i MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN limit of our nhllities. Isweodvoneelnllfevwelcarnlie Charlottetown Guardian. Two Oilfi- Iornlnl Gui-din. Founded In‘! JAPS EVACUA "new ml! Mel-NM.“ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Al trend and niefless u s rlch man's {unenl- MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, ocrocsuils,’ i542 TE TWO ISLANDS __I .._ 10 PAGES Upward Revision Made More than 00 mechanics line I! stop the wing of s flying Ibrlress to give some ides of tbs Ilse of the ships which sre spreading destruction sud fesr on sll fronts. The hugs ships have Tokyo Nelly I0!- rled, Combat pilots say the Fortresses sre rugged and esslly msnoeuvred. ‘Hail Potency of Flying Fortresses French people warned; huge U- S. planes. IDNDON. Oct. 7 —- (OP) - The BBO today carried sii luncrican warning to the Wench people lo vacate dress producing for Ger- many or be mood. while the gotency of the flying fortresses was ailed in an exemplary way in the House of Commons and wim forth- right fear in Tokyo. The Tokyo fears u heard by British listeners in India were ex- pressed by, s. Japanese naval kesman who told his people by radio that the United States is building long-range flying fortress- es which could spring on Jmiun from the Aleutian; and Midway Island. . IEOOO-mlle lllili 8e sold these great planes would have a range of 10. ‘ the United States was assemblim! weapons in "astronomical quantity, end that the war is lust begin- n 08f. the warning to France. "the B U.S. Army 000 mLes. that the Tokyo admits fear of BC’: Hench service explained that it had originated in the United States shortwave stations brood- castlng as “America Calling Eur- ope" and that it had been record- ed in London and rebroadcast twice in French and twice in Ger- man. 1h Washington the Ailing sec- retary of State, Srmner Welles. said that factories working for Germany were legitimate targets for Am- erican bombers and that the warn- Illlt was in lino with the United States government's wish to spare innocent Frenchmen. AIIOIJICP scour. - hour. note ‘Rio warnings oi] stepped-up operations come in 1e wake of another bombing of Germany by R..O.A.li‘.’s and R..A.I~".’s heavy night bombers. striking at Hitler's strained transport facilit- ies at Osnabrueck in the fourth raid on the Reich so far this month. News Briefs ‘ALLIED HEAD IJARTERB. Australia. Oct. 8—( build“)- (AIU-Tbe Allied wand of- fensive through the en Stan- ley Mountains of New Guinea has been slowed by the diffi- culties of the terrain. s com- munique said today. HALIFAX Oct. ‘i-(Cm-Mal- Gen, Jean Knox, 34-year-old head of Britain's Auxiliary Territorial Service. inspected 300 Nova Scotia embers of the C.W.A.C. today and ater said they were "the best I've seen in Canada." IIALFAX, Oct. ‘k-(Cfl-An electrlcal power failure. caused when a plane severed the city's transmission line, brought a 30- mlnute tic-up of street car transportation and industry in Halifax anti its suburbs today. The pilot was uninjured. WASHINGTON, Qct. '7—(AP)-A post-war trial of I-Iutier for high crimes against humanity was ap- parently foreshadowed today when President Roosevelt said the terms of Unit/ed Nations victory would call for punishment of “ringlead- ers" responsible for "ortzflnized murder" and other “ntrocitiesi” Warns X Occupied F rance’ Tells people to stay Targets. _._._.; BUDDIES FOR OFFICERS LONDON -—(CP)— The United Stntes army in Britain has start- ed officers’ training courses for meritorious enlisted men frtm in- fantry regiments here. Coming Events o-Q- 0R5. "Wanted-Fat Sows and II l0-l-4i McGuigan 8r. Boyle. "Box Social and Dance at Curran B id i .Oc be 9th. onPr oynflnt to r 104M,‘ "We require a quantity of well fleshed bologna cattle. Island Cold Storage 60.. Ltd. B-ZG-dtf. "Chicken supper, Holy Re- deemer Hall, November 18-135 8 n "Pownal 15m Aid Chicken Supmr st the Ilprester House. Oct. 81h from 5 to l0 P. M. 10-7-21. o "‘”‘"‘.‘.‘.‘.’f t" 3" T." “oil” ‘$5.: o e , enry c. IOEIIIogers Bytore. 10-8-1i. "I-Iseelbrook Chicken Supper st Parsonage October 15th. Please note change in date. 10-7-21. "Dance at 0'Brien's new buildlmz. Oovehesd Rood. October 8th. Excel- lent music. Grand floor. 10-7-21. "Hot Goo: Slipper, Victoria Hell Thank vinIeMondey. October 12th, s o'cl . United Church. io-a-ai. "Trucking hogs as ususl for the {he filth A. u” y “r o l Green. Imsrsld, b-b-gyllf-Wn- -M-tl' "Reserve Ifi-ldey. October 80th for Afternoon Tee gale in 5t. James Church Hal. Ba y's knitted torment: and household toblcflm u “Bhi ing h slain from Chsrlotmown Jolly, tober 9th. e suggest you ship t rough our °r8aniuti if you want the high- est Dleveiln market value. Live- ltocl: Marks g Board. lo-I-li. "We do not expect farmers to bell their hogs below nt values limnly because we ps d s fair price heretofore. Our returns will be in line with markets. You have Mer- keting Protection when we sell your stock. Livestock Marketing Igoaarxcll. away from possible NEW YORK, Oct. 7—- lAPl-A United Stat-cs army warning to the people of occupied France to move away from objects likely to be tar- gets for U. S. bombers was broad- cast at frequent intervals through- out the day today by two Powerful transmitters in the United States- The warning, readjust before and just after each broadcast beamed to Europe by the NBC StHUOII-‘i WRCA and WNBI, was broadcast in French, but also was being car- fled to the rest of Europe in Swed- ish, Danish. Norwegian, German. Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Greek and Turkish. The text- "Listen to BI] important vom- munlque from the American high commend to French people in tho occupied zone. "American bombing from the air is directed only to Germans and those installations which in Franco and other occupied territories are working for the German war ma- chine. "The sentiments of the United States of America toward the French people are onlv those of great sym athy. It is t-sr this rea- wn that he American high com- mpnd gives; you the warning which you are about to hear in order that the inhabitants of the occupie zone may take for themselves and for their families necessary meas- ures for their safety. “You are listening to an impor- tant communique from the Ameri- can high commend to the French people of the occupied none. en:-- “To all inhabitants of the oc- cupied zone, living within two kilo- metres (l l-l miles) of factories working for Germany. W6 "Vi" ou to evacuate your homes. When bombardment of e. target is carried out st high altitude, some bombs ms fall on other D11"! then the jectlve itself and that’! why we advise the noh 1n l-hv upled some living within s red- us of two ilometres of feotories working Germany, leave thei homes. ' o objective likely to be st- teoked b our hers ere ell sutomobi e factories which ere con- verted to the German wsr effort, and especially those making or re- citing planes. tanks vehicles, ocomotives. firearms d chemical Lrgets likely roducts. The other N: be attacked by our pl nos are railroad ltltions, shipynr , sub- marine bases, eirdrouies and con- centration points of German troopa. "You have Just heard en impor- tant communique from the Ameri- can high command directed to the French in the occupied zonel" TELEGRAVII CREEK. 8.6., Oct. ‘l-(CIW-An anneal for help wont out from this north- ern British Columbia tradlns‘ post today following s renori. that eight persons had died from an epidemic believed by the doctorless community to be some form of influenza. (Reports from Tefcflflwh Creek did not say whether the outbreak was amomr white ner- sons or Indians. 200 of whom live In the urea-l Pressing Need For Education Synod Is Told SAINT JOHN, N. B.. Oct. '1» (C?) —"'I'here is a pressing need for broad and liberal education." Dr. N. A. M. MacKenzie. President of the University of New Brunswick. told the Maritime Synod of the Presbyterian church tonight. "This is essential because of the rising tide of materialism. We must strive to develop social conscious- ness-the great ideal of the broth- erhood of man and the fatherhood of God." If the dark powers of evil we" victorious, “church and education will disappear. to be rexfnced by institutions denying nhristlnnlty and the christian mode of life“ said Dr. MacKenzie. "We must not fight only for survival. but give to youth a posi- tlve belief and conviction about life. To the struggle must be brought zeal and srdor, sacrifice d and conviction." Plane With Duke Aboard Off Course wunorr. Oct. 1- (cm __ Air Secretary Sir Archibald Binclalr said todsy the accident in which the Duke of Kent was 1.11194 0c. curred "because the aircraft was flown on l. track other than that indicated in the flight plsn given the pilot and at too low on altitude to clear rising ground on the track." The Minister said th R.A I, Court of Inquiry also had found the captain responsible "for s seri- ous mistake in airmanship.” Weather conditions were not good for the takeoff. the Minister's written reply to s House of Ccm- mons question said, but "should have presented no difficulties to an experienced pilot." ......._____..___._. NFLD. CONTINGENT A NORTHERN BRITISH PORT. Oct. 7 —(CP Cnlfcl- A further Newfoundland srtillery contingent we; welcomed on arrival here today by D. James Davies. Newfoundland lrnde agent in Britnln. It was the 31st contingent of Newfniltirllmiders to be welcomed by Mr. Davicil. ._._. w? Annusl Subscription Delivered, I100 By Mull: P. E. l. H.001 to other Provinces 1nd U, l. A. u,“ IN ALllllTIANS In Qanadian Beef PriCeSwConcentrate Plan Stricter Bontrol Over Retail ilricesi W Donald Gordon Asks For Effort to Make New Policy a Suc- cess. UPPAWA, Oct. ._. The Wartime Prices and ‘Ilredo Board tonight announced on up- ward revision of the wholesale oeilln prices of beef and stricter contro of reilaill prices, whioh- also Will increase correspondingly. A b00111 statement said the re- Vifiion lIil/Olves an increase of GU50 per hundredwelght in the whole. sale canvass price for the autumn Ififlcd. end1n8 Nov. 31). ‘Ilhe basic rosnto maximum price will tihere- fore be $17.25 per hundredweight, will-h the usual differentials for the other i4 zones across Canada. The statement said the higlher wholesale price will mean "c015, res ending mcmuses in retail prices wh h will, however, be moire strict- ly controlled." It added: "'I'he wholesale price level will be advanced seasonally until June, at which point it will be 25 cents per hunriredwelght above the cell price announced last. June In a did-ion, a special premium of 50 cents per hundred- wei i», will be allowed on beef quulfylng for the Dominion Gov- emment ‘ted brand’, and named discounts have been set for grades inferior to good commercial beef." The lengthy statement from tihe board said there had been repre- senlations in regard to shortage in the domestic beef supply and complaints about the previous schedule of seasonal price dffer. eiitiuls. __ The board had reviewed the situation and reached p. decisio. “in a mutter which hsfs presented the most troublesome problems in the entire price ceiling administ- ration." It quoted Donald Gordon, the Board Chairman, as saying: “Now that the decision is finally made. and all concerned know what to expect. I ask for renewed deter- mination to make the policy success regardless of past mistakes or misunderstandings. ‘Ihe needs of war are such that we cannot afford to waste time and energy in differences of opinion amongst ourselves." Viscount Bennett ‘to Remain Here for Time F orrrAw/l, Oct. 1 4cm ._ vts- W“ count Bennett, former conservative Prime Minister‘ said today he will remain in Cnnndn for “some time," and that he has not yet mode any phms m. his return u, Enghntt‘ as a result of the war are new m of a total of 18 brought before s. But when he was questioned by s local newspapewnan about his views on the "war-mindedness" of the Canadian Deorile after his cross-countrv trip, ‘Viscount Ben- nett declined comment. And when he was asked "do vou think the Canadian war effort ndcqixate?" he countered with smile: "Ask the Prime Minister." Howe Continues His Busy Round LONDON’, Oct. ‘l-(CP Gablel- Hon. C. D. Howe, Canadian Min- lstcr of Munitions and Supply, continued his busv round of cou- ferences today with a lengthy dis- cussion with Sir Harold Brown. Controller-General of munitions production for the supply ministry. Afterwards he was a. luncheon guest of the Canadian Munitions board, at which C. A. Banks, its chairman. presided. Guests in- cluded Sir Charles Craven, Vice- Admiral William Wake-Walker Air Marshal Harold Edwards, Cap. R, I. Agnew, R..C.N., Ralph P. Bell, Halifax. and Frank M. Ross of Saint John, N. B., director-general of naval ordnance. IDENTIFY PILOT! VIUIORIA, Oct. 7- (CPl-Two pilots killed in a mid-air collision near here yesterday were identified $030M Fldt. Iitif. DpButlcr, Na- . an . , , , 8mm John. N, B‘ S Simpson Make the most ‘slice/AI’; " ‘I'll COMPANY OI‘ CANADA, LIMITED N G where events must soon disclose who thermihe “iiifityarirliictig ‘ taupe by sea or merely falling back to new holding ground in the mum.‘ Mnlnlon-‘bln either "tin the threat to the important nlllgd bu, u yon I s o o o y seems . Iven if the retreat ves to be e. race to the beach for night ssh rfigvévilfgfltgléflroeewgne. lfifims doubtful that General MacArthur plans own 0 e sea. The mountain bulwark for protection 0n Kiska, U.S. Report Says Encouraging Picture of Fighting in Western Aleutians is Given in’ ‘"4’ P0" Mflmbv ha: been fully broven and the route offer Au i u ' gwmrlltgkellyhiggrian "lgrc-egfla%tldawllltliltiiizpftfzla afgrcssive asctions. ‘glob? COMM unique. rat or than hot land pursuit seems lndi i d, almnese "a ma”. --_— o o o o“ “o s in, .1. r. Sanderson, Canadian Press sour wma; u. Prime Minister Curtin of Australia recently designated . the Allied land front in the_ New Guinea. mountains us strictly a. "holding" pQQIHQIL fllBWrf-ation difficulties are foo great for it to be used effective! t my? all; or other bases the Japnnosc may he abandoning on the nnxth? ......::::...'::§:.ir..tg;.%"""' “- i» - I deep-sealer har or, it was reported United States Navy. Th b I O I I I l: ailing?‘ retreat to the sea if such it is,’ or to ifecl Tilfbsslhznfltwfllalgcnfl: c e enemy fall. bah. The reoccupatlnn bf that hlzli gap is couraging picture of fighting in the Gui of important land operations In ..'.','§'°'"'° up‘ h’ “ma! u“ end . w. . _._. erplsnee within oaey flylnl distance y The communique also refer-red to the "light anti-aircraft fire" sent up by Japanese batteries and to sea- plane lighters sent up to intercept the big, powerfully-limped bombers end their even more powerfully- g-unncd fighter escort, Iln this un- equal battle, six Japanese seaplane fighters were shot down with no American losses. There is no seaplane eouel to land-based bomber or fighter in either manoeuvrabillty or fire-DOW- er and if the Japanese are forced to rely on them. and. "lixht anti-sir- craf-t fire" to hold Kiska, they ma! find their task hopeless. The communique made no men- tion of Canadian fliers takinll Dart in the raid and the Navy Depart- ment said it could add nothing to its Loan Ubjectives National War Finance Committee Chairman Makes Strong Appeal To Public. WASHINGTON, Oct. 7--(CP)—'l‘he In islands of Attu and Agattu in the western Aleutian: and up oonccnfiut- lng their strength in the North Pacific on the island of Kiska. with its The Nuvy said aerial reconnaissance bud failed to lty or occupation of the rocky, bsnen islands of At weeks and that most of the buildings on Attu were deltroyed raid by urmy planes late in September. Reading between the lines of the communique, ft was s most eu- the North American continent under Ja raid on Kiska harbor last Monday by b fed by fighter planes, which seemed to ' been constructed on some pert of the Androsnof blonds, brin have anointed the tonight Ln I communique from the €i‘°l'...i“°"‘io'.‘.°'i$ s bl. western Aleutlans, the only part bl anese control. It described u g Liberator bombers, accompan- ' to that pdvanco buses hav’ n: fllhlo- of tho Jnpanese ‘- “' bur or. INTERNATIONAL AT A GLANCE By The Canadian Prel RUSSIA — Reds stand 2km Q Stalingrad; reported to In: thrown pontoon bridge ldfbfl to the northwest. ALEUTIANS - U. l. Navy re- ports Icrltil reconnaissance show! no signs of Japanese on Attn and ttu where bombers previously TOIN, ONT., Oct. 1 - ( ) - G.W. Spinney, Cliaimian 0f the Naiuional War Finance Com- mililfio, eltpréfised the belief tonight that the war-enforced high-ta ation schedules will disappear‘ mm the coming of peace despite the ‘probability’ that pcstm-ar m. habilitatiozi will require a govern. mental policy of expenditures. Mr. Spinney spoke to a combined meeting of Hamilton service clubs in connection with tine Opsllinv of the Dominions third victory icon, for a. minimum of $750,000,000, Oct. 19. He reviewed the count- ry's financial requirements and dcsorllnd the coming loan as “the real test as to whether we in Con- ada actually ore growing strong- er. . . . Emphasizing that he was speak. as a. layman and not as p, mem_ ber nor an employee of the gov. WW, he declared of post-was- "I think no one of us has m rightful basis for believing or ex? peoting that the high tux schedules, which have been imposed upon us stay. . . such s statement to my mind is based completely on wrong thinking." MT- Elpilmey said he hed heard flple saying the present taxat- on rates would never decrease no matter how soon the war ended. He pointed out Canada's tax blll now is around $2,000,000,C00 an- nually compared with $500,000,000 helm the war. and the interest oh the public debt is some $175,000,700 and likely to be increased by $25.. OILlhOOO because of t-ho third victory lelIwh-s Debt Strain ‘Tfwehsdslxursevenoreven 818M more victory loans before this awful business is over, our tax bill assuming other cost; on a Dre-war basis, will still be Sb - sicntlally short of let us say hnlf the present levy and lei. us not forget that the money will be owed iaontlnued (in pHgcEiFCiTz)" McGill Men Offer For Harvest Work MONTREAL, Oct. ‘I - (CPl Scores of McGill University stud- ents lined up today to register for r voluntary harvest work in western Canada as university officials on- nounced they would be given leave- of-absence durln the harvest. per- iod end special c nsees on their re- turn to catch up on their .'\‘lflléS. The appeal met an enthusiastic response rom the stildenls, i your Tea . . 111/1114 {Ar AIIA An wrecked their ' stsllntioris. official announcement. Canadian NEW GUINEA ground and alr forces an aidinn in Alaska's defence. 1”‘ ‘i? "“°‘" ‘“°..i."i."t“§§°..'§;; one muzar was u e Bo mention of ships in h bor- The withdrawal of the J84 eso arrisons from Attu and Asattu. wo most westerly of the wind-swept and barren islands seized last June. was interpreted here as most sill- niiicant and undoubtedly was a. direct consequence of the American cbgunter tofzfensiive LtIhafhIedAt: troop: d“! mg S B. 10116 GIGBIIO ' Islands, within easy tighter-plane UQCANDINAWA 15 Norwegians Are Executed By Germans find bodies of Jeps without worm ease; terrain dlfoicnltles slow n-lli advance. to handcuff Dfeppe mostly Canadians, sf noon tode, claiming British comma ' cuffed Nazis in rs NDON, Oct, 7—(CP)—IIitler's exccutioners took the lives of 15 more persons today at Trondheim, — Nazis Q Australia!‘ passing through Owen Stanley (an. podsibly victims of hunger or dls BRITAIN - (Ia-mans Iirsaion prisoner; hand h! on Channel Island of Burk: war office denies m more ‘Trondheim ofthcns ii Nonvoy; the 0510 mum announced, distance of Kiska. As long as fighter us Nazi administrators bore down P181168 We"? filmed W 099'?“ 1mm gflfilazflmzgr nfwgziamm with a, reign of terror in ruthless Dllwh harbor. the mbin A-Ymflcfln in emu“! ‘m. pistol “m gqtgrminaticg w “K351i we comm giggeggdfligogeyggiglgc$eln gig: .____._____ c 1 “new or cr" su ervience. vv i hlliiouz “Iitlidwttllavilyers. courage“; géiuébemlaliéfiseghggndlsblxtlsdl“ :- "w" INDUSTRY s powner an o er prommen c - .' ' i“ lzens who were executed yesterday. twill‘ L590 and 130° mne‘ b. 3"?‘ m‘ ozmmfiwml , the total thus was brought to 25 as Whether the Japanese oe-n one o the m bombed into submission. on iced states the result of s. state of emergency Kjska or whether the high mum” of mirope. with only Great Britain and Belrohn hsvin: . dh i d jcndazctgzieldstliygrbf 201d) Irlnildsfn m ‘l command has decided it. is worth g yelgflvgly greater industrial Two others today were sentence‘ the effort at this time, considering “mum, “l the claims of other fighting fronts. remains to be seen. But the truffl- sonlng of the Andreanof Islands and the Japanese withdrawal from Attu and Agattu would seem to in- to 10 , a. t hard labor. while one --—-———-———- v8 rs n STILTS WHEN NEEDED The city of Namur In which formerly suffered court martial was acquitted, the radio said. All were charged vaguely with “criminal offences." v from i-hN A thorough checkup of everyone dlcate that any threat to the “L 5 b” M5 liv’ in the area. of thg_stage_c>_f Alaskan or Canadian mainland gggleozlggrsolhnn ‘heenafloted for, 1 from that quarter definitely has m gmbwalkérs for many cent“? . (Continued 0n page 9, Col 2) subsided. i” * F ' Red Ofiensive Gains Ground MOSCOW, Oct. 8 -('I‘hursday| _(APi-- The Rib Army continued its drive agulnsl the German left AN UMBRELIA HAs BEEN RECOVEREP 4M1 HA5 ' NEVER Bren Paper Companies ilunil; dIIOIUIWSSCh Idol.’ “Stalliliggald H_ P. Wvtnes ay mi c a pos s illsltle the battle-scarred city MONTREAL. Oct. ‘lof-‘hgf-‘Pls? t. th h . of men and Newsprint companies iiiiiiis thee Gbligriitirggwhave thrown Lawrence River Valley are stnliel" into the battle, the Russians an- lng their days of operation tinder nouiiccd todnv. a plan which provides an additional Rainier reports said Mata-r» 50,000 horsc-poiver of electricity Telltlsllcllkds relief cftcuslvc ncrth- for war industries, lt was learned west of Stalingrad had ripped into here today. s line of hundreds of Nazi "tank Under the plan. which W“ "980- forts" and overrun a stronkhold. tint-ed bv WW" Cfllllfimer symml!‘ wining out 1,200 Rumsnian troops. ton end newsprint administrator [In London Reuters quoted an Weldon, all mills operate six dnvs Italian radio repnri, as saying Rus- a week, with the various 911ml! slim forces attacking the German closing on different dnys. seen their. Casualty List High tide this morning at I0 Ind tonight at 10.49. Bun sets this evening st 6.30 and rises tomorrow morning at 7.07. flank nnrlh of Stalingrad had thrown pontoon bridges across the Don and sent troop to the we bank of that stream.) In the Mozdok arch. in the Cau- casus, the Russians retired to n" positions at one point after a fierce engagement. At another point, the communique snid, 12 German tenks New moon Oct. 9. 12.06 urn. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY 1.00 p.m., 4.45 p.m.. 7.55 p.m. OI From BOIIICIP-IJIVQ 9.05 s-m. managcd to penetrate to the rear __.._ 0i’ H 5<W1flt detlwhmfllll. but ll 0i‘ UITAWA. Oct. ‘F-(Clfi-Nemel Leave Cape Tonnenline-ILM the tanks Were Dllt 011! 0f B65011 of five men killed on active service mm, 3.05 pm. 646 mm. 010 pm. and about s company of German overseas. three dead of lniuries SUNDAY SERVICE trMN WPPB wiped mit. suffered on active service overseas. (May 8 to Dec. 27 inclusive) -—---—-—— three missing and bellevad kllleg {one garden ‘£1.00 Indra. 0.45 i: ' ‘ ' dur nil overseas ar opera ons. an have ormen no . a.n1._ . 22 missing after overseas air oncr- pan. nlions were contained in today's Royal Canadian Air Force casualty P.E.I.-N.!. FERRY SERVICE list. 389th of the war. The list also gave the names of i . p. m. Oct’ 7_(CP._ four men who are prisoners of war, Leave Caribou Noon m“ "M n. Iqnnve Wood Isllnils 10.00 mm. snfl Hgxlavicroé Npogoski Polish min- m“ "frfvlillrlfifl fmlmd ""55"" “"3 "‘ j t C , y“ t" 110w or o 1c a purposes presume tlidrdat; is “:§§.i>.ch§§i“yvgf-N“N: Ema ‘Qiigge ffmmljflv mjured ‘m M“ SERVICE . Germans will crumble and fall as n wésronelfithizvliofigét Rodin Chlflflllmlwnéiqilmmmkl" i they dlrl in will. The Gennan ns- . tion, he said. had for generations ‘“§.§,,,‘,Q,$,‘;,’Q“,§“‘§,e hi“. one desire — to overpower their casualty“- ‘ neighbors nml conquer the world. Qyenea} h "M" ("l l‘ W" "i; the Mflfllilll". Killed mi active servlrr: r‘ Fllllkc ill scvcrn meetings tlnr- Adams. 'l‘liomn.s Ritchie Clarke , _ inc the ll'l\' lie left tonight for PO.,'l‘oruitlo. l "m Clltlrltlilvlmill. where he will rc- 1- "~- --~~~ - main two days. (Continued m page list of 1g 45 SUNDAY SERVICE LPHVE (fhlrlnifflown I245 pm. Lciive Moncfon l-ll In. .. A. JL-l 9. C0! l) Mon on Lcavs Charlottetown 0.85 sJl-I . p.m. Leave Sumrne aids 7.10 um: 1.20 p. . Tcnve Moncton ll 1.1m: and IJI