%m.|r fillll "Qjff" or“ ~...__ ....-._..-. ‘ Paper 00V!!! Prince Edwsrdilslond Like he Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1943 W18 FACE DEBACLE IN S0 . 13.1. Victory Loan Total Passes Millon Dol Defense Minister Makes Strong Appeal On Behalf Of Fifth Victory Loan rslulfslill i Leads Island In Bampaign etc) . paign be approached tions ior the iirst iull wee led 8411. o! 809.500.1100 aaaionét a £1,110 eadqulrtera r that lorel. peroen o tslobiscti senor us objective sttent eentres still a sf general canvass. S winis Falls ue. also u!‘ bvq E so. Latest general canvass and lor Notre Des-no l-ligh Tea. l0 "York VVedne-sllsy. Victory 5119901‘ 0 to l0 Hampton Hall, October 21th. alley Theresa's "Bingo 8t. 21th. Webster's eay. Oewbe Q's. r "Been Snpper- s d mellt. Morell, Wsdnrisday. "Tl-h. 030 P. M loanelns View M t lea. National Filln Board. s "Eourls Thursday-dares Movies. S shows, 8t. Mary's Victory Loen Meeting also. "North iltshlre ldestairndg in Mr . use r "Wanted filfiiwwtli this 00.. Ltd. "ls uersd, long Wldnay. Climber 21th- eion is can "To e Alpha Rebekah “@1116. I I t4 5.000. ma!’ » during lest w sk's carn- ‘nu m today's canvass ts had announced Sukillllairquliilghll that total slklbsérln- 144.200 ior a daily average required ‘us; M, to reach the 01.200.000.000 ouote within the 18- , rl. "Eiiiimli! subscript-ions totalled sported us. having subscribed 12B its in W- ll wsll as 135.3 per osnt oi its combin- al canvass and payroll sav- lon reverts to mini! at 100 ner cant (Continued on page ‘l Col. S) BUIIIIGEVEIITS _ r a ursdsy. 4_ 10-20-31. "fainter-Canoe Cove Friday. i 10-5-31. " . rednlblne maawlkiee and Dance B “MM” "Reserve December lst and 21E! meeting. Bound Movies. ll prn. 10-00-21. n§f.f‘.‘.i"‘i°r'iii.’t‘ib‘do."é‘ieii"ei“"t _ 10-22-31. “United Church Goose sooner- io-ss-li- "Dsnoe Lorne V 0mm B11011. Webster's orfolrazsii-rza‘. “Dance. Lower Montague l-lall. October 30th. Webster's Orcgegigfill-l “iiitiii 10-80-11- te m0ctober 10-20-21. "Vernon River l-isll, Tuesday. —Bound Mov- 10-20-11 io-as-si w imitllii‘ twinge. l-la .104“, "M usreds e. Veffle" ill Ootobe alifwm‘ "' ilm- - to buy live and dressed Col s s- : mil. cm $5M” ssis oi Iunfmfidt ladle m" enuisiimisniv . mu attend: Ines requested. iiisltlns I ll!- with lends DIY‘ ae- . Loan H011. rtain- pm. Bound Bell. WI £0 IIIII IIIIII Pic. Cyrus Gallant; is among the members oi No. 33 Coy. veterans Guard oi Canada who have return- ed to Canada after service in the Bahamas. Pto. Gallant who lives in W lingeon. P. E. I. enlisted in April 1916 during the last war with the 5th Siege Battery, He went Overseas in the some year and saw service during the battles oi the Somme, Courcellette. Charlevoi. Vimy. Verdun and Passehendaelo where e was wounded in 1917. I-Ie 'wlll have to be s. served with the Army oi’ Occupa- tion at Bonn, Germany and return- ed to Canada in June. 1919. He en- listed again with the veterans Gill-I'd 1X1 BUNNY. 1941 and went to the Bahamas in i942. Pie. Gei- lant who is married is the iather oi l2 children and has two sons, Pies. Annand and Fldelc serving Over- seas. (Canadian Anny Photo) Italian Sub In Belated Surrender DURBAN, South Airlca, Oct, 25- (AP)-—The Italian submarine Am- miraiillo Csani has come over to the Allied side somewhat belatedly but received n hearty welcome. and in lain View of the bathing beach- es s going through exercises under the waehiul eves oi Royal Nsvv escorts. l-isr ore-armistice operations and even her post-annistice rovInilS in the Indian Ocean are somewhat mysterious. but bv the command- er's claim she sank about iive ships in 80 days at sea. The 3-year-old skipper brought his ship voluntarily into port ll days nfter the announcement oi the Italian surrender. The Mill-ton submarine was built in 1940 and curries 14 18-inch tor- pedo tubes. “Sabotage Scene" Brings Jail Term PORT ARTHUR. Oct. 25—(CP)-- Andrew Koslluk. 58. former Cunn- dian Prlciiic railway Seei-iflflmil" i" Pawtck Out... was convicted here today on s charge o! "nubile mi!- chiei" and sentenced to thrlée months in jail. Police said he erea - ed a "sabotage scene and" laid a efilrilgojifllhiiilfibkf- B l. V. W. JONES Associsytsld Press Staff Writer Jt-(A amide- laid the Oept. Mslchen l!» M!” o‘ groundwork for the intred isuoolwea i" fiiil t Speed "i" Col. J1... Ralstcp. Ministe oi Ne.- tlonal Dsisncs. last night save as a wotchword to the people o! 0H1- odn. ‘Ihnft let up. Keep at it. K000 pressing on.” hin a Filth Victory an ess ere. OI-Ie .93. in the Empire Theatre here before a largo audience Ha warned that ii good war news is to continue "lt can only be by continuo payment of the match- less price which the men and wom- en oi the iorcce give ans‘ only ii wa are willing to make our contribution in self-discipline and sell-denial worthv oi theirs." “Twenty-live vears also tonillht" Col. Ralston continued. "we were l0 or 12 miles irom Mons. ‘The end iii the wur lvns in sicht. The Hun was tired and a good slice oi Eur- opa was in our hands. ‘Tonight we have not touched ngfthwci§til Europe: the superb fighting oi Russia still has to he matched: Chins must be liberat- ed; and Hons Kong aveng ‘ Bur- ma, the Malay Peninsula and Sine flDOIe and the Philippines must be regained and the Southwest Paciiio cleared; Those enemies oi mankind must be iorced to unconditional surrender War Not Won "Don't let anvbody delude into thinking the war is won. have only lust begun to win. W'- are glimpsing the top oi the hill through the clouds but it is 0 1mg steep, rocky d news is voll We coming. but there lot more good news before the end oi the roan is reached." Speaking oi the cost oi the war. Col. Balaton said Canada's expen- ditures totalled $1,'l00,000,000 in the First, Great War. In this war. Can- ada "up to last March had spent over 87.700.000.000 and this year expenditures planned ior is nearly s4 900002000 more. “In other words. up to next March-A 1-2 years oi war-we will have spent between 12 and l3 bil- lion dollars. or eight times the tot- al oi the inst war." The increased cost. he said. was due in part to diifsrence in quel- ity and quantity of euuipment- new armoured divisions. shins ior the greatly expanded navy, planes ior the air iopce. The Real Cost But the real cost oi the war is borne by the men and women in the lighting services, he said. "When we rend that the Navy has sunk :1 submarine in a clash on escort duty we know that it means no: simply that an enemy shin has been destroyed. but that probably to achieve that success the cost has been paid in priceless lives or young Canadians and in sorrow in wEiTtEiEa on page '1 e61.- l) British Bruiser, Destroyer Lost War Situation Last Night By KIBKE L. SIMPSON Associated Press War Analyst A dezperatn Neel race for eeiety from the Qnleper bend is under way with the emerging Bed Army's capture oi the Dnepropetrovsk bastion st the upper elbow or the grant river loop. Deep In the centre of the bend and oloelnginon Krlvoi Iltog junction. other ' ' ' ' the‘? b * I‘ ' to cut oif the Nazi forces from escape. A dll aster greater than Stalin- grad is in the b‘ for the F hurrying “ IvIru over in- adequate roads to slip through the till-mile gap north of the lower arm of the river bend. There appears no doubt that the Nazis have started evacuating the whuls Dnleper plateau and the. Crimean peninsula. The. Kremenchug bulge break-through, followed by Russian capture nf Melltopol to threat- en the last exits from the Crimes had apparently collapsed the whole German right. flank In Russia. ' The retreat could become I. rout, The Nazi lllgh Command, hoping for exhaustion of the Russian oficrlslve, appears to have held on too long. There are grave political portents, too. in the situation in the south for the German High Command. If the Nazis are thrown back to the Bug River ior another stand-end the Bug ls the only naturally strong po- sition available west of the southern DIIIQPBI‘—UIQ battlefront in Rus- sia would lls within 100 miles oi Rumsnlsn frontiers It would be with- in bombing ranga‘ oi the most. vital Nazi war making nerve. the Ruman- lan oil fields and installations. What that will do to Rumanlsn and Bulgarian war morale, sl- ready at a low ebb, can only be conjectured. There can be little doubt, however. that both Nazi satellite states. with Russian forces that close will c “ as Italy collapsed. ' Gen. Sir Harold Alexander, Allied Field Commander in Italy, esti- mates that the Germans have from 35 to 40 divisions Illnned down in "B1! Ind Balkans. That ls close to the numbe Russian second ‘rant westward. advocates have asserted a cross-channel Allie] attack would draw from “"51! to lnsurs a Red Army victory. That means there has been no large pool oi strategic reserves upon which the Nazi command could draw to meet crisis in Russia. The al- ternative was retreat from the Dnlcper line. The fnll of Dnepropetrovsk widened the base oi the Krsmcnchug blllsc beyond any Nazi hops of counter-attacks to pinch it nfi'_ There remains open for the German retreat from the Dnleper benll only the till-mile conidor south of Krlvol Rog to the lower arm of the river. It has n. single‘ secondary highway iofsollitafe the Natl flight. Russian field guns within a. few miles of Klrvol Rog command the only rail outlets Veteran Railway Builder Bead VANCOUVER. Oct- 95 — (OP)- Alexander R» Mann. B4. a Veterpn oi railway construction in Canada. died at. his home here last night. Mr. Mann had been s semi-in- valid ior several years. He retired a year ago as presid- Cltig of Northern Construction Co. Montgomery Says Victory Is Certain NEW YORK. Oct. 96 — (UP) - The Algiers Radio today quoted Gen. Sir Bernard Montgomery in a message to the men oi’ his British 9th Army on the first anniversary of the battle cf El Alamein. EBYPt. maroon. Oct. 2s _ (or) --'I‘he British cruiser Chnrybdis was sunk and the destroyer Llmbourne was damaged and had to be sunk dur- ing a channel naval battle Satur- dny, the Admiralty announced to- day, The Charybdls and the Lim- bourne were s. part oi a Royal Navy force engaged in sn oiiensive sweeP oil the north coast between Ushant and the Channel Ifi-vds- Both ves- for a rry beck and irl rter. to ' iirsleliiiioqumelonsa De Mari ny i! the nilht do! Jilly l. the sels were struck by torpedoes. ‘ Crown Produces Star Witness At Murder Trial star witness 90k tAstlf alter Dr. Will . had iiotcd a threat by the accused man last to “crook the head oi’ Sir Harm" h - nE"ti’t“‘...‘.'i’...°°“°°'%.“0.'- 82'» worm u... e n2...“- s“ . sll. d him on the The t fmtnkda he w res o y the prisoner's cell-like doc . timss yawning and ones winkinl l" iscovered b Bar G- s house-lug» e1, the "worm... '_ was tie. slop nlls_e__e. Ool. 0 r- as saying: "If ever anything is cer- tain in this liie It now is clear that we shall win this war." The broadcast, recorded by CBS quoted Gen. Montgomery as add- ‘nrr: “ .'I‘Ii-e end is In sight." Queeniees An-zi-(Tuinea Pigs Rate Priorities NEW YORK, Oct. 2s - (AP)- Queen bees and suinea piss rate trans - Atlantic flyina priorities In one shipment of machinery. room was found ior two tiny boxes. each containlnil a queen and iour work- er bees as the nucleus oi new bee colonies In war torn aress. Anoth- er flying bont delivered a “ ent of guinea pigs- CLABK GABLI IN N. Y. NEW ‘ORR Oct fl-(AH- rp}, ciar Gable. motion picture st -r now in the United States Army Air Form. arrived hen- todav by airplane irom Great Britain. he Victory- Bu Yugoslav Guerillas Capture Big Port LONDON. Oct. 25—(AP)-Kotor. Montenengro with its iandlocknd harbor hi): enough to accommodate the ent re Allied Mediterranean ileet. has been wrested irom the Germans by the forces of Gen. Dra- a Iovlc. war minister. the ugoslnv government at Cairo sn- nounmd today. Also claiming new successes against the Nazis in Yugoslavia, Gen, Josip Broz known as Tito. asserted m a communique that his Yugoslav partisans were lock-ed in desperate combat with Gen. Mi- hnilovic's Chetniks in the Monte- nQltllll hills. As iiiternccine striie reachod a new pitch oi‘ intensity, reports grew that Hitler was shaping new moves to control the seething Balk- an Peninsula. Allied control oi Kotor could be significant. The port is only 120 m ies across the Adriatic irom the Allied-held Bari, Italy. and it may vet play a big role in Balkan operations. ' 3 Soldiers From P. E. I. Wounded Three Prince Edward Island sol- diers were listed as wounded, one oi‘ them slightly, in the 384th casualty‘ list of the war, Issued last niflit by the Canadian (active) army. ‘The Islanders were: Wounded Overseas Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island Regiment Cormier. Edward, Ptc- B50102. Mrs. Mary Jane Gallant (mother), Mrs. Harold Nicholson. Mont- ague, has received the following note ircm her son Ccrpl. Harold now a Japanese prisoner in Filkuokn Prison Camp —"Just a line to lct you know that I am well. hoping you and the children are enjoying the best of health. I am working and receiving vaages. Give my best regards to family and friends -cherio for now with love. -l-Iaro1d " ll. B. And ll. S. Victory Loan Totals SAINT JOHN. NB, Oct. Z5- (CPI-New Brunswiclrs Victory Loan total stood near the $10,000 .000 mark tonight. Today's subscrib- tious, $1.180 4510, raised the total to 39.946350 but fell below the $1 500.- 000 daily average required ior the 535.9011 The total represented more than 4.2 percent oi the province's $36,310,000 quota. Sales today were $1,825,650. Two-Way Air p Blows Against German Area LONDON. Oct. 25 -—(CP)— Bri- tish-bascd allied bombers maintain- ed the aerial offensive on Europe today and allied ncnCqUfl-IZCYS in North Airica announced a raid by Italian-based American bombers against Austria-the one Nazi area hertofore almost immune irom air c . Escorted by long-range lighters. these Italian-based bombers struck in the developing campaign to bring Hitler's southern ulnli under the same devastating bombing that already hos blackened Gerrnen cities irom the west. Two niriieldc and a power station in northern France were the inr- gets oi today's raiders while the Germans returned to the London area tonight after n One-niqhl; ab- sence in their "nuisance" rnlrl cam- palgn n-vanIsZrlla s55; Own Song By Request LONDON. Oct. 25—(CP|—Trvin" Berlin stood beiore a mixed British and Amerlcnn press conierxnce nt United States army headquarters todle/ and unmeiv sans one oi hi< own sonus-"Pm dreaming oi n White Chrlstmns"~bv request ‘ He arrived to but on his hit. show 1 "This is the nrmv." with plans to open it irre to at least G0 000 Amer- second St. P. O. box 361. Summer- side LeClsir. Henry Bernard, Pts. F50- 780. Mrs. Baseline IscClair (wife) Box ea. Summsrside- Blishtly wounded I-Iawbolt, Robert Ira, Tr.. retail. Edgar Ilawbolt. (brother) lworell. Join the Host of Home Bakers who i [D580 ican soldiers in Britain, and then take it on to North Airica ior 1 final tour before its personnel breaks up and goes into combat un To Study Municipal Sat Ilp In St. John tawa, Director oi search Institute oi Canada. has er- rived here to make n study 0i the municipal administration oi Saint John City and County. l-lis advice was sought by the Municipal Cour-- cil. "No change has bren mule in the municipal organization ior more than half n century. and it i! 19118 ovgrdue," Mayor C. R. Wesson said o sy. Reliability and a trade er III-l iesaleu are a child's best portion. MAXIMS ov ' a MERE MAN Soviets armies under Gen, llodlun Malin- ovskv and Gen Ivan Konev today captured the industrial city oi Dnepropetrovsk which the Ger- mans had held ior more than two years, thus cleaning out the enemv from the nort eastern corner oi the Dnieper river loop. An order oi tlv: day oi Marshal Premier Stalin announced the cap- ture oi the city and also Dneprod- zerzhinsk, former K ‘eya. 20 miles to the west inside ths riv- er bend. A badly mauled German army oi perhaps 1,000,000 iaced a debacle in southern Russia. Judging irom Moscow‘: disclosures and the ad- missions oi danger emanating from Berlin broadcasts. A midnight unnlementarv com- munique broadcast irom Moscow said one Soviet army crossed the Dnieper near Kaidaki, l0 miles south oi Dnepropetrovsk. while n second moved on the city irom the wast. They smashed through elaborsio concrete boxes and blockhouses to take the twin cities in the upper corner oi the loop by storm, and captured "enorm us! quantities" oi war material the enrmy had been accumulating ior months. This sklliul springing of l. “trep- lvithin-a-trali" was abetted by two arms oi a larger Soviet pincera. one, hammering at the gates Krivoi Ho: 85 miles to the south- west. ths other racing snllthwlcst- ward through iaiiin Meiimpol to- ward the Crimea. Dnepropetrovsk Itself normally supplied one-third oi all Russia's cast iron. and the city of more than 500.000 is the kev to control of all Russia's lower Ukraine industries. LONDON, Oct. 25—1AP)—-Red | I ggsiégacg to roach liS $24,500,000 - I o... .. - '_ Alltl Aircraft "tfifiéiivétit; sees. 24:21.21: n - gllllbScilfigtiiln total stood at $l5,— Given Last Night Capt. Bev Piers and liLs crew oi 30 men, last night gave to the pub- lic in Charlottetown s most inter- esting demonstration in the use oi anti - aircraft weapons. e. huge 800,000,000 o sridoeprew x! 800,000,000 candle power search- light. a 40 millimeter Boiors anti- aincratt gun. a predictor and a gen- orator. The searchiight is operated by Bgt- C. W. Smith and his crew oi eight men and is used in anti-alr- crait defence to indicate the path in operation for guns. Its range is i2 miles and it is also most useilll for “homing in planes" in stormy weather. These lights have been the means oi saving. to date. eight planes. The predictor is used in conjunc- tion with the gun and is also oper- ated by a crew oi eight men. This weapon has a range oi 34,000 yards and is used against dive bombers and low ilying aircraft. The cost oi these weapons, so vit- al to victory, is 521N000 and every- one should contribute by buying} victory bonds to help to procure‘ them- i It is interesting to recall that Capt. Piers was here In peacetime days in a iar diiiemnt capacity. I-le was an outstanding tennis play- er and appeared during tournam- ents here, flgurinlr In some cham- pionships, especially in the doubles events. Gives Figures 0n II. S. Goal Supply NEW YORK Oct. 25—(APJ—-The bituln‘ us coal institute today said the United States now has one of the greatest coal stockpiles in history — Approximately 100.000.0110 tons-and said the industry ls nre- ndditional produc- t0 mat =d moose-ton stockpile (in transit). ll )0000 tons leeseelptlee Delivered. 00.00 lull. ll-IO- other Provinces I ill-A. Ill-U- USSIA HHIREBB? lar Mark Capture Dnepropetrovsk lion. G. B. Ilowe Back In Ganada MONTREAL. Oct. Z5 —(CP) — Munitions Minister flow‘; returned to Canada irom the Commonwealth Air Confer-sung in I-Iwltnln tonight aboard a. trans Canada. air lines mulfl- engiml plane. He was accompn ' d hy 1|, _|_ Syrnington, president of T. C, A "Id BYAK- James L Melville o! Ottawa. iormer chiei engineer of the Canadian forces over. eels, who has returned to inks up the post or chairman o! the ‘Canadian Pensions Commiss- on. Mllnltlons Minister paused only briefly st Dorval Airiiort and then resumed his trip by air to Ottawa. He rel- fused to discuss the London conference. saying h! woum make his report to the Govern. ment tomorrow. Georgetown Soldier Killed In Action The Canadian (Active) Armv, I its 384th overseas casualty Ilse c the war had the iollowlns name finder the heading, killed in action. “loyal Canadian Engineers: Nova Scotla and Prince Edward Island Regiment “Fouchere. Rudolph James. Pte, 0514, Mrs. Irene Fouchere (moth- er) Georgetown P E. I Pte, Fouchere was s son of Mr. . William Fouehere. who A brother. Howard Fou- chere, is also serving in the Can- adian Army. Two sisters, Gladys and Constance, reside at George- own To Deliver More Wheat At Lakehead WINNIPEG, Oct. 25 —iCP) The Canadian Wheat Board an- nounced todav that action ha! been taken to assure delivery or 60,000,- 000 bushels oi wheat at the Lake- head within the next 40 days i0 provide grain ior the Unit/rd Kins- dom. Canadian mills and supplier urgently required ior feeding pur- poses in the United States. t FMNT PRnlslz _NE’ER won 944. gloomy Washington reports ol looming coal shortness. the instilte said the visible Unit- ed Stat) stockpile totals 75,000,000 tons. In addition there is an esti- 10 “iloatlnil" and st least l-ligh tide this morning at 0.3) and tonight at. 10.14. Sun sets this aiternoon at 5.50 and rises tomorrow morning at 1.31 New moon Oct. 28. 9.59 p. m. Summerside tide 1B minutes Iat- er than Charlottetown- DAIL! AIR. SERVICE Charlottetown — Slllnlliolllfle - Monoton Leave Charlottetown 7-35 a. m- l2.00 noon. 4.30 m. Arrive Cherloletown 1.10 p. III- in the invisible 5,45 p. m. 1.05 p. m- stoclpile stored in homes Unmoved by what it termed "sup- sUNpAY SERVICE position slsrums," the institute said that the industry is elevated Am" Chuhmmwn a.“ m m GOO-ton quota bv thelend of the vear, and declared this lmggléll to meet. the previously eat 000.000 could probably be raised to 1100.000 tons for 1044, ii extra ates = -. itlallnialusnds y iciory Bonds bro- duction is needed to meet United heave Charlottetown l1 n00"- r. s. l.-N.S. rem Sefliee "l"! 'nl:ldvl:‘W's0‘1!|e‘ld.lyllunds—l0.0G l.m "' c--ua»»._l2.l_s__a-a_~-“ ARMY WEEK