ILEW/ a eopie's Paper Covers Prince ECWIIHI’ Island Like the Dew Th0 the little things. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Ifaveat thlnll in life are I tlallfl. gmhfi... can-f. Two can. EERMANS REPORT NEW ALLIED DRIVE slllllllllillsilili iii-NA ucurozv MAKES l ruesr ADDRESS AS l DEFENSE MINISTER 1 iuestion 10f ilelne truly’: Future is Unanswered By JACK BRAYLEY Csaadiau Preaa Staff Writer UITAWA Nov. 4 - (OP) question of the future of Can- ada's 70.000 home defence troops -dubbed Zombies - remains un- mswered following a cabinet crisis which saw the conscription- lst-col. J. L. Raiston - succeed- rd by the volunteer supporter Gen. McNaughton - as Defence Minister. Nobody in the capital knows who picked tip the iwod word Zombie -meaning body without soul - iiid applied it to the home de- fence draitees, but all are agreed iilet it was a controversial hm. doc. The name was first opPlied when active and reserve troops were trained together early in the Will‘. The home defence army has been t contentious issue almost since ruthority for compulsory military lervice was provided by the Na- tional Resources Mobilization Act when it became law June 21. 1940. Under the Act the Govenimcnt could require persons to place themselves, their services and their properly at the disposal or llie crown for the prosecution of ilie war or to maintain essential civilian services. These powers 1°19- 11111VYYQ1”. limited to service ll. Canada or its territorial wat- iis. Began With 80 Daya The first regulations for corn- liuisory training received cabinet; 'p1"°1"11 A110" 2'7. 1940. immedi- ‘111913’ following the National Ree- ltration on which the call-up has iliten based. The original regain. télns maoe medical fit men be- een the e895 of 21 and 45 sub. iict to call for 30 (lays training. ‘r52? 11151 8101111 which started Yea‘ 11$ 171111.‘? in October of that i, 1' 11115 Composed oi $3150 men ‘iilfilafé’ .33 ti"? f1?" - ‘on i raring period {l}? 111111111 11111dequate to meet FEM111°Y11118 emergency and in ‘Xter:1;11~t1941. the period was L ed o four months with only llycig-olds to be called. 11 P111. 1941. it was decided to 221x21’? men in the army for home Imlshcz P11100595 after the liad e their training per od. By AHNPRIOR, Ont, Now 5 _ (c P) —- Gen. McNaughton, who be- came Defence Minister on tho rc- signation of Col. J. L. Ralstmi said in a speech here tday ho javcrgd continuance oi the voluntary sys- tem of enlistment in Canada. Indicating ha opposed conul-lp. tins Home Defence troops for ov- erseas the General said he was “firmly convinced that the best hope lies in the maintenance of our lcinghrsditions of voluntary aer- v c ' e. "We have had this from tho enr- liest days of this war," he said. “We had it in the last wai- until we changed and then we gained no benefit in time to be of any use," (Conscription was introduced in the First Great War in August, 1917. and the first conscripts arr- ived in France in the dying months of the war.) The figures on reinforcements showed Canada could safely count “on some short period yet before there is danger of the situation be- coming acute." And now the need was knorvlm he was confident “our men and women will come forward to serve-that they will take up this honorable obligation and rally to the support of our gallant comrades| overseas." His speech confirmed the gen- eral belief his view on the voluntary system coincided with the govern- me1it's policy which gave rise to a cabinet crisis which resulted in C01. Rulstows resignation. .. b with the General indicating the voluntary system would solve the reinforcement problem, the question as to what is to become of "the home defence draitees remains‘. unanswered. It is understood he may deal with this question in a speech before veterans at Ottawa Monday night. The best conjecture is that the larger number of them will be held in service ior use if the volun- tary system fails. Others may be seconded to essential civilian work. His speech was received with close attention by a victory bond rally audience of about 1,000 which included veterans of both the First Great War and the present conflict. When he reached the section dealing with his reinforcement pol- icy Gen. McNaughton spoke delib- erately and with great emphasis. He said:- “I have read and studied the re- ports from our officers in the field -_I have rend and studied the- suggestions and proposals made by our officers here-and I am firinl)’ convinced that the best hope llcs Ling l‘ L us R THE, Tor IN L landing 0n lwalclleren Costly KIHARLOTFETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY, NOVEMBER c, 1944 l l “ "w" ‘ lyWar Situation Last Nigh i; t— - l By ELTON C. FAY, Associated Press War Analyst | . i Since the Allies landed in Normandy more than five months ago1 they have thrown an average of more than 1,800 tons of shells a day at the enemy. c There, in nne item alone, is an example of the immensity of the Allied supply problem and another reason why new deep water ports. such as Antwerp, nre needed urgently. The Allies have. and have held for weeks the city of Antwerp and all lta port facilities, left virtually intact when the Germans fled the oily in haste. There la, however, extreme doubt that big cargo carrying ships will be able to use the port in anything like the near future. Reports from overseas say that the ship channel is heavily sifted, with its pre- sent use confined to shallow draft vessels. The task of dredging out the channel will be one uf weeks if not months. it ls feared. Until that is done, the third greatest port in Europe will be of only limited use. It followa that any full-scale, sustained Allied offensive on the critical northern end of the western front will have to depend In large measure nn supplies coming In through distant Cherbourg and whatever other French nnrts may be restored to use In the meantime. How long an intensive push against the Siegfried Line will have‘ to be sustained before a break-through is obtained is a matter of de- bate among military men. There are iliose who maintain that the west- ern defences of Germany are brittle. Thry base this belief to some ex- tent on the ages of prisoners taken by the Allies which show that the 1 l garrison Includes groups both below and above the accepted brackets ._ for efficient combat forces. From this they rlcclucc that the substantial por- llon of all Germany's manpower is at the perimeter of her defences ngdside, and that if those defences crack the break-through will he deep anti decisive. There is no Inclination. _ the nature of the west wall garrison, a vast amount of munitions and men will he needed to thrust through these formidable defences. "st. J l... Dill Dead; Had Long Military Career 1 WASHINGTON, Nov. s _ (o?) Local Man Aids in Army Courses _.Fic1d Marshal Sir John -Dill. head of the British Joint taff Mission in the United States, died last. night in Walter Reed Army Hospital. He had been 10!‘ several months with anemia. Sir John, who was 63 years old. has been called by British ad- mirers "our best General since Marlborough" and during the e"- ly days of the war a Al’. Ctacnpbell. of Cliarlcttctownn Auxiliary Servicts Superviros. imdl his iwsistant, Cpl. Loo Michel‘. of; Montreal. are playing a biz rolc in making army educational courses popular among members of the ’I‘l~irce Rivers Tank Regiment in Italy. They clrend much their time asslstlnu students and eivirq lectures, ssigl: a Canadian Arm Public Relations dispatch fvc the only British General "worthy= of our steel." He retired as Chief of the Bri- tish Imperial General Staff three - years ago and served as Governor of Bombay until his assignment to Washington. He is survived by his widow. 011E Italy. More. members of ihc Thrc b .vmus marriage’ John Rivers unit are enrolled illilliniiliyl fincger?“ pgiu‘ of me Royal AF other regiment in the 1st. Corps. “nary. m“, Sewing m thebcem and y a tral Mediterranean, stepdaughter. Miss Sonia Furlong, oi Wiisliinglon. Aii Irisliiiiaii from Belfast, he wls educated at Clicltenhzitn Coi- lcge and tiic Royal Military Col- lcee ni Sandlilarnt. I-Ie served in the Bucr \l'lls1' as a junior officer tli i Charlottetown. however. to discount the fact that whateve l COBIIW. $1WM>0 ._ l Campaign 1 Going Well l in Province Summerside went over the tooln i the victorv loan "c Sillulill‘. ‘.<.1.lll.i..‘iv lil..i1 @1000 suoscnibed 1'; axces of the town's 5.330.000 0111c.- ve. Loan headquarters for Prince County announced the victory an iniq-attesiloon and whistles were blown and bells rang to announce L118 NEWS Li) ClClZOFiS. Summersid» thus became ihc first district in l1rilice _I.‘.(l\V‘dl‘d Isl- and to reach an obicctrve. Meanwhile the CEIIIDBIRD in the Province was also going well. with ‘i5 per cent of the $3,300,000 min- imum objective subscribed at 111126, c. t close or‘ business Saturday. actual subscriptions amounted to $2,484,150» and officials espresso the, hone the quota would be rlllcn-l, ed lonz before the end of tiie cani- paign next Saturday and that the‘ Province would exceed the minimum asked by a aood mllffllh. b Bv districts the totals were div- ided as ioliows: Suinmvl'.<:cic, Soil,- U" Prince County outside 511m- 541513200: Chiiriatteiovcii. s9l4,300; Queen's Couniv outside $370,650; Kinks Campaign Golnz Well OTTAWA. Nov. 5 — (CP) —Ci\11-i adlaiis subscribed a total oi $i1.-| 492.400 Saturday to brine the w... | subscriptions in the Seventh Vic-y lo 1.895.000 at the end of the second week of three-i wok eanilailzn for sioooiloopoo. I The Saturday sales compared with sales of $58,592,801) in tile c0r-‘ responding dav of the Sixth Victory. Loan last spring. ‘rile cumulativ‘. total was nearly 342.000.0011 iiilzherl than the corresponding total on the! 12th day of the previous 10.111. l Uonunentina upon the progress oi the loan to dale, Graniiin "Io s,l general chairman of the ‘ war finance COlllmlttfft. are very encouraged bv liic s . o the first two weeks. Purchases by special names group are mcctinz: expectations. We are pnrizclilarly cncmuW-Zed bv the manner lil uliiciil German ccm-Hndividual Canadians 111's respon- mentator once referred to him as . di 11%.... “We_enter the third wccl; of the; CBHTDHIIZII Will] COHIlGClKU illlfl 0D- timlsni tempered. IHHVEVLI‘. with l. ‘ knowledge that it will take the bsti efforts oi us all to reach this 011-‘ jectiw." Tim Buck's Views Cf Cabinet Shake-lint TllnvBllCK. lcacl r_ n.’ ' iilf-"WIVG partv. soul r21? l last liizht that I} (ill l‘IIlF.- l §liear 1R. C. A. F. § one-third with personnel mustered used. ._ Willi a third some m the Pacif- 10 PAGES lfioene Dr in Am LONDON. Nov. 5-(C ‘liodiw neiir Arnhem-scene of the gallant British ziirs; .111'°i1Ded Sabotage parachutists" behind the vital Arnhem bi ed tonight. MsiL $4.00: that Pmvlneea . . . Subscription “Delivered. 05.00.‘ u u‘ u u hem P)—FieId “lhjlillififlibl Monti-r usl-i Area f)‘ launched a new assault dlvisiozfs stand and .~.fre, Berlin radio declar- This unconfirmed report came as the 1st Canadian Army and the British 2nd Army punched up to the Mans (Meuse) River to the southwest on a iii-mile front, l‘€ilCl'il1l,'_',‘ the river iii several points. and other 1st Canadian Army forces virtually ended the bloody battle to clear Antwerp harbor as a supply springboard for offen- sives into Germany. only two isolated pockets of Nazis remained on Walchcrcn Isl- and £11K . D12 suns the lind been oi bv Bflllsll licclti» in- (icy L.-G:il.C1'crar: save for min - sweeping, the lvuter route lo Ant- werp had DEVI! opened. There was no Allied word on am operations at Arnhem, a city on the Nedar Rhine Euardiul! tile north- ern approach to the Reich Berlin sol ilcmcrffs forces mans‘ Arnhem bridgehead . hezrvv aerial support. The bi" - cast declared all the parachutists dropped to disrupt Ccrmaii com- munications had been killed or CilllllPiCfl. G miaii slrlsilutli ut Arii- licui cntly wits Lil.‘ ljlr-cl at five iilfinlullj 11nd soiiic armor. Southeast oi Aachen. rank-sup- ported U.S. infantry folxzht back 500 yards almost m thf e e Schmidt in a bitter batte to regain that bomb-levelled villazi‘. and re- captured two-thirds of the izround lost curl r to licavv German coun- tcr-attilcks. "i Field lvlrirslial Mont- G‘ r- utiLickcd iii’; To Be Reduced OTTA\VA, NOV. 6 -— 1GP) — A report izoni usuallv well-informed sources it that the R.C.A.F. will undergo " . 1945. \\ll8i1 ' out on the previously IUIHOIJXICEd "first-in-iirst-out" basis. Air vice hlarshal LJE‘. Stevenson Ls home ll"l‘.l the East Asia theatre with n iu ._tll, on needs and coll-- (iiiiolis iiicrl". Plalinxrs are I. incoiateiv point: ahead for the! swiicli i0 ilic Pacific nf squadrons! llilW scrviii: in Europe. Tlxcv will be raised on a rc-voluntarv basis and it ls LIIIGCISLOOG that a third of the air force's 45 squadrons will b." ili n iliird b01115.’ dcinobilizcd c in llic new veal", it is under- stood that the remaining third will| bc used in hoiiiu establishments and also for European occupational dutv with tho uosslbilitv of some dav toe-- im: included in an internallonzn‘ police [nrcl if one is fiiiallv cs- izibllshcd. Plane Wreckage g- By Ross Munro WITH THE IST CANADIAN ARMY IN HOLLAND. Nov. s -' (CP Cable) — Canadian lZIOOps herel are anxious to learn what Stand Gen. i A G L McNaughton. newly-ap-l pointed Canadian Defence Minister. is going to take on the reinforce- ment question and the moot issue 01 5BY1d-1n8 home defence men ov- erseas. _ At present the troops are con- fused by the controversy in Ottawa, and are uneasy about the implicat- ion that Geri. McNaughton will refuse to send home defence men overseas. On this issue they would 5llliport former Defence Minister Ralstonts reported recommendat- ion to the government that home defence troops should be dispatched to active theatres as reinforcements. There has always been deep resentment among overseas troops that the so-called “Z0mbies" nave stayed at home throughout the war. The majority oi Canadians here voice strong opinions on this ques- tion and Mr Ralstonk reported view certainly reflects what the Troops Anxious To Learn McNaughton ’s Stand lielis Reported In Budapest LONDON, Nov. 5 (AP)— The German radio reported late to- night that Russian tank spear- head: had crashed through Budapeafs suburbs and reach- ed the southeru metropolitan limits, only two miles from the heart of the stricken Hungarian capital torn by Red Army siege guns and planes and Axis de- molltions. A Buchareat broadcast said other Soviet troops, racing around the eastern side of the city, had smashed into the capital from the north and also penetrated l2 miles beyond. Hungarian reports quoted by Bucharest indicated that the bulk of the German forces weze fleeing across the "Danube to the western side, giving up the greater part of Budapest. majority oi the troops here feel. Now that the “zombie" question has come to a head. they want to know what is going to be done rtb- out it. So they wait to hear what Gen McNaughtonls policy will oe-l The Canadian troops in Holland: received practically all the news on the situation from reports in iliej army newspaper Maple Leaf, al-j though they first heard oi Mr. Rl-l ston‘s rcsigrition and Gen Mc-j Naughtons appointment from a‘ BBC broadcast which only m2ii-, tinned tho cabinet change and did~ not g0 111w any detail or &Xl)l"ii1-' ntion inr the switch. Less Steel iieededl For Shipbuilding July, 194-2, 1 in the maintenance of out‘ _____ v finylears v-sis"“llii..'§°'ésil§flms.lg it: “w BLYE1“_"F“.'1’.S°W1°“L1V_° ALLIED SUPREME llEADQUAR-i " 111151 Gm‘ w“ 1“ a ‘Col. .11.. trtalsinlr . . U u 111i’. 1943 th ii ' " ' ' P. ‘is. N '. 5 - lAPl Tic‘ . , . _ of and he acco ueulrfiuz to *1" . CLEVELAND. Nov, 5 - (AP) -—~ married mgn_'2|_ em 5Z1’ group o: Pagefi ca‘ 3') British hlihriiil-Olhndinq ul \V(\ , _ - 1111111111’ ~11 P115“, crisis were an ilniil-allilil LllJL “lcf-. The hiagazilic Steel says "ship- "Wed notices to reporty an’ re ' pelie on Waichcrcn Island was an 111 1116111- “1111 P EJ111111 “'51” 1°1‘|tist" views _in the Liberal nartl liiz rcoilircnicnts consulate: Present call-up regullstio of the cosillcst attacks of tile wcst- luv/oil by i115 1g? 17118111115 111 were becomiiiz _.\1'eiidai:i. .lli factor ii) \\‘III‘ rerluiic- i113‘ to married men born ‘lb Eh‘ lern front with "severe" loss in naval? 1957 1'" m1” $11111?“ 91 1111‘ 11118 u lie tEITHCd Col. Ralston a ilian o _ > .; shrinlznze. with other iiecdsl years 1913 to i920 and single met? and marine personnel, supreme’ 1114111511111 ‘$111119. The Same YEN '10r.v leanings . ocooscd to sc‘clal~ _ holding closq to 11:11:, incluoiiig Ed childless widowers born 1.1 ' _ lfleadquarmrs disclosed today lii-iullfsiglllféllilbtfid to full General 11:21;ifiuagaésléigggfinrlglpsaaifilalitgngnnilii- wijillklzifAkf. Noy. 5 -_lCP) 3 llizeplvvixlziiollrcctiles. land transport eyearl ‘. . ' ' ' ' ,__' ________ laii. zngtt. i <‘ mz-i- no.0 o an a _ c"'l. g... hiszflfil. Tltiftlli W111 111 1511111 1111111111" - . @1l*1".11<.°1,,,";i.,§:§°*;? its ti.£222ti“.Jlti"§2fi‘..i‘%..-“f;" ‘ " ~ ...i"s.".tis.lrssr .32‘. sizes-Puss avg mssd u ' » , ‘roll ill’ iv \£“.‘.c_ ‘ x o ‘ , . w“ ‘ _ _~ ‘ - I ‘ _ s ui :__ - _ 1 _ _v o v lflilllfllflillefilltS ‘eillhdiatllo blggd:¥i_ l Cogps “1311115111111111331 “R131 Ifriflggg Ellsngmilélieillc. ’ Ihmm ,§“‘..§1f“{..,g" A an,‘ m Shllallbol n} 133.1511] 131ml. p“; re 1‘ , _ ‘__ 1 uc ierivn .. ‘..- - ___ _ _ - n- “- - ~- --"> '_ y _ _ ._.‘ H g , ‘ l datum Eiiogéllnsaigl/‘gbliéialiigrhome LQNDON. Nov. - 1C1 Iconic.» 1 , 1 led to laiigliind and made ~— ll 11.11 Gourmand nnnonn- ui jrchtcoifi l-asflléilsaihli‘;Lnrégliégzxlnhfis grmedinstnlaska, Nffilifflllfldlfisia. gigtisgdcll 531...... u- N. B. , “flssmgg ouqtandm. s p tum-engine Hudson bomber 119911 111-1 1111b 1,1511" ‘=15 fur-lied‘ at , )3 _' . - .. . ‘. _ 1. a‘ “ . . “ , i‘ iwn. isi i fl‘ 1c < lmcc. iviii pro a iiv tint fov ‘re Guiana.“ ermudn and B“ igllimialiilcdli. llililll E5... hlfllfl‘eblb(l"lltlf.l'\l T‘ 1 - P” .*.'t‘,?n.°°§ “an. O21 ‘lb-i: f0 g éllfllsndnglOOnIIf-{IflgsI “Om N l cud of first filial" _r it \\‘1ll be ifc-g BY 11 Keneral plebiscite in 194.2 biz-lea iii me post-war civil nviatlcil FREE ICIO 11 ifs“ ‘1 131i _ _ T l» ; m- nc \. i,‘ velv 110211;! sic,’ Sttgl clown-o: -: 11 cilovernincnt was released of ilicu nzcause lllc LhS. £1215 no rca. -Dlr_ tu. ‘ as oi.essoillx,_.iblc ‘{0}. P 1‘ < “11110 1111911’ 13 o ‘ ' l l“: 1,. ".l‘ f i . =1"? . r " 1°! ovriglelitiglengrvln conscrlpum.‘ lgmlsrljtfaixsieliwilitbirslaiiittifseitvm m X grickuiacuity‘ wt" 116 \'c"~\i"5 1191010 111° dec1s1°11s “ken . 111°‘! “lane Minister M,“,,°.",,,,,,.§‘°w§",§,‘é "We shall beat tlic American in icon-cg 111151. Jllilfi‘. loéimu an; iiigflpf cgggssuit of cutbacks during; the government would not the air without the slightest doubt." was ru esscr o ilioso .‘ Y , “‘ _ -" -§-< _ m y m t; o1 H; rely-e. PARIS. Nov ,1 ~ (A Pl — Di . _ Labour lioublc caused iiic nat- ggla‘ authority to Bend ml! gala“- gclgwgllgzfiggllpfinlgrlg :5 glelgtil, on l‘ e me I Alexis Carrel, 71, surgeon and bi:l-' F n n ‘lOlls/ll steel production rate m de- (Oontfiftuwz? “ = h m like: lAei-onnutical Soci A Baptist. clcraviiiaii bciore jrin- 031st who wnii international fame ‘ ' ' 611111? one inl- lflsi Week l0 95 '6 1 c°1~ 9) vow: shay]? bun, him because .1. lng the U.N.ts. faculty. lie also was for his medical lillillll ~. and 111-, B R l i101‘ omit o onbacitv. the publication ' Amer- vention of a lIICClIillllLJ heart inl 1| e ‘$1115- Coming Events "5111" —- Bradalbane Tuesday. l 11-4-21. , __. ":55" — Bt- Peters. Wednes- 11-6-21. "c1111 party d 1 m“ 111v Hell. “do... u-llm’ iififll "Mum i School Tuesda y. h?“ 1m Board Movies, a ii-e-ai ee m- m" “<1 d nee. Fort Augustus h- "Wider. Nov. e. ii-e-n ee "'*— m eicth Dance atEm- tti: h°°1 M01111“. Noypmbser .. m. mwer Rsfiie and mm mkqghllun- Wednesday.‘ Nov- "Ohicir- ‘T’ I hlc,,cilk.“llelii..lr.1 than u 11-6-31. Annual Bazaar m, y a d - 11o Bay, and MEL “CVNIHIQI n IO-il-M. i “u” 511mm‘ and Dan , flliiiillpernglrtedhmndli’. Nov. tlielifa It o. isuirisw Or _i\l"‘.i KIA - i , as " ti-s-ai. vEYsurci-I en, know how to look alter our cus- tomers better than he does and we have tin men to do it. ‘There is not that particular class in the e1"- ican ma-ke-up-thev all want to be President after scllinlz newspaper Three Lose Lives In Halifax Hos —__,, gomresbegi the Qtéléen Anne period heart, kidne or ‘glands ‘from ran av n resn s e ve HALIFAX. Nov. a - we» — All we" weaved 1" 111° 11°~"1~ and. for 3am oi altrlifi ?l'..'.'i'§“i..°°“l...°§l.....‘l.e..f‘iupplifii Turned into an inferno by a No announcement on the cauac qt and Natural Beauty Mra. by olwulaiion of artificial blood. swiftly-spreading fire that took of the fire had been made to- Mun“, 5mm’ dauehm 3 Dun An ‘mum! lung supplied a m,” time; 112m. the Qaanadiientbeségn inisht-l i1 “Ppetwftféiyrfjgltffm Bradley both have been damaged ture of oxygen, carbon dioxide O8 G BIO WM UHIE 0 O fl E 00B POOH! l b _ ground early Saturday as about building, which Hartley found in tLwh and nigwssn- M. C0 servicemen fought their way to flames at 3.15 a.m. safety. In a matter of minutes. 114m" The $100,000 fire spread "like were roaring) from window! thl lightning," according to night length and readth oi the build- g r1: Ralph Hartley of Spry- ing. Soon the roof caved in, and e eld, N.S., starting while the oc- cupants were aaleep and roaring through the wooden structure with such speed that the service- men had time only to leap from the nearest window or door. The three victims were trapped together on the second floor of the building. and their bodies were found huddled near a window they had not been able to reach. ‘they were Alex Rutherford, W of Antigonish, N.S.; William Whib- of Halifax. and William of sydney Mines, N5. formerly t\ incniber of the _ fellow o: 1i "i Enter Federal Field icnn economic socrutv, a the Royal economic socictv and member of the Canadian uoliti science association. Prof. BS. heir- steadylvlcflillfiniversity. is a son. MONPREAL. Nov. 5 —- (C?) -- Maxinr: Raymond. Bloc Ponulaire notional leader. today announced ited to the Province of Quebec. DONATES _.__,__ HOUSEI LONDON. NOV. 5 — (OP) -—~ TWO tel Blaze research with Charles A. Lind- P Car- rel, Nobel Prize Winner and au- thor of the widely-published “lvian The Unknown," had been ill iritli a heart ailment for some monilis.| From 1903 to 1939, Dr. Carrel. was a staff member of the Rocke- feller Institute for Medical Re- search in New York. In ‘INC. Dr. Carrel and Lind- hergh announced development of a mechanical heart, in which the 40 minutes after the outbreak was discovered the structure was pree- t d t" ed. ltilililllfl); beesfdrocy the roof fell i11- James Olsen of Tracadie. N-s- leaped to safety from the top of the hostel. Rutherford. who We! with him, fell back into the build- glwo men were taken to hosplilfl- Harry Dait, so, of Halifax. an em- ioyee. who 11 1* urnping from a ""1 Joseph Gorniley, Halifax. who was burned about the hands and face. MOSCOW. Nov. 5 ~~ (A1111 - Izvestiav. Soviet. szovcriimcilf. nouns- Wipcr. iii an tiriirlc headlined. “the (lcction n1 President. Roosevelt i~ Iturirantcr-d" said ftidnv there was n rumor that Rcbliblican interests were blotting a fake assassination attempt against. Gov. Thomas E Dcwcv to swav American voters. (Gov. Drlvcv. rencliod in Albany had no commcnt. in milk‘ on ihv Russian licwsnnncifls storv. Pro» sidcnr. Roosevelt. was in sccllisio at lii-isrljlyde _ Park _ lionic.) ._ WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 -':1.Pi -- 13-159 Supcrfortrcsses thundered 11 hilfintl’ double strike at Japan- A 95c 1701"!‘ loflfly. hitting naval in- l isli base no" Japanese hands, and ‘the second "st airplane lsolirce in i-.~ I-nr Flast l A communique frctn the iiiriorcc which files tin‘ ll their world-wide 11115510115 tish sea bower on the up of ‘ Malay peninsula. and at the P .Superforts_ Ir; Double Raul Against Japanese fuel "- liri l air- 1 . ll calico‘ Five iiazi Cities Bomheli Yesterday coupon. Nov. a - toe: -l1‘iv*2 German industrial cities rocked todav from bombs of some 2,500 British and American hclivies whose. fighter escort went SDCIllllIl-Z for bat- ilc but fnluul the cncmv refusing fltfiflliibfiLforthjticcoiid straight day.‘ north coast oi Sumatra. Pcalali-Brzlndon Oil i"‘llil0i‘\' on the 1 Tlr- primary hl.iv:. in lthe Japanese arc understood “substan- _ _ ital for e“ w l st d. -' -. - i 5t1111fl11<>u5 at "msapci-c. great Brit-l repair l.clill‘l3.“§l ‘§l....’é§lé“llil‘l‘£ll t . vo converted into the chief has‘: ‘attack was to hnnirl-r the reiitiirgl iiliiibinz results "good to v*xc('1l"lli‘10f Japanese warships which inav. hoih at the former bulwark of Bri- have escaped in that direction frcm? and 2.00 the the great naval battles in Philip- ang- nine waters. CITY LIFE NEW T0 ARCTIC GIRL EDMONTON. NOV, 5 — (OP) Brig-ht lights ma/v be nothing new to “City folk" but to Sarah It "L_o.l they're i". novelty. Tliemldqv -o.n miss ital from AI-iixvik, N.W.'i‘ and siie never before beer .s soulli oi the Arctic circle. "Citv life is strange and I don't care for the traffic and noise." she 531d after lier first gllmpge of Edmfmiflli. 1311i. she suiuiised. she'll have i0 set used to l; for she‘. heading east to \'lSlL friends iii c. Aklavil: is a nice placc to live. shc thinks. "We llilVp movies and dances a: s ti’ w "k to do “ u: Allsklza <0 A that quislflon; flu Yovut. Facets or ‘loom will. Qlzow Ole Ant woaar Alaoln- ‘ills Yoont, PEOPLE 0s {chanson Y METEOROLOGICAL Toronto. Nov. 5 - lcP. _M end - colivcr 52. so; F, 011'...» 33. ; 0111.‘. rcal '4. 3'1: Quc . 49. 56 | FORECASTS l l A arilimcs" Fl-sh ifldlfliliv iz_ ‘ Vi and al r and snow. Tltcsdnv. winds. cloudv and cold with snow- flurries. High tide this afternoon at 430 . and tonight at. 3.30. Slut sets this afternoon at 5.42 and rises tomorrow morning at 7.45. 1111;, quarter moon November Tih becoming colder Willi m .1 I DAILY AIR SERVICE Char‘ ‘ ‘ e g _. Mo-ricton ' A Chaiglottetown 7 A M. Arrives ciiarictmcwi. 12 4:. r M. .M. 8.40 f’ M SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown 11.30 A.M and 4 I’ . M. Arrive Charlottetown 2 P. M and 5.45 P. M. Cll ARLOTTETOWN NEW GLASGOW ‘. lDaily except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown l P. M. Arrive Charlottetown 5.50 P. l.en ves M their navy in the south. 1 The presumption was strong that‘. l’ E l —N S FER-RY SlillVlCl Ia main purpose oi! tlr) Singapore; DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Caribou-JIM) noon and e Lenvea 0.00 l’. M Leave Vgood Islands-IBM A. M_