MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN .-_-¢-_ MAXI MS 03A MERE MAN "m; (i uur “grime a"? ll ‘ll’- 55? “ledge”? ma: tars: gather. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew w CHARLOTFETQWN, CANADA, SATURDA?’VNQv/Efifiggfiglilm T‘ i, 1.35338 " “1*.;;.". ....;.:.;;.:.T.1;..;.;§ “a” By Aluil: l’. E. l., $1.00; Luuullu 11nd UJQ. MJQ jp MISSNG rnom ronrsnosn u. s. Report Drive Cn Moscow falls Off Only local attacks on all but one sector; ‘Situation not so if’- Seek cause of lir Liner crash l7 Passengers And Three Crew Mem- bers Dead In On- tario Accident. (By Jack Sullivan) ‘(Canadian Press Stuff Write 5'1‘, THOMAS. Ont“ Oct. 3i _— (CH-United States and Canadian rrlatlon experts probed into the pmrred wreckage of an American Airlines transport plane, seeking the cause of - 1 ash that sent the. big ship noseiirst. into a farm ‘1-2 i ud 20 people to their deaths. 1 Ahslf-duzcn officials of the Ur- fltd States civil aeronautics boar , rldrd bv Col. Douglas Joy, Inspector oi Aviation for Toronto district, 1nd other Canadian officials, ivv-a ncharge of the investigation, chore res little cf the plant shin left t‘ J them to examine-only the port ring and the tail were left an;- vheie nenr" intact. i The plane, in cirnrue of Capt, Da- vid I. Cocoar. 34, cf Plundome. N. l, crashed to the ground through the rain and fog about 11.12 A, P ‘l‘. last night. It fell on the oaiflefd oiThomoson Rowe's farm 14 nules mt oi here and burst into flames! Burned Two Hours Angry flames licking out from th~ ' machine prevented any chance rl ue for the i.‘l passengers and new of three. It was two hours be- fore anyone could get close euomxh t1 start pouring water on the llunes, described by Rev. A f1. I‘:1_\'- hr, pastor of the United Churn at (Continued on page 11, Col 4) llow London papers tplashed sinking IDNDON, Nov. 1—(Sa.turday)— (CPI-Front-page bannerlincs on linking oi the Reuben James-- Dilly Mllll—:'U. S. are on the lass 1 mile into wa Dolly Herald-“Nazls glad U. S nrship sunk." News Chronlcle-"U- S. destroyer V-llli; but. policy remains 581119." Coming Events -||.- Im fur Nlrllrln In um I com: pa: word column "wllllbltd w buv Chicken, Puwl llillnd Cold Swrage L-ZlQ-‘l-Q-l! "Show-Canoe Cove Tuesday. L-lllll-l l- 1-31 "slltlw-Cranaua Wednesday. L-134-1l-1-3l "Shoiv-Bradalbane Thursday. L-IZH- 11- 1 -3L "Slioiv-Mnlpeque Friday. L-lilfl-ll-l-(ll. "Grand Bazaar and Chicken glllllltr. itustico. November 4th 111d, “'- -a5-11-1-11 "mlllter River United Churgh ‘ullllvl’ Wednesday, November 5th. L-137-l1-1-5 ‘Qigltggrqirrurch Chicken Supper "v would’. 1r..t.“.iii..l‘%iia.w°“‘““ 11-145-11-1-21 "m" Burner closi a a V“ . n3 ance. qqtweuielflz ogggiiay‘. November b-ICS-ll-l-Zt "out W H," hlgflaglrgtggerin Credit Union .' . bor no. w-b- m" Whom: irisa-n-iin. slim-lg; Bale. or. Peter's “i ll. Saturday. ‘l o'clock. Irlm-ll-l-ll. “WW9 Wednesday, ll “hm, comm“ U“ November iced oh h “PM L-ISI-ll-‘ltii nfituelhs Elly “Dora Deon" in N Hal‘. Monday event . m“ l’ 3w- ls-WI-ll-llbd “Bl-RBI 3on0 B“ Pgnd Chicken Supper he - Tlltbddy Ind WFd “ill. November 4th and 5th. L-B-IC-‘IO-Bl uwufled “T? hymn bu 4101MB! c rm Phomflilgwvyil lives. all rddes at..." co lg once». rum Co‘? to ‘i- oricauyi“! Pitts Monday at In; . were» '°“~ rlnz woo d m?‘ P‘; Roch. Oollzcwg. or Sig: f m t if. u- Knul or ' offortitud lrlm-lo- “iqii-i-mim m oolnfimn good in the south. MOSCOW, Nov. l-(sagur. lllyl-(APF-Flghtlng up and down the bnlire front from Leningrad to the Sea of Azov Will! Iellorted by the Soviet ln- formation bureau early today. "During Oct. ill-our troops [ought the enemy on all fronts", said the unusually brief enm- munlque broadcast by the Moscow radio. LONDON. Oct. 31 _(CP) —So- viet dispatches reported tonight ilat Hitler's suorenre offensive on Moscow had fallen off today- the 30511 llllY 0f the grand campaign when he said was to bring a great decision at the Russian centre-tn mere ‘oval attacks in all sectors save one. In tlrs sinzle region of present active menace-Aunt llmitPd on its northern vxlrcmuvr hv Kalinin, 95 m‘les riortlnvcst of Moscow. and ex- Bitter row in Congress over Torpedoing Charge Mr. Roosevelt Responsible F o r Lives Lost Brings Heated Reply. WASHINGTON, Oct. 31—(A.P)- The torpedolng of the United State: destroyer Reuben James Produced B bitter row today in the senate. where majority leader Alben 33.2‘!- ley angrily disputed a statement that. President Roosevelt was "ner- isoncally responsible" for any lives os . The charge of presidential rewbll- sibility was made y Senator George Aiken (Rep-Vt) during de- bate on the question of lifting r-he Neutrality Act's restrictions nil shipping. Barkley declared that the accusation was ‘unfa.lr.“ Reading in n loud voice from a prepared statement. Aiken charged that Mr. Roosevelt, "without the knowledge or consent of Congress." had given orders to the navy “hunt down and sink shins of =11".- othcr nation with which we are not. legally at. war.“ This was done. Aiken said, de~ spite the fact that CODEWSS "ll/ll been given assurances that. the navy tending m [he South mmowhere i“ " would not engage in conveying. l LONDON. Nov. 1—tSuturdav). —-((‘l')—.'\tivircs reaching here early today suld a stile of" sheer‘ has been declared ut. Tula, roll junction 100 miles south of‘ Mos- cow. The advices said a serious sil- uutlon ls developing around the town, under attack by the Ger mans for several days. l bout Vol Okolarnsk. udriu. is 55 miles zuovq the cap1ta.—t!1e infan. by was declared suu beating tire- ssly at the Red line with infantry 1nd tank charges, In spte 0i llilllllrently great im- llrovenicnt in the Russian situation at the centre, however, Soviet sil- ence suggested that matters mm going badly for the defenders in the south and more especially in the Crimea. . Asupplcment to torlnys com. muurque did r-‘port, however. that on an uusated sector of ti . south- ern frcnt. Red cwainry Ind an- nihilated two German remnants 1n a battle for a town identified on- ly us “Z" Says report of Big wheat sale ls Cincorreet” OTTAWA, Oct. 31—(CP)—P1‘lme Minister lvlncKlnnon said tonight he would soon be in a position to make an announcement on wheat sales but described as “wholly in- correct" a newspaper report. to the effect Canada has sold 150,000,030 bushels ta the British government. "I will Pave something interesting on the siujeet very soon," said the minister but he (icclined to go fur- ther. ' “It is entirely incorrect." he said after reading a newspaper story which stated the large sale ha? been made at a price between 85 and ill) cents a bushel, Early this year the British gov- ernment contracted for l2(l(l00 00o bushels of wheat from Canada am. it. is not _v6t known how much of it- has been shlppcrl. Yesterday an authoritative gov- ernmental source indicated some Canadian ivhcat previously nitr- chased bv (‘h-wt Britain had been shipped to Russia. 41 burned in Factory fire HUDDERSFIELD, Yorkshire, Oct. 31—(CP)—Fort.y-0ne persons, most- l girl workers lost their lives 1o- ay when fire swept through a clothing factory here. It was the largest. tire death toll lu Britain m years. Most of the iris were trapped on upper floors oil the birrnin in: and weoe killed when trey al- tempted to Jump to safety. An eye- witness described anem as “shout- illfl and screaming" as they jumped from windows. "I heard thuds as the bodies struck the ground,“ the eye-int.- nesg sold, "A ran over but some were nlread dead." Ono wor er rtn outwith nls cloths: in flames and, after she has. been given assistance. returned l0 the building in an attempt to save others. r-l b-o GREEK V. C. FOR KING LONDON - (cc) - The Greek cabinet awarded the Greek Military Cross-equivalent of the Victoria Cross-to the exiled King George rf the Hellenes "for his unspfifi"! "- orts to render the Greek army ef- flclent . . and for the higll; example set dur- Duuqf- Royal Canadian ‘than Aiken cited the torpedoing of the destroyer Kcarny. with Arr: lcss of ll lives. and the shaking o. the Reuben James. "Had the. President of the Unit- ed. States and members 0f his cah- inet kept their promises.‘ Aiken went on deliberately’. “tilt! men 0i the United States navy aboard Yh- =e ships would not lle rotting on the ocean floor today." In reply, Barkley said Mr. Roose- velt had “more right: to outline a defence area around the Wesem Hemisphere than Hitler did to take a pencil and draw a line 1.500 mllfis our. in thc Atlantic." "Whether it. ls the senator from Vermont or any other senator.’ Barklev continued, "it is unfair to charge the president with personal (Continued on page ll. Col 5) Minimum butter Price expires OTTAWA. Oct. 3i —(CP)'—'I'l"e minimum price for butter set by order-in-councii last May at the suggestion of the dairy products hoard expired today and in future the board will buy butter if neces- snry 1o protect the market instead of renewing the minimum Price. The Carlad nu Press was informed tonight. The minimum price in effect this month was 32 cents a pound to the purchaser" in the aiaritlmcs. Que- bec. Ontario 30 cents in Mauitolaa and Alberta and 2i) cents in Saskatchewan. The price of crenmery prints was one cent. a pound lzltrher in each case. An agriculture department spokesman sold it would be for llle dairy products board t-o decide when to step in and support the nmrker by buying. but. he thought such action ivouid be taken ii but- ter prices went below 32 Cfillls ill Montreal. indiscriminate Warfare against ll. 8., London says LONDON. Oct. 3t - (OP) ~ The sinking oi the United States th- struycr ltrubeu James, following at.- tucks on the American destroyers Greer and Kearny, was described- by an authoritative British swim- man tonight as a clear lndlociion that. Germany already is waging "indiscriminate warfare BBB-Amt the United States." Furthermore, this ‘esman ob- served, “The United dtates can ek- pect heavier and heavier attacks against. her shipping west of Ice- nd. ‘lhe German submarines. he said, have supply ships witch can op- erate in the vic nity of Baffin Bay, which lies above the Arctic Circe between the west 60M?’ 0i’ 6R9!!- mig Blldtcllnfldl- k m h i, m (tOtaWaas esa-i e Tile/y declined to comment on this conjecture-l llemobilizerl ships Join demonstration ALEXANDRIA. Oct. ill-MP)- Demobili-red French warships here oined the British fleet today in omage to French hostages execut- ed by the Germans. Under orders of Vice Admiral ll. E. Godfrey the Wench vessels drop- ped the tricolor to hall mast at. 4 . m., the hour set. by the Free ench for a sympathy demonstra- gom and kept t t re until sunset. Action bv the interned French force here, which nomlnuli at least. is under the orders of ony. was on invitation of the British no- vol lutiioritiel. and British Columbia.‘ Expresses Oil Exists “you are sitting 2.: Church boys Assemble for Conference “Boys And a Better World,” T h e m e. Rev. E. R. MacLean, Toronto, Leads Dis- cussions. Seventy-five boys, representative oi every area of lnce Edward Island, met in the opening session of the Provincial Boys’ Conference last night. The boys assembled at the Baptist Church for registraaon and to hear Rev. E, R. Madman, Toronto, speak to them on ‘Boys and a. Better World." The director reminded the conference that being held across the nation, follow- ing the same programme. The following conference officers were elected: Sresldent, Heath McQuarrfe, Vic- to a. Vice President, Wilmot Robertson, Hunter River. wSecretary, Jack Proud, Charlotte- twenty othe1- such conferences yew: . wn. Rev. I. J. Levy, Provincial Boys Work secretary and Rev. Donald (Continued on Pate ll. Col l) Give population Figures for four Island towns OTTAWA. Oct. 3|. -(CP) — The Dominion Bureau of Statistics to- day issued the fourth list. of popu- lation figures which the bureau saio was subject to revision. It contain- cd the populations of some cities. towns and incorporated villages not previously announced. They included: Prince Edward Island: Towns.‘ Albcrton 544 (590); 301-. den 507 (385); Kensington. ‘I52 (612); Summerslde, 4.908 (3.759). Price ceiling Details expected Sunday night OTTAWA. Oct. 3l—1CP)—De'.alls of the order-in-couircll under which the government is setting up a ceil- lng over the prices and commodities and rates charged for various s1 1-- vices will be made public late Suu-, Cay night it was learned tonight. Terms 0i the order-in-councll: were understood to have been ao-f proved at a late afternoon stoning ot the cabinet. but the official an-i nounoement will not be mode until, Sunday alter signature of the order by the Governor-General. i The announcement will be made by the Wartime Prices and Trade, Board which today announced key appointments tn the administrative organization being formed to carry out. the government order. ment of Hon J. G. Taggart, Shani-- chewnn Minister of Agriculture and Bacon Board chairman, as food ul- ministrator. Interpreting The War (By Klrko L. Simpson) (Associated Press Sh! Writer) The torpedo-mangled hull of the destroyer Reuben James nu gone to the cold sea-floor of the North Atlantic somewhere west of Iceland a grim Nmlnder to the United States that an old world conflict s in has cross- ed the eastern reshold of the new. Iceland, with its British-Am- erican garrison, is l rampart o! new world defence. Westward of that outpost American worcroft of sea and air one shepherding vital we: cargoes for Britain or supplies for he Iceland. garri- flson. ‘They an under orders lo shoot on sight at mnrnuding Axis raiders. The Reuben mes i; the third American naval craft attacked in that. defence “Twenty do ago British naval authorities n Iceland revealed! tn from the hour when the ‘Wt’... é...““i‘i"°-ll"iil‘$ .ro Elm . gig war or commerce had been Belief Here Mr. J. M. Corbett of Tulsa, Oklahoma sayi on oil here”. "In my opinion there isn't much question but that there is oil in this Island." Mr. J. M. Corbett, well- known oil man of Tulsa, Oklahoma. said last night while in the City enroube to his home after spending a few days visiting Dr. and Mrs. A. Kennedy, Georgetown. Drilling to a depth of between 9.000 and 12.000 feet. will be necessary. however, be- fore oil wlll be reached. here, he added. “You are sitting 0n oll here" was his confident prediction when dis- cussing the matter further. He bas- ed his Judgment on n, personal tom of inspection to the I-Ililsborough Bay area several years ago. At that time he visited Governor's Island. where drilling had been carried on several years before, and studied the geology of the coast line. He has also heard the opinion of au- thorities in the business regarding the possibility of oil being discover- ed here and their ideas were in a- greement with his own. Mr. Corbett said that this Island might become a “valuable reser- voir" for England if oil was struck and he has no doubt of ‘its exist- ence h°l"@- A native of Summer-ville. Mass. he has been tn the oll business for, W. S. Grant and P. W. Turner. 111-‘ many years and operates someut the finest wells in the Osage Natlon are; in the heart of the oll produc- lng area of United states. His wells are situated in the countrY of the Osage Indians. who possess "the highest morals of any tribe in the world." He has visited the province on many different occasions in his Illi- vate plane, being an ardent en- thusiast of aviation. Mr. Corbett is not connected in any way with the Cities Service Oil Company o! New York which is at. present; developing the oil possibili- ties of the province. Nor is he con- nected with the Selsmogruph Stif- vlce Corporation of Tulsa. which 1s conducting the geophysical survey or the Island to determine whether or not the rock structure is suitable to the production of the valuable fuel, The opinions he eXPNSWIl ‘Ml night were purely his own and quite impartial. He aid tribute to botn lite cities Servoe C mpnny and r-hc Seismograph Corpo ation as well as Mr. Hugh McKay. ‘Filled. who son- trols the oll riallts here. ‘Ibev all stood at the top of the list in the oll industry, he said. He expects to leave the province today by‘ plane. Canadian Air crashes (By The Canadian Press) dlan l1istory_ was the crash of an American Airlines transport , near St. Thomas. Ont... last. ilignl in which 20 persons were killed- 1‘l passengers and the crew Ol three. , Following is a ilislhg; meior 0M1- ' ‘- l r 1 “d§:§._a'1l§), allilgll-c-i-‘ive killed at St. Oal-harmes. Ont, 1n crash of sifllll- l . llallltlaIil-wflve killed in crash ‘The hoard gave out the appoint-f ixo-nuh-anmnllllll lwm or monopltine at Hamilton air meet May 23, lulu-Pilot, mechnnieand five passengrers killed in crasir of‘; General Airways Dlfllli! mll!‘ Den’, netnidyellllgillgsb-Four killed in crushl or passenger plane at Zeballos. B. 9-’ Nov, 2i], 1939—Three iiot ofiioersi and alrcrnftinan of R. . A. F. kill- ed when plane crushed after 1111b. spin at. ’i‘rcuton, Ont. l M“ 17‘ lgqo-Fout- members of . C. A. F, killed when plane :rash-, ed nefiar Edrgstéone, 15 miles north . n- - “Jigeolib? HMO-Defence Mintster‘ Rogers and three R. C. A. F. ‘men killed in crash near Newton/ll e. 01%;. 11, l940~—-Five killed who; s; 1 AZ O. A. F. lane crashed on between lifogl eBay, B. 0., and "“1§‘;‘§.“1§?“.’81o_' R11- airmen killed when two R. c A. n. planes plum:- ed into Luke Muskoka, Ont. Jan, 6, lMl-Five airmen killed in crash of n. c. A. F. plane ll Rivers. Man. pep s, lint-Nine passengers. crush threecrew members killed in plane of Trans-Canada Air b11168 near Armstrong, Ont. Oct 30, UNI-Seventeen passen- gers and crew of three killed in crash of American Airlines grams- port plane near 8t. Thomas- _______--——- War-ZS Years Ago Today (By The Clnndlnn Pres!) NOV. 1, mid-Italians made big drive on the Oar-so plateau an drove onem from heights east. of Gorizin; 4.00 Austrians c tuned. British forces in Macedon a cap- tured three villages on the Strum NOV, 3, fold-Gannon; evacuat- 0d Fort. Vaux non Verdun. Rus- sian warships bombarded Con- tt. Bul Ramm- m "“"u§‘*&"°§~. Worst aviation disaster in Cane; planet [Name local men For Regional Labor Board Local Board 0f Trade Informed Inquiry To Be Held Into Sink- ing Of S. S. Char- lottetownt The Council of the Charlottetown 1309.111 of ‘Trade met at 5 p. m. yes- berday ht The Charlottetown to deal with the matter of a communi- cation received from the Secretary of the Canadian Chamber oi‘ Com- merce which requested the selection 0f representatives of employers for the Regional Labour Board. A led- ter rcgardlnu the inquiry into the 1055 0i the S. S. Charlottetown car TBYPY was also read. Present at the meeting were: Lt. Col. K. S. Ropers, President. Lt. Col. G. E. Full, Messrs_ R. E. Mutgh, V. A. Atnsworih and W. L. Higgins. Following a discussion on the du- tics winch would probably be re- quired from the men appointed as representatives for the Regional Board the following names were submitted: lvfessrs. J. M. Hunter, struclions uiere given to the Secre- i lary. Mr. Higgins. to find out 11 these men were willing to act. lf called upon to do so. The wire received from the Sec- retary of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce Mr D.L. Morrell read as follows: “Chambers representa- tive on National Labour Supply (Continued on page ll. Col 3) Few details on, llow Frenchmen Observed standstill VICKY. 00b. 31 -- (AP) - The Frenchmen of Petaln and the Nazi new order turned their backs today on Gen. Charles de Gaulle‘s pica for a five-minute standstill protest against the execution of French hostugcs by the Germans. but the extent of tire response by lather Frenclunen in the unoccupied zone could not. be Judged impartially. The occupied zone was. as usual, n dead spot. in independent commun- lcatlons. (A Free French s kesman tn London. where Gen. e Gaulle and his staff stood solemnly at attention for the allotted five minutes, said some days would elapse before do Oaulles reports through secret channels fill in the picture of how Germun-donunated Frenchmen re- sponded. (But if the edge of Gen. de Guulle‘; move was blunted in Vichy, it was owing mainly to the iacl thutthe Petain regime had made obedience to the call n virtual plea of guilty to listening to “anti-na- tional" broadcasts, Only ‘Thursday es? vessel sunk sinc (lly Richard I1. Turner, As WASHINGTON‘. Ocl. 3l-(AP) lion. _ Presumably’, several ships have taken nart in the rescue work, for the Reuben James was on con- voy cluty, and the most commonly advanced theory for the lack of news was that rescue ships were making no radio report-s for fear of disclosing their ivositlons to Nazi submarines. The first. word of the incident, \\|ll(‘il stirred and excited Washing- ton, already embroiled in a bitter row over foreign policy and revising the Neutral y Act, an; received this morning in a short matter-oi. fact statement from the navy. TOIliTlIi, almost i2 hours later, it had this in a i:- "The navy (iepnrtinent has re- ceived a npcrt that 44 members of the crew of the USS. Reuben James have been rescued. The sur- vivors who have been accounted for are all enlisted men. “The navy department has no further information at this time. But additional detail: will be re- leased when received." Hope persisted that more rescues would be reported, for the Reuben James was equipped with more than ample life boat and life belt facili- ties, Moreover, since she was on convoy duty, it was assumed that. friendly hands were close by to pick up survivors. Extension l of Training period For R.C.A.F. Pilots OTTAWA. Oct. 3i —(OP) —-E- tension of the training period for pilots under the British Common- wealth Alr Training plan, from 24 to 28 ivecks, was announced by Royal Canadian Air Force head- quarters today. The change is ei- fectlve with the classes now under instruction. The additional four vreeks an spread over the three types o! such listening had been made a crime punishable by fines of 5.400 and imprisonment up t0 two years.)1 There obvlouslv were instances of i London lender, such as at Vichy as inconsplcuousiy as the main square. watching the clock in the tower of the Church of S.. l Louis tick off the minutes from 4 l to 4.05 p. m. Around this group traffic passed as usual. Linn. given throughout the Associated Press correspondents, covered as much of Vichy as pos- lhis wines. Initial training _ instruction is increased from seven obedience to the summons of ttiei i“ “mm “""‘k-‘3 , training school from seven to eight. where five men and a woman stood‘ “TPkSI mssiblc 0n school from l0 to i2 n-ccks. schools throurzh which the prospec- tive pilot passxcs prior to receiving school elementary flying and service ilylnrz training ‘Of most imnorlaitt-c in the ex- ensicn of the training period is he increase in instruction in air- llttle, craft recoanition and in air naviga- entire nurse,“ the air force said. “As our laombcrs ext-end their 5M9 i“ “l” fl"? “liiliiirs “mi iii-wild or-tivitv further and firrther afield. ihe 3mm’ “Iflimg “t m" chili?“ it" navigation for the pilot. and obser- the onlv visible sign of SYlllDil-fPl-G V0,. mm m, "Mmv ,0 mo, “mm response, t _ ,, , , , _ _ LflCfli 1 ilrcss‘ reprefinyatlrfies .3. faorurfiiéwfzmwnc lycmuc .llf‘l‘<‘.l.<illil .uch man rvres as arse es a1. '- “ _ liven said {hat “uolhinrz happened" Phwicm him‘? is "h" M mam" m ‘ha, mdnqhq." disqrkqsf fin"; importance. P111 s cal training and l mcst that cculrl have happened 1111-‘ ifllimllil-"il Hill)?“ "are taken more lder Gen. dc nature's order wo1t1d‘suruli=crlucc lll ti" lmlulrltr plan been and time for these have been have a five-minute cessation‘ of 1111 activity.) l Killed In (CH-The bodies n! 19 coal minors had been removed from the No. 3 section of the Braz- . eon c Tilers here tonight. and l another 10 were mlsnln In the workings and believed illed in n blast which roared through the section today. The blnsl caused so mur-h confusion In this little town I50 mlles southtvest of Edmonton that It. was Impossible. tn learn from mine officials immediate:- I the exact number of men in l o section when the Irlasl oc- curred or the cause of the ex- NORDEGG, Alta... Oct. 8l- iI NORDFJGG. Alta" Oct. 31 —(("-P\ -United Mine Workers of America officials reported early tonight the" had been informed that 40 coal miners were killed when a blast roared through the No. 3 section of the Brazcau Ccllleries today at this town 150 miles southwest of Ed- ploslon. , doubled at all schools, ‘Z0 <:.;..1"M.-..s... Blast Described as worst mine disaster in Alberta history. Britain to omit Traditional services 0n Armistice llay LONDON, Oct, 31-(0? Cable.- Brliain. for the year. Will omit the traditionally 1m zCeuotnph, the King announced to day through the Home Office. of Canterbury’ and dedication, ernment. "feel that in the prcsgrlr that, other large services which has been the through the country ‘i, (Continued on page ll, day should not be held- second successive pressive Armisilr day Service at the, . f. circumstances it would be pre era i?‘ Ikaws 44Crewmen From U. S. S. Reuben James Rescued First United States naval e War began goes t0 bottom West of Iceland. soclated Press Staff lvrttnr] --Tho Navy tersely announced the rescue of lll members of the crew of‘ the United States destroyer Reuben Jam“ llllllflli. ifllvilllt‘ the fate of some ‘l0 or more enlisted men and seven linulish uiiiccrs still the subject. of anxious uniting and inquiry. But. beyond this and the fact that. the ship hurl been torperloed and sunk west of’ Iceland-the first American naval vessel to be sent to tho bottom sinrt- the war started-the department was still without informa- may " " “*'~‘ __ R.C.A.F. list Cf casualties OTTAWA, Oct. 3i --ICP) -- ‘Phe Royal Canadian Air Force late to- day announced the names o! five men killed on active service over- seas, six men mlssiuo after air cp- cratlons, and two killed on active service in Canada. Included- in today‘: list was the name of one man previously report»- cd missing and now iaresuxned dead. This latest list brought. total dead and missing reported officially by the Royal Canadian Air Force since war started to 915. Following is the latest list. with official numbers and next of kin. Ovenean Killed on active wrvlco: Gibson. Mark Fatrweathor, PO. JG231, M. Gibson (father) Keiowna, B C Young. Henry Lloyd Maurice. PO Jicooc, mo. n. L. M. Young, twttol’ Regina. Fasslno. Stefano Domenico, 51s., B84031. J. Faasino, (brother) Lynd- hurst, N. J. Lacey, Patrick Earl. 8gb, 1178169. Mrs. P. E. Icoey (wife) Toronto. (Continued on page 11. Col i!) l", 41am is \_ l-HEAP-wuetw You use Your? Niziaursows (Cana dinn Prose) TORONTO. Oct. ill-Minimum .land rnaximuua temperatures: l Dow-Ion 10 22 Victoria 46 in 1 Edmonton 29 60 Regina 2'2 52 Winnipeg l3 33 Tomato 43 +6 Ottawa 3i 39 Montreal 33 42 Boston 45 52 Svnopshst A disturbance of in- fens ity is movin 1t towards Lake MlCllllIflll frcm the ,-.r,v11t-ll\\ cst, and light rain has occurred in south- ein Ontario, thouirh in other (lia- tricts from Ontarit to Alberta the weather has been fair with h little higher temperature in the- Prairie Provinces. Rich tide l-ltis morning at 8.55 and tnniifht at 9.14. Sun sets this afternoon ht 449 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.39. Full moon Nov. 3, in pm. Silmmersirle t‘de l8 minutes iat- er than Charlottetown. ‘ nonnaN-carn TORMENTINE i srnvrc (DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAYA , “Hléeuvglllorrlcn 9.25 A-M» 1-99 I'- Lcave Cape Tnrmcntmc 11.00 AM . 3.20 mu. 6.20 P-M- sundny service, leave Borden 9.00 M l At. the same time the Archbishop! A ‘y m", H5 n“; hm". mm. 1,", sot aside Suuduvl " " .115 ll.M.. acre mi. Nov. 9, as a dav of remembrance’ mmune m a" n WOOD ISLANDS FERRY i (DAILY. INCLUDING SUNIIXY-Q) The Home Office said the 20V- Leavrs (‘caribou 8.15 l-LM. eon and 8.15 P. H. Wood Island 6.30 A. M. custom t0 nnldi 10.00 A. 1\I. and 1.30 P- a“ oln Armisvcel n 11-45 ~1;¢41¢j5- r- POI-n. l t. l.