>- 1 MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN Feverlsh hate, the demand for eu-lflnd Vlllble Infill“! h n llllg token of spiritual immsinrity, _t}..____ Ztnntum-t. Gulrdlnn TWO ouw‘ poi-sin; Guardian. Founded 1M7. G TS. U _,,___ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADATSATUROAY, OCTOBER 2s, 1939 Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew 14 PAGESI MAXI MS OIA MERE MAN One may not reach the level 0| his ideals, but he will reach n high- ‘ er level because of his ideals. Annual Subscription Delivered $6.00 By Mill-l’. E. l. MANN Cllllfll l-lifl U. I. ‘EN. SENATE APPROVES BILL Army Observers See Increasing Signs 0f Drive Nazi Troop micentrations Face West Front From Italy To Denmark. (By H. Taylor Henry, Associated Press Staff Writer) PARIS, Oct. 27—-(AP)—Clashes of increasing inten- sity between German and French combat patrols were re- tit-ted tonight on the western front between the Rhine and the Moselle Rivers. Reports from the front said the Germans were strengthening their patrol action, said to be passing from a preliminary reconnaissance phase, in which groups of four or five scouts were used, to action involving combat pillflllS of about 50 men. The fighting was about equally divided between French and German soil and carried on in bitter cold weather. The night communique told of increasing activity of advance guards in contact along the 100-mile front and added that artillery fire from both sides was increasing. - The German patrols were said to be led by "Grenzeschultze" . _ I I troopslnatllves of the fréintier gog- Nazi Political Circles g2, 1.12.3, ggy,gy,e",x,,,,;vs= 1e I Tge !F‘l'€1ICl’tllSi.l.1di8(% lclarofully re- " . . or roni ielr e i ence ser- lJice on Glermnn trgop dispositions for indications of the Germans’ in- hise siwpagrtsat sacitd gm, e n x nc ri- trations running from he Italian frontier to Dcnmar with one in reserve. t All Along Line i¢'- BERLIN, Oct. 2'1 —-(AP) —Ge!'- llllll political quarters expressed - i illiil today because Pope Pius n his encyclical expressed sym- or the Poles but not tor the i Nationals "butchered" in Dis ositlon of the Germans was repor ed to be about as follows: The southemmost group facing the SWISS frontier and extending northward: the second along France's Rhlnelnnd frontier on 1116 stiuthcrn flank of the front; the "';il"l£‘lf)‘ i" ' - l1.l\t‘ made a good int HTHSlCXI if the ‘ghlgflqfismg ,,‘,‘,’,}“,‘,§,.“§,‘1,};Efi§. Ptilit‘ had thought not only of the m? fourth along u“, Belgian and 11-1‘ 1"" 315°, Q1 U"? 51191151111115 °f Netherlands frontiers: the fifth on _»‘ 1111110111115 —~ 111°", "film the North seanntl sixth forming a ~ Zllgéllgqlagfvclgflgwfilfm “C9152 great reserve in central Germany. vii bv the Poles in the cruel- lllJfillOlZh Pol 'l...\t the Pope appeals for broth- ‘ nipaihy for the Poles is not rung in view of the tilfection i l*olL-li Catholics nlvrtiys have en» rd from the Vatican." they \\'.thout doubt, lio\rc\ ‘. it would On Swiss Frontier Military authorities were said to be studying particularly the re- ported contrenlrtitions facing Swit- 1’l‘l']llll(l and on the llOl‘lll(*l‘1l flunk. They ieported there were ‘J1 dlv- isions on the Swiss frontier. (A German division's strength is be- ttiecn 12,000 and 15,000 men.) Four army corps oii three divisions each was reported massed between Basel and Lake Constance and three corps of three divisions each Coming Events -U— Rate foi- Notices in this column I cents per word. Communication With Germany interrupted BBILNE, Oct. 27 -(CP —Bav- as) - Telepnonic communica- tion between - Germany and Switzerland was interrupted to- night and cl-lls to the Belch from Italy, Yugoslavia and oth- er neighboring countries were reported under severe restric- ons. (Amsterdam dispatches jflm telephone connections between the Netherlands and Germany were uifficult to establish. The Amsterdam central station ao- cepted all requests for lilies but there were long dellys and con- versations were frequently in- terr lited.) The War This Week By Don Gilbert _ Canadian Press Cable Editor The increasing probability 1-111“ Germany will attemPl 1° 5111149 a bold and crushing blow at the al- lies before the winter makes large- scale operations impracticable grli- ped the world as the eighth week of war ended- Almost daily this week. activity was reported among Ge - man troops in and behind time we:t- wall, leading the allied command to believe an offensive is a, (listmct possibility although snow alrea. 1y cloaks part of the western front. the mechanized German forces are to strike, they must do so in the immediate future if they are not t0 lose their mobility in the winter m re. The French and British arm- ies are ready to meet any mili- tary contingency, be it an as- sault cu ilic Mnginot line or a. flanking movement through the lnw countries or Switzerland, militnrfv ill patches indicate. 'l'lie ailivil commander, (iciier- al Maurice Giimeiln, early in the ivcck completed Withdraw- al of troops from all but the most strategic positions on Ger. man soil \\'lll(‘l'l they occupied in preceding weeks, While in Paris a land assault, was generally expect-rd. London tended wtlle belief a vilorous drive a- Rainst British sll iping and ptTllFfS air fllltis oii British port: and lvzii‘ lllflllilflfiS would be Germany's choice of notion. 'I'liis British belief “'11s 1111' 1 ‘llcly on the declara- (Continued on page 13, Col 5) "llatliune Do cl. Rcudinis, 1.05 t pm“ Sweep y _L_162l_&_25_4i stugtgyoncd from the lake south to Because of the cold and flooded conditions in some parts of the front, French observers expressed doubt a German drive would he immediate, although they said they expected it as soon as the ivcrither improved. “Detonator” Ray Said Discovered ‘ take sale, Zion Church Guides ' lll.u..tiitc Electric, Nov. 10th. L-ilz. “Nurses pantry sale at Holman's Stiizlttttiy, Oct, 23th, L-1flI-l0-26-2l. "vlllllilllllgfi Sale Trnity Socittl Halt this afternoon 6.30. L-l4-10-28-li. V‘ Zion Guild Cake Sale at Marl- itnir LHUCLYIU wday at 2 P. M. L-Q-lll-Zll-ll. ' B11110 and danci- in Sca View ll»... Alonday, October 30. Good 1111 “ L-ll-l. SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. TL-(AP) -Secret details of i1 "detonator" ray, decnred b its sponsors to be capable of exp odmg gasoline and ammunition two miles away, were submitted to United States War Department representatives today for test and develoomcut. The sponsor is Otto H. Mohr_ eld- erly Oakland. Quilt, inventor and former illuminating engineer for the IlllQTlfll‘ Department. Mohr came upon the lay soci- dentniiy while experinientlnr‘ with one of his many inventions design- ed To ‘tinmess the power of the sun. Its first effect, no said, we: to explode n number of rifle cartridges stored nearby. He tried it on a small quantity of gasoline several hund- red feet ri-ivnv, and the liquid fuel wns exploded. "Conic and enjoy a good hot 1117' ollDlEl‘ in tvlzirshfleld H1111 ‘etlncstlay, Nov, 1st, Ausptces PYl-“hylerinn Church. L42- "( ilcken Supper and Bataan-r,‘ 131 {I110 Hail November 10th. Pro. u.» Womens institute. L-3-10-28-11-9-1D. “Animal Chicken Supper Hunter R1117‘ Iilisontc Hall Thursday, Nov- ember 2nd, AdniL-sion 35c and . L-l654-l0-2B-3l-1l-l. "1111: ladies of the Order of the Efl-vgrru Star will hold a cake sale a‘ 5- A. MacDonaltTs Store 11115 aftetnooti. L-2Zl-10-2B-1l. "Giulia Crushln . rushtn five d1 1 Week CDITIIITOIIClCIIK Mdgnday, He. suggested it mltlht b! “$311165 Qvtolxir 30th. New Hammer Mill. to explode fuel and ammunition .J. Clements, A, H, River, East. stores "within a radius of a few 30111111’. L-lil-IO-ZC-ll. miles." It thus mieht be directed ___. against enemy stipplles or even hos- "Halloween Dance. Bin o and tile aircraft anvrvschlns within 5307111 51111161‘. Tracadle Hal, Mon- range. , “Y. October 30th. If not fine 'I‘hurs- n5 most; Objejlddllklffi feature s. “fir. November 2nd. L-1700-10-27-2l. pfespnf, t, u... u... pay spreads out- ward in all directions. "Cattle-We require a uantitv gtiltlclgtystl‘ “£31k bumf tori) 1602x111: ' 1 us or r . - “m1 Cold Bmrage Co. . B l t L-96ll-9-30-tf "' e ntIzqfliiligcy {he Beant agnost- t‘ ti- oo room Se ur a. , '. O v m __(cp)__ The 28 h. Aus toes Ladies’ Guild? nuwegzziipedfieléal Bwmecuom w tier set-re 5230 b0 7. be hem 380' 1a rose w your to- "Exhtbtgiim o; night when Prime Minister M110- _ palntlnps and 1°10" Work in Harris Memoi- a1 Gal- f-rv this afternoon and evening k .. d that writs iiciftlmllzfiegliguelimfjdliflciioting in two Montreal vacancies on that dill- only, Admission 10 cents. nder The? Me m) Jam“ and Jacques li"’“ wwflnotnuai iig” British Comment 0n Senate Move LONDON, Oct. 2B-—(S11turd'11.')—- Brit-lsh official circles declined to comment today on the Untied States Senate's vote to repeal the arms embargo. They suggested that any such FGTWHOII would be prema- ture before the issue had been de- cided in the House of Representin- tlves, Unofflcialy. horvovcr. it was stat- ed in dinlomribc circles that Great Br‘t:itn "at 1P1? iruutd not be dis- isatlsfled with the Senates decis- on" ‘The Daily Mail said‘- "Io cannot now be concealed that the prospect of such a vast war storehouse as America offers comes as a tonic encouragement to the nations flgthting the cause of democ- racy." Under headlines reading “U. S. To Sell Arms To Allies", the Daily Exnres: said editorially:- “This big Roosevelt victory means that 300 planes will leave for Eng- land next- week. It wis a sir-lashing victory for President Roosevelt, a smashing blow to Germany. "Another vote in the Home of Hepresentatives—which is expected to izive a similar verdict next week at the latest-mean: t-htit 300 plane; crated for shipment or tuned up for flying will be free to move m- ward air bases in Britain and France. It means. too. that Amer- ican factories will be able to go a- head with new orders understood to have been placed hv the‘ Allies for 6,000 warplanes and 1,000 sub- marine chssers." Will Meet At Truro, Nov. 2 SAINT JOHN. N. 13.. Oct. 27-1-1. P Robinson, second vice-president of The Canadian Press, announced tonight that the meeting of the Mar time division rovlously fixed for Hallflx would at ‘Di-mo, N. 3., at 10 l. m. Thun- day, Nov. 2. IIIIAZIISB | held instead j Pope Pius Writes Encyclical 111.8. SHIP PDPEPIUS? cniiuiis ‘DICTATURS iExpresses Hope For The Resurrection ' Of Poland In First Encyclical. (By Charles H. Gintlll] (Associated Press Staff’ Writer) OASTEL GANDOLFO, Oct. 27- (AP) -- Pope Pitts XII, in the first eiicycllcal of his Pontificate, today denounced governments in which civil authority "puts itself in the pie-re of t"e Almizhtv and elevates the state or group into the last end of llfc." - “It is quite trui- that. power bas- ed on such wrak and unsteady '..l‘!‘.S can nti"ln at times, (‘l1'll‘.f‘!‘ rirrvinistttiirxxs. ma- r 1 FUPTPPIS not. tn arouse won- der in superficial obrervers," he , said. | “But tho moment enmesfhe warned “it-hen the inrvltnble low triumphs. " s dawn all that has ctecl upon n hidden or portion between the of the material and success, and the mew nt th" inward value of its 1 mural lntuuiatinu." I ‘o Pope. who said his first, icvl \\'"-\‘ "ciiret-trrl to the wilt. christlnii ti. .1. scattered ovcr the ivorlrl.“ offer d his cori- solntlcn tn conquered Poland, con- i: (Continued Von page ,3, Col_2 By J. F. Sanderson Canadian Press Stsii’ Writer LONDON, Oct, 27-(0? CABLE) -'I‘wo of Germany's 10,003 ton pocket-battleships ~ the Admiral Schccr and the Dcutschland-ltavc been at sea n month. naval author- ities disclosed tonight, but have sunk only three vessels, two Brit- ish and one Norwegian. The Deutschlnnd operated off Newfoundland iii the early days of this month. but the only re- liable report of the Schen- placed her in the South At- lantic on Sept. 30, ruthorltles said. There is a possibility that the Schcer has rounded Cape Home into (H! Pacific or steam- ed into the Indliin Ocean. Naval authoriticssatd they had no confirmation of reporcs t-lie Gor- man cruiser Emden had slipped through the Allies‘ North Sea ps- ol. Each pocket-battleship mounts six 11-inch gum and has a speed of 28 knots with a cruising range which probably touches 20.000 miles. They are ideal commerce raiders and it. would take a batle cruiser like the Renown or the Repulse, or owo or three eight-inch gun cruis- ers, to catch and destroy them. These fast vessels have been st sea n month and lilve inflic- ted only small damage to ship- Pone Pius XI! Royal Navy Seeks: Two Pocket-ships RaidingSeaLanes Only Three Ves-s-els Fall Victim To The Admiral Scheer And The Deutschland _Au_t_ Sea A Month. SAID ENRUUTE T0 GERMANY By Melvin K. Whlteieather Associated Press Staff Writer BERLIN, Oct. 2'1 —(AP) — The United States freighter City of Flint which Germany claims as a, war prize was reported tonight to be making r1 \71'C‘C3l'lQ\13 itoyatge dovtn the North Sea toward Hamburg in the hands of a German crew. Official advices received here said the vessel left the Russian rt of Murmztnsk~wliere she was mken by a German prize crew put aboard Ly the pocket battleship Deulschland" l1l"0ll|.11_\‘ altcl‘ she was released by Soviet authorities, Count On Bad Weather Italy Adds n» Armaments 0n. Anniversary Possibility more adventure lay in store for the City of Flint was con- ceded in naval circles here. The Germans, presumably guarding the ship with submarines and other naval vessels, were said to recognize the dangers of trying l0 slip through i118 British blockade but were count- ing onbad weather and poor visibility as well as th01r_siibmarine defence l0 bring the Flint into a. German ROIVHQ, Oct. 27-(AP)—l“asclst l131‘l-_ _ p _ Italy celebrated the eve of the Qflwmlndvices said the small Ttflishter was somewhere along the l7tl nlversar of the blacksliii" _ . ' a“ y “ Ncllvvsmn coast tonight heading m- march on Reine today by adding $873.800,000 to its arms expendi- tures. , The Governimcnti: announcement l it would spend 17.470.000.000 lire t on Italy's military might. in a new I WASHINGTON, Oct. '27- Ambassador Laurence A. Stein- “allli- Wllbrteil to the State De- g > b. J t F35 L.“ partiizcni, tonight that, soviet Zia“; ggfivrélrxd ahygggc}, expmfd?“ officials had ordered the City tunes‘ to iaavgalvoououo n“, (and ot Hint to leave Murmansk under her German prize crew. 6. 4.0 0,000) ' 1'7 . . . rently 5 60 q in years awkward‘ 5am “smut w"? Al; th saeti 1 Itlran" _ _ Great B1€ltainmmo\'<‘\lc1luto_ tlmpiovld °f_1‘°1"?lKI1l_ Affillfs 1'11- trads relations ‘by signing an éulssgn “Jguvgflilv “emit Ta‘: ‘l? ngi‘0€fi19llt_eSlabllfihlllg‘ it pcrmnn- “er-Mon was flotilla?“ Q l» ent C0mmiF5l0n to regulate com- wrdanue m u Y "l" M‘ meiclal affairs bctiveen the two mud “M2111 “F! t" ‘vim’?! Cfiélgt/TIES. d.‘ i riw aiid eliiissoiiantn eiiitfh Billie e new arms expert i ure pro- ‘ ._ . , ,- gram came as Fascists plannsti tor afilgltgdiitlmrrtgot-tiet? Iilildtradorrliigl celebrate the 17th annivcnaiw o , pubmon l, Mk9 M betwcm their clim-b to power. The eels ticn will be itiailzecl by three .<_ - toward mak ._ a greater natttn. Fascist leaders announced The ministry of ncrriculture will. . inaugurate the second block of 100 l farms in the Apulia area of Italy —-ful‘ms created by cutting- up large estates. This aircn is dtuatotl the eoit....iiig claims of the 1 iiiitrd States and Germany to possession of the vessel and livr cargo. t0 the British blockade area, She was 111011-111 by the Russians 111st $5,513 g§,§;;gg;<;,,;""§l;,,<;.§.,g1*P ,3"; 1131211112236;.t§"..if5§ltf“ii.il§§°3323.2? colonists ivlll oxll_si‘lfl'l"\°ii"%l‘°s ma‘ pm ‘i Prize bmrd ships m!‘ Libya m "in 20" Zguiltdlisbdncdlfifiéiitiitgdllltlligadl‘liléixe 000 already . strrnnftioninz: ,..,b.,,,\ H“. m. . . . . n .. . . ret nnctl to its oun- “n eilcnmnlc lmk m m“ 1mm“ 111's. 4R ports reuniting Stockholtn Emil"? ‘llnux-titrr said the cargo had been The new battleship impcro, of 35,000 tons, heavily armored and built to attain a SW9d of 30 knots will he launched at Genoa. The Imtoero will be equipped with 15 unlczidett at Murmansk.) Roundabout Voyage The prmecrcw was expected to inch guns. steer the Flint close to the Norweg- ian fOtlSi. to the Skagerrok, then (town between Copenhagen and , lvliilnio to the Kiel Canal and t thence m Hamburg rather than to court trouble with the Britl>h byt sailing direct through the North Sea to Hambur believed the g. Officials said they United Slates crow of 41 still was 11119-1111 i111‘ City of Flint; although Scottish Troops R110‘; latkcd definite word of this. International Situation , At A Glance By The Canadian Press WASHINGTON —Senatc by a 63- 30 vote approves repeal of arms 9m- bai-go; secretary llull baffled ln search for definite information 011 ljliy of Flint seizure by Nazis, 111E5- res inquiries in hloseuw, Berlin. ping, fear of British patrols is evidently keeping them off the crowded shipping routes. The Admiralty, nevertheless, has ‘issued orders i-o track them down, I _ realizing the damage that can be i LONDON —Naval authorities say done by these heavily-united ships. two German pocket batlleshl 5 hflvfl One of the most famous of Ger- . ranged sens ior month. sink ng at man raiders in the firt great war, llcnst three ships; 80 German sea- the cruiser- Eimdcn, was at large on- men land at Scottish port, officials ly thrétishififlfllilfi and sank 74,000 1111111111110"- t f 11f;- “éittittng 5hr... British S111 Stone- CASTEL oANvoi-ro -P»t>e r1- irate about 500 miles east. o Florida 11s XII assalu governments where Oct. 5 was sold to have ‘ieen the CW“ authority 1"“ "*9" l," ma“ Deutschfandfis first victory. The o‘ Almighty’ promh“ l“ H“ n“ next heard o; he, was when she cyclical to continue pence efforts. mpped a N°'“’°““‘" ‘mp m N""" wioscow —Unlted States salnl gméngggléd on‘ 12' “is Sh!” was belated conference with Soviet for- o ' clgn office vice oommlssnr on City sank ureniw "amen or Flint; reported to have made re- Neutrality Act _ Passed By 63-30 Vote La_s_t Night Administration Forces See House Adopting Bill By Safe Majority-Will Permitf Arms Shipments To Allies. (By Richard L. Turner, Associated Press Staff Writer? 1 _ WASHINGTON, Oct. 27-—(AI’)-—Voting overwhelm- ingly to repeal the arms embargo, the United States Sen- ate tonight approved the administration neutrality bill and sent it on to the House of Representatives where pro- ponents of the measure claim a small but safe majority. The 6340-30 vote was the climax of four weeks’ debate and a discussion which has raged throughout the country since war broke out. The bill would permit the European belligerent-i to buy United States products of any kind, with the restric- tion that in general they must pay cash, may borrow no" money here, and must provide foreign ships for transport- ing their purchases across the Atlantic. (The bill generally is considered as aiding the Allies owing to Great Britain's control of the Atlantic Ocean by the Royal Navy.) ‘ Further, it. is intended to insul- ate the United States from the war by laying down conditions de- 6 signed to tircrent “lncldents" like- u ly to inflame public opinion or t In Montreal I Steel Strike (‘d Stat“ ship» to sail for belliger- ent D31 z iii thi- (lntisrt-r tireas or TORONTO, Oct. 27—I_'ll'npl0y€Q Tana-d o“; of two Toronto industries wore out travelling on belligerent ships. enter combat." zones to be de- marcated by the President, and on strike totilght. otter wage ingo- tlations collapsed. prohibits American citizens from A suokcsntiui o: {toils-c 3w. 1111 ~ 3‘ Fort? we-clfls of debate fully cnrerotl the issue of the oin- hsd so bflfgifi that when the Senate rcach- of me Steel “BF-ml” ""='1““ "1 ed the p’ t at which it was con- conumi/we; PM“ >0 ‘)1 _ H , f fronted i what Senator Clark 131955 of 1~ ' >“-~-“"'“*- called the “naked ' we should have (Dem-Ni , issue of w! ‘ an 01111111210 tr not " ‘he lfi-elslatrvns | fitizill": llttiiid that they ha?! no t m0": ‘.0 :03‘ ‘ t t ~ t and ITIUXK.‘ than 500 c ployces of conc sions, he said. ilandlcr, manager kn‘: Shoo Ctilllpll workers ‘went on strll-v- at tiattiui. between ('lllll|!l'}' union ultirlals lr-t 1:0 .2 n9. union i~ irI-triv- . crease in wage bers of the U Union, Cotiirrc .. o.‘ gaulzatictfis fllillllilf‘. ‘the sire] wt '- ‘COlllllllllfP loci The volt‘ on retinal, presented by Clark in the form of fin tiiiicnd- mcnt to nr-ort an t‘ll1‘.)lll".;'0 lllll) the tireswnt litll sluvuotl 00 Soh- ators 1'01‘ repeal and Ilis against it. IIO\\'<"\"i‘l', three o!‘ l'1"~r\ ulm l. U11 to rcttliii the (‘llll).'l'E;Ii. altlio bcntmii on that Arum felt obit to support the bill on filial pas- I (Continued on page 3, Col 4t “Dig ln” n Mm HAD A llf-tls west From lino. tint time i Wis ENouGt-l ‘(Mi-as 1 = lltiivt use ‘vile use: VERY {titan v '1‘ F. BRITISH ICXPEDI- 'rid>i\:lilii' lib-tact; IN FRANCE.‘ Oct. 27 --. P) —-St.'0ll.l5l‘l troops wele tlizgliig tn todiy along a ie- l serve line under the eyes of V15- ccunt Gort. commander-tn 0f the British eipeditionaiy forfie- < These units, trnieh won fame the first omit War, took nulls 111 the name said to have b04311 E1119!" them by the Germrits, ‘the ladies from Hell." But thcfladles from l-Iell" will not be ladle. much long- er. Sometime in the. next two weeks they are to take off their kllts and stick their legs into the overalls of the army's new boltll‘ dress. The don't like the idea much sl- thoug they still will be allowed t0 wear their lillts for ccremonltils and on leave. Whatever their dress, the TORONTO. Oct. LIT ...t.'l"= -.‘.lti.l- “mp5 mum and maximum l(‘lI'll‘1(‘l‘l\1\l1‘("SI are a tough and seasoned lot. Their Dawson 6 L; trench. dug in 20 hours, was n mM- Vancouver 44 51 vel of neatness and efficiency-When Edmonmn 513 z: Lord Gort jumped down to inspect- mmmn 3 1p, it he couldn't find Buything to ask wqnflpeg 17 2R except "what's the ruling on sand- Térm“ m m bag seams-tn 0r out?" on 0 T, 64 "In sir." a sergeant answered. M '01:" 1 ‘m, 59 Just, three out. of loo or more O“ ""1 b _ l d l . t. _-_”‘. sailgritagzitiril, Ldiligctilliistsudifferent High tide this morning at. 10.58 and tonight at 10.44. presentations against vessel's treat- ment in Russian port. BERLIN-City of Flint sallin rccai-inusly down North Sea towai lambui-g, official ‘advices say; Ger- man naval vessels guard prize, Two days later the Norwegian ship Lorenz W. Hansen was sunk by the Deutsnhland near Newfound- land, authorities said. The Dcutschland, t-hey added. subsequently seized the United States vessel City of Flint and re- mained with her until she reached Norwegian waters, from where she ROME-Fsialsts announce $816.- wss taken to the Russian port of ffitdi. hitiit-neslldirgilttprid Milrmimsk by l‘ German 971% l route to Italy from Gihrlltar. d09- "5" "m" n19 ‘amen pite British order to soil to Eng- The third victim of the raiders “m; rename "pa", “Mum was said to be the British freighter v ' ' PARIS —l’a‘.ti-o1 cliches on west- ern front increasing, French com- munique says. (Continued 0n D830 l8. Q01 S) units three and four times a week, doesn't miss a thing. He doe~n‘t mind mud water or cold. He made and a thorough examination of billets 6,33 q and defences, told the troo s they Full moon October 28, 2.4. a. 1m; looked well and hearty and c umped stimmersldc lldo el'.!1‘"’°“_ m n overnthe mud like a gvo-year-old t0 utcs later than Charlottetown. see ie new reserve ne. _ . - , ‘The trenohe are about seven feet TIIE CAR DERBY SAIIJM’ deep, built with iii-in steps and frequent bays for mac inc-guns. In this Scottish regiment the tradition holds that whi e tho troops so without overconts the officers cannot wear them either. S0 today the soldiers sweated d18- Ilng trenches and the officers shiv- exe in their tunics watching them. Sun sets this afternoon at 4.56 t morrovt‘ morning 5i u; v93 Borden 9.45 A M 1.00 PM. Lie-lives Tormenflnc ll 00 A N1 "i 05 P M SATURDAYS ONLY Leaves Borden 4.45 P, M. Leaves Tormentine 7.00 P. M. §¥~r\a.1e\il-.'.-.;I ky g», A