_MAXIMS _. OIL. MERE MAN xii l ,o§, fromtyour impatience. borrowsfts sharpest i} c in“, um Outs, grlfftfmfsf’ Ion-whoa nssoturioli sears REPEAL or us Mleet Obstacles In iazls claim p if-shipi British tonvoy sunk growl, Sept. 26 —(AP) -The high command claimed to- will almost complete destruction g s il-ship Britain-bound convoy o“ West Africa, declared that a ~ my and secret Nazi U-boat tech- pique had made the convoy system increasingly vulnerable and said “may 1,000,000 tons of British “ppm; have been sunk since the put of the Russian war. All but one of the ships attacked y; a U-boat fleet off West Africa yen sunk, a special communique glaimed. A few hours later u high wmmalld spokesman, citing this latest attack as one example. pro- fused the Loooooo-wn figure to [uppott his allegation Lin’. the sub- marine had been developed as s. mpon oi offence faster than de- mos; against U-boats have been devised. ghrlef communique placed the British tonnage losses off West Africa at 78.000 tons, and said the miy ship to escape was a small one. (There was no corrlnent im- Efforts To ll ' here ’ the the German threat to Rostov, great northern end of the Caucasus. The outflart " ‘ It was said. British and Russian experts have been working intensely in Teheran to organize a combination shilp-rail-truck system which would de ver a heavy traffic of war ma- terials from the Persian Russia over a. route using Iran and the Soviet Caspian Sea. ports of Baku and-Astrakhan. They have bumped into obstac- modlaiely in Iondon.) Shortage of i500 tank tars reported 1 YORK, Sept. 25-(AP)—- ‘Ashortage of 1500 railroad tank ears belo a present require- leum industry was reported today in oll company circles. The shortage it was said, was lttlously hflmperlng supply 0f gasoline and other petroleum needs lo both the east and west coasts oi me United States and to the soul-h. . Rallroa s were said to be ex- l shipments in an effort relieve the situation. The Pennsylvania railroad for instance i: moving about 500 tank cars a fly in three solid trains from pips lice terminals in Ohio to eastern refineries. Oil experts said the tank car shortage indicated a huge rise in nil transportation of oil since J. l, Pellcy, president of the Ameri- un association of railroads, stat- ed s few weeks a. that 20.000 tank cars were aval able to carry ti.‘ from the southwest to eastern leilnerles. with several hundred fillini; ‘lhiions in the east already empty of gasoline. despite the '1 p. m. to ism. curfew on gasoline sales. ihc oil men accepted the report on link car shortage as a. grave mat- *th’town Pastor liiiil preside at ilaritims Synod 4 HALIFAX, 5090. 35- OP)- Ths Maritime Synod o the Presbyterian Church will be held ln Stellsrton,‘ 00$. ‘I to 1°. with luv. Csr yls Webster . gghsrlcirgtlolwn, resent Mod- l‘; ll "It . Bil od clorki o .1?‘ u parts l flllll the Maritime Provinces will be meeting to -slcct l Moderator for the comi fur and formulate cbur Policies. Coming Events _|“l he Retfsss In this column I esuts pea word . "w . a1 4m} _ "I Rob t A “wuunue 3141711, bfiogis y E's 7 “Montague Tut-ad Chlflflllufl; lcs at every turn, however. The R are aware that L. Britain is coping with the difficult task in supplying a big offensive army on the Egyptian desert and other divisions scattered in Iraq, Syria and Palestine, and they have been given British assurance that tormagc would be diverted event- ually to OBJTL tanks, munitions and plane par to the Iranian port oGf gandar Shahpur on the Persian 11 . Given an Anglo-Russian re- organization of Iran's railways. freight could ed from Bandar shahpur 800 miles across Iran to Bandar Shah, Iranian port on the Caspian Sea. From here it =(_C_ontlnued_on_page _10,_ CO1 1) Russians In MOSCOW. Sept. as-(am-ne Russian lines before Lenindfld again swung out in a series oi sav- age counter-attacks today and Russians declared the great battle at lieust trluongent-firilv was turning v ers. agThnestGerlnalls were thrown back six miles st one place and control of two villages taken from them. 'said Soviet accounts. Concurrently. Marshal Bemeo . Timoshenkoh armies of the centre reported new successes at the core of their counter-offensive in the region of Gcmel. claiming the re- capture of a settlement under cov- er of Russian aerial assaults which BERLIN; Sept. w-(AP); Russians are throwln m n igifons on th north cen man ' m1 ll-‘dt. tly to drew German strength away from Leningrad, dispatches from the front said tonight. 1e grad was portrayed H be reduced to bin-hing wreck- age continuous cannonade and des rate house-tb-house fighting its factory suburbs. alone mashed two Nazi companies in a single area of action. Before Leningrad the appeared to be reaching a cres- cendo of violence: even Soviet cav- slrv was said to be chargifll Q19 mechanized invaders at some points. Mlllt _ di iches to the army organ loll 5% told of the seem. (Continued on pole l0. Col 9) _..___..____. e at f. Compulsory Loans Bill introduced In Australian iiousa it‘ hummus... ‘Danes music Bali lit-idly 1133A C. fulfil-ignoran- bulllclqpfeatlm 5- (flPl-A CHARLUYFETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, SEPlEMBER 26, 1941 @151" §>*' ‘I’ Covers Prince Edward “*v-~_.----<\ Island Like the Dew ‘J Open Iran ian Supply Route‘ Russians emphasize urgency of situation; Rolling stock limited. _ (By Daniel De Luca, Associated Pres; Staff Writer) TEIIERAN, Sept. ld-(All-Brftlsh and Russian sxperts are work- ing to establish an affective backdoor supply route through Iran to the hard-pressed Russian anuied but obstacles thus far have blocked the ‘hoped-for flaw of supplies. Informed persons said today that a few tons of Indian Jute ls all Britain has been able to send by this route. _, of the ‘ , _ out Black Sea port which stands at the Germans might wcll go farther and Caucasus communications within the next two months, l Hanson and Party Visits Canadian Fighter Station SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND» Scpt. 25-40‘? Cab1e)—1-Ion. R. B Hanson and his fact-finding Can- adian Conservative party group made a. brief tour today oi the first alLCanadian fighter station of the Royal Air Force and met a few ilots who were not engag- ed ln aining operations. After lunch which followed their arrival from a bomber squadron station, Group Captain A. P. Campbell of Hamilton, Ont., show- ed Mr. Hanson and Hon. Grole Stirling, former Canadian Defence Minister, the station control room. The party returned later to London. Lash Out Counter - attacks _ Moscow reports Germans thrown back at: one place before Leningrad. British experts pessimistic. Driver in accident a easier” SPRINGHIIL. N. (Cm-Ruth Heisler ton N. 3., died in hospital todsY of injuries suffered when she was thrown from a. motorcycle at near- of North Milton. P. E. ., was driver of the ma. chine. It struck a bump in the road, throwing the girl from the plllicn seat. a interpreting The War News, By Kirks L. Simpson Associated Press Staff Writer A cryptic German claim that heavy damage has been inflict- ed on a Britain-bound convoy “off West Africa" raises again the grave question whether the Nazis are using Dakar or other French African ports as U-boat bases. Eleven out of a destroyer-pro- tected convoy of s dozen ships were sunk, Berlin claims, add- ing that no less than seven German craft took part in the damaging onslaught. There is s. strong implication in the German statement, that a base of some sort has been developed, perhaps with the tac- it "collaboration" of Vichy, on the coast of French West Af- rica. If that should prove true, German . American relations would coma under added strain and Washington and Vichy » l = in lot. qwnscucd m» w i 1 t t l . meistngimr sud my.’ nulls system of comp m“ fl lg; m‘: b‘ mm 1y " on" f, or. bDC-O-Bi-Bt. clgbéggto ggaolngpmes wasnmdvuuw _ . , Y "u. m ma at...“ day by Prime Minister Arthur Fld- The South Atlantic anoss- , wflfllltlfw machcol, Irlday, can. “no”, Numb,” head via mm m. been stress- ‘Ct '°' "‘°°°"" “ash” he'll o..."”°{i"..°“.." a...» .. two “.35. Wllflfiffiilfihct’ x . "'“"- ‘ KYLM°J2lrIWWlll1IZ°§l§Q§l3 would $0.3: it be rlwed It l ‘chic and Danes at. bun,“ p,- ‘ms w is ahilli in qsmmi. disposal. To Britain ms. OHM" “V°'ml'°' ‘om- ths WWW»: "n" ‘m m‘ also, the implications of the . ‘ L-Olil-C-it-si. n ' m. w”. uqmm m, m. Nari announcement are impofit’; - _ i .__._.. 3 , 341%, willbe mp- m. m. South Atlantiow a "@°r="rh"im“'i°““‘m'é»r= h? u. t all: .:::. "°"“"°" 1 l" "'14 °" ‘M’ In ih "i533" 1°’ ‘"""'“°‘ w her North Atlantic anaco- Mh . comm l at 10.00 sin. in m, m. ltainitcd sum lend-ms d m "m, “c ‘luck. uildlngb- ohsriotie- A mm o zigaoopkooo em 01~sl;ips.d Oltlfitlbfl on m an ' ~_ "rwe- . ., convnce Germ ' " as-rn...°'“.. .. l“: roofs‘ :3 '""'" ~ l‘; "s" s". .".':."'...::r.“...:: 4M tum... of cg:fo".>'r”a.a.1. Mwafmiteri or d gap; “Wm” °°° chug‘ m“ o.“ r chm“? ed madam pnq glligdm Q 9 m 3,’ ‘m’ uwanflgdl . idcndnued so we it. on 1t l l BERLIN, Sept. as --(AP) -aoi.i.-'~ Induction at Stniamcs Church REV. '1‘. H. BUSSELL SOMERS, M.A., S.T.M. In an age-old ceremony the Presbytery of Prince Edward Is- land last night inducted the Rev- arend T. H. S.T.M., into the pastoral charge of ihe historic Kirk of st. James in the presence of a large and rep- resentative congregation. In the absence of the Rev. W. S. Wadland, B.A., Belfast, the Rev. T. O. Hughes, BA, Cardigan, presided as Moderator and the Itevd. J‘. C. MncNeil, B.A., B.D., Marshfield, acted as Clerk, The sermon was preached by the Revd. H. M. Buntain, B.A., New London, the charge to the Minister was delivered by the Revd. T. O. Hughes. and the charge to the con- ilrefifltlon by the Revd. Wm. Ver- Wolf. A. Summerside, the pro- cedure leading to the call outlined by the Revd. G. C. Web_ fiber. Interim Moderator, Char- lottetown, and the newly inducted allnistcr pronounced the Benedic- on. A reception was held afterwards at which the clergy of the city including the Revki. 08mm ME. lone. the Rcvd. Hugh Miller. the Revd. I. J. LEVY. the Revd. A. Lo Drew Gardiner, the Revd. D. C. Boothrovd. and Capt. Mercer, all of Charlottetown, were guests of honour. Amongst the congratula- tory messages read by Rev. Mr. ‘Webster was one from the Right Reverend J. B" Skcne oi Van couver. Moderator of the genera] Assembly, one from the Revd. Dr. R. Moorhend Legato. the former Ntinisier cf St. James. and one from Rev. J. Keir Fraser, 3.1),, A1- berton. Paper charges Nazi plot in South America SANTIAGO, Sept, 25 —(AP) — The Socialist newspaper critics. charged today that the plot un- covered this week in Argentina was s. Naal conspiracy involving a mili- i-ary attack on Chile designed to prevent unity in the Americas. No source for the information was given, other than the newspap- er's own correspondents. “The German general staff plan- ned the form of attack and seleect- ed Wednesday at 3 o‘clock in the morning as the date as the most favorable for action," Crltlczvs story said. (First news that Argentina was moving to frustrate a plot involv- ing air force officials was obtain- ed Tuesday night.) Critica. said the plan was to be carried out by a "simple tie-up be- up between pro-Nazi military lead- ers in Argentina and the mili- tary command of the Third Reich. It went on:- "Let Us suppose that the Nazi plan in Argentina had been suc- __.__—r (Continued on page 10. Col Bussell Somers. MA. '- lStorm signals. Are ordered nosrou, s». rs-(sr , The United State Weather Bur- ch? tonlghxfihllssucd the following s rm war :— “Hoist sout west storm warn- ings 10:30M:m.A.D.T from -. Inst rt, to rortsmollfli, N. H. evere storm Jr north of ew Englan will cause ‘Roaring gale Takes life In "Ontario TORONTO, Sept. 25 — (OP) — A roaring September hurricane, Cana- adian counterpart of the one which swc t the southeastern Umzed sta this week, today caused one death, fear for the lives of crews five fishing boats, and a trail of destruction across western On- tario. Weather officials said the storm might increase m intensity during the night but would be over by morning. The storm, in its eastward sweep across the southern part of the Windsor and b mid-afternoon was lashing along t e coast of Lake On- tario east from Toronto. '.l‘he gale swept George Payne. 58 year od Brantford maintenance worker, from the roof 0! B. b01186 I16 was wtirking on. He was killed by he fal . Five fishing boats in Lake Erie and Lake Ontario were unreported. Three fishermen from ‘Kingsvilie, Orin-Stanley Little. Mlrwln M0- Cormick and new ltenfmw-ivfile last seen in their boat five miles from the Kingsvllle Harbor. Cou- oern was felt at mleau for two Goodlson company fishing (use that were well out in the Lake be- fore the storm reached its 50-mile- an-hour height. Frank Knox on iiisit to ll. S. Base at Bermuda HAMILTON, Bermuda. Sept. '25 -(CP Cablel- Frank Knox, Unit- ed States secretary of the navy, ar- rived in Bermuda aboard a naval vessel and immediately embarked on an inspection of the U. S. hem- isphere defence establishments on this British colony. ‘The secretary, paying his first visit to Bermuda since Brit-Hill turned over base sites to the U5. a. year ago, stepped ashore at Mor- gan's Island-location of one oi the US. bases- and then surveyed na- val, military and air activities of the U. S. forces in several crowded hours. Highest U. B. naval official to arrive here since his country took a. hand in the defcnge of this 560- tion of the hemisphere. Knox W“ accorded full military honors as he came ashore. The length of his stay was not announced immediately. Argentine Air Force Chief ls removed BUENOS AIRES, sept. 25 -(AP: -Cen. Angel M. Zuloaga. chief of the Argentine air force, was re- moved from his command tonight by War Minister Juan Tonasai af- tcr 20 aviation officers hsd been arrested as conspirators against the state. The 56-year-old Zuloags sub- mitted his resignation yesterday to ,. his dissatisfaction bozh with his subordinates whom the government charged with plotting an uprising, and with his super- iors who acted against them With- out consulting him. But ‘Ibnaszl chose to discharge him-a few hours after returning fried Ilbder, who drew up the, orig- inal 20-point program on which the Nani party was founded in i022. died Wednesday at Nurnau. Ullber Bavaria, after a long illness. He was 5G. Hitler paid tribute to him in his book Mein Ksmpi as the ex- pounder of "the fundamental pre- conditions for founding the MW party," and he marched with Hit- ler in the sbortlvs beer collar putsch st Munich in ma. In June. 198B, Feder became state secretary of the ministry of CCOIIOIIIJ, but is months later Bit- ler removed him because of Iisdei-‘s difference with Dr. Hialma Scnsch’. regarding sublimation of the mark. Ibdcr was retired on half pay, and from a good-will visit to Chile and going into a conference with act- lng president Ramon Castillo The president has charged radical par- ty members, nationalists, and oth- es were behind the plot, but has given no further details of the extent or purposes of the conspir- acy. Although shorn of his ommand, zuloaga remains in active service at the disposal of the war minis- BNJII FRIEND! IND! hsd been in political eclipse aver stool. - rovince, was first reported 11'1"!" New President Mr. PJ. Rnsslier, elected Presl- dent oi the Charlottetown Branch. of the Canadian Legion, B.E..S.L., last night. P. Jilmsiter l Legion Branch The annual meeting of the Char- lottetown Branch of the Canad- ian Legion, B. E. S. L., was held last evening in the new annex to the Legion Home. There was a large attendance. President John lleightizer presided. After the reading of the minutes. three new members were admitted and one transfer from the Oicary Branch was announced. Mr. A, G. Bruce read the report of the Entertainment Committee and also the report oi Miss Laura A. Young, who has rendered sucn splendid service in the Branch Lib- rary. Over 300 service mcn make use 0f this library. Mr. I. E. Harris read the report of the House Committee, Other reports given xvere Sick and Vis- iting by A. G. King. Publicity by T. E. MacNutt, Relief by James Roblson, Unemployment by Ira Brown, ‘Trustees by N. W. Lowther, and the Canteen Committees Re- port was read by P. J. Rcssiier, who with his Committee has clone an immense amount of work since it was started. The following officers coming year were elected. Honourary President, Dr. H. D. Johnson. Honournry Chaplains, Rev. J. R. Skinner and Rev. Father R. V. MacKcnzie. for the (Continued on page 10, Col 4) ‘Ilsley completes Conferences OTTAWA. Sept. 25—1.CP>—1-‘ln- ance Minister Ilslcy tonight com- pleted the series of conferences at. which buses were formulated for agreements with seven provinces on the minister's proposal that they vacate the income tax field for tne duration of the war. Final agreements are expected to be reached by correspondence alter conferences have been held with the two remaining provinces, British Columbia and Ontario. License forms To he sent to Canadian Firms OTTAWA, Sept. plicatlon forms will be early next month to persons firms scllin ducts fee s. clcthin stituiion of the board's new sin plan I was the plan is likely to go into to be made public soon after Oct. i More than 300,000 dealers will or policing prices, for securln in .......i'..... v for the alum h rtage ar: in o s s o5‘ month disc that each, deal! 12 PAGES ' u Elected Pres. of -. 25—(CP)-The Wartime Prices and Trade Board announced tonight that licence ap- distributed and or handling food nro- i mand alisckix. - W1 NWYWQ lmofflclallyegmgi figxllietlng uim sovlci airmen, came early in December, the exact (lute be mffecied by the licensing pro .am. intended to provide "the mach n-“iy 1i th t i son of supp u m fronl feilsllgrarfd‘ men destroyed seven German planes snipping an: er war conditions, oarliler or he necessity of curtailing domes-- tic consumption to meet emergency dfillllllldS from Great Britain or the a u» Tonight's announcement that lic-i siaqpd d ence forms will go out early next. as 101p.“ Cou nothing to be dared. MAXI MS 0)‘). MERE MAN rage never issues when lhurc is . -.._ , All move to repeal By RICHARD L. TURNER Associated Press stuff Writer WASHLNGTON, Sept 25—(AP) The Senate today received a reso- lution calling for outright repeal of the United States Neutrality Act. ‘amid a mounting tumult of controversy over that issue. It was inirorluced‘ by Senator Kennclh McKellar (Dem-Tennes- see), long a firm supporter of the administration's foreign policies, w‘ h n statement that the act vio- lates the principle of freedom of flu’ seas. However, it was not clear wheth- er the repcnler had the official backing’ of the administration. President Roosevelt and his advis- ers have been studying the question uhetlicr to ask outright or only partial repeal of the act. IVlicKcllnr. in introducing his res~ olution, told the Senate the law should be repealed in its entirety. WASHINGTON, Sept. 25- (CP)-—In a determined effort to block inflation and control prlrcs, Henry lilorgentliau, Sec- rcinry of the United States Treasury announced today he had instructed departmental officials to draft a proposed bill to limit all corporation profits m ihc United States to six per cent during the present emer- gent-y, ills announcement proved to be the biggest political bomb- shell in months. overshadowing the introduction in the senate, by Senator Kenneth McKellar oi‘ Tennessee. 0f a resolution to repeal the Neutrality Act. For weeks, in one Wily or an- other, official Washington hus been ivresiling 3m] Kenn-any Kflflm.’ nowhere with the prob- lcm of rising prices and wages. ltinrgcnfhalfs plan for an Qx_ oess profits tax ls expected to hrlnu the wlinlc problem to s. head although it is hv no mnnng surr- that it will he ‘adopted by Congress. The government, he said, i; “pay- In: v1rlilw11s' no at-icntion to it" and it shnlllfl be withdrawn from the sinful-c books for that reason and bwfllise it interferes with the freedom of the seas. “By keeping this law," he ma "we arc indirectly consenting t6 G°PI11M1.\"s claim that she controls llflfi- of the waters of {he Atlanflg -[‘/cc.1n." __ I“? Ddlssnge of the act was a mistake in the first place, he 53x51; ncqullfaeged dilm noirgolfi but - - s us. . mg? Irma.” D a on al 11H 0r Robert Taft (Rep-Ohio) took the pOYlI-lOH ilrni" iopoallng the "Pi Wlllllfi be tho equivalent of a (lCClfllTlllOTl of war, A! a nyinlnyum lie said, it would authorize the ad.‘ ministration to CflITv o“ m, unde_ gagged W". H0 Dredlctcd a bliier f! ‘Is in t-lic SCllJJC over tho issue. Senator H011‘? Schwartz (Dem, Wyvmlligi. gonornlhv rogm-dgd as if; mllddlo-cif-jhc yond mun where 01'?!" W110i!“ konfroversics are concerned. surprised some of his culls-mics bi‘ announcing that he “m5 W911i’ milcli m fnvor of arming 0UP merchant ships," B. ATFTEB. ‘(Are effective l i LONDON. $0172.. 2s--<oz=)_.am .wcallicr curtailed the aci-vitics of lL-lle Royal Air Force today but mic Air Ministry's news service said that aerial mcounaisnncr; bod dis- closed the effectiveness oi the large-sized raids oi last ircck. The only action roimrt by the air ministry Thursday" was ilmi of Hudson aircraft of lhv coastal cun- mand which brmlirdi a largo enemy supply ship oil Llic coast of Nor- way. Wllllf‘ r11 lhmkorquc Hurri- cane aircraft a‘ illii‘ fighter corn- nn enemy minc- _ if. millincrin. sweeper uulh cannon and machine- footwear or furs preliminary tirlruig- i gun rim From the Russian from, whore n of the Royal Air Force is news of the first British casualty. He was pilot. Norman Holt Smiili, ,20. who loft the accountancy (ic- ypurlmcni of Imctis llni-vorsny‘ and i iw.» works of lhc Will’. tlic eastern front when the ILAF this work Tile tooled Britain's lmmbPx-s as I TY ACT MorgenthauAsks‘ Limiting Profits‘ To Six Per Cent Is political bombshell; Senator Kenneth McKellar sponsors n- lflllifli iii; all‘ forcc during tho first Smith “Ylx _* (ho solo British loss in Lghtllig on . picture of damage donc on '14)‘; the continent in lull. week's razds l in which lmnrlrcris of llgllfvls pro- they light attacks, was given . _ _ ,_____,, _.._. ._. ...__.:I Annual Subscription Delivered, $5.00 lly Blull: l’. ELL, H.005 Cunudu and 11.5. 85.00 neutrality act. l Fascists raocoupy Demilitarized Croatian zone ROME, Sept, 25-(AP)-0clnci- dent ivioh word that 1.500900 Serbs still o pose the Axis-sponsored re- gime n Croatia-thousands of them. roaming in guerilla bands with torch, bomb and machine gun-Italy claimed todn she has secured her Adriatic fla by reoccupation of a Croatian demilitarizcd zone. The commander of Itflly’! $00115» army Gen. Vittorio Ambrosio, re- pflfllllg no Mussolini, said that the area was reoccupied without ‘any incidents worthy of notice.’ The re- occupation was ordered in August. The announcement appeared the some day as a dispatch in newspaper 1i Popolo di Roma tell- ing of a no-quaricr fight against Serb rebels. Croatia was erected from the ruins of Yugoslavia, it also was disclosed that Italy had lven Croatia cqui ment for a butta ion of rnotoriae police-JO motorcycles with sidecars and ma- chine guns and two searcblizhle- (Related reports Thursday includ- ed a German (llspatch from Bel- grade saying that German 50161915 and Serb armed forces had dissolv- ed “a. Communist gang" west of (Continued on Disc 10. Col 8) COLLIERY RESUMEB SYDNEY MINES, N. 5., Sept. _.(QP)_Operation5 were renunc in Princess Colliery of the Nova Scotia Steel and Coal Company, idle yesterda and last night after a, mechanica bicakrlown. (Hr. BANK Cashier. v2» (as Ouor MAN ‘NHO Si-ioutf) ' PASS {Ha BucK’ ifho @_5@ TORONTO. Sept. 25—-Mlnlmum snd maximum temperatures:- 2 Dirwson 8 41 Victoria 49 60 Edmonton 30 3i RC1“!!! 32 5i Wlflllillell 81 44 Toronto 5'1 '14 Ottawa. 42 B0 Montreal 52 74 . Boston 48 62 l Synopsis: The severe storm of tropical origin, ccnlrcii ovcr lower ‘hflclilgnn this morning. has mov- ed rapidly; noriherisirivard across Lake Huron to ziorilnwsi. Quebec, causing heavy gulps on the Great Lakes. Llglit showers have occur- red in southern and eastern On- tnrio wiih moderate to hoary rain in northern clisiricks. It has been fair and quite c001 in Manitoba and Saskatchewan with some snow land rain in norihcrn whorls, BOSTON. S0111. 2f_l—~iAl7)-—F\){C' cast. for Northern New England'- ‘ClOUilX u-iili occasional light shov- lcrs, cooler in the Flirts?! lsnturclny fair. slightly warmer; (iirrsh to strong westerly; winds i-“ri- "Y. l High iidc this afternoon at 2.48 fond inmorrotv lYiFWilllliZ at 2.31. j sun refs this afternoon at 5.51 yand rises tomorrow mornih! at ‘S52. 1 First quarter moon Supt. 27. 4.09 p. m. x Summcrsidc iidc olgliicrn min- luics laior than Charlottetown. BORDEN _ (‘APE TORMENTIN] SERVICE lSinmlard Time) ave Bordon 0.30 A.M. 0.35 A.M Pill. 4.45 RM, 1.30 PM. Lcnvc (‘um- Tormcntlno 8.00 A.M. Hail All]. 3.15 IE“. (5.20 HM. 8.40 P.. . SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Bordon 9.00 A.M. 12.00 noon. '-——'- , ‘r A "con vicuonslv sucrus iul" 4.45 PM. . . . lgfiirliexziiogiepetdcffibq glirceelfifignzlglf ‘llhllilflmulis cliflflfiuif- bonlbmg of ‘he DOWN‘ and ch-‘niic- 2 SI§={,"QIC“QSOT§'{{"“§‘PD" Adm —- ‘ - - 51p" 1 ,< ryg - . .. . .0 . t . . . d.’ m’ iuymond Meow’ n‘ 6mm. m the Pa“ o‘ the mam enuim-wc lilifzlorglnliikccsoBlcntigslmlllimllells. ' ‘ Jail “isobar who escaped with to his“? ace of business or to a wm- Hum“, a, iekmc" ammo.‘ mo“ W909 “LAND; pgmw ‘w m Wm“ the 1m‘ He dow lommg u“ mun aw" i hlmb‘ at the most vulnerable and "l"?! WM" mm“! u“) 5-m- wls arrested in a restaurant. Police After the licence application forms‘, mmrxa,“ mm‘ o, mo Nam “M ,\_ M_ 3,90 He; 311% milling" d ———-————-———-——-—--———- ‘ ivhilo the RAF‘. fighters kept off “M” cmqmm 9'” 5-M~ 1M PM‘ “h; (Continued on page 1o. cor n lam Mcasemchmiti-s. 135M- ‘ . . s-ou- ear. .2- ._ .-...;._....~ .:..~.I‘ ~ ;_‘;;,~ ,_._;;__.,_