\ '”'"“'*""7+">*~¢.--... . _. “who ‘If? _ f. ‘h l. .‘ MAXIMS MAXIMS MER: MAN o’ A MERE MAN ‘rank on not so dun» u arrows. ma“, "Ne. u: “and h h". Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew chnrlotlolown Guardian. Two Con!!- Iornln; Guardian. Founded Ill’! cnaiiijdizrsrovvr-i. CANADA, THURSDAY, OGFOBERIZ‘), 19.?" Annual Subscription Delivered, 05,00 By Mall: P. l. L $4.0M to other Provinces and II, l. A. IBM EIXPECT MAJOR J AP DRIVE AGAIN ST U. S. BASES Germans Hepburn Deplores “Blind Partisan ” Rule At Ottawa. Elsewhere Was under “Growing Pressure” to put Liberal i_ Iland Loan Total Reaches $924,800" Prince Edward Island's contribut- ion w the third Victory Loan soared close to the one million mark yesterday according to figures released from Provincial man Headquarters last night. The grand wiui ior the province to date now stands at $924,800 as a result, of yesterday's sales. Cnarlottetoun continues to forge steadily ahead adding to its total earn day. ‘me amount subscribed by patriotic citizens up until last night was $364,300. The objective for the island capital in this loan is $600,000, Slllllllkffildiyfi total took a. big jump yesterday with the result that thc figure passed the $200000 mark. To date the Western Cap- ital subscribed a grand total of $211,000 Prince County outside Sside, is also making a good showing. bu until last night the total ivns $116,500. Queen's County, outside Charlottetown, moved up t0 $1.26. 950 yesterday. King's Count put on an extra push tn yester ay's canvassing to oversubscribe the The total for King's now stands at 8105.800 ivith the hulf-ivav mark in the campaign just passed. U.S. To Freeze hewspriiit uuiput WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 —(AP)— A spokesman for the War Predict- ion Board said today that within "the next few days," the War Pro- duction Board will freeze output of newsprint and other paper at ap- pncxniately present levels. T0 stiff-Erik BOOK SACKVILLE. N B.. Oct. 28 — (C?) - Miss Eleanor Fraser. New GI-"Row. N 8.. a fourth vear aria SiIIfVnt at Mount Allison University. has been appointed editor-in-chief of the Mount Allison vrar book flvd is the first voung woman to achieve this distinction. Gaming _Events 0 "Talkics-Sourfs Monday. 10-29-21. "Talkies-Canoe a»... Friday. 10—29-2i. "Talkies — Montague Saturday. Matinee 3 P. M. 10-29-21. "Talkies-Mt. Stewart Saturday. 10-29-21. "Dance, Tracadie Hall Friday. October 30th. 10-29-11. "Rummage sale ‘trinity School hnll snturday Nov. 1i. 10-29-11 "Kiiikora Hall AJIIIZO and dance Friday night. Mulligan Orchestra. 10-29-11 "We rcquiie a quantity of wcll flcslicd bologna cattle Island Ccld Storage Co.. Ltd. D-ZG-dt-f. "Masquerade Dance, St. Peters Bay. Friday 30th. Prizes. Cliffords Orchestra. 10-28-21. "Highfield Presbyterian Cliurcn Pantry sale at Holmans Saturday afternoon. Oct. 31.’ Roast ohidicn baked beans, etc. io-2o-al "Trucking nugs as usual for me summer months. List your no with A. C Green, Albany and G. Green Emerald 5-6-7-i1-W-T-M-t-f "Masquerade Dance. st. Georgrs H811. Friday, ocwbei- 30th. w 29 u "Bean Suppe d D nce. St. 910m“ Hall, VM-edrlinesdsyflvovcm- bcr 4th. 10-20-31-11-2-3. ‘argaticlie-l-Iglxlfyifenfilhfivorty goo- . ne g a Fr ay, October 30th Prlzgs for best bov- "iy costumes. 10-29-21. " uqueradc Dance, Lyndale Bchool Monday. November 2nd. Re- freshments, Prize for best Ofiztllzfglfil.‘ "Notice-Mr. Alex MacEachem, 1-0118 Creek hereby notifies his cus- tomers that he will be runnin cosh business starting Novem 3111i 10-20-21. “Free motion pictures pnresented bv Travel 1211110“! Alber n, Oct. 20: O'Lear , Oct. 90. 8.30 pm. A Hnesker wtl give s short address “T1 "I Victory Loan campaign. $100,000 mark. I a oarenl wn described Sept. 24 . 1' 5i: Bu tan Ahmed. member of Party Interests ahead of war Interests. ‘IICIRDINTO, Oct». fll-(‘CIPP- Hon. fviiicueu F. ncpbuiiin, M11060 Nfilsflatlon B5 Pilkllilel‘ oil Uni-ant) CB-h-c with staining sundenness Just one Wfifik 8/80, wiillfllit m E statement said that "the intensi- iicacioin of pnrusan prcssuic in- tericired wltibmy aum-nsuative duties to a point where l wasiorc- ed to moose between the party and the well-being of the Nation; I have put my country first." Mr. l-lepbuin, tn his IfiuO-WOIIC stauuiiciit, salon ‘outfall-i division" that. LiEVCIOIxG between the Gov- eivruiient and irie Pisriy brought about two outstanduig issues- "ccrmplete smbservienoe w the Ot- twwa pOliitlcal machine and the ceiling of a snap electldfi whenever the time appeared opportune.” DOUD PARTISAN VOICES In reviewing the events lending up to his resignation and the change in the Ontario Liberal Party leadership, Mr. HuplDllfll said tzhe “main cause must nc-w be apparent to the public as a iesult of the resignations from the Cab- inet and tihe loud voices being heard from partisan politicians who are already organizing for a convention, an election, or batch." At the same time Mir, Hepburn stated he would remain, at the xe- quest of Premier Gordon Conant, as Provincial ‘Iueasurer. Hemade no reference as to .he length of tllénee he would mnaln in that of- Mr. Hepburn spoke of his pre- war wamfngs of "impending cat- astrophe" and his appeals fcr an all-out. war effort since hostilities broke out. SCORES "PARTUSAN SECTION" “As was to be expected, my ad- amant and consistent stand. my lack of blind adhesicn to part/y welfare as against national inter- ests in tihris unprecedented crisis in world liisicuy, annoyed the purely partisan section of the Liibcral Pntrty, and as a consequence my Position as lender became unten- fllble, A serious division grodually developed within the Go-vzrnmeni/ and the Part-y which became in- tensifled even as ilie war came cics-Ii" to cuir slicres." Then there were the issues of suibservienoe or a snap election. Because of the “seric-umess of the sixuation." the Government last session prolonged its life one year. "According to political prece- dent, Governments which hold to office are usually defeated." Mr. Hepbuirns statement said. "I ne- alizied that but, nevertheless, 1 re- sisted the growing pressure for a snap election to a point wlisre air- dent Party incn cliallmged my position pointing out- fhat it was my first duty to get the Party back In wer regardless of the war. In - is respect I was in an anomalous and yet vulnerable po- IJrive Makes Steady Prgress OTTAWA, Oct. 28 -—(CP) - The National War Finance committee announced tonight that 401.492 subscribers had contributed a grand total 0f $414.583.900 t0 Can- ada's ThLd Victory Loan up to the close of business Tuesda , the cum- ulative numerical tota of sub- scribers exceeding by 43,411 that of the las‘ loan in its first eight bus- iness days. The committee attributed the in- crease in subscribers to an "earlier inrush" of the subscriptions of fact- ory, stone and office worker; under the payroll savings plan. Killed By Mob In India UITAWA. Oct. 28 -—(CP)—- Pilot Officer Josegih Henry smith Ksmloow. 0.. listed by the R. C.A.F'. last month ls "killed on active service," died when s host- ile mob In troubled India attacked a train, It was " closed today. Only meagre details of the In- cident we.e avirlable at R.C.A.F. headquarters, but the sis fng of this oung BriiLh Oolumb an ap- O is Viceroy’! council. before the In- dian Assembly at New Delhi. He ouid two Roytl Air I'm-co officers had been killed in a train In Nihnr Province. India's Dflhcf- pal steel centre, and that the “brutttty and ferocity with whic B‘ Red iirTy Makes Gains No Major Break- ' Through In Ruined City. By Henry C. Cassldy Associated PrI-‘Ss Staff Wrltvr MOSCOW, Oct. Zfb-(Thiirsday) —(AP)—The Russians today re- ported tlicir second withdrawal in the battle-torn city of Stalingrad the Red Army had made gains northwest of Stalingrad and on the Black Sea front of the west Caucasus. The Wednesday midnight Soviet communique said the Germans had advanced 200 yards at. one point in the factory dictrict, of north Stalingrad after gaining a- bout tivo blocks during the prev- ious night by throwing 111 huge masses 0f men, tanks and planes. At another point. the communi- lnfaiitry broke through So et lines to the southwest outskirts 0f The German advance in Stalingrad, achieved by incessant assault at the cost of severe losses, cramped still further the Russian defence on the high west bank of the Volga. But. the Russians said. the Germans did not make a major break-through. (The German high commands communique said German troops in Stalingrad “thrust on east of s. factory as far as the River Volga." occupying scveral fortified blocks of houses. East 0f Tuapse. the Germans claimed they occupied a Advance 200 Yards; FWar Situation LasI Nigh _.i_ __.__. -._. ,. (By Kirke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst) The crux of the clash In the Solomons lies in continuing naval ac- tlon far at sea but the “unslnkahle plane carrier" on Guadalcanal is fully justifying the tactical and strategic conception that dictated its seizure from the enemy. American planes from that Japanese-Invested air field are still striking heavy blows not only in the close waters between Guadalcanal and Florida Islands; but half a thousand miles to the northeast in the "Pen sen between the Solomons and the Gilberts. And It is there, east- ward of’ Sleivart Island and north of Santa Cruz, that the pattern of wai- In the Pacific may be undergoing a drastic change in what the navy calls a "naval air battle." I O I Aside from the successful defence of Guadalcanal air base from first In 24 IIOUTB. 1711i’ Emflfiunfied mill formidable Japanese land attacks, the most significant line in a navy recapiiulatlon of the fighting in the Solomons area on Oct. 25, 20 and . 27, was its statement that bombers arid fighters "from Guadalcanal" had ITDf-‘FlI-9dly mused "400 miles northeast." of that Island to strike tell- ing blows. They chalked up one Japanese carrier, and a heavy CIIIISLT “badly damaged" and another carrier and a battleship hit. I O I l I 0 Navy planes figure In the accounting although marine corps fight- ers participated in closer action against enemy light craft, and a fight between an army Flying Fortress "on a search mission" and six enemy Zero fighters ls also mentioned. ‘ _ It seems certain that the Guadalcanal air field is to some extent Que 581d. a compfllllf 97 mmonze“ serving as a substitute for lost or damaged American plane carriers. "1 There can be small doubt, however, that the commandvr of Japan- , ese landing forces has been grimly Instructed to disregard 105505 iii tlin °“° ram“ m“ w“ “med “Em, effort to retake it. The first attacks beaten off by army and marine corps men can be only curtain raiser: for what must follow. 8th Army Wins Opening Round CAIRO, Oct. 28—-(AP)—'II'ie ad- (onmed mounmln msmon 1mg- vance tail: force of Britain's 8th repulsed enmy counter-attacks. Southeast of Novorossisk. above Tugpge, m; communique said Ger- man troops "successfully stormed a mountain range dominating the whole district") I6 Die In Bus, Train Collision DETROIT, Oct. 28-tAP)-SiX- teen pcrscns w-re killed and more than a score injured, several crit- ically, today irhen a Detroit street. railways inuioroiis, jammed to its doors with school children. office workers and factory cmployces, was ripped in two by a passenger train. The bus halted at the Cniilff av- enue closing cf the Grand Trunk Western Railroad to permit a northbound freight train to pass, then ITIOV-d directly into the path of a southbound passenger train. The locomotive of thc Chicago- Detroit train sliced through the rear end of the bus. hurled The front end to onc_ 51d; scattered bodies along the right of way for two blocks iind ground to a stop a quarter mile away with the bodies of six vouths mangled against the front of its boiler. Marie Giles. 21. a passenger seat- ed directly behind the bus driver. told how standing riders obscured his vision. "There was a car ahead of the bus." she said. "When the freight train cleared. this car started a- cross. The bus driver asked the pcople jammed against the front door if everything was clear. He could not see for himself: the bus was too crowded. The people said ‘all clear‘ and he started across." Sisters Meet After 43 Years Separation ‘THOINEPSONVILLE, CONN" 05o 25-(API—Afi€r being separ- ated 41f years ago when b11011‘ par- Wocdin of Inkstcr, MIch., sisters, held a reunion here today tlimiks to a Monctcri, N.B., priest who traced their family grneology. Mrs. Fortin was BKIUDI/Cd as an infant. and only recently learned hei- truo identity. Mrs. Woodtn, five years old at the time of ilhe tragedy. was raised by her grand- patrcrils, Anxious to learn more about herself, Mrs. Fortin wrote to sackvllle. N.B.. where her parents resided. l-ler letter was forward- ed to Mcncion where s protest told her about her sister. The rest was 88W. v Are Transferred From Ch’Town HALIFAX, Oct. 28 -(CP)— lbur reinforcement officers. all of Nova Scotis, who have been stationed at No, 62 Canad‘an Armv Basic hafn- ing Centre. C arlottetown, have G R Murray of Stcllarton. N5 : and Lieut. ERG. MiicNiibb of New Glasgow, N.B. The first three officers were at the tralnlntf centre for about seven months. while Lleut. MscNsbb was posted to No. Silver collection in aid of Red they were murdered display the 62 OA.(B.)T.C., about a month Qrw- 10- ob." 29X! callousness of the m Army has won the first round with Field Marshal Romm:l's Hflllfly in bat-i es through the Alainein mine- field gaps", and dispaiclws from the desert front said today the British onslaught was steadily widening the way for the major test of rival steel and gunpower. Over the shell-packed battle- ground and tlic bomb-pitted ports of Romincls supply lines the Al- lied air force kept German and Italian panes on the defensive. The Allied brig yesterday was 1B pianos and total Allied losses six Inncs. The British Middle East Com- mand announced furtli l‘ DFOHIYSS had been inside Mondav in night fighting and iznve this account of ilie first tank test of the new cam- DfllEZIlI—- " _clrish on Mrs. Roosevelt Amazes British LONDON, Oct. 28 ~—(AP)-Eng- iishmeii are incredulous over "we eternal suiinlnci 0f the wonini ‘ Mrs, Franklin D. Roosevelt has had that; effect 0n them slice her arnval in Britain five days ago. The personal charm of America's firs. lady has evoked pleased ex- clamatiioiis everywhere, but it is her tirelcsg activity and the eff-urt- lcss wav in which she spends whole days wearing out slice-loathe,- visit- ing war ftSlllblifihlllilllig that fins unused them to vb their hats in ii.|.i ration, iii less than n week Mrs. Roose- velt has covered perhaps as much as 1,090 mzlcs jus‘. on ynunis around LOHCICII, She has been on the go from as eariy as '7 ii.m. to as iatc as 2 a m. and appeared in Lalf a dzzcn diffirsnt places In a day. only this, but she has dis- played as much cnthusiiisiii watch- lng girs tinker with gasoline en- gines at seven o'clock in the even- ing as she did at one o'clock in the morning. The effects of the pace have begun to tell on her two Scotland Yard escorts Veterans wth vca.s of leg work behind them, they are shift- Iiig ruciuily frwii one tired "dog" to another. On Monday she tore 150 miles across country from the airport to three different bases, and in the process diovo Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby di ector of the WAACS. and Mrs. Winston Churchill to near ex- hsusilon. Mrs, Hobby has disappeared en- firely from the entourage. Mrs. Churchill reappeared today, fresh and smiling-but onlv after s days time out. Sees Great dpprtuiiity For Giiurch ~ Powerful Address De- livered Here By Dr. John R. Mott. h Striking the note, rcixatedy that b/Ians" extremity is Gods Oppoy. tumty. Dr. John R. Mcit. Boston, famous for 50 years as a great HIISSIOIIBTY statesman. addressed a crowded mass meeting in Zion Church last evening. People from evlry section of the province came to hear the message and so large was the crowd that every zivnii- ab.e scat, with an overflow into the schpcirooui, was tnkcn up. DF-lwlfli,’ U110" a iicalth of life- long experience iii critical points of church history for the past half- centuiy the inuch-trnvcllccl speak- c,- pointed vividly to Ilic great incds of uprooted hlilllflllltl‘ which open a wide door of cliillciigc to Oiirisiisn pcoplc TIlI! church, he asserted. must tiikc advantage of the rising tide of spiritual con- sciousness and S-IISC of nccd. Ev- idences of this great upsurge were unmistakable and numerous, DI‘. Mott said iis he enumerated thus’: he considsrcd most important. But. lie ivarncd, ii rising tide can be ektremeiy dangerous, fllltl the Present was one 0f the mo-t critical and dangerous timas iii work-I history. A world famed traveller who iii the course of Ills duties has \I-'ll~ ed tricre than 80 countries of the world, the distiiigui UNI Ylrlil)!‘ sketched a world picture of C111- uda, United States, Great Britain, Europii‘, Riv-sin, Japan and Cliinii He gave ilio background of inc people in some of those COUllLYl." and spoke of the roots of Christi- anity In each. In his opinion “Christ has iievci‘ becii miter preached and better lived before than he is now iii these oppressed countries of Europe.” Even in Gor- many and Italy, as well as Japan, this is tilie case. Speaking of Russia Dr. Mott paid tribute t0 the Russian OTIil- odoix Church for the izront suffer- ing it has unilcrgonc. Ho said that In future with this great country the Christian people must make the attempt to appreciate the be- liefs of that church if they wish to understand the character 0f the Russian people. Canon Dixon, Foreign Mission ntlniied 3¢y7k$zy Fwué "SALAIIH v TBA Cadetbirector t I . _ In Stalingrad: Fighting May Spread From Solomons Areal Enemy Attacks on Guadalcanal Airfield Die Down; Both Sides Probably Taking Stock of Losses. (By Walter B. Clausen, Associated Press Staff Writer) PEARL HARBOR, Oct. 28--<AP)—Tlie Japanese were mobilized with a superiority of ships, planes and men today, for what appears to be a major thrust against key Amer- ican bases and communication lines on the route to Aul- tralia—the New Hebrides and the Fiji Islands. The mobilization was coincident with the assault to . fw- recapture Guadalcanal, where even before the naval bat- _ m, am- m $ffjff tie of Oct. 26 the enemy had landed tanks and artillery, fllflvlifi? ii. m“ oi I’i>Ii:/p‘5 and had swelled troop forces to perhaps 40,000 men. €§§“g.r,5‘/’““l “‘,L"’"““<“Yi13"- Q11“ There were three significant factors in regard to the . \\ilI) ban appointed DI- rfcicr i" y 4 = fir Can- IIHVHI battle. “d0 ‘CW ~ All". PIIOIOJ- First, a Tokyo naval announcement said it took place T in the midst of Japanese mobilization; second, the Japan- TO COIIIPIGIZG Huge ese term it the battle of the South Pacific, and, third, it Pipeline By June took place some 300 miles northeast of Guadalcanal and within a day's striking distance of American positions in the New Hebrides. \V/\SHT\Y(;TON_ 06L 28_,CP) The Japanese hzid completed two mass landings on iiiintlal- B" ~ ft IIFLQI 300-090 bRFTIS R cniuil and while those forces started laud assaults against marine “.},ih?,'._‘c §{,,_,‘,‘ xii?‘ 2;‘,',.,‘.AH1(§$ ‘E; and army troops, a powerful striking force of Iiattlcsliips, carriers, ‘k5 m" 0T Eil-Qi-“Tn UHF-Pd cruisers and dcstrovcrs‘ \\'IlS streaking cn>t\v:i:'d nrriiinil the Nio- I s transportation trouble ivill , , , , .' .. '. . ' . . 1o,,.,~,,,, (m, n; “(Hing s , lllilll Isl.llltlb—ililililltLII) mining toiinrd tIic I\t\v Iitlirirlcs “lien i 5101'" through tho world's the Iixittic Contact ivns inudc with .\IIlCl'lCZIIl sun ziiul ziir iin-cc-x W la iilI "JtJ .01 Fcl- ,-, . '. , . , ' : ., c l 01011191.;niiniiohncekintodnv. t 111i‘ only other J-iiiniii-schniiiics, suite tin Inuit oi .\l.¢I\i.iy' y Fi‘ : link of me "imdciwli-oiind in jiiiu- ci-iimplcil their Hawaii invasion plan. have been the Iiiulrl- ubricvtion ' — n 520-mic 1'1: ~ _ j '- . ~ , -. . . - -' ._ ,,, 1mg‘. TPHS_ to Norm mg of a hllllillfllilll‘ IJIISC at Iuslta in the Aliiithins and the intiltia Tll- —- “T” IX‘ Cfliflvlficd {fills Wm of the Southcrn Solonmns———fhe latter Iiaving been halted .=~i frth t "i _ i... - - ,... ‘\sl‘tyhpqnyl ,,.,§‘, be ot;1nc,f5_sh,‘,‘,f .'\Lig. / Ii__v Aiiuritnn mnruics [finding on (iuadnltuiuil. ‘ pa"! on nnstvcard bv train, barge I)III'III_Q’ tlicsc last {our months a PUWCTIIII invasion armada apparently was Iieing made ready at Truk for the South PflClllc and truclz. drive which now is under way. Japs Mowed Down I I ‘A. - HI Yanks Have More N ws B 1 fs m, _ e r e JnYxifisli-I‘Iryziglqtooakezggétxlsrtal Mgngy Than Gogdg — airfield on Guadalcanal are being mowed down lll far greater num- ——— bers than the American defenders, NEW YORK. Oct. 28 —(AP) - tho United States navy announced TJJ-Slllie higher tHXQS Bud B higher today in a cQmmuniquB which also cost of living. an international described the damage to enemy statistical bureau stud showed to- cquipment as “very iieavy.” iifly- Americans W111 "Ive $17,000.- fmm pneumonia which (ICVH- Pussjbly because M me 105593 000.000 in 1941i left over because of uprd after a fall from his they have suffered since they EhQTtBIZBS- _ ‘ ‘WW3- launchcd their full-scale offensive Any I191 9-‘ \\'Ii the DEW t2; IDIII _____ on Och 23' me Japanese reduced will cause a great (IQCIIIIE m 5pc 4;. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. Aus- their opiratioris on the night of 1P8 m 1943 must. be m ‘I1- ,_,-._,1,‘,_ Oct w_,-fhu,.sday,_(cp) on. 2647 w several "Small scale fled In accordanzn with the sunny -Alhcd bombers hit two Jiip ships amis- ' against. the American p0- 9f E000! t» Sta-hid 1t for, despite m0 in the Imrbcr at Rzibaiil, on New smcnm A“ o, mesa aLLflcks were IIICTQZkQ m 11:. nic tax mics. Blltillll island northeast of New “van-n but; — Guiucii rind also bombed Buka, is ll(l at the northern tip of the .. mion Archipelago, the Allied high command announced Inday. MONTREAL, Rot. 28—(CP) - iitiil ailministrntors “ivill Ii 'I‘ to become tougher as time goes on" If rent control rvkuliiiiniis are to be enforced, ('01. (livvn Loblfy, rrntiils ad- niiiiI-triifnr for Quebec and the Miiiitinies, said Iicrc today. WTOCKIIOLM. Oct. 29_ (Thursday) - (AP) _ King (‘Iiritiun X of Denmark ivas report-oil cazly today recovering Fighting In Lull ALI. Rona Mousse LEAD AWAY FROM HOME Qtherwisc, naval officers inter- preted o. communique making these announcements today as Indicat- liig that the fighting in i118 5°1- oinons is in a lull. ‘lhcy empha- sized lioivcver, that there is hotn- ing to Indicate that Japanese nav- g1 forcsg have withdrawn from the anca of the fighting, After a series of furious sea bat- ———— ties which erupted zit several points NEW YORK- OCL 33~(API" 1n the vicinity of the SOIOIIWIIS 0"’- Tlie GJi-iiizius in another of a scr- er 1,119 iveIk-cnd, it was only nriiur- ie< 01' I‘\'l‘.'-Ilf‘i\VI€l‘ lfvics "I10" al that both sides should be catch- Vicltv niu demanded that the 1m, mm, Dream and taking stock '- iuvii-iiiincnt turn over to the of the resulting 511mm“!- Revlcw Situation nationality. a reli- sollrcc informed 1 Pro s todzrv. The siiuntiou in the Solomons and vlsviihci"; lll thc southwest PJCIIIL‘, 11s iicl] 1s the outlook i1‘- th: Aliiiiiit‘ Inxsi. \‘.';|.‘\ (Zllllnlfibfl) (titling the tiny hi‘ Prv-idi-iit lions- International At A Glance llieli tiilc tiii- hi‘. anti i<\iiiiiri'o'.\‘ n. . (IllOOIl at 11,25 n}; a‘. 2f!“ D/Iissilur l-‘uii _ s is this IfllK-Tllmfll’ n1 5.53 _____ I rLocated grail rises winivrrou- lililflllllg at (Ry The (‘ininiiiiiii Press) Boat s g ‘ l "' Lust quarter inoon Nov. 1. 2.1! 22p (cfm- 0m _ _ Summcrsidc tide 18 mlnutrs lat- er than Cliarlottctoivn. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Rl\\‘l.-\ — (iernrins gain 200 MON] LEAL. _ ‘ but Rvlls iiinc 'I'lii~ CIYW ci a Hits-mi: Roar‘. .' mi-cIiniiizi-rl flying brat, have beui found ll"l tiniest outskirts of QUK- ch sI>-'\I'-‘YI.\'--“(‘I» (‘(1 Lake St. Jchii District and are being flown t0 Rockcliffc Aiiport ncar officials an- fiirtory district. BRITAIN — New contingent of Ottawa, R.C.A.F. United States ltfarincs arrive in nmmccd here wdayg (‘OIIWWIY- FRANCE ’ “Gcrmansc French surrender all ships sequest- ered In their ports. From Bordcn-Lcavc 9.05 a-ra 11.40 Lin. 2.00 1pm., 4.30 p.m. ‘f p.m.. Leave Cape Tormentlm- - 10$ a.m. 1.15 p.m. 3.05 p.m., 5.45 p.m 5 pan. SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. 27 Inclusive) i-m-n- lslandflWoman Aids In Furnishing creisotlxgogliitxiflcngIngriIgiIglddOIRIIgI Rgcrgation RQQm Iienvy Ios-‘csi on Jan assault troops. _ *'"'“"‘ Leave Burden 9.00 n.m.. 6.45 n. . EGYPT - hlvaiicc units of Bfl- BOSTON, Oct. 28 — (C P) — , tlsh 8th army’ score Initial lllflltll The Canadian Club of Bqgtrm and ‘Lgeme TM-memin‘ 10'“ mm‘ s‘ in contact ‘th RommePs forces. 1th; worgegstguxiiliagv are lcoklirig ' —~ 4——-—.——‘ orwar e e catory cxerc scs _ More S Marineq at Fort Devens, Arvcr. next month Pal" N's‘ FERRY SERVICE " ' _ z which the refraction room flitirlconl- "Leave Wood Islands 10.00 aJn. and va esoenis a Stat on Hosp ii ivil 2. 0 p. m. Reach Great Brltaln be formally opened. The Canadian Leave Caribou Noon and 4.00 n. I men and women voted more than AIR SERVICE $500 to furnish the room. the fund LONDON, Oct. 28 -(CP\- Addi- comiiirz from ii cfinritv ball hold Chlflouemwihslmmgyildl- oncton Leave cn-i-ibmmwn 6J5 l-m-I Iicriil units oi United States Mar- last spring. Inc, lc.l bv Col. William '1". Cle- Mrs DanirlH Rose. formerly of mcni. n BflIflhfl-COTTPRIGCI‘ vcicr- Pictou. N.S.. and wife of the Can- n‘; ‘um _ 2 an. Iinvo arrived in the British ndian Clubs President. and Mrs, [you siumnenlde 1.10 mm. 1-‘ IsIfW nnrl are at battle stations. Henley V. Howlett. formerlv uf St. Mm _ d t“ Hi1‘ United States Marine Corps ‘Rotors. P.E.Il. bothtof FVXIBCIPI-t 33f; Leave Moncfon If a.m.. an i- IIPLIIIQIIIIYIPYS iiiiiioiiiiccil tonight. 1m’. W111‘ fin-w" 9 ‘ American Marine units already furnishings. Mrs. Hawk-tit BAKE-Ff SUNDAY SERVSTE hero have cncaged in joint traiii- President of the Womenl have Charlottetown -5 pm. lng with. the Royal Marines. lllfl-W- In" Mmmwn '15 “m i i i i