Maxims OFA MERE MAN -_-Z-- "1! ll’ Id God we might fall flfefilmlo :11} depths? a realize that if’ we once lost any- gyl/ /// ' The People's Paper 147/, Mal \ Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Heeling lllfl men and nations who seek justlcr, love. mercy 1nd ubey honor. MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN Ilfellltb con: fc clown Guardian, Two Canto. (iuurdlun. Founded IIIII (print! Iornlnl CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1942 8 PAG FRENCH FRONTIER, -‘\P)- Hitler's sucidcn "(ll lulu France was p10- (‘Jy by Marshal Pctazn, 0y rllr ov. ll w ll 518d ~<> p‘ aiicr Lilc reiurn Pcrre ‘pa, (rem Munich conferences p, Hlllfl‘, the aged Vichy Czlief ‘smu- lonigllt wns reported urg- z (‘Ollliilllvii French resistance to ' Ame icon occupation of North ,1 daylong barrage ol_ccn- Mm; yopOYLi, lhe Vichy radio un- llnced lint both Pctam and his tine! called upon the C0.0l\1£ll ,,, m Nllflh Africa to fight the l... "to tho . . . In the in-_ ‘ of l-“zlnce and the Empire’ m. ' i radio acknowledged it tile slllln ,. was serious. upon the relllrn of Laval the l by rilciio dropped all mention of gain‘; pfilliWl b0 ihc GcrlllflnS. p, ¢0lll‘.(‘(“il01l wiliuLavaifls trio. was mlcd that Hitler's declar- l, "all rench Fleet woud be settled “in accord with the French authoriifles" had inspir- ed immediate speculation that Lavul had brought. back sane out- line of terms for peace. There was no confirmation of this. however. and everything de- pended on further decisions of the Cabinet, which continued in ses- S'Ol’l. The czlll to the colonial: cams soon rafter Laval stepped out of a plane bringing him back from con- ierences begun last Monday wit-h Hitler and it came a-ilnost simult- arcously ulith the announcement frun North Africa that the "cap- tive" Admiral Jean Darian had ordered all the French colonials to lay down their arms and re- turn to barracks. German ‘Foreign Mlnwier Ribb- cntl-ol) and Italian Fbreign Minist- er Cismo were reported to have sat in on one of the talks Laval special_quesiio_us'_'_l_lad with Hitler. Still Big Question Mark Conflicting reports as to what is happening to lflXllllN, Nov. ll-—(.\l’) llle llilllll striking power of French ill-ct still romain- gill \irll_\"'.~; faltering llzlllds "as irpllrll-ll tonight ill zulcllor l ls ilolnc 111150 of T0lllfill. There was no llillt as hriilcr it would stay or would ' " ‘ 4 l f rs ~ O | publicised ‘Thurs- ing in the London ress from its l-or- rrs on "llu- French frontier" said several unlia of ihe Frcnrll Navy, including n numlu-r of sllbmnrlnl-s, had lieamr-d out ni’ Tnulon rnrly llelillrsdlrv io s the Allies.) V (lay morn Dally pen nl. illlr l ‘lrlvrl Mullins. Cflilllltllllg reports about flle Fl vrw-(‘ls were clirrlnf ' ill-l (lily. in the nlrlrlling rep-ll hon) .'1 French llllrlll-l" poilrnplllcpllrlillg (o conic from ulloifl Ill sources in Vichy, {all the ~llipS 11ml szlilcrl to lillfl lllc llriii-ll Zlllil 1\lllCl‘lC£‘i'l l zlilvrllollll, pcrilzlps to nlifilfl‘ lllcsc reports, the "by rnllio l)l‘0(l(lCZl§l illnt illc girlish» l‘ll 'I‘nulun_ lCMlllilll-ufl on page 8. Col 3) flaming Events -0_ M-CITEGIIIO Saturday. l‘ M. 11-12-21. Sollrls Monday. 11-12-21. "T. 1k‘ ,- . ‘howl ll Craplllld Tucsduy. Lust 11-12-31. A Dill“ - Nvlv Perth Hull Friday “Wilm- 1' ldlll. Webster's oFCllLHftfll. 11-12-11. "Douro St Peters Bo l . y, F‘ridll 011111“ 41's Orchcstrn. ll-li-Il: "W9 "quire n (Jlntlt . y of well ufsheil byl-lglnl clltlle. Isinnd Cold “l” h». mo. o-zs-an. "Baltic Starch Com pally will be bl]: Iflracccpt further rail slli - 1111-11 further notice. 11-10-31. "Dance Fm i p _- - otvnie School Friday elvemb"! lilc 13th. Miliview Orrin: "b 11-11-21. "Filler voln- rooster with Pur- fitglélfik Fattena Chgckers, $3.}? . Dillon 8L Splllfitt. 11-11- , lllnAm 1"""ll"u bulk car whcnt ,,§lmls ilnzclbrook Friday. Smith ' 11-12-21 u —~~—-- Due to nl-rivc shortly. cars bar- in mdTmll blllk feed wileat. oil cako Bo» N “Bulk 110W. McGuig 1 dz m- 11-1131, .. -____ figuring nuns as usual ior the months. ho ' df-w-r-si-li O Rmflc Nov 13 - -» DBDCC “his l}: Afton Hall. work, Illh and Proceeds 11-10-12 W ""5""! live and dressed rlffflkl Telt-‘Dhcne Office. An- ‘Wfllyll. Montague. ll-IU-T-T-S-Bl, socomo to >~_-____ llle parlor l c soc a1 at the b uihiii-r "ed MacEwen. Stan- zm hilrfidlv evening, Nov- - momma by w. M. s. 11-11-21. ‘IN w l id.‘ Units ill Vichy Control._ iLS. Paratroops Flew 1 ,500|lli|es Non-stop (to Bran By Wfls Gallagher U. S. Correspondent With A. E. F. ln Africa ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN FRENCH NORTH AFRICA, Nov. ll—-(AP)—American par- uciluiisls staged the longest nlrbornr invasion in history when they flew in transport planes 1.500 miles non-stop from England to participate in the assault on Oran. It was disclosed foni ht that the parachute troops, ed by Col. Ed. Raff of New York, 34, and wearing camouflaged baffle suits, boarded planes curly Saturday night and flew continuously for eight hours across Europe and the Med- iterranean to land nt dawn Sunday near Oran. The longest known previous airborne troop movcmvnt was ln the Norwcgaln invasion when till- Germans flew parachutls from near Namsos to Nurvlls, which is less than 100 rnlles. Nnzi parachute troops attack- ing (‘rote had only n short jump. First Shots In Campaign ? LONDON, Nov. lb-(Thurs- dayl-(CPJ-The Dally Ex- press reported from Tangier todny that 12 members of the German armistice commission in French Morocco had been "ambushed by French patriots and killed by nmchlnegun fire-the first shots in ill! French African campaign.” ‘I'll; dispatch said the Ger- man; prior to the ambush had been uitendin an emergency meeting culle by lhns All". Nazi consul-general at Casa- blanca, because Auer had re- ceived information the Amer- icans would land wllhln a few hours along the Moroccan coast. Appeals To French Fleet ALLIED‘ FOICI IIIAD- QUARTERS IN NORTH AF- RICA. Nov. ll — (A?) - Lt.- Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. commander of the American ex- pedltlonnrv furceo In North - ""1 to it"s-m“? IP61; n o c ee Bfeuln the United Nations In the fight for freedom” b1 culling for Gibraltar _..-_-_--___ PARCELS 1U DIIPPI PRIBONIRS ._-— TORONTO, Nov. ll —fCP- - Cllnaclian Red Cross overseas dis- pulclled in October 1.707 first "capture" parcels personally 0d- dressed to Dlepoe prlsoners-of-wnr. and cards have been received in Ottawa acknowledging their receipt, Red Cross official; said here today. Great Interest In Churchill's War lleview By DOUGLAS AMARON (Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON Nov. ll — CP CABLE) —- Prime Minister Churchill, hull- ing the 8th army's victory in Egypt, promised tine House of Conunons today that the Allies will strike MW. hard blows at the Axis and ce- ciascd the moment Germuily be- comes “demora1lzed" by Allied pres- sure m Europe and Africa she will be struck by invasion across the English Channel or North Sea. Even as Hitler's goose-steppihfi troops were over-running France, the Prime Munster was promising during s. lengthy war re- view to an electrified chamber that. the "immense degree of preparat- ion" necessary for a. blow acrcss the Chalhnel or North Scu- "ls PTO- cee ng. "But it takes time," he warned. "Of course, should the enemy be- come demoralizcd at any momenv the same careful preparations will not be needed. Risks could be run on a large scale." Predicts New Events In a message ringln with opt- lmis Mr. Churchi mid th House it could be sure "that many things are going w happen in the next few days.’ and sounded lm ominous warning to the Nazis’ ner- vous ally when he said "we shall shortly have far greater facilities for bombing Italy." In outlining Britain's "cnormous” preparations to invade the con- tinent, he reminded commons that the German army in France is “as large, apart from the hOme guard, as ours in Britain," though not so well equipped. Invasion Plans Proceed Hlesaid that invasion preparat- ions had been "Greatly advanced," and that. "enormous installations have been and are being brought into existence at all our suitable ports." He declared. however that it would have been "physically impossible‘ to have made an effective invasion across the continent during the past sununcr or autumn, Mr. Churchill adnlltted. it was with some trc idaiion that he flew ‘to Moscow n the sunlmcr to notlly Premier: Stalin that the Allies dld not plan an invasion of the con- tinent in I942. "Although the news that‘ I brought was not welcome and not considered by them adequate. never- theless the fact remains we parted good friends, and in the words which Stalin uses. complete understanding exists between us. Remembrance Day Parade And Ceremony R a lembrance uay was fittinrlly obsmved yesterday bv mcmbPrs 01 the Canadian Lcaim who tinned out in large nclnbcrs to ill-tend B- solemn ceremony nt the war Monu- ment. Their rurlils wll". nurznlenied by veterans from the C.B.A T and R..C.M P. The parade was marshalled by President J1“ Leightizcr of the Charlottetown branch, Canadian D9- gion, and presented a lmurt 1111139111" Larry Trainer ance. Sign-Major headed the legion members, the parade being headed bv the I'll-n Armored Regiment (P. E. I. Light Horse) band under the direction of Bandmasicr Thos. MeFurinne. The parade moved off fzom the Legion Home at 10.40, prmeedlnz to Pownal st, aiong to Kent, Queen and Grafton to the Monument. where a large crowd was ilss-vnbied. The streets along the route of pro- cession were also lined with citizens. At the Monument the ceremony opened with "O Canada", followed by the “Last Post", sounded by Stoker (lst dies-s) Milne of the R. C.N.V.R. This was followed by two minutes silence at l1 o'clock. the fire bell tolling from 10.50 to the zero hour, every twenty seconds. At the conclusion of the two minute; silence “Rlevellle" was sounded, after which prover was offered by Flt. Lleut. the Rev. T. H. Bussel Bomerl. As wreaths were bein! placed at the foot of the Monument appro- riate selections were mndelcd b? he band. On return to the 10810" H0119 the parade passed along Grafton Street to Prncs to Richmond. Pauing the Provincialiuiiding the Iilieut. Governor B.W. nePge. The (Continued on page I, Col 4) 1 Canada Has Surplus 0f Strategic Flaxseed OTTAWA Nov. u - (c?) -—0f- ficial statistlce indicated toda that Canmdu has enough finned — u strategic material bees of war developments — to ill needs and leave about 8.000000 bushels ml- the use of omel- United Nations. Almost a. you ago major sources of vegetable oils were cut off by Japanese aggression in the far east. Canada and Uni States made haste to develo a am u» replace imports wi home pro- duction. In t is program, flaxseed had an important olaoe. War Situation Last Night ,_ (By kirlre L. Simpson, Associated Press war Analyst) A fog of conflicting rumors I"! the war scene in Europe; but Ml sufficiently f» hide one outstanding fact:- Vlrflmliy overnight, Allied initiative in Africa has changed n. stntio battle of attrition to one o] O I complete military fluidity. O O O O France, all of France, continental no well as colonial, l, ngaln in the war theatre. The vicious Fr: ‘hfls armistice ls at an end, scrap- ped by the Nazis. The Vlchyjeglme In conquered France, born of the unrealized Laval-Petain expectation that Britain Ilsa must yield to llltlerlsm, ls dead or dying. The spectre of s, rebcm fighting France ls arising to haunt Nnzl dreams. O I For the first time in lhe war Hitler ls on the defer-lain on all fronts, ‘even in Russia. lie has been outguessed, in strategy and out- matched at his favorite propaganda game. Two-front War, not of his 0W1! Illlklnt. ls already a grim reality for him. A three-front or four- front Allied attack may be upon hlm soon; and n. Russian winter. The whole continent he overrun but failed o. master is seething with unrest that bodes him no good. The jaws of n vast. Anglo-American trap are closing in upon Rom- mel's army in Libya and aiming Winston Churchill Fascist tzunquest conspiracy Italy. O O O also for a knockout blow at what calls the vulnerable "under-belly" of the Nazi- What share Fiance is to have In this swift and astounding change of scene on the war screen none ca n yet say. That tile majority of her people applaud Allied initiative, even if makes all Franco again a bat- ile arena, goes without saying. Silver Championships Decided At Show Interest increases at big Fox Exhibition; New Types to be placed Today. Interest increased at the ‘ day of the Provincial Live Foil Show yesterday. Visitors wee pre- sent from Quebec, Nova. Scotia and New Brunswick, and in the afteznoorl there was a large at. tendance which included the above and city and out-of-town spect- ators. Fbr two minutes following 10.56 the show judge, exhibitors and visitors observed a two minute sience in tribute to those vmo fell in defence of the'r country, botil in earlier wars and in the present conflict. The light was poor in the morn- ing, but improved towards noon and was excellent in the afteznoon The extra light class, 95 t0 101) per- cent silver, held the spotlight all morning and up until 2 o'clock in the afternoon. Entrcs reached as high as 24 in the male pllp cuss. All foxes on display were of good quality, and some were really out- standing. It took Judge Brenton Clark much longer than usual to arrive at decisions, so close was the run- nlng for top awards. Sec. 1, adult male, was topped by W.I-l. Tid- mnrsh with n magnificent animal. But John C. Mountain's fox was a very worthy second, wth the former champion breeder Roy Woodside, third, and H. G Muttart, fourth, Hg. Muttart won the adult fema e class. Male pup class had twenty-four entries, and probably it was, from a. pelt. standpoint, the most out- standing exhibit of the show to date. H.G. Multart placed 1 with the pup that later became the champion pup of the show, while Ralph G Muttart, won second, Roy Woodside third, Enlest 'r. M'l fourth. Female Pups In this class were an excellent Zot All of the twenty entries could be classed as very de- sirable. Stewart and Lewis won first, with Roy Woodside second Ernest T. Mil third, and Gordon MacMillan fouth. The above crmplefed the various ‘ liflfiicrfiifi:i:cci”s>z People Thanked For Response OTTAWA, Nov. Prime Minister Mackenzie King. Finance Minister Ilsiey and G. W. Bplnnev. chairman or the NBMOXI- a War Finance Committee, tonight tihailked Canadians for their splendid response" to the mm Victory noun, whose $750,000,000 minimum objective was oversub- scribed by $221,037,900 as of today. The addresses were prepared for delivery over the eastern and lat- 01‘. the ch and western net- works of the Canadian Broadcast- ing Cglporctlon. 11—(CP)— A! News Briefs LISBON, Nov. 11 — (AP) -A "We force of transports. bomb- ers and guuers was signten on the rortdguese cousl. early (ins afternoon. nynlg In norm -l.0— soutn (urection. (lnerc were no further de- tails In this brief 11151181011 and the D3l-l0ll3llly of the air-emit was not given.) WASHINWIUP). Nov. Il-(AP) .. — Destruction of 16 Axis planes during me fighting near Algiers by Aiilelfalrcrult under the l-‘Ulllilldlld of Bruin-Gen. Janles n. Doolittle was announced todav in a war de- naxtnlent communique. VICKY. (From French broad- casts). Nov. (AP) _- A Vichy [lavas News Agency dis- ilflwll from Tunis tonrgnl said st was formally denied there that Axis forces had landed in Tunisia. PARIS, From French broadcasts). Nov_ i1 — (AP) — Allied bombers attacked Lille today for the sccon». time in three days. the Paris radio said tonight. LONDON, Nov. Ll — (OP) — German radio stations at Leip- 155. Mlmlflh and Stuttgart went off the alr tonight. lnulcatlng possible air activity ovcr Ger- many. International At A Glance By The Canadian Press NORT-ll AFRICA-Dorian orders French lo cease fire as Casablanca cap-tulatcs; Aids infiltrates Cor- sica, Tunisia in effort to thwart Allied continental Invasion. FRANCE-Hitler's troops march into occupied zone in violation of armistice terms; Pctain declines Nazi invitation to go to Versailles; Paris radio ohlmg Peialn ordered cunltlnutd resistance in North r ca. RUSSIA-Reds continue initia- tlve in Stalingrad, send parachut- lots against southern airdrome, de- stroying lanes and escaping. SOLO ONS- U. S. Nnvy reports destruction of l2 Jup plane‘ while offensive up " cont ue on Guadalcanal and aircraft damage two Jnp merchnntmen. ALEUTIANS-U. S. Air forces hit two Jap cargo ships and do- sfroyed seven Jup seuplanes Kislu and Aftn. Malre the most o! you Tea" "LAM ‘I'll COMPANY OI‘ CBNADI. LIMITED 500 Supply Ships, 350 Ships of War In Allied Invasion NEWYORIQNc. II —( P _ The United Nation!’ invasisn) cg French north Africa W85 "the greatest amphibious operation in history." Capt. Oliver Lytteitqn British Minister of Production, told the Association of National Ad- vertisers tonight. The number of veseis in convoy was Well Over 500. plus more than 350 Ships of war, he 535d, Cont. Lytleilon snid he obvlougly could not. give fllil statistics and other details of the African Qper- ation, including the number ES - --___ _ _.: Annual Subscription pguygnq, ‘p39 B! Mull: l’. l. l. H.001 to other Provinces nnd U, l. A. $6.00 Hitler Tfzshes Forces Into French Colony Axis Forces take over all France; Yanks and British troops involved, but, he 5am, ~51: fnents Landing. Armadas of history would sink into insignificancc if compared with the mighty forces employgd," Gold Weather 0n Soviet Front MOSCOW, Nov. 12 __ _ day) — (AP) — Cold weathgmfid a bold Parachute fire raid on g fi?a‘l“ill.ilédlfi’élfi fi‘.‘.€§"l.‘ll§“ff"‘§“ 111310-1013! m? front. rm y le roar plctu‘ limited activity an: invcliégasiglrgecold thlltils counted on to Simplify m; “ids imfl"? problems. Particul- "(Y it‘ Slifllmgrad. and multi iy the hardships of the Genmm 11,- vagers. 1 ramal t f cumg mantis Wlsdllpetgdzg: com- mllfllquc “as the brief account of a parachute raid on o, N“; Sea Mr Dori. which told how 2s °“°"‘Y Planes Prere out to the torch, Little News 0f Battle In Libyan Desert By PAUL LEE (ASSDCiIItUII Press Staff Writer) CAiltO, Nov. 11 — (AP) —While the lualnpant British 8m army con- tinued to hack alvily at the fleelng Axis Airlca Corps both lnslde 25g pl. and across me Libyan border to ay, Allied bomber squadrons and sub- marines roamed the Mediterranean and struck repeated blows at enemy surface forces that might have hop- ed to assist Mflrshlll Erwin Rommel in his painful retreat westward. A British submarine under com- mand of Licut. J.W.D. Coombe reported scoring two torpedo hits on c. force of three cruisers and lhree destroyers enst of Sicily, while torpedo planes operating from Malta reported two hits on a cruis- er south of Cape spartaventc. Al- terward, fighter planes on a broad sweep from Malta declared there was not an Italian vessel in sight. Absence of news of the struggle inside Licyo. led military observers i0 speculnlc on the possibility that Gen. Montgomery, instead of con- tinuing a direct pursuit of the dis- organized Nazis, might be setting a trap that would cut them off well short 0f TNPOll- Giff sir Archibald Wavell, they point/ed out, dxmolistrated nearly two years ago the feasibility of an overland dash directly across Cir- exlaica to a point on the coast road near Agedabia. One source estimated that Rom- mci. when finally brought to major battle again, might have as many as 100 tanks Elltl 60.000 troops of all classes at his dlSlJOSBl. TlllB figure was considerably NEW!‘ than previous estimates. Japs llouted At 0ivi ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Aus- tralia, Nov. l2 - (Thursday) — (CH-Japanese forces have been routed at Oivi and face entrap- ment while another enemy group at Gcrari has been enveloped and destroyed in battles for control of northeastern New Guinea. the high command announced today. A5 the climax of a week-long battle at Oivi, 55 miles southeast of the “Mm ha" °l 31"“- Ausllfllm“ the south, destroying and damaltzlhg their way across the Owen Stanley hm been bombed and mchffie. n40 ‘an 2m) “m” troops which have been batting Mountains, forced the Japs from their positions, inflicting heavv losses. But the Jnps’ only course of re- great is into the hands of American roops whlch were flown hv aerial transport to the vicinity of Buns. Think Egg Supplies Are On Upgrade Now OTTAWA, Nov ltcd in some areas it is CR-rllda is "over the hump" for thl la ent "An increase in production of terdav from 20 to 30 per cent over last for their year is expected in the coming wln- mcnts. Schools ter months," one official said. . 11 — (UP) - Food supply officials said today that while egg supplies may be lun- believed Vegreville Teachers 280 miles from Spot where Enemy Aerial Reinforcel (By John H. Martin, Associated Press Staff Writer) Axis forces occupied all of France, invaded Corsica, off the south shore, and sped by air across the Mediter- ranean to land in Tunisia Wednesday and challenge Bri- tish and United States troops plunging eastward toward that key African province. The United States troops, reinforced by the crack British 1st Army, had reached Bougie, 280 miles west of Bizerte, the Tunisian naval-air base where Axis aerial ro- inforcements were reported landing. The Allied advance was facilitated by Admiral Jean Dzlrlan’s cease-fire order to all Vichy French colonial troops in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia. United States airmen already have shot down planes in the Algiers area. These r6 Axis enemy airmen presumably were hi; southern flank from paraiticns were being made Hungary 40 more German now fighting the Soviets, From Istanbul tonight came lull. l (By ‘Frank O'Brien, Associated Press Staff Writer) ANKARA, Nov. 11—(AiP)—HItler was reported tonight to be wheeling part of his great war machine westward from the Rus- sian front to face the Anglo-American offensive moving toward the Atlantic end of the Mediterranean. One report from a. usually well-informed source said that pre- hastiiy for biileting in Yugoslavia and divisions withdrawn from Russia. This would constitute approximately I. quarter Balkan source that railroads through Rumania were loaded heavily with German troops moving in the general direction of Greece and Italy. Another report which could not be confirmed said two new German divisions had entered Bui- of the entire Nazi forces e report from an experienced and Hungary operating from the Tunisian base where Vichy French officers apparently did not know w hether to obey Admiral jean Darlzm or aged Marshal 1321:1111, who, with Gcnnan officers practically sitting in his lap in overrun Vichy, had ordered Vichy’: African forces to fight on against the Allies. The Germans were bombers and fighters, in Tunisia, believed to have about 1,000 airmen, with dive- plus some Italian Marines. They also had the support of remaining Axis troops in adjoining Libya now be- lng invaded from the east by British troops pursuing Marshal Rom- mel’: shattered Egyllllflll ctlredltlon. The situation in France was ob- scure, but in French North Africa. the Allies were being welcomed by the people. Casablanca, bat Oran and Algiers had capitulated; Vichy French and Allied prisoners in the short four-day battle were being exchanged; Allied reinforce- ments were pouring into the French ports opened to them. Hitler destroyed his almistico with Marshal Petaln when he sent German and Italian troo s early yesterday into the rema nder of France. One big prize in Hitler's newest grab is the French fleet. Apparently is still is in Touion, north Mod- ite ranean port 400 miles across the sea from contested Africa. It believed to consist of three battle- ships. seven cruisers, a seaplane carrier, 25 destroyers and other units Alr Battle Looms Aside 1mm the approaching struggle in Tunisia the next phase of the Mediterranean war appeared to be s. gigantic air battle Italian troops took over Napofeonis Cor- slcn, the Fascists were feverishly fortifying Snrdinh south of 1t and Axis airmen already are opu-‘a- ting from Sicily across the narrow strait from Tunisia. Rommel Speeds West Rommel apparently is speeding as fast as possibc to Tripoli. his main base near Tunisia. in nn effort to use his; remaining strength to stop the Allied move from French Algeria. In Russia the Reds continued to hold the initiative at Stalingrad and reported that their parachute troops raided an enemy airdrnne in numerous planes after the gunned to soften its resistance. 57 Alberta School g-{g-gg w- m 1mm. M5 p.111. Teachers Go On Strlke 5m" SERVICE ii- (Mny S to Dec. 2'1 inclusive) Leave Burden 9.00 u.m.. 0.45 n. VEGREVTLIE, Alta, ‘Nov. 11 - Leave Tonnentlne 10.15 sun. s. (OP) Almost eve _ school ln Vegre- u-m. ville‘; rural schoo area remained closed today as teachers continued P-E-L-N-B. FERRY 855W“ iir*it.zl":t.is.l*r:l r‘l;iis.<,=‘2s2 , 59'3"“ -----1-~ -- --' the second straight dav. ' h?" énm,‘ y“; ma 4.00 c. I. s said a check when the 57 of the 62 teatchers homes t?“ me ‘own Vegrevillc itself are not affwlfi-‘l- James McRllc. President of the Association, showed only thlre year and that the benefits of en- schools holding classes, manned b! riled production soon will be evld- fiw teachers strike was called v9’- lefl develrw- SLOW-DOWN IN COLLIER OFPIAWA. Nov. 11 -- (CF) —- Labor Department officials said to- day they had been informed of s. “siow-down" at the Cumberland, 0., mines of Canadian Coilieries m8 (Cunsmuir) Ltd. But that they had no comment to make. 80M: Yeoetl: Have 'fiiE SPRma FavcR Au. (as YEAR lélllgérkm FRICAN BATTLE SCCENE SHIFTS T0 TUNISIA etain Takes One Side Then Other In Conflict — Protests Nazi March then orders continued Resistance in North Afrlca. High tide this afternoon at 2.50 and tomorrow morning at 2.16 d rises tomorrow first quarter moon Nov. lb, 2.50 Lin, CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden-nave 9.05 “n. 7.00 Leave Cape Tormenllnc — 10.30 4.80 p.m. p.rn.. charfouetown-Sumrnenidu- ct 8.45 p. m. 1.05 p. m. m! All IIWWI -. nfsxcnrr sulvnnl .1 Sun sen this afternoon at. '53s an morning M Mon on y; Charlottetown 8.30 u. m. 10.80 m. 4.30 p. m. or Ar ve Charlottetown I p. ll.