MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN Allflalh lslfnu and all the m1",',',',,f'""°'" - ~=-- M- The People's Paper a...- N“. Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ,°,::.'.l:'.""" P""'.':::...E;'°..‘Z:“‘ Cl-IARLOTTETCWN, CANADA, Tmmviozrbisn 2o, 1942 s PAGE—Sw \\l. wf/ /// ' Tzv-"Qw Applause ll the our of noble minds. the end and aim of weak ones. MAXI MS OIL MERE MAN Annual lubsorlptlou Delivered, ‘.00 By lhifr I. ill. l. “.001 to other Prnvincu and U, I. A. ".00 _- . .._= sovmrs“ RETREAT, THEN HOLD AT STALINGRAD laps May Be Ofl’ Schedule In Solomons Drive Speculate On Burma Invasion Gathering of Generals gives rise to‘ New rumors. IIONDOIN’, Oct. 10-(AlP)—In- creasing speculation over the poa- sibll1t_ of a swift Allied thrust into burma was heard in Lon- don tonight because of the report that Gen. sir Claude Auchlnleok. now at New Delhi with both Gen. ir Aruhibald P. Wavell and Lt,- n. Joseph W. Btlllwell, will re- ceive an important assignment. Auchinleck was succeeded as Middle East commander last Aug- ust by Gen. sir Harold Alexander and there has been no announce- ment since of his new duties, To- day military quarters in London disclalmed knowledge of an im- pending eastern appointment for “the qiuk", but lt was agreed genera ly that he possesses quali- fications useful in preparing an assault which would be aimed primarily at reopening the Burma road into China. (The Japanese have five or six divisions in Burma, and these have been described as a "holding force", Allied re-entry into the country from India would be in the face of extremely difficult terrain. Chinese Pressure <T£@£@_1~!._Rr§§s11¥¢ 1mm "P? (Continued on page ‘l, C01 2) .___i..__i__ Liberation or Trial Of Houde Is Asked BERTI-IIERVIIILE. Que, Oct. 19 ——(CP) — The liberation 0f Camillien Houde, former Mayor of Montreal, or his immediate trial "by his Peers" has been asked in l. resolut on sent to Justice Minis- ter st. Laurent by the council of this town about 50 miles northeast of Montreal. Houde has been in internment camp since August. 1940. for nis denunciation of the National Re- gistratlon. “gerthierville has a population of Coming Events l-O-P. "Talkies-Eldon Friday. \ 10-19-21. "Talkies-Moran Tuesday. , 10-19-21. "Talkies-Murray River ‘rhurs- 10-19-21. "Talkies-St. Peters Wednesday. 10-19-21 "Madam Doyel Readings. Hillsboro. 10-20 "We require a quantity of well fleshed bologna cattle. Island Cold Storage 00.. Ltd. ii-Zti-dti. "Hope River Bazaar and Chicken Supper, October 20th and 21st’. 15 m 144 "Collecting hogs every Friday. Please list with Leslie McDowell, Fredericton. 5-l9-20-twti "Chicken Supper at Fort August- us Wednesday, October 21st. 10-20-21. "Bazaar Rollo Bay l-lall Wed- nesday and Thursday, Oct. 2i and U. 10-14-51. "Come to the Rebekah Auction Bale 1n Lodge Room Tuesday, Oct- 20th at 8.30, 10-20-11. "Booking orders for car of Feed Wheat to arrive at 48 Road last of October. Tom Curran. 10-20-11. "Dance Georgetown Hall Thurs- llrive Gets Underway ln Province A total of $36,500 for Charlotte- town and a. few outside points in Queen's County was the amount contributed to Canada's Third Victory Loan drive on the open- ing day, figures released from the local office of the War Finance Commltic revealed last night. Can- vasserg got away to an early start yesterday mornin and their work continued well in the night. Figure; for Summerside were not available last night as canvassers worked overtime to malre up for the hours devoted f0 the ceremon- ial program which inaugurated the campaign in the Western Capital. For the first day in the second loan last February a total of £93.- 660 was realized in Charlottetown and Summerside combined. The majority of the $36,500 tum- ed in by the Victory workers yes- terday was contributed in Char- lottetovm. '1I‘he quota for this city is $600000 For the remainder of Queen's the objective is The quota for the Province is 1.750.000. No word was received from King's County last night but a zealous group of canvassers were combin the various towns. villages, an other communities for investments in Canada's future. The same is true of Prince County and Queen's. The King's County quota is set at $250,000; for Prince, including Summerside, it is $600,000. Figures available last night would not give a complete picture of the manner in which the citizens o1’ Canada's tiniest province are ing about the business of prov ding money for the guns. tanks. planes, ammunition and other necessities of Canada's army. As the contri- butions Slart pouring in by mall today a clearer picture will devel- op. Report Nazi Troop Ferry Torpedoed STOCKI-IOLM. Oct. 19 —(AP)— The German ferry Deuischland 31. carrying 1,000 Nazi troops on fur- lough W115 torpedoed late today 10 miles off the Swedish coast and an unknown number were drowned. _ The vessel. a train ferry, was ab.e to reach Trclleborg tonight by steerln with its propellers. The submar he was of "unknown nat- ionality" but Russian craft have been operating under the Baltic Sea for Months. The Germans were reiurnlna’ l0 Norwayflafmm furlough and the Deutsc nd was enroute from Sossnitz, Prussia to Tmlleborg. Four soldiers were killed out- right by the explosions and others were wounded. A Swedish ferry which was following the Dcuhschland closely was not at- tacked 29 in Cana a 0.8. Warships Blast Enemy Supply Dumps American Fleet Oper- ating in Waters Formerly Dominat- ed by Nipponese. _(By William F. Frye, Assoc- iated Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON, Oct. r9- (AP) — United States war- ships, joining in the battle of the SolomonS, have bombarded and blown up ammunition dumps the Japanese had col- lected for their all-our assault on the American marine and army men on Guadalcanal, the navy disclosed today. Whether t h i s accurate shooting by the navy, coupled with constant, furious assaults 0n the enemy from the air, had thrown the Japanese timetable awry was not stated, but the fact remained that at last rc- ports the big enemy land of- fensive had not yet got under way. "No recent troop activity or enemy landings on Guadalcanal have been reported," said a navy communique. The communique, containing the first report in more _than a week of the fleets activity in wat- ers previously believed dominated by the Japanese, said that Ameri- can surface vessels shelled the en- emy’s positions on the northwest- ern Guadalcanal the morning of Oct. 17, with direct hits setting off heavy explosions and fires in am- munition dumps. Naval Battle Possible The presence of American war- ships appeared to foreshadow a ssible early engagement between he opposing surface vessels which could prove decisive to the out- come of the Solomons campaign. The navy communique related that during three days beginning Oct. 16, American plants-both long-range army bombers from Gen. Douglas MacArthufs com- mand and navy-marine corps fighters and bombers based on the Solomons-had pounded en- emy ships and installations throughout the islands. Fewer Types Cigars, Cigarettes Likely UITAWA, Oct. 19-(CP)—Smok- ers are likely to have a smaller choice of cigarets and cigars if a plan for simplification of the to- bacco industry, understood to be new under consideration, comes into effect. Wartime Prices and Trade Board officials have already taken action to simplify manufacturing processes and reduce costs in sev- eral industries and il; is under- stood that the tobacco business is one of the next in line. WOMEN'S INSTITUTE BUYS BONDS FREDERICTON. Oct 19 —(CP) -Pcssibl the first bond purchase after the official open- ing of the Thin? Victory Loan cam- paign was mfldc here one second after midnight by the Fredeflcton branch of the Wmnenls Instltute% Large Subscribers Buy Bonds Heavily day. October 22nd. Webster's Orch- 0mm“ o“ - 1‘,,'""_ (C?) _ gstm‘ m-mm" Workers g] gle got/lanai Hefad- "c w m m byterian “Wm m" 5 "l" m‘ Gilckgrrllesupper, Cleyde Riier Hall, w?’ 1mm umlglm 53m,“ lfblju‘ October zzncL supper 6 m 9_ aton of the frat ys re 01111! “Fmdt telegraphed to Ottawa. Eterly re. ports. a dis- “Hallovween Dance, Vernon River E011. Monday, October 116th. Web- ster's Orchestra. Prizes best cos- tume. 10-20-11. "Unloading car of bulk wheat. Monday and Tuesday. October 19th m find 20th. Bblllett. "Buying every day Cranberries, hand picked, clean. Hi best market rices. Albert Kay's, Ciarlotwtown. hone 1289. 10-20-21. "Come to the Chicken supper on October 21st at the home of Mrs. Willard Prowse. Proceeds in aid of Braclrlsy Church. Supper served from 5 o'clock. “Not buying weaner pigs until further notice. Suggest that farm- ers with surplus, grow them up to rinb . Dino and um my m feedienr age, then. they will dell T98 . Li too M ke n! Board.’ V“ k lb-IO-Zi. they said, indicated part. iiion the of large cor- glare Ilgzrribem to bilymeome- 800 what more healvily than previous loans in ins with the creased ob . l 7 -- maiiires a daily vet-age some ,'I00,000. First day's tom be announced at National ‘Hhaidqimriars wmonow mornln . One of the large corporate su - Efiflvbflfl reported n the first day's budnesa was International Har- vester Co. of Canada Lid. offlam- ilton with e .00).000 subscription. This was .000 than the corgpalriig’; nlzeori h” to the sec. on 10811 150F111"!- kgubmoke, .. Nat- ional H received word that the 2, gcrsoll-Rand O0. Ltd. had Over- subscribed their $821530 objective and befome the end of the day h mpped the 0100,0110 mart. employees of the rn- . ____________-i=a War Situation Last Night (B Kirke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst) Intlmat ons from India that an Allied attempt to wrest Burma from Japanese control may be in the making tend to recall President Roose- velt's recent fireside chat assert-Ion that diversion attach for the re- lief of both China and Russia are on the United Natiom war agenda. "That, however, like second-front preparations in Europe, hardly can be an immediate matter. It could not develop in time, for example, to affect the situation of American forces in the Solomons awaiting a for- midable Nlpponese attempt to retire Guadalcanal Island although it might prove an added deterrent to Japanese attack on Russia. By the same token, the chances that an Allied second-front in Europe can be opened in time to aid Stalingrad‘: fl0ffflfl9fl do not seem bright. I I I I I It is only in the thlrd crisis-laden war theatre, in Egypt, that there in a clearly discernible possibility of early Allied offensive which could deeply influence developments on other fronts, including Russia. Nor ls there much doubt that behind the furious and sustained Axis bombing of Malta lies Natl expectation of such an attack, One out of every 18 Axis planes sent against Malta during the last eight days has been shot down and many more no severely damaged that they never reached home. I I O O I There is no indication whatever that the mass nir attack has soft- ened up Malta for ultimate capture, or that the AXls uvrpccted it would. Its purpose is clearly to neutralize Malta as n threat to Axis convoys to Libya carrying reinforcements and lilplilles for RommePs stalled African corps. Nothing short of a growing danger that Rommel might be crushed by an impending Allied counter-offensvle unless heavily bolstered with- out delay could seem to warrant such lavish expenditure of air powvr against Malta. E0 Million French Poised For Revolt Report Hitler's Soldiers desert and Mutiny in Norway; French situation boil towards showdown. LONDON, Oct. 19—-(CP)—A vast underground army numbering up- ward of 2,000,000 Frenchmen is poised for mass revolt against- Picrre Lavals program of forced labor for the Germans, a. Fight- ing French spokesman said to- night as reports of mutlnies, de- scrtions and suicides among Hit- ler's own troops in Norway were added to accounts of spreading unrest in conquered Europe. Laval either must back down on his plan to conscript 150,000 skill- ed workers for the Nazis or be thrown out of office on a wave of revolt, the French spokesman pre- dlcted. If he does back down, this source added, the Germans them- selves might oust the Vichy Gov- ernment chief, With Lire critical French situa- tion boiling toward a showdown, this was the picture elsewhere in Nazi-conquered lands, as drawn by dispatches from the continent and statements from the various governments here:- News Briefs ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Oct. 20——(Tucsday) —-(CP)—Afti=r a week of heavy blows at Japanese bases in the northPrn Solomon Islands and New Britain, Allied bom- bers under the southwest Pacific command confined their activity yestcrrday to recon- naissance flights north of Australia, an Allied communi- que said today. VANCOUVER, Oct, 19~(CP)_- Sir Walter Carpenter, Australian financier, announced hero ‘uiloy that he would establish a at Hamilton. Ont, for the pr cg of linseed oil from flaxseed, and other oils from soya beans. OTTAWA, Oct. l9— (CP) - In Norway Announcement is expected Norway: Mounting defections lair this week nf restrictions on bus services in various parts of Canada. it was learned io- day ln official circles. OIITAWA. 00f, l9-— (CPL-The Ottawa Evening Citizen said today An authoritative Norwegian in- that a “sire-spiny; reorganization" formant said that 1,000 Germans of the navy. army and air force stationed north of Klrkenes rebel- Eublic relations Offices, which will led at an order transferring them ring all three under one head, to Russia and that one out of is “in process of bein ried every 10 was ordered shot, but that out." (COIEIUQCI on page a CO1 2T‘ LONDON, on. lav-acri- The Admiralty announced to- Jean Darlan among the 200,000 Nazi occupation troops, resulting from the severe climate, virtually no home leaves, fears of being sent to the Russian front and the hostility of 98 per cent of the Norwegian people. K051i‘ day anti-aircraft gunfire of the naval trawler Lovnnia and of a naval base together liberals llold?‘ Antigonish In N.S. By-lileotion ANTIGONISH, N, 5., on, i9 <CP)—- _John P. German held th Afll-{Bblllsh seat in the Nova Scotia lkllislature for the Liberal Party at a bY-election today, defeating Russell Cunningham, C.C.F., by g, ulurziiitv of better than two to one. The 0.0.11‘. candidate lost his deposit as his government oppon- tflt rolled up 2.640 votes to the 10891"! 1.137 on the basis of com- uleie unofficial returns from the ridmizis 32 polls. The Lzbcral plurality of 1,503 comlnlrcri with that of B83 in m; hst ggilclill election, when a Lib- eral defeated a Conservative. On the other hand, the p0 ular vote wiu slightly lower this e, drop. 1112 frorri_1i.847 to 3,777. The Liberal winner is a mm. mercml iraveder living 1n Anti- gqmsh town. Cunningham is a. railway worker from Glace Bay and was a last-minute entry in the e1- ction. _‘1‘he conic-st was a two-party fght. the Conservatives having wrihdwnvn from the field in line Willi llu-Lr bmzoilnced wartime llolzw in this province of not mak- ing wlmi Livy tvm “unriece5sary" by-clection contests. The sear \\'1l.‘, arid previously by Capt, John fvinclsaac, Liberal, whose death created the vacancy. fire House standing as of today ivas: Liberals 22; Conservatives, 4; C.C F . 3: Vacant, l. Admits 75 Grimes In Eight Weeks CIIICAGO. Oct. 19 —(AP) Irwin Karl-ens, a law-abiding family mun who siltiiicllly became one of the cuunLyKs most dangercu... des- pezndces, held a bloody head in shaking hands today and guessed that he had commuted "about '15" cr m(s in eight weeks. He fUilCllPCl the end of a spect- acular outlaw trail in a. west side curt-entry.’ exchange. He was en- E-Qfll l" Pol-Till": the place when ilk‘ nliiungcr, an enlployce 11ml o. customer i csilud him to the floor. Tim-c policemen rushed i0 the rescue, Ono 01' them knocked lum out with pzsio. butt blows on the head. ‘The slender, hawk-nosed Kndens Wfls brnu u l0 the Fzfmore station to he quc tioned about a kidnapping and ii MENUS of robberies, rapes and shootings that DFOIHDLQG J. Edgar Hoover, Ch cl of the Federal Bur- eau oi Invcslmaiion, to list him as a "llircc-siziic Crime wave." "He ildlllils about 50 robberies "imes,“ stated Capt-uh , rubbing his v intcrjectert- “About 7.3 would be closer." Iiunver, lll ichiing Kadcns i scalp '0l'lG of ‘iv most dangerous criminals at r1, ," llflfl placed the abduction. iivc rapes. 17 robberies and l6 auto thefts to his account, but the prv number of offenses went unrcr oncd while invvstitzufflrs sOililiii ic determine what caused him to zibaudon o. Life of respect- ability. Mrs. lioosevelt May Visit Great Britain G088 T0 Algiers liféiii.‘ “an, “ havens: - "' l ‘ IONDON. 0C1. 19 — (GP) — crashed inland and explodifl‘ I I ‘o newspapers reported in mow voarr, Oct. 19 —(AP) _ carao, Oct, l9 —fAP)_ Allied , ll“ “"11 NW .Y°Yk anddl" The Ber in radio said today that planes made sharp Tiilfls cn Axi w,“ _,inc°l‘;umésooslgufl‘y l . . i .. A 1 $i‘.‘i1y“2~.<?§§.l.§1‘§§§“a§£i%’ flail‘? ?§<‘il"3"§m§i§‘..‘“.ll .;T“l‘.‘.‘“i..¥“..'f. w er Preterm- 15 comes gone tobeAlgiers and ihinled inn ‘desiert operations stillodfl‘ by grilglllfge“ at’ ‘he mvmtnon 1 m (ed _ _ . _ .10 r c . poi-sumo? me 15:33:; ogwginllfd major “st aE-BE Mom“ Aiuhoritazive sources did not gates troops 1P1 Liberia, near Y)VALE'I"I‘A, Malta. Oct. 19 (O dmllinlhi report, but, declined to ance's west A rcan possesions. — Axle l n. nil nl - CC!“ @11- fi effective stgblsodtcnihigulslanid K1418 Rmswell- when 151ml Berlin broadcast a transoccan (Nazi News Agency) dispatch date- lined Vichy which quoted Vichy political circles as saying Darlarvs Jvilirjney "is entirely private" but T18 "The (the Vichy circles) admit fortress during inst night rmri toda with fighir-r-immbem. one of lch was shot down. A mm- munique said others were dam- aged. RETIRED STEEL WORKER DIES I D4 Earlier subscriptions included that od the iwbm H Flour Mills Co. Ltd, of Moose Jaw Sabin, for $625 .000. all parts of the Dominion mme reports that indicated an enthusiastic response to the lar- gegt loan ever sought of Canadians. Sawville, Que, with e. quot-a of l coo, considered gubstantial for me population, was over the top before noon and still 301118 $111008. At Charlottetown, the first mp- llcatlon for a bond was signed by Kira. Catherine Hyndman 9'1- yearzold moiher of Mr. Justice J. D, Hyndman of Ottawa. Mn I-iyndman purchased a bond for herself and one for her 17-month» 01d granddaughter, Helen Cathe- FIOIII rine Malcolm First purchasers at Cardswn, Alta, vrere three full-blooded Blackfoot Indians from the re- serve in that district. Tom Russell and Cecil ‘Iblibuil each subscribed $500 and Pete slabson 8600. uhey was}: dressed in full Indian Rie- ga . Workers reported e quick re- sponse to the opportunity given farmers to exchange their pro. duce for “victory tickets" used to- purchase of Vioton ad ward the Bonds . Darlans visit may make possible d‘ ‘ ---~ between the North African high command and the Cunmander in Chief of the French Aimed Forces. "These conferences would take place at a time when the landing of Amo:ican troous in Ilberin has made a, series of defensive measures on the part of the French military command necessary, it is said.“ "SM-ADA" TBA SYDNEY, N S, Odl. l9 --(CP)— Patrick MacQuarric 80, miized employee 0f the stool plant. here, died at 11's home Sunday after a long period cf ill-health. Mrs. Liloyd Black of Moncion. N.B., is a daughter. Two sons, Chauncey and Duncan. are on the staff of the Syflnrj_EfE-_Rlord.: alrut reports of a Lmidon trip at lier vnilm l-Icusc conference last wCilIlCSdfly, snad: "I would like i0 g0 ii I could l-n usrfill. I would have to be vrry sure of 10ml." She lliilicriltd such n mp was lust another filing that miKhb 0mm‘ 1n tho fili-ure ) Enemyp-Cbptures One Block Of Wrecked Factory Some Indications Nazi all-out drive" Weakened by heavy losses; City in Crave Peril, However. i (By Henry O. Casnidy, Associated Press list! Wrlim-l MOSCOW. Oct. 20—('l‘uesda1')—(AP)—The great battle of Stalin- grad raged on around a factory stronghold in the northern part of tho battered city Monday, but the Russians said today that nil German ah tacks were repelled after the Red army had yielded one block cl wrecked buildings during the preceding night. The Soviet Monday midnight eommuniqu uld the Germans oom- tinued to launch "fierce" tank and infantry attacks in a desperate effort to take the Volga City, and that “fighting was particularly Itub- born in the area of one factory," but indicated that there had been nq change in the general situation. Northwest of Stalingrad Russian troops consolidated their positions and repelled a, number of enemy attacks, Rumanian troops triad desper- ately to capture a. strategic hill, the communique said, but were thrown back after losing 150 men. On another sector the enemy lost about e. company of troops, 1t added. Heavy fighting also continued farther south in the Caucasus. both along the Black Sea south- east cf Novorosslsk and 1n the hiozdok area where the Germans were trying to reach the Grozny Oil fields. In the Black Sca area, the com- munique said, Russian troops evacuated two villages after a fierce battle, but in another sec- tor of this region the Red army repelled several attacks, killing 1,200 men. In the Mozdfk area German tanks and infantry succeeded in vvedging into Soviet positions, the communique said, but by the end of the day the enemy had been repelled and the Russians had re- gained their former lines. Nazi Drive weakened There were some indications that licavy losses among the 75,- 000 Germans in Stalingrad had weakcired their all-out drive to smash Soviei resisinnce. The msoluti- ltussians declared they had cirrlvcricd the latest German offensive, now five clays old, into a long grinding battle like its forerunners by wholesale killing of the attackers, and wear- ing: down the Slll‘\'lV0l‘.~; to exhaus- tion by day and night counter-at- tacks. In Grave Peril Stalingrad remained in grave peril. however, since the Germans appeared intent on occupying the Voiua cilv and providing a victory needed not only for military rca- sons but for home-front morale as well, 1111c German communique, us- ually‘ brief. claimed that a. con- quered industrial area had been moppcd up and that planes at- tacking east of the Volga destroy- crl ll oil trains, Further progres was claimed in the WCSLCIH Cau- casus. Bombing attacks were re- porird cu the central front where the Germans have said there are vast RUSSl-flll troop movements. hinting at a new Russian offen- sire.) Fire (‘ausegSMlig-ht Damage T0 Freighter QUEBEC. Oct. l9 —(CP)— Fire- men bntilerl for several hours a smouldering blaze which broke out in the hold of a heavily-laden freighter in port here during the week-end. Part of the cargo had to be un- loaded in nimble iircfzrzhlers to get at ihc blnzze. ’I‘hc only casualty’ was a storedori- who suffered foot in- jurrcs Damage was light. O. Couples Praise, Criticism WASHINGTON. Oct. 19 --(A'P) —'l‘lie office (f War Information, coupling crlticiwn with praise, re- pnrirri l<xiny ilinl ivorfnrmance of Amcrcan combat planes on the average has been good and that new mode-ls are pmmlsin . they are tho best The nllior. mi a m n, Ge ' wflcilwmcr NM‘- n r s "nun Other Candidates who have an- U.S. Planes Five Candidates LA MAIJBAIE. Que., Oct. (Cl?) — Fkitilard Gnudrrau, yer of this Lmwcr St River Town, announced am. Candidate in the Wdornl by- 2M in ChnrIevoix-Sagurnay 30 19 — law- Lawrence International At A Glance RUSSIA-Russians hold In Stab ingrad after yielding Single bloc: of wrecked buildings; 18 Na tanks destroyed, 400 Germans kill‘ ed in one sector. SOUTHWEST PACIFIC --U. l» warships bombard Japanese am- munition (lumps 0n Guadalcanal before ecnmy opvns land attack. MEDITERRANEAN —-Alln ll ports and land positions amnshe by Allied planes; feeble raids 0n Malta by Axis. n SWEDEN- l-‘nur German sob diers known killed and 29 woundv ed when German ferry boat, carryt in; 1.000 Nazi troops on furloug tnrpedoed 10 miles off fiwrdis coast. EURQPE __. Fighting French spokesman in London says moré than 2,000,000 in French under- gmund army ready f_0r mass T60 vnlt against Laval-Ilitler forced labor program; Norwfilrlun 900M5- man says 1,000 German sflldlfl‘! in Norway (Ir-clim- to filth!- ifl Ru!‘ sla, one in 10 is executed. BRITAIN — Daylight German raiders dropped hnmbg and mit- chine-gunned l6 forms and Vill- ages in East Anglia, killing abcul 20 persons. GETTING 7E1 Y0 IDNDON (CP) - Mlnlmiifli age for enrolment in the Air Tram‘ mg Corps has been lower-rd frnrri 15 to 15 years and three months. 4MB Dlinfisf fetuses vs 4o Gaonn ‘fr-rt’ WE Go 4o HlM f0 BE RELlEVED 0G‘ Pam High and tonight at 9.11. Sun sets this evening at 6.08 and rises tomorrow morning at 723 tide this morning i". ‘Z58 Full moon Oct. 23, 12.05. a.m. Suumerside tide 1B minutes latd than Charlottetown. CAB FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden-Leave 9.05 a-rn. 1.00 p.m., 4.45 n.m.. 1.55 p.m. Leave Tormcntine-ILOG a.m.. 3.05 p.m., 6.45 n.m., 9.10 mm. SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. 27 inclusive) Leave Borden 9.00 a.m.. 0.45 n. Leave Tormcnilne 10.15 a.m. 8.0 n-m. P.E.I.-N.S. FERRY SERVICE Leave Wood Islands 10.00 a.m. ml . n. m. Leave (‘nribou Noon and 4.00 u- II) and Jnpnlmsc planes are su crior. _ I v T)“. Unmd 3m,“ agmmfl ndus. no-uncrd that they would contest M“ qnnlcg trydnudbigliolarrned services were 1111c €l("i‘l_lfllti, mydf trlicoessaiy‘ biii Charlottetlzriméifiloalmmcrvidn- s41: lo L‘ l1 an orderly ferment if‘ R1190!" mm‘ 0 l0 l "Y" of gciiclogwlug specialized aircraft gour of AUPPM! 01MB"! “<61; P]? nléigfinch"l°m‘w'n u‘ m.“ of llll. ii some cases sensational 41$ bu. 0N ‘Rs fK-“fl » - - _: u. irromisc of battle erfolmance." Emil: Bolvln, Maw!‘ 0f 58K‘ Si... Leave summenlde 1.10 LII Some of ihcsc actualv arc flying Pa and produclloil of the others has ing agvnt from Giifard and Charla: '~ o . or Rochcvc, Qucbrc hilrvsier begun. Two high-altitude fighters. the Mil! _ r-i . r;._:_~:_;__ W :1; of Imbo-r’ Mines and Marl-gig” (Continued on page a. on» .-,f‘?ll(‘l'l(‘, brolher of the Fisheries. ul, Drnat LnCvnix manufaciur- ‘Mauve Moncton ll a.m.! nnd 6.1‘ l """' r sr-rayarzcg m. y l4; , (‘h riottetown - il- = 1.4:: Magnum 4.15 a.m. A