ALL QUIE'i ROME Private communicati. -j " ' ii h9in ,ind down. The Home radio was sl J " ours vester- i DICTATORS IN AGREEMENT BERLIN Chancellor Adolf Hitler and Fremler Benito Mussolini met yesterday and were reported to have reached "complete agreement." The place of meeting and subjects of discussion were not disclosed. MALTA IS RAIDED VALETTA, Malta German Stuka bombers made another raid n this naval base yesterday and Sunday. Twenty-five of the German planes were brought down in battle and one British. KENNEDY AND BRITAIN NEW YOUK Joseph P. Kennedy, former United States ambassador to Great Britain, declares that United States should give the utmost aid to Great Britain, However, such aid should not be allowed to reach the point of war for which he believes United States is not prepared. Since aid t0 Britain is a tound part of United States policy, Kennedy belives that aid thould be by outright gift rather than by loan. GREEK SUBMARINE SUNK ATHENS After sinking the 11,000-ton Italian supply ship Sirdinia in the face of a convoy, the Greek submarine Porleus was sunk by Italians. This occurred twenty-one days ago but bis only now been announced. The Forteus was a vessel of 700 tons and carried a crew of five hundred. , MORE THAN 1400 RAIDS LONDON More than 1400 effective air raids have been made on German military objectives by the Royal Air Force tince last September, it is announced. Daylight bombing is the latest phase of the British attacks on Kelch controlled territory. TEL AVIV RAIDED TEL AVIV, Palestine This city had. its first air raid alarm jfsttrday. Bombs fell harmlessly. PACIFIC RAIDERS MANILA Three German raiders are believed to be operating in the Pacific, according to survivors of sunken ships arriving here. . The ships are between 5,000 and 10,000 tons, have Japanese names but are manned by German marines. They have junk at least six ships. USING NEW SPITFIRE LONDON A new and very effective type of Spitfire plane lj bfing used. It has a -speed of. 400 miles per hour." AR.L UVbK dUMdo IN CAMBODIA DAYLIGHT tectorate I'oliow.ng Battle BANKOK, Jauuary 20 The flag I rv , t . i i r it,. i iiiMi nit x nppn raiJiw iui lug . " ' X- m J " tncQ proiecioraie oi uamooaia, RECAPTURED FORT WILLIAM, January 20: Erick Welser, a second internee Nazi Air Force Resumes Attacks After Having Been Absent For Twelve Days Southampton Bears Brunt LONDON, January 20 The Nazis, . - . i.i fi-a roiris tnprt Tn nurn - 4Vi ,n.,th omir rvrt nt iniiLnamD- - , 1 . .k .Kln-Vif hut thn ivnrl- nT rnp iuu uuv jiib11" vuv w. . w. British fire lighters was very ef-fwtlvn and damaee was light with PE D1VT A NI IQ casualties few The German planes ULiIVlYlrl 1 10 came over in waves and. although thousands oi incendiary ounius were dropped, they were extlngul StCOnd Prltnnfr Whn F.scaned from , u.uhi .Via ratH ufis nvM , neiore buiujbk i ho ascaped at the week-end from !attack centTed upon Southampton & prison camp for Germans near iyesterday a quiet day but. "re. nas Dccn recapturca wnue nevertheless, five enemy pianes 7tng to make for the United) broueht down, four of them nate" border. Bruno Schwalger, h nntl-aircraft fixe. One bomber "ho had made his getaway at the jn an English fie-ld last 1:e time, was re-taken on Sa- nl ht mi Iour Germans were 'urday soon alter his escape. So kUled fir twenty German prisoners have I raiding planes were escaped from Canadian camPs''absent from over Grea Britain ;Jneteen of whom were recaptured Saturdav night. They were balked hlle the twentieth was killed fa wlntry w-eather. There was a b-en attcmotlne to resist recap-. K, onj a southeast gale ure CHICAGO WHEAT CHICAGO. Jan. 20. Wheat fu tures were unchanged to V2C lower on Saturday, May Closing at 8678c NEW YORK COPPER NEW YORK. Jan. 20. Copper dropped. The enemy aaso visuea south and west England and Eastj Anik rfurinff the nlsht but the, lashed up heavy seas in-thebiraius Five bombs fell in a wnaon 1 noon when German bombers made i 1 Ji -t their first dayugni. capital in twelve days. I rrucr nprman aircraft had .been reported over northwest Eng. . 1 i.,iii in In the the In in- prices were .01c to .09c higher on;. . and severai towns the New York tnpfol markpt Ra'.Uf- . ...ji.-j. j ... . o.usxriai jvuunu' un May closing at iljic jjci pound, Saturday's Circulation o the Dally News 2150 Xour Inspection Is InviteJ The nort of Sw-ansca in South Wales bore the brunt of German aerial attacks Friday night. pOUND STERLING Vol. XXX., No, 16." British in 20,-Thc YORK, Jan. NEW fltV .n imrhaneed at.ly ON GUARD Each week airplanes oi the Royai Canadian Air Force fly thousands of niiics along tauada's sea coast on constant patrol. Ihtg bi Hudson is shown as it wings over a merchant ship,, part ' ot an Atlantic convoy. CAIRO, Jan. 20: (CP) British forces, in pursuit of Italians who are falling back from the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, have pushed into Eritrea at two points, British headquarters announced today. Striking beyond Kassala in the Sudan, from which the Italians "were driven yesterday with aid of Ethiopian Irregulars after having occupied the place since last July, the British are now"op-erating eastward of Tessenei and Sadborat in contact with the retreating enemy. The latter are on the border and the former are several miles inside of Eritiea. The Fascist flight is said to be general along a 200-mile front. London reports said that two Blackshirt battalions had hecn routed around Kassala with 2000 casualties. Meantime, the British also continue to pound at Torbruk and are active against superior Italian forces in Ethiopia. ANNOUNCE NOTHING and Mussolini Are Not Disclosed BERLIN, Jan. 20: (CP) Chancellor Adolf Hitler and Premier Benito Mussolini met at an undisclosed nlace today with Foreign ministers Ribbentrop and Ciano and reached complete agreement "concerning all questions, a communique. What the questions were was not divulged and the communique did not say if military advisers attended the meeting. From this it was thought that the discussions were principally political rather than military although II Duce and Der Fuehrer are commanders-ln;chicf of their respective forces. Lady Tweedsmuir Endeared Herself Accomplished Many Things in Betterment of Canadian Life Lady Tweedsmulr's tenure (1935-40) as chatelaine of Rldeau Hall is wpil rpmcmbered. She endeared herself to women, throughout Canada for her Interest in their work, cartlcularly that of the Women's Institutes. She was gentle, mothcr-iw nnd pvpn shv in manner but ac- the pound steri ni, foreign L,ilv,b complished Tonnw many th things Intra In in exchange ItTLfZZl betterment of Canadian life. VICT BACK IN MISSIVE TO , ERITREA CHURCHILL Italians Have Been Driven Out of Wendell Willkie to Carry Message Sudan by British Still Pounding At Tobruk For United States Fresident WASHINGTON. January 20 Pre-rident Roosevelt has- instructed Secretary of State Cordell Hull to supply Wendell WiHkle with' full particulars of the admin atratton's foreign policy before hf Wlllkle '.caves by plane' for England on A ' ' Wednesday. Th: President and 'WUlkle'xon-, the rerrecl'foT half-an-hour yesterday and Mr. Booseveit gave vviukis a personal note for Prime Minister Churchill. On his return from England. It is intimated that a. post in the administration wiJL be Willkie's for the asking. There would be pre cedent for this as President Wilton later appointed William Howard Taft, his presidential opDonent. as, Ohiel Justice of the United States. Mr. Willkie nlso met Secretary, of State Hull before leaving' for Eng land. SPAIN GETS Canadian Supplies Being Released By Britain in view oi ieea shed almost as fast as they fell LONDON, Jan. 20: (CP) A ton- and fires were kept well in hand., Nature of Deliberations of Hitler ct signed Saturday by the British embassy at Madrid and tne . Spanish ministry of industry r.nd (commerce under which certain! quantities of Canadian grown wheat now in British stores in the united States will be shipped to .Spain where the need for the grain is great. Fifteen thousand tons to be j " .dispatched from Baltimore will s comprise the first shipment. j j fleeting more friendly relations between Great Britain and Spain., Further supplies will depend, It is suggested, on the progress of ne-j gotlations between Great Britain and6paln over the Tangier quest-Ion. . Weather Forecast General Synopsis A disturbance is slowly approaching the Queen Charlottes from the westwards while the pressure is abnormally high in the lar north. The weather remains mild throughout British Columbia. West Coast of Vancouver Island Moderate to fresh northeast to sleet. War News mm Tomorrows TSes High 7:35 a.m. 19.9 It. TALK OF INVASION LONDON There is renewed talk of a German invasion , atlimpt on Britain which mar -e within two or three month. The aviation expert 01 we s& Times thinks it will be soon ,nd with treat suddennr t jjQj vcnty days, says Musso-lini's newspaper in Mila Z J make a spring assault aiiinst Great Britain with SrV ttacks." war NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAYTJANUARY 20, 1941 Bulletins RECONCILIATION VICHY, France Premier Henri Phlllipe Petain and former Premier Laval met yesterday and a reconciliation is reported to have been reached. NAZI MISSION TO ROME ROME Dr. Karl Claudius . and thirty-five Nazi economic ex- nr. n . 4 ri.it - fit- 1 FIGHTING IS HEAVIER ATHENS Fighting between Italians and Greeks in Albania is becoming heavier as new Italian reinforcements move up. A concentrated Italian air attack is expected. The Greeks are consolidating positions after routing The Wolves of Tuscany." STILL POUNDING LIBYA CAIRO The Royal Air Force makes heavy and continued afr attacks on Libya. There ..have been Italian air raids on Cairo and Alexandria with insignificant damage. TORE DOWN FLAG WASHINGTON The United States Department of State has officially apologized to the German embassy for a German Incident at San Francisco Saturday when two United States sailors tore down a .Swastika flag which was placed outside the German consulate Tn observance of the seventieth anniversary of the founding of the Reich. The two sailors were arrested but later released on writs of habeas corpus. Thousands of people stood and cheered as the sailors ripped down the flag. DESPERATE SITUATION MADRID Former King Carol of Roumania is in a desperate position here and is threatening , to go on strike. He cannot en- dure it longer in Spain, he says, I but has been forbidden to go to Great Britain or United States. ' OFF TO WASHLNGTON OTTAWA Sir Gerald Camp- United States. PALESTINE EARTHQUAKES JERUSALEM Two earthquakes shocks were felt in Palestine. They are believed to have centred In Turkey. QUESNEL MAN KILLED ririiiiirieir u.nlj III! in Wales lQrr'Jin.a Arrest Made In Low WOULD MAKE VJ It II XJVV V V uvu nH4 1 jured and is in hospital here as a HT , - f C result of a dynamite-laden truck . Jj alClirUIll Udld going off the road twenty miles . iff east of here and plunging twenty , JreaKinff Attair teri nver an embankment. The & truck belonged to a line running between Vancouver and Fort St. James and skidded in loose gravel. CAPTURE CIS. mrnmAnr i .been arrested by city police and lYiEiWUUiA. charged with shopbreaking. The i u wv ma trial of WaUace has been adjourn- French Freighter Was Forced to Follow II. M. S. Asturias Out to Sea RIO DE JANEIRO, Jan. 20: (CP) The French freighter Mendoza, attempting to run the British naval blockade and return to France, was Intercepted Saturday by the British east winds, part cloudy and some- auxiliary cruiser Asturias and com-what colder. I pelled to follow the cruiser on to the Prince Rupert and Queen Char- high seas where the cruiser placed lotte Islands Fresh northeast to Jon board a prize crew, the Mendo-easi wJhds part cloudy! and partlytza's crew being transported to the coMer with some lisht': rain or' warship. Brazilian naval planea re- cd until January 24. Stock Market Trend Upward Continued Strength Shown in In dustrials and Utilities NEW YORK. Jan. 20. Stock continued their upward move ment on Saturday on the New York Exchange. The turnover for the short session totalled 250,000 shares. The industrial average closed at 129.75, uo'.21: rails, 29.03, down .13, , ported to the minister of the nejy. and utilities, 20.27, up ,14, .... 20:40 pjn. 16.4 ft. 1:01 ajn. 7.3 ft. 14:14 pm. . 63 ft. PRICE: 5 CENTS. F.D.R. Inaugurated Today Purpose To Protect Democracy, Declares President Roosevelt 1 Urges Americans to Sacrifice to Preserve Nation From Disruption Now Attempted From Without-Brilliant Scene teen dav in nrrntJalf fnr fur. I WASHINGTON. D.C.. January 20: (CP) Franklin ther tightening; of Axis econo- rj. Rosevelt, solemnly taking his third presidential oath mic relations. . t0fiav. proclaimed that "our stronc purpose is to protect I and perpetuate the integrity of democracy." Before a : crowd estimated at more than 75,000 persons, the President placed his hand on the old Dutch family Bible and j promised to "preserve, protect and Bomb Toll Is Now 23,081 defend the constitution of United States. he i Just before Mr. Roosevelt took the oath as the country's first third-term President, John Nance Garner I swore in Henry A. Wallace ot Iowa i as his successor in the vice-presi- " dency. The oaths were admlnister- LONDON. Jan: 20: (CP-Th.e jed by Justlce charles Evans Ministry of Home Security re- t1Hugnes 0f the Supreme Court of the ported today that 3,793 civil- United States. lans were killed and 5,044 tn- Jn igm-ai address, Mr. Jured in air raids In Decern- Roosevelt proclaimed democracy ber. These casualties bring-the cannot Qie anQ that to keep lt announced civilian toll since aUvJ we must muster the spirit lart June 18 to 23,081 dead and t and falth of America... 32.296 injured. At the outse( President said that at each inauguration since lg79 the people had renewed their sense of devotion to the. United States. In Washington's day, the task was create and weld,,together jiyfOpr preserve the naUon. from disruption. ITIVIVLj l"lllLl 1 ! from within. Today the task was to save the nation and its' lnstltu- Hepburn Urges That Currency Be tions from disruption from without. Increased in Order to Meet j Democracy could and would Wartime Requirements vive but there was real peril in lso- lation and Inaction, declared Mf. TORONTO. Jan. 20: CP Prcm- Roosevelt. Tyranny and slavery ler Mitchell F. Hepburn of Ontario need not become the surging wave urges the Dominion government "to 0f the future, make available sufficient new cur- Mr. Roosevelt emphasized the im-.rency in order to take care of ex- portance of a better life being pro-pandlng requirements of wartime." vided for all under democracy. DAME LLOYD- (Greater security, opportunity ana (knowledge could and would be ' made available for every citizen. nrnnnr mrc In a nation llke a Pe"n. how- (trA)KllLi ULiVSlVVJU ISllJV UbTil) ever, it was not enough to bestow a bQdy mind Qreater than i these was the spirit. bell left todajr to assume his new (Wife of Great Britain s Former; ..If the Spirit of America were duties as British minister to the j Prime Minister l'asses. Away tilled and the body and mind con ilWAUVU scripted by an alien world, the 1 America we know would nave per- LONDON, Jan. 20: (CP) Dame )lshed declared llix. Roosevelt. Margaret Lloyd-George, wife of Bri-1 spLrit of democracy, although tain's first Great War Prime Min-: otten unnoticed because it was so ister, died today at Criccieth, wales. jobvlous m triis country, spoke in She was "5 years of age and Is sur-, manv wavs nof oniy from this hem- I vived by two sons and two daught-1 Sphere but from presently enslaved 1 Deoples across the seas. A destiny of America as proclaimed by Washington was as applicable 1 today as it was then. Preservation 'of the sacred fire ot liberty and the j destiny of the republican model of government was entrusted to tiie hands of the American people. H ,we In this later day let that sacred I . 1 fire be smothered by doubt or roar. I Arising out of the breaking and we shall have rejected the destiny entering of th Star Wellding Shop which Washington strived so val-pfflce at Cow Bay last Thursday lantly and triumphantly to estab-hfeht when the safe was damaged iish. "The spirit of this nation jus-by a welding torch in the attempt ' tifies every sacrifice we may make to open it. Andrew Wallace, a re;' in the cause of national defence (cent arrival from Vancouver, has jn the face of great peril, we muse protect the spirit and fate 01 Am- erlca. We will not be content 10 stand still. We will go forward." Among those on the President's stand were Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, in a broadtail fur coat and sable fur with large black hat with huge bouquet of violets, and Mrs. Sarah Delano Roosevelt, the chief executive's proud mother who. was all In black. Also present were other members of the family. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, in purple hat and veil, was also present. It was warm and -sunny during the Inauguration ceremony and the great procession which, moved down Pennsylvania AYentje", t Eaiief H turned cloudy. JV-v t' ;J ' 'J