MAXIMS OIL MERE MAL‘ a habit. llid a succession becomes a olsarsoln, Repeated sets of kinilnese been, ll habits Charlottetown Guardian, ‘IIa Cont!» Ioruisg Guardian, [sanded Ill! \\t 72%’ The People's aper Read by Everybody Covers Prince some IslandLilre the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANABA. THURSDAY, Nova MBER 26, 1942 s Pacts we do not MERE MAN The harder It is to be kind when braver our kindness is. MAXIMS CIA want to be, the better and Annual Subscription Delivered, $3.00 a; Illlll P. s. l. $4.00: to other Provinces and o, s. a. ss.eo .‘_ .____ _it Iii-IT JAP DESFTROYERS SUN K, THIRD DAMAGED prive 0n Tunis A_i_1d Bizerte To, Beg 300,000 Nazis Are , Near Encirclement Soviets Estimate German Casualties At 138,000 In Battle Of Don River Bend. Says Potato Price Boiling To Be Revised HAIITLAND, N.B., Nov. l6- (cr, - ‘use price ceiuug on recently announced by we rrwos swam, is only a tern- purary measure and vvni be r6- placed within two woess by a pgfnfllun‘ ceiling arrangement set at a llxeu price with monthly moron“. It. ti. Hatfield, M. r. for Victoria - Carleton, slated touay IllWn his return from 0v- tow a. ‘iilr. Hatfield said the "new policy" will no better adapted to the needs of the industry 8B0- it is believed, will meet with euerai approval.” It ls hoped t will provide s better market price for the growers, which will result in general approval throughout this part of tiie pro- vince, Mr. Hatfield added. The New Brunswick member said he discussed with the Ag- ricultural Supply Board t e matter of supplying potatoes to the armed forces and an lir- recment was reached relx No, 1 small, will be accepte Previously a standard of No. 1 only had been accepted, 0ntario Gov’t To Garry 0n TORONTO, Nov. 25—fCP)—Tha Ontario government as presently constituted will carry on during the nest session of the legislature after which s. general convention of the Liberal Associations cf Ontario will be called to choose a permanent leader and to decide the future Doiicies of the rovinciai Liberals. This was deci ed today in a cou- cus oi Liberal members of the leg- islature who met for the first time since Gordon D. Conant succeed- ed Mitchell l". Hepburn as Premier in a dramatic move Oct. 21. Decision to carr on the lei-UP through t e next egisla- ture session and to call a conven- tion the following session was en- lillmsd by e- 47-5 vote, Coming Events 0-0- "Talkies sour-u wiondsy. ii-sa-si "Tomes-International squadron Mgiungue Saturday. 11-00-21 "Farmers wishing to ship dress- tii 1108B advise McGuigan and Boyle. 11-21-101 "Iona Hail, Thursday, last dance season, Miilvlew Orchestra?“ m "Rummage Sale-Trinity Church $811 Saturday November "ma" Supper at John Brown's 51ml. Tonight, Thursday, u m u "St. Peters Bay, iday 27th. Last dsnc r ason our ds o h tr e or se or Rickie‘ “Livestock Marketing Beard not buying weaner pigs until further notice. 11 26 it N”!!! 0f "Trucking rims ss usual for tho Iiimmer months. Liist Your hose with A. O. Green A b and G. - Green. Emerald t-e-v-i -W-'l‘-M-tf "Arrivi in s few days cur wheat and rie . Book orders. Will Ibo mill llid bend feeds for snv requirements. lari lull. Mt. Her- bert. 11.35.33 d "Buying Ohicberi andllpwl Mon- kllys and Thllfldly . Highest mai- ti» prices. Dawson and Johnston Crapaud. 11.31.“. "Livestock Marketing Boardin- “ims "Wit two oar-loads of OI at Charlottetown this weekend. As- “mbiiilil Thursday and Friday. Richest market rice paid regular- ‘Y- 599ml prem um on h grad- z select, Truwlng lance re. Vlded on request. 11- s-ii "liurmers from all parts of the Province sre complimenting us the eorcellent market-ins zrrvice we are rendering each "k and the extra amount of "ltlney their hogs are netting when 31f thlWsh our o snisstion we cif. the patrons e of all hog groducers. Livestock Marltstin °"'i- 11-20- By Ilddy Gilmore Associated Press Staff Writer MOSCOW, Nov. 30 —('l‘hursday) —-(AP)—The lted army strikins llibW-CJVOXUG Don ss River junction in s move threatening rapidly to complete the envelosment of the 300,000-mon German assault army at Stalingrad. . A special soviet communique, the fourth in four mya. announced also that the Nazi foil in dead and captured now stood at 08.000. and another 140,000 Germans have been wounded in the bloody battle of the Don River Bond. The Russian axmies occupied Novomaximovsky and Btarronsxim- ovsky at the junction of the Dori and Chir Rivers, d6 miles south- west of Stalingrad. the communique said, without detailing the sig- nificance of this advance. This indicated one of two de- velopments. Either the Russ-an army which struck across the Don River at Serafhnovich on the north side of the Bend penetrated clear across that strsgetic elbow to the southern side, or the Rod army column driving down the Stal niIrod-Novorossisk railroad had turned northward to link up with the upper Soviet army. Held dispatches ad reported only u 30-mile gap remained to be closed in the Don elbow to encircle the Nazi Stalingrad armies. ‘These reports preceded the issuance of the latest special communique, which did not give the new miicase rolled u by the Soviet offensive begun ov. 10. Sentenced T0 25 Years And l0 Lashes MONTREAL. Nov. 25 — (OP) - Jud e Edouard Archumbsuit. today sen need Dominic Telesco, 21, and John Hunt, 25. to 20 years’ im- prlsonment with 10 lashes of the whip for the torture of one of their victims duririsr an armed holdup in the ’!‘ic Tcc Cafe here Nov. 1b. A witness, Harry Diamond. told how he saw the men anniv burning boner to the soles of Louis Dott- ner‘.= feet. in an effort to learn the combination of the safe Goebbels Shows Signs of Worry NEW YORK, Nov. 8 —-(AP) - A revealing article by German Propaganda Minister Joseph Gob- bels broadcast by the Berlin radio tonight inilicatcs mat the Cell;- man peope are m; swayed y Allied Propaganda and are con- cerned sbout the German reverses. Itlthenriore, throughout the act- icie is the strong suggestion that the Nazi leaders are gravely worried about German morale. In one of the franlrest articles Goebbels has yet written in the weekly r/"lication Dias Reich, the Propaganda Minister told the Ger- mans that they must try to n". Pass the encmy not oriLv in gainin victories "but also in the art oI mssterin! reverses." Ford Plant Still Tied llp By Strike WINDSOR. Ont... Nov. 2-(0?) - There was no slsn wmsbt o! settiemcnr. oi the some which h“ closed down the hUIO plant of w! Fore Mow: uomccny of 0111508 Ontario despite an appeal from lAbor Minister Hill’ Hflllan ill Toronto for a return to wchlr pend- in settlement nelotili-ifilll- [luring the day mm Motor Coin- pony President Wallooe B. Camp- bell, issued a statement in which ascribed the tshtriire as illolll hsd not employed hourly the women rates thsdhirodl’! wornenior cleric work at rates of pay eb- proved by Go man's rate of pay. WRIT! Till IOICIB Will NIIW ATIBIOBD. N.l., Nov. (Cg -'l‘histo is staging forces woe from Nov DecJ. Idealstosoothatno New Waterford man or women in envelopes ‘d tion If! will b! dlltfibilglnd tbo~ ch h , d itiasn wiifobefiskzd m, w-r-Iite c.3013 ad- dressee of the envelope he receives. the sdf will ith I w" nor-as..." ' c . 1 st Army 0n . Verge 0f Big Offensive I . Axis Making Great Efforts To H o I d Bridgehead In Tun- lSlfl. By BLAKE SULLIVAN Associated Press Staff Writer ‘LONDON, NW. 25- (AP) -—'l‘he grand Allied assault on Tunis and Bizerte is about to be launched by the force of British Lh-Gen. Ken- neth Anderson. the Morocco Radio announced tonight, while Amari- csn and Britt-m planes in relays pounded Axis hotbeds over the whole ‘Ihinisian battleground. The Morocco Radio declared that Anderson, loader of the British 1st Army and s. supporting force of Americans, is on the verge of be- ginning e, large-scale offensive. It said further that his forces had once more thrown back s. German column in an engagement zsmiies south of Tunis. Make Progress The regular communique of the Allied Force Headquarters in North Africa merely said that the British 1st Army is making satis- factory progress in operations a- gainst the enemy in eastern for- ward areas. _ The Axis poured aerial rein- forcements into Sardinia and Sic- iiv and flew trccrps to ‘Tunisia while Foreign Secretary Eden in the House oi Commons twice cm- phasired that tize battle of North Africa has reached an "extremely critical" phase. The determined efforts to rein- force . v it..p_l_ain that the Germans an Italians will try to win in Tunisia at ariv cost-even perhaps at the expense of the Russian front or the battered re- treatinlz forces in Libya, which ap- parently will be left to make what- ever stimd they can at E1 58116110- Gorman broadcasts said that their Tunisian forces had been re- inforced b armored lei-motions, mechunizc detachments and ar- tillery and that their hold on the coastal and inland highways had been strengthened. There has been ample evidence that the Germans and Italian! were reinforcing Tunisia, but there ‘have been no such reports of help for Marshal Erwin RcmmeYswenrY legions. This may be due to the difficulty in moving SWP-‘Plle! miles from Tripoli. Planes from Russia One indication of the IQZWNiS to which Hitler wa= going to hold I bridgehead In Africa was the f6- port of John Jorvie, Australian Correspondent. who cabled from Algiers that Axis planes raiding Allied positions were fighting at stsiirmd three weeks aeo- tdsns statement final the Brittle for Tunisia had reached an ex- trerrvlv critical prose" followed l semi-official warnirez that. the strong Axis forces should not be considered eosv prev fol‘ "he Am"- Predict Gut Soon In Newsprint NEW YORK. Nov. 25—(AP) - Cranston Wiliiims, General Man- ager of the American Newspaper Publishers Association, said today it is likely a cut in news rint pm- duotion will be made in t e United states and Canada within a few aid:- Washington is that officials oi totes and Canadian Governments are giving active cori- siderstion to is to reduce news- rint produotcn low the out in he mm order effecti Ne. l, last. and that it is ve holy the new out will be made e foctiva in a few weeks and possibly not later than around Jan. . "Further information indicates that active consideration is bsiri given plans to be a basis o newsprint consumption both in the United States and Oanaih, and that earl: sctlca may be expected," Dr. S.H. McKee Of McGill Dead DI‘. . Mflkfiro” v. ss-(orn- d If metres: 07o specialist and of melon ssser of s- at M iliwgnivorsity. died n hospital here ay following a esrt attack he suffered two weeh gollowllfland a active o! Dr was head at’ the oph amol cal department of Mon eneral Hospital at the time of tents by menus eye sssmins , in Africa although his failure tn I I I menu from enemy observation. io lift the siege of Stalingrad and Ellsrllssed by preparations for Nazi field command have failed to Russian troop movements on the itary crime. They have, by Hitler's n._.._ ; 3. _._ UstSaivagr: Collections In Dominion . n. . OTTAWA, Nov. :15 --(CP)- voi- untary salvage committees across Canada, which have reported to ‘the salvage- division of the War Services Deparfinent new have 00.186611 more than 105,300 to of scrap materials and horse senile? “P their activities sharply during PB- cent months I The i05,300-t0n figure was based on reports from only‘ 981 05 me 1,964 voluntary comnhitecs organ- ized through the Dominion, and officials said today the total would be very much higher if full re- turns were available-even though they suggested the toi reportins cunrnittecs probably were more act- ‘ve than the others. Salvage marketings by the com- mittees which sent in reports tot- alied 111,367,315 pounds curing the five months ended Oct. 31, coin- pared with 100,124,203 pounds dur- ing the 13 months from May 1, i941, t0 May 3i this year. For the entire 18-month period Manitoba had the hiirhest standing on the bass of pcceiitage of pop- uioticn to percentage of the total salvage collected. Largest bulk of the material sold by weight, was Miler. which totali- ed 87,338,603 pounds. Next came iron and steal, 81.540456 pounds. In addition, the icporting coin- rnitteeg disposed of 6,150,550 pounds of other metals. Concentrated drives to collect scrap rubber yielded 11,001,809 pounds of this commodity. Rag sales reached 8,458,812 pounds. The repmt showed solos of 1,181,- 448 pounds of fat and bones. ii,- 270751 pounds of bottles and glass. and 13,570,991 pounds of unclass- ‘iied materials. - Ontario held first place in total oi’ materials msrkstted with 1M,- SBGAGS pounds. Quebec was second with 38,880,674 pounds and Muni- tobs third with 20,141,360 pounds. Total sales of other rovinces were: British Columbia, 1S. 48,835 pounds; Alberta. 12,054,050; Saskatchewan, 9,601,306: New Brunswick. 5,210,551; Nova Scotro, 3.657.002 and Prince Edward Island, 90,705. Fire Destgys Row Of Homes ‘ SYDNEY MINES. Nov. lb —-(OP) - Fire levelled a row of four sd- joining homes here late today. las- ving our famili s totsiiin 26 por- sons homeless. ll escaped without e wooden homes. owned by the Nova Bcctia Steel and Oosl Com- pony. were about '10 years old. All were of one-storey construction. From the hour of his order to attack Russia, un whom he has most heavily relied have been War Situation Last Night (By Kirke L. Simpson, Assccisted Press War Analyst) Evidence continues to accumulate that the twin-jawed Russian coun- ter offensive in the Don bend caught Hitler as much by surprise in its scope, power and direction as the Anglm‘ ' doubleheaded atta ck foresee it remains a mystery. I I n Blleaks volumes for Red Army staff skill, inasmuch as weeks of preparation under the eyes of Nazi air scouts must have been required to mount such powerful blows. There is little cover available on the barren, windy Russian steppe: to conceal mass troop and supply move- " ll Possible that the Nasl high command already had determined withdraw to winter lines before the Allied offensive in Africa or the Russian flanking squeeze play tools shape. It would take time and meticulous management to effect a re- tlrement from so dccp a. pocket as the Stalingrad salient. Not only men but all manner of heavy army lmpedlmenin would have to be moved back, without prematurely revealing the strategy to the onemy_ O O I I I I so dangerous an undertaking, the give sufficient attention to reported flanks of the great Volgu triangle. llitlcr and the general; guilty of s cardinal mil- admission, repeatedly underestimat- ed_t_he ftle-hismrilolrile. military skill and resources. Mitchell Says No." Manpower Czar Here MONTRl-ZAL, Nov‘. 2.5 — 1GP) —— Labor Miiusrei- riuiiipiucv Mitchell siuo Ill an acidic-is. iiei-e today "Liitie is no iuaiipinv-ei- csar lli England and wc coin. iniy don". vvunt one in uuiiadu." Speaking at a (Kiwanis) service club luncheon which was boycotted by several invited Labor Leaders, Mr, Mitchell made only o. brief re- fficncc- truths resignation of El- M. birth as uuecwr or Nut- ional Selective Service. He_ wus referring to a stormy crossing he experienced on his re- cent return from England wiieii he said: "W's vvrutlrrcd that storm ul- right and we'll vvuiiiiici" the present. storm at Ottawa to the ultimate benefit of this Dominion." He phlci tribute to the Selective Servvice Administration in Britain which he said “'11s a co-opcrativo effort between various ministries with the advice of industry and labor. Mieiiniimc a statement issued by the Montreal Trades and Labor Council, explaining why labor lend- el‘! including President Poul Four- riier. and chief organize,- Robert Haddow turned down their invit- ations to the luncheon, said tin-v “strongly disc. proved" the Labor Ministers ottl WI“ which lad to Mr, Little's resignation, Plenty Money But No Turkey WASHINGTON, Nov. 2r». (up) -The United States observes its first wartime thanksgiving In 25 years tomorrow wit-h swollen pack- etbcoks and shrinking lnrdcrs. For the first time in years, many with money t0 buy were unable to get the traditional turkey and some of the "fixinls" because of local shortages due to the war em- erizency, Flush with war funds, millions crowded food stores throughout the country in [i inst minute iush- to stock up for the holiday". Agricul- ture officials reported that never before had there been such a de- mand for food. But because of lend-Lease re- quirements and the need for sup- piyiilil hundreds of thousands 0i’ troops overseas, there were short- ages of meats. poultry, dairy ro- duets. e388 and some vegeia les. These shortages varied with local- ities. Somc stores instituted their own rationing in ordrr to make s- vaiiable stocks go further. N0 errands MONTREAL. Nov. M_ (OP) — Kliflliltal authorities today report- ed "no change" in the condition of Air Marshal W. A. Bish , v.c., who is undergoing treat-men foran attack of acute pancrsatitis. 'l‘bey Cause of the fire was not known. Q", ,yl,g>,*;=,f__,ig-';j;g"nm,gl;gg_rr Make the most ‘your Tea” "sAlAllA" coursirr or causes. I-IMMD ~ Licut. Robert 0. MacMillan Enroute Home Lieut. Robert C. MacMiilan of Charlottetown, who- has been awarded the Distinguished service Cross and Bar for distinguished servce with the British Navy in the Meditclxaiicnii zirezi 15 in the United States on 111.» “av home, it was learned last night l-fe is a, son o!_Mr. 11.13 lviucMiilan, De- puty Minisler of Piliillt‘ Works and Highways for the Province und Mrs. MacMillan. L'eut. MrlcMillun was awarded, the DS.C 1'11 liie ‘King's Nevis Years iimiors list this year “for outstanding zeal, {.“.\‘fl‘ll"1' and checrfulness and for sewing an rx_ ample for whole-hearrvri devotion to duty wtlicut which the high traditions 0i the Royal Nuvv could i not have [wen upheld." i Last night Mr. liliucMiinn and members oi hi.“ fainiiivj here “we talking by long distance telephone ‘ to Lieut. MricMilian, who landed a few hours earlier at an PIIIQTICQ“ port. The 26-year-old naval horn arriv- ed ht Alcrmnriiu 111 Mo ., i941 He enlisted with the P . can- ndirm Nziizii Voiixn‘ ‘l’ Reserve here the ilrevroiis veal. It Was while he was operating off Tobmk (luring the famous siege of tho mw" b)‘ Axis armies in the summer Cf 194i that he ppy-fnrnwd one of ‘he s1 wipl “pf: which led to inc C‘, >1 '-"-~ 1o Hp was nwnmr-ri [Ill mun".- Four Syxiinvy Youths Chara-aged SYDNEY. N $3.»; 24 n rcp) ~ one of them cri tccluv on and vzm- 'T'he- threwyi-i, 11,513.. . rrililflv‘ in "fob: Cry"? H mantle-d furs». iflflr , ‘hém llcnily f3» Lm n, My, w. ,H.€flk_ ingjnio .» iii-ouch of the 5...,“ BM‘ 0i "#1089" hue arid sicziffng two revolve-rs. Complain List 0f Conservative Delegates By JAMES McCOOK Canadian Press Stair Wriiir UITAWA, Nov. 25- iCP> HOI- licials ht Conservative C l‘vf‘litl0fl| cqunmittee Eeudqunric to- dayi they are compietin the roster oi‘ delegates who will railend the "Leadership and Policy" Conven- tion at Winnipeg Dec. 9. i0 and 11. With all classifications of dele- gates in ‘vlded, 1,19’! will be entit- led to attend and vote, hilt it was estimated only about would actu- ally fake pnrt in 111i d l '.\ r5115. Wartime rESPUIISIIJIIITIEu .. health and other reasons iirc expected to prevent fl number from making the tri to Winnipeg. g. R. Miliier of Edmonton, Con- vention Committee Chairman, now is In the west on Conrcnfioit busi- ness. Conservative sources suid it appears likely Mr. Miincr will be chosen as Convention Chairman. The name of Francis Fuurcux, K. C.. of Montreal, former Bntonnier- men. it was expected llll‘ Conven- tion would choose nine Vice-Chair- men, one from each of the Pm- vlnces. Two vetcrnn Conservatives will be among those making the lciiga est Journeys to tiic W\'1111\;\ As- sembly. Capt. Goo 11.- IIIIWK- ~\'i~P-. Mcrriier of Pariiunicnr frv: Yukon and former speaker vi Po House of Commons, will travel 1,-- from will be one of the delegates that easu-rn Province. Officials said all constituency delegates in the western Provinces have been named. and re rts are awaited from only two ruins’! in OIitRYIO. is ln Quebec end for" i" the Marltimes. There are 243 con- stituencies in all, and each Ls cn- titled to three Convention 0918' gates, lbr-officie delegates include Members of the House of Common! and Provincial Party Lenders. Probe Shooting Of Ontario Couple COBOURO, OnL, Nov. 26-40?) — Illvfifltlflflilmv into the double killing of a 111.111 and a woman whoa: bodies were found. this morn- ing four miles from Cobours was continued tonight bv Police headed by Inspector W. H. lmigheed of Toronto. lace Cunningham, 40,01 Toronto and the Woman was idcntiiisd as Mrs. Tony Fardclis, 38. of Coh- uurg. Both had been shot throuilh the cbcst. No weapon that. might have been used in the shooting wn» found at iii! scene. leadinil police to the the- ory that both had been murdered. Police said tonight they were hold- neratirvn with the murder of Fron- cois Mingun, man at ihc Guaranteed Pure Milk Company plum. eiiriy tcduy. d Crowbiir, Mlngaii ivns found with iii S0011 Enemy-‘Fclils To Land Troops At BesiegeiBuna Close Contact Fighting Rages For Coastal Base; Ja panese Are Put-' ting Up Fierce Fight. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, N0‘ 26-(Thursdziy)—-(CP)—Allied born hers sank two Jap de- stroyers and drimziged a third during futile enemy at» tempts to relieve their tottering defenders of Buna, in today. inortheasi New Guinea, the high command announced n This naval blow was struck while fierce close-contact fighting" raged for the coastal base of Ilunzi the outskirts of which forward elements of the week ago. Toduy’s communique told ericans moving upon careful included dugouts and barbed The Jnps have set up at tributes of a fortress,” the A Allies entered nearly I of the Australians and Arn- ly_pi'epai'ed positions whicli wire. Buna “all the defensive ai- Ilied command stated. . Low, tropical jungles, interspersed with swamp and tidal creek, added to the difficulties of the fighting. En- international iit A Glance (By The Cauadiln Press) ' RUSSIA — licds strike across snowy Don Steppes wrst of Stillln- Kflltl, seize Don-Chir River Junction uiirl lhrcilti-n eiivclopmciit of 300,000 Nazi troops. NORTH AriticTl Grand Al- lied assault poised on Tunis and Bizerle, hioruirco radio announces. "OLOMUYS — Unfit-d Stall‘! illl‘ rillliillllt’ adviuivi- in (illdlillllfiillzil jungles with losses heavily in their favor. AT SEA — Indian trawler, Nelli- crlands tanker, heavily outgunm-d sink Japanese merchant Jalller in Pacific,- mori- than 300 Canadians participated revealed to have in African lnvxieion NEW GUINEA — Allied bombers sink two Jap ilestroycrs. damage third, as enemy makes futlle ut- iemnt to rcllevo hard-pressed de- fenders of Elma. lloldwMan In Murder Probe MONTREAL. Nov. 26~ (GP) — ing a mnn In!‘ questioning in con- Gil-ycar-olci WfliCIl- cmy Edi-tilled air forces were in constant action. Enemy Naval forces were shat» tered and repulsed last night in attempts to land re-enforcements under cover of darkness in aid their beleaguered garrison, now pinned against the Sea in a thin il-miir- co-ustal stiip between Gona LIFLI Buns. As on a previous occasion, flared dropped from bombers surprised the Jsps. disclosing g, sortie by a light cmiscr and four destroyers. In addition to the two destroyer! sunk. a third was seen motionless for 2.5 mhuies after being hit h1g3 was handing for land, as if to EHCIIPfI. lli-avy Loss Of Life Heavy loss of life by the Jag! vms suffr-red as nil tho ships were Minded with trcons. Tito troops on the two certhinlir-siink destroyers “were undoubtedly‘ lost," the com- munique said. The light. cruiser and the fourth destroyer fled to the north.‘ On Nov. i9. flares di=closcd a light (‘IIIIFCY and two destroyers if! o similar sortie Tiw- bombers sank iiic cruiser and one dcstrover and dllffiilfifll the other ship. Nov. 22 another Jap destroyer was bombed and sunk. Todnjfis communique al=o told o! additional Allied olr rnlds on Port- ugcse Timer and of two raids ‘w Jzrp planes on Port Mnrcshv. the s-siitlirssr New iiuinca llllicci use f"cm which the IFITKI push over in; Owen Stanley Nlcunioins tcwnr Buns began lat-g last September. The Jim bombs intended for Port lvloresby dropped hnrmics=iv in the brush, thr- noon rczmmiiiiiqiie slain ed. A JAY-WALKER l9 A PcoEsfRiAu who Biziomzs (o His skull crushed by a blow from in Cienrcni of the Queue" Bur, was the harness room of the Distribu- i mqjltlullffl as a pos=lbic Joint tion Station in Montreal's Eh=t land g Chairman, curly this morning One safe con- 1 In addition to the joint chair- tsiriing little of \'llIilf‘ was found i broken Lnio, while Minchiiis pork- i eis had been turimri Instr?“ our. A second safe had been iflllilfred _ but had resisted efforts i0 birnf: into if. ‘ Radio Speaker For Fighting French Quits By E. U. DANIEL (Associated Press stun Wrlifll‘) LONDON, Nov. 25 -- tAP) -—Tho voice of fighting France which has broadcast nope and encourflement to France daily since June. i040. quit the air tonight in wows against the American deal with Ad- miral Dorian in North M1108. I irieasure of expediency with which the British Government indicated it was content until the carnpslan there is finished. llbreign Secretary Eden earlier in the day mid the House of Com- mons that this Ls not the time 1w n Provincial North Africa between Gen. Eisen- ithe American Lieutenant- eniire 3 The dead man was William Wal- North Africun or ration» and local "discuss arrangements made howcr ficiiorul Cumimmiing the i-‘reniti authorities." Then the military spokesman f0!’ skipped ‘his the fighting Fr-iiili usual broadcast to the ‘ "As long as Duriaii is retainedll-I‘ me hand in North Africa I gag, cannot conscientiously w“ ' ._i (Continued on pm ‘7- “f” 4H1: MofomsT‘ who Sits HIM Filter High tidc this afternoon at 2.3a and tomorrow morning at 1.85. Sun sets this afternoon at s. and rises tomorrow morning at 8.1 Last quarter moon, Nov. 30, 5.8 m ‘Summerside tide 1! minutes laid than Charlottetown. CAB FIRE! SERVICI DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Fro B rde have 9.05 a- 11.401111. 3.00111. too p.n1. 1'51 n.in.. Leave Cape Tormontlne — 10.00 a.m. 1.15 pJIi. 3.05 p.m., B.“ pJn. 8.15 pun. SUNDAY SERVICI (May 3 to Dec. 21 inclusive) Leave Borden 9.00 a,m.. ti.“ Leave Tcrmcntlne 10.15 s.ni.. lHti. rant-ans. man ssIWII-‘I ' Leave Wood Islands l“. 3-5 ‘a ' ‘d . IIIWU‘ ogggp‘,i'grrfvnsr:idc l1 t grieve Chnlmaragsn 8.30 s. Ills _ , ., 4.30 p. IIi. lgggrii/em (Yhnrlottetown i D- Q I,“ p. 111., 7.06 p, In. ‘ oo . . i" [ere-goodies Noel and “O a. Q I q, t»