MAXIMG GIL HERE MAN Isencoiaetionlsliownro- ward. cliariottetown Guardian, ‘I've Cont!- Iornin| Guardian, lauded Ill! >:/'//// The Peoples Paper (lovers Prince Edward‘ Island like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1942 Ill. A cruel story runs on wheels and every hand oils the wheels as they MAXIMS OPA MERE MAN Annual Subscription Delivered, 85,00 "I 11111“ P- 11- 1- 84.00; to on." Province! and v, s. A. same Tosh Red Garrison gtrong Protest .To Col. Ralston Re CZNEL Moves Joint telegram forwarded urging Retention of all possible admin- istrative and operational work in Charlottetown. _ A; ‘ meeting called yesterday by Illa Worship Mayor Holman and “(ended by Premier Campbell, Mr. J. L. Douglas, M. P» "°"- 3;‘ t’; I ,._ Macmillan, legs" or lhe opposition and himself, in; ques "in"; centralization to the detriment of this Province was dil- 401,2, ‘l: and the lflllowinl telegram was prepared and forwarder" J-a < > it. ll ~ wd- i. Charlottetown, Sept. 25. if", Colonel The Honourable J. 1.. Italstoflo .§/%"§viinister of Defence i " Q Otto "Ciilzeii? of Prince Edward Island view with alarm the 11"’ grcssive and apparently unnecessary centralization 0f Camilla; National Railway administration in the Marit-lmea. T111! 111W"! K Pvidcm-od by gradual removal of repair shop and paint-shop wort- from Charlottetown to Moncton and P79111151” ""155" *7‘ "W"? in: 5y§lem_ Result is great lose of employment and training or skilled workmen in this Province with doubtful gain in scone?! or efficiency for the Railway. In fact many easel show actua n- .’ l ying out repairs. We respectfully urlfl :;;a‘>(;ve¥; s]; 23:11:10 retain all possible administ ative and ilpcrutionai work in Charlottetown and that i1"""11"1‘|)’ 111 111"" (lllyi of premium on skilled labor and tools every 11051111" "I; should he made nf the facilities of our 111031 r1111"! W°f|"11°l":":n mmuholt we grggfly flppfeflfltfl your efforts III‘ thle lfiiteyes n“ our raiiwaymcn and trust that 1°" "1" 1" 511cc“! “l 1" ‘v n‘ gpppunlln! system retained here and in securing the restoration of ll pair and paint shops. °“,'S,';,,,,',',§’,_'°.,_ Douglas, M, P.; Thane A. Campbell, Premier; Dr. w J. P. MacMiiian, Leader of oar-within; B. n. Holman. Ml!"- The text 0f the’ above telegrem AT A GLANCE was read at, a spemal meeting o1 the City Council, called last night by Mayor Holman after his re- turn from Ottawa and Moncton. Giving an account of his trip to the Council he stated that Coun- cillor McKee. City Surveyor Hair- old Messervy and himself before l " going to Moncton to interview Mr. BY T116 Cmmdm" “P” W.U. Appleton, C N R. regional RUSSIA Reds ‘Mn "vahmme manager, had made a extensive I111<111"11" 1“ 5“‘l1“5";ad'“:‘:‘, 5i“. usable in the local railway shops. 1-5110 1411115 11°1'"“‘"~‘5 ° ‘n n; ‘Pliey had prepared a comprehen- llllrrefhfy threw?" G"m;“ A“ sive brief and were in conference 1115511113“ FRONT “T ' "ca; with M1". Appleton from 9 am. 11111111 051". Nmwa-"i dmm‘ '“‘ uniil 12 noon. Their reception was In: 110111511111! 9"“- Ad ‘am, cordial and they discussed all 1'1‘ 51H — 1111*“ "3' M, phases of the brief. They did not 11111111111111‘! 1°11! "7 d°5""1'" 5m“ iccclve any definite promises other survey of machinery used and M11 m1I1"§W1‘1‘i11‘1' 11°“- c" “m” than a sym athetic hearln , but homo nficr escorting lzrcat convoy Mn Apple“): “surfed thug, that t» flussia- i l “N, Pa,“ “no further reductions" in labor .\_l~Rl(‘.-\ — Naz -ron ro “adv w would be made and that he would rod!" SM‘! 3111151‘ “My - do nll in his power to obtain more lition. s ops, ' _ —— h (gust tnilghxt His Wofishirn said he a a eel-none ca mm Mr. Alr Gunners Appleton, in which he stated that I‘ G- repairs on rolling stock 0n the A e Isand division. it. would he dune) However the committee was not ‘ll lfiPk-A @111“ <11 "l" ““““°"5 lh in ivioh to nd n1 w ~.li “imwmid fitpm Pa" Cfllriiriiflllfifl on ctonoitawik-son mil’ “'11” A" F111“ -‘ f“ “ vicwinv Hon. Col. Ralston. the lat- ""““"‘_ 1111135111‘ 15mm“ ilearinz of the shift in inc account- Kvuuvflv Co} “lllliuhc w A Pa“ ancy department. That evening the N" Brlm-‘MC ~ - ' ' Mayor had received a telegrmi N v.1 Scoliu: D. W. MncFzlrlflne. . '1‘*'“?"1 R- E- M““1°Ck' Halifax‘ liwiifimiianaskgllilactehaiililméld? “i” iatciy. Mr. Ralsionfls replv to this was I ~~ t Billing Even s attack D1111" 80°11; 11° “mflnm employment in the local C N R. h if if were at all possible to make KTCVNTAIN 17131110 0m" Sept‘ satisfied with the assurances given ‘1"1""1"'1‘~“1""1“d‘"1:"" R S lcr cxprcssed astonishment on 1“"*"'"' ‘71‘"11’b’~’m°“' f-om Mr. James Fullerton. City "So thcy are trying to beat. the _fContlnued on page ll. Col 4) “Japs Hold Villages 0n Guadalcanal WASHINCYION Sept. mum- The Ja anese still are holding sev- eral vilages on Guadalcanal ls- lsnd, principal American bass in the southeastern Solomons, the navy disclosed today in a com- munique reporting that, new bomb- ing and strafing attacks on those and other enemy strong points and ships had damaged docks and buildings and scored three hits on transport vessels. Points attacked in addition to the centres of Japanese resistance on Guadalcanal were Gizo Island. 215 miles to the northwest, and Rekata Bay at. Santa Isabel Island, B15 miles away. Docks and build‘ ings were damaged at. Rekata and one small float plane was shot down. These actions were carried out by army “Flying Fortrcsses." The three hits on an unreported number of transports also were made by army Flying Foriresses when on Tilursday they discover- e‘d th enemy transport force near Short and Island, in the western Solomons about 259 miles from the sorthwestern shore of Guadal- anai. The attack was opposed by about 20 Japanese fighters, the navy communique said, and one fighter was shot down. Disclosure that. the enemy is in possession of some villages on Guadalcanal came in a paragraph of the communique reporting that. they had been attacked by navy and marine corps dive bombers. “Marine patrols on Guadalcanal have been active in attacking scattered enemy units," the com- munique ssid. “These operations have been supported by navy and marine corps dive bombers which have bombed and st-rafed enemy- lleid villages and other points of resistance. ll.A.F. Bombers Attack Oslo LONDON. 509E. 25—(CP)—~R.A.F. bombers attacked tile German-held Norwegian capital of Oslo this at. tiernopn while the Allis-puppet 1cm. er Vidkun Quisliiig was addressing a party raiiv on “the new order in Niirwiiixuu u u orl a ve Le l _ ' tilie daylillm Pflidndloasll. tiise ggillg D one. Stockholm dispatches to Reuters 119W H-Rency said four British planes flew low over Oslo at 5 pm. (ll 11.111. ADT) and that four persons were killed and eight injluud. and g number cf houses damaged. The Germans in Oslo claimed the destruction of three of the raiders. but. Berlin broadcasts wing-ht iliadc no mention of the raid. Instead ilhe Germanradio merely reported ‘on Qllisiings latest effort to knit re- calcitrant Norwegians into a sem- blance of parliamentary KOvcrnmcnt directed by his Norwcglan Nazis. Reuters quoted Oslo reports pe- layod through neutral Sweden as saying that tour persons were killed and eight. injured. The Quisling meeting was ended abruptly with the crash of British bombs shortly alter the air raid alarm was sounded, Stockholm dis- patches said. This was the first raid on the German-occupied Norwegian cap- ital since British pianos attacked shipping in Oslo harbor on Sent. 6. ‘rile targets and the numbsr of planes in today's attack were not specified. Reports. meanwhile. broadcast by the Vichv radio. said British planes flew over Sknnni Province iii south- ern Sweden apparently to lav mines in the straits between Denmark and Sweden. The planes were said to have vanished soon after anti-air- craft fire opened. 4 ,_,o_. s? . .. __ ________ e an l-‘edr ration annual I k ‘ l i’l‘.f‘L"1iiifZ. hurifllvv. October lst at ll 0 0 A. . iii Y. M. C. A- 9-25-31. blnnaiov. Septe 23m Webster's Orchestra. 9 425-31. Japanese Sub .. o. Operates In North Atlantic "Social Service icummalw $1119- Holv Nunlc Hall. afternoon sand ev- rullllz. October 3rd. >364“- "Womenk Institute Chicken Sup- per. Clinton Hail. October Minis (By William B. Kins. Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON‘. Sept. 25—(AP)-- Axis propaganda out. eta dioruaed the 3| Tokyo claim today that a Japa- ' nesg submarine had cruised half- way around the world and now is "in close co-operation" with Ger- 3341. man U-boats in the North Atlan- __i tic. new l umllty of well British naval observers didn't Home; DE“? cats‘ “land Qold believe it amounted to much-even Storage 00., Ltd. D-SB-dtf. if true. Axis assertion coincided “Chicken Supper, Dance Vernon Th withethe first Axis trumpetings to River Hall. September 30th. Web- herald the second anniversary. star's Orchestra. 9'79‘ 31- Sunday, of the signing of the -——-— three- wer ct, the Rome-Ber- "Plnln and fancy Broads. R0115. lin- omiltary agreement which elc. for sale this afternoon at. Rn- provides the basis for present Axis ilcll s. Chandler's by Christian conabonuox-L Church W. M. s. 9 1' ‘rhe naval observers ‘said thaitulé “Em Muamflor Wm ‘mg at there is any trut in he repo token union of e widely separ- C R0 ds h ch Bund . Sept. - Zlttilssat ‘IBP. it: 5.‘... n. r‘. genwick. ;:°,%,Q*:ffm“m' 1° °°“ld b’ N Mmme“ "n"? 1. A Jlurely propaganda stunt "Buying as Monday at F‘red- d“ to sheer be populations H, m l 1 ofi span an Germany an con: .é;.°.°3..."?.l.’l‘.o’f.... .3512. 3.1.1.123 mo}; ‘$111,313 gpggg 315$; uy “rune: ‘ma’ Knud "°'§‘_‘§‘;f{l; te-‘the failure of the Japanese w ‘event British operations on odagascar. a way point and po- ltial supply base for far-rans- g‘ Japanese vesse-a, . The delivery of a smai: id "Chicken sooner. Little P011“ llail. Tuesday. Bfiptember cecal. "Buvlmr live and dressed chick- ens and fowl evel-v Wednesday. Pay- top market prices. P. J. Noy. 8M1. l1. 9-H- vital cargo such as medical sup- plies which couid be carried more rapidly and with greater safety in an undersea craft; and. 4. A demonstration to bolster German naval efforts, which have been reported unsatisfactory to the Japanese, and at the same time answer Nazi complaints over Japanese naval failures. The suggestion that Japanese craft were reinforcing Nazi U- boat packs to intensify the war on An lo-American shipping found lltte support among London ob- servers. The Ja. nese, who have their hands fui in the Pacific and In- disn Oceans, started the war with approximately 80 submarines, as far as is known, while the Ger- mans probably have that many simultaneously operating along sliied shipping lanes. The la r, known Japanese submarine as s. dis iacement of 2.180 tons and severe types built for warfare in wide expanses of the Pacific have an range of 16,000 miles. Therefore. it is possible that a submarine made the voyage from the sings re area to Eilropc with- out refue ling. but if. Ls more like- ly that a rendezvous would be arranged with a sllpply ship in the South Atlantic or Madagascar w“ operating L. Nazi rTrocps Hurled Against There apparently is growing hope fn allied capitals that Stalin- pmd can be held by the Russian; until winter freezes the out front and maria Nani colnmunicatlo lines. Moreover, this hope is supported by the outvoicings of Axis spokes- men. They are obviously trying either to explain away the delay or to distract German attention from the Stalingrad siege and its enormous blood cost. Nazi patenteea of the war-of-nerveu technique al a psychological cvmlllernent to the blitzkrieg are getting a. taste of their own medicine. Their spokesmen are busy on the nerve front; but now will. some doses for war-frayed German nerves, not with verbal attacks 0n allied nerves. Their y: nda machinery is working overtime; but in re- verse. O O O O O O Examples are numerous. The most recent and most curious, per haps, is a Japanese report that Japanese naval forces have arrived to co-operate with German and Italian allies in Atlantic waters. in con- firmation. Tdryo reported that a Japanese submarine had touched at a German base. Berlin amended that by adding that it was base “in Europe." lt may be true. Little as Japan could spare even one submarine from her own vast sphere of sea action, she may have sent one er more into the Atlantic. It could be done; but the only reason for doing It is sufficiently clear. it gave lfitier a chance to underscore to his own people tho strangest remark lie has ever made to them to assure them, not thaf victory was certain, but that defeat was impossible. In his war anni- versary broadcast from Russia Sept. l, he said the Axis pact with the "majority" of the peoples of the Far East insured Germany against Russia and the Anglo-American fellowship. Less than a month later he had urgent need, due to the Stalin- grad stumbling block, to enlarge on that. The Tokyo report of Japa- nese naval co-operation in the Atlantic served that need. even if only one submarine was specifically mentioned. That explains Berlin's qlllOK rebroadcast of the news for German ears. 4O Planes, 2 U- Boats lgestroyed British Lose Destroyer And ‘Mine- szoeeper Irn Arctic Battle. TILONDON. “Sepia 25 - (Cs?) T . I I ‘I 1e oss of e escroyel‘ cmal and the mineswecper Leda, both on louse llgnle, was annouilmd by mo. Admiraltyh today in an bag- ccumiilg of l e ilg running a- c t I F t tic between an Arctic convoy and Gemlan planes and submannes during which at least 40 Nazi i glance; and two U-boals were dcs- (A YQV fated P St‘ if ll’ 14' ‘finosscs were suffered among lf§§°ww_ 25A_ (Ali's, r)_ ships l_n the convoy,‘ a communl- Travelling by Jtep m“. nmddy quc said. "but despite nlunber of made by the enemy n great maj- ority of the slnips arrived at. their destination (Russiru " By HENRY C. CASSIDY trip to the central IiTTlt. wllcrc llc wunesscd a thundering artillery- duel in the Rziicv scclor and On the ilomcward trip the for- heal-d from Qmlbattled Md am“. pcdoed Somali, 1.870 tons, was men the mmllla, query; ~30‘,- takzn in tow by another drstroyer about, l; gigond fmnyg" but after 111160 days 015 1nd W58111- The heavy cannonnding was old er she broke in two and sank stuff to Willkie, an artilleryman ill Fcur 13111111 p-flllcs were 1081. the First Great War, but he C011- but the 911018 0f three were saved- fesscd that the lurciling, 14-hour The convoy was sighted S9191. 9. Jeep ride through hub-deep mires but the attacks did not begin until was a new. expeflgngg_ A5 5mm Sept. d2 when hostile submarines as he gm bu]; u, MCSQOW he am 1-1116 1111159 roads Wendell Wlilkic returned a q Vf-IY heavy 5118C“ little wcrsc for w-sar lxiny from a 6f Wm, w,“ r Says Allies Will Attack Dakar IUNDCXN , Sept. H - (OP) a The Paris radio said tonight "the Dakar" on Allies are blockading the Fivcnch West. "and they will attack soon." A political cccnmciltator iifying ilimscli as nramoontrollrd Paris station. The Nazis have intensive propaganda recently re- garding nilcvcd Allied African coast, iden- Jenn Azema made nhe statement. on the G91‘- camed on an aggressive Death Rate At "Stalingrad Higher intcntims on Dakar, but: this was the fl cin lm of any Allied I ' t . 1' i . lh . l. to '0 , . W - “rillfl-lrin isa £718,611? mflesfiehtst 821i (B) h d d y (1 11m Ore» Brazil. __V___ Announces Air Force Successes Against U-boats OTTAWA. . enemy subiilni-lilcs were Air Ministci‘ Power typical of lallilc patrols. Maj. Puwci- issued a statement shying tllc squadrons on the east coast zirc “steadily increasing the counter-u attacks on U- - iiiicnsily‘ of tilcii" boats ill tile North Atlantic and filey hzlvc had considerable suc- cess in rooting out. the skuiktng undersea maraudcrs." Ccllfoi-miilg to the general policy of keeping the enemy EUCSIIIQ about the fiite of their submarines Maj. Power gave no details of iinlr, place Oi‘ number of attacks. His disclosure of four apparent- Iv successful attacks. however. was 1111011191‘ indication. coming on the hccls of recent news from the Royal Ciimidiail Navy, of growing Ubout activity in northern wat- crs. largely piltrolled by Canadian forces, aiwl" a period of quiet while tile Gcrmiln raiders were busy in United Sthles coast-a! wat- ers and in areas further south. The air force. lilo minister said. is conservative in its claims of U- boat kills and has more difficulty in iilPliflfiiailffiS he cited. illc aircraft nil rlmppwi dcptil charges close to surfaced subiilzirincs. Foi- lowilig one attack debris and all object lcssion in wartime publicity oil porch 2 1-2 nllics long appear- ‘ ed. Aftcr nnoiilcr, air bubbled up aggemclpn of me gallantry o; the for l0 nliilutcs and a large stretch Dicppe raiders." of water was covered with oil, The llxlrd attack showed wreck~ gc and oil patches n5 cvidciicc fiilhiflClPd n “klll" and in iilc fourth, described as "dcfin- nledinie owning of a ilc rinmnzc. ' ' \\'(‘1i(‘(l up for about an hour. (LN .11.» Mliresident Appointed Chairman possible kill," Oil When Mr. Vaughan became C. ll. 25-fCPl- Four iilslilliccs ul‘ puilisliiilg attacks on Than AL Verdun 25,000 Germans Killed in Last Week, Russians Claim Further Cains. ilssociiiled Press Staff Writer) ‘110550115 SW.‘- 26_(Sa1“1“dal') — '11P) - Russian 11110115 flprhtlng amid the tumbled walls of Stalingrad cap- iurcd "a valuable position" yesterday and killed 1,500 Germans norihwcstvof the city where Soviet gains have ihiczltcncd the Nazis flunk, it was reported today. Announcing this hczlrtcning development today on ‘he 5555111 1111.1’ 01 Stilllllgfllifs siege, the Russian high coili- nlzllld silili another 200 Germans I city, and that a German nluniiions dump and other nlili- tolfilgiffti lg i.ii_\ equipment were destroyed without any reverses for Royal Canadian Air Force operations on the North At- ihe Red army garrison. Pill! Trihutch” To Canadian Troops By J. F. Sanderson Canadian Press staff Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. 25-(6?) -Iilspircd by the Dieppe raid, a wave of tribute to tile fighting qualities of Canadian troops and a frcsll contemplation of what if. would cost to open a second Elwo- pciin fzollt have swept acloss the in establishing; successes than the American Press in the last week. nzlvy, since aircraft cannot wait The editorial salute to Canadian around to pick up wreckage lifter voior is ilalion-lvide and the frank B11 fill-Wk and clonr slntcmcnt issued by De- frncc Ministci" Ralston on the cp- cratioils at thc Fmch seaside rc- sort-lolvn is being heralded as an “Tilcrc can hardly be any ex- thc Lns Aligleles Times dcckarcs. “Disclosure of losses their." in the opinion of the Hartford Cllllfllili. "nllly quiet those who have been clamoring for ini- second front." The Cleveland Plain denier adviscs all proponents of n sr-cnild front “to think of Dieppe before they talk again." "Wherever and wilenclzer we go ashore on the darkened cousin." The Iiouisyilic Courier Journal as- scl-is. “it will be through rivers of our own blood, across ‘lie rum- parts of our own dead. We cannot blame tile colrvlliliuicrs for plau- wcre first ObSETVf-‘d 11y 1116 @011“ a big meal of ham and eggs, then 1/“11911511- PITMQPHL of Camldkm ning that the terrible price will, voying ves=cls went slralght to brd The next, dily [Lboats and air- Wilikies mp carried h'm National Rziillvnlus. has been to lxnntcd clinirnlan of the railways‘ ap- criifl; Attacked. while other planes ovltl-lln seven miles of Rmcv iincl Board of Directors, succeeding S. sowed mines ahead of the convc . from o vantage point he The first. aerial attack W841 111 9 inio this bitterly-contested Nazi- bv sis bombers flvms of hlsh held city, some 13o miles lcokcd J- 4 dlrcctol- cxplrcs west. ions Miiilslcl" Howe ailnounccd to- approval n: mllllmy Hullgcrfoxi, lviiosc term as a Scpt. 30, Munit- ai; least. not be squnildered." To the Fol-t Worth Stair-Tole- grilin. "the opeiliil: of a second front, is a monumcniai undertak- ing not to be C-Riilyfid without full councils." lcvcl. Tllrn bstwecn 40 smrl 50 101" ncrlilvwst of Moscow, where sfl-cct. day in his capacity of acting min- T]... NC“, Oflpnnl; “om l5 vcllllng-q‘, itrdo 11181195 SW00?“ ("W11 °11 111B fighting raged under cover chips. , artillery crossfire. Intensive anti-aircraft fire was Q“ hp; thrown u willie _ took off rom a 081F191. planes were seen the Admiralty said that probably ply mssion to Moscow: m-c B msh plane‘ 1 d t touliktsfor WillChl1i§kSflCI‘1i— onto flilCl Whfrcd J '1‘. Gagnoil of 1 wwvh"lcc.wlwasvilil. brfi ~ . F1“ ""1 wfifimhanieg by sMa .-Gen_ lgcilcti 1.?"..’°£...»{il§“$§§o€i-Ji. tileiiTgoab-g? §‘Z,',‘f,°“i.‘,“"°“ ‘m the PM“ 0r85111118. 811d Brodie , chief of an American supl- gmnlng ().-l_ 1_ (i “Ihcn Mi". Vaughan becrme C. 0f 151"!‘ 9f T1'1111»l>"1'1- A150 P93111391“- icnvc the ‘wllclc and the when‘ to mcllt ilf JFnlTs A. Norihcv of Tor- our own army and navyjl The Chicago Tribune, which has the exclusion of EUIOPE, took the line thin the Dioppe losses should end the "agi- mnnv others were destroyed or Joseph A. Michelin, United States N R‘ pl-,sld(.l~lt_ l“ July‘ 194p My “Mon o, “mate.” Stmwgisls». for . damaged. military attache, ‘Ifltn 25 torpfidl’ P131195 Itilfmlfed Cowdes and Josellzh Barnes of tllc Dwwched 19111 “EYE drive“ 0" Office Of War Information Tile Willie still for from the convoy. pal-W was esoorlgd by gov-ml (m. Two fell to the sea. At dusk l2 Lllyushenko, more wrpedv P1111111‘ m“ 1° "1" Gen Bradley. the first Am- tack. but again the naval fillhwfl‘ ericim general to visit the Russian inforwpiod them and 5110i 110W" front, joined Wiilkie in praising x. the high offensive spirit of the At. dawn sept- 14 U-MW m‘ Red Army and both paid ‘tribute m into action Depth charge?» We” the Rod Army leadership. dropped and 111 at 191151 01w “*1 Wiilkie talked to seven "nir bubbles, oil and the wreckage prlsmem who Wm loom (loppy of wooden Bra-Kinks 811d Wm? We‘? cotton uniforms and siliveird in vole-tables came 1o the 1111111°'~'- the cold rain. mo American, who Early 111 $1141 1136mm" 33 W‘ came to R/ussia after a. visit to to Dvdfi-bmfflifff» Biiacked- Ne“ “me iizylptian front, said ihe Nazi cap. a hlflh-level ill-midi ‘by 1'11 P151195 fives looked better cquippc for which lasted about '75 minutes. Mae" warfare (hm m- “mm-s ‘Illcn a5 torpedo ohms evwmd- alipilbadiiflg winter. Five were shot down. l4 uomased and three others pf0b0171l7 f1"- “c332,”... smsi. came 50¢ le BOmbGE Missing‘ when between so and '10 planes . made h -level and low-level bombing finer. for three hours. 5 Grew visibility was pour and 01117 0116 plane was seen to cmsh. Just before the ships Mohcd the Russian port 24 Ive-bomber! Two radio apnea _ attacked. Two were shot. down. watch for a. twin-engine 001N017 missing from nearb The commodore of the was Rear Admiral EK am- Command since is HALIFAX 2s _ (OP) ‘LI of Rear Ad- authorities announced tonight. They said the bomber, carrying a crew of five, were lmder cormnand miral R L. Burnett of the cruis- scylla. was n-oorwd a- s son. from the becomes n ictirclncnt Vaughan Although ending his active con- act as of National Railways engaged iii manu- MES-SAORE 0F ciwfivs mums; _ o». - Greek rov- ermnenl. circles in London report- ed that l5 Crctuns bv the Nazis at Canta- wcm thrown info prison and iatcl‘ taken l0 a lmblic square be photographed" down by nluchlno guns. arrested . for sabotage "to a lid were mowed Dunno-rinks. J. A. colvailo _ SUSSEX, N.B., Sept. 25-(CP)— asking pcc-ple no Mrs. J. A. Conrad, 69. died at hrr aircraft. home hcrc todav af Eastern Au- ncss. She was a dauR slim-noon Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Jones. Pownal, ' PEI, i d is survived. bv her hus- whflrmm and the escorting tom” have n“ had any resums" A" “nu baild; son Ralph. Montreal. and a hcarl so slant tier a brief ill- liter of the late both 11nd Galdrmr HIIIISIOTIUICI continued us chairman second {mug The phlladepllla Re- 0f 1110 b01114» HP 1'<‘=1<‘11'~‘1‘1 1119 H59 cord pinccd the snmc construction of 70 last. July 16, and with his impending board Mr. bonrd member and chairman. on the operation but Pierre Allard in the New York Dally Worker treated it. as proof that a second front is feasible. The Amcrlcnn Press mention to ncclion with the C.N,R. Mr. Hun- the Rnlston Slalmenl, almyfll any gcrford will continue to president Gemnnn Munitions L.td.. a govcrrmcilt own- ed company facture of munitions for the De- n w“ frank“, hailed as a Can. 1111751119111 07 11411111119115 and Suppw- ariian show which, in the wor s misgivings that the shock of the Canadian losses at Dicppe woxiid produce any reaction from the original enthusiasm over the raid. of some anonymous writer, "will shine as long as tllc Dominion." There was no disposition in '11P editorial columns 10 condemn 1119 oporaiion as a costly or unnccrs- snry one although tile price flrlld bv the Canadian Army overlooked. The Germans were reported hurling against ncvrlg/ established Russian of the city, but the Russians said three of these powerful ttacks were beaten off. (Continued on page l1, Col 3) up: not were slain inside the fresh troops positions northwest In addition to the 1.500 Germans wiped out in that sector, the com- munique said l2 tanks, 20 guns and other arms were destroyed, and a number of prisoners taken. Five German tanks and two srmomd cars were put out of BCUOD in another sector, the com- munique added. Tile Russians did not concede any German gains citller at Moz- clok in the mid Caucasus, lvhcre nnc single Russian unit fighting to kccp the Germans from the Grozily oil fields was credited with de- stroying a battalion of Gemlan in- fantry. 12 tanks. four arlnoied cars and other equipment 1n four days’ fighting. In ihrce clays of conflict south- east of Novorossisk on the Black Sen coast the communique said 2.000 more Germans had been wiped out and more than 1.000 rifles and other armament cap- tured. Far to the north in the Innin- grad ricfrilcc bolt the R\l.\<lrln5 acknolvlcdlzod n German wwluo had been driven into their lmsl- lions at Sinyiivino, but. said tllnl a Red counter-bloc: stopped tile cri- emy‘s advance and ‘fighting con- tinues for the mopping-up o! this German lzroup." The bitter fight at Stalingrad still was bcinlz likcncd by Russians to the First Grcar. War dcfcilcc of Verdun. The Russians ouotcd a captured "German llrivafo of the 64th Motorcycle Riflc Battalion" as saying that his company which originally numbered four Ofilcors and about 200 men had only one r b ill fills WORLD You CAN urn’ lNTo A L01’ . WORSE JAM$ ' MYHAN (ills v _ ‘\ -< I _,;_.~ x.- High tide this llftcmoon at. 1 and ' t 1. wglfiicsé‘... this evening at. 6.51 and rises tomorrow morning at. 6.52 Last. quarter moon October 3. .27 . . 6 Suiillhrierside tide l8 nllnutes in‘!!! than Charlottetown can runny snnvics: DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY I l-om Borden — Lcnvc 9.25 m!!! F The Baltimore Sun flooded H; ed- 1,941 "m, 4.45 p.m. 7.55 n-m- the Ralsion sfnromcnl statement to iioiqial on “o. courageous courageous people" rt~_ ;_Y()\'f‘i'l‘.lllf‘iii hlls its pcople. Dominion frankly xvi‘ ll recognition ill ll two daughters. Mrs. J. M. 'I'ilomo- bad new: hravolv ' er The German air force. the com- missing en. noon today and no 1111111"- observed d nl-lmlqlse , ‘had 1111 fut-flier word had been heard It enough for his convoy was not. at- is believed the plane must. be tacked from the air" on its home- somewhere along Halifax county ward trip but. the U-bosis were coastline. active and got. the Somali and the Name »=~ withheld pending notification of There was no indication that next-of-kin. file Nazi battleship Tinpiiz or 8117 other surface era-ft. joined the Bf.- fack. Informed circles said the wwnw lo=.=e,< claimed by the Ad- miralty were C0115"- SAVINGS SAVE PAPER. LONDON - (C?) —- To Probably _ vllllvc because o thc difficulty of paper, the sire of the 110% , 0111"‘ varying Savings Bank backs is bung ic- keeping count under miller igqngfltlqgq duoed from 13 to seven pages. ASK nfiiilsis or rm BUCK s of the crew have been gpmrlgati-lsnn odious Yarlnouth. N.S.. and Isobel at If\_V("if‘. luv. ltics in rcsnorl to 1hr- Nclvs llMrlcrl ill Canada, who gave themselves olmnh-hw “m. pullllclvv," up t0 Pollen hrre today solluilt. tWO yvoars. night in a f t or W85 out, signed by Mr, Conant. Royal Canadian Mounted m1"? menisci "it loo nzuch on tho cxlrrl’ of ( L" Itekfirmg 1° thyme“ the Canadian lo<=rs in the rrl‘1 on p. m. save lvlinis or oils S. alircn rom n. l I , , l) - .l_l¢, Pl-clnicr Mitchell F‘. llcphurn and £13m‘ WM“ 9 “P mm p WC Aii0rtlf‘_\'(‘:i'l1r‘l'f1i Gordon D. Coll- Iricrnld no good Rliilzlilrl. Vt. u-ill do dwell (Continued on page ii, Col I 11 l-mo and said in "It is not the first time that. the ilrail honcriilc il=clf illl<i Crlilsiln with the a iwoplc which 3-09 Pm- qan giro jig mils to lilo llnfilm has that. if» can take "File (‘nuricr rind Journal of Ln- conlllarrd the ftrlrk- 5-30 mm. ness of illc Canadian lrovcrrnlcnt. with that of the American 11111101"- ———— Sryomon TORONTO. 5991- ZEP-icm-ne Islands opal-muons and found ihe Likolvis’. the ll: odihvrzai 90m- ]. v C Tormcniine -— 111W “$15 0.4.". n.m.. 9.10 um. SUNDAY SERVICE (Slay 3 to Dec. 2'1 inclusive) Leave Borden 9.00 a. m.. 6.15 pJm Leave ’l‘orlni-iltinc 10.15 a. m-l l‘. E. L-N. S FERRY SERVICE Leave Wood Islands 7.00 a.m.. ILOQ a..m.. 8 pm. iieave Caribou 9 a-m-. l p-lll- W‘ AIR SERVICE Charlottetown - Summcrsirle- Moncton Leave Charlottetown 6.35 a. In.| 12.45 . . Lease ‘Snlllllmtfflldt 1.10 a. ni.: 1.20 Q, Ill. Leave Moncton i1 n. m.: and 6.1. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave (‘llariotieiovm 12.45 p. In- Lcave Moncton H5 p. m. “mo.