MAXIMS 01L MERE MAN —--—__ u; that drinks fast. pays slow. 251182!!! Ioundul Ill‘! Two Con", Emmi-n- gprloltcluvlu uusrdilvl. Eu Strategic ortress Naval Greets en Jubilantly “Hope they don't get into action ahead of us” View of Canadian Corps’ in Britain. souo KONG; Nov. 16—(CP) - mmlexpc-ctcd arrival of a large gntingent of Canadian infantry u; reinforce this strategic mu fortress was greeted jubil- mgy may, especially among the population. as news of the mam; spread through the city. Disembarkcd, the contingent jmed on a nearby field and, led by two military bands. including hagpipcrs, marched with m...“ equipment and fixed bayo- m m specially outfitted barracks, rlllls hundreds of Chinese and Eur- opeans lzathcmd to watch. popula- llr. E. M. Found Speaks at seal Sale opening “The experience of the last gen- eration with its thousands of mcov- cries. has definitely established the conviction that tuberculosis is a ‘Ni. ThePe Says China Ready to aid Burma, Russia LONDON. Nov. l0- (CP) — Chins stands ready to providg trained troops by the tons of thousands, if requested, for the defence of Burma or of Russia ‘NO "it ‘WWW "illildvf 91D IT nese ambassador in London. Dr. V. K. Wellington Koo, declared today. Koo said in an interview that he had no first hand informs- tion on a report that Gen. Chlang Kai-Shel: had offered 1-009Jl00 soldiers to the Soviet Union contingent upon g Japan. use attack. But he indicated that this was not. improbable. China. has an lu-my of 5,900,. 000 with 121100.000 or more in reserve‘. he said. and China will not forget. hcr dcbt to Russia. The envoy pictured China as the Far East. "reservoir of man- power for the democratic..." Pattullo in The United States navy department announced tonight that s. United Stats cruaser had captured an 3X15 mcrllzant ship on Nov. 8 in Atlantic equatorial waiters with a Unlfgd States flag displayed on either sidc of her hull and on deck. was not nanlcd in the navy‘s an- nouncement, is bringing the mgr- chant ship to a port “within juris- diction of a United States court," the navy said. R8941 by he!‘ own crew." the navy said, adding that repairs necessary to make her seaworthy again. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARI-OTTETOWN. CANADA, MONDAY, 160ml...“ 11 1941 EASTERN cmsls sum APPROACH U. S. Navy Takes Axis Ship Flying Stars And Stripes Crew said to have made deter- mined attempt to scuttle craft. WASHINGTON. Nov. l6 —(AP)~ Moscow radio Reports Nazis A crew from the cruiser, which 1'1“; ship had been "severely dank LONDON. NOV. Wm be mans to fixed sian front has The use of the American flag in they Frozen to death l6—(CP)—Suow such as has helped hind the Ger- positions On most other parts of the MOO-mile Rus- caught up with them also in the Crimea wilcre had been making their most 9!‘ fllaadianirocvs Allied: 8 PAGES Bevin implies Extension of iicv’t control WDDLESBRDUGH, England. Nov. l6 CP) —- Labor Mlnlslcr - t Ernest Bevin told the British Peflllle v be subjected to greater government. compulsion ‘than they have ever known. He hinted that wolmen will have to play a large!‘ o c. seemingly implying a further ex- tension of government control over the war effort, Mr. Bevin said 1n a speech in this Yorkshire town that it is better to suffer tempqranlv than be in "perpetual slavery uri- der the Nazis. The British people must not worl >1 he added. _ ' Fbrccastlng changes in handlb g of a vexing manpower pTODldlll which is likely’ to be one of (be most controversial raised in Parlia- nlent during the days lffllllCfllillfliy ahead, Mr. Bevin announced that want to get at least 1.000.000 nlar- rled women either on full time 0i‘ part time work." ried woolen to work in munitions, distributive trades, offices and com- too much about profits and taxvs, joduy, with war issue at stake. Infor mcrcial enterprises in order to re- a K0112 Without justice courage is weak. MAXIMG OIA MERE MAN --- s .4. __..._ . .____..__4 Annual Subscription lhllverell. “.00 "1 All"! P- El 1-. v4.00. CI-lnuilu and 0.5. cam luc cum War Or ‘s! A Peace In Pacific May Be Decided Soon Japanese Premier outlines de- mands which must be met if con- flict is to be kept from spreadin SHANGHAl, Nov. or peace in ‘ _ _ 17—(.\I0nday)—(AP)—'l‘hc v Eastern crisis appcalrcd io bc approaching a climax rapidly Fan the Pacific fhc tremendous med quarters at this key listening post believed they would know soon whether ihcrc is to he war. American and British residents here and elsewhere (By Max Hill, Associate TOKYO, Nov. 17-(Monclay) The minister said he wants mar- pflcific Telephone)__premier Hidek-l Japanese demands for sett in China arc expected to prepare to leave the country. d Press Staff Writer) — (AiU-(Via 'l‘rans- Tojo today outlined _ _ _ lemcnf of the Pacific crisis in Dlct speech ln which he forcefully stressed the necessity s demands were an end in of Japan, a halt to what ho and the restoration of nor- mllml“ Km“ °°‘““"'“ cur bl disease" id p r: M iloaof nearly 2.000.000 was taken Fmf d°°. K puffs“ ‘p, ,- 1- llllS manner l5 unlawful under the d . . ~. . ample,“ b: surprise as m‘ cam n en v e a Ar um n Uniwd st t t m t‘ strenuous rive, authollfatne Bll- lease symmgv mobile wo,m,n,.. . _ ‘ tuna‘ transport. a former liner, fwgéggsofggfmlfofhfiubhgfflflg‘? The nullye’: 'I§.‘§.§“..,..l,§§... m. “sktfigaggrgsatrfrfl: ‘fag agglgg; ————————— i f“ lélilqvlélltlllg spread ‘if “if “'11? l" "l9 Pilfilllc- -= sis" iven last night at a public ACYIET“ d radio proclaimed that “Napoleon _ - , , H ‘e among, the Premler’ SOMBWERE m ENGLAND meet ng in Prince of Wales College s I tonéiltwflygt aelfilrililggnlétgaffklflm weather" had arrived and report- - m lie Auglo-Amer1can_ blockade Nov 16-10? Cnlilel-News of Audlwflllm which milked the on- ‘ I er M dawrh Nov’ 6 m Adéntfic stdanfogolizingrsfhggdtigivlén tgztfleseig called military enclrclement, ' mal trade. tile arrival oi a Canadian force ening oi the Christmas Seal Sale ltllong Kong was received glith eafiflfiglfllainpifln w“ declared o! ' . i - "dc Intomt by t m CM“ an ficially opened bv His Honour, Lieu- Corps when ihe announcement. was made hricfly over the BBC sl noon today. The secret llilll been well kept and only a fl-w senior officers inf-w of Canada's intention to sill file Empire with troops in the Orirut. where Canadians lure never served before. Summing up the average view of the troops was the remark of a young privair who said:- "Thats a hlg brook for thorn but hero's llblllilj: they don't ht lnio action nhcad of us.” lleamed info the harbor, strongly fonroycd, ‘The new reinforcements. vrho ln-i euie Slllllf‘ volunteers from the linked Sialcs. reached here within I reek of Prime Minlsiu- mucch- 111's announcement that Britain sis "m ‘l°°"“’° “m °“ “m” lmmwl‘ RUSHVILLE, 1nd, Nov. -—Eight persons burned Will‘ in cvcnl of hostilities between Juan and the Unitcd St"‘es, and m tlrlrlalullnq comcidod wifll arrival lllllllelllflflion of a special Japan- wfllilli’. Saburo Kilrusu. fol con. iennces to avert a Pacific clash. M?“ ‘cmlllnllsd 0n nose v. Col '1) Coming Events s-u-n by “it for Noni-ea in this _ 3 culls pgfmwpffl column "WM-ed u- buv Chicken alum Cold Storage m“ c-alé-r-s-i: "Sim" “ml Dance. Bradalbane Tuesday, n-cas-n-ll-sl. "Chicken Sulliifl‘ and Dance ‘m’ “All. luvsuay, November 10th I-rwIi-ll-lb-Ql "n T‘. . . M, ‘jllfédaliolgcov River Fanner s ' L-701-11-11-2l. "Chicken 5T 9,. kPDi-‘Y. J w. Mc- "l; Hall, Bristol. November - 5l“l’"ll1'.l9th. L-578-l1-l4-3i. "Chick m. Novjlluxsugm. Cnmbridle 14-100-11-17-21. "omit i0 the TTYOIT Blpllflt 511 - l" ""1 Bazaar November filth. p L-fi97rll-l7-ll. . -§ _ ‘Qfllrlrélrv tfisrbgaStbfcléh Factory _ '°'"“"°' 2W1- Sigaso-lilfiilfdi n ‘(- . hmfiipprices mm m“, ohm“. °°k l-flyin Mash . M‘ Dillon 6» sp llctt. “o0 w . L-GGT-ll-ll-(l. l“. Alhmm Qlblilh Terrace Howl in t. srar-lmr" L-BTB-ll-ll-fli. E 5E5 ' 7AM" Wed 4,15% “d B“ . November B9. 5t. JOI- Mm" 5111- Proceeds war ‘ D-UT. hqummiltlw Dance laulsao gm-qsv 18th. Lune Pm:- s Credit union. L-cos-n-ls-al I. r tte Mail‘ ysvglflvifi Fl has Checkers. Dillon a pillett. n-orl- l-ls-u. L “I fi . “u. a ""li‘l§t'£¥r.e|j..§,.¢ ,1 M» fill‘ 1am u; ‘ii-W-‘ilzflfif. l, near here Hansen, 26. the burns several hours later. As near as could be fnday bound dianalpclis. Nine injured, five only slightly. The wreck occurred as swerved llsion with an automobile driven ream. Authorities wolked the night searching charred and twisted wreckage for information which would lead to identification of the victims. Oonncll was arrested on charges of while under llquor_ Interpreting The tenant Governor BW. LePage, with s. brief address in which he cited the need of more work being done by both the Dominion and Provin- cial Governments for the better- ment of public health conditions. Premier Campbell presented the prizes sponsored by the PEI. Tuberculo- tc the winners cf the essay League. These were merited by Miss Eileen Kneehone, Rustico Cross (Continued on page 7, Col 2) ___________.__ Eight burned in Wreck of bus 16~(AP) to death wreck oi a Greyhound bus Saturday night. Andrew driver. died of the determined l8 persons were on the bus. from Cincinnati to In- pnssengcrs were Hansen in an effort f0 avoid co:- bus Paul Connell, 30. The struck a culvert. and burst into flames as it plunged down a 25- foot embankment into a shallow throughout through the driving influence and the intoxication War (B Kirke L_ Simpson, Assoc- lated Press Staff Writer) Another week-end finds Hit- ler's armies still balked of do- cisive gains anywhere and s Russian winter that much closer at hand. From Murmansk in the frozen Arctic war mne to an uncertain bridgehead to the Caucasus in tho Crimea. his forces are waging a see-saw battle. Each succeeding wave of Nazi attacks on the Moscow bastion has come with lessen- ing‘ momentum for weeks. o one knows just what the cold fury of a Russian winter, when it, comes, will do to break tho stalemate on any front. ft ma. be the Germans are wsitln or heavier freezes about hen grad and Moscow. They need harder ground than they have encountered in the first w nter chills to pave the way for furiously renewed tank onslaufh‘ . Iiikowise n the south where they hope‘ lo reach the oil tress- ums of the Caucasus, they may be waiting in expectation of ion-bound waters ‘and frosen roadways along the lower Don and Kcrch peninsula, Yet the Russians have better natural defences on that vital southern front. than they had at any time since the dcfenccs along the Dnieper were smashed in curly fal. This week-end. also. Axis supply lines from Sicily or any port of Italy to Fascist (Oontuluod on can ‘l, col l) VANCOUVER, Nov. l6—(CP)— Premier T. D. Pattullo in a state- ment today declared that not one of the three parties in the British Columbia IRQISlHUITG “has a man»- daie from the people to coalesce." In his first comment on the sit- uation created when the Liberals lost their legislature majority in the Oct. 21 general provincial election, the Premier declared: “The people elccted us as we an and I believe that thcv expect us to carry on during this war per. iod “I was electcd with the largest group and I think I have the right to expect the co-cpcration of the two Opposition parties as well as the Liberal members in the House under existing war condi- tions, and I sce no reason for thanucs in party nlilrnment in the legislature merrlv because offi- cious and powerful minority in- teresfs wish to accomplish their own DUNDOnGS." Nazi ll - Boat May have sunk The Ark Royal 0f LONDON, Nov, l6--(CP)—One or moxe German U-boat captains may llavc been sent llllQ the MCCllL-"lk. ralncau with the specific assignment lo get. the Ark Royal, which was r01" cd commentators said today. <Tlle German high command‘; chumed Saturday that the two U-l bouts in addition to sinking the Alk Royal damaged the battleship Ma-l laja and that “further British units suffered torpedo hits.“ . lLondon made no mention of any damage to the Malaya, which ielf New York irl August after under- gong repairs, as such claims my the Nazis frequently have proved to b attclnpts to obtain information oil a vessel's whereabouts.) Authoritative quarters were silent on the German claim that two sub- "marines captained by LL-Cnldl-s.‘ Hans George Rcshke and Fmidrica Guggenborgcr sank the Ark Royal,‘ but well-posted quwters conceded that skillul submarine commanders, would be able to fecl their way through the iO-milo strait at Gib- raltar. The German claim was the first report-of the presence of German U-boats in the Mediterranean, tho sea which Mussolini calls alysl own. But rccenv. reports from Brit-l ish naval headquarters at Alcxan-l dria have indicated the Germans were becoming more active in naval warfare in mat. area, supplement- ing their air and land activities One such report said ltailan sail- ors, their morale suffering from consistent. defeats. no lollgu" were. willing to go Lo sea, with ulc result that. German sailors are taking over. A. V. Alexander, First Lora of the Admiralty, promised that ll avenue the Ark Royal as we avengcd nood"—a reference to the sink- the 42,000 ton battle cruiser the 35.000 ton Bismarck the subsequent destruction that tho Ark with hcr crew given the honor oi mannln her successor. ‘The irst Lord said he was able to reveal now that four Italian de- stroyers were sunk and damagod in tho Mediterranean action at g of last week in which sunk. That. is one more than Ad- miralty communiquos had claimed. One source said it was quite pos- sible an attacking submarine al- ready had been accounted for by one (is! thogluélycirgcgaofydepth chars; ea rc pa o or: as e scum about the crippled . equatorial waters sighted a mer- chant shin flying United States (.01- crs and with a United States flag displayed on either side of her null and on deck. Upon closer approach a United States merchant ship -on the sides of her pilot house and on her stern. shown as the home port. was suspicions, the cruiser signall- ed to heave to, lowered a boat and. death, their tanks vadcrs. Moscow said, re cruiser read the name-that of Byltlgh press dlgpgfclqes prepared for the having ands of ski troops. British ~ press dispatches Stockholm said the temperature the Crimea Philadelphia was However, since thg appeargncg imprisoned in ice and snow The same relentless winter that stalked Napoleon to defeat now preys on the new in- from Moscow said that Russia is well winter fighting‘, trained hundreds of thous- l from had suddenly dropped Menmied by Mid - air crash OTTAWA. Nov. 16— (GP) A mid-air collision oi two Royal Ca- nadian Air Force planes today Wzuscd the dcalh of LlWlf pilots uticn the machines crashed about five miles south or nearby Uplands m Airport. The pilots, flying solo, were‘ not c, offlczals The other main stipulation was that others kccp bands off Japan’s settlement of the conflict with China. “The economic blockade resorted to by non-belligerent The Premier referred to the “ulllitary enclrclement" which he asserted had (ievclciped in months as a major stumbling block in the way of easing the far mgr- crn tension. He charged specifi- rccent w sent an officer to invcsti ate. to five de ces fahrcnhvlt above , Before the boat reachedgthe mcr- zero. and [fnllilt oven the offensive 3911mm; “iflwm“ti°§..,§hfiq,f,f"l,§,f Cally that the ABCD Powers-- chant snip, the crew of the latter of the Finns, famous for their All‘, half’ t mt ulunm wl;o,.‘,.‘o\v America, Britain, china, and the b98011 abandoning ship. At the same winter ski fighters. had been ""15 push no - ~ Nethmqnnds Ens; 1ndlcs—\vcre re- tlme a signal was hoisted On her stopped by the weather in Karelia m°rnmg' “P01150119. with the meaning: "Send boats for where Russian reports said Ger- _‘ T010. 1n Imiffllm. IDOke force- passengers; I am sinking." mans and Finns lost 5.000 men in lull? and WM loudly applauded when he finished his 10-minute plnslons were merchant ship. The cruiser put a- salvnfze party some hours work succeeded in sttm- I a. 10-day battle. Immediately thereafter, two ex- Although encouraged by hoard within the resistance ihc aboard and affcr ‘ent stalemate in the the Russians are offer- ROStOv ...'t Resume offensive due in the Crimea and the appa. British Airmen address‘. Preceding him was Foreign Min- !sif‘l'_ Slligcnori Togo. who dcciar- cd ‘tlme for negotiations United states is with the nearing an end ping the leaks cause/i bv the explo- | for-the two areas from which v _ u sons and in getting the englncsll-llfl Vital 911 1'10 d5 Tllliilll b9 1P0" -_.-- anlkllmned bluntly the“? l5. mil‘ mrmingq lpardized-lnfcrmed quartersr ex; LONDON Nov 16__(cP)__Royu1 limit to our CllnClllflfbfy uuron lrme. - ' ‘ . - r - All‘ Force bmobers resumed their pers of the that she was owned by subjects of one cf the axis powers, the ship was sailing under false colors. that she was severely damaged by hm- own crcw and that she is now un- 'lI c cruiser reports that the pa- l DPf-‘fifiad 601199?" 0V" reports of German the other end of the Leningrad. Germans tell of merchant ship indicate seawort-hy. inc the merchant ship to is bring- A crew from the cruiser a port Bad weather wirin the iurisziiciion of a United States court. tionably be necessary to rendcr the ship entirely seawcr hy. sunk Friday with one casualty, ill-l‘ oil Repairs will unques- successcs at front near BERLIN, Nov. io—-(AP>~Nearly Four planes were all German war reports today em- offcnsivc against Germany Sat-ur- day night affcr dlavlng been grounded several nights by bad -.tl r, wtilllylial through heavy clouds and ‘loin conditions, he Bri- severe tish mach nos Boulognc . were laid in enemy wafcrs. lost striking at Eng- Docks at France, also mines were German raiders land during Saturday killed sev- Found dead near Ferry wharf The lifeless body of Mr. Charles Mcllillgall, 61-year-old resident of Rico Point. ter ll o'clock Saturday morning on the shore l0 the east 0i i116 “'21s found sl10ri-i_v' af- h ’ ‘ fh l- . - egglzylad Allaellggwlfiuvggillnercgllglgf- oral DETSOHS on the northeast Ylhmf 0“ l°‘§"l"l' Pflllc“ sire“ whiff‘ l-hruils- but clillmed a 19W wmmF-coasl. but thc Minisll?’ of Him“? l5 tilelltelywliigisnllnlfertlh? Cilslgnolafrdl ial gains for the Germans. lgpcurltv said damage W85 slight blwlll- f?“ m‘ cflsiFridav 6m One claim by the high commandl Md one NM; bomber was d0wned_ fcfind vts krgtcur. cm she 5"}, ma“ gym: claptxlre of a gsstéilyt deflmged Two more German bombers gore dflqvf 0 Y‘ ~ or" n e ring o W15 0190's 6-. _ 'd ff the east was un- _ v . fence-s in the Crimea. . gggytroye o Eaiil) flftlfltayv migfiltlgllg 299i For to the north in the LCIllfl-l ' l" Clan)‘ "'““ ' l‘ l: ~ '-”"“ ‘ Mr. Robrrf. MacDonald, Nine Milo Premiers charge two companies of defensive positions lnllwav junction 110 miles cast Leningrad. OTTAWA, Nov. l6—(CP)—J. A. McNeil. general manager of The Canadian Press tonight issued the fsllowing stafcmcntz- Prime Minister Mackenzie King, in referring to a demonstration by the troops at Aldcrshot during his visit to a Canadian corps field day Aug. 23. is quoted in iiansard of "riday, Nov. l4. as saying: "I was rather surprised that so much im- nriance was given to a matter, which rcaliv could onlv be a misre- of the facts in their by a communication Can- that Edmonton girl llies from wounds rznmomou, Nov. is 40!) presentation true light, which wcllt out through The radian Press from AIdeIShOi- 011 in hospital after she was end district here late last night. Police launchcd a “The management of The Cana- scarch for the assailant. dinn Press has no desire to over- cmphasize by repetition the Alder- shot incident. but must point out that as the co-opcrative news-gath- ering organization of 90 Canadian dailv newspapers of varying political affiliations, it is and must be dedi- cated to the ideal of truth in news. ft is not entirely clear from the Prime Ministcrs statement as given in l-lansard whclller his rofcrcncc to a "mlsreprcscnlation of the facts" iy to the demon- roooe or to the ro- of it by The Canadian Press. abdomen. She was discovered by vard with her feet qravel on the ma gloves were found nearby, were blood stains on the gloves. wok the gir Police said the motive of e .___‘__ (Continued on page '1, Col srrcsied. Join the Host oi Home Bakers who- Lll§30 CANADA M cT4/9Q . A1’. /|-"|. cal ,. Dorothy Hammond, i4, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Hammond, died found stabbed on a boulevard in the west widespread Officials said thc girl had been slnbbed l5 times in the breast and an uniden- tified taxi driver lylng ona boule- dangling in the d. A knife with a Sour-inch blade and a pair of men's ‘There J. Nadeau u passing motorist. l m iospitnl. they had no ides what th alleged slayer could ho and no suspects had been grad area. a further reprt claimcd; engineers took 103‘ around Tiklivinl, .,. Air Commodore N. R. Anderson ls promoted l OTTAWA. Nov. l6 —(CPl -Pro- motion of Air Commodore N. R. An- derson, all‘ officer commanding the castern air command, to the rank of Air Vice-Marshal was announced Saturday b“ tho Royal Canadian Air Force headquarters. Born at Walker-ton. Ont, 4R years nun. file new air vice-marshal saw scrvlce (luring the first great war with the Canadian Exncdlllouary Force, transferring to the Ro_val Flying corps and lalcr to the Royal Air Force. In 1920 he joinud the Injured in crash FREDERICTON, Nov. l6—(CP)—- Blx soldiers were injured when their train crashed alzainsl me side cf a slowly moving ircight. train en- gine at McGivney Junction Crossing early today. The six, from the training cen- tre st Edmundston, N. 13., were en- mute to their homes on the north shore of New Brunswick Extent of their injuries was unreported pend- ing x-ray examinations. After receiving emergency treat- ment the men were rushed by am- bulance to iuulpital have. The injur- ed were Pluvatzs P. Asfle, driver of the l. .r. Raymond PUTlOllZ, GPOfRT‘ Henderson, William Savage, E. J. Atour, and V. D. Brown. Crook. in the laltcrh automoblleli Aftcv ilrriving in rcascd had wsifcni who is an elnmloyee the cit-y. the de-i. his son, Neilm with Frankl .__§ .._. ___-g__,, --_-,_ (Continued on page 7, Col 4) ___.___._____ Rescued men Tell of ordeal AN EAST COAST CANADIAN PORT, Nov. 1'1 --lCP\ ~-Rx'scued at sou by a Canadian corvette, ll crew members of a tomcdocd British frcightel- told here of a 13-day llfc- boat ordeal that saw four of thclr companions plcrish of cxposurc as they drifted on the slorlny Atlan- l l 1 l. tic. TvWnty-flve other clement was Bob Baldry. mm brought. her of the Royal Navy who helped man the frclpzhiclfls dcfcn lifcboat bobbin on the horizon men In (I10 boat. sunn- sin-of in South Siliclris. Finn, "A ht-ll of a vial-f‘ l0 ncxl-dorvl- nviululP-ll lilo blinkill Atlantic." _ Walkcr as e told of the meeting. members of the Orlly Canadian in the ship's com- formerly of Edmonton. who was one of the hcre. Bnlciry. who lcfi Canada 5 1-2 years ago. is a mom‘; Til a next-door nc gllbor of one of the It was a strange lcunion for AB. William DaviP-s- ti"! navy man, and stokcr Sidney Willi" lr of tln- frl-igilier, who llvc on illl‘ mccl your l the mldrllc of \i. rcmnrkcdl heave» (‘urlhou ll-lb ILM. HA5 noon powers constitutes a measures little less hostile than carrying on armed warfare," Tojo declared. snap... WASHINGTON, Nov. Negotiations for a s ‘llcll fiflltlVé mine (ll nlecl lute loda John L, Lewis. preslul I 0., Unllcd Aline Wolmls l made it clear to remrtcrs l 000 captive miners would n». l‘) 1rd for work l0lll(i\‘l‘()\\‘. "You all know." he said, “the terms of our contracl " . He did not ilflllilli} rcmaric, but the implication ha‘. un- less the stnel com; nies, which o an the captive mint‘: sign a r-unlrch conlainln a union-slurp clnwsc “no miners \\"i 1 strike. , EVER‘! 4mm‘. Aw NlLLlufiAlfiE NEEDS axe eel/fa Lrlow l-lavs ‘TORONTO, Nov. lS-Eiinimum i and maximum iclnperaiurcs: Dawggn lElB 5B Victoria 3“ ‘l? Edmonton L“ 3" mm“, l‘. ZlZ Winnipcg 2'1 1l0 Toronto 3i 45 Oi loava ‘JR “Z Montreal 31 ~44 l Synopsis: Tlic WCllllt” has liven ‘cloudy and SVITHWYll i mldn- nvrr l-liv Wcsiclll T‘l-l~v‘.i\.c~ wrlw it srcln- (l: has s, snow m‘ rain in Fair. cooler \\‘(‘1\ll‘i(‘l‘ cvvw; Ontario. Canwla“ M’ F°T°° “ml um“ me ail-man crcw arc still missing, the mrmfllwn °l the B" c‘ A- F- l“ l9‘ survivors said as they rccupcraled _ 24 was one of its first officers. in hospital’ but n; me “m9 time High tide thz< morning a‘ 9.03 '*”_"_ word reached llcre i-hut tho captain "Tlil lmlllllll "l 9 "2- s n lagdNgwgofiillzilglmogfnzdmiz 51m sets this llllvfll" r. n’ ‘lflfl SIX slillllQr-s are ed up in at-hlrd lifeboat. Ally,‘ ‘ll-W ‘°'““""°“' ""*“‘ "I “l Now moon Nov. ill, 8.04 pm. Sllmmcrslrlc tide i8 minnlcs lat- cr than Charloliciavil. ' BORDRN-(égfli TORMENTINE sivc gun. Ho had bccn llvimz lfl . .RVI(‘E~ England. and his arrival hcre with (DAILY EXCEPT sUNDAYl lhc other survivors marked his firs return to Canada since leaving the “Iéeycllullordrfl 9-15 A-Mv 1'00 n“ Dominion. . . . 1 Bv a. long-chance coincldcncc. the 3 zI{-';'V;IC"“|_’;BTI',’_'I“{'_°“"“° “'00 N“ ' warship‘: lookout who siuhtcd the ‘anal; "WW. ‘MW “Mam M‘ leave (‘apl- Tur- ,, 4.4a ma: AM “m. 5.50 um. mentlno 10.05 A.i\l.. and WOOD INLAND?» FFRRY (THTLY, l\‘f'l.lllll\'f‘. QVNDAYS) 10.00 A. Al. 11nd 1.30 l‘. A and 8.15 P. M. learn": “Hind lslznlvl (1.30 A.M. t, s; 5 \ i N _ A _. _ __ _. _ .. ...__----IJIJJJIJIIIIIIIIII