MAXIMS MAXIMS 0| A or A MERE MAN MERE MAN A heart unspotted can stand a A flattering speech is heaeved lot of imoclllll- Widen. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Fmtrioitetown Guardian. ‘Iwo Cont; "Mhlng Guardian, Founded lll‘! lllR ASiSARli-FLT 0N STALIN G CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, I THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1942 ‘We not; Annual Iubscrlption Delivered, [L00 By Until P. ll. I. 8.0M to other Provinces aad U, I. l- N.” RAD IS IN TEN SIF IED British Convoy Reaches Russia Some Ships Lost In Sea Battle But Majority Arrive At Russian Ports. LONDON. Svrt- 23—i°l’i'-"1'h° Admiralty announced today that the grcat majority of a convoy of British, United States and Russian mpl-r-hnnlmfln carrying large quantities of war materials had arrived in ngflh Russian ports despite German bombs and torpedoes unleashed in , running battle of many days along the northern convoy route- The Admiralty said some ships were lost but the claim of the Ger- m" high command that 3B vessels were sunk and three others dan- m-d out, of a l5-shlp convoy Wns “more exaggerated than usual." Tile Germans further annollllfl m,“ gig- warships escorting the con ed with great fanfare last Sunday voy were damaged or sunk. To this m, Admiralty replied that not one conveying vessel was lost- ‘ i‘ al ab at the Ger- m§§‘°‘,‘.,,.‘,i},; 01;“ simosr total de- 5[1'll'iiil'l of the convoy, the Ad- lllllxllw dcclared:— w. .s not intended to assist til: encmv by informing him of til» we,“ of hi5 lack oi success ggilillbt this convoy. The communiques mention of r,‘~~ d U-bo t attacks h? 1g uiclliguagltiinption ‘here that th slron surface raiding fleet h by fine 35.000-ton German battleship Tlrpltz had been k619i? from intervening by the watchful British nail)’- Tlie German radio has acknow; lodged “painful losses in the air giving rise to the Dresumption that the Nazi air force paid dear- ly {or the damage it did inflict. Naval circles here expressed be- lief that 1n failing to destroy the Russnl-bound convoy the Axl-i probably lost the last chance this year for extensive use of its air gohv- against convoys in northern wafers. Autumnal i088. mi5t5. M"! squxllls of rain and hail make air , observation in this area almost im- possible. ' it W83 the eeoond time in three months that the Germans hnd claimed a triumph over fl will”? heavily laden with aid for Russia. The German communique broad- cast from Berlin Sunday recalled previous Nazi claims. not confirm- ed. that 35 ships in a convoy of 38 had been sunk in the same Arctic waivrs between July 2 and '1. In connection with shipping. Prime Minister Churchill today told a conference of the shlilbliiill- lnr industry that the shipping po- sition “has improved recently" but it “still is grave and we are in urgent need of every ship that can he built." In a message read at the con- icrcrcs, Mr. Churchill urged the buiidrrs "to strive your utmost for only ihus can you compel vic- icrv. Without ships we cannot live and without them we cannot conquer." INTERNATIONAL AT A GLANCE By The Canadian Prose RUSSIA-Reds hold Stalingrad in 31-day battle, killing thousands sf Germans, knocking out 109 enemy tanks. MADAGASCAR -Britlsh forces enicr Tanonarlve, island capital as “thy governor flees. WESTERN DESIZRT- Motorized British commandos strike 50 miles lrhlnd Axis lines in Oesert, raiding llllirily bases and retiring. AT SEA-Huge Brllish- Russ- lan-Amcrli-an convoy reaches Rus- sian :\l‘l‘tiil port with loss of some ‘Tnrrhantmen but with escort in- ac rizalvm- Vichy orders black- out of Riviera and declares it a vrlmnry war zone. taming Events cros- "Talkies-Montague Friday and Saturday. “So Ends Oua- Night; m. monwealth Air Trainln "Talkies-Souls Monday. o M a "Unloadin Coal $8.50 Dar ton. delivered cos . Phone 938. E. N. Kays. 0-28-21. "B Dan Cecil 0am 11's. Thurstillisxil. uphill». 24th. 1%.. door prize. 9-24-11. "Chicken supper. Bingo. Dense. Port Augustus l-lall postponed until Thursday. Bonlember 24th. 9-23-21. "Trucking hogs as usual for the I mer months. List your h Wit A. C. Green Alblany and G. Green. Emerald. H-ti- -1 -W-T-M-tf "Concert at Protestant Orphan- lse this Thursda . Hear Beach 2"“ boys an other talent. finches sold. MacDonald W "lens Institute. 8-28-21. “"11 meeting of the Ynembers of 1 e Dundas egg circle will be held n the hull at ridgetown on Wed- "rtday the 30th inst. at s o'clock - m. for the our ee of establish- gl an egg gre ing station at ‘Yiiisetown. All circle members i-ilii rather-s interested are requested 0 attend. O. B. Clay, Secretgry. ' t British Take Capital 0f Madagascar (By Blake Sullivan. Associltfli Press Staff rl t ‘B: R012?) Brl IDNDON. Sen. — — ' ugh troops reached their 803i on Madagascar today by “W193”! the capital city oi Tananarive after W0 weeks of operations from seized coastal points. but Gover- nor-General Armand Annet aP- parently had fled. Word of the occupation came first from the Vichy French radio in Tananarlve whih was taken over dramatically in the middle 0i’ i! French announcement by a voice which in. to Governor Annet ticlan and supporter o! the Vlch regime, had asked. then rciwtt . armistice terms midway in the British drive and said he would d; not stay to surrender at the in- evitable fall of the capital. His last words quoted on the Tananarive radio were of thanks to his troops for their “courageous defence" of the caPiiifli- 771959 were heard after he wall rBDOTWIi a fugitive somewhere in the south oi the LOOO-mile-lon island. fourth largest in the word. There was no indication as to how Annet hoped to make good his escape. However, it was recalled that at the outset of the campaign to dis- lodge Axis-inclined elements from the island unofficial reports tod or Japanese submarines using re- mote harbors for refuelling and supply and of Nazi agents operat- ing in connlvance with the Vichy colonial administration, These reports were circulated in London after the slnkin s of sev- eral allied merchant slaps in the Mozambique channel. the United Nations’ sea lane to the Middle East and India. The announcement of Tenan- arive‘s occupation was heard In Port Louis. on the British island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean east of Madagascar which now will b?‘ denied to the Axis for the dur- a on. Open New ll.0.Il.F. Training School CBXNTRALIA, Ont... Sept. 28- (CP)—A new Royal Canadian Air Force station was officially open- ed here today by Air Vice Marshal Cl. O. Johnston. air officer com- manding Number 1 ‘Raining Com- mend. Listed as Number 9 Service I'll’- inrr Training School, new station will be commanded by Group Capt. E. O. Fullerton first man to fly a Hurricane fighter plane in Canada. it is situated 20 miles north oi ‘mlonto. The post will be staffed by one oi the youngest groups oi flying instructors in the British Com- Plan. the average age oi the ins uctors be- i 2i. nheshioned out of four Ontario farms into what airmen describe asuzthe finest and ndw flfi ter planes which are o assembly plants. The school itself is not new, Group Capt. Iullerlon stated. It was originally a single-engine school at lurnmereide, P. E. I. Under the huge expulsion pro- gram of the trainin flan, lum- merside was converte nto a gen- eral school and NIIIIIDGX Q 8.1V!‘ . into Q (twin- en ined school an moved to Cen- tl‘ ll. 0- IIG IINHIASI IN 0. N. B. IIIVINUIS ways tern for he week ending sop‘ l" 21.104; were tea. as compared with $6,300.00‘) for the corresponding week of 1M1, an incntnae of “H8900 or 2.9 per ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. M15 p. traliysept. 24- (Thursdav) —(O Shosen Leader flfflewBrunswick l ilonservatives FREDERICTON, Sept. Zi-(CP) —l'-iugh Mackay was chosen unani- mously wday as leader of the Con- servative party in New Brunswick. No other name was proposed at a convention oi Conservatives from every constituency in the province. Mr. Mackay. a resident of Rathe- say, has been o position leader in the legislature or the last three sessions. The former leader. FRO. Squires, resigned after the pro- vincial elections oi 1939. One oi the convention speakers was Hon. R.B. Hanson, Conser- vative leader in the House of Com- mons, who declared that “no mai- ler what may be the fortune of this party with which we are con- nected we must spend our energies in winning this war." Adopted resolutions charged the provincial government with adequate policies concerning agri- culture. oil development, fisheries and educniiong. with “wanton dis- regard of the needs of the national war economy," and with "failure to obtain a proper proportion of our national expenditure in war industries." At the annual meeting of the Women's Conservative Association of New Brunswick. held before the general convention. Mr. Mackayb wife was ire-elected president. Buna Attacked For 10th Time Pl-Buna, ‘ape-nose shore base in northern New Guinea, has been subjected to its 10th consecutive daily -attack by Allied warplanes, Allied headquarters reported to- y. The raid was made by bombers and fighters, which both bombed and strafed the enemy position. Hits were scored on seven bar es, supply dumps and anti-aircraft n- stallations, the communique said. A single Japanese nlane appear- ed at sunset over Port Moresby. the Allied centre on the southern side of the Island. but its few garage dropped harmiessiy in Willkie Confers With Stalin MOSCOW, Sept. 29—(AP)—Pre- mter Joseph Stalin conferred with Wendell L. Willkie, President Roosevelt's personal Emissary, for two hours at the Kremlin tonight. Present at the meeting oi the Soviet war leader and the special “WW WE»! Vyacileslav Molotov. Soviet Foreign Commissar, who hmself visited London and Wuh- ington last spring. The meeting ciimaxed willkleL-a WP t0 the Russian capital. He arrived here Sunday from Kuiby- silev and expressed the hOpe that he would see Stalin for a straight- forward talk. “I understand he is g men who likes frankness and I like frank- ness. too." Wilikio said then. He has spent his time in M05. cow mainiv talking to workers and 596v"! Points or interest in the On all sides during hi; trip about Moscow he has been asked virtually the same uuestion-"whst about a second front?" Once before. when he was asked that question Willkie said! "I want to check a lot of things here." Besides seeing Stalin, he ha; had e long ta‘k with Molotov and he has been promised a trip to the war front. Before coming to Russia. Willkie toured Cairo and the Middle East. He plans to no to China when he has completed his Russian visit, Builds Ship In 10 Bays PORTLAND. 0m, Bert. 23—(A Pl-Ten days from k -laying to launching, the MflW-ton Liberty freighter Joseph N. Teal hit the water today to rip 14 days from the Evian speed record for ahipb ing. Even S’. promised (By KlllKit L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) Warn French To Evacuate Coastal Areas There ls enough rumor smoke from the talingrsd siege to warrant the conclusion that Hitler is building fires under his lenerais even if one accepts with caution the Swedish reports that Field Marshal Fedor Von Bock. German commander, has been pruged. Stalingrad. left-wing citadel of the Russian defence llnc extend- come to have more than startling significance for ilitlcr. It has become a symbol of his personal counsel oi his profes- sional soldiers, as the Stockholm version runs, he dare not sanction a ing from the Baltic to the prestige. 1f he ordered its capture halt in the bloody frontal attack. O O Only its fall to Nazi arms, whatever the cost of that victory, could gloss over ever-mounting casualties in the eyes of the German public. Even that could not satisfy the sombre Judgment of German mili- tary professionals that Nazi political-military utter disaster. guided only by Hitler's ‘lntultion" instead of sound mili- tary conceptions. There has been friction before between the professional and politi- cal elements oi the Nazi army. Almost a year ago Hitler swept aside the advice of his most seasoned generals. took over supreme command in Russia himself, and blatantly announced that his personal "intuition" Caspian, has against the amateurs are would thereafter provide the guiding genius for Nazi armies. Events compelled the recall of the ousted Von Bock. British Raid Axis Bases 500 Miles Behind Front B! Stephen Berber Associated Press Staff Write; oamlo. Bert. 23/(AP) - Bri- tish armored raiders sped unde- rected across tracisiess desert 10 days BBO and s"ucir telling blows at Axis bases and communications all the way to Bengasi. 500 miles west of the Egyptian-front, the Mldde East command announced tonight. On tile cnme nigh‘. that a ect- bournc comm alo expcclti- n and pillfiChUt-‘Sts landed at Tobruk and British warships bombarded the Axis Libyan coast farther til-st, the British raiders swooped on Bengosi and Barce, on the west side of the Cyrenaican hump. They destroyed and damaged more than 30 Axis aircraft an the ground and inflicted heavy cas- ualties on enemy troops and trans- goris, while supporting planes of the rltish and American commands mot down several German aircraft which tried to attack the raiders. That was the night of Sept, 13- 14. Two nights later mobile raiders descended on Giaio Oasis, deep in the desert 235 miles south oi Ben- gasi, occupied it and fought a (battle of several days during which "considerable casualties were caus- ed to the enemy garrison." Ammunition dumps at Gialo were destroyed by British cannon which the raiders dragged across the deg- elt. Italian accounts said the British forces withdrew from Gialo after six days of fighting and then only when on Axis motorised column came up. It was the most spectacular com- bined assualt yet undertaken in three years of rapidiy changing foridunes 0n North African battle- 5. Brltish authorities said the raid- ers have returned to their bases, but they did not mention the '2 5!. starting lX/iilt or the routes taken. The radio at Lyon, France. sug- gested that the raiders operated from Kufra. Oasis, 250 miles south of Ginlo, which the fighting French occupied in 1941 Even from Kufra, however, the raiding patrols would have to have travelled some 500 miles to reach all their objectives. roving over the waterless wastes at night and mak- ing their own tracks. since all known desert trails converge upon Axis occupied oases. . Allied heavy, medium and light bombers took up the work of des- truction where the desert raiders left off. Today's communique list- ed a sticcessful attack Tuesday on Bengasi in which two vcsses were w set nflre in the port and Monday night raids on enemy landing grounds in the El Daba area which caused a large fire and explosion. Last night British and American bnnbers teamed in a heavy attack on Bengasi harbor, ll.S. heavy bombers attacked at dusk. scored direct hits on t-wo ships. One exploded and the other was set on fire. R A P. heavy bombers following after sundown, found te target area obscured by smoke from fires the Americans had caused. When the R.A F left, there were more fires in the harbor. No American or British planes were lost. Annual Meeting W.M.S. Opens TRURO, ll.S., Sept. 33-46?)- 66th annual meeting of Maritvne Provinces section of the Confer With Hitler At Headquarters -..__._ BERLIN, ir..|.l ucJnan Broad- casts). Sept. au-—-\n-l"J— U11 Anw novella, pluatlall ulllei 01 brute, and Malia-l Auwnescu, acting g-rgmierxq; Riuuulhu, W819 receiv- eq, oy i-lstlcr at tliii east ueaauuarvem wally, it was mi- noullceu tonight. ‘inc purpose of tile conferences Liflfllltlil W118 110i. UIMHDSVQ. ‘the ivews Agency irunsoceau said. i10W- ever, that uhey were concerned "with me totalitarian war ugalns. Bolsnevu .1. ' risking {X01111 LONDON, Siipt. 23 -- Th B B.C coastal arcns NDLiQlY§ offensive "annlhila/tlons of announcer said. "No One will be warned Ln Bd- atiack or place," Vance cf lhe date oi point at which it will take ‘rile Foolish-language broadcast said, but when the moment cornea to call for the cooperation of the French people as a whole we will keep our pronllse to let you know lll lull-J." ‘lll B.B.C. announcer em- oln d that a series of such warnings had been given to the Frcncil lll the last six months in order "lo prevent as for as human- ly pcssbe the useless shedding 0i French blood." “In the course of our military c-pcrnli " lilo message said, “it was n and today it is more nccsssur than ever, to en- Visage the possibility of landings y B ilrhl and Allied troops on Fri? soil, of operations our navy lll French territorial waters, and ailacks by the R.A.I~‘. on rnildiry objectives in occupied offensive of the United ..c is being prepared. On the clay nil-en we can be assured of attaining our goal which is noth- ing l “s than total annihilation of l-lirlcnt-e Germany this offensive Will be launched. "No One will be wamed in ad- vzlncg of the date of the atfiack or the pclnt at which it will take place, but when the moment comes to call for tile co-operation of the French people as a whole we will keen our premise to let you know in time." The message continued by tell- 122? the Frenrh: "By following our a vice you will contribute to the success of present and future operations that form the prelude cf full-scale action which has tern s0 long awaited." Higher Farm Prices Ailrnllescu previously had spent two days lll oeriln wncle he con- lorred with Foreign Munster Junc- ium Von Riobentlop. (Germany lecenlly has been rc- porwd calang for more Runlalllnn troops to go to Russia. It was possible tne conversations about this. It may also be Hitler is seeking troops from Crout- ia, although that country is not formally at war against Russia.) Warns ll.S. Faces Food Shortage WASHINGTON, Sept. 23—(AP) —A warning that the United States Will ace a food shortage unless it acts ulckiy to solve the critical farm abor problem was laid before the House Agriculture committee today by Claude Wick- ard. Secretary of Agriculture. He suggested that consideration be given to national labor service legislation as a means of keeping the farms manned with enough workers to produce the crOps so vitally needed at home and abroad. Testifyin in the presence oi MaL-Gcn. wis B, Hershey, selec- tive Service director. viilom the committee will question Fuiday, Wickard estimated that the armed services and industry may drain approximately 2,000,000 farm work- ers by the end of 1942 in addition those already taken. "The only hope for agriculture is to try to replace the experienced workers with women, older people, children and other inexperienced and less competent workers, Wick- ard told the committee, "and even then, agriculture must expect to come out second best in many cases because industry will com- pete for this type of abor." Election of 0.0.F. Member EDMONTON. Sept. 23-(0?) - The (Jo-operative Commonwealth Federation gained representation in the Alberta legislature for the "Flt time will!" Elm!’ EH09" W" strong Gc rnnn attacks on positio WWW Mimi m‘ north of Cllaume Wood, elected after the dav in sn Edmonton by-election. The fourth count of the ballots Roper 8.433 votes and Jill‘. greater speed was by hail er llenry I. Kaiser who Women's Mlnionery society of the bum, Inde ndent, 7,188. No candl watched the vessel slide gracefully into the ontflttln basin Oredson Shiphuii yer . "Do you think on ever will build a ship in lam t an 10 days?" an Mrs. J.A. Tucker of New Glas- gow, ll.S., presided at the sessions. Re . liflAA. Lawrence (If ‘Ikuro de- livered an address at the evening meeting in the absence of Dr. Hugh for see by Sunday. If it succeeds Munro of New Glasgow. the sche- dutleegi speaker who was unable to m at Interviewer acted Kaiser. "Absolutely," he replied, adding: "Nothing Is impossible." The yard Intends" to prepare her it will have delivered a major cargo ship in two weeks Presbyterian Church are sched morrow at a general meeting. in Canada drie was eected on the first count‘ of his opened here today. Reports were Corporation heard at an executive meeting and uled to be discussed to- because none had a majority. nec eesary for a victory under the pro- oortional representation system of Cargo slliils of the anon-ton class aboard," across Canada. replied. well-known balloting. Mo]. Neiles V. Buchanan, Liberal. will in the second nlillinry camps it was learned here able to crawl up the rnpc ladder. Griffin. today was eliminated for count, William (Paddy) Soldiers‘ Candidate. for hhe thlr and J B Gillies, social for the fourth. The bv-clcri-ion was stood that names ode necessary hv the death of Elem-tier, Camp Sussex, Camp were red spots whore ihc sun had 11M. Duggan. Xndependert. Inflation Bill were tllnt WASHINGTON, sepl, 2s - (AP) - D-llllllg a nlalo; defeat w ad. mlnisu-nrrlon leadership, the House Oi‘ Representatives lalle today wrote lllgilcr prices for farm pro- ducts into the unti-irlrflulion bill and then passed the measure. Tile vote on filial passage was announced as 28-1 to 96. Tile farm bloc, which had in- sisted that parity prices be raised by figuring farm labor costs into the parity formula for the first time, was in easy. control of the proceedings throughout. Akllrlln-ist-ration lsadclrs predict- ed that if tile bill containing the farm-bloc proposal passes the Senate, which has yet to act, Mir. Roosevelt ivould vote it. Tile measure authorizes NB‘. Roosevelt to stabilize prices, wages and srllarizs, but he has declared that the new parity computation would make such stabilization 1m. possible. He has threatened to act on his own responsibility unless Congress pTlSSCS a bill he coll- sldors ndcquaic. ‘illc bills lnbor provision sti- pulated that no wage or salary 1n- creascs could be rvlio-wcd without the approval oi the President or an agency he designates. How- ever, tile pay regulation would not be operative against persons who have failed to receive a lfi-per cent increase since Jun. 1, 1942. Passed a full week ahead of the Oct. 1 deadline set by the Pre. siclent, the measure provided a floor under farm prices at 90 per cont a. parity, redefined to in- clude form labor costs. 1t sti- pulated that no ceilings could be placed on agricultural commodities which would return to the tanner less than 100 per cent of the new and higher mriiy computations. or less than rcccnt market levels. War—25 Years Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) NAMES FOR CARGO SHIPS MONTREAL. SODt. now bPillg built named after d .1; complete list will Credit, m dc public, although it is under- rt, will be used. (C?) — _ urged Frenchmen zigflin tonight to evacuate French because a United aimed at the Hlllerlw Ger- many is bBi-‘iig prepared and will be launched without warning, the snrvr. 2-1. lotv-ruencn bent off if ns mmcn"! our captain shouted. heavy losses. German airmen mega b bing raids on Iron on and 4* th lif bo t plied. the from yesterday's voting save Mr- Biiihsn southeast coast, killing 1s e c a m LYm- and injuring 70 persons. 2S-—(CPl- “l Nazis Hurl 1,000 Dive - Bombers A‘ Day On _C_.'ity Red Army Reported Holding Firm‘ As German Attack Increases In Fury. (By Eddy Gilmour, Associated Press Staff Writer) _ MOSCOW, Sept. 24-<Thursday)—(.AP) - The Rue- slans announced early today that Stalingrad! valiant gar- rison had wiped out 4,000 more German shock troops and knocked out 109 Nazi tanks in fierce street fighting into which the Volga River naval flotilla was pouring sheil- fire on the invaders. The Wednesday midnight communique said the Red army had gained slightly northwest of the city, and no- where did it acknowledge any retreat inside the battered city itself. Front dispatches said the Nazis were hurling 1,000 dive-bombers a day against the city where the Red army has converted every ruined building into s bristling fort.‘ ress of anti-tank and machine gun nests. " " t-"im The Germans also were sending 7 gundredsdyoi massed tanks into Arrest Former léirlflifafisiififlibé?“$153932; Member Winnipeg School Board the Volga. and the latest Russian communique claimed its most im- pressive score yet against these steel ilulks. Forty-four Nazi tanks were de- stroyed or crippled lrl one sector, 42 in another, and 23 in two other areas. Two thousand Germans were killed in one unidentified sector, the same number in another, and the Volga river flotillafls gulls were credited with annihilating at least two battalions of Gcrmans and Rumanians in the lest few days, Red guardsmen fighting inside the city were said to have beaten off steady attacks by huge Ger- man infantry, tank and air fore ces. TAKE TWO NAZIS FURL In the Mozdok area of the mir}, Caucasus the Russians said they killed 200 attacking Germans and. destroyed five tanks and 24 trucks, More than 1.500 Gel-nuns were said to have fallen in the Voron. cZh arcn of the Upper Don where the Russians beat off repeated Nazi attacks on that left flank of the advance on Smlhlgrad, Lose 10.000 Men The Crennans were believed to have lost more than 10.000 men in the last four days in the Stel- WLNNIPEG, Sept. 23 — (0P)—- William C. Ross, former coau- lnunist party lllcmbel‘ of me Winnipeg school Board, “was ar- rested on a, downtown street to. day n, ierw hours alter he appear- ed at. the worker's committee of- fice here and announced lrl s. statement issued to the press that he hurl been "compelled l0 remain in hiding because oi an iiuern- ment order" against lll-Hi. The arrest was made by Royal Canadian Mounted Palace on an lnternnlonrt ordtl" issued in 19-10 when the Cbiiiilllillli-‘i. Purl)‘ of Canada was declared illegal. Ln this statement, Ross said he had d-ccldecl to end "my abnormal position by taking the only course open to me. I am coining oun. to wovrk publicly. My intentions are to devote all my time and ener- gies to llle task of helping to win i118 war." The statement said in part: “For a long time I have been in the anomalous position of en- - , i» my u» 1§r‘;‘r“’.?.°rf$.°’d’“l‘rlél."‘i‘.i‘é“ir u mos, to ‘The national war effort Sig“ n " while being cool-celled to remain " ' Reports lair- yesierdny had fold of the Rod Army's loss of a few more shelhpccked smarts, but ilid in hiding because of an intern. menlt older outstanding against me on charges of being a member o! the Communist Party. - —='—'—————-~—i— = "My position has been mad (Continued on page ‘l Col S) l ever more abnormal by the re- ———————— ‘.11.? lease from internment of the ' i majority of Winnipeg Anti- KEEP Youn- ‘SELF IN 4H: PINK 0F Fascists and Communists. “I regret that our government has failed to take action on the report of the parliamentary com- mittee which recommended that, in the interests of fictional unity, the tnn on the Contcnunisl Pany be liiied. Its lmplclnfniruicn wculd CQNDVIION AN’ ' solve the ooni-raditlon between Canada's adherence to the cause of the Unlqed Nations and the ‘- '- government policy of ccnlnning the ban on The partv wh‘<*h is dedicated to ilnquallflrd support of a Canadian ell-out war ei. .. Adrift 32 Days After Torpedoing NEW YORKmSeptX 23—(AP)— ,_ g The Herald Tr nine. n a copy- righted dispatch from a West H1811 Tide ihunrgwm! at 11'” African port, said today that l8 and tonlflili- M’ -fl-_n M 65° men from a torpedoed American Sun sets this a el M 6w freighter had been saved after and 115.08 tomolrowmornolsg‘ am- - having spent 32 days at sea sub- Full moon Scpt- 34. l - t“ m" sisting only on concentrated foods. Summcrsldo tide l8 mnli It was a "trick of fate". the dis- than Charlottetown- gtaltch snld, for the Norwegian ves- c“ FERRY ‘Bay-w! which made the rescue, had changed its course by coincidence DAILY EXCEPT SUNDA! From Borden — Leave 9.25 lune and came acrlossti tgleétiifcbottitoin ivll ch 19 mcn a s ar ou. no 155 _ _ man had died after a few days at l.0Ee:-'r;1--éé4:e P;l_':-mén“::‘_ u“ segbur ca. tain was suspicious,“ a-ln. 3.15 p.m.. 6.45 p.m.. 9.10 9.!!- the Hcrnl Tribune's correspon- 5UNUA! SERVICI dent, John O'Rellly, aboard the rescue vessel said. “Submarines m.’ 3 M Dem 21 hwhuwe) use liic boats for decoys. But. as we circled off our course we could mcn in the drifting boat. Pili- cries emanated from the craft “How long have vou been adrift?" Leave Bordon 9.00 a. me 6-46 lI-lll Leave Tormentine 10.15 a. as; $.00 mm. P. E. L-N. S FERRY SI-IBVTCI _ l x Leage Wood islands 7.00 n-IIL. 11-" ‘Thirty-tun rims. a voce rom anaflep-Elérlbou a mm" 1 “l. ,0‘ The captain oi the torpcdocd 5-30 pan. ship was first brought over side. l-Ie immediately made for the bridge. forlnnllv announced his name and the name of his ship. am hnpnv to have you the Norwegian skipper The crew followed. Somewrere AIR. HERVIOI Lharlottetown-Summerstle- Moncton Leave Charlottetown S-ll a. mt . p. m. Leave Summerslde 7.10 a. m.: 1J0 m Others were lmnlcd aboard. Their ‘MAW Mona“ 11 g, m,‘ and t.“ m. not be big muscles were wasted BWBY from disuse, ilicir bodies were such as Camp weak from cxposrlrc and thew SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown 12.45 p. m. burned away layers of skin. Leave Moncton 4.15 p. m. i