thundering stream cf planes was the only means of keeping 2.000.000 West Berliners supplied with food. fuel and raw materials. The decision to retire the air cargo operation was taken because adequate stipplies have been stock- piled since the usaiane have per- mitted rail. highway and water traffic to be resumed from the western zones. iciear they will be prepared to re- lsiart the air lift on short notice ilf the Rsinians adopt new block- ‘ede tactics against the four-power icity. 100 mild inside the Soviet , IO“!- l.000 for October. Allied Air Lift To Berlin To Shut Down On Oct. 31 But the Western Allies made it. | The outback program calls for a idally schedule of 8,700 tons for the elm this rear la to August. 2,100 for September and about aimsooooe s “ma. ilhiswillbeahranslclritisbhedcoet 16 PAGES Dean OfWesnenAi I Mo.‘ Allison University SACKVILLE, N.B., July ilk-Dr. W.T. Ross Fiemirigton. University President, has announced the ap- pointment of Mrs. Hugh Dickson. M.D.. C.M. (above) of Truro. N. S., as Dean of Women at Mount Allison University to succeed Miss Mary Falconer. For many years Dr. Dickson has been prominent in public health work. She has been Provincial Convener for Health in the Wo- men's Institute and the Home and School Federation of Nova Scotia. She has taken a leading interest in the Victorian Order of Nurses, the Hospital Auxiliary and the imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire. She is a member of the St. Andrew's United Church in Truro and is also a member of the Horticultural Club and of the University Women's Olub. In addition to her work as Dean of Women, Dr. Dickson will do some lecturing at the University in her own field. . ._.__._____ Report Atlantic” Ocean Ia Dusty f. Mi e Motor Vessel Cut OANBO. N1, I -—’(G) - flie American tar 0o out down firs ‘all motor v Leverinere in dense fog off this Eastern Nova Scotla port today. The six-man crew of_ the Imvernl- ere was rescued by boats» lowered from the freighter. Later the men were transferred to the swordfish- ing vessel Edward L. and brought to Censo. , The 5,600-tcn Colabee out of Wilmington, Dei., and bound for Bale Ctmfil“. Q11!» collided with the 126-ton motor vessel out of the Magdalen Islands about nine miles south of Canso. Capt. George Lake of Montague P.E.I., skipper of the Laverriier, said. "We didn't have a chame. I was on the bridge. We were sounding our siren regularly but‘. w. mud only two blasts from another ship ncarby._ "We weren't able to tell where the sound was coming from. We didn't sec the freiflhter until it was about 100 yards-off starboard. ‘ “We swung right around as fast (Continued on Page 5 Col. p) _ -¥—-i-—w--— Pious Wiio tar. 4w ttucii Atwevs tar sac uncut. {Hines ,1 rliQlTfiNew-i. ‘ . , . “ensure owsnuiiiliistnr _ '- That's‘ an official United States Navy report and to drought-hound New England it's-more plausible than any sea-monster. The destroyer Livermore, en route to Boston from Bermuda with 300 New England naval re- servists, radioed first naval head- quarters Thursday night that she _ had sighted this: "Large patches of dust en the surface stretching as far as the eye can see." Real dirt, the Livermore’: mess- age said, and samples of it were collected for study by Washington ex erts. cattcred around, too, were s lot of sponges, the destroyer reported. The navy'»s only ex lanatlon to date was-“inexpiaine is." Production. Sale Of Milk Increasing OTTAWA. July 20 --(CP) —Pro- duction and sales of milk in Canada are going up, the Bureau of Statistics reported today. but butter consumption -is going down. Canadian farms produced an es- timated 1,76t.000.000 pounds of milk during May, a gain of 91,000,000 pounds over May. 1048. Sales of fluid milk and cream climbed to 339,606,000. a rise of about 500.000 poundsover the seine month last year. Domestic disappearance or consumption of creannery, dairy and whey butter during May de- cllned 3.000.000 pounds to 3.750.000 —a decrease of 0.7 per cent over l the same period a year ago. TORONTO. July Iii-AC?) imum and maximum temperature Victoria 50. 7i; Edmonton 50,’! Regina 42, 79; Winnipeg 41. '10s Toronto ‘I2. 01;, Ottawa 0d. 02: Montreal ‘l3. 0i; Quebec 7i, ‘B81 Saint John W. 83; Mcnctoa 00. 04f Halifax 02. B7; Charlottetown 0Q 80; Sydney 0i. 02; Yarmouth l! 70; St. John's 55. '15. HALIFAX, ‘July ‘ii-Official ins isnd forecasts issued tonight b1 the Dominion Public Weather Of- fice at Halifax: . Synopsis- The weather was ‘hot and humid t in the Maritirnes again today.witb isolated thunderstorms develop during the afternoon. Ho points in the district were Montn ton and Blissviiie airport with 0f degrees. while Greenwood sirpori was not far behind with 93, and Summe side reported 00. Eastern Quebec was also hot; Gaspe re- ported B0 degrees. but shower! kept the temperatures cooler ll the eastern part of the north shore. The weather and temper- atures will contiriue much the same Saturday, with the same air mass covering the district. Cooler air covers Northern On- tario and the Prairies, and if moving slowly eastward. 1t will each Western New Brimlwlfiifi iata Saturday evening, preceded by thunderstorms. but will no] cover the entire district until Sun.- day evening. _ Regional forecasts. valid until midkgiighf, Ssgturday, with an out lee or W! Prince B ward laland-Jihillll clear but occasionally cloudy Gill's ing the nightanri Saturday. Risk and American pilots who have averaged 8.000 tons of supplies daily since the air lift got into full swing. Lt-Cien. John I. Cannon, Un- ited Stsies Air Forces commander in Europe, praised the air-lift fliers. He called it "a proud moment for us all." Be said the end of the air- lift signified "io free peo- ples everywhere. the successful termination of a lengthy and diffi- cult task by the combined forces of the United States. Britain and France." France do-operated in the air lift. although no French planes were used. It shuffled. too. that the West- we'll Allies would not bow to the Soviet , t. testiee. It was the big oonvlncer for the Buaaianl. who halrhopad to squeals the Western Bowers out of Berlin. The air lift. was axpeiidve in lives and money. Seventy airmen ~00 Britons and If Americans — were killed. In addition aevln or .‘........ Saturday after- noon. Continuing hot. Lightwindl Low early Saturday morning Charlottetown 05. Hilh in u" afternoon 85. ' Outlook for Sunday-Widely scattered thunderstorms. 0180?!“ in the evening. ' High tide today at 20° A- M ll 3.91 P. M. “Sun rises this mornir‘ at All and sets at 7.43. . ________. DOIDIJN-TORMENTINI Illll was: nus Lv. Borden Lv. Cape Tor-meeting . 0:10 AM. 10:00 Al. ~ use rss. me PM. 0:00 PM. 1:10 PM. ' 0.00 PJI. 10.00 PM. SUNDAY! s Lv. Borden Lv. Cape Teraientfm one Ass. "ill A-Il- 1.00 PM. 0:00 P.0d. 0:4! Pl. lies Pl. WOOD IILAIDI - OAIIIOII German civilians were killed in plane accidents. Official figures were not avail- able. but it was estimated the op- Sri- have. tain reported~ June is their some 1 Ares e “some I Ila with». . I Ila III- - - ‘ _ . ...-_,-._.. oration cost the United ltatas 3 P-I-t passer-sear lnveleellsaanla I-A ‘humanist-Ia