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The Ottawa Journal from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada • Page 2

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Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
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2
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'2" London Headquarters Captured Officers and Maps Seized U.S. Home Guardsmen Acting as German Parachute Troops Successful in Raids IW ml DREW MIDDLETOM. I AnKltUI rrM tun Writer. LONDON. July 21.

United States home guardsmen, simulating German parachute troops, captured the headquarters of the London defence, seizing officers, maps and documents In. tactical exercises held yesterday by the London command. The gaard unit, coin posed of rotted States ef Britain, commanded by Gen. Wade Hampton Hayes, awoop-'- ape the London ten. forcing.

the staff to sur-- render at pistol point. The attacking Americans were aided by "fifth Including a golfer and a man who simulated drunkenness. The golfer made practice shots to study machine-gun emplacements. A casual stroller took a complete set of pictures of the headquarters 'area this in' spite of regulations strictly forbidding cameras near airdromes. A dog was used by another American operative.

He tossed a stick into bushes shielding a machine-gun position. The dog chased the stick. He followed the-dog. He learned which way' the gun pointed. With pf the airdrome defence complete, Hayes led "parachutists'-Jn the attack.

and although the British gun defend ina that particular zone opened fire, most of them were offkially declared to have survived to reach over. -Armed with tommy-guns. revolvers, tear gas and hand grenades and with rain to I lower visibility, the Americans British Prisoners Roughly Treated in the Italian Camps Everything Done to Torment Them And Finally Placed in Huts Facing Own Guns By TO Canadlaa Press. I Britons luckless enough to fall into the hands of the Italians during the battle of Africa received rough treatment, according to S. Amnion, a chief cook In the Merchant Marine, who suffered that fate.

Now in Canada, Ammon was taken prisoner with 200 other sea-men in Italian Somaliland before the Fascists capitulated to British troops. For the first three days they existed in a native village on one large biscuit and a quarter a cup of water daily. Then they were taken to a prison camp In Mogadaclo where they were given a small tin of bully beet and three large Msculta. Ammon said i the captives were driven there 1 in a truck "packed ta like sardines ana claimed ine drivers released great columns of black smoke to torment them. During the 10-hour trip, the men went without water and were lorced to stand up.

At Mogadaclo, they were ordered Into tone, huts facing the sea and any attack ine tinusn migni launch. Ammon said the stoves on which they were supposed to cook were useless and that their food generally was rice and water. There were no razors, cigarettes or soap. The heat was terrific and the camp swarmed with flies. Ninety-four of the prisoners were 111 With dysentery, some so eeriously they had to be removed to a military hospital, where there were neither doctors nor surgeons.

The only aid given them was in the form ef injections. Ammoa said the Joint Ital- tan -German officials of the camp sold their food to the natives and he was convinced they would hare liked nothing better than te see them die. In January, they were moved acraei the desert another camp in Merka, where there Ladies' Smart. SUMMER 2-98 FROCKS Downstairs Drew Shop i i 4 See the New BEACH ELECTRIC RANGES Only IjO fiJI Easy LOW up Terms REID'S tti BANK 3-S7Z1 CONNOR WASHERS ISM UiAt, DA1.HOI.SIE GEORGI SIS. rose from tneir positions ana nuhed.

sentry guarding a gap la the wire. Ha was aver- powered and ruled dead. The Americans poured through the tossed tear gas bombs through a window and knocked down a door. While half the guardsmen watched over the staff, others dashed upstairs to seize maps and other army documents. "We bad to give them back their maps and an American chuckled, "so they could continue the exercises." The Americans, organized several months ago and regularly drilled, made up the only home guard unit participating in widespread manoeuvres, of which the successful attack on the airdrome headquarters was one phase.

The captured British officers protested that the attack "came too The Americans quoted field orders showing that they attacked at the first moment permissible under regulations governing the manoeuvres. The' argument was halted by word that one of the Americans' imitation explosive grenades had set the bead-quarters on fire. This blase waa under control when a high staff officer relied up to find out what waa wrong. When he learned that the headquarters had been captured he praised the Americans as being "as enterprising as we can expect the Nazis to and ordered the maps and orders returned "so we can continue the was even less ta eat. Bags of macaroni and rice were alive with magfota.

Their ordeal ended, Ammon said, when South African forces captured Merka. Air Marshal Grins Over Movie Lines Even in front of a movie camera, Air Marshal W. A. Bishop, V.C, couldn't help grinning at the lines they gave him for a wings parade scene in "Captains of the He walked down a long line of graduating airmen, picking out at random and asking them what province they were from. The answers were Ontario, Que bec, and so on down the line.

Then one big six-footer replied, "Texas, to the question. "One of our best provinces was the Air Marshal's comment as he continued down the line. But he couldn't suppress a smile. Members of the cast and crew of the film are saluting the Union Jack every time they pass the flag mast at Uplands airport. Jimmy Cagney started the habit and others followed suit Admiralty Announce Loss of Two Boats LONDON.

July 20. CW An Admiralty announcement Sunday said: "The board of admiralty regrets to announce that H. M. Drifters Devon County (Skipper G. A.

Barnard, R.N.R.) and Lloyd St Vincent (Skipper J. S. Alexander, R.N.R.) have been sunk. The next of kin of the casualties have been informed." Controller Ads Continued from Page One. The new curtailment plan will involve the use of smaller quan titles of nickel for such articles as electric toasters and other ap pliances, automobile bumpers and fittings, household appliances of many types, and machinery not essential for war H.

S. Wlngate, of New York, secretary of International Nickel, announced that his company would "co-operate 100 percent. with the U. S. and Canadian war Expansion of the In ternational plant together with curtailment of ordinary com mercial use of the metal is expected to Insure ample supplies of nickel for both Canadian and United States war industries.

Traffic Court mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm For illegal parking, Clifford Hind, 88 Sunnyside avenue; William Woodley. 1 Ridgeway street; Walter Tate, 348 Parkdale avenue; Donald F. Cornish, 87 Hopewell avenue, $1 rnd costs. For riding a bicycle two abreast on the Driveway, Yvon D'Aoust, 30 Boteler street, $1 and costs. For making a forbidden left turn, Albert Loiselle, 189 Nepean street, $3 and costs.

County Cases. For failing to have a transport license, Dclanges Express, Joliette, Que, fined 820 and costs. For defective lights. Wolf Bodo- vcky, 321 St Andrew street, fined SI and costs. For falling to produce operator's license, Robert u.

Aiken, 198 Powell avenue, fined 93 and costs. For failing to stop at stop street. Louis Lackary, 231 Highland avenue, fined 11 and costs. For speeding, George Balcer, 170 Cobourg street; George R. Preston, 612 Bank street, fined SI0 and costs.

1 RECEIVES WINGS LEADING AIRCRAFTMAN D. A. BERESFORD, son of Mrs. H. G.

Beresford, of 47 Edina street, who received his wings at No. 9 Train ing School, R.OA.F;, Brantford. He born in St John, 29 years ago and graduated from Llsgar Collegiate. LAC- Beres ford worked in the main office, of the Bank of Nova Scotia on Sparks street and for three years In a branch of the bank in Toronto prior to his enlistment last October. He has a brother, Gordon, of Kingston, Jamaica, and two sisters, Mrs.

N. Ferguson and Miss Maysie Beresford, both of Ottawa. Ottawa Boys Home After Service Aboard Destroyer Two Ottawa boys who have been assisting in the Battle of the Atlantic aboard a Canadian de troyer have arrived home to spend theh leave with their families. Gordon MacNeilL of 12 1-3 Le- Breton street, returned to Ottawa this afternoon after being overseas since February. Ha is a wireless operator, nis twin nroiner, smart MacNeill, is also a wireless oper ator, and took part In the evacu ation at Dunkirk.

two boys are the sons of Mr. Leslie Mac Neill and the late Mrs. MacNeilL Leading Seaman Walter M. Dicks, a member of the crew of a destroyer since the outbreak of war, is home on leavs visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

T. J. Dicks, 449 Somerset street west He has two brothers, Chief Petty Officer Alfred Dicks, T.C., serving on another Canadian destroyer, and Corporal James F. Dicks with the Cameron Highlanders In England. Spain and Portugal Continued from Page One.

The President asserted It would be taking a grave risk unless Congress were to make 'possible-the maintenance of the present, full, effective strength of the army during the coming year and give training to as many additional Americans as possible. He a'dded that it would be a "tragic error" to eliminate about two-thirds of the trained soldiers and three-fourths of officer personnel. The step which the President took to underscore the administration's desire for extended service was considered to some extent an acknowledgment of a strong opposition existent in Congress. Compromises have been advanced. But Mr.

Roosevelt said he was not asking Congress for specific language in a specific bill. He said he hoped the legislators "will acknowledge this national emergency either for a specific period or until revocation by the Congress or the President The objective, he declared, is the all-Important Issue. The President said he was confident men in the ranks realized better than the public! the "disastrous effect" which would result from permitting the present army to melt away and set back the training and expansion program at least six months. Noting that last year's selective service legislation definitely provided that the one. year training program could be extended by Congressional action if a national danger later existed, the President added: "I do not believe that the danger to American safety Is less than it was one year ago when, so far as the army was concerned, the United States was in a woefully weak position.

I do not believe that the danger to our national safety is only about the same as it was a year ago. "I do believe I know that the danger today is infinitely greater. I do believe I know that in all truth we are in the midst of a national emergency." In presenting his case. Mr. Roosevelt warned that "Americans cannot afford to speculate with the security of America" and he re minded the nation that this coun try also must prepare to defend the entire Western Hemisphere.

He said plainly that the menace which this country faces originates in Germany and the Nazi party's aspirations. .1 must refer again to the sequence of conquests German conquests or attacks which have continued ulnterruptedly out several year all the way from the coup against Austria to the present campaign against Russia." 1 In addition to recommending continued service, the President said he thought Congress also should remove restrictions on the number of selectees Inducted each year. The limit now is 900,000. LIST 318 CASUALTIES. LONDON.

July 20. The 193rd casualty list of the War Office to night showed 99 killed, nine died of wounds, 110 taken prisoners, 83 who died, 39 wounded and. six wounded and taken prisoners. THE OTTAWA" JOURNAL' MONDAY, JULY 21. 1941.

Urges Blocking Wodehouse Assets LONDON, July 21. (O.N.A.) Blocking of the assets of P. Q. Wodehouse in Britain and the United States -was advocated today by the Financial News as a symbol of the "practical disapproval" of the novelist's broadcasts from Berlin. Paul foreign editor of the said the Trading-wIth-the-Enemy Act entitled the Board Trade to list any specific per- son as an enemy for the pur-t poses of the act This provision, he said, was now ap "pllcable to Wodehouse since he was no longer technically an Internee or a Sunday Traffic Near Record TORONTO.

July 21 en Ontario motorists took advantage of the last Sunday they may put chase gasolin and oil before the new regulation restricting Sunday sale come Into effect and boosted traffic to what was said to be near-record proportions in many parts of the province. Evidence of reduced speeds to conserve gasoline were reported throughout Ontario. The greatest reduction in traffic flow was reported in the Hamilton and Niagara areas of the Queen Elizabeth Highway where a 30 percent decrease in travel was -reported. 1 Reports from the Midland district, Cornwall, Sarnla, Stratford. Aurora.

Newmarket, Peterborough and Woodstock Indicated that there was heavy traffic and in some Instances no tendency to ob serve a 40-mile-an-hour speed, A Toronto policeman reported that traffic on one of the main arteries, Yonge street, was as heavy as any other week-end and a provincial policeman said traffic on the Queen Elizabeth Highway was "Just as heavy as any other week end with no reduction in Slight reduction in Sunday traffic were reported from Gait and the Owen Sound district While many tourists enquired about the new regulations at Sar nla, officials said there was little change in the number entering irom Fort Huron: Now Dismantling Bomber The Lockheed bomber which made a forced landing at Masham, on Saturday morning began its initial stage this morning in the process of being towed back to its hangars In Montreal. Ground cf ews of the Atfero Company dismantled the big ma chine where it lay in an oatfleld on the farm of Francois Martineau and prepared to tow it on a trailer over the fields to the road con necting Masham to Wakefield. Officials of the Atfero Company apparently decided attempts to re pair the machine on the spot and fly it out would involve too great hazards because of the surround ing hills and rough ground. The warplane continued to be an object of great interest to residents of that district as they gathered In large numbers over the week-end and this morning to watch proceedings. The crew of the airplane made a miraculous escape irom Injury when the pilot brought it, down in the field by "pancaking" it without using the landing gear.

(See also Page IS.) R.A.F. Bombers Continued from Page One. It war known that the Germans had been working hard on the defence. On clear days United Press observers, using powerful glasses, have seen the defences gradually taking shape. Long white slashes mark excavations where the Oermans have hewn road In the chalk cliffs.

Near the Dover patrol war memorial on the French side the Germans have erected a big circular concrete building and all along the cliffs other buildings are going up. It Is believed here that the Germans have built a network of roads at strategic points between Calais and Boulogne, to give their troops fluidity of movement- The roads have been sunk to give armored vehicle! and supply trucks good cover. The Air Ministry reported that reconnaissance "planes had seen a German tanker, crippled by bombs yesterday off the French coast, beached half a mile from Berck-sur-Mer, down at the stern and with Its bow out of water, spilling a trail of oil on the sea. The well Informed Press Asso ciation reported that 'last week had been the most successful of the war for British raiding 'planes and that In addition to constant raids on Germany and occupied territory British 'plane had prob ably destroyed in all 242,000 tons of German shipping. SPORT SLACKS Coras Tropical StriM Oaaardlats 3.95 4.95 0.95 Rideau aaa Sums (ta, Call S-4SIS a ii-i ratqu, armsnei, Enamela 1 Dttaltrni fohnson'g Wax Car-Nu W.J.

CARSON Llau'u 291 Laurter Ave. W. 2-1713 MSB an a a ak3 No Early Rush To Buy Gas Although gasoline service sta tion -begin operating under the new regulations today, with" the dally closing hour 7 p.m., motorist had not evinced any hurry their supply of gasoline this morn ing, jt Most service "stations reported "business as usual" and as Monday is always an "off-day" business was slack At many places 'there was even a slight decrease In busi ness because motorists with "courtesy" card and. used them on Saturday antf-SudO any, oiling up weir tang wgrtne limit of their Although staffs of the various service stations were reduced it was not expected any unemployment hardship would be' caused by the reduction of "operating hours. The service stations will be-closed from 7 Saturday night to 7 a-m.

One or two men at each service station were discharged, but since it has been hard to get men for this work, no one would be unemployed for long, it was stated. Several men who were released found new occupations The Retail Gasoline. Dealers' Association will hold a meeting tonight to discus and clear up several matters pertaining to the new rules. Some dealers have in mind keeping open after 7 p.m. for bus iness other than selling gasoline and oil, such a car washings and tire-changing.

The association has been in formed that some' gasoline stations, independently owned, would still extend credit and a ruling will be sought to determine if such garage could do so under the new regulation. Bennett Goes LONDON, July 21 CF) Vis count Bennett former Canadian Prime Minister, la moving to the Ministry of Supply where he expects to help Lord Beaverbrook, the Minister, In developing Bri tain' tank production. The 72-year-old Canadian, now a resident of Britain, who 1 waiting to take his seat in the House of Lords, was associated with Lord Beaverbrook in the Ministry of Aircraft Production. The two men were associates in their early days in New Brunswick and at Calgary. Lord Bennett has been at his desk daily since Lord Beaverbrook was transferred from the Ministry of Aircraft Production and expects to be there a little longer until his work has been cleaned up.

He would not say definitely what hi new duties will be, com menting simply: "I am ready to do whatever they want me to do Honor Father Sweeney Who Soon Leaves For Saskatoon Post Rev. Leonard J. Sweeney, O.MJ, Director of the C.Y.O. in Ottawa since it was founded three years ago, was honored on Sunday morning when member of the Oblate Order, secular clergy, and more than 300 members of the Catholic Youth Organization gathered at -a Communion breakfast in his honor following the nine o'clock mass in Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church. Father Sweeney leaves shortly for his new duties as rector of the Oblate Church in Saskatoon.

During a brief address following the breakfast Father' Sweeney said that He believed the Ottawa C.Y.O. to be recognized as the strongest branch In Canada. He aid. however, that the group would need five years to become stabilized and he would have liked to remain In Ottawa two more years until this term was completed. On behalf of the C.Y.O.

the presentation of a wrist watch hd a cheque, was made by the secretary, Miss Carol Dennison. Matt Beahen, the president gave the presentation Praise for Father Sweeney's academic and social activities, particularly among the young people of the Capital, was expressed by L. A. Cormlcan, O.MJ, rector of St Patrick's Col- llege, where the young priest has oeen a memoer ine teaching staff. (Father.

Sweeney celebrated the mas which preceded the Communion breakfast, and Rev. John O'Neill preached the sermon. TERRORISTS KILL THREE. SHANGHAI, July 21 Three persons were killed and two were wounded today in an outbreak of terroristic violence in. Shanghai.

iiC PTn UJEL HOWLAND SWIM CAPS ken your hair dry. or. All OOC Ut Spcrks (t 1M Bank St. a-nn j-7n mm FRBK ClTT-WIOa DELIVER mm Shop at Slover'a and SAVE (ust a raw STEPS from rsi BIOH RCNT DISTRICT To Supply Post HOME ON, LEAVE 1 'v 1 4 1 i GORDON, MaeNElL, wireless operator on a Canadian destroyer, who arrived in Ottawa today to spend his 'leave with his father, Gordon MacNeil, 12tt Le- Breton street Four Montreal residents were injured, two of them seriously, when an automobile driven by Al bert 1542 St Matthew street Montreal, plunged off the highway and crashed Into a ditch about a mile south of Chelsea, at two o'clock this morning. The driver of the machine told Traffic Officer A.

Fournler. who investigated, that the party was coming from Gracefleld to Otta wa, and that, he lost control of the car when blinded by glare lights of a machine coming in the opposite direction; The injured are: Mrs. S. Kelly, fracture of the pelvis and super ficial wounds. Arthur Robida.

severe cuts and knee injuries and three fractured ribs. Miss Flore Courchesne, sprained right ankle and multiple bruises. i Allan Kelly, aged three. cuts about head. AH four were! conveyed to Sacred Heart Hospital, Hull, in an ambulance of M.

Emond, 271 St Joseph Boulevard, Hull, and were attended by Dr. Gerald Brlsson, 163 Champlaln street Hull. Hanson Sees Canada Have Conscription Despite Opposition SKAOWAY, Alaska," July 21. Cn rHon. R.

B. Hanson. Conser vative leader In the Canadian House of Commons, told inter viewers here yesterday that he be lieves universal conscription in Canada is coming despite opposition to it Mr. Hanson said he believes European conditions will intensify sufficiently soon so that conscrip tion will be virtually necessary In the Dominion. The Conservative House Leader arrived here on board the steamship Princess Alice and changed to a 'plane for a flight to Dawson, Y.T, where he planned to visit George Black, Conservative member of Parliament for the Yukon.

Others in the Hanson party Included Col. A. C. Casselman, member from Prescott Ont, and J. 1 O'Brien, Northumberland, N.B.

SOLDIER DIES. A native of London, and a member of the Midland Regiment since May, Private Francis J. Bryant 30, died at a local hospital this horning after an illness which confined him there for ten days. I -A Private Bryant was a sort of Dr. J.

F. bryant and Mrs. Bryant of London, and received his education there. He was a member of a brokerage Arm for a few years and later travelled across Canada for the Retail Service Association. He enlisted at Peter-boro and moved to Kingston and then to Cornwall where he was taken ill and brought to Ottawa for treatment He was a member of the Baptist Church.

Surviving besides his parent are one brother, Benjamin Bryant and one sister, Mrs. C. L. Martin, both of London. The remains left the funeral home of Hulse and Playfalr on Monday for London where service will be held on Wednesday afternoon.

Interment will be In Wood-lawn cemetery there. ROVTH-TURGEON. The funeral of Mrs. Isabelle Routh-Turceon. a resident of Ot tawa for many years, was held this morning from the parlor of Horace Racine and Landrevllie Company, Limited.

451 street, to Sacred Heart Church for requiem high mass chanted by Rev. Father L. Proulx. Interment wa at Notre Dame cemetery. Chief mourners and survivors are: two sons.

Horace Stanley Routh. of Port Henry, New York, and Edgar, of Aylmer; a daughter, Mrs. Louis Ranzeit of Ottawa; a brother, Antolne Rattey, of Hull; a sister, Mrs. A. Roger, of HuH, and nine grandchildren.

Among the many spiritual of ferlnss and floral tributes were ones from the Director and Alumni of La Salle Academy; Laurler Tennis Club; MInevllle and Port Henry. Telephone Girls; staff of Slover, Limited; Chex Rose Flor ist; Friends of the Gleanlea Club; New York Telephone Company, traffic department nd New York Telephone Company, plant staffs U. 8. INDIA MINISTER, WASHINGTON, July 21. Thomas M.

Wilson, of Tennessee; was nominated by President Roosevelt today to be Commissioner to India with the rank of Gar Leaves Road One Russian Army Unit Destroys Two Battalions of Hun Artillery latTma MOSCOW1. July 21. (B.U.P.1 A communique said today that one army unit had destroyed two battalions of German heavy artillery and 300 German trucks, another had captured 189 trucks, five tanks and four armored cars, and a third had captured a German air field. couts reported that the Germans were preparing an attack In a sector designated as Major Goryanlov surrounded the German concentration point' With artillery, and infantry and attacked. After hours of fighting, the.

communique said, the Russians destroyed 300 trucks and the heavy artillery, numbering perhaps 2,000 men, and captured 30 undamaged trucks, many horses and a large quantity of ammunition. Units of infantry division surrounded and wiped out a large German motorized formation, capturing 189 trucks, five tanks, four armored cars, two 'planes, six field guns, and trench mortars and heavy machine guns, it was asserted. -This also -captured a German headquarters bus with documents relating to military operations, a radio station, pontoons, motorcycles and 19 motor cars, the communique' said, and destroyed 100 German trucks. Dash for First Cost Player Life PORTLAND, July 21. OP) Ralph Wesley "Red" Kreltz, 85, Chicago White Sox catcher from 1910 to 1912; hit a single in an Old-Timer' Baseball Association game today and dashed for first base.

Half-way there he collapsed. A doctor pronounced him dead of a heart attack a tew moments later. Russian Audience Cheers British Envoy MOSCOW, July 21 General F. N. Mason MacFarlane, head of the British military mission, and Sir Stafford Crippi, British Ambassador, were storm-ily cheered last night when they attended a ballet at the Tchalk-hovsky concert halt MacFarlane and Crlpps, with other British officers and diplomats, were seen by the master of ceremonies as they watched a program of Russian 'national dances.

He greeted them and the audience' rose and cheered, shouting: "Hail the Russian-British "Long live the great British and "United we will defeat ''V' Nazi Blitz Continued from Page One. The Hinh Command then added that encircling annihilation operation, ware in nrooresa and that Rumanian and Finnish troops were advancing on me uessar-ablan and Far Northern fronts. Fifth Week of War. The Russians said that the fifth wwlt nf war atarted with the Germans still hammering toward Leningrad, Moscow and Odessa but indicated that the panzers had scored only slight advances, if Guerrilla war-far behind the front said 'Mos cow, is increasingly hampering the Germans. At fh urn time Josef Stalin continued' to concentrate Russian tiirhtlv In hi.

hands and in the five-man high defence directorate which was eatao- Ushed to prosecute the war. Stalin hlmlf took: over the defence commissariat, presumably because Marshal Semyon- Timo-shenko now is engaged in the field directing defence of the central front 1 Laurence Beria. member of the Supreme Defence Council, took charge of the combined internal affair horn securltv commissari at The posts, split only a tew months recomblnea. COAJMOR BY A Canada's PHONE 2-4231 wa rn Mi KKE0 ZA Another unit under the com- nd of Senior Lieutenant Sa- bashhlkov, were operating behind the German lines in White Russia when they found that tha German had repaired a captured landing field. They attacked the field at night and captured It the communique said, killing more than 20 Germans.

The rest surrendered. Prisoner told Sabashnlkov that German 'planes were expected to land at the field after daybreak and he decided to capture the 'planes if he could. A formation of bombing 'planes landed at 3 ajnn- and they and their crew were captured without a shot; it was asserted. Two more formations arrived and also were captured, it was said, and the Russians destroyed nine "planes and fuel and ammunition dump. The communique said engineer near River were ordered to lay a road across a bog so troops could cross the.

river and attack Germans entrenched on the other side. Working waist deep under fire, the engineers completed their task while theinfantry beat off German attempts to cross the river and hinder the work. Then tank and Infantry forced the river and routed the Germans, it was asserted. PopePius From Exhaustion CITY, July IL () Pope Plus XII was described from nervous exhaustion and his associates-were said to have prevailed upon him to spend the hot days of next month in a rustic house in the Vatican gardens. There is nothing alarming in the Pontiff's condition, it was stated, but he has refused to leave the.

Vatican durlngr-the "war and has had two years 1 of heavy work without a real rest To enable him to spend more time in the fresh air, the house usually occupied by his director of gardens. Augusto Issopi, has been prepared for hi daytime use. The Pontiff intends to receive visitors In the Papal palace, however, it Race Entries EMPIRE ENTRIES. rirst race, pun $1,500, elalmlnc. xDouble Eire 111.

xOur Bally II 10S. Billy O. 119. York River 110. Prim ll.

Elbaun 118, Aumum 11. Bulnuft U. Second race, pun tloo. claiming. 4-ycar-eUla and about fur-Innts Oailr 117, Beauiar IIS.

xBof rrt III, Old RoMbuah lis. omlv III, Tony Weaver 11. Bill D. 1U, Dpa Cup. Id 1x2.

Third raca, pun 11 allowance, 1-yr-old, furlong Itvin Shi 111. Aparh lit. Hegemon 112. atar Tlmbr III. Kliniar 114.

Anytime IIS. Oummad Up lit, Pomway lit Brabant 117. Midnight Rjd US. Fourth race. pur $1,500, spacUl welghta, maldana, S-yaar-olda and about furlong Arms of War IK.

Iran US, Wia Timmla 11 xPeri-ovrr 106. Lota ot Tim 120. Schuyler-villa 11, Blowing Rock lit. Lannano 111. Baalleua US.

Big Risk' 11. Bau Brannon US, aArquaro ISO, Spar Tfoa Rod IIS. aPlrst Family 111, Cut Baaia US. Lanccron 111. Sea Lord US, Com-mlxlon 11.

Cadenza 111. aC. R. Fleishman and Mrs. p.

Vlachcr entry. Fifth race, purse 12.500, aUowaci. J-yaar-oldi, 1S mile. aOrevtlle 120,. Bwynsun 110.

Hard lester 11. aChoppy Sea 120. Jongleur US. MaM tar Henry II. xPtep Show tot, Happy Hunting 120.

aBelair Stud and Whaatlcy Stable entry Slxtrt race, pun (I JO, claiming. 2-y ear-olds and upward. 1 1-1 nuiaa. Early SetUer 11. aBuckboard 10.

Key Man US, Discouraged 101. Fir Marshal 116. True Kmghteaa ill, Roman Hero 111, Offshore 111, xHand and Glove 110, Autumn Quest tit. xDark May 103, Phara Frost 111. Zostcra US.

Aleinous 101, aConumdador lil. aM. L. Freud entry-Seventh race, puns) SI .500, claiming, 4-yearolda and upward. 1 S-l miles.

Short Distance 115. Sliver Beam 11. Impreaalnnist 114. xAir Cooled 1P3. Connie Plaut log.

Dissem bler 117? Abyssinia 111. Wcetcan 111, xDan'c Folly 103, Brown Queen II 106. Slav Charm 111. Chalmac UT. James 117., Deserter 111, Day la Dona 10.

Baby Talk 111. xlnterpretar 111. Count Sneety 111. Mlauelnn 117. Cortes Ml.

Dr. Sticks 111, ManUgna lit. xA.A.C. Weather clear, track fast. Suffering VVlffi most GUARANTEE That reminds me I must call ORPE'S for a FREE ome Demonstration Today".

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