MAXIMB OIL near: MAN A o-i-io- MAXI MS OFA M E RE M f", y, not the re roach of men. "whet he y’ u: o! the“. "m. “G0. and l0. l am uitln lru m INF is the promisc- of Divine convoy . . . carriers of the Word. _ _ (lover! Prince Edward island Like the Dew g; '§f_'_'_;,,_"_'_"‘;',‘,‘, 13:1,, M ._ w." . -- .- N. ~- _ ._- . - W 12 Alnull Subscription Delivered, $5.00 nplofhto Cl-IARIDTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, NOvEMBER 29, 1941 By lull: P. ILL. HM); Unurulu uncl L..~l $3.00 dENERA Citizens Meet To Discuss Blackout LL-"Col. F. C. Hanington and Mr. J. B. Hayes are Guest Speakers.‘ Last stand of Fascists taken In Ethiopia ll Wiihl): “l! puniqne goidzers | parl- lhouid , nrertlrrirrrulé Fran empire.’ Ki‘ .ll moored Emperor kiddo Irrtllazrs under Guglielmo Nusi before the Fascist colony. Nov. ds of exhausted yest-erday in the mountains cf north- Erlrloplo to mark the end l" i‘s vast. Afrlf-Bll 9m ire. t ful Hallo "c, given u final smash Gen. Ethiopians. fitting," the British com- said, "that the who played so prominent ill lrnvo the honor of finally African the whole campaign Mussolinfs East Af- f assault by tanks, in which henchmen participated, cllmaxed up fnil of Gondar nntuvni This stronghold, 7,000 , fret abtve sen level. was all that remained after the sweeping Bri- lLh spring which r-ecnnquered not only the uonoo snunre miles of Ethiopia ire ital‘ llso ltnl rr sonralilnnd and Eritrea. lrclrr. no all casualties UITAWA, Nov. 28-—(UP)—One inn was reported missing after ' lion,- overseas reported missing was uported interned in Eire Roynl Canadian Air Force's 123rd lllicial casualty list issued late tc- lir cper previously lay. The nnnrber of air force dead llltl min-ind llhce the start oi the war stands It 1.051. l-‘olovrirrg is the Stir official numbers and next of ,1. Overseas :- Missing After Alr Operations: William Can R-57Rl_ Mrs, E. M. Keogh. (mother: ‘Toronto. Keogh Previously low reported interned In Elro: llsdali, Fzederlck William. Bu. noun. Mrs. l". w. ‘Plsdoll gills) l2 Council st, Moncton, N. Coming Events h“ for fii; llw man 05884133 Sktrprm Chicken. Pkrwl "SeeBelhrt Y P s Pin rvnu- n p, “ - - - Y~ Bglnxiril, Monday, “Qfsrrlnr tiff Women's Institute W held rmntry sole, Maritime Elec- llhs afternoon. L-ll36-ll-29-ll u fir. "christian T" 11rd Home Nolln-rn (l f 8t. Dovlds Sup and Bazaar. m?“ llllugeorgeasr . ‘Thursday. l. and summer drives I seized in 1935. but and one ina reported officially casualty list Austin, Sgt. reported missing sgt. —()_ In llrll column out: per word L-2l9-7-9 l! December lst L-ll65-l1-29-1L At an enthusiastic meeting of the Civilian Defence Committce (AR P.) held lost night in the Prince of Wales College l-lnll, which was attended by several Irurrdred inter- ested citizens. Mr. J. B. Hayes, chief executive officer of the Provincial Elmerrzency Committee of Nova sco- tia, Halifax, explained the tech- nlqua of practice blackouts. Hon. H. H- COX. chairman of the Provincial Committee presided. The Yrovincial C- mmlttoo was mounced by Hon. Mr. Cox and: comprises the following: Hon. H.H.l Cox, chairman; Major W. H. Poolefl vice chairman; Mr, Morton Dew, Secretary; Inspector J. A. Wright,‘ Police Services; Dr. B. C. Keep ng.‘ :redlca.l services; Mr. C. A. Beerzl fire services; Mr. D. M. Gass, pub- ' lic utilities services; Mr. R. S. ‘fnc- ' Beth, transportation services; Mayor . John E. Campbell, S’slde and Mayor Willard McNeili, Borden. l In his address Mr. Hayes explain- ed the set-up as it applied to his province and stressed the need of co-ordlrration by the civilian popu- lation. He said that the Minister of Notional Defence hud designat- ed certain vulnerable areas which are liable to attack. In these areas In’: (Continued on page ll, Col 4) Thousands » pay Silent tribute To Statesman QUEBEC. Nov. 2B—(CP)--A steady stream of citizens rum all walks of life continued today and tonight to file past the bier of Justice Minister Lapolntc and to i Cooling in l French-Nazi Relations NEW YORK. Nov. 2B -(AP) —A drastic change ln tho French pttiludc toward Germany during he Dist week was reported to- fllly in trustworthy advices reaching The Associated Press. These advices came from sources which previously had said that Germany and the Vichy "Kline would reach n collabora- tlon rim-cement in the near fu- lure. It was slated that In Vichy. where officials permitted corres- pondents last Saturday to send dispatches telling of an Immin- cnf meeting between Marshal Pellfn and hfih German lend- ers, rumors are circulating that inch a meeting hu been p051- poned indefinitely. Find wreckage 0f plane lost In 1939 flight ST JOHN'S. NfifL, wrec krrge Va., was lost on an wreckage after it from the air plane was in good condition bu the fuel tank was punctured. from Old orchard, Me., 28. i939. Tie was never again. pay silent tribute to one of French Canada's most illustrious leaders. From all corners" of the rovince and even outside tllre pro nee the public crime to move past the cof- fin where the Justice Minister's body lay in state in the Red Cham- , ber of the Legislative Council. At times. the people moved at the rate of 2.000 on hour through the‘ spacious chamber. which l5 over- fowing wit-h floral tributes. The funeral service will be held Irere tomorrow for the statesman who died in Montreal Wednesday nnd was brought here yesterday. King George VI today sent his tribute to Mr. Lcpolnle. The Gov- ernor-General, the Earl of Ath- lone. said in a message to Mrs. Lrplnte that the King had asked hlm_ "to convey to you and your f-zmuly an expression of his most sincere condolences on the death of your distinguished husband." No price increases Under new order OTTAWA. Nov. 2B—(CP)—Just. to help those piIICYIBSCT5 who may‘ bc c rifle confused hand all this| Milk 0f Price fixlng~tlrere‘s to be; no more price increase vmon con- trol becomes effective on Msnday. The Wartime Prices and ‘Prado Board drew attention to this fact‘ tonight. If nnytlrlng it's going to mean a reduction bccausze. where prices have risen beyond the peak price of the basic period, scpt, 15 to Oct, 11. they must be dropped back to that level, So. says the board. there's no need for housewives to stock up Tickets 40c and, L-IITB-ll-Zil-lr. Church Afternoon Cookln Sale Tues- "lrlkcvurber 2nd. L- rar-rr-zs-zr "Bee Belle River play l-u...‘ ll, Wives" rrt Hunter River, Mon- lbwember m at sis lfltlon, lid "Ann l ‘*- rr-rfiootiml Dmmbewglfellows Hall. Tuesday. hvseuétui. 8P. “Bring u; l Your lunafx- Fair - Dickie Tllkles N ‘pa, mum‘ cw Glasgow. "leer sh - ll m. b?‘ comm“; ~ lg: mw-lll- Payljng f! over g3 p0 _n “fling Ir 5 Tlklfl almllllr Bus: . b-unsln-aa-ar. Charlottetown Vendors Assoc- M. Ell L-ll 41-29-31 chicken, fowl adlng, price IT d- Buying every day. R son, 14-1121-11-27-21. Tues- at Ind December 4 Admission 3b war work. L-nac-u-ao-ar. Monday at Pred- SB per pon- Knud Jorgen- 14-1204. . "Amllllelv no more credit! loco Mun fill to P! p. s: hlggolmt. Any commodities whose dbc- u ber- ro will be’ handed I 1km “mum, further notice. Knud hcdulctcn, Irflfl e court for collec- l 8 f0? can effort to send it undo each. Oolloct- house banking committee had been u usual for the deformed by g standing vote of 1'11 with stuff thinking they'll avoid a Jump in prices next week. ‘mere Just isn't sung to be any ,1 Remnant of ll. S. prices Bill passes as -(Al>l- WASHINGTON, Nov. A-tuttered remnant of the admin- vlstration’: rice control bill WM sed by he House of Rrepresen tctives ton! ht after President Roosevelt's oroes. facing a. complete lrout, compromised on many poln ‘with a coalition of Republicans Ind Democrats. Cllmcxing what many member- snid privately was the most. con- fused legislative situation the had experienced. the revamped bll ‘sent to We Senate by l 7°“ c?“ voto of 224 to rsr after a. Rtfiflllbll-i to 184. As flnollv approved the bill would give n llngle summon-nor- rower ‘Impose confuse on the one" °l rlgiesflstpgxg~ of line with the structure. but an ldrnlnistf-‘ctlv’ board of review would have emhor, lty to set lsldc the administrator. millil- Killed in Mine accident GLAGE BAY, N. 8., Nov. 28 - '(CP)—Struck by a. runaway string of cool boxes, John J. Patton, B9, was killed instantly today in Do- minion Coal Company's No. 11 col- iiery here. He was a shct-firer. A son, Robert, Montague, P. E. Two reporters Are captured LONDON, Nov. 98—(CP)-Two the British forces in Llbyar-Godfrey Ander- Press, Lon- Ncw York n pflsoxg Christmas trees. Occupants of the correspondents with son of The Associated don, and Harold Denny, Times, have been to e by the Italians, it was learned day, dents in are known to be so! hod been obscure were ton, Toronto star. A Reuters, and S. Brewer, Tribune. interpreting The War (B Klrkc h. Simpson. A5806- lbled Press Staff Writer) A general Russian retreat on the Moscow front, forced by new Nazi advances on far- separated sectors of the 200- mlle defence are. wows "n" der way. It. ls clearly designed to N- concentrcte Red armies in a tighter circle about the cit? from the Kiln region in the north to the Olmnara river line in the south, although full lcopa of the retirement is not yet revealed. Stress laid by Russian com- mcntetors for several days on the increasing gravity of the Moscow developments indicat- ed preparations of public opin- ion for n. broad retreat. In the ' of such a withdrawal, advance forces went of the city would be in extreme PM" 0 piece-meal cnclmlement and destruction. Similar din!!!" would face those to the south, now fallln beck from ro-cn- clrcled’ l.‘ . _ Like the British for the flaming Libyan of cnclvc. annihilation of armies, not occupation of towns, l: Hit- ler's prime oblcctlvc tn the Moscow battle. Bitm- Hulls-n experience wl too long dc- yl tcoouoooconnnmonll of a plpne in which Thomas H. smith of Clnrksburg, attempted trans-Atlantic flight in 1939. They found n0 trace of the flierg body. The troopers. Eric Rhyms and F. Benoit, went in search of the Royal Canadian Air Force fliers reported spotting several months ego. They said everything in the l Smith took off on u projected hon-stop flight across the ocean on May sighted Illves ln Lower \ but three other correspon- I who hud been reported misa- ,_ e. The three whose whereabouts M. H. Hal- lcrlc Jacobs. °“‘°"° l Pretty passenger iCream Of Nazi ‘Forces In Libya l Caught In Trap | ___ . l OAIR/O Nov. 38—(AP)—St.r0ng\ I V ‘ill-day respite lAxls formations trappedeastof the - ln ruling re Tobrulr-Rezegh zone-the elite a- . Licence numbers {prong fit-Gen. Erwin Rcmmers surviving North African tank corps l-threshed against a closing Bri- . tish line tonight in a desperate cf- fort to escape annihilation. Retreat to the west and to junction with other German and Italian forces simultaneously and heavily enga ed deeper in Libya,‘ beyond Rene . was blocked by an. Imperial wcl standing nthwnrt. the coastal routes. Rommel thus struggled for the life of two Axis columns, one rc-l turning sorely weakened from a.| foray across the Egyptian frcntlerl and" the other formed of troops leaving their broken positions in the frontier region or Sidl Omar and Helfaya (Hellfire) Pass. The northernmost of these col- umns had been under violent Bri- tish bombing assault. for more thanl 24 hOUIs before it was met head-on! by British tanks and dispersed in a two-hour battle, said British] headquarters. The second column was not precisely located save that. it, too. was threatened with envel- opmenl; and destruction. N OTTAWA, Nov. 2a __(c|>)._. Manufacturers, wholculcrc and ' ether nonrlle of food, feeds. livestock, poultry, clothing, and footwear have hem granted a 10-day extension from the denrL line of Dec. i before they must, nfflx their customers’ licence numbers of invoices 1nd sales clips. "While suppliers may there- fore ship any of these goods to a retailer until Dec. 10 with- out knowing his licence num- ber they arc still under an ohll- gation to affix their own and the buyer's licence numbers on all documents recording sale; which take place between Dec. 1 and Dec. 10." said C. I’. Mor- . Nov. 28- . , (c1: cable)_-Ivwo t“, t _ While this series cf battles rag- Dilly. director of licensing. mg from the mods Qpfffh ‘Quafe ed east of the imperial Tobruk- While nu.- 10-day exten- souu, coast semlement o: Grundy“ Rezegh line other British and New clon will facilitate the exchange fiver m4“, reported finding the Zealand forces now in full con- of goods until licence numbers tact fought forward mile by mile. over powerful German opposition. to the west toward the strong Axis‘ pflsltlOll-S of Gazala and Derna be- yond Tobruk. It was the east, however, into] which Imperial Commander, Gen, Sir Alan Cunningham, was throw- ing the greatest of his striking, Dower, for while Axis forces west o . Be guardians Ill - Price control J "0 Scllflrfld. it may not. be eon- slrued as an extension of the licensing deadline of Dec. 1, and does not nffcet in any way the effective date of the price ceil- ing," he added. of Tobruk are perhaps more num- erous than their snared comrades t behind them, the Axis mechanized arm is concentrated in thu latter area-quid that, 1s objective No. 1 for destruction. The ‘Ibbrrfk-Rezegh zone itself appeared ell but cleared of Axis, forces, for substantially the whole of the ‘Italian Bologna Division] holding tfre eastern side of the ro- OTTAWA, Nov. 2B—(CP)-Can- bruk perimeter has been annihll- adian women received a coil from uted and only a few of Rornmels tho Wartime Prices remaining tank units still hold out.‘ Board tonight, little more than 4B near Rlezegh. hours before price control becomes The main fighting has swepbeffectlve, to act as guardians of back some 30 miles to the east be- l the price inn’. lc-w the region of Gambul; where. The appeal lvent out from Dorr- Rcmmers two frontier eoiumns Gordon, chairman of the moved up to the showdown-to irrices board, who spoke over the break the imprisonment or be national network of the Canadian crushed Broadcasting Corporation. The price ceiling on goods will be effective Monday, M1". Gordon said, and pricvs higher t-hnrr rhose which prevailed between Sept. l5 and Oct. ll would be a, breach of the law. "If you find some bwtleg dealer who wants ycn to conspire with him to break the law you must not only refuse. you must also lei. him know. in unmistakable terms. that. he is an enemy of this country." Mr. Gordon said. Mr. Gordon said the board pro- poses to deal drastically with any person who deliberately violates the law. "but the housewife must lbe the real guardian of the law." I Nazis stab at car were returning from Monctcn Killed in crash Into parked truck REXTON, N. 13., Nov. 28 -(CPl- Gordon Marks, l9, was killed near here early tonight when a car in. which he was riding with two olh- , er Rrexton residents crashed into a parked truck. Malcolm ffannay, tnc driver. and Kate Kennedy each suf- fered a, broken leg and were token to hospital here. The truck driver was loading RETREAT? unnrn WAY on Moscow r i Centerwolding But Flanks in Steady Betreat German pressure continues despite heavy losses lBy Eddy Gilmore, Associated Press Stuff llritrri RECEIVED NEW RANK Rear-Admiral Percy W. Nelles, chief of naval stuff, has been pro- moted to be virc-zulmirul; Major- (icncral ll. D. G. Crerur, chief of .tlu: general staff, has been pro. muted to lieutenant-general, and Air \'lve-l\1;;rshal L. S. Breadner has been raised to rank of air marshal in tho latest list of p170- motions issued at. Ottawa, Jap Press O Begins talk 0t “Menace” May be Working up case for further moves by Tokyo. TOKYO. NOV. 28 -—(AP) -- D15- KUIBYSHEV, Nov. 28—lAP) flanks of’ the Moscow sector were ltopped n scant 86 miles from the south of th the region is some 100 nriles capital. and in Voiokolnmsk, 85 of Moscow, wedge driven into the lines imperllied the Red position. ‘Ilrese are called "distant up pronches" to Moscow but. the sit outflank Moscow on the east. First of all, the trying to encircle the battle-front dispatches They acknowledged city called "N” near Tuln, unde and trench mortars. All German attacks ln the Moz haisk and patclu-s purporting to describe a new British "menace" to bcrtlr Thul- lrrnd and Japan began to appear in Jnpnrrfrsc Il(}\\‘$l)1lll'3l‘S tonluht. as the cabinet, flanked by high war and navrrl ministry oifleinis, delib- erated Jnpnnls final stand on the Pacific peace negotiations in Wash- ington. Nlchi Niehl printed under n Bone- and 'l‘rndc - . (lil country Battles over BERLIN, Nov. 28-(APl—-Admit- tedly hit in the Black Sec corner‘ o! the eastern front by Russian‘ counter-attacks oi unusual strength, the German arureri forces stabcedl at the fringe of the Caucasian oily country from the air wniglrt. in the start. of new Offensive operations. The Nuzl armies cf the Cfirllcfl. also opened a new drive on the Red navy fortress of Sevnstcpol. which has been holding out, hr the southwest. corner of the peninsula while more spectacular operations unfolded elsewhere. On the Msscow front. scene of the most prolonged and violent. German pressure, the attacking armies were pictured as forging ahead, sic-wly choking off lire Rod capital's cCmmunicaticns on north, west and south. ~l.abels Finland As puppet of Hitler regime _ Marked voyage r NEW YORK Nov. 28—-(AP)— '1lre Egyptian passenger liner El Nil crept into port today after a bizane 84-day voyage from Alex- andrln-o. trip marked by several knife fights among passengers and officers over a pretty woman pass- enger, bombings in Suez and‘ nar- row 88031365 from Axis submarines and raiders. The 'l.'l69-ton motorshlp, Egypt's first and finest nger vessel. brought further rcuble. to her 48 weary passengers when the llrrcr stemmed into the My last nishl- flrhey were held at quarantine ov- ernight and the ship could not dock immedlatel because another vessel oqculllgl l; c Pier. The Des!- engers were kept. on the El Nil, anchored nee: the Btotuc of Liberty in the bay. Added to this the lllp ran out of fresh water three days out of Trinidad, had trouble getting fuel at mast 5nd West African ports and was unable to go to Freetown. sierra. loom. because the crow re- fuoed to call the veuel there for four of submarines. Passengers sold o chip officer and several passenger; became em- broiled over cttentons to o pretty Enflllshrwcrnnn aboard and thnt several melee: with knives were staged. Richard 0. Watson of Halifax. WASHINGTON. NOV- 23 -— “Pl —Secretary of State Cordell Hull today labelled Finland n puppet of the Hitler regime. He asserted the little country's signing of the anti-comlntern pact was highly s‘ lficrmt and could‘ nnot be camouf anvil or explained a- way, and added that every recon‘. t, f th Flnnlsl government giifcoiiliiifio ma?" ‘m: ghowg it ise"fully co-‘cpemtlng with fluted w h g Qanflfm.“ m the Hitler forces. l 1 Ni rlu. uld he was innocently ln- B9 "llerlwd "f" m" "Pm “F” vo vcd in the sffclr and that a gull‘Flnlnslaomlll‘Pfinfglfflgglerlfl l us: a e ,v - fiwofogkfim h“ h‘ ‘Dun can effoE-ts to uld the Soviet Union and referred to Finnish military collaboration with German forces in Russia. as ‘u menace to all Am- crfcn chm for calf defence." v0. Watson sold he carried c gun constantly fm advice of Oapt. H. 0. Walton after reporting the first to In l! kok datciine the rrport that more " ‘ lr l‘ lows had been ‘s borders- brought up to iimtlllg them “lcrvclnrls Indians"- in order to imperzl 'II ailnml and strong-then what. lire Jrpanese call the "ABCD encirclemerrt" of Japnrr. British air forces, the (lispntch said. ‘ were flying rlrriiy across the fron- - tier in orwr to .rten the Thai ‘ morale. and ran-partitions were ss- serted to be complete for n British invasion of Tirnzlnnrl over l0 roads. Prior tn the cabinet meeting. lzovernnrcnt spokesmcir declined to say wlrellrex‘ flrrrc rvvrxlri be a reply to the llnfr- of Cordell l-luil. United Stnles secretary of stat». whim was (ielivercrl Wednesday. 'f'lre news ag- ency Domci expressed tire opinion hnrvever, that there was little lec- rray for prolongation of the Woslr- lll'l'l(lll discussions. Tnkfivz coeniznnce of the fact that Japanese oceunntion of French intro-China has entered into the negotiations, the Japan Times and Advertiser, rPleh ls controlled by the foreign office. was necessary laeenuse 111g cnlcrclenlclll by lire p(§\\'(\1‘5" and h_v Free French nctlvi- ties in the. Fverrrh colony. of “increas- SAYS BRITONS IDLE LIVERPOOL —(CPl Ill {We of invasion vvarrrlrr_;s “Britons l1". wasting rinre in hilt-MOSS“ and n1‘- gunrcnrs," declared J, GLDSOH Jur- vie. regional port. drrcclcr M the nortiruesrerrr area. m u slxellh here. l fEa ar would be regarded here as any drry, embroillng rnnny nations, noumements. The first was that United States merchant ships on the Pacific would not bo armed "under exist- lflg circumstances" but President Roosevelt. mnklng the announce- ment. at hls pres: conference, said lt is up to Tokyo to decide how long tire “or-Listing circumstances" will last. The second indication of the extreme gravity of tho situation was thul. Mr. Roosevelt, when he left this afternoon for Warm Springs, 0a., said he hoped to stay until Tuesday but. he was not at all eertrrlrr he could stay away from Washington even four days Hume Wrong. counsellor-minis- ter of the Canadian Logction, tContlnued on page ll. Col l), n definite threat the For East and might lead to war Japan, it was indicated hcrc today on high authority. Tirol the precarious peace of the For Bust were stopped, although in n1 former sector it was acknowledged the German lines had been push- ed within 3B miles of the city. Russian cavalry Moscow, against which drove between Knllnin an the capital inst week. Several vill- ages were reported re-occupied. On the Rostov front in ting further advances. Fire destroys Ahbatoir at. Amherst Abduction", N. s, Nov. 2a 4c?) --A meat packing plant. and abbo- toir operated by Hcdley Slddnll and Company was destroyed by fire ear- ly today. The loss, estimated at $25000. was lmrtly covered by in- suronce. Of undetermined origin. flames gained a headway in demolishing a slaughter mass of flames before could reach the scene. A considerable quantity of meet products and carcasses were but a =rrfety from the basement. A second alarm was sounded later were svlrcn embers in the ruins ‘ fanned into flames and, for a time threatened other buildings in the \. iclnlty. W S FHPQOCG May Be Shattered Would take little t0 start con- flict between Japan and United States, some observers believe. WASJIINGTON, Nov. ztl—((‘-Pl—A Japanese thrust into Thailand to American intercom In between the United Slates and Vancouver's first Fire Chief dies VANCOUVER, NOV. ZB-JCPV-J- Vancouver's flfll fire chief big fire that. destroyed the eltv thfll Mai H. Carllsle, 84. fire chief. died today. Mr. Cnrlis'e became in 1886. helped battle H19 and continued in the P059 '1“ January, 1929. He W” l-flllshorourzlh,‘ N. Mr. C;r se W King's Medal in 1933 for his s0 vices to the 61W. to be healing a slow retreat under the most pour-rlul cl flr-rmifrr lure, llthough n Nazi drive from the west nppcnrcd to The defnding armies were full- ing back northeast of Tula, which 0f miles northwest where a. German Russian army Germans are Tula and its defenders on the north and east, said. the fall of a tire concentrated lire of artillery Maloyrrslavet-s areas west and southwest. of the capital counter-attack- ed at Kiln, 50 miles northwest of German forces the south a. soviet. counter-thrust sev- eral days old was reported net- the the flfifllfll m“ fills main building and spread rapidly house. ABCD smoking plant and warehouse. The nrnln three-storey structure was a firemen lost. number of cattle were led to Is up! to be shattered was demonstrated here In two an- presented the _ ._-..._‘ —’I‘he Russian armies on two bloody reported in front-lini- cllsprrtvhss today’ prob- hm": been Rod capital. ;-_=q‘ Toast victory In dusty desert 9 _ Pipes of famous lliggjir- nation, especially to the east of ~‘ , ,, . Tu, m m8 mg.“ o, szalmo_ land Regiment heard sorsk. l: most danserou-I. in lull of battle. I Here, the Russians bay, the _____ Germans have hurled the last. of WITH THE app; my“; m the forces they have available on 1,131.3. Nov‘ ~__(Ap. the central front in an effort to Z,-.,,_ - British 'I‘Cnrrzr.l' fzom '1‘ ' 111.5 Dilflfl early a. ha. l‘ E d line. the sk ‘ in lire moi lull; in the gr: Nov. ‘.1. ~Xlrrrimlrm ‘m 3) 1 TORONTO. " ~*r.\\'..:rl-lt:l ‘ , w; Victcrrrr 5° Erinronton L‘ 5 Regina 7J4 '53 Winnipeg l5 '19 Toronto 34 44 0‘tawa l‘! '3'l Illmrtrcnl '3" 99 Boston 1'71‘ 54 Svrrop-is: Th“ weather h“ been cold lr\ the wrxvrrrr provinces. with light. snow and sillt m crn Alberta. .\'lrv.ll* lei}; rfl v TVTWT has prevail in ~ and eastern On ..-\ ' the southern purl of l‘rr rvorrrrcc ll .ri has been full." and qrrrfi- n‘; BOSTON, Nov. ‘LB-l cast for r/rrllrlvn New F: "i Considerable clorullnes lirzhl. » » i=1 l‘ lwnrnrer in south idny fnzr, It'll" r-lrizrwil l aturc. l l-llvll tide lit?‘ and tonight at 7.41 Slur sets 1h‘. nurl rises tr-ruo. 716. Full rum-n Dec. 3. {Bl DI"- Srllnnrersirlo title "lqlllwh mm’ lllPS inter than Charlottetown. BORDEN-(Qélélglrféftfill-INTINE aunt‘. ‘EXCEPT gprflfihYl 1.00 PM 2n w Lem-q- Bnrden 9.25 l\-i\'|-. "*5 PM‘ .- Torrncnflnc 11.00 on r m! ..0 . 8'20 service Ienvr flmrlen 9."! gin nd 445 l‘.'\I.: leave 1'11"‘ ‘lur- giénltfie runs .\..\r.. owl m» car. ~ r l."l.\.\rr>= flllllY (Ddllg? ‘Nfhllnxr; st \rr\\ ‘=1 S‘ a '1 a '1 a in Len-es Wood "kiln". 10.00 A. H. and l...0 l‘. \I r- Ind 3.15 l‘. M. B30 A. ill i l-PIUIW (‘zrrif-ull 8-15 AMI 11.4; noun