MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN nu for tho rarity 0| Christian charity Under tho Sun l m Charlottetown Guardian, Two Oenll. Iornlng Guardian. Ioundod l!!! Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHANLOTTETOWN, CANADA, wsbtvrsnlvgiiéiobsr 21,1942 10 PAGES All the windy f ma. An but dust tltyrigoa up, And ll lllbtly ll-id a-nin. MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN Annual lnbacrlptioa Delivered, ‘L00 B! llailr P. I. L H.001 to other Provinces and U, l. A. II.“ __1~=n 2 BIG BATTLESHIPS ADDED TOW BRITISH FLEET Ralston, Howe Return Home From Visit To Britain Ansorixfzd Howe" Sherbrooke, Saintllieniie lldts Johli Lead Drive OTTAWA. Oct. 20-—(CP)—Vic- tory Loan national headquarters announced tonight that Sherbrooke. Que" and Saint. aonu, 1mm, are in are IODOIIOIID of larger municipal- ities reporiinil progress in meet- iiig their quotas for b"lo0.titr0,000 in three weeks Sherbrooke had reached 23 per cent. of its quota and Saint John l9 per cent. Sydney, NS», and Moncton. N.B., were next, each with l4 per cent, Calgary had ll per cent and Ed- uiuutou, nlllb per cent. Lariier uie ‘iliiiu nctory Loan headquarters announced that total subscriptions at the close of any were $aZ,0i4,0c0, almost $11,000,- 000 above the average subscriptions liiworklng days ot the drive if the ODJCCUVC l5 DO be W011. '.L'he first. day of the Second Vic- tory Loan last February irielded $51,334,000 ‘rue response from-factory work- ers resulted in live Ontario plants scyjber 313m on me dotted um the exceding their quota witlnin less than Z4 hours aitei: the opening of the canvass. All live sent in Pc- quisitions for plant honor certifi- cates under the payroll savinas blan. A suixscription or $3,000,000 from the Steel Company of Canada, Ltd. was received from namiltou, Ulit., and $750,000 from Beatty Ema. at Fergus. Ont. Nazi Prisoners’ To Broadcast LONDON, Oct. 20 -(CP)——A new international radio program ou which Ge mans in Canadian pris- ouers-of-war camps can broadcast to the folks at home will be started Thursday night it was announced today. A daily "America tailing Eur- o " shortwave broadcast fromNew ork announced that the pus-m- ers’ messages will be broadcast from American stations and relay- ed by the BBC at 11 p.m. German summer tme on fOur wavelengths, U73. 285, 41 and 49 metres. It advised Germans to “listen garefully” and relay the prisoners words to “anyone who might be mferested." Coming Events 2-O- "Madtmi Doyel Readingls, 144 Hill-Short). 1 40-31. "We require a quantity of well fleshed bologna cattle. Island Cold Storage 00., Ltd. iJ-ilti-dtf. "Hope River Bazaar and Chicken Supper. October 20m and 21st). l5 61 "Collecting hogs every Friday. Please list with Leslie McDowell, Fredericton. b-lB-m-twif. "Chicken 51101161" at Fort August- us Wednesday, October 2lst.1o 20 m "Dance, Flat River Hall Friday, October 23rd. Aid of Red Cigssél n "Chicken Supper at Frank Cut- cliffeks, ruxclcricton, Wednesday cv- enlng, October 21st. 10-17-21. "Chicken supper in hall at New Glasgow, Oct. 27th, 5 to 9.30 p. m. 10-21-26. "Canoe Cove L. O. B. A. Chicken Supper. Octolxi" 22nd, starting at 6.30. Proceeds war work. 10-14-21. "Trucking hugs as usual for the sumuier mouths L151. your hogs with A. C, Green, Albany and G. C. Green. Emerald G-G-T-ll-W-T-M-ti "Kinkora Hall, Friday evening, October 23, and October 30. Bingo and dance. ‘ 10-17-21. "Dance Georgetown Hall Thurs- day, October 22nd. Webster's Otch tstra. 10-20-21 "Chicken Supper and Dance in St. Andrew's Hall, Wednesday even- ins, October 28th 10- -li. "Buyin every day Cranberries. hand pickgd, clean. Highest market prices. Albert Kays, Charlottetown. Phone 1389. 10-20-3- " ome to the Presbyterian Chicken Supper. Clyde River I-Iall, Octo . 6 9. ber 21st Supper to 10mm- “Como to the Chicken Supper 1m October 21st at the home of Mrs. Willard Prowse. Proceeds in aid of Brinkley Church. Supper served from I o'clock, "Not buying weaner pigs until further notice. Suggest, that form- ers with surplus, grow them up t0 ..- feeder age, then they will sell readily. Livestock Marketing Board. 10-20-21. ___.___.. "Poultry producers: 1n com- pliance with numerous requests we will resume marketing of live poultry again this year, common- cllitl at once. ‘Iriut us with your gguliry marketing problems. We lleve we can benefit You. Live- Ffock Feed Agency, Fitzroy Street. Charlottetown, io-zl-at. the t first day oi the campaign, Mon- Loan which had been “necked and Loan Total A is $119,650 For Two llays Prince Edward Island h n- , begi “mil to let into its “Investment for n Vlcl/QYY stride. MOIIdB-Yb total of signed applica- ions for Canada's Third Victory riled at amounted Ioan Headquarters t0 “in U9 W $83,150. Making the totalao; the two days $119,850. Bu. this does not represent by any means all the appdcgtlong ma; have been completed throughout the Island. As soon as one sub- llllliointed salesman goes along to another prospect and keeps at it frequently till late into the even- lflir before lflklllg or mailln the lesulis of his day's work to eacl- quarters. with one mail a day from most rural areas there is necessarily can. slderable delay between the matlln °l the applications before they ge to Headquarters, and after that. each form must necessarLy be very Carefully checked and cross check- ed to prevent the possibility of any error in the totals before the amount is reported to Ottawa. dnthat explains how the results wporwd in the early days do not. by any nit-axis fully re resent the extent of the response "amimlgn hem every assur- ance of ra idly ascending totals. Reports rom all points agree that there is a more widespread Inte.est in the present loan than ever before and‘ the fact that the rfiikiliembtg tort appl cations finalized in s wo days is much 1;. er than ever before shows lazily glrllfllits ttlgeé sellilntgh torganlzntion s an a very man - Sons are twins to buy a balding! the. Third Victory Loan who never botuilgslgt iii bond begreb 5C6 S fiom the outggt that tlie $219: rare.‘ tractlve installment terms of the PWSHlt loan will be an incentive which will enable many to particn pate who have heretofore been unable to even consider the pur- chase of a bond. N. B. DOES WELL SAINT JOHN, N. 13., Oct, go _. (CP)—— New Brunswicks Victory Loan total for two days was an- llflllllved tflréléflit as $1,208,500, Sub- scriptions t uy amounted to $555,- 000. Minimum objective the province ls 812500.000. N. l. RETURNS INCOMPLETE HALIFAX. Oct, 20 —(CP)—Vict- orv, Loan official for Nova Scotia ton ght anouiiced an incomplete labu aticn of Monday's subscrip- tions showed $681,000 for the open- ing day. They pointed out these were not the day's full total, but only the amount reported to headqum-g. ers here. German Threat ls Broadcast LONDON, Oct. 20-(CP)- The German radio broadcast a throat tonight that the Nazi Government would take "extreme and drastic" reprisul measures if Britain fol- lowed the official Russian sugges- tion that Rudolf Hess be put 0n trial immediately. DR. MOTT TO SPEAK SACKVfliLE. N. 13-. Oct. (CP>- The annual Founder's Bay observance by the Mount Allison Educational Institutions will held Friday, Oct. 30, with Dr. John R. Mott. well known Church leader, delivering the main address. _ $365M. Y d ' 01 MMWMKI “@0000 dolly lli I416 total applications ou the si§frfirb£ig ‘llarin’ To Go Again , Back In CFawa Aft’; 23-hour Flight From A British Airport. OTTAWA, Oct. 20 —((CP) - ry unit, that fought at Dieppo _up to strength again or practic- Blty so. Defence Minister said tonight on his return from what he described as "a periodic visit" to the troops in Britain. “Allf-l." he added, “they are all ‘rarin’ to get back at them," Col Ralston arrived by airplane after a 33-hour Journey from a British airport to Ottawa, accom- panied by Munitions Minister Howe, LL-Gen. Kenneth Stuart. Chief of the General Staff;_Col. H. A. Dyde, Col. Ralswnks Military Secretary; Ralph P. Bell, Director of Air- craft Production, and Desmond Clarke Director of Shipbuilding. Away Three Week; The six men were absent. from Ottawa Just under Circe weeks. Mr. Howe and his officuils conferr- ed with British Supply officials and heads of the Canadian Army 0n equipment and supply probhns while Col. Rolstou and his military aides went around seeing the forces and conferred with officials of the war department. PJ ) ‘icfiurlizifilfitFfoatm 5) News ‘Briefs ALLIED IIEADQUARTERS, Australia, Oct, 21—(W¢dne5- daY)—(CP) -- Allied DOIIIIIBI: were beiicvvd to have inflicted extensive damage in another blow at tlie Japanese base of Buin in the northern S010- mcns, It was announced today, while Australian tfflnpg forced hi!!!‘ ll"! Jilllflllcse three miles in the New Guinea land fight between ‘fempletou’; Crossing and Kokoda. VANCOUVER, Oct. 20—(CP)-- Navy Minister Angus lvlacdouald arrived here Dy air late today en route to the opening of Canada's new naval college or, Esquiinult and said the Dominion is (icing the best naval job it can “twitn the ships we have." OTTAWA, Oct. 20 —(CP)—- Anticipating new diffi.\.|e§ in handling Christmas i\ f be- cause of the labor snort-age, post office officials today said they have started tentative llrllnltmfints to use senior high school boys n; lempornry postman. OTTAWA, Oct. Z0- (Om-The Dominion Bureau of Statistics re- ported today that the birth rates were higher in 1941 than in 1940 in all Canada's nine provinces with the exception of British Columbia which remained the same as 1940. SANTIAGO, Oct. 20 —(I\P) —’l‘he Chilean Cabinet resign- ed tonight to give hesident Juan Antonia Rios freedom of action in replacing Foreign Minister Ernesto Barros Jar-pa, advocate of continuing relations with the Axis. LAUZON, Que, Oct. 20 —(CP)-— Approximately 200 pipe-fitters of the Davie Shipbuilding Company in this town across the Si. Law- rence River from Quebec went on iitiiko here today seeking an in- arease in wages. NEW YORK, Oct. 20 -—(CP) -BBC today quoted tlic Italian Gflvernment as announcing that Gan, Orsi, Commander of an Army Corps, was killed in action in Egypt on Sunday. He was the 11th general officer the Italians his‘? lost during the war, BBC so . To Aid Provinces In A. R. P. OTTAWA, Oct. Z0—(OP)-H0n. R. J. Manion, director of civil air raid precautions, said today agree- ments are being entered into with the provinces which have been de- clared subject to air attack, under which financial assistance will be given to them by the Dominion for A .17.. P. activities. Dr. Manion ssid no details of the amounts involved can be an- nounced here yet, but that the provinces affected have indicated willingness to enter into agree- ments by which the Dominion will bear a part of their A. R. P. ex- peuditures. Dr. Manion said the assistance 1, being worked out on a per capltn basis, with the numbers of pie in the areas considered mic to enemy attacks taken into account. These areas are in the Mari- Activities time Provinces, Quebec and Bri- tish Columbia. Apart from this financial assist- ance, the Dominion will continue to provide A. R. P. eqlllPmfim ‘l! in the past, with fire-fightin and other supplies made availabe as rapidly as possible in areas of greater risk, Dr. Manion Mild. mllowlng the outbreak of war with Japan, large supplies of fire- fighting e uisment, oaued by the Province ntarto, were shipped m British Columbia by federal authorities. The Dominion has also assisted bv instructional work and the distribution of booklets, Dr. Manion said. The federal assistance will not relieve provinces and municipali- ties of responsibility for carrying a share of the cost. of A. R. P. work. War Situation Last Night (By Kirkc L. lisnpaon. Associated Press War Analyst) The British Admiralty revelation that 530 Axis submarines have been sunk or damaged by British and "some American" action since the outbreak of the war is a. startling figure, although its significance is not measurable without a time breakdown to show the current rate of slnklngg, Just why it was decided to break British dlonco on U-boat sinking! at this time is not indicated. That information has been closely guard- ed on both sides o! the Atlantic-and it was to the Atlantic-Mediter- ranean theatre tho First Lord, A. V. Alexander, referred. O O O O O O Ho excluded results of Russian antl-snbinarlno efforts and those of the French navy before tho fall of Franco. Presumably he also excluded flkures for the Pacific, Japan's U-boala do not figure in the European second-front problem except as they help pin in the Pacific American forces that otherwise could share in the submarine hunt in the Alluniic. What Alexander stressed was that Anglo-American second-front operations in Europe must depend upon “the degree of control we otter- clse at sea as well as in the air." l-Iis remarks were clearly designed in part to still public clamor in Britain for n premature second-front ai- tack, or at least to impress his hearers with the scope of the problem. O O O O O O That Mould not have required n. break in official silence as to the aggregate “actual" toll taken of Axis submarines, however. Some addi- tional reason must have dictated the annfluncement. Such figures have been withheld up to now in London and Wash- ington as a result of experience in the First Great War. The progressive demoralizaiion among Gen-nan U-boat crews in that war was a nuijor facior in the final German home-front collapse. They saw comrades put out increasingly never to be heard of again. There was no mention of the actions in which they died or were captured in British announce- ments. The gnawing effect of that upon the morale of Gcnnan under- sea personnel led to mutiny, 0 O a O l O Whether the progressive toll of U-bonis lost in action is sapplrig Nazi underseas personnel morale seriously is I. matte;- of pure conjec- ture. There cun be no question, however, that a. morale collapse on that limited sector of his home front could wreck Hitler today as it did the Kaiser in 1918. Speaker Discusses Economic Controls I Mr. Georqe Houszliairi of Talk at Dinner Meeting. "The war on the economic front involves issues just as vital and far-reaching iii their consequences to our way of life as did the war in the more spectacular and dramatic theatres of armed cou- fllct," declared Mr. George Hougli- am, Toronto, addressing a largo and representative group o! wholesalers, retailers, and other in- terested persons in The Char- lottetown Hotel last nigh-i M. 0 dinner meeting sponsored by the Charlottetown Board 0f ‘Trade. Mr, Hougham, who combines the functions of secretary of the Can- adian Retail Federation _ and the Retail Merchants’ Association of Canada, is in the Mai-limes mak- lug a tour on behalf of the War- time Prices and ‘rrade Board. President V. A. Alnsworth Pl‘!- glded at, last night's meeting. “This war on the economic front might conceivably continue after the guns were silenced because there would be problems culling for clear thinking and intelligent lggdershl ," Mr. Hougham added. Meauwhie it ‘was 5115i B! news‘ sgry that business should accept the discipline involved by QW- nomlc control as it was that Ill!’ rank and file of an army should accept discipline in the achieve- ment of a common objective, he ted. “fir: a number of occasions with- in the past few years. the speaker said, he mo stated m sroups 0i _ICoittluued c-n page 9. @614 5T‘ DeGaulle Says French In Revolt NDON_ Qcg g()_ (CD-Gen. cliiieles De Gaulla, head of the French notional committee in Iondon, in an address broadcast mm m; said the French nation is prov g to the world that our people are enilflked l" l lelml" against the tieasonablc lenders ol Vichy." De Gpullq spoke from Britain little more than an hour after Pierre Laval, chief of Government, broadcast an 8179811 for support of his PN-Qemm“ icles. ch w! wflltgvglsendemaud that skllled wflrkers e sent t0 Gfllllflnl? "T" smpeg once to its rightful place among nations at W!" Wllll llllim‘ ous Germany, insolent Italy and barbaric Japan." the General selfl- In a spirited exhortation. called for still greater resistance. His broadcast aPlWNnllY W" planned as a reply to Laval- resistance Toronto gives interesting Gov’t To Restrict Consumption of Alcoholic Liquor OTTAWA, Oct. 20 —(CP)-—-Steps to reduce the consumption of cohollc beverages have been agreed upon in consultations BmOIIg Dom- inion and Provincial Government officials and are to be announced before the end of this wreck, The Canadian Press was told today. While the exact extent of the lanued restrictions was not known, t was believed direct control will be exercised through reduction in the hours beverage rooms und liquor stores may remain open, and indirect control through reducing the output of breweries XIIIII pos- sibly wineries and regulating the release of spirits from bond. Wine reduction has already been curtalle through reduction ln tho amount of sugar available to all industrial users. This may bo rc- garded by Dominion nuiihorltlog as sufficient restriction on the Wino manufacturers. It ls expected the restrictive orders will be issued by the War- time Prices and Trade Board and the Liquor Control Boards of the "f- ' Provinces, one informant said, These orders may subsequently he sunnentod as a result of any sug- gssilong arising from study of the i umperance question by a Cabinet Committee under Mist-Gen. LiiFieche, Minister of National War Services. The restrictions now definitely planned have in view ec0nnmy of man ower as well as Temperance. Disllle employees will be auto- rnafioa y converted to war work Nov. 1 when these plants switch entirely to iihc production of ln- dustrial alcohol. 10,000-t0n Liberty Ship Is Torpedoed RDOTFII, Brazil, Oct. 20-(AP1-- Sinking of the IODOO-ton United Staten Liberty ship John Carter Rose was disclosed today with ur- rival here of 35 survivors ubmird the Argentine tzinkor Santa Cruz. TWO ENEMY PLANES DOWNED VALETITA, Malta. Oct. 20 —(CP) he —’1‘wo enemy bombers Wore (los- troyed in s, series of n. A.F iulcr- ceptions after dusk yesterday, it was announced today. Smooth Sailinq For All your Bukinq When 19530 C NADA you use MM L. R. cl L.__‘_,_fl§_. _ SKY GUY TYbical of the tough, capable men chosen to lirromo the uni-lens of the ( ari-iiliaii Army's first puriliroop unit is si-rgl. H. R. Ilowlby, oi’ Yar- ninuili. N, S. lllcn are training at Illlll-f. Go. Step Up Air Drive n Axis in Africa CAIRO, Oct. 20 -—(AP)—British and Auirriciiii 1i.anvs, 111 clay and uigtit tactful ).'.ll'illt‘l‘Sllll) against the A have sizuck heav-V blows ashore s00. um 0ft in a new stormed-up offensive, comniunques from‘ ilio R.A I". mid the U.S.A. F. _d ~ l tnriuy, . stups were sunk arid at lozist. iv others hi; Sunday night rctuy_ in those combined uuaclrs. in which the Allied Iorces brought into nrfiou the wfiole 111111.10 of their flying fleets, in- IHIIIOT-DDIIIDCIS and tor- s. two enemy merchantmen l by llL'l1V_V United States bzuulirrs iu an attack ou Toiiruk. Brttigsli torpedo pianos loft auotilcr sinking With hits ou her stern off id of Puutellaria. sh figlitcr-boriibeis cssel, a two-masied schooner, allauio and sinking s11‘ Llio enemy-livid Greek Isle of Crete. liouieunird bound from this nt- tzitur, the stunt: planes encountered a large formation of fighter-os- cotcd JU-Si: transport planes some of ttmu totrziijg gliders over the eastern Nicititorrziuean about 25 iullos southwest, of Guvdos, a small island off the south coast. of Crete. One cf tho juukers was (lowuccl, the 1t Al“. communique said. (The Gczmziiis are known in have born using Crete as a way station for supplying the Axis army in north Africa, both by son and nu‘ The point where the sky-trains Wflfe itici indicated that the Nazis were f‘ g men to EST/ill? llv T118110 and glider, ii device they have used before to avoid the perils of gen transport.) Says U. S. Govt. Freezing Press NEW YORK, Oct. 30 —(AP\ -- Dcnu Curl W. Ackerman of Col- umbia Uuivesity said toiiiszlit that ll(‘\‘.‘Sllll1lf‘l‘5 of the United States are being sulijcctorl to ll. “freezing tirocess" by the Government and la that the Justice Departments re- rout lawsuit P s is simn .5 liozici of ‘Columbia's Graduate School. of Jottunlisui mid fnrmr-r W-n- Coitcspmtdciit told ilio fourth .' . into a new mold." Tli iiute buuqticl, “under the m. gency, the Am- (‘P101111 way of life 1,; being D11)- fouudly chuugctl by law nurl dir- eciivrs" Willflll strike directly at a lif€0_D_1‘05$_ audlheullill, of_R.iuht.§s._ uutitiu 1t in a l. Already At Sea Commanders engaged iri friendly Rivalry to be first to meet Nazi Ti rpi tz. (By Alfred E. Wall, Assoc- iated Press Staff Writer) LONDON, Oct. ZI-(AP) —Two new 35,000-i0n battle- ships, the Anson and the Howe, are at sea with the fleet, the Admiralty dis- closed todny, and the An- son already has been in action with her high-zingie guns against German air- craft in the Arctic convoy route to Russia. if is this route that the German battleship 'l‘irpiiz occasionally threatens by venturing from her Nor- wegian berth, and it was understood that the com- manders of both the Anson and Howe are engaged in friendly rivalry lo see which first can engage this pride of the Germany navy. The disclosure that Britain has thus finally restored the ileci. to its original pre-war strength of l5 battleships and battle cruisers with completion oi the five Llffilit battle- ships of the King George V class came at a time when it is vital for the Allies to maintain their cou- voys and control the sea 1i’ they are to open a second front. A few hours earlier A. V. Alex- ander, First Lord of the Admiralty, mentioned both those phases when he announced that at least 530 Axis 5Ub111BJ‘lI1C$—-G0l‘m€il'l, Italian and Japanese~have been destroyed or damaged by British and American forces since the war began. Canadians In Crew The commanders of the new bat- tleships are Capt. H. R, G, Kiuahan of the Anson and Capt. C. H. L. Woodliouse of the Howe. There are Canadians and Newfoundlandera among the Ansonks crew. Woodhouse alreadv has s feather in his cap fr m on contact, with Urges That Every Hog Possible Be Marketed Soon, iilfwtu SAS-KATOON, Oct. 20 —(CP)— I-Iou. JG. Tuggarachalrman of the Bacon Board and Feeds Co-orclin- alor, said here that 1', is imper- ative that, every hog be marketed as soon as possible, speaking at. a. dinner meeting of 1'C“l01‘l21l bacon inspection officials . night, Mr. Tiiggnrt said that shipments t0 Britain had been stepped up. Between 100.000 and 110.000 hogs were being marketed a week at, the present time against 130,000 to 140,000 iii the some time iii 1941, liu siiirl. Mr. Tuggort said there are many pigs fit for marketing that are not. coming iii because the furiuers tire too busy with dr-ltiyed htirvesmig operations. He tL-kctt that lll(‘.s(‘ be vuurketcd within u xveok or two ns more hogs ure Il(‘\‘llf‘(‘l now than during the same period a year ago. - . South west Pacific Outlo ____, r GUELPH, Out... Oct. N ——(CPl—- iii Tltt- war outlook iii the southwest P.i<-;f;t' uow~is brighter than soctn- said. 0k Better ~—~*——-— ——i~—______-- ~~_ 1 F rmen now serving 1n the Com- monwealth were Australians. ha In addition the country was rd l)(i:r‘\ll)l(‘ 1i low months ngo but providing 9O per cent of the food Aikilfil. zius will not. be contcut uuti. titty ucliiovc llllllllilie victory, Sir William Glasgow, Australian High Couimlssioitvi- to Cltllllflfl. said in un address prepared for delivery totiiqhi, to the Women's Canadian Club. lwviewiug the general wnr pict- for the American expeditionary forces in Australia. Large supplies of foodstuffs were beiug supplied to rent Britain. " 1th regard to our confidence", he continued, "I may snv that the outlook in the snuthtivost Pacific Ls HlllCll brighter now ilinn ST. , ‘T (C? Cablc>~ Qlllfflly seemed uro, Sir Will um said the improvo- possible a few mouths ago, and this utrni in tho lust two yours was due l5 due not only to the help ihnl: Laval Renews Plea For Men To Aid Nazis n; lilel tum Associated Press Staff Writer VICHY, Oct. 20—(AP)—Pierr\ Laval reneucd his atlbcfll l0!‘ Frenchmen to go to work tor H11.- ler in a radio speech tonialit 111 which he announced an BZIYiQIIK-‘nll for a levy upon cacti far/story which will be obliged to furnish a certain number of workmen." _ The Vichv Chic! of State Bald this new levy was aimecd upon _b.V his government "out of aDDFPllEHSlOYl lest measures of constraint be aD- Dlicd to France." (Although Laval left open ma technical question of whether ho would order forced lnbor conscrip- tion. seasoned French observers in Mruo, Switzerland, considered his stiooch as preparation for conscrip- tion since it is not expected to vii-id the 150.000 volunteer workers de- manded by Hitler.) Laval told his listeners that hh government is “resolved not to tol- erate resistance" to his atlbfial fill" workers 2o Germany despite llioi!‘ “love of liberty and o1 indcpch- deuce." . "The government must be obeyed. ' h e said. "The highest interests of Franco demand that we undertake a p01- icy of entente with Germany," he said. "I am directing the policy ll! France in such a way that FTP-DUB shall not be the victim of a Ger- man victory." He added that such a victorv was inevitable. Nevertheless he said mt one boi in his smech: “The Germans hay suffered heavy losses.” Nild. Woman Is 115 Years Old JOHN'S NIFLII, Odl. U _ Mrs. Ellfll Carroll of nearby North River marked her 115th HHHIVCFSBTY 1°- day and serenely served notice Sh! intended to remain the British ETH- Elrcs oldest woman for some year! c0119. Still in mood health despite he‘! ears, Mrs, Carroll was ill-st 08 happy to have no fuss made over‘ this anniversary. lettlnil it slip 11v more-or-lesg unmarked whLe her country was 1t war. Hat: A tioucmwf is Moat: Nu-fRt-rtous ‘THAN 4n: High tide this morning at all and tonight, at l0. Sun sets this evening at 6 M ‘and rises tomorrow morning al 2A Pull moon Oct. Z1, 2.06 p.m. Btimmerside tide 18 minute; 14f‘ than Charlottetown. CAB FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden—I.cnv~ 9.05 am, 1.00 p.m., 4.45 p.m., 7.55 p.m. Leave (Yam: Tormeniine-JIMI a.m., 3.05 p.m., 6.45 p.m., 9.10 pim. SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 tn Doc. 27 inclusive) Leave Bordon 9.00 n.m., 6.45 p. Leave Tormcnilne 10.15 n.m. 8.0 to Britain's stout-haunted defence has bocn received from the United 9-m- iu th the ctcrmiuetl blockade of continent by tho Royal Navy, aid Item flic- United States, and the blunder of Hitler Russtu before he ‘und accounted for are we Biiaiii. know we ’I‘lie itisplring rcssicn r- Rtis-utus hurl rellcvcd he pf!“ sure on 0'11" i:.:u.., u breathing co of which Cnziadn cuomv. had lliTll qu.ck to take advantage wnr litdustry on n more ussistnnce both in mnu our: D FOR - we lll (Xllllllfllil firm fvtuulnt on, rather than pro virluir: more hurried and prmhtci on. Szr W l inm dealt iu more doiui with Australia's pnrt in the war. theatre of wnr and .u.t provided buck and dccsivcly defeated limited throat. m ronlizc that. 1hr Australian ihenlrs 9 ' f‘ must be treated neriul offeusivos of late 1940, Striios mid our nwu industrial and the military efforts but nlsn in many respects to nid ifiom Britain "But we-nre def likely to be, even if be snflsfirrl tmiil "We noulchof course. the vr-rv but - material to at. our ITInIIYP d oorsiop. wo {of wm- L; only part of a By far the majority of troops and accordingly." not P.E.I.-N.5. FERRY SERVICE Leave Wood Islands 10.00 p.m. an] iuiicly not sails- iu attacking fled with our present, position, nor 2'00 n m we have definitely stooped of the the Japanese advance. We will we have drivgn t e ye Caribou Noon and 4.00 n. m AIR SERVICE Charloliciown-Snmmenide- I Moncton [leave Charlottetown ‘J8 I-Il Lea like much 12-45 P-m-summe 3g‘, 7J0 ‘m; l,” Leave TA.» Moncion 1i a.m.: and 6-1‘ SUNIIAY SERVICE leave Charlottetown 12.45 ll have Moncion 4.15 p.m. . m. A