HAXII IL i use: rm: Ileleel-II elthe gevlued ',:r‘ltl'lr"a.i‘ms...""“" the ----..........r:o=.:..-.:~ lEverym-C-i-tizen Strongly Urged To Buy V Island Tbtal Nazi’ Retreat l For Finish Of Germany lelrer lilnieter Invites Premiere To lienferenee | __ (YITAWA, Oct. Z0 -— (UP) - LI- ler Minister Mitchell announced tonight that he had invited "l! Iremlere of the provinces to semi representatives to e Dominion-Pro- vincial conference to no neld here November lth. Draft coping fig the, government's new posed bo IINgl-n cov- ering’? e control‘ enll In?» le- iellens. ll be ed before dele- getee to the con erenee. it use understood the provinces have ed been with 0091s; o! pale ty end mlnoritv repel-g, on the bor inquiry conducted eeverer ninth: ego In bor Board the Nlllfmll We!’ Madrid Says Nazis Quitting Crimea MADRID, Oct. 20 — (AP) --'l‘he newspaper‘ ABC esid today that the Germans already are withdrawing from the Crimea. anish Press correspondents in quoted spokesmen there H. i‘ i s _ o0 danger.- ii0lillli EVENTS . -0. \' " i“ 5' "M nuribflt-er. the! t rthvvar lo floater?“ riisiieereeiir "fielder-Can O0 Pridl. o. v° l0-%-3l- "Talkies-Helpers Wednesdly- u‘ ro-sa" . ‘rracedie l0-Tl-2i. "York Wednesday. Victory loan INHDI. sound Movies. 8 p.m. 1046-3. _.___. m” ' uerade Deuce St. re lev-ygihey Qth. Good prises -\, 10 Z’! 2i "Concert and box social cove- bced liall. Thursday, Oct. H, at ti: P. M. l0 2'1 2i “Kingston. November 10th. Ba- ll". M: social. entertainment. Ad- mission fifteen cents. IO-ZT-ll-Ofli. "Unleediru cer Barley. bulk. ghursday end Bidav momi-m. une bees. Court a son ligdarcrg. i i "Masquerade dancc Iell. "r-‘ridev. 3th. Prices "Alexandra Women's lnstitui-fi Pantry Btio. More 8t Moi-morib- 5"- ludev. October eoth. r 41-30- "Booking orders for bulk wheat. Cer will arrive November 1st. D. M. Meltinnon, Murray River. l0 2'! ii "Women's Institute dance in Wiltshire Hall on Thursday, Get. nth. r0 2'1 2i all. u siiwefvedbngd mbécngbner r GIG . I , ma. eso r. M. ‘i y rode-ax. “Bourie ‘Thursday-Free Bound Vile. 2 shows, St. Mary's Hall Loan Meeting also. TO-M-Zl COM gtver h. "Kingston Women's Pantry Bale lioimens Store. Saturday, Oct 30th for War his-pose. l0 2'1 1i esauerade Dance, Vernon ell. Wednesday, October Prilel. 10-26-21. “Reserve Saturdey Nov. 27th llotre Dense Alumnae lT-ummego llle- re n n "Wanted to buy live end dressed ‘Ilvhee and m1. Paving w: market prices. Island cold Li“, s sin-Chi“ moors: e u; an ornstijtggug; "Ohgken . Depot, ' Hell. t ‘I. ednesdey first; "-- mw nuns‘. Ooene to llasq rede deuce in I Hall Oofnuelth. Ju lnl et 0.00. Prizes and lu es. l0 T! ii ‘U “libel-vs Thursday, October lth _ l Pwheet . i‘ ‘I variety so m rsurn tingle“. aid oi’ thz am . ted Ohiuch. ro so Hot Chick- uelt Sets Trdp B! John M. llightovever Associated Press ltaff Writer WASHINGTON. Oct. 26 - (AP) — German armies falling back in Russ!“ Md Italy toward an innner fortress of Europe actually’ iiro set- ting the trap for the final destruc- tion of their own homeland. The more they retreat to shorten their lines and strengthen their Positions for ground fighting the more they lay open Germany's cit- ies and industrial resources to nt- tack from the air. This is one of the most import- Bnf- Points to keep in mind about the European war today. According to the old standards of Warfare. the German is shrinking his fronts, shortening his supply lines and generally strengthening his grip on his vital central posit- ion. This central position includes B11 first vast area from western France lo the heart of conquered Poland and from Northern Italy and the Central Balkans to the North Ses which the Reich generals know they must hold to win even a chance to avoid complete defeat. In so far as ground action alone is ’ it ls conceded by some Allied leaders that once Germany has drawn her armies into that 19,-. tress she can offer powerful defen- oo find mil’ be able to muster occ- asional offensive strength. These leaders confidently ex. pect. therefore, that when the Germans have consolidated their final ground positions they will come forward with peace proposals on the arisument that since the Am" "Y! Bot hope to w n without enormous cost they should agree to en ‘armistice on terms short o1 unconddlohal surrender. However. with Allied air power in the ascendancy and German a“. iel defences steadily weakening it ll B" 0W1! question whether the Germans ever will be able to stop and consolidate their ground 111,95 foléva W121; otflposiition. 9H oy o succeed, will not be able to stop Allied b??? N" from striking across their Efound defences at the supporting industrial elements without which "W" military fronts eventually must disintegrate. Fingerprint Evidence In Murder Trial oxamination of Meichcn w o hfld estifled that there were burned hairs on the defendant's anus af- er the slayin . that De MarrBnY could not uce the shirt ho th i tal ihi’, w“ °' wffffafiiltraé’ rfmsé‘ ‘is. gouns . . . Cellohder up ainst Melchen eodfly W" ques on as to when the witnes first learned of the mares-aloe o! De Marignyk little right finger which Barker will testify was found on a figured bedecreen. ll. B. And ll. S. Loan Totals i. This rs 40.0 of the province's $36,509- JOHN N34! 00f. U -' firunewioku total in eeo $°f$€'-'r“-r.°§“§i>‘ie‘§§°v‘§ ‘ii u’ ' r "aibscrr tions Iv Kw saber, . quota. i § s Q @8- NASSAU, Bdhlmas. Oct. 30 — ___ t th 100 mark, _ lfuin ,§§,"f§°$,',‘§°,n‘¥§§,f.l§,¥§§ our’ a Centres with more than a0 pot Sir arry Oakes’ slaying told w. cent of thlcié gcnerarbrggirgasscaollg- day of learning only after Alfred Jootivc incu o‘ Shier,“ m, “c: de Marigny was arrested that e 05.3, Summer? dc. . . 3a e fingerprint of the accused son-in- boo. $913k “1- "9- p P raw was found in the death room. Breton. 3-’ 681 Vllleyfl-ldr Q“? --s~~»==." We W .1... sir Oscar Bedford Daly in tho re- glwou gal; 331: -- r bént cords of the Bahamas Quill?!“ "95’ " ' De ' Court after Capt. E. W. Melohen said he traveilled fogofltleairzolurs 116:3: _ ompan c a . - 3...... t. so... .1... s... Yugoslav PilfllSflllS m“? “Md ‘"5 "“fi§.""t“.iaT {i8 man ev enc w Ctrogn 55ers a. convict n. Marlgnv ||| flgw suggggggg o ur r. The fact came out durl cross- he ique announced today s said that Vienna had been bombed liow Stands At $1,151,250 The total in the lifth Victory Loan in this Province continms .0 move upward but there l; sun as 1°"! way to go before the goal is reached. Last night sunscrqmons in the first eight days of the 1B- dpy campaign xrood at Shluaftali. 'lhc objective is sa,u0o,u00. UAIlI-‘lflls were Ctlniiuflnt the Eoai would be reached but they Wlod everyone to invest every possible dollar in the loan, A victory bond ealo at, Sum- momde last nlgnt was o. great success and preliminary applica- tions Wore received for bonds l0- ‘Milling $140,400, rt wag learned. [he sales, when completed Will bring the total for Prince County to $140,700. The quota for the County is $1,150,000. Bv districts the amoral totals (with quotas in bracketsi were: Summerslde, $348,450 (§550.000): Prince County outside ummer- side, $243,850 ($000,000); Uhar- lo town, $366,000 i 15,000); Queen's County outside harlot-w- town. $109,500 ($415,000); King's County. $83,450 ($400,000). UITAWA, Oct. 26 — (GP) ~Na- tional Headquarters ggtifnawd night that Canadas rifth Victory Loan should roll “suwtantialiw over the ssouooocoo mark when to- days figures become available on overnight wires — with the cum- ulative total going to $550,000.00.) or better if the current dairy aver- age is maintained. Today's headquarters a d that Monday's subscriptions mounted to Srmlil _ to ‘ orin the grand total to $481,279,230. Those figures compared with a one-day total of 855,800,350 and a cumulative total of $436,345,250 at the same stage of the fourth drive. It has been estimated a. daily av- erage of $66,666,000 wru bu requir- ed to meet the loarrs si,200,00rJ.0cn oblectlve within the 10-day cam- paign, now running through if: second week. Officials said that. while the grand total was running ahead 0f through the recording system show- ed that, at the seventh day of the canvass, general sales and pa roll subscri tlons totalled “comet ing like" 2 per cent of the $535,000,000 objective for that division in e lit- tle more than 38 per cent of cam- pai rr time. " s was taken by loan officials to indicate that unremitting herd work is necessary tuoughout the rest of the loan period," tonight's statement said. Headquarters said that in a sec- saw race, Shnwinlgan Falls, Que, once more leadx _—.;nntf0rd, Ont... in the general canvass and pay- roll swings race, by 88.8 per cent to 84.3. Lethbridge, Alto... is thlr .tl still aiming LONDON. Oct. 26—<AP)—YuI0- slay partisan fighters have driven the Germans from the st Nazi- held wntra of heavy industry in Bosnia. central Yugoslavia. captur- ing the steel city of Varesmnvdan after a 12-hour battle. a Yugoslflv notional liberation army Commun- Stockhoim reports. meanwhile. on Sunday. and declared the bomb- era came from l-‘ogeia in Italy in the first American raid from new bases there to hit Austria and Hun- gary. Yugoslav patriots assisted the ro.id by sabotaging Axis commun- ication lines to Austria. and south- rrn Germany. these reports added. The Stockholm newspaper - okraten said there was chaos in Vi- ll in the unexpect- ed ra rpm the so e er- rnens had told t pools that the bomb-shattered Fascia. ei would not be ready for use by Al- lied planes for another week. ifould Boost Tax 0n II. S. Liquor WASHINGTON. Oct. 26—(AP)—- The 1-1 of Representatives we e d ey to boos the United States from td lon to I10. but rejected all propos- els for any increases in tobacco or eesollne levies. Committee members estimated fncresoed liquor 5% that under the the total levy on e drink of proof liquor. estimation 80 drinks of the season w "°fifr'r'i""m"ia°'flr'b'fé mlfil £1 Wednesday evening "l- IIeeenone. sen “$9 plum l. d 12.5 cen 3' ‘nition to groin growers oi ,».... (levers Prince Edward Island Like tire Dew cnarworrmuwlv. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1943 Tunas CAPTURE us TOWNS m ITALY amounts ictory Bonds BIIIII IIIIII Bracken Appeals For Fair Deal For Agriculture Progressive Conservative Leader Outlines Broad Programme For Improvement And Development Following is the summary of on address of notion-wide import- ancedellvered yesterday by Hon. John Bracken, leoder of the Pro gresslve Conservative Forty, of Letlibridge, Alberto: Our objectives for agriculture ore three in numbe : lst-Equolify for formers in the Conodion economy; 2nd—Tbe maximum contribution of agriculture to the welfare of the Canadian people; 3rd—The conservation, as well us the development, of our greatest heritage-lire nTOTGhOIISG of wealth in flue upper foot of the nation's soil. objectives -- Equality for Agriculture. l sholl indicate vurious steps towards recovery of that position. Al" the moment, offer many years of unnecessary deloy and pro- crastination by the Government, o measure of improvement hos been promised in on; section oipgricullure. It is n tardy recog- inequities too long perpetuated; ond in its application is creating still other inequities to producers of live- stock and duiry products. Be that as it may, what agriculture needs is o recognition of ifs fundamental right to equity — not oc- casional hand-outs having the character of charity. In whet follows here I om thinking of agriculture in terms of post-war pence. Unless present attitudes toward tliot industry ore radically changed. the future promises to bring only o repetition of the pre-wor ups ond downs ond strains ond stresss ond iniusfices, so deeply etched on the minds of many formers who went through the trying times of the thirties. These steps toward recovery for agriculture ore meant to be o rational approach toward placing those engaged in that industry in o position of equity with other Conudions who make comparable contribution to our Canadian welfare. , (Continued on page 5. Col l) e ‘ Anaiy nv rum: n. SIMPSON (Associated Press Wu n) ' Russian-German Naeidonfs greatest crisis is taking shape en the death grapple in the Dnieper Bent] and south of it. On its outcome, and on the Russian’. ability to exploit f-win break- throughs that have shattered the Nazi right flank position from Kiev 1° the (Jrirnca, may turn the whole trend of the struggle. By contrast. the slow-paced Allied advance in ltuly offers small pros- pect of curly decisive ileve opmenta- There remains no doubt, however, that Anglo-American troops ° -—-methodicaily, remorselessly an y re aiding heir Army n: mrades-ln-nrms as much as though t ey were fiJhtlnI ‘hm-‘Mu’ to shoulder with them in Russia. _ They were pinning the bulk of the Nazi strategic reserves in a iosilll battle. The Nazi press now admits that lack of those troops to braciltho east front has forced the German retreat to the Dnieper. and now a f If" to the Bug line that could become a morale-cruehin disaster. in Italy the fight obviously ls entering a new p use, the first ilhfllfi of the actual battlr of Home. Allied military spokesmen figure thntblll: Neel retreat from the Voltumo-Biferno line north of Naples is o o" complete-l. The enemy, by every‘ sign, is preparing to stand again on l! short ilne from the Mondragone lli.s on the Tyrrhenian coast to V8510 on the Adrinic shore. it is a well-buslioned front, desoribcd by Allied spokesmen as "HEB"! ideal for defensive purposes. loo it r an °“ ‘.i"‘.i"i",' ‘lifi‘5’i'i"3§§' maps. There seems smell hope o any s en en ec s vs e r " through by frontal attack given enemy will to fight it out on lhai "m"- ln this discussion l shall confine myself to the first of these. i HON. JOHN BRACKEN Army Program 0n Market Square This Afternoon Citizens who visit Market Square at 2.30 p.m. today will see Canadas "Men in Kh in action under training conditions as the young soldiers stage the second of their training demonstrations as rmrt uf Army Week of m. Fifth Victory Loan Officeu. instructors and men from the Basic Training Centre at Beach Grove will present e. ‘three- ring" program. designed ‘to let the bond-buying public sue the troops doing the some type of training u recruit undcrtwes a5 he progresses from a civilian to a trained soldier. The dcady bayonet, renowned for its moraieshnttcrinq effect. will be featured in the first part of the demonstration. Recruits and in- structots will demonstrate modern methods of bayonet fighting in- cluding the charge. hip-firing of rifles and the lethal butt stroke. Reports from the front indicate the enemy is still of baypnnts cold steel. especially when handlcd by n well-trained fighting man. Lieut. Bram Nickel"- son will be in charge of this part of the Droxrnm. The second part of the demon- r4 _,,__ from rope climbing to agility ex- ercises. conduct the program. A boxing show will round out, the program. and the bublio will scr- some good scraps as the Beach Grove mitt-wielders have a each other. Boxing is an important part of the recruits training. and the boys make up in determination what they may lack in skill and experience. Tm bouts will bc direct- ed by Lieut. Frank White. Yesterday soldiers from Beach Grove staged a realistic capture of an "tnemy" machine gun post. Rifles, Brsns and Starr guns cur- ried by the attackers cracked 1n Rochford Square and thunder- fiash explosions rent the air as the troops advanced on the sand- boggerl nbicctiva. After the post was captured. the men out on a demonstration of battle first uid using cnlv the first ficld dressing carried by every soldier and parts of his own web equipment to dross the simulated wounds A commentary on tho sham battle was given bv Lleut HNA Mac- Donald, who commanded the de- The line also is the lest short and well inseeretod natural fluent‘ front zrrruss the Italian Rollie hllll- A ifllllo "flwmk of major highways and out "f Rilme- "T" l0 "" infer its mountain end river bulwnrks - light the Mondragone-Vaeto line is vulnerable on both flanks as Woll es in the centre where e tlnl’ v°lllfro and Eseil- amla it can be turned by leap-frog amphibian ou- eretione at either end es were successive Nazi positions In Sioilv es "W Allies drove their war around the Mount Einl billion- ._ ?—1—-—.—-——-——-——————_ _. Japs Driven From Air Bases ~, HEADQUARTERS (A kesrnan at South Pecifio Boutlifvv-esltilglaaciflc. Oct. 27 -- (Wed: hesdqirnrrfcrsddf Addmiral Wlgijevm __ ._ -F‘.H.l sei Tue ay een s Md“) ‘A?’ Cmsmit bom mougirsrfirue fields of Kahlil and Knrp have not been used since 00L 23 and that the g1, the shortlsnds also is inopera- t ve.) binge by hundreds of Allied planes apparently have compelled the Jap- lo cease using their most im- Northern snese portant eir bases in the ‘Solomons. t0 the lull < 1d iln u. £1‘; tli“wtufi"irfi”ima“ri‘f I all “III IQKL Ballele Island field z tachmant. and riFs/trlntlrrrs oi the first aid tiy-v unfilled was given bv the soldiers themselves nw-r a pub- lic address svstcm. The Training Centre Band played during the demonstration. J. Gordon Worth a First Great War vetrran. gave the Anny the us-o of his house for Dower connections. On ‘Thursday m. the Market. Square weapons usrrl bv the Army will be on exhibit, including riflts bavonefs. Bren and Sterr guns. pis- tols end 2 nnd 3-inch mortars. Bren carriers will also bc in tho display and skilled instructors will explain the use of each weapon. The display will iv in chsrxzr- of‘ Lieut. JJ MacDonald. IlCJNi, Thr rlisnlnv will open to the public of. .30 lLm. Friday's demonstrations will be‘ concerned with chemical warran- and will relate how a nae attack is combntted bv soldiers who arc fully equipped to moot and over- come this form nf denth The troop: and equipment np- pearing in all these rlcmonstrat-iom hnvc been used bv kind permission of Mslor A. S. Robertson. office:- commbndiniz No. 62 Basic Training Centre Britain Gets [Tihsvt Synthetic Rubber IDNDON. Oct. 2B — (C?) tnin has received the first promised supply of synthetic rub- ber from the United States shipments are expected to 030N800 12 PAGES "maintained and increased“. said may hove boen dropped by elth Capt. George Morgan (‘larro - Jon- n training plane for purposes cs. Parliamentary Secretary nf the “OM50 Ministry of supply, in pgply to g searching craft from another sta question in th f Commons 1°11 IIIOIIIQIII Delivered, Ill. UM “Al: other Proviaeee I IJJ. I-lt First Ffiiéé Of Campaign Ended By E. KENNEDY A. P. Press War Corre- spondent ALGIERS. Oct. 26- _(AP)-The Anglo-Amer rcan 5th and British 8th Armies striking forward: up to six miles have cap- tured 10 more towns, al- lied headquarters. an- nounced today, winding up the first phase of the battle for ltaly as the Germans withdrew into a new mountain defence line stronger than any they have held before. The new line, running from Mondragone on the Tyrrhenian coast north- east of Venafro and then to Vasto on the Adriatic. apparently is where the Germans have decided to make their first "per- manent" stand. Th e position has natural ad- vantages of mountains extending right across the peninsula and run- nmg several ridges deep. The Allied armies. having con- quered all of southern Italy in a 54 day campaign, now are confronted lb)’ a much more difficult task. hirer/mi; crossed the Vcliurno an lngrro Rivers, they might. be said t,‘ have hurdled the moat of Hitler's fortress Europe. and they no‘ stand before its first great wall. Tho Pflomyls retirement to the shortest and best defensive line anywhere between Napleg and Rome and reports that Field lvlar- shal ETWlTl Rommel is bringing more troops into northern Italy were accepted as certain sign; that the Germans are detrrmlncd to hold Rome at least through the winter. It was even regarded as possible that the Nazis intend w launch a counter offensive. The 0th Army, whose Trigno Riv- 91" crossing Wus disclosed today to have been made at the Adriatic coast, scored its most recent advances fa] inland. Advancing six miles west from Vinchlaturo they captured Boiflno. on the main inland high- way toward the key communicat- ions centre of Isernia, and five oth. er towns. The Canadian 1st DivLs. ion. part of the 8th Army, has be", reported operating in the ggngra) area of Vinchlaturo. The conquest of southern Italy has given the Allies advantages much more important than the mere possession of the soil cf one third of the peninsula. It has meant the ontflanking of the Germans in the Balkans: ll has elven the Allies new nir- bagel frcm which to strike at the eastern sections of Germany: it ha; driver: "It dwindling German nlr force back to bases in the Rome aren end thus has made Mediterranean ship- ping more secure from enemy air attacks: It has provided new naval bases l" Nflliles. Taranto and Bari; it has enabled the Allies to seal the mouth of the Adriatic sea end make in- roads on the German coastal shin- ning along both coasts of the Ad- riatic. V, H Moscow Reports 'Nazis In Disordered Retreat By Judson Q'Quinn Associated Press Staff Writer Oct. E —- (AP) — Soviet forces captured a railway station only 2 1-2 miles from strat- egic Krivor Rog today as the Ger- mans - retreating in dsorder be- fore the blows of three Russian ar- mies —- sought to extract them- selves from the closing Dnleper bend trap, Moscow announced. The midnight Russian commun- ique reported that Soviet units took Karnovatke, 2 1-2 miles northwest of Krivoi Rog, industrial, iron ore sud rail centre deep into the Dniep- er River bend which the Germans said the Red Army is storming. The Germans made no effort to conceal the gravity of the plight of their armies in southern Russia. The German high commend ack- nowledged penetrstlons in the Mel- itopol sector after fierce battles, and said only that "some" were sealed off, thus implying that other; were not. Tire‘ Germans announced, a afior the Russians told of its the evacuation of Dnepropetrovsk and they said the Russians were bringing up fresh forces for the assault on Krivoi Rog. . . Although the Russians reported only reconnaissance and artillery action on sectors other than those in the south, Berlin said that the Red Anny had launched an attack "on a brvad from" west of Krichev in White Russia. a front about which Moscow has been relatively silcnt lately - perhaps in prepay- ation for an announcement of a big break through. Big Liberator Still Missing ANCIENNE IDREZITE, 28 — (OP) — An indication that a Que“ 00t- Savings On Deposit In Chartered Banks OTAWA. Oct. 26—(CPJ——SavinRs on dvoosit in Canada's chartered banks at Sept. 30 last amounted w SL998,904.500 eginst 81.95.732.000 at Aug. 31 and 31.748.248.009 8i Sept. 30, 1942, the chartered bank statement for September showed tods . Gail loans in Canada amounted to S34.088.000 at Sept. 30 as against $35,233.000 at Aug. 3i and $26,516.- 000 Bl; Sept. 30. i942 inc APPROACH 4o EAsY SfnaaT , ’ \s Lmco wrfu ' NERvous wREcus l Boston. Oct. 26 ~ iCPl - Maine forecast: Continued cool Wednes- day and Wednesday evening with rain in south portion. strong wlndi on the coast of south portion ant fresh winds inland. High tide this mcrnlnR at 10.3) and tonight, at 10.49, Sun sets this evening at 5.57 and rio" tomorrow mornirru nt 732. ~v moon Oct. 2“. 959 n.m. n mmorside tide l8 minutes inter irlrlcdilreft lmaty“ have attempted a thhir Chnrloticfxrivzr a ng n m St. 14* m,“ vane, at‘: he“ 873113‘; out! em ssnvlcs o" still beins Dioired up by search- lnl aircraft was seen tonight in the pilot he hed spot- in the Woods report from one ted e parachute in that vicinity. lare Parachute flares can be used at» night by planes attempting a for-l -—'Br1- ced landing or sometimes for pur-‘ of a roses of correcting a course. 11w} flare drops slowly by parachui and lighting up the whole area. Therm be is a possibility, however. the flare‘ er nnothig including Sundlye. checking or by Charlottetown — Sllrnme side - Moncion Leave Charlottetown 7.35 e. m. l2.00 noon. 4.30 p. ni. Arrive Charlottetown 1.10 p. l. 3.45 p- In. 1.05 p. m. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown l2 noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5,45 p. m. P E. l.-N.S. Ferry Service "l"! 2.‘, Leave Wood Islands-I'M In hi.“ rJvTJoernnu-Il ea. ere