HE WESTERNG ARDIAN AGENT: Mrs. John Pond. I‘ Church SUMMEBBIDB anmfllNbl gD-SNIFFM“ a‘ m; Subscription; Advertising. ahcllld be left with My; you he Ito h , Guardian may u: éusily 1:11; of the tollowtn; "m." u, gookslore. Water Street. n Biker]. Water Street. m uuaruran will be delivered to any pom. m "I 1°" wr Week. Phone as: w, you] order to the boy reupcnglbu h, p, flay at 2c pel day. column is reserved for new; mo; rntereJ, but advertising Inglis) nature may he uuerleo “out; a word. strictly pqynblg L-263-8-16-2l tsp l PT. heavv galvanized hue still obtainable at Brace‘: L-263-8-lti-2i all! a8 special spaced. farm ,. \\‘ll]l the Frost Tightluck. Gourlies D Mu,‘ Willem. Water smug Gilli". 87 Granville direct. or l-u-n». ... .... ..:.':.t"* —1 sto l‘ m‘ l5. l‘! heavy duty auto rage batteries, sold a; nrmg L-283-B-16-2i .____.__.___ -_ -s0LlD cent,“ quaut nails all sizes obtarn- gifjlllzlstlhk (1'7“) all sizesvirlfigtfilckhlats L-409-B-l8-2i. —MOIRS 1 L-101-B-5-6l. —WANTED-M Married or single at?) $3.1??? 223T} itiirzrcus. L-263-8-l6-21. farm near Summerside Box 45s —-—— Summerside. ' _ - Y aunt's statutes: lily‘ spray L419 3464‘ m, ctr can. an ess n your c‘... L-263-8-l6-2i. -—WEEKEN|J vrsnons m < ._ i MONCTON — Dr. and Mrs. 1-1. '1'. rook sauvlcns — Rev. Dr, flolvin and Mrs. E. w, Manggn 5, lilillsll, rector of Chr st "ti" y'all-Ola w Moncton. N. B. ov- Cll, Dartmouth, N. s., took the '3' ‘he "Wkehd- They were accom- ires at Pom Hill parish on pfmed by M“ Mansmfs daughter ' durum the absence of Mm George “Wis °r Mmww“ l. = who had been visiting in Summer- .G.Stnrcrt Tanton, rector. who recently married. —S. ESIDENCE DAMAGED — ersde firemen were called on Sunday afternoon about 5 r for a fire at the residence zhur Enman on the corner of ont and Russell Streets. The which originated in an up- {com lmd gained considerable ray bclorc it was discovered. “one through the ceiling into rafters of the house but owing eroof bong of fireproof shing- dni nct go through the roof. fircnicir fought tie fire from .» and succeeded in putting it Considerable damage was done tire. water and smoke. The in; was partly covered by in- ce. It is thought that the was coined through an over- ed stovopipc.—S. GYIIIIHYPIIY EXTENDED symnnihyis extended to Mr. iirs. Peter Gallant of Bgmont ‘n the death of their daughter, 'il§.\\'l1fl passed away in the ceConniv Hospital on Satur- liiss Gallant underwent a us operation on Monday. She only i9 rears of age and Per tiwas n great, shock to her ‘l; and friends. Besides her - striclzcn parents there are left ohm one sister and seven crs. Ouc brother is with the it‘. in England and ano‘her tire PFI. l-Yglslanders. The indrr r.’ the family are at t. Mr. Gallant. was for many ..<c‘;ionl inspector for Prince ‘_\' and many old friends will rd sinrrrc sympathy in his arernent, The funeral is taking ecn Monday from ii e residence tr. Gallant to Egmont Bay cii h: nine o'clock.—S. Personals \liss Din iii of Ottawa is lrg her rscatlon at her home ‘Eclton, -S. llrs. AlbcrT Mcase of Kensing- ‘s rt-vung in Summerslde. - Rev. w. s. boring and Mrs. g and two daughters, Fern 51;)" of Marysville, N. B, are rig 1n Kcnslngton. uster titnry Dorothy of Bt- Jinifosota, is visiting her sis- llrs. Anna Carmichael of Al- ister lifary Rachael of St, liinizcota is visiting her sis- ..\!r.=. Patrick Tierney of Al- Hnd lirs. Emmett Croken of leicn Siding. 11H‘. Wm J. Hunt who was o Elcanors attending the fun. rt his brother. the late Dr. Hunt returned to his home in its“. N. 5.. on Saturday mom- l1 is Florence Kelly of New 1h Vlslllllg Captain Basil Kel- lld Mrs. Kelly of Summerslde ‘ "rill! to be here until August 11R and Mrs. Preston Green ‘Jllle daughter Shirley. Mal- t. Bro enjoying the sea breezes ilicwater Beach. 11l- and Mrs. ‘Halter C. Patri- ' “lid-family 0f Si. JOIlIl, NB" Ylsltlilhy after spending a h°11=1hy at Edgewater. -S. Itll-u Eulalie Arsenault of Man- ?" l\'- H. is visiting in Burn- dl- "c guest of Mr. Paul and family. _s, “Y- Wm. n. Campbell of ot- arrived Thursday by plane to l1! best man at the Riley-bevy “l ll Baltic on Saturday.- llhr. HarolrPChlow of Bummer- mls sirccessfully passed the M6 examinations of the C. N R “has taken a position with h‘ Way as telegraph pperator it Present assisting in the office at summeraide. '-B. lhfl Mrs. Thomas Ramsay hm MRM. have returned to new" Filler visiting their for- hom‘! 1" the Western part of Rmil- They were al~o guests Iu-Qsurmsavs sister. Mrs. Wm. "ésand Mr. Huestis, Bum- slde and Charlottetown-s —l"0RMl-'R ISLANDER vrsrrs OLD HOME _— A very interesting visitor to the Island during 01d Home Week was Ml‘. Sidney Heck- be". apromlnent merchant tailor 01 Chhtnflm. N. B. He was accom- panied by his sons, Ralph and Harry. They went to the capital and took in the racing program and enjoyed their visit immense- ly. Tney also paid a visit to Mr. I-Ieckbert‘s native town of Sum- merslde which he had left 48 years ago. Mr. I-Ieckbert learned his trade with the late John MacKenzle, a prominent tailor of that time and whose son. Mr. M. L. Frank Mc- Kenzie. still carries on the busi- ness. An interesting note on Mr. i-Ieckberts apprentice days with Mr. MacKenzie was that he assist. ed in making the coat which won first prize at the Colonial exhibit.- zon in London, England This was a great feather in Mr. MacKenzieis cap, as he W05 made the champ- ion coat maker for the Colonies. and also brought Summerside into prominence. Mr. Heckbert visited his o‘d home 37 years ago but had not been back again until last week. The party had a happy family reunion with Mr. Heckberrs two brothers. Westley of Summer- slde and Reuben of Indian River. The family gathering was held down at Indian River at the home of Reuben Heckbsrt where the brothers met and talked over old times. Mr. Heckbcrt was much‘ pleased with the improvement of the highway and town of summer. side. He also was delighted with the many improvements at the ex- hibition grounds. His two sons are veterans of the lust war and now their sons are serving in the arm- ed forces-S Levy - Riley Wedding A very pretty wedding took place at the home of Mr. John and M158 Grace Riey, Baltic, P.E.I., on Sat- urday afternoon, August 16th at 3 o'clock when Miss Margaret Simpson Riley, daughter of M“ Riley and the late Mr. William F. Riley, became the bride of Gabriel Bhenlg Levy, son of Mrs. Levy and the late Mr. Gabriel H. Levy. K.C.. of Hamilton, Ontario. Rev. Alex D. Stirling of Kensington officiated and Mrs. u. c. sin-lawn played the Wedding March. The bride was given in marriage by her brother, Mr. Bruce Riley of Baltc and was attended by her sls- ter, Mlss Ed‘th A. Riley of Rock- land. Me. Mr. Wm. l". Campbell of Ottawa acted n; groomsman. '11 e bride wore a dress of navy triple sheer with white pleated 11166 collar and hat. of baku straw with wide veil. Her corsage was of talis- man roses. The bridesmaids dress was I p. der blue and white ensemble and she wore a 0018880 °l 3'15" cllffe roses. Following the ceremony a buffet supper was served. Roses, gladloll. gngpdragonS were used in decom- tiori. The table was handsomely aa- pornwq Wm; n three tiered wedding cake and Miss Grace Riley 5nd M"- Henry. S. Ancerson of Maiden. Mass. aunt. of the bride presided over the wedding table. Others assisting were: Miss lillllle Cousins, Baltic. Mrs. Harry Dlilk-e Summer-side, Mrs. Gerald Macbeod. Sackville, N.B.. Miss Jennie John- ston, Washington. D.C.. MB- 5°?’ den conneil, Summerside and Mrs. Wm. Roach. Summerslde- The bride is a graduate of FY1009 of Wales College, Charlottetown. and was formerly employ“ Wm‘ tnc law firrn of Stewart and lewls. Summer-side, the Defll- 0f N" °m1 Defence. Ottawa and 011F108 the past eight months with the British Embassy at Washington. D.C. Th; groom is a graduate of To- ronto University and Trinity 901' iege, Cambridge University. Chm- bridge, England. The you“: couple will reside in Ottawa where the 370cm u emplnyed 1n the aeronau- tical division of the "Bum" 7°‘ search counciL-S. PRINCE BAILORS AWARDED IDNDON-(CP) --Crews of l"! Free French submaflner Rubia and Minerva have been decorated with the croix dc Gucrre for distinguish- ed services. by Admiral Emile Muse- iier, Commander of the naval for- eel. 4 BY THOMAS M. JOHNBO NEA Service Military Wm}: WASHINGTON. Au . - Japan's demand for bases Tnmlmu 9mm! h 10116141 Run at Singapore. The "IP91". to the great British naval base is obvious. what; (ow Americans realize is that the ppm“ to 0s is just as great if we intend to defend the Philippines, Except for Blnzwore t it is an Open secret that Britain n“ Promised us use of ths great nu. val base), we have no fleet op. erhllhs base in the whole Far gait. Caviie and Clongapo _ silt‘ $2.5m. “do.” “ldiffi l ' no by ee n te miles from °§..se.°p°'.rr§ figigtulyn 22: Philippines, ships of our punk; Fleet- rnust first traipse out rr-cm Hawaii and then, if injured, limp back through a. Pacific infested with islands we let Japan keep in 1919. It would be well 5000 miles out and 5000 back. The Javanese Fleet has Qnly a rum as far to travel to reach Manna" BRITAIN DEPENDS ON us IN racmc T 713.111? from Slhlapore. a harbor which can hcld‘ and service the world's navies, to the Philip. To organize lied Gross Gorps In Summerside The Canadian Red Cross Corps which was organfzed in four see. tlchs- Nursing. Nutrition, Office Administration and Motor Trans- lmrt. in Charlottetown some two months ago. is now going be started in summerslde under the Chairmanship of Miss Ruin 1_ R1255. P.H.N. The organization meet- ing is to be nem- in the High School Auditorium on Tuesday. August 19th.. at 7:30 p.m. Standard Time All interested in this Corps are asked to attend this meeting at whirh it 1s hc-ped to have Mrs. H. l... Palmer. Prcvinclal command- ant of the Corps, and each section leader present. Dutch Princess Inspects ship PICTOU. N. 5.. Aug. l7 —(CP)— Princess Juliana of the Nether- lands reviewed one of her coun- try‘s naval vessels here Saturday, boarding a wnrcraft for the first hreat t JAPANESE DEMANDS ON THAILAND PmN 54 Wily 1330 miles. So 1f we intend to defend the Philip. P1068. as Preszdent Roosevelt's recent mobilization of the islands’ forces indicate we do, the gnlety °1 511188901! is vital to America. To guard the safety of this for. titled island at the tip of the spmdllhil Malay Peninsula, the fimlsh have Breat land fortzfica- ons and American heavy bomb- gl- kALr Marshal Sir Robert roo e-Popham commands Brit. 15h- scolllfih. Australian, 8nd Indian troops-totaling 000 and steadily augmenting. But he could withstand Japn. nese air attack from ADO-mile dis- tant Thailand, followed by land ‘WW3 51°08 the narrow Malay "Ilm-“llh- Only l0r a. matter of $111115. according to e5fln1gw_ r sea defense British warships gtvlew. being needed in the M. ‘l ~°- In the Pacific. Britain de- dfr lariely . And now that the Administration has do. WM i» flsnt for the Philippines. we depend on Singapore_ mvéltyhilut- Slhsanore our Asiatic 05nd how‘ in the Philippines tense ‘"159 Only a delayzng do. . flded by aircraft, especial- ly lonB-range bomberg ma“ $1"; lively been flown m m; till S ' compensallw Iglxfnbcrs intended to Kl-flg - E9 Meeting Year Ago; Planned Joint Defence WTOTTAWA. Aug. 17 ._(cpy P 91h Prime Minister Churchill and res dent Roosevelt met at sea re. celllly to consider defence prob. "m5 they were following the ex. ampie "I by Canada and the Unit;- ed States s year ago today In Set- u“! "l? 1-118 Permanent Joint board °n 5959"“. C01. O.M. Bigger. chevr- man of the board's Canadian sec. tion, said tonight. In a radio address on one first anniversary of the Ogdensburg a. Rreement between Prime Minister- Mackenzie King and Mr.‘ Roose- velt‘; Co!- Fscar described the board as the first step taken by any two powers snce the first great war to consider their common and vita} Problems of defence.“ He said decisions read-ed by the President and Mr. Churchill at their 5" mfilllli.’ “W111 lead to the fur- ther consideration of these (do. fenlce) problems by other repregen- tat ves of these two governments and to the discussion w'th the government of the U, s_ s, 11 or such problems as are common u, all three countries." t"me since u e and her two chil- dren crossed the Atlantic to Ca- nada last summer. In a driving rain. the Princess rev’ewed the warships personnel and talked to several of the men. The she spent 15 minutes inspect- ing the ship. Later, the officers and men were entertained at the hotel where the royal visitors have been staying for the last three weeks. Blitz Bitz By Douglas Amaron Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON. Aug. i7 —(CP)—Blltz bits:- The magistrate decided Thomas Bridgeman acted with excessive zeal" in heaving a brick through his neighbor William Keirman’: wndow when he saw a light shin- ing from it some time before the blackout period began. Bridgeman, fined $22.50 costs on a summons for alleged assault, said he had been impressed by Prime Minister Churchill's forecast of heavier air raids and wanted to make sure the house was blacked out. It was lust unfortunate that. the brick caught Kierman flush on the side of the hffld. g I George Adams, 34-year-old blind. deaf and dumb basket maker, is working single-handed a 90-foot allotment at Worthing to where he was evacuated. He coflyeflfll I grass plot and planted enough W8- etables to keep his family supplle‘. A number of mills are converting straw into pulp as a means of ov- ercoming the newsprint shortage. Harold MacMlllan. Dllllflmflll-Bfy undersecretary to the ministry of supply, stated in the Home bl Commons. Here are English‘ translations of German camp names often. seen In accounts of prisoners of war "Oflaa." officers’ camp; "$1'!1°1l-" base camp: "front stated" "mil I“ occupied France; "stalag 10ft." I11‘- force base camp: "dulls." ""191" camp; "kommando," section of main camp. Flight Lieut. Arthur Rfehard Hugh Beauman, killed in actlM was awarded posthumously flit Distinguished flying Cross. H! completed 30 major operations in- volving bombing, torpedo attack-I and mine laying, often in advefhe weather conditions and in the face of considerable enemy 000051110"- Pllot Officer Alister Stewart Ramsey. who received the D. P’. C- for his part in the attack on Brem- en which won Wing Commander Hugh Idwal Edwards the Victoria Cross. is booted as misslnr. Col. Biggar said that to give de. tails of recommendations by the Canada-United States defence board would be give the enemy "ex. actly the information he would like to have in order to be able to make "15 dispositions." But the board had been "strikingly successful in rec. onclling divergent opinions and ou, wrwlusivn have. almost without CK- Ceptlon. been unanimous." Col. Biggar, in h's address brosd- l Former pupils Attend funeral 0t old Teacher Among those from Charlotte. town who attended the funeral of the late Rev. Dr. T. H. Hunt at st. Eleonora Miday were the following former pupils of the deceased when he was Master at St. Peter's Boy's school: Hon. George D. Delrois. Ear-Lieutenant - Governor; Charles H. Earle; Charles Hlne; John A. Williams; Robert I... Cotton; T. Edgar MacNutt. also A. B. Cosh of St. Peter's choir and others. Convalescent Home 1 For Norwegians CHESTER. N. 5.. Aug. l7 —tCP) -—A convalescent home for Norweg- ian fighting men wounded or in- jured in this war was opened to- day in tlrs summer resort on the Atlantic coast. ‘ Surgeon General Karl Evang o! the Norwegian legatlon in Wash- ington and Sven Nielson, member of the exiled Nora; government. took party in the ceremony. Dr. Woodhouse, deputy minister of pen- sions and national health, and the Norwegian consul general for Canada, E. Steen and Mrs. Steen of Montreal were unong those pres- ent. Says Russia Will triumph warshlD-l sent to_ lhave divided, or now divide, the The U.S. Asiatic Fleefs Philippine vital facilities the great British nav are Atlantic before the occupa- ‘"1 0f Iceland -- which swap of Sea power for air power may or may 110i have encouraged Japan l osevelt cast in Canada over facilities of the Canadian Broadcasting Corpor. ation, and carried also to the Unit. ed Sims. said he did not desire to minlm7e the contribution to the war effort made by the United $1M“ but he felt the extent of Camldilfi 6110111 was sometimes no: flllhrcciatcd fully, H9 gave these comparfsons;_ Canada has sent. m Britain g force of all arms which in propnr- F011 to population would be equivg. 0H1: to a United States force gf nearly 1.000.000 men, Canada has on active service ire equ valcnt of United States forces OI more than 3.000.000 men —ab.'>i't ha“ 1S many again as are on dly in the United States armv and navy today, " Number killed and nfssing in tire Canadian force-s would be the Qqiyj. valent to almost one-quarter of the like losses sustained bv the Unitgd States army in the first great “m, In the cilrrcnt fiscal year Crm. “d3 W111 Sflcnd an amount more ihnrrequal to tier whole u-ar ex- pendture during the last vcar, That expenditure will in pfflpgy- m" 1° D0D1llation be nearly as Feat a burden as the whole Unit- (‘f1 States national debt at, the end of the last; wary "In view of these facts and since Canadians are deeply apprecfgifiivn 0f the assistance in the war effort glvell by the United States. fundamental differences of Opinion 5 Q i sections of the permanent Join: board on defence," Col. Bigger spud "Bfitein Speaks” feature. I'Make no mistake. Rugsip, W111 triumph because Russia is fully prepared for war," he said. "Rus- sians have sacrificed to provide for mighty war machines and this is l a war of machines" "Russians: 1t will be done as Prime Minister Churchill and Pres- ident Roosevelt promised. Allied soldiers will follow allied arms to join hands with you and Germ- any shall not stand in the way." Mr. Owen said that "if I were a German I would not be very happy tonight." llaylirgfihldjyveep (Continued from__p_age__i) i a great, volume of smoke, and an- other of 8.000 tons which listed heavily after the torpedo blow. Britzsh bombers also attacked G611 SPOTLIGHT PERIL TO ONLY being particularly lacking In drydock facilities, This AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE 0 Singapore S ._.i_..._,.__.>_ . _ ___. bases at. Cavltc al base offers to American ships. to msve into ‘Iiiai. Certainly it has not stopped her from edging very close t > H515 with us. For from TURF, Oilrl)’ attacking the Philippines, ture mow and Olongdpo arc inadequate ‘to repair large Ships, hllse llflfllih: dry-dock at Singapore is but one of the i land the next logical step is t0 that to u". that Japan might not ninkc it at all wlhout simultane- Sing apor Wlzlcli s.n that she understand ILIJCTC means 5U to S figs-pore ' of SINGAPORE ‘IS are nilici" 8141c from the danger from Jiipari in Inch-China an: 1d o Thailand may attack on the or n: H115: \5. OUT e Ind cs. All the tense drama of warfare is mirrored in the faces of these Nazi soldiers, pictured In s boat on the Dnicpcr River In Russia as they sighted their Soviet enemy. Naked to the waist, gunner in center l5 Efabbl"! lyt-‘flllon as soldier at far right unllmbers it, according to Nazi-censored capli sitar... s...“ Plane losses Very low [By Gladys Arnold) (Canadian Press Staff Writer) OTTAWA. Aug. 1'7 — (CF) —— HFrom those operations 2t) of our plancs—l2 bombers and eight frghtcrs. failed to return ..." So run the British air communique: turbing to the laymen. to Air Vice- Marshal L. D. Dalzell-McKcan it is "wondcrfulfi "Wonderful? nddcd the head of the Unltcd Kingdom air mission in Canada, "because the only crit- and. while the score may be dis. . erio of enemy action by uvlilchwlty DI], ican be measured i5 that of the Nazi b'itz days last autumn. Por- .linps few realize that in action gslmilar to that, in which the Ger- imans lost as many as I86 and even 200 planes, we now lose only .30.. In the view of this British Air Vice_Mnrshal just back from Brit- ain, the Germans are clialkin up a second air failure. They con dirt take the fierce defence Britain put up last fall and now are failing to stop the offensive of the Royal Air Force. Ho rt-fcrrrd back to the action of last. wreck in which 20 British planes were officially reported lost ‘and said, "had we lost 40 planes it would still not be grave or sur- Wzrlslng. On‘_v now is the shoe be. ‘ginning to be pulled on to the i..:h<r moi It's going to pinch a ttot worse." A lonu alert man who flew in tlu- ilr (treat War and four r _ d from German prison llllli. and hit two tankers of 4.000 tons and two schooners of 800 tons be- tween Tripoli and Bengasl. One of the tankers blew up and the other was presumed to have been lost- frcm fire. l (In London, the Air Mlnisiry~ news service gave an even sharper picture of the extent of the British aerial activity in the Mediterran- ean. Within the last 48 hours, the K news service said, British planes i had sunk 17,000 tons of Axis shlp- _ ping, . (Besides these confirmed sink- lngs, the service said. a colller had been bombed at Lamccdusa on the Libyan coast and a destroyer and two schconers of 800 tons probably had been destroyed. (An attack on Bcngasl. the re- port continued. was so severe that an explosion was seen 100 miles away. The service said this later aerial warfare sta Aug. 8-9 when a large formrtlsn of heavy bombers conent-rat/cd on the Corinth Canal which separates the Greek mainland from Pelopon- essus. causing hcav" landslides which effectively blcrl d shipping) The Admiralty of the exiled Netherlands government in London meantime announced that one of its submarines had sunk a 5,000-ton LONDON. Aug. l'I—-(CP)—Frank owen, editor of the London Eve- ning S sin will triumph In her war with Germany and allied soldiers will join hands with Russian soldiers- "Germany shall not stan way." Mr. Owen was speaking on the British Broadcasting Corporation's d in the‘ supply shin and a sailing ship of 1.000 tons in the Mwllterrancan. RAF‘. and novv bombers learned landfill. 881d Whlillll- R115" up for an assault. which raked lnr- bors and dlrdrrmcs of S'ctly from ‘i end to end. a cnm-mttniqne said. ANCIENT‘ IIONI-TY-CIIILD The ancient Eizyrpilans fed honev cakes to the sacred crccodilcs of the Nile. l rted the night of i l i l 1' m 5h"? ® War Industries "f /// /Wi7% “Q h\q\\r° . . . ‘ ' ) Cattle Irrhslr Air lose "m, “OEEwZKZTHASMAguA a Wheat Q) lrirish Navel Bose Dutch instead of 20 in offensive action.‘ ASTRALIA ON THE ALERT Pacific Ocean in)“ z/c/ \~ a‘ . . V CTORIA ~44‘, o, T“ --- T:—‘" -T—_.—. rcifmns, Air M 1 ltfcKean is ..k in Can do after l2 days in Britain. l-lls .. blue as a Dutch zcapot. sparkicd as he told of the . shock of experiencing there for the first time in his life the feeling of being a "stranger at home." Vifhatevcr else the blitz has done. he added. it hns so stripped arti- ficial \'.llllf‘5 from the British people that. newcomers "feel com- plicated and encumbered with a stoc of mechanical reactions which suddenly seem a burden." ._____.______ SCOTS’ THRIFT FOR WAR. l EDINBURGH—<CP)—li/Iore than 24,000,000 pennies or approximate- ly $500000 have been collected in penny banks throughout Scotland for the war effort including 1.000,- 000 from school children. Use Mina ‘s for sprains _ 6 Cora! Sea A ovmsvilla -- / » / /'7/// Mceltay /.// w nw/fl . ~e /. ///. ’ ouszustmo ./ y. ., M/Lgydn '0 ‘Y _, Cenberm South of the East. in now looks to iLs own defenses. Australia, one of the British Empire's biguoxi tion and aircraft, has called its parliament to emergency session as the . . .._ ... __._,,,_.__._____,____b__._ _ dies lhc land that sent its men lo fight. in the bottles of Africa, S)‘: ‘in and Britain producer's of food, muni- l r apaneee threat grows. W! Endangering Philippines ADEQUATE BASE FOR US. FLEET IN FAR EAST So real a menace I-l 11E!‘ Zine of communi- e uilglit rwk it for the I much w o-rc-r on the lmmedato French a threat during a Ja- Sovi- Singa- our Far t Just Singa- nln. but Singa- need to ‘ v.'l‘l explain fu-