MAXIMS, 07A. MERE MAN ‘ii-i mast out of it. ji» gI-ltflllll. Iqilldod ion-i ‘Inn Outl- lle who puts most into lilo gets the The Pe CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, -1941 0P|8'S PEPSI’ y Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody MAXI MS OIA MERE MAN God looks at intentions and is lltt~ searcher of licairls. _'___v _ ______________.. ___ n. *1; aiiiiiiiii Subscription Delivered. 85.00 M s’ rAcas A Nazis admit llussians resist cl; 0-s- {Q '1 3' € U! W C‘ = “Rpm, Sept. ‘l-(AH-Ger- n dispatches from the eastern iiont today acknowledged that the dflgndefS of beleaguered Lenin- gid are fighting it out village by Village and that slowly advancing Ggmttlll troops could count on the liltterest resistance at every clump cl trees and on every htilock. The regular communique from Hitler's headquarters merely said that "operations in the east con- tinue to take their planned ursc." Military considerations, Berlin sources said. made it impossible to disclose troop pOSltiOXLS or indicate more than in a general way what ingress had been made.‘ But every report allowed to drift back from the fighting zone em- pliaslzed the determined nature of lize defence. Dispatches said that fields, high- itavs and even towns were pro- ttctrd by countless land mines to be touched off by a careless foot- IEED or the pressure of an auto- mbie whc . The commander of one German torps said that his engineers had managed to remove LOOOinines in iiolit two days. iContiitued on page 7, Col 3) LONDON. -...,. .——lCP)-Britain Jinounced Saturday for the second iii" in succession a successiul attack ii a iii-cc i.aiiali liner iii tne AVkG- iarillic-iin believed to have been ansuorting troops to reintorce Axis AL‘: lll A\-ll1ll nhlLil. An Admiralty communique stated "an exceptionally strongiv escort- ‘convoy" of destroyers, torpedo- lt and flying boats. "Liners of this tyne are used by lliFCllCXIIY as troolislilps." observed tie Aiiiiiiia.tv' in a coiri.i.cnt similar tothal used Friday in autiouncirz the torpedoing and “almost certain" tilting oi a liner which the Admir- llhlvlllflllfllli, was the 23.635 tori ll o. .iie Duilio. also southbound. was ‘=' to have been carnfillif troops. .1 successful attack on a second iti the fi 9 F5 o ~ r‘ :r O 5 5 E m 5 n‘ W 5 o British Sub Believed lost LONDON. Scot. “l -— (GP) — I'm’: Adillirsitv issued the lOllclvlllQ coni- . D.S.C.. RN.) ind most be considered lost. Fhe next of kin have been informed” Coming Events _|()1 llm for Notices in this column 3 cents per word. i- _._ r._.---——-—-_—.~.~ "Bhow-Morell Tuesday. E “Show-it. Peters. WIe-déesday. 3.9. "Dance in Y~'-~ i-lali, Wednes- liv. scptembei- 10th. - L-48tl-8-ll-2i. "Wanted u» puv Ohicken. lliiwl bland Cold Storage L-Zlb-‘l-ii-‘f _"lleserve October 9th for Pres- PW-‘Yiln Bazaar and supper. Leg- ‘°“ Hall. Montague. L483. “Dance Lorne Valley Tuesday mlieniber 9th. Webster's Orchestra L-445-9-6-2l men's Institute. L48 l0 lildsgntlqfi; ‘°-li iii iiiii of Rad Cross. ladian Ocean some months ago. l L-343-9-8-2lf "Sunday school rally at Com- gll Wednesday instead of Thurs- 7- L490. "Dance Fail-view School. Tues- gi aunt. Sept. aui. Admission 2s ml- Lunch free. Fairview Woz- ‘Uhlcken Supper New Glas ow to the dance in Stanley . Wednesday, September 14-461-9-8-10. Airmen smoke and flames. F. eight planes. In the raid on Bergso a fish oil factory was set afii-e. The attack on Norwegian objec- tives followed a raid Saturday in which Axis shipping in the harbor of Oslo, 80 miles up the pine-bor- dered florcl from Skagerrak. was attacked by a Fortress plane of the British bomber command. The major purpose of this flight was scouting and a communique said that the German-occupied port was strafcd “in the course of high altitude reconnaissance." No Brlcllish craft were lost in the Oslo rai . Canadian flyers, returning from the attack on Huls, said that anti- alrcraft shell fragments rattled against their bomber like "skele- tons dancing 0n a roof.” The air ministry said the Hui: factory was located only after a long search. Powerful searchlights made the task particularly diffi- cult, one pilot diving to within 100 feet of the ground-to avoid them. Many of the crews said their bombs fell dead in the centre of the rubber plant. As they flew away they left behind them “multi- colored fires settling down in the end to an angry red glow with clouds of dense smoke billowing skyward. ___ (Continued on page S. Col 6) Premier (By R. K. Carnegie. Canadian Press staff Writer) MONTPREAL. $69K. 'l—(CP‘)- Prime Minister Mackenzie King. tirrivud here today by ferry bomb- er from the United Kingdom and expressed confidence that his stay in beleaguered Britain had been made at. the "most opportune time and he was glad he had made the trip when lie did. "i could not. have gone at. a bet- icr time." he told ncivslncn whom lhc received at his private cal" to lvvliicli he wcnt after leaving the plane, "1 wouid not have accomp- lished as good results had I gone to Britain earlier". Mr. Churchill 1 was kind enough to say my visit had meant much to the Brit-isni. Government and that my speech. M. the Lord Mayor's luncheon had I been most helpful." Mr. King said he returned to Canada. more resolved than ever in ._ his opposition to an Empire war cabinet for settling problems be- tween Canadian and British Gov- ernments His discussions in Lori- dcn had convinced him that. most official opinion there was sim- iar to his own. _ "At Downing street.’ he said. Mr. Churchill and his cabinet meet with their specialists On the vari- ous war problrms oti call so they arc able to give decisions based on all the advice at their command. "In much the same way I meet cisions thus arrived at are much more llkey to represent the wishes of the two countries than would bc_ icoiiziiiiica oii oars ‘l. C01 3) __________ ylllame laek of Aeid for ills ATLANTIC cm. u. .i., sent ‘I _.(A,P)-Lack or pantothcnio acid, known ss the "acid of life". W“ M1- Wedneaday. Sen-ember 1 tli. tentatively blamed before the Ain- ghlf 1o Standard mo. Price so: eiiciiii Chemical society today roi- ldren 25c. L-m-D-o-Ii. appearance of what was" said to be l“Wiinied to bu ~Bologns Cattle a’ “ran” new dmm among m‘ “to and Veal iilves. all mics m“ Foldmm “mm; "We. writs for prices. lsisn Cold sum" Wm‘ this new“: Eton“ m,“ [My u suffered fatigue. breat esanesu. fainting spells and disturbance of heartbeat. Belief that it was attributed to lack of pantothenlc acid. the little understood fifth member of the vitamin B complex. was expressed mv colleagues in Ottawa with 0111' experts rcady to give their best ' views on each problem. The dc- Direct The ministry said this and other overnight attacks on industrial objectives and communications of western Germany and the harbor of Bergso Island off the coast o! German-occupied Norway cost the R. A. Boulogne Bomhed Sept. fl-tlllon- dayl-(CP) — The sky over Boulognc reddenell early today with the glow of fires start- ed by Royal Air Force night raiders who crossed paths with German bombers pounding widespread sections of Britain. The It. A. F. assault upon the German-held Invasion port started around midnight last right with subsequent waves or bombers adding new fires to those set by the initial for- mations swinging out across the channel. While this raid was in pro- gress the Nazis struck back, bombing a southeast coast town. the northeast coast, East Anglia, a. town in the east of England and northeast Scot- land. Reports reaching London, however, did not mention any serious damage or concentrated attack at any point. Over Boulogno the R. A. F. encountered one oi’ the heav- iest anll-aircraft bar-rages yet seen from this side of the _D_o_vcr_ Straits. Says LONDON, Trip Opportune Returns to Canada with “heightened sense” of immediate Worl N. S. inan lShot to death HALJFAX. Sept 7-(CPt--Wal- tcr Austin. 5'1, of nearby Tufts Cove was found shot to death to- day in his residence above a gell- eral store he operated Royal Can- adian Mounted Police said they were holding n man in connec- tion with Austin's death. Interpreting The lNar News (By John M. llightowcr, As- sociated Press Staff Writer) Storm signals are tip for the United States in both the At- lantic and the Pacific. What they seem to mean in this sec- ond week of the wars-third year is that the United States is nearer open hostilities than it has been since the fateful days leading up to entrance into the First Great War a quarter century ago. Then as now the issue at the heart of thc crisis was freedom of the seas and then as now German U-boat hpgffltlbfli! raised the challenge to Am- erlca'a historic policy in the Atlantic. Added to these par- allel circumstances of past and present is the new fact that today the United States also faces potential opposition in the Pacific dyer‘ the same issue. o It was against this grim background of facts that Pro- sldent Roosevelt arranged to make a broadcast address to- night (Monday) before the death of his aged mother for- ced a change in pfans and postponement of the address until Thursday. What the President intended Jto talk about remains a mat- ter oi’ conjecture in ob- sence of any official indications as to his subject, btit current war developments taken in conjunction with his utter- ances of recent months suggest that he may well have in mind reaffirming in specific terms Woshlngtonh policy of keeping WOMEN SAFE CANADIAN Mrs P. W. Arnoldi, formerly To- ronto commandant of’ the Canadian Red Cross 'l‘ransport section, and l4 other Canadian women who 'vol- untecred lo serve overseas with the Mechanized Transport Corps of Great Britain, have liindetl in Britain safely, it was announced officially. President "Roosevelt's " Mother dies Scheduleifhllroadcast Address By Presi- dent Is Postponed. HYDE PARK. N.Y.. Sept. '1- (AP)-—Mrs. Sara Delano Roose- .velt who lived to sec her only s>n income Prcsftctit of the United 5ifllei. 410d tcziay at the ancestral: R.“ ‘elt. y home overlooking thc: l n raver, .th. came at 12:15 p.m E.D.'I‘ oi fin acutc circulatory c: . ‘se rc- sultzng; principally from her ad- vanced age. Tho first lntlmalim ol her declining health came Friday W119i! President Roosevelt left Washington for Hyde Park to visit hi; mother whom lie said he Wish- Mrs. Roosevelt. clled scii-~the 32nd President of ' ' States-was preparing an of major importance to the frcm the White House tomorrow night. It was announced that the edzlrcss. expected to deal with thc iii-iv lcfisPn in Germrn- American relations. would he DYi‘='P"‘_'t‘d until l0 pim. E.D.T. Thurs my. It will he carried from the While House by major Amer-men networks and re- broadcast to the world in l4 languages. Dr. gcott L. Smith. the family Dhysiorati. announced that Mi-si Roosevelt had been ttnconsc'ous f"r l2 haul-s preceding her death. and that h"i‘ condition had not 179"?" Rlfllmlntl until Saturday evening. Eiwu at lior advanced age ‘"5 PXYTPmPYY active. attending l mm!’ PhHTiPb ° functions and stat: , occrricns. She had 53mm the; she sitn~ntci' at her collide "ii camp. "WV" Til-“lti. ‘dew “rtinsifick, leav- iP” AWL 3i ‘or "vdo Park, 3*?‘ m‘! pYP-slfiwil and h’: tvife Many Britons Pray for Allied victory LONDON. Sept. '1 —— (GP) ‘- In churciics wnicii mauv tiiiics in iiie past rang with denunciation of all illlllKS bOlllilillllsSblC, millions of brlttillS prayed today for ii vlcto.y of Russian as wcil as uritlsn arms.» A day of pi ayci", requested by the Kitlll. coincided Wlvil liic lust -.\.i- utversary of the beginning of the illl Federal field . . oi‘ a new ed "o mmerg‘) a physmal check“? federal field were while he‘ closed meeting here last night. it the was learned reliably by The Cana- dian Press. Schgthugd m be brcadcas" Conservative representative in the House of Commons. helped organ- ize the meeting which an official great nlr assault on licndon. UZlB year ago .150 planes swooped dovm on this capiiai and flames leaped; from bombed docks and buildings. l No bombs disturbed churchgoers air war is not ended. worshippers in one southwest England town found their chapel shattered bv an overnight raid. _ The Archbishop of Canterbury in broadcast services appealed to Brit- ons to devote their prayers especial- lv to the Russian armies. He said the war has become a conflict oe- tween wholly opposite concepts of man-the one as ii child of God, the other as a creature of the state ——ln which there could be "no coin- promise. indeed no neutrality.‘ Arthur. Cardinal l-llnsley said in a broadcast that Poland had made a pact with the Soviet in order to deliver her sons and daughters "from slavery more awful ‘Jinn death." lle added. "Russia oi- Russia's gov- ernment we know to have been guil- tv of great wrongs to others aiizl Poland. also. But a people whise forfeit all its own rights. We omy that defence of Russia's rights may “Yen's Theatre’ Mblltilile w a. i i. t my. Beat. i0. Bee Prairie nPzililfllyieslrcloil-lfftpezr 0f the vit- - Also dance after. iimins are yeast. ‘ . r100 L-iflb-D-B-Sl. bulls Ind liver. (Continued on page ‘l, Col t) - help repair Poland's London's before Almighty God that I shall tOdBY but elsewhere do all that lies within my power. there were itriin rentlnoers that. the and deem no gggfiflcQ mo great, to ~bri rulers have done wrongs does not Li's. unmerited tish carried out trench raids near ———--~~-—--- -- - » wrongs. __ l Lille. Ginchy and Rlohcbourg. in faunas eiiiu successes IN counts Make Hit On Rubber Factory Canadians includednin raiders over Rhinelaiid} Plant shrouded in smoke and flames. i LONDON, Sept. ‘I-(CH-Buil’: eye bombardment of an imports!!! German synthetic rubber factory at lluls. in the Rhlncland. by Royal Air Force night raiders was announced today by the air ministry. The airmen, some of them Canadians, said they left the plant in billowing Soviets to move A A “i. Pro - Nazis to Siberian region MOSCOW. Sept. 'l-(APl- Removal to Siberia of the pop- ulation of the Volga region, settled b Germans In tho 18th cenzury in the reign of Catherine the Great, was order- cd tonight by the Soviet sup- rume council. It said the move was made upon the discovery of "tens of thousands of diversionists and spies among the German pop- ulation there who are pre- pared to cause explosions in these regions at a signal from Germany.” The order provided for the resettlement project to be car- ried out as soon as possible under supervision of thc nu- tioniil defence council headed by Premier Joseph Stalin. A decree signed at the Kremlin Aug. 28 liy President Michael Kallnin and made public tonight. said:- "Accordlug to reliable infor- mation received by military authorities lherc are a thous- and and tens of thousands of divcrslonists and spies among the German population of the Volga region who are prepared to cause explosions in these regions at the signal from Ger- many. “No German ever reported to Soviet authorities tho pres- ence of such great numbers of’ GETS NEH’ POST P. Taylor of Toronto. ha; lit-m named to the newly created post oi chief cxcctilivc offing-r iii‘ 11in Briti_§'] 5111101." (‘nuilril in Nth-iii Amcrlt-zi. “T- Tillflor is now in Elllllilllll. whore he conferred with Primi- Dlinislcr Churchill. ‘Two Germans Wounded in New outbreak (By Roy Porter) (Associated Press Staff Writer] B; Mulli l’. B. l., $1.00; Cuuudu and U. l. 85.00 Moscow Reports Germans Driven From Vigil Road Fierce fighting LIIIClEYWZY on fog- saiiors take part With land forces shrouded battlefields -— Airmen, (iii lit-lit)‘ (‘iis-"itiy". Assoclitlt-tl Fri-as Siziif Wfiifil‘) Moscow. Sept. s-tlliiiidztvi-i -»\l’)—Y<i1*>'1=\1\ 10"" on the counter-offensive ztititiust the iit-rltiiitis by lttnd, sea lllflll llll‘, liiive driven the Germans from at villi] highway lending to Lcningrzid, delivered “massive ’ ucrial blows at thc Nazis unrl czipitirctl it submarine in the lizlrcnls boil, it jWilS rcporlcil l0(.lil_V. _ _ i The Red armies hold the initiative on ii bronil section '01‘ tho front, it was announced here, with sonic til‘ the fier- iccsl fighting of the war. now in its 12th week, inking place fziround ilic clot-k 0n illc niud-clitirlictl, fng-shrtitided l. battlefield Iici'oi"t' licninttrliti. _ l 'l‘otlii_\"s citvly morning Will‘ report siiltl Red airmen ivcstcrdtly bucked up the embattled land force with one l destructive ittiilck zificr another upon the Germans at the I front ziuti Hlflifflll fur beyond thc lines i0 hammer home telling" rilitls on Nazi liirclvtmics. The ctlptttred German 5lil)lllfl_l'-' _... ____ iiic ivris identified by the official announcement as the U-TS. one of at ci-siii 1i a l . Th - i folio fhtrenfiirigiilim iilizyfiilutioilrzf pAlus- Sent 7‘_‘AP’_TW° Ger" -.- l'll‘ti’c"l 59a 10in sub. ..,, ‘ . , tntm oificials tvere wounded Sllflilllyl alum?‘ 5 ‘ " °‘ 5 g in“ Volga “Jons are lPw-r- iii a new outbreak of niiti-Gcriiian "melh- - . m‘ up “mm” o‘ m” “"9" lIlClClLlllS as the biiitlc Lictwccri the ~‘\"*“’“m->‘ or m” ‘l°“‘rnlmed Rug‘ 96°?“ am] “"1” lmwfii’ occupving authorities iion-coiiioriilisls continued totizli‘. lllilll noli-couilnissioneii officer were allOt by unidentified assailants Siii- urtiliv ninth‘. hours ailcl" the dawn execution of tiircc Frctit-h Communists by (it-r- llidll firing sqliatis in tho first lllflll- lfoid rcprisai for acts against thc OCfjllilllliOll forces. Further indlt-uiioii that thc Ge":- man policv of shooting- hostnitcs is not having the desired cttrci \v.ls sccu lll nil llll.'(‘ll[ili'\l'_‘,' blaze \\'lli\'ll also broke out Saturday night in a. garage in fashionable Autvtiil sub- urb which had been reouislt oiled bv German tioops. The German civil official was shot by two unidentified assailants on Rue Lniotttalne in the Autcuil quarter. llic tiltacl-zcrs Ilcd. The German non-commissioned officer was slict on thc Rue Dfibtll- kii" in the Louvre quarter under similar conditions. Wliiie lie ivas more svriotisiv vvottntlied, he was not considered iti danger, Plan new Political party QUEBEC. Sept. 7--(CP)—Pre- limlnary plans for the formation political party in the, discussed at a J. sasseville Roy, Quebec's lone and Flliillvll A Ucrnlaii civil Olliflitl and Ger- httrdly more than l2 .i.in elitlldii l0 suiilsh the tlirizilt to Lfllllllgfllll indicated that "euiutidoiis losses were being iii- .. iffd upon Hitler's invaders. The coulitcr-ilttacking force I . Girl heads I u Lbllllllilflflfid by Col. Doriskov was \,ll[l lll .lll itcctiiitit 0f lzvcsliri. gov- i ‘oi-iitiiclit llG-\\'a]).ipL‘l', first to have; lilociicti a. Gerliiuti thrust iirrrtlss u ‘riicr and their to have taken the offensive. The Gcrniatts lost 1,500 (icad and ivouiiciod in the one ac- lioti, the ])i.i])Cl‘ reported. iAlthottgii the river was ~ 11 ~oplcs rriilyt of the Ciittrclies of REL, s iiinnierside af- u lcl‘ n three on. ‘file diff??- ent $Gl'\'.Ct’5i ' e all well vattendecl. anti t e a dies cs were vcrv inspiring. ‘The ‘ f i coming vein" llOl iliinioti, it may have DCC-ll the Ncvii. A, PR Bflmce i’ . cli lloivs from the sotlthw'cst-1'\v.d,.d‘ Urh _ ViGBPI-es" 1t "n corner of Lake Laooga at] “iss ALMA,‘ Bonshnw, ‘ Sclilucssclbtirg, tilroitgh Leningrad t Fecl-etal-i; U..- .» ._-@_1_ reek-cg- ; to the Gulf of Finland. The Gcr- . 0d and ffy-gayd Magma“, 'lllkl‘il$ have SillLL-lllilb the railway i Clyde Riv id 1501-5‘ RN; I‘ Zinc from Selliitc ‘clburg, 25 miles '~ wn Rev. A. E, t-iist. of lk-niiigratl. and Lciiinizrati Rev, H_ R, listlf were utiticr Gcrmtiti artil- 1t ry lire.) brought Col. Ddiiskows troops were forced ‘ie pastor to light it grotto of 5U Gfiflllilll our- id:- ; achuiists ilronlieci in their rear iCoritintteil on page 7. Col '7) Sifitemefii» 531d WM attended by The iztirrige tit-c was discovered, inc the iiigiii. it was. said. btit those - 300 persons front 45 _of thc 64 din-inc inc night in the Rue Fcli- \\(‘.'.‘ linisiic-ii 01f b_ ore tiuwn. counties ‘in the province Those cicii li.ivi_ti_ anti lilC,lll‘C€§ll(ill11|-y purer g“ v vfiOllltlllsllliétlnt-f,“ Li.‘ M fr’- "37? present lllClll(i(‘(i Hon. Sam Go- cliiiit._iiii li hiiti ‘Stllliiitjulld bnie -. it; _. c ii o. cutlllKxl-ri. ‘ O g HO .1 hem a fol-mm Dommum cabinet. wits 1mm tt-(l by itiigggigntots, 11,3 .ll \\.lll)tl‘i all illlltullallt i.\li\\ii\ litllC‘ ‘y ' - Rfll‘li"t.’ \v.i.' being trod by the Gcr- ipocsi Lv the line con ll&c'lllR C l mgrlistetetllelegale at the meeting sold mans fISnSSZOTBQC depot. stchti ssoibtirg and LDlllllRlIKl; was AN T DANCE. A that the new party would favor Exeumml o‘ ‘Moe Fiemllmen- “ha?” by ‘he Gemmnd 1 ll E l‘ K “radical reforms like mo“ m,“ drawn from thc Drailcy concenirn- _'lo the north oi lfilllllf-Zfflfl; Dull-i // “” l‘(‘SLlll of the ling w; reported doing oil wllll tite. ; lined in England by Arthur Grten- He“ mnm‘ "m5 m“ ivood." w. _wotttitline. .. Gcrtnan sergeant Scot. 3. Ofti.i.t the executions referred to the viro- ' I of Paris wiirnitig that in the fulurc dlilifv iiiliiiiiri’ vit-iii-‘crvd wilillil ' hostages would be shot lll a ntim- Dl0\\'$-_ tym- cnnmnqng m m‘. sfil'ic\l_qnfgs (WY While hastily mobilized citizens i111- Cfrpiiyp ngginst Qm-iiigiiig .lllCl s: .ors tritni trio Baltic fleet Be The Germans said lill]llll'_\' uzii‘. - t tlitis aide-ti ' e utility oi thc nt- liic Li "- trick against thc sergeiiitt. who sill- lcrecl a slight ivouiitl in llic shouizl- } otsiei‘ . >>f___ictill'llillf‘fl [on p;ige_'7,___Coiv 5)“ l er. "could inv." been none than FTOll/Cll Ciiillnitinists." Take pledge OTTAWA. Sept. 'l-(CPl-—Ml‘ Justice 'I‘. C. Davis. associate dc- puty minister oi notional war ser- vices and chairman of the commit- tce in charge 0f arrangements for y Rricniisecrzition Weck, Saturtlnii rc-ltiasetl for publication a tiiotigc‘ which Canadians will bc asked to take during thc week. Reconsecratlon week is to be observed across Cruinda Sept. 10.17 tu commemorate the second anni- versary of Canada's entry into the war. At the same time, Jitsticc Davis‘ urged Canadians to distiliiy flags and to decorate their homes and business premises as part of their observance of Rcconsecrotion Week. Germans (A1100 Milxwoli, for six years iiittlon to f rem ivo report the latest ucti l ‘ th t6 t f th plfgglegiing is c x o e (Associated Press Stall‘ Writer) “At this time off peril ‘for 3113' country in this lght aga nst e 1 . . . , _ evil powers which threaten to en- ‘l; flfiffllfffcj.‘;§,‘},‘§$0‘;_i$,1§) ewyrtztitllig; Bu" We elllmi mnsclollfi 0i my the condition of hcr footwear pct‘- rluty toward Canada. and toward sonali and de id. ii th. it niy fellow man, I solemnly pledge v c N “ w or or 1 she rcallv needs them. If his decision is favorable lit?!‘ l1 Dtlll‘, about the victory of our 1mm momma ng arms. that right. may triumph. that ‘- Justice may prevail and that a righteous peace may reign through- out the world: to this end I re- consecrate myself. with faith. with courage and with the knowledge that. though the path be hard and ghiel day dark, our efforts can not a ." il.'ar-25 Years ocrs. Today it is shoes. consist largely (if the {pit the Germans take wherever woollen clotiiin . are hard to g “i are scarce as hcn's teeth, Listed U11" ¢°111\l°1'l\ll~ll°k¢d-" so u among the mlggin are hag glasflgg" The nzwvs original announcement \ PM. dress slaielcls an good hairpins.‘ Tililfsililv ililiilt Siiid that the Grim". SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Barth-ii 9.00 AM. 12.00 noon. imgl bail actors when located. Without atlllitirizaiion no sh tuei-eliulit wmiiii risk n siile. for ‘ (lertnzllis ililfitise severe l-‘iven the least important of covet-lug. sitch as the tufted slippers concicrizos love to weal Se t. ii fold-Romanians captur- ed rsovo on the Danube. H~iivy British shellfire between Arra. and near Aiimentieres. French made further gains in Vermando- vlllera area on Somme Front. Bri- (Contlriucd on page 1,Col bl posters ituuouiiciiii! clmniition 0i‘ Aug. 22 of Gcn Von Schriumlxirlr. commander of tlie 'Yl'.V Strip Paris Former Fashion Writer zit French Capital tolls of Nazi looting. fashion writer iti Pairis, recently rc- iilrncd. from Frtitlcc ivlicrc silo 10-’ I ilillincci during lilo Gcriiiiiii O(‘1j‘l- I “ n 1d l)hc flit-ii fashion [rout of the N ' I ' l‘ . (Bv Alice Dlaxwclll c NEW YORK. s :. 7» AP - i V“ woman who wants Lllnflilll‘ bf sine/s " a .0 _ . ta- h . Rives lier a boil (Yiicliiit. a form olf ticket authorizing someone to scll ago silk stockings ivcrc problem No. l for women 5hUl)'~_ Signs for next winter point to no‘ creams or llpsllcks at all, since coll; y material they find it to grease their war machinc.l Countless other luxuries and so- called necessities, such nsi shcem and and arc soniet nics obtained only through the black tuarkct. a bootlig enterprise charging bootleg prices. Spools oi‘ black and willie threatl Zipper fastenlngs are hard to find ixiiiallivs. '- U-boat itseti its torpedo tubes Ullllls l the vlcttillv of Kt-stvilizp on the shore of in Kurciiiiil Lu Soviet accounts said Finnish sol<l-' icrs find ill panic to tiiv woods nciir the Soviet-Finnish border when Rule. \ /./» i l) _ lit‘ ‘y. .llli1(‘(l alone the rnIire . { Greedy; Bare 3 iiiliilflii TORONTO. Sent. idllllill .il‘i.l tii..:..lii'.i.ii i1 i l ail, '5 1 \VASllIN(‘i'l’ON. Salli. T»~i.-\l’*»- ‘llic UllllCtl Suilllus Navi- l)i-',i..i"tiiii~i.t oluntiv disputed Szlturtiav night a ciiiiiil from licrilti ‘iiiiil tilt’ iilslrna- ii- tutor iiiitl been ttic irc Hamill‘ in tin cnuiigcinotit ivilh a tli- lilll sub- uiarhic oil Iceland it l't.‘l'i(‘l"il'.(‘(l that "thc initial attack iviis made by the submarine on the Greer.‘ The uiivv issued thc lolloivztig statement:- "Notivillisiantilng Gcrninii lPIlIlOllS appearing iti itititiy‘ lligli title this :i and totii rrou: n" SiIlIlmOTSltl" title ill iiifiiiiiies lat- er than (‘liarlottctcivn Nciv moon Sent. 2i. 12.38 am. Summer-side lido l8 minutes lat- """‘ vi‘ than (‘llfll‘lfifl(‘i"\l'll. s nltilCd bv tho uiivi- tlltpsirtint-nt _-— ¢5i_i“"t.,i~q Th“) iiaulciy that the initial attack in this l‘llil£li‘.\‘lll(‘lli. was ulndu by the LHNIP Bordon 6.30 AJlI. .\lli)li‘ii\l'lllll on thc Lil's-ct". lt was; 1.00 PM. 1.45 ['31. 1.30 P.i then. and not until thou, that tile‘ Lci ‘c (‘apt- Toriucntine (t "on route ti. lcciiuid wltll mail. i~e- ‘idlllPll lllln morning that. ti subin ir- lllt‘ l\1il\(‘li‘.‘\l ll1‘l' ll\' tiring lillilflililfihll \\l\l<‘ll missed their tuark. Tile \ll‘tf‘l' lIHlllQtl-iillvlt’ coilult-rtltttickotl with ll."lllll charges." llorliii cliiitiicd Saturday that the Greer attacked first. and that. ilk; l sell defence. 00 P-M- 4.45 l'.l\l. 7.00 RM 0e iii‘ ill l‘.'.\l. e30 l'..\l. Nill) l‘.i\l. \VOOD ISLANDS FERRY ‘ ‘Ii. is 11.00 A. M. 3.00 P-M that the Greer was thc iii: . .__ . , - N ill its ilciioii with llic stibiiitiriue. i i mnlnn)‘ rqfizzrq¢zonuh§rrl E izicts arc the sumo its (ll‘lil.l‘.l‘lily' ‘ ‘ ‘ i) 35 AM. . il. iiiiio A.'.\I. 3.15 P..\i. 0.20 PM. s40 Leave (‘ripe ‘Vbllflrfltlll? 10.05 JLM. Lcnvisi Wood Islands 7.00 ILM’. 5 Leaves Caribou 9.00'A.M. 1.00 PM