MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN prflefe Alnlserebnt the vehicles oi Charlottetown llllrlhl, Two 0o!!!- Ienillg ilurdlel. hunted llfl ‘ULL VICTORY ALMOST IN SIGHT IN AFRICA >2'%/// ///' The People's Paper _ . Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew MAXIMS 017A MERE MAN Clllmlly is man‘: true touch stone. CHARDOTTETOWN. CANADA, Crluoav,‘ Nofilvllilan ;. lollz .___ ..a_._ ____. .._~_,%_ _ ___ _ _ , 2 Annual tlubsarlpilon Delivered, 80.00 5! llnll: P. ll. l. $4.0M to other Provinces and U, S. A. £0.00 s elicits §yster Bed Bridge__Man Killed. Here YesterdayBrokelTAxis Urge Immediate Move Re Dryclock Board of Trade resolution adopted At large meeting last night. At a large and lcpresentative mgetmg held last night in The cnei-loileoown, s Board of rssohltion urging the Dominion Government w make immediate provision for the erection oi a ma- m, IallWfly drydoak at Charlotte- town was discussed and ind by s. standing vote oi all present. Speakers at the meet includ- ed Messrs, 8A. MacL-c , T.W.L. Prowse, J.O. Hyndman, J.P. Crock- ett. ax. Clements, representJlgi-ho Kings county Board oi Trade, Col. K3, Rogers, RE, Mutch, Dr. J.A. clerk, Col. 0.1.. MacKay, Angus , Senator JE. Sinclair, Hon. MR. McGuigan, S, Rowsell, Montague, lion. Dr. Cyrus MaoMil- ian. M.P., J. Lester Douglas, M.P., and W1. Hiaslns. The text oi the resolution which was drafted by a special committee oi the Charlottetown Board com- S.A. MsoLeod, their RE. Mutch, O01. DA. lisoltllllnocl, AW. Matheson, J.0. l-Iyndman, leads u follows: BBOLUTION ‘WHEREAS in the year nineteen ulldred and fifteen the Dominion eminent proposed to build a Dry Dock at Bouthpgrt, Prince Edward Island. The dock proposed was to provide accommodation sufficient to haul the our ferry 8.8. "Prince Edward Island" and was designed by James L. Crandall o! the Crandail Dry Dock Engineers, Cambridge, Mass. “AN the needs for D orsed dry dock facilities in Prince Ed- ward Island are much greater now than the! were in nineteen hurl- dred an fifteen because oi the grave d er oi losing ships by enemy act on in the waters which ships 0d the larger size must at present cross to reach dry dock facilities. “ WHEREAS the loss oi the 5.5. ‘Charlottetown’ is a serious blow to the transportation facilities to and from this Province. “AN Virl-IEREAS it is necessary each year to send our car ferry steamers and provincial boats to docks in other Provinces, and it was reported in nineteen hundred and forty-two that the 8B. "Prince llklward Island" narrowly escaped sinking on her return trip ilom the dry d . “AND WHEREAS Mr. James L. Crandall has recently inspected the Charlottetown Harbour and has pronounced the site adjacent to the plant oi Bruge_Stewal-t and (Continued on a e a Col. 2) Charlottetown Goes Over Top In Drive Provincial total now $1,637,200; Loan given Good support yesterday. International At A Glance (Canadian Press) EGYPT-Rommel’; broken Axis "my in iull retreat: British com- mander declares "complcte- vic- llllv almost In slime’ high of- iklal in London says Axis army virtually helpless-"hnglossible to 59 loo optimistic." RUSSIA-In ‘l4 days of besieg- lhz Stalingrad, Nazis lose 100,000 killed. s00 tanks, 1,000 planes; Red All"! held film and even gained llllhlly yesterday. summons-m. s. troops at- lllllll westward on Guadalcanal ml 350 Japanese and capture {to ilelti pieces, 12 light artill- tl‘). 30 machine-guns. “BRITAIN-R. A. F. and ground ‘Plenccs take toll of 21 German allies in October; RAF. loses 20 Flllfls in sweeps over Europe; Mil raiders kill three person; 1n "mi-full raid 0n English town. snllNITED STATES — Republican ylflle lcader Charles McNary op- |"*_l‘- rnmnulssry mobilization oi vlrlllan manpower, Gonhiffivcnts -g- “Talkies - Montague Saturdag. h 11-5- . lllllnee a P. M. ‘ "Reserve December 2nd and 3rd °1‘ Notre Dame High Tea. 11-6-11. “Talkies — Bolltil M d . on alyl-d-Il. "We require a uuantit of well flesh ~ "8l.‘?.“'i‘.ii‘.’““°' "hum: '\ gfiélfi‘. "mnlwmacx l‘ 7th at O. B. Orr. 11-1-8. "Annual Meeting New Glasgow Racln uh “l? gxerlzilrdav eveningiliog: "Burner in Cra ud Hall Satur- W Novembe ‘lthpiiro 6 to ii Pro- “llll at senile w. A.“ ll-s-al. Prince Edward Island put in I big day's work on the Victory Loan yesterday and drew appreciably nearer to leaching the objective set ior the Province. In the final days oi the cam- paign with province after prov- ince across Canada attaining their objectives and the total for the Do- minion well in advance of the minimum needed the people of Prince Edward Island have come to the iull realization oi all that is involved in the result. The boys in the fighting services must nor. be let down, the loan must be well oversubscribed. Hitler must be shown that nothing matters now but victory ior us and death for 111m, and the Commando dag- gers reserved for each the three counties oi Prince Edward Island must be forwarded to units oversfigs oi whéch Isiandgge llnake up t prqpon eran nu l‘ . King's County had funds in sight yesterday to pass its’ 0b- jective and while last nights i18- ures do not show a total as great as the objective it is only because oi the lag in the receipt by mail at loan headquarters oi the appli- cations. King's County is def- initely the first county in lh Prqvince, the first Commando dagger unit, to go over the top. King's County yesterday also set up another record which will take a bit of beating. The record was made by Mr. Harry Francis, loan solicitor 1n the Bay Fortune '11s- trict. Mr. Francis obtained no lcss than seven a plications from seven se slate in ividuals in one homehol . In Mr. Francis’ district they not only have big families but the big families are big in pat- rlctisnl and are going 1o win the war if it takes everything they ve. “supplementary applications were received yesterda from corpora- tions and indlvl uals in various pfl-ts-rpf thomovirlcligqrflditionsl (Continued on page l. 001 l) ___.___--—- Girl Sentenced To Year In Jail MONTREAL, Nov. 6 —- (OP) Muriel Doll-on, 22, originally mar d with murder. was entenced t ay by Mr. Justice W rid Laaure to a garb ailonareducedeharaeol 900,000 — mum objective of $750,000,000. Amos Gallant ls Victim 0f Alleged Fight Frank Knockwood, 29- Year-Old Indian is Arrested And Held Together With His Brother Pte. David Knockwood. Mr. Amos Gallant, 56-year-old former of Oyster Bed Bridge was killed in what police said was a fight in a backyard on Richmond Street in Charlottetown yesterday afternoon. Iless than two hours later City Police arrested Frank Knockwood, 29-year-old Indian, at Scotchfort, and are holding nim 0h l! dhflrlle oi murder. Hls brother Pte. David Knockwood, was also taken into custody and is being held as a material witness, The fight in which Mr. Galiant was killed took place in the bsick yard oi the Richmond House, police said. It followed an argument wlfch started in the house. One of the eyewitnesses to the fight was the aged father oi’ the deceased, Mr. Daniel Gallant oi Charlottetown. The man's face was battered and covered with blood. Coroner Dr. I.J. Yeo ordered an inquest which opened last night and will be continued at B p.m. this evening. The foreman of the Jury is Mr. Byron Brown. The jury only viewed the remains last night and no evidence was taken. An autopsy of the body w1‘l have been completed before the inquest resumes this evening. The deceased came to the cit; yesterday t0 collect some bills i"... payment for produce he sold nel-e several weeks 8K0. He was a pro- minent inmler in h’s home ccm- munlty. After havinil bile of his horses shod, he returned to the Richmond House and prepared to leave for home. This was about 3.30 p-m. A fcw minutes later the argument took place and resulted in a fight ill the back yard, police said. Apparently the mun dad in the back yard and the man fight- ing with him left before the police arrived. Immediately a manhunt was started for the man involved and his brother, who i; alleged to have intervened as a peacemaker in the fight. Constables Stems Webster Gordon Poole and Robot Daz‘e1 were detailed to track down the men. A hasty search about the city failed to disclose the whereabouts of the men. Playing s. hunch Const. Webster went into a. local taxi office and asked if they had seen two Indians, one a civilian and the olhcr a scl- dier. The answer was in the af- firmative and the man in cllarqe said one of the drivers 110d. gone away somewhere wltll them. The Police decided to wait until the car ‘T-(Tfiliiii? ' Hit Kmllliln Raids On Britain LONDON, Nov. 5~(CP)—A single German raider blasted a village in southern England with bombs late tonight, killing four persons and irliurlng several others. The raid was the latest in a series oi llit-and-run attacks on England today. Th ee persons were killed on the southeast and south coast earlier in the tiny. Longer Banking Hours Saturday OTTAWA, Nov. 5 —(CP>— Pin- allce Minister Iisiey announced to- night that Canada's chartered banks will keep thelr branch offices open from 2 to 4 p.l_n. Saturday for the convenience oi lat: sub- scribers to the Third victory Loan, which is expectedtopassthetlloop 000,000 mark tomorrow. In the first 15 business days- oi canvassing, investors subscribed a daily average of a 1’tt1e more than 0519113000 to the issue. Providing this average is maintained the man's dollar total should, by the close 0f business Saturday; top by B0 more than $150 mini- More Passengers Wm Travel By Air lneeligi ireilotuiene en%fin; the , i fig"? °l3ll~~¥'~'=°"ll‘h-“P-"' blltlitm‘ii'mii'hillizidll"s lllll hedCross. 11-6-21. mac" “WWW” h" "Dance and Bi o v Rt am ng , ernou ver "Pl ‘élfillfmmm “r9359”. "Perlnlele School mus Nov- "llber ilth.1l’r¢e ’ - s.ls l- it P. Ilillll. siomfiilleeiilioil. o “Unloadin mum, ‘wear bulk wheat semi-us , Nov- tll. 0th. 1m. ill-Alf own Dillon s» Bpiilctt. l-s-si. serve the sentence, which dates from the time of her arrest last The lesser Gerald Illautcux K. ., told the Court that additional sctsobtslnec-i lulled ti? v In suburban Outlelnont home Bhe had been employed u a servant in the house. Headtot-he "I m, 10s by 7'1 w from 254.898 pounds t0 150,790 "OTTAWA. gig. 0 t? (C?) u; Hg- nue passe s anspor civil aircraft durin June numbered nlltldlgomplalcd w th 13551 in out‘: wa reported a Dolriinlon muesli :3 goetilsuoe. Freight declined to 1.1 .991 pounds from 1,104,610 in June, 1M1. Mail increased oer cent, Revenue 0i Oansda-iiclnsed com- nies rose to 0,104,768 from $800.- 14 in June last year and grating amuse; advanced to $028. . from Q M7, the bureau reported. War Situation Last blight (By Kirka L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst) d Whether the Axis retreat irl Egypt ls in fact the i-ouq, oi- a with. rawnl under pressure to new defensive positions, there seems small chance It can stop short. oi’ the Libyan border, There is no naturally strong front east oi that point upon which harried German and Italian fol-cog can be expected to organize a new stand. The Italians indicate thlt on the coastal flank the retreat has llllwly recalled or owed Fuka. '10 miles west oi the British jump-off line [r0111 El Alalucln lo the Qaltara dcpression and nearly a third of the way to the Libyan border. Severe Italian losses in that region were disclosed by Rome, although Cairo has yet to claim chili, the British troop; have penetrated that far. A British advance to Fuh would represent a wide expansion oi the action front, O O O O O O There is no narrow front behind Rommel to secure his flanks. Every foot. he retires westward increases the length of from, he must hold. The smashing blow administered to his tank divisions 1n the Fell‘ lwflvy clash of desert armor after British forces gunned their Way "llllllkh his mine-field defence: makes it doubl-ful that he has the Illfillllllliled fll-ftlllBi-h to resort to manoeuvre warfare anew. There is also a grave question as to whether lack of fuel for tanks and planes was not a vitally important contributing factor 1n the sit- uation that forced his retreat. Ii It has been, his case is even more desperate than the most optimistic ills only hope would be to reach Cairo and London advices suggest. defensible positions on the coastal flank llle Salum, “l-Iellfire" Pass and Tobruk and hole-up to stand siege awaiting reinforcements. O O O Greek report; say several Nazi divisions are being rushed from the Russian front toward North Africa. Nazi requlsitionlng oi mer- chant tonnage in French harbors points to some such attempt. llow- ever, movement of so large a. force across the eastern Mediterranean in the face of Allicd sea and air superiority would mean staggering losses. Only utter desperation in Berlin would warrant the attempt, There is another potential in the situation on which lllllcll mill- tal-y attention focuses-sand probably that. of Berlin also. That. ls the morale of Italian division; in Africa. For the second time they are tasting the bitterness of a. retreat irom Egypt irom which Germain military prowess could not save them, Questions Vital To Fishermen Discussed Mr. Napoleon Arsenault of Mont. Carmel is Re-clected President of P.E.I. Union. The need of ploauclllg g.od qua- lity lrlsll luoss to lnaulc a market alter the war‘, c112 p0ss...l1.l.y ‘paflllill-A,‘ a, "up lnlLtartlcn Oil m8 lillllalkl‘ industry in the lnl. season. ll request to lunci‘ tile s.ze ALMA] oll lobsters to 6 1-2 illclics, and a _re- quest for the CSiAIlLZSIKIH-elib l_)i a “sh nlcal. grant ill the plovlllce. and cmieisul of tile dlsnllasal of t\\0 fisn 1llSelll...l}Ll'$, were tile lllguligllls of tile annual lneetlng of the PEI. Fishcriucns Uxmn rr-ld in the City Hall ycscrday. The iull slate of olflicers was e- lected for another term. ‘ihc or- ganization is ileudcd by M1_‘. N9.- pclcnn Arsensult, Mt.‘ Glrmci, W110 presided at yesterday s SLSSIOHS us well as tile executive lneearlg held the previous evening. Mr. All. Barry, Chief Supervisor O r -- 0f Fisheries ior the Man/j. Ilulliox, ill an l-l/CLJESS yestadily ait/crncon pill. forward a PmP-‘Sl- tlcll to guard against loss o1 lob- sters because oi the early rusr. at the factories 1;; the [all season. He elqllaincd that warm weather ro- suizcd in the spoilers of many 19b- stlcrs which could not be hanuled v/hcn large quantities are brought ill during the firs‘. two weeks. I‘0 oifset uls ile susslstfid l-lllll lK-ll" ernlen be limited to so traps dorms ms first week and an sdd-tlonal 50 in the second week. After that they could but as many out B»! tllcy wished, Tue lllcctng agreed that some- thing should be done to remedy this situation. Howmer, all were not. in agleoment Villll the propo- siiion as set forward by the speak- r. a Some believed that the SIALEHOD oouid be best met. by llllllllng 63931 fisherman to 300 pounds the first week. Others thought it was matter o» be decided by each l0- cal organization because the situ- ation varied in different locantlfi- In the end 1t was aglvezd that c9491 local union should consider the matter and pass their PGJOIITITIBII- dations along to the silvery/Mr- Irish M08! Plcdic a. falling off in the price of 1r h Moss and polntinillfl the danger of losing the market to the European countries after the war unless hlgh standards were kept up at present, Dr- l‘! Needler, Director of the Research ard oi Canada. in the 5101081081 Station at St. Andrews. N3». cllfid the need for some iorln of orCB-lll‘ nation which would work to keel! “l0 lll1°°_"._ ni"_!‘..1’°§§l'l?l° W)“ F Gv’t Takes fiver llialii OTTAWA. Nov. 5 - (CP) — Tile crown has taken over illc ownership and lllilliiigenliillb of‘ l- Ic £13.... o.;.ll strut Unr Aircraft Plant at. Multan, Ont, which is enraged in production of Lun- cnsicr hombcrs, it was announ- ced today. li-llm l‘. Bell, Aircraft Con- trollcl‘, was quoted in the mun- itions lieparnlncllt as saying: "The plant will bc operated by is government ownui company knewn as Victory Aircraft Liih, with J.I'. Bickcll as President.“ "It is felt that this step will ensure the successful cull- iinuallcc and completion oi’ the Lancaster program which ls so vital to the war effort," Mr. Bell id. sa The statement said the gov- ernment is taking cvcr lilo plant. “ill order to CXpiIdlic operations and to maintain a community o! interest and co-opcratlon llc- twcen the plant management the munitions dc artlllent and the designers and llildcra of the Lancaster bomber in Britain." Operations in the plant, llow wcll advanced. will not be inter- ru¥tcd bv the change. mmperlsation to be paid to the company is to he determin- ed bv agreement or undrr the statutory expropriation proce- dure the department sznd. Two ll'.G.A.F. Fliers Killed HALIFAX, Nov. 5 — (CP) -—Tuo fliers were killed last night in illc crash of an R.C.A.F. plane four miles northwest of Jonquiere, Que. the Eastern Air Command here an- nounced tonight. The victims, only occupants oi the aircraft, were: F0 W.E. COP?» R.A.F., the pilot-whose next-oI-kin 1s an uncle, - Dutton Copp of (258 Forest Hill Rd.) Toronto. PO. D.C. Sutherland, R.O.A.ll‘., son 0f D. Sutherland of (340 Mai 5t.) Weston, Ont. The Eastern Air Command said the cause of the crash was not yvl known. No further details were an- no (Continued on i 5. U‘ Join the Host of Home Bakers who- LC! hlfia. Nazi Attacks aArmy Still In FalicrAt ~ stagingrad Fall Retreat i I O M0$cQw_ No. , _ (mm, _Brltlsh Commander urges no let up an; $11.? .522“? lawil” °’ ill; - ‘ 1 a re and e lqnhllllllgdglslybmledhffiélség gzralvlngarlaqg In dTIUQ Army. llelci ilrlll and even gained around m the bail-lo of tile Caucasus, the Soviets axllloullccd curly tpday_ Thus far tile Germans have lost lllore than 100,000 lnen killed. 800 tanks and 1,000 planes 1n their futile effort to subdue the Volga Ell/Cl‘ Clio’ the Moscow radio said in quoting a letter il‘0m the Stalingrad garrison addressed to Premier BRITISH 8TH ARMY FIELD HEADQUARTERS XN THE EGYPTIAN DESERT, Nov. 5-—(9255 A.M.)—(AP)——Lt.-Gen. B, L Montgomery, Commander ct the 8th Army. announced this morn- lllK "ll"- lht 31h Army bull-ling the Axis had achieved complete and llllsvlule vlclorv. and that the enemy new is ln mu real-est. Joseuh 5mm (By Edward Kennedy, Associated Press Staff Writer) aegis?!Rqggllnlillfkigglxlggbbgedfied Itffi- LAIRO. NOV, 5—(AP)—ThE broken and bleeding Alli! ~ l ’ H l - . chikkmam? addlng that “New o“ ggzgrelrtbarmgefied ilclotsts the ‘sands of western ‘Egyptt to- icllslve tiullilu: is under wlay" 1n a spera e a emp 0 escape apparen y cer ain lllglfelalilzfillilglllifsue “the swlmy destruction at the hands of iriulnplling Allied forces g,,u,e,.i,,g 3.55;,“ “qme, L, to we whose British commander declared: “Complete victory is tilll0llfifllnuifllllétl Ccrnlan supplvfliltlpes ahnosi i“ sight!" lroug l ros v and LZUElTliil-lll es .d . . ‘ Over a 40-mlle front littered with hundreds of wreck- territory, The snow line in the llloulliaills ls creeplng farther down ed enemy tanks, planes and gunposts, the British 8th tile mountains. . . . ____i Army and its Allies, fighting Frenchmen, Greeks and _ Poles-drove unrelenilessly forward on the heels of Mar- shabErwln RommePs exhausted columns withdrawing hastily toward Fuka, 62 miles west of the shattered Al- ameln line. AIRMEN MOVE “BOMB-LINE” H“ Allied airmen, Canadians among them, steadily mov- 5 ed their “bomb-llne” ahead of the advancing infantry and LC DON N 5 (C? C m) link: Byd day and nlghlhthey hacked at the remnants of fr} , 0V. —_ i! G -— e I ' ' . ' ' , Euyptim battle (Mans were my vls b65932 leglllalls w o were s_o certain of victory lust “ma, @\-,,,-,_.,vhe,<e ,,,_ England W summer t git usso lnl made hurried plans for a triumph- eyC-Elllfll eXclllslon oi evew lint personal appearance in Cairo. Mm, ,fL,._.,._,'pape,_s m, lengmy The Allied formations themselves had fought 13 1c ‘ll: ediill-izlilullillllcll; éflllllgt? in gruelling days, but with victory so nearly in their grasp Pl‘lll‘*.il:lll roln le n on .ar’s _ . ,- “YVctilave a. victory; We iIlPlYt chair "I; xhgntgomery’ spurred‘ them on “uh a. lrc Lop 0i our yolces,” o e -- Slallcillrtks “Tile British people are tc WiSC in 111* way of mod rn KEEP UP PRESSURE wiir to acclaim comilete vlctgry yet." l‘ “Already,” said the standard t II cafll on all ‘troops to kc‘? [up the pressure and not ediLQ-in]. “m, Rumnns have “L, o re ax or a sing e ‘moment. e ave a chance to put the llvt-"vveld we lntyllrwlgbiigly or: thedNazl whole panzer army ln the bag and we will do so. I con- . . i 3 . .1 l.‘ - . ' fougfangxm, in)“, ‘ffltljsvelegfjifi grlliulate all troops 0n what has been achieved. Complete Our hearts are warm with VlCiOYY l5 almost in Slghl.” u-w-c must m‘ forge“, said the 1‘l'011{ dispatches said the retreating Axis armcarcdk detach- LQ,»,_~_.,_, Evening News‘ “ma, uwugh lllents—-0r what ls left of them-were short of fuel, t an s to t e non-incl is llnrci hit he is not yet stcady rear-line battering of their supply depots by Allied airmen. l-fflmufifl ‘jgilffilmg, ti‘); ‘flflfimyg (A Reuters News Agency dispatch said not a single Axis tanker ‘ and that he will not had bccll able to cross the Uediterranean in the last six weeks.) y." The Starneclared , tllc, Eiyxovln slicers-s "fllllls "5 GERMANS OUTSTEP ITALIANS i y a long stride towards final vct. y." ‘ ‘ '. The Cam,“ Western Mm, said, There also were accumulating slgns that the German Afr! "Rcmmc will not be allowed to can Corps, the backbone of the Axis force, was outstepplng lts “lily .‘.m°“.‘°‘~‘ lmm” ‘>5 See's“ m“ Italian counterpart ln the flight. The advancing Brltlsh troops salflfllf},‘Q§,§‘“,§§h§§,§§m‘§§§§ discovered that Axis rear-guards were lnostly Italians, that nlost tint in illc last encounter with of the screen of rear-guard weapons were of Italian make. Mar- R"““““'1 H‘ ‘vm m5 supermmy m sllal Rommel, these dispatches indicated, clearly was trying to tori; and anti-tank guns and the , . . . boiler use he made of them which save lus own tattered fornlatlons and leaving the Italians to fcnd Pmllfll-ll film iigliwsfs-"t Tgllililulllilfl for themselves in a “jackrnbbit war" where nlost commanders lull ntllc : “ ls ac T01 \Vl 1- ~ _ cmgnp-w u. (m the {figment W111 appeared to be left on iliur own because of CICDTOYBllECilfCDlIIlllilfi be Ildllfigl Yvlltwll l0!‘ Olll‘ Plfiellt icaiiolls and leadership. commandos "if they end by crush- The Brmsh command mnqimc. lng lwmmel- ed yesterday that Gen. Von ——?-*———-— smmme, second in command to ,, , Rcrnmcl, had been killed. and that ailing, (y Gcll. Ritter Von Thoma, third of gflly, (he topillght Axis leaders, was in _‘ a ca piivizy r l a. 1.‘. g being made along the Mediterratrlxl- T tal d. F‘ to the sou ‘GTQNl N°V'.5 —.lAP) iglzircfi edggao-i viii Qattara De- ~ \| f‘. ' ,, ui lllc liritlsil vlctoly pnsslon. 1501MB‘; enflny groups -m . " n ' f U.” .- h 4y. _ b- . ope You Must HAW. A CERTAIN AMouNf 0|-‘ Sousa 4o TAKE CARE or Tm: was irregular, most of the Speed tidal wave across the desert ‘ “l1 n. “ma” has “owed trouble, dlspnt/cues sai . Tllcre puns Many Prisoners Move East. ull 2.'1.ll.~.1l:l1 Hummers Axis were being mcppcd u, with “me ‘ at uly circles in Wasll- - . v d y, QkL. of lugecn, \_'.lll,.,i hr‘. inclined. however. 213g grlsgilieg .,°,‘§°,,‘1f‘,,',b_,'f,§ why]; to_vl»:\v lt as n still illnitcd IllLllOliEh a-‘rmdy has passed we 9793,) nmrig, blllllallb 5lw°~55~ "rhme day; ago the Itullzlllsivc-rc '1“"""’ l5 a 59mm“ hmiemlnes.‘ reported [Oullille ziskrd for alrlloo tllw. Lt. Gcll. l1 L Montgomcrys to bury their dead The adva,.c_ ligilllsncsziilpiiglitcieig ing 8th Armv lllll ltd this alibnr- ~“ » . . ' -- ’ ’ ~ {f1 l all: and destroy Rommelg form; e:lt hbfiillEr (ICU and ius ct But. until this ls done. experts who onmnreci jiflnen repurtfd desert decline to be quoted by H8109 58y ~ . med “gm that the chic-i illlmcdlotc effect oi roads and trmls were m‘ __ tllc vlslorv l5 W lenew’ we danger Elm-l religgilliingwliglhlllilsvglldgfiifiailg w Egypt‘ ________i iAEQZ concentrations: i. H1211 tide HMS Jli planes 315;, sirafcd Axis lrcops and loniilh‘. at 9.54 a I scurrying away from the roads. Sun sets 1111s afternoon at 5.42 Dc Gaulle Jubilant and rises tzenorl-ow morning at 1.40. Gen. Charles Demagnulle, ‘the New moon Nov. a, 11.19 am. Fighting French M‘. Se“ I I = , CAB FERRY SERVICE message to Gcu. Slr Harold Alex- Recellle Awards $135."... ‘3.‘.i.§“i‘.......2°‘“.;2§l”§i;ll‘; °““‘ _______ "the French Army will never ‘for- uwimugflfigxhwzfaogb“; ‘if; LONDON. Nov. o - (Friday) - Eel Y°ll hm’ 1°“ "a"°"°"5' “éflfifi p.rn.. ' ' " ' ' ' (OP CABLE) _ can», Air lgiiniistry) by the sl e o! the ~ Malvgstiapo glzllglflenllnes-(u 10st l1ll0il1'(l id le war o - lull. . .m. . .m. . .m. Dlliltillgiilfihtldo 111-1.. grosses and Th9 Alllell all’ "m" ‘Plelld °_°“' 8.15 pun. p p ' p tllreq Dlstillglshed Fylng Medals to tinned deslluctlon down the l-ms. _ Canadian fliers, weaving lines of retreat motor sUNDAy sgnvwg . FltSqsl-n- J.D.APl1\ltlS0n.dl¢gXol8 convoys and armored vehlc cs. 815° (May 3 to Dec. 21 inclusive) . Li. . MC ill? Ell . _ Gifford Foderin llllni, Toronto; ztColltinued on page 7, Col, '1) Luv, poi-um 9m “m, 3,45 p, Flt-qlit- 1111C NEH‘ 03>. anclgll). 1%.? _‘—'_'—_i——"' Leave T-lrmentine 10.15 mm. l. ry slap o. onre ; ac ng . ' pm]. Lt an. Jost, native of Guysboro, Nazls Admlt v0“ 1:518“ iawgoseohfinlrivlnow is at Dove‘: Thomais Capture P.E.l.-N.S. FERRY SERVICE e.; . . . orgamRoseda , an?‘ EB Egg-wig‘ dginug. B N (Fr Ge B d 2016:; Wood Islands l0.00 an. and n . . . mun on, . FIR-LI . om rlnan roa - - - - B . and PO. JO. Lovelace, Sydney, casts), Nov. s - (AP) - Gen. Rit- h!" Cerllwll "W" "l" 4-” l‘ "' . . l. V Tl f 1 l t B lti h gt. Sgt. (not PO.) A.A. Blsllbd), lflil-ndiina Dlzluflmlnoroafillcagti Osaldr tlsa- DA§I*YCB;II'QU%I‘FAVYI)O. .l New Minus. N.S: Flt. Sgt. F. . day, when his armoured car wns l D022. wilmilxzg. and Flt Sgt D. cut off from the column he was M. MacDonald, Fort William, Ont, heading and “in the dust. and smoke were iflllsllliviliél bill: D.1-".M. dad m gr liaétg; was captured unnoticed "lane" u. l m . a o w s awar l s." . - ' _ P0. E.A.F. De aartgk, native of ‘DNB said more than 100 $011k? Anne fgglrplvllnfllwll l ll “" Budapest who lclned the R.C.A.F. were involved on a narrow iron 5,45 p.lu., - - and trained in Canada. when Thoma was taken. “an 8.80 mm. s. iii‘ 4§Q4Ia&