4, PAGE SIX iH-‘IHK55'-'-'-'-"-'ii"-"u'u“u"u"u"n"u"u'u'u'u'u"i.“-'u"uF-'-'-‘u"f-‘u‘u"h'-'u'u'¢'u'u"-'u'-‘3 I Hundreds Th. iv Prince Edward -=- i lIIATINEE 3.l5-NlG}1'l‘ 7 AND 9 -BE EARLY '- a ¢'u'u'¢'u"u'u"u'n ;7. a , re.v-.-a-.-t--.-.a-.-.-.-..--:N-a-rerr-ww-i-I-v-vr-v-v . m-av-n-n-tv-u-r .-.' r . it-wwa RICHARD EN 0nd IEAN PARKER, A Paramount Pieluvo with NILS ASTHER - MARIE WILSON ROGER PRYOR - EDDIE QUILLAN DICK PURCELL- Directed byFrank McDonald :5 we’? rerrzezvv-W’ -_.. . =1. F I: E l‘li.-\-“(‘/i3\r\I).\ CAIIRIES ON" I I: Community Sing-—C:iri00n a get-van-.-i.-.-.-.-v.-.-.-..-i.--i.-.-i.-.-t-.- .---.-..\.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-H -.. I Ill-NIGHT -=- EMPIR£ -=- s. SAT. Evening Shows Start 7 8: 8.115 IUNPINEE SATURDAY ONLY 2:30 __n_l ,u_u“n__u_nu-u-uu-n-z-u-u-IJ‘. It (h w, “not - an... iiiiuusu -_"-'-----vu-tua~.--n.m-.mw.-- I t 0 0 ¢ »-»»s”+.“”+,, TODAY AND SATURDAY ‘p. ——. n, ' Plane Jane snows-a.is - 1.00 s45 I '1 5°31!“ OOUITI-ANII YOUR FAVORITE ACTION TRIO ' RIDES IQ NEW ADVENTURES! on"!!! xxx!" More, IImIIs Jlljilt’ GMIIEITIPIII i ‘T5119 cumbfid groom‘: ‘ plane and closed Istill hear Joe shouting at her and, through the wnii-lin storm, she vaguely made out hs figure run- ning toward her across the field but before he could reach the side o the plane, sh down the runway. His shouts die away behind her. the air. As thefiplane lifted into gallantly ghting the wind, she gave a. little sigh of relief. Beside her, Mamie her arms, Her face was white, her eyes wide with terror. “Ever flown before?" asked Jaile- Mamle shook her head. Jane said swiftly. “Well, buck up --wa'll make it." And under her breath, she whispered, "I hope." She climbed until she was well above the first layer of the stoim and then levelled out. She hid. of course, done instrument flying as a part of her training course, but that had been a game, whereas this was in deadly earnest, with three lives at stake. However, the plane was a steady, sturdy little ship and it hurled lt- self valiantly against the win fighting every inch of the way wiiib eyes scarcely merit board. Under ordinary conditions, the flight from Oakton to Baltimore took about four hours, but Jane knew that tonight, even with I‘IN-I-I.I-I-I.I-I.I.l-I.I-I'l-I-I-I-l-‘I-Iil-l-‘l-I-I-I-I-l-n-Img-“x-‘a-‘NI-a-I-‘I-‘I: . best of luck, it might take twice that lnie. a The sglane roared on. Now and then. e felt it falter as the wind time, would shake itself as though to got the storm out of its eyes and would orge un. . ‘ As the hours passed. she began srrnun - JUNGLE GIRL ‘Egrfligl 11 Idteegeillgflilnfnievgffiflglrlvél . _. ___ . , “OMLDY CARTO 0 N _, selcmcduw know how much depend- -.-.-.-.-..-.-.-.-.-\.-.-.-.'.-.-~.'-'.'--v e °11 - Then, toward three o'clock in the morning, she saw signs that ‘he storm was aliating. The snow ceas- ed. and the wind gradually lessen- ed. With a. feeling of immense gra- titude she realized that the worst of the flight was over. . . . A dirty gray dawn was breaking when, at last, she came above the Baltimore airport. Circling to get (Exchange) her bearings. she had la: strange The dcalli ul Mi". Charles Eurnas ginafeojgliifllféeyalfiéghy ti‘); hgulled-Fnd at Damon. Ohio, is reported in L116 Below ha.‘ as She brought the Yvlk P1611115 Tribu"? a5 m‘ plane about to make the descent, 1' #571110’ “Wall-i? M11 F1111“? “$15 she saw a crowd or people and the iue iusi. passenger ever curried in mp5 o; gays in a 1mg row, Th“ .in ziirplrimr. surprised her. What had brought Mr. Furims was a mechanic In them to the airport at this eaxiy IIlU bicycle shop of the Wright hour? Then. as she came down, iii-oilu-i: and wont with them to she saw an ambulance at the edge First Airplane Passenger J g _ ‘THE CHARLQIKIETOYVN GUARDIAN, ° “Imed It ‘mum? Soviet capital had lost 60 per d,‘ Jane sat glued to the controIs, her] e was taken out of the twisted and tugged at it out, eachl like a iiiettlesome horse, it-disclpline among workers. Punish- Iments were decreed for the absentee, A new Russia Emerging from lllrucihle of war By Henry Cnuidy I Associated Press sum Writer | KUIBYSHEV, Rusvig Oct. as - , (AP) - Dispatches from Moscow ' declared today German forces ham- ‘merlng at the approaches to th: cen .0f their fighting strength in the {past few days and that it had br- .oome aivllarent that they would be unable to take the city. ' Now Russia is In the fiery JP11- _ was huddled‘ 1b] i ; d if ast experience low, with her child held tigiitiy m1?‘ ,",.;“§.iille “i? stlllpwlll be Russia, ‘running lier own show. long after the so-called battle of Russia has been decided. But what kind of Russia will it i’ The Russia of Nikolai Lenin was -a vastly different Russia from the lRussia of the Czar-v. and by 1989 the Russia of Joseph Stalin had become vastly different from the Russia of Lenin. Even between wars Russia was Changing. I The land which had been taken from the landlords and distributed among the peasants found its way into the hands of a new landlord —il:e Soviet state. The revolution- ary ideal of equality of remunera- Ieaving ‘he my“? tion for workers gave way to a new lsystem of wages ased on individual imerit. ~ Factory management gradually hands of workers’ committees and centralized 1m the hands of factory managers, and finally. in 1939, these managers were ordered by decree of the So- viet government to establish rigid the tardy worker, the lazy and the troublemakers, and also for the "floaters" who hampered produc- tion by dflftimt from Job to job. Now, momentous changes un- doubiedly are germinating again in the land of the great revolution. One possible fundamental change ls indicated in the shifting of Rus- sia's centre of gravity toward the east. 1f the unity of Soviet military command and civil administration is preserved in the rocess of re- organizing the nat en's strength far in the interior, perhaps east of the Uruls, the result might be a temporarily smaller but tough- er U. s. S. R. but it would be a regime more definitely Asiatic. Kulbyshev, where the diplomats and the soviet commissnriat oi for- eign affairs went from Moscow, is 0n the east bank of the Volga, “where Asia begins.” Establishment of a. temporary if the military front falls back to 1' LL’ if. n, y. 0., t .sist i de- 0f the field. inloizlirutliyig ‘I = latcgiaboxki; for W119" 5116 113d landed 11nd $11111“! the United Si. army in 1908. Of l0 11 111111. S110 bwlme “were that Charles MNIPHIII‘ 0mm" r-uiau PANGBORII PLUS-GOING PLACES CARNIVAL or RHYTHM ClUi'I‘OON—_-HENI’ECKED DUCK “'-vr-----u---i.-.-.-.-.'.rn--tvn-.-awn-w'-'-.~.-t-.-.-.n.-.-.-i.-.- -.- 1’ 4,1310 ;rr-'.'.'-'-'.'.-'-'.'.-'.'.'.'..'.-.- I - - - I - ~1- ~ H-‘J-vi-I-I.'-'.-.-.-.-.-.=.~.~=.-.v.-..-.-.-.v.-.-.-.~.-.=.~.~..-.=.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.- - - entertain in their canteen dur- in the break at night. P. M. 9 30 ‘BRITAIN SPEAKS‘! WORLD riziaxsnnssion AFTIAIltS THIII by H. wrote.‘ Ernii-rn Daylight Saving Tlmt n 4\§’IIIJI,,,,S.FIE,IR Family. __ Em} WAVELENGTH Bods 145 I 10.00 HEADLINE NEWS AND? VIEWS (Ccmlnenloior, J, B ‘ McGEAOHYl AND FLASH- BACK 10.15 ‘CIVILIANS’ WAR‘ - 25.’ ‘A Granunar School in War-Tmc" 10.30 Song Recital by Roy Hen- derson. 10.45 ‘Talking of Parliament‘, by Maurice Webb. 10.50 Music. 11.00 The Dally Service. 110:‘: ‘London Calllngg’ 11 15 ‘BRITAIN SPEAKS’ Throughout 00.30 pm.) Western Canada-HM lll no 1U 00 p.111.) 49.10 ni. (from Canada and U5.A.-8l 32 in. 25.53 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31 .15 Vinnrzo; Culling’ 30 ‘Fran; Line Family‘ -- Epis- ode 115. NEV" _ Em 5.4.3 "Tn 'f‘a!k of {tinny Things‘. RADIO s R ' 6.00 ‘Blil'l‘.\lN (if) 1S TO ITI ‘ '. ~ . _ . Fmin Lnnrlfls l-nul to John 1200 Music or m” M1195 4‘ The Belgian Pifmn Quartet in cffiroais!‘ FPHILITI’ Programme. a program“, o‘ 30mm“ Mll§"\l I i5 nvrrit '10 you; with June‘ 1.15 DEMOCRACY MARCHEq-_ Wr-‘sli. Pr gamma for l-lle ,2 25 THANK vnu AATERICAv H. l1‘ ‘ll i‘ Minn. ‘ ' ' ' ' ' .. v , D 6A,) ,1 m NEWS q s KWI i2 BQHEIGFSADLINE NEWS AN 6 55 N WS Afl.i\li‘i'i_l by o N - ' UCARRULLJ 12.43 Close down. 7.00 WAR COAIM NTZKIZY. 7.10 ‘London Ca Y. 7.15 NEWS IN FRENCH. 7.30 ‘CNADA CAL-lb‘ P'l~<,1f!.\1 LON- DON' Improvement In Health of Hogs (in ili1.:iliv.v.'n1i0ii ‘Greeting from th ‘uh i Calling. Visit m American iiuubcnnov NIARCHES’. "I'II.'\NI{ vou, nurtures!- 'l‘lll~" Naive OTTAWA. Oct. 28 — (CPI -- '.l'lie‘ Canadian bug's standard of health, and resistance to disease has im- ~ NG POST‘. proved in spite of the viist ‘increasi- : ‘Work:- Wonrlrrs’. . in his numbers In meet the ‘baccni a Northern Fzictnrjr.‘ for Britain" demand, officials oi the retreating Russians, mini-ding u» capllon radioed from Berlin with These ltll tanks near 0:10am, already damaged by German and Rlmanian al course the Wrights hurl flown their mePmwd W“ cheering-Puzzled» 5m‘- licuvicr-thzin-air machine for the §1e1§°%a§,‘,“b“‘,°%§~dgf,“f§i ofligeeolilfe)‘ first time iii lusiorv five years be- her uwmsgmexft she had ‘her fore. But a requirement of the army ' in the 1908 model was that a pas- ovIIhllgIéleojlieeglIg ‘sfkxutgihlum iliiiifig-‘illiiii 1*°S3{;Y' 1133515, "$5,311 ,, ,, - _ - e e £15 11 11l°°11111110 he W115 Bm°T1E "19 spoke tgpieane of thepfield ittcogxdums flllikof Ulfldlfilgfll 11:11:11 010131” 1:19" wrhol had come running to the sirie nus, an 15ft hung B. in g L19 54m pssonger. he was among the first "whaII, 1n the w0r1d-__-" of the airplane pflWsllgcfs. "News of vour flight was broad- Tlutt he could be thcr the first cast last night, Mm Andrews. Slime mechanic or the first passenger is] 0f these people haveibcen waiting doubtful. Perlmps he imagined he 1191'? 511168 11111111181". f-‘Xlllflilled m6 was bez-nuu e is reported in theI 5199111111111- Herald Tribune as brlicving that i‘ A tall youns man in a White um- tlie Wrights were the only two men l form 9511mm!’ hidden! b3’ l" 9W1" who could fly ln 1908. That was I Co“ hm com‘ hurry n3 from m‘? Janel not so. On this continent alone, l mflbullmw‘ , 171cm: Curtis: W85 flying at Ham- I he ‘:$;°.,Xn“éug§éry%8.s€‘:£yi; monmcn-t, N. Y., and taking up‘ passengers. And not only did he fly pus cnucrs but he must have had i111‘ mechanics, for in 190B he made IIIQ record flight of 52 minutes in lire nir, and at Rheims, France, won ‘Ire Gordon Bennett trophy for at- mining a speed of 40 miles oer hour. Mr Fmrnns died s, few days ago without ever taking another flight in the air since the twelve taken with the Wright brothers at Kitty Hawk thiriv-zhree years ago. He went into another line of business and from the sidelines regretfully watched the grmvih from ilie first boxkiics to 1| i‘ biz and lust 22.885 civil airplanes certified today by the Unified Siales civil acro-nautic hoard. the hospital." "Oh, thank you!" Jane turned to Mamie, who sat crouched‘ in the plane. her arms holding her baby convulslvely clou. Then, suddenly, the girl slumped. "She's fainted!" gasped lane, geeltchirtg out quickly to take the a. . l’ . The interne signalled to the ambulance, and two other men came with a stretcher. In a few minutes, the unconscious Mamie had been laced on the stretcher and was be g carried to- ward the ambulance. As Jane fol- lowed, another outburst of cheers broke from the crowd. At the ambulance, when Mamie had been placed inside, the interns turned to Jane and held out his __ arms as though to talc; the bably. hpnllth of animal branch said to- ..Ii%n:,'eg:%;:~fiogestxgfrtheeag; n gi . - i __ v i“ Ciumriian shipments of bacon to ggnrlllistgrélelgxfoilg sgfxlxléekgfi p" "y Britain 1931 were 11,000,000 “He-s muons “lends. Am pounds. In the next 12 months they! dmwkmd so are you,” and me will be at least 000000.000 pounds.‘ 1nteme_ “Youwe done a mama‘? Tn 1920, hog carcasses lnspectedieno Job and you um bank on on‘ by AQYIFIIIIIIFC Department inspect-u thing __'_ we won.‘ let o“ down n 01's tntallvfl 2.1711350 rind 5.088 were ‘hm and o! me ‘up the" h a cfinrlomned. In 1940, inspections ‘mince for that youfm M10“. we-u numbered 3.961.282 andd 8.782 car- give n w hum». - ' (185505 were con vmnc . . "What hus happened is that the rggedhegeregxgewcoggxfigighgag; number of hogs has increased gursmn‘ mm bears urcntlv in recent years with the At me huspmu not only the oaby health of animals actually improv- and Mamie werebut m the can 0L nurses, but Jane too. She was taken into a. lounge and given the strong,, hot coffee that she needed badly. ' “When you feel equal to it," said the nurse who was attending her, 0d." offiwiiils said. ‘This is the re- sult of intelligent breeding watch over animals‘ heulili and the obser- vance of good counsel by those uri- dertaking production." "there are a number of reporters waiti in the reoepti room to interv ew you." Jane's eyes widened. "But -— but wh shouldn't they?" l " ause you risked your life to fly that poor little baby and nls mother here. It's the sort of suiry that the public loves. Don't you realize. my dear, that you are a heroine?" Jane looked frightened. "Oh, no -I don't want that — publicity. I didn't do it for that?" she cried. in honest distress. "Of course yuan-didn't. said the nurse, "but you should know that there's nothing people admire mom tliianeézourage such as you have dis-y pay .' Jane was silent, thinki of theI attention she had attrscte recent tour and of Marlse Sinclair's scathing desci-i tion of hei- - "s cheap little p any." And now. once more. she stood in the" brighil light of publicity. Stories about hen pictures of her. would be in the pa. rs again. , ould people think that she nsd made this fl ht ult to get back into the lirnei ht The thought made hoi- n lltt sick. (To be Continued) cnaassctom nusniis Oheesecloth dusters are by fu- the best for practical and efficient work. ‘They can be washed out readily, and therefore are more apt to got this necessary bath than some of the other duster-s milady useful d one used for polTsh-l ' . be r attacks. were flooded by m‘ cloth‘ on m’ “m” o! wood‘ this official German photo, the llne of the Volga; and if the war drags on a long time, with So- viet unity still unshattered, the in- fluence of Asia on soviet life and thought would be putter. Even in Moscow the enormous Dill] of Asia seemed i0 many a for- eign observer to overwhelm and neutrslile all influences from the west. However, 1t can also be taken for granted that the Germans will do their utmost to encourage the de- velopment of s. new European Rus- sia subservient to Nazi policy. 1i’ Hitler's armies can occupy and hold, for iny length oi’ time. the territories west of ths Urals, there will be no lack of emphasis on a new order there. That is why Hitler may deliber- ately chooseio surround. rather than attempt to storm directly, not only Leningrad but Moscow, and simply keep them dosely surround- No. 4 MIRACLE BILL SAYS I've been keep- ing iabs on a calf I'm raising on Ogilvie “Mira cl e" Calf Meal. When it was about a month old it weighed a hundred and seventy pounds, A month later it was two hundred and forty-five. At three months it weighed three hundred and forty pounds. And it kept right on growing like a weed. At the end of eight months it hit over the seven IlllllfIf€iI pound mark. At six months everybody swore that it was near a year old. That is, everybody who hasn't used “Mlracle" Calf Meal to raise calves. Those folks just say, "Sure!" and they don't get a bit excited, be- cause they've done the same thing. But I surg- wish you could see that calf-you'd want in try that Oizllvle “Mlracle" Calf Meal right off. For one thing it con- tains iodine, which helps calves digest more of their feed. CABVELL BROS. LIMITID Charlottetown Exclusive Distributor: for P. l. l. hill-III MCI Illll ililii _, ed for a. while. hind the Urnis might disintegrate into several regimes, each by a general in control of several armjes rind each maimqininp au- thority in n separate area; lords still ponerfizl enough to har- ass the Germans with raids from behind the mountains and still able to demonstrate that Russia is ioo big to be really crushed, too vast to be truly conquered. capital still farflier east is likely. “Laslwchance” 4/ // Kl’ mi \ OUTERWEAR ' know this: Before Peninans name is put on Knitted Products, Penmans famous quality and value are put in. Q Thousands of Canadians UNDERWEAR ‘ K N I TT E D PRODUCTS \~\\ ,. - HOSIERY His purpose in Ihni case W-iuld be to lct them produce out of their ii agony a new regime ready to talk collaboration \\'l‘.I1 him. lvfeanwhile me Soviet regime b1‘- headed W11’ But the real changes born of a bloody war begin to be discernible only after the war. Arid {iris W211‘ slill Is raging. Offer to save French hostages PARIS, Oct. ZB-JAPJ-A "last chance” offer to spare the lives 0f 100 French hostages and re- lease war prisoners vivhose families turn informer on the assassins of two Germans ivns announced lo- niglit by Gen. Otto Von Stuclp. nagel, commander of the German occupation forces. Suspension of the "‘100-for-onc" reprisnl system for an indefinite period was ordered by Hitler, the General said. to give the French more time to deliver information on the six assiisslns. One hundred French hostages have been slain, 50 at Nantes and 50 at Bordeaux. Two men were said to have been involved in the actual slay- ing of Lt._Ccl. Paul Friedrich Hot-z, Nazi commandant a1. Nan- tes, and four in the‘ killing oi’ Dr. Hans Goiifrind Reimers German‘ military lawyer at Bordeaux. Stuelpiragelfls announcement , which was handed to the press for publication in the occupied zone snldk- t “I have informed the French‘ Government that the Fuehrer of 1 the Reich had decided to suspend the execution of new hostages in reprisal for the Nantes and Bor- deaux assassinations. "A last chance thus is given to all Frenchmen to co-operiite in the investigation of these crimes and thereby show by deeds that they disapprove of these two throw light on t lacks-that at the same time by his attitude he can prevent his‘ “m1. d°3"e°“ hlldm“ from being that he can irilow shot as hostages and eventually further obtain the lib- erai-Ion of prisoners who are near to him. "The army in France and I mY$¢1f_ ivould be happy if meas- ures like those which have been flPDlied could be avoided.” CORRECT THERMOSTAT CONTROL SAVES FUEL. Since the middle of the more active and pin-t of the day, it is set the thermostat lo sasslnations. “Let every Frenchman is within his countrymen The Senator Tom Atlanlic. Senator h n Ililak! over flack of mall urgln| complete reps ' In c menu wiu aroused to lover hurt by nun of furher slnk g e Connolly's comralce h now conducting hearings Im Ill! l°"'"9|“°v'd m , of ‘ vessels. Introducing Selby Styl-EZZ ‘SHOES In IIIIARLOTTETUWII Sole Agency WRIGHT SHOE no. Queen Connolly, Democrat o! Tun, chair nun of the Senate. Ionic‘! 3"‘ I ll of the Neutrality Act. The will?" ° realize I power to help B‘ hose craven at- Ilhe any 1;, Iivyrvwiiriil- the warmer: “fgvifgrblfixzi, III! pl fill NEWPORT FLIKFS time. This will save fuel, and economical. _ In the mornings when the li colder, and in the even? when the fiunily is relaxing, themostat should be set for Sly ‘nea engineers. SWEDEN Ifl READY STOCKHOIAVI WWII’ -- SW6 will not sell its libe iy n! any and the people ‘are prepared fight and die for the coun freedom," said the neu-sivnyier B svonska Dagbladet, discussing neutral country's preparedness. AND NOT SO PUBIICLY Tgennflfi grow rm"? Il“‘f as IEISI Sh, Store (yqmmllw tinnanlkd Sm, ni American li-elnncrs 11"!“