MAXIMS OIA 111- oflfll i, mg bells for a fool. MERE MAN g man’! own sum pride 1| . “flilWIl Gun | Guardian. lanatiian Destroyer Asisiniboine Sinks Nazi Sub rdlan. Two Canto. Founded Ilfl >,‘%//’ The People's Paper ;-w---"" "“'--~»..,.,____ Read b Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Clanatorrarowlv. CANADA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19. r5242 Everybody MAXI MS - 01A MERE MAN A mm’! disposition is never well- knuwn till he be crossed, 12 PAGES Annual Subscription Dellvorad, [[00 By llnll: P. E. l. I 4.00! to other Provinces and U, S. A. ".00 i '... der dead and l ‘ awn. five “y bllitst we other val the second .. vessel Raccoon had officers our nl led mcrchanislwll Rppliéld Sept. l8—(CP)—- Loss g corvette Charlottetown hbY , urine ac ton. W111 0i‘ 7 mm of her ‘. missl o, was announced today er Macdonald. ratings died of in- vRoyal Can- ,, N“... 1m rcpoltedillis week. Monday Ml‘. Mncdonaxl said the been . with hcr entire complement of and men missing‘. reported the sinking by U-boat He Ch ar- wrrr cnlnmander. Acting LI- , John hllllard Bonner of the i Cflllddlftll Naval Reserve. was . in action. The five ratings m missing ole believed killed lotion. e oliiccr and seven ratings an: . d seriously injured-—two of .. on the danger list-but all improving. Six ratings . §ll§il'._ in lured. four of them dy discharged from hospital. .. other four officers and 8b u, were unhurt ~ wing is the Killed in Action: ‘casualty i t, Peter Artlficer .N.\'.R , Toronto, Died of Injuries: l. Donald St. Clair. a. N S ~ Ont ‘y V-R. London, Ont. n. Kenneth. AB., our 2a lbs, it Orchestra. i" °°_N°W Haven 1W0 gale " l and Tuesday. 1 m ‘L’ tionaiiiolrillae, n any!" ~‘ bleep Hall, lid": - er, John Willard. Acting Lt.- li C V.N R., Halifax. t. ,Belicvrd Killed in Action‘. land, John charlie. 08.. It. it, Gallagher Ridge, N.B. Kenneth, Engine (4th Class), St. r-ce, Marl. ldrigan. John, Stoker (1st t. ltC N V Ran Lord's Cove, d, David, Engine Room Arti- .R.C.N.V.R . Greenfield Park, arton. Leonard Arthur, 05-. AB. R., Ostrea Lake, Halifax l-Donald, Thomas Allan, Engine u» Artlflcer, R C.N., Pe erpor- insori, Edmund Charles, Load. To 'flllh1sf.li.C.N.V.R ,wln- v i! lniured (On Danger List N“ “It Rworted Improving): "l Elbert Edward, LS. R. _ new. ‘I Wlllk-WD. Nottlnghamsnlrc, ning Events 1-0- ifke“ Sllllixn. bingo and 2n Lot 65 hall, Wednesday, ‘lll- 9-18-41. _‘ ' “i906 Digs at Fredericton aYlnR $82? pair for good so small pigs. “ACDWIEII. Fredericton. idle" Supper and Dance, at. ‘i Tuesday. mntembeg agar}. - -ll . School. September 21st. Lgunghes Seriously Injured: Grocery. George r.'r.. Lieut... re C.N.V.R., Victoria Brown. John Abert. Stoker, n. C . N . V R. ., Vancouver. Grant, John Alexander. Stoker RC N.R., Fbft Willi am McMillan, James Douglass. Stoker. R..C.N.V.R. Saskatoon. Thompson. John Inglis, 5,3 , )1, C N.V.R., ‘Ibronto. Slightly Injured Costco. William Henry. LS, C . N ., Consort. Alta, R. Fbrtin, Leon Paul, 08.. RCN. V R. , Quebec. Montgomery, Joseph C . R.C.N.V.R . Tbronto, A.B., Perras, Gerald John, Stoker (1st- Class). R..C N.V.R., Sudbury, Ont. Rush. Frederick Joseph. Tele- grnphlst, R. C.N.V.R.. Winnipeg. Batcman. Cecil Murray. Sick Berth Attendant, R (LN V n“, Brandon, Man. Di'llon, Frank Charles, Stoker, R.C.N.V.R.. Montreal. INTERNATIONAL AT A GLANCE (Ghanaian Press) RUSSIA-Reds ltrultle to German infantry and tank troops who forced entrance to Stalingrad streets for third time in tb-day-old battle. eject FRANCE-Germans execute 116 persons in Paris for attacks on Nazi troops. MADAGASCAR — British troops only 75 miles from island capital at last report. SOUTHWEST PACIFIC-Austral- ians adopt counter-infiltration tac- tics as Allied bombers and filhtera pound bases from which Jana move on Port Moresby. New Guinea ad- ministrative centre. BRITAIN-Jl. A. F. starts using moot-pound bombs on Axis. TO BROADCAST 18- (CP)— OTTAWA. Sept. “Gentlemen With Winasl’; broad- casters Saturday, Sent. (CBC. 6-630 p.m. A.D.T.) include) :— (Prince Edward Island) Charlottetown: Edmund F. Christ- opber. iqvernment Will Erect owcrful Short- Wave tatzon At Sackville UFPAWA, Sept, 18 - (C?) - Canada is prc-parirlg to enter- the bat-i-le of air waves, wilh govern- ment approval given to establish- ment of an $80000 hitch-power short wave station at Sackville, N. B. War Services announced toda on o1 the si-aiton Minister Thor-son that (ionstruct- by the can. adlwn Broadcasting Corporation will proceed as rapidly as circum- stances will permit. Priorities fa the equipment required will be ar- ngled, bu; nevertheless some tn- fcrmed soiucss estimated it would be at least a year before station is in operation. Although the approvin g construction of stat on set forth its value in send. order-in -couxlcll the 31- ing news of Canada. to far places and in assisting Canadian trade after the war, the "lighting" pos- sibilities of short wave were not _ of Furnishings. "Q. at 202 Prince Street on L .O.L. H Richmond 8c, , l °v°llllla a o'clock. o-io-ll. Friday evening " l’ 15. ice cream and dance. _ lb Orchestra. WK div. but " “lilo: service mill’ in advance for re: I all usual loadi r‘ if‘ °l lébtemberngl 0-1 l. Institute at Pownal ‘Dm- r "toon d Tea ‘servo? rfifTiQ "ii"! livestock at OhRlOHA- prefer we "it" fly. and until noon Tues- u“ Tilllflldoy and until noon rotvlded, s ner- K Marketing Bong, Dell-ll nta . and after until f th _lll service “vrfidnfi ll}! .» p.33. shore wave p. forgotten . Among its other purposes, said the order-in-coilncil the Ilatlon will be able to "pmvide “the es- sential means o! self defence and counter-attack against the con- tinuous flow of German and Italian do directed against Canada, or trarlunittoa to foreign countries ‘in .0110: to min- lmiu the Canadian War effort” IDNDO than 50.000 N, Sept. iktcrl-Km Indians are enl iatinff volntarily everv month. the Mahar- of the war cabinet. Landon broadcast taught. a]; Jam Sahib of Nawanwlr. mem- llidlfll l-fo added that the filullll could be raised to any the war demands thoncccelarv equiplnmtvm! u- R.A.F. Using 8,000lb. Bombs In Latest Raids .._.i_ IDNDON. 5910i. l9- (Saturday) —(CP)- New 8,000-pcund bunbs were used by the R..A.F'. in raids which laid waste the vast (‘"8515 0i Karlsruhe Sept. 2 and Duesseldorf eight nights later, the n1 ministry announced today in the first om. clal disclosure that such massive explosives were being loosed upon Germany, Four-thousand pounders, which have been in use for sane months, naw are commonplace in the almost nightly assaults 0n Hitler's indust- rial establishment. More than a square mile of Dues- seldorf was wrecked in the raid and in Karlsruhe Z70 acres were laid waste. the ministry reported after a. study of photographs mado by reconnaissance planes. More than 100,000 fire bombs were showered on Duesseldorf spreading great fires in the wreck- age churned up by the "great weight" of 8000- and 4,00(l-pound high explosive bmbs, the air min- istry news service said The photographs the Duesseldorf railroad station heavily damaged by a direct hit. and much new destruction in the dock area. Among factories destroyed nl' badly drmaged were the inter- national harvest factory, Duetsshe Rohrwerke steel tube factory. Ob- erbllker steel works and Rilhrstalil steel works. showed ministry said without rota}! The into detalls of the damage at Karl- sruhe that the industrial area. there was severely hit. Third Victory Loan To Be Launched OTTAWA. seot- 1B —— (C?) — Finance Minister Ilsley today raised his Sights for Canada's flflh war loan, announcing that the third victory lcan to b8 Ol-‘Ellfli °ll Oct, l9 would have an objective of $750,000,000. The objcctive is $150,000,000 higher than lhat set for the victory loans in June, 194i. and February this year. The frst and second victory loans-each for $0o0,000,000—‘tl-e January. i940, 5200100900 war lcan and the September, 1940. $300.000-°00 Wat loan, all were over-subscribed. Mr. Ilsley has stressed that itn addition to the new and heavier taxation Canadians are Carfylllfl at present, greater support must be given victory loans and the pur- chum of war savings stamps if costs o-f the war are to be m“. In a brief statement today, G. w_ snmney, chairman of the Nat- ional War Finance ocmnfltlce Witlfill organizes loan campaigns. slid that the financial need is in- creased to the degree that every thought, every effort and every penny must be devoted to en- suring To success of the forth- omn oan." c Dengminatlons and malilfliiefi 0i’ the third victory loan bonds. and the rates of lnterrsf, will be an. nounced later. The secrnci victory loan this year offered thrre mat- uriY-ies, A 2 14-year beorlns l 1-3 per cent interest. ll SlX-ysol‘. beef- ing 2 1-4 per cent and s, l2-yflfl bggring three per cent». The second victory loan brought inc government almost $l.""00.000.- 000 with cash sales of 8843-1219 and conversions of $153,539,000. Mr. Slplflllley said "the challerlst 5nd cpooait/ilnity presented to the Canadian pecole" in the form 0! l- thlrd victory loan might well V0" to b, I mmtter of consequence in m» winning of the war. 1;, Umiggd "the alacritv” cf the Canadian people in moon-dine t» war loan needs in urged renewed Mass Executions IDNDON. Sept. 1B-(CP)—- The execution of 155 more persons by the Nazis, including 116 in Paris for attacks 0n German trawl. W" disclosed today. ‘rhoae put to death in Paris were described as "communist terrorists," g customary designation for per- sonog who violate Nut rules. They were diarged with attacks on German occupation t pa and with being "in the pay o Britain." Gen. Otto Von Steulpnagel. Naal oomnander of the city. aid the executions were "ieprlaala." . i! vailsble, We are loading ilve- Modular. the other Indian member of cabinet. uld t Ill‘ flit gotta‘: factorin are Illyiflg ‘l! “W 99mm working it maximum capacity. The Yo s u: Twen h‘ death ty were hostages shot to in the Croat vlll of Dugo- selo in reprisal for t e ambush v sources uld ' o deaths of u. ctha l . n the past and _ ca oss 0f H. M. C .S. Charlottetown Repor orvette Sunk By Enemy Sub_ ighl at i War Situation Last N (By Kirke L. Simpson. Associated Press War Analyst) The Russian last-ditch atand at Stalinkfld- dflflibfll by the Nfllifi as "embiticre " and "suicidal," has thrown Hitler off schedule at least another day. The fact must be that the Nani attempt to storm the city streets from the northwest was more "suicidal" than the Russian defence. Geruian casualties inevitably were heavier than those of Russian defenders who first contained the twin thrusts in a house-to-house bat- tle, then drove the attackers out. In close quarter of that type, the at- tacker invariably pays a heavier casualty price several times over the dc- fenders. I I I I I I Stalingrad ls so certainly proven now both a. symbol and a strategic pivot which Hitler must have at any price that it is a fair guess he is lashing his generals and troops to outmatch the Russians in suicidal de- termination. Yet that first repulse tended to confirm the Impression that when the attack reached the street-lighting stage, the odds against the lessened rather than increased. The enemy could not bring to hear in such close action and so re- stricted a manoeuvre field his dive-bombers or tank superiority. Man to man, the Russians stood him off. Only by throwing overwhelmingly sup- erior manpower at tcrrible cost can the city be reduced. I U I I London has forwardbd l. report from Moscow that at the supreme oment, orders to counter-attack, not to stand and die where they fought, were issued to all Russian units in Stalingrad. They stressed that every house or hill regained meant time lost to Hitler. There were also Moscow reports of reinforcements from central Siberia pouring into the battle along the Don and Volga. It is too late for Russian counter pressure far to the north to in- fluence greatly the trend of the Stalingrad battle. It has long been too late for Anglo-American second-front assault from the west to ease pressure on Russia at that point. Reinforcements From Siberia Part of Lost Positions Retrieved By Heroic Stalingrad Garrison. MOSCOW. Sept. lil-tsaturdayl-(AIU-German tank and infantry forces smashed into Stalingrad’! streets yesterday for the third time and Russian troops still are trying to eject them, the Soviets announced early today. Part of the lost positions were recaptured by the Russian garrison. a communique said in describing the action thus:- "On tho northwestern outskirts of Stalingrad fierce actions were fought. On one sector where the Illtlerites concentrated large infantry and tank forces they succeeded at a cost of heavy losses In taking pos- session of several streets. “Part of the lost positions were retrieved in the course of the day." Dispatches from the tortured industrial city on the Volga told of housc-to-house close-combat fighting while hundreds of Nazi cannon and airplanes hurled explosives into the ' positions, Red army reinforcements from Siberia were reported in action against the Nazis. The communique said numerous German attem ts to capture a commanding hil site had been rc- pulsed by the Stalingrad garrison ivhlch destroyed 26 Nazi tanks, 49 motor vehicles. and "annihilated about two battalions 0f enemy in- ntry. The grim battle for that hill still continues, the Russians said. 1n the Caucasus the Russians said counter-attacking Red Army units had knocked cut 26 German tanks and killed more than 1,000 Gelunans in the long-contested struggle in the Terek Valley of the Mozdck area, less than B) miles from the Gromy Oil Fields. To the west in tho Black Sea area the Russians said a Soviet marine unit had wiped out anoth- er German infantry battalion in a three-day fight sou-iheast of Nov- orossisk, Russian l-roolpe fighting at Vor. onezh, 300 miles norhwest of stal- lngrad, were reported to have wiped out two Gennan batltalions in a-n offensive action. “Most Critical Threat" The German break-through into Stalingrad apparently was the most critical threat yet to the mutilated lyilgustrlal city and lla valiatnt I81!‘- n (AlReutctrs Moscow dispatch said “German commando troops were Heavy Attack 0n Tohruk CAIRO. Sept. l8—(AP)—-Austral- ian air force heavy bombers and medium bombers of the Royal Air l-‘orce attacked Tobruk 1n force last night, as the lull in the land lighting continued. The main attack was concentrat- ed on the harbor iettics. one whim received a direct hit. Fire broke out in the harbor lust south of another Jetty, and was believed to aboard a sh . Bombs also fell in the town and the dock areas where a number of fires were started. Six fires. two which were visible foo‘ 30 miles. also were started along the mad near the Halfava pass. All planes returned safely. Mayor Goes To Ottawa His Worship, Mayor B Roy Holman, left Monc-tcn yesterday enrouts to Oil-awn to plNss further the claim for more activity in the Charlottetown C.N.R. locomotive shops and for retention of the Acooimtazlcy Department in the C.N.R. station here. Councillor McKee and Mr. HA. Mesoervy, city Engineer, who were the two other members of l-he d8- legatlcn which acoomronlrd Mayor Holman to Moncton to interview Mr. WU. Arpvpleton, Superint- endent of the Atlantic Region C.N.R., were back in Glarlcrtle- tmm stcnday. Coun. McKee said last n ht that the meet-ins W"?! Mr. ton "was not as satis- factory u we hoped and for that moon Mayor Holman went to we. Rowevcr, Mir. Appleton gave the delegation a good hear- ing but was unable to do much about the matter, he added. 0mm. McKee said he did not know whflehet the Mayor was going to naect with offirflals of the Can. ndian National Railways in Ottawa or with member-a of the Peder If!’ rain berfore Stalingrad and at the outskirts of the oiltyf‘) Communiques from the oily said troops who twice rushed in. streets were routed quickly rely asserted: "in the bail/tie Stalingrad, further gained in embi close co army and the air force") At this climax of tho struggle. ending its 25th da , the Russ rls delivered a new of enclvo throat on the Voronezh district on the upper Don. 300 miles northwest of the Volga city. A main of important hills was reported oooimted on the went of the river by Red infant- rymen. Inch Siberian Troops army tanks and fresh towns brought info the from the but played lent J. .9» Red m . 7t or UiflTillC. 0f Survivor 0n ‘Charlottetown’ MONTREAL. Sept. iii-RIP) Fll'.‘=t Class Stoker Frank Dliiftfl o Montreal survived the sinkxng of the Corvette Charlottetown although he W85 blown frCm the water ivhcn a depth charge exploded, he related today following the naval announce- ment of the ship's loss. Dillon and his twin brother John were nmollg those rescued bv rm- other naval craft alter the Char- lottetown went down. He said he vuater. H0 landed near other mew mcnlhrrs on a cnrlay float was pulled aboard in safely. The C1(‘\’vilCl1 who were here had with them the ship's mascot a clog, "Screech." The dog was overboard by Frank Dillon as the ship sunk and was picked up \v the same float. The dog's owner, Able Seaman Charles Garland of Gallaghir Ridge, N.B , was lost with the ship. Sees Attack 0n Brazil (APl-rbrcign Minister Oswaldo Aranha declared today a strong Axis attack on Brazil is a certainty, but added that it would be unsuc- cessful. “l think the Germans forced Brazil into the W81‘ because they believed they could make a front here with some appearance of suc- cess and ' people llcme they to t€dKills Commander narrow Esgapg Captures Crew In Blazing gun Fight 7 Royal Canadian Navy Figures In "One of Most Spirited Actions of The _ OTTAWA. §ept._18_(CP)—In a usllllllltllllltl. stylus ti‘; ";".i.‘.‘.f...‘.‘-‘.f..‘“£51332”..‘l°ii.'.?.§§.$ii'";.?3'“' a “a Bflfl crew. i The battle-described by Rear-Admiral L. W. Murray, flag Officer Newfoundland force, as “one of the most spir- thloiyn lted actions of the war”—t0ok place at an War.” Naval Minister Macdonald announced tonight. time and an unannounced location. _Mr. litlacdonzlld said it was “only one of the successful actions Wag"! by the Royal Canadian Navy against L'- boais. Details 0f other actions will not be given until it is certain they will not help the enemy. The Asslnlbolne is a destroyer flotilla leader acquired by the Cans,- Iliflll Navy shortly before the outbreak of this war. The submarine in this action was finally sunk bv ramming after the two ships hurled shot, shell and depth charges at on, gnaw", m close together that the Canadian gunners could see the faces of the Germans. ed. ..___. 0'"? "m". Ordinary Seaman Kenneth Watson of Bevelstokc, B. 0., RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept. 18- the youngest member of the crew, was killed and 14 others were wound- The Assiniboinc caught up with the U-hoat after chasing it in anfi out o1‘ fog and losing sight of it twice. The fog cheated the Cflnadigng when they sighted the enemy at 1.000 yards. They saw hlm again ail CHASED SUB THROUGH FOG BANK half-mile range and tried to ram hlm but lost hlm in a fog bank, Lh-Cmdr, J. H. Stubbs of Hali- lmcg fax, a native of Kaslo, B, c., com- gobme mander of the Asslniboine, told the up the biggest, nation and the best "Si? 0f tile 51ml!- ally of the United states in South America," he told a conference of the foreign press, Naval headquarters reported as saying: "Then we ' again, right on the saw surface "lint ever doubt that as soon almost a st0ne's throw away. as they can send 50 to 100 planes to Brazil they will try _ our cities alld drop parachutists." "But never doubt either those parachutists and planes that land will never return to and that the Germans will get foothold," he continued. "United States and forces will be ready to swoop on them, Brazil has handled invaders before—-Dutch, lish-ancl ttley couldn't stay." Aaskcd if he tholmht such an tack would come from Dakar, the our fire control and so we said newspapers resort to quarter firing. each gu operating independe Foreign Minister ircrc overcmnhasizillz the impor- tance of Dakar as a point of at- tack Oll the '"c=l-=ru hsvnisphcrc. "They don't need Dakar," he said, "They can operate from other places." He did not say what these other places are. Met tféftiFilé-éln A On Assiniboine AN ATLANTIC PORT, Sept. l8 _ (CP) _- -— Advance) - Kenneth (Wiley) Watson Cit Rcvrlsocke, B. C._ died hugging a shell Canadian destroyer fought and sank a Garnlan siliplrlntes told his story the destroyer THMiJCd port "We closed him at 200 yards to dosh-av the submarine Started an evading kept moving in and that just missed ramming his stern, ‘From my perch on the bridge the German comman- no der plainly in the conning tower but a short time later he was killed Brazilian bv _a shell from which struck the conning tower. action. We Germany, I 0° uld see “The Nazis French Ana Eflg- fire on our brldne few shots started a M. starboard side, This interfered with had to concentrated and the one of our 417's fire on the n nt of the other. All Guns Blazing blazing close-tango captured the unannounced m: i "With all our guns blazing, our him point five gunners kept, spraying hlm the submarines decks." and The U-boat tried to dive and the Assiniboine and erai times but too close for it Que. entered the to ram. said Stubbs, their first Nfblflded under hlm." Seaman ma nninrg the (Continued on pagg 11, Co] n _ “crisso cross action crossing its stern sev. llre its torpedoes. A shell riled by Ab, Michael Scuilion of veraun,’ _ U-boatis bows and the Asslnlbolne gm; m pggiflou "We slapped right into him m ' “and then for good: measure let go charges from our port and starboard throwers which‘ thrower! said one depth charge bounced on- iimivm 1i 2) _.._J Island Naval Officer Describes Corvette Sinking Lieut. Wm. Johnston of Brackiey tells of loss Of Corvette Charlottetown. Limit. as the Brackiey, Assinibome vlvors of the Corvctlo sub- Charlottetown arrived in Charlotte- town Thursday on a 30-day furlough vihen Only one other islands.‘ was aboard He the corvette, which was sunk when William P.E l Johnston, , one of tile was the youngest man on board. hi‘ by Pl lofllffflfl- H15 llil-‘lle just i8, and ill-e only one to die. was his first ship and his and as Lt-Cmdr. J. H Halifax, the Commanding Officer, J said in the burial service n-sxt day. “He was a brave man. He doing his dut for his country and his ship. Ccud any mun do more." Tile lnllmrt 0i the _ fired at the ship threw i101] out on the floor. He was awake before he hit. the deck. however, and heard e the “clang" which he imlncdlately recognized as a torpedo bloa; Johnston coming in the starboard side and lost no time getting to port and e11 up on the first deck. l-ie was in charge of the port alm- float and “action stations" sounded Watson dashed up the hatchway to his gun carrying a shell and was clipped in the alrm by a piec of shrapnel. Thai, knocked him down but he scralnlblcd to his fact and was just about to hand the shell to the gun- loader when another German sh got him with a direct hit. mates draped him in the Wirsn ensign and laid him almost others h he had fallen. Nazi ‘Prisoners- On Assiniboine AN ATLANTIC PORT, Sept. l8 --(CP)-—- (Advance)- White bread and butter was a great treat for German prisoners captured by the Canadian destroyer Assin bollle when she sank a submarine, mem- bers of the Asslniboirle crew re- vealed when they reached port. They said the Germans were fed up and glad the war was over for them bu-t were still stout Nazis. For a few minutes tho U-boat crew thought they were min to be shot, as they had been to‘. can. adians did not take prisoners. When a guard summoned live of shook hands with them and said goodbye. Bill the Conn-Alana were announcer of gust taking them up live at. a f or exercise. Limitless uantitles of watei- for ‘u ing WAS Lieut. 1y, McNevin from the eastern first battle the province. whose chrn. stubbg of and address were unknown ohnston. At the time Lleut. Johnston was died slee-piilg on the "flush" deck, been on me four o'cloc.; watch. torpedo which noticed ii M.C S. water of sur- n/“s Britta to tef A tannins 0a tar. w“ brace than one 1N ’it-\E \ WooDSal-zo _ A/ ' v 1*- / llav- a (f d i‘ made straight for that section of (Continued on pagr ll. Col 3) JERUSALEM. Sept. The Rulnanlan oil fields of Plocsti St. Oil Fields Still Burning Bon the ship. Standing at the float when e arrived there was engine room Artificer P.K. Lovatt, i. face. Man, who has been officially reported "mlssinit. believed killed in action." Quite a number of men were already in the water and he CAR FERRY SERVICE 1.00 p.m.. 4.45 p.m.. 7.55 n-m- Leave Cape Tormentlne — a-m., 3.15 p.m.. SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. 21 inclusive) DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY ‘I From Borden — Leave 9.25 amt-r 111M 8A5 n.m.. 9.10 D-Im Leave Borden 9.00 a. m» 3-45 0-m- Leave Tormentine [.00 p.m. P. B. l.-N. 8 l-‘EBR! SERVICE Leave Wood Inland: 7.00 a.m., ll. .|n.. 3 p.m. Leave Caribou I mm" l pan. and a 5-30 p.m. AIR SERVICE 1B»~(AP)-- "still are burning" from tile Soviet Vial fic. air raid last Sunday night. n clan- destine Rumanian radio station. them to cnmc on deck the others bilgggggsighizim hi}? “d” “Our reportér visited Ploesti.“ the secret station ~lll° said. "and the results of the bomb- ing are terri \l: the Cbarlotlctow-rl-Summersldo- in a 12.48 p. m. U. m L P. 10.15 a. m, t, uncton Leave Charlottetown 0-35 a. m.) Leave Summersida 7.10 a. rn.: i.” one Moncton l1 a. 1a.; and HI l m. "Iv-aw 1- '_.;