MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN dlsadvantalu to our point. It is for us to lmrn tha sweet uses of adversity and to lay hold of g n ‘lunrulnn. Two (‘outta m-srlii. rliinrdlnn. Founded IM‘! §__ LA KAL Condition of Pro-Axis pair Said critical Shooting in open defiance of German Officials; Occurred near Palace of Versailles. VERSAILLES. German orator with the aide “new order," and his w] Dent, were shot here yesterday by a 29-year-old French assassin posing as a volunteer in the French le- gion recruited to fight Rus- sia. _ The condition of the two men was described as criti- cal early today by physic- ians who worked over them in the-Municipal Hospital. Paul Colette, the assassin. coolly emptied his gun at Laval and Deat and bullets also struck two other men, who were wounded slightly. Authorities said Colette confessed that he had gain- erl, by a ruse, entry to the Versailles barracks, where the anti-Bolshevlk legion was being formed, for the ‘express purpose or killing Laval. Fernand de Brinon, Vichy Am- bassador to Paris and colabora- ttclllst. was in the barracks near level but was uninjured. Early today de Brinon saidz- I ‘We are faced with a terrorlstic organization." The shooting occurred in the Borgilis de Bordes Barracks new the Palace of Versailles. It was in open defiance of German offici" Iho were present and who had announced death decrees french hostages should sabotage, (Continued on page ‘l. Col 3) ___...._____- Fish catch lip in 1940 UITAWA, Aug. 27 — (OP) — lfarkeietl value of Canadian fish. cries production during i940 was 845,118.75’! compared with s40.- 075322 in 1939, the Dominion Bur- eau or siatisilcs reported today. 1111s was the highest recorded flllce i930. Percentage production figures by lrovinces: British Columbia 48, Xcvascotio 22: New Brunswick 11; Ontario seven; Quebec four; Manitoba four; Prince Edward Isl- llnd two; and Alberta and Saskat- chewan on: per cent. Sea fisheries contributed $38.- 00058 of the total va'ue and in- lino fisheries $0,203,690. The salmon fisher had a mur- keteil value uf $14.11 .496 with $13.. _l 0r 9'7 per cent credited to Bfltlsn Columbia. lierrill; moved into second place in the .ist of chief commercial fish all a marketed value of sense.- .(.‘od was valued at $4,984,504 "Iii lobster at £3,181,594. e-—_____- -—~_—— —- llominlg Events loo m Notices in this column l cents per word. “valailonla Church su pel- Wed- "W- August 27th. Lgll-B-W-Zl "Wanted i Ilium Cold stibrliiida Omsn-igiil-ofdwi .| Din .... s, pressure. e L- 189-8-38- 1t. "Qreenv le l‘! i his. Marfln.‘ ‘ax: sad dmcc. meow-IL?! ~Modern h More“ Hllltld Old Time Dancing v ,8 orghwlgiday. 20th. Bl. in i. 0. O. i‘. Hall. ‘Thursday, Aug. W Bile, 3a orchestra. Llapg-mqi ta lifts {gig-gig ab“ —Bolosna Cattle l llVQ . ll q hum“:- llg nrioui than rioiiéi u ' 1* “Mina n s Alba o mgfldlltfidtl olgrtdav. “diveuila m" wuklfliglnlsct the better once qmm A oeklna service. Write on, cmu and a. a for i Occupied France, Aug. 28 — (Thurs- day) ._ (AP) - Pierre La- val, foremost French collab- and faithful follower, Mar- Cl-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, "rrlURsDAY, AUGUST 28,1911" I 727/’ The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew dEPllllTS HEARD IRAN T Everybody ‘silences MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN A level head. n pure mind. a cour- ageous soul and a healthy body are strong guarantees of success. Annual Subnrrlptlon Delivered. 85.00 By llnlli P. E. L, $4.001 Cluualu iaml U. U. $0.00 0 05K FQR Alllill§TlllE, AND HEINGHMAN INJUREZ) B Y ASSASSIN‘ Cabinet Quits; One Axis ship Left sinking, Another damaged CAIRO. Egypt, Aug 2'1—(AP)-— One Axis vessel was left sinking and another was damaged by a direct hit in a heavy bombing at- tack by the Royal Air Force yes- terday on German-Itaitan craft tn the central Mediterranean, the Middle East command announced tonight. The exact location and tonnagi of the ships was not stated. Raiding Italian planes were chased from Malta to Sicily, a communique said, where thre~ were shot down. Several other It- alian fighters were badly dam: rn that action and an 5-69 was shot down by fighters off Fam- agusta, Cyprus. Reporting on raids Monday night, the R. A. F. command said that masses of debris were hurled high in the air by a particuiarly violent explosion and fires flamed near the fort and power station of 'I‘rip- oli, Libya. Bengasi also was a. target and several bombs were reported drop- ped there on "railway sldings and the enemy encampment.“ Ships and gasoline supplies were hit at Bardia and transport concentra- tions near Rasuenna were heavily damaged by South African Air Force fliers yesterday. Italian positions at Wolchefit and Gondar were bombed and ma- chlne-gunned in the Ethiopian campaign. In both land operations and of- fensive and defensive work over the Mediterranean the R. A. F. re. ported three of its aircraft were missing. Tragedy strikes I l With axe, ‘kiiifc; Four arc ilcail NEW YORK. Aug. 27-—(AP)-- Tragedy struck with axe and knife today at the family of Willlam Morey. a discharged patrolman, turning his Brooklyn fiat into a bloody shambles, leaving his wife and three-children dead, a fourth critically cut and Morey wounded. Police and the Kings County Dis- trict Attorney's office announced lute today they were certain that‘ Mrs. Morey had murdered the tlireei children and then killed herself. Heifer-nan said the m.tive ap- parently lay in a contagious dis- ease from which the whale family suffered, But behind that was a story of the Marcy's difficulties and poverty after Morey was discharg- ed frcm the police department for intoxication, Wllcn Patrolman Alvin Dunne and Anthony Winzler responded to cries for help from the squalid Mzrey flat, they found Morey weak from loss of blood‘ from a head wound and Wifinm, jr., 1i, lurch- ing senselessly. groping at a deep slash across his throat. In a rear bedroom lay the bodice of three other children, Marcella, ‘l: Claire, 4. and Frill. 3. and on the iced was the bo-‘y of Mrs. More . All four had been stabbed to death, their throats slashed. On the kitchen floor the police found an ordinary kitchen knife, still damp. They found there. too. the Ford-stained head of an axe; its handle was on the living room floor. llrvida strike Gould have ended Earlier, claims By D'Arcy GDonnell Canadian Press Staff Wrlkl CI-IIOOUTIMI. Que» Allfl- 37 — (CP)- JAW. Ilabelle. company of- ficial, today told a Royal conlmia- aion that if pickets had been clear- ed away from the aluminum com- pany of Canada plant at nearby Arvlda soon after a five-day strike blslri there last July, the walkout might have ended at midnlflhl- 011 the day it started- “My op‘nion is that if the strik- ers had been cleared away from around the plant, many Wmkefl would have entered for the mid- night drift," labellc. employment manager and security officer for the company, told the commuter! investigating the strike. Lnbellc, the fifth witness to an- pcnr bolorc the commission since it began its investigation Monday- said that if pennlaalon had been muted an anti-aircraft batter! at Arvlda and trainees from the Chicoutiml training centre to form two like lending to the will". "I! Red Army MOSCOW, outskirts of the city of K. Kinglsepp, '10 miles southwest of Ukraine. (A report that the giant: hydro- electric development on the Dniep- er River, the Dnierperostroi dam. had been dynamited by the Rus- sians was carried by Reuters news agency from Vichy, unoccupied France. Reuters quoted a Vichy Reported Holding All Fronts Unconfirmed reports huge Soviet Dam blown up — If true would indicate Red Army Forces safely across Dnieper. (By Henry C. Cassldy. Associated Press Staff Writer) Aug. 2ll—('l‘hursday)—-lAl')—Sovlet ltussla officially indicated today the Red army ls holding its ground on all fronts against strong German attacks and front-line dispatches said scores of thou~ sands of Germans were killed when the invaders were routed from the The Soviet. communique said the Red army is putting up a fierce struggle on the fronts made familiar in the recent communique; — Leningrad. Smolensk and Gomel. both on the central front, and Dnieperopctrovsk and Odessa in the |ncws agency dispatch from the Soviet frontier. There vivds no con- ifirlnntion. If the dam had been blown up, it. would indicate the Russians ha\e safely moved their Ukraine armies across the Dniep- er. A wide stretch of territory in (Continued on page 7, col 6) k (By C. R. Blackburn) (Canadian Press Staff Writer) OTTAWA. Aug. 27—(CP)-Offlc. tals concerned with curtailing civil- ian use of raw materials essential to war industries tonight held out the prospect that Canadians may have to return, in some degree, to living conditions of their grand- parents. More walking instead of driving. vraslt boards instead of machines, brwms and clusters instead of vac- uum cleaners, ice deliveries in place of electrical refrigeration. Those. it was said, may be things of the future when the curtailment pro- gram hits its stride. "But if we ore to win this war we must be prepared to make the same sacrifices ollr enemies are forced to accept,” said one auth- ority. “lt is a competition of sac- iificc at home as much as a com- petition of arms" Because of the direct need of war industry for raw materials, it was said, sharp curtailment of liomessential use of certain mater- ials is to be expected in the im- mediate future. Restrictions the government feels are necessary to meet the, shortage in steel, certain non- ferrous metals and other raw ma- terials now are being formulated. The expectation is these measures will result particularly in reduced manufacture of heavy household conveniences such as electric re- (Continued 0n page 7. Col 8) i Pioneer Conditions Before War Is Won ? _ Must make sacrifices to reduce civilian use of essential raw materials. Slowdown in Western epidemics WINNIPEG. Aug. 27 -(CPl Slowdown in the spread of western Canridao polinmyelitis epidemic was apparent tonight on the basis of a decrease in the number of new cases reported, compared with previous daily reports, but the number of encephalitis cases 00n- tinued to increase steadily. Only 16 new cases of infantile paralysis were reported in the west today whi‘e sleeping sickness cases increased by 46. The western totals s‘nce the epidemics began reached 7'78 of poliomvektis and 558 of en- cephalitis with i2 and 28 deaths respectively. Interpreting The War News By Edward E. Bomar Associated Press Staff Writer The battles just opening for mastery of the skies over Len- Premier King ‘ Clears desk LONDON, Aug. 2'1 -(GP Sablel spent nearly the whole day ill his hotel suite, olearir; his desk of piles of correspondence accumulat- ed in the early part of the week during many outside engagements. The Prime Minister tomorrow will visit Canadian military units and lunch with Lt-Gen. A. G. L. Mc- Naughton, Canadlsn Corps com- mander. Two student Pilots killed BR-ANTIORD. Ont. Auk. 2'! — (OP)—Two student pilots of No. 5 service flying training school were killed today when the Avro-Anson planes they were piloting on solo flights collided in midair and crashed on the Brantford township farm of John Morduc. The pilots were: Lac. Alexander Frederick Swltzer. 2'1. son of Philip A. Swttser, Pem- broke, Ont. Lac. K. F. Davis. 2'1, son of V. B. Dovies, Des Moines, Ia. The Morduc farm to about one rnllo west of the Royal Canadian Air Force school and the collision occurred as the pilots were bring- ing mell- planes down to land, the (Continued on pile ‘l. 00! 9 plenoskalllngsplnltofonoc —Prlme Minister Mackenzie Kim" lngrad appear to be a prelude to a last-ditch struggle for the city which the Russians pro- mise to make as tlesnern": ils Poland's defence of Warsaw Not a bomb had fallen on the roofs of the city itself up to uwednesday morning, it was ss- scrted, but ire progress of Nazi and Finnish forces in- creases almost hourly the ac- knowledged peril of the histor- ic capital of the Cmrs. I O l ‘rho advance from three sides which Marshal Klementy Vor- shilov last week termed a “ter- rible danger" ls even more threatening now. A main pav- ed highway to Moscow long since has been severed at Nov- gorod. and a German vanguard is reported at the d'rect rail- way link which is the com- munications jugular vein. Assuming no weakening of Vormrilows determination to fight from door to door, Len- ingrad: defenders seem fully capable of keeping up tho (Continued on page ‘I. Col ll) s Over ll. S. oil Going to Soviets" Moscow warns Tokyo not to interfere with shipments from America. (By Max Hill) (Associated Press Staff \Vrlter) mxvo, Aug. 2'1 - (AP) - The Japanese government has madere- presentations to both the United States and Russia _ merits of United States aviation iuei to Vladivostok “ilnder the very noses 0f the J:llJ1\l1@$-¢‘-" the Llolnei news agency reported to- day. (The Soviet government, con- . firming the report, announced that in reply it had warned Jnpilll llliil any Qttllllpl. to hinder traile bu- tween Russia and the Unitfll States would be regarded as 811 unfriendly act. (Cordell Hull. American Secre- tary of State, made it clear that the United States was standing oil c frcedom-of-the-scas policy re. carding shipments of war ‘suPPUQS to Russia across the Pacific. Hull had a conference ill Washington Wednesday afternoon with Jap- anese Ambassador Nomura at the Ambassadors request.) United States EmbRS§Y quarters in Tokyo had no official knowl- edge of the Japanese representa- tions, which were dispiaycd in of- ternoon papers. The news stories avoided the word “protest? refer- ring to the Japanese statement n1. o. “representatlom or a "warn- lug." Especially dlspleusing to Japan- ese, said Domei, the Japanese news agency. was the fact that the high octane fuel passing _so near is bai-ined by the United States for export to Japan. As Premier Konoye and Foreign Minister Toyoda were received ‘in audiences by Emperor I-Ilrolllto during the day. newspapers eln- phosized the serious view the gov- ernment took of the situation. The newspaper Kokiinliil said “the Iillperial Government was una-ble to remain indifferent to aid shipments from the standpoint of ‘preserving peace in East Asia" s Emis- ,_- U-u- BERLIN, Aug. 28 —('l‘hurs- day-(Afl- Several Cuban citizens have been arrested ln "occupied territories" for com- mitting “hostile acts directed against the security of the Gannon Reich.’ DNB. Nazi propaganda and news agency, said today. LONDON, Aug. 28 —(Thul‘sdayi -(AP>—Tile Moscow radio went off the air at midnight and still was silent an hour later. Radio silence usually indicates the approach of hostile planes. WASHINGTON. Aug. 27 —- (AIU-Tho United States, in- stating on freedom of the seas in supporting foes of the axis, indicated today that Japanese protests would fall to halt "II! movement of American war supplies to Russia's Pacific port of Vladivostok. MIDLAND, Ont, Aug. 27 —(C- Pl-Gasoline may be sold in cans or other containers providing it is for use in lamps, stoves. washing machines, or for domestic purposes. oil controller G. R. Cottrelle stated in a wire today to a Midland wash- ing machine agency. OTTAWA. Aug. 2'1 — (CPI- A labor department spokesman estimated tonight that “not. less than 500.000 industrial employ- ‘ vii-chaos n1 many as 750,000" now receive or will 800.1 receive cost-nf-llvlng bon- uses based on order-ln-councll. IREDIZRIUION, Aug. 27 —(C- Pl-One new case of infantile paralysis and 10 cases. hitherto un- reported, were added today to New Brunswick! growing list, bringing the total to 114. LU53U CANADA Smooth Sclilinq For Ml your Bolt When you use Maw on against ship. I i l _Suggcsts World l Japs annoyed icon of living Bonus for many In Public Service OTTAWA, Aug. 2'1 -(CP) —Ef. festive from Aug. 1 a cost of ilv ng bonus will be paid to the vast ma- jority of members of the federal public service-those earning less than $2.100 a year and all manual workers-ii was announced tocizly. It was not immediately kilcwn just how many civil servants will benefit, but the bonus will app}, from coast to coast. A flat rrlie bonus will be pnizl to all full time ployees (‘llfllillg bt-uvccil $1,296 and $2,100 a year, to full time mall- uni workers wit out supervisory cil- tics who are engaged in war wQrk and earning over $2,100 a ywar, and in heads of hollsellolrls Oflllllll‘; 1m than $1.295 a ymr. The fiat rate bonus is 25 cell‘...- a week for each one-per-cent rise in the cost of lvlilg. Maximum fiat rate bonus myabie immediately will be $ll.9l a month since tile cost of Lving had risen ii per cen: at July i. i941, as compared with (Continued on Page '7, Col 7) Duke of “Kent At Jarvis, 0nt. JARVIS. Orlt., Aug. 27 —(CP) — ‘The big Lockheed plane carrying the Duke of Kent arrived here late Find l today at the No. l, bombing il?“§l;¥.§°“°%ii. ‘T5332 iiiifiiffiij Ennugh rggruitg l Hamilton where earlier he had Lil spectcd service units and munitions works, He w'li remain here over- night. Ieavirlg Hamilton he asked that the flight to Jarvis be taken $0 that he could get a view of Niagara Falls, "I am very anxious to sre ivhat the spray looks like from up there." the Duke said. Ill Hamilton tile Duke visited the plant of the Canadian Westing- hnilse Co, whore l-e inspected the bg munitions factory. From the plant the Duke jour- neyed to No. 33 air navigation school and No. l0 elementary flying school at Nfollnt Hope. Tomorrow the Duke will visit St. Thomas before leaving for Mon- treat. where he will renlnin over-- night. Gonfcrcncc of Church groups Island Ciergymen on and seasonal elll- l Invaders Drive Deep Into State Russians 100 from Czlpital; British 4O miles 1.-:e:t.h of Persian Gulf. 'l‘lilril<lll.t.\‘, lrilil, Aug". ZZS-(fhilrsdzrv)——(l’ll’)—'l‘he cabinet of Premier Ali Mzlnsur, in conflict with Brit.- aln and Russia, resigned early today and Rcza Pahlavi, ruler of Iran. ordered the ministers to continue their tasks until anilther cabinet is fol-med. l The llfl(iL‘l‘.\“.‘('l'L’ttl]‘iQ5 also were ordered to rcmzlin zit llfltlli‘ posts until their successors were chosen. ‘i The cabinet resigned two dliys zifter lrzin lvzls re- yliiibly reported to have delivered to the British and Rlls- ‘sian ministers ii plea that the lrllniiln invzlsiilll end iiilr] ta giizirziiltce thzlt zill Germans salve a few in indispensable technical posts would be ililsted within a week. The British and tile Russian‘ governments had demanded the ouster o1 tile Germans holding |tll1€ft they were a (iilllgr-l- r0 the a1 ics. c tMflflllI Agrotl. ', NBC l-qpre.‘ selltative in Ankara. Turkey, ln a broadcast to the United Siatesi said reliable f0l'(‘i_‘-lll quarters in Ankara reported the new premier, vet to be cll0sen,»\v0illd announce that the token by Iran showed ,0 countlgvfls dp_ sire for independence and that she LONDON, Alli}. 27-—(CP)—-'IhO Allied lava-ion was fast cutting n with British s north of the * Mnrid, Rus- was bowing to BrilislnRilssirln ‘"135 319 force. _ alld informed (mere was no immediate mdb quarters prcdz. ng the imminent; cation as to who might head the new government.) llot RgctIQ l collapse of all Iranian resistance. Subsidiary Britih thrusts east- ward, based upon Iraq. occupied: Gilall, a town 20 miles inside Iran, and Sclr-I-Pul, i miles fl the north of that point, in a coniiniling and uninterrupted advance. 'I‘he Soviet invaders, informal-ion from Mesczw indicated. were-loos- ing overirilelnllng potvel- in rouqhly parallel cffr-nsires prncceriillc: from Russian Armenia rind from Ril-s an Arerbaijan. _M___-M_ .._. (Continued on page 7, Col T) I For active army I\I0!\"l‘IlE.\I., Aug. 27 —(C- I’)—-W. I2. Scott, K. C., joint chairman of a. special recruit- Ing committee for overseas scr- vice iii this military district, said in a written statement today that "it is time for the public to know unrl realize that we are not getting the recruits we need for the active army.“ “It ls also time for the pub- llc to do something to enrniir- nge recruiting, fnr the answer to this most important question rests with tile public." sniil Mr. Scott, who shares with llrlg. G. I’. Vnnlcr the chairmanship of the recruiting committee in military district No. 4. “The public seems to have lnyiscil into an apathetic un- consciousness of the war. A cer- tain amount of enthusiasm “n: born of the recent recruiting campaign hilt the results of this drivi- in I\I.I). 4 proved llvi» to Etncfm Cm. Stereos ‘ is MEREMY mo.“ Snow i-‘oawilunoiavl. $HoWER$ ’ Executive of Maritime Baptist Institute. WOIIFVILLE. N. S.. Alli!- tcPl _'I‘hc "church ilnivorsal’ must be concerned with the treaty swell ends the present wiir. Dr C. B. Liimsden oi’ Acadia Univer- sity told delegates to the annual convention of the Maritime Bartlet-fil- Instltule here todav. l-Ie advocated formation of a “silncr-dellonllnn- tinr" church orgnrfization. “We need n program of T79R99 c-‘ilcstion and a rnmhnttins 0i Th“ factors which make for war. not carved oilt by Baptists, Methodists. Lufhcrans. Prcsbvtericins or Czvhrl- llcs, but by the ‘church universal,‘ an organization we will have w create." he declared. Dr. Llimsclen said a conference of Christians the world over milsi be called together before the 6nd of ire war “to make known to the framers o; the peace the Christan attitude of the world." "Good lntentinned Christians. without sound knowledge have had a part in the moss we are now in." he said. "We must not make that mistake again." He suggested tile Maritime Brin- gis; curler-mien get ln toilrh with major denominational bodies 111 Canada, United slates and Great Britain io make plans for a unl- vorsril conference of all churches. The report of the nominating committee was adopted. Tile offic- ers for tile coming year are Rev. C. W. Cook of Silmmerside, P E 1., Pres‘delli; A. E. T0llli, \'(\l'i| River. P.l<‘..l._ Sccl'et:ir_v-'l‘l"v i "er: Rev. G. B. MacDonald, of Petucoil- inc, N. B. ‘first Vice-Presiden" Rev. H. B. Jnllcs, Hammolltls Plains. N. 5.; second vice-president. and Rev. f. J. levy, Charlottetown, tillrtl vice-president. 27- be lnailoqilatc, just as SUILW- 'I‘(?i't’()N'i’()_ 'lil"' bull‘: qiirnt days have urovcil it l0 lnulm ulld lll8.'.illl\.l,ll iz- . lllhllllfl- have ll(‘f‘fl short llvcil. Dawson )7 T3 “t’—~*'"' ' Vancouver "f ‘f5 it.) HG Nazis lost 80 000 fl.’ #1.“ l al to n S‘ iii Before city of e G9 T9 liomcl captured MOSCOW, Aug. 27 -t.lPl- Germany Inst 80.000 killi-il and wounded snlzlicrs licforc tile Nazisorcuplerl the city nt‘ Gn- mrll on the central front, lhf‘ army flour-paper Rcrl Still‘ said tnilay in tili- first iletnlleil story of that bflttll‘. The account was ivrltien hy Milt-Gen. I. Berrznvsky, who iflimrliwll" participated In the defence of W,“ w!" thx M.“ o. _,,. 233 Gllmcl- and. trrc".'lw'.\' lllC1‘llll"I lit Z56 "The Germans pnlrl the heaviest price for the city." Sill‘ s" 5h‘ °l‘f"l'7"-"- ti‘ '1'“ Find the general wrote. but when Yfifs tonlnrronv lYlCYlYV-il Iii “l7 they entered Gnmcl thi- "or- ‘F"r.=t qllarfrr moon All‘. 2°. i004 chords were npplclcss, stores 1m were empty. warehouses grain- lcss and not a single living sfllll was In its dwellings." Gcrlnlnl material losses “ore said to have her-n about 200 tanks. several hundred field guns. 100 planes and 1,000 ve- hlrlrs. Siuivncufdc "d" l“ nliilll§c= lat- er ‘hcn (‘lli~-""4’.c?'~-.v-ll. BURDEN - (‘APIT TORIVIICSWWNE SERVICE (Standard Timcl Leave ltnrdrn 6J5 Ad“. 912.‘. 1.00 IKM. 4.47» Th.“ 7.30 I‘..\‘l Leave (‘ape Tormr-ntlne fl.ll0 -\..Vl. 11.00 AM. 3.15 PJI. 6.20 RM 8.40 Li“. WASHINGTON. Aug 27 - rAPl - Navy S!‘('I’t‘iill‘_\' l-‘luillk Knox said liiilll)’ ill‘ wsl-lpl ilii- llll-sllln nov- SUNDAY SERVICE |.f"‘.\‘f‘ Bordon illlll A.“ 12.00 nnnn. i-rlllllrllt “(Iliili prrlllii Ullil"(l H5 “M- 71m P“ .' ltvs (1b\t‘l‘\'t'l‘$ in go up i0 tile Lmw m‘ T""“P'm'"' “H” ‘AL 230 I'..\‘l. . .. .. _ _‘\ . Ril-so-fivrmnn lrolli Zirlrs and ilb- so p“ 8m P“ serve tile iigiliillp. lie said the WOOD ISLANDS FERRY United State-s lzn'.'crnnlcnt had , made repeated flllile rcqilcsts to ufifinxc"il§uo'adphland' 7'00 Am!‘ send Americans into the fighting AM L“ PM DIN. Leaves Caribou IJO PM. i