Miixms OIL MERE MAN p-ii of mam“ p, biislnusioui alord the luxury ‘IZZY’ The People's aper . (lovers Prince Edward .rsiaiid Like the Dew Founded l"? mm." tluorliill- t‘. m.“ Qlriiitietoivn Guardian. __ _¢___‘.___ __ an Kllwfllhlly .iuiniil spring surprise Qiiri-ri of iFilli. [sires io-ircd in. (1.50?!) Troops Rescued i. Transport - Ship From pin hoiiiii- crown prince Mohmnm sister of Egypt's Kin! F" i-uilul in loitering throne abdicated by h ZOJIOO-ton former Liner set afire by Japanese Bombers. Rescue Australian tron-x: Tebf~15-—JCP‘I—A iii... .r.;h;ui wa ship his‘ pick- LIOSDS 11cm a 2 .000- ' l an liiicr Vlblnll hid Lem _- md 3.9L on i.".e se u} a, r -_z;ri d today. l :.ll:' '. .. .1 b_ i. e nu .. i. .1..;.- ‘in a b TGARYSL head wsncsv rowbei" ttoclvd i0 oil's For 5i‘ ft- hi s - b'm‘i n‘: We alrrglrc- and took ii- t|‘illl 1.300 mPfl- \\'.w ll.’ no“ i“ mflre iron \ ha" l6“? (l W‘ liul 1lfe‘-ca‘s poked tlvm i n Ars‘rn"~'~n offer 5B!) but ervlre show‘- tn he a solid n fr» rcseu n! Th» iv-f. *0‘ tcd bnflging- htszpcfileiiai lit A Elaine ' \'- (‘hurt-hill lnnounces = ‘- full. “(T "!l‘\'-- llusfnns GET" - rm-rzw-s, ailvziiice 30 miles in rri- s Nor. Plvlniilliltl B\‘\‘Cl‘.--\)iii<-h rut down 700 “l! p: r-u liulo troops. [lisp “F-‘b-Jliiile for cast midst t. ,,;i:' » ‘l uulf nears climftx. l‘ iruorvc "bio-nous :‘~I - ICP» — Micro than ' triiincd far dis- . ~ ‘. have Jreeii lhot .0 the inmmon wcd pigeon "Min '0 the crow. the enemy 0f "e17 Fiulish farmer. timing Events O his for stun-t. In this l et-iitl per vmrd column §___ "Parish Hlu o d D “P0118 llill Iii. 35f‘ on ablige > ~ . ndl‘, Ftliruary luili. L-195-2-l2-l4-l . . "Blow. st. James i-nu Sum- mrileld. Monday. Plebruai-y 16th. "HY. Tuesday. 1,314, “w mane; rggéitlre n hellersi mind Co d twantlt of well- cstt. (s rs and dress. 600 lbs or over. 39mm 00.. Ltd. Li-‘ltfl-l-Qt-tf. "Dame French River Hg] ‘ 1 Wed- “fifllfa ri-b. ism. u not pm Y- Admission l6 cents. L-Sl iiii°..',".°“ ‘"05- Ml the latest 1.. inglsrieiies Bend for free you‘ °81l@- Arthur rail "i! Wdfiyiind tomorrow fifinfiljgk" P18 starter. grower idiiiinpffniam"l°" _ lately-t. mwmgiiceipid cash. R. L. Dickie- L-fl. made by small Warship. Japs attempt To gain held Lin oil area A (By Witt Hancock) (ASSDCIlII-kd muss Stuff Writer) BATAVIA, Java. Feb. l5—(v\ Ph-Dctcrmincd defenders of soutliern Netherlands Sumatra fought tiluily a sea-borne Jilli- iinesc attempt to establish a. footiiold in thc prized oii region near Palembang lifter cutting down 100 parachute shock troops and dynamiting at least part oi the huge refining centre, ii Aciiicrianus high command communique said tonight. ‘flu: new threat to the second largest island in the Nether- ill. cs East indies, only 250 miles fr u liotaviit in Java, devclopcd euuy Sunday when three large Japanese transports appeared at the mouth oi the Must river bctirccii Sumatra and the lli- aiiii of Biiugita. Nchici-iuiii.» bombing plant-s ilIlliLi/illilfii.’ litulttttlti the ships leased wiJi troops as ili.y swung into the cniiiiiici only ‘l5 miirs mini iiilcmbang. Direct hi... ousted the manoeuvring v.. 1i ..r hiunioii, the com- < s-iid. iuiy Alflnfli parachute . y, nropiuu at three points in ilic iiiipiiititiii oi. icgiun flifllliltl Piiicnibiing from 100 ifllllSpJfi. planes. iiriiicctcd by fiQIliQFS. liud iilreauy been mop- pcil up with the eruption of "onlv a few score oi’ the enemy s.'.il olive.‘ the defenders sold. 'i‘h.~ ouymirsc hzid light mortars itliil tummy-guns. Nazi ‘Munitions Depot Blown Up iii. Holland NEW YORK. Feb. l6—-lCP)—-T'he BB5; rcpcrtcd tonight that o muni- tions depot hurl been blown up at The Hague and that the Germans shot unless those responsible are caught broadcast was iiad ordered 30 Holluuders in five days. 'I'lie heard here by N80. Aussie R einfo rcements Rushed To ‘y spell trouble for new Shah of ed Rizal Pahlevl, shown hero with oiik, and their child. Shun silo- ls father as British rnd Soviet m PORE Fills Al. F. Scores Dvgr 30 {i315 f) Enemy planes Amhusheil; 20 Are shot down Enemy May Attempt To By - Pass Tobruk In Desert War; British Subs Active Also- (By Edward Kennedy) (Associated Press Stat’! Writer) CAIRO. Feb. i5—(AP)-'I‘he R. A. F. scored its greatest victory over the brittle-sound Libyan desert. smashing a formation of 30 Axis dive-bombers and lighters near Aln El Genus. but the Germans m- uiglit were atieiiipilng to flank the main British lliics before Tobruk. At sea, submarines sunk one large and another medium-sized supply ship and probably destroyed a. third. ' Ajourtli Axis vessel. carrying sup- P1165, was attacked by naval alr- crult which brought iiie ship to a standstill with columns of black smoke pouring from it. A fifth ship -—-oii armed trawler-was hit by 15 submarinesliells almost within sight. oi the AJUS-llfild shore. and e ere-iv abandoned ship. The zieat air battle was fought over Acroma. only l0 miles w-cst 6f Tobruk. A squadron of l8 Kit»- hawk planes flown by British and. Australian pilots ambused the Axis squadron attacking umpire land forces and shot clown 20. "Not one of the eiieniv formation €S§ilD8d damage." the it. Apr‘. said. The desert wits studded with the smoking wreckages of ‘ alien planes and five German Messcr- sciiiiiiits. Ari anti-aircraft battery added l1 21st victim. Two Axis vict- ims earlier in the week were con- firmed as shot down. and three other planes .were added to the growing toll of Malta's anti-alr- craft batteries. On land. the enemy started mov- 1x11 fcorislderable" _ armored icrcts cast o 1e n; British lilies between El Meehlli Tmiinl and it appeared that might. try to by-pass Tobruk, A good coastal road parullcls the Clreiielcan coast some 30 miles south of the Mediterranean from El Mechlll to the EiZYDtlan ii'on.l';r._ The enemy columns were dis- persed so ivldely that British arilil- ery was unable to engage them cf- IECHVEIY, but patrols hurried out t0 harass the enemy continuously. New action in Burma invasion and HKNGOON. Fob, l5'-—(AP)-J:it1- aiiese forces struck from two rlirec- 5-- ol ‘Ylizilou. <10 mllss iarluban Oll tlic Ran- szoon l‘llll"02\l'i_ Plld the but lv for the cost coust of the Gulf of Martaban li(‘1ll'0fl ils climax. The lnvodivrs were attacking from scnsldc laudiiii: points above captur- c-rl ltfiirtnhnn as well as from u dc?!) salient thrust from their Siilivern l‘l\‘Ci' bridgehead at Paah. unoffic- ial reports sold. Ottawa to check ilhungking report ,___~ lions _ DCfi/lHVlYSl. ol r Nb. 15- (OPP-The Dgiynrlincnl of External Affiilrs to- night announced if is taking lm- mediiile action to check the truth of 3, report from Chungklug that 5,000 troops of the surrcudcrcil gong Kong garrison-including Canadians-ore llvliii‘; l" fin 1"" terruueiit camp at Kowloon under primitive conditions and without proper food UPTAWA. ..__, Dutch Indies _ ’ Government considers calling home Australian Airmen from Britain War-ZS Years Ago Today (l: The 0mm" PR") Pacific. FEB. 16. inn-alum. issued The commonwealth forces. M- drrier-in-muiwn comoelllnv We!" conlpatiled by other mph-e m! l1- bclllng to or frcm s. neutral coun- u” troops’ were moving into dr- tAriy to call Li, t. port in British or m“, pwmon; on Jiiva. site o! the fled territory. ‘HIM!!! N!“ "9' gum-d Nations general staff head- Whed mm“) ’""‘*‘ m" Kuhn‘ quarters and vital island buie ex- Amuq on the River ‘Harts. ma“; in be the target soon of ii ‘ '—_""_‘“"T-'_' Jgmnese lnviislon thrust. ‘he ‘Hole 'a ic - sAo nous-compo Imwliam‘ °’ ‘"“ OEAMLING. Gunner Robert Amutrozii homo on leave children. Ftzbert. t, 4. were drowned sewage worh. It EnJnd - (C?) i“ Olihil WWII for defence in Pacific. rein- eflllid-S East Indies satin-day and the government weighed the flue-t- Hon of culling home Aussie airmen from Britain to F!" in m! Ullmd Rgtions defence of the southwest lied cause was stressed 11v if?" téfunenf-aiors who sillfl its ret.n~ lion would shorten the Paulie cmi- nlct by two 31""- . “Jiivn can be defended :1 1150;“ and bombers arrive in tme. .. _ one observer. "Manpower Elsi), ‘t’ nestled. but NW5“ °°m° i ' CHARLOTTETBWN. CANADA, MON AY, FEBRUAl-{Y 16. 1942 into n Wor Situation Last Night %‘I__ Ll (B). Ku-nq; L gmgpgoiw, Associated Press War Analyst) The struggle unfolds an ever blesker picture to allied eyes every- where except along the blood-‘ cliched snows of the Nazi-Russian front. Disaster itfier disaster has stalked allied arms from North Africa to the southwest Pacific. Yet there are some allied mghlightl to relieve the gloomy scene. aside from developments in Russia. Fighting Hollander; stand pledged anew, despite toppling of Bri- tish Singapore. to fight to the end for their spice islands, and to do- stroy what they cannot protect. MacArthur‘; giillant band of Am- oricisn-Flllplno warriors battles on, still it gliiing thorn in the path of the Japanese victory march. A belated offlclol disclosure of dam- age wrought by the United Stntes Pacific fleet to Jnpsnese Sen out- posts in the Marshall and Gilbert islands shows that operation wu the most serious counter blow yet struck at Japan except in Macossar Strait. O I t Q There is one other less sinister facet to the war picture. In Libya the counter attack oi RornmcPs reinforced legions has been halted short of Tobruk. The latest of the allied ‘disaster; can not yet be assessed. Full significance of the daring Nazi stroke which slipped three powerful and dangerous warships away from Brrst through Britain's watch- mi-tlie-Channel at Dover Strait depends on the use Hitler has planned for them. Their successful dash for hundreds o! miles along England's own 7161""? manned coast has sent new waves of invasion apprehension over British minds. They must weigh that equation anew, t. t t t if a veritable German battlefleet screened by the Nazi sir force can run the channel for 750 miles from Brest to Hellgoland, the 670551"! 0f iis ZZ-mile narrows by a Nazi invading host certainly is not impossible. llow the passage of Dover Strait against British sea, air and c°"§!"l_ him“? power could have been achieved passes understanding. Britain has been at war more than two years with her first con- cern i\i\i'fl)'5 centred on ill‘|' channel defences. That the British hull- d"? "mid h? 0511B!"- flfllinz on his own front stoop in such circiim. stitnces is difficult to explain on any thesis. lRuss i uhmTroops “W013” Meet F resh" Nazis Moscow tells of SLO-mile advance in one sector. (By Erldv (Tfllinrirr. Associated Press Stuff “lritcrl MOSCOW]. Ffb. l5~-fAl'-'\-Rus- nlau iYOCDs driving against en- ircvirhrd positions of the German I I Report British I I nriuv have come lri contact with $33..i§‘?§$"‘2.§“§.3€2§° alélvahfii? front the front Flfllfi In manv sectors. Russnii troops basic 'T"nr oozunuauiquc is- Snvlsf. bureau 0f lu- are eonfronllnz Gcrninriws ivliilrr lino. l (‘Hll.\'(il(l.\'fi. Fol». il.)"’iA") ' ‘l "i Gcrmm‘ will“ —-Fivc thous-nd troops of the “m” _~”"°m,"5 ‘with suircnilcrcd llcn" Kora" ;~_-..r- mrcwll-‘g m m“)? rison - including Cllllflfliilll frsi reserves. The communique suld seven Ger- m.iii plaid": were Sllfll clown yester- tl'00pS-—l1l‘0 living in an intern- ment ciimp at Kowloon uidcr primitive conditions and with- out proper food, Arnold Voilgiit of the international Friends’ Mission reported today. Vaughi is supervising expen- diture oi‘ American relief funds rlor lll‘lll“ll‘lrv the lntul for the first 14 d w: cf Februaijv lo 269 against 83 lost bv illf‘ Russians. Three Ger- iuon plane: were shot down "near Maseru” today. rThc BBC broadcast a Slock- in China. holm dispatch saying soviet forces "As the troops marched past (lilvlug through White Russia tho Kowloon Y.M.C.A. thcY bogged for water." Vauglit said. "Pccple who run to iii-f! "W!" some were driven away by the Japanese who threatened them with boyonets. "in oainp they hail no water for two days. There were no latrines and the prisoner were \\'.l'(‘ within 72 miles of the old Polish frcollci‘ mid the Vllnu dis- trict. Oll the southeast frontier of Lithuania.) Dr. Dafpe Quits As Qllllits’ ljhysiiliail not given any tools to make _——- them. Officers and men were put together and no coni- TORONTO, Feb. 15--<CP)——Dr. Allan Roy Dafocls association with ihc Dionne quiiituplcls since the dov of their memorable birth nearly eight years ago is ending. The little counlrv doctor whose fame grew with that of the babics has submitt- ed his‘ resignation as the qulnll physician to Premier Hepburn. Premier Hepburn siild Dr. municmlun was nliowed with the Jiipariese general. "They had only two bowls of poorly-cooked rice a day with nothing also. There was only one water faucet for the entire camp and no way to boll irat- er. In the first ll days 200 cases of dysentery were re- foe's position "lliLS been made al- ported." most impossible BIL reason of the vpugm “u! fltquggnfl. 0| (not that the chll ‘(Ell sire not til- Chinese no leaving l-ioiig lowed to speak English. Altliouizh Kong every d“ (or [Mk o; there were other factors this Will the chief reason for the docLors resignation. Mr. Hepburn added. Dr. Dame's comment from his Callnndei" home. near the nursery food. European nflil-cnlnbnianig confined in concentration camps are allowed out only two hours n day and givrn little food. he that bears his name imd where the dwmd‘ "hi: "n": ..‘*"r“.r:n°i. d. s." monisa rier r e - onne farm home May 2B. 1034. was Flfisideéktgiwlggtefi: brief. “l feel my period of useful- ness ls over," the doctor sold. "l hope I have done it good job." Mr. Hepburn said he would make I. public statement in the legislat- ure when he receives an answer in a letter to Olive. Dionne. the qulnts’ father, asking for his views. east English coast tonight, drop- ping explosives at several polnm. several person; were lnjurid in on: village where btilfdlngp were damagrd. Ole enemy bomber was destroy- ed, it was sold uiithoitfailvely. who to“ ls CANADA M THE All PURPOSE FLOUR ANDS or JAP i iYe Bqmbers Churchill To 15.000 Victory Bond Salesman» 0o into action UITAWA. Feb. l5 --(CP) — Fif- teen thousand vlcwry bond salea- men tomorrow morning munch 1 nation-trifle drive aimed a raising at least 56.00.000.000 to help meet Canada's war blll. Already many organizations. business firms and individuals hove earmarked funds for subscription to this second victory loan and an encouraging first-day response is anticipated, said national loan headquarters. “Immediate goal of the three- iveek drive is to borrow from Ca- nadians s. war chest of at least t600.000.000." headquarters sold ln I. statement. "But 1t ls officially hoped that. aclual returns from the appeal will pass the nominal ob- jective by i1 sizable margin.” Tonight. G. W. Spinney. chairman of the notional war finance com- mittee which ls directing the drive. expressed confidence 1n success of the drive. "because I am sure the spirit of Canadians will respond to the challenge and the need con- fronting them." Inquest opens Into death At Georgetown The adjourned inquest into the death of Mrs. James MacDonald, 67-year-old resident of Georgetown Royalty, will be resumed next Fri- day. MtswMacDontsld Was- found dead on the side of the road lead- ing lo Newport. about two miles from her home. Friday morning. The aged lady had been in ill health for several years who her sight, was badly impaired. Police said .~,| 1e had protested when her sou. Emmett, ivsiited to take a horse out- of the stable Thursday evening. However, the boy hitched the ‘norrc nurl lcfl to drive a friend tn Launching. It is believed that the woman storied on foot after him without. his knowledge. When it tivas found that she was missing from her home the next morning a. scorch was stuff/Ed. Nfr. Albert King and it companion found the body along the side of the road about 9.30 Friday morning vrlien they were on their way lo cut ice. The woman was dead. Royal Canadian Mounled Police at, Montague were nol-lll-"d of her disappearmicecar- llor 1n the morning by one of her soils. When found. the woman was lightly clad. Dr. A. KPlllKWiy of Gcorgeloivn testified at the inquest before Monzislriiln L. B. Molllsh that in his opinion she had died from shock and exposure or probably ex- haustion. She had left her home uboizl 6J5 Thursday evening. Other ltucsscs lo testify were: Two sous of the deceased. Emmett and Frank, Albert King mid hi5 companion (whose name was not a.- vsilulifo last. night.) Tm forcmmi of flu- jury ivas Mr. Arthur Jenkins- Gcorizcloyrii. Tlic (incensed is also survived by a daughter, l/lav. in.i‘.ie United Slates. Her husbnn. predeceased her. 13.21.20" Singapore ’s Believe many Troops successfully evacuated from Island; Security reasons forbid full story. (By Russell C. Lamlstrom. Assoc- iated Press Staff Writ") IiONDON, Fob. 16~-(Moiidii_y)— (APl-Tlie detailed story of Sing- almm"; dying gasps remained un- told in this Eimpirc capital today after Prime Munster Churchill's brief announcement that the once mighty sywmbol of British strength lmd fallen to the Jnfiancse. How it fell-Jay surrender otherwise-remained unknown. Mr. Churchill's own grim an- nouncement, without lmpllflcution, 1,15; night confirmed Japanese trumpelings earlier in the day that heroic British defenders had yield- ed the stronghold into which Bri- tain had poured so much money, talent and development. In measured, sommbre words he cove the bore news a row moments bifore terminating his "black Bun- ilay" broadcast w the world. "sings-pore has fallen." he sold briefly. "I speak to you all under the shadow of a heavy and far- rciiichlng military defeat.” A few breaths later he added: "All the Malay peninsula has been overrun." That was all. Bill. slngupore was written off- 0f oly temporarily in the optimistic replied by some ih iallrlcatlons of many-as Britain's was m make a report lo ripest humiliation and s blow of i-st magnitude to the United Ns- lions. Th0 ltlllit of Untold Of blood and flniatorlnthewevk. MAXI M8 OIL MERE MAN Ila prnyeth best him lot-viii ii. i~ all thing-s both great and Slllllii, ..___a _ ..__ . a Anniinl Subscription Delivered, $5.00 u! Illlt P. I- IqHDi-H Io other Provinces Ind Lin t’) iii E ‘i A‘! r: :1 .1 ‘~' . 7 rs . , . t; . ~ Of Loss In Tat? On War Situatio i. Declares faith in ultimate victory is unclouded; Lack of unity only thing which can bring defeat notv With United States in conflit. LONDON. Feb. 15-—(CP)-—Prime Minister LTliurcliill announced grimly tonight the fall of Singapore. siilil it was _a “heavy and far-reaching military defeat," and iii a stirring plea for ‘the life of his Government dcclurcil iilfli. now with the United States in the war "we are no longer alone.” Broadcasting to the world in a 24-minute speech tho Prime Minister answered rising criticism of his. cabinet {saith the declaration that his policies _had been hosed on e United States entry into the conflict, that “it is whzit I have dreamed of, aimed at and worked for, and now it has come to pass.” l “r3 Chlnlclnn dld no‘ nmflfio" ti": “C106 0i the German battleships Gueisriiau and Scharnhorst and [he crui-er [Hipp- lgugen through British home waters last Thursday, a flooring of hmalns chenshed "a PQWQY. Which with defeats in the Pacific, ad raided fueito the grousmg against his Cflfiffimqnt ,2 made it ‘plainhhait’ neither today's fall of Sinmpqn m" Iapanspther quick victories could cloud his faith in Cl/Evfllvql allied victory. i ‘i Immediate reaction to the speech vrzig that M, (‘l ,,._ 1;“ h,‘ spoken well but had left much unsaid. I l i k it "The British public sees eye to eye with him aim... .1“ KR.“ . ,, , . . . AmFUCE" any. said one commentator. “But that srill docs not exp, m" ti" kfalaYan disaster and the channel clriqiaii. “by. .11 their dreadful implications." l I A U Mr. Churchill spoke in am earnest uneruotioual voice O ' - i . mil. lhidmdw» Whm he ‘Pfikflytbe tense ltmtisphere hm preamplifier-O."- en by the news of the disaster 1n the Far East, i-rpei-c. Inst week's channel battle and evil Middle East. LONDON. Feb. 15—(AP)-—Follow- lmz 1s the text of Prime lVLinlswr Churchill's broadcast Sunday night: Nearly six months have passed since at the end of August I made Local man given §d..biii’§.-‘i§§i.° ijtirigtlllyleigffiiltlv digiliil H ffz" while looking back QYCI‘ mismiiiiif- Ty G I i e year of struggle for life-for at is zvhat it lliast blfen and wheat {lg is—- o see W13. as a ne our fortunes and to our Iiarxigsoects. DrMg§1TREAL' F)?“ l5 “(C)” At that time. in August. I had the ~ “I11 118v E. Silniili o! Wuuvnr- pleasure of meeting the President of Pres ‘MB; ‘h? Lmvm l)’ ‘if Al the United States and drawing up ‘Qbfl. W11§ lt-P-i‘ Mil tun. ' with him ii declaration of British 410m of the 11211.10‘ ~ and American policy which has bc- Young Men's Clirl come known to the world as the Al- at, the condudmg s lantic charter. We also said a num- annual mwlgng her of other things about the war. qoy G, w‘ 3mm o. “Oh. some of which have had rin lmporl- my. Mcwmnm, u, ‘\ imt influence on its course. D_ i Bound‘) 0°, C‘, 1'11: nf portents of ihc fiijir in rile Combatant and Benevolent Neutral E- I" ‘WW3 ‘Win94 llffiSlilOlltS. In those days we met on fhe DF- H- L. Kermit" terms of ii hard-pressed COlTllJPlLlllf iviis iwv-ehczcii r. . 1 see-kind assistance from ii grout Dr. N.A..\f. \ful£~ii' friend who was, however. only s 101i and J. f’! 3.1 l; benevolent. ncutrnl. In those (luvs \v.._,-._n.jns;(.r I; i; the Germans seemed in be learner: “hum. ms“ “e _ the Russian iirmlr-s to plcrcs ai (mm Com“. striding on with grmvlno momciif- ‘ um to Ifllillilfild. to Nioscoiv. to Roslov and oven farther into the heart of Rumlri. If was tliouolil a very drirliiiz as- sertion when the President declared that. tho Russian armies would hold out until winter. You um‘; sin" _ililli milltmyv men of all rouiifrios. ‘il'l(‘l1(l. foe and neutral alike. were very "Col _::_—J Eontlniied - onp e7, Capture found ample phrasing in morning papers and in public and private discussloios. Reliable sources the lack of lnftnnittlon of Sing- apore's downfall, said: “Nothing libs been allowed out except the triumphant Japmese version, but no doubt there has been s. suc- cessful evacuation of many troops." "For security" reasons there can be no speculation on that." one‘ informant sold. l~ Mr. Churcliillfls statement “other dnngcrs gather about us out there" gave a. clue to his ob- vlous omissions. Authoritative quarters here sold ‘they lino no details from Singapore and expected none. The singapore radio was on the air to the endnone of!’ its liilst _ _ . nounoemrrnts te ng o tie nvn - , l, m; an stabbing closer and i-‘oscr to the ““~Y;,l,’f,g§1, glfflirall‘ r d heart of Singapore city- p“ ‘ ' Much as the Tokyo W05" we" discounted. ln allied circles there tendency early wile!’ W M“ commenting on TORONTO‘ “b. H ‘ W: V m Mliilum and mixiiiiuiii lures : Dawson Victoria Edmonton Regina “lllllilhflg Tcrou‘. n that Ottawa Alon 1 n-al Boston Bynopsifl M‘ G.\.,__-...-i l,» in ~wv t.‘ iileh fido this mornlnc n’. 1155 and lbtfittlll n! H41. was I i 1 , Po - - Sun so s Hus aft noon of out) 0am me emmlia liierslortilergi glil- and rwisuomorrots’ tnorifrc: n! 0.38 render‘ M’ 1e“ 8e First quarter morm. Fr‘). '22» 10.4" m)?’ criticisms that Mr. Churflllll P- m . . . mpthg, have fold more wllhoiu mi- Siimmcrswic lilo 1B mmulcs later dagger.“ me allied cause lt was than Chnrlotlctown. at his firs‘. iluty _ BORDEN — CAPE TORMENTINE the If ruse SERWCE of Conunons. Political 0hr i-vcrs “new; the exohnellen WWW Lens Borden 9.25 sin. L00 rm. come in full when Colnlfllml "196" Leue Cups Tormentlnc 11.00 MM I.” PM.