MAxms OI L MERE MAN mflbkqf hituaeif. I man cannot base I ti... o! i. mother which be was never ‘nuhmtewa Guardian, Two Cont». hm" Guardian, Iouudod 1061 2w” //~ The People's Paper (lovers Prince Edward Cl-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA,‘ McYNbAY, SEBTFEMBER 21, 1942 "'13!" m“ 1M ~'"'"---e--\\ Island Like the Dew at th A man may cry Church} flinch! MAXIMS 07A MERE MAN ev‘ry word. with no more piety an other people. 8 PAGES )4- Annnal Subscription Delivered, [L00 B! Halli P. E. l. $4.0M to other Provinces and U, l. A. ".00 STRONG R.A.F. FORCES BATTER MUNICH Peril On Inc.rease Predicts Huge In‘ Stalingrad Battle Rages With Unabated Fury Northwest Suburb. (By Henry C. Cassidy, Associated Press Staff Writer) M0_§[‘()“’, Sept. 2i—il\tlonday)—(AP)—Red army troops have re- grpiu red several more of Stalingrad’a rubble-strewn streets in savage younicr-aiiacks which ripped additional gaps in the German wall oi’ in- [lpirvrrivn and tanks and left the Nazis still short of their long-expected victory on the Vol80- As (he siege tor Stalin's city entered its 28th day, the Red army high mmmllllll iur the third straiihl communique reported at midnight Slindilv that soviet counterblows had flung the enemy back in certain mas hand recaptured several streets" in a struggle hitherto unequalled m this war‘s fer oclty. Tltc Russians were obeying Stalin's historic order to die rather than lo retreat, and successes were measured in yardage in Stalingradu sub- orbs, which have been battered to ruins by incessant shelling and homb- ‘six German tanks and l4 motor vehicles were destroyed, and about w; Gprnmns wiped out in a single engagement within the city, and the Bussians still shrg-Led no signs of cracking under the strain. lilr Henry‘ C. Casilily. ' Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, Sept. 20—(A1-‘)-Rls- ing l0 the counter-attack in house- pphuuse street fighting, Stalin- trads defenders won minor rec- tification of their sagging lines in lhe suburbs Sfltllrlliiy Yllfllll- but W‘ m the Germans hurled fresh tank divisions against the outnumber- ld RlLSélllilS. Above the onrttshing tanks came raves of air-borne Nazi automatic allemen and behind them motor- ized infant battering without. ptue in a ma. we effort to achieve tbreak-tltrvouggh to the heart of the city in this 27th day of its urge. (The German high command, devoting two brief sentences to the Ml for Stalingrad, asserted the l-rnang "confirmed with unabated n‘ ess had that Soviet relief t cks front the north had fall- d.) Pcril 0n Increase communique said hunter-attacking Soviet forces cleared tho enemy from several suburban streets overnight but the Oovert rt newspaper" Izvestla. nlbsequ ._\~ reported the Germans clung to some new-won positions lllll the pi".'ll to the city admittedly ns on ‘he increase. The inch cha tng Russians. re- inforced by we kc recruited from ltclorl and sailors from a VOlRR lllilllla, were reported to have dis- billed the Gcnnans from one it: (Contained on page '7, Col 2) Enthroihahlent of Bishop Postponed ST. JOllN'S.,I~lild., Sept, 20—-lCP) -lla of Rt. Rev. Philip Selw n Anglican Coadjut-or Bis - . wioundlatld since 1957. Ertrenlcd his cnthroncmenl; as the» of Nctrfounciland today. Tihe n- The soviet Abraham on oi llhfrnonv has been postponed ieanuely, Boning Events _u_ "Talkxs-St, Priors Wednesday. 9-21-21. Th urs- 9-21-21. 9-21-21. sound movies. 0-21-11 hITalkrcs-Auurray River "TalkiosuEldon Friday. "Freetown, free filly. aoo. “Free sound movies, Kensing- . Monday, 2 shows. 9-21-11. "Chicken ltnce lent. bingo and Wednesday, 18 4i. Bullpen in Lot 65 hall, 23rd, [Cleaned hall Friday, Sept. 2s. gllclilll. bingo, hot d . etc. 9.00 n l a. m. Aid of omens In- “uit- c-at-za-zs. "Chicken Supper and Dance. 5t. guru's, Tuesday. September 22nd. tbsters Orchestra. 9-i9-2i. "Chicken fiiipper <1 1);,“ , 3t. George's flail, Wednganday, Seotioem- mil- 0-16-41. M"Dance-New Haven school. ‘fvlldilli- Beplember 31st. Lunches “l- 0-19-21. ‘l ‘ki- - -- a rn ree on liendav and Tuesday. 0e I-iB-li. "Niillee. Chicken supper and “lsédnggFes sl-Iall. Siémmer. ' - RY. ep. 231' . Sup- l" ‘Sivfid from 0 till i0 p. m. Q4141. b. “with! twin as usual for the glimmer months. List vcur h om“ c Green Alban andG . "T ‘Emerald ll-tl-‘l-i wv-r-m-tr “kilo-Maren Tuesday. B-li-l. "Chicken sup b1 d “dualism rriiii,"rtrer§%y. ‘not.’ $21-21. British Forces Nearing Capital 0f Madagascar LONDON, 56p‘! 20-(CP)-—Bri- tlsh forces have occupied Ankalobe. about. 50 miles northwest of Tan- anarlve, the capital of Madagas- car, Viehy military headquarters at- Tnnnanarive said in a midday communique relayed by radio. The communique said Governor General Armand Annet had trans- ferred his headquarters to a town in the south of the island and was “determined to resist. to the uttermost." The situation at Brickaville, on the coast. about 100 miles east of Tananarlve. was unchanged. Bri- tish troops occupied the town after a landing at Tamatave, the islands chief commercial port, ‘l0 miles t0 the northeast. New German Plane In Action Againstllussians MOSCOW. Sept. 20 — (AP)—A new, more heavily-armored Ger- man flghtcr plane, the Messer- schmitt 100-6, which the Russians describe as an "aerial hunter." has made its appearance in the battle for Stalingrad, Red star reported today. The army newspaper said the new plane ls powered with a 1,- 700-horsepower motor developing a speed of m miles an hour at 3,000 feel; altitude and 325 miles at 12,000 feet. It was said t0 be armed with three cannon and two machine- guns and to differ from the Messer- schmitt 109-1" in that it has armor plate behind the cockpit. and gaso- line tank. The speeds list-ed are consider- nbly less than older models of the Messcrsrsilmitt fighter, perhaps a result of the armor. Peace Feeler By Finland ‘i WASHINGTON, . 20 — (A?) -- Di-plolnntic terest oen. ired today on a. statement by Flnnl-nsh Mirtiater Hjaimor J. Procope that "Finland wants to cease fighting as soon as the threat to heir existence has been avert-ed and guarantees obtained for her lasting security." ‘Ihe timing and the circumstan- ces of the utterance led to eon- 1991-1176 in some quarters as to whelher it could be OOIIBUFUBG as by Finland in her war against Russia, or at. least a feeler on possible peace ‘emu. Prooope issued his etalemenlt at the camluslon of a press reception of. the legetion late Saturday night. It came while the Rilsslane still held the Nazi push in the Cant- casue to slow moi-ion. The Minister said Ila-land de- sires to cease fighting when gua- ranteed her security. bull he re- iterated his country's determinat- ion to fight an until all menace to her has. vanished. Food prospects for Finland are betier. he asserted, and the calm-try‘! fut-ore "looks somewhat brighter." ERRORLISS FINGIRPRINTS iltogerrprflbig? Taper-ts‘ o P “Tooiniird e say . en- tilllcationc have been made without since the system was storied here D yea-re I80. American Army By End of 1943 WASHINGTON, Sept. 20- (AP) -W'nie the uncertainties oi the war preclude any authoritative fore- cast of the ultimate strength to which the United States army and navy will soon grow, Selective Ser- vice Director Lewis B. Hershey lu- dicated today that more than 10,- 000.000 Americans will be under firms by the end of 1943. Hershey and his aides gave these guides to future operations 0i vile draft in an interview clarifying and recapitulhting the various _ and announcements issued prece- meal in recent weaken- The supply of single men, includ- inc those with dependents, will be exhausted this fall and calls for childless married men will begin War Situation Last Night - ...il ‘i-imi (By KIRK]! L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) Whatever the impetus behind Hitler's orders to his armies to take Stalingrad at any price, the month or more of lost time it has cost him has brought him perilously close to the some predicament in which ho stood in Russia lust a year ago. Again winter is impending. lt bids fair to close in earlier this year. It's first heralds, continent-wide rains and a skidding thermometer, ap- peared before Sept. 16. A year ago those grim symbols oi’ disaster for invaders of Russia were first noted Sept. 28. llltler gave them no heed. O I 8 I With the fall of Kiev Sept. 1B last year and invasion of the Crimea and investment of the Rostov gateway to the Caucasus in progress. llit- lcr's hopes of a decisive victory reached high tide Oct. 2, 1041. lie issued orders a pompous “order oi’ the day" to his troops, "Tomorrow," he said, “begins the last great decisive battle of this year." Next day, after a flight to Berlin, he broadcast his historic asser- L tlon that “Russia is already broken and will never rise again.” lie believed it then, no doubt, Ills thought that Russian armies had m generally tn December or January Virtually all been decimated or trapped was reflected by his press chief who announced Oct. 9, after a conference in the field with his master, that the last "complete" Soviet armies had been scattered or trapped. "For all military purposes Soviet Russia is done with." that liitlcr spokesman asserted. "The British dream of two-front war is dead." O O O I U I as the strength of the army alone tops 4,500,000 by the end of this year. Unless congress aulhorlzes the drafting of 18 and lli-year-olds, the supply of childless married men will be exhausted about a veni- from now and calling of men with child- mn W111 befn around Qct. 21. 1943. ‘Even the crafting of the teen- agers might; do n0 (not? than <16 BY the calling of family men because the total number of men who tilti- mately will be required for the services is not vet known. The army and navy. to he'll PW the inroads on important industries. announced jointly that men Prilnlttd occupational deferment would no longer be ccmmisslond or accepted for enlistment without consent of their local draft boards. The Anny-Navy Policy statement included newspaper empluyees fillflcul! lhose who would be rejected un ess they had written releases from thclr employers. ii’ they WET? “V111?”- or from-their local draft boards if they were not key men- Nazis Planning To Exploit Gains In The Ukraine LONDON, Scpt. 20 — (C?)- Netherlands industries and farmers were told Saturday night they must. co-cperaie with the Nazis in a plan to colonize and develop Germany's conquests in eastern Europe. Aneta, the Netherlands news agency reported. It is reported the Germans have established a service to PYOmDV’ the transfer of entire industrial plants with machinery and per- sonnel to the Ukraine. Japanese Agent Linked With Big Nazi Spy Ring laboration in military espionage in the United States long before Japan attacked Pearl Harbor last. Dec. '1 was disclosed today as the Federal were reported. WASHINGTON. Sept, 20—(AP)— mp. mm, Evidence of German-Japanese col- north;- Five weelrs or less will see another Russian winter upon Hitler. He has conquered rich Russian territory, threatens her main oil artery, but on the authority of President Roosevelt has destroyed no single Soviet army. Again he is looking to Japan for help. And the moment for that help to be afforded somehow, somewhere, may be at hand, Yet cvgn it’ he holds Stalingrad, the "decisive" victory in Russia he foresaw last Oct. 2 stlii is denied hirn. u. s. FA},- Fortresses Route Jap Armada ,. l ,,-.,...,,. ...,_.... WASHINGTON. Sept. 20—(AP) -Unibed States army Flying Fort- resses drove a Japanese force of battleships and cruisers away from the American-held sector of the Svlomon Islands last Monday wit-h a bombing attack which possibly damaged two of the battleships. The action was announced by the navy Saturday in a communi- que which lcft open the possibility that the powerful Jan fleet might return at any time for a renewal of the cttemyks efforts to wrest. the strategic Guncialcanal-Tulagi area of the Solomons from American hands. The communique also reported linl. army bombcrs had made fresh attacks on Jap installations in C-izo island and at Rckata bay- hascs which the enemy presum- ably uscs for offensive operations against Guadalcanal. While land activity in the Solo- mons slowed to .mlnor skirmishes and sniping with reinforced mar- ines in firm control of their posi- tions, the big army bombers dLs- covered the Japanese battle force prowling northeastward of Tulagl and went in to attack. “Heavy anti-aircraft fire was encountered." the navy said. "but possible hits on two battleships When lost seen. was retiring to the Jap intentions Unknown There was no evidence to show 3mm, of mvesmgauon announced the exact intentions of the enemy that a Japanese agent was llnkcd with the big Nazi spy ring broken up in June, 1941. but. that he es- d 08-99 - , Lc-Cmdr. Takeo Emma of the Japanese navy, who masqueredetl as an engineer inspector with of- flees in New York under the name of E2 Satoz. the FBI. said, was a liaison man for the spy ring. the largest uncovered so far. Of that gang, 33 are serving prison terms aggregating 279 years. Most of them pleaded guilty. As the FBI, was arresting the spies Ezmia quietly left New York in having such an armada in this area. Since the ships apparently lacked aircraft protection. they may have bccn manoeuvring to loin with a force of aircraft car- riers and possibly transports for an early onslaught against. the American Solomons, Or they may have been making a reconnaissance in force. It was from the northeast that the Japanese made their last large- scele naval move against the Am- erlcan-held areas of the Solomons Aug. 25. Both army and navy air for the west coast. boarded the Jap- and 5°"- mlces m“ "lul- lillfusl- Mid anese freight/er Kamakura-Maru and went home. The ship sailed a- head of schedule the P‘.B.I. said. to accommodate the naval officer. INTERNATIONAL g AT A GLANCE RUSSIA — Soviets recapture some Stalingrad streets; Red Army coun- ter-attacks rip gape in German wail of infantrymen and tanks. BRITAIN — it. A. ii‘. male heavy raid on Munich; second force of bomber Including two it. 0. A. ll‘. squadrons pound Saar Valley. SOUTHWEST PACIFIC — Allied command report wideapratl aerial campaign on Japanese in New Guinea area; eight tons of bombs dropped on bee, New Guinea. Casualties Reach“ 1,300, 000, Claim MOSCOW, Sept. 20 - fAPl-A Communist. party announcement yesterday stated that. German cas- ualties in the drive in south Rus- 011 ala alone have reached 1,800,000 kill cl. ‘lshe announcement was made by the deputy propaganda diief of the Communist party. Sebaleev. the Japs withdrew. The main Japanese sea units in the area at that time appeared to have been screening operations of lighter units, accompanying transports, which struck more dir- ect Guadalcanal from the north and were repulsed. As for land fighting on Guadal- canal, where the primary enemy ob,‘ " is recapture oi the air- field, the navy said it had lulled since Sunday night, being con- fined to minor patrol activity, sniping and "occasional skirmish- es between small enemy unit; and U. S. marines." "supplies and reinforcements have reached our forces," the com- munique said. Near ‘griolomon Islands U.S. Soldier Shot ln__Belfast BELFAST, Sept. 20_(CP) -— A United State soldier was reported shot to death under ntysteriotts circumstances today while on sen- try duty in Belfast. United States army authorities declined to give the soldiers namc. They said there was no suspicious civilian seen in the vicinity at the time and suggested that. he might have shot himself accidentally or committed suicide, A shot was lteztrd soon after the scniry went on duly and other sol- diers who hurried to his post found irlltnddying of a bullet wound in the ea . Voice Sympathy 0f Argentina BUBNOS AIRES. Sept, 20-(AP) —Flve former foreign ministers of neutral Argentina Saturday pro- claimed their solidnrily with Brazil in a -mass meeting organ- ized to express Argentinzvs sym- pathy with the warring neighbor republic. Jose Maria Carrillo. Adolfo Bioy and Tomas 1e Breton addressed the crowd of some 10,000 gathered ln Buenos Aires’ largest auditorium and Julio Roca. whom illness kept away sent a message which was read in his behalf. Carlos Saavcdra Lamas. who or- iginally was scheduled to speak. excused himself for "personal rea- sons" but sent a note expressing his complete adherence to the Brazilian cause. It was believed Saavcdra Lamas considered it in- advisable to appear in public at. this time because or student llgit- atlon at Buenos Alrcs University, of which he is rector. New J ap Decree BERLIN. (From German Broad- casts). Sept. 20—(APi-—The Jnpn- nese army and navy commands at sllflllfillill have decreed that all lubiwte of nations at war with Japan or which have severed dip- lomatic relations with Japan must wear a red arm band beginning Oct. 1, a D. N. B. dispatch from Tolsvo reported Billtlrday night, The order streets all British and ‘l Y United staies cltiw-n- more than iii years of age except Indium and Filipinos. Join the Host of Home Bakers who - Wimmg "ill" iBirthplace 0f g Nazism Struck’ Sounded By Alexander LD, E land, Sept. $0 -»?C{1?Fgi»il§lc>—A.ng V. Alexander. firs‘ Lord o; we Admiralig, 2152f: today 111M @1195‘ who m emEur. ing allied action in Wt-‘Sleln we “let those in authority be ti" judgv-i-s Qf what Tlylrduld be done and ' f (illlfiil . fitdllltlawai: doing all we possibly can do but it, would not b_c helping m any to iakc Action which might- lead to <11." ‘Bier ti) uul 0w“ cos." he s rd in an atldrffis- Alpxqnti ~ also substantially re- Ll bv ,. . in capital ships, aircraft- 1c and cruisers _ ccl by now construction. rln, he sari. has lost a COH- destroyers. izldtifablt? number" of ‘Plrcy ll‘.\V€ been more than re- piactd he irdtlcd, willie m t-llfi (atcgo es of ccrrolics and land- ing crzlii llli‘ Bl rlsl born aciurtlly’ increased. Britain's losses in the last nromlts ltave four caPlllll rllllli, four t1 u‘ and tire and 3B submarines, Enemy Simply Bases Raided ln New iiuine ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Aus- tralia. Sept. _20-~tCP)+A widt- sprculd campaign of aerial assign-ts uptn the tliillfillliSil was under we}! today iii the New Guinea area. with the Alilccl cbmtrtand reporting suc- ' (ls on enemy sllDDlv basfis lng and a thorough straf- lion up and down the track leading to Port. A. n headquarters indicated lit- tlc ground action on the front 32 milcs cast of Port Morrsby, main Allied supply base in New Guinea. A comnratrd communique said the srttratiun nus trnchzttrqcd but. patrols wcr: aciivc ziusinst the Japanese. The Dlllltlpill raid rcporlccl today was a "co-ortlinatcd attack" against Lae, New Guinea, in which eight tons of bonrbs were dropped. Alliud tncdlunr bombers hit enemy dispersal areas while ati-a-ck planes l1ca\.ly' strafcd anti-aircraft. and silmalv installalinlls in the vicinity. the t-tnntnttnlntre said. 'l"lr<:1c was no irrrlal onposilroti and all plants rel turned safely. Further Blows Dealing further blows at the Jau- ancse, Allied irzhtcrs flcw up and down the Kokorla track. the invas- ron route from Buns. on New Gul- nmls opposite coast across the Owen Stanlcfv mountains. "Butldntgs, huts and sheds aloft-Z the track were heavily strofed with cannon and machine-gun fire,” the communique said, Allied fit-lifters also set fire to an ennmy zero fighter" an-d supply clump at Buna airdrome and smash- ed an anti-aircraft. position. Ranging out to sea, Flying Fort- rcsscs sci on fire on enemy cargo ticsscl in Vltiaz Strait, off New Guinea. and attacked n large motor- boat from a low altitude in the time of considerable anti-aircraft re. Allied Flyers also Greece. Pound Sicily and (By Edwin Shankc, Assoc latcd Press Staff \Vriier) LONDON, Sept. 20—iAl')--Briluin‘s biggest bombers, four-motored Lancasters which carry 4,000 and 8,000-pound bombs, left the Nazi birthplace city of Munich a mass of spreading flames Saturday night ilcraiccl ataientcr in a speech 0i after a 30-minute attack climaxing a daring l,30fl-mile rottnd-trip foray saying rilat British which carried the new allied aerial attack dccp info the Reich. A second fort-e of bombers hammered the German war potential in had been the Saar Valley, much nearer England. The Air Ministry announced losing 10 planes during the night,‘ which on the basis of five-per cent losses in big raids, would mean that about 200 planes made the attacks o n Munich and the Saar. in the lllcditerrancan area. allied fliers pounded Sicily and Greece. The stories oi’ the returning ra idcrs indicated the destruction in l Stlflllgtll has Munich, which produces motors, tanks and armrred cars, was some of 27 the worst that the R. A. F. has dealt out t0 Germany. (The dispatch hinted strongly that the R. A. F. had used its blUCllr- Carriers’ 2g destroying 4,000-pound bomb and its great new 8,000-pound explosive, 80 and 90 development of which has just been disclosed.) Dispatches from Basel, Switzerland, said the detonatinns in south- ern Germany were so loud they co ground vibrations were perceptible. LON-DON, Sopt. 20 — (GP) — The R.A.F. stmck at Munich, birthplace of Nazism, Saturday night dropping tons of bombs and starting big fires, while other planes, including two bomber squad- rcns oi’ the Royal Canadian Air Force, pounded the Saar Valley Ln i-ho Mediterranean area, Allied fliers pounded Si-clly and Greece. While two Canadian bomber squadrons were taking part in the assault on the Saar Valley, air- craft of a Canadian fichier squad- rcn (zarrir-d out inl-rttder" patrols. One Carladlan coastal command squadron also was in action durr- ing the night. taking part. in an attack 0p a convoy; off lire Nether. lands coast, The size of the aerial fleol. Mtich crossed i0 sc-uthcrn and western Gcnnany u-as not announced, but British authorities said 1'.) planes were lost, which, on the b11515 0f five-per cent losses in big raids. would mean th.-. about 200 planes made the IBM-tulle round trip lo Munich and the lvssrr dfsiance to the Soar Valley. Munich Left Burning The air ministry said large fires were left bulrnit‘; in hiunich tvhlrh lire R A F‘ last zrllackcd (hp niqltf, cf Nov, ll, 1940, uihrn l-lztler was to make a speech Besides being the spiritual homo of the Nazi party, the city is of industrial lrfl. porfonoe. (‘I119 German High Command said in a communique, brcadcnsl by the Berlin radio, that “in some illaces, including (he city of Munich, explosive and fire damage was caused. predominantly in reside-n- tlal quarters and public bulld- lnqsfi’) 'l"ho attack was tile 10th the R. A_F_‘_hg$_ma§lc_on__C-ernrany this (Continued from page 1) New U.S. Carrier Ready For Launching WASHINGTON, Sept. 2i) —(AP) 1-1,‘, Fortress“ “arm, summed the -The new aircraft carrier Lexing- mllCllllV-"llllll fire at a low altitude ton, replacing the v.18 which \\'.tA nlnd all returned to their bases after sum‘ m“ Ma" l" 911-‘ b35319 l-l lliu 7. ris blow. In Gocdonough Bay, New Guinea, Allied fighters slrafcd a Japanese vrhnllng boat. and killed its occu- Ir can a lortmst attack report/xi in ic- d~av’s communique was a raid. bv medium bombers on Buka Island, at the tip cl the Solomons. These planes dropped bombs in the tar- not area of an encmv airdrcme poor svcnthcr conditions, starting a i111‘- Thcv did not observe other re- sults of the raid. Supplies For Romme Sunk By R. A. F. CAIRO. Sept. zo-(Alfi-An Axis ship loaded with supplies for Mar- shal Erwln Rommel was sunk b a British plane in the western Mediterranean Sept. l7. the R.A.F. Middle East, news service said to- B . At least one bomb hit the ship, of 3,000 in 4,000 tons, near a fun- y says they (llsplncc Coral Sea, will be .!\li!JC!l(‘ll rtcx‘. Srtlurday one ycar a read of scho- dulc, the United States Navy an- nounced Saturday. The Lexington will be the, second carrier latrnchcd silltt’. the United Stats entered the war The Essex, prototype of a ncw c ‘ " to which the Lexington belongs. entered the Wfllcr at Newport Ne n, V, July 31, It will be some monzhs, however, before these two new “flat-roos" can be fitted out and ready to join the fleet. The new Lexington will be launch- od at the Bethlehem steel Corpor- aziorfs Fbre River plant at Quincy, Nlnss The navy, racing in secrecy to build the world's biggest and hard.- cst. hitting fleet. of carriers, has lllflllt! public little data on Essex ‘v5.5 vessels. Jane's fighting sin-pa‘. around 25.000 tons, cost about snnooooot) and have a complement of more than planes and 2.000 officers and men. Speed, a prime essential of on air- craft. carrier, was list-e‘! as 35 ael, throwing up quantities of the l‘ "is deck cargo. When the plane's bombs were all gone, ii, turned machine-gun and cannon fire on the ship which was last; seen halted and listing, In Euvpvs desert battlezone, to- day's conmurnlque reported patrol activities continued during last nlcht and air activity was on a re- duced scale. NEW TANKS PRAISE!) CARDIFF. Wales, Sept, 20—(CP) dent in Oliawn, saw‘. in a broadcast Eight Essex ships were ordered in 1940 illld the Lexlnirton. first of those being hulll- at Qlll'rc_\'_ imd not been due off the ways until the fall of 1943 Believed Equal To second Front OTTAWA. Sept. ZO-ICPF- P J. Phillip, New York Times cert‘ non- m 1.00 p.m.. 4.45 P-m- 7-55 0-m- uld be heard in Switzerland and 19-year-o1ds For Military Service WLNNIPEG. Sept. 30 - (OP) Hon. J. T. Thorson, Minister It National war Services, in an it» tervlcw here yesterday said that i most areas of Canada the “pool o? single men and wldoyvers between the ages of 20 and 40 has been vaxhaustcd," and indicated 19-year nid men would be called for mill- tary service shortly. “At the rate Canadians are be- ing called up at present, it would probably not take long to exhaust the supply of 19-year olds as well, should the government decide to ext/and the draft age to this limit," 'l‘horson said, ' R. A. F. Activity In Mine Laying l LONDON, Sept. 20—(CP)—tM1.nq strewing R, A. F, pilots, whose exa plnils are playing an increasing role in disrupting Axis shipping, laid more of t-hc explosives in cn- cmy waters in (he la . six mnniirs than in all the previous months of the Will‘ put together, the Admir- alty and air ministry reported to- night 1n s joint communique. Further emphasizing the extent of those iitllc-ptrhllclzed operas ‘lions. the report said that in l5 months ntinc-lzrvlng planes have flown 3,000 miles while the num- bcr of mines laid in all theatres since the war started “runs into six figures." r i} T00 MANY VEoPLt-z ‘flunk orpotrfutufv MEANS A CHANCE ‘(o MAKE MONEY WKHOUT EhRNlNtl l-f (y, - ../ <77 ‘oer! C C m? High tide this morning at 8.0! and tonight at 9.34. p Sun sets this evening at '1 and rises tomorrow morning at 640 all moon Sept. 24, 934 am. immerskle ilrle (‘lilllleiill min‘ ut later Charlottetown. can. rum! sr-ztwrcl: l . DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY a From Borden — Leave 0.25 a.rn., Leave Cape Tormentine -— 11-95 1.111,, 3.15 p.m.. 6.45 n.m.. 0.10 pan. SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. 2'1 inclusive) Leave Borden 0.00 a. rn.. 6-45 0-!!! Leave Torrncntlne 10.15 u. m1 8.00 mm. P. it. L-N. S FERRY SERVICE Leave Wood islands 7.00 e.m.. 11.01 .n\.. S p.m. . Leave Caribou I a.m.. l run. and 5-30 pm. . AIR SERVICE i Charlottetown-Summcrslde- “ OIIC Il lmave Charlottetown 6.35 a. m.‘ = —\Var Srcrclnry Sir James Grigg tonight- thflt Canadian Broadcasting " told on trudlcncc here today that new Brllizsh tanks now coming in- to production are "miles better than anything provided before." tank than any one in the world,” he said. (Zorporatlorl National Ncnvork "that the constant. slrvanr of Allied bomb- ers and fighters over Europe can be counml as open now, ln its effect on the final Leave Charlottetown 12.45 p. na- outcome." occupied ltrly “I am quite certain it is a better equal to any second front. we could ‘rt-hi; ilnummerslde 7.10 a. m-z 1-20 I), m. Leave Moncton l1 a. m4 and 0.11 p. m. SUNDAY SERVICE a Leave Moncion 4.1.5 p. m.