THE WESTERN GUARDIAN "Toasts; Mm min Pond. cl Church Street-Phone i» I sullmanslua end PBINUI couurlt N... Subscriptions. Advertising phould he left Masai»... . """,-17 may be bought daily It my of the Iollowin m Gm‘ m" Summer-side. ‘ "not" m Bookstore. Water Street. Gouriiee Drugstore. Water Street, Toronto y“ Bgktfy. Water Street. Man Geudet. 6'1 Grenville sir-gist. Th, Guardian will be delivered to any home in Summeretde by ‘ miter Bo» at 4c Del’ Ill)‘ III 100 Del‘ Week. Phone 289 for an; gang“ m. n" you; order to the boy responsible (or deliveries on you: route. ' relervrd for new: of L p"; udvertielng of I m] “m,” inserted at I Taylor Dru: Co., Kensington. 1"" “WT. “Rand, puyuble in —0u'r AGAIN The mall ' , ll — y friends ma‘; “"' of Mr. ‘Inlmaage Montgomery wnl -—- b0 Pleased lo learn that he l5 able y, _t0beouta.ndbt '- aa. 'dmlyl\‘<ibiiilibltiéaxliata 8' ‘um-l- Ml- Monlsomerv is now w‘ B CHILI-Biki-11-{5-18-20-22-26-29. “my l°°°vel¢¢ —$- . ___ Cl I ken and IMWL —YOU ARE INVITED i0 S00 m: "Zyfizslztutllllccsftgualifled Grari- mechalllcfll Poultry Plucker operat- . P J and c Kennedy, Kensing-J"! at Canada Packers Limited. < ' 1,.514-11.15-1pt, Kvllslllkwn. L-793-11-z0-c1. l; - 17R POULTRY mech- —BUY quality roofin and I fitfacktld and properly sheaf-Illa: paper at Bruce's. g gesseti lit Clillildll Packers Limlted,| L-75l-1l-l9-2L nmnnyn. L-vsa-il-zo-cl‘ _YOUR sU——-IT d“ __-- a ss or coat _J_ an Tnyyy)“ Qptomgtpjsg’ will take on new llfe after going cplriattt-ztlllll, trill be at 111s through our odorless dry cleaning hlleltcn Oificc tilts Saturday, Nov- Process. Prompt‘ service, Mall n1‘ ‘mm. 22ml L-75B-l1-19-2Lfl7h0n6 156, M1115 Dry CIeaners ..i_ and Clothiers, Water Street. enamel. muresco, Summerside. L-642.11-14-21_ _BUY pztiut, mmznlc nntl ' l foil houseclean-| M. m; sllpphcs at Brace s. l —-LADIES BOWLING— The A,—. 101151414941 glenis wives who bowl every M011- ----- ay at the Capitol Alley 1-1 - -S(‘il00I. SPORTS Bedeqlle lng excellent fun and kite? coax. Petition Ls displayed in the games. i . -su1\lsr:1" ours in all shades at l mtlng rink Friday night, Nov. i1. All schools wishing free after- This week the Hudsons defeated coon skating this tylnter are re- Spitfires winning all three games quested to take Ila-l in sports. wth a score of 179 pins. The Hur. L-77a-1l-19-3\ rlcanes defeated the Wellingto-ls ——-—— in two games to o ‘th '- _r01t RP‘ ‘T. apartment. bonrd- of 101 pins. Mrs. flecqgmfilfitisc$glg in; or (l\\t‘l.1l1g house. Sltuatled on yugn angle (228) Mun Swvtns’ three paved strccts Spring, Ftzrov high "wee (533) foundry; east ofuArmolglfl’ P553013?‘ within a Wllli“ .l."°“' ° " --MONTHLY MEETIN _ ice. Tallln Hull. I-lllc Station, Taxi regular monthly meeting‘; of Eztltlt. "Jltllltll hundred yards frcm children-s Md society of Pym“? p, _ thcatrc. railroad.) county was new n, n“, Town “an ‘ll contains four double and on Tuesday evening‘ me Pres,d0nt_ Dr. J. A. MacPhee. presided. l‘ho agent and truant officer. Joseph A. fireplace. new range. bathroom. electric Gnnnnt bated tn . ~ . wlll- A "P m- “mh Shade “Pd no truanscy, but niriafifsfiiaf them- tl. ootu for garden. Flr- b“ of new {amines had moved m“, alshtd Eflll- l<'ll‘- Wt “mild ""5" the town lately. one family 1"lll‘l llnlttu; uliftlrlli-llcd. Write Brace pa“ e_ P1 c 1h .. ilcliail k (Ill. Ltd, Summcrslde. ehiltkjsen 01f nsfhooliugltzk wliad‘ “Ills? I-"747'u"19'l1 moved in and he found one of ale _ W8 h C Ch h l . _ -ss.ll. sunr 1N slslml: HAR- p“; $5.1, cfaic f? Jgfliifiifol fi. 00R ~ A lll“"»’-‘ 5PM W95 5m" ‘W commodate any more. 1t is utl.»:tl-‘ THQSUMM AND Mrs, “Pent the week-end at Mt. Stewart- “'"‘“5“m""! l" "W development X211 her father, Mr. Edwin Mam? EQY, ‘ C. \ lfisutlllnlft ALL Lil? RALPH MUTTART Summer-side BORDEN 3410b Tocmbs of Borden ERSIDE IN CE COUNTY C PR z {Prince County ‘To have new Industry During the summer months de- Wlflnments have been made at East Bldeford in bringing a new indus- l"? in“ being in that section of WEIR’??? Jolqllgilnswrbleglrllsrii like“; w conxnmunlfy. w that’ l'- Gwraa Miller, B.Sc.. in - ing and Metallurgy, and lflpfbglllilxé- 111g the firm of 11y M_ gonna“ o’ Jforonto. (Mr. Connell is Deputy IMetal Controller of Canada) ha; [Just returned to Toronto after svendlnz some months in East Bide. ford looking into this new indiu- |try and organizing the pfgllminary of the industry. The Peat bog from which this Private Elmer Robel-ig a menh new industry is to be developed ggnlllnglg Corp is letft r ay morn ng 1 - where in Canada. or sewce else Mrs. William ozon nndl son Keith Private Ausin Maclnnls who ilflslgun y been Spend,“ H l - v lcs next summer, _ here 1e“ one Fnfdaeyvgoalrgtsiglcfilg machinery to process the deposit. unit at Halifax. Mrs. Norman Oat-way visited her-i "l B-Tdell. were visitors to Char. lottctown 0:1 Saturday. Friends of Mr, of Borden regret ill a . ~ Soggskllgub gléalnobc that he will out the moss and piling it fOI‘ dry- Walter Farmer to learn of his son Roland at the Provincial San- aillrllllll feCefll-ly returning home on Saturday. Herring of Borden who Congratulations to M155 Dorls ber of 62 Canadian Army Basiclcwllarises about 600 acres and is BOFden on, Sllllslsd on land owned by G.Sl1el- wn Shara. Russell a. Ellis and .1. 31155911 Mllrlilly about three quart- ers of a. mile off the highway at East Bideford School and some distance in from the shore, The “ind 0!‘ 50E has been acquit"- ed by the Toronto company and fol the past two months about thirty flve men have been engaged cwtinlz Ill!- It is the intention of the Com- Plllly t0 commence operations 1)] setting up I Mr. Miller examined [he dew,“ lduring the early summer and re. ported his findings to the Govern- Iment. The Federal Government rs. port that the areavat East B‘defcrd is the best deposit in Prince Etltvard Island. The moss is of excellent fillflUty and has a depth of from led her seven to thirty feet and if Mr. Mill- class i:l the Music Debartnlent title“ findings p"°"° “"9" Wm ‘KM’ St MfllYs Academy. Summerside. for the mznth of October. Mrs daughter Dorothy ct Bo den were‘ Thomas MacTavlsh and vlsltcrs to Charlottetown on Sot- urday. Sympathy of fiends in Borden is extended lo Mrs William Luddlnfllou on the death c-f hsr E. boiller Mr. which Mass On Noven“ M Graham, $50k l) at Wakllam “l1. The rezulal‘ w -. v nuctlcn party the Borden Women's Institutel wfls held at the tcwn hal an , a daily output which should last for from 25 to 30 years and give em- lllovment dill-in; the slimmer for Tsome two hundred and fiftn mm, The pYat moss is used extensively in horticulture and also for insulat- lllg Wills. etc. and an entirely new _and valuable discovery "as been made in which the moss ls used in the orcccsslnv of magnesium ore which classifies it as an essential material in the manufacture of ma- ;t<.=rl:-ls of war. l Before the war Germany. Holi- flnd 8nd Sweden were the principal ynroducers of neat moss. but now scienflsis on this side of the A‘.- l~ul‘" are looking for sources of ll: Lorna 11 Alzlclfnrlane as he was swni nnweven m“: the prnhnnn Truly-SM“. evening wnh n“. “Wes smpnvn retttllu on tli1(‘ of the rocks at the Miss Rnmsn. is [nun cue 9nd or l‘.1f‘_i'l\\l1 wharf. A seal had mnnen Tneié nave gneen goings Pf" W" lll W‘ ll~'ll'b°““ h‘ “We cases of delinquency lately which illsalld hid lvcu rfltlflflfd llllmm“ have been dealt with by the Juv~n- lrlz the fisil"l"lll."ll's_ smelt nets. Mr. “e Conn” In me ca” o, a lnmny on Vffl-"f-‘l’ (“ll”- l‘l-Yl"h°"59'k°°“'r Myrtle Street, Mr, Gallant reported to ll tlv" WITH-W "f! SW5 P" that twn children had been ntéc 1d filtlllfll-"Ill lull fl billlllll‘ °l 5-59 in S.. Vincent's orphanage lzlrl lillllt‘ Klllllll e5 two had been placed in ironies in —" the country-S IEWEDDING 01' INTEREST TO 5 l) l-‘IULNUS — Tile folkln-l _ _ n nnnlnn.‘ “on, me Mcnc, lN(r-—Aiv the regular monthly meet- ‘ n1 n0 n1 “Wm-est ,0 ls- mg of the Home ano School Asso- n- n nuns: Bn-mnq CllitlOll oi henslngton on ‘fnulsuay Mrs. Fred Csocrne of btunlllcrstae ; l I . l ' sun smfljafflflna i,‘ m: lived for fourteen years in Labractcr inittts; ‘to l " Mm J_ wnby navlng gone there with the tirin- l‘, - , , s‘. f“ “l- fell Missions. 1n the CCUISE of h.r Mrs _ o b ewmnnwnéfle nwh- HvlllTiSS Mrs. Osocnle described this day aftlcrllcon w th n he members flfCSCTl , w‘ ,. o, \l;,,;_,.,. 1L Bnrmn so“ ozuud coast and built-en land. 'l'tl0 Lr".“1fl'sLP1'.'t_VPt‘ a tell which minutes - v - _ people wno sultcr many l1a1'...s..1'~s 0 rs nlccf n5: ‘mud Bun)“ P adopted. Sick Contmillea ‘lhe speaker gave a vslt rig one sick and sending fruit the cli.l.a e, to two sick in the The secretory g"ve the lmn Bt;\nche_b9cnn~e immense country with ks rock- ld .\lt'.~'. gm “n Mumnnn Re‘, D_ Bl-ne arc 0t a. must. nospitutxe nature, loy- DKllott pcrlorllled the ce.sm 11y l“ and Km“- in the ll.'(‘:i‘i‘.L‘L‘ cl relatives and Vlvlfl deslillllllll". 0i, g in...“ qllu. Uncle‘ who was my n hflblcS and pfltllllaflllfis o. SDcQCh c1 . t‘ bv l “m5 of when- French and English desccnn Her y. .. . .stl ooi ol the audience was ample proo. or .el tn 1113191] “d wm-e a cofsgup their appreciation. She told of the bouquet o1 'l‘alislnan rose; and work oi the Grenfell Missions and fulfil-n m1; [cl-IL M155 Evalyn gum; wild a warm tribute to the late Sir some lipid-s 11d and wore g, 11-...” lltred Grenfcll who has done so p o; pgnk fuggsv My place in which to hve. In the forty- l Tllilrs. Stanley, N. a ing stations. Mrs. Osborne showed- gning of the r :- ,. pttgll and puffs: tlcles made by the convalcscellts of U"; cfle-“Unv- Labrador which are sold in thc 1-, mcslvsq “my Grenicli Iusdtutes, and also - nqggs my; T, gamples of moccasins. parka and lll1lll_\’l0\'0iy and "lsf- 1110591 01 d0! 095m Wmc" were . '1 - mum ls emphqyefl viewed by the audience more close- lliill" C. N R uctlcrnl pills-s, VHiln l. after the address. Material for l‘! llrifv “'35 rm the st"ff of 1‘ tilose articles. is supplied bv the Pica ('0, trtl an, and Mrs, Bur- Grenfell Missions and the finished V ltlfl. uh n tlsnqlvmqpn il-‘n in articles bought back from the mak- l_'\"= Pctlzll “my will] resin;- tn ers. In this way many who are lu- “llclon lu ‘llcir l-rtlll-n, A Lgndlrq canacitated for the hard work of "Pa" l» “~31. p“. m-ldgs “and- fis ing are able to earn something n .\ll~. spa arm wm J for their families. In moving a vrre "m" Pf Sllmmrrrlde. P. E I Of 7"“. "l“"‘l\"‘s and mend; wtgl-l James Pendergast said: Mrs. of those around him was pressive of their enjoymen address. The regular routine busi- inf/gill. in the usual manner. Mr. Saunders spoke briefly on Educa» tlon Week and the inspiring radloi addresses delivered bv Rev. Dr.‘ Murphy. Mr. McDonald and Rev. Mr. Sullivan. Outta u discussion tn educational problems followed and e rrollltlcn was Missed to be for- warded to the Education Commit?» saw-lo that more utFmtIOn be on!" to the teaching of Citizenship and 701/ need In bit/Id up W” Democracy. A soclnltrour m}! on- ‘ no (h F. PE W Q Q /“.'5””'c¢’ | igdlgs £355.: repfrghinents-K n-mc THIS IS rue romc Personals P I Eculw RECOMMENDED -Mrs James some-rs. Pleasant . grilling up your system and VaFey. ls at present tn Kenslngton. f i m s‘? ftlllnst common winter ills, n, ca"! B Emulsion regularly every m}. nialns vital element: everyone . M" l" Pllovlot health, end l: “I lg" lo digest than plain cod . ‘n-d Yen delicate systems can mm ‘Isllln Scott’: Emulsion. ‘ "l"! and economical too. —Mi’.l. Rowen who has bot-n v's‘t- imz her hiher. Mr. Mbrtlvl Mur- vehvv Wm. la eerlfllwhv til pt I-ls holr.” 1n Camobellmn. tot 4 left by vim" cal-iv this week on return to her home in Boston. -S. -—Mf. ind Mrs. WW1. J. Bil-banish hqvg IQMHTQQI‘ m their home l" Filmymn-gldfl from a short visit to Mom-ton. N. 8.. when they attend- u! i». wamuw of twil- mind deuehter the former Miss Kathlrefl i Buchanan-S. WHAT-STILL PIRATES? i The Horigkong oollce furnish antl- plracv guards for mitten vessels on the Chloe cont “"Ml~waay.1uaual-amm tiaynlr Mrs. W ltfnclccd. L-"drs l‘l'i7e was wcn by glnls llv Mr R. ldodg-ers wi‘h consclat onprizes 80ml: to Mrs. Fe‘d and Stsrllng nenoss, at East Bnnfnrd has mo“ MWcLeod _ served playxng was the frcezcut- v"lc"~ was After lunch had been resumed for wnby Private Attsin Macfunis. O11 Thursd-"y cvrtfng. Mrs. Dan MacPllc son entertained at three trblrs of bridge in a‘d of the Red —HOME AND SCHOOL RIEET- (37035- Pflle W85 James Cami-roll pilZf‘ going l9 Mr- worl by Mrs. with consolation Willard L-eald A delicious lunch was served by the IICSINS and a pleasant. eenlng en- wus me guest speaker. Mrs. USDOPLG Jvliflfl by all Annual me=t'ng cf the Women's Social Club met at the home of r “when entered the halves who are of Scotcn, Irlsn, igccport for no adflaBSS was fclilfilk with puthoes lclv rig a h"‘ifl1".C(‘ on hand of $83.- “... and humor and the rapt attention 8B. Mrs. sulncrlntlrl reports-d week- ly collectlczls RIVOIZIlIPCl to L Eldon Cam. ell ozl Welnes- Mccting opened 1h the read and Nfffiiéfd “TIC ctmmllrlity. flnancol the year ictal rec‘pts $309.47 E1‘p‘l’l(iitll'05 52TH’? $9 08. A hymnary had been purchased for the church Tt-e folfc-wing of- fcers were elected for the ccm- ing yea“. m mgLchlng app-e- much to make Labrador a safer Mrs Presifrnt (re-elected), Neil Darrwh, Vce-pres dent. Mrs Cecil Stewart. Scurtcry’ tre- elght years since Slr Wilfred fl.st elect/nil, Mrs , The mom “_' went to Labrador he established six suthcrland vcas al-pdntcd treasur- l rams and c“; flqw- modern hospitals and twenty 'llll‘S- er o l Committee appoznted were Mrs. E played "1 my; quite a number of interesting ar- Lynda and Mrs W. A. Field. Mrs weekly collections. Sick Sutherland. It was decfdcd to hold an afternoon ten and bazaar in December A delicious lunch was served by the hostess assisted by Mrs. E Lynds and Miss Betty Lynds. Mrs. Robert MacPherson invited the members to her htme for the next meet ng. Mcctlng clcsed with Mizpah beurdctton. LOUD SPEAKERS GREA i3 of tllel diam Natio V day The s ness of the meeting was condllc nd speakers p l T ASSISTANCE TO TRAVELERS l MONCTON N. 5.. Nov. 14 — The thanks to the siwlkfl". Mr- loud speaker system recently in- , Oa-t stalled on the r l" "Haul 0011111.“ much happlrwfs.‘ home's address was like a breath oft ‘orm at Moncton for announcing ‘s old times to him recalling the zears departure ~._ , he spent in the north. The motion; trains has proven " ii was seconded bv Dr. Inghnm Jar- value 1n aiding dine who said that the happy faces messages to pass uite ex-lnllllrNeill. superintendent of Cana- nal Telegraph; here Io- stem consists of loud aced in locations where James any call transmitted from a central l;l.t can be heard the l th of the station SERVICE Have MOVED To Bowness Bldg. Water Street Opposite Dominion Fur Sales Phone 127 ailway station plat- aud arrival times o. of considerable: delivery of telegraph engers, stated D. A. whole latform. _ Peat moss is a vegetable zrnlvth of snaznlltn n~"ss uuhumitiifed. ve.‘ retaining l‘s fibrous structure. The bablv been vraduallv building un for thousands of years. With the oyster b"d= ‘nrlrcaslnlz in value everv ylear and ‘re wravtl‘ nits still nrovfm a source n’ lvvalth ‘n lh‘s district it locks as if Princs Counfv is about tn exn=r‘erlce M‘. eta of nrcsnrrfv should the neat moss indllsrvv develcp as it 1s ex- pected it will do-S. Declares post-war Mental epidemic Threatens world NEW YORK. Nov. 17 -,(AP) — The Royal Air Force's chief men- tal trouble-silooter. Dr. Robert Dick Gillespie. told a distinguished medi- cal audience here tonight that a post-war mental epidemic threaten-s civilization. The epidemic, he predicted, would lhlt nations and peoples in two l ways: One is a revival of the al- ,lIi0St-l01‘g0l-b€n medieval mental trouble known as accidle. a serf- like apathy of tre brain. The other .as a mental restlessness which would rebel against social order. P-‘lychoneuroses were the danger signs he discussed. The person with a psyrhoncurosls looks and acts normally, but hi1 a hidden. abnor- mal mental state. "Surprisingly enough the war has given birth to two institutions which are hklrly successful as a preven- tive of psychoneuroscs." he said. “They are the alr-rald-shelter and Airmen get Thrills in Low bombing LONDON. Nov. 19 —(CP Cable) -Canadlan airmen are flying new Hurricane fighters outfitted as bombers and dropping their bombs from a low level “with greater ac- cllrficy than can be achieved ‘gen- erally Ln dive-bombing." Squ ron Leader Vaughn B. Corbett of the Royal Canadian Alr Force declar- ed tonight in a broadcast to the Dominion. Describing recent operations of the R.C.A.F. squadron which he commands. Corbett, who comes from Bellevllie, 0nt., and Montreal, said that "whoever thought of fit.- tlng bombs to Hurricanes is to b;- thanked for giving the squadron I command some of the most thrill- ing days‘ work that has ever fallen to the luck of fighter command pilots." The squadron leader was among the Canadian airmen who chafted with Canadian newspaper repre- _ sentatlves during their recent visit to Britain and told them o.‘ his most recent explot, that of downing a German plane during an exmting battle. He also wlecomed the Duke of Kent during a visit paid to or- air station last Sept. 30. after tbr Duke's return from his trip to Can bféjlblllg of ground targets blade possible by the Hurricane fighter bomber "is some lung new to fin-val Air Force pilots." “In our Hurricane bombers wr don't have to dive on our ‘a: a ' he said. “We come down almcs. tt" ground level before we reach then- and drop the bombs in level flight.‘ He said that the Hurricanes travelling sometimes more than 3'1 miles an hour, usually are on ton of their target before the quit-arr- craft gunners sec them and though the pilot wculd have little charc- of bailing out if ‘I e plane were hit “so far the adlzautage scents to be on our side and not on the gr1tnrl defence." Tommie row us. - THANKSGIVING Montreal. (£57m. 1S»-Im-. without their Thank-glwng any; turkey, cn whoever of the two dflids they chorsc to celebrate the holiday, November 20 0r 2'1. Yes- terday the Camtian Natlom‘. EX- prése handled filly boxes o: these seasons‘. gbblers. enroute from turkzy farms alacent t: New Ycrk city and desaincd for Unflfi Sam's men cn activs servcc. The turkey arrved from the Am- erican metropolis yetterdfly 0V5!” the Rutland Railroad and were fumed < ver to local Canadl- n NatlonalExpress 0f‘l(‘_.8_]s for des- patch on the Maritime cllroufe to ‘lhilil’ _"s lnewhere. ' community centres. “we have learned that shelter life with its common sharing of danger has helped people to withstand peril better than isolation in small groups. , "Now we find persons returning from safe areas to the shelters in large cities declaring ‘I'd rather be bombed than bored.‘ _ "one of the most significant svnlptxris of psychoneuroses l5 the apathy noted in the battle-worn soldier as well as ln those whose homes have been destroyed and WIéldOSG lives an completely disorgan- lz "This apathy is usually the result of continual thwarting of simple desires-in the case of fire 5014511"- the repeated thwarting of the 1n- stlnct of self-preservation. in the case of the civilian. the thwarting of the desire for activity- "Ihe continual thwarting of the desire for activity produces rest- lessncss and irritability followed by rebellion. "After the war we may expect either a dangerous r tlessneas or an equally cancel-oils apathy lmlw we are as energetic in organizing peace as we have been in 011K011- lllg war." PLUCKING means money service. CANADA PAC Kenslngton Attention Poultry Raisers Our efficient killing service with MECHANICAL 30 per cent loss in grade by taking advantage of this We can dress your poultry while you wait and pay you on a dressed graded basis. And you will be interested ln seeing this me- chanical poultry plucker operating. in your pocket, avoid a 20 to KERS LIMITED Prince Edward Island | \ \. Rltl-NGING UP raruan’ More than 100,000 Deaths in hostage Terror in Europe B! Robert B. Bunnelle Associated Press Staff Writer LONDON. Nov. 20 —('I‘hursday)- (CP)_— Tile flhostage terror" Sweep. "l! mm Ellis-Occupied countries in Etuope has resulted in the death of more than 100.000 persons, grid the disappearance and imprison- ment of countless other thousands. ile inter-allied information com. mittee announced today. Britain. Russia, and the nine oc- cupled countries are rcprescntcd 0n the committee, llilose report, said:- "No occupied couiltr is ree f the hostage terror. In {severi out gt the nine countries thousands of in. noccnt men and women have dierl, and in all of them thousands live daily under the shadow of death." The 4.500-word formal report said the hflstose system was invented by the Italians in their eastern tnvy, stun of Albania in 1939. was perfect- ed by the Germans and "received its most ruthless application" in Blu- Eflflfln Ntlllsqls on six Greek cities where 15.000 persons were killed in a single expedition. Here is the picture as given by the committee:- Greevce—A total of 15.000 wore killed in six small Tilraciall village: ada. Corbett Said that U16 IOW-level (by a Bulgarian motorized force and bombers because of the deadl of only 19 Bulgarians. Thousands of hostages seized by the Italians nave been killed or are missing. Th? Germans use the principle of “col- lective responsibility" in exacting mmllal" lives. and huvc burned whole cities in Crete because of attacks on Nazi troops. Poland-“No less" than 82,010 Poles executed in two years by the Germans and "death sentences are Dffllwuflffid daily in great num- bers."_ Hostages extcuted from cv- ery village- unabfe to meet Gcrnlall levies. 'I‘hllec hundred amnlunition workers were ttosell from 2.000 and Shot to break a strike. Thirtv Pol- ish actors executed lor the assass- ination of the Polish film actor. Igo Sym. who was an informer for tllc Gesapo. Yugoslavia-More than 5.000 were executed by the Germans aside from ercan soldiers. saiiors uni arrrerrl m? urea] wry-are» now conducted Sell/WK Outside ‘h’? 0°“! n95 0T me‘ against the Serbian guerlllas. Axis- Unlfed 378E58- ale l"! fir-E ‘H b9} allied Croat officials are exacting “JOO-for-orle" retribution for slain Croat soldiers. the hostages "includ- GUN HRONICLE For _ - Economy in CoffeenDr/ni/f . 4X Will H0116’ E l. ' " s55 1r Yoq non/r a .- “ l ‘RIC/l FfAl/OUR All/MOP" ,5. ll m EVERY Pol/ND l u GefMOYQ Here? Why Y, l. Maxwell House has llccn brought to the very peak of ricllnr-ss by a DP", illlllic blending of sllpl-riiuo Coiiccs. 2. A remarkable new Roasting Pro- . cess radiates even heat right . n ’ through every ]l(‘(lI1——|ll'll1l_'I— mil; k E '1 all lllis t-xtrzl ricllllv-s. ‘ Q‘ '/ 3. Maxwell House cunlcs in you with ii 11 "t. t t - .r' l "hill. A“ l 3 l ragran rooster rcs mess ' scaled 1n n super-vacuum tin. 2 CRINDS Drip and Regular Always Uniform Roasted, Ground and Packed in (anode A_*‘* "' f" 1i 1.nrt.1.~. \\'il.\ brokul wllcr‘. LcBiallc slipped and fell as he left ins home ll-ere for the concert ital‘, l-io did not rcahze tile instru- a u Flying accident R d ment. wllgich he valued aL1$30.000, l. ‘or n‘l '1. ran cd ‘n , 233C511 hazlli 211d‘ olllflllctf till!‘ frontal l case before appearing on thr- 2.1.130. ing innocent women and children." The Germans use the same d. th scale. Ill some villages every tent yman is picked out and shot, and l then the village is burned. l Belgium-"Although many thou- isauds have been arrested and sent to ccllcentrat‘ ll canlus on trump- ed up or trlvzal charges. no murd- ers of hostages have been reported ‘ so far." i Luxembourg-J-Ieavy fines impos- ed on towns of Luxembourg and EXP1“-*$l Etlelbruck because of demonstra- final dfslllllllml. tiors in which the names of the exiled royal family vlcre written on walls, but no deaths yet reported. A number of persons were deported to Germany. The Netherlands ~Hundreds of former government leaders, profes- sors and Jews have been sent to concentration comps where many of them died. Among those arrested was former Prime Minister Hendri- kus Coiijn. Street riots and revolts have resulted. Many Netherlanders were killed by German troops. Am- sterdum was fined $9.000.000. Norway-Hundreds of fathers held as hostages because their sons fled to Britain. Several trade unionists executed to break work stoppages. Another Nut hostage move was the establishment of "industrial guards" on Norwegian railways and in fac- tories. These guards are shot if saboitage is committed on their pro- rte s. Czecho-Slovakia- Hundreds of hostages executed, including form- er army glenerals and prominent Czech; 1a ed ever since the Nazi occupation. because of sabotage and underground activities of oth- ers. More than a 1.030 other! W91’? handed over to the GestaPO "m? torture. if not death." fiance-At least 250 Frenchmen -———-— t Thcu. too sn l \\'1th emotion OTTAWA, Nov 19 —(CP\ -Vet-‘. to tell the fllldl ICC wilac happen- cran airmen said today that figures 0d. he flllPf-‘illflli Oll ml! Shall‘: ll-‘llil made public by Air Minister Power the broken instrument while the show that the “kid airmen" at tha lmprcssario .1. A. Gfillvin told the British commonwealth air training story and calcd mt the concert. plan are going through their 1MP. 144313111110 ulrr rt pcrttlrtll- cntlrrcs. including acrobatics, with HMO 1n Charlotlcivull ll Cvlllll" as good an accident record as first- Ol years ago). class civilian airlines. GPilotswwith memories of the First reat ar and tile hast , hazard- ous training which had toy be given Pl-YMQEJTPP-IPPP mcn before they wcllt into combat ‘lUQ-“i or m" Bml-“h ‘5 said Maj. Power's figures on train- i ylMlcaA- "wk m" ' lng in this war were “rcmarkzlbi I “Imlslmlfi HOW l" - - Th6 minister said that 1.429.252 P0" l" "as l" a ltfi-‘lcl for his" miles were flown for every fatal ac- i "l the NM)’ m“ 397mm“ 353F109- cident in the training plan, Fills conlparcd with 1.269.231 miles flown ' "" ' ' ' for every fatal accident in UIIiLCfi . HI! p] j IEWPQRT fluff; j Stairs civilian flying in 19-10. l Officials said United States airl lines were recognized as leaders in operational efficiency and passnl- ger-carrylng machines were man- ned by pilots with hundreds of hours of flying time behind thenl. "Tile civilian pilot flies a straight course assisted by experience and by all 11c resources of his service while a military pilot of training i; often on his own, flying e fast military machine in aerohrtlcs in the later stages," they said. t In the 224.486.625 miles flown et l an average of 125 miles an blur by the training plan schools tc l Sept. 30, there were 157 fatal occid- nets, or one fatality for every 1.l.- l 438 hours in the air. MaJ- Power's figures showed. l The fatal accident rate irl Sep- tenfrr lvas .067 or one fatal accid- ent to 1.818.279 miles flown, com- pared with .1’! in November. 1940. with less favorable {Lying OOHQILOFF during the winter months, . Power said that an upward trend REDDIN BROS. JIFFY SERVICE FOR FILMS 25c PAY IN ADVANCE finishes any 8 exposure roll- mall orders must be accompanied by post- a“ CAMERAS Baby Brownie Sp. $1.75 shot by the Gel-lama because of assassinated German officers. One Paris “pool of hostages" is complii- ed of those caught on the atféfl-i during curfew hours. Heavy 11095 levied on the cities of Nantes. Rou- baix. Lilolet and Alsace One Nor- mandy town we: deprived of meat for 4o days because Free French placards were found. “These are endless." the report "Q WHY HAVE lfii some ‘\€~\\FEET_7 was to be expected. From the beginning of this year to the end of September. training school planes spent 1.596.680 hours in the air and Maj. Power estimat- ed total flying hours for the year would total 2.250.000. Bullet — - - — 2.85 620 Bulls Eye — -- 3.80 Kodak Bantam — 5.50 Jiffy Kodak v. p. 6.00 Brownie Reflex -— 7.35 Kodak Duex — — 8.25 Jiffy Kodak 620 10.75 Jiffy Kodak 616 11.75 K od a k Vigllant f 4.5 -- — — — 35.50 Mr. LeBlanc breaks Treasured lliclin These Cameras all in 1g — stock QUEER. Nov, fCPl-A sobbing musician carrying a treas- ured violin, smashed perhaps be- yond repair, appeared on the stage before an audience of music lovers lest night just as they were preparing to settle back and lis- ten Chemicals — Accessor- ies. Sensitized Papers. REDDIN BROS. L. .\l. Douceiie. R. U. Smailmrln. The musician was Arthur fm-l Blane, a young Quebec vloiihlstfl, who has given concerts in many ‘ parts of Canada and the United l States. The violin. made and signed by J__B._G_tl_adagrlin_i,_a pupil of Strad" IT THAT IT SW6 ViA$ kllHETV-Sbf YESTERDAY-ALB WHO l5 THIS MAH- ~- Bv George M rManus ll QEALLV '?.| 3x21’ N _ cgmrsHANe-E- ‘l"l—lAT'6 EQV %LO'\N V DELJVEIZY/ iii“? FALO BILL T HA$ A Q1 THE all