I*.Mi)FINALAtOtITt wjrI I- LII 4EDITION1 «1Hrino*' —» i»l n . . wMl 11! 1«| Ill Ml Ml «WM]MiM|_M1Ml IM*1r«H Lmm4 Wfe* riw Mi Wi4# WffM M*w« 3*rvi«*(AMD THE D1NNKB ■OEM)YOL. 74 NO. WitPARIS, TEXAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 7, 1W2EIGHT PAGESESTABUSHED 1M9This DayAnd TimehW.HFIndia Developmentc'T’HE WAR FRONTS must not be forgotten* even lor * minute, by the people of the United Nations. But today is a day on which one of the greatest single developments of the war — perhapsone of the greatest developmentsin centuries—will take place on a non-belligerent' front.It will take place in India, when the All-India Congress party convenes to take a step which may easily do much to help the enemies of the United Nations, or by the same token may do muchto help the cause of the UnitedNations.India wants her freedom and wants it now. The price of Indian participation in the war onthe side of Britain has been put at immediate freedom. The alternative to the granting of this freedom is a mass program of civil disobedience. A nation-wide sit-down strike, as it were.Technically, of course, India is on the side of the United Nationsin the war today. India enteredthe war against Germany in 1939bv declaration of the British governor-general, Lord Linlithgow.4*Nazis Checked On StalingradFrnt InGreatTank Battlerrr—rDuisburg IsO'Daniel OpensEnemy Infantry CrushedAttacked AgainBy RAF BombersRace, CallsBy Hundreds, Reds ReportNazi AirdromesAllred 'Yes-Man'Cossacks Sabre More Than 3,000 GermansAs They Beat Off Assault South Of DonIn Low CountriesAlso Are RaidedSays Opponent'sMOSCOW, Hurling its own defense still reported lagging b*-huge tanks against the mechan- fore the big Axis offensive. TheiWPlatform Is//WILHELMINA ADDRESSES CONGRESS—Describing the resistance of her people, Queen Wjlhelmina told a joint session of Congress that “the fight goeson. To her left on the rostrum is Sen. Alben W. Barkley (D-Ky) and to the right Rep. Sol Bloom (D-NY) and behind her left to right are Rep. Alfred L.Bulwinkle (D-NC), speaker pro tein, and Vice President-Harry A. Wallace. Man at extreme left is a Senate attache*LONDON, UP)—A strong force of RAF bombers Thursday attacked the big German industrial center of Duisburg, target of repeated raids in July, and other poinls in the Ruhr Valley, the Air Ministry announced Friday.Nazi airdromes in the low countries also were attacked by British raiders, six of which failed to return from their night missions, a communique said.The size of the strong force wafiTermite-Eaten//FORT WORTH, (flb—Senator W, Lee O’Daniel reopened bis campaign, for re-election Friday in a broadcast derisively attacking James V. AUred as his “yes-man opponent” in the coming runoffprimary'.O’Danjel’s 15-minute speech was his first since he ran up the huge plurality which all but gave him a majority in the July 25 primary.In it he scornfully charged that Allred—whom he never men-ized Nazi onrush, the Red Army checked the Germans Friday along the whole Stalingrad front in one of the great tank battles of the war, with infantry crushed by the hundreds under the treads of the steel war wagons, battlefront dispatches said Friday.Only in the critical Belaya Glina sector 100 miles into the North Caucasus were the Russian!not disclosed officially but a Brit- tioned by name—was constantlyThe Gandhi InfluenceRUT MOHAND13 K. Gandhi D says the Indian troops which have fought again it German, Ital-ian and Japanese troops on various fronts have lot done so with the consent of representatives of the Indian people.The Mahatmc. has instituted civil disobedience program# inthe past, and undoubtedly has it in his power to start another with-tti a short time, if he so elects. But a program of civil disobedience now would not help India.True, it would hurt Britain. But is this a smart thing to do? Is it not a version of the old saw about cutting off one's nose to spite one's face?Does India think being under control of the Japanese is any more desired than being under control of the British? Apparently India is about to reach such a decisionv for if India stands patin her demands for freedom and the, British stand pat in their refusal of these demands, the disobedience program will start And when this happens, what will keep the Japanese from moving intoIndia?Big Cargo PlanesIn ProductionBuilders DiscloseIndia Will AppealCause To AlliesTroop-CarryingTo Ask FDR, Chiang Kai-Shak, MaiskyTo Support Demands For IndependenceShips Actuality,Not Future VisionBOMBAY, IjFj—The working! 360 midtani committeemen fissem-British PromisesDRITATN HAS PROMISED In-D dia freedom after the war. IfIndia will become an active m the fighting. But Britainmade a tentative agreementfreedom of India after the war, and the people of India not be blamed for recallingallyals^forlastcanthisofnow.Unfortunately Die handsBritain are not altogether clean in her dealings with India. ThisLOS ANGELES, UPi — Gigantic cargo planes, capable of mass transport of troops across the Atlantic out of reach of lurking sub-, marines, are not a vision of the future—they are an actuality, inquantity production.And even greater ships, with a capacity of 400 soldiers, able to span the Atlantic in 10 to 12hours, have passed the speculative stage to the point where the industry could begin their construction.Tom M. Girdler, chairman of the board of Consolidated Aircraft Corp. and Maj. Reuben H. Fleet, the company's founder and present adviser, made these statements Thursday night as they told the nation, in separate radio talks, that the industry is prepared tncommittee of the all-India Congress party voted Friday to appeal to President Roosevelt, Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek and Ivan Maisky, Russian Ambassador to Britain, to support its demands that Great Britain grant India immediate independence.Maulana Abdul Kazan Azad, president of the Congress* was authorized to dispatch the appeals as soon as the Congress committee passes upon a resolution calling tor a mass campaign of passive resistance to continued British rule.Endorsement of the resolution, barked by Mohandas K. Gandhi, was regarded as a foregone conclusion.Gandhi himself sent a message to the Chinese Friday to “let China know that this struggle is as much for her defense as it is for India’s liberation;' He declaredtackle the heavy transport prob-| that India’s “ability to give ef-lem,“The problem calls for big planes that ran carry large loads over great distances at high speed;' said Girdlcr in San Diego in a broadcast address. “Such planes are being built. Douglas and Curtiss are building excellent sky freighters. We, at Consolidat-is dependentfact is a great handicap In deal- j ed, are building: such airplanes on ing with the Indians, who are un- j a production line.”lectivc assistanceon her freedom.In an incongruous setting under a canvas tent’s big top, theMFSome Reductionrterstandably questioning of anyBritish-made Iffomises,But for all her shortcomings, Britain would seem a far better risk than Japan, Making the Indians see and believe this therefore becomes the greatest single job facing Britain, it would appear.On the other hand, nothing has been contributed to the present negotiations by the Gandhi announcement that if India were not granted freedom he would enter into negotiations with Japan, Then he countered this with a statement Thursday that even if India were free, he could give no assurance that he would not deal with Japan.Britain's Answer*yHE BRITISH ANSWER to ln-He mentioned Cnnsnir1? giant four-motor ships—the 33-ton flying boat, the Coronado, and the R-24 Liberator. These ships, ho declared, have been in armed service for many months, and in addition to fighting arc carrying cargo to nil parts of the world.“Consolidated** Coronado . , . has a hull bigger than a Pullman ear, he said. “It can remain at sea for days. It has a range oi more than 5,000 miles . . . and well a vc over 3.000 men developing super-planes for the Army and Navy. If shipbuilders can built planes in quantity we will helpthem do snjReferring to the 400-passenger craft. Major Fleet, in a broadcast here said aircraft engineers “have planned this greater airplane to the point where our industrycould begin its production.in Fire Rate SeenParis Agents ToMeet Monday Tobled -o begin, deliberations for throwing into motion, what may become India’s grimmest bid forindependence.They had the scrawny littleleader's own word again Thursday night, on the eve of the conference, that the time for non-violent action is now and that time would show what strength the Congress could marshal from his masses of disciples* \*%There was not the slightest hint from Gandhi’-s headquarters of! any wavering. His statement seemed merely to reiterate that Britain must yield now—not. as she has proposed* wait to grant independence after the war—or sec the Congress party act.Ail that Bombay was asking was: when would mass disobedience begin? How widespread would it be? What forms would it take? Boycott? Highway stoppages? The shunning of dealingswith foreigners? Even a generalstrike?And Gandhi gave the word simply that a general strike was “notoutside my contemplation.His statement was issued Thursday night in the form of written answers to questions from Am-! urican correspondents.Before be began a mas? movement. he said, he would write to the British viceroy “pleading for avoiding conflict'’ and that a basis for negotiations might he found in a favorable response.ish source said that in the days before the British buried mme than 1,000 bombers against Germany in a single night. Thursday nigh Vs total would have been considered *'a whopper.Thursday night's foray was the third successive night assault upon the Ruhr region.The German High Commandacknowledged material damage to buildings by both high-explosive and incendiary bombs and said there were some casualties in RAF raids on “residential quarters” in several towns. It claimed seven British bombers were shotdown. .The German communique said German planes bombed military targets in southwest England Thursday and harbor and armament works in east England and on the east coast of ScotlandThursday night.Tlie raids were not on a heavy scale, however, and although there were some casualties first I reports Indicated the numbeT was not large.phosphorus Bombshad been prepared for phosphorus bombs the dropped by a bulletinMinistry of Home Security, which gave explicit instructions for dealing with theseincendiaries. As a result fires which were started were extinguished with a minimum of dam-NewBritons the new Germans from thebouncing around over the state changing his “termite-eaten platform in an excited effort to win votes.O’Daniel promised that his friends, “the rank and file of Texas voters,1’ would give him such a great majority in the Aug. 22 runoff that the power of the “professional politicians and “special interests” would be ended forever.Schedule Given The Senator gave the first word of his plans to stump the state. Monday he will speak in Olney,Electra, Quatrah, Memphis, andClarendon* the latter at 9 p. m.The following day he will visit Claude, Eorger, Tulia, Dalhart, Canyon and Floydada.O'Daniel devoted several minutes to asking his listeners to write him, in return for which he would send them copies of one more edition of the “W, Leo O'Daniel News'* for free distribution intheir communities.“Don't send for it, friends he said* “thinking that it is going to be any kind of scandal sheet. . . .I am not running for office on the demerits of my yes-man opponent—I am running on my ownrecord?'The incumbent s ? \ d many friends had written him sayingLong, Rugged RoadStill Lies BeforeAxis, Fischer SaysDeclares SmallAmounts Russian OilIs From Maikop Field(E* itnr Vote: Tfclw If* artfilliAi* |nl.A;’«n*ws A rite I* Uy Fterl '1 r wSm ftan th*» Texsi*stuff of tiio rw* after twoyean in Germany. 1am year V* ifn* ttnrmnn arrnle* in*o KusbIfi. one of Hi** flt;?v Amortenn lt;sr»rrrRjion*l*nt* wUri first-ban* knovtedpe of the Ruwe*Ciermnp ar*a.lBY ERNEST G. FISCHER Associated Press StaffHitler, fighting against time and stubborn resistance, has two more serious obstacles — rugged terrain and great distances — to\ overcome in his attempt to seize the Caucasian treasures,Onlv one who has traveled overthe vast distances of the American West, China, or of Russia can j troops launcheddive bombers blasted ceaselessly at the Russian lines as they battered the way for German gain*.The Russians reported rolling the Nazis back in hard counterattacks at the Don Bend, approaches to Stalingrad, and said fierce-charging Don and Kuban Cossacks sabred more than 3,000 Germans as they beat off the assault cf two tank and two infantry divisions in a fight for Cossack village south of the Don. Report* from this front said the Russians were driven from the town twice, but each time won it back*(The German High Command took significant cognizance of the arrival of Red Army reserves in the battle* mentioned large-scale Russian use of tanks in the Caucasus for the first time and said the bolstered Soviet forces were counter-attacking against German and Rumanian - troops ■ between the Sal and Don Rivers, In the Don Bend, and in the Rzhev salient, northwest of Moscow.(Ti e Germans said they had throv n large air forces into a j heavy defense in the Rzhev area, indicating that the scale of the Russian attacks there waa considerable.(The Berlin communique amidAxis force* had penetrated deeper into the Caucasus, driving across the Kuban Rriver to ■ point 30 mdes northeast of the Maikop oil fields which produce seven per cent of Russia** oil).The Russian communique gave this account of operations at key points an the battlefront:“South of Ktelskaya (80 tfdleinorthwest of Stalingrad) oura number ofSee O'DANIEL, Page S? Col 5age.In one southwest coast town the Nazi raiders demolished a section of a hospital causing several fatalities and trapping a number of patients in the debris.A coastal resort, crowded with vacationers, was attacked by a single low-flying plane which spraved the streets with machine-gun fire. Several persons were injured.Escaped ConvictCaptured in HugoRefuses To TellHow He FledFrom Prison FarmSave Russia, WinDiscuss Cut•*r. , _War Parley Setdian demands for freedom at this time has been an unmistakable no. But if we arc to accept Gandhi's position as a true indi cation of what to expect, what to do. Tf Tndi is not freed* she wiV.negotiate with Japan, hg say*'And if India is freed, she maystill negotiate with Japan,In the latter event, Gandhi adds that he would negotiate with Jap an only with the assent of tho United Nations. In such case* about the only negotiations h* could make with Japan would i* negotiations for surrender. And the Japs are not ready to begin talking of this.This may happen. The Indhvi Moslems* 80,000,000 of India's 380,000,000 people* are challenging both Gandhi and the British,OPA To Hear OfTraffic ViolationsEffect in Paris of the sweeping fire insurance rate reductions, effective Aug. 1, cannot be immediately determined, although therewill be some reduction, local insurance men report.Insurance agents contacted here concerning the reduced rates say they have received copies of the rate changes in many classes of risks* but those contacted were unwilling to make any public statements concerning the possible effects of the changes.ll was learned that the Par usInsurance Exchange will have itsregular monthly meeting at the Paris Golf Club Monday night and it L expected that the rate changes will be discussed at that meeting* It was not known Friday whether any public statementRC Field Director | RepresentativesHUGO. Okla. (Special),—“I may want to try d again; sometime;’ Randle Dean Smart. 23-year-old, 220-pounder, retorted as local officers queried him Thursday about how he escaped this week from the Central State Prison Farm at Sugariand* Tex-appreciate the long and rugged road which still lies before the Axis troops. The isthmus between the Black and the Caspian seas stretches over an area more than half the size of Texas. The union's largest state has an area of 262 -000 square miles: Russia's southern Isthmus, 137,000 square miles, line Nazi legions, since the cam-[ pnign was launched six weeks! ago, have conquered some 70,000 ! square miles.Although the Germans claim thev are within 30 miles of the Maikop oil fields* the Berlin statement that “without this oil Soviet | tanks and planes are just dead 1 metal” obviously is ridiculous. Acomparatively small percentage of1Russia's nil comes from the Mai- ■kop field. iPictures Battle iPicture the territory south of j Stalingrad a* Texas. Imagine ett- jcounter-attacks and pressed th#enemy back ...“In the Kotelnikovski area (95 miles southwest of Stalingrad) the Germans are sending in large numbers of tanks in an *t~ tempt to smash our defenses. OurSee NAZIS, Page 8, Col, 8IWPB Okays OrderFor 500 MarsrrHuge Flying-BoatiWill Be BuiltAt Kaiser's Plant4, . . , WASHINGTON, Chairmancmy forces converging on the state; Donald Nelson said Friday thelfrom New Mexico and OkJcinoma. Assume that the Rio Grande is skirted by lofty mountains, a few narrow passes, and deep chasms i —a stretch of rough country 900 \:is. He was serving a two-year \ long and from 60 to 130forgery from DallasDiscusses PlansOf Major UnitedNations In MoscowIs Here To ConferWith CC Officials,Find Office Space’ LONDON, un— Representatives of major United Nations werereported assembling in MoscowFr iday for u “save Russia, and win ! the war ' conference, the urgency |of which was accented by the in-■ creasingly desperate plight of the Thomas F, Desmond, member nt jsouthern‘ Soviet armies, the Red Cross Military and Naval j information came fromWelfare Service, was in Paris Fri- ! s0Urce^ whnsc identity could not day for conferences wito Cham~jkc disclosed. The British th ember of Commerce officials con- selves maintained dead silence on corning office space for the Red the movements of their own lead-Cross field director to be station-short-by U. (Bill)term for County,Smart was arrested here Iv before noon Thursday S. Deputy Marshal W, A.White, who received a tip from j the owner of a tourist camp ihere, _ iAccording to Mrs. Jim Mill-! ing. operator of the Sunset Camp ! on E. Jackson St., Smart stayedthere Wednesday night, and toldher and Mr. Milling that he was an unemployed truck driver, The camp owners stood good for! miles wide. In natural barriertnd behind this are the mineralSee FISCHER. Paae 8. Cob 3Cloudburst Trapsii9 In Auto, 8 KilledAs Car Rolls Down Hill1L—A water canyon Tmt used here.Desmond, now stationed at Perrin Field near Sherman, said thatCopies Of Ticketswhl be issued concerning trie j probably would be a^umed toGiven For SpeedChanges following the meeting.Extreme difficulty of arriving at any accurate estimate of the total savings to Paris property owners j [is a result of the rate reductions |the position here* He revealed tentative plans to move here w;thin the next ten days.Plans lor establishing temper-the C. ofTo Be Sent Office, . , . . v' arv office facilities ...was explained by one agent, who i c/builflinK wiU bo ci,sni?od Knit I _ „j pointed out that the saving,day. Permanent quarter laterPatrolman Frank Jackson of the Stale Highway Patrol Station has warned potential speeders and traffic law violator? that effective August I copies of tickets issued by patrolmen will be sent to the Texas Office of Price Administration*Mark McGee, State OPA di-any. will darnel upon the class . ^ ^ avaiJj,h|(! „ CamDIThey accuse Gandhi and the All rector, said that all speeders orother “saboteur?” of tiresIndia Congress of seeking to establish a Hindu prince in Indri and are demanding their right to an all-Moslem state. But they also are demanding independent from Britain.If the Moslems refuse to support Gandhi's non-vsoiencc plan, lt;md the plan is launched because of this refusal* Moslem leaderspredict uncontrollable violence m some regions between the Gand* hi followers and the British* and between trie Gandhi supporter*and the Moslems*willforbe deprived of eligibility new or recapped tires.This program is being carried out by State Police over all Texas.of insurance held by the prop . ertv owner, the 'cnRtli of time in I Maxey.wli'ieh the eoirtraet lias been in! Duties of the new official wileffort, the amouni of reduction j be to organize rea-eatienai andestablished by the state fire com- s welfare facilities for the men atmission, and many other factors. | the ramp. Women and men to)All of the agents contacted j carry on this work will be senthere, however, agreed that the j from Red Cross V,VUMMNWS head-problem of working the reduction tables arid amounts for each policy holder will be many and dif-fieub and that quite a bit of time will be required in which to handle the matter,Hie 25 per cent reduction announced for dwellings is expected“Speeding, however, is not the j to be the largest decrease here, as ' -■ ■ * -risk classes of many other typesare few local!v. *only traffic violation that meansexcessive wear on tires/’ Stale Department oF Safety Director Homer Garrison said. “We’re going to report all highway traffic violations to the OPA.”quarters in St, Louis- Parisians will be employed ^ clerical help.Gilbert J. Rhodes, regional manager of the welfare service, is expected here sometime soon from St. Louis to complete fin*l plans for establishing Mfiee, Desmond said.evs except for their ambassador to Russia, Sir Archibald Clark Kerr, who has gone from Kmbv-ihev to Moscow alone with theUnited States ambassador. Admiral William H, Standley.Dispatches from Moscow paidconferences were proceeding Friday between Admiral Stand ley,Maj. Gen. Foliett Bradley of theU. S. Air Force, and Soviet officials.A Moscow communique announced that Bradley, who arrived in Moscow by bomber three days ago, came for “a discussion with the appropriate Soviet authorities of practical questions connected with the supply of armsand war materials to the U. S. S. R, from the United States,”The Moscow dispatches indicated that Bradley had not yet seen Premier Stalin for whom he brought a lei tor from PresidentRoosevelt, .(For the past week the Axisradio,? have been circulating “unconfirmed rumors' that Prime Minister Churchill^ was in Mos-| cow along witfi William t. Bui-|litt, a special envoy of PresidentRoosevelt.)merits he wore and left them on the floor of a camp cabin. When Mrs. Milling noticed the word?*’ Texas Prison System” on button? of the shirt Smart had discarded, she immediately notified officers. White apprehended the prisoner in drug store.Jn a telephone conversation to the warden at Sugariand. SheriffCap Duncan was informed that Texas officers will come to Oklahoma for Smart on August 16, when they are going trr Me Ales-ter for another prisoner. Smart waived extradition Thursday afternoon.* iWENATCHEE, Wash..cloudburst and wall of hurtling down a mountain nine miles north of hero some work clothes for the man, ^ay night trapped nine puopie inwho changed from the dirty gar- automobile, killing eight otthem as the. machine rolled and j tr\Uvas carried several hundred NeUonIvards down a hillside*Russell Kirk. 27. the driver, escaped. Thrown free, he creptthrough the mud and debris to thehighway and was found by a pass-front of a downtcrwn mg motorist.Six of the bodies were foundin the buried machine, which wusjammed in the mud against theGreat Northern railway tracks along the Columbia River.WPB bod approved constructionby Henry J, Kaiser, West Coast shipbuilder* of 500 huge “MarsM-type flying boats* with *n initial order for 100 to be placed by the Navy shortly.The other 400 seventy-ton cargo carrying planes will be built Nelson said, if the initial program ia accomplished successfully in Kai-ser‘s Pacific Coast shipbuilding plants.“This is all contingent upon the construction not interfering with our combat plane program ” Nelson added.Asked whether WPB believed it could be done without hampering war plane production he replied:“I have hopes—-at least we cansaid Kaiser now :n Washington, would go to the coast and then “come back and tell us what materials and facilities he needs, when he can get started, and where he will build thenu9 Other WPB officials said they believed Kaiser planned to construct the big sky freighters at Richmond* Calif.* on San Francisco Bay.Flying Fo rtress On SecretGeneral AndersonTrip Gets Four Jap PlanesArrives In ParisFriday AfternoonHEADQUARTERS. Hawaiian The Flying rortrcss reached\ Air Force, •A’—An Ameiican ]Wake about noon._ after entran-: FIving Fortress on a secret mis-I*™* heavy ^er. Jep ; .-ion to Japanese-held Wake Is- ««« ^ere caught 'bj ilurpnw.! 'and destroyed four of six Japa- - fibers .ook off as wt *lt;*•: iann uvmkmvu m»ui vl m.\ , ■ jar** fnijr-e7j!f ^nS'refurned Ctl ’n? baUw’ith j motored flying boat.PLo three bullet holes as the o n 1 y j^aace ships. Major4 *GIVEN EXECUTION STAYAUSTIN. i.JFt—Fidel Contreras, El Paso Countv ’•esident convicted These records will be forward- j0f murder in lot- death of Ended to the offender's local ration- jQllf Valles and sentenced to die in* board and when an applica-i;n the electric chair Au*. Vi willIi TAKE TOM. OF NAZI SUBSLONDON. i-P'—“Wp arc continuing to take a very heavy toll of Axis submarines.’’ A. V. Alexander. First Lord of the Admiralty, told a London audience Friday,II Kit I CrtO -Brig.-Gcn. John B. And Arrived in Paris shortly afterFriday and Saturday will report, ,for duty at Camp Maxev a? com-;0 4 1 * / f t ...inander m the 102nd Division,; A ftfln en^m piano probably\vh ich will no s ia 11 oned thero, lt;r v * s ^v*r 1A ^ *K\ v 11 e s1 x 111 • sv MV 1 ‘Gen Anderson and his familyifollowed the Fortress awill 1m at 174 s. Main. The GcnO1^ ™1es »*«\ 'V!‘era! was preceded here by h.sj'^V SC-aft crunee tn £FIRE PREVENTION WEEK aide. 1st U. Charles F. Urschel. | !^ck to.(h^al,:'f of theWASHINGTON- T,— president q6t1 Anderson and his staff of j orevaLlm* bad weather.Roosevelt Vw proclaimed the offiwrV arp scheduled to report j The attack occurred last week-wrek starting October 4 a? fire-I fnr duty at Camp Maxev Satur-jend.prevention week, declaring it was day when they will Hart their j We jus! disintegrated the Japessential that destructive fire be work of preparations for the per- - planes, said Major George B. ,arrtf lO^nd Division. I Gloher. of San Antfelo. Texas ' It wFour of the fighters were Zeros, ;,he other two were newer type*.“We completed our mission vhiif' the rin fighter? climbed tof:ghT.ini posUiou?. The engafe-mrri starled at 16.000 feet and ended at 25,000.*'We came out with no c and on I y three machibulleri’ m ^ur ship.He the enemy pl«m* vutclv destroved were two and two of the new typehic’n he described as ^