MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN To give the full measure of tlevo. tion to a great cause l; some” [n lifc. r__ (‘liurlottctown Guardian, Two Gen“, llornlng Guardian, Founded _iilll'l Cl-lARLOTTETOl/VN. canker. ' vveoivesoAY, Noveiuaizu i5 A1942 Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew senses MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Christ stands behind the hunger of the poor. the lonellnesg or an, qr. plun- An-nual Subscription Dcllvoud, [$00 I lhlli P. l. l. “.00! to other Provinces and Ii, I. l. IIJQ _:2 NEW AXIS DRIVE MAY SPRING FROM BALKAN S hritish I Pat-acute Troop Federal House Leader Stresses Party Objectives Hon R. B. Hanson, Mr. Hugh McKay And Hon. Dr. McMillan heard in Rousing speeches at Conservative Meeting. "Where 141 your iransporliltionglhe recently nominated candidates nxsh-m in Prince Edward is lli to- uiid Nlessrs, W. Chester S, MCLUTQ, do and what would iizippcu it‘ your l J.0. Hfflltliilblil, and Dr. A. A. Mac- rcmiiiiinlf 1°"? were lo be blown Don-old, conservative candidates in up? Mr. ilowe suys that owing to the lust Federal contest. exigencies of war it is not possible A vote of thanks, moved by Mr. to hnilil a new ferry. Yet permits 1-1.1" McPhee and seconded by have llf‘('Il issued for stccl Mrs. J A, MacDonald, was tend. and other materials ten times cred the vis ting leaders at the gri-iilrr than would he required ln cose of the meeting. huiiil o. ferry for this Island. The Mr, Hanson followed Hon. Mr. reason why you haven't gut. [lritll- NicKav and was introduced by ltic. and thc reason a ear ferry Hon. Dr. MacMllian, who paid is not being built today is because wazm tribute to his work as Con- the representatives for your Prov- strvatire House leader at Ottawa. hm- hzivc absolutely fallen down stressing the value of an honest, on llir-lr jobs." aggressive Opposition, Mr. Hanson This unis oiiiyof seven‘. qllizidiillSlCllfid as “the greatest, disservice asked and answered by iiiui. it B. Prince Edward island-er; hm ever iiiuzson. Coiiscrviitivc House iead- tltlllf.‘ theinse.ves." the election of er. iit the Coiisei ‘use meeting in the Campbell Government in LD35 the Eimpirc ‘Fheotre last night. He without on Opposition member in llvns life ehiof Sllvflkvi nro- the Legislature, "What we need." firfllllliie ivliiidi l|1l‘lll(.t.‘fl 8(l(-ll'i slhe said, "is a reawakenlng in the by lion. , Afar-Kay, Cmi~ public consciousness of the import- alive lender of New l5l‘lllli\\v ck, and nncc of Government in this coun- Heii. Di. . . . 1 i - ' try." inciiil Coii.~e; votive lcailcr, No Representation hfr. W s Grant. President of the Queen‘: County Conservative Associuii-vn. presided zit the mast- lllll. ' ' ‘ attended 7L‘ J i ~o Z 5 '. 5 E <' . Apart from ti! Mnxstei- of National Defence in his ministerial capacity, he continued, this Pr e h§s_ - _c_tic_al_ly__no re- an Mm 1- _= _oii Vrli __ plutio to iiicliizled (Continued on page ll. Co‘. 5i Arrangements With Darlan Temporary Roosevelt gives statement on Political Situation r lnirNAortl ilkfrica. Coming Even-ts: 1-0- LONDON. Nov. l7 —(CPl -- i-‘ighilng French spokeslncn said ionght they received “with gratification" President Roose- villZs statement that thc United States army's political agree- ment with Admiral Jean Dar- lan in North Africa was only a temporary expedient dictated by the stress of battle. _.__.. "We honed and believed that "Shoiv-Murruy River Friday, that was the situation,” one li-iu-ii, French source said. "Our state- . i ment yesimday was an effort ‘Unloading cur Screened Coal at to lift the bewilderment and Br-iitillaiine. M. lxCllllCdyKll-lli-Al consternation among French- men rcgardlng thc arrangement with Dorian. We never have doubted the good faith of Am- o - - éq“ chicken Supper, Kingston iiull, Novinuei" 18in. ll-lli-ii. "S1\0\V—-Mi..-S_if:‘;’-fl1‘i. ‘fhiii-sday. 11-18-11 ' Dame Hope llivjr Parish Hall, Wmiiiv-idov Nov. 18th. ii-iis-ia _ ————- erlcans." if jWc require a quantity of well s1f-1lPfl bologna cattle. lslaiiibCi-ld LONDON, Nov. l1 — (GP)- 11111111: 00., Ltd. il-Llu-dti. Tl!!! reasons why LL-Gen. “C Dwight D. Eisenhower recogniz- Rl‘ ‘ome io_ Dance in Hunter pt] Admiral Jean Dam", a, ~»l ivfusonic liull. \Vt‘fll\0~\‘ 1 1|"; [crumb had" 0| NM“, 110k 18th m aid of titiool. 11-17 l Ari-it... probably Wm be dtschsed 1 in Washington rather than London, it was said tonight, and the disclosure may provide a sensation. Explanation of the incident, said the press association‘: dip- lomatic w“ pondcntl "may well be of sensational ntercst." But it is not likely that the full story will be told until the military decision has been reached in Tunisia, he slid. it was indicated that military considerations of first import- ance lie behind present Amerlc- 1 T‘ l1 ire. Hist School. hi‘ , Nuvvmber 10th. (iood ll-lB-ll. Pnckiloctini; i.»i.._,_. every Friday Hesse list with lscslie McDowell atlei-icton. 5-19-20-nvti "fBox Social and Diiiicc in Truc- 1‘ 10 l-iall, ‘Piiursday. Novemht r 11111- ll-l7-2i. RffBlngo and dance at Johnston's ner school Thursday, Nov. 10. 11-11-11 :1. cfillnhorittio: ‘with the u _‘“_' ‘renc man w n or many coi-liggfi? Tillxllrsggglllllqslll1l1‘YOYCTQE months in Vichy collaborated p,“ mush - “d812, with the Null. "Bllvlng dressed poultry daily By l‘ r’ SANDEBSON , ~ v ' (Canadian Press Staff Writer) D. M. McKiiinon, Murray Rhieiiq 21 WASHING-lurk Nov. 17 __ (op) ___ 1 - ' - apolitical‘ cxiaiaxtnnigemenrs innmilnn "Dance Forest Hill Hall Nov- ,,.§°,‘,‘,,,‘,‘,’, m Jean Nan‘ . - ' * . ,' r Vich military chief- ‘mbir 20th. webswrs Olchelfgrfi- tain, are of a mporary nature 11' ' - and have nothing in do with the future Government of fiance or the French Empire, President Roosevelt said today. Ending the speculation and doubt that has bccloudcd t bizarlrethpog; B_"Klnkora i-iall. Friday cveiilirg 111111,‘) and Dance. Mulligan Or- ‘were. 1i 1a “Trucking hugs as usual for the meal gavel.) pments w ich ‘ummef months List vour noizs the gmgrsqngg o; m, mm q”- A. c o Alb o o. c. Green Emertlletltlh-C-‘la-‘llv-alrl-T-M-ti "Come to the Bean Supper in cmilon School on November 20th. cribed by the fighting ln-cxich as the “No. 2 traitor of France" an chief coliaborationlst with the Unit- ed Nations in North Africa. Mr. Roosevelt said they are o. military Blliliivi- 25c and 85c Proceed: I01 0,, . _ . pedlent. justified solely by the Iar viork. ‘lbw-n’ stills: o‘ ‘Jamil?! and do nolit clim- . ——-—- s u e rccogn on or recons u on crznmifliruzil meeting of Morell 0g gym Vichy fggflgp_ L,“ "ally (Io-operative Association M, [hg gflflg mm, mg mauve]; " “'1 11° 1W1" 1n MOT?" 11011 announced that ho had requested the liberation of all Anti-Nazi pri- Fihlny. November 20th at 7.30 P. M. 11-18-21. soners from the llill of North Af- "A ———.- riea and tho abro lion of Anti- “ t Dilease your appetite tonight Jewish and other g "fmptrg4 he Hot Goose Dinner in b Noll Governments or Nut MI Ilifirld Hall under the auspices i Riogisaa." a] ihc Presbyterian Church. g to tneyoice; or gmrest a utterances. of the~ Big Battle Expected To 0pen Soon Strategic Ekar Base May Swing To Al- lied Side. IDNDON. Nov. 1'! —(CP)— Big American transport planes scatter- ed British parachute troop; deep in ‘Punisia toniBht in advance of a major enveloping movement by the revitalized British 1st Army of Wanders and United States Flying Co unns. The word at Allied headquarters was thgt advanced French patrols were making contact with German reconnaissance groups. These latter appeared to be operating out of Bizcrte, which Berlin said is de- finitely in the hands of Axis forces. From the Atlantic coast. a. sun- day dispatch out of Monrovia, Lib- eria, gave the first hint that the strategic Vichy naval base of Dakar has begun negotiation; lookin to- ward capliiilation t0 Amer can- British forces. From oil accounts it appeared that the real battle which may well decide control of the Mediterran- ean. and the fate of the Axis arm- ies in both Tunisia and Libya is about; to open. Reports to Allied headquarters said the French patzol which first made contact with German scout- ing units didn't immedlatel en- gage the Gemans. but mercy re- ported back to the main Allied forces. According lo radio Algiers, how- ever. the Gcrmon reconnaissance forces were diven back in a patrol skirmish. In any event. it was obvious that the Germans had not passed frrm the defensive. The British parachutlsts mush- rooming into Tunisia were reported to have reached their objectives without opposition. The transport planes which chopped them were escorted by United States fighter aircraft. Enemy advices during the day lent support to the belief that the combined Allied forces are operat- fnt: in both northern and southern columns in an effort to trap the Germans’ and Italians in 'I‘u'.iLsia and close the road to Trlpoii. Still under the srme code of strict secrecy which covered the start of the north Andean onero- tions. Lt-Gen. Dwight D. Eisen- hower's headquarters disclosed nothing of the Allie-d advance movement or of the strength of forces stll‘ pouriivr into Allied-held north African ports. But an Allied cnvcinplnq inan- oeuvre, hinted alinost a week ago by the reported movement of United States forces soiilheastwurd from Aleiers. was indiralcd strongly by n Berlin hiwli cor-wand communi- qiii- wh"'eh sald:- l "Mxrching enemy columns on the coasts‘ rnrd enst of Bone (in tho Aleerlnn-Tunisia frontier country) and in tho Southern border dislrcr. of Tunisia sirffevod heavy lcsses from our air attacks." Sight Nazi Gain At Stalingrad MOSCOW, Nov. l7 ~(AP>~Ger- mun troops at aeost of 1,009 cas- ualties gained slghtly in a Stal- ingrad factory district todov wnlle far to the north in the Leningrad siege area the Nazis and Russians were engaged "in violent street fighting" on the outskirts of a town the Soviets recently recaptured, it was announced tonight. The Russians seized a town on the Volkhcv front east of Lenin- grad several days ago. and the Ger- mans have been attacking heavily ever since in an effort to retake it. the midnight communique dis- closed. At Least 3,000 Italians Arrested least ‘ beiri have een arrested days in Genoa, Turin, Milan and other Italian citels, the Moscow- radio said ton t, quoting a Toss dispatch from cnevs. Among those arrested. it was said. an many army officers - dustrialisu. Several hsclst party ‘ ’ , of having relations with op tion elements. also have been de in . the report said. AIRMAN FOUND GUILTY KENTVILLE, N. 8., Nov. i1 — (CH-LAO. Jooerm Gad for- mer member of a Montrea firm was fund guilty here today on wo charges of theft from an R..A.I'. airport at nearby (incen- wood. and sflutonced to two you: idgnitentiary on each count. the son nces to iun concurrently. The airman, charged with the theft of 8540.00 in cash and $593.07 in cheques 1mm the officers‘ mess at the air rt, asked Judge l-i. W, Santstcr t t he be sent to peni- tentiary so he could "learn a Harbor. ncsday) — in Tunisia. British 8th This Libya. Rommefs sored victorious miles. trucks. Al LONDON, Nov. (A force nearby i War Situ-ation LasiiNighi 18 —-(Wed- -— Reuters News Agency reported from ad- vanced headquarters in North Africa tonight. that German Field Marshal Rommel now is The agency quoted well-in- _ domed sources as saying that. t c Nazi Marshal whose armies are being thrown back by the Army in Libya is “making a desperate effort to organize Axis forces" to resist the British 1st Army and its United States advancing from the west. latter from Algeria eastern Allies attacking is ihc most im- mediate cnuccrn of the Ger- mans (iaught in 'i‘unisia., poli and in Tri- western whereabouts has channels headquarters in Africa. Newsman Describes Desert Front By Don Whitehead Associated Press Staff Writer EN ROUTE TO THE WEST- ERN DESERT FRONT, Libya, Nov. 17 —(AP)—- The yard of RommePs hopes to con- ucr North Africa is a terrible _ sght, to see. Even this scene of death and destruction the desert, however, is not as awesome as that of 8th Army chase to the retreating enemy who is not many miles ahead. The roads to Poland. Belgium. France and Greece must have looked like those l saw today —cxccpt that this time it was the Ger-nuns who were on the brown snake the desert floor tin-cull! littered wreckage burned enemy tanks. planes and for a; I could I60 been somewhat of a mystery. llc had been reported both in Italy and in Munich, but this dispatch appeared to be most definite yet since AIFed landings in North Africa, coming as it did through ceu- the the from Allied of twllte KHIVG - Britain's giving run. The Italian radio said thll morning that Axis armies in North Africa were "advancing" to new positions. it was not. funny, it was a rather pathetic thing to hear aftcr seeing the tremendous number of British troops, tanks, guns and sup lies moving up to the front lino unbroken for miles and ‘Transports moving llvfll u" coast road looked like a If"! writhing across the d. r (By Kirkc L. Simpson, Assoicated Pres; w" Analyst) Pa jghe full fruits of the great United States naval victory in the Fm- Mc‘ "i, ""1 Y“ 10 11¢ Wvfllfll in Japanese Military reaction to the ow. ut navy opinion that the 10¢ ""151 8111119 IIRIII at Guadalcanal, if 91117 to save face. scams well justified. . I I I I I 11111111" 310B". reooiling from a new defeat, noi- flmer, manned by 11°11" “°°'“1‘11'°1'11 P11911111“! 1'1 N01"! Afflfll. dare surrender the Initiative. To do so would be to acknowledge {allure of m, A“, dream of world conquest. The Achilles heel of a philosophy of power politics, of rule by force 01 M1115. ls that its practitioners cannot. stop. Aggression is their only waichword To revert ti: a dffensivc rgle ll’t.o accept augurles of defeat, o Thus the next move is obviously up to Germany om] Japan, Even 5°. "W": are certain unchallengablc new war factors resulting from thc staggering rebuff dealt Japanese sea power in the Solomons. They have I ball"! on the war in Africa as well as the war in the Pacific. Wfllvlns the psychological br-oroauct-whicn could prove vastly lmilflrtant-the factual and practical results as achieved o“ highly encouraging. They lend a color of realism to Allied hopes. that the tide has definitely turned against the Axis everywhere; that years may already be lapped off the probable duration of the war. I I I I I I 0f supreme importance even before the full score of the 5010mm“ baitlc 00ml‘: in is the cumulative attrition of Japanese sea power. On navy books a ratio of better than 4 to 1 has been established against Japan in ship losses since and including the Dec. '1 attack on Pearl lBad Weather; one" lSlows Pursuit 10f Axis Army By PAUL LEE (Associated Press Staff Vvrifcr) CAIRO". Novfi’! -— (AP)'_ The British 8th army has captured Del‘- na and El lviecliili. narrowing the Glliilly-llud gap of Libra and Tun- isia to 900 miles. but pin-suit of the disorganized Axis arm)" was slowed today by brui weather‘ and sharp rear-guard actions. The surviiing Germans and Italians in North Africa iii effect were hemmed in by three gieai Al- lied forces. of. least two Oi uhich were closing the laws oi a trap, ‘The 8th army ivus moving slowly despite short, hot stands of Axis suicide groups which had the cliolee only of fighting war-guard actions or surrendering. The British 1st arniv and Ani- PFlCHH iPOU S \\'(‘l't.‘ lllDVlllg Ell-Si. from Alger a into 'l‘iin.'\siu. The Germans said United Stliifls troops were bombed at the southern boundary of Tunisia and Algeria. which is only 290 miles from Tri- poli and 000 fillies front El Mechlll. Yet a. third formidable force wiis known to be cle loyecl in the Lake Chad region 1,0 miles south oi Tripoli across the desert. The forte ml iht already be on the move from lip itin French territoiy. Mars al Erwin Ronimers ex- hausted remnants were scattered all along the coastal route from Dcrna to El Agheila and inland. They were scattering mines lndlscrlminutcly as they fled - smpluliiiit tot-ll‘ last effective means of defence now that German planes have been cleared from the air and the great bulk ol Axis material has been captured or destroyed. The weather kept most of ‘lie R. A.F. grounded, giving the rs- treating foe surccasc from the ter- rible bombln s which have beset him alon hs too-mu.» flight from E1 Alameln in Egypt. United states fighters ranged the forward _arcas yesterday without. encountering a single enemy plane. MaylieChaiiges. In Conservative Party Policies OTTAWA, Nov. i7 --(CP)~Radi- ml change; in Conservative Party Policy will develop from the Nat- ional convention at Winnipeg Dec. 9. i0 and ll, party spokesmen forc- cast 10d”- "I expect that frrm the con- vontion will come a policy which will place the Conservative Party somewhere between the present Liberal Goveznment in Ottawa and dust swirled and billowcd over the 0.6 11K." sold one prominent w, "m m u“ movg. 1 Conservative. The sght made you feel "I believe-and this is borne out warm inlldc with the know- by resolutions on policy now com- ledgo that this time the Alilco ing in from Conservative organ- wcro in for the knockout iaatlons throughout the country - and at are vu- stuff going that there must be a than: swing JP u, p, n“ by, to tho left." 5i "° 80c. Tables ready at 5. "=- ' 11-18-11 (Continued on Pile ti, Ool, 7) trpde." 0S0 l. Smooth Sciillnq For All yourBakinq When you use ADA Maw 50ueen’s County l Candidates Nominated Rousing Conservative I Conventions for 2nd 3rd And 5th Dis- tricts. At a-n enthusiastic convention for the Second. Third and Fifth Districts of Queen's County. held Yesterday in the Empire Theatre, the following candidates were nom- inated unanimously as Conserva- tive simidard bearers in tine pro- viniclal field: 2nd District: Messrs. Reginald R. Bell, Charlottetown; Philip Math- icson, Wheutlcy River. 3rd District: Messrs. J. J. Train- or, liedinrd; Wylie W. Gibson. i ltiurshficld. , 5th District: Hon. Dr. W.J l’ ,' lliaclllilian. llri.ii.A.. Provincial lead- er, Charlottetown; Mr. W. A. Stew- art, Ai.l..1\., Charlottetown. ' Mr. W. S. Grant. President of the Queen's Cr‘ Conservative As- sociation, " d at the conven- tions, Wil Alb-on Farmer oct- iiig a5 seuelary. ' Brief speccligs were made by the 1 "lldiitcs in which they empha- l the importance of strong re- filtfltlflll 0:1 behalf of the farm- ing iiiierc=is of the Province. and "f fiximir". nnlirlrs suitable to post- war as W011 as present conditions Mr. J. A. MacDonald. K.C.. vet- or in a. speech in which he express- ed. approval of having two farmer international“ At A Glance iConadian Press) NORTH Al-‘ltiCA-Dokafis sur- ren. r hiuttd as Allies 110111111 fonviivil into ‘Iunisia and 8th Army takes Demo and illeklli. RUSSIA-Nazis make slight ain l“ Stalingrad ail-er losing .000 more men m assault. “Wis-TEEN FRONT—U. S. Flying For-trusses pound 51. Nlllilll‘ >111!- mariuc shelters; British, Canadian fighters strait: ground installations, plans and transport facilities In North i-‘rance. UNITED STATES - itoosevelt declares Allied dealing with Dur- lun ls only military expedient to avoid dcluy in mopping up French North itfrieu. lliore Milk ls Consumed By Canadians Ily James MeCook (funudiail Press Staff Writer O'l"l‘A\1VA, Nov. l'i — tCP)— If health iiiid strength are found in milk, Canadians ought to be grow- ing healiicr and stionger every (lay, The Agriculture Department. the Prices Board and the Dominion Bureau oi‘ statistics today told a slory of sharply-rising fluid milk consumption in Canada, at a. time when production of cheese and butter, and demand for those pro- ducts, are coating records. The drain on mllk supplies has led to lulk of butter rationing, but Prices Board officials snid nope still iunziins thnt increasing ‘pro- duction will keep pace with higher demand. The tnaln concern over the butter situation comes from the l3,000.000-pouiid reduction of stock in stoic at Nov. i in com- parison with the five-year average. but if. as is expected. butter out ut during the winter months rses wel‘; above past years. the with- drawals from the remaining stocks will be umller than usual. For nil Canada. fluid mllk H8185 in September were 7.3 per cent above those of the same month lust year. For nine months of 1012. consumption was 8.9 per cent h‘ ~11- ei‘ than in the same period in Jill. Provinelai records showed what Turkey May Be In Line For Uffcinsive In the West Spain orders partial . Mobilization; Portuguese Gov’t Protests to Allies. (By Robert Bmmelle, Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON. Nov. l7--(AP)—Growing indications came from the continent tonight of a possible new stroke hy l Hitler against the Middle East and Suez from the Bal- j kans in a desperate effort to counter the Allied successes l in Northwest Africa and Egypt. Signs pointing to such a manoeuvre were seen by ‘ competent foreign military and diplomatic sources in ad- vices from Germany and Axis-dominated countries. These informants, who could not be identified by name. said their best information was that Hitler has withdrawn. or is in the act of withdraw-inc, 40 divisions. including 16 armored. from the Russian front. Most of these divisions were reported being concen- trated in the Balkans. especially in Greece, for “big action” in the eastern Mediterranean. Some, however, were said to have been sent to the west for rest after their mauling by the Russians. , Besides their own private information, the observers here said published accounts from Turkey indicated some- thing is afoot in the Balkans. Among these was a dispatch felling of German use of Bulgarian labor for hurried con- struction of new airfields near Turkeys northwest froniier._ PARTIAL MOBILIZATION _ MADRID. Nov. 1'l—-(AP)—All M y R three Spanish malltary services a e were llllill0l'lZE3d_t0fi8y to order a partial mobilization, _ The army, air, and navy minis- lers, it was explained. are being allowed to call UP 91W 119111155111? number of troops to reinforce un- its under their respective com- mantis. _ _ ‘Inc decree authorizing strength- Jap Naval Losses. Upward WASHINGTON, Nov. l7 -(AP) ening of mili'.-.iry_utilt_s saidz- _An upwind revmon o! Japanese "Tue l>1'<¢5**111 51111311011 "1 111a naval losses in the sea battle world. fl-v‘ a 1951115 °f 9119 $19111 1'11“ Guadalcana. was predicted con- iensioo of the War “limb 11°“ fldently today by United States teaches heretofore calm areas and dailv comes closer to Slimli- 1191‘ colonies and protectorxites. mekffi i; prudent w take measures which insure our keeping away 1W1“ conflict. and which strengthen our defence, our integrity and sov- ereignty and at the same time peserve peace in our territories. The decree authorized calling up all non-commissioned or retired officers whose services may be Naval authorities who emphasized that. the announced total of 33 ships sunk and seven damaged was based on incomplete reports from ttic rouih Puciic war none. Yet to be heazd from, it was said, are the clean-up o eratlons by Am- erican planes an surface units which may have dlscovered and finished off crippled units of the enemy's fleeing fleet. There was de med necegary ihsisu Plain gneozfinenth of ‘Near. ~ ,- - . - o W110 no iing as n shilling siieilllllxasrflifitcllefiiilligr install? WUUXHM "1' ‘"1 m“ 1L “m; fought‘ . .._.... .. . .v.--c iiieiiléié ltmtgr "£111 Xggosggfnffi wuicn rears: anx ' - __ invasion of North Africa rather GLASGOW - (CP) — The Glas- tllflfl 1116 1110i $111111 591111511 11°°l15 tzmv Herald published this tinder now stand all 1119112 511111115 the heading “ll/ithout Comment": "An o.fi-ii.<.ve against rats will be launched lll PIll‘lS~Vll‘.l'l\' radio " northern frontier wit-h France) MAKE PROTEST LISBON, Nov, l'i—-(AP)—-—'Tl10 Portuguese government has made a diplomatic protest to the Un- ited States and British goveiii- NAN PROPoSE$ Ano L5 1 g if Umlcti gills.»Zgxinlliztafgjjagfiigigivy “f; , WOMAN - WELL r um se - - Wis agnnounced tonight. i 0ProsE$ Sees Turning Point In War By J. F. Sanderson Canadian Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON. NM‘- 17 '- (FIW- President Roosevelt to- night hailed Fnlted States suc- cesses in Africa and the far Pacific as an apparent "turn- ing point of this war," but add- H. l ,. . I , _ _ . _ .1 ed n warning that there is time ,,,,,,,"‘,,‘,,,,“§{‘,“, ;;“§_3{;‘3ll‘u1“ u“ b‘ only for working and fighting, Bun Se“ this Bun-noon M’ l. nom- for cxultatlnn. Earlier he hiul described the recent naval battle in the Solo- mons as a major victory for the Allied cause. Tonight. ad- dressing the Herald-Tribune Forum b radio, he singled out one part clpant. in that battle for n hero's raiswllear Ad- mlial Daniel . Callaghan, Admiral Callaghan. before he 33g rises tomorrow morning at ‘rim moon Nov. 22, 4.24 pm. Summerside tide 18 minutes lat- cr than Charlottetown, . CAB FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Prom Borden-Leave 9.05 an“ 11.00 mm. 2.00 ma», 4.30 pun. ‘l. has been accomplished in lncre-is- lng the production of dairy cows. The Canadian aveiage of milk uro- duction per cow has been running at 18.9 pounds a day in 1942. com- pared with 15 2 pounds in i938. in Prince Edward Island the aver- age daily production 1942 has boon 2.9 pounds higher than in i088, in Nova Scotia 1.2; New Brunswick. 3.1; Quebec 2.2; Ontario 8; Mani- toba 2.3; Alberta 1.5; and British cdumbla 1.6. Saskatchewan show- ed a drop of .4 pounds in the same comparative years. "On June i last. year. dairy cows in Canada numbered 3.587.690 against 3.680.500 at the same date this year. lriry heifers lost yea-r numbered 895.324 against 928.000 in ion p.m.. Leave Caps Tormentlnc — 10.30 a.m. 1.15 p.m. 3.05 p.m., 5.05 p-m. 8.15 pan. SUNDAY SERVICE (May S to Dec. 2'1 included) Leave Borden 9.00 mm. 0.46 l‘: Leave Tor-mention 10.15 one Q»!!!- . . .. . . I "'1' 1.5-5: til-ft Eg- 1 us. u! "unmanned Noon and l-ll I- l- QEBVICI L wag killed in action. sailed his cruiser. tho San Francisco, directly into the guns of the Japanese armada and spread devastation among it, the Pre- sident said. The San Francisco. still afloat. has been recom- mended for decoration for ont- standing service, (the first Am- erican rhlo of the war to be so honored. in addition to these things, Mr. ltonst-vclt defended the afl- AII . minlsiratlorfs policy of wttil- n?g'x'clfl lUNbAYl s, holding news of naval loan! chumMgoqg-isummersldc- Monciicn beau Charlotte-own L30 mm- Imn . m. 4.30 p. m. Arrrvr Charlottetown l II- II; 5.45 p. m. 7.05 p. m. anti! it ls or» ‘the: $111522‘; possess. on Milan and indicated that hill- range coclal reforms hi?‘ b" shelved for "I0 "m9 1" “