NOVEMBER 21. 1941 Z MlNOB his HERE ..MEN i ' i gibflflfleratccf I" SILLING ECONOMY, u“ m m! nlnsu wink, NOW Ill?! l" Clfllfil n“ H" .0». am... oog-IOOKINU LNAVIII “ADI _ to“ 1i ,.». H" ° M Churchill Sees (continued from P586 1) pr?’ - ' ha met the Ger- finf,“s,f,“f§fisfweqrlsiy well-armed M equipped and realizing that which a British victory in Lib- ’. '11; play upon the vlliole course I the wan‘ [flying told the House that Brit- ain's troops already had won posi- gong of "marked advantafle.’ Ind p...“ [my/inn imrucd that the result cl the real brittle was still to come, he dispatched to the British com- mandors. on land, afloat and in the lir. a message in the tradition of Nelson at Trafalgarz~ Message To Forcel ‘I have it in command from the m; to express to all ranks 0f me lrmy and the Royal Air Force in m; western desert and to th_e Mediterranean fleet His Majestye miiidenoe that they will do their duty with exemplary devotion in (he supremoly important battle which lios before tlicm. "For thc first time British and mp1" troops will meet the Ger- mans with ample equipment in modern weapons of all kinds. The liattle itself will affect the whole course of tho Wm‘. Now is the time to strike the hardest blow yet struck for final victory, home and freed- om. ‘The desert army may add a page to the history which will rank with Blenheim and Waterloo. "rile eyes of all nations are llpon l-ou. All our hearts are u"ih Y0"- biav God unlmld We rigllv‘ Thus wont his affectionate march- ing orders to the British comman- dmin-chief. Gen. sir Claude Auch- inbck; to the field commander, Lt.- Gen. sir Alan Cunningham; to the British fleet. commander. Admiral Sir Andrew Browne Cunningham; to Air Vice-Marshal Arthur Coning- ham; and to all the officers and men striking forward in the great- est British action since Flanden and Dunkerque. Brothers in command Bir Alan was throwing out his link columns along a Mil-mile front extending south from near the coast while the warships under his brother's command beat at the axis Armies along the coast in an appar- ently-uncontested command of the lea flank on the right. He appar- ently was extending hi5 SO-mllo deep southern push that had been sprung below sidi Omar with the intention of inking Rommel from behind. while the right British flank best through the harsh areas a- round I-llllfnyn Pass in an effort to We command of east-west com- munications. Gennan clnims during the dav to have repulsed the British tanks Welt of Sidi Omllr were dismissed ti’ British informants with the ob- serrations- ‘Evcn if true it moans nothing because our first penetration u-ns south of that point." Moreover, it was added. Rommel i: in a dilemma; he must rush hut’? forces to the south in an effort to breast the British trooos or face the prospect that the ad- vance cou‘d novr-r he halted subse- quentlv short of disaster. in the air, vice-marshal Coning- himicmricrl major successes in blasting nvis tank and transport columns moving wosi. bcforn Iris bombers on thc Snlum-Cnpuzzo 701d. and irhilo this ilunWr‘ t'*"t. the British forces are strongly in control of the principal highway a- b“! their Tillht flank an informed wilrce cautioned against regarding my! DFOOI of a general axis rc- All indications ivere that the Brit- ish tiiaifql’ was to use the fleet and air corps to prevent a long tYAWH-oilt axis retirement action- "fiiiioel Rommel in take his stand Ind iuzht it out in ‘he fronticr ar- tls W110i‘? the strain on British Communications would be negligible. Trill in with cvcrv notion in Libva y’! a continued r-amvmiqn or m. m"! Rilfllhst axis shinning in flze Mediterranean rlqgjnnqd go bu- ilmmel from help from Europe. U. sTsusrnlxlns tJContinucd ‘from page 1):. “Mr devotn y, A ll tho morning to ,2: Burlikau stuatlcn Hull, dis- dgrggil the Thanksgiving Holi- mu’ J MmLfll Kfchisaburo No- raro Jiarsrizfisz. "l: “M” if?‘ designed m’ rinil in the Pac iii. ingmfgspliiése had rece ved new n“ cumin Jrcm their foreign of- ht. these orders CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN DETRDPI‘. Nov. 20—(OP)—Tor- onto Maple Leafs captured ther fsftli straight victory and‘ main- tained their Nat onal Hockey League lend by defeating Detroit Red Wings 4-3 in an overtime game before s. sellout crowd of 12.581 tsnlght. The Leafs, spotting Detroit two goals seven minutes apart in the first period, squared the count in the second period and then ram- med home two shots in overtime before the Red wings lCONd again in the last minute. Lorne Carr fired the winning shot on a pass from Sweeney Schriner. Rookie Johnny McCreedy, the s edy Syl Apps and big Hank oldup beat goalie Johnny Mowers before Carr connected. Detroit's flyin start. was provided by rook- 1e B l Jennings, who once scored three times in 5'1 seconds in the minors. This time he got two goals on shots of 25 and l0 feet. S'd Abel bagged the other De- gait goal 4.1 seconds from the fin- SUMMARY were based on developments in the several talks they have already held with President Roosevelt and Hull. State Department officials said that toda ‘a meeting was at the request o the Japanese for the purpose of elaborating further on same phases of the international situation. The conversations, they added, continue to be ell lvrfltofl! and no decisions were un ertaken. Hull's statement, made after a full report on the Weygand episode by Admiral William D. Leahy, the United States Ambassador. Dlflflfid the blame for France's plight di- rectly on the Nazis. "According to reports reaching the Department." the announce- ment slvd. "the French govern- ment has acuuiesce‘ to the empress dr-mand of Hitler to remove Gen- r-rlll Weygand‘ from his post as Delegate-General of France in Af- rica, thus permitting a Gemlan control over French ailthority en- tirely outside of the provisions of the Armistice..." ‘FASHION FLASIIHES Yellow accents ‘on black are smart. l Leafs Defeat Red Wings Ldprade refuses 4-3 In Overtime Game TO tum pro ‘FTP First Period l-llfhzetroit, Jennings (Gieseblecht) I 3 ‘ll-Detroit, Jennings _(Brown. Glesebrecht) 8:21 if-Toronto. McCreedy (Langelle, Goldup) 9'0’! Penalties - Davidson, Orlando (match), McDonald. Second Period 4-—Toronito, Apps (Drillon, David- son) 6:08 Penalty-Church Third Period Scoring-None. Penalties-Jfone. Overtime Fi-Jforonto, Goldup (Langellc) :47 6—Toronto, Carr (Schriner) 3:18 '1—9D1etr0lt, Abel (Howe, Liscombe) : 9 Penalties-None. Decorations for 3 ilanuck Airmen By William Stewart Canadian Press Staff Writer IONDON, Nov. 20 —(CP Cable)- Decorations for three Canadian air- men-all attached to ilze some bomber squadron —who have con- tributed their skill and daring to the Royal Air Forces widespread pounding of enemy targets were an- nounced tonight. PO. Warring Laird Jennings, 23- year-oid member of the Royal Ca- nadian Alr Force of Hamilton. 0nt., receives tile Distinguished Flying Cross. Sgt. Stephen Robert Frost, a no.- iive of Vancouver and Sgt. Harold Alan Taylor of Halkirk, ~Alta.. re- ceived the Distinguished Flying Medal. The Canadians, members of No. 57 squadron have taken part in YHLXIIETOUS attacks on key objectives. including Berlin. l s? Itallrn destroyer which had run afoul of British fleet in the Mediter- ranean. British shell had justjtnlck her mainline- BAD NEWS FOB IL DUCB-(lbsoured behind this poll of smoke ll ll PORT ARTHUR, bklv. 2O -<CP) --Ed881' Lapradf. forward star with Port Arthur Bearcats of tile Thun- cler Bay Senior Hockey League, m. 1118M revealed he has refused an offer to turn professional with Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League. Laprade was offered the pro con- tract by Frank Patrick, business manager of the Montreal team who gas been in Port Arthur for two aye. Vics edge Sydney 4-3 SYDNEY, N.S.. Nov. 20-46?)- Defcnceman Wally Kcster of Win- ni rapped in a goal in the last m nllte tonight to g’ve North Syd- ney Vlctorias a 4-3 victory over Sydney in the Cape Breton Hoc- ke League. e win drew Vics into a tie with the champions for second and last place in the three-team loop. Glace Le Bay Miners are four points out in front. vics had the better of the play through most. of the first and third periods, keeping the puck in the Sydney end for minutes at a stretch. They opened with two goals in the first, only to have Sydney tie it llp in the second The Northsiders gzt the odd goal of the three scored in the final period. Speedy Lucie Check got two goals for the Dollarmen. only playervof either deal to give a double scming perfonnance. OUT our: m? Sydney gets Two players SYDNEY‘, NS, Nov. 20-40?)- Two newcomers from Western Canada Joined" Sydney Millionaires of the Cape Breton Hockey League tcday. They were Jim 'l‘rosgick. native of Saskatoon who played last year with Moose Jaw, Sash, and JLm Wilson, former member or Calgary Stampeders wtlo per- formed last winter with Washin- ton Eagles. Both are fozwards. Oldest hockey Fan passes ‘TORONTO. Nov. 20 — f0?»- James Robinson. Toronto centen- arian who told friends that when- ever hls favorite hockey team lost lie could not sleep died in his sleep early today. He would have been 101 in January. Mr. Robinson followed the for- tunes of Toronto teams in the National Hockey League for de- codes. He was considered the old- est and most enthusiastic fan of the! present-day Toronto Maple as Native of Ireland, Mr. Robinson came to Toronto as u. child. Remember M/ilen George Vezina, one of the great- est goalkeepers hockey has ever known, played the last game cf his career at Montreal 16 years ago to- night. For 15 years Vezina was an outstand ng cog in Montreal Can- adiens hockey machine. Vezina entered his last game despite a high temperature but was forred to retl-e after the first period. He died Marchjjlglggo. Americans Hand Rangers Fourth Straight Defeat 4-1 YORK. Nov. 20—(AP)— Brooklyn Americans roared through a wobbly New York Rangers de- fence for four second-period goals and a 4-1 v‘cto before a crowd of 12,222 at Mad n Square Gar- den tonight, in the first game of the intro-city National Hockey league rivalry since last season. Goalie Earl Robertson, playing in top form, and defenceman Tom- my Anderson, the outstanding- man on the ice, sparked Brooklyn to their victory. After rookie Grant Warwick gave Rangers their lead, Anderson Led it up early in the second period. Then Buzz Boll put Amer- loans ahead to stay, and goals by rookie Johnny O'Flaherty of Tor- onto and Harry Watson of sas- katoori made the issue certain. The Rangers, in losing their fourth straight, game, gave their kid goalie, Jim Henry, little slip- port and even the New Yolk crowd. traditionally hard on goal- lgs, did not hold the defeat against m. Ameiicans by winning went into third Vince in the league standing. SUMMARY first Period 1—New Yorkéqwarwick (C. Smith, Tustin) l5 Penalties —'N. Colvllle, Benson, Branigan, Coultel", M. Colvllle, Anderson, Juzda, Kelly. Second Period 2—Brooklyn, Anderson (OFiaher- tyi 4:24 3—Brocklyn. Boll (H. Watson, Armstrong) 6:28 d-Brccklyn. O'Flaherty (Knott. _Her_on) 14:10 R. Williams P’ PHlL, I WANT TO ' sl-iow TH‘ ci-“EF ol= i . "rt-us GOVERNMENT i wolzlc THEM OLD ‘ s-PEciFlcATlous on i. . WE BUlLT lN iqlll, BUT T. CAN'T SEEM TO RECALL IF WE STILL-wa- yl/c a __\\3 _‘ §—§ _n——‘_ I /Z/" ,1 4‘ Xgifi us. m. err. ecmrmuv nus WWI-M i-i iirq‘; gEfl! m: o _.-._ BRlNGlNG UP FATHER \/ THEM euro eAlzizlAslas c By J. OH,VE§. we sriu. eor 'EM—- wl-w rl-ilzv "n-lr-zv was Aiarr EVER PUT AWAY MADE PHll. 1N TH‘ A aces or= EMENT some l<lui> -- 'iui,- i-s‘ i / su=s DiSFANCE ru. NEVER WELLJPHIL USEDT UMDEEGTAHD "ro BE TH‘ BULBS OFFICE aov Miub Au oi=r=lcl=. BOY Kuouln‘ HE KNONV5 M022 "n-uxu MORE ABOUT HWLBIIF NEVER Tl-(is sl-loP A FOEEMAH! THAN ‘n-vauu. Manila ASKA HiMsELFJ Mm TOO HEAR U2 OWN ME 3O 0| iR BOARDING HOUSE ’ 02m l1, IiiARTHA! ll= 1 MUST ASSUME THE ROLE OF CPQT i-iorsslapceasa LN‘: BEHIND Tius DiSGUiSE To ourrox QINMETER spies wuo time. MPRHED ME ‘FOR A FEAR- l-‘Ui. FATE 1-» fF I'M sooner: WiTl-\ you, MY eooee wiu. Ba COOKED! 5-Brooklyn, (Arm- strong) 16.2 Penalties-Egan, Bzailigan, (major), Egan (major). Third Period scoring-None. Penalties—Anderson, Pike. H. Watson ' 2 J uzda Nova to meet Gas Lesnevich lvlow YORK, wit. 20—(AP)— 14 0a Lou Nova, minus his Yogi, cosmic punch and what have you, is slat- ed to get back into fistic action Jan. 23 against light-heavyweight champion Gus Lesnevich. Managers Ray Caficn and Lou Diamond have agreed with Pro- motor Mike Jacobs on the f.gllt, to be held in Madison Square Gar- den, probably over the IO-rollnd route Nova has been out of action since he met Joe Louis in September. In recent days. he has been on a CPI-Hie to Guatemala, and Carien said that when he returns to training he will have left all his fancy theories of fistcuffing ori the s p. PAGE’ SEVEN Chihawks take 3-2 victory From " Boston - \ CHICAGO. Nov. 20 — (AP); Scoring all of their goals in thv second period, Chicago's Black Hawks held their second piwo ranking in the National Hockey league tonight with a 3-2 victory ever Boston Bruins before 18,222 spectators at tile Stadium. Playing before tile largest home crowd of the season, the Hawks. only undefeated ream in the league, won their fourth game with a scoring blast that produced three goals in the second period. Then they withstood a constant third-period assault SUMMARY First Period Scoring-None. Penalties: Cooper, Hollett. Second Period l. Chicago, D, Bentley (Thoma), March) :59 2. Chicago, Kaleia (Dahlstrom Hergesheilner) 15:44. 3. Boston, Wisernan (Conacher, Cowley) 16:04. 4. Chicago, Paplke (Allen, W. Cal-sci 17:19. Penalty-Thorns. Third Period 5, Boston, Jackson (Hui-Mill Penalties: None. Silver Jewelry is very smart. Plaid suits are to continue in fall styles sqllkldlml grey, sanws brovln, cadet blue. ‘ailber green and blackberry are good colors. Large, flalvless rubies are rare, but they command a higher price per carat than any other gem- stone SPAGHETTI SALAD One and one-half cups cooked spaghetti in l-in lengths, l largo green pepper, minced; l large to- ——--__-___ mato, chgppcrtl 1 mcgllillm ollglcum- ' bcr. dice; 1 arge i pic e; 1 N‘ H' L' Standlllg medium onion, minced; l teaspoon ———— salt; l teaspoin celery seed; 1 cup P W L D F A Pts mayonnaise; 3 hard-cooked eggs. Method: Combine spaghetti. Toronto 8 5 l 0 2316 10 green pepper, tomato, cucumber Chlca o 5 4 0 l ll '1 9 pickle. onion, salt, celery seed and Brock yn 7 3 3 1 1'1 l8 7 enough mayonnaise i0 bind the Bllstcn 5 3 2 O 13 6 mixture tlgethcr. Place on salad New York 6 2 4 0 l6 20 4 plate and garnish top with hard- Detroit 6 1 4 1 l3 l7 3 cooked egg wedges. Surround with Ciifij/Qlels 5 0 4__l__l0 l6 l salad greens, _ PAca-shwi: oonuao "1 / /' , .° i "WUUTRPCKING ' HE'S eor A ' . With — Maior Hnnnlo \\\- GPIEE ? Til-law's 1.0m: ol= 4, cHocr/aw w-vcu 4 eaocElziEe, ' CANlT EVEN CAREY i so el-ie ANN-S recurs 4 CAN'T BE a < vllTl-iouT DELNER- / TAKING ’ ' iNG PAPERS TO HiMTO AN AF-LOCK OF luerirurioal! wizoue NUMBERS.’ t‘ I UJILL i=5- IF DlZBLlLvfi-IE KIN HELPME IDIT‘ NE MENT AND NOW- DO YOU UlltgEggTAAND HOW SELLING THE D9 BOME GOODS? 11M l WJUMnE Z -fi 3 i. an l ‘DNI "i? CHARU 5KlNT'$ COMIN’ Ei ' GOT TO GHT SOMETHIN’ TO DISCOURAGE FROM COMIN’ TO SEE CLEMENTINE- ' ol-l, M4 GOR6H! AZZAMATTEE .1 » MILLIE‘ CAN AGAIN Aw IT'S MY TURN! NOTH\N’S WELMWRAT iF CLEMENTWE "V/"m-E M“ “'5'” omen! WM Mlus 3E ‘ROUND Li? msflrlmz» ¥( ' ' S _ w [ill ill .‘\ iiil-riiifiiii .,--/. .' f’