racr: six _ NOVEMBER 4, 194a s'i>"t'i"ili*i"llit;i NEWS ii 3 1n bath halves. st. Dunstarrs I second rugby team. challenging for the Inteimediate P. E. Island Ln- tercollegiate title held for the P639 two years by Prince of Wales. yes- terday held the defending champ- ‘e n: the first ions to n scoreless t cries to de- gei-ne of a bcst. of th: clde this year's 1i:l.-l . From the opening whistle with steady downpour of rzfn that swept across the 0193M: field the two squads irattlrd miqzhtlv a‘! the way but could not or: . Iue opposing: tclvii line. Good foothill‘ was out th~ question. nevertheless the ms Wave evervthinrr r11 (Purim! the 70 . the‘ the pl"v nrogre-‘sed. FlhSgt. R"rs cf the R. , Sport“ Briefs I BALTIMORE, Nov. Il-IAPJ-Kirk. lg l; "c Willi n bur ‘ ' _ in vhc $40,520 Pimlico Futurity today. VARSITY STADIUM, Toronto. Nov. Zi-ICP-Torcnto h. C. A. F‘ HLIl'l‘l('flli6,; m""_ ' in tire 0' “llo Rugby Foctnnll Union stall ings by (leleaiing Tor. onto Navy 16-10 here today. ST. JOSEPH, N. B. Nov. 3499.. Rugby teams Cf Si. Joseph's Uni- VEPS-Il’ and St. Thcmns University {Ought to a scoreless draw today In the second contest cf a two-game, tctal score seizes. st. Jflzépffs win. ning the exhibition series as a re- suit cf the 3-0 victory last week. REMEMBER WHEN Onl" the old-timers will remem- ber Wilt"; Bob Fitisimmuns WDTI a Zifljrountl decision over George Gardner for the light-heavyweight bolting Cllflmplonsiiio of rhe world 40 _yer.:'.s n70 [Oriiqht at 5v, Fran. msco It was billed the first bottle f0!‘ the titlr- ' ' bi'.‘__ nctviilly (‘my g wgn . crown with n ‘IZ-rcilnd knockout over Jrick Root at Fort Erie, 0nt.. four months earlier. ...-. i? fsgasoned nzk beech, hard birch. cry. rock maples and black locust have hieh heatlnv effici- e cy: o cord of any of these has a; jut the same heating value as a ton’ of hard real. ij-mr ngu Ii-l-di. SPfFD 7H5 V|CT0RY,.,,,@ BIG BGXIN-G MEET GIIARLOTTETGWII SPGRTIIIG GLIIB FRIDAY NIGHT, IIGII. SAT 8 P. M. Featuring Navy, Army and Air Force, (R.A.F. 8: R.C.A.F.) boxers. 0R MORE AGTlGII-GIIAMMEII BGIITS Sponsored by Charlottetown Kinsmen Club PROCEEDS FOR “MILK FOR BRITAIN FUND” Advance sale of tickets at Fred Lambros’ shop, corner _ Great George and Kent Streets. ,3 Admission (tax included): Ringside $1.00; Reserve 75c, . Rush 50c. f “P. W. c. And 2nd Saints Battle To Scoreless Draw In First Game i slugging through mud and rain handled the game in his usual cap- able manner. Next game vll probably be play- ed Wednesday, November l0. . Lineups. P. W- C. - fullback. Quigley; tiipe quarters. Hodgsnn, Cuntweli McKinnon. Lane. hai..=. Blanch- ard. Cornish. D- Bagnal. forwards. Ccurt. McDonald. Weilncr, Down- . Stacey. Beck, McLennan. S. D. U. - fullback. Dorsey; three quarters. J. A. McDonald. Ar- semult. J- Mahala Greene: halves. csey. D. McDonald. O'Keefe: :is. Shea. Owen Sharkev. L. . McCarthy. Smith. Bnrge, » 18H- Sllbs. Corcoran. Good- Gnsoline Offence Two_ Prince Edward Islanders were irstcd amonw the 8S persons. prosecuted for violation 0f the, Prices Board regulations and 20] others fr: offences against tirc and gasoline rationing during the week ending October 29. This was revealed in the weekly summary 0f ‘he Board's enforcement adminis-f {ration which was released today. ; A Summersldc man. nus finetll $160 when he pleaded guilty to a. (barge of accumulating supplies cf sugar beyond his needs. A Portage firm. was convicted for breaches of resoline rationing rezulntlons. The fine nv-s $25 and cost= fcr a shor- tawe of pasohne In oiflet. Price ceilinz viclations accoun- ted for 33 of the 86 Board prosec- utions. Infractions of rationing re- eulations by 14 persons were recor- ded during the woek together with ccnvhtions of two nermns for hcardin" sugar. Unlnwfuliv increas- inv rentak resulted in .=~ven pros. ccuticns against landlords. SANDWICH!" 0N NOVELTY BREADS Snappy cheese spread on l-nisin bread. Cream cheese on prune bread- American cheese and gram telly o" cracked wheat. bread. Butter cr margarine and honey cn orange bit-ad. Cream cheese er bran banana nut brew! Butter or margarine 0n prune bread. .._ _,__~ .__ ___ I. THE ENDOF *. . .- v wrnww mn-mpwvwwi-nev u- i‘ Chicken Card Party 3.1.5. lhll for members In" l their friends Friday, Nqv- ember S, 8 mm. Brigadier B M. Hoffmelster, 30, Vancouver. who has been pro-~ lIlCHd overseas frcni the rank of- Licuicnant-Colencl. and appointed ‘to COflTliilld a Canadian Infantry Brigade. (Canadian Army Photo). Stresses Value 0f Free Enterprise SHERBROOKE, Que, Nov, 1 _ (CP) - Arthur C. Morton, vice President of the Herald Publishing Company, Montreal. said in an adores prepared for delivery to s local service club tonight, that “the post war program must be based on the fundamental belief that individual initiative and free enterprise must be preserved, for without these we cannot have free labor and free government." Stating that "we have properly turned over the central direction of our war economy to the state, and in the immediate aftermath of the war the state will have to maln- tain many of its controls, the speaker commented that there werg scrne who_would take Hitler's place - a maoe in Canada variety of dictator" _ who promised a perfect paradise for everybody provided the people would place their fut- ure entirely in their hands. He believed that government should take over many services —child welfare. protection of youth In industry. Public health in all n; "M10115 phases. the rehabilitation of the crippled chlld-"but be- tween "We necessary services and the assumption of the ownership fmd ODCFRIIOn of all business en. c-érrrises there is a- great differed. 4 Morton added: "National 30¢- .a urn - call its proponents by what name you like - would sup. nre=s the press for the pllrpogg of "Wins out its theories unhamper. if‘ IW public discuslon." Those standing for doctrines Ieflfllfl" to bureaucracy he gglfl had already persuaded ‘a lot of weenie that the system of free on. ternrise could not. work, and they I d t . $3155.. 1.2.35? m‘ m“ " = "They h ningly for Ehfeyxigwtltjliatlalt-leiis ere could be {up 1 gltllrcgnada‘. Mr. Mortoncfsnafrfiyygllggf » efitrovinv private initiative o; flfiiipilifialli’ ‘Lille.’ “ ‘mP‘°-""' themselves. P Oyees before Prices and Trade Go cuted the case for the Prices » Present at the hearing was the seed pots RONALD GREER f RANIICM nliivrsr N COLEMAN GARSON MONTAGUE—FRIDAY —_8 P.M. SATURDAY — 7.45 8i 10 P.M. Baker Fined For W. P. T. B. Offence baker pleaded guilty an d a total 0f $75 or 90 days 1n at on two count! under the a-rlrne Prices H14 Trade Board ranching regulation! when he appeared before Stilt”- diary Magistrate K.M. Martin ves- tcrriny morning. On the first charge, suppiylfll sugar to a ‘consumer without re- ceiving vallc. sugar coupons in eli- chanlze. he was fined $35 and cost! or 30 days; on the second count. altering a re uisition for sugar, the Ilaenutgothwu offenoclsndwggti vs. - to order No. 242 of the W411!!!" Boar-d _ 33°50. A Charlottetown d was fl ie Mr rdch n. Holmes BOURIB -' TUESDAY -' 7.00mi 9.15 PM. MATINEE $.45 PM. CEIITIIAI. Cilllillliiii ru- column u run-ml for non if local Interest. but IRIUII u: a r0103 ‘zllbllll ‘dry no lnllflce a o n Ill strictly mil in ndvnuco. o.’ CON FEDERATION LIFE INBIIM AN CE. COOKS for Chrlstlnfll P11070- graphs- UNLOADING SLABWOOD feat lengths. Perfect firewood. ‘l-i. Lara. ti: Co. 11-4-11 “BOXING. MEET at Sporting Clan Ic-"ricgmv night sponsored by Klflllllll‘? u . - - . HEAR. MR. JUSTICE GORDON at Red Cross programme. St. Paul's Hall. Thursday. Nov. 4th at 8.00 p. m. 11-8-21 d’: BMOYCHIIEBC counnl. Mr- D. O. Stewart. Canada's Food Stuffs flooded At llama UITAWA. Nov. i-(CH-Can- add has needed most of her food- stuffs at home and has been unable to fill quotas allocated to hcr un- der the trade uni-cement with the United States so far this year. a trade department statement said day. Under the annual quota. 8.000.000 its-lions of whole milk may be sent. to the United States under prefer- red duty arrangements but. up to Oct. 2 Canada had used only 5.586 1.500000 gallons special duty ratesbut only 702 gallons had been shipped. The Dominion did better in fish shipments. The quota. for the ca.- cndar year is 15.000000 poun of fiileted flsh. frcsh or frozen. and 118545191 pounds had been shipped It G O .2. A quota of 1.500.000 bushels of toes was made effective Sept. l5 1942. but only 1.6 our cent had been shipped..alone with only 0.9 per cent of the l.000.000-bushel quota for other than seed potatoes. Brigadier Ceorie nlwhlhf- 93' °1 . h been promoted 29211:?‘ frZIIIiOtheIII-ank of Lieuten- ant. Colonel and aplmllmd 9° °°m‘ mand a Canadian infantry Brlsflfk- (Canadian Army Filo-m Montreal Livestock Market Report MONTREAL, Nov. 3 - (GP)- Prlces on all classes were firm t0- the llvestoc markets. Re- ' m. “tttdilt n-i amu- mostly _ w u 1:" live- ht. Gfld A drew grggnium witah discounts 0% 50-0. t7 01m- Th were no quotation on qual- ity is. lambs, mls and gruurl. Coiling Prices Fixed For Chopped Susi UITAWA. NM. I—(CP)—AI\ WI on e ca en or pr 0e; th I d . the i bold “n1” ‘d! u lmmodinl m- pr ce e e0 v0 a , sale Ef ch suet. o groduct used‘ seasonal ml Chrilt- mu coils. s and I mgifimmg“ ti defined i u» ' order u hi“ suct obtslngd b Irindln or ineiy-cnopping boo uul. c or dney fat. It may Courtesy of Montreal Dally Sill ~ h, mmn"; w” i" CRIPPLED CHILDREN'S CLIN- IC at Rod Gross House. Charlotte- town. Saturday November 6th. (For children only). 11-8-41. UNLOADING SLABWOOD I00! lengths. Perfect firewood. I-l. R» Lame. a Co. 11-4-11 MUSICAL NUMBENS by 30d Cross Corps members Mr. Charles Earle at St. this Thursday at 8 o'clock. u a n TRAIN AND FERRY -— The train left Borden last evening with 175 passenge at 7.50. The ferry made six crossings yesterday- BUYING CATTLE — Ml‘. 0f Te BAPTIST CHURCH C- G. L T»- The regular meeting of the C. G. I. T. group of the Charlottetown Baptist Church was held on Mon-E day night at the parsonage. The meeting took the form of a Hall- owe'en supper with the leader, Mrs. III- Noble, as the hostess. The special guest of the evening was Miss Lois ‘rapper, Girls‘ Work Secretary for the Maritime Education Council. After supper the group went to the Church vestry where Miss ‘mpper carried on a most in- tel-eating informal discussion of the development of the C. C. I. T- work across Gouda‘. led the 81'0"}! in games. and brought the evening to a fitting close with a brief wor- ship service. _ POPPY DAY SALE -- One hun- dred and I) girls representing ev- ery school in the city will be lales- wum. for poppies starting Satur- day, November 6th, and continuing until Wednesday. November 10th it was announced by local Canadian Legion officials yesterday. years sale, proceeds of which so to rellref of returned men and their families. both of this war and the 1914-18 conflict. is rection of J. cause. as everyone knows could not be a more worthy one-the Ileneral public has always responded nob- ly before-and it was confidently expected that. the sale this year will even exceed the total reached in the previous years. Remember- "if ye break faith with ushwho die we shall not sleep, L poppies grow in Flanders‘ FleldI."--M¢R!¢~ Aeroim-sp m COMMI'I.“.I‘EE— m. an. Fullerton. city Clerk h" been notified of hisrapmlnlmlfl’ Fin meeting of the Muncinal fine-nee Officers Associlmo . t“ this committee "lfinnillgminvbivu the development policies t-l i7 of financial that will best guarantee the sat-is; factory oonduc of a munlc Pfllltlll finances over a long WNW 0! “'3:- Included in such plannlnz 8N ° ‘radltional DBY-fls-you so vs. D011’- rowing controversy. and the deve - merit of long term cwltfll W!" s ructicn Other fang!!! that affec local iZOl/‘Cmment in‘ ancss. such as fixed charges t0!‘ retirement systems. and main en- f th illfimiilsifi§s°°of cregit ‘or maria EEiaIIIlOcSiSe-dIEhsgtIaIEIIIQ the” 60m- mittee is to develop 1nd “"11"” the elements that properly relate w long term fiscal policies. Personals Mrs. Una D ick. N Y. visiting her parents. Ml‘. and Mn. B. W. Joy for the lust four wash. wfiifrnd-"C “l"'“'5' "new ed er n r . John liltlfaws grlénrlotggtuwn loft a or iEvII-ier: they yvEiali vlsiI: relatives. “Ag; llfaflflhore,‘ of the may: r rce n erwen an 0 n th “Prince ‘caster-day momma in a ward Island Hormel. He is MI rutin: comfortably. to ,1 wiiv wit i ~iM\$CRE A‘\\\-*Ic> veer? s Canadian airmen who helped pave the way for the Allied invasion of Italy. They're the crew of a Welllngit '\ b: I ‘zier of an B. C. A. F. squadron based in North Africa. and have Just completed a tour of I operational duty, the latter pun of which saw them operating against vital Italian target-s They're head- ed for well-earned leave now, which hi‘ nIEY somzvlzo u mi accounts for Bell. Ilfl-Vifltol‘ (64 those broad miles. From right to left they are. Flight LY} i=1; 1 y» tree "-. I x z _“r if»; Sergeant Bernard ‘Iremblay. rear Runner, of (6701 Cliateaubiand Ave.) Montreal: Flyina Officer Fred Atkinson. bomb almer, ('11 Auberon Ave.) Toronto; Flight Sergeant Art Jackson pilot (2807 West 7th Ave.) Vancouver; Flight Sergeant Joe Ross, wireleu operator, River Bend. Que, and Pilot Officer Don Campbell Ave.,) ‘fbronto. (R.C.Il.r'. Photo) ALLIES WIN FREEDOM FOR ALL’ BUT 100 OF NORTH AFRICAS e000 POLITICAL PRISONERS" (By TOM WOLF) NBA Stiff Correspondent. AIBEIIRS. Oct. ill-One of the civilian agencies which moved into North Africa hard on the heelsof the Allied forces has already fin- ished its mlssionlrhe Intcr- Allied Commission for I the Release of Po- Prisoners Just asked General Eisen- camps here. To- day there are less W01! than 100. 1111: largest single group of pris- oners were Spanish loyalists who hid fled to France at the end of the Spanish civil war. ‘rhey had gone or been sent to North Africa, where they were put into labor-- camp; on n variety of vague charges- Release was dependent on getting a steady 10b. but it was usually impossible t0 get out of ’ camps 1on3 enough to look or one. The other chief group of pris- oneni was enemy aliens whose violent anti-fascist feelings ‘nad forced them to leave Germany soon after Hitler came to power. The story of George Gorcm is typical. ISCAPID FROM NAZI! Gordon (which is not his origi- nal name) was born in Stuttgart, l" . n 1906- He studied at the Berlin Academy of Art, be- came an author and composer. At 23 he was secretary of the Demo- Within s sent to s. hospital. from which he escaped to France. 1n Paris he became y 0f the Ger-mm Committee for the Relief of Victims of Hitler Fascism. When the Spanish war broke out. he went to Madrid to head the mini-official foreign pres agency. when the Loyallsts. were defeated, no escaped back to e. Despite his long anti-Nazi ca- reer. Gordon was jailed as an enemy alien in October. 1m, when France we t to war against Ger- many. He was released to enlist in the I-brclizn Legion. sent to North Africa to serve with it. With the sirminz of the Frnnuo- Ger- man armistice. Gordon was sent to a labor camp hm. His experiences in various labor camps are the usual story of bod food. inadequate clothing useless This picture, showing a typical prison camp in North Africa. was 513:1! gled out of there and released in America by the Free Norwegian VI eminent. The prisoners are a group rested by the Vichy Bovernment Norwegian ships. work (moving rocks to one cor- ner of the camp one week, mov- ing them hack the next). road building, scant attention from any one- He lost hol of one leg when‘ a minor injury became serious due to lack of proper medical ut- tention. When the Allies landed last November. Gordon and other anti-fascist prisoners pccted immediate release. But ft wasn't that easy. military had too many other things to do. until the Inter-Allied Commission was established the first of this year- SOME PRISONHIS RELEASED ‘The French agreed to release. if their frredcm dki we.‘ rrmnromlse French security. political prisoners who could fulfill one 0f five con~ dltlor": (1) emigrate to Mexico; i2) join the French Army? (it) join the British Army's Pioneer (i. e. labor) Corps: (4) get work contracts from the French; or (5) from the Am- here the ex- el-lean Army. Each case took time. often hcortbneakingiy long. Finally the 0f Norwegian sailors who were u" for their refusal to man Nazi-controllld Commission obtained the rel of all but one per cent. of iii nearly B000 prlsonem. Most 9 them chose either the P1011091 Corps or work with the Amelia cans --a.s dockcrs, in the dc in dozens of different kinds jobs. Gordon was one of the ll}! to get out, hardly a month l Unfit for active service becu of his loss of one leg. he Vi‘: taken on by the Commission its! in a semi-administrative clpacit! Already, however. he has 103d civilian employment as au and composer for a forthcominl revue. _ The Inter-Allied u mmlsslon’, lob Is done- But the problem isf from solved. As with so ma!!! problems here, the solution to do" is a tetnoorarv one. The areal GUEStIOYI remains: What's going t! lmppf-n vixlteu the Amer-leafy leavei hundreds cl‘ the noliticnl prisoner! have been released on the t-"sls t‘! work emu-acts o. . Armv. Only fi few am aq lucky a4 Gordon. having found civilian IOU which may continue indefinitely What. is going to happen to w others when the Americans lea 1%”$0‘3§i"‘m“ ALONE GO LPSTAIRS, II l" CHILDREN “I '