MAXIM6 °’ “ MAXIMS MERE MAN 0' A MERE MAN The candle lighted in Palestine nearly two thousond years ago will never be Pill 0'39- E_.—%:,- can-lottcto Iurulng Guns-d.|Au,~l‘ouudod I uunzdiuu ‘two cents. M1. CI-IARLO,’i"l‘E"I‘(—)WN. CANADA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, Covers Prince Edward . Island Like the Dew \. .=:.'at'.>.a~:.+ws«.~.-.-.vr .. W-,,,, V Writers are the masters of words. and words any It my time become the masters of men. i939 i2 PAGES Auullll Subscription Delivered C6-C0 My Moll-P. IS. l. 14.00; Condo and I1. I. IN» FRENCH AND GER MAN’ PLANES lahlhl Phone upon I unis RR lllihllhlfi BRITISH NA VY DESTRO YS ENEMY U-B 0.4 TS IN Ell TTLE Nazis Ecleated E OETERRINEO TOMAINTAIN SOPPLYEINE Large Quantities Of ll.D.M.P. To Search For .Airplane CALEDONIA. N. 8.. Sept. 15 -— (CP) — Royal Canadian Mounted Police from Liverpool will enter the woods near this Queens County villu c tomorrow (leyman Shlntpents iizrzfsrclg full; on arplane re- S(’lZed Admiralty .l1’.uSc:‘é1;|y.]0 “I ave crashed last Reveals scan til: ;lnii§,erfslvalidgd 3:: wlalildl, nosedive and apparently fall into the forest_. A short time later smoke arose from the approxi- mate spot of the crash but no one investigated and the matter was not reported until today. No air-plants have been report- ed missing in this area. 'h‘u'u%"n'-'-'n'Lfin'l.'-'ln'ln"b'h\ llO:RESTTOR HARD PRESSEO POLISH TROOPS Fight Invaders Fur- iously As Multiple Attacks Aim To Bottle -Un Warsaw. (By Robert Rh-ffei) tllavas Staff Writer) LUBLIN. Poland. Sept. 15 ——(C.- P-HaVasl~ Gcrmany tonight: es- secl multiple atlaoks design Mm trap defending forces in e tern (llr Frcd Backhouse, Can- adixrrr Press Staff Writer) l.t).Vl)()N. Sept. 15--(C. P. (‘zrhlt-)—liritain’s determin- rrtion to keep her supply lines open is meeting with success, it was revealed in curt hullctins from the Ad- mirrrlty tonight. They told of encnry U-boats being dc- strorcrl by combined patrols of wnrships and aircraft. Simultaneously the min- lsiry of information disclos- ed that large quantities of vital supplies for the German war machine had been seiz- ed by the British contraband control. The Admiralty announce- ment told the public for the first time that the fleet air arm had cooperated in "min! attacks" which had her‘? mzrdc on submarines. It sat :- "His ‘Majesty's destroyers and patrol vessels and air- l «an we been ca.-ya... *r.::.“':.::r:.:“““" out constantly patrol over NPcl>lish at\rtltr1or'ltles deflmed the W‘ . . - ‘:12 RI‘ ELC CS gave CV 3.115 H8 rde areas In search of wen as mmps no respite and chm? ed the German war machine was waging totalitarian war on an un- precedented scale. Polish forces fought back furi- ously along an extended front in central Poland while tom of Ger- man bombs b'nstcd towns, villages " ‘ cf enemy U-boats.” Then came a hint of suc- cess nith “many attacks lr:rrt- lwcn made and :1 num- ber of U-boats been destroy- ed_'- The communique add. and military objecii ed: “Survivors have beenr ."__ if-‘NW1 and captured when‘ (By Elmer w. Peterson, As- " sociated Press Staff Writer) lllli‘. — rmval authorities stated 1"" that the sr.nti-srrbmrrr- tie is proceeding along the British mctliods they ct crri. are already yielding l’.n at present it is con- .l rzrsrdvisaible to state ex- 1u‘\l' many submarines have I’. For one reason, the ppeurance without trace and crew is for more enemy‘s morale (JERN.-'iU'l‘I, Rumnnla, Sept. 15- (AP) — Foreign diplomats fleeing war-tom Poland univ- ed here tonight with reports of a. new Gennnn drive through southeast Poland designed to cut off that country from Romania. The new southern offensive was reported being built up with vast numbers of reserves pouring in from Germany, while air attacks were being -3. “WM \‘Jnkmg' ucceiernicd —— m—.t.R,]{q——?C‘r s.1.————':(lE‘Q‘§,,1rL--JL‘_n _ The caravan of diplomats which arrived at this town t(‘rr::tinuod on Pom ll Col 4) Coming Events Just across the Polish border at 8 o'clock tonight (2 p. m. ADT) included Madame Jos- eph Beck, wife of the Polish Foreign Minister and their three children. and diplomatic ht , _"'U‘ representatives of the United c ir)r‘N0ll(‘cs in this column .<t:‘.t~s, Brazil, Spain. Italy. 3 Cents per word. Belgium. Sweden, Japan. The c: _ Netherlands and Switzerland. rifle FEET . I-‘acin-z ever-widening German at- tacks. the Polish Government has n"P:<~'.c.~.t:rrrt Orphanage rum- -itz .~.~..r- Friday. October 6. L-968 "i’«IIIrrrrrbcr Cake Sol at Hol- V :m,_, . . 9 shifted lrcadnrlortsrs repeatedly, wommb 111‘-Ltnaigtlllloolijlgasfigflfgflfi mu! M... .-mrwrt-$1..‘-1 £v:':hi__Lf. "l)l0.\er'vc Saturday, octobel. rm] t(‘~n'lmr~d on l’-W» ll Col ll) ilruatlrco. Rummage Sale. L-937-9-16-3i. _ _ 3...P°rl*r.“.. 5 Film P°59'b'° ' L-968-9-X6-2i. Cause Of O.S.. Sub Disaster POR'I‘SMOU'I'H, N. 11.. Se it, 16- (AP)——Ste pi.ng into the D1118 interior 0 the salvaged submarine Wlllirv sale at Moore 6: Mc- smms by Wheetley Women's In- mh °' Saturday afternoon. Sept ' L-930-9-15-2i. "Basilica Alta: society Coke Sal A. McDonald's Botundsy, Septfi U; tDellciau.s home made bread, v ° 0-. for sale. L-B77-9-16-2t. "K 1 h tl ' tier 0 l f the esnt'{1(fie,,B,,“t'yw°B,£°pp°"‘sl‘,"°°1“1:,;' ?cc‘llii2ri1sv.)i§ 20; oil ‘her zgalliedld -0 —one “>50 n . ping“-W“ '35‘ Tm“ “°" dead body was missing - -3 United °“ ° - Btates naval board of inquiry to- L- -9-rs-2r. me day put its finger on the poss cause of the disaster last. May 33. I-Iuddled around in borrowed oil- sklns, the board watched o test op- eration of two air induction valves saw one full to close properly, on heard Lieutenant Oliver P‘. Nsquin, still skipper of the ill-fated crsft_ is belief that the valve be- ''°',’‘‘- N- 0. Hummus sure. Pro- }, _°F war. St. Peters Ontrhedrul °°1R°°m.Bcturds 7 p, M, nor-o-14-us. ‘Baptist mites Guild Aftem “ ‘E the home of Mrs. J. A. 013313. i‘e nerrmemr Form Th rad Be t. ’“"“‘“' Elm... ..... - .:..:.r...r.. “r:.“..".:t.:*‘a‘.%.*‘.:” =° W ..:.-Y- A Ru-mmce 5... ....EJ-*.1.::=;-..s:.:.'“r..=:.""°"*~h=d '1" ' ' I5 n3VY um“ 30“! 7100 D. m- friends and relatives found consolation in on expert's opinion the victims died swiftly and merci- fully. Novynh tel aides canted the all ontom cl or 116 days at the aft epgd of the subrirmrlikhe to on impro- v . morgue n e mv where flngfiprint ond ddhto. ex-' ports care lv carried on the work Auocnarlon nu‘-' ildln ~ g. Proceeds in "d "1 Y- M. 0. A. L-966-9-16-al. .. Wy1N°"“l‘~I7nt further notice Dr. ‘err ll‘ Allen's 0! ice will be u to ,, ment. of sccountzpe only. "1 “"11 be greatly gppreelated. D14-9-l5~2i. of idcntificotion. speculation centred around ale settlement of all ac- sons in urreors to Mt. heme . are requested to possibility one 'l;)1ogyuflh‘od; bheéghgiézn during salvage opera- tom ex September lard to save up to the sen. StaIin’s Disposition Of Mobilized Troops Puzzles Nazis & Allies LONDON, Sept. military prepara ions are cousin the German Government as wel as the British and French Gov- emmem anxiety because none knows Russia's intentions, it, was learned today. Reports emanating from Moscow indicate that Russia is mobilizing on 3. full war time basis and it was estimated here that it now had at least 4.000.000 men under arms The German Government was re- Dorted to be Surprised at the extent of the Russian mobilization, par. Uculafly as regards the troops’ disposition. Russia is massing men not alone on the Polish frontier but along Russia's entire frontier from Finland to Rumanla, Apparently the Germans are no more coznrznntt than the Allies of the reasons for these impotent measures Experts speculate Military men speculate whether Russia is disquieted at the im- mincnt prospect of German forces reaching the Russian frontier at the southwest corner of Poland. it —- Rusian The German’; sudden drive to the vicinity of Llow ( ) brought them within about 1 miles of the Russian frontier.- 'I'h‘s thrust with heavy armored and motorized columns was aimed at <-rrttingr the Poles off from ac- ross to Rumanla. at outflanking the Poles on the Bus: River line and at menacing Poland's remaining oil fields toward the Carpatlrians. Rumaninn Pressure Perlrrms also the I’/zrmans fore- see that their arrival on the Ru- manian frontier would enable them to exert pressure on Rumtmio to increase its oil supplies to Germany. Unessiness manifested in Nazi circles regarding the Russian large. sra'e mobilization seems to indicate that the Nazis are not too certain re-zardimz Stalin's lntentitms. Nor are the French and British Gov- ernment: one authority on Rus- sian affairs expressed the opinion here that most likely the mobilize.- ficn was due to the Russians‘ un- oeriaintv at Hl‘lcr‘< nlrms rather than fil1.V,"T‘9Darai.lon for action such as seizing the Baltic states. w.}:2s'v.“m Ago Today {By The Canadian Press) Sept. i8, 1914--Gcrnjians gave way in fighting extending from to Verdun. Sixty thousand ‘E’ slowly Noyon Germans sent. into Belgium , attack on An ."“‘Rtlssi:ms ll-acéred Przcmysl n southern an , Sept. 17. 1914-——Ba_i-tie of Aisne. between British-French Al- lies and Cnrrnans, along 150-mile front, enrtered fifth day. Paris rc- ti Po- the -'lflJ'sr'U' WSSIANS AND Elli. Hon. “ll.B.” JAPANESETO‘ To Serve END ,Red cross o'rTAwA.——§_bt. l5—Right Hon. R. B. Bennett, former Canadian Prime Minister, now May Result In Far Reaching Effects In European Conflict. resident, in England, has accept- led ti: (ilmzltationgofltthe ‘gonad; an 1: ‘ms: . 00 e ac as its chief rcprrsenytative in Britain und on during the war. ——— The lied Cross has already sent MOSCOW, Sept. l5-(AP)-Toss, 310,000 to assist sufferers from Soviet official news agency conrgm the steamer Atlv-ula. Activities announced a Ru551,m_Japam,5e a_ of the Society overseas woul greemeni; 3,0 Cease hosmmes on the of course increase greatly if and (border between Japanese—dom1;n- Wm’; “nyi(aMdm" “Damon- ated Manchmlkuo and s°V1et'PT°' arlvlrdorgiosi sdfri'ii~l'rls a roach- tected Outer Mongolia. ed Mr. Bennett fiist byPptrans- The announcement said the arm- stlantic telephone a day or so istice would begin at 2 P. M. (ii A. 3:0. and he later (‘uhlcd his be- M. Adt,) tome;-mw_ or-ptance of the post. The respective forces. under the "u“ ‘ " “ “ “ "“ " ” "id" - ' ‘ Efleement, will maintain their po- sitions held at l P. M. today. 5 00mm’-5S10n 01’ two Japanese- Msnchoukuoan and two Soviet. Monsolian representatives will be orsanized “at the ea.rlle:i; possrbret date" to establish a. frontier line be- tween the two states in the Men where intermittent warfare has been OF EUROPEAN Vatican Organ is critical Of Nazi Moves VATICAN CITY. Sept. l5 ——(O'P- I-lavas) ——Crlticism of the Nazi Goverm-nent‘s action in Ger-msn‘Go‘t.hol.le»'0h .- - sibly as an air raid precaution. was expressed by the official Papal newspaper Osservstore Romano to- night. The a pesrance of the article coincide with reports that MEL Rnwllna. Chaplain General of the Polish Army. had been wounded at ports said It-aly would _ioln Allies against Arrstro-G-crman forces the ”°“‘i' and la,“ the Pgpzl hgggg wnmn mo weeks quarters at, arsaw a (izrnmged by German bombs. War, Briefs LUBLIN, Poland, Sept. 15- The Polish radio announced tonight that Polish warplanes bombed and destroyed in Ger- man airplane base in the Poz- nan zone where airplanes which attlwked Wa.rsa.w dur- ing recent days were centred. The destruction of the base "weakened German aerial act- ion against Warsaw." the an- nouncer added. BERLIN, Sept. 15—German communiqucs paid scum at- tention to the war on the western front_ Today they mentioned briefly active urtil- lery cast of Saarbruecken and reported the retreat of French for-vs back across the border south of Pirmuscns under I heavy German artillery bur- rage. (Purl: reported French ud- vunces all along the northern flank of the western front and seizure of four German villages at least two of of which were believed to have been suburbs of ssnrbruccken, the industrial capital of the rich Soar terri- torv.l CIIATHAM, Mass, Sept. 15 —Distrcss calls from an un- identified ship. -ayinr she was “ oing down“ after “being clled by I submarine" were intercepted at 5:41 p. m. ADT today by the Radio Marina itut on on CANBERRA. Sept. l5—The Australian Government ‘orgy ,- decided to raise an army 1) 000 volunteers for home or overseas war service sud laid lung for a 35 per cent increase n the Dominlon's defence bud- get during the current year. In 5 brncdcnst to the notion tonight expluining the war meanurcn. Prime Minister Rob- ert Menzies said the country was confident of victory be- am. “the Austrulion people are united on mutter uhd are lI|'¢PN'¢fl W I“ it through." OTTAWA. Sept. 5-Creation of A government board with power to regulate and control trlnrructions in iorelxn OX‘ change, to license imports end exports of all goods, money and securities. and to use the ex- chunge stabilisation fund on In gld u. mnlntnlnlngexchange rates, was announced tonight 1,, p|m.m-e Minister Rolston. Control is effective on from tomorrow. DI-Jlil.. KENT. Enrland. Sept. 15 _.((;m _ The Royal Navy. strictly enforr-in~ Br-|taln'r| WI!’- tllne rule of dctulping virtually every merchant shin to search for oontrobsnrl onrgo, tonight held to vrssv-is under armed Wiles. By order Trustees. covered open Io-019-O-lb-21. Uni. gurd oil the moment coon. In utlrrcking the closing of Ger- mrrn churches. Osservatcre Rn- mzrtro said: "The rretexts invoked by the German authorities do not .=**m at all convlncln_v.." The Osscrvatore was not satis- fied with the German statement. that, Protestant Churches have, been closed also . “The treatment inflicted Ifiivnncelical church." it l“only confirms, it I":-r.s~=.=arv. the existence 0 upue amt w=lnm- lwoetilfi on the declared. confirmation is f inten- without t("~nti"u"rl nn PM“ ‘i Col 6) rlindbergh 3Advises O. 3. ‘Avoid War i WASHINGTON. Sept. 1‘5—(AP)-— ‘ Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh urg- ed the Ullitéd States tonight. to keep carefully out of the Sn3C0I1d Gncat War. asserting that "if we rritcr fighting for democracy” 3- brrad, we may end by losing it at home “We must. not be misguided by foreign propngunrh to the frontiers lie in file: said in i for broadcast I this effect that our Ellrr>pt'." the famous an address prepared by all major United States net- works "One need only glance at 3 map to see where our true fron- tiers lic. What more could we ask itlrnn the Atlantic Ocean on the least and the Pacific on the west. ‘An ocean is it formidable banter ‘oven for modern aircraft." "Now that war has broken out alzuin." Llndbcrgth said, "We in America have a decision to make on which the d-esilnv of our nae lion depends. We must decide Whe- ther or not we intend to become forever involved in this age-old strrrwzle between the nations of us not delrrdva ourselves. If we enter the quarrels of Europe during war, we must, stay in them in time of Me as well. "It is ma ness in send our sold- iers to be killed as we did in the last war if we tum the course of peace over to the greed. t.he fear. and the intrigue of Europea tions. We must either keep our, European wars entirely, or stay European affairs perma ly. "In making our decisiorr. this point is clean: Tin-so wars in Eur- o sre not wars in which our cvllization is defending itself ri- guinst some asintin intruder. There s no Ghenghr Khan or Xerxes marching against, our western ne- tiomz. “This is not B. nestlon of band- ihg together to efend the white race against foreign invasion. is is simply one more of those age- old quarrels within our faintly of notlons—a mrarrel arising from the errors of the last wor—from the failure of the victonr at that wan to follow it consistent policy either - of fslmess or of force." in Drogress since May 11. N0“'fl8KI’ession Poet? The agreement was reached fol-_ OWHIB negotiations between the Japanese Ambasador. Shigenori Togo. and the soviet Premier and Foreign Comrmisar, Vyasheslsff Molot/off. Formal announcement of the E- greement came after unofficial rc- DOTYA of the action had been coup- led with predictions by some ob- servers that it might be the fore- runner to s. Ncn—Aggression Pact. Patching Ohthe quarrel between the two nations would have a tre- mendous effect upon Japan's cam- Dflizn in China. The Soviets have been supporting the Chinese with materials more or less openly. Affect U. 8.. British Interests A RUSSO-Japanese agreement also WAR SITUATION (Canadian Press) Cremmny's piece-meal conquest of Poland proceeded today. The second of two big German pincers appeared to be closing east of Warsaw. This would out off a big effectively as the rldor. A German advance from south and another from the north began cutting communication lines cast of the now-ruined Polish cap- ill. The objective of the German advance through southern Po- land which has now passed the would deal a blow at Great rltain's t ' . f°°¢h°ld in Asia and mlshliz r>ossi- 5 Ellcu'(ii'm_h‘d‘t(i)r?ity'miql(li drirgebcticfrli bly affect United States interests ‘ gives’ ‘is(' to corrjecture as to in the Far!‘ East, observers said here, I \rl‘.etlrcr an lrrrnrcdiate drive right A8 3 result of today's develop. ;.cro.<s sorrtlrcrn Poland to the Russian irorrticr is contemplated ments, much deeper significance is 2 now attached to s communique is- , or ‘vhemer 1‘ 15 9‘ mwe "0 pm" the Continent; sued yesterday by Tsss. Official Soviet news agency, which said Russia. had not taken any Manchou- kuo territory and had no intention of doing so. Ever since the signing of the German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact on Aug. 24, Germany has been try- tween Moscow and Tokyo. Expect Invasion LONDON, Sept. l5—In B. dispatch from Copenhagen today the News Chronlcal (Liberal) said that Ru:-v sian troops are expected to invade I ' Poland as soon as the Polish army's resistance is shattered by t-he Ger- mans. The story quoted circles close to l the Wilhelmstrasse in Berlin as soy. ‘ ing that the Russian Press 1: now‘ building up an “opprcs=icn-oi'-Rrrs- ‘ 9.- .. . . .. - ,. .._..._n..r....<~ g "‘ on Pa'(- 11 Col 5) t" Mysterious S. D. 8. Gail Unexplained CHATHAM. Muss, Sept. 16- (AP)-A mysterious distress call from an unidentified ship, crack- ling out the terse message. "shelled by submarine. going down." left the fste of the vessel and her crew un- certain tonight as hours passed without additional word. The distress signal was intercep- Marlne station and by MacKa.V Radio at New York. and was relayed from another ship which gave nei- ther her name nor that of the vr-.x- sel "going down." As picked up by Radio Marine, the message read: "some ship with loud signal sent distress signals on ther heard. ships please keep look- out.” Speculation centred around the chance the message was from the 5.200-ton freighter Fanad Henri. enroute from Montreal to l3_elfast.. 'l‘he Ulster Steamship Company of Belfast. owner of the vessel. report- ed late today she had been attack- ed by a submarine. Radio Murine said the signals from the ship relaying the dl.«trz-.<.-: cell were "of such volume we nrn certain she is not far away." ‘How- ever, the station added that would give «no indication of the position of the ship in distress because fre- quently yes-els intercept messages from ships far removed. ing promote B. reconcilliation be-V ted late today both by the Radio ‘ 600 metres. saying ‘shelled by sub- ‘ ymsrine: going down." Nothing fur- - tect the flank of the ibrces oper- utilxg around Warsaw. Slrmrlil the advance proceed to the Russian border a corridor for the tr-a'r.«por't of supplies from itlLS.:ll~l. to Germany would I opened up and the Poles would be ‘cut off from communication with ltumania on the south. On tile west the French fcrces_ moved closer to the Siegfried liney as they ci’\'~:(l in on Saarbruecken ' and forcccl the Germans in retreat down the Moselle Valley. Infor- motion is still lacking as whether an immediate attempt will be made to smash through the Siegfried forts, In some respects the British- French position recalled 1915. Then Rrusln after 13. brilliant cam- paign a« the start of the war was on the verge of collapse and an -llicd oflfcnstve in the 11st was onsidercd necessary in order to rzlievc the Russians. HAD VWRONG SLANT l VVOODSTOCK. N. B.. Sept. 15 -' lCP>~Mrrr‘vcn Mowl'y's conception of the function of the Canadian rrrllltrrrjv forces landed him in court here tod:r_v, and cost him $30 to -quart tlrlngs 1111 Military :rrrtlrorl‘.ics snld .\/lowry approached a sentry at a local mil- rtary cnlrm. and demanded that a car be |)l‘0\'ld(‘fi l0 drive him into town. when the sentry refused. .\lowry was alleged to have "Jumpctl on him " The court warned that similar oi- fnndm-_=; in future would be liable to ll term in the penitentiary. i , boat.-r have destroyed "number" of P.I\ltlS—-French rr-port turning buck German attack on western front and driving Germans in retreat In Niosolle _ Valley. 1 Warsaw and Krrtno; Gl.‘I'fl’IllI MOS(‘0\'\'-——mru:la and Japan its possible fun--nrnnrr oi‘ non-aggression pact. on for Germany. \\’/iSlllNGTON—-President Roosevelt indicate: he hopes to legislntion at special session of (‘ongress in rcvislvll o (‘ERNAIVTL RrImnnia—l-‘oreign diplomats arrive with reports of new 1 Iuig Gr-rmun drive through southeast Poland to cut country off from Romania. l Situation At A Glance i tBy The Connadisn Press) l.0.\'DO.‘\'—Grcat Britain reports air force. Bl-1ltLlr\‘——G¢-rmnn army reports , Radon-r and continued nituk on defenders st cities and towns ; nually—-In addition to amounts paid by Individuals-—io pay costs of war. In Air Clash On‘ Western Front Germans Retire:-ext From Advance Positions On North- ern Flank Move Rein- forcements In Attempt To Stem Allied Advance. (By Tzrylor Henry, Associated Press Staff Writer) PARIS. Sept. 1:')—(AP)—French warplanes were re- ported tonight to have defeated an undisclosed number of German planes which were bombing and strafing French troops in an effort to halt their gr/cral advance on the western front. Dispatches from the front indicated German forces were retreating slowly from advance positions all along the front's northern flank. The French and German planes clashed so low over ‘ the lines, it was reported, that advancing troops almost could distinguish the faces of the pilots. The Germans were reported to be bringing to bear the full force of their air force and artillery in an attempt to stop the French. At least three full Nazi divisions were reported fight- ing to hold the strongest advance defences of the German Siegfried Line along a 12-mile front before the great in- dustrial city of Saarbruecken and to the east of that city, whose defences hold the key to the centre of the active front. Although there was no official lnionnation. the French wens Is- sumed to have thrown as many if not more divisions into the fighting slice of wes‘ern Poland just as ‘ first puwers in this sector. movement cut off the Polish Cor- Tbe only official indication yet given on French strength won I communique which announced o week ago thst one division hud taken part in the conquest of the Wsmdt forest area alone. The area lies west of Saarbruecken. The Germans were said to be fighting a dogged rear guard action to cover their main forces falling back toward the Siegfried line. Local counter-attacks held up “*—‘~‘*- the French for hours until rein- was for- I re_ r forccments arrived. The attack stopped and the announced ward march of the French was sumed. From the brief description of the all‘ fighting in the official com- munique tonight, it was apparent that German planes dived low on the French advance lines. raking, them with machine gun fire and? forcing them to dig for cover. French pursuit planes roared, out from airdromes behind France's , Maginot Line and fought off the German ships. < Text Of (‘ommunlque Death Of Senator Mclennan it Dominion Capital OTTAWA, Sept. l5-tCP)-Senu- for John Stewart Mcbennun, 86. ot Sydney. N. 5. died suddenly in: his hotel here tonight. The Senator came to Ottawa for the special war session of Parliament and had been ill for only two days. Senator Mclennan was attended by a nurse when death came short- ly before midnight tonight. Aduug.h- ter, Mrs. J. W. Farley of Boston, is expected to arrive here tomorrow. Death of Senator MoLennan, Con- servative representative of Sydney, brings the number of vacancies in the senate to 11. giving Conserve- tlve 53. Liberals 32. Following is the text, of the gen- eral staff's night communique:— "We consolidated positions con- quered during preceding clays and repulsed s corrnterattack, inflict- ing losses on the enemy. “".l‘ho.'e was strong enemy a.rtil- , lery and air reaction on part, of ‘ the front. l “Our pursuit aviation repulsed enemy planes carrying out an at- taok at low dliitlldf‘ on our first line." The French were said to be ad- vancing through a scrccn of shells , laid down by German artillery on ‘ o. 40-mile sector cxtendinnz from the ; Mosclle River on the extreme north. where tire front touches neutral , lrxerrrborrrg. to ll noln two miles ,bcyond the irrdrrstriul c:tv of Saar- ‘ hrrlcckcrr. in: S\L\rErv.\’\ Lrmnc, is ALWAYS Bnrcnnsr \N otttlzk l7Ec9LE's Cncuos /- r l Intense Bonrhwwimcnts (Dispatches from Rrrrssels said the Mosolle V:r'.lc\' fighting pro- ceedcd all drrv with intense bom- bsrrdrncnls Tcrriflr trrrniiv was lrrnfd of tlv lrrxombmrrg frontier. in. »j- ' -2....» U.’ {WM h, t('nn'.Irrrrr-rl nn I’u'!l* 11 Cal 3) TORAONTO. 5891- 15 —‘C?’ ~ '.\virnim\rm and maximum tempera- , trn-es: destroyers and patrol German submarines. Dawson 38 — ‘ Ottawa 56 91 airplrtne rountu- Toronto 66 89 ‘Montreal so 84 Quebec 62 Gil Saint John 5!": 7?. Halifax 5'7 -- ,,lm“h“R“nn,, M rnmh hr", at ‘Clmrlotletown an '74 two nth?!‘ kt‘! Dnlflil 0‘ , Mnrltlme Provinces: Moderate winds: urtly cloudy with n few must pay $500,000,000 nn- much scatterer showers and not Ichsnge in temperature. l r ..-M an ,...*rr:,..:;r. f.‘:‘-2-r3.‘;'*“"* *= *2 *° d diplomatic virtrvry ; Sun sets this cvr~nirr5_7 at 6 ii and rims tomorrow morninz tr? 5 ‘‘ First dnnrtt-r moon Svpt A. ‘M. Srrnrmerslrle tldc cirlrtwrr min- llil"< lain: than (‘lr.'1l'l«':t’-'l<\\'ir. TIIF. (‘AR l~'ERR\' S.-\ll.lNf‘-S 1 ...E Si‘I'f| 2}» ‘n .14 limit f Ni-utmllty Law. ares Torrnentlne 4.30 PM. 1 ye 3.05 r. M.. 6.20 P. M. Lcnves rzonren air: A M. r on P..Vl., 1100 A. M., «stung. vj"'T\