MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN The highest good is not ‘lo be reached without moral conflict ,_i___ Clmrluitotown Guardian. Two Cente- flornlng Guardian. Founded [III ALLIES ADVA-N CE 75 MILES PER DAY 0N TUNISIA Cl-IARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, FltlDAY, TNOVEMBER 11s, 1942 zzw/ The People's Pape Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew MAXIMG OIA MERE MAN Mlnilathlabestinatlmeof testing. trial. and temptation. Report Hitler Offers France Peace Terms Story is unconfirmed; Laval heard offer at liiunich Meeting. — (By E. C. Daniel. Associated Press Stafff Writer) LONDON, Nov. l?r—lAP)-—I‘Illl0l"l terms for immediate peace with vll-hy," restoring to France all her 1939 continental territory except Alsace and Lorraine, were carried to Vichy by nch-oollaborationist Pierre- I.:lvnl from his bluulvll ml-eting with the Fuehrei. it was re- porlrd tonight in reliable continental circles with close Vichy con- sections, The report was not confirmed. The reported provisions, especially that involving the lose to tha French of the two provinces, probably would prove decidedly distaste- ful and unacceptable to the whole French nation, The. cardinal terms o1 the oro- in Rome yesterday said Italy’a sud DUIIPE 11s reported by those share in the occupation was not in- ntulnnd sourws. which culllci not tended in the interests Of ilerritory. bc iurlhcr idcnlificd, orc:— Most reliable Vichy circles re- l. France would rennin all her ported that Laval. who nos con- cunzlncnznl urea except the 1H0- Sifiieilily favored the Germans. had Vlllces c! Alsace and Ioorrnllle. nevertheless reizct/td a military al- 2. Alsace and Lorraine would be- llnnce with Germany. com.» lllnoflolnous. iThey ‘if-IVE Infnrlnnnts from the former un- he'll incorn0l'1\tcd into llltfRftlCllJ occupied area said aged Marshal a. Frnnnc would keen hor cumir: Pctanl is showinii the strain of the (v11, .1111,- nll o1 which now is con- crisis. IlYiilfll or allied with the Ulllteu These informants represented 14,119,151 Petnin as not yet decided on his 4 The French flcct would co- course but tonight the Vichy radio oFm-uc with the Germans to rc- mow obviously under the dom- gum 4,5. 1511113111» inntion of the Germans) broadcast 5 Ilalv would renounce territorial that both Petaln and Laval have c111,,“ on Fmnce, indicated their intention to remain The Italians in the past have in office and continue the policy yelled loudly for Nice. Tunlslzl and they followed before the Germans corslcn, but an Italian spokesman extended their hold. Orphaned lm/Aichy Fleet Remains Off Toulon Germans stop short of big Naval Base while Angling for control of 62 warships at stake. B! BLAKE SULLIVAN (Associated Press Staff Writer) 1.1.’) , Nov. i2 —- (AP) - Tllc curiously orphaned Vichy French fleet lay with guns uncover- ed and steam up tonight off Tbulon. the last remaining bit of unoc. cunlcd ill-once. as the United Nat- ions and the Axis vied feverishly m-nlnrl the scenes and openly on the air waves for its control. Naval authorities were convinced that the French warships still were in ‘Toulon. ready for any eventual- itv. but sources on the continent with close connections in France persisted in the belief that at least some vessels had detached them- (Jcrmnn B-qoad- selves from the fleet in [the last sev- News Briefs WASHINGTON, Nov. l1‘. (A Pl-Gcn. John J. Pershing. nciilg leader of the United Stairs armies in France i917. sum tonight that "the Axis has met its Marne” and invited his former French comrades-ill- arms to join the ranks of the Allirs so they "will once more be free.’ BFJRI IN (From Crisis‘. Nov, l2 »lAPt-— An officlnl oral clays to loin the Alien. Vu-hy French statement ls ex- Tonight the Vichy radio broad- pcrlmi within the next. few hours cast that the French fleet had slu- mlmllnd Admiral Darlslrs nrm- il-rcd "severe losses.” ap arently islzcc ngrcvlucnl signed ill Aluivrs YQIPYYUIK l0 We Mill!!! l" l M‘ ivfih _‘\'l'.l'l‘.l‘llll nrlitllrv fllllllWfllZPS. “mm o“ cimablimca- French M97‘ ' ' oeco. It said the new 35.000-ton tllr- Gcrnlnll radio said tolllgnt, ' .. -. . bnttltslllp Jean Burt, engaged qlmm" “my sauces‘ {wound Casablanca, was out of act- LONDON Nov. 12 ~10!‘ °" ' . At 1h showdown. British Naval mbm_M“j°r GMIYm "mya authorities believe. the feelings 0f Gvrvlze disclosed today that the decline In Brlinilfs coal out- liilt hus lrell halted null that iln- furl situation is generally "very encouraging.” the Wench officers and sailors — new men with power but without e. chosen allv — will determine on which side they will ii ht. AER tbilzdprtze at “its ehwitlls the "‘—‘-' xsanlnizon one seo WASHINGTON. NOV- 17 - (A?) the Mediterranean and the Allies {Tl}? Efjilllle Bvmtllflffl Cim-KWSS" triumphantly on the other. consisted 1:191 nctwm on ieylgslul on milking o; 62 ‘wafghjps, 1n¢11111ing three of ll- lllll(l 10-year-old vnoll sublcot me gflpual c155; lo die United Slates mllzlary draft. Brim“ Bllfihoritieg have pointed _-_____i‘_- 011p may, foreign ships have little o1 no nuvol value to a cantor. but they must be operated by their own crews and that their value in fight- ing could be retained only by win- ning over their crews and command- Monluguc szllilrdlly. ers as Allies. M, 11-12-21. llzlvs :1- 3 P. ‘ 'l“.llki:s-S0ul'ls Monthly. 11-12-21. “lillklcs-Crnpntld 'I‘uesdny. Last Show. 11-124.. h 16l'l‘Dnnce-Ioila Hall, lviondayq Nov. i. Mlllvicw Orchestra, ll-lii-Zr. "Wlkley ma“. "0- 27. 1-°~°-F'~- ALLIED HEADQUARTERS Aul- illccts tonight. Important business Hana, No“ 13 ___(Fr1day) __ (‘Ap)_ 1143*‘ Allied bombers have dealt a‘ léeavy _'——“" blow at, the Japanese base 0 u n- gpiilylk‘ Nquue “Jlmmtn c’! we“ Fnisl in the north Solomons, the star‘? liglogua came’ Is and Odd High Command said todayffhe raid . 1150 0., Ltd. D-ZG-dti‘. was the second in aslnqtahny filfiyg , n a base where recenty e A e lniqdililgli‘. billiielrlgosélliiiclxiii‘ (ilolnbers sank or dame-lied more ""1 has. Dillon o Spillctt. 11-11-341, "m" a m" “l ‘hlps- ‘“°'“‘“"5 f“ "Am loading car wheat and mlts llazelbrook Friday. Smith “M. 11-12-21 aircraft carrier. In Portuguese Tlmor. other med- ium bombers attackd enemy bar- rocks and other installations in Bobonaro and Moablsse. lcrDllelto arrive shortly, cars bar- , 1.13.3.2‘...slsxstrrslcsllsso Alrmen Escape “"“”‘" With Minor Injuries "Remember Kings Daughter Rum - c 1 ssluiliillv? r§§i§m£gi“iit1§°o.ill>]§i1i§ HALIFAX, Nov. io-rcrl-rbur 11_13.11_ airmen escaped with minor "Come to the parlor social gt me rubber dinghy after their home of Mr. Fred MncEwen, Stan- motored Bircfiiit from the . l" Bridge, Thursday evening. Nuv- station at Debert, N.B., cradled ember 12th. sponsored by W. M. s. i to C0 uid Bay yesterday, lhe 11-11-21. astern Ar command announced “ -—- here today. ‘ Hear Flt-Linn. E. n. Wood- Tile plane crashed late Wednes- {do and members of tho R.C.A.*F‘. day afternoon. and the men mon- ‘1; New Glasgow Christian Church aged to get a rubber dinghy inflat- 100v evening, Nov. 13th. 11-01-13 ed before the aircraft sank. They u -——~— ,. I leached shore about 2 pm. today in Conservative M g-A mcet- near Moose Brook, i’! miles west R5601 the Conservat ve electors or of Maitland, Rania Oolmty, lily Point Poll for urpose of ap- Causc of the accident was not 191611"!!! t6!‘ tbelilil w ll known. the announcement said, Point at B. T- Currie s. Rocltl’ and mama of the men involved are .onMonday BEM,“ n u being wi id. BULLETIN CAIRO, Nov. l3 _ (Friday) (APl-The Germans are rush- in; supplies westward out of Iobruk. indicating they plan to abandon the famous coastal Ilfilllsllllld. an Associated Press mflfllse from the Libyan-Egyn- tian frontier said this morning. Shippers Granted Two Concessions Two concessions which shippers in this Province have been seek are bems sranted. it was lea Ylsierday. Mlr. R. E. Muteh, one of the representatives from this Province on the Maritime ‘Trans- Dortatlon QOIIITIIISSLGII had tho news from Mr. Rand Maaheson, Mone- ton. Mr. Matheson is manager o1 the transportation committee. The first concession, now in e1. feet, provides that the minimum weight for turnips in erld-bunke cars has been reduced from 50.0;0 I0 40.000 pounds The order issued from the office of the Transport 00111-10110!‘ is effective immediately egg remains in force until May 31, The second concession, which Mr. Metheson said might not be in ef- ‘965 yell allflws 36 hours for load- ms frllt and vegetable cars, in- cluding turnps and potatoes, be- W" dBmWTB-Se is charged, exclud- 5lmdfl-yu and legal holidays. Hitherto the 36 hours was com- Pllttd to include any Sundays or hclldfl-Ys that "llsbl. intervene. Mr. Mathesons wire regarding the second concession was from Mr. $1.1?" c193??? 31ml.“ €-"““°°“" - e o r = Controller. mp0" The tcrt of‘ the wire concerning turnips said effective immediately minimum loading for turnips an. der transport control order number T0083‘ r ting loading or fruit lfld Veslets-bles in refrigerator cars has been reduced from 51,000 1o 40.000 Pounds in end-bunker ears for a period to May 31. I943. , The argument in favor of ‘the iishter loading of refrzgerator tars with turnips was that with soo~o pounds aboard 1t was diff-cult "qt impossible in vet Dropnr ("irrli- lavlon of till‘. Ccuseqtlcntiv lllhvg W95 211v!‘ flilililfil‘ the contents of the cars ivcllld be at least partially damaged in transit. Drophlhlemy‘ Air Action 0n Russian Front MOSCOW. Nov 12 — (A P) — German tank charges on the cent- ral Caucasus from. near Naicnlk were thrown back today while on the banks of the ice-clogged Volga, we Red “my mastewd ‘Very welt-l“ ience were several former residents "lint! thrust of the Nazis. Sub-zero temperatures and. bitter winds around Stalingrad forced Germans clinging to precariola footholds to cover. Enemy aviation cut its activity sharply, concentrat- ing on the Russian communications and rear. Outdated planes appeared at the front (indicating the foe perhaps had shifted air weight to the new North, African theatre.) (The Germans claimed large scale Iishmlg took lace in the Nalchik 811 ing that they still have an interest in the association. an announcement was made of the result of the Nleman sale of silver foxes in New York last week. In brief 1t was that 8.000 silver fox War Situation Last Night (By Kirke L. Simpson. Associated Press War Analysti Mounting evidence that the developing Anglo-American equeegc play in Africa has already shattered both prongs of Hitler's most ara- bltious "pincer" attack of the war comes from many sources even before full fruits of Allied strategy can be assessed Certainly the southern jaw of the Axis vise is wrecked. Nothing v remains of RommePs African Corps in Egypt except its casualties in men and machines. The Sues Canal and the eastern Mediterranean are again secure. I. I I I I I ln Russia. the northern Jaw of that made-in-Bcrlin device design- ed to throttle the Soviets into submission and to isolate and immobil- ize Turkey is no less stalled. German retreat before an oil-rushing Russian winter, perhaps soon to be fanged with a massive Soviet of- fensive, seems all but inevitable. Moaoow and Ankara reports indicate it is ‘already in the making. Significant abatement of the weight and fury of Nasi air attack on Stalingrad and in the Caucasus is noted by the Russians. That German air power ls winging west and south to meet the rising Allied threat across the Mediterranean is the logical explanation. It ls the first definite symptom of relaxation of enemy pressure on Russia llue to the Allied offensive in Africa. I I I I I I Turkish observation posts cap that with otherwise unconfirmed but plausible reports that Nazi trllnps from Russia. also are being shuttled westward into the Baltnns to mun a new potential Axis de- fence front fn the south that reaches from the Pyrenees to the Dnr- danellcs, from Spain to Turkey. Nor can Hitler be certain at what mo- ment Turkey might forsake her neutrality to Join the tightening Allied‘ Mediterranean cordon. Turkish accounts of heavy Nazi troop movements from Russia to the Balkans are of special interest. If true, they indicate Hitler's ap- prehension over the security of the Greek-Balkan sector of his south- ern front as wcll as over its French or Italian sectors. ' I I I I I I Ills concern is instilled. Bis most vital war asset, the oil to keep his planes, tanks and war industries going, is in the Balkans Could Allied major strategists freely pick the place at which they could strike the most deadly blow at the Axis, without question the Rumztniun oil flow would take first place in ther calculations. Higher N.Y. Pelt Prices Announced At Fox Show Keen Interest Shown In Yesterday's Judging. By many declared to be the most llli ti d I ll ill .t w‘ 1T progilscilillgfoxusllgwilesteliggy ‘icon? ‘shaded the tlheird ollibtihie I081‘ dogs’ ll glng at t Ex ton roun s. . Many new faces were seen in the audience, some who had not ut- . tended n show for upwonds of ten yers came to see what the new types were like. WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 _ The crush around the tables be- (AP) _‘ Th” m"? a""°""°"1 came such that the secretary had $221 "u" sevellr-lrillllt-‘Se $111115. to invite the eager onlookers to sunk gift?“ ma’ '1‘|'_s'_h"‘d Pm“ seats on the sidelines. It con be agedhmd bgfagvedczuuli”; a“? definitely stated that yesterday's m 5mm submarine‘; o: f‘ ' show day wll rank as one of the 1n the wesm." Pacific p u "'5 most interesting and exciting for The V955,,“ sunk wk“, listed years. The light was dull in the morn- aiagspclfgttrlmunifllre asmak large I 3 0 II 0i‘ B. ink. but towards noon bdghtened 13mg cargo 5111p? a medlfmb up and in the afternoon was ex- sized cargo ship, a. medium. cellent. A lot of sections were dls- sized auxiliary ship, s, small posed of by Judge Brenton Clark, cargo ship and a small patrol but none was hurried, and the most vessel. painstaking examlnation was given to every contesting animal. Of _the successful attack on the destroyer, it was said only Among those noticed in the aud- that the vessel was damaged and believed sunk. These latest operations report- ed by American undersea raiders, slashing away at Tokyo's supply lines, raised to I41. the number of enemy vessels sunk or dam- aged by submarines in the Puc- ific since Pearl Harbour — 93 sunk, 21 probably sunk and 2'1 . damaged. d many directors, thereby show- Bigher New York Prices Midway through the afternoon its ff d b, th N Y k - region near A agir; may, they ggp- glelctlozergorcilpfilriay fgr the eNllerl-iiin tured important heights 118d: firm, and every skin was disposed Tuapse and more blocks o: houses gébultlugs sggfiélntwlgifciltheuépgrlfigd America and strong points in Stalingrad.) Recognition For Army, Sea. Cadets UITAWA. Nov. 12 - (C P) - Canadian youth in training re- ceived new recognition todlly when the defence and navy departments announced the Kin has become Colonel-ln-chief of e ormv cadets and Admiral of Sea Cadets. The army cadet movement also got a new name-“Royal Canadian Armv Cadets" — as a further step in plans to identify it more closely with the reserve army. These plans recently resulted in the appoint- ment oi Col. 0.0.1111. Grier, head- master of Bishop's College school at Iennoxvllle, Que. as director of cadets, and call for the a pointment of a French-speaking of icer as or sociate irector. Fewer Casualties Than Expected In Raids- BYRAOUSE. N.Y._ No . 12 — (C?) — An "Astonishing" feature of the German air at-acks on Bri- tain was that they ac ved only a small fraction of the damage to tie and limb that the Un ted Kin dom had expected, Rt. Hon. Ma colm MacDonald, United Kingdom i-lign t‘ issioner to Canada, said to- day in an address prepared for de- livery to a New York State con- ference on social vor . Before the war many experts had c0380 British hospitals would need 1. .000 beds to provide adequately for air raid casualties. By a tre- mendous effort" 350.000 beds were provided. "In all the months of continuous heavy bombing the largest number of osoital beds that have been oc- i re cu ed at. One time by wounded in air raids is onlv laid 1k. DIP-III brought, prices averaging 20 to 25 percent. above the Nleman October sales. while ‘““‘~’°'°““"“ ‘mm BUCHIATE MEXICO Nov 12- averaged ten per cent over last (A?) __ n £00k an the baa-my “wmhs levels- m“ message acted workers in Southern Mexico and all as g, tonic on everyone prflsfim- It the emergency brldpn-bulldiilg unt- dlsPened 9' 3-9“ deal °l 31mm erialls but the international spas zsiz-xflz-i _~—_~_%_r= 1 _ 1 woolmved s“ v e "It °°1 It 553:8‘??? denliiinilhgflefiimctrdél and maybe sugar and rubber - will Government-owned railroads to push the span. a few lert shorter til 1-1 th own id f De uty Minister of ‘Trade and thglrl-lgcountiay.“ no ‘one o Coiiimeree, is acting as lXmliY be open for business this month. Engineers say the span ovcr the Buchlate River. boundary between Mexico and Guatemala, set l1 re- cord for construction. Bridge- To building crews were taken from the than half a mile, across the river at ( réolélngn, Ngvt/l. 1a n-(rrlday) j- an average advance of 3'1 feet a dov- C a e)- e Da y Express n -——-————-———i;- a dispatch datelined "on the French ACTING DEPUTY MINISTER- Frontier" today reported the French ——— people in many p ces were "stupl- OTTAWA. Nov. 11 —(GP\ - fed" when they learned Hitler T;ade Minister MacKimlon said in- nsd ordered Nazi troops to mnrch day that Oliver Master. 55515131" The Germans, commandeering Minute: followlns “It! HD1101"? billets wherever they went, were ment of L.D. Wllgress, the former met with a frigid reception. the Deputy, as Canadian Minister .3 dispatch said. As far as possible, Russia. Mr. Master was aplluilltg it dded. the invaders were nored. assistant De ut Ministeiibi - Island Native Dies In India TORONTO, Nov. 12 -rc1>i -The Board of Foreign Miss- ion; of the United Church to. day received word of the death of Rev. Fraser Campbell in Ruilam. India. A native of Bedequc, P. B. L, he was appointed to India in 1875. Annual Fox Banquet Held Last Night Interesting event held at Charlottetown Hotel. The Annual Foxmenls Banquet, which was largely attended, was held last. night at The Char- lottetown. Mr. Lowell Hancock. President of the Prince Edward Island Fox Breeders and Exhib- itors’ Association presided. Speakers included: Hon. W. H. Dennis, Minister of Agriculture; Hi5 Worship, Mayor B. Roy I-Iol- man; Mr, P. G. Clarke, Summer- side; Licut.-C0l_ D. A MacKln- non, D.S.O.: Mr. D. 0. Stewart, Summerslde; Mr. W. Chester B. McLure; and Mr. W. R. Show, Deputy Minister of Agriculture. A v~ry fine musical program was presented during the evening. included vocal solos by Mr. Charlie Chamberlain and orchestral sel- ections by Al Blanchard, pianist, Miss Kathleen Hornby, violinist and another violinist. During the course of the banquet a toast to the King was honeyed. Hon. Mr. Dennis in a few brief remarks referred to the importance of the fox industry to the prov- ince, especially during the years of depression. The industry, he claimed. curried Prince Edward Island through these dark years. In the future the department would haven kindly feeling toward it, 11c said. Mayor Holman extended a wel- come to the visiting foxmen. He congratulated the Exhibition As- sociation 11nd especially Co1_ Mac- Killnon for the splendid facilities provided for the show, He expected foxmen would real- izc the importance of the industry and would see b0 ll. that it would survive the present war. The last sale, when furs showed an increase of Z5 per cent, indicated that fox-men would see to this. He re- ferred briefly to the benefits of the orderly marketing organiza- tlons which foxmen had built up and exprrssed the hope that the Dominion Government, like the Provincial Government. would re- alize the importance of the in- dustry, l-le closed by saying this province had the best foxes in the world. _ Mr. Brenton Clark. Summerslde. stated that the exhibitors were “the finest bunch of sportsmen he had ev v’- Iratbarssmegleé r-e c» (Continued on page 3, Col. 5) Time Correspondent In Canada Charged OTTAWA, Nov. l2 -(CP)—Fed- ernl law officers moved today to prosecute Edward Gay Rohrbough, American-born Toronto newspaper- nlm its the ollesed author of in- {urination on whch time, the Am- crlcan Weekly News magazine bas- ed a story of disorders among Ger- man prisoners of wnr at Bowman- viile. Ont., last month. Royal Canadian Mounted Police laid infcunatlon at Barrie. Onr.., chaglng Rohrbough with having violated section l6 of the Defence of Cannon regulations in corres- pondence to Time from that point last O . _ The story had to do with resist- ance set up by the prisoners when being handcuffed at the Bowman- ville comp as a reprisal against ‘he mnnacllng of Canada prisoners at Dieppe. Rchrbough has represented a To;onto newspaper (Star) at Barrie and Camp Borden, Ont. International At A Glance By The Canadian Press NORTH AFRICA -— Allies con- tinue advance toward Tunisia in west while Bth army pursues rern- nants of Axis force in cast; Vichy reports all’ raid on 'l\1nls air field. FRANCE-Nazis declared I-‘rene naval base at Toulon isolated area French fleet “e fight not to be occupied; stands offshore offering to any aggressor. RUSSIA — Cold weather alowa fighting but Reds gain in Stalin- air act- ed counter-attack; Natl vltv lessens appreciably. WI-ISTEIIN PACIFIC - ‘Us mn- eii: g‘; mar ncs s |\ c sswcv- more . an s pa, m . n: t tim in the compmvl damexe and Probably ink lab 0H pug,“ he?’ yflmmn troyer. 8 PAGES h chlng, and an mm Annual subscription Delivered, “.00 B: uau. r. l. 1. 04.00100 ailm- Provinces use u, a. a. use Germans-Land 2,000 Men By Airvln Colony Darlan requests Toulon Commanders To take ships to Africa; French swing To side of Allies. (By Alfred E. Wall, Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON, Nov. 13—(Friday)—(AP)—A powerful Ai- lied striking force advancing at a 75-mile-a-day clip early today was nearing the frontier of Tunisia where reports said the Nazis had landed at least 2,000 men by air in an expanding effort to hold that strategic Mediterranean corner now under R.A.l<‘. assault from the opposite direc- tion. BOMBERS FROM MALTA R.A.F. twin-engined bombers based on Malta aided the Allied land forces by heavily attacking the Axis-in- filtrated region of Tunis, capital of Tunisia, yesterday, and these blows were expected to increase in co-ordination with the Anglo-American advance from the west. The Vichy radio said the Tunis area was again st- tacked last night and that anti-aircraft guns in the French protectorate were in action during an alert last- ing from 8:15 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. BONE IS OCCUPIED Continuously fed from the ea and gathering momen- tum by land. the combined assault armies had reached and occupied Bone, eastern Algeria, only 60 miles from the Tunisian frontier, yesterday morning, according ta Vichy reports. By now it was believed here the Americans and battle vet- erans of the British lst Army might have plunged across the frontier. In France meatlwllile the Axis divisions that overrun the remainder of that country placed the naval station oi Toulon in a strange zone of Quarantine, mysteriously failing to occupy 11131 port or 1Q lay hands on the battle fleet which so long hag lain offshore. DARLAN MAKES APPEAL Front Algeria Admiral Jean Darlan, the old commander OI the fleet and former head of all Vichy French armed forces, broadcast a request to the Touion commanders that they bring their ships to North Africa. The former collaborationist, who was taken by the Amer- icans in the capture oi Algiers, did not order the ships to sail, hug only suggested that they join the Allies or at least remove themselves from the German grasp. ' N0 matter what the French IS THIS A RECORD? " ' Fre h 1 {- $5.‘??? Eiirllclijmiflei: ‘airmail: i: LDNDON-(OPI-“NZ. v.c." 1K who 1e the “*1” “W” i.“ iiiffidfmm‘ 5.’."°“"Li.é’“"$'§l _ su as e w rec {xlllevififrefinllg $515211‘; ggmpggntl?“ for the shortest headline of the e . spied the Allied advance. m“ Although official silence cloaked the actual progrw thll-B 1i"- ‘he Allied ground troops were said in g Vichy broadcast t0 MW bee“ bolstered by United States troop! landed from British ships in 00- ied Bone. cuiule Allied troops were i111"! with the utmost speed W elm “ LOOO-mile coastal gap and catch mo remnants of Marshal Rommels troops which now are betwctlh them and the British 8th Arm)’ mugging mm eastern Llbyo hum t Egizliie force is commanded l! veteran of Flanders and Dullkrluue. lit-Gen. Kcnnrth Anderson. M1111? of the hardened tonlmicvs 1n 1115 5 - army have ma; the German enclus bef re. Ilhder Gen. Anderson, in $212; mand of the Americans. part o H a major force which the Un 6 States landed at A1810“. l5 Mil-l" Gen, Charles Ryder. U-s-A- (some entirely ullOlilClfll estim- ates placed the combined force 8i- , nearly 150.000 men.) New Record E01‘ Building Freighter SPEAKlNr. 0F ENDURANCE tlasifs; D10 (HA EVER WAN’ FOR AN AMATEUR Show {o 84AM’ l-l.g.l 1.1.1.: 1.1.." :11. and tomorrow morning at 3.06. Sun sets this afternoon at 5.85 and rises tomorrow morning as 7.56. First quarter moon Nov. lb, 2.50 am Summerslde tide I8 minlubu let- RICHMOND, cnnr. Nov. 10-. er than Charlottetown. v <AP> - Tile 1°»5°°'°°“ “'°‘5““’"' can small ssavlcn keolffrtt ilémPfigay6nwfll°yofi°fayig°fl mnnv EXCEPT SUNDAY 1, . 1-3 b91135» sfipmd fmm the Henry Prom Bord ~n--I.eavo 8.05 a- J- I-fie; Wm ‘ilfallmtgchfxfflihfig 11.40 m. 2.00 p.ln., 4.1.0 p.111. ‘l. IBCDI‘ OT BDCQEd l1 . __ bu -d~llE~ u red “Teave Cape Tormentlne — 10.30 “git lsmflwéfietgtifd kl)» t}; ‘iiamkn; “l; 1.15 p.in. 3.05 p.m., 5.45 pm. Ooriimission "before next Mondaiy" ' ‘m’ - still another and even more e I- QUNDAY QERWCE (May 3 to Dee. 2'1 inclusive! nificant mark. The previous Nwrd 101' I 6mm‘ Leave Borden 0.00 a.m.. 0.1a n. Ililjliilgiugglfllgm 1132118111: “hfglrfo “lllgugf ‘Mllfave Tormcntine 10.15 0.111. a. additional three dayl. l2 1-2 hournsugor outgilitxillspamlrlf; P.Il‘..I.-N.S. FERRY srsnvlcs i’ by " K r Y“ ' Leave Wood Islands 10.00am. an! 1.00 . m. lcgve Caribou Noon and l-Il I. D Ore. .______-- sunsrrruwa son rm mun All. self. fl HAMILTON, Ont . , Nov. l2 —— m"; (OP) -- Manufacture of bonderized (EXCEPT g mmeflu.‘ shallurrl*ly‘c.l°'slslra.s: W'"‘“‘»i¥-'-'@~"- ... .. nnda. which said tall: “an Uglszkérgfl‘ ' .' ‘e w“ “mdmmd 1M w "mfwsllai-lcttetown l 0- I- g,4| p. m. 1.05 I- l-