. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN u-i-i None lniurv ll can ecoupe ‘the prelsurel of very tom on mo’ but 55.3.1 in our feign» m is... A»- Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew lion. To uvold gloom follow the gleam. 4 A sure safeguard against collapse m character, personal disintegra- every moment of ‘ MAXI M6 OIA MERE MAN i: intelligent moral choice in 0 nrdlu Two Con”, g3f,';‘,'°',‘;‘.{1'....‘1., retina-a new it Rebel front, [rouble For Germans Goes On As People In Conquered Coun- tries Seek Freedom. Canadian Prefl 661210111‘ liloring squads and mili- n. courts struck at the contin- w-s internal front of revolt 8811111 from. Two Frenchmen were shot n-fpnria for possessing flneamls who“, permit; and 26 Czechs one o; mm a Government form offl- clal, were condemned‘ to die in Prague and Brueno (Brno). The Paris executions raised w 15 the total of deaths due to al- lwd violation. o.‘ the rules laid down by the conquerors or in re- prlshl for ltltarks on German sol- drificzecho-slovakia. by last re- ports, considerably more t-han 100 ARM Farm Prospects 14nd Conditions Review of season's Agricultural Activities by Deputy Minister W- 1i- Gcrmans claim Advance along 310-milc arc BERLIN. Oct 10—(AP)—German troops, claimed by the High Com- mand to be advancing everywhere along a SiO-mile-wldle "break- through" in the Russian lines, were reported tonight to stand within , had been executed as the oi utiat the Germans call a treasonable plot. u The usual charges- Economic wbouige nnd possession of weap- ons without permitP-lwere levied ggaiist the 25 condemned yester- il-n- in the Bohemia-Moravia pro- ieelornte. Fifteen ‘militant communists"- ilie term is used nearly every t'me | citizen of the occupied lands is haired in by the Germans-were "med m France's Somme de- u: to 45 the number thin the last several where the Ger- ‘l'l pro-Nazi Croatan have been busy bands strong enough Coming Events _“- Nullveiy In tllle 1i eu-llin per word lhue luf column "Zicn Lluild Cake Sole. Hollnans lctlnlz L-287-l0-l1-1l. "Wanted u» buv Chicken. Fowl Island Uold Slot-ace L-219-7-9-lf "Chicken Supper and Dance Cardigan llull Monday. Oct. 13th. 14-185-10-8-10-11 "Reserve Thursday, 16th October for Chicken Supper at Kingston. L-280-l0-1l-li. "Chitin-n Supper, Dance for School. L-uruc Valley, October 15in. Webster's Orchestra. L-Zil-l-ltl-ll-l-l. "See Belle River (play. Valleyfleld Hall. Wednesday, tober 15th. 8 r. M, L-zal-io-u-ll. ___.__. "Chicken supper, Bingo and Dance. St. Charles Hall. ‘rucsday, October 14th. 14-295-10-11-14. "Modern and old-time dance in Morcll Hall, Monday, Oct. 13. L-Sl’! "Buying Chiuczahland Fowl daily Queen street Meat Market. 14-220-10-9-11-14. "Dance. Hop-shiver Farmers flail Mlllllitiuls Orchestra. Monday. October 13th. L-290-l0-l1-ll. “"R£Si*l\E Tuesday. Nov. 4th, for A 01110111 1 Gs Su r. ll ocge USE PIX? L-aiz "Conic- to the box social and dance n‘. Pleasant Grove Hnll Mon- lllv maul. Oct. ill. L-303-l0-ll-ll "Don't forgct to hear variety concert in New Glasgow Hall, Oct. 12- L-302-10-l1-4i _“Vlct0rla United Church Thanks- tlvlulz (iocsc supper, Monday, 0vicbi-l~ 1311i. Sixty cents. L-l97-10-10-2l. “Hunter River Starch Factorv is My olicrniiiig paying up to 50 cents P" lllll lbs. according to guality. L-2 4-10-9-41. Wanted to buy-Bologna Cattle 5090b and Veal Calves. all grades hone. write for prices. island Cold Btoraile Co.. Ltd. tf i‘? l "Buying pigs at Fredericton’ “ttbday. paying $1.00 per E18! over l5 lbs. each 0B8 Tuesday. Knud .Jor amen, H1008 27-221. L-4B3-9-20-27- 0-1-11. "special eneral meetinit. Chill‘- mllwwn M k Producers and Ven- dors Association, Agricultural Hall. “sway. Oct. 14th.. a p. m. bar e lttendance important. 3 9 "Hear Rev. Neil Herman lecture It Central Christian Church Tucs- thy. on. 14 at a o'clock. The sub- ! "Whv was En land not invnd- ttl and will she besl" L-SlB-IO-ll-Ri "Come to the Concert by Beach Brove talent at Clyde River Hall. llednesday evening. October 15th. admission 25c. Under aus ices YPB. ‘Enlist. Church. Ii not nc Thur!- Monday being Thanks» I1 zlving Day, and a pub- lic holiday the next is- Bue of the Guardian will be Tuesday, Oct. l4. 106 miles of Moscow on the south and to be preparing to by-pass the capital with the intention of sur- rounding it as Warsaw was strang- led in 1939. The icture of the front drawn by Naz spokesmen was of a great inverted arc pressing ever inward from the vicinity of Vyazma on the northwest to abzut Orel 0n the southeast — an arc gradually thrusting forward on its lower end and enclosing the surviving Rfid armies at the cent-re. Behind oll this it was claimed was a chaotic ser es of encirclements being drawn to tighter and tighter and crushing hundreds of dstachments of Red troops. Authorized sources, went mush further to lm-ply that the lower end" of the closing semi- circle had bsen in fact extended to a print which was east of the longitude of Moscow although south of that city, and that at that point the invaders were turning sharply north. intending to pass Moscow to the east and then cut it off. Moreover. claims were our-rent in Berlin that 'I‘ul-a. 105 miles below Moscow. 125 miles northeast of the previously captured position of O:el and astrlde the lung railway run- nlnz from the capivl far south. to Kharkov in the lower Ukraine, was in Nazi hands. however,‘ cnanuorrsrowu, CANADATSATURDAY, OCTOBER 11.1.1941 Shaw. ‘lllw Guardian is indebted w Mr. WR- Show. Deputy lvlinlsterof Agriculture, for L114 following n»- view o: farm conditions at this ‘Thanksgiving season: One of the wettest seasons m the history of the Province has in- lerfeNd very materially with farm production and effective labour “elllY-‘lfi- UT! to the ppresent date the rain fall in 1941 is in the vic- inuw of seven indies above that of the average for the province. The shrine sewn OPened fav- ourably for the initial stages of fann seeding but since that time AhTOlIBh the growing and harvest; 1118 periods unusual rainfall and broken weather has impeded {arm practices and seriously reduced farm production. Only in one or “W0 lll-‘lflflves has the season been tiavourailzie to growth. Pasture has been EXCEIICnt grid me hay CF01) has been substantially above 01190386. The former condition‘ has had a favourable influence on dairy production and, as a result crcamery output has been increas- ed over 20 percent. The production of’ cheese, however, has declined chlfly through the closing down ln the earlier part of the scum of the largest cheese producing plan-L As a r€s111t of conditions already Pflfelfed‘ to. seeding throughout the Drovince was late and at this date, Tllflfiki-Blvlflfl Day. there are still thousands of acres of grain to be SEW-d- fl large proportion of which is still to be cut. - 80 p. o. Decrease It must be quite obvious that under weather conditions now be. 111B experienced u. substantial acre- 686 of grain will r:duce very little well-developed hgh quality seed, We have the estimate prnnred by our Statistics branch placing grain poduction for this year at about (Continued on page ll. Col 3) German Potato, turnip, Production down OTTAWA. Oct. 10—(CPl —Re- ducfons in Canadian potato, sugar beet. turnip. and mixed grain crops were reported today by the Dom- inion Bureau of Statistics. Potato production. estlmnied at 39.290000 hundrcdweight in 1941. wag slightly below normal, with acreage down 36.900 acres and aver- age yield 77 hundredwelght all acre against 78 in 1940. Production in 1040 was 42.300000 hundredweittht. In the Maritime Provinces, prin- cipal area of surplus production, the acreage was down 15.800 acres and ylelda were below 1940 in Prince Edward Island and New Bru:<s\v‘c1r. A reduction in both acreage and yield in Quebec resulted in a iicllue in production oi 2.403.000 hundred- weight and rot resulting from re- cent rainy weather will further re- duce the commercial crop. "l0 01"" eau slid. llov. 10th to 14 Latest period for Ovorsas parcels OTTAWA. Oct. 10—(OP)—'I'he Post Office Department announc; ed today that, from Nov l0 to 1g the latest rlod at which Can. adians shoud mail Christmas- glft parcels to Canadian 107669 was‘: ‘fir; time in reach the men _ a as. The mailing dates m! Q1105“!- Nov. 12-18; Maritime Provllwel» Nov. 18 . The Department reminded that personal greeting cards must- no! 0e enclosed in tobacco barrel! "orwarded to soldiers overkill from companies. Cards should be mailed separately. 'l‘he weight limit for gift W?‘ eels to Canadian forces overseas is ll pounds when prepaid at the special reduced rate or 12 cents e pound or a ail-pound limit when prepaid at the regular civilian rate when the parcel is sent core 0 Canadian Auxiliary Service!- Dillrle 8t. Chelsea. S.W.. 8. 1.0110011- m-s R. A. E Laslles LA Shipping Not one challenging Nazi plane is encountered; 58H. Hi1‘ battle _reported off Norway. ;_____ LONDON. Oct. 10--(CP)—'I‘ile ltoyal Air Force lashed nortnerrz. l-"mnce and German shipping in th. ' English Channel today without en-l countering any challenging Nazi plane. the Air Ministry announced tonight. After dark additional British Llu-' its took up the assault on the, I-‘rcncia coast. and the big port of| Calais appeared to be one objective. Considerable anti aircraft fire was visible from the English soutlnusr. coast. In the daylight forays the Air Ministry said Blenheim bombers nit a supply shill in an attack on ship- iug off Netherlands coast. Despite 0w rain clouds. R A. F. formations, heavily blasted Boulogne and Di- eppe. Axis shipping off Norway and Norwegian coastal towns were bom- bed last night. FOUR SHIPS 111T NEW YORK. Oct. 10 — (AP) - Four German ships loaded with supplies for Nazi forces in North Russia. were hit during Royal Air Force raids between the Lofoten Is- lands and the Norwegian mainland. the BBC re rtcd tonight. The broa cast. heard here by NBC, said one of the shigs was‘ abandoned, another left urning. The two others were said to have been damaged heavily. SBA, AIR BATTLE SIOCKHOLM. Oct. 10-(AP)— Brltlsh planes hit. several German warships in an hour-long attack off Alesund, on the southwest coast of Norway, Stockholm newspapers re- orted tonight in dispatches from orway. Anti-aircraft fire finally drove the attacking planes off and the then raided plants at Harem an a radio station near Alesund. these advised said. (The Stockholm account: did not e he time of the lea-air battle. ut the Admiralty reported today e fleet air arm in an attack tied Wednecda it four ships n3:- o in a group of vesse carrying plies to rman oroel on northern Russian front. . (The presence of the fleet air arm off Norway indicated presence tin-re) of one or more aircraft cu- ers. BODY IIOOVIBID OAMPBELIIIUN N, 5.. Oct. l0- (CP)--'I'ho body of Walter McNeill, one oi two men drowned in the Restllzouche River Sept. l1, was round todav on the shore near his home at McLeod’! Bldinfihfleephlanéla at lt .' body was found orifice, men's outboard motor- boat cow l Runiors heard Germans oflcr Russians truce Stories Instantly De- nied By British, Rus- sian And E n emy Spokesmeni. NEW YORK. Oct. i0—(OP)—'Iho Asfiwlfllbd Press reported tonight that somewha/t circumstantial stcries of a German armistice offer to Soviet Russia and one report that Moscow was considering the O-llfer. was received in New Ygrk Wdby from both neutral and bel- ligerent ooun/tries _of Euro . The stories were insianty denied by German, Russian and British spokesmen. and the head 0f the United States supply mission to Moscow. Averell Harriman. said in a London press conference; “My Jlldfiment Ls that the Soviet lead- ers will iead the pecple to fight to the last." In Washington, President Roose- velt. said he had heard no reports at a1 to support the story that Russia might accept a truce. The armistice reports obviously arose fom the regress of the pres- ent German ofensive. and, indeed. were considered by responsible United States observers to contain a considerable element of probab- ility, insofnr as a German offer was concerned. The Associated Press said that these persons point- ed out Hitler had told his armes on the beginning cf the offensive Oct. 2 that it was to be their last great decisive battle of the year and that victory would establish “the most essential condition for D6008." Hitler's spokesman now contends the victory is won. One European informant of non- Axis persuasion told the Associate-d Preis the Germans had offered to accept the Soviet capltulatién through intermediaries in Bulgaria (Continued on plge ll, col. d) Interested in Island potatoes Dr. Carlos Berta, Montevideo, Uruguay, with the staff of the sred service in that country, leaves Charlottetown today after a short visit. He was here to study condit- ions relating to the potato crop with the view of finding out the possi- billties of the Island supplying Uru- guay with some seed varieties this autumn. He explained last night that It ls nfccssary to test these potatoes in the South American country to learn how they will grow under conditions there. For that. reason only a limited quantity of tubers from this province will be requ‘red and another factor is the difficulty encountered in getting transporta- tlon. Cobblers. which are a0 plen- tiful 0'1 Island farms. do not grow well in his country because of cil- matic conditions, he said. They are very susceptible to disease there. As for Green Mountains, another lcrpo product in the potato fields of this province. it is possible a small quantity will be taken. The greatest demand is for the Kalah- dln variety which is not cultivated :0 any great extent in Prince Ed- wnrd Island. It is estimated there are only about 500 acres of this va- riety grown here as compared with about 7.000 acres of Cobblers. Dr. Berta came hero from New Brunswick where he found many potatoes of the Kalahdin variety. Potato houses in that province are quite busy at present packing crates of this variety for shipment to South America. Already a total of 80.000 BO-kilo crates have been Duck- ed by a. group of eight shippers. These potatoes were 95 per cant oi the Katahdin variety. It is under- stood the farmers there were paid £1.50 per barrel for these tubers. The freight rate to Uruguay from New Brunswick is about 81-40 on a crate. The potato man from Montevideo expects that the de- mand in his country will be lower than normal this year because of, this. I-Ie leaves here today for Halifax, N. B. ll. S. man is Acquittetl on Murder charge LIVIRPOOL. 115.. Oct. 10- (OE-Willard I‘. coin was acquit- ted today of I charge of murder- ing Roland Ooolen, whom 001p testified he beat with a piece of wood after Coolen molested the prisoner's wife and created a du- "Kmnu m m: ltometlt jury delib- cupreme c ur erated slightly less ‘llian two hour! before freeinp theil-year-old 001p at the end of a four-day HAL First British War supplies Reach Russia Two Phases In Plane To Aid Soviet Un-l ion; Seek Speed-up Of Shipments, Through Iran. coupon. on ltv-(crl-wsr‘ frvn Britain already 01c q Ru 1.. lt was ciircloczi tdaji. as heads oi the British and l l WOULD BOMB JAYS - “Per- haps I'm not speaking as a bishop should. but l’d like to see a few American bombers bomb the Jap- anefle", said the Rf. Rev. Ronald Hall, Anglican Bishop of Hung Kong, on arrival in Loa Angeles. Train special Gorps in all Invasion tactics LONDON. Oct. lb-(Salurday) —iCP)-—Formation of a corps of shock troops whose rigorous and highly specialized training im- plies that. they are primarily meant for an nvaslon of the continent was announced‘ by the War Office today. The corps. called command units, is made up of nicked men from everv brunch of the army who are trained both in om hibious warfare and to Alpert!" ndependentlv on land for lmlg nrriods without assistance of sup ly and maintenance organ- izut one. Both officers and men are dc- lcribed as having steady sea legs for work on deep water unrl M being trained in lizlntllinir small craft. They have had practice in rapid eniiinrknimn and disembarkation by tiny and ni hf. in all sorta of weather. lost of the small-craft train- ing was carried out with assault lantlin craft and flat-hntionu- rd mo orboafs with bullet-proof protection. The corps has learnt-d io swim ln full qulpment and marched lung distances over tlliflrlllt terrain on scanty nil-ions. and has been taught Jlu-Jltsu unri roflciency in the use of all in- antry weapons. Furthermore. the men haw; been taught to use “enemy weapons, and "as these lrooos may he used on land in__guerll a o erafions," the Wur Ofllcc said. " hey may have to learn to work in small parties or even ns in- divlduals.’ "The final subject in the cur ilculum of these troops is the hunting of the tank.’ the Wu" Office stated. "All ranks are trained in the aria of surprising tank crews and of dealing with tanks with ordinary infantry weapons and grenades or by em~ laying bombs specially tlcsigncd lbr destruction of tank: No Indication was given of the size of the 001115- Ron. G. A. Dunning to Reside at Montreal OTTAWA. Oct. lo-icrl-lrcn. Charles A. Dunning. former Fctl- eral Finance Minister. unri ins family are planning to move to Montreal nt- thc end of the month Dunnin home on fashionable Island 1mm Drive here has been sold. Interpreting The War News By KIRK! L. SIMPSON Associated Pres: Staff Writer The Nazis claim that they have broken through the Mos- oovw defence lilies on a ircnt 300 miles wide sounds Ounlzicus. A galp at wide in Russian defences would be almost double the distance from Vyazma to Orel, which had been consid- ered the extremities oi the central battle front. Measured 0n an air line it would expand the German drive from RJev on the Volga, 00 miles north of V anna. w the vicinity of Kur , something less than 100 miles south of Orel. There is u hint from Mos- cow, reported- by London, that. the German attack has widen- ed northward to Rlev. If so Moscow is definitely menaced from the northwest as well u the west and‘ southwest. Rjey ls an ‘important river town on the upper vclga and a rail junction from which the Vyzama "pocket" where sever- al Russian annes are said to b0 trapped could be widened l___ J and it was announced today the, Un cd Szalcs nlisslrns to the Sov- ‘ revealed two phases of their ogrnm-an unlimited Supply program and heip in Sll‘€Ilg‘ll1"1l1‘.‘.[1‘ lllvs "Burnu Rcad," l-llc Iran-l zun rzhlway. l While the hlud- of the British and l American mis. ms, Lord Beaver- .'l‘.('lll1l’lgOl their ed Pic=s reporter t ship jammed} l Soviet. l nwrl the reporter‘. Jill stuffed with "e parts. beef; a‘ 0 all bound for» He “"115 bid the Russian, are just gettlngg a few ships their destina- Ru i=1. supplies "re-ally . rtcd" but lha: ready had reached lion. In London. 10rd Beaverbrook. asked‘ if he was 5112c supplies from l Brit-lid would reach Russia, dc- c'n : “Of course I am." His remark recalierl a previous tlovcrnlncnt nnnouucrmcnt that. British aircraft. sum‘ of them manned by Rwlfll Air Force crews. already are fighting on the eastern t front. It also recalled an all-tim l procluctlrn record sci by '- (Corfi uctl on page 1 Warn citizens 0i‘ Rotterdam l1—(Saiurday)— u this mornings Dally . llll‘ correspondent slated that the Nctllcflancls gov-l crumcnt in exile _ people of Icoltcrdnm by rudio to; move away from the harbors and I freight jmrds against the early} prospect of heavy British bombing. ‘ It was added that the Germans had been forcctl to conccnt-ratcl Shipping in Rot‘ rdam brcuuse oil ‘he great clvslljilclloli visited upon the Hamburg and Bremen harbors. llclvhbacon .Agrccmcnt l0—(CP)—Th€ 1. Col 5) OVITAWA. Oct. Czlnadinn Bacon Board _t0nliti1l- annouucul illlll the top price per 100 pound, of grntlc finNo, 1 size- nbc \Vllt.'<l‘lll‘L‘ sides which Canada Will supply l0 Britain under the 1121M‘ bacon ngrecnlellt. will be $19.00. at Canadian seaboard. " 's compares with n top of $10.00 rcucilcil nuclei‘ 1940-41 nurcclllcllt which culled for ship- nltm of 425000.000 pounds. The new zlgrcement cfllll. for shipment cl not less than 600000.000 pounds 0i Canadian bacon in the next i2 months. The new rates, the board said. will be effective for the product of hogs purchusrd on and after Oct 113. Besides the ll1(‘l(‘4i.‘~i' ill prit-r ‘pilyolfc at seaboard for grade A ivo. l sizcrtble Wiltsiiires. there are l proportionate price boosts on oth- ir grades, weights and selections ‘ranging downward to $16.70 for 2 B-Ii, 70 to 80~pound Wlltsliircs t Under the new contract. the‘ _United Kingdom government pity: ‘ the full purchase price. l "It should be remembered thatl Britain wants 000000.000 pounds as a minimum amount in 1941-12 and will welcome whatever additional quantity Canada can spare." the board said. "Consumers are being requested to continue to curtail quantities of bacon. hams and Omit!’ Doric Products purchased to the minimum to as to make oval‘.- cble greater qlant-ltles for export, to Britain. t "This La a vnluobe war service in which everyone should DflrllClpfllv. and housewives would do well tn keep this lfi mind vchcn making their selections at the meat counter." War-ZS Years Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) O01‘. 11. mitt-Allied govern- ments demanded. and obtained under protest. cminiete surrender of Greek fleet, Italians made big gains on the C-arsw. ill the Trenlinr) , and the Jillian Alps. 0C1‘. l2. lino-Russians sent re- inforcements to Allied force. n the Balkans, French and Britzsh airmen bcmbed Mauser works at Obemdorf, Germany. r ii PAGES 11nd unarmed the 4 Annual Subscription Delivered, 80.00 "Y “"111 P- E- L. £4.00: "llflllllll and us. $0.00 .._- WlTllllRAlil T0 new nlzrsngl; Lille Moscow Reports One Nazi Plan Has Collapsed Best of Red Army Reserves a "he being rushed to front t0 block further German advances. ("l llvuljv tussidy, Assnciilicd Press Stuff lYrllc-r ) 31051.9“. Oct. 10—-(.~\l’)—The imperiled Red Armies late tonight to he yviihdltuvinig Brmsh 0n the liryjzlnsk front southwest of Rloscmv were reported ‘in u nz-u‘ (lcfeuvi- llilt‘ under "l" PM?!‘ "l nluhi (‘(lllfllv'.‘l‘-ZlllZl('l(S lly scleclvtl units. Herc and also on the purl of lhc central front directly vu-st of Aloscou" the Hnlrlmzlh, told mensc German attack units had made new advances Siild- hlllliltl‘. illzlt one of the main Germ I HIOFC lfusslzlns conceded that im- They an plans of en- circli-nlclll llllil r-irllzlpsetl and that the host of the ltussizln reserves uvrc lll‘illi_',' hurried io the front t0 check further Nazi pl'(l;_',l'0s:-_ (Then- u; spokesmen hinted that tho N no indication as to how fur east of Bry. ansk the fills-inns were withdrawing. _ ‘ although Berlin nzls 1n this sectormnvhave pushed their advance lines as fzlr as 'l‘uln. which is 105 miles (lllL' south of Nloscolv.) (in the soilthcrnmost battleground L Red 31'1")‘ units were reported to have raided Ore], fron of the central rail city alulniloned to the Germans, entering it a; nigh; nnil l'ill(lil'.u' ii llll'j_'t‘l\' nfjna To Mr. Grerar l itiONTflblAL. Oct. l0~tCPl~Any| Baxter ...|:.;.i l. in the "y lire, de- Germzm tanks und ‘ ‘ lllll of motorized mfontry m0 through m» 0i . zltchcs said. Orel v \ sclvll o! Aloscou‘. berth oi Orvl the Russians were ioldlng off liic Cicrmuns WHY] Rflll-lflrlk guns and new, nmle- ‘cubed weapons in the hands of a tank-destroyer‘ corps. t y is about ‘J00 n 1 l Carlndin oi Parliament. lvlm , plV. of \\‘t‘lCOllli3 lo do s" "ixltr. lllfillllltrl‘ of llu 1*‘ of Colllmons, said tor t a- luncheon meeting of ' ' Club. i l\ ti that Ila-sources Mi ' uldgcd both ll cour ~ ~ Hillard action covering - - ~v retreat 1r ‘ Ilrvazzsll l.“ l‘ >1 (‘tor ‘v1.5 (lggpyjl), ,4, 7, mug,’ udllm Al. P. visiting I-Znulzinci would The Pl"""ll'lldl‘.ll_'llb cnmmnnlqu, not be welcomed by Br‘ J mcrci" rl- wlbcd fhlj fjghflnq u "We nccd lilc pencil pcricnce," hillil llic fit“??? in the Vvalrmu axlsk fifWlflfg on mg‘ - . . . ,, ren- pplltlclrll1-_ll)ll1'llz\1lst._ l.‘ anri in the Ilfclftmwfl vigor {if illc Canadian comm-l -. . ‘ w;- wil nccil it more than our ui- . for‘ the um‘. i [Erwin m Canada should have lundc lair ‘ ' r voice ilcnrd far mor strongly in v ——+ — w: England in the last '5 yours. li ue in Enelanci pursue n filrcign policy‘ that. ’ ' lvcs the Enlpirc in war, then (wunuclu \' " a duly as well as s31 k strongly." l Mrnl n right l0 . _ (In Toronto ‘Fuesilzry night Crerar said in an ilildri-ss that a] British M. P.--vvllonl he did notl identiLv-diad said rcccntly in Cam-l aria th t conscription was the only! demccwlic \\'u_\ for Canada m help; l ‘slctl ‘lint if, l tllall P.li'll-.\-, ‘Lhllflllfl to Ui- lold to mind ..\ merit were in :0 in I fer advice hi- would bc his own l)ll.\lll(‘.\’5.\ Mr. Baxter said he yvils willing toj arrange n li'll)lll‘ llltt-Zillk‘. lll‘.\'\\l\t'll>l in Ilvlluin u! \'.l\‘.(ll any Cdnzltlian‘ ‘Hllllltll lo nu nvcl‘ t0. Ii (‘."i'('v lll\ nlulullll on llli- conduct of the war. lie nlsol nrnltliscrl m urrnucv full press in-i ‘ an npliortuxlzvv in ad-; group of ‘7“(‘§i"‘.llllll\'l‘ ..‘\ .\lll‘ll vlvi v .\'.~ - llli! llusnl . ll‘ ullll with ..1 wnrllvll u! iecilnz: low ‘SOS l3": .~ ' \.T(‘ll from ever‘ U States liar‘ urn-iv‘ l fashion‘ We're now and we cant un. you." ‘Island Airmen Among Graduates CALGARY, Oct. 10 7401“ - A lilac number of airmen \virrl<~.~ lllfldifis m a gr union pd ado al N0. 2 Wlrchss Srllool oi ‘the ltiyvul (Tlnziiiiilll All‘ Force “eve ‘today. The highest marks of the l - were (ibaznril by tsmnn J. R. Brutal" of Vancouvc . Alllrvlg; illc (‘vrluillalrs wirl- Iv": Prince i-Jllwnrr: Island nlcll, l‘. P. Andrew. Cllill‘lilil(‘l(‘\\‘ll. and C. If. Pratt. Si. Peters. Island man ls Graduate (lUluLPll. Ol\l., (Ml. lit-it'll“- IContiz-ivlcd on D129 ‘I. Col S) i A 0u\.\_ SCHOLAR OFTEN SlllHES in Sgclafv i\/" will > V TORONTO. OCi. 10 —(CP) " ; hiizvniann arid maximum ivlnrwvn» lulu-s: Dawson r. go Victoria 50 (ll Edmoni n“ 3;, u] Rest n. 814 T0 Winnipeg 24 ul ‘Tn? "u 40 (i0 w.‘ l 4'2 48 51 ti]. l SYNOPSIS The Wttiflltl‘ h.» lwccn fair t-s-th Sillllvdllill. l _ 4v lcnlperalure m- dnv in the prairie pl‘0\'lllf‘v.'~ r cool lIl Ontario will‘. Sll(\\\(-'_§ mdny districts. High t‘dc this afternoon at 2.41 one‘. lOll1fll‘1‘0\\' morning at 2.01‘ Sun sclg this nilcrnooil at 528 and rises ttunovrovv mornilil: uf. 8.11. Inst quarter moon. Oct. l3. 8.52 a m. Summcrside tide l8 minutes la..- er than Charlottetown. BURDEN —- (‘APE TORMENTINE SERVICE Lenvr Bartlet! 9'35 AM. 1.00 l'.\l. 4.15 Pa“. Leave illpr- 'l'ill‘lil"llllllf' 11.00 .\..\1. 3.20 l‘.l\l. 6.20 I‘.l\1. maul.- .1 1'2‘ l»l..-.»..< l- v1.1.1.3 "iiiit-Zn‘ Z:.l§....~.ii§§. ‘Al. 'n>‘.~li-l wooo Isl-Anus vmmv ‘S1 1 'i C lfli‘l‘_' \vh v-(‘f ‘ (‘$01110 diblomulso loilny iudludiltlfl ‘Ck/t l-P-‘ll-T‘! “W10 Nflllill 5 A-M- l0 1\ W- : Frrgllsoll, Clil]\.’ll1\l. i’. E. 1. and 11ml '3 P- M; 1A wumL 5am; Joluh 1 Iaenvv-a iaribon I AM. 12 nool an .