MAXIMS OPA MERE MAN We need faith to heurtcn us in the ircai-lness of all well-doing. -,_. 21/ ///' The People's Paper _.-~/ ‘VF?’ a,“ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody pride Aflverlitv ll a nut corrective to MAXI MS 03A MERE MAN and self-sufficiency. Charlottetown Guardian, Two Conto- liornln] Guardian. Founded I581 zzzszz: .1.=-J _.1-—==r-.».- ~_. 1A4: . .».-.-n..m Order Becomes Elfectivikl: Qnce ' llv Frank l-‘lalierty Clinlulntn Press Stall‘ Writer 0'1" w call for cl-uipi ‘I v:ce in iii ' s '1 reached out ltcstiurccs Ni" IIIi‘ll who are . 1111.111 those u, \ n O‘ B" mtii have ‘rccu 1i .1.» v.1 stli. )I‘ ior line- ' du‘. y but not 0 and 6.3.0570 men w c to (‘tlllllilll- men l“ to ~10. 0y c rildlcss S, 191'. have ' ‘Iii!’ on ‘e undo a- " VII he en- .:ll Vflll‘ work, ntAlltf will be farm workers eligible icr iiidcliiilte postponement of cull. and still others will be found to be ui still lower categories as a result. o: sickness or midentsince the time of their medical examin- ation. On the other hand, some may be lozuid on rc-cxalninatlon to be in category “A" because of unprove- lllU-il. iii their condition in the in- terval or because Army Medical Boards who examine men as they enter the Army put a different e- mulation upon th-em than the civ- ilian icians who conductedthe till; 1.11 examination. A lcw "B" category men have ' my been cahed up by the War services Department for service with the Royal Canadian Mounted ‘Ptrilvc but up to now the Anny has ‘not IJJCII interested in drafting men in that class, although it has ac- .' ttztitcti "B" men who apply for ac- tivc service enlistment voluntarilt Tile R.C.M.P. received authority to requisition “B" men through the War Services Department for duty as guards at key points in Canada. Wlil‘e there is no authority at tircscnt. to send compulsory service mcn overseas a considerable pro- portoii of those called up volunteer ior ova-seas service. It is possible some oi the "B" men called under the rc uisltions may volunteer Ind bc accepted for overseas. Cf-"ic Efforts Made To a a Suitable Site For Dehydration Plant ‘ . iii: ‘as '11-!‘ i5 {he . _ y; f..:r‘ .11 1- C. ;: rl-uit <' iiic rs‘ Tratliln: CJILIW: at B' cki "c. tire ii ' ' . .' L .i.1lurda_v 1110:1111 B. I Gosling Events -"_ ndlilll"liil‘i-..i”illl’ ilti.“‘“”iii‘l‘i'lli Remember i Tags. C.W.L. W" Pluto today. u 11-21-11. ..,'1““*t'i\‘c Wednesday, December -1 itlr Auction and Bridge, Saint "(Writs- Sotiality Hall, 1i 21-11. "Dance New Perth Monday NW‘ 23- IVQIJEiPFs Orchestra, ' ll-ZI-fl ,d"F“l'"i°l'5 WBiliiiiTio ship dress- BO, $5 advise Mctjulgan and N“- 11-21-101 ll , ‘i? floshwe "more a quantity of well B. c" bQi-giln cattle, Island Cold ‘Wis w. mo. 9-26-dti , _.__.. mum‘ . live and dressed no" ‘Lat t-ltl '1‘cl;pli<.ue Oilice. An- ‘ 1‘i°\\'¢‘ii.\'n, Moniaptic. ll-IO-‘f-‘I-S-fii. In ‘i m 21mins lire and (lrcssccl chick- 1“, ‘ml i Wl evcrv Wcdnrstlny. Pav- Hunmll i iukct tirlcea. P. J. Nov R111 t: s-zo-s-M-tt. ",1," "IIIIIJIII nnd innrt- breads, q ‘ Y‘). l.icl|<~s ot Christian M-MI. siiiirtiuy, November Zlsl, Fr .1 . . until .1. Chandler's Store. 11-20-21. A5 zcported previously, a site has 1.1.11 sccctetl in Siminerslde for a rtrvtlrzitlon plant L01‘ Prince Ed- uard island, and work will com- mence immediately on the con- ncllon of the building. The con- ,lt-, led on [and iozmcrly owned by loocrtsgns Mill and Bakery, Ltd, oii Water Street East, will be 130 loch by 64 feet, oi frame construct- .o11 one and a half storeys high, .1ll(i tvrh :1 deep concrete basuneiit. 'l"he plant will process Vfillwlbisfl .1111! perhaps other commodities for tlic Agrlcu tural Supplwi BUR-Pd. Oliaivu, This BClLd suppbeg part til 1c machinery required and re- niiis titlc to it. Responsible for xolistrtlCtlon of the building, boiler and heating equlgment, ior general supervision and andling of goods. 111-1: tin: Assocaled Shippers and tillers, “no are the promoters. Two shifts daily It Ls expected that the plant will be in [ljiPTfltICD early in i943. Th; still‘ will consist oi approximately tnglitcen men and twenty-five wom- cu per shift, and will operate two shifts a day. The question of location of the Dlllllt caused a great deal of inter- csi and speculation in both Char- lotlcititvn and Sunnierside, these centres. on account of the electrical ,}(i\VCl‘ zcquiremezits, being the only nos in the Province which could toe considered. It was necessary to ,.~rc\.de icr u (SO-horse power elect- .c.\l motor. Other factor; affecting lie location are prox‘mity to mil- ‘\\ll_V s gs, and to a harbor front where wusiage could be dis ed (and firm ground on whlc to l These conditions made the select- ion oi the site quite difficult. In the negotiations which followed one site was thought to be avail- able in Charlottetown to fill the requirements, but a title to part of ilic land could not be obtained. The Summerslde site, part; of the Robertson estate in which a ciear (Continued on pa1g€'i§T_Col."B_); Less Butter For ILS. Givilians WASHINGTON. Nov. 20 —(AP) — Forty per cent of the total butter ln storage in the United. States was irozen ior government purchase to- night as a "tcmporar ' measure to nimre suiilcient supp es to meet the needs of the armed forces and lend-lease. Aer-culture Department Officials solo the freon order would result in_n sharp reduction oi civilian sup- llllls inasmuch as the current pro- duction of butter is insufficient to inset civilian and war needs. Because oi the butter shortage W.P.B. explained the army an navy have been meeting difficulty in getting sufficient sugpliea, and ships having s ace for utter have been leaving w th other carao, The action is effective tonight and will remain in force until CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21.1942 REPORT MOST OF TUNISIA IN ALLIED Jag; Base 0n Timor New, Th T0 Call B-1, B-Z‘ Men __ I I Enemy Makes Strong Base 0n Island Could Become Spring- board For Invasion Of Australia. CANBERRA, Australia, Nov. 20 _..(CP)—Facing defeat in the solo- mons Islands and New Guinea, to the north and northeast 0f Aus- tralia, Japanese forces are strengthening their positions methodically on the Island of Tl- mor to the northwest, it was stated officially today, Nine anchorages on the north shore or Portuguese Timor have been occupied, and the Japanese have moved in much equipment, including many motor vehicles. Australia consequently is still menaced by invasion, Australian spokesmen said, and Prime Min- ister John Curtln expressed the belief that; an action similar to the long and tedious campaigning in the Solomons and New Guinea region will have to be fought to prevent an invasion from the northwest. Timor was being consolidated. it was believed, as a Japanese spring- board for projected operations against Australia. It was thought the Japanese were obliged to con- centrate there because, their foot- hOIds in New Guinea and the Solomons were slipping away 1m- der the relentless oundlng of Al- lied sea, air and and forces. In New Guinea American and Australian jungle fighters were pushing the Japanese into an even more restricted strip of territory along the coast between Buns and Gena. Even on this beachhead their position became more precarious after American Flying Fortresses made an effective surprise raid on enemy naval vessels oii Gona. A cruiser and a destroyer were sunk. and an operation in whlzh the warships were meeting land- ing barges from the shore was thrown into confusion. Whether the landing barges were eviicuziz- lng men or bringing reinforce- ments could not be ascertained. Twelve Naval Ratings Leave Twelve members 0i the R.C.N.V. R. leit this morning fcr other training centers on the Mainland to receive further instruction as communication ratings. Four of the men are from the Provlrce uid thelremainrler Ifcm Ontario prin- c a ' p . The Island sailors include: L. N ,Darracii. Charlottetown; R. lleech- en. Fredericton: J. Gamble. Wocd Islands; and M. J. Brure, Heather- dale. The Ontario sailors include: A. G. MoGlll. R. T. Petznlck, A. Nou- harnln: W. T. sim, L. J. Brown, G. E, Rumball J. W. Gilbert, P. G. Broom. Red Offenshie Gaining__Speeti MOSCOW, Nov. 20—tAP)-Nevvs of R/ussian counter-attacks came from all sectors Qt the Eastern Front today, while in the Central Caucasus the German withdrawals from Ordzhonikldz struck a quick- enlng pace. Batlcred Stalingrad resumed l. place in dispatches the Russians announcing theiy ha/i captured s heigir. south o the City. At the conclusion of an action in which 400 Clrrmans were killed and ma- chtine guns and trench mortars captured the Soviet forces en- trenched themselves in new ad- vanced positions. Wit/bin the City the German! attacked several times. The Russ- ians reported all these assaults were repulsed and that Soviet po- sltions were strengthened. Curtin Urges One Command SYDNEY. Nov. 20-(0? CABLE) _ Prime Minister Curiin told his press conference today that one army under one command. ls s military necessity in the southwest Pacific because s serious handicap would be exposed by factors hind- ering military mobil ty. Ho was explaining the proposal he made this week to an intereetate conference of the Labor Partv seek- ing to widen the area in which the Australian militia. may be used. Mr. urtin said Australia at present is defended b an outer screen of Islands inc uding New Guinea, the Solomons, Timor, the New Hebrides, New Caledonia, and Fiji. Under hLo proposal, which has been referred to the State Labor Parties, the conscripted militia could be used in any pert of this area as needed. Hitherto all Aus- tralian troops outslde Australian March B, I043. territory have been volunteer; in the Australian imperial force. reef To Aeeitaba War Situation Last Night (By Kirke L. Simpson, Associated Pres; wai- Analyst) Thfl 01')’ of a Rome b-uzdcutcr that "Italy's hour hu come" finds its own echo in Berlin's announcement o! the Axis evacuation of Ben_ gasl. With the fall of that town, an Axis grip on the south shore of the Mediterranean, that once reached from Tunisia lo within B0 miles of Alexandrla- 3 °r°w4ulhl Elli-ll 0f nearly LMO mllvs, has been shrivcl- the Pyrenees to Turkey, exposed I I of the vast Allied nut-cracker. Just how close the southern out Rommel’; communlcati hours. e e o must follow l; nearer 2.0041 African army ed to a meagre 600-mlle long coastal corridor. ently overwhelming force is closing in for sea. the net ls swiftly tightening. Decisive results that seemed destined to leave not Italy alone, but the whole Axlp Mediterranean flank from to attack cannot be long delayed, I There are American forces in many parts of Equatorial Africa. Their exact whereabouts and functions are military secrets mu; but by every sign they are busy with establishing and maintaining alr- ways and other communications across Africa for n", Wm)”; army“ surging in from east and west to clear the Mediterranean coast of the foe and pave the way fer ultimate Invasion‘ of the European continent. O I I I Q Sound reasons underso e the predictions of military observer; an both sides of the Atlantic that the first crux of the final battle in Africa will be in the air. Air power offers Hitler his only hope of delay- ing, lot alone halting, the impending complete destruction 0f his “Events may be moving (In the Mediterranean) towards what may soon develop lnlo the greatest air campaign yet fought in this war," General Sewell, commentator of the British Information Service, ob- serves. “The best hope the Germans have for their tTOQpS in Tunisia and Tripolitania ls by reinforcement and support from the air. We know the Luftwaffe is being concentrated in the Miidlllifhzneln area, and in ly they have many well-organized airflelds.” Allied power In appar- the ltlll_ By all’, land and The abandonment of Bengasl wag obviously a desperate attempt to escape the British trap squeezing upon it before It was too late. Whether it has succeeded, or another substantial segment of Rom- mela shattered army hag been destroyed remains to b; dlsclnggi British forces were already on the sea coast south of Bengaal bar- , ring the only escape route. They stood between the Axis rearguard flee- ' in: Bcnziisi and the El agheila bottleneck at the depths oi‘ the Gulf of Sirte that offers the foe his only hope of halting the page", h“. gpurheld of the Anglo-American army In Tunisia may be is uncertain. A clash between Free French and Axis forces at Gaves, 100 miles from the Trlpolitania-Tunislan border and less than 200 miles from Tripoli, i; reported, That Tunlsign port would be on General Eisenhower's shortest line of advance to behind him and catch hlni in the clos- lng Allied vise. Once Eisenhower's gpeeding forward elements reach it, they should be in Tripolitlnia at Rommel’; luck within days or even O I 9 There has been nu further word of the Fighting French reported i moving up from Lake Chad to complete the circle hemming the Axis forces in against the 50D. The long desert distances the French must, travel to reach the scene in time are a ‘ rmldalile obstacle. By air- li"? u"?! "v liwlli- 1.000 miles away. blt the circuitous road route they WELILAND. ONT-. Nov. 20—-(CPl -Offic1a.s of the Plggot Construc- tion Company oi Hamilton said toriighbthat four men was killed, two seriously injured and 29 others injured when the roof of an Atlas Steel Company Building collapsed here today. All the men were employees of the Piggot Company which) was constructing the building for Atlfi; Steel, The dead: llorluisrlus Groulx, 5158 St, Heu- ri SL, Montreal; Alex Leadbetter, Welland: George Dudich, 445 Salisbury 8L, London, 0nt., Kolmzui Mozog, 23 Van Allen Avln, Toronto. Mike Pelinsky of Welland, P28- vlot1=ly listed as killed, is stillalive and is in hospital ior tres-‘mcnt of his injuries. Nineteen of the injured were Welland men, seven otners came from Ontario cities while the home- towris of three were not immediat- ely available. Likewise the name of one oi the iniiured men was not known immed ately. There were reports in Welland that one or two other men still were buried in the debris but of- ficial statements were that. all work- ers were accounted for. (At Ottawa the Department of Munitions and Supply issued a statement quoting D.W. Lathrop, vice president of Atlas Steel, as saying that a. concrete slab six inches thick, 20 feet wide and 60 feet long-poured yesterday-had caved in, crushing the men under- neath) 1t was estimated here that 300 tons of concrete fell on the workers on the main floor of the building which was of reinforced concrete construction and was three storeys high. The concrete slab which fell waatoformapsrtoftheroofc the building. Bomber ilraslies CALEDONIA, N_B., Nov. 20- (OPl-Bodles of several men were found tonight in the wreckage of a lar bomber that crashed and explo ed in heavily-wooded coun- try five miles from here this ev- ening. ft we; reported there were five in the aircraft, but late to- night no sccurate count 0i the bodies had been made. Eastern Air Command st Hal- ifax said it had no announce.“ .t to make about the crash. and it is not known whether the men belonstd to the R.C.A.I'. or the RA F. However, an announcement from the command was expected %OH'UI. lFoar Dead 31 Injured In Collapse Of Roof Big Battle Raging In New Guinea ALLIED IIEADQIIARTERS In AUSTRALIA. Nov. 21- tSaturday - (CP) - Ileavy fighting is in progress hr "I" northeast New Guinea I10"! of Gona and Bllnl as Austral- ians and Americans, who reach- ed the outskirts yefitefdillfi strive to push the Japs into the sea, the high command an- nounced today. The tempo of battle rose to high pitch all along the coastal strip between Buna and Gena where the Japs are being forced back toward the shore. Jflpanegi! planes, whose ap- pearances in the sci-tor have been Infrequent, have entered the engagement In an itttem i. $0 forestall what split-h"! i0 ‘i! n growing disaster for the enemy. Willkie Praises British Sprit NlilW YORK. Nov. 20-10?)- Wendell L, Wlllkie today told the British we; Relief Society that "no one could have had the ex- pgflgnge; I had on my visit t0 England during the blitz of i940 and i941 and ever forget not iilone .From Arctic Trip 10 PAGES Continue Retrea that “all Tunisian territory 'l‘un1s-Bizerte stretch now is MAJ. GRIN. M. A. POPE M. C. Nlagcp-u. ciuil M. A. Pope, .v1.c., TGDTLSCIILCLL oi trio war CCfllllllbl-i. of the Cabinet 0.1 the Canadian Lcgcition at W. s..l1iglo11, W45 among s, group oi‘ (Jonathan Army officers doccrtilcd by the Beygian Govern- mur, not‘. .1 "aitii tin,- Croix .\iiIi— taire Bilge Ciexcral Pope w.:s u.ii- able to i are h s duties in the U S. Captal to attend the br ef ce.e- moay a". the i; in Legation. Nascopie Back OTTAWA, Nov. 20—(CP)—-Safe return of ttic Canadian Govern- ment Vessel Nziscepie irom its an- nual expedition to the easiest‘. Arctic v1.15 made known tonight with the arrival in Otto/we oi Mal. J. l) Mc-Kcand, leader oi the voyage, ‘ilie Nascopic left Montreal July B last, tl“d cocked at Port Alfred, ~ ritzy, alter a voyage of more that tour months. Maj. .\.-i~.t-'.1iid said the expedi- tion C(i\l.'l'(‘d oelivecn 10.000 and 12,000 unit-s and that members lound the ilskinios ‘exceptionally uell.‘ llc said the Nascople was live uxells l.l',i;l' liiuu usual 111 rc- turiiliig. one to pressure oi work. T ‘ f \ ' L.N .111. l0 Drill 5U Oil Wells EDMONTON, Nov ‘.50 -— (C?)- Proviiicilll liIALIAOIILICS rciculed here today that. 111i agruincnt is bciiig signed lllicrcby Canadian National ltalluay's Will midertakc the drill- ing oi 50 wclisin Alberta's Ver- milion Oil l-teld and tlic arrange- ment 1s exptcted to result iii the re- opening o1 the oil cleaning plant which closed down tlicre some. ivecks ago. The ull cleaning plant trheu lls operators protested they unit: upl 1111.11; at a, loss under cur- 1<~1i..ollp1 e5. Arco11~..i1.. to official flgur< s, the VCYlliiIlJil lucid produced lroul l-i wells u Lot-oi oi 8,412 barrels 0i trum- illliilli: kicptcilib-tr this your, m] utitptii illiicli l _ 1t high 1111111111; h.- oll pioduvtilg iicltls of tile Uuhuliion. Cililtlflhlli National Railways get a 11111101‘ portion of its Oil reqt in...» 1....) r.».- ‘lcrliiilitul i‘ IUCJL- d 111.1 llilli s cast of lioniou .- 7-‘ u: llllB Talk 0f Big Events LLSUUN, POlflLiLLAL, NOV. 20 —— tAPJ -~ lJ ’ " tiisivatcli. oubl ‘ ' ~ Se- lo l competent Axis tplil): silence Lvcy 1d tlirir h.1o..utu lt.~l?l’\l.’ iii such cl cumstnliccs," tutti, second, 4 tactil- ul cauiuutlllglzc winch AXIS military leadars wll follow Wiiiwlli giving the lrast prior indififitivii 0i lts_charricl4‘r.", VICIIY, tFrom French Broad- the courage but the infinite pa- tlencg of the British people under circumstances which seemed ‘al- most beyond human endurance’ Willkle speaking at a luncheon of the society of which he is a director, credited British author- ities with “deliberately playing down their own contribution“ in North Africa "in order to ilive an extra lift to America and also so that my world will have a vis- ible demonstration that Americil is fully in this war with actual fighting troops." When the war is over. he said. "the story of Britain's part tn North Africa yesterday and today will be one of the noble sagas of history." val told tho French people in s broadcast IOIIITIII that “an entcntc wltli the Ilvlt is the only guar- antee ior |)(‘.'l(‘C in Europe" and said "notlimg; justifies American hostility touzird us." "Co-opciaitlcti with Germany is the only guaranty. "I was :lI\Vfl_V$ certain Germany would bc the victor. "I like libt-rty but I will never accept, for m_\' country a parlia- mentary government as we had before." tlnvais speech was another strong iutlicttlluu that. he Ls pro- pariug a police with the Axis and pcrltnps tliul riraw up a treaty 0f alliance against the United Na- lions.) closed‘ BI_I_.II_I_Q__IOI:IK__XIOI'IIIIIWPSL African bat- casts), Nov. ‘lti-fAPr-Plerre La- ' returning the seized Brazzaville said Allied tr Annual Inbacrlption Delivered ($.00 By lull: P. I. I. $4.001 t0 other Provinces and l1, l. A. Ill-G CONTROL Nazi Forces Hold Tunis And Bizerte Axis Troops Abandon Bengasi; Remnants of RommeVs Army f. LONDON, Nov. 20——-(Ci’)-—Tile Fighting French radio at Brazzaville, French Equatorial A frica, said tonight with the exception of the in the hands of the Allies.‘ oops had made contact with Axis forces 25 miles southeast of Tunis, the capital where the Nazis are entrenched. LONDON, Nov. 20—(CP) tonight that “important Al fRadio Algiers announced lied forces” were deployed near Lake Chad, 1,000 miles below the Italian Libyan base 0f Tripoli. ‘ and that it was probable an army was moving - northward to cut the Axis Mediterranean road of retreat between 'l‘ripoli and El Agheila. (By E. C. Daniel, Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON, Nov. zo-cfe) —Preparing for desperate stands at Bizerte and Tun- is, Hitler was reported rush- ing reinforcements of men and armor across the Sicil- ian Straits into Tunisia t0- day in an effort to stem the onslaught of powerful Bri- tish and American forces closing in from the Algerian border. Hot upon news that heav- ily-gunned spearheads of the Allied drive had maul- ed three Axis armored col- umns ia the first hard fight of the Tunisian campaign came the report from the Morocco radio in Rabat that the Germans had land- ed new reinforcements at Bizerte, including tanks transported by air. The Allied advance units which destroyed a third 0f a pkiiilfl‘ column sciit out to meet them and sent two other Nazi culunitis tumb- ling back ulXm their main body were reported to have penetrated Within so miles both of Bizcrle and ‘Tunis and to have reached the main Axis defence lines. As encouragement to troops of the French provincial garrison to throw in their lot with the British and American invaders, the FYEIICII North African commission today published un announcement that "lull and entire amnesty" will bc granted "to all persons who fflVbrrd Allied action in Africa." Win First Round Striking suiltlv across Tunisia to clear the u 11y ior the main body Lit-Geri. Kvliiulli rtiltllissulls Bri- tish lst. army pouring in lium Al- geria and ‘.11 lurk the LIHLIILIIIIQ Axis forces 1n the northern tip oi the French protectorate, the Allied sbt-zirlieads clearly iron inc llrst- rouiid of heavy lighting. A spokesman at Allied licatlquari- ers, after recounting the firs: nmki battle on the coastal route to n.2- erte. in which l7 Axis zilniourtd d vtiiiclcs. llicltitling ll tanks, tvrre, A: (lrstroyed and “heavy casualties‘) inflicted oii German lrotilii‘. D?"- dlctcd flit: iiulit irould moi-lose i/n fury and s; ILH‘ now that heavy Al- liedluéiits lllitl l't‘iilCill‘t.i the mflin Naz ecncc ltons. I-Ie said Alliwcosutililes had been . “minor” in the owning 0135i"?!- , As the Germans and Italians re- j treated stubbornly into Biurte ‘ and Tunis to make their final stand on the extreme western and (Continued on page 9 Col 4) Laval May Be Planning Enten te With German Reich He scoffed at Allied promises of portions oi the French Empire in the future. and recalled how Britain took French Canada and parts of the West Indies long ag0_ “On the ot. er side of the world," Laval continued, “Japan, an old nation by its history and a young one by its dynamism. has just taken from Britain and the United States immense territories, treasures, and raw materials. "The Anglo-Saxons are seizing the (l=‘rcuch) Empire and seeking compensations ior the losses they know are irreparable." (Jiipatrs Pnrlv seizure of French limo-China opened the way fol‘ h? quick conquest of iiw Phi" Ping‘; and Nethcrlands and Brltls t rltorles in the For Elli-J MONTREAL, Nov. po-(gpf —Marc Carrier-e, chi“ "u". lzei- for Jean Drapeau In the Nov. 30 bY-Bilifition in Outre- mont. federal riding, was tak- en into custody late to ht. by Royal Canadian Moun Pol. Ice on order: from the Feder- al Minister of Justice, Carrier: was notified of the ordcr at. the centre committee room of Mr. Drapeau, and pa]. ice said he faced charge; un- der the War Measures Act. The detention order Wag be- lieved to b0 band on Halb- ments made by Can-ior; n g campaign meeting for My, Drapcau here Wednesday night_ Mr. Drapeau, pelt-styled “can- didate of the draftces" la op- posing limp-Gen. LaFleelie, Minister of National wu- 5gp vlccs in the by-election. Japs More Active In Alaskan Area ‘—‘*" z HEADQUARTERS, Alaska de- fence Command. Nov 20 — (APM. United States uriny aerial recon- naissance substantiates recent re. ports 0i Zillpllflillfly renewed Jap all‘ activity at Attu Islttnd, near the end of the Aleutian chain. The Isl- and was occupied once this summer 2g the invaders and later abandon- Japanese planes were near in sttillatlons \\llI('Il the invaders Milli’ early iii the summer and iii-n abundant-d two mouths ago ulien Kiska a)>pr1rc11'l\' u-ris reinforced. 411/11’ PlECE or ‘fin WITH ‘THE FANcY itllfmts on if i055 High lilo l..l. lllollllllg .1: and tonight at 12.48. Sun sets this afternoon at 52B and rises tomorrow morning at 06 8. . Pull moon Nov, 22, 424 pm. Summerside tide 1a mlnucs lat- er than Charlottetown, CAB. FERRY SIJBVICI DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY ham Borden-Leave 9.05 a- ll.“ mm. 2.00 p.m., 4.30 p.m. 1'3‘ p.m.. Leave Cape Tormentlne — 10.30 mm. 1J5 p.m. 3.05 p.m., 5.45 p.m. 8.15 p.111. SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. 27 Inclusive) Leave Borden 9.00 a.m., 6.45 run. Leave T-irmenlinc 10.15 1.111. 8.00 D111. rat-res. FERRY SEIVICI Leave Wood Island: 10.00 un- ml .00 n. m. Leave Caribou Noon and 1.00 n. l- a sslzvicl "flirt"? SUNDA 1'1 Charlottetown-Slim!" oncfon Lean Charlottetown 8.80 a. In. 12.30 .111. 4.30 pm. Arr ve ‘Charlottetown l l. In» 8.45 p. 1m. ‘L05 I- Ill- BULLETIN l t l y. l i m",