‘ l9! h Iotleu in "Binge cg Milly. hug. in.’ ltcfreshments. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN il- uffifi‘ ;.'l"...$il'°.'tuu'."€!éi“.§.‘i “flpmeeewn Gunilla, ‘Iwe Out; hi. >}"%I/ /// The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Creditor: no g l". greet ohreven of time: and gen- null. MAXIMC OIL MERE MAN lnperstltloul CHARLUTTETUWN, CANADA. TUESDAY. AUGUST is. 1942 8 PAGES ~w a Aural Bnblerlptlun Delivered, ll.“ '7 "u" l- l- l- lU-Wi to other Provinces led II. l- I-IO 5 BRAZILIAN SHIPS SUNK BY ENEMY U-BOAT§ ti. S. M a ri n e s Well Established In Solomons Anglo - Russian LeaclerL Confer Churchill Visits Moscow; Second Front Probably Looms Large In Discussions i .._..___. ‘ By Eddy Gilmore (Associated P1085 Staff’ Writer) MOSCOW, Auo. 1'7 - (AP) -- Pilme Minister Churchill. Premier siiliu and British, soviet and Unit,- QdSilIlCS field and staff command- ers hive met. for foul‘ days Moscow audreaciied secret decisi- ons for turning back the Germans oii a tremendous bitt-leground. tlie United Nations announced to- dill. The bare facts of fcur days of Kremlin ccnferencss, wh ch began with Mr. Churchill's arnv-al in llfc-scoiv last Wednesday a.b:ard a four-motored Litezattr bomber with American pilCts at. the con- trols, and enried Saturday, w:re dlscloszd in communlques ifiz-tlQd in Moscow and London. But. a source clrtse to th" Pnme ltllnisler describrd this first. Chunh. ill-S aliu meeting as markin", an epcch and added that it might. prtve g, turning point. in the w-r Mr. Churchill left. Moscow Sun. day morning and the ccimnnunlriue wax issued aftsr he was outside the Soviet iitrion, (London viewcd the disclosures E? T‘ ' ’ ‘ ' ": (Coiiti ed on piige 3. Col 5i w -.___~____~ .-___ On Mosc By Robert Bunnelle Associated Press Staff Writer LONDON, Aug. 1'7—(AP)-The war cfecisions which Britain. the Unlml States and Russia have rcrichcd in the Moscow conference olPiinie Minister Churchill and Premier Stalin uicre regarded bl’ observers tonight: as ansurcrs to the Boviec cry for "deeds, not. words" from their allies. lt was believed that: the confer- ' once. heavily weighted on the mil- itrlry side, was aimed at knitting the major United Nations int/o an in- tegroicd lighting force and that. a. fcrmulo upon how. when and ivhere to ODPll a second front had been a- Breed upon. Significantly. the official an- nouncement of the conference that was issued in Moscow and London strcitlcully excluded Japan from the is powers against; which the stmtcgv was devised. lt s.u<l the decisions concerned the "ivor against Hitlerlte Ger- many and her associates in Europt." Nevertheless, it is not believed that the Allies excluded the poss- lblllty of a Japanese attack unv-n Slbrria when they R09 WW" mapping their plans. Three Possible Plans Speculation here centred upon three means with which Britain and ifloiitinued ofrifife-‘TTOCBI 3')“ touting Events 1-0- an; leluun I eeuu on word "T l edneed - alklel Me peque, W adfi" "Dance, Ions Hall. Wednesday- Aiieusi 19th. a-ia-u. School. “Dmoe 8 1B 30 . Lake V Thursday, August 20th. "Talkie: Orapsud, Thursday. 8-17-21. "Talkies and dance Breadalbane Tuesday. 8-17-21 den Lot as hell. a-ii-zi. i “Plui Wdnesd .A ciom. . It Neil éealaend Chiiiclnumuil-lo-lll. “Collecting hogs every Friday. Plum tut mu DRUG McDowell, rlcwu. i-io-ao-lwtr. "Dance Georgetown Hall ‘Thurs- dty. August ma. Webster's omi- utre. _ 3.1g- 19- at the San Pedro up!" ' have discontinued custom "iodine. Walter A. Mullcna 18 u "Owing circumstances beyond tcntrol am unable to do any m0"! “Ltf-"i sawing until further notice. Bur Munn, Belle River. 8-l8-2l. c"Come to the firemen’! ball. "Ydllan Town Hall, Thursday. M13- 39. under nus ices A. R. P. MAD-dancing contcs . Peters Or- theatre. 5.1g.“ 135 Acres of Mainz Blasted LONDON, Aug. 17- (GP)- Dayllght photogra he ehow urea; of “complete cstruetlen" totalling 135 acres in Mlllll, German city blunted by RAJ‘.- R.C.A.I‘. raids the night 0f Aug. 11 and l2, the air min- istry announced tolhy. “Great patches o! devout:- tlon by fire and high expluive bombs" attested to the accur- acy and effeetlveneee of the bombing which hit all rt: of Mining and its subur . The ministry said the pictures were not sufficiently clear for news- paper reproduction. Malnz, beside: having im- portant lndustrlw, ls n. gar- rison town with permanent barracks and military depots. many of which were destroyed or damaged extensively. Guesses ow Talks British Guns Go Into Action DOVER. Aug. I8-—('l‘uesdn,v)— -tCP)—Brltain's biggest guns threw shells across the chan- nel at Nazi-occupied territory early today with reverberation: which shook the countryside for miles. Brilliant flashes from the guns lit the sky. At one time white flares dropped over the French‘ couct_ The German guns between Boulognc and Calais began to answer after some minutes. Tho cannonpding lasted nearly an hour. 1 500 B. C. Coal Miners Quit Work NANAIMO. B. 0.. Aug 1'l— W (CPi- Fifteen hundred miners employed in Canadian Collleriw (Dunsmuir) Ltd, mines hero and at nearby Cumberland were idle today in what the operltors de- scribed cs an illegal strike and the men as a holiday. The unions have been seeking a revision of the wage scale set. out. ln the agreement between the operators and the United Mine Workers of America, District 1d The mines affected produce 8.- tone of coal a day. Rudy Valle: Joins Navy LONG BEACH, Calif. Aug. 11- (APt-rtuuy vallee. bend leaner md crooning radio ltar, today joined the Gout Guard u a band master with the rank of chief petty officer. Lieut. Max Bturgee. assistant per- sonnel officer in me Long Belch Coast Qllllfl office. aid Vellee had been approved pnystcally and "new is going through the details. There was no previous announce- ment today that he had come here from Hollywood to enlist. H0 is 4i year old. Vailee enlisted in the navy at the age of l5, just before the First ureot. War and spent three monthl in the service before his ale was discovered. He we: shipped MIM- Ln 1084 he wu commissioned a lieutenant commander in the nev- l rve. ‘Eifiwwlll be stationed tcflinnorutlv base and be in charge of the Coast Guard band. semi. tar/lure. N01‘ ooonl CALGARY‘, Aug. l7 -- (U?) '- Every retail merchant. in Albtfll will suspend sale of his own mer- (handles for 15 minutzs BePt- l sell only We: Sevlu s Stamp! un 1- ; plan of the Net nei We: Finance Committee. "Ifhe P1111 ll to make the sales emul ch00"! lhroillhout the grovlnoe. 1m i to 8:15 n m V ‘P Japs Fight Fiercely To. Stem Landings Some Nipponese Pris- oniers Taken; En- emy Loses Large- Scale Naval En- gagement. (By J. F. Sanderson, Canadian Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON_ Aug. l7-—(CP) -Unlted States marines are “well established" in the Guadalcanal- Tulagi area. of the Solomon Is- lands. the navy department an- nounced todoy, despite furious sea. and air attacks by the Japan- ese designed to break up the landing operations. hi a communique, the navy an- nounced that Japanese air and sea units were defeated in a run- nlng fire battle that: started with the surprise landing on the early morning of Aii . 7 and continued through the nght of Aug. 8-9. Jnp Ship! Damaged Al; least 30 Japanese planes were shot down and there was damage to Japanese warships in the night naval battle but it was impossible to determine its ex- tent. It was the informative communique yet issued by the navy department on the cam- paign, and brought it up to date with these words:- “The shore positions taken by the United States forces have since (the original landing) been developed and are now well es- tablished." The communique told of the original landing parties taking the Japanese by surprise in the early morning of Aug. '1. even destroy- ing l8 seaplanes before they could get into action, while troop cm"- riers and destroyers screened their operations. beating off Jup- anese land-based aircraft. and shooting down 1B planes during the first few hours of the occupa- most. tlon During the first night. Japanese cruisers and destroyers attempted to cut through the protecting ring of American naval ships to get at. the landing parties but; were driven off with losses on both Taduhan?gifg;.gia. ‘Col. l)’: I I Bandit Slam In Gun Battle Damon‘. aux. 1'1 —— (APPA bandit with a long police record was slain in a sun flsht with pli- trolman Harry Irvlne here todill‘. and Irvine, wounded in the ab- domen, was in a. critical condi- tion after an emergent)’ 0P6"- mm A second bandit escaped. The man killed was Warren Hcyser. 42. who was free on bond pending trial on charges of pm‘- tlcipatlng in a 035.000 Amefifli" railway express robery at. Younkfi" town. O. His companion was not identified. Irvine was watching a private garage on a tip that a stolen auto- mobile was stored there. 1'11‘.- garage owner identified Hicysci‘ as the man who rented it rcp- resentlng himself as a federal employee who had to go to Wash- ington and wanted his automo- bile off the streets. At, 10:40 a. m. end his companion. a younger men, entered the gutuflt- When Irvine approached. he was met: b! gunfire and was hit. in the ab- domen. I-le shot Heyser. collared the other man and marched him into a nearby house. There the bandit broke away and fled. Irvine, giving chase, collapsed. Display Trap For Bombers imw YORK. nus. 1'l-<AP>—- A dive-bomber trap operfl-tlnd 0T1 ‘he the“); that, g, plunging attack pram can't aklp steel ropeshurl- ed by mortars was llflOng military mccmznlscm in a wln-tthe-wer exhibtlon opened we W" l“ l dc tment. store. e United slam wet displayed a el of the traP “rum u aimed to protect» I ore- pami position menaoed by e dlvelbomber. A mortar cannon hurls into the air a ions cable which stretches out to fall slowly, supported by two parachutes. its object. is to foul the eiicmY Dlflflfi Qf force it to swerve from its iatget. Exhibition lecturers sold the d9- vlcg has ended the ellfctlvencsl o! dive-bombing prepared posit- , _ _.. 0T total of 60 united nations gov- ernments. defence agencies and rtvata organizations are sacnsor. n! m; display: open until Aug. g9. today Heyset -_.____ (B! Edward l. Homer, Aaeooleted Press Wu- Analylt) Cairo’! disclosure that. American efr fighter: are ready now to o into notion in I.‘ ypt in their own union which 0t erwlse is puzzling ndTbe development euggoete the n. the cruclll importance After ‘ of squadron: is a. hopeful end discouraging. arrival o! Ill ltantial reinforcements promises further augmentation fE t’ d f d i k i 1h of North Alina grin ‘in: :iiii.}re"iirliuai:pis:§c.w' Intensive improvement of the cross-Africa aerial ferry route. it can be hoped that n. fast and steady stream of short- Plfllffl flxht-or plump as well u bombers can be kept flowing to 5UP‘ "ml" "m" 0W1! Dower. Definite information on this point naturally is Iackilng, roops, tank: and bulk Ill move by ships on ILOW-rniie, ‘l? O lted States or Britain. . ‘ Espionage Case Opened By 0.3. ARK. NJ” Aug. 1'1 —(AP)—- ""11 hi I Ii ' The United States government open- ed its espionage case against Her- bert Karl Friedrich Bahr today by NEW usserting the scholarly deifendant; tficd to smuggle into the country on his person on ingeniously hidden device for making invisible ink. The former Buffalo. N.Y,, citizen went on trial before a jury of six Critical Of Axis Human Rights’ an m the desert struggle mu must men m! 51X Woven and a male and e O 0 . o", unwffllgd Wyn,” "om u“ Um a female alternate. He was charged with conspiring _ foreign The_ current Egyptian puzzle is that in the month since Marshal "P1110115 to forward to Germany in- Rflmmcls anny was brought to ii halt. Gen. Auchlnleck has not seen fit. Yfllmfltivn vital to the American with eight men in in launch s. full-dress attempt to drive the invaders back to the Ubynn war effort. border and relieve the threat to the Nile. Dlsouuragcment arise: from the suspicion that the British The assistant US. Attorney. John com- Morrisscy. in opening his case said the mnmler decided his 8th Army was unequal to the task, that now Rom- government intended the offensive. llopes were high last month that. reinforcements had given the Bri- tish forces a temporary margin of appeared to have retained an edgf In United Nations capitals there was l. widespread expectation that was arrested superiority in men and tanks. They in ‘the nlr all along. Auchinleek would momentarily attack in force. But he did not. There was one formidable tank foray of a day and a half, which was report- ed to have been more costly in tanks to the attackers than to the foe This setback, it may be, accounts for a. decision w dk in and en- gage in a race for reinforcements. Despite the continuous aerial lambusiing of Nazi and Italian con- voys and of Bengasl. Mn-truh and be recognized that Rommefs strength ls being built merchantmen from Slolly and Greece have been badly batter bombs, but fast motor boats and self-propelled barges are able other North African buses, it must up. Convoys of across the Mediterranean by night and in day-time periods of low vis- ility . ' . gree the Middle O O O East fronts are mutually-supporting. Snmc diversions can be risked from Palestine and Syria, and munitions originally des- tined for India and even Russia. may be sidetracked. Time also permits expansion of American vice fighting equipment of all kinds. Malta. replenished at. the cost. of a British aircraft- cnrlefi pd effort, pm‘ the Brlilsff harp thorn to the Axis cruise a W015i!!! u‘ iizvy If‘; back’ in eotloliruiiiashlng at the ports of ' l f ne uppy e. onglii ‘ilc-‘oueltsofndlitfiiled information the Allied public can only Bifl" CQHSOI’ S Take Mrs- to he ils hopefully patient over the outlook in Egypt as over the pros- pects for a ’ front in Europe. i Nazis Cross Kuban River At New Points Red Army Still Holds Initiative At Voronezh Sector To North. u. c Halifax Water (Associated Press Staff MOSCOW, Aug. l8 - (TlJ-Biday) __ (AP) -- The R..ss1lris announ- ced early tcda that ‘lite Colman-i had succesde in crossing tho Kuban rlvcr at. t-wo new Ddlnts mar Krasncdar in ihf! Caucasus. but indicated the Rio Bflfll’ W55 hcldlng film in the Ketskflyl. RTEH cf the Don bend mar sain- grad where 5.0 0 Qveimans were W" gortcd killed durlnll u» out 10W ays. . Fierce fighting was said to be in progress in b:iii these suztcrs, as well as around the Caucasian rail. way town of Mlneralnye Vcdy and ncrtficast 0f Kctelnikovski on the Stalingrad front. Moe thfn 50 German tanks were reported des- irCyCd in various sectors. The Red anny cont nixed to h:ld the initiative in tme Voronczh sec- tor to the north, the mizm ght communique said, but the Ger- mans were said to have thrown large reserves into the fight to halt the Russian threat to the Ger- man flank. Sovict fcrtlficaticcis in the Klets- knya region were reported Ktlifd- ing down tncreaslrg numbers of Nazi men and mwhinee. but Mar- shal Fedor von Bcck sent fresh reserves prodlgally into the gamble to cut Russia's main waterway be- fcrc witiicr. (‘The Geimans claimed they had evicted all Russians frcm the Dzn Elbow in the Kletskave ares. be- fore Stalingrad and now control all the Den basin. A steady ad- vance in the northwest Caucasus toward the Black sea naval bsse of Novorosslsk also was claimed. (Heavy defensive fighting east of Vyamia and ct Rzhev was re- portcd. Another Russian attack was acknowledged on the ncrth. em front.) The military i-ess said a full- scale German of emsive wcs on in the Kletskaya region where for a month the Ruse an have held firm uni exactld on ep- palllns toll of casualties. Although the Russians acknow- ledged Sllndly night. that n. wedm had been forced in their defences dis ctotiee today sntd further es- sa. ts were being repulsed. w" War-——25 Years Ago Today (By The Onnnfllen Press) AUG. 18, loll-Canadians re- pulsed three detennined counter- ntteclu, and inflicted great losses northwest of Lens. Punch bega advance between Oils mil Aime rivers capturing Morsefn. Aus- trians drove alllilO-Rlllllniln! from entrendied tlon: louth Groleeni. 5 Shortage Ends HALIFAX, Aug. 17 —(CP>— A water shortage in sect-ions of Holi- fax was ended late tonight by the repairing of a. broken pipe after two days of inconvenience to house- holders, industries, business places and institutions. The break, in a pipe joint at, n new suburb in booster pump station had reduced the flow of water tn a tzickle in some of the city mains The downtown section was among the hardest hit. Hundreds of workers at the Hall- fax shipyards, where two (iesirflficfii are being built for the Royal ciunu- dlan Navy and repair work done on damaged vessels, were handicapped for a time by the shortage. But salt crater win substituted for fresh, and the work Went on. Ice was rushed into the breach at. Molr‘; Limited, engaged in mo‘;- ing bread for the army. The melt. ed ics enabled the bakery to con- tinue operations, but the company's candy plant was forced down. it was carted ln with buckets and other containers. No Increase In N. S. Beer Prices HALIFAX, Aug. 17- (C?) —The price of beer in Nova Scotla will not be raised at present. As. Mabon, chairman of the Nova Scotia Liquor Commission, said to- day. He was commenting on an Ottawa an... uncement that. effect- ive wdey, ldjustmerlts in beer price: might be made to take care of 1n- creased taxes In the new feredal budget. Mr. Mchon said any increase in beer ‘gr-ices in t-his province would be dc yed until the commission had made en analysis of the situation. Steel Workers Vote On Strike Question GAUUI‘ EYE. MARIE. On Aug. 17 - (OP) -- Officials of the Algomn steel workers pounced late tonight that. more than 2,000 of the 4.0m employees of tho Alumna steel corpcration hero have east strike vote. . The voting startcd here tonight after worker: — new on 24-hour holiday - were told at : mass meeti today that. the Ontario Region l War Lebor Boezd had re- fused to eat a minimum basic labor rate of 55 cents per hom- for etlel worker; m. the plant. Morrlsscy said talned onnterial for factuze of invisible ink. In addition, Morrlssey u; h, clasp had been removed from his to slip hill/filling bu‘: and other materials for makiiu; the ink had been im- bedded beneath the replaced clasp. Bohr also hid $7,000 in large bills What Auchinleek ls reeelvln . ulda from the new American flght- beneath paper in a cigar box. Mo"- er s uadrons, ls i: military some which Cairo dispatches can only hint rissey continued, The money was at. The defenders havo one primary advantage in that to a. limited ilc- to be used “loosening tongues." The 29-year-old former exchange American citizen virtue of his father's naturalization, 110001810 "Dill! and 5"- sewned nervous but: reserved. He court-appointed counsel during selection of jurors. student. an conferred with Roosevelt T0 Task NEW YORK, Aug. today in her syndicated column military Roses have not the slight- "Mv Day" that she had received ¢5tl<>uWlfl110H-” " a "stern letter" from the censor- The flmmu-“lelnelll made n0 Ship board for conunemmg on the other reference to casualties. wenmen (In Biicxios AllYs, however. for- u-rhe Censor has written m, a eign Miiuter Enrique Ruiz very stern letter about my re- Gmmz“ p?“5°“anl' wnveyw m marks, on the weather, and so m” Bmzflm“ Ambassadm‘ u" from now on I shall not. tell you or whether the sun shines where I happen to be.‘ code of the that whether it. rains The censorship time pmCiiCEs for States press proirides to exceed of publication. FISHERMAN DROWNED WEST DOVER. N. S , Aug. ~ (OP) - Grandwcll Zlnck, 31, Dover fisherman, was drown- ed today when c. rcuboat. capsized in His bro- ther, John, was able to sw.m a... Dover ls about. l2 miles West. a. breaker neat shore. shore Went sgutlfnlmfwi-Ialifax. six to prove mel may be inln time for reinforcemen and that hen th d- - " i» - ' '- ert. front flumg; lnifi a new crisis it again will be the invriiiers whim tatlfe Ceolxiil/Fiirtilbliialigfiullcll‘ li-iiile iliadxtcitilgleyfi-‘g- Siding llldge. Wlllizwn F. Smith, the question of imposing penalties rang- ing from 30 years to death. that: customs agents at: Jersey City. where Bflill‘ aboard the Diplomat Exchange Liner Drottninghnm July 9, discovered the middle button had ' been removed from his coat. and the thread used to replagc ii. con- the manu- 17-—(AP)— Mrs. Franklin D_ Roosevelt said war- United news storles about weather occurrences must be restricted to an ares. not 150 miles from the point have sunk five passenger and recently, including carrying soldiers, in a and promised the would not go unpunished. the 1,905-ion Annibal raquara was first ced. Later the l69-ton Iiagiba. in the last three days. the others. All went. down bulge of Bf-IlZli. It. must. be revealed ‘that e-ast, carried the government said. "Rumors dispersed so many Brazilian lives?) (First word of the sinking of the Montcvi o, Uruguay. which the Brazilian Embassy there had announced the loss of the shi , de- scribed as a transport, with 00 or 800 troops. (Later the Brazilian Ambassador to Argentina, Jose De Paula Rod- riguez Alves, announced he had tel- ephoned the embassy in Montevideo 1'7 and had been told no announce- ment of the sinking was made there. He did not, however, deny the sinking.) "Our country within its tradi- tions does not flinch before such brutality and the government is ex- ‘ ICOMliJliSTO-Fifiezt. veLoj Airmen Almost Ready For Offensive By WES GALLAGHER Assoohted Press Staff’ Writ" LONDON, Aug, 1"! —(AP) t° shill Gen. Curl Spautz declarnod to _ that United States bom er crews, The 508""!!! Sheet military m)!‘ some of whom ure being seasoned Pm“ W“ "mm" MM Wfltct- but on daylight raids with the R..A.l“. reparin ast an and R.C A F. were "bomb Germany as Maj. niglii. iiiirniilfitfiiii AT A ounce (lhndlan Prue) UNITED NATIONS -Ch\|rchlll. m Stalin, llarrimun, with milltlry M leaders, lay plans in Mowow for often as possible until we win the ‘goppin; ‘h, m,“ .n In s. joint press conference. the WESTERN FR 0N T — Flying commander of the United States Fortfesses‘ "can"; by n, Q A_ y, Air forces in European theatre and u“; R" ,\_ p_ “amt-rs, smash at Air Vice Marshal Richard H. Peck “on”, h, m.“ a|l_AmQr|c.n Mm. ngrced that "the mum enemy of the b" "m 9n gum“, Allied Nut-ions is in this theatre and the only way to strike at him for the moment is through the air." ‘round During tho day, it was announced Ind in foothills that. Brig-Gen, James H. Dflfllittle. Grozny RUSSIA — Beds northwest of give some Stalingrad oil field: on the who led the United states squadron cguuguy which been here l0 days on »Unlted States. bombed Tokyo April l8 hna special days, extend Gen. Spaatz and Air Marshal Peck are reported well setablinhed. spoke shortly after RAF. — fighters and bombers high altitude over the Channel on another foray against the French MONTREAL, Aug. lone German George T. Coleman who has been raider had caused damage and klll- general superintendent ed five at. a south coast. English portstlon for the Canadian Paci- town. Marshal Peck is assistant fie Railways since i936. will retire Sept. l after more than 49 years mum a,n_ Bot-h said the R..A F‘. R QAJ". :e.vice with the company. it was ‘and American Air Forces are lIl announced here complete agreement on bombing president W. M. Neal. Mr. cole- pollcy mid methods of operation. A.F. const and after a l» chlcf of the British Ail‘ staff. R C . flew at WILL RETIRE today by man is "No one ln these islands is more man, president of the C. P. R. anxious to bomb Germany than the ii-i- Americans.“ Marshal 0' icon out bot said, "mid they nre milking amazing pro- urcss ln a short space of time." Gen. Bpnatz explained that Am. lanes and crews will carry separate and joint mis- ESCAPES FROM JAIL HAMPTON, N.B., A (OP) - Ernest Geneau. ed from the King's County RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug. 17-_—(AP)—Axis submarines, preying on coastal shipping, Brazilian cargo ships the 4,- 80l-ton Iiaependy which was the gov- ernment announced tonight statement which bitterly criticized the Axis “crimes" The loss 0i‘ the Baependy, Ben- p, evelo and the 4,872-ton Ara- announ- statement was amended to include the 1,075-l0n Arara and the 2,- The first three were toppedoed an. by nouncement said. 'l\ie time element was missing in the case of the _ bet-ween Bolus and the state of Sergipg on the coast below the big eastern the Bfifipmdl‘. which was 50mg north- au army unit with reduced iiiintbcr of forces of wh ch only some were canvoked meerves,” about high CQTIdOIPXICPs of his government and people for the sinking which “cost Baepeiidi crime in s. dispatch from said approaching the out SOUTHWEST PACIFIC- U. S. mission. l-le will return soon to the" forcen, ashore in Solomon lllandl occupation and 17- (OP)- of trans- vice- a brother of D. C. Cole- us’. 1'! - 1 , serving a six-weeks tcrm for theft, escnpfi a here early tonight. rnrl was still be- ‘(Contlnuedibif bile gfcoi l)‘ m‘ mm“ ‘i’ ' 1a“ mm‘ Reported One Was Transport; Many Liges Lost” Brazilian Government 1s Bitterly For ‘Disregard Of’ News Briefs LONDON, Aug 11_<cp>_ A mun was killed and several pgf- sons were trapped under debrh when Nazi bombe , bran“! workmen’; houses ln s. south coast town late tonight. lligh explosive: were dropped on two other nearby towns. BOMBAY. Aug. l7 —(AP) _. Bands of demonstrators pulled down telephone and telegraph wires and burned a street a“ in Calcutta today, but quiet pre- vailed for the fourth successive dfly ln populous Bombay I5 the lslue of Indian Independence appeared no nearer solution than it did a week ago. AUCKLAND, Aug. 18 -(c r Cabiet— Now that American forces have established satisfact- °PY foothold: in the Solomon Islands victory must go u, thq side controlling the sea. a New Zeuland Press Association Cor- respondent at a south Puffin port wrote today. VALETTA, Malta, Aug. l7 _. (APP-Three German Megs". echmltt-109 planes were shag down In a brief morning alert, it was announced. Tonight the 2.91001 alert was sounded. LAKE COUCIIICHING. Ont, Alllf- 17—(CPt—The ‘Var-lime Prices and Trade Board does not intend in extend rationing be. yond gasoline, sugar, tea, 3nd coffee for the next three months at least. Kenneth Taylor, secre- tary of the Board. said here today at a meeting of the Cana- dian institute of public affairs. CARPENTERS RESUME WORK LUNENBURG. N. S. Aug. 1'1_ (CPt - Carpenters at Smith and Rhulands shipyards here returned to work tcday after walking out. Saturday in a demand for higher Pay The men claimed the advanced 00st of living necessitated increas- ed pay They went back to wovh when they Pewlvcd assurance their claims would be referred t9 the regional war labor board 41E Fallow who insists on FAiR PLAY ALWAYS WArifs j-ro BE 4m: Juoaiz Too i h tlwcivtlilv aftcrnoon at 4.00 an: gwmorzow ‘morning at 4.09- 5,,“ we; mtg evening at 8.08 and rises tomorrow morning a 8.05. First, quarter moon Aug, 19, ‘L30 alSxlxiffilflefsidll tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. OAR FHIRY SERVICE DAIL‘ EXCEPT IUNDA! From Borden - Leave 9.25 up. 1.010; p.m.. (41.45 fauna. w” IYO 81$) ll " :-m., 3.15 palm. 3-05 F-mn "l. ‘n’ SUNDAY sslvlcl (May a m bee. :1 howl,” Lee Borden PM l- ull: T,,,.,,,,,,u.a "ills up. 8-00 pan. I “not __ . RR B Ltd-WA. shfasndl 1.00 5.1m. 11.01 . ., s . . ‘riieevoparibol I mm» 1 I-I. UN M. "m" AIR scnvicr Charlottetown-Summers“!- Mon on léave Charlottetown 0-8! l- Il-I . . m. Lure Summerelie ‘Ill l- l-l 1J0 . m. Leave Monoton l1 L. m: ml 0.10 p. m. Dell! elpeptlflhl- in , . .z--, ,. .. ~ r-zsrqfic ~