MAXIMS or A MERE MAN 11-1- willbeferevsrpeyillg. Be who is oonscions of a debt. be ' Iemaewa Guardian. fll ‘lwo l, lloaallllslbnadedlll, r... Are Fitted With Heavy Anti-Aircraft Weapons Canadian planes in two-day running battle with submarine wolf pack. llhsat Coiling to llold Bread Costs ._.__ i OTTAWA. Sept. 2B~—(OP)-- The method to be used by the federal ‘rovemrnent to maintain a ceiling arise on wheat for rumpiion, and md costs ls at pro we todafi _ ter acKinnon whic pounced discontinuance W on the Winnipeg grain eli- e ange The Minister said the government eaLt to sub- plsns to provide wh sidlsed domestic om vernment-owned wheat, rather an from wheat in which h farmer has a anticipating inter- u. “The government will thus be able to avoid the position of being both the farmers’ agent and, in effect, the ultimate buyer of the wheat," ifr. MacKinnon said. The pressure on price control caused by the rise of wheat prices on the grain exchange was under- stood to be one of the factors lead- ing to the government decision to ’ lllmoutintlo trading. ti. o "labor Congress lload Answers Premier King (YITAWA. Sept. 28—(CP)—A.R. liosher, President of the Canadian Congress of Labor. said today in a arepared statement that rather suits which he thinks from its association with the C C. P. Prime Minlstcr Mackenzie King would be better advised to adopt policies to protect the rights oi sbor and make the war effort more efficient by improving re- lationships between workers and employers. (In an address to the National Liberal Federation here last night. Mr. King said he had yet to see an alliance made by labor with any political party which did not have a disastrous outcome. I-Ie referred the recent political affiliation of r advising labor to av with political parties, but what the Prime Minister appeared to over- look was that his own party was elected with the support “of a con- iilrdbfoble body of Canadian work- 5.. The endcrsation given by lob!" to the 0.0.1". had been due " - most entirely to the reactionary attitude cf Mr. King's Government and party and the refusal to im- plement their own program with Ie-nrct tn the ytabllshment of ad- equate labor and wage policies in Lsnaea." "Labor's requests for represen- tations on important government bodies have been consistently ls- nored "nd in many other wa s tho in sole o! ts disregard ‘for the wishes oi the workers and con- Rquently has lost their confidoncb Ind support. Ciliilllii EVENTS l I01! I alkles-crspeud Thursdaayédl. "Bulk Wheat tn arrive . BOOK WW- MoGllilu-r a 39y“, I-ll-IOL "Dsnc t. ' a mm . bt c1firoBro'sP'd'r-§§estr9i. o-sa-‘i Hsll "Dance in Alberry" Plains . ‘Kaunas . mun 80th. Web- Iar‘: $1.33.. Ii-sfreshmgnztvs.” "lzlancs ‘u; wrong Hall wee; . , s ps0 e inldranaex Martin and firs. W. - million. o-NJi "Wanted to buy livs and dressed dlickens and fowl. Pay to; "but Pilots. Island Ool s ru b». ma. s-os-or "linkers l-Iall, Wednesday eve- UOMMN, l.“ m. “The Little 0 by the In- Rver Dramatic Olub. Special- i-fl-Sl 95E‘ ll F f verso *:-'.'.=;.-r:..r- haunts soon t syd . one wreck. ‘m. m“ weight. ll " ‘umNationll Iiim ..Iov'e4: h Pitetcwn wie saentague s. _ summer the theory held in , e ' ‘comes’ m R.C A l“. late By IBANK FLABEBTY éfianadian Press Staff Writer) ‘ITAWA, Sept. H — (OP) — Bctum of enemy submarines tc the North Atlantic sealanes, fit- ted with heav antLaircraft arma- ment, was of icially confirmed tc- day when R.O.A.F. Headquarters released the story of six separa attacks by Canadian-based, long- range aircraft against a submarine wolf-pack which chose to stay on the surface and fight a. two-day running battle. When the Germans pulled their U-boats from the sea early in fie formed circles was that cruising aircraft had made things too hot for them and that they would be back, fitted out to fight off planes carrying loads of depth charges. Theory Confirmed That theory was confirmed by port, written at an R.C.A.i". station by F0. East Coast . A. (AB) Folland, Air Force Public Relations Officer from Toronto. The REAP. made no specific claim to sinking or damaging any of ihe submarines but described one attack -- delivered by Fit. Lt. —-s_s popped out ca ht his U-boat by surprise. vi or ofwthe submarines‘ y _ gamsr the big Canadian Liberator bombers, however, wns evidenced in the fact that one air. craft returned to base with a motor disabled by unfire, flak holes through wngs. tail and fuselage, and one of its crew slightly wounded. Aitho h there was no official rmat on it was considered pos- sible the incidents reported to- dill! by the R.C.A.F. might have been part of the attack on a con- voy which Prime Minister Churchill mentioned in his speech to the British House of Commons last Tuesday. and might also be con- nected with the source of a Ger- man report which claimed sub- marines had sunk l2 destroyers and nine merchant vessels from an eastbound Atlantic convoy. The Canadian planes were pro- “mmfififimmnfi m- a |l.C.A.F. Awards OITAWA, Sept. 28—-(CP)- The today announced a- ward oi Distinguished Flying Crosses to four members of the It C.A.F. serving overseas and uf the lstlngulshed Flying Medal to a Cairtoaldiafii serving with the R..A.F. By WILLIAM STEWART (Canadian Press war Con‘ dent) TARANTO, Italy. Sept. 28-(0?) Jrictureaque Taranto, with its important naval base now in . lied hands, is like a peacetime city cleaning up after a. military cole- bratlon. Although it is little more than one step .emoved from the Ita- lian front line, war seems remote in its streets thronging w h mill- tary personnel in their best and cleanest uniforms. There are hundrcgs of‘ ICit\Jl‘i:IlIcli"Il uxnégwlrg: aver ere n . popuylhvtion oi which ls i50.0°0. and they seem to outnumber the Bri- tish forces which made an unop- posed landing s few weeks alo and pushed beyond; Italian military and naval of- ficers. soldiers and sellers. all loo as thouah they had Just from a bath. are friendly an ce-operhtive. Nct an unusual sight is a couple of Italian sailors. who are tbs noatcst of sll Italian servicemen, wslklnf a. -in.arm with British Tommes in dusty. tropical wear. ost remarkable about Tarantc la its easy. unwsriks atmosphere and the feet it has electric lights. running water and operating street ears. t's because it never was hard hit y bombs ere is no rubble left in crn Italian towns an entirely undisturbed even by surrender. llarbonr Installations Intact "s-a-st, l ge of of ficers and. the streets as in other smashed south- d its life seems e fact. of the country's unconditional While there are scarcely any lt- ellll shins loft in in harbour, the Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1943 .BIIRR llllhll ST Al TAlN WAR EFFORT Z my U-boais Return to North Atlantic ll. S. Senator Heads Liberal Federation OTTAWA, Sept. 20 — (OP) — Senator Wlshart McL. Robertson, 52, of Halifax, appointed to the Upper Chamber by Prime Minister Mackenzie Kintge last Feb. 2i, late today was elec d President of the National Liberal Federation. I-lc succeeds State Secretary Mc- Larty, who has been acting presi- dent since Hon. Norman Lambert resigned on entering the Senate several years ago, The federation accepted the list resented by a nominat- ing commi tee. Others on the ex- acutive are J .A. Blanchette, mem- ber of the House of Commons for Compton. vice president, Mrs. 8.0. Tweed. Ottawa. vice president, and Gray Turgeon; member the House oi Commons for Cariboo, honorary secre . Permanent ish and French speaking secretaries will be ap- pointed by the new executive. Senator Robertson, formerl pro- minent. in the Liberal organ zation in Nova Scotla and a resident of Halifax, was appointed to the sen- ate last February. Prime Minister Mackenzie King was named honorary president. The meetings today, which will continue this evening, brought a wide discussion on a set of resc- lutlons which were boiled down in- to a. multi-pointed program for the Liberal Party -which the govern- ment will be asked to accept. Michael Marcus Civen Freedom SAINT JOHN, N.B., Sept. 28 - (CP) -— Michael Marcus, a fruit dealer who had faced trial on a char e of manslaughter, was given his reedom today after a. Grand Jury reported "no bill." The decision, which the. jury foreman said was unanimous, was reached after all witnesses heard at the preliminary hearing had been called to the Jury room. Later, Mr. Justice J. I-I. A. L. Fair- weather granted a dismissal ap. plicatlon by defence counsel. The Prosecutor stated the Attorney- GeneraYs Department had given itrlrstructions not to oppose the mo- on. The charge against Marcus arose from the death here of Mrs. Elizabeth Landry. Jagizins. N.S. A coroner's jury fo"nd that death resulted from n\iulc poisoning icnused bv a paste applied by lMarcus. Witnesses testified he , had treated the woman for a ;breast ailment, dlagzn-ed by the accused as cancer. iii .___ ITALIAN SOLDIERS DEPORTEII AT. .'I'HE SWISS - ITALIAN FRONTIER. Bent. 28 — (AP) — Italian soldiers disarmed by the Germans have been deported to Germany where they have been added i0 labor ranks working for: the Reich. it was disclosed today. Official notification cf vhis pro- cedure, reported frequently since the Italian capltulatlon, was given by lilieerbtLvLllen - Tairanto Naval Base 1s Getting Clean-up cd naval installations are in ex- lent condition and its naval per- organlzed. - going about the go cel sonnei is still well eryone is so easy war that s visit here from the battle areas is like stepping back into peacetime civilisation. We drove to Taranto by jeep from the 8th Army area. travelling by road where evidence of Allied bom- bings was on every side. We passed through some towns wracked by bombs and others untouched, al- though nearby military tsrgets ha been smashed- There were a couple of ares on the road. Once a forms on of fighters flew by, then wavered a moment before deciding not to pay us any attention. Then two men with rifles and wearing dark unif- orms spotted the jeep and ran into nearby bushes. They turned out in be Italian sailors patrolling the road. They had mistaken us for Germans. It was almost a shock in enter Taranto and see runn g trams and busy restaurants. e were held up at s drawbridge where priority of passage was given to throngs of Italian civilians and cyclists and we were put up for the night in a big Fascist school with radio in every classroom. In a gaudy. new Fascist head- quarters building representatives of AMG. the Allied Administration Body. set up their organisation and said the city's food supply was ad- equate for present and that civll~ iana were faring well. The building was one of several monuments to Fascism in the city. Peple with whom we talked. some former residcnts_of the__Uni£d Allied efforts appear ‘to be aimed annihilailnn in the field. l A Nazi retreat to avoid such s. Column that swept westward up the Rome road via falling back from the Naples front, reach the A-‘Jriatlo coast above the ection Gen. Montgomery's veterans exbhan ed the roles they plaeyied in that fig t the battle-harden flank while Gen. Patton's American Coupled with the cracking of t idian hamrnerl , that sh the very thin which would the possible joined. What Prime Minister Churc nean "third front,” channel jump when seconfl fron to Berlin. Italy is a full sea Balkan theatre is concerned. Nazi between the Russian advance to th it comes. has up the Aegean from the south. Capture as WASHINGTON, Sept. 28- iAPl-lndicatlng new bloniraeaz Nazi ‘German Pres Iii ' Roosevelt today described tho fall of I-‘oggia. in southern Italy 25-mile irltlsh vanced two to five miles Tonight, Hitler's Foggla is the most import- ant strategic city captured in the Italian campaign. Its air-fields are within 580 miles of the Ploesii oil fields in Rumsnia without which Ger- man machines would thirst to death. They lie 485 miles from ment extend as far as 23 miles from the city. gla at Munich, the craft centre, and oi l-Iun g.~_ . slz. . m. a er, as well as all and tonight they could on the rail and road Castelnuovo. Lion of Naples on Italy to Bari. Castelnuovo miles east 01 Naples. The historic city _ birthplace oi Horace. 7s cf Naples, also fell. It south of Foggia on an railway leadin up‘ connecting wit t e is i" retreating to San evacuated Alerla, of Bastia, a said. Mines an ed the campaign. declared they were losses and capturing prisoners. i0 For 50 y (Continued en Psas s, By Kirlse L. impaon, Assoerateu Press l ntiy is be of the Nap es-Foggia line in not to force the enemy out of the Naples sector but to pin him there while British forces to the northeast crunch forward from captured Foggia to take him in flank and rear fol‘ f hi in a. position to strike either 3w: the Fogg Lumen. to get in the rear of rail hub should give clearer gliIIlDSe of Allied battle strategy in scaly. British and American forces on the Italian mainland appear to ha] British 8th army gripped the Mount Elna ook the enemy o Allied tactics bid fair to force upon the German command it most wishes to avol orce withdrawal of addi crucial battle of the war there along hill has called the Italian or Mediterra- reservlng the second-front desi t could not alone have ac le second-front so far as its influence o slhilities of an Allied leap to the Greek Peninsula from the southwest, o! - ? D. R. Hails Foggia’s as one of the most lm "l!" Allied successes yet rom I strategic Point of view- WINNIPEG. Sept. 3B — (0 A L L I E D HEADQUARTERS, p) ___ The whmlpeg Ql-fln p5. North Africa, Sept. 2B —- (AP) — The great Italian air base of Fog- gia and its 13 largely undamaged fields were captured Monday in a armored swm- ‘ has eliminated the only lunge which increased the peril to g ell-fie f1", “mbudy ‘Hardin's German defences or Names‘ the irug value of Canadian through which the 5th Army ad. Balkan satel- lites lay at the mercy of Allied air fleets which can strike from F08- Vienna and 500 miles from (Wedncsdgv) -— (AP) — Allied Munich. The main field is bombers have sunk seven Jap- Fosllo Gino UBI- Tho lliol- anese ships st Wewak. New ites ol varying she and equln- Guinea. today's headquarters heart of Naz- ISIII. at Vienna, a key German air- at the capitals gary, Rumania and Bul- Conquered Greece, Yugo- nd Albania also came un- der the shadow of Allied air DOW- northern and Central Italy and southeast Ger. many. Britons of the 5th Army on the extreme left advanced two miles in bitter hand-tc-hnnd fighting in mountains northwest of Salerno look down junction of Nocera, southeast of Vesuvius and l9 airline miles from Naples. The ca ture of Nocera would take the Aiies to the edge of the Naples plains leading to the demolished the time he can return to his port of 925,000. homeland. Americans inland on the I181" -———-——-————- flunk of Naples advanced W") l0 BENARES FLOODED five miles and captured Lioni and i is i6 miles east the railway trossinu of pfelfl miles cast is 34 miles inland from Potenza Bari-Naples e. Ths Germans on Corsica were Stefano hill and miles south French communique d demolitlons slow- but. the French inflicting severe Front Line star... "SALAD ears this trade-mark has guaranteed superb flavour to the tee critic. Var Analyst baited for the mlior Hilly. tra is reported. The British armored n to Fof-sis yesterday. however, is -Naples highway almost Germans or northward through San cvcrn w Monte Gargano spur. Just Which dir- follow from the Foggla rnad_and tho ve the swift Allied clean-up of Sicily, n ‘lth army overrun all western Sicily. he Nazi centre under American-Can- ut of the Mount Etna strong- In Italy d a lcnrthonlng of its defence lines tionnl reserves from Bus“; jug as the Dnieper is bfllfll’ gnatlun for the Ho"!!! mp isheil something that I it was well on the Ibfld n ihc Balkan satellites are being pinched c lower Dnieper in the east and pot- already aeco lvieved untl Big Victory News Briefs change Council In a statement issued tonight said that the government's action in suspen- ding wheat trading on the ox- wheat in the world market. OTTAWA. Sept. 28 -—- (GP) — Preserves coupons which are al- ready valid but which have not been used may be used in the pur- chase of honey, molasses and sy- rups in the new increased scale which becomes effective Thursday, the Prices Board said tonight. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Southwest Pacific. Sept. Z9 — communique report-ed. The ships were three tankers snd four merchant-men. LONDON, Sept. 28 -— (AP) - The Germans announced tcdpy that their southern European forces, already spread thin. had occupied the Greek Isle cf Corfu in the Ion- ian Sen opposite the lTeel of Italy nncl the Yugoslav Adriatic harbour town of Split 300 miles to the north- LONDON. Sept. 2B - (CP Cable) — With f-he whole Yug- oslav coast being opened to All- ied attack by advances in It- aly, King Peter nf Yugoslavia was reported tmlav to have arrived in the Middle East to set nn p, government there until BENAREE. INDIA. Sept. 28- (CP) - The rain-swollen Varuna River today flooded sections c Benares, the holy city of . Hindus. Fifty houses collapsed in one section, but no deaths were re- ported SEEK REFUGEE ITALIAN! ISTANBUL. Sept. 28-(AP)——Th¢ command in Greece has p a demand for immediate delivery of all Italians who have taken refuagle in Greek homes. Tho dsam pen ty is provided for re- fussl to obey the order, accordlnl to advices today from Greece. 'M.0. of Paratroops Charlottetown Doctor At Winnipeg Meet tain Robert Wlllia lottctown, Prince medical officer of aclian Parachute Tralning- Centre, Shllo Camp, Manitoba, was in- cluded omong medical men from the active army who attended the annual convention here of the Manltoba- Medical Association be- ginning Monday, Sept. 20th. Ca in Begg, whose mother. of kin, lives Charlottetown, was appointed to the active army in May, i942. I-Ie received training in Toronto, 0nt., and at Fort Banning, Georgia, U. Rods Capture 1,000 Villages LONDON. Sept. 28 - (AP) —Red Armies pursuing a badly mauled and disorganized en- emy lnto White Russia captur- ed more than 1,000 villages to- day, puttlng the Gomel - Vit- ebsk railway within artillery range and threatening the only collapse of Germany's upper ‘ line, dis- closed tonight. A Sovlet communique said German i/roups (ailing buck on Vltebsk were blowing up brid- ges and dynsmitlrlg installat- ions as the Russians closed in on that upper White Russian city. key to Poland and the Bul- tic states. The Red vanguard was believed to he only l0 mil- es awa . le P0 llrge Lifting of Pulpwood Ceiling in th FREDERICTON. Sept. 28 -(C‘P) —New Brunswick pulpwood deal.- ers and producers, meeting today with Provincial Government ot- ficlals and representatb/es of the Timber Control Department, urged removal of pulpwood ceiling prices in the case of New Brunswick domestic mills or, falling this. a bonus of s3 Der cord. Formation of an association by the industry and appointment of a pulpwood administrator for New Bruns\vlck also were urged at the meeting, A. H. Williamson. Federal Tim. ber Controller, said opposed t_o the formation of Producers and Dealers’ Associa- tion. He believed appointment of a deputy pulpwood administrator would be beneficial but consider- ed bonuslng would be inconsistent with antllnflation efforts. (ii Ill S0 0C CI‘ AWARDED GEORGE MEDAL OTTAWA. Sept. 28-(CP)—Naval service headquarters announced today the King has approved a- ward of the George Medal to Lt.- award was made tvcre not reveal- cc O- _i_.___..__‘- fo MAY INCREASE PENS IONS TOR/ONTO, Sept. 28~(CP)—Pre- mier George Drew of Ontario stated hem today that his govern- men was considering an increase in re old age pensions. Present pension in is $23 a month in (Jntario. Alberta recently announced an increase to v__=' ii- LONDON, Sept. 28 — (AP) - Mixing its punches with the skill and power of a champion boxer, the R. A. E's great bomber fleet, augmented by R. C. A. l". planes, smashed the big German industrial light raid on the North Sen port of Emden. and pounded the metal and machinery centre of Bruns- wick. The Air Ministry said that three attacks wercmade in "very great strength." and the forthcoming added The Prime Minister and the La- bor Minister and four other Gov- ernment ivflnisters addressed 6,000 representative British women as- sembled secr bert I-lall. heart talk with the women to en- list their aid in maintaining the pfxesxetnt peak in the home front e o . the peril is as lmm in deadly in their character short of munitions and enemy's hope; Axi Position and "open upon the world- ln, it may be, a decade, war even more terrible than that through which we are passing." said Mr. Churchill of through the fifth year of the sixth year of woe if need be, worse." and that wa r would in health problems. they All month the night bombers have been altcrnatin many's "jaw" around Berlin and the the north. and her "solar plexus", the Rhlneland industrial ares 30o that 38 o! miles to the southwest, with occas- the his bimbo" Wore lost, nine of lonal punches at her “heart" ar- for T its inst ls what one is willing to do MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN he happiness of love is in action; others. PAGES *1 luoserlptlon Delivered, 86.00 lall. luo- ssas- momma o II.I.A some. EARS BIHREIEE Sealanes Churchill Says New Dangers Could Arise Need t0 continue present vWar tempo till Victory. v s». By E.C. Daniel, Associated Press Staff Writer‘ LONDON, Sept. 28 — (AP) —- Prime Minisfol’ t-up, warned that apathy or a s the British war machine would bring new dangers, “deadly in their character." Mr. Churchill said werful air forces wonl ear, and to this w be a tough go that larger a that “It etly They had a. in London's Al- heartac- Although praising Britain's wo- men on the tal the "incomparable “United and concerted war ef- one hand for the vi- trlbutlcn they had made to example” cl’ a Tm’ “mam! “n” i” u” f rt" Mr Churchill nevertheless south the Russians reached a :55‘ mum m m, wu-mng o; the “l” °"'~" l‘ “n” “"4"” dangers of letting up at this cru- Gomel, Junction of five ra.il- @151 901m, on m; mgr-ch w v10. ways, en the heels of a “dis- (pry, organized enemy", the Soviet ~we u; engaged 1n '5 w“; Wu", communique said. he said. “We are engaged in a struggle for life. Peril Still Exists “Although you cannot say that lnent as it was i940 or during that year when we were all alone, nevertheless if is war were so handled that the unity of the national effort were mlnished, that its pace and vl- gor were slackened, that we fell apairt, that apathy overtook us, an out the forces of the United Nat. ions, then indeed another set of dangers not perhaps so catastrophic if this were typical through- their aspects but nonetheless would arch upon us. "The war would languish, our would find themselves services Ju.\ at the time when they would ldlers need them most, just at the time when their act an ever-larger scale-all this would ion is growing to cur." The Enemyh Hope And this, he said, is Just the that the Demo- acies will get weary and that the s will be able to consolidate its another “We are fully extended now," Britain's C q_ J 1, H ' __ g N_V_R_I war effort, “and what we have to 01m vllrgstmgunt,‘ "QT? R do is to hold it. What we have to Details of service for which the do b w maintain this effort r we will never stop until have achieved our purpose." Health Problems Health Minister Ernest Brown ported that "the general hous- position is always gettin the fl th year p ‘the biggest yet" . Hanover In Flames After Heavy Attack which bore the brunt cf the assault. The night's operations carried number of significant indications of the greatly expanded scope of the Britain based sir campaign against the Germans. Again the It. A. P‘. switched its main objective hund- are most needed. g in jabs at Ge d be striking at the heart of the Jsrnphcs urlng_ __ Churchill told Britain today that the country's present full war effort must be maintained without through two more years if necessary, and ho lackening of the pace 0f rmles would be iilhtinl Ind mo" enemy during Labor Minister Ernest Bey!!! wibm_aud_esllr_rb_flal-_ r Good News For Homes Good news for homes was given by Food Minister Lord Woolhm, who said that despite "a certain renewal or the U-boat campaign" this winter “we can maintain our pnesent modest (food) standards, which I regard as the minimum of which we can keep well." The President of the Board of Trade, Hugh Dalton, announced in- creased supplies of items like pots, pans, sheets, cups and furniture, but he didn't promise more cloth- ing coupons. I-Ie did say he was making an effort to obtain more and better shoes and shoe repair- lng. Foreign Secretary Eden, looking beyond the war, advocated working out the practical problems of s. post-war settlement efore making "elaborate plans for s future Ut- opia". He proposed proceeding "by practice rather than by blueprint.” Ellen Wllkison. Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Home Security, was the sixth lovem- ment leader to address the women. The government took the extra- ordinary measure of 1nviting the thousands of women to Iondon secretly, paying their expenses and reimbursin those who lost time from work. A similar meeting was held several months ago for miners, to whom Mr. Churchill ap- pealed for a higher output of fuel. PACKING PLANTS NEED MEN EDMONTON. Sept- 28—-(OP)—- About 800 men are needed in Ed- monton plants and 100 are required in Calgary 0.8. Longman, deputy minister of agriculture, said toda . I-Ie urged farmers of Alberta to he p relieve the situation "immediately harvesting is concluded." RETIRED PUBLISHER DIE! NEW YORK. Sept. 28 -— (AP)- Walter Rcmeyn Benjamin, 89, re- tired publisher collector and authority on historical manuscripts filllil letters, died today after a long nests. f‘ ‘fill A Sana ltmrc cuts both a due one» aw flu: ruiaaa» and tomorrow morning at 1 l0 tomorrow morning at 5.50. centre of Hanover last night for reds of iles, kee in th N l N°w mm“ 3° 39- 739 1-m- the second time within s week. scrambllrlrzg to cohcegrtrcge tail- Agiytm“ a 9“‘“c‘ quickly followed up Monday's day’ lhinly spread defensive forces where chnhlmggynn- gfiggaglieids - r-- us p- m. ‘LIB p. an. P. B. I.-—N. DAILI IN UBI Les Iced Isiah": 8%“: ' them Canadian. Returning crew- . und Munich, 300 miles so th f the n " 1 men reported termendous flames genital. u 0 ‘nu! .m'$"_ ‘u _ ._ were eating through Bancvmi ' 1 y‘, .- ' 5 High tide this morning at 11.41 sun sets this evening at so‘: sine liars cmnfiiéfl“... 1.se a. m 1W. In. 4.30 m. A ve Charla teiown l.l0 p. m SIRE! SIIVICB Y! -