l . r l i i i i i ' or 1a urns MAN‘ bii ammonia-sham”... unnum- can», a.“ Ilrllll of». Inseam Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY. JULY 2. 1943 You faith. MAXIMS 01A M E RF. M AN cannot post a letter with, , - 10 PAGES .._.______. _._____. .. m Subscription Delivered, $5.00 lull. $4.1m- oths- Provinren A 0,5,5, 55,09, “BIG OFFENSIVE IN “SOUTHWEST PACIFIC lWilI I Move Thousands Of Men To New Jobs Order Becomes Effective On July 15. Warn ll. S. Cities May Be Bcmhed WASHINGTON, July 1 -(A Pl-Thc public was warned to- . s" “y: "u. W n s tea ctea a sum- mer in an effort to cripple forthcoming allied offensive! by creating a public clamor for yvithdrawal of air strengtlh gum tlhc battle zonea to the omc mnt. The warning came from a highly-lalaoed source asking npt to be l entitled by name. "The war is approaching a vigorous comma]? andmsnythlng can hap- pen." e as . Observers believed the warn- ing carried the clear implica- tion that": auclh sir attacks occur. m ry ca ers expect the country to "take it" in the rfaliaagoa thaawlgajor“ air a reng comm! to o ens- ive operations overseas, and any change in that strategy could only prolong the war with a msnltant waste oi the lives of soldiers and sailors. uppueMBr liar. Electric Co. Granted An application oi the Maritime Electric Company for the supply and sale oi electric service to the territories heretofore served by the Nor-ii Tryon Electric Company, was granted by the Public Utilities Board at a. meeting held in Mo- Gulgan and Trainor's law office on Wednesday. An application for the erection oi a pole-line highway from Charlotte- town to North 'I‘ryon via Bonshaw. and the servicing of the route. was also granted. Briefs on behalf oi both applications were presented by Mr. V. A Ainsworth. divisional super- intendent for the Con-many. There were no contra representations. Dr. I. J. Yeo, chairman oi the Board. presided. Commissioners Thos. Johnatc-nc, Sllmmerside. and J. J. Condon Georgetown, also sat on the hearing. Mr. Condon acted as secretary. Mr. Ainsworth told the Board lhat electric line construction was held up by difficulty in obtaining metal. Pole erection along the highway will not begin pending a permit to be received by the company from the meinls ccntrnller, said Mr. Ains- worth. Meanwhile. the Maritime Electric Company will proceed with a land survey of the territories to be used for pole placing. EYE ACBO“ “"7. CHANNEL DOVER, Errol - tCPi ~Sev— en young glrls in a canteen amuse themselves hv tailing the ‘lme from a clork in the centre of Calais ac- ross the Channel. On clear days thcv can plainly see the French coast and t~llsr hrwdin-gs. and with glasses can sec the hour and minute bar‘? on a clock tower in the town e . COMING EVENTS -n_ "Horse Races at Riverside ‘Frock, Vernon. on July 21st. 7-2-61. "Dance French River l-Iall Fri- day July a, _'i-il-ll "Dance in Morell Hall Fgitlll’. July 2nd. Clifford Peters 0h- estm. "Rummage Sale, Trinity social Hall, Saturday, July 3rd, 6.00 P. 7. CO 1 B. V‘ Jgynsiffirstwsnwaitn. I . Lotto in s of Greek Pund- 7-2-1!- "Murrsy Harbor shipping Club load hogs, Monday afternoon. July It . D. Ray Brooks, Bec‘y.7 a u "Concert and dance at Wiltdllm UITAWA. July 1 — (OP) - Laocr Minister Mitchell tonight an- nounced issuance of the thirdwm- pulsory employment transfer order which will make thousands of men - Ancluding many in wholesale ea- tabliairmerlts - - available for more essential work after Juh- 15. The order, like its two predecess- ors, applies to men in age groups subject to call ior oomrplfisory milit- ary service and. in line with the Minister's recent ann-uncement in the House oi Commons, to youths of 16, 1'1 and 18 years of age. Subject to compulsory transfer to more esential work by National Selective Service under the third transfer order are men in these ago ps in:- 1. Any wholesale activity except the wholesaling of the following commodities: farm products other than tobacco: food products; lum- ber and building materials; plumb- ing. heating and ventilating supp- lies: electrical equipment for indus- trial use; machinery and ecui-p- merit; gasoline, oils and greases; fuel and ice; farm supplies; metals. minerals and chemicals; paper and its products; books, newspapers. magazines and sheet music: watches clocks and timing instruments: leather and leather goods; scrap metal. junk and waste. 2. Raising of special livestock like race horses, and dcgs. cats and oth- er pets. 3. Flower growing. 4. Horticultural services, except tree surlcry. ~ 5. Leather currying, finishing. embossing and japannink. 8. Brewing. 7. Manufacturing in any of the following lines: fur goods; robes and dressing gowns; neckties and scarves; curtains and draperies: metal household furniture; house- hold furrliture of other kinds except mattrisses and bedsprings; metal office furniture: rattan and willow- ware; cigar boxes and fancy boxes of wood; mirror and picture frames: perfumes. cosmetics and other toilet preparations; and hand bags and small leather goods. The age groups subject to milit- ary call-up - - and hence subject to the transfer order along wit-h youths of 16. 17 and 18, are set forth by the minister as".- "Every man who was born in anv year from 191‘! to 1924. and who has reached age 19. regardless of wheth- er married or single; and to every man born from 19:12 to 1916 who on July 15, i940, was unmarried, divor- ced or judicially separated, or was then a. widower without children. even if such a man has since marr- ied: and it also refers to a man who has become a widower since July 15. 1040. and has no children now liv- lng; as well as to men who since that date have been divorced or judicially separated." u. s. Seed Fcr Bermuda HMIILTON. Bermuda. July 1 - (CP Cable) - A new market for Canada's seed potatoes was seen here today when it was announced by Sir Howard Trott. chairman of the Ben-nude Agriculture Board, that E. A. McCaTp would leave lhorilv for Nova Scotia to arrange a contract for that Maritime Prov- ince to supply seed potatoes for this British colony. GESTAPO IN LAWS TONDON — ICP) —- A husband giving evidence in court gave a new name to oft-maligned mothers-in law when he told the judge "I am YIIIIII standing for no Gestapo-in-laws in my house. IIIIIII Issue 3rd Compulsory IJPT£LCV§¥MJ ' VIIIAF’ Employment Order Airman Killed At Ch’Town A member of the RAF. was kill- ed Wednesday when he was struck by the whirling propeller oi an air- craft at the RAJ‘. station in Char- lottetown, the Eestem Air Comm- and at Halifax announced last nigtht The airman walked into the path of the plane while it was tarclinggthe announcement said. Name of the victim, who came from the United Kingdom. was not: announced pending notification of his next-to-kin. Churchill In Statement 0n Giraud Status lily Lynn l-Ielnzerling Associated Press Staff Writer LONDON, July 1 - Prime Minister Churchill in the House of Commons today that the British and the United States Governments had asked the De Gauile - Giraud National Ccm- mittee of Liberation on June i9 that Gen. Henri Giraud be retained "on military grounds" as commandor of French armed forces in North Ai- rica for the present. A request for assurances "that there should be no important change in the French command in North Africa at the present time," was made to the Committee. he said on behalf of Gen. Dwight D. Eisen- hower, Allied Commander-in-Chief. The representation “was made on military QHQ nds and implied no decision to inv:st Gen. Eisenhower with full control over the political organization in North Africa." tho Prime Minister said in response to a question by Emanuel Shinwell, p __ t disclosed La r. Mr. Churchill's unequivocal words came amid the stormy reaction oi the press and some political circles hero to what was described some newspapers n5 sllghting treatment of Gen. Charles De Gaulle, Fight- ing French Leader. Following so closely nn Mr. Chur- chllls statement yesterday that heavy fighting would occur before fall in the Mediterranean, the state- ment. was seen as along the line oi last Sunday's analysis by Klrke Simpson. Associated Press Staff Writer in Washington. of the view that the De Gaulle - Giraud diff- erences would not be permitted to threaten the success of any Allied military operations in the Medit- erranean area. North African dispatches reported on June 22 that the French Comm- ittee had decided that Giraud and De Gnulle each would retain com- mand c! his own forces. In other words, Giraud retained his post in line with the British — American rsquest on June l9. Mr. Churchill said this request- was made “in view of the prolonged discussions between the French leaders in Algiers on questions in- volving the character and control of the French armed forces and the serious ‘ffrrt. which this might. have on the furtherance of the war eff- ort and the safety of the Allied forces." ‘ The Prime Minister, depreciating “any undue attention to the per- sonality of the new French organiz- ation." said:- “The committee is working on the basis oi collective responsibility and it is our hope that all its mem- bers will merge their personal and individual interests for the common good oi fiance. "The British Government have consistently encouraged the union of Frenchmen in the fight against the AXis and for the liberation of France." ‘Main Port In Sicily Is Blasted From Air ALLIED l-IEADQUAMIRB 1N NORTH AFRICA. 1 -- (AP)- Americsn heavv bom rs, encoun- tering little opposition, smashed the main Sicilian Port oi Palermo yea- terday in an unrelenting aerial pre- lude to trsns-Mediterrarlean amph- ibious operations that lnuat be the greatest in h Iisoo Il-lLPfld ..m andProcesdf r smurf? ovelrysesa fund. o'er»: m? ",,°{‘},.i’§",',§',:§,“°' ‘mafia sored by Reserve Army. 0-30-21 ‘in? “no”. m? rflggam; “M, !"“"""'md m, feds. s common ua a . states: arsulgowiall ° trivial‘ tools: §§}.',‘;"'§,,§n'f,',‘§ "w" W‘ °" m‘ um Brothers, to 535cm inlet’; "W1 '1" 1"" "'1" It ' Ball. rnc . J and r a ofi lad from Igldamhll 5th ‘greet prominence today to reports of Axis alarm over the vulnerability of the long Mediterranean coast line oppcaile Africa. including neutral dispatches of the mobilisation at able-bodied Italian manpower Hail! British Fighters ' - —w/---__-__. War Situation Last Night By Glenn Babb, Associated Press War Analyst The Allied offensive in the southwest Pacific now extends over an arc of nearly B00 mils but a dispatch from Gen. MacAr-thurs head- alarters says it ls "only a small beginning" of the great strategic plan yet be unfolded. Most oi the evidence supports this estimate. The initial thrusts. into the new Georgia group in the Central Solo- nlons and along the northeastern coast oi New Guinea, apparently are the two prongs oi o. plnccrs directed toward Rabaul. on New Britain, the main base set up by the Japanese in their Island con nests above Aus- tralia. But Rabaul may be oni an intermediate objec Ive, although its reduction would be a major m tary accomplishment. To the north lies Truk in the midst oi Ja n's powerful outposts in the mandated Islands just above the uator. o the northwest lies most oi the rich Island Empire Japan seize from the United States, Britain and Holland in the first six months oi the Pacific war. If the drive from the Pacific were co-ordlnated with an eastward thrust. from the Indian Ocean that whole region oi conquest nlight be sliced off from the rest oi Ja an'a holdings. It is not unreasonable to assume that some such en- terpr se was discussed at the Washin ton war council in May. The initial advances by the Alli forces Jargely American, under the overall command of Gen. MacArthur, were aga nst the Islands nearest territory already in Allied hands. Beyond Guadalcanal and the Russell Islands, into which the Americans had moved in recent months, the closest Japanese territory was the New Georgia. group. The move into Woodlark and the Trohrland Islands was an easy, unopposed step from nearby New Guinea shores. At first glance, therefore, it would appear this was in the Island-hopping pattern. But the United States is definitely committed against such tactics. llcncc it is logical to assume that these first Island landings are merely in the phase oi clearing the brush away before the real assault Sir Patrick Duff And Lady lluff Visit Province Declaring that he had long look- ed forward to seeing Prince Edward 1513Y1<1¢ M111 OXDressing unbounded faith in Canada's postwar future. Sir Patrick Duff, Ottawa, Deputy High Commissioner for the United KlflEdom to Canada. arrived in Charlottetown Wednesday after- noon in the course oi an official Maritime tour. Sir Patrick was accompanied by Lady Dllif. who is an active mem- ber of the Red Cross Society in Ottawa and who showed her keen interest in this work by visiting the local Red Cross headquarters tvith- in a few hours oi her arrival. Sir Patrick paid his respects to His Honour Lieutenant Governor IePage Wednesday afternoon. and yesterday. with Lady Duff, visited Allies S Allied Artillery Fire By J. F. Sanderson, Can the National Park and other places oi interest. They were accompanied by Mr. Justice A. E. Arsenault and ZTJIQIQLQ Transfer eize TWO Strategic J zip-Held Points Enemy Air Field At Munda la Under adian Press Staff Writer. WASHINGTON, July 1--(CP)-Aliied forces have seized two strategic points in the Central Solomons and from one of them is battering a key Japanese air base with artillery fire. American forces which landed at Rsndovs llald llazi Convoy LONDON. J11 i- (OPl—BritL\h fighter comman aircraft damaged three medium-soiled freilhtfls and four minesweelpers in an attack on a German convoy oii the Hook o! Holland today, the air ministry news service announced. Typhoon bombers made the at- tack st masthead height, executing their runs in the face of intense fire from ship and more batteries and weaving in and out oi the cables oi the convoy‘; balloon ber- "K-phoon fighters acted as cover and darn ed some of the eonvoyk C0011 oi ke Willi-ION. begins . War; Now Publishes TORON O, July _1 — (OP) __- Just; one ay in advance‘ for the newest Axis guess for “invasion clay” a former German Army officer pub- IZSIlCS in Canada the first clear-cut plan for an Allied invasion of Eu- rope. The author is L. V. Randall of Montreal. an almost unknown essay- ist who cnmc to Canada six years ago. The invasion blueprint is no wishful-thinking guide in an easy victory. It is a cold assessment of the high cost of a vital task. its primary aim. the author says, is "lo show how foolish it is to sncaklight- ly of an invasion or think that. it can be startled just any day." Five - Front Plan ‘Ilhc plan outlined - - after a hali- bcok-lenglh military estimate of the situation - - is a. five ifont campaign starting in the Mediterr- anean and taking three weeks to reach its peak. a smashing drive at France from England. Its key strat- egy is to win bridgeheods on Eu- rope's west or northwest coast for the launching of strong attacks co- ordinated with hammer blows on the eastern front. Five years in the- Gcrman Army. Mr. Randall finished the First Great War as commander of a Bav- arian infantry battallion - - in which Hitler was a corporal he “doesn't remember." Because he saw the inescnpability of developments. he lcfl. Germany in i931 and lived for six years In Swilncrlnnd, trav- elling extensively in Europe as ban- ker and industrialist. before coming lo America. "l6é5fnilJd I Flre Damages I Coal Mme GLACE BAX N. S. July 1 —(CP) - Fire csriy today damaged the bankherul of Dominion Coal Com- pany's No. 4 Colliery here - - old- est operating coal mine in North America - - but company officials said later they expected the pit would be back in-to operation tomor- row. No one was injured in the fire. The coliiery was idle for the Dom- inion Day holiday as ilhe flames, breaking out near the IDP of the towering bankhead, melted one oi the thick hoisting cables to send a cadge crashing to the bottom of the AGO-foot shaft. The No. 4 colllery - - known also as Caledonia - - has been in con- tinuous operation for '74 years. It. is one of the most consistent operat- or's in the Glace Ba field and had not had a major acc dent since i880. BLUSSO German Writer Has Plan For Invasion Was Officer In German Army In First Great Be9k..1_c.9a“c<.1s “AT A GLANCE (By The Canadian Press) WESTERN FRONT — British fighter command planes damage thrcc German freigllters and four mincswccpcrs in attack on convoy off Hook of Holland, British naval observers expressed belief Germans losing one submarine for every Al- lied freighter sunk. DIEDITERRANEAN — American heavy bombers smash anew at main Sicilian port oi Palermo in . wake of heavy British assault on ferry terminus of‘ Mcssina. NORTH AFRICA- Giraud asked to remain as commander of French forces in North Africa, Churchill announces in London. SOUTHWEST PACIFIC - U. S. sen. and air forces smash back first Jap counterattack, downing at least 65 planes while troops ashore on New Georgia. Island capture Vii-n Harbor, miles from Munda air base. RUSSIA - Red troops capture CANA A F LU Ll l; EXBELS IN THE KICEN height oi "great strategic import- Iancc“ on front northwest of Mos- cow and hold it against 3 Nazi counter-attacks. ‘Capt. Kelly Awarded Llcyds Medal For Bravery At Sea HALIFAX, July 1—-I.loyds Modal for Bravery at Sea was today pro scntcd ‘to Captain P. A. Kelly, if. BE. of the Canadian National Steamship. Halifax by W.G Mlllcr local manager on behalf of R.B. Teakle general manager of the compnrly. ill the presence of a re- presentative gathering of local shipping and port authorities. The incident that gave rlsc e award was the sinking of the Cun- adinn National Steamship Lady Hawkins oi which Captain Kcliv was chief officer at the time, by an enemy submarine. Llnyds war Medal is bestowed upon officers and men of tile merchant nary fishing fleets in cases of exception- al gallantry at sea in time of wnr: 251 seamen have received the award since the start oi the war. Capt- ain Kelly was only recently ln- vested with the Insignia oi a lifcm- ber of the Order of tho British Empire at Government House in Ottawa and was presented with a silver tray by the Dominion Gov- ernment for the same action. M Lt.-Col. and Mrs. K S. Rogers. Pickering. two of the children. were received by Sir Pat- rick and Lady Duff. They gave p brief account of their experience here and were congratulated by the visitors on being in such pleasant surroundings. sir Patrick also visited the RA. F. General Reconnaissance station here. The? leave this morning for Moncton. where Sir Patrick will vlslt the R A.F' personnel depot. They will then go to Saint John and Fredericton, where he is sche- duled w speak. P.E.I. Like Home "Since I came to Canada I have zliwayys wanted to visit Prince Ed. \vard Island," Sir Patrick told :1 Guardian representative on his a:- rlvnl. "I came in o. convoy with many Canadian officers returning here after a long spell of duty in Great Britain. There was one from Prince Edward Island who spoke so loving- iv of his home, and as I heard him describe it, it almost sounded like home to me. with its red soil like Devonshire or Worcestershire. and all its kind scenes. “You always make people feel at home in Canada." 11B added feel- ingly, "but Prince Edward Island looks to me like home as well. "In Great Britain we have been set by Providence and geography to be the foremost garrison and the Springboard of assault. Whenever we look back. as we so often do with gratitude. to see the direction whence all these gallant reinforce- ments of men. munitions, food. etc. have been pouring to our aid, it is the Maritime: which, across the mists and wastes of the Atlantic we descry firat-—like s friendly hand stretched forth to grasp our own ii vast distances separated us from the horrors oi war. But once you art up in an airplane it is only a few hours. Canadian fliers who bombed Germany one night were in Ottawa the ncxt night. I flew in a bomber back t0 Britain my- self not long ago. and so many Great Britain and countries beyond which (‘minions are really only a. short flying hours nwny. harbours. got captured, the mans could be here in a mutter hours, and the fires which I have set-n in London, and the fires which devastated Europe, nlight br repented among Canada's fair allies. No place is too quiet or too in- Island. five miles from the Munda air field of the After luncheon Miss Jessie Full- erton, secretary of the British Over- seas Children's Board, accompan- ied by Gordon Taylor and Stella overseas "It seems in these quiet scenes as i“? people do it that they are bBCOITLIDR perfect bores. But the point is- have been overrun by the fcwlhanging before dawn tomorrow if "If anvthing wont wrong-if the111l8 deal-h 5613431109- nir fields of Great Britain. or her —"_"" o tralia. Japaneseon New Georgia island, destroyed tho en- emygarrlson there and, within two hours after the landing, opened up on the Munde field with artillery fire, sald a report from the headquarters in Aug. Earler today, s. navy ‘ issued here told. how rful sea. and air forces beat of an aerial cmmter attack made W the Japan- ese on the Rendova landing forces. Reports from headquarters and from the navy disagreed as to de- tails on the number of enemy planes shot down. the former saying that 101' Japanese aircraft were downed in air combat and by ground fire while the earlier navy communique said the number oi attacking air- craft was 101. with es downed. Viru Harbour, also on New Geor- gia Island, fell into American hands ‘the navy said. This harbour, 3'.‘ ~'ni1c§ from the enemy's base. is the only shelter or anchorage of any sort alone the whole southern coast of New Georgia. The Japanese counter-attack on the American forces at Rendcrva ran from early fonenoon until late a/f- ternoorl of Wednesday. The overall progress of tins off- ensive, the biggest of idle war and all tinder the strategic direction of Gen. Douglas McA-rthur, was re- nortod as satisfactory on both flanks 500 miles apart. one prone aimed it Munda, the other M. Rsbaul. Max Stephan Escapes Death WAEIEIGION, July 1—6@)— Onthe eve cf his schsdfled ex- eoution, the death senwnoe o1 Max Stephan. Detroit traitor who had been convicted ot treason for aid- a German prisoner who es- as omunuted today by President elt to life imprisonment- The President took this IND. l White House announcement acid, because he believed "that the sen- tence imposed by the Court was too severe in that it did not sui- inm account the statute Much dos for the con- sideration of different qualities of treason." Stephan would have dlsd by caped from Can w -Mr- Roosevelt had not. commuted lBcy Scouts Fund ITc llehabilitate ngcent for the‘ Hun to bomb a, w s , c. llrch or a c ildrenis school llerc. “But this will not happen. The‘ initiative is now with us. A new and signal hour approaches. and ____ expectancy is tense on the air. As‘ QTTAWA, Jung 30--(CP) -Car1- we survey the majestic resources sun's boy scouts will make a con- lhc tenth. and fighting on ' mmnnicrltl It isiihuzc $313.. ge 9_Co'ij Bl Dominion Executive Council of the Ilorldy Scout Association announced t ay. "For the present. 1,000 books in lain." the satement said. “Canadian bllicd more than $37,000 to Long, Tough War OTTAWA --lCPl —Defcnse Min- isier Ralston last night visited the University of Toronto contingent of be used t0 covcr the rosl of lishing thcsc lonrks. which will h presented i0 the scout nrlzllnlzntiol the Canadian Oifimrs Training Corps at nearby Connnught Ranges and warned chem that “despite ln those collnir i‘ Canadian scou Cne ll-Bcat Sunk For Every Freighter; Lost LONDON, Jib l -—( - The Germans now are lo g at least one precision-built sub- marine for every mas-pro- duced allied ll ‘ghter sunk, British naval observers said to- day. Sharply-reduced Nani claims oi British and American ahlj- ping destroyed during June » were weighed by these observ- ers against record allisd slnl- inga of U-boata in the last two mon Berlin broadcasts. recorded by the Aasoehtcd Press, anssrtatl that 31 merehantmen egg-regat- in; 149,000 tons were sunk by all German agencies in June, o! which M ships of 101.000 tons were mocked out by lJ_-_ ts. An estimate ol U-bsag destroyed 6th‘ as meat ¥robably would be oonstvative, or Malcolm Facdonald, Bri- tish High Commisdnner in Can- ada, announced in Ottawa Tue!- dsy that 14 of these raids; in the previous ll rm» Mhistg mall db- eloserl in his nidhall speech yeste/rrlay that the allies’ aver- age in May was at least one U-bmit sunk a day. -‘ of the United Nations we can look tribution towards rehabilitation of.’ High nde this momma m, 11m forward with confident hopes to the scouting in Europe after the wlrzanri tonight at lull event. But our hopes must be sober. by 17354118 1°!‘ tho publication 0f Sun sols this marlin: .li R30 nnc realistic hopes The crlcmv have "iiwlllmg 301' 5W5" 1n the “911911- rlsos tomorrow morn lav at Illll. 1W0 t0 three million men nrmcd in 0291311. 119111971111135. P19911511. N01" New moon July 2_ 84-1 n m inner “T811111 “m1 P011511 “mlumgwl m" Sllmnlcrsido ilric 1R miml r. ‘ {or than Charlottetown, CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY i ‘l b0 ‘ id l gaucrilldlliflgziigepzridliol" bipxglifiiidlllll From Bnfilfrll — Leave 0.05 sum scouts through their "nuns-up l ll- m- 1111f‘ 4-15 P 1 _ fund.‘ which was iilllllgllfilififi to HP"? U111“ 7]). ""1""! 11 3-"1 nid stricken scouts in Great llrl- 3-0-1 P- m- “"1 1M" P- "'~ DAILY All! .\I‘.R\‘I(‘E (EXCEPT NFNDAYI scouts have 601111‘;- til‘! fund. nearly all of which now is ill England. Future Cflllfilbllliolls Wllii Charlnuclow“ _ (“mmcnide _ l r- ' ‘Alnnriou (‘llllvlnitvlvnln l‘ Lcnvc 7.50 n. m as n Kilt Imml 12.10 n. m. 4.220 p m. l Arrive (‘ll:lri‘l'i.-'llrrn l.l0 p. rn .515 p- m. 7.05 p. m. our recent successes W? are still “THEN _ _ _ _ . engaged in a touzh and long war." cnnscotv -- a R 1-“31 3- ,"1-";"-_Y fl-Rwlj "Fhlrope has still lo be fro l" fiOll. li/lilllnnll m1‘. .. ""15 ‘M 1'1 mm’ s‘ gm“! he said. "We have siill to mnlrh v-mn n lliltit .~ Fl r In . - | 1. _ _ m; the fighting 0i lllffiln and we llzwc ‘l §<vll(|l.l. sic 111110111 aunt n l:~.\r.l 3...] njip;.,‘,‘»»1_1n;:ln.j ‘:11... 7 a’ m to clean up the situation Fa: East." in inc m 111g 1.000 concrete slecpcrs weck. a Lczlvc; lariilou - £1.60 a. m. and ll p.m. and 5 p.m.