OIL MAXIMG MERE MAN q-ii A Clbfi they "h" oer!"- 1;‘.,,‘".i“’;.':.‘°r..‘li“i..‘ii‘€.'3 The Pe (A I "Mttetnwll Gnu w“ Guardian- Illl Iorulnl I“ §IIITISH azis Try Use Soviets To u”, ‘two Coutu- dfll “I'l- opIe's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew “WI!- He who wishes to secure the good of other: had already secured his MAXIMS 017A. MERE MAN Plan cnaaaorrarowu, CANA-IJA, SATURDAOI’, JANUARYHII, LAUNCH TERRIFIC IJAYLIGI-IT AIR ATTACKS Hepburn favors Cpcn discussion 0n Sirois report TORONTO. Jan. 10.—(OP)—PI\I AgainstBlockacle Huge grain agreement is repOYlICd; Russia seeking Supplies in Argentina. Minimum price For Butter, is Announcement IDNDON. Ont, Jan. Ho“, J, G. ciardiner ulcr oi Auricuitui . that nuiuinuni prices for ¥mdemne<l by H- Ontario farmers. lion. P. M. De ltier of Aariculture. said "(is I interpret Mr. bearing an undue burden gmsiclei ll llid bacon production and audience which interrupted because farmers would 0t tilned anv extra profit f tomcdian dies In Hotel room -Ioe Pennrr, comedian iiaiic and screen. died in twm here lute today. The inn-maker who made “wannsr buy a duck?" a gag the nation over‘ lull been appearing in ‘.Yokel Boy“ ere Dciiiriv Coroner Bernard Diiilflll Ialii lust conclusions were that a heart attack caused death. Peuncr was found dead bed bv his wife, Dulzan said adding that lrc had been aslecp lire hours." Coroner Dugan said it was “quite apparent“ Pcnncr had died pence- llllll‘ in his sleep. The comedian was born town near Budapest 35 years ago. ills real nanrc was Pinter. liar-ZS Years g Ago Today (B! The Canadian Press) ISM-Herbert Samuel dllltecfittl Sir John Sinon as Brit- JAN. ll bli Home Secretary. F‘ren llnilvd on the island oi’ the l0lllall Sea. Russian 0i Iiuki: h Armenia began. JAN. l2. Him-Entcnte Allies blew "It rniliviry bridge at 3-star. t‘llil.ll Turkish Ethan comm nfcatlons l teats Coming Ev __.o_. "Moonlight pirate 0.-(CP) - , Federal Min- dIscLosed today butter will u; set in the summer months. and ‘may urteiwvard heard such act-ion H. Hannam, ronto as insufficient aid v-rl-ncr made the disclosure (y: opening a. conference wan. Ontario Min- Gardlner, if you can prove to him that you are (its llis government will give it full ill. ll. l . GllIdlllCI‘ reviewed the Ilieder- vernurcuts agreements Britain in connection with cheese ruently that a maximum price for butter had been set last December had been allowed to increase PHILADELPHIA Jan. 10% -—(AP) O Cett-ln 1e, capital of 0. to the of sacri- with told the him fre- have ob- the price radio. his hotel .- in his "tour or Ina small ch t/r Corfu n invasion Demit- afd Bul- Aiis trla ns ents supply her with great stocks Jromwthe mid-December equivalent By The Canadian Press A double-barrelled set-up whereby Russia may become a vast medium in an attempt to feed warring Ger- mnny In the face of the British sea Electrode appeared in prospect to- KY. Germany announced yesterday that Soviet Russia has agreed ! o Russian grain and other materials under a new and bigger trade agreement. A stiort time later informed sources in Birenos Alres said aRus. slan trade delegation is en route to negotiate a “giant” trade deal main- 1y based on the export of Argentine 2min to Russia. Russia already has been accused by Britain of trans-shipping to Germany cotton and other war ma- terials obtained in the western hem- isphere bv Way of the Pacific Ocean. A dispatch from Vichy. France. said food shortage in both German- occupied France and the unoccupi- ed zone lind become a. major politi- cal football between the two sec- tlons, with the German-controlled press in Paris compluinintz of the lack of aid from the unoccupied zone, and. government. officials in the latter area blaming the Bzritish blockade. L Germany's Axis partner. Italy. al- so feeling the pinch of shortages, ordered u census of essential food stocks to provide a basis for further rationing. In Erie Sean Lemass, Minister of Supply, urged farmers to double their wheat production after ex- pressing fear that Irish grain re- sources would be exhausted before the 1941 harvest. Portuguese authorities were urg- ed to distribute hot drinks to the poor in Lisbon because of unusual cold weather there. and one news. paper quoted the police as promis- ing to distribute food daily in order to stamp out beugary. Britons already lnul been fold this week they nave to choose be- tween steuks and victories ivhen a new meat ration cut the allotment of 47 cents‘ worth a person to 23 cents’ worth. Further sharp Reduction in mler Hepburn today declared that all discussions and deliberations on the Rowell-Sirois report at Ottawa next week should be "right cut m the front yard and not behind clos- ed doors." Tire Premier added that the con- ference was “in federal hands" and that he had not been informed whether the sessions would be open 011 in private. “Or how private they will be.” He would not say whether he would present a formal request for open sessions. British strike Initial blow Against Tobruk By ERIC B1610 Associated Press Staff Writer CAIRO. Jan. io-(Api-Brltaln’; Canadian Offic ers Decorated Approves Sirois Recommendations Involving Labor 1941 1‘_- 12 PAGES 8'1‘. THOMAS, Ont. Jan. tOPr-Labor Minister McLai-ty re- commended tonight that proposals of the Rowell-Sirols Commission lnvolvin the Department of Lab- or shou d be ut into effect. Annual Subscription Del-fund. ll-00. Q lulh PJJ». “.00! Ollmdn and 0.1. JIM) 50 Bombers, 500 Fighters Blast Nazi Territory Only few enemy-fighters try Two Canadian soldiers recently decorated for exceptional bravery I1" "Pt- D- W_- Cunnlnxi-on (LEFT) of Cclsary. and Lieut. J. M. s. Patton of Ilrimrlton. The two men. at the risk 9f their own lives, re. mow-d a tanc bomb from a factory, saved It from probable destrue. tluri, and kept its war production uni-unpaired. They received the Gwrtre Cross "for conspicuous bravery In carrying out dangerous duties." By far the argest of these pro- posals was that the Fedcral Gov- ernment should take over the problem or locking after all em- ployable unemployed, Mr. McLarty said in an address at a dinner given i_n his honor here tonight. "Subject to the acceptance by the various provinces of the fin- ancial condi-t ans necessarily pre- ceding the adoptlon of the report," he said, "I believe it desirable that the Dominion Government should absorb this burden. “I do so because I believe the provinces and municipalities gen- erally are unable to shoulder it; and that the Dominion has ow- ers of taxation wider than either and these wers must be exer- cised lf the burden is to be borne." One Definite Step l He said the Dominion already had taken one definite step in this regard by enacting the Un- batteries in Libya. shelled Italian- held Tobruk todav 1n the initial ow of an attack attverned after that which reduced Nearly cut off b an encircling movement of Brl mechanized units Tobruk was rapidly being sur- rounded bv British land forces while its perimetre of outer defences was battered by artillery rolled into place from Bardia. The British command, stating it would take some time to bring up full siege stremzth. Said it was too early to speak of an assault. towru-if the ERNIE! pattern is followed-faces not only a heavy attack from land but severe bombinz from the air and strolling from the sea. Such a triple offensive reduced B11411 1H 18 days and resulted in the capltulation of its garrison of more than 30,000 soldiers. Tonight the Middle East com- mand announced that during last night and early today “several tons" of bombs were dropped on Italian naval vessels in harbor at Messina. Sicily. and on wnarves. docks. cll storage plants, and an army mar- shalling centre. One “stv-"k" -—-a series-of bombs fell across Fascist cruisers, but ob- servation or the damage was dc». Furious Steamer with ~P.E.I. Potatoes scribed as impossible because of the. heavy’ smoke screen thrown up by’. the vessels. l Ebiplosiona and fires bccuried in the WlIGIVOS. near a drydock andl close to an oil plant. l In a sector far from the Libyan front! British hind forces were l'€-. ported advancing almost at will acres Italys African empire. Some 2.500 miles to the southeast. ihe British general headquarters re- ported that troops of the South Af- ‘ rican army had recaptured Buna,ln the Moynle sector of Kenya. which the Itaiiairs have held for months. Butter stocks OTTAWA. Jan. IO-(CPI-Furth- er sharp reduction in the amount of butter in Canada was reported today by the Dominion Bureau o! Start stics. Creamery buttcr held in cold Storage Jan. 1 totalled 314394.152 pounds. the Bureau said in its monthly report on cold storage holdings, compared with 42.279.- 476 pounds last. Dec, 1 and 41.631,- 24 pounds at Jan. 1 lost your. The reduction in the month end- 0110000 pounds. The Bureau's report came onl e. fortnight aftir the wartime P ces and Trade Board advised Canad- lans to eat less butter and Denied butler Prices across the country at a level which meant a reduction of about a conlt a pound ln the pre- vailins price. One govcrnmrnt spokesman said tonight that while the reduction was heavy. yct December produc- tizn cf butter in Canada was about 360.030 pCilhds higher than Iu R- oe-mbei‘. i989. Graham's RM "mk "mlllllt. Excellent ice. 11-220. n ‘C Jmmcela Prlfeasant ML .1“ - not fine, Grove Hell followl alt! of Red Cross. L-zl . "Hoe (W rink, m, Road Hunter River key tonight at New Glas- vs. Glas- 11-218. "Ulla Shipping Olub loading Milllfllll’ altenr , J uary it. w. D. s... some" Is-Ilfl-l-ll-Ill. In m9 Annual Meetina of the 21km"? Dairyimr 6b.. will be nelc e h ll i waAi§¥$%u#%fi§§@ II-IBO-l-ll-Sl. l-Iontw "mm! District I.» o. L. meets in January We Rm . Ui . at 2 p. M. "ii. c. rllleiiee. Dis- Secretary, L. O. L. meets "Cleluud District harm" Arthur Indira. Crapaud. runfigv 14in at 2 o'clock sharp. " »- lltrllil. 39911151’! L-lill-l-B-ll. MR c A _"*‘“‘_“ ‘ - ~ F‘. Recruits wanted- Em‘ l-Ieui. Molyneaux at cox . 1a,...- sWri-s. Monday. 1am and h ~ ilv Hill. recelvlnu applications L-ZOC-l-Il-il. recruits of Sourls and vlcinllv Is-i47-l-II-3l. International At A Glance (By The Canadian Pres!) LONDON — Raiders hit at south coast; RJLF. In mightiest daylight offensive strlkesht wlde- area. in occupied France. MOSCOW — Russia sign: new series nl trade treubes wit-h NBIIQ; said to Involve large sum. not grain shipments. WASHINGTON - Roosevelt asks special powers to give vast add t0 Britain. canto - Britain's trays butter- Chu hill confers with 1h limp- ltlnsfcllcoeevelfs special eglnsu y- ATIIENS Klleuru. gate 1n Vnlone. falls to Greeks. uorvrortrvwriorv norm nuns mos. msland Mo?) planes. frrm confirmed W thn B —+ lug Jan. 1 amounted to almost 9.-_ Ies shell Tobruk: It. A. l‘. bomb! mad-one leading to Beret and warships at Meulnl. Elclly- Durazzo. the other to Valona. DONDON’ -- Prime Minister \ strategic ’ e m1 r 1mm‘ ". tt " kc wa or nemv n w" m the rmlfl of iggvschool l m], 181 Eton Co CR0 s were C IR a In between there were reports that tribesmcn in Italian conquered Ethiopia were attacking airdromes and cutting tlic Italian lines of sup- ply to the Kenya sector. Creeks Toward port 0f Valona ATHENS. Jan. l0—(AlP)—While Greeks at hcme rejoiced in tli streets c-ver fresh vzotries in Al- bania the forces at the front sent back word they had pushed past captured Klisura toward Velma- last Important pcrt in southern Albania stilt held by the Italians. 5 With the spearhead of the Greek drive in the KliSura sector only‘ about 3t) miles from Valcna. Ital- ian trrcips were sold to be in dis- orderly retreat. The Greeks an- nounced the captiure of prisoners and material including many trench mortars. but said they had no time to count. them. y As a result of Klisurahi fall. mil- itary observers predicted the Ital- I ians probably will be forced to a- ‘ bgndgn Topolenl, 15 miles west of Kllsura on the WM’ l0 V510"!- The Greeks met s stubborn re- sistance at Kllsnira and said the Italians apparently attached con- sldreable military importance to the town for they brweht replace- ments and Installed them in Dre- red positions on the Kllwe ligights. Greek cmnmuniques related the capture of height after height- many cf them by bayonet-wielding trozps. in the rims attack. Today the fall crl’ the town and the heilhts was orfflcially announced. If, was a few miles beyond XII-sure In the direction of Beret that the Italians were withdrawing in dis- order. Kllsura stands at a GPOSS- Q ‘BOSTON. Jan. itl-UIPI-Geome H. Blair. '78. Boston Globe cartoon- Iot. and sketch artist for ncarl 50 years, died tqday at hi5 ROX I'll CARTOONIST! PASSES r Badly battered NEW YORK. Jan. 10 —-(AP) - The 32-year-old Canadian freighter Colonv Trader limped into port to- day for repairs after battling a North Atlantic gale for three (lays. , En route frcrn Prince Edward Is- rlrmd to Havana. Cuba, with a cargo lof potatoes. the BBB-ton freighter Iran Into the gale 800 miles east of New York. Water flooded her engine room. causing her to list, the chief mate broke two ribs trying to batten down a hatch and a seuman developed pn-cirmonla. Cap. John McGrady put in here for repairs. (The Colony Trader sailed from Sonris. P.E.I. carrying A cargo of 12.050 lfiO-nounil bags of seed pota- toes for Havana. The shipment was mode by Simmons and ltlncFar- lane. produce dealers or! Freetown, P.E.I. who loaded the boat. The steamer. which was formerly named the "SS. Sambro." Is well known in these parts Sire made three trips from this province last yen‘ carrying cnrnocs of potatoes. 'I'lio captain. John McGrady. made many acquaintances in Island ports dirrlnz his visits here.) iiHoted British Artist dies KILMAG-ANNY.‘ Kilkenney. Eire. Jan. lQ——kCP)—~S‘.I' John Lavery. a4. nfitid British pointer. who painted famous portraits of mem- bers of the Royal Family, and oc- cupied a dominant place in Brltlfih art. for years. died here today. President of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters since 1932 and holder <f mItYlY high Europe“ honors, Sir John had been livinfl here at the home od his step- daughter. Mrs. John Ntcmery. He was knighted in 1918. Born in Belfast he stirdled In London" Glas- gow and Paris, and his pictures are ‘to be found in galleries throughout- the w:rld. HELMETS WITH WAGES LONDON —(CPI —-'I'he Roe/d Haulage Central Wares Board will ask the Minister of Labor to make an order lncreasinir the wages of road haulage workers. They will $30 ANAUA hzmc. I-Io was born in Truro, N.S.. undl was a graduate of Dalhousie Unl- verslty, Halifax. Hr leaves tats wt- dow, Marl :1 L. Blair. and a. semi John K. Bil-Ir. or Stevenson. All amr-fBritish South Coast Town Under Many casualties feared; London free of raiders. Attack LONDON“ Jan. Il-(Saturday) -(CP)-Hundreds of high-explos- ive and incendiary bombs were rained on a south coast town last night and early today In a furious German air attack. The British Press Association said many casualties were feared. Six churches. several theatres and The area raided included re i- dential districts. a number of r- sons being rendered homeless. An attempt to stage a fire-raid on the town was frustrated early last night by Royal Air Force fighter planes. Then a second and larger wave droned in from the sea some time later under more favourable attacking conditions and "smothered" the town with lncendlaries and explosives. One high explosive bomb fell directly on an air raid precautions post. blasting it to bits. Bombs fell in a residential dis- trlct of a south coast town, but no casualties were reported. Other Nazi lanes were reported over a town n western England. in the vicinity of Liverpool, and in South Wales. French ship To try voyage i-With Beef Cargo BUENOS AIRES. Arizcntina. Jan. i0.—rAP)—'I‘Iie {1.000-ton French uiercliantman Mendoza. partly load- ed with beef, sailed today for Mon- icvideo to complete its canto for what. appeared to be the first at- tempt by a French shin to reach Ircme from this countrv since the German conquest of France. Informed sources. speculating over the Mendozafs pans. said the Brit- ish consul had not been ask <1 for iravicerts (navigation certlfica es i0 permit pas-sage of the British block- ade). Questioned last week when the French government. bought 1.000 tons of frozen Argentine beef and sought to purubasc an additional 4.000 tons. Inuls de Roblen. the French Ambassador. said: "I regret I am unable to any nothing." Dnlomatic sources were puzzled bv the preparations In view of what they called a virtual certainty that. British warships would seine the merchantman as soon as it was on the hlrrh seas in umrpllnnce with blockade plans. The Free French committee chm"!!- ad the saillrur preparations were German-Inspired to "create a fresh also ask that employers be requir- ed to supply steel helmets. m °° Bl. Incident’ between Britain and n . employment Insurance Act. If the] Rowell-Sirois report were adopt-ed. it also would have to provide un- employment assistance. “It realizes that these steps are desirable as a wartime measure and also should be effective In cush- lOIllIIt! the shock under post-war conditions.” Mr. McLartv said. In_ his discussions of the Rowell- Slrois report. Mr McLai-ty refer- red t0 the recommendation that the Federal Government be given the right to enact a nation-wide measure of minimum wages and maximum hours. "Viewing danada as a whole and not as nine countries. would it not, 1 ask. desirable that. there should be some measure of uni- formity in both mlnimiim wages and in the hours of labor?" he said. 'I'he commission also recom- mended the Federal Government should be given the right to nego- tiate all indirstrial disputes. At present the Canadian Gov- ernment power was confined to transportation. utilities. mining and such indirstrles as have re- ceived war orders. He pointed out it has "no powers over industries that. have not received war orders a number of buglnegs premses _-\vl1ich industries comprise a were fgpgrtgd damaged, _1arge portion of our industrial Communications facilities also suffered (Continued on page 11, Col 3) Churchill Confers with Harry Hopkins IJONDO Minister Churchill today conferred for a long time over a luncheon table at 10 DOVJIIIIIQ Street with Harry Hopkins, President Roose- velt‘s personal envoy to Britain, to start ivliat Hopkins later described as discussions on "matters of mu- tual urgency to our two countries.” To the press the American em- lssary predicted that United States production of war materials would reach its peak in approximately another your, and declared flatly: "1 have no misgivings about the outcome of this war. . there is going to be a united and altogether successive effort in the production of defence materials to be tised by ourselves, Great Britain, Greece ";-—" and China." assault on R.A.F. Bomb- ers’ escort; British Coast rocks from blasts on u German side of By George Tait Associated Press Staff Writer LONDON. Jim. 10 —-(AP) —1.'n the mightiest daylight offensive ever loosed by tlic Royal Air Force, 50 British bombers and a swarm oi’ 500 fighter planes delivered a ground-shaking assault today over 1.000 square miles of northwestern France. The air ministry itself announc- ed in general terms merely that more than 100 fighters were involv- ed. but unofficial observers of this great flPllDlI said the fighters out- numbered tlic bombers by t0 to l. Tilllfy strruck at the Channel strait. areas of Calais and Boulozne and elsewhere upon the bases of the Nazi invasion effort. sweeping the German positions with bombs LONDON. Jan. IO-(CPI- Germany and Italy bear many traces today o-f the destruction wrought b1: Royal Air Force bombers lll uric-easing attacks delivered through the last eight months of ill-IO. In that peild lzhe RAF. made nearly 5.000 sortie-s on targets stretching from the Channel ports to the Doclecanese Islands. Almost. 4.000 of tfnern have been launched against Germany and objert-ivcs in German-occupied t-crritoriy. German airdronies were blast- ed 1.123 t-imcs. On rail. road and trailer communications there o'er-e 683 raids. Large scale nt- tacks on docks. shipyards and tories in Germany were the tar- sct of Britairvs bombers 260 times. handicapping the Reich's attempt. to replace the losses in- flicted on hvr air force by the R.A.F.’s fighter‘ pilots. ever to take off from Britain. Three of the few German planes which rose to challenge the raid- ers were shot down. the air ministry Channel. l Revolt within Italy shortly, Is declaration AN EAST coAsT CANA- DIAN PORT, Jan. 10—-tC_I’l—- A revolution within Italy in u "very short time" wag predict- edtonight by Antoni Badznyski representative of the Polish ministry of finance in London, ls he left for Ottawa after ur- rlving here from England. He said he based diction on "recent British suc- cesses in Africa and Greek sun- cesses in Albania, coupled with the fact the Italian people a: a nation do not want war.” Only one man in Italy want- ed Mar, “and that was Musso- -., III. "Britain will win out, and the British strength la growing lteadlly," he said. After his Ottawa. visit, Mr Badznyaki is to tour the united States and later South Am- erica. on a. mission which he did not disclose. The Polish official is a form- er Warsaw banker. He went to England after escaping from a Hungarian concentration camp after three weeks there following the fall of his coun- try. Whcn war broke out. he shimmm Iflllnflslgfffi 32¢; rpm-fie walla lieutenant In the Polish l Ziiderl rc en -es_ an Smas - BI’ iiié bloivs at the ‘invnsirn ports. Poland's p" ht new. he said. Aircraft and munltion fac- ll “most ptlul‘. Ninety pot cent of the people were in con- centration camps, and "one outstanding tragic figure II that education is denied the children." “When victory is won by Britain and her allies," he said, "Poland will arise greater than ever before and assume u; n BERNIE. Jan. 11 -- (Satur- day) - (AP) — Air raid alarm! in Borne and other cities in neutral Switzerland sirunded warnings shortly before 6 aJn. today (midnight AST Friday). said. and but a single British plane was lost - that on the return trip. For an hour, just at midday. Brit- ish explosives foil. Hits were ob- which were also assaulted by plnnes lserved irpon a series of airdromes- (Continued on page ll. Col 7t Would In presented Legislation Emitting Roosevelt. sweeping powers to fur Congress today and contained would permit repair of British ‘an Administration promptly laid plans to hurry opponents dmounced it as "streamlined declaration of the President. closely the advance given by ailmiirlslrtitloii qrinrii-rar. It would simply ailtliuriarc. nisli the sinews of will‘ to nations battling the warring axis powers was Introduced In the United States 0118 major surprise - a provision which ships in United States navy yards. l lc u t c mints it. through io final enactment. while uar" And began organizing for a supreme effort to defeat the measure or nar- row the powers It would confer on Aside from the provision affecting nan-v yards, the measure followed descriptions the Hwailiden-t I0 tum over we: mater- Repciir British Warships U. S. Ports Major surprise in sweeping bill to Congress yesterday. WASHINGTON. Jan. l0 —(APl—~ yials, on hand or" Pursitlceit lo lOl‘ this would the future. - hc ll\l\\I’!l\l could lllilkl‘ any HWTIIS. so far thought satisfactory. - (fongrcss Retains (fhcrk Congress would. hoivc vcr. a ronioronri- Tin‘ Prcsiriciii lions for the articles lo be scnt neutral: _ n rmini. of (‘Ollll‘O\'(‘I‘S_\‘. GNU lil Nye (Rep -N, I) l will A LOTTA CUYE-B Tl-uoiK IF A GIRL uei-ra BEAUTY ~ CLAY _- HER and machine-Kiln fire.‘ me ma“ ‘her rightful place amon from eight-gunned f liter craft democratic and Chris fan which formed the brrgcst escort thinking nations of the world.” ‘ I innuiactirrcrl in‘ .511 nations when contribute to (l0l(‘lli'i‘ of tho United Stairs. lie r or not. thr act would lift iriis of tho Johnson and lcr titan Chrrrlniioiorvrr. acts immcrlirttely became l Soiiiilor ' ' 72”‘ l . (Continued on page II. Col it i335‘ p, M, flORONTO, Jan. 10—rCP>-Min< imuni and maximum tcntyicrrriurcs: Drrnrson 4B 5 Victoria 46 54 I Edition 10D l3 34 Regzrin 2 16 WinuiPPS 4 fl Toroni o 2T 32 Oitcivrzr 14 2t) Mentrcrrl it; it! Quebec 14 11 Snlnt- Jvhn 15 29 ax l8 ttctoan 6 Halli [Charla FORECAST Maritime East: Strong winds and rgrrles with snow or part min. l 537K315 light to moderate snow cold wan. Hifili lick» t-lils morning at netaln 2 r y y 4 one rliock which Mr. Roosevelt (‘are- md m“ g‘ a 8’ 5 lrilly called atitiiiion to at a press‘, i "morrmr m onnng '7 37. n- l Pull moon Jun. l8. ‘PM am. I (‘AR FERRY SAILINGS it ‘Purine-nitric V08 is". 1h» weather has been. moderately cold in Ontario with in rnzrny ‘districts while in lire Prairip Pro- n‘ ‘vinccs it has lwon fir.‘ anti ltllltl in ‘ .hc .d. tl ‘ t" Sr‘»k.t payment was concerned. Wlllfll he 113120.33, “Jim gsliws§frlgtcxifi A “i; Manitoba and eastern Saskatche- 9 .45 Sim sols this attcrirmn at 4.30 ‘~‘\'°‘~_Il‘l rand rises Iirlvc to ask Conrzrcss for appropria- aft Strmmcrsidc (‘do ill minutes la)" Leaves Borden 945 AM. I00 PIM- LM-