ore Subscri _ Fine R. A. F. Display Of l -i— Jill. P. E. Liege in Drive For Three Million as "5 9% 5. '< gt S" ‘s § OTPAWA, Nev. 1 - (W) —Net- tlmaiired ionai loan heedq rs es tonight that becriptiona to Can- ada's flfth__l_f_ic_lory_i.oan_shouid (Continued on page e. O01. s1 Planes Take Part in Demonstration to...» liezls-alliien Drive ‘"1 0n 50,000 Greeks at i intervals of st s minhalm s00» feet. the flights‘ taking place et 0.15 s. m. “$.13 "is on ms 1 n is ill l l)’, 6h C W hedroppedstuoonby theme. ever the city. and no t these v as souvenirs ef the occasion. 'i‘he.p es on Wednesday and sat “ will include l! exhibitions of low level bombing. DDMIQEVEITS "Talkies — Orspeud ‘rhursdefi. . , 11-2- . "iTllklcl — IIIPWHI "Rifles-Albee Cove Pride-grim. ‘Teikies-Brsdaibane Tuesday- 0 W-Sl» "Dance, Graham's Road Hall. ‘rueeciey, November and. 11-2-11. "H ter RTivcr varlc. cgngeét I . . . ill _ Thurecey. Nov. s. Proceed 11-21-21 dance Canoe Cove 11-1-21. llaeuuersd Bell. ‘meadow Nov. z. 2min.“ ' l . are. ' l’ w a“ lt-so-si. "Dance Pleasant Grove ‘lfhursdey idler November 4th. Proceeds Bo s boxes. rr-l-ri "Chicken supper U School Ia weeeeedev. Ndv. hi}. other.‘ "Dance Graham's Road Ill-ll u errlber' . dwich d u? m“ wnro-se-“Epr-"ii. "Uilloadlhi car Old 5N1"? we! esda.. N ber are. court .8§dfordc:"m rr-l-ri "Chicken Supp . st. ‘a Kali nmmw. °=Isd....-=*i‘.i:.l..~- D-ID-ll-l-ii. tewari. ‘meson (Library wont» National Iiim Board movies Ibo an. -1-2i. "It. l wadsndlp l1 n31 .....‘n°“"a‘.'“"e‘.i‘. $3“ ' ' “m r ‘ii-l-sii “lean r. ‘pleasant veuev 2% fun fir. i2. 1km ' uerade dance Ions ilall.‘ O W . s . °' M‘ lo-lo-I-l-ll IQIGOMI one The P >./' l A eopies Pepe Covers Priaee Edward island Like lire Dew cuARpoTTr-zrowu. CANADA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER z, 1943 LL, ED N PLEASED WITH "Iqgr" §>" 10 PAGES IIIIII IIIII Planes And BliLl._EllN HEADQUARTERS Pacific, Nov. fl- (Tucsdnyi — (A P) — United States forcce be light in Woods Dhilis Prisoners WINNILIJG. Nov. 1—(CP)—Nine- loan l‘ prisoners mi war re< turned to the fuel wocd_ camp in Riding Mountain ' s Park to- day sftcr on absence. oi more than 20 hours. They escaped early Sun- dav afternoon and were reported missing lato last rrlitht. After a n ht in the woods. dur- ing which t. was a heavy fail o! snow. the men ‘walked into the camp in groups tow’. "We gct lost ln tho bush." they said. ANKARA. Nov. i - (AP) —Al- ready confronted by chaotic lucr- iila warfare in Yusosiavie. the f‘ have opened a full lied- offensive against 50.000 Grctlw l". led banded in disputing camps. The Germans obviously are seckllll to -tehe advantage of patriot dlssens- ion and put down armed resistance before it gets out of hand. The German campaign, accord- ing to reliable information receiv- ‘ed here today. is being directed a inst the Eias ‘group oi pet-riots o Col. Seraenhis in Thessaly. and the rival Iides Army oi’ Ooi. zervas in Bpirus. Careful investigation from wide- spread sources indicates the real root of their conflict la a disagree- ment over whethe Kim; George II should be allowed to return to his throne and if so under whet con- diticrrl 2,500 D. 0. Miners 0ut 0n Strike VANCOUVER. Nov. 1—(CP)—Ar1- rrimetely 2000 British Columbia coal miners went on strike today complying with s csii from dis- trict ead uarters oi the Unite Board in consider‘ a request for wage increases. At meetinas yesterday the min- ers votod not to report fol work be- R at milky-twist nilht in support of the t headquart- ere move. At Bernie and Michel in the Crow's Nest pass about 1.000 miners attended me at Nsneimc and Oumberl 180 yea‘ in favor of striking and st in the than 200 approved the move. -Plane Missing With 4 Aboard .___ KALTIAX. Nov. i-(OH-Iour grew-numbers of whit... (M115; bomber °“ " “sitar?” “£35.23; v ed h mun‘ t fromngebert. N. Appeals for‘ information about rhythm m"... arm .. “Eton sgélltmthe plane. with u“ “file wueioe"r"o'rma (pilot). n. Youna father. Osrunore Alta "Wanted": boy live end dressed _ m?“ 001E‘ sEr M m" w rstloie-birniEEi-Terliwlil I , , s ' 0a. us. P“ Elf-largo Garden. amour-as “fl " “T” - . ' leymour rr Diner." m. “lefifrtflld- opera . ma. l. m”; ‘"0 sires served in New (slot-her) ea Agricola sa. Halifax. 3"" mo» my" s “a. Pl“ r.°"~".....-.'i:t:." ' ‘m’ ‘m’ tritium“... ‘rumour. ru d on snoouver island. 9,0 Equipment Opened In Armouries A lerge and keenly ‘ terestod crowd of spectators attended the opening last night of the R. A. F. exhibit of pianos and aircraft eq- fcrvneily opened by His Honour lieutenant Governor B. W. LcPage. is being held in the armouries in connecti-h with the Fifth Victory Loan and is one of the most out- standing featrnee oi’ the loan campaign. it is doubtful indeed, if a bettz" display could be seen in any part of console. The exhibit covers so much of the weapons. material and equipment with which the R. A. I". and R. C. A. F. works that it is e, revelation to the average c n. Mr. W. D. Grills. vice chairman of the loan committee for Queen's County presided last night. Those present included Group Capt. H. N. Hampton. D. F. 0., officer copr- mandlng the R. A. l". station here and Wing Cmdr. J. G. Pcrtiock. phief engineer officer at the stat- on. The exhibit. which is to be seen without charge, is designed to iii- ustrate graphically the need for more and more dollars to supply the enormous amou ‘ of equipment and weapons necessary ‘to defeat the enemy. Highlight of the display is e~ Canadian built Hurricane fighter which was flown here for the dis- play The piano was the centre of attraction all night. A platform has been built to enable visitors But lo see tthe plane more easily. the plane itscif is only one item ~in a large and varied list of exhibits. Those who ‘ ’ " in- in the displays of aircraft engines and also oi’ the various engine parts displayed to advantage. Camera enthusiasts will really no (Continued on page 0. Col. 6) Death 0f Former Island Attorney In Massachusetts Word was received yesterday by Mr. J.J Johnston. K.C., oi the death of his brother. Mr. Richard E. Johnston. attorney. oi Boston. Mr. Johnston had been one of the leading citizens and public men of Boston. For several years he was a member of the State House oi Representatives and on two occa- sions was selected for nomination by his party as candidate for State Treasurer of Massachus “s. Ho was a distinrzuished member of the Bar of that state and was delegated on more than one occa- sion to represent the Common- wealth at nrrbiic functions abroad. Mr. Johnston was about seventy veers oi age and was a graduate of St. Dunstanh University. He stud- ied law in Crlmiottetowp with his her. Mr. JJ. Johnston and w the late Mr. W. A. O. Morri- son. Aiter being admitted to the Bar left here ss s young man of thirty his last visit to the Island beins! about five zears ego. H many friends here will neatly regret to learn cf his e si ‘. . ohns anoth brother Dr William John- ter. Mass. n terment is taking piece in Boe- British Destroyer Has Fine Record LONDON. Nov. l-(OF-Record of the destroyer retort one oi Britain's new warships. her first vear at sea:- Sank two enemy submarines helped to sink an Italian ammuni- : ved one enemv aircraft: rescued menv British airmen: captured l0 enemy soldiers towed a walrus aircraft to safety gsudueteenred more than _'iii.0t0 De Msrigny Murder "' Trial ls Dontinued N U. . (A!) def agreed t Alfred m?» made in‘ t used effort to con the er- or is was lichens: ill the T00!!! where the Oensdlen mil- el urned These Three Men Make History ANTHONY EDEN First 0ueen’s 0o. District 0ver The Top "Bonshaw the beautii’ byword on Prince and. A rlrivc over th By Klrke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst rman morale have been rained upon, Nazldom Heavy blows at Ge power Moscow covenant of war andi Nice publication of the four- the accompanying declarations. The sweeping scope of the China as well as Britain. Soviet Buss to f h on against "those Axis powers with at war until such powers have laid down the conditional surrender." is brea uld leave even Japan. Y main document, announced yesterday, la and the United States which they respectively are ir arms on the basis of Iln- not specifically mentioned, in no doubt as will stand in the global battle to eau svery- '” ‘°“""‘“"‘ ‘m’ be forgotten and lnv ria . . M jleoiaratfivlfl soon by sirniiarAng o-Amerio u-Chinese pronouncements of ar clined will be ogrticuiarlv lntzested end lin'd btfll llken e Moscow deliberations l as at heme in "l6 Moscow to match "l9 t fall moat heavily. doom; other Axis war criminals. Steps to that Washington, London and Chunglrlng before th I the Nazi front, military as vvel e blow conceived and executed in military disasters mus fiet, that stern warning that hem (those guilty will deliver them to their WW5"! be done" will be brought home to eeverv G a political coup as far-reach nd satellite morale as the d out by Allied arms in Russia and in 1131i’. itely Nazi hopes of an Allied break ove hey make up a dramatic reetlise under the llitlcrite yok in the fighting ranks to have brought ihem to this taina. willie in general terms, appear for both war and post-war purposes s , ,. ,, .. s. . e. 5 9 Roosevelt and Premier Stalin to accomplish. The Moscow conference unquestionably timlstlc hopes of the Washington and Lon U. S. Coal Mines Are Seized By Government Roosevelt calls on striking miners_'to be back at work Wednesday morning. ddlc MacLeod and to 1e for the exhibit of aerial cameras the Victory Loan and on,“ nhomnmmen “$553,; ever widening cycle of Nazi railio or air-borne lea wars will pursue t with fine eo-opernllon from the people they have succeeded in reachin: 10?. per cent of ill strong. With such leaders: in order that justice rua man who can be reach . Tire Moscow agreements constitute in effect and as stunn ary Germans at home o!‘ done with the evil infllllncce that have ific declarations it 00h- e whole "Hill of knit"?! Churchill, rresident “Elise objective for the dis- t l-tself and the seven s More Canadians Arrive Dverseas t far beyontl the most 0i!- don governments m its will!!! C ANADIAN b-(CPJ-Additional reinforcements for adlan, Navy. Anny In Force troops ovcrse e a recently. The movement included several thousand American trgps and fighting men of ho Britain was announced Also sailing WQTGR nine in .0 o members of the Grievances of the country's 030w wax‘ F“ on! a an“. miners have been heard. the Pres- ldentflsaid. adding:- with. The government offers the miners a iair contract They have no right in wartime to refuse w WASHINGTON. Nov. l — (AP) r-resident Roosevelt seized the United Stats‘ cool mines Main to- night and called on every miner to be at his post Wednesday morning. The President's actiofr came as a War Subsidy Plan ls Still Disputed 0n Dapitol ilill D Y mines. He authorized Interior Sec- retary Harold L. Ickes to enter in- to a collective bargaining merit with the miners and to coil- clude a contract for the duration oi government operation under the approval of the war labor board. In s. statement issued st the same time es the executive, order taking possession of the mines, the Pres- dent declared "for some time we have not been producing the coal which we need lo fight the war." “As President of p U lted States and as commander in chief of the armed forces," he went on. n every miner to return ll. S. Man Kills Wife, Then Self - President itooseve “war subsidy" 01in to control the cost oi ilvins. sent the Unllod Stowe s. 10.000 word messwt 111 "hm time to start wander- untried field oi uncpr; Q AMLSDALE. N.S.. Nov. 1_ old Watson Oampbe attic of his farmhouse here shortly body beneath e woodpile today. and d ided nigh armcr and lumber- mlncs wii be opened by the Gov- man had kilgied his wife and com- c ednesdsy morning. miner will be cxpectod to to work for his government’ The President authorised Ickes to to war secretary Henry Stim- IOII 1M‘ any B32011 "he may deem necessary oa- ab Protection" to returning min and wages. , But the first reaction on Capioi Hill showed that his mcssall fanned s lopg srnouiderinl t iieve the megsape 1 going to change any v0 '- m m, thmus, and 59mm‘ ‘mm H‘ Bankhem (De night that one fleeing enemy group Dub north o the Peninsula had been “my surroun ed, losing 2,000 killed and 0.000 captured i‘: e. continuing oat- s on. off the Crimea the ed and captured isthmus of that ng rive miles be- W8 bllOklfifW ha; lay- many years pant breerdlng n m’ ‘m’; $95 1'19"‘ - subsidy leader in the Dev Senate and author of a bill to lsw the "rollback" nts The administration's polio " lg to curb retail prices while 1mm“. | g subsidies if they are con- 119N399, on necessary to support prices name, paid to producers. The plan has yond the narrow land br e made bitter congressional tho Glance. ng advocates oi hlllgl‘ oeiline §‘;.,“,'.?3...".,°",:‘.°.,,..,.. __. ,1. where Field Marshal Gen. Fried- most killed or Congress last surn- 5° mer - has been opposed by House Banking Ocanmittee ~ "present 10%! llll- Ill“ Th first degree of f ll i, to corrective onc’e ad! wise; o y to profess it: the third to despirv counsel. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN the second lIiaaIlpdlaI-‘Dé-l-lvitel, ll-Il I IIJJ. C-D. CONFERENCE IIIRBE glans Urgently Needed For Victory Loan lAllies Decide To Speed W_a_r Effort Moscow conference laid cornerstone of new collective security system. B! FAN! EGIImore Associated Press Staff Writer MOSCOW. Nov. 1 - (AP) - United States and British delegat- es to the tripower conference of Secretory or State Cordell Hull. Fcrckn secretary 1i ‘ (my Eden and Foreign Cornmiua Vyachesirw Molotov agreed tonight that result; oi the historic meeting surpassed their most optimistic expectations. I did not see Molotov but I saw Hull and Eden after they signed the declarations. The 72 ye" orq gun, who made his first airplane flight to attend the conference. looked “ Eden was Jubilant end no secret was made of the fact he considered the Moscow conference. to use a British ilill-age, "3, pretty considerable result" Documents pledging Britain. the United States and Russia to crush their enemies into unconditional surrender and then in a post war world to work together for “inter- national peace and security". which we're made public today, were eig- ned by the three foreign secret". lee late Saturday. WASHINGTON Nov. l-— (C?) — On the occasion of the 10th sn- niversary cf the founding cf the Charlottetown Council cf the Knishrs o! Columbus, s. banquet was held yesterday eve in the Charlottetown Hotel in 1' 0f the charter members oe tint coun- cil. with Supreme Knight Francis P. Matthews es chief speaker. 0i tho orlllnai sixty-rive members of m council. twenty ‘emain alive, e Jim-Vic Nicilaillt. Judie C. Gavan Duffy J.M. , P.W. ou-rrdn. and pa. iidechfills-h. all of Qhsr1ootetown._Benstor J.A. MacDonald of map. Judge A. J A Es» Phws-crmof m‘ _ d. m. . ohm ‘l-‘ltn t Reverend as. Madeira-n. vg‘, of Bimineraide . In all. bout three M, hundred guests attended-the ban- illlc . The ioastmastar. Dr. J3‘. Ora- teou. welcomed the guests to the banquet and proposed the toast to The K1 . Rev. Archibald V. MEODOHSlQ, C.Ss.R. proposed the toast to ‘E 9 5 5' r. a s E § civliiainli r fiuence iic Church throughout the world. In respondinii to the toast to the Church, Right Reverend G. J. Mac- Leiian. speaking in the absence of Most- Rev. J. A. O'Sullivan. spoke of the efforts of the hurch through the ages in the fieds of the advancement of science. tho Christian education of youth. the encouragement of tho paving of family wales to workers. and. in zenemi every work that tended to maintain and foster a supernatur- si life in men's souls and load .hem to Heaven. “iomnfiifiiafiowfaf” lieds Trap Nazis In Drimea antl- maroon. Nov r-iarr-The Red Army trapped tens of thou- ls sands oi Germans in the Crimea u today bu cutting the rerekop Is- Moscow announced to- rm the sndsmash h Von Fellini's 0th army of 3 ,- mc was lost. Nazi Crimean bei umber less is mo... wh 1n the Tlnitcd States announced their Enjoyable Banquet Last Night Charter members of local council are honored on 40th anniversary“ of fogging. determlhation to crush their Axis enemies and then. es peacetime partners. work wgethcr for "inter- national beam? and security." In straight and solemn words. the Moscow conference-one of the most momentous diplomatic parlevs of all time-bound together the biz four and this program: insistence on full and complete victory over Axis countries: a permanent and lasting union oi all peace loving countries on the basis of equal status and cold veneganoe for those who have bloodied their hands with barber-ism and bestiality in w“. The Moscow ‘ ' . annulm- ced simultaneously in Washington. London and Moscow. were hailed enthusiastically on almost every side here. particularly the close collaboration foreshadowed by Rug. sia with the other powers not only in iitary decisions to end the war quic iv but in effort to orrzsnize |\ stable and free world in the ion! peace ahead. The inclusion of Chins came as a welcome surprise and was regarded as another slgnif- icant achievement. The declarations. breath-iokinr: the moral i G r. J their sateEIiEo prswxékas?‘ wan and They ended. once and for all. Allies Plow Ahead in Mud AIDLIRB. Nov. l — (AP) —'.l‘he Allied 5th and 6th Armies. labor- ing forward in mud and rain, have captured 2i more Italian towns and villages. including Teano, in grim fighting at the approaches to the Germans’. massive new trans- peninsuis defence bsrr1er. Teano. important road junction 10 miles northeast of the enemy's towering Mount Massioo stronghold, fell to Lt. -Gen. Mark W. Clark's 5th Army sfior a one mile uphill fight against elements of the crack Kerri-re: . Goering Division, e headquarters communique announ- ced today. - in: only flilbBihRili‘ Aiimm. 1M1 Stems 1o De iioiom’ rf-c own l$ g; worsen are to n that since some have been spurned we food ad- ' ministration requezt in: more sub- M’ Bern“ ‘n’ “d the sldy funds. The committee vobd to outlaw subsidies with the clogs ns hsnselves were said in ave had o y 200,000 in the area when they lost it. during the liti- l-ligh tide this afternoon at and tomorrow morning at 2.00. 3.04 Bun sets this afternoon at 5.48 and rises tomorrow morning at 7.40 First quarter moon Nov 4. 1121 p. m. _ Bummerside tide 1B minutes iat- er than Charlottetown. DAILY AIR. SERVICE Charlottetown — Summerside - Moncion ave Charlottetown 1.35 a. Ill- Le 12.00 noon. 4.80 vn. Arrive Chario tetown i.l0 P- “ 54's p. m. 7.05 p. m. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown l2 noyr. Arrive Charlottetown 5.15 . m. S. l.-N.8. Ferry Service nail) P. Including Sundays. Leave Wood Islands-moo Inn.