P.E.I. MAXIMQ or A MERE MAN the work of fear. By winning words to conquer will. m; hearts, and make persuasion do Over To Charlottetown Guardian, Two (Scull. Iorninj Guardian. Iouudod [I51 CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1942 p In Victor! )‘Z// m" The People's Pape (lovers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Amount the sons of men now we are known WM don be 1m to merit not their MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN 12 PAGES Annual Subscription Dollvorud, Q30 BI mu. r. l 1. 04.001 on other Provinces and u, o. a. os.oo TALIN SAYS GERMAN CASUALTIES s MILLION at Tank Divisions Pursue Rah-eating Nazi Troops Calls art-Reds‘ To Permit No Fresh Advance Russian Leader Refers to Second Front; Heavy Fighting Continues. island Total $5765 000 Prince Edward Island went "over the 0')’ at six o'clock last evening 1n Czuiadlvs Third Victory loan am; lxhre the final figures were ed the loan had been over- _~ JUCl. The grand total with ~ tiny to go in the campaign is _ out), figures released from all Loan Headquarters last n1‘ revealed. The lulmnlum objective for the province was $1,760.00) but now it is awed that the two-million mark gr well past their quotas. Kim's County. the dark horse at. the slnrt of the drive, streaked ham away out i.n front with its Remnants 0f Iiolnmefs Army Still Retreat Enemy NR7 104 Miles West 0f Shattered Alamein Line. objective well over-slbscrilzlod. ‘Iho total contributed to the loan in this . y worttho Con-union o Dagger which will be sent overseas tn tho Canad- ian Army. . Prince County also went “over the top" yesterday with o. total subscription of 46,960. Queen's County is t; mini. mum objective but loan officials are hopeful that it will also win one of e Commando Daggers gained by the other two counties. The t-oinl for Queen's was $246,150 last night. The total for Bummersids to date is $358,350 and for Charlotte- town 8601.900. By Edward Kennedy Annotated Press Staff Writer CAIRO, Nov. 6—(AP) — Three swift British tank divisions racing into western Egypt ignored thous- ands of surrendering Axis prisoners today in their relentless and an- mhilating pursuit. of the remnants of Marshal RommePs armored forces fleeing beyond Matruil, Thousands More Canucks Oversea Maj. W. W'. Reid of Ch’Town and Lieut. Cordon Darrach of East Royalty are included in group. Mel-din. F." r. wot-tampon, Commander of an Armored Divis- |"" llrc has just received largo reinforcements. Renting Events _o_ DrF-lftlvigall Chicken Supper and ‘~11 '. mounts-nay. NDVCIIIIJOI‘ 11:11. itllstt-rs Urchsstra. 11-1-41. d ‘fsunwr in Grape-lid 1-Iall. Satur- 1117.‘ NtnClllbfl‘ 7th from 5 to b. Pro- “9-5 Si. John's W. A. 11-6-21. Hlll-mw" ‘"111 31118.0, Vernon River .1 _._ Alundny. November 9th. Web- "11 S Orchestra. 11-6-21, n"l_l_llluil(llfl§ car bulk wheat e "gle-‘fl-li‘. F1‘ day, Saturday, Nov- n 1 51h. em, rm. Bring own wits Dlllon a Spillett. 11-5-31. “Red Cross Chicken supper $111118 Riva Hall, Wednesday, NOV: ‘hi1 11th. s P. M. 11-7-11 "Chicken supper in Mlllvlew £11111‘) November 11th. supper served - Proceeds war purposes 7 u "Dance, Pleasa t G ov Hall, wit“): Novembiii- 10thr. I?“ 7H1 . "i-‘hicken Supper Long River Nlllllllbcr ma. Serving o u. 7 m’ "Stauchel W. I. hot chicken sup- dag» mégbeéorse Dixon's. Wednes- Thursday‘ r 11th. lf riff. "Burma live and dressed chlck- m m‘ as mgvxlkglgervnwednegag. lacy- o ces. . . oy. “llllter River. 9-26-S-M-tf. H"Dcncs at Covchcad Community s... “.3;“’il..“°é°.“.‘."°'$’il‘. s"; “ ~ r . es .ra “mili- Lunches sold. 11-7-11 “Llveuock U Bswcllilun Qiimblillfi hoes at Charlottetown ml}! FY00 Monday till Saturday ship-ll“? until further notice. “m ‘F? Nsularly every Tuesday W1 day with special shipments ,,,,|,; “gr: when carlcads accum- knrifiér ucklng service for busy new B m“ h” 111111181111 by calling ma," 1457 or ‘I38 daytime, 17 M,” 81-- Give couple of dayo 1 5, - . ves ar- ‘l Board. 11.744 104 miles west of the broken Ala- mein line. Fast moving British infantry took charge of these German and Italian foot soidicrs whose up- raised hands and stunned expres- sions told their own story of victorious British advance. By now the prisoner count had exceeded 13,000, "a conservative estimate". in the words of authori- tative sources. Incomplete figures also showed that the 8th A:my had captured or wrecked a mini- mum of 330 enemy tanks. In the latest bag of 79 enemy tanks, 20 were German and b9 Italian. Although Lin-Gen. Bernard L; Montgomery's omnmuniqus said only that "our armored forces lnje in contact with the enemy rear guards well west of El Dabs." Axis communiques acknowledged fight- ing both at Fuka and Matrulmth e All‘ EAST cauaman PORT, Mat-ruh ls 104 miles frrm Nov. 6 — (UP) — liuneinog tnruugu former battle cauldron of El Ala here 0n Uvllteil‘ y/ayto we Warsaw: mein; Fuka is s2 miller from m 5-1118 0X00 knoll an ' JR R les om g3;- glgggeecor 131:; P-xglvlmge-umc iifiiifii rrt “$3 3111131. can r 011M anu every Alued nation sailed from this 5131,32,, ”f,',',‘§"§§,,fi',‘§°”§}°“1‘,,,1,'§§f w“ w“ in ‘he bmcme“ °t ‘l’ bms‘ ment at all three laces ‘m’ “umnim ‘“°“““B- “We 1mm All lae- 1hr D l la m in 0f those thousands 1n Britain m ‘at? stamh n me hilh “momma Lough sec r 0n _ cons , w ere at gt wit“ mm “m, mum “shun: road has been made into a s rec “m, we“. we“. “w” under "m. of destruction and death for he the g1r5,q_w_A_c_ company eve,- ileeinn motor convoys and nanzrrs m move “om my; Donumun over. by the cfonstant bombardment of 5eg5_ Cqmmanqeq by can.“ 1:13am, Allied aircraft and ~eneated labs Riley o1 Winnipeg, ulev lent noveily frcm mobile land forces. to a scene that here is s; 01d as the An Admlraty communique fur- war itself. nished additional evidence of the oulels swelling the predominantly Chaos created rmenlr the enemy's army movement were a group of sunply shins by Allied aircraft and army nurses. members of the RC. submarines. Alli. 19111101119519!!! 101' U19 UN!" It reported the destruction of six 3am‘ n"? “Qnwfs 1n 15mm! 5nd l more enemy vessels and the darn- figlgxlhfia-rwilubunch t°1 3W5‘ can‘ aging of ‘two others by B-"itlsn uvy s o-Lueu enants, l ' Wm‘ ma“, Mme 5mm)“ ma“ submar nes in the Mediterranean. seas still an admiralty secret, these brand-new irraauates from Cal.- adian trasnlng schools and lighting snipe were 100mm: IOYWBIG to their p. "it's 801113 to be great,” said Keith Beecher of MOIIuGIII, "to pe passengers on a snip uletead o1 tnc clewflnut tms exultarlon was short.- lived. A ship's omcer cams in his cabin and said ho was taxing one of the watches. lDl-heffl With him were A. M. llonlinion Loan Total $821,965,550 OFPAWA, Nov. 6- (CP) -Vic- toe-y Loan headquarters announc- %°‘.....‘°‘“““%n§““‘.“” l"..‘.“fn°‘°‘é °‘ Wright, also of Montreal. W. J. "5 l"! BY - w in‘ bCSIAEI. or riamutoil, unm, and J. "diam had invested 84321-955559 m W. Young o: Saskatoon, yen“; bonds of the Third Victory Loan. gave the proper nautical dressing w The iota-l 01 605i! 811119011 “W! the occasion, sporting a. wcll-de- so far recorded is thus only 1.261 veloped beard. aso short of the final cam tolal cl _Henuing the nursing sisters was B. the last loan, exclusive of conver- Bllllcy c. Montreal and also in blue, slcns. and indicates that the pra- thcughadliferent color, was O€OI£e sent issue, with today's and to- COMKA cf Windsor, Om... leader o1 morrow’; receipts to come. will the tire ilKhWIs for Britain. exceed the cash total of the Second Victory loan. Holds D. I‘. H. Most potablo R.C.A.I'. Ion aboard was PO. Larry of Queboc who holds tho D.F.M. for darin ln . He coked like a flier tor the ' "d wn trol" cast. Short, mxty an cocQLhe was happy to be going . aisle. as: - ,—,~=,,-»- mind saying so. He unused 1f h" - n an égugf; b‘.ii‘i.““éh"°'l.“ii'.‘.iiii..‘i“ltilii "we 1* "- --*1-~="-*1~1v “Fm l“; °' roportoil cosmic. "Anyway/Wu sold, "over than "'l“"" w, m, f m,‘ MIAMI Flo. Nov. 0-(AP)—'I'bo moygfi mgr’- first tropical disturbance of tho qr; p, w; m“ w“ My b. season roared up out of the West. t and more flu] tt t " g Indies today, Stfillhl tOWBPG U10 they 53y 1 n..‘.‘..i‘.1‘.it‘$,§i’,°u.°'fi‘,--” n northern coast of Cuba, including Another Air Force Officer was Havana with its crowded P0111111!- FL-Lt. Art Ccles of Vancouver, tlon of more 100,000. Then Dominion Ski Chain in 1M0. who were no early reports of dalnogo. wonhiotitle at! LI-Iiss - ...._.. ti: All! ALLIED HEADQUARTERS the downhill oprin 9 llllm- Australia, Nov. 7 -(Soiurdoy However. the movement was dom- ._(01I)_.A 5mg gm; |. y". War Sitsiation Last Night ' (By Klrko L. Shnpoou, Associated Press War Analyst) British battle odvlcoo from Egypt continue to unfold an expanding victory pattern, achieved and in the makinl. of staggering pfppqfllgng and possibilities. It boo kcytd official comment in lnnduu to a new high in optimism, American , ' , led by [s ,, , caution in appraising reports from the African front, Premier Stalin said in substance that, helpful as an indicated Axis debacle in North Africa might be in easing pressure on hard-pressed Soviet armies, if. did not constitute on Allied mend-front. ion of maJcr scope. Il |_ 1 a o o o o o o That Russian view ls debatable. Much depends on the success of the British effort to encircle and destroy Nazi cohorts before they can escape from the Egyptian trap into Libya; even more could hinge upon other Allied offensive move; strongly suggested in tho African-Med- iterranean theatre. Axis advices insist onew that a mighty sea-all- Allied armada is mobilized at Gibraltar, including ‘ ' an trcopships. It may be pre- paring to widen the African attack or even to threaten Italy with in- vasion. O C l I U U Home obviously h running very high in both London and Cairo that a. blow lo being dcolt to Italian morale in the field and on the m’ home front that could start unravelling the Alxls at its Fascist-Nazi seam. Official Cairo report; of Italian foot troops in Egypt found abandoned in the desert while their German "allies" seized all avail- abh . . . . . I . due .....tom tensify Italian dislike and distrust of their Nazi partners. There ls evidence in both German and Italian official accounts that the exigencies of his perilous retreat have forced Rommel to sccrlflcc some slow-moving elements of his command. That would include Ital- . lsn or other infantry units deployed on the south flank of his shattered E1 Alalnein defence front, O O I O O I P1111011!!! forcaocllorouaccdllos .h.i..,cu_1raas_ the Axio coastal retreat and hem n. main iii-en a in the rear 1.- gainst the sea. The Nazi commander might be forced u. naluslilcn =11 available motorized equiplnrnt a» hasten nu westward trek dcwc the coastal road before the trap was closed up“ 111111- That African reverses are enzendvrlnr wrcethlcs llke panic In Rome is reported and not Improbable. Every British propaganda dcvlcs l. harms,“ w mgemlgy n, ‘m; n, l; imaginable that the Axis collabor- ationlst regime m Vichy l. n» n. a mu of nu: ncclc- The 1111"- e1 both situations. as well as the effect cf a Fiwlnl Am"! 1'10""! l" Africa 0n Turkish policy and on the Russian Inllltar! ‘Will-t 8P0 M! yet predictable. Baltic Is Hot Spot For Nazi Shipping i British Planes and Soviet Submarines appear To be Troubling Germans. _sra<>N.-.s:a isé$’.".;%§““i§l Japs Turned ' 1 llown llltler s Naval Appeal Baltic. so dangaous for German stripping that vesses now are be- British Occupation 0f Madagascar Is mg sent in convoy. There lo s0 much gestlou in both German and Finnish ports that Nazi crews are being forced to act as steve- dores-not. only for their own am but for any others that neop hep in loading or unloading. The latest British raids have been concenlLated on the cradles of Axis sulmarines. Flensburg, German Baltic port raided in daylight by low-level Mosquito aircraft Oct. 2'1, f an im rtant submurine-build- ‘l iilg yard. é; are Kleé, Wilslmlyrhigpé}; Qompleted‘ m" “d “mmm” e‘ “ ° mun-on, Nov. 6—-(AP)—Brit- have been blitzed with bombs and torpedoes by bomber command. Coastal command has added to the havoc with its mlnelaylug cp- e".ations. Sohhave RUSSIBIISaIlJITISF- inc-s. Thoug a convoy sy m as . been instituted, German losses have l" l "ll-bl 1W‘ l" 141° All-led m!“ 003:2?“ h“? m ma‘ 5,31%‘ W Int-fulfills‘ for mastery of Africa and Axis ' erry ocrv ces 5°“- bnn interrupt“ "m, m4 “w, “Even as the final surrender of by mines. Herr Kaufman's appoint- 15111141’! V101"! “will! W" 5°’ m» -- chm e We w» icsnl..z".ss'..rzl:is.. " m“ "h" “mitgyg “gmfifi kara disclosed that Hitler 1:. des- shipplng. The ‘ ‘Wumm, o; ration over his crumb _ all Norwelion fishing vessels, u- 111 "W11 Mflvfl- 111d swell“ res tivs of loadin capacity, con- l0 "° mu" 5 “W” firiilfzcd the sign. appearance of °'" “Mug”! l °" mm!‘ Soviet submarines in the Baltic '°“ u u‘ 5m "i" °“- was heralded dramatically by the sink g of the Gormon troop-laden fsgyn, Dsutschlond. -v iah occupation of Madagascar, be- iast May and resumed in September to thwart its use as a possible U-bcat base ior Indian Ocean raids, was completed today Tho disclosure, comm from the Japanese as it did in icated no ouch attempt wo be made by lo boil Hitior out of bio Af- rican difficulties. Moreover, the Japanese in Tur- key said ‘llokyo had flatly turned down the appeal on the ground that Japanese naval forces had been s10 depleted and sgll so urgent engaged U ates forces ln t a Pac ic that- they could not be spared to divert Allied lsetrcngtb from the Esyptian quar- rs. Vichy acknowledged the capltu- two courses have boon Mt in xauffmmz- 1. To fo the dockero to turn ships oroun quicker. A art from the German sailor; who ave been conscripted to help dockers at lhs Baltic ports non-German sailors arc being worked at full stmtoh. 2. 1b compel shipyards outside Germany to produce-more dlips by hook or by crook-German yards are all busy building U-boats. In inated by army msmrclnfordlmfllll in; between Allied and Jop- France. Bel um Denmark, Nor- 1mm h, m 1 d M . igggflgaqégifldfkmvmzuaaiggg; §nsoo ground troops oi Olvl, in Icy and Hcslsn . German pressure 3,“ Pomwanm g’ ‘,‘,’,‘_,_,,,,§§,, 90min; m“; ‘n u '7 mmuv "m" w "m" ‘"7"- the Island command to conducttho Mulmnm “illllmggd w ‘ south of the I“ ooooiol booo The situation may not yet be nqwmm. on l ml1l\yy mam,“ of Buns, the led command anally critical for Germany. but the b," wiuwut m“, a mm ~11“ Th,” nwmhy. wmim- ‘m. sold today. Tho Japanese, who . .11‘. daily is making it more mp5,,“ Mflgy" Wm, 5mm, happy warriors and exultant about M" hm who! m! more "HWI- _ The significance of Pawns m- t ng overseas. Im-Ool no. Rob- hi" hell-WI! "M! N" 611111- T" t" °l "w "c191 BH- oiructiono could be Judged in relo- Esau of Wlnnipol. 0.0. of mo c1 lrcm ihelr lmh on rm Ircln Bunker-qua to 1ft. srl- tian w the British report that mm unit, said, "It's poetic going, Mcresby, wore reported rulsi- m‘!!! lflll $01k 050m "I 5609- l than 1.000 French and Colonial just like a miraculous tonic on tho in: ntronrlv. on 1m rdam by flyino fcrt- troom‘ had deserted ovsr u. the mclutiredwltlrj-lrmycal-lof oout- ——--i--_ mm and what may did to the Brit side in the loot few dlyo .1 m»: work. urn asp nowm mljtcncéglr-iwllarlc ‘the 2511111113 um». -——-— . . yin: ._._._..___ '~"-~' "r1 "- "e-"r ......‘€lh.;“.iflz..il.f.~ si°§2..-, "assassin. s... .... .. "W ““’___°'" WW" n1 d-in-command, . w. Pro-Fl so 1, ' ' ' . t 1m . tonco, __ _ W. flied. t‘?! Chorlotietownitlbitljught wcightiucidoto "lnldslflmg 3H1 :1 News??? the will: uliorcotalii of iron grlelfiillligrtcdmgllennliilliiuti: the some thins. 1d pounds. and underweight be German No and Afr llbrce which for is year is approximately o, . 000 tons Amount in 1938 was 9.572.- i up to 1o ds during theil-‘t w: ‘palatal o intensive physical aci- 29- -o former school tsodlsr, be cved in (Con u on pogo l1, Giff)“ l" "Th! Stop Allied convoys " pogo 1170211)“ 0.471.000 tons. 2nd In Command MAJOR W. W. REID, 0f Charlottetown, formerly of the P.E.I. Highlanders, now second in command of the Princess Louise Fusiliers, whose safe arrival in Great Britain was announced last. evenin, M101‘ Reid is a son of Dr. A. B. Re d of Charlottetown. i4 Witnesses Testify lit Gallant Inquest Fourteen witnesses gave evidence in the inquest into the death of Amos Gallant 56-year-old Oyster Bed Bridge farmer. as the hearing continued before Coroner Dr. I J. Yen in the City Polce Couzt Room last. night. The inquiry was further adjourned until Monday night when the Jury requested that two eyewitnesses. who did not testify last night, be summoned. The late Mr. Gallant died Thurs- day afternoon n few minutes after he was badly beaten in a fight in the back yard of the Richmond House in Charlottetown. Frank Knockwood, 29-year-old Indian was anested at Scotchfort a couple of hours after the fight. He was 101‘- mally charged with murder in the City Police Court yesterday morn- ing and rcmanded until Friday, November 15. Those who testified last night were: Dr. JD. MacGuigan, Mrs. Lottie hogan, Mrs. Helen Dunn Arthur Ramsay, Patrick J. Gallant, Daniel Gallant, David Knockwood, Richard Quiz-m, George Peterson, Sgt. Allan Mclnnis, Constable Sterne Webster, Constable W. G Poole, Constable Robert Dalzlel, and Constable Peter Walsh. Evidence disclosed that there was a Mr. F011 and a Mr. Ax- worthy in the vard at the tlme of the fight. When all the witnesses were examined last night, the Jury said they would like to hear the evidence of these two men before arriving at n verdict. This request was granted and the inquest 11'1- joumed untl 8 pm. Monday. Mr Byron Brown was foreman of the Jury. DB. J. D. MacGUIGAN Dr. J.D. MacGulgan testified that he performed an autopsy on the bodv of the deceased. He gave the findings of the autopsy. There were several lacerations on the face and the nose was broken, it was diseased. There was r10 evidence of fracture of bones of the skull witness said. "Dislocation of the skull from the spinal column on the first ver- tebzae was the cause of death" in m; opinion of the witness. This would be caused by the action of MOSCOW, Nov. ‘l -—(Saturday)- (APJ-Premier Joseph Stalin de- clared in an order of the day that the “Red Army has put nu‘, action more than 8.000.000 enemy flfflilcrs and men" during the Ger. man-Russian war. "The Red Anny". he added on the 25th anniversary of "he sovzet Union, "is carrying the full weight of the war against Hitlerite Ger- many, and its accomplices. , '33’ its self-sacrificing struggle 1t has won the love and respect of all freedom-loving peoples o1 me world." Stalin added that the Germans undoubtedly would hurl thtrnsclvc» into new adventures. but the forces of the enemy already have Scent "blunted and stretched to the m . P. The Nazi Army is "considerably weaker than in the summer and autumn of i941." he pointed out in 11181112 the Scviegpeople "not; to ailgxw" the enemy to advance fax- 1. iocond Front lhfller in the dB-y Premier Stalin assured the Russians that the Al- 1195 W°Wd Open a. second front against Germany in EUIODg and q... cllucd confidently may, we Ame. would win the war. He Spoke Only m Moscow mem- bers of the Communist Party and other special organization; m g secret meeting place. The Germans, he said. had been able to use 240 divisions - "more than 7.000.000 men" _ because Q1 the absence of a second irunl. and, thus were able to penetrate 300 1111185 deeper mm Russia, H6 Blwrefied confidence that the Albee ‘woner or later" would. 1n- vade Western‘ Europe for their own 800d, He reviewed developments of relations between Russia, Great‘. Britain and the United States in a lrifllldly wne in the speech that hlillllghbed celebrations throughout the land on the eve of the 25th an- railirglrsaxy of the communist revol- The German dream of conquest 91111151011111! the fall of Stalingrad by $801.. 25. Saratov by Aug. 9, Baku by Sept. 29 and Moscow this fall has failed. the Russian Commander- in-chlef asserted. Meanwhile the Russians an. ' nounced that repeated assaults by large forces of German tanks. fa-ntry and planes upon a factory district in Stalingrad have been thrown back with heavy losses for the Germans. They indicated they are holding firm 1n the Nalchik and Tuapse areas of the Caucasus. The Soviet Friday night com- munique reported that the Ger- mans were thrown back to their or- iginal positions in the fierce fighting for the Stalingrad factory area Ful- ther. the Soviets said, the Nazis lost about 1.000 men killed, 11 tanks, 20 trucks, and a large number ol blockhouses thq-e, In the first mention in weeks of action of the Kallnin front, north- west of Moscow. the Russians said the Germans threw a battalion mu. a vain attempt to capture a height of tactical importance. Limit Taxis To 2,000 Miles In Each Month AWA. Nov. 6-(6?) —Gaso- OT!‘ force 0n the skull or on the neck. 11m restrictions for taxis, liming 11; might be caused by blows or from a fall. There was a wound on the centre of the fore-head, he described this and explained its extent. There was also another over the left eye; a third wound was over the bridge of the nose. new arrangement, when sufficient Under the left eyeJd W8; a bruise coupons have been issued for 2, .00 Ho saw the body about 10 or 15 miles of travel no further coupons will be issued until the following ed \' another doctor. The blow on month. The number of coupons the vorehead could be caused by a alloted to each car used as a taxi sharp or blunt instrument or a will be dependent on the sine of the object. In answer to cor. e said, certain boots It was indicated that the order, cculd be called blunt instruments. issued by Transit Controller G.S. Gray in co-operation with Oil "on- troller Ootlrellc. will reduce taxi IBSlTlTiE minutes after death was pronounc- fall on a sha the Coroner. George Peterson George Peterson testified that he lived at 1m Richmond, a boarding taxis to about cc miles a and rooming house and stapling. 1-19 was the proprietor ning. The dccease’ was their travel to 2,000 miles a munch, were announced tcday by the Mu- nitions De rmleri. Previous y taxis have been able to obtain all the gasoline ration coupons they required. Undert-hc travel by about one-half. The ILOOO-mlle limit My. Mr. Gra him. After that Gallant went to o voluntary 10111118 86191119- get his horse shod. Shortlv after t_hl‘ee o'clock he returned andlvit- (Continual an page 11. Col. I-‘our Tho ‘rrsnsit BULLETIN CAIRO, Nov. 7—(Saturday) —(AP)—Pur§uing British mo- bile forces have overtaken some of the remnants of Marshal Erwin RomrnePs African Corps in the Matruh region of West- ern Egypt, "and are steadily chopping them to pieces,’ flront dispatcher said early w- ay. LONDON, Nov. ‘l-(Satur- dayj-(AIU-A German radio broadcast early today assert- ed that. the British battleship Rodney. one of s large num- ber of British warships said to b0 manoeuvring mysteriously around Gibraltar, and o large convoy of freighter-s, steamed away from the British base yesterday. The convoy, the radio said, headed inf-o the Mediterran- Olli- War—25 Years Today (By Canadian Press) NOV. 7 INT-Canadians consoli- ggffg sew ggsitioirsm 1.11m Passcnien. ea mma lain. British force inllfialellstlilgndlaeg: ured one. 50 miles southeast on Jerusa em. French successfully at< tacked German lines at Bchonholz upper Alsace. NOV. B. 1917 — Austro-Germa armv crossed the Livenza River an outflarlked the Italian rearguard. Gen. Armando Dlaz replaced Gen. Liu i Cadorna as commander of the Itclan armies. Permanent inter- alhcd military commission formed. WON'T TAKE TIRES CAPE TOWN _ (C?) — Drastic legislation will be introduced for the conservation 01 rubber, con- trcller officials stated. The gov- ernment. however. will no: com- mandeer tires. llouw You HAVE ‘fo KEEP AN Esirmo Dot. m fir. ICEBOQX" said orrarlgesnents are but had not being ma e to pool taxi faciltss been home at the time of the hap- in larger centres. 5o 8B t0 "*5 '1‘! hi; "dead" mileage. Long trips to r 2k rother-ln-law. He had dinner with 11p customers would be avoided by S tlono "films... in me M.._ (Cditlnuil on Ill’! n. 5| n. High tide this morning at 11.2!’ and tonight at, 11.20. Sun sets this afternoon at 5.01 #141: rises tomorrow morning at ‘New moon Nov. 5, 11.10 om. CAB FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden-Leave 5.05 a. 11:0 asn. 2.00 pan. 4.30 p.111. 7. Q. .. Leave Capo Tormentlne — 10.30 _ a.m. 1.15 p.111. 3.05 p.m., 5.45 pm. 5.15 p.111. SUNDAY SERVICE iMav 3 to Dec. 2'1 inclusive) boavo Borden 9.00 o.m.. 5.45 u. Leave Tormenilno 10.15 o.m. B. u-m. P.E.I.-_N.S. FERRY SERVICE Leave Wood Islands 10.00 am. on! 2.00 u. m. Leave Caribou Noon old CO0 n. Il- osnvrcs Dilltirycsémsulvnavl 3 .5 mervido- e-"~"'s::...':' u". Charlottetown 8.80 o. In. mun’, us. 4J0 p. In. A vc Charlottetown 1 p. us 5,45 p. 111.. 7.05 p. m.