r" ' “gull (lélcgntes to attend conven- MAXIMd Christ give: us the true Idea of God. MI/ /// ' The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew o, , MAxms MERE MAN °' ‘ mess MAN \\l. [hurloffetuwu Guurdlun. Two Con". ugynin] Guardian, Founded i681 cnAntorrurovviv. CANADA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBE-Bml4, 1942 Serve God end God will take one of you. .______fz 12 PAGES Annual Uublerlptlon Delivered, $.00 B! lhtll P. I. L “.001 to other Provinces lad U, l. A. “.00 FRENCH TUNlSlAN GARRISON S FIGHTING GERMAN S African Offensive Paves Way For Axis CollgpseAllied-Tfoops Allied “Squeeze Play” In Africa To Oust Axis Amuuclu. - _ - q ' :.. gel}.- Q33: r4 u ' S; 2 ' MOROCC a ALGERIA 1 NORTH AFRICA AMERICAN TROOPS, RANGERS. ‘CHUTISTS- SUPPORTED lY BRITISH AII»SEA FORCES-LAND AT KEY POINTS ON ALGERIA AND MOROCCO COASTS Herc ls a view of the Unllcd Nations’ great “squeeze play" lu Africa. Wllllc British forces, sided by Am- erlzuu tunks and plures, have chased the Axis bank 11110 Ubyfl. lhousamb of American troops have gone hip fl‘.'ll0ll at the points on the African cossrtl he the flip of Italy. UIYA Kill? FRONT ALLIES CHASE AXIS IACK ACROSS outs 1 a .8; utter ‘I EGYP Nllllll PASS ‘ORDER INTU LIIYA pictured above. If Iwcesslul, this great pllllfi... move. ment can elem‘ the Axis out of French Africa, crush Rommel’: African army, gain control of the Med- ltemanean and put m: Allied force 1n Tunis, close to At Toulon Nazis lteep Sharp Watch _Qn Fleet Nozi ll-Boat Seeks Food LONDON, Nov. 13- (AP) -The main French Fleet, object of o. vi- tal jtug-of-wer between the Allied Nations and the Axle, still rode at anchor lu ‘Iloulon Harbor today, Watched intently from the skies by 1121c Gerlllau Air Force lest lt make a break into the Mediterranean. rue Germans went ahead with , .. _ . , Uh ' swift occupation of Suithem SAX JObla, POQJIRIDZI, boy. Fl. we but they stayed pointedly 13—(Al’)-—A Gcrumn U-buut away [tom the lmmedmte “ea o‘ "lll-"llfod to lund some of its q»m,_Gn_ Them was no duubt a_ (‘rrlv on the fitlnntic r-nzist of (“in llirn, it was Announcer! numg naval men’ huwever’ ma‘ Nani bombers would attack the in- (lnhp- T] - ' t .11‘ . - PW ‘mb;;n;m2"“a:$"‘2mm‘; s_ utut bgconle a areut the pow. v-Irl snprllxvs ‘LONDON. Nov. l3 — (C?) — ‘Plu- ll-bout made two uttuckl Willi lls (lcclr guns firing, nl. an Reports reached undo“ tonight that Grand Admiral Erich llllo .,dli(~1l_ 110ml, in)‘ (he whilst: Raeder, Commnnder4|hch|ef 0f n 0 ‘lllflln ""11 My 1'0"“ Gcman naval forces, ls in" Tou- -_.l \\.ll| gun fire lmmcll- h,“ "w French mu.“ h.” on l‘ ll‘l(l said they "repulsed" llll- Jlnrllr. ’l'\\'n of fhr- submarine crow “Tri- rr-pnrlrd wounded. line (‘min llirun “of rvorlndcrl slightly. this was the third announ- rm enemy attempt (o (Illlfllll {mil for sulnnarlncs in (‘vista l‘ll, the Mediterranean Rucders presence there was lwhevcil conmcted with the un- certain status of the port, which the Germans said yesterday they were not occupying, trult- iug the Vichy navy to defend It "against unyjggressolnf; soldier eilul flotilla of 82 ships meant to _ "flu-y and naval ruuihor- jciu the Allied side. tin-s have inrn-xlhrrl their land Fighting French headquarters ntni -.-.\ plllfllls in the past here sald it hud no information few weeks, whether the fleet had picked its side, but pointed out that its com- mending officer, Admiral dc ll Bord, was believed to be lo "a: to Nlnrshal Petnln who ordere the ships to remain in port. The mystery was tied 1n another knot tonight omen the Vichy RA- dio broadcast that Gen. Auguste Nogues, ersiwlllie Vichy Common- dcr in Morocco. had binned himself ilucler orders of Admiral Darlsn, who has asked the fleet to come over to the Allies, and that both regarded themselves as fulfilling the mandate of the Marshal. This may have been, Ln rt, to Boning Events _U.._ “T.\lkirs~ Cfflllilllfl Tucsdauv. Last mm‘. 11-12-31. "D.ilicc—lona Hall, lvionduy. N v. 16111. Millvlew Orchestra. 11-1331. “Dance at Clgcliedd Road School 1611 11-14-21. Planned Big Fascist Naval Base At Tohruk By The Canadian Prose Mussolini once dreamed of Tobruk as a great Fascist naval base, a sort of rival to Alexandria. but this dream. like his African Em- pire, hes fallen apurt under the mnact of Allbd bomb and shell. When British troops marched iuto the Libyan port yesterduv. for the second time in this “for. all they found were smoulderinz :ulns. Languld waves lapped at the hulks of countless ships lying like ghreis in the harbor. Eighty miles from the Egyptian border, Tobruk has the be=r natur- al harbor in all Libya. The sur- rounding terrnlu makes it easily defended, as shown bv the epic British stand theze during the l’! months they held the town after first taking it on Jan. 22, 1941. Lt-Gen. Sir Bernard Mont- gomery's 85h Army vuade its second eutrv less than four months after it was ejected by Marshal Rommel last Julie 22 ln one of the worst defeat; suffered lav the British in all the African fighting. Rommel captuzed some 33.000 British prisoners nt that time and it was possible that the current Brlflsh sweep across Libyn might brlnrr liberntion of some of these. Before the war Tobruk had e. population of 4.000. only 10 per cent of them Italians sud lhe rest Arabs. Urge Delegates To Eoonomize 13—<CP)—Del- rvntive Nation- Dec. 0, t0 take OITAWA. Nov. egews t0 the Oonse ul Convention at Winnipeg 10 end l1 are being urge Nunnnhcr‘ 1. Dill! P105511"! 0n d6 18- 5°"! 011191‘ tourist cor accommodation when _______ his ships out 0f AXIS reach lnd ll- travelling and t0 sprung to ‘Rumm-dge 5mm 91,11,113], 5W0 him lml Bud‘! I dffilllflfl "double up" in hotel rooms-at in Cllllffl] 5cm,“ mm 330 “Hwy. would keep the faith with Peluln. line with the convention commit. 11_1‘4_11_ 11f it were o. matter for the crew's tee‘; policy of encourog war. themselves, to decide. the fleet n-l- time ecouo y-psrty spo esmen o. Zion c1 1 q» ,1 ready would have steamed out to Tuoszlay‘, 1101113531‘... mhfifflo {mill figlht the Axis at the behest of 11_g1_l')nrlsn, erstwhile Commander-in- Chlef, it was believed here. “WP “quire a quantity of well llcshvrl bolosun cattle. Island Cold “WHY: 00., Lid. 9-26-dtf. .. l by, Dent miss Mllrshllcld Pres- xwltflflll Church Hot Goose Dln- No; Marshficld Hall, Wednesday, ‘- 18th- 11-14-11 International At A Glance By The Canadian Press) RUSSIA - Qtelln tells Anoelet- “Patten Your rooster" with Pur- lna Chick I-‘attena Chesckers. $3.15 Dillon an Spillc-tt. 11-11-41. ynlfauvlnz lzecse. poultry and ed Ptces um British-American m- Knllé! ylss Monday at Fredericton. vances in Numb Africa open we! u ‘Henson. ll- - . for early collapse of Axle. "New buvhTiTvl and dressed uou-ru AFRICA 4mm crowd ggilltrg‘ at old Telephone Office. An- shuttered Axll foreee info Nb)! ll T" Llewellyn, Monlagile. British-American Intern ll-io-T-T-S-dl. app uch Tunisia hen Ireueb reported fight Axle forces; Ber- dla, Tobruk f : I order of day lays enemy erlpp UNITED STATES — loeeevelt orders IQIIC-hld old In food. elotb- lnr and weapons for eeeupled Afri- can territories. SOLOMON! -— U3. hllvy er, destroyer damaged wblle anllng Jan west o Henderson dr- field on uuduleeuul. Jl“! “'3.ll.‘.'l'.‘..';.t1""' ‘H; ve o an u u zgu-lrcled l0 miles from wit: bue o Buns. "Bllvlmz live and are sed chick- ftlll: 11nd fowl everv Wcrlnisdny. Psy- Huntlgu market prices. P. J. Nov. P River. 0-26-S-M-tf. on , ii Hmwomnus Institute dance and cnhyld QVPnIng at new warehouse, 17.] 1° slllllflfl. Tuesday, November ‘L If flflt fine 18th, 11-14-17. "Public Meeting All Conservative "rlfllprrer. of Soulhport ll at V, ‘Wort School Monday. over-I- ‘ m" 3 P. M. Business to ap- . Reeves, Chairman. il-l4-2i. 12-15mm said today. Expenditures Pared Previously the committee un- ounced that elaborate oellu old name-bearing instead. Expenditures on printing have been reduced in erlsou ‘with past conventions and book- lets issued to delegates will give them necessary information in the simplest form ible. Oon tlm heed- ven ttee querterg meld the convention will open nt 11 em. Dec. 9 with reg- istration of delegates beginn at 3 pm. the revloul day u un 10 pm. milieu-e- tion boot will be open day Dec. b for the convenience of del- fi egltu expected to uttend. Qummenlde Mm A lnnxpu-tation committee heed- ed bv John T, Beckett of Montreal it: been selected. wiltshekungmr: being naked to set in touch with thew provtncle xwresenmtlvel in making 15rd: oeiuienta for nil- eenh. ttee members include: New Brunswick, Kenneth B. Ouson, Saint John; Nerve Scotti. Frank Stanfield, Tnxro; Prince Bdwerd Island, J. Arnett. Bummer-side. “l” Air Marshal War Situation Last Night (By Klrlre L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst) With the full of Tobruk to the British 8th Army In eastern Libya. end indicated Anglo-American advance from the welt into Tunisia the original L500-mfle gap between the Jlvve of the Allied trap closing on ltommel’: shuttered and fleeing Axis desert army tn Africa. ha: shrlv- elled to 900 miles. Against that dual threat, driving in upon him from both sides at a pace unmatched in any previous phase of the give-and-take British- Axis campaign in Africa, Rommel’. b of escaping complete au- nlhllatlon are dwindling every hour. There are strong indications that Berlin ulreedy has ubnnduned hope of winging what it oun from Africa. by lea 1nd sir Qvleuatiou. e o e o u e Tobruk is of extreme practical as well as psychological value to the British command. It pushes forward u British supply advance base, fed by sea u well u lend, to sustain dud speed up the pursuit of the Axis army to its ultimate annihilation. It enonnously strengthen! British control of the vitally important custom Mediterranean. The westbound British have encourfiered for days virtually llu Axis sir opposltlfln. Rommel’: men are running almost unshelterrd from uir strafing. What has become of Clemson-Italian air power in Africa ls a puzzling enlgnuu lt may have been mussed westward to meet the Am- erican occupation of French Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia. insistent but unconfirmed Axis reports of damage inflicted on British-American wercmft sud shipping suggest thut. I I I O U O _ lf so, however, Hitler sent a small boy to do s mun-size 10b- It slgnally failed to halt or even sluw up the American thrust, Berlin was obviously guilty of the some fault this time that has so frequently plagued Britain end her allies. lt wu the Axll which was too late with too little, and reports that Hitler has removed his sir commander there sound plausible. Gen. Dwight Eisenhower's coastal column of Angl°4mcll¢llll mm‘ ored forces under u. British command was estimated to hflvc thrust 111e,, Tunisin, The degree of opposition it has met or will meet remained uncertain but the chnnfel were it would prove ‘nesllslllltl- Nazi withdrawal of air borne troops flown into the French protec- torate beforetbey even came to grips with the Allies ls significant. It looks like ruem from poselhle flshtln: rmwh seizure before the Allied column arrives. Trophies Presented At Provincial Fox Show Standard Platinum Championship Won Yesterday By Mr. Roy Woodside. llrew Complains Mail Opened, Phone Tapped LONDON, Ont. Nov. 13- (CP)—Lt, Col. George A. DNW. ‘Yesterday was "get-away day" at the Provincial Fox Show. It was expected that the Judgmg would be completed at noon. ‘the classes in some cases were quite large and the foxes were so evenly matched that it was almost 4 0'- clock before the lest on the list had left the table. Trlcn came the presentation of prizes. Them was a good atten- dance to witness this. President L;.vc.l Hancock spoke briefly, thanking the spectators, the ex- hibitors, the officials sncl Judge Conservative leader In the Ontario Le lslature, charged gmlggulcinaflglll” in‘: pgifiigg’ here today at mull he send: hnbmon. “It hlnsleenbeen, said he. to Ottawa is being opened. "not by the censor but by some- one else," und that his private "one of the best we have ever held. made particularly interesting be- cause of the many new types telephone “is being tap ." In an address to a mutton dxlgyblllilome “gwmgms “nmnef ‘g9 service club (Kiwanis), Col. e rs- lm “"59"” C e l; Dr", h“; whom chm. a (fries freon Quebec, _Ncw Brunswlc’ were lad recently under e 5nd 11°“ Swua‘ ‘Ne ayltlfialfd (95%; larger numbers will our neighboring provinces next ear and take away with them a rger number of our prizes." He called on Hon, W. H. Dennis, Minister of Agriculture. tn present the prizes. Mr. Dennis said it was Defence of Canada Regula- tions and later withdraw!!- sald that "I' have lust dis- covered that l am in the new! again. My letters to Ottawa are being stemmed open, not b! m: “m” b“ by “mama a pleasure indeed to be at the show .1 h“, "ch lane" 1n m, again on closing day. l-le had at- possesflom bended several times and in his opinion this was in many ways lhe “My ‘mule "lephone l’ be‘ best exhibition of recent years. He lug tapped and it does not , m“ "‘°"- l "ml ""‘ °“ $liigrad>mllleois “flit gmnflliesslill "Mk “” “m! made ‘m. "Oloep your fists, shut your teeth, copied. These evplea ure being sent nronud to the depart- ments concerned. "If that is democre», then Ill and go home with a determlnation that you will come buck next rear with a winner." He complimented the mmllserrneut and the staff cn wonlggas of democracy are than perk“ mangemenm He M“ 9MP“ I“ 0mm“ m“ a lo her hus- “:' ekfemwfif‘? ‘yarmcllfl band's e was Mrs Dennis n wor n; we .‘ se ‘ - ' Drew. adding that if such ll gtntggggred me Judging ‘mm the cue not only ls the govern- ment n fault "but we are all to blame." Be continued:- Numerous Trophies The handout of silverware took "Bow many of u have m "w" “M” "l" -' - v" wtfipWfitnt? ‘A? $2.2‘? $32 contract wmlilllll °l “m” very large particularly the Pro- ‘aflmff: :31‘ gfgjljlffl: Vince o1 ‘New Brunswick trophy e we ‘o. I m MI»- "e- Eilifil‘ “m” ‘l5.’ is: ‘$13.62.? lnees with the government.‘ I mount my“ in these tmphws’ euy that anyone these dlvl mm 0g mam donated for the first who been ouch fem and e ‘um ‘ovum Wm do‘ “'9', lulu“ l‘ ' w‘ u’ u‘ well over g thousand dollars. “w” '7' -t of the day's Judginu Wes e win of Stewart and Lewis in the Standard platinum medium male pup class, which had eighteen entries. Wellington McNelll se- 00nd. In the female pup dines Stewart ulnd won first and secon places end they followed that up with wins in the standard platinum light. sec. l and 2 for adult males uni!“ adult females. OTTAWA Nov. l8 —(C'P) — Joseph Stalin Comments On Situation B)’ Hellfy C. Cassidy QOILVHglItI 1942, By lhc Associated Press _\l()SC()\\', N0“ 1_1_(Sm_ "1'd¢1l’)_(-’\1’)-—]0S@1)h Stalin declared today that the Amgrj. can and British campaign in Africa ‘has turned the military and pOllllCill 1wusitio11 in El1rr,pg_ radically in favor of the AlFes, Qlmlllng the way for the early °°l1al>se of the German and Italian Axis, lle Sflvlfit leader praised British and American leaders as first-rate organizers" of the African campaign and ex. pressed confidence that it soon ‘Yould Yelleve (iemmn pressure on the (‘asltrn from, H‘? Pll-‘dgcd that the Russian Army would carry out its part 0f the war task with honor. The statements were made in the second exclusive autograph- ed lCllCY by the Russian leader tostglhls C0rl'e51)ull(le11t_ ninth fl t tte Oct. 3 said aesecrcsmcle frgntto fii (g1 paramfiunl- importance and de- clared the-t Allied aid {,0 Ru5$1a 11nd been or little effect compared to the Soviet contribution to pro. sf-‘Cullon 0f the wur and called onthe Allies w norm their obll- gations fully and pmmp , I sent a letter to the Kremlin Thursday evening asking the sqv- ict view of the situation since the American landings in French Norm Africa and the British. victory in Egypt, Stalin's reply reflecting the Sov- iet s-pprecintiou- or the campaign was hon-deal to me Friday at mid- night. bv Nikolai Palguncv, Chief of the Press Department of the Foreign Commissuriut. News Briefs ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Nov lk-(Suturdny) —(Cl’)—’l‘he slaying of more than 500 Japanese In the Gor- ari area by Allied troops fight- ing their way out of the Owen Stanley Mountains toward the north New Guinea coast was announced today by the high command, NEW YO-RK. Nov. 13—(CP)— Cauarlzrs LnlJGr Minister, Humph- rey Mitchell, arrived here today after a visit of several weeks in Britain. The Minister, who mode the Atlantic crossing by ship, ex- pecis to leave for Ottawa tomor- row. BUENog AIRES, Nov. 13- (APl-Thc Argentine govern- ment announced tonight that the United states government had presented to it three mem- oramlzt charging the existence of Nnzi espionage in Argentina. PANAMA, Nov. 13-(AP7-—Pau- ama announced tonight it has broken relations with the Vichy regime because of the Axis occu- pation of France. WASHINGTON NOV. 1&- (AP)—Prcsidt-nt boom-en m- duy signed the bill providing for drafting nf 18- and 19-year- olds in the United States. LONDON. Nov_ 13-40?)- Reuters News Agency quoted the Vichy radio as saying that Axis plllnes had mode several raids on American-occupied Bone in Al- gerla, today, causing damage and civilian msuletles. Crop Figures -Are Revised OTTAWA, Nov. l3 -(CP) lcs Dominion Bureau of Statlst "by a considerable margin." "The Canadian oat crop now is 65l,978.000 bushels, estimated at e t0- day reduced its original estimate of the i942 wheat crop by 7.555.000 bushels, placing the total output wt d 607,688,000 bushels-still the largest wheat crop Canada ever produced Cross Frontier; Nazis In Tunis To the east British 8thArmycaptaresl Tobruk; Rommel’s Army “Com- pletely Smashed". * _ _ LONDON, Nov. lt-(Saiurduy)—(CP)—French Tun- lslan garrisons were reported fighting German tanks and parachutists in Tunis early today as dispatches said Al- lied troops had swept across that protectorate’s western frontier amid appeals by Vice-Admiral Jean Darlau for all Frenchmen to lay down their arms and join the Allies. 8TH ARMY ROLLS ON Far to the east in Libya the British 8th Army rolled on after occupying Tobruk without opposition, and Mar- shal RommePs fleeing remnants were being pounded by Allied armen already operating from captured Libyan air fields. A dispatch from Allied headquarters ln North Africa told of the French Tunisian uprising against the Ger- mans who were said to be trying desperately to control the capital of Tunis. Nazi parachute troops were said to to be in control of an airport outside the capital. TRANSPORT PLANES DOWNED This information conflicted slightly with an earlier R.A.F_ report thst said six Italian transport planes cl-rryln: Nazi troops north across the Mediterranean had been shot down. The R-A-R had 1101100011 that the Germans were leaving their infiltrated Tunisian positions, but It also was probable that the destroyed planes were flying from T149011 gr some other point in Libya rather than from Tunisia. CROSS FRONTIER A Reuters News Agency dispatch from ‘mugler llld British troops h“ grossed the Algeria-Tunisian frontier in the speedy effort to close all North Africa. to the AXIS. Allied headquarters opinion was said to be reserved 0n the pros- pect of the Tunisian Frenchmen fe5pgndifjg to Admiral’ Darlans appeal, but it was apparent that French hatred nw precipitated the battle with the Germans and this was viewed here es favorable to the Allied pOSlllOIl. Algeria and Morocco already have gwung mostly into the Al- lied fold, and French dock work- ers are siding the Allied advance. United States and British airmen were said to be taking A heavy toll of Axis airmen trying to stem the surge toward Tunlslfl- Enemy Smashed Gen. B. L_ Montgomery, com- mander of the army chasing Mar- shal Rommel, said the enemy has been "completely smashed," 10s- lug at least 30.000 prisoners and vast stocks of war material. He named 12 Axis dlVLSlCmS, four German and eight Italian, which he said are uo longer effective fighting fonnations, and ordered his cleanup forces onlward with the words "good hunting to you all" Unconfirmed reports said also that Axis ships were setting soil from Bengusi. DOrt on the Libyan coastal hump which lies 400 miles across the Gulf of Sirte from Tri- Nazis Claim Heavy a Allied Ship Losses l BERLIN (From German Broad- casts). Nov. 13 --(AP>— The Ger. man High Command claimed today the sinking of a British cruiser. a destroyer and five transports and damage to i8 other Allied ‘hips by Axis U-boars and plane attacks off North Africa. (There we; no Allied confirme- tion of these enemy claims.) DIES 0F INJURIES QUEBJSD, Nov. l8 -(CP)—E‘n_ gineer H.111. McGovern of Quebec died in hOSplllll here today from injuries suffered st Moutuuban Le! Mines Monday in a collision of two Cans. d l a u National Rallwzrvu freight trains that has already cost the lives of slx men, Fireman J. C. A. Brault of Joli- elbe. Quebec. and J. E. Beruler of Ste. Crolx de lmbiniere still are ‘n hospital here but their condition is not regarded as serious. L048 0’ ll itself. poThe Allied force headquarters DQQQH commun‘quo this evening confirmed , Thursday's reportsbithrét (the oust‘; b d Alled com no orcc l 13231111011 North Africa had "extended the Algerian zone of occupation M for as Bone". 60 miles from the Tlmisiuu frontier. Raid Warnings Sound In Borne‘ LONDON, Nov. l3 -—(CP) -Alr raid warnings sounded tonight in the Swiss ClL es of Borne, Gonevrs and Inusanue. (Such wnrniuis usually indicutA the R.AF' is flying t0 attack Italy but there was no word on that tonight.) High tide this afternoon at 43k New Recllrd F01‘ ““§o.l°Ql§"Z§om§IrZ“,-L%OZ” fem‘.- so Ship Construction 931$} "e" “mm” mm“ " First quarter moon Nov. 15, 2.54 um Blunmerside tide 1o minutes ult- er than Charlottetown. CAB FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 18 — (APl—-A 4,000-ton freighter floated in San Fuanclsco Bay today 80 hours after her keel was laid. smashing all records needy ship construction. f0! From Burden-Leave 0.05 1-in- ll.40 um. 2.00 pm, 4.30 p.m. ‘LOG .m.. v Leave Cupe Tormentlne -— 10M mm. 1.15 p.111. 3.05 p.m., 5.45 pm. 8.15 pm. SUNDAY SERVICE (Muy S to Dec. 27 Inclusive) Leave Borden 9.00 l.lll.. 8.45 ll- Leave Tormentiua 10.18 mm. p-m. P.E.l.-N.!. mun snvwI Naval Battle LONDON, Nov, l4 —(Sntur- dly) —-(Cl’l—lkuters uld tn- duy thut the Vichy radio ‘a ~d broadcast a report that a vlu nuvsl battle la in proyres- off Air Mental WA. Bishop VAL 59¢, 9 mfle gmmem maslnum 8.740.000 bushels below the Sept- le "dangerously ill" in u out- 1km" when,“ 1n 194m "m... were ember estimate but more than Al len. mull- 10.00 us. and reel hospital It Ill announced fifteen entries, end it was rnobnbly double the 104i crop." be announcer quoted e dle- Leno WON! et B.O.A.I'. headquarters today. the second best class in the whole Fllxsffd Pfcflllcl-lon Ls also plse- patch from Lu Linen. Sllllll- '-°|:'"“éu.n,,| mm 1nd 4-" ll- l‘ he etutmeut sold, however. 110p, g 11m, m; _ Every fox ed ‘ower at ,99i.000 bushels, al- en the Gibraltar border, us ea - I E eundltlun ll "sllghtb ubjgd 1n; worthy of u prime. and most 2,000.000 bushels below the lug that confirmation of I DA"; All " 31148; Bung“, mark we“; n 10,1; earlier est mate. report of the battle In lens: (IXCIPT 8U Dllllhel Bishop, director (line making his lacing. It finally The 1942 potato crop is estimated In the departure of 313m m|otutnwlvhsu|nmefg|flw ef recruiting for the RC-AJB. ' ended with Raxvnondm fox at 42,097,000 hundredwelght. e re- Illvll lflfl llflml“ 7"- Mun on Inspected nu ulr cadet uquldron first, B. G. Muttart second. Vernon ductlon of 950,000 from the Oct- nltu durlur mic"! -M M, u". chgrlottetnwn 8.30 u. m. in Hamilton, Nov. b and became Gav third. ober estimate. (Th dill)!" m M‘ n, 1130 _ m“ 4,30 p. m, ill tbnt evening. returning lm- Female may in the some class of The 1942 hay and clover cro at ther detllls 1:“ f‘ ,1 a A ve Clnrlnttetown l b. m. Iaiedlhtdy to Montreal to mic! ~-————i-~--—————~~~ - 16,942,000 tons is 1,444,000 tong a ve "WI W’ , 5,45 p. m, 1.05 p. m. ‘ (Continued on page ll, Col 6) the first estimate. »