‘ he HE WESTERN GUARDIAN l AGENTS: Mrs. John Pond. . _ SUMJIEBSIDI nnd PRINCE COUNT} . ' News, Subscriptions, Advertising should be left. with Mrs. Pond, an nil! be bought daily Bimini 5;]! Bookstore. Wlter Street. Bakery, Water Street. Mark The Guardian will be delivered curler Boy st 2c per day or 10o per week. Phone 2B9 for this service ‘m your order to the boy responsible for deliveries on your route. u m“ column ls reserved for news of hm“ interest, but advertising of I |ervsy niituro miiy be Inserted st I m," s vvurd, strictly payable ln IIIVIIWI- Alla vawrss m Cod Liver Oil rt Taylor Drug 60-. Kell-Iglaglzllbdig‘ ..rl.AN on giving Photos this _ S Enmalrs for special $.22; ea L-473—9-20-24-2’l-l0-1. _LONG range smokeless gun onrtrlhgcs. fresh stock Eli-m AIALIBUT OIL capsules, 2 for 41,00 lit Nyall 2 for i sale. Eznmans Drug Store. L-ii20-9-30-2i. _(;REEN SllEAF Binder Twine 550.11. advanced by mblllil$CL1i1PEliS u" lrlsarlrs; sates." m‘ “n L-rlls-a-éo-zl. _.\\'.\NTED-Girl for housework, family oi two. Douglas Bell. Carle- m, L-828-10-1-2i. _ l SOCIAL Club of Borden Plotlrislgit Church will hold u chlcgel; supper in the Town Hall, October 1st. from 4 II-m- I0 3 _CIIICKEN SUPPER. St. Marks church, Kcnsington are holding their annual chicken supper Sat- October Ath, commencing L-B17-9-30_3l. . I (continued from page i) __ 1 » > "' cretlon.“ he said. "If I llmnllwd that those questions have several times occurred to those responsible for the conduct of the war." But, he went on. grand strategy new W“ 16st m ‘we darkness of ll tiers long silence as to his in- ientloris. "we don‘t know," said the Prime Minister, "how far he will attPmTIl to penetrate the vast lands 1f So- viet Rus 1 in ihe I066 0f lhc Val" iant Rtz. an defences, or how loll? his rmoplc \v ll endure their own tremendous losses; 01'. B181"- wlletlsoy l..- will decide to SlflYl-Ii on the defensive and OKPIIM the lei‘ rirory of imlllCllFé value which he has conquered. "We do notknow whether h"? will turn a portion of hS V155 srmy southwards toward the valley of the Nile. or whether he Will mill’! his way through Spain inzomorth- wcst Ail-m, or whcthcr, usmr the grcat continental railways of Eur- ope and an immense chain of alr- flcids. he will shift hls weight and lsscmble an army for an extensive invasion of the British Islands. “It will certrfnly be in his pow- er while standing on the defensive in the east to undertake all three of these hazardous enterprises on a. great scale. "His only shortage ls in the nir. Tlizit is a very serious short.- ngc. but for the rest he still retains the initiative and W8 have not had the force to take it from him. lie line the divis- ions and weapons ori the main- land of Europe. He has smPII means of transportation." Informed persons took this refer- ence to air power to mean that exis squadrons were not now up to fighting heavy and continuous aer- ial gagements on two fronts at once. Other authoritative source said the Gcrmnns unis maintaining 36 divlsbng in France and thflt l. land attack by British forces BOW "would do Russia no 800d Blld W‘ sult. in‘ ailothcr Dunkerque." Answers Critics Defending his government strong- ly against accusations of IPmIdItY and “excessive scrulllP-i "lid lnhlbl" ions," Mr. Churchill rccallcd:- "People ask why Klllllt Y0" Wlllb Rome? Did you not soy W" "Ill-lid bomb Rome if calm was bombed? What is the answer? "One answer is that Cairo hi“ not yet been bombed. Only military positions on the outskirts hove bu?" bombed. But of course we have the same right to bomb B01110 l! m9 Italians had to bomb London ll" real- when they thollflllt l" ‘m’ 801mg to collapse. and we sh hesitate to bomb Rome to the best of m.- gbimy and as heavily cs Possible if the course of the war should render such action conven- ient and helpful." The Prime Minister. in bl! N- porl on Britain's brooms nshlmt the l-aldng axis submarine and bomber. declared not only that Brit- I-Ih. Allied and times greater than previously. British robe reserves. he nlldfll stood higher than at the outbreak of war and fai- higher than I» W" lilo, and "there will be bell/B! Christmas dinners than last Yell” "We must not. relax." h‘! llllll" med up, "but the facts I have stet- ed must be regarded as not un- satisfactory. They are‘ moat stultlfy- i"! K0 Hitler." eelcsfdtomlaeihilrxiliumlull ' I011. Water Street, Summerside, ouldn‘t supported by nearly 2.000.000 erm- neutral shipping losses lb em throuflll July. busy-II and Sepbembef were only one-third the total of the previous quarter- Ilnd presumably about 471.000 WI! ——but that. during the same P-‘Ymd German and Italian shipping louse! have been about one and a_hslf ll Church Street-Phone 2N sign: of the following “m, m Dflllltore Water Btree '1' Iii-wet. e1 Grenville smf. 0'0"” "In! home in Snnunerslde by 41cm xuv French River nsliwrntffixrliey-ft 1 L-l4-l0_1-2l. égr gmsiale this week, L-820-9-30-2i.‘ ‘W l —EVERYTHING mm I in men's and ung liien‘: figs 23' llllelwflls st and made-to-meas- “N- Mm‘ DI!’ Cleaners and Cloth- l l l l l l -NYALL 2 Enman Drug L-li-IO-l-B. _W*\NT5D~$L50 to $5.00 for Y°lll‘ °1d WWII? 0n c. trade in for n. new safety fill. Willard Battery Summerside Auto Salvage, Wahcr Street East. L-505-9-l9-7i -nuv NOW d z rol- i sale. soils?“ hill; Etoflillll, L-820-9-30-2i. TO WIN WAR , _<lzs>.nt_lplszdic>rn_r>rs__li In doing so travelled 0000 miles by train and 7200 by motor. During this time he has attended 114 meet- ings. Throughout the survey he m; been a listener rather than a talk- er. However, on the occasion of his visit to this province he will as- sume the role of speaker and de- liver all address on some of the m. teresting things he has encounter- ed during his survey. Speaking about this survey last night, Mr. Graydon said: “My m":- slon across the country has not as its objective the building of en or- dlnary peace-time partisan ms- chlne. Such s move could not be justified. The building of a strong- er opposition in Canada is regard- l ed by the public and the press, as a major national necessity. For, when the present Federal Govern- | ment. received the endorsatlon of; the people in March 1940 to carry I on the war as one political party; His Majesty's Loyal Opposition au- I tomatlcazlly assumed a position oi , scarcely less import in our de- mocratic system than that of the Government itself." ' hailed as a. national need. When this Government falls it becomes the duly of, not only Conservatives. but Canadian citizens to see that something worthwhile is construct- ed to take its place." "While we have men overseas fighting for the preservation of the democratic way of life, it seems to me that, it is incumbent upon Canadians at home in the mean- time to see that one of the major instruments of that Democracy ifor which our Empire fight-s. shell lriot deteriorate and decay." he de- clared. Continuing he stated: "We how that the rebuilding prosram of the conservative Party will not simp- ly centre around the wlnninc 01' I part v'ctory but will rather Eil- l-eported that already "precious sir- craft, aluminum, copper. Illbblll‘. ll" and many other materials vital to modem wsr" had gone to the $0- viet in large quantities. n blems to be {Moll "In some respects." he went on. "the problems we now have to face are similar w those which rent our heart-s last year. when we had to refuse to send away from this country for helping France the lust remaining squadrons of the fighter aircraft on which our whole position depended; or again when we rightly judged Hitler's unim- paredness for invasion in the sum- mer of 1040 and took the plunge of sending so many of our tanks and trshled troops sround me Cape u, m; Nile Vslley in order to de- stroy the Italian army la Libys and Abyssinis (Ethiopis.)” He added that Britain never bad and never would have an army numerically comparable to those on the continent. siul. he said. it wu n "very r004 army" end finely "mllered which, ‘ed home guards. would be relied [upon to "destroy or hurl lxito the see the invader should he 511600811 u, musing s number of successive and simultaneous lodfelmnll °n our shores." - ' Much of the ‘bra-lilac! ‘alibi-gal: speech stressed e. 8 ' tie had not ended-e theme ‘to which he returned near the end.- “..- I cannot gig] tihc F335;‘? fluttering hopes, s 6M ' mm that the future will IR bright or easy- 0b Ill“ wlllmYr even the coining winter sfiord! I10 assurance. as the Russian embas- scdor hes candidly and shrewdly pointed out. that Ger-roan 0108511" on Runlljjwll be relaxed ol- that... the denier of invasion will be en- tirely lifted from thew llllndl~~ "We must certainly "DWI III" in the ipi-nl; very hem flrhllhe- much liesvier than my we have prosper-fenced in this war. W111 develop in the esat. and also I-hd menace to these blends from in- vuion will present. lfecif In m‘! OVERSEAS PARCELS Postal authorities ad- vise sending parcels ov- erseas early. We have a large variety of suitable gifts and will wrap any parcel for you. FOLEY’$ DRUG STORE Phone 37, S'side. I£§1.9.;1:4'7.i1_°- vide for Canadian Citizens on s broad basis to make some resl contribution to Canada and the Eimpire." "In short the rebuilding of the party takes the form 0f a national war time service." he concluded. Mr. Graydon, the popular Nat- ional Chairman, was born on s dairy farm in Chinguacousy Town- ship, County of Peel, 44 years ago, of Irish and English descent. (He is greatly interested in the potato industry on the Island and expects to learn quite a lot about it before leaving on-returri the latter part of the week.) He was educated at Brampton H‘gh School, Victoria College where he graduated in Political Science 1n 1921. He was called to the Bar in June, 1925 and received his de- gree of LLB. from Toronto Univer- sity in 1925. He enlisted in the last Great War three times but was re- jected. On October 24, 1939, Mr. Graydon enlisted again in the pres- em. struggle but was turned down for medical reasons. In 1920 he was leader of the Con- servative Party inl Victoria College In 1932-34 he was President of the Peel Conservative Association and Oct. l4, 1935 was elected to the House of Commons for Peel. On March 28. 1940 he was fe-Qli-ECIQG by s. greatly increased majority. A champion of the farmer, work- ing man and active service forces in Parliament, Mr. Graydon took over his duties as National Chair- man on May 23, i941. tions, on the north said that Red forces regained the city before Leningrad after a 12-hour assault by soviet tanks and infantrymen, thus measurably easing the pres- sure on that second city of the soviet Union. Elsewhere along the whole front the strugg‘e of titans proceeded without respite or lack of Soviet initiative. In the extreme south. west. the Red army was declared in a Tess dispatch to have coun- ter-attacked between two villages. kllllflg 2.000 of the enemy and tak- Interpreting The War Britain has become merely e token affair since the Russian over-taxed Nazi air power is based more on known German losses 1n air personnel than up- on availability of planes. Recent reports both from Britain arid from the front in North Africa eu gest that rrnan planes brought. down in both theatres within the last. few weeks, since the attack on creaslngly manned by youngsters of little experience and training.‘ . frnnkidv‘ Admit- s warning e pos- sible Nazi halt in Rue-sis to strike elsewhere against. Britain was based on speculation rather than information. Yet his re- rt. that British sea. losses dur- light. For if SIM condition continues in the Atlantic inw next as: and the road for American 1p l; thus kept fipennthe day mun come when tiers sir power short e will become sbsolute, not re stlve or local. Arid on that day he will have lost the war. (Ocngn_u_e5l_fr0m_ NIL!) The Germans spPlNfll-I stung into action by Royal Air F0 night upon Stcttiri. 59mm tlo base for the Rrlelilll and Hsmburlb front. The r OILbO sirens have alien . Although gunfire hes been heard n. few times ln various metropoli- utn areas. the capitals lest rslc’ warning was July 2'1. In Septem- lhsrp form...’ _u________,_..._._._. GERMAN RAIDERS ‘ were f ve-hour M Olfhpblfln lubed aids took place es Beptem- bei- ended and marked the 0nd 0f the second mouth in which milieu!!!» dam lfilit t n y ii stacks upon Stet heuviugthhirahfm “ills-by m: m. th cos; Baielguftgris msttgckl s before Watson)“ olnmarid us! the convoy eir projectiles convoys destroyer , biggest in . "Y. "I Brest column of watear r1101’. l-ID intodihe sir and fell sla. on thaofllgglzgdzclftruogs itlot ea a. lat at! hon" o! R. in ure of the 0P9"- 0118. the sir inis Ported night and dsymattscks ‘:5 the northern French coast, in- flhléiilrl-l; the docks at Cherbourg :26 srmefglaTrlsTnllggllixngiliwl-nooth 111% off Cher a“ w“ - Two German planes We; sihrot down Monday night, un eds of lanes flew over Stettin by moo 15m, 1g starting many the docks, ‘.33.?’ 3'.’ ‘ti?’ e Port were lllelifly seen and with fhres to Qkq m" I110 mwnllsht the docks one Iallwll-y station were readily lglglg" wlieilellrw mgisléotcb reported. sulfa of the bombin . .0 you‘ r” Klrlfdfdflflill appeared] ere abg? the gigs" couds of smoke e bombing of Hamburg was described as a thorough job 1n which "B. considerable number o; our most f 1 we‘??? Dower uh bombs were enonevery ea b0 b - ploded part of the q...‘§’w..”‘.,..,°.’,‘,, right into the air," the ministry related. One pilot reported many bombs fell. on the big Blohm and Voss shipbuilding yards. WILL PLAN FOR __§C0ntinll0d_fi0m‘ page_ 1) be burning ed by delegates from Canada, Un- ited States, Argentina, Australia and Britain. adjourned six weeks to permit the governments concerned to consider a draft Esreement to regulate‘ both pro- duction and marketing of wheat. Although Sir Frederick Ieith. R055 is not l1 British delegate to the conference, it has been suggest- ed here that he might attend the meetings in order to present his views on the establishment of wheat stores for use after- the war. The Canadian delegation to the conference will be headed by James McIvor. chairman of the Canadian wheat Board. and will iOfllsllil. largely of government of- ic s _ One of the Bir I5 reasons for l Frederick's visit to Washln . gton ls Valuable Function ' to determine the extent to which _____. the Unliiceglo States fiWfTIiTfnC is .. c g1 d g 1) pix-pare co-opera n t e cre- ws“... ."..::':'.-....:2..:"::; -‘ °“ ~‘-"“‘ss”““"=s= an“. r = m- valuable functon to perform. That l" llldll-‘Imel- ts th _ {lawmaker field o; 001m "w bclns the case. In strebsthenlns I! Rwm‘ "°°°““ °’ ° “m materials after TJTC er w 1 be discussed here by the British eco- nomic adviser with Amerlcan of- ficla‘s but his immediate purpose the establishment of food re- serves to feed impoverished Eur- ope. Canada and the United states are the key nations in any plan of this sort because the re- serves. for the most part. must fiime from their surplus produc- on. In a general way. the United States Government has agreed to the principle of establishing food flit: 30g] prisoners alonl with oon- reserve‘- s era e oo.y. —-i——— ROOSEVELT ‘=( ‘Jllni-IEBHIJ l_l2111,_l>l89__1)___ si of the present restriction of United States merchant vessels. Possibly he will call, too, for repeal of the section which bars American mer- chantmen from the combat area of the North Atlantic. A; he pondered the roe end eons of the situation, be tle lines campaign started. It hBs no rnil- 101' I319 BDDYOBIIIIITI 003mb 098W“ itary significance but only s, taking shape. and he administra- home-front propaganda value to tlon received Pflwefflll Suppl)“ the Germans, from Wendell L. Willkie, last There is some evidence, also year's Repiblican presidential that . Churchill's estimate of nominee. “The law never should have been enacted in the first place." a friend quot/ed Willkie as having said. “It ought to be changed now ‘atrid I believe Congress will change senator Albert Chandler (Dem.- Ky.) declared h elf for revis- ing the law with a. statement that "we have got. to be able to rriove on the seas and move quickly. However. opposition came from other Quarters. "When we passed OUT OUR WAY _ i“ , SUMMESI E c; PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE [KEEP YOUR COMPLEXION PETAL Soothe llrsd News with silk-smooth lather ~ Cleanse skin deeply yet ever so gently Olive and Palm oils are iwo of Nature's finest beemiiflsrs In u refreshing Palm olive Beauty Beth the Neutrality Law," said chain man Robert Reynolds 0f the 5e11- ate Military Affairs Committee, “we did it, when we were cool- headed. clear-headed. Those who sponsored it said it was designed m keep us out of war and that it was for the country's benefit. 1f it was {or the benefit of the coun- try, its repeal or drastic modifica. tlon would be to the country's detriment." Senator Frederick Van Nuys (Dcm-Ind.) said the law has "been working very nicely," and that “if we arm our cargo ships it. would most certainly lead to an- other shooting war almost at once." TELLS OF BATTLE Far away to port. we could see the gun flashes of cruisers and de- stroyers. Throughout the morning the vit- al convoy of large merchantmen carrying stores. munitions and troops with their majestic escort of battleships. cruisers and destroy- ers had steamed through blinding rain squall: and under heavy clouds. In such weather shadowing air- craft could get but s. hasty look at the miles of ship! before fighters roared after them. ‘Then the sky cleared and we were bathed in brilliant sunshine. As guns of the esco \l.ng wsrslripe opened up in the distance en of- flcer spotter aboard shouted: “There are five torpedo bombers." One attacked a. destroyer and was blown to pieces. Fighters from the Ark Royal were engaging the en- my and not one bomber got through the line of warships to the mer- chantmen. There was a brlef spell of quiet. Then with bewildering rapidity a second attack developed- this time from starboard. llbur or five dark shapes shot low over the water toward us through a murderous barrage. Ahead of the aircraft carrier a big two-engined plane staggered. tr-‘ed desperately to rise and dived into the ees amid s lurid glow of flames. We felt there could be rlo sur- vivors. (Continued from page l) By J- R. Williams " ‘- rrolmourgumeiearcdsnd we sew s‘ plane gliding 0n s. slant- ing course towards the Nelson. A torpedo flopped into the bee. The plum turned end s column of wom- i-oee nul- the bowl of the battleship. , Thrplsne was bit sirnoel im- mediately by fire of other ships end plunged into the eel. The next phase of the attack opened when we sighted five tor- pedo bombers only 100 feet above the wsler speeding along e course parallel to that of the ships. Fighters roared to the attack end the pisnes disappeared. Ten minutes later the roar of bet- tio broke out. unin- We BI l plane to the starboard a. here 800 yards from us. We could not sec whether it still eerrled its torpedo but it swung around as if coining in to sttsck. I: tlrst was the pilot's intention. he met s fete that matched in its horrible swiftnees the audacity of the sttsek. Our pom-poms pumped OI" I stream of two-pounders. Then We! s sudden oxpiAslon midway down the fuselage and the reel- hslf of the plane lopped completely off Ind flopped into the bee. A split second later the other half of the plane crashed 1n s cloud of spray. A black smudge marked the grave of the crew. An Italian fighter was seen per- forming weirdly. Aimleesly fr. loop- ed tlie loop, getting nearer to the see. each time it looped, until if finally plunged into the water. Then the attack ended. Funeral services for Two prominent Montreal men MONTREAL. Bept. 80-—(CP)—- Funeral services for two of Mon- treal's most prominent, residents. sir Herbert Holt. and Senator Lorne C. Webster, were held here today. The two financiers and philanthropists died within a few hours of each other during the week-end. Archdeacon A. P. Gowerjees officiated at the services in old St. George's Anglican Church for Sir Herbert. Leader; in overn- men. financial and in ustrial spheres paid tribute to one of Canada's pioneer builders. Floral tributes from all parts of Canada formed part of the long funeral procession from hls home to the church. Scores of friends. business assoc- iates and government representa- tives filled Dominion-Douglas Un. ited Church an hour later to hon- oi the memory of Senator Web- ster. well-known throughout the province as s. businessman, philan. thropist and church supporter. Rev. A, Lloyd smith officiated at the services n the church where Senator Webster had been for nlany years a trustee. and told the congregation that "Canada. has lost one of her most notable citi- zens.“ Senator Webster would have celebrated his 70th birthday today. while sir Herbert was 35 at the time of hLs death. Tells of killing 2,500 Nazis In sea fight By R. J. Anderson Canadian Press Staff Writer NEW YORK. Sept. 29 —<OP) - The "mass murder" of at least helf of s 5.000-msn German force at- tempting to reach Crete last May 2i was the "most. repellent thing I have ever had to do." Capt. Henry W. McCall of the British cruiser Dido said today. _ “It was the sort of situation I had dreamed as being ideal- going amongst the Hun and giving him e blt of his own meat," Capt. McCall said as he told New York reporters the story of the ill-fated German attempt to storm Crete by sea. The Dido's captain had to "steel oneself with memories" as his 5,- 450-ton ship, in concert with two other cruisers and a destroyer force, ‘TO THAT 5EEM5 STUPID ME, KIN‘ SURVIVOR§ SWIM WITH THEIR HANDS UP.’ MA no ROOM FER Praia ou i-zzs .' Busflaale TO ‘THINK J bet of 1940 there were m wern- . UARDIAN QUEEN ADIAN FUND DONA TIONS lmidiands bu attracted fresh successive raids. Eventually placer are found for them ell, pieces of Nl-fltlve Iccurity. but. ma: belong- ings of ell kinds ere destroyed. The wk c! ememncy feeding pone is difficult. The teak of setting them uP °l1oe more with some quantity of tlothlng end bedding ls much more difficult. To meet thou enormous needs. funds have been started in vsrloue lie-rte of the world. Her Majesty Queen Elisabeth hes permitted the use of her name in connection with the Dominion campaign, which l; Mp0s _, raids on Brf. lulh 9°11 mo; end the industrial st- ‘tezition to the frightful suffering ‘ the many tboussu‘ of civilians .ln Great Brihin who are harried from lieltcr to shelter end finally driven info the open country by officially known u "The y Canadian Rind for Air Raid Vio- time." Evcry dollar contributed to the Queen's Csnsdiau Fund goes with- out deduction to the Lord Mayor of London for distribution to the homeless sud needy. Contributions from this Province should be forwarded to the Royal Tout Ccmpmy. Charlottetown, which reports the following m- oeipts to dew Received yesterday: Mt. Buchanan Women's Institute $1.00. Belle River Women's Institute $5.00. Uttie Pond Women's Institute ll. Cseoumpeo Bed Cross Brunch OI. Brooklyn Women's Institute use. Previously acknowledged, $4,545.36, Total $4,571.66. smashed her way through the mus of drowning Germans and sinking Greek asiques, smell wooden fishing veeeels seized from the Greeks by the Nazis. Not one of the little drips reached Crete. The Dido is deigodn; l-epsk 1g Brooklyn navy yud. A till. lean men with e slightly ruddy, weather-beaten face. I. tinge of grey at the temples. the 46-year- old captain told his story simply and directly. Completed last yesr, its. Dido joined the Mediterranean fleet sf- ter extensive convoy duty in the Atlantic. In the middle east. she saw action quickly, participating 1n the evacuation of Crepe, ‘This was Oapt. McCall's scoount of the engageinentzm "We were flying m. flag of Ree-r Admiral I. G. Glennie. In company with two other cruisers and four dest-lpyers We "fore pstmllirig north 0f CNW- It was s dark night. "Towards midnight we suddenly encountered s lsrze number of Greek calques- wooden sailing vee- sels with auxiliary motors- and a smell number of steamers, escort- ed by one Italisn destroyer. “We altered course into the mld. dle of them and opened fire, swiwh. ing on our searchligiits, st e range of about one mile. The Italian de- Slfflyer sank very early in the pro- ceedings- apparently she blew up, we sew no more of her. It. was just s case of steaming through the convoy, picking up the steamer; and caiques in our eearchlight rays. “At one time the water appeared strewn with German soldiers all of whom were wearing full equipment. As we steered through them the sir wss filled with shriek: Hid cries for help but of course we were unable to help. “There were pcrhupg up so 5,000 men in the convoy. A considerable portion of them escaped, perhaps half the force. “The only return fire was from ll WI‘? smsli number of soldiers who fired with their rifles. "They (the German soldiers) were obviously terrified by the per- formarloew-defenoelesa in e dark night....never knowing when they were next to be sunk. “The action lasted shout e couple 0f hours. We pursued the escsplnp boats until they wen widely separ- ated and until we were subjected to s exceedingly heavy dive-bomb- ing attack. But none of the convoy ever reached Crete. "me mess murder we were en- gaged in was the most repellent thing I have e had to do. It was the sort of tustion I hsd dreamed of as being ideol- going smongst the Hun and giving him s bit of his own meet. “But when it came to the point one had to steel oneself with mem- ories of many of their past actions and keep in mind that they were then intending on forcing s land- ing against our sorely-pressed gar- rlwn in Crete." TWO-YEAR-OLD BARON IDNDON-(Cfll- lord Sudeley, 30-year-old major in the Royal Horse Guards, lost his life st sea while on active service and heir to the barony is two-year-old Marlyn Hanbury-Tracy son of the late I'M GLAD vou LIKE Tue oozes-s, MARTHA! -~-r. DON'T wAm? AT ‘THE DANCE QOMETHING l-IE FOUND ~- WNTING DOWN- GTAIRS “- AND k QERGPIRING = ‘a Capt. Michael l-Ilmbury-‘fiacy. OUR BOARDING HOUSE ' Spent ill-minute’ t-I-klng in water. "I was sll but drowned when I saw s bright light above me, Thgh must have been the fire burning from the navigator‘: table to m‘ reu- turret. I made for the fire, cribbing bold of ovlrylhlng 1 001114, "I felt the vsrioue things go page me—the wireless eat, the oxygen bottles, the main spar-and 1 knew I W84 some up the fuselage so 1 tried the sstro hatch, but it we; lcickedimdlwaetooweaktoopen ‘Then 1 new moi! iilhle sheed. Ibi- a second le flashed some: my mind that it was one of the lights “WWII-III people are supposed to S90. but I mud‘ f0!’ it L11 tho snap, when I got. near the second light l fvimd liifirenwss‘ s break in the ll-‘lellflb- e on gunnery“ getting throuflr it. hm “Mlsctmyheuiebovewsurr My the dlnshy Ind with In imp °l u" IBPRQA-Df. started swimming toward it. “I spent sil nilht getting the salt water out of my lungs. 1t n; s night of complete hell." Speculation over Withdrawal of ‘British Admiral HALIFAX, Sept. 20-! uletion has been e-roueed bee-e the announcement that. Britain withdrawing Real- Bonham-Oartor, ehf d Na activities along me coca. and that there will ‘ And the inter-pie i s! 0 tat one lie more. this belief dominates:- The Uiuted States navy is erot to s substantial patro North A no Atlantic be no of die films. vy Minister Maedonald es-id st Ottawa last week that the Resr Admirals duties will be carried o to n large extent b- Commodore . filiifil?‘ m‘ a. °‘““”.f.“ , cer common on e Atlantis eoest. ) mmthillffiifo’! It b here st that ‘time lease the Royal Navy from some re of the duties which had ke t some of its toughest fighting ps in Csnedian waters slncg the war be- gen. Mule 52 year old Admiral Bori- lism-Carter directed madam from s yacht berthed at a, o. N. dockysrd here, such bsttleorsfb as the aircraft carrier Furious, the new battleship King George and tier older sisters, Renown, Rodney, Re- venge Warsplte. Malaya and others came in and drog‘ an or. To observers, e next question is thg effect of America's new role on Halifax or other coast . They recalled that in the first Great War the United States in l small way used Shelburne. a south shore seaport seed of a harbor first. ranks wi that of Halifax. LIKE IRISH APPLES A century ago. potatoes were com. priratiw-lv unknown in India but nogilr are is most. widely grown vege- es. . With — Major Hoople av ms was; _ FUNNY FEELING FRIEND$ / ‘PM m on ME! \:\ \\ »\ \\\\\~\\\ \\\\\\\\\l\ STILL HAVE. THE I KNOW l5 GOING TO COME BARGING MNBE r675 semen-two 3 ' vou ATE! s... As FOR y’ THE: oases, 1'0 as Pnouo ro HAVE You . FOR A DAUGHTER, ’ QULIET.’ --DON‘T ‘NORRYfTi-IEIR eves WILL STAND our LME ooommoes I \\