MAXIMS OP L MERE ‘MAN n-n-x-fl “uni; u: n trust, not a. fl- oundod ion ‘ _ efqmdi-n, Two own. NADA ABLE T0 SUPPLY ALL TRAIN r Urges Maximum Mobilization 0f Manpower Conservative Leader calls for “clear statement” of inner R.0.M.P. inter mentioned dispatches _._.._._ M t Mechanic Agfniefgyferett Gillis Was Attached To gharlottetow n. Detachment. -- in Awn, Nov. 4-(0?) Nov w: headquarters announced .m,vi, SlX Canadian nil-Vi’ bu,” been mentioned in dis- ‘I for couro/re displflyfid l“ ‘mgiundering of.‘ alifax last "an o‘ we armed patrol ship ggfigonod posthumously in dis- wnc; werez- 1 e1 Motor Mochsnlc Dan mil (iillis of Halifax. Rvvol R erve. (gm? stationed at uiotielown for several yearl- -' m-vcd nun the marine branch the Rovui Conodiun Mounted lice here. llc went. on BMW service immediately after the wreak a! our.) I ggnaimon inn Wnllnce OI-lars. “mount, Que, Royal Cano- . . Naval Volunteer Reserve. qniggrdphiv Euri Day, TOIOHY/O ‘ O. N. V. B. three m w... mentioned 4 _ Gulldford, ford. N. S. R.C.N.V.R. Blrmilmin Wlillnni Edward ter, Toronto. R..C.N.V.R. vlilnetecn oi the Diner's crew re inst and 22 rescued when the . icanght fire and foundered. val service headquarters said ' weather nnd sea conditions dc rescue work both diffi- .| and dangerous." The posthumous incntion in dis- iches for chief Motor Mechanic ‘F. Glllls drew attention to his age when the lifeboat was ~- d. He wns mentioned "for unfailing checrfulness and "otlon to duty. From the mo- ‘lat the fire was first discover- ‘.. he was active in endeavouring ‘iu rcss it. when the vessel trinity abandoned his cour- end efforts to cheer the re. 3r of the crew were moat. continued to his final res witch he was very nearly conscious. just bell re he was red up by the rescue shq). "Also when a lifeboat upset, '1 ihfoior Mechanic Gillls sup- ~ motor mechanic Drew in ,1 writer until his remaining n in the lift-boot were able to tChlrf Nintoi‘ Mechanic Gilli! dmiliolor iIlPCllilTllC Drew on ‘Next ofulzin of Chief lwitor Me- mic Gains is his Mfe, ivm. is Gillls who livcs at (3 Lin- , ‘S11 linllfnx. and AB. Guild- ,I' i lgied Giiildford, ll tren- Governmental OITAWA, Nov. 4—(OP)—Ma.x.i. mum mobilization of Canadian man wer with s. view to Canadi PM lpation in o. iant allied-null- tary offensive on e continent of Europe was sug ested in the House of Commons t av by Conservative House leader Hanson. Basing his remarks in part on in- formation gathered during his ov. erseas tri the Conservative House leader sad a British invasion of the continent was impossible now but definitely in contcm latlon for the future. A successfu invasion would require the combined efforts of Britain, the Dominlons, the Unit- ed States and other nations. More than the present six iivis- ions would be required from Ceri- nda. The time to mobilize and train additional men was now. Mr- Ilanson described Prime Minister Mackenzie Kin '3 speech at the rte-opening of t. e session on Manda s; unsatis- factory and callc for a clear statement from Mr. King on what the government proposed to do about a situation which was becoming gravel‘ every day. The Opposition lender did not ad- vocate conscription for overseas scr- vlce but said the men should be ub- w B tained by whatever method of en- listment was necessary. The House swuntz into the infor- mal committee method of proced- (Contlnued on page 10. Col 2) Jap press attacks 0n ll. S. continue TOKYO, Nov. 4-—(AP)—Japan-, ese-Amerlcan efforts to reach an understanding were termed a fail- ure by a bitter press tonight and the new -per Nichi Nlchi charg- ed that ie United States is 1Y6- pnrlng "a first fighting line against Japan" with air bases and munitions factories in the Chin- ese interior. Citueai Shosyo said um Wash- ington's support of the “United , uppet rt-glmc" of Gen. Chlong nl-Shek liidlcuted “Amer- ican reluctance to fight Japan directly," and ‘hr- nctvsrnizer Miya- k0 flfflllfll “l-hc tmc has come for the final showdown." ilTlnzivTan IVew Salient In octet Positions i: M coffin]; E vents In this column nlzwuu-‘ii w ouv Chicken Ibwi “i you storm c-aiia-i-o ~11 "(tome to“? 1 "ml Fliday. uoleiieiberrimTwonw . n-wilii-s-u. ll “WW Wednesday NQvQmi-Ir gm. Cord Pirly Holy Rcdeellicl‘ ~ n-aaz-ii-a-i. "Bin 0 d - - Z h» w-ii‘@;t..?“rs:-..?t..*rs* w» L-339-ll-5-ll. U! Hunter River United Church will)" Wednesday, November 5th. L-l37-ll-1-5. "Co N . mmtimmcto Comwad km u United m] Bu“ tonight's pper in Corn- L-300. m a e Ba -‘ . ‘Wiley. Niiveilnliiaiitatriuftiiilitl 10-349-11-5-11. m "think" rs: “u: I‘ h Cousins, Rose Valign.‘ L-Ml-ll- 4i. cc in Elnersld H ll W d s . e nu- imiliii‘ illéootbikm" M" L-ITI-il-S-S. nhoiie ‘i h wmnwctlna will be net’. i’ 5m, all: giiliewlilniild” I.-2ae-Ii-.i-ii_ Qihlmllhe no s Alb! Ind Wilrliufilnrlf" Flrldu. ‘gm n: mitt the better owe m: “We A o. omu m its‘: e sawing mfleaday, ‘Qnan Al . irlnilfi o-Tele in N; Nort ks Sta By Henry C. Cnssldy Associated Press Stuff Writer KUIBYBI-IEV. Russia. Nov. 4 (APl-New mnsscs of German tanks directed by Col. Gen. Ewald Von Klelst have stabbed a salient sever- ni miles deep into the Red army po- sitions in a heavy offensive toward Roetov-on-Don. the railway 1mm- tion which links the Caucasus with the rest of Russia. front-line lo- viet dispatches reported today. Others of Von Kieistis armored forca were hammering hard at the lower Don basin in several direc- tions, the Russian dispatches ack- nowledged, with ferocious fighting in ptrogress all along the southern ron . As the strength of the German offensive increased, the stubborn- ness of the Russian defence grew. but_ the general situation was and relmsins serious, all accounts stat- e . In another ares two attacks by Italian troops were reported brok- en. All up and down the line the Red air force was credited with a vigor- 0"! llllllXu-t ¢f the Russian defen- ces. ‘ War—-25 Years Ago Today (I: The Canadian Prue) e, IMO-British caplufld won grsund neu- ihe Bute _de d Hench erlcnoourt. oocu ed gcnmloup. a Germnmtgnaebo ill;- s. - aopglooni kiiildeen a more with monarch and constitu- hedi tldtlililtgllilllidlfiwlllt- -.nre?§r“§d§§rne P2129?- Saw accused Enter, then lleartl shooting SYDNEY, N.S., Nov. 4--(CP)—- Flour crown witnesses testified at Arthur Frosts murder tzlal today they saw hm enter Hyman Brody’s home at Glace Bay June 17 and then heard gunshots sliortlv be- fore the discovery of the bullet- riddled bodies of the elderly Brody liartlcnetlhriny Rushed from Arctic Siberia LONDON. Nov. Ii-tclil-Pnrt of a special Russian winter army of 750,000, hardened iii the Arctic reaches of Siberia. ls being rushed southward to strengthen the ad- mittedly; hard-pressed defence of Rostov-Oii-Don. key to the Cauca- sus a well-informed source he:e reported ttnight. Approximately 200,000 men 0i this army, tra fled‘ for moze than six months pest with skis, ski- planes and winter-type mechan- ized equipment, alrerdy have gone into the snow front-line defence of Moscow. ths source said. but another 200.000 are en route "to help out where they are most needed." He sold the prrincipnl worry of the ssviet forces still is an insuf- ficiency of tanks. 'I‘h‘s need was described as even greater than thnt for plfilTCS. for he said the Germans are be inning to feel the pinch in the a r because of the loss of trained crews, whereas they hcld a 2 to l super- iority over the Red Armies in tank strength. I War By Klrke L. SI Associated Press sh: mrson f Writer The Germans appear deter- mined to crack the Rostov-Don liingc of the Caucasus defence line before the war in the east is bogged down by whiter weather. ‘Thus the Nazi strategists may be tanning to shift the main bat 1e into the Caucasus whilu digging in elsewhere for the winter all the wav from Xen- ingrad to south of Kharkov in the Donets-Don basin. The Germans say a deadly trap has been sprung on 360.- 000 or more Russian troops in the Crimea. The Nazis are said on have captured the Black Ben port of FeQdMiYl lit {I12 III-SO of the narrow Ketch romon- tory. This if confirme , mean: that the liussians are cut off from escape across Ketch Strait into the Caucasus. except by ion distance sen transport. '51s xedoubled fury of the German tank attack on Realm nu sts that the Nests mly b0 at in there in coat? frontol onslsug t in order to raw fled srmv forces from other fronts m that Don river ares. Red n- my forces that otherwise would b, diam-dd east of Kerch strait u, ‘id u-d escape of Crimnn army comrades mu have to go Oover: Prince Edwardllsland Like the Dew l Egmcnt Bay man lloads Provincial Fishermen’: llnicn Annual Meeting Of Organization Here Yesterday. Mr. Napoleon Arsenault, Egmcmi Bay, was elected president of the Prince Edward Island Fisherman's Union at the annusl meetin held yesterday in the City 1B ding, Charlottetown. Mr. C. P. McCarthy, Tlgnish, the retiring president, was named Honorary President. Other officers named were: Vice- President. Mr. Austin Bell. Whit Sands, rc-elecfeci; Directors: Kings County-Mr. Jerome Chapman. Red Point, Prince-Mr, Cletus Gavin, Tignlsh, Queens-Mr. Emmett Gal- lant, North Rustico. Delegates from various parts of the Island were present at the ses- sions in the morning and afternoon and took putt in the deliberations. Mnny problems pertaining to the fishing industry in the province were discussed and valuable sugges- tions offered. The matter of the proposed increase in the size limit of canned and mnrket lobsters, the soles tax on canned lobster. the purchasing of stilt and other mat- ters were considered by the meet- in the City building when in Char. lottrtown and promised assistance in nny way possible. The minutes of the last annual meeting were then rend by the acting Secretary, Miss Noreen Jolmsionc. This was followed by the appointment of the Credentials and Resolutions Committees. President's Address P McCarthy. President. dross said the president Mr. C in his nd (Continued on pugc ll, Col 4) At Montreal yard MONTREAL, Nov. 4-—lC‘Pl-F0r the s 0nd tme in a fcw weeks s 9300- n freighte w:s launch- ed at the yards of‘ Canadian Vick- Christencd in a brief ccremon by Mrs. N. A. Tmm n=. Montrea “Port Niplgon" slid down the ways to the cheers of hundreds of On Oct. ll B, sister "Fort ville Marie" was launched at the Canada's wartime building pro- gram of 100 merchanlmcn has The new slilrp is 427 fect long and has A drat of 25 feet. s’x l0 or 11 knots Her keel was laid down five months ago. ll. S. lost T22 men In Atlantic battle The United States army and navy have lost 122 men in connection was disclosed today, aluicugh there was no loss of life in the latest in- ing of the U. 8. 8. Belinda, IIlVll oil tanker. was torpedoed "without warning" last Wednesday night while she n 0Y5 L€mlted this afternoon. the substantial hull oi the I over- alletl shipwrlgihts. ship ssmc yards. A third shin under been launched in Vnncruvcr. inches. She will have a speed of WASHINGTON, Nov. 4 _tAr-i'- wlth the battle of the Atlantic, it cident to be reported-the torpedo- The tanker, the navy announced, was travelling a convoy south- west of Iceland. She was seriously damaged blltrfltiflfilfid m undisclos- sa e y. ed port in l (continued on son ll. 0d ll l THE All PUR - f. . I Freighter launched - p 80 Yesterday OTTAWA. Nov. 4-HT)’- Rt. Hon. Raoul Dundurand. Government lender in the Sen- ate, today celebrated his 80th birthday and in his own words to thelipper House "I feel as well today as l was five or even l0 years ago." _ Both sides of the House pnid warm tribute to the gray- haired veteran of Canadian politics who first entered the Senate 42 ‘years ago. Senator C. C. Bniiantync . Commodore Raymond Coliishaw W56 quoted by the Toronto Star in a newsuagc story today as say- 121g that Italian Al: lvlrizs-‘inl Italy, Balbo was shot down b_v anti-air- craft fire over Tobruk "after res- Clllllg some British troops." Air (Immodpre Coiishnw who returned to Cannon lot u-eek to to-ke up an undisclosed post, had Ch-"Ylle of nil iii". ar operations during Croiicrol Alflllbilld Wnvelifls sweep of Libya. (Reports have circulated that Premier Mussolini had Balho be- trayed into an ambush and shot dmvzi.) Air Commodore Collisliawis story cf Bulbos ill-nth and on ted by the‘ 5.11" follows: “Far out in the <le.-eit some of‘ our British ‘fllTllffPd cur men were lcst and dying of thirt and stur- vation. There were not. many of UIQSQ. but they WPTc in terribly bud condition. Brilbo Hhcarti of their plight and got into rlaiie, i001! nit e-n ' ers and tron l lng picked them up lic flcw the troops to an Itrlmn hnspitoi. then storied back to ‘Iicbi-iik, his head- quarters. “B81410 was nloiic l‘l the linmber at the tmc. the two (eroding fighters being on his flanks. At the mflmflllt Whrn he came hick over ‘Pobruk our forces cite-nod a bombing ntinek on the inn-n. n queer coincidciicc. Our men were CHARUOTTETOWN. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER s, 1941 Canadian Navy Sank more than One Axis Sub OFITAWA. Nov. -i—-(CP)—More ihan one Nazi submarine lies at the bottom of the sea because of the vigilance and skill of mcn of the Royal Canadian Navy, the House of Commons heard tonight from Navy Minister Mucdonn-ld. This war had not been without its casualties for tne Royal Can- adian Navy, the minister said in a navy review, but Canadian sailors hurl also token their toll of the enemy. “Five enemy merchant sliips have bren captured by tmr iirtv_v since commencement of hostili- ties." he said. “Encmv submar- ines hove been frequently attacked by our ships. mainly by depth charge, and while it is not pos- sible to give tit-tails or these actions, it mfiy be said with cer. tninty theit some of the attacks have hnd highly succrssftii restiits and tlint more thnn one German ‘U‘ boat now lies at the bottom of the sen because of the vigil- ance and skill of men of the Cun- ndinn lTfl.\'_\'." , Canadian Tank i and his wife. vIng. These matters were fmally (Con. Quebec) said plans hm] v ' The Drls-‘ucl’. a sergeant- 011 the 'lf‘i1li.'. with by pertinent resolu- been made for a gathering in ; (friable Becky pblice ftgce at flied time; lions. 1 hung: ubf thslcnaitoi-t Dundurzuid t o ie sioo ing, accuse o Hi w hi . M yor B. Roy Ho- on s lr ay u since Scn- murdellm ‘will i116 BYOdl/S- H6 15 mans offtilcsialli/ opzéned the meeting ator Arthur lileighcn, Dpposl- bang; tiriedhfor fir; lllllllflfi o‘: the and bthdr intérostlno addresses were tlonlvlleacllcr, and‘ Prime [Minis- us an , w o was is on 'cr . '- M . . J. J. La bee, Sup- er ac tenzlc ing cou d not ___,,_ The vrow wr- 1- urge-i when 511332.“... F-lilfd-i... oiiiioruiow... were u M hw- Dllfililflllfll hefienicrgd tihe Brody home. ac- and Mn s’ A_ 363cm diredwr of until January. By Russ Munro 211.2“is.“;:..i°tr.tiisrs.ilt- ~1- E,§**'“"°.3““,s‘““°“r ....l.i.""'...:: .'":::...“':i. i“? Cetde- * ‘ - ' liinx N.s. T e pres en ‘s repor m s - in: ln the Brody backyard "It gain, ‘Ways activities was given journed until Jan. 2i. its sit- ggmgwgmg 1N ENGLAND was only a minute or so after b ‘M Cum), who presided, tings opened yesterday. Now 4__[CP)._.The canadjafl Frxnbi ‘intend hula hon“ m.“ we yy-nsrwqrghip, Mayor B. Rny H01. iii Army tank brigade is back from a” "snme S 0'5 ‘mm mam“ the man, extended a hearty welwflw Wales where the troopers practis- fuse’ said Mmgueme Mcmm‘ from the city and hoped its c ll‘ h I ed shooting with their tank artil- admey m“ w a window Sm said delib. ~ ions wotgldlbe Dtoflttablettb 0 lcrybaitifi had n general ~uiric-un-, . ll ‘ ' ti , a d er county. or u e he 1011. Pd in“ Fmst‘ spams were mm‘ flies Srtesent the fishing in- - The three regiments-Alberta, n8 Nam someuhmg m his fight. dustrv had not received its due. he Central Ontario and QHF-"bEC-fflflfll “and? she testified‘ but she mum saidfI-Ie pointed out the import- spent about 10 days in a remote :18} ,‘,",°.’,‘,§,“l,.f,,“,f $12G}; 5:11 could ance of the fishing industry to the M pnrt of Wales shooting thousands . -, '3 d the of rounds of» ammunition against S;mllnr ev dance wes given by ‘éfglkrégi-egqlt; Nfimzhfiwthzgge pm" an gyvpgs a; “my targets and pyau- vel-m‘ Bullye- M" “mm” 931d duct {mm this province be "seq. iislng new armored t-zrctlcs in man- Il- lmeph McNeil 0nd to noneg’ ‘ - oeuvzes where they hwd every op- He extended an invitation to the port-unity to do real firing for the organization to hold their meetings TORONTO Nov. 4—(CP)-Air first “m6- They now have moved into win- ter quarters in quaint little Eng- lish towns and wooded volleys Within the next few months the brigade will train on broad open nreas a few m‘les from their new cnryis where the men are iii/ins’ in huts and biilcied in houses. ‘Hie brigade is practically com- plete in equipment and for th Welsh tri the regiments took mos of their llaiiks wit-h them. Pond- crous Motildas. Chin-chills and sleek Valentines were out on the ranges every day potting nwny at stationary and movlnc, targets. British tank instructors helped tho Canatiier- ""ll€h up shooting rinn lntiie tactics. Q Halifax unshaken i By egg barrage DETROIT, Nov. 4 -t'APl -Un- shnkcn by a bnrrngc of eggs and tomatoes hurled nl. him by women pickets opimsinu Unitcrl Stains par- ticipation in the wnr, Viscount Hal- ifax. British amlinsszitinr- to tlic Utiitcd States, l'0llllfit‘(| out tonight u two-tiny tour of Dctroits arms production centres. bumbmg from 21000 fect anti Ba‘- bo {IE/w in at ... ifn fem. Anti- aircrnlt Izntterie: on shcrc werel using full-nut. bu: nut T'hi'\' rm», lively. Hr-wcver. when Tlnlbo crime‘ over, nn ltolnn CITYISCZ‘ iii the llfl"—l tor. one which v0 later suck fllld nli so hulk is stl‘l being nwvl by Oil!” men. onvtwd f‘re and struck the Marsholk pltmc with a dlrgct hit. ‘To iidd to the coincidence of the whole thine is the fnct that some of our photonrnpliers had their lens on the Marshal's plane at the vcry moment it was struck. "I had the picture of Bwlbofis plane crirkiniz up and carried it for several months...” Air rmmwlore r‘ ll‘=li~.u' was quot as sayinrz that Balbo "was really a flrst-chss tfvp, one any- body would be rlccsed to krow. and I'm glad of a chance to clear this business up." TOYS GETTING SCARCE IDNDON-(CP) - Toys will be scarce in Britain this cliristmas and by Christmas, 1942, there may not be any new ones at all. Licen- ses to manufacture have been with» drawn and supplies of material cul ,..,‘o 20 per cent of normal. FLOUR 12‘ PAGES tit-ct 0i t. "(- sit-p MAXIMG OFA MERE MAN feat is but education. the first to something butler. Annual Sutiavripllun Delivered, $100 ll] Mull: l‘. H. IA] 11.00; Cllliflliu lnil lJ-B. $5.00 ti 41'1"!“ W1. .\'ov. 4——((‘I')_(,‘iiiiatl ucii its Lin: aircraft requirements o.t liuu: lice-ii lur-aicd m Canada,” Mun mulls tuiiiglil. In hi5 departmental rcvlew the for ltu Ill lit-fore the curl of the ye lic govt.- lllL‘ most recent figures oiitlic Doniinitms wartime ship- lllllldlilp lllllgllllli and said 7'7 cor- vcttes already hnd been launched and more thou 5O of these deliver- ed for active scrvicc. Building of " projected. . lLHiO spt. tlic \\lli‘ lllliilslt-PS to = llilYlillCiillli ucliviiivs as- uxirtime program of his C(‘])£li'iill<'lil the clllllflllrtll‘ 1' sol" iy us manufnctiireri id placed iii sci-vice since l s . lfll, 0i‘ has assvtnhlcd} in Canada. 3,749 aircraft. In the, some peritid 1,1368 planes had bconl rccci\'r~tl from the United Sinus “The ;)l‘t‘.‘~"lli’, avcrnge rate of pr i- duclioii is approximutely‘ 40 per ivcek of zili types, and in this rte-l hard it should be pointed out flint, the present pzxztitiction includes a‘, heavier proportion of advanced‘, trainers and service aircraft than in the our ‘er months of productlonfil Mr. Howe sold. Link ll",\lh(“l'S now were mlng. produced in Canada with deliver- it's now well ~t the IOO-niark. Thel Dominion was in "very substantial‘ production" of Hurricane flghfers and Bolintrbrtilze bombers for iper- ntionai ivork and was rvcll advanced toward production of the consoli- (Continued on page ll. C01 1) on.i?i.?.. Fuel tanks At iiiherbourg LONDON. Nov. 4——tCP)--Bri- iish punts left. fuel taiilu on the Chtrboiirg peninsula in flames lute today fLliC!‘ a series of night blows ngnitist French harbors Gcrmun shipping off the Frisian islands, rind u fish oil factory at Bcrgso, Noinvi-iyg One fiulitcr plane was reported n. missing in tlic daylight sweep hich " lncitti uttnclzs on a Nazi nlrflrniii lrti ‘it trains. Nazi troop ilCliliJlllilLillS, and gun posi- tions in llflllllllil France. But no plnnes were lost. the Illlllkil‘; sziirl. in inst night's bomliinn operations which hurl ll. : at least one big supply ship uif tho Frisian Is- lcutls; lllis on docks m St. Nuz- titre; four tliiec‘. hits by one homlisr on lllf‘ Btrum fish oil plniit and on oil tanks mid store. One en struck Lord Hnhfnx as houses which iv-"re left. “flottenvd he pnssct a group of 25 pursuing llllil in ruins.“ women ontsirlc the downtown bllllfl- Light Germain air nefliitv over i115; whore lir- vi=itc<l with Arrhliisi lulu i ' ‘ mu < rl some , on EllWflPll ltfoziney". hvnri oi tin , nor . n iciv ' ' ' Catholic rirchdloc ‘ of Detroit. Lies, the uniiiieiiii said. l Axis Convoy D In English By lIiirtNdmFalr Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, Nov, 4 -(CP Goblet- The admiralty disclosed today that the Royal Now iins seized five Vichy ships off South Africa. has damaged an nxls convoy in the Eng- lish Channel and in the war against submarines has takcn 1.216 offic- ers and men rescued from sunken axis U-boals as prisoners In the attack against the axis convoy in the channel it said that an enemy stipply ship was hit by two torpedoes fired from a vessel commanded by a Canadian. Limit. C. E. Bonncll, R.C.N.V.R. of Now- tonbroo‘. ()nt., a former Toronto sec cadet, trained at Kingston, 0nt., and in Britain. The ship has "eith- er sunk or been beached," the ari- miralty said. These brisk developments in the war at sea occuned against n background of steady bflffcrlng- at Nani shipping by tPe navy and the Rbyul Air Force which dllflflq the first four days of November has taken a. toil in the channel of 32 axle ships sunk oi- damaged. Dtuing September the total was PE ,, (Continued on pen n, col. l) Five Vichy vessels seized off Africa; 1.276 Officers and men captured from enemy U-Bout. A Channel l n lfiermans in iDrive on ‘Sevastopol s nnuuu, Nov. 4 —(AP\ — The German army of the Crimea was clnimt-fl tonight to be beating rup- l(ll_\.‘ forward in two columns, one huvlng stormed nntl twkcn the cit-y of Fbocloslvn some l‘ mllcs short of Kcrch lilYl ‘iv n. 1' dflvlnl! down upon thr- z: suit-t nnvai base of Scvasiopu. Full of Fcotlwsivu, an port and communications centre on a rnilwnv tunnlnz to Kcrch. was clnlmcd by the lllflll command. The prourvss of this thrust np~ neared to mcnnco Kort!» itsclf, which is separated onlv by n 1W0‘ milc-\vidc strait from the Russian Caucasus nnd i< rcsmrtlod cs i111‘ most llkeiv point of attempted exit for Russian troops reported in sch- important (Continued on pun l1. wl- 7) urv iiirt-rnir lo "met-i. nil the requirements oi iiit~ uir lflllilllig; |il.iii _ ___ _.__: Howe fiiorecasts 200 Tanks Month in 1&1 Per $2 Seventy-seven Corvettes already launched; Building of super "Corvettes projected. a now is in a position in manufact- _tfie British training st-iiuuls Him itious Minister Ilowc told iiic (or..- rninlsicr forecast that medium tank production uouid reach 200 a month in this infant. Canadian industry early lilulillf." lie recently said 100 (‘unutiirui tanks would be avniinliic an . .. . Reported Mayor 1 ~._-.—:1 {Lafiuartlia lls re-elected NEW’ YORK, Nov. 4—-t.\I’l-— ‘I‘l|c New York Times, iii its first. edition at 11.30 p. m, A. 5. T., said Aiuyur I‘. H. iezitiuiirdia hnd been rc-elt-cted to a tliirll term by an estimated plurality hf 75,000 over his llcnnincrutic opponent, William i’. (Yiluycr nl‘ Brooklyn. (At 10.45 p. m. A. s. '1‘. ilie count gave liufinsrdiu, 127,388; O'I)u'_\'cr, 423,638; George W. Iiurimann (SOC), 8,639.) Souris boys win Awards at Toronto TORONTO, Nov. 4- (CPi-Jfho Canadian Connor. on Boy‘; 4nd Girls‘ Club Work asvazu prize: tonight to vtririnerrs in the Conn/lion National Judging competitions. Five provinces equally divided to- night's awards. Results included: 7, Priiacc Bd- \\'Ill‘(l Island: Billie and Fnluy iiou-iett. of Sou .E.I. , / An Ounce 0F _ .1 Pncvanrtou is ‘ Worm-i A PzcK 0F ‘fnouutz METEOROlAiU-ICAL QFFICE, Tkirtiiuti, Nu". 4 i(,‘i’~-~.\iliiln~.:iiii ..;iii iilifulllVllil t-:\in;i(‘i'n\.\1rvs: ll ., .. " Dav. .. EB Vi orin .. .. liilmtiivnlii . lteuiiin Winnipeg Toronto . r)t!.’l\\'n . hiontrenl Light S\l0\\‘lill'..\ and iluirvs luive oceurrcci in Shsknlclivxvnii. hiunito- lin mid nortlnrn OiJni-in. while in southern Ontario the wcotiicr has bcvn inlr nnd m.l<‘i. BOSTON, Nov. 4 ~.-ii\l">-l"oi'r- cast for TlOl'lll(‘I‘l'\ blow Eiiulnnth- cloudy, occasional ii'hl showers; siirlitiy (‘fll(l(‘l' ventral and north .ons WYuliiv-silnv; min in south ~ il snow in north nortiotis, colder '.'l'\.lllf‘.<flfl_\' ii'u':it; 'll‘.ui'sila_v clear- s: and colder. High title this morning at 1156 und tonight at 11.29. Sun sets this afternoon nt. 444 and rises tomorrow morning ni 6.45 Last quarter moon. Nov. 12. 12.5‘ a. m. l Summerside tide eltzhfccn minutes = lntvr than Charlottetown. l I I BORDER-JUNE‘ TORMENITNI GER \ C I (DAILY EXFEPT‘ SUNDAY) t Leave Ilnrdrn 9.25 A.M.. 1-99 n“ | LAN IKRI g I ve Cu e Torme-niine ll-W A-M- r soil-its. slim rm. ‘ gundny service huwc Borden 9.00 I A.i\l.. and 4.45 P.M.: leave Capabl- mcntinc 10.05 A.M.. and 5.50 .. . WOOD ISLANDS FERRY (DAILY, INCLUDING SUNDAYS) Tmaves 10.00 A. M. and 1.30 P. M lmnvcs Caribou 5J5 noon and 3.15 P. ll- Wood Island 6.30 A. M‘ Am. us: