MAXIMS 017A MERE MAN God. Prayer is not u form but u forei that opens the full heart und lui its contents of hope. of slu, of want and suffering fall into the ll Dill flaming (iunrrllln. Founded 1881 Naval planes Bomb convoy 0ff Norway LONDON, Sept. i4—(OP)—Car- per-borne aircralt of the rtoyal pavy attacked SAlIPPlIlE in the moo iiicd oi Norway, Judi; south oi Adi‘- lil; at dawn luSl. i-rmay, sinking a Loon toll snip flitting all aluinlnun lit/ind and aireectilc power s_a- tion anci damaging otller vessels, one Afllalillilty ailnounced today. "purifier successful action ncs been token oy me Royfll “my against the enemy s supplies and sea communications with this troops on tile north rtussiail front.’ the com- miullque sulu, in explaining purpos- cs of the action. A §.l‘0llg British attack also was made Saturday night by a large force of British aircraft algainst .iie naval base at Brest in azl-occu- pied France. Explosions were seen close to the dry-clocks where the (lilelscnau and Scharnhorst are perihed, the Air Ministry said. Killed in crash luring test flight cztatva and Toronto and Flt. Lt. lllallzlce Richards Of WBlBS We"? killed Saturday when their Royal cinadian Air Force plane crashed during a test flight near here. inquiry would be set up. sqdn. Ldl‘. Briggs and Flt. Lt_ Richards \vere attached to Ottawa air station at suburban Rockcliffe_ Tile ci"ash occurred about four miles southeast, of No. 2 Service Flying Training school at Uplands Airport, also in suburban Ottawa. local Railway- man Officer llf Brotherhood UITAWA. SeDt. l4—-(CP)-W. L. Best oi Ottawa Saturday was re- elected to his 31st term as chair- fllilfl of the Brotherhood of Loco- motive Firemen and Enginenlen as the organization's week-long meet- ing cilded with election of offl- oeis. Directors include John Stewart of New Glasgow, N. S. Among provincial vice-chairmen were: New Brunswick. J_ F. Cain. Cape Tormentine; Nova. Scotia. lllllln Donald, Glace Bay; Prime Edward Island, J. T. Revell. Char- iottctown. l‘ War—25 Years" Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) euarlotiotovvu Guardian, Two Cantu, iinirisii T0 i Germans In Kiev Soviet army appears jaw of a giant pincer movement UITAWA. Sept. 14 — (OPP-l ~---' Sqdll. Ldl‘. F_ E, R. BrlEBS 9f SEPT. 15. IBIS-Canadian 2nd. Div took Courcclcile ill Allicdl lili‘ on Somme frcnt, British .,.ilg High We d. most of Baulezlilx Wood. and villages cf tors nnd Martinpuich; tanks us:dl for itie first time. Serbs drove Bulgarians back in Macedonia. Coming Events Notion-ii In ihlu Ii cont: per word "Bl: —F‘reu M a . o" c” mvuc-ailo-‘iia-ai. his for column “Show-Crapaud Tuesday. L-8l-9-l3-2i. "Dane lntotosn ll.Se te be "ill- a ala-lilflgl-lxzl-lll: 10s w@o..‘;?l"..."'°‘ °‘“'°° rfiffiliiliilf. "Wanted a b "cal it . Fowl Bland Cold Stimuli; i-iia-i-o-i: hWJllnce ‘rracadie Hall. Tuesday, Dlember 18th. Gay's Orchestra. 14-25 43-21 “Collecting Hogs every Tuesday Wilfrid . ' - llllle amigo. imgisjililyiiiiilrlifif, hrflollectin Hogs Tuesdays and mllm. truc n service. Robert ‘"011- Craoau . L-sv-o-iz-is-l . Anflchicken supper and dance, St. b; lews Hall, Thursday, Septem- ll- VL-loo-o-ls-zl "Chicken Supper and entertain- "! ll ‘ "a 144034-1340. O “Tome to Bean Bu per and “l!” in at. Catherlneo all, wen- Mully. November 17th. Proceeds W" Pllfmles. IHIB-B-IB-ll. "W! Creek mil Tuesday, sept. l office, located in the main post- Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, unitary, SEPTEMBER 1s, 1941 ' 8 PAGES MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN No man has a. prosperity s0 hi;,il and llrm but that two or three uuil s run disiicarien it; and there is no ialanliiy which right iiords will not tcgin to redeem. n. .__=| .\nlliilll Subscription Drihorctl, $5.00 iiy Mull: l’. H. L. ‘L00; (fllnlllllt lallll lflb. $5.00 OPEN srcouo FRONT m mo‘ won Advance Drive closing in on Smolensk on central front. i (By Henry C. Cassldy, Asoclated Press Stuff WIISII MOSCOW, Sept. l5—(Monday)—-(AP)-—The Russians acknovneuged today a retreat by Red army forces from Kremenchug, on the east bank of the Dnleper River, before German units lengthening ' ‘ Kiev. Krcmenchug is a rail junction 175 miles southeast of Kiev and B5 miles northwest of Dnleperopetrovsk, already abandoned hydr the southern lectrio power and lndusi. ial centre on the Dnieper. The abandonment of this town followed by four days the an- nouncement last Friday that Rus- sian forces had withdrawn from Chernigov, 80 miles north of Kiev between the Dnieper and Desna rivers_ In extending the northern jaw of their pincers aimed at. Kiev, the Germans drove southeastward to increase this threat to the Ukrainian capital. With these two fiercely fought operations the Germans appar- ently are trying to form a June. tic-n behind Kiev to form the dis- tant right and left flanks of the city which long has held firmly aigainst the fierce German offen- sve. Details of the loss of Kremen- chug were lacking, but today's early morning communique spoke of prolonged and bitter fighting in this middle Ukraine sector. Elsewhere, there was the usual report of stubborn fighting along the entire eastern front. Marshal Timoshenkos western army, counter-attacking on the central front, appeared today to be closing in on Smolensk. the old Napoleon road to Moscow. where the Germans are said to have been thrown back without having done as well as the Little Corporal, _$9'l§t41i$lle2¢ll?=_»d_m1_llfid “Mt (Continued 0n page '1, Col a) Zero Hour In a. c. A. n. headquarters said the l 0 r;..:.l:r*l.aa lat-J's B la Ck Sea Drive Ankara hearsfi- standstill of all shipping in Rumanian, Bul ANKARA, Sept. i4 -(AP) -Un- official reports said tonight that Germflily has ordered a standstill of all commercial shipping 1h the Black Sea ports of Romania and Bugaria. Tile. report was taken here to ln- dicate that large-scale axis Black Sea operations were at. the zero hour stage. These operations under German direction would be aimed at R1155. if"! l-Pmllls on iheCrirnean Penm- silla. 'IIe Germans were said to bellnlpatient with the progress of the Rlimanian land drive. Foreign quarters in Ankara heard that General Ciupercu and several other Rumanian officers were shot for refusing to advance beyond the D"ieslt~r River. Tllfli Dont marks the outer boun- dary of Bessarabla, which the Ru- mailians ceded to Russo under German pressure a year ago. It has been reported repeatedly from Riirriania that the army and public. bitterly discontented with continuance of the war, was a- gainst going beyond Bessarabia. Meanwhile. indicaflons were that tl e Black Sea, bounded by Rils- nla. Turkey. Bulgaria and Rumania, seems to have been chosen as ‘the- settlng for a decisive battle bc- tween tho axis and the allies for control of, tire Ukraine. ZagE 'phone System blasted; Bombs used German Major And 13 Other Persons In- jured. ZAGREB. Croatia. (via Berlin»- scpt. 14—(AP)-Four time bombs exploded in zosrebs central tele- phone exchanse lwfll’. lllillllnl ll gel-man major and Bf. least 13 other persons. while in another part of the city six creat- soldiers were wounded by miwhirlfl-Blln fire. - The first bomb in the telepho office building. exploded 1i 1113" P. M. Three other blasts occurred t 1 it . wfinéngxfiiloslon: crippled Zagrobb telephone system and made calls within the city or to outside [Willis impossible. There was no indica- tion when communications again would be restored. There was no official nTIIIOlIIICB- lnent. but informed sources sold they believed "Communist" sabo- uurs were responslbls- As a result of the blast govem- nient offices lemllvrllllly We" "l off from the rest of the 00mm’?- A systematic search of houses in tho neighborhood was infill-ll!" and gendarmes controlled the streets at the outskirts of the city. Re meanwhile reached Zr greb that the railway line con- necting Brod with Sarajevo in m“ "Y1"! Concert i ured "Idlers of beach Grey? ‘gaining cllltfd. b, 15; time tlllflflfl Im- f (l f the fourth Bosnia was has?“ or“ a.‘ m ermany orders garian Ports. Bulgarian army l Balls men to colors -_»__.. 50PM Bulgaria. Sept. 14- an -\\ Partial mobilization of the (Bull garlan army has been ordered effce. tlve ‘tomorrow. ll. was disclosed to. g . The cl f 19 the elasszfiaolf) llfiglagiild Bozgthiviiil have finished their secondary stud- ‘was ‘.i'i'.'§'.‘...°.".l'."’ f: "r e a o s put in into aflect decrees to suppress a6 subversive activities and may lln- ose the death penalty for sabotage. hese decrees are under the laws‘ for civil mobilization and defence of the slate. 13 Editors to Visit Britain OTTAWA, Sept. 14 -- (GP) - A party of i3 representatives of news- pupas wnl fly to iiiltllili by rain, Aniericail Clipper" plane to vlcw at‘ .n"st nand, at the invitation of the nlltlsn UClllLli, the United min;- doms war eifort, it was announced bd-tilftllfly. Mom-hrs of the party are: B. K. Sailewell. Toronto Saturday Night; uranan Qmary, Ottawa Journal; Hugh Templin of i-‘ergus, Ont, rc- prcsentlng the weekly newspapers; Oswald Mayraiid of La Patric, Mon- treal; Bsnop R. J. Eteluson, repre- senting tile Toronto Globe and Mall; L. S. Shapiro, Montreal Oa- ' Cferrle, Edmomun Journal; W MacTavish, van- couver Province; Ma]. H. G. Chris- tie, Saint John Telegraph-Journal; D. B. Rogers, Regina Leader-Post; J. L, Gagnon. Quebec LEvenemeiit- Journal and CMIOD J. A. Chamber- land, L'Action Cathollque, uebec; Bruce Hutchison. Vancouver un. The first six named are flying from New York by Clipper Sept. l and the rest of the party will leave New York Sept. l8. N. S. Pilot ilies flverseas; Was ilt Summerside - KENTVILLE, N. S. Sept. ii-(O Pl-Sgt. Pilot Gerald W. Gates. 2B. son o Mr. and Mrs. Ausiin Gait-s of nearbv Port Williams, h of injuries suffered overseas. l-ill wife the former Mary Northup o! lgentviiie. was notified of bis death by Ottawa authorities yesterday. He was married at Brantford. Ont. hut March 17. the day he received his wings. He had been in Britain less than a month Sgt. Pilot Gates was well known in Nova Scotiajs a hockey star. A: captain and star defenceman with Port Williams in i938, he led the Annapolis Vallev Hockey league in scoring and helped bring the town its first hockey title. Before proceedin to Britain. no was stationed for a time at Sum- merlilde. P. E. I. Mrs. John Armstrong whose nul- bu... .. _ me a. é. A. n. at Premier King Plans address. For Wednesday Expect Eo-rnment (iii Ro0sevelt’s O r d e r And On G0v’t Plans. OTTAWA, Sept. l4-(CP)- Of- ficial government reaction w Presl- dent Roosevelvs "shoot on sight" proclamation of last ‘Thursday may be given by Prime Minister Mac- kenzie Kirlg in an address he is scheduled to deliver here Wednes- day night. The Prime Minister is expected lo state. also. the government's in- tentions with regard to Russia and give some indication of Canada's place in the British and United Slates volley of aid to the SOVl€l republics in their war w'i|. Ger- many. (Continued on page 7. Col 4). Island Airmen -...i. n. ll lllllfl’. Receive wings MOUNTAIN VIEW. Ont., Sept. l4-—(CP)— A group of graduates from No. 6 bombing ‘and gunnery school here today received their wings in a wings presentation cere- moi-y. Tile graduates included: Nova Scotla: W. P. Trrlsk. Yar- mouth and A. L. Locke, Lockeport. Prince Edward Island: C31‘. But- ler, York Point and G. l". MacNutt Malpeque. New Brunswick: River Glade. CAMP BORDEN. Ont.. Sept. 14- fCPl-One of the largest classes at No. 1 Service Flying Training School. Royal Uiinad an Air Force. received their wings last nlgnt. Group Capt. R. S. Grandv. O B. E. offlicgdcomnianding the station. of- c a List of graduates included: New Brunswick: Thomas Larlce. Aroostook Junction. Nova Scotia: Harold Crouse. New Glaggow. Arthur Swansberlt. Locke- por . Prince Edward Island? Peter Sirl- clair, Charlottetown. A. B. Burgess, Strike at Soup Plant settled TORONTO. Sept. 14—fCP) —'I'ne eight-day strike at the Campbell Soup company plant in suburban New Toronto ended tonight when? strklng employees voted to return‘ to work Monday. on ajbasis outlin- ed in a telegram from provincial. Labor Minister Peter Heonan. , The telegram from the Ontario, Labor Minister was read to a Slfliif‘ meeting attended by about 150 men and women. Only about eight strikers were reported to have vot- ed to continue the walkout. A three-cent-an-houi- increase to women. boys and men employed in the plant. seniority rights in accordance w't qualifications, ailtl permlslon to fol"nl ll grievance committee, were the benefits agreed to by the company, and outlined in. Mr. Keenan's telegram. These benefits would be granted on con- dition the strikers returned io work immediately, Mr. Keenan's message said. Interpreting a The War News i By Kirk: L. Slmpbon Associated Proud Staff Writer President Roosevelt's grim shoot-on-slght order to the United States Navy has cen- tred attentlon on the Atlantic, yft it is conceivable that Hitler lmself is more immediately concerned with hi; bloody cam- I pal to smash Russia than wit western war developments. ‘Phat "crusade" is now far off schedule due to a Russian re- sistance that has made a mockery of the first thunder- ing war bulletins issued from Hitler's own headquarters on the east front. Dee as have been Nazi penetrat ons to lay Kiev and before days of the bloodiest. fighting ln history but little convincing evidence of impending decisive victories. Russian armies. described by the Germans weeks ago so cracking up, instead are butter- ing tho war-worn Nazi forces backward about smoiensk. a] from Ber- There is no denl lln that this war-big Rus- liol. "Ralston Urges more men Forarmedforces OTTAWA, Sept. 14 —(CP) —De- fence Minister Ralston tonight ap- pealed to the Canadian public to take up the job of encouraging and convincing men to enlist in the fighting forces——"a job that ivill be getting bigger as the months go by." “The job of supplying men calls for the personal effort of every Canadian," Col. Ralston said in a Reconsecration Week address broadcast over a national ilettvork of we Canadian Broadcasting Cor- poration. “It's a steady job for everybody. It's a. real war job because fight- ing men are the very foundation of our war activities and the best guarantee of victory." Col. Ralsion said he did not mini- mize for an instant the service which thousands of Canadians were renderng in connection with wai" activities. “But? he said. “we civilians cli- gaged in what we think is war ivorl- in office or factory or anywhere else must recognize that any con- tfbution we make lacks the su- preme quallty of the service render- _ ed by the sailor, the soldier or the i a'rman-—namely, itie pledge of life itself. saysflPiidaiitl Germany's Ally By accident Government“ Sp0kes-= man Comments 0n Position Of Country In War. HELSINKI. Sept. l4 —(AP) - Finland is Germany's ally "only by accident" and “will not continue the war any longer than Finnish interests demand." a Flnnksh gov- ernment spokesman declared today. “The Finns are no party to a great war." said the spokesman. Vaino Tanner, minister of trade and communications and leader of the Social Democratic part-y. "It is for us an entirely defensive war with the aid of whlch we de- sire to secure our frontiers and a lasting peace. Wilat/ever is needed to secure this must be done. but there our task also ends." Tanner branded all rumors a- bout peace negotiations iviih Russia as absolutely unfounded and de- scribed such rilmors as rm attempt to "sow dissension among us and thus ease the military s'tilat'.on of ‘I e USSR. both on the St. Peters- bllrg rtenlnorarli front and the Murmansk railway sector. Hanson spends Bay tramping London streets Conservative H 0 u s c, Leader And Party Arrived In Britain Saturday. (By Harold Fair, Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON. Sellt. l4—(CP Cable) —Hon. R B. Hanson, Canadian Conservative House leader, today spent the opening day of his first visit to London seeing the heart of the Empire afoot like an ordinary tourist. Leaving his hotel at midday a4:- companiecl by two fellow members of the Canadian Parliament, Lt.- Col. A. c. Casselman and J. Leo. nard O'Brien, and by his secretary, R- A~ Bel. Mr. Hanson walked for four hours through Hyde and St_ Jamess Parks down to Bucking- ham Palace. Westminster Abbey and the Houses of Parliament along the embankment. The AblWY visit was the most illrillini." Mr. Hanson said as he Maxed in his hotel suite before visiting the apartment in the same hotel where lives Hon. Vincent Massey. Canadian High Commis- oner_ "We arrived at the Abbe Just as the service was ending. an then walked around." Mr. Hanson add- ed. "I was particularly interested in the tomb of a fellow New Brunswidrer. Sonar-Law." (Arthur Boner-Law was Prune Minister of Britain early in the First Great War). During the walk Mr. Hanson met man Canadian soldiers and befriende one pair who were "broke" and sitting forlornly on a. pork bench. * . (Continued on page ‘l, Ool la (Continued ml page ‘l. Col i) n cnlP on" THE 0w BLOCK Arthur Bishop, IB-yeaiwolcl son or , Air Pfarshal W. A. Bishop. V.C.. llflx Just £10119 to Oil-sun from Aloiirrczil to join the R. C. A. Fl. as all all" crew recruit. The oilly 50]) of rhL- grerttest living aw of me gym, war will start training soon, IW. E. Bentley is jP.E.l. Vice-President ‘i TORONTO. sr-pi. l3 --.ic1>i ...l McG. Siewart of Halifax. federal" conl coilirolicr, was elected bye-Si- dfllt of the Canadian bar associa- tion at the concluding session of the annual ll’"f"lll§ today‘. He suc- ceeds D. T. ." Crllthy of Toronto VFe vtesidciiis for the provinces include; New Brunswick, M. A. Porter, Sn lit John: Nova Scotla, J. W. Godfrey. Halifax; Prince Exiivnrd Island. W- E- Bentley. Charlotte- - town. i i gMany attend iServices on Parliament Hill OTTAWA. Sept. ll-(CPF-Par- iianlciit llil’. was transformed into a. glam cathedral today as Cana- (liaiu, tilere fervently recited the recollsecintion pledge, dedicated themselves anew to the ideals for which free peoples fight. and pray- ed fol" a successful outcome of the stliigglc. similar ceremonies were held in churches across the country. For tile first time in history l i/Ving U? RAJ‘: Arrives In Russia; Is Complete Unit Assumed planesuare fighter craft to participate in de- fence in vital sectors. LONDON. Hopi. li--(Cl’)—~.i\ wing" of the Rilyzil Air Iibrce, with planes, piloi~, ground crews" and liuiieriliis, has zlrrived iii liilssizl to open a British ziir oar on two frontl with (iermzlirv. ziilihilriizliive quarters disclosed today. l This extension of Britain's baiile front was accom- panied i)_v the (ll\‘('l0.~illl"3 that ihe first group of American- . made loner-twinge figiiiei" planes had reached Britain. These inlay permit iiriizlinis" bombers, with fighter escorts, to l reach as fill‘ as Berlin iii daylight precision attacks. The strcnghi of the R. A. F. detachment in the L‘. 3. 5.1L wi" not disclosed, hut informed sources said a. "iviiig" is an elzisiic term zlppiierl to zi self-contained unit of two oi" more squadrons iviih full flying and ground per- sonnei. It WflS assumed that all ihe planes were fighter air- craft rushed to participate in the defence of Leningrad, .\l(l.~2(‘()\\'. or Kiev. just as Hilrricnnes and Spitfires formed ihc first line oi‘ defence iii the Ilaiilc of Britain a year ago. the R. A. I". units may already have participated in some of the fighting on the eastern front. Arrival of the iliilts was expect- ed ill DOllIICHl qtiartcrs to quici some of lilo criticism exilressed in press and pilriirimeiit of the lack o.’ extensive aid to Britain's Rus- slaii allies. ' T Last Thursday Prime Minister BERLIN. selll- 14 —-'APl — Th‘. ciiilrrliill replied to violent criti- Rlmlm‘ defenders °l Ulliflirad clsltl of the Coiiiiilililis). member i Were lilrlllllefi ‘i0 lie blasting all“? of Ptlriinnlent, Wiliinlii Galizicilel". i blocks of bilildiiizs to clear spares by declaring that hundred; of l for battle “may M the German a". P-flllii file 39mg Y’? 3415515,; g _l force and Nazi armies contiliileri to Informed rualteis said isatiudl) i b95503‘! the great m,» "Flicre tivcre hints that some ow Berlin story of Eastern front the‘ ox late the flow of Bil ish , , L1,“? A,.,lf,.i(.un_lnadc planes i0 the; ‘ILtlers coizimanci claimed that ltussiail front \\'()‘.ll(l be sti-ppcrl up] 1'0"}! Will fOYCQs llfld broken \as.i\ through i d y sclTlitu ]l1l‘-'ll_\' lrollqh the cztys “. 911C!‘ front" WW5 l‘ 5- ‘ and were continilln ' lei» -= The routs lili it be across" the‘ g “ “ lwjkur‘ ill the face of fiercxl reshtniice. Africa and Iran’ Pmdsely Wm“ across Alaska - Wm; meant l?! f? i la_ or by wily oi Iceland; Leningrads “defence front" wed iniisk. Itlfielqilelstioin lfitLflg-l; not dent lDCOllPQ ilk‘ (9.3 5511'" H .. 1-. _ 1f illvfiflliilf; foscow coil-l hccmmnl 5 sullen“, m3‘ 3‘ all‘ lerclicc i BllLl.$l1—."\Illt‘l'iCflll aln "*“"ll»"'~ “lllll "lwa-"S 15 Pill" 55l- l-lie Soviet. em or oililmisilc, struck an optim- istic note in its communique and, [claimed that operations are going Arrival of the first new Lockheed‘ f)“ 5° succesmlny that me w“ l. w long-range fighters irozii 995ml PTPPQYP“ 14"‘ "P"? FllCressel islilivs brought o: clots Iii baffle" b from some aei-oilliullcnl circles Lllzit _-._i___.._, the it. A. F. soon will attempt pig . * /'/' KS Bci lER Day Sweeps Over Germany? Mass was ccicbrlttcd on Parliament Hill, Tile EIIDYCIIIQ service of the Roiilzlii Caiholic ritual. the rc-eil- i . .. .. ... . . . -». i - 2 "l Uliltvd lull C.ili..il). “as pclfoinlcrl at nl. . rm llllllllltlo ‘1- l l? . .. . " ~ the $11.0.» "truly; lS_ili'lllL‘k1 Mill both‘ \- lnnm “mud m the Mm or UhllllOliLdilq llliliiillllt ,!,llllS and l s DOWN Peace Tower before a crowd es mated at nioro than 20.000 ircople, The service was the first of two z i-eligious dviiiozisilntloiis zlrrnngcrli for lllt‘ same place in COXlIlPCTLOXI I \\"itll ntdCOllsftlkllilDil Wisek. Tilt" other, under Protest-ant aiisiaccs and in which all Protestant rlciioln- inaiions will participate. ivlll bring Recollsccraiioil Week ‘.0 a close Vvcdiicsdzlv evening. Priiiiv bliiiistcl‘ biackvlme Kili- worsllliliorcl at nearby s1, Ail . l-i"e.<.l>_\ie>l"lilll Church and l<.l( ‘. lesson while JllSliCi‘ lllilizszcl" Li- poiilte. Navy Minister" Ddacrtoilalfl son occupied seats of honor at thi- Mass. Coi_ the Most Rev C. L. Neill gall. principal Rilmiii Cnllioiii- cyclebrant. British 10 ships hit, three p CAIRO, Sept. 14 -(AP’i— An iii» termittent tum-day gttlc b0l.\\'(".‘i\ British airmen and .i Lbva-boil" convoy in the Mecllicrrxmcr " brought today a British announi-i ment that no less than l0 vessch had been hit, three probably sunk The battle started the night o! Sept. 11-12 and conliniled the nigt i of Sept. 12-13. The fitgiiivo sllrvv- 0:"; of the first clash. in wlllcil three merchant ships were believ- ed to have been fatally flnnlageri. were spotted on the second night. making for Tripoli, capital o’ Libya. With them was their escort. _ Planes of'the fleet air swooped lo attack. "One meiliilni sized merchant mun was hit, broilvilt to a sldlltl still and set on fire.“ said tile RAP communique. "Aiio1|iei' vessel of the same 511p was also stoppenl and clouds of black smoke were ob- served lssillng from it. A third ship was possfily hit. destroyer" flFlll dCUllClll. oi the sacrifice 0i Christ- . - All iluul‘. Tilv islgiiiiilllgs. powered u; twill and War Services lvfillisicr 'I‘lioi"- . ‘ " " " chaplain of the aitilcd forces. unis _ Planes Libya-bound Convoy day running fight. ,. quarters saltl tile Lightning 1 iii tile Ulllifll Sllllvs llS B- lllit'l\,'L‘plOl' pi. .1‘. it Il-Ziilis. lili oi \\'lliL'll lins lJl'i‘ii ordimzi ll filldé (ll-FOL) lllTU (1Ul'lll‘.lli_\' v even as far as Berlin. 4o l-‘Au. sown on A Joe 4mm ON \T-~ a top slbutxl uf liiore illzlll loo in: Alllsoli llilillfl-i would ‘ill l0‘ ll0ill‘lj.‘ Lotto " "" u T lilclll. 'l‘:i<"t" escort bollllx-rs nearly lo Lllv sub- urbs u; tn.- tron-i i i-imlglll The iliuk oi l *» ‘ ' Ali's. ~p. lniiciis l ill. t .illi l.il Naval Aid Too Ru -.~ Ea Till‘, l‘. n. illil to lie} "~11 l 'l'()ilO.\"I‘('I so" iloi Qt‘ i.» mu 1i) ~.i.1r"l’.il. \ _ o’ ' ' "'“ lilllXlllllllll tompci'aiiili lcilllilllllifi on page ‘i. Col B) __ 41 " . 64 ‘.29 60 llfi 73 Battle " 3'.) T“. iit..i".\:t ~11 7n ‘iiiiilllx-al 50 7° The u-cnthoi" has been Syllfillxl s: 1, iii soiitiu m and \\' I1 l'll\ rnbnbly sunk in two- \llil\\‘(‘i‘.\ ill iloi" has tween fllil" over Provinces. cool in Allwiua biii iiiori- erateiy warm in Iilllllltriltl niirl siziltilcnsf Sli>k:i'.cl1o'.\'."iii .154 High tlrie this nit out: ill Confident of r Q ..'=".ii l0illlll‘l'()\\' lilurl .1 ill 5-07- s l Siln scis tilts ovrniiic‘ at 6.12 lfillfl rises tomorrow‘ iliorliillg at i 7 i) fill. ———-—- New moon. sept. ill. i238 rum. OTTAW A. SPPV- ll" ‘CP‘~- l Silmmcrslde tide eighteen mill- N -l l’ .\' Minister 31H Cd 0 ll ll ill? ilics later than Chaiiilttcimvn. t‘ rl lflill'llll 1i at llriirl n and llt‘l‘l people llifl_\' have llllill‘ ililsiiiklxa ill >ll".o pnsf. lllli ilv Wfls i‘0ll'i‘l1'i to ‘ re in lilo other lmlziiico illl‘ ‘Smmhm Tum.) ." and iOTiliHIli‘ oi tlic British ll'.l(‘(‘ iii those last two years and l-ilfl" 5075B" 5-30 A-M- 9-35 5-“- l l ;.'\’-l'.llT the tipping of the scam.’ \ L00 a“. 4.45 PAL 130 Rn‘ l i i BORDER — (‘.\I‘I~‘. TORMI-INTINE SERVICE i Leave (‘ape Tnrmenilnc 8.00 Adi. ; ISTANBUL. Tilikcv, Sept. l2 — ‘ ,,\[, 4 llhlanii) lAPl ~ Tho iii ' Tull:- SUNDAY SERVIFE , l !i iiiiiiinoiil rm pi-.-.i_.l 1.; m...“ . Leave Borden 9.00 AM. lZ-llfl noon. ‘ti '.I- slliiul-iil-t iiililitss i illie tl- 4J5 n)“ 7'0“ V"- - . Lenn- Capo 'lurtiir-nllne I00.» A3!- ,rli_\ from ll‘o oitlwul llil - ‘.\llli'll 23 PAL 5:,” PAL 8J0 |>_M_ 1i l "l lTPfl 1-- ‘i “(ll‘l‘lill'lf‘l_l' fiiiris herself in llzo WOOD ISLAiIVIIISG FEgltSYA M‘ san a . . sziiiie blind alloy as she (iiil in Bite lnsi Will‘. The important thing is— how will Germany react?" Leaves Wood 11.00 Ii. M. 3.00 l“. ll.l)0 Al". 3.15 IE“. (5.710 l'..\l. 8.40 l» Leaves Caribou 9.00 AM. 1.00 PM 00 P-M. '