MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Q-n-i- n, rue h hwdwwn who strllllkd gqidcr 111"!"- 1" Gun! %m all. Bomber crashes llear airport it 0h’town members "my. when their no AllSull ‘$.31. iii tn..- crac ‘CHO occurred as the PlP-m parlll minutes aiior. ‘my; as the medicament Bf iiBlli. ‘lilo machine will d13- iiauilrti and removed from its P0" Wm “vrtigfll in among the trees, odor. Charlottetown llan committed lo Supreme Bourt uaw opascow. N.5.. Dot. T! mow-John J. Nocnan, New Yirk. and John Edward MacKaY. ciiariotietovrn, were committed iosisnd trial in supreme court. at iorelirninary hearing here today- They were charged with break- lug and entering and l. Taking tlie stand at the hearing George i-‘tinjcy. proprietor of the time state-d goods to the valua of bet '00 had been itolea. He identified goods exhib- lied by the prosecution. Noonau and MacKay were witn- oilt tcounsei and offered no state- men. m 5 av é so :1 D- m» u tut down on teilophane use UITAWA. Oct. 27 -(CP) -Alan ll. Williamson, controller of sup- plies today announced an order prohibiting the use of celloplmle titer Nov. l for any purpose other tiian packaging food, candy. druss. or tobacco, not in tins or bottles. The announcement followed the liming by Munitions Minister llotve of transparent film under its various trade names as a "lflDDlY" under the proibislons of the muni- tions supply act. The new ruling. will eliminate the be of cellophane or similar mat- trial tor the wrapping of textiles. hosiery, canned and bottled 10x1: oi all kinds. paper products, metal products, toilet and rubber goods. lluvcliies and notions, soa and cos- metics. matches, salt, an fertilis- us. iilm. (cstimatcd at 50 per 0005) tallied by the diversion to produced. $01 Notion I cent! nor word llto for ‘filial. iidaliii?" °°‘°"°' North ‘ti u been helped snout by of! the atlzuéal fir es a - escaped 1mm izsoriiber crayshed the edge of a bomber was badly dam- k-up, none of the d a scratch when the was to land at 1N0. 31 General h . » - .,. , h ~ fleas than HVB‘ “bout dmlcutiile fire tender from~ the airport was at. the scene of pane was sccn by observers at the "iili lnisliilp occurred about sao n. n. wiiiic tini- crcw was on abévlY-"lm theft Pinjoys store on the night 0f Oc . The order is. necessitated by the Nduoed supplies of transparent Wfll‘ llldustrisc oi glycerlne and ethylene hlyeol from which transparent film Coming Events In clils column “Bur r and Danes in Wiltlshlre 25%. LJTQQ-HFa- . “Wm scone supper and basins- "We instill?’ Pptiieiitiimsonil: L-S l. "5"" Miller bi o and dance h‘ L“ 55 he". Ilhurs sy. Oct 80th. L-lfa-IOJI-Si. with glflpflllfl IIMNWIIWO Egosrvrir Verge Of Constantly reinforced British bombers And fighters in m All - day raids gets on land, including me Sea. plane base at Ostend. attacked. In one sally two enemy float planes on the sea. were destroyed. Off the Netherlands coast Blcn. helm bombers, protected by fight- er B80011. bombed a German con- also were voy. In another foray German freigiiters and barges were at- tacked. Two bombers and nine fighters were lost. Seven German fighters were destroyed in combat, two of them by a pilot of the American Elli-ll? Squadron, PO. Carroll Mo. Colpin of Buffalo, N. Y. In addi- tion two German bombers which approached the British coast were shot down. Last night strong bomber forces attacked the port of Hamburg and other objectives in northwest Germany. Four bombers were lost_ but five members of the crew of one of them were rescued from Eh? sea. today and landed in Bri- an. Tlifiili'li'il$litll Schooner is Total loss DIGBY. N. S, Oct. 21-40?)- The three-insisted schooner A, W. Willis. owned in saint John, N. 13.. was reported a total loss tonight 0n Dartmouth Ledge. so miles west of here, where she ran aground Saturday. The vessel was moving under sail through Grand Passage. be- tween Long Island and Brier Is- land, when the wind died out ‘suddenly. without stcerage way. she drifted onto the rocks. Her crew of seven under Captain Ogilvie made land safely. They were travelling in ballast from Boston to Beliiveauis. cove N. S.. to take on lumber. ‘ Today, the iiLton ship was re- ported breaking up on the ledge. A crew of men began stripping her oi’ sails and other salvageable equipment. {- Island Airman Will broadcast UITAWA, Oct. night announced the names of Canadian ainnen overseas who will broadcast messages to Can- ada tomorrow evening. They will be heard on the pro. gram, "Gentlemen with Wings". to be broadcast over a national network of the Canadian Broad- casting Corporation between 1:30 and a n. m. asr Tuesday. with a rebroadcast over the western net- work starting at 11:30 pm. All‘. The names include:- Now Glasgow and Halifax. "W ted a. buy Chicken Fm" New B ll wick-Lac. R P Bell isaiiifdoia SMIBII [0410-74-11 5g SMMQQWPM nedmcm, Prince Edward Msjesu. "Chili i cant J ' t r-lieiii- “erilitriiillrii 3P9 ' 9m 3 ygigtiiii“itti‘“ii.“iflfs ‘all “i350 filling 5' Ir-MC-ltlm-al. _a_~.¢~ raid by e00 fa:- eastern tstlng a clash in which both a initibifis. ca“... V. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew MAXI MS OFA MERE MAN Beware of magnifying- yourself: -. is only little things that need to it magnified. 5cLinEs “sfloorl Moscow Reports Hitler's Troops Appear On Exhaustion German armies continue fierce pressure l MOSCOW, Oct. 28—('l‘ues- day)—(AP)--Great battles are raging on the fronts be- fore Moscow and in the Donets basin, but Hitleids troops appear to be “on the ééaesagtvtlllllgiiled]fifgisfigiemgrd’ “l” verge of exhaustion,“ the nakeafoitcilarfiiérsvgfli; atglavilélla: LQNQQN, Qcg zq_(cp)_n_ A Soviet information bill-eat! eliiehasiifgilnipg-toolnw “It me m“ fihsybomoxekigs “ash: fgghteirs spent announced early today. ililililemle 0i the wings hooked into rmgmg m: cough: 31'.“ "£03535 A communique said that Niacin of caté-iinsuléoirnligi-“igg mam, Belgium and Harland 1.. during the last 20 days flgghlzslnqfiap anmm climbed om| search oi’ enemy shipping. Tar- {here 11M] boon “a sharp do. terinraiion in the physical condition and the morale" of the invading Germans. The Russians specifically mentioned blnzhzlislt. 57 miles west of Moacmv. the industrial Donels basin city of Kharkov rind Tuganrorr. 30 miles weal nf Rnstov on the lllsil-k Sou as the locale of the fierce fiirhfinir. A T1198 broadcast earlier quoted the information bur- eau as saving that the guns and bombs 0f the Rod air flect had destroyed almost a full infantry battalion and 28 tanks near Kharkov. and had inflicted heavy losses an two infantry regi- ments in the hiozhnisk sec- tor where at least Still Ger- mans were wipcd out. KUIBYSHEV, Russia. Oct. ‘ll-IA P)——A German advance some 15 miles bcyuiiu Miliuyrlftréiitllltlifi to a point only 5U iiilics below .\1U.~;CO\\‘ on the Nara ltivei- was indict cu tonight iii lllllllllfy‘ dispatches tviiicii reported Lll‘ ‘ovlct counter-antacids ' iifi driven the invad- ers back across tlic stream. The Nara jUHlS the Oitu River at Serpukliov, a city oi 71.000 almost directly south 0'1 Niuscow. nncl Sa- vlet advices spoke oi the heaviest of all the increasingly violent act.- lons as rtigiug on till! Russian left wing in liiut vicinity. Continued 1101111)’ action also was reported about iinioyrirosiuvcis, lt- scii‘, 65 inilcs southucst 01' Moscow. the base oi tho ucriiiaii salient. The Red armies, under llijlllliltldll of the sirprcnic commander oi the centre, Gen. Gregory Is. Zhukov, to hold or die, ivci-e beating rit tins Two-way drive 0n Suez Banal Seen in making Events M a y Topple Turkey From Fence In Next Few Weeks. LONDON, Oct. 2'1 - (C?) — In- creasing indications were seen to- night. that British armies in the Middle East. ready for possible ao- tion against the Germans in the Caucasus, might be forced at. the some time to oppose a two-way Ger- man thrust at the Suez Canal. Some quarters expressed the be- lief such a Suez drive would ‘sop-ye Turkey from the fence and broaden the w sole amphitheatre of the war. Only scraps of news reached L01!- don from the Russian front but re- liable sources said these seemed to lfl(llCftL€Z—— 1. The Germans were increasing their pressure toward the southeast obviously with the hope of taking Rostov-on-the-Don, driving across the Caspian land bridge to Astral:- han on the Caspian Sea and mov- ing south against the big oil ports of Battun and Baku. 2. Bad weather._along with stif- fening Russian resistance was slow- ing at least temporarily the Nazi drive toward Moscow from vhe Mozliaisk region where fighting was so near the Soviet capital that the guns could be heard in Rod Squlre. 3. Russians in the Kliiinin sector apparently have blunted the nurtu- crn claw of the German Olivier around the capital. l Oiic source said development of tiic campaign to the southeast "is i quite likcly to knock Turkey off trie lciicc one way or another in me next fe\v wccks." No deliveries of War supplies fiat across Iran TEHERAN, Iran. Oct. 27——(APJ- Russian sources said today no dc .livei-ies of military equipment have yet DCCIIJIIZIIlE to the Red army by Britain across Iran. "Considerable quantities of cot.- ton, jute and other raw materials have been trucked to us from the Persian Gulf and should be useful to our factories in the Caucasus. they said. United States-made planes are reaching Iran in increas- ing numbers. 'I'lie progress of the German arm- ics through Russia's Ukraine to- ward the Caucasus has led many ir- anians to believe that the Nazi lov- y ces might reach this Iranian capi- t tal by late winter or early spruig. belief may have impressed the government. which l5 leisurely l and this CHARLUITETOWN. CANADA, TUESDAY, ocroaiauiiélzs, 1941 NG HAS STABTE Report Island l‘ Airman showed Great daring NDON, Oct. 2'1 —(CP Cable) -Acting Sqdn. Ldr. J. l). Rieardon of Charlottetown, P. l3. I., recently awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, was listed as killed on active service‘ in the Royal Air Forces 88th casualty list issued tonight. Reavdon was the only Canadian in the list which contained 257 names. The Prince Edward Islander re- ceived his DFC along with five other Canadian airmen decorated for daring attacks against the ene- my. The citatlon said Rear-don was “a steady and dependable captain of aircraft who has shown great courage and devotion to duty. Most of his sortles were completed in winter months under adverse weath- er conditions." (His relatives were informed Sept. 14 iliat Reardon was killed in ac- tion Sept. 11 but no details were given. He had been with the H. A. F. a year. Reardcm studied at Prince of Wales College, Charlotte- town, and the College of Redemp- torlst Order at Scarborough Heights, Ont.) Maritime fish ;Landings, value i Show increase ‘ MONCTON. N. 8., Oct 27- (CP)--Fisheric-5 production in the Maritime Provinces so ini" this year has been weil above the 1040‘ level both in volume and value of the catch Fisheries iVlifllSlfil‘ Michaud said in an interview here 4 today. At the end of Sc-ptciribcr the. catch was 241500.000 pounds l larger and worth $1.000 000 more‘, to fishehrinvn than in the corrcs. i pending period of last year, he said. An increase of 37,000,000 pounds in New Brunswcik landings offset decreases of 12,500,000 if! Nova Scotla and 200,000 in Prince Edward Island. Nova. Scotia. however, had the largest increase in landed value. Value of the nine-month catches for the three provinces was: Nova Scotia $5,300.000; New Brunswick $2_160.000; Prince Edward Island $640,000. Mr. Michaud said large ship- ments of canned salmon and cari- ned herring had been iuadc to Great Britain and before long the Egg quota would have been ship. Air Commodore ltollishaw back studying the terms 0i‘ B. FY0903“ 27- lcPi-Na- _ tlonal Defence Headquarters to-w Nova scotio-Sgt. G. D. Bent. Island-Sgt. B» Eastern frontier SHANGHAI, Oct. a1 -(AP) -- A 20 Japanese soldiers sci-us.» the tensely-patrolled Soviet-dentin" frontier. precl i- supreine German thrust with artill- ery bnrruges and iulantry counter- attacks treaty of alliance with Britain and Russia. clsltlslinlbznlzltcilatbxtililtsin HiEEBEICllIIIC I ' ......~ Exiled lirand Mufti "Every dman itcilust fight like 101T‘ " owar s an paiic - inouig-r sf . s must be destroyed ruthlessly as‘ traitors to tlic fittlierland!“ g y Against the disaster iiilicrent in" .___ V the possible loss of the great llizills- OMB Oct‘ 2'|'__(AP)_HBJ Amm trial 11nd °°‘*‘l'l”'°d“°l“g Dmlt“? Elfendi Al I-lusseini, exiled grand Basin and of the lower stretches ct mu“, o! Jerusalem who Ion has the Dun Valley, Soviet 1GCiTITIiClBIlS‘ been a, fugitive from Brltisiii ail- were declared already feverishly at’ ‘hormes came to “My today and w°rk m dismm areas’ it was believed he would attempt to carry on from here his anti- B-itish activity among Mosiems with the encouragement of Musso- lini, whdistylcs himself Pmleihm’ of Islam. The Fascists expected the mull-l. who fled from Iran when British force: occupied that country two mon i s ago, to serve as a propBKMI- dist among the Aralbs whosieltsypm- M, AX, O g g7 _((;pi _con- pathics Rome long as sous - 0i‘ fi-gntgdmanew ‘with a choice bc- "ears the muftl has tried to pro; tween Liberals Consfrrtgntlycs gcrlltffln Moslem llllrlslll! B88 T15 _ i ct o or on r1 - gstlvapsgaotiiiiiilil ‘df lhiil‘ 619th legia- His 111959069 l" 39m: “F5 M5‘ 1am" since Confederation. closcti 11.5 Count Ciano, ore gn min- From ii a. m. to 8 p. m. A.S.T. lcr. conferred with Hitler. "£23."J§“l..l"§f.3llf..5°l3 li1“‘..§‘;.°= . . . eiltier to return the Liberal zsv- Fo:: fur grades Made clearer Nova Scotians lio to polls today ' ei-nment that has ruled since 1933 or the Conservatives undoi- their 09-year-old leader, Leonard W .1. M. Maser. It is the same old story—l-ll>efals vs. Conservatives-but for the first time the Co-opcratlve Common- wealth rederation ls making a ser- ious bid for recognition and some of the 325,000 eligible voters will decide the fate of the third par‘.y's_ six candidates. Sixty-five candidates-SO Liberals 29 Conservatives and the six C- C F. men-flung themselves into this wartime campai n. a campaign that was serene an unspectacirlar in comparison with some of those. in the Dost. War-ZS Years ranching iiidustr tions. and ion, Agriculture lals said today. to encourage reduction of quality furs, of lcials said. A fox pelt under the i -cutn oi the Somme, OTTAWA, Oct. 27—tCP)-Clearcr definition oi grades used in the fox have been provid- ed for in amen merits to regula- grading centres are being established throu hoiut the Domin- partment offic- Tiie amendments were designed to make grading more distinctive :56 regulations means the hide of s dud silver. white-marked silver. pntlnurgid ni- HALIFAX, Oct. 2'1 -<c1=> -aii‘ Commodore Raymond CQHIJEHWQ one of Canada's greatest sky aces of the first great war and comman- der of the Royal Air retro-o in Egypt in this war, was in Halifax tonight. His mission il€'\: ms t. (lififl is- ed lmmei‘.'z-l_v. Nvivsnu-ii learned of his arrival in the city only late tonight. and he could not be reach- ed at his hotel. Air Commodore Ccllishaw is be- lieved to have been detached from his Egyptian post for new duties. I-fe commanded the Egyptian area sinoe 1930. Nazis report Big advance 0n llostov BERLIN, Oct. 27 -— (AP) — The, Nazi high command claimed toduy_ the Germans were driving toward Rostov, gateway to Caucasus oill and big Black Sea. port. and b1amr:d' a slowdown of the advance on other Russian fronts to bad vireath- er. The high command claimed the Russians, launching desperate couri- tor-attacks in the Donets Basin oi the southern sector, were thrown back and credited Italian trod with inflicting a major shore of t e repulse. he exact location of the ti ht- ing and the strength of the Ita inn forces were not given. but fonei correspondents were furnished wi copies of press material on ltostov. It was recalled that similar matter was ut. in their hands only a few days fore the Germans announced the occupation of Kharkov, the "Russian Pittsburgh" 240 , miles stov. rt on the 0m River it was said, a highly import- ant or its grain trade. industi-lvs " ’ d d l ti I X0 5Q n ., girlihllli“ that“ 5.332%‘ 9P3 fiéif"iy°ii‘ii“s‘tffviti'.iiw.'ifilfs. ~ Xfiflflssél.“ ifbilafas.“ " Si... g,=;§,,';g;;gg,;"“ "i" °°"""""*"= shone. write toi- m-io“, m“: "y; Jl hes! officials here said they o color phases of standard silver It? The huh commmd report, on ‘More Co. Ltd u lied no information of such a clash » "e dark half silvegfl‘thlli°'q"" f other fronts, particularly before ,_ -____ which ‘ran m4 occurred four days sliver. silver and sivr . Ph- Mm°w_ "M on; m“, operation, S“ Belle River lay "yogi a . "Filled l!“ *5 "N mm“ ‘WL were makln cont. nued progress "in m‘! Wives", char; galley Hall, who Russian account said the (Iv The Canadian Press) " giitblli-“A slilechln and éw,‘£'°§:: |plbe or un avorable weather." m? d nag 'ppg“ l K0 ' - ' ' ' ——_——~——~—-i—- a an out “i. #0 i6 a1 2i ‘org: iii-incisors (gglylhwfiwai-{lyglflhi oc'r 2a 1918-811: United States Qingr igrtjmiylfrmlulfi" ‘fflqfih a‘ carom T0 SAFETY ' ' ' ' ' ' - ‘ ' British tea Y - ~ ‘ "Cilllktlng rnwbogralel; mrtjmitwns?“ Tia!“ iililingleiijsierivngii vessel silnkmlgil- "lcmmm Depmmengp wan‘: i: LONDON - (C?) - A ser ant mralld dlstnctshcgéggeihng|y:w ..fllhtllll with Ituli n Datmls the subunamne Jllokifialgllgittakhfill§iflsiti rfflfg“ ‘oevgre “m”; mkwlntldangflilggéé“ ehginechaistim “Boom ‘ J tudeowtndi-sw tuition mederse ti "c l‘ ‘ ‘ 1 o an in- mr m‘ s batter one gm!" - _ ,,. ... M,“ “nah ,. “rm; inspection may appy a g; iokinn service Write l l? "m"!!! "l"! "Wm- W‘ m" Y.“ P ' " .. '. "p ‘ t t m lte s Journey minis a o. anon and o o in Miles ma cartridges lr- ~— i» ne.r ha Maisonette. l‘§3'§°;$:aiii¢._i nnuamlsed iii an snsiisn Senate begins l Debate on U. S. Neutrality Act Administration Lead- ers Believe Meas- ure May Be Approv- ed In Two Weeks. By William B. Ardery Associated Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON. Oct. 27 -fAPt- The Senate began its historic de- bate on neutrality revision lnday, with Senator Tom Connolly urg- ing the United States to reassert its right to freedom oi’ the seas and Senator Arthur Vandenberg charging that troop transports would follow in the wake of armed American mcrchantmen travelling to bclligcwvit ports. Before I - chamber was a insis- tirc greatly broadened by the Sen- rttc foreign ralations committee, of which Connolly is chairman To the House of Representatives pro- vision for the arming of merchant ships, tlic committee added another iiholisiiing the neutrality act's plu- liibitions against sending such ships into belligerent ports or com- bat zones. During a 00-minute speech before s. areas "I I packed galleries Connally said tho proposed revision “is a defence measur". tint a ivai" measure." He atltlcd ll at "the United States must claim its rights to the seas. its right as ti free and equ-il nation a- mctio the nations of the earth." Vanclenberg, hiicliigan Republi- can. told his colleagues:- "Wlion you arm t; merchant ship and send her l0 a belligerent port she will be followed one day by an- oilici- ship-a troop transport. I am trying to remember the trans- port as well as the mcrtliati: ship." Prior to opening of debate, Sen- ate lenders told President Roose- volt at a White House conference 'h:\t. H10 hrozitlencd neutrality revis- ion measure-Jvhirh would carry out the President's recommenda- il0hS-~l)1'0b3l)i_\' would be aivproved by their chamber in lean than two works. Opposition leaders generally said tlicv had no intention of fili- tiusteriniz. Canadian Editors Back from trip To Great Britain NEW YORK. Oct. 27 _(CP) - Canadiaii neusimper editors and writers, arriving back from Britain, today declared in a joint snatc- ment that the British nations "can- not be bertten; but neither can they achieve victory unless and until all the great notions of the womi which are opposed to ziggressini. pct together and wage total war a- ',.a.nst total brutality." This was the main point of five stressed by the 11 Canadians rep- resenting newspapers from the At- l lantic lo tlic Pacific, who spent 16 busy days in Britain as guests of the Brllisii council. and returned in the American export. liner Excani- bion which docked today from Lis- bon. Thcy also declared:- 1. “The belief that Hitlerism can only be finally vanquished by a di- rcct invasion of Germany itself." 2. “It. is incorrect to think that the British people are not ieellni; the uroiglit. or suffering from the impact of the war." 3. "Too many people are carried away with the false idea that vic- tory for us is inevitable, that. all we have to do is carry on accurcl- ingu to schedule and all will be wc ” ("We are returning to Canada‘ more convinced than ever that if we expect l0 halt and overcome the Nazi hordes, everybody has got. to sacrifice a great deal more that: ui present." The group ilcw to Britain by clip- per plane by tvay of Lisbon and while ovcrsrris were given access to vital sources of information, ob- served important military manoeu- vrcs and talkcri with Prime Mflnis- ter (Jiurrlilll in the House o. Commons and v-‘li Lh-Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton, Canadian Corps commander, at corps headquarters. Pitrpose oi the visit was to gain first- hand knowledge of the gen- cral war situation and Britain's war effort. The party included:-Maj. l! G. Christie, Saint Jolin. N. 8.: Rev. Canon Chambcrlnnd. Quclxec. Lionel Shapiro. Montreal; J.I... Gag- non. Quebec; B. K. Sandivell. Tor- onto; Bishop R. J. Renlson. Toron- to; Hugh Tomplln. Fergus, Ont; Grattan Olicarv. Ottawa: D. l3 Rogers, Regina; Fraser Gcrrie. Ed monton and W. L. MacTavish. vau- couver. The 12th member of the party. Oswald Mayrand of Mon- treal. returned to Canada ahead of the main group. Second reprieve VIOI-IY. Oct. 2'! -iAP) — A sec- ond i-e rive granted by the Gor- mans mpornrlly spared the lives of 50 hostages who had faced cxe- ln Nantes in rcpriaai for ilie as- sassination of l. German officer. ‘Med 15 mu,‘ "m landed hi; mg-icutlon at. midnight by firing wqirsds servance of Navy Dny, was broad- _..... at Annual Subscription Delivered, 55.00 lly Mull: l’. E. l., $1.00; Cuniulu isnil U-B. $5.00 Charges Nazis Plan To Carve South America U. S. President calls on people to unite to defeat Hitlerism; Says Germans to substitute Nazi Church for eging religions. WASHING'PON, Oct. 27-(AP)—I'resident ltoosevell asserted tonight that "the shooting has started". that “America has been attacked." and that the nation stood ready to fat-c its newest and greatest challenge. He said in an ziddress at a Navy League dinner that “we Americans have cleared our decks and taken our battle stations." In it, the President advocated broadening of the pro- gram for revising the Neutrality Act to permit not only the arming of Anterican merchant ships, but to let them also "be free lo carry out" American goods into the harbors of our friends." ‘Merchant ships must be protected by the navy, lie declared. The Senate foreign relations com- mittee has recommended these le- R.0.A.F. plane Makes forced I Landing in bay visions and Ur. Roosevelt sail. e1- lmiiiatioii of iiamstrlnging provis- ions of the neutrality law was "the HALIFAX, O01. 1f — (OP) Bolingbrolm bomber- of the R/o Canadian Air Force made a f course of honesty and of realism.‘ M1‘. Roosctcltls speech. at an 0b- landing early tonight, in the wawr of St. Itiargarefis Bay, about N miles from here, and one of its crew of four was seriously in- jured. R. C. A. I". officials hens the plane was flying out of ali- base at Yimnoirth, N. S. Cause of the crash was not. known. The crew consisted of two pilot officers and two air-men. Three d the men were only shaken . Their identities were not known. flwliaqAltfldnottflaoiooo what, mission the plane was on- gaged on at the time of the acol- dent. cast throughout the world. He insisted that America's do. fence output must be multiplied and must not be hampered by the “selfish obstruction" of a small blit v dangerous minority of industrial managers or of labor leaders. Objective to Stop Hitler Navy Day this year had been set aside as a. day of recognition for total national defence. And tht- first objective oi’ that defence, he declared, "is to stop Hitler." "He can be stopped and be com- pPliPd to dig in." Mr. Roosevelt said. “and that will be the begin- ning of his downfall, because dic- tatorship of the Hitler type can live only through continuing victor- ies—incl'easing conquest.” Mr Roosevelt made two ills- closurr-s of secret documents which he sultl originated with Hitler's government-one for dividing South America. into five vassal states and the other ‘for abolishing all existing sell;- ons. OPPORfura utvra Sittartco HER Kuucktes FROM He dcclarcd that. these grim truths of presen: and future plans of I-Iitlerism would be hotly denied by the controlled axis. press and i v hams‘ radio. But he declared that he had a secret map of South America arid part of Central America. on which Berlin experts Iirive “ruthlessly ob- liternted all existing boundary lines" and have divided South A- merica into five vassal states, bringing the whole continent. under their domination." In one of those new puppet- stales would be the republic of Panama-and the Panama Ctinnl. "This map makes clear." Mr. Roosevelt said, "the Nazi dcsian not only against South America tCoiiiinut-d on tinge 7, Col 4) Tugboat Brant l-(uocxmo. TORONTO, Oct. 27~—It'iinimunt and maximum temperatures:- Ditwson 20 ill n n e Victoria 45 5a Missing since t; l lllilélllii“ ‘.11 3%‘? October ill s. Lontt val all n4 I Boston ~10 T1 ax, Oct. ai-tcpiusni -. , ping i1‘i..l'il< trqicsscd concern t2» $fmvvalsl Th‘! Wither iitis been imgm “n. H“. mes U; ac“... mm mild with showers in sturlicrri aboard the lmgbont “Brant, more Ulllflflfll; but ciold i\\"lll‘. I.~1ll\\\\’lllll1‘l'i~.‘li iiian two wccw. over tie iiorv on a lll "m" 09TH 15H‘ 5- i l‘ ‘ll HWPS voyage from Quebec city. iuir in thr- Prairie Provit The 00-foot vessel has bet-n unzv- in hiaiiiiobn and Sn ported since slic loft Mulqrzivc. N., with moderate ?('l'ill)4".'. S.. Oct, ill for tho short run down Alberta the Nova Scotia coast to llilill.‘l‘l Several days‘ search oi tlii- t-iust. BOSTON 0.», between _ll\‘l'_C and Muigriivc Irv ms.‘ [or nbl-Lhcu, coastal shipping, naval and air tmit- Ram mnngn‘: H, {bis has produced no clue to the “rem than“; rigs ac. ' ' ’ v ,. Capt. J. R. Mann. 55. of Montreal mmd- llmrcllv Cofl. . ivus her skipper". Other crew tn-ni- “f "l -‘l~__ ;‘~l‘f_ i‘ '- bers tvcrc bCi10\‘(‘fl irsiriciiis of Qur-, ‘rlmnflh -“‘il_il“‘ '~ bcc PFOVlHFt‘, but their names cn-icl llorllllla“ “limb not available licrc, y Tlicre ivas scant hopc for tho. High llrlo this niicriznori at 10gb “Ccilldllli! Ifld 108F111!‘ ¢irél\‘-'=-15.44 anti toiuorrnu- moiiiziig at S ppiiig men sai tic 111g or ln- 51p, ariiv should have madc Halifax the? 51m 591,: this afinrntinn at 4.55 same day she lcit Mulgrnvv. on 'uc_ ‘m; r159; nmymng at Strait of CfIIlSO. . The wcuilici" ivas fine t-ho 'll0fll-i ing siic lt-it there, but ncxt dav a stiff wind blew. However, the Brant. was a sturdy craft. arid no anxizflv. at first was iclt. lt ivns l)l".‘<lllfl"(lg slic bud cntcrcd some harbor ior shelter. The search was begun rvhcti she failed to arrive Monday. A chock oi n11 ports bctwvcu Halifax and Mill-l grave also proved fruitless, - i The Brant had just been rebuilt‘ at Orleans. Que. hoioro leaving for, Halifax. Wl1(‘f‘(‘ slic was to have, been put in service. She nus nvxivd; by the Porter Construction Ccmq P0715’- Hcr trip from Quebec tn Mul- grave was described as il-‘itllvillll-F“ 1 fast. Her ordinary sailing speed was ‘i around 12 knots. tomorrow .33. Full moon. Nov. fl, i0 I'm. summerslde tiric cighireii min- uics lair-r than Cliuiioltclnwti. BURDEN-I'd PI-I TORMIINTINE S ‘RV mum‘ I~2.\('l~‘.I"l svNlMYt Issiiyglllnnlrn 9.25 A.l'\l-. 1-09 P-M‘ 4.45 . . Mavi- (‘npe Tnrrvrontlnc 11.00 A.M. 3.20 EM.- 610 P-M- Silnday service, loavv Iini-tlcn 9.00 A..\l.. and 4.45 PAL; lcnvr S n :1- Tn!‘- mcnilne 10.05 A..‘\l.. and 5M9 Ji- WOOD l5 ANDR FERRY l (DAILY. |N(‘I.I'Il1.\‘(i stmnavsi Loaves Wood lslan-l 6.00 A.M.. 000 All!" and 2.00 Pf“. Loaves (Tarihol 5.00 AJVL. l2 n00! and 4.00 IHM. A fish ~__,