,Ti .E M/ES] ERN GUARDIAN slia was. u Church sum - ram m QUMMEBSIDI and PRINCE coumx Nln _, iptlom. Advortfllll lholll be left with Mn. Pond @3417 m" l» mum mu n m; or tlu following m... a. llmmerslgezlg-slnre Water 8t. Gentiles Drugstore, we“; g; “Tlfuuufi anliéry. Water il- Mnrk Gander. o1 Urlllvlllu si W’ will be delivered lo any homo m summon s mm: Boy l1 2o nor day or llic per ween Phone I88 for this |ervlcQ a: p" you; order to the ha! responsible for deliveries on your rouse. '”""‘ f new: l; lumn is reserved 0t 121111051111 interest but advcrtmny ' of a uvw=y nature may be Amer - . ‘d M z cclllS a word strictly ply- ' m, ill advaiw —GENUI'NE h coats special fllglbseflthéggCélie-ather 11-983-11-1-21. —BALIBOB.ANGE the Pleasant vitamin. Taylor- Drug c0" Ken. _klTt'IlII.\' stove for sale. For u slnlzton. P. E. I. 1- 1-, sec Gilbert Ga ant. , _ ——— I§1'1§H‘,‘Q,‘.D,‘,,Z_ L-7. —(-v|-1NTLEMEN your headquar- b111 ~ ters for fine dress gloves. New JESSRSI “_K_ s_ HEMMING 3, stock. lowest prices. Large seleemm w glmuilllfi". me sale of Mrs. to choose from. sheen and Mc- Hol}, him fr» residence on Innis, Surnmeraidc. L-8-11-1.3|_ sued’ l... lll J. L). blmpsbfl. —— —V15lTS SlSTER..-Slster James my; _\_ l". r. A. of St. Marks Marie, from Stillwafer, Minnesota. imngtoii, arc 110101118 11 flallEhtcr of Mr and Mrs. James N. lit‘ and Table oi Home 08111011911. of Cape Traverse, arrived CM“ my, November 2nd in home Monday evening to visit her lhesmu 1...», ly qccupled by sister, Mrs. Harry Green, who r,- {fgkliizie is 120., commencing at J critically ill at Prince County Hos- 10-day‘ L-811-1i-1-1L. pltal. She was accompanied by __-- Sister Aniceta from Kellys Cross. .-'l‘l|f; ulltl. uLllDI-JS_ are giving u Uliplsllllt’, of Lliglisn tolk cos in old fashioned .» fllgll SCIIOOI Audi- l.i\. November 1st at . Proceeds 111 51d 01 The Summersidie Ifilgil School has Just received a gift of l5 volumes of Stoddartfs lectures, a copy of Webster's New International Dic- tionary, as well as a Victrola and records. and ‘a picture of the Arch of Constantine. These valuable gifts were from Miss Grace Bcattiv, I-ls l'ROPERTY.—-DI‘- of Summerslde, and are very much i, lids purchased L116 BIIRTCCIBLGG by the members of the , (in Beaver Street. 0f Sc ool Board, teachers and pupilszf. o,» llullfer, ‘ilie P10119113’ 15 —-—-- lac flllPnL in file 1011/11. 111191 --,T0 RESIDE IN S'SIDE. —Rcv. l 1]l\1l111';(.d w My‘ Henry C- W. Cook and Mrs. Cook are ex- i-gil.» pilrclifiscd it fl'0111 1110 pected in Sunilnerside this evening <>.-.llL‘l', Mr. rraiik T001111» to take up their residence at the i plullllllUlIL loxllimi 110W 1'0- Baptlst Parsonage. Rev. Mr. Cock ‘ldlmg iii inc United States. nnd Mrs. Cook arc from IL-uston. N.S-. and Mr. Cook has acccpicd the _0I'Ii.\‘I.\‘(i BRIDGE - The invitation of the United Bap- ._ 1e of the season held tist Church at Sulnmerslde to the WED-mes o; the Ladies oi pastorate. Mr. Cook will commence a Clnuch was held on n1‘! 1311118111! 111 flflflmflsédfi ‘V1115 1191mm“ ' 111° Pam 2021115 M195. §§oi§1ivili'¥f=3§ii= gowqirm vigi- Fl¢111°1 6*“- Mrs‘, e M? come. not only by the members cf 1011- 1115- 1101’ 013,11‘ 3nd ,8; the Baptist church. but by citizens 1"- 1111? 11°5*°~5"-5~ T“ “a” generally. Rev Mr. Cook succsefs 1.11111": 111° 1111°111°°11- “5- Rev. J. B. Wilson as iulsfor. S Will Survey“ Conditions 0nd Magdalen ls. MONTREAL, Oct. 31—(CP)—- Canadian Red Crms Sccictv officials here announced today Hon. Mar- guerite Sliaughnessy, chairman of the Societys Quebec Committee on disaster and relief, will leave Montreal Friday to gather 111st- hand data for a survey on llVllliZ conditions among the inhabitants of the Magdalen Islands. Rewnt reports from the Islands indicate many of the Islanders face a winter of starvation because, ow- ing to the war, the market for their fish catch has been cut off. Red Cross officials said the sur- vey would be made as a preliminary flltila. Admission ‘Zoo. L-9l2-1U-31-ll. .0. a. A. ACTIVITIES -The [a Ciiwli Chapter of theL.O B. "c 111111 a very active year. 0:15 llilYE been made by the ' lllirtsrllle and Canoe Cove \\'\""11 as Charlottetown .llt‘ \'l~l!llil0fiS. ‘the various clurllaolv activities under the guid- William Brooks, Wor- the Lodge have ., during the sum- ionths and members of Lilo Lu. - have contributed to 7:0 R01: (FOSS Fund as well as l their usual work for Pruii iilll. Orphanage. The do rod quilts and knitted w) the Red Cross. and nenf was received from . Ynrslilpflll Grand Lodge for fplvndid contribution sent fro: rho summerside Lodge to the Grand L<\.,~c for the Red Cross fund. I'll» Edith Cavell Lodge of theLO , have every reason to i their record of work inn with Red Cross ac- , i to th first shipment of relief iosiulll continue their roodfzlothmz and Mel “Cm Monk ___ real to the islands. in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. They said the ship- ment, would be made on the last boat of the season bound for the islands. which leaves here early in November. _ _-llfrs l5 W.Manson, of Summer- slde. who has been visiting in lfoncton as llli‘ guest of her daugh- ts-r. u» mingle Lewis, has return- gt. lo l‘ liulilc. l WEEK END SPECIALS (‘URN FLAKES, - - — — — — 3 for 23c liilriiln Large Size BEANS, per can -- - 15c ’l'().\lATOES - - - - — — — 2 cans for 23c Alymers Tomato & Vegetable Soup, — 3 for 25c (‘ulu-rhouse PEAS - -- — -— —— -— 2 for 23c IAIN), per ll), 10c — — — - — — — 3 for 29c _‘._\‘llii‘l<'l‘ENING — — — - - -- — 2 for 27c Silk-ill - - -- - - -- - -- - — 10 lbs. 69c i l\'l.\‘(i COLE TEA, per lb. — — — —— — 67¢ i APPLICS. per doz. - - - — — — — — 15c tilt-WES - - -_ _ - -- -- - -- 2 lbs. for 29c W. S. McLEAN GENERAL MERCHANT Kensington, P.E.I. he SUMM K ensington And Vicinity Mrs. Luella Kennedy 11s.; n. til-land to hei- home in OLeary g1- icr a holiday with relatives and friends in Keaainrton. M1‘. and MN. George K9319 of Charlottetown were visitors to Kensingwn on Wednesday. Her many friends will be pleased to hear that Mrs. James MacDougaLl who is a patient 1n we pm“ County Hospital, Summerside, suf- |fering with pneumonia l; grggtly improved and is now well on the W81! to recovery. —RECEIVES VALUABLE GIFT— . caves in the nel l lMr. A. J. Pratt, General Mer- chant of Bloomfield, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. George Palmer and daughter Doris also of Bloomfield, ‘made a short call with friends in 14811511151011 on Wednesday while en- route to Charlottetown. ' Local truck haulers are at pre- sent engaged in hauling seed pota- toes to Sunimerside. A successful Halloween Party 51101150180 by Mrs. James Saundei"s, Mrs. Frank McDougall and Miss _Kaf.hlecn Ready, was held in the qMcMiiilon House. Kerisington, on I Wednesday evening. A successful chicken supper, un- dcr the auspices of Aid of the Kensingfon United Church was hcld in the United Church Hall on Thursday; evening. The many attending, were all loud in their praises of the excellent sun- per served. H. I ‘Bloomfield Man Missing in Sinking MONTREAL. Oct. 81—(CP>-One Prince Edward Island man i5 p."st- ed as missing as a re u't of the sinking of the Canadian freighter St. lvfalo by cncmy act on lvhile she was bound to the Untcd Kingdom. He is AB. R. Cousins of Bloomfield whose next, cf kin is his wife. The ship's carpenter. another Is- land man, M. Gofcl of Georgetown, l5 lisicd as raved Seventeen Can- adians in the crew were lCst. No Comment From Liberals 0n Bracken Plans WINNIPEG. Oct. 3i- Mombcrs of the executive Manitoba Liberal" Association re- fuse comment on the plans of Pre- micr John Bracken for the for- mation of a Union Government in Manitoba. A statement issued by W. J. Llndol. president of the associa- tion, said that no one responsible for the Liberal party. either at Ottawa or ln Manitoba. was con- suit-ed in regaJd to coalition plans. l It added that responsibility for _‘.lle union proposal is that of Mr ‘Bracken and his associates. The statement was issued fol- lowing a meeti of the executive officers here las night. Mr. Bracken announced plans for a non-partisan Government early this week. confirming reports that his Liberal-Progressive adminis- tration would have the support of the Conservatives and Co-Oper- atlve Commonwealth Federation groups in a non-partisan war-time government. Since then, four of the five So- (CPi—- ced their support of the Bracken union. The statement issued by Mr. Llndal said that Mr. Bracken and those with whom he conferred un- doubtedly are actuated by the highest motives and a desire to be (‘If ‘assistance in Canada's war ef- or . NATURE HELPS CHATHAM, Eng-(Clfi-Inhabit- ants of onemlientl village have nat- l‘ - 1t a a r m 51"’tfirspf°{i,f,h§gnl’§fis,Jami" Mcfiixas because there is no ection. ‘They borhood. /~lll\\ THE CURE E ' \rni\‘\\\\\\~- ,.-, I. ll. no n EN F CHEW M’ "rbLgi-gco Z You“ N51“ FROM HIS COAT ,/ m’ FEE. ' Tongs? HE cEurP 1’ UP some RUBBER. 1 3 s IN rr -- é” TONY HE'S Purrllo‘ . "mgr AMJFHQDIN‘ 1 ou-r ms A ///’ 1 J.Q.WIL\_IRM5 of the i clnl Credit members have announ- wm evezv TiME u: LOOKQ 1122855 T1AE- cancel-w»- GAY. W14°~T'5 THAT youlgg BURNING? rr SMELLS E THOUGHT . f THEY WERE ALL DE5TROVED= m," li s not surprising ilial you're constipated! 11 you Iufler from coustl on to the point that you fee weary. depressed and worn outfit is unis to quenion vimzlfllf-h‘ 1 y a a y mYFiialdikéé-‘f abzwlgel‘! 11,11 not survrlsinl 111011 111°! 7°11" constipated. Your diet laclfl "nulls" And "bulk 111M111 mean quantity, but a kind of food that is not ‘ assimilated and leaves a soft "mass" in the bowels that helps this bowel movement. I If this is your case, the no n- tioa is tasty Kellog s All-Bran. ""1 -".l.'"=..'..."'...::;"“1s:..51 sildméillfaminem, the natural in- testinal tonic. Eat All-Bran ever? day. drink lots of water and get 17813143780151; zest for life! Ail-Bran I Iiondon. Canada by Kelloifl- A! all grocers. Amherst Workers lSeek Employment In War Industries AMHERST. N. s.. Oct. 3l-((:P) the Lndies‘_E"“1l/' 10010111.’ in Canada should be cnavizca in the war effort _ 1D10y6cs of the Amherst rolcleixxriir mills said tonight when they up.’ beared before the local Board or 'l‘mde to urge steps be taken to put industries here into war pm- duction. There were plenfs n ‘l. ‘ Amherst for the 13111511111111101118113? munitions. the men claimed Opel"- ation of the rolling mills o! Am- herst \vas_ llcld up by i1 11ml; or ra lwn- rails nllzl as WfilCil could be roll:d info r ‘ ‘Uipg rods am; o r nmirrl on claimed quimu. ‘"111. obtalnfid from Monctsn had 5:11:11 sent to Svd- "EY- Where scrap o any type could ybc re-meiT-"d vlvreas Amherst I131 @113? 0 with axles nrlr. i: '1 card dmid ’ 11111 Pxcv C. scrvntive in nib. '" o,‘ Pu ..l!1‘.‘ll1 for Cumberland, with the request he interview the general-manager of ;thr- Canadian Cnr and Foundry {C11111l1fl1Iy' as soon as possible. [ii rc-fcr the I‘- clr. Con- ll Duclfs Army Losing Prestige lln Slow Advance By KIRKE L. 1 Associated Press a f \ ill-r TIIBISLZIIKLO!‘ lltlli! GTLIPCK‘, Ql"(‘ill1_\' culmmcfied in number's zincl niocicrn fighting gear by her Italian zissail. ‘ant. ls doing more than stir woild ,111‘111111'1111011- It is rnisinq an lin- ponderable question as to Germnn. Italian strategy. Just as their spartan ancestors more than _24 centuries ago put fr; a brave (IPIPIIFP rlclnlnst (1 Persian host at the Pass of Thcrmopylac, Greeks of today ai"c holding up It- aly's advance. Every hour they can ain is of_ vital consequence. It rings British he'p that mlich near- er. and diminishes by flint much Italian and Axis military prestige. 4 Thc samc factors that temporar- ily balked Xerxes‘ Persian war char- lofs at Thermopylae in 480 BC. and ave Leonldass handful of spartans hclr undying fame, is stalling Mus- so1inl's modem steel-clad mechan- ized chariots in 1940 AD. They are mountains, lnud and valor. Rome reports attribute the snails pace advance of Fascist le- gions into Greece to torrential rnirs plus Greek resistance. Whether it s that or other influences which are prolonging the Italian slow-mo- tion Bdtzkrielz remains to be sccnq There are indications that Rome ives not prvimrcrl for tenacious Greek resistance. It 11in attack was l, not pfanncd to test British resourc- les as the uliv of Greece, or the irritations of Russia and Turkevthe lplain fnct is flint Greece already has further dimmed Italian prestige by lier stand and mav have influ- lrmced Balkan as well as Russian and Turkish policy. ‘The plight of Greece is desperate unless Br taln can spare both fleet and air power from defence of her own SIIOFCS and life lines to aid her. There Ls no reasonable probability of n political overturn of “Little llmpcrtant racial minority in Greece OUR BOARDING HOUSE — ' "f ,..., or- wiiar ’/ emu-ER! - o: ALL mew- y "E11 “°°PLE GET A LOAD ?oasu vr, WERE 91o. vow w! 1 "e HANDS ON 114m" iurelzual. ,1 DOOR NEKBHBOP- HA5 TO LlKE A GLUE ..l.-.=:.ll-ll l1“ 1.1% ECRSIDE GUARDlANl AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE " Estimate 0f Willkie’: Chances (By H. M. Peters, Canadian Press Staff Writer) NEW YORK. Oct. Wendell Wililde’: chances of be coming President of the in the sylvania and New York. Roosevelt carried 46 states 1n uh?“ “mnlu-‘Yd 011511119 11110 1936. losing only Maine and Ver- mont, for a record electoral-college total of 523 to eight for Alf M. ‘Landon, Republican. In the pop- ular vote table Roosevelt had 2'7,- 476.673 votes to 16,679,583. i Republican strategists something like this: In 1936. Landon, it developed, was an unpopular candidate, yet he polled 16.000000 votes. FEW. 1f any, of these votes can be expect- ed to switch to the President- those who opposed him in his most popular year will surely oppose him, they claim. So on that base of 16,000,000 Re- publicans they expect to build a substantial addition made up of <11 Democrats who oppose a third term; l2) Congress of Industrial Organization members attracted to Wlllkle by John L. Lewis‘ break with the President (it was noted that many 0.1.0. leaders have collie olit for the President, but. any Iollowilg Lewis takes with him would be not gain for the Re- publicans who believe few of these men voted for Landon.) (3) Vot- ers who for various reasons are ‘alarmed over the President's for- ‘cign policy which Willkle himself docs not oppose, and t4) Demo- crats who broke with the Presl- dcnt two ycnrs ago over such issues a» the supreme Court I‘L‘Ul' zmiz- atioii and the “pui"l_lc" of ‘ISUI- gtlft Democratic members o. Con- gross. Since the 1936 piesidenual elec- III“! ttcli there intervened congression- al clzcticns ,\vo _.€3i‘S ago lll which many of the industrial states ElCCl i Republican Senators. Gov- crnoi. or reprczzntctives. These .= Michigan, where in 1936 l. nod a majority o. some votes; Ciiio, where the Pit idzuls marlin was 600.003- odd. and lvlzisslichusctts, which he carried by 180.000. In addition flic 1938 raccs in New York, California and several other states were niueil closcr than in 1938. l Il taki-s ‘.106 vctvs in rite electoral "college to elect ii President. A solid bloc of those is centred in the "states mentioned. The prize for which the Presi- dent and his opponent. are gunning includes: 4'7 electoral votes in Now York state, 29 in Illinois. l9 1n hfichigfin, lb‘ in New Jersey, 26 in Ohio. l7 in hlassriicliusctfs. 22 in California, 36 ill Pvnnsyllvnnin, l4 lin Indiana and eight in Maryland. Those l0 slates comprise 234 votcs-alnlost half of the total. EXPECT EAR LY DEVELOPMENT OTTAWA. Oct. Ill — (CPI -— Enginerrlng fnvcstigailons lcoklng to early development of power re- sources ln the international rapids section o.’ tie St. Lawrence River will begin on Monday, Nev. 4, it ivas disclosed here tonight. The Prime Minister's cflzc re- ‘eased copies of a Joint staiement issued after the first Joint meet- ing of the Canadian Temporary Great Lake-St. Lawrence basin committee and the UrJied States. committee,‘ St. Lawrence advisory lieid today at Massena, N. Y. "At the meeting this morning general agreement was reached as to the scope and conduct of the engineering and other investiga- tions xvhich are necessary prelimin- aries to the development of the in- fernafional rapids section of the St. Lawrence River,“ the statement said. , T0 OPEN PROCESSING PLANTS KENTVILLE. usf Oct. IiL-(CP) »-.»\lllll0l‘llv “'85 received from the Fed 'al government today to Open ogessing plants to__ha.rid up: for the Axis to use as a lever. Reported British naval occupa- tion of unspecified Greek islandsof strategic importance show that help ‘is close at hand for Greek defend- lers. It makes the pretext on which iftaly struck sound all the more ironic. It was to keep British forc- Grcék ‘ cs out"ot""those""very'"'k """ bases, Rome said. Yet t e imme- diate result of the stroke at Greece was to place them in British hands, at. an undetermined ultimate cost to 1_1§ Q$§-____ With - Maior Hoopla 31-40?)- United Btates rested today, it was gen- erally agreed. upon the support the Republican nominee has attracted densely-populated states such as Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, California, Massachusetts, Penn- “7, Further Limit yCn Fish Imports §To Great Britain , ‘l ‘Survivors Cf Margaree Land In Bermuda HAD/ELTON 3g __ (or Camel-The air-in c1315; , 1;’? ‘lilo when _H.M.C.b'. Margaree‘ 011 down with 142 of their snip. mates lli an Atlantic convoy (org. C/ITAWA. Oct. 3l—(CP)—Clos\ . study is being given by the Fish- - ieries Department here to tile fish marketing problem created this y. J. l l sign, “rm-e - f 1 , ltveek by a new ruling me Bri- tonight’ 1-151. tgslaléilguégé fish Food hllnistry . ("Ting Bri. Join lne rank; o; me Canadial] and ‘l tlsh lmporls of Ire or frozen British navics. fish to cod. Dr. D. B. Fun, de- lpuiy minister oi fisllCllés, sold to- day. Until the probable effect of the ;I'U1i!lg has been thoroughly ex- ianilned, it \\0uld be impossible to decide what measures might be necessary", if any, to aid Canadaa swlfl ust of death in the night hours, °1 091- 22. tile six officers and 34 {gt-Inga came to Haiiulton aboard e merchant ship that knlfed info, the destroyer while slie was cscorwl mg a convoy across the Atlantic onl 11111 1W5’ to take up service with the" "FIGHT IS FOB. US" ,, _ y _ _ export fisheries, he said. fig? (ggémdéfi; blsfirfkffif dlegiéggifz; ‘W910 1116 V0111’ DBOPIC Britain is Since the war began Britain has 111359;; 1 1181111118 for Even‘ 11111; one or of limited fish imports including wiry, glam came the disclosure 51101141 1* (101113 0111 1111- 101 1101. yCflflllfid, to the cheaper" varieties, ma; me Lmrgaree‘ reumfly acquir- ‘P15531511 51113961 William Grfmlfiflo con. e foreign exchange for ed from tile Royal Navy, was weed Knsza, Royal 90114101811 Engliicflrh f the pw e of war fllllltfl-IIS. in two by [he bow o; me column? 1'11? 018111100 10 1J0 SPOKE-Em“ f0!‘ 1 ‘ This he . ruling: carries that lim- treightei" when they met in the as they travelled without 11111V?5 Dlummctted under the At- lantlcscombcrs like a stone, giving most oi lici" crew no (diance for es. cape. But the details of the turbulent minutes bcforeand after the cr-aglr still remained lfl the possession of the navy‘ tonight. Newsincn were not permitted lo hear the survivors accounts, pending a mass interview" ..omorro\v. ‘Ihe rescued I114. 11- 32 from the Canadian Navy and two lioln the Royal Navy~lvcre to be taken to Canada as ed. MBfllliYlllii‘, a court 0i inquiry was to be 1I('1(l lierv. Belief was ('.\])i'\’.~hl\1 licroil would be difficult to iletcvniilic the exact cause of iiic COIIIFfOII, since al lie survivors were .5“iLi to liiivc beui asleep wiitn lL cahle, and were awakened only b)‘ tile ucuJi Liirocs of the trig Al. puree. A Royal Ca lufiiii nova. officer, iiiounccc. was Dtlllg lilflllgilt to Bel" do L.» limp aul.".c.ii.;csl1.1e in the inveshgaticn, l-ic- was not identified. Officials so... the re- port on the inquiry would not be made public, following the usuai .-ustcm. The extent of damage stifiered. the vessel flint struck the M " ivos not QIEUICSCQ IICFG. " sliliicfi slle iiali not been darling: seriously, since she was able lo pick up SIIIVIVOTS andbring them to port. (Hamilton dispatches did not identify the merchant ship). The (icstrdvt-l", which was to 13$ ‘CE 11-.- hnvl: joined IllC riolntniolfs navy as‘ ihe 13in ship of that type, was commanded by Cmdr. J. W. R. Rcy’ of Ottawa. who was lost. Five oi the surviving officer, arriving heme were the Canadian Navy; the other was zitiilchtd lo the Royal Navy. Sonic of tlic sill"vivcl"s_lind gfllll‘ through tho Fraser" Slflilllll’: off tho French coast in June wllvli 45 Illtll‘ was 5114381111 Sub-Lt. were lost as the vc in two. One of Robert Timbrell. who unified tlic .. .rl ser- vice cross for .i' . during the ‘va llritlcil _ 0f_ Dulllzcrqlic. proximately 80.000 barrels of Anna- polis Valley apples (lam-aged by mid- October frosts, it was announcedby the Nova Scotia Apple Alorketlng _ Board hero. y Growers had feared those aPPW-i would be a complete loss unless they could be [uyptffl illtp‘llliillllifffillllfeil products. Scvcn of me l3 plant-i 111 the Valley have been ld.e, but. all Besides the thousands 01 011°" 1" greater number» of 011101 HD0115 ful. A class In aero-mffhflflk! Dominion. A fighting aeroplane with a balky’ engine is as useless as a crippled duck Lack of engine power might foe in battle or might l71\111§l‘ 111"“ into the sea or info TOllghHIIIllDfllZx able country on a long flight. Air Observers and Air have a warm regard for the 11111111‘ skilled Acro Engine Mechanics of pianos serviceable unspccfnciilnr. but just as important " in ifs wily as the work of the train- ed men who fly the plants. A crew y charged with faking a bslnbcr 4001 miles out ovcr the Atlantic on con- voy pafrol. for instance, must 1X‘ soon as transportation, could be arranged, it was ‘rllIIIOUJIC-, will g0 info operation tomorrow. .P6P@11 11131161711 Gina: lll lllscllll . I leave the crew helpless before inc y 1 icilginrs are inspected bmorc and Royal Canadian Air Force lallolsg Gunners ‘ l l l the R.C.A F. who keep the nrro- l 1' ~ Their unrk is; , Caccizosloraks in Canada, who on i Oct 29 oiwerved the 22nd anniver- I Apparently me warmm-ls‘ sary of the birth of their nation l .Can Hold l Fascists. Greeks “Tell Turks ANKAIIA, Turkey, Oct. SL-(AP) -'I‘he Greeks have tcld the Turkish government they can hold out a- ‘gains; the Italians without this country's help, ailtiiorilativc quar- lcln. said nodal‘. They added that Turkey would 1111411“ the Will‘ only “.n case 0f a Julgarian attack on Greece or if Tu 0y}; national interests are en- d . glred." N(3\'€l‘i.ll’1(‘5S, they said. Turkey has prcniscd all possible aid to \1I'€€C€ even though the aid does not take the 'I‘url<s to the point of becoming belligerent: ' All ilILS—llIE br ef story of what ‘ a series of diplo- arici exchanges— _" scm".- fficlal in- Lie Llze cffi .a, Turk sh radio tack one more flnig at the Izalians. , said the broadcast, is up '.- an important test of her power, but has not “shown l‘ b alltly.“ Di cusslilg British aid to Greece. the announcer remarked that what was needed from the Greek stand- point was a Royal Air Force bomb- ing campaign on Italian an‘ bases. and air attacks on "Itallancitles, including Rome." To such raids, he said, llzc Italians "scorn especially scnsitxc." _ Tn,- rzldlo agtllll rlil, forward the Turkish vzcu" that Italy was lilitxn; at Greece “in an cffcit to prove to Germany that Italy can act on hcl" own iniz.ia:i\"c.' acifiig: v “Italy also wants what f xzforv she can occupy in Glrcce to make sure she will be rowar ed for her efforts in the war 0:i the szde of iany." . There was speculation as to the activities. of German Ambassador Franz Von Pnprir who left ' . day. I‘. was ultclrixtccd h ' he u s to make a arson. . to Hitler on Tu: pcslliivil. (In Berlin alitho zed sources de- clined any ccrnment on the Von be filmed a steady. rhythmic roar fziitrr and fall into silcnco whcll i.‘ landing ficld is ovcr the horimn. The powerful engine: of R. C. A F‘. receive all the care and alien- iicn of lhormlghiirrd IZICCHOIZ‘ u.- .cr flight, and any woxn piris im- mcdlnlcly" replaced. Valve cicarancos are carefully chcrkcd and cvrr; filing possible done to keep the F11- _' s nnd conlrojs in porter; con- nl nil f'mcs. A‘. rcgnnr u: iorv s of 390 or 40D flying llol "" the (‘IYXIIYS are i-rmnnmrlly" rcn1ov~ rd ircni SJFYITG 101' n 00111111619 overhaul. The engines one 111N311 lnpart, cleaned and all parts min- utely" ilisprcfed for llmvs R1111 101 lllos and not ‘ ‘lfatioil a step farther. Before the war Canada sold ‘Britain almost no cod bu". cod ex- ports since lhen have risen rapid-u l_v so lililb in the first zoui" months of 111-10 cod exports zimozintcri to 18,497 hulidorvm-iizlits. A‘ .1 same time frozen salmon and ' tit ex- ports to Britain have men of! heavily. salmon sales in the ‘ t four months of 1040 bring 2; 05 ‘lililldrerilvelghf compared to 3i hilnrirodvtwdltilt in ill!) same l od of i939- I-Izilibll’. Sales dlOppPll lFOlTl 0.660 lllif'i(ll'k‘tl‘i\'l‘lg_’ll‘. to Lilli liun- tlrvciwclght in the same two per- iocis. It is expected in the industry itself lhat a domestic market for an additional 200.0110 0:" 300.000 pounds of lrozcn snllnm". may be dcvuiupa-d fairly rmitiiiy. some ad- ditional halibut Illllilll be (‘Lsposed of at home in the some tvnjl". It is also pO55l1)lf* that sonle of the sfllmOfl and halibut formerly exported as frozen might be can- ned. making lt possible to hold it until a market oprrnilrg could he made for it. The United Kingdom has col",- tinucd to import considerable quantities of Canadian canned salmon of the cheaper varieties. pinks and chums, which are as nutritious as I115‘ more e nsive sockryn and as lvvll l Cons..cri\blc qun . i. crin- ncd herring are a.o being ex- ported now from tile aver’. coast. Although this is a comparatively izcw industry in British Columbia. 03.500 casts were canned up to Oct. 24 this season, alllioilgh the season ls just getting fully under way. “GARDEN BRIGAEE" FOR N.S. HALIFAX, us. 51:. Jl A ‘gaikicii iii"ig.i<lc" up pa 1CPl— ‘,iiIl11Zl'Ll——\\ l u litlng veg the ptopie -.'.‘~. lion of the Wnmcrfs Install». of the provlnw. Agi uflilrc .\l.n".stcr John A .\lcl)oli.i ltllllglli. life L"."ll\'i'll *1 liclcl here Nov. G ".ii.il 7. The “brlgacid u-zli be organized chiefly aliioifg infra. Quill. t ‘S. the 150 branches of the li mute being used as "rccrullinz ‘centres. Th,‘ id -< 1'10’ to mac vcgc- ‘ l ‘ . but to “I. make it l). blv become so needs in vcgc S COIICCYIICJ ,L‘§e fill-bard! for danrlgrf l out under the Commonwealth Air Tralnlnlt P111111 ‘"5 lire belnfi trained tn make ihr Empirfs air IOITPs the world's III>0l poucr- |s 5]]()“‘|] he" at study in one of the many schools 811111111 11'1"“ 11"‘ .‘.<‘f‘(i llllli bill‘ Pllillli; f 'll1"i‘.' an‘ Um oil a 5n . . .- stand Lxutl: 11.1.11“ b.1\ 0 11a z i-lrunis npe l“ r. znli-llnrry, and nlni""f¢1ll-'\111‘P Lrallil. f; 0m zit iv-lP 11y A p ,~ M, , 'f‘..\.|i ng .' .5 M s, Tlin v.01: . hicli lurllszi mil s ill.‘ 1.500.) inc- i\ Chéols all cvcv t‘ " they have a trade lo we. " "11 when sure that the engines will maintain signs-of wear. Any worn parts are the war is over. 0m