l“ . gaming Events ‘BIWI-Mt, BWWIN. 1011131117. d 1-17-11. Elbow - Murray River Mon- . 11-17-21. v ' ‘Pantry Sale by the Parkdale men's I ‘ e, November 17th . dlqlmens. 11-8-17-21 »- yember 30t Hot dogs. "Livestock Marketina Board hogs at Elmira Monday. I iv; 10th. John Pierce Agefihmm "The Starch Factories at Hun- " Lrltlver and Murray Harbor are - ng cull potatoes daily. 11115-61. "lliverdale-Churchilb Women's nstltirte Pantry Sale, Rogers Hard- ~ tare, Saturday, November 17th fit ‘ o'clock. n-ie- . "In stock. oats. ground oats. - wheat. mound wheat. barley fi ““‘ii’i’3’at J tariey meaL; "t ' in 1' semi‘ Eidfifit '"‘ Pé-tiiiii Livestock Peed M01107. ‘IO-HM. ..."°‘..'.’. °"‘°'.....J"i§"°.' bi’. v Asvncy- 4 "w h...‘ a ,, . outlive’. "gm Davie and Wgyfr “ , Tuesday until further cellos Dingwal and 30s- dter Monll. I-l-.'.i "Our h d d f ed l mash andwchigk fsntgynereis 3512“ iaily put up and prtcven. livestock reed Agency. ~ Jo-o-e-o-tr Webs r's Orch- 11-17-11. t "IJVUMQ Marketing loading hogs at all usual points week of Nov. 10th. Ooncgillt presents . huddle-use; rut-tn‘; mitigation.” nlififlifitul 11t§.'.""°'“‘ r1 . ve res- dsy. Call col ct J, 8mg. gaclhy, 500""!!- 11-17-81. interested. Board loadind Club "Morell farmers please watch ink day st vour until further Marketing Board "card Part and Dance, Volnim River Hall, ednesday. November list. Cards played I tn l0. Mill- view Orchestra. Ausplces Women’: "livestock Msrketina Board . loadilik hows at Murray Harbor Monday. Nov. th. Your oati-onaae courtecully solicited. luv Brooks representative. 11-10-21 "Attention Je era! The annual ‘meeti W 8m‘:- ll. I. Ierse ohm- on held m Provin- of. stature, ltibvcm- _fl at M0 . . frl-if-ai. “U Msrkctinl Bill-PG ti?‘- ..l."*"*'..=.“3'3*'~'...':.ra7 o e ; t cone y? "of-edit... rll-ld-gi ‘ Ladies Aid oamttre Church l gm an hold m.’ .. _ idglflli. "Loading hE-u ‘mien I11 ha" l. . gone Q sci service. ll. "re-t c»- i . d-id-lat-llort-tf ' dish!- ‘dllanu, Logic Vail , Tuesday, odds-it“? i=- V. C. Winner Ham GT8». ward a Canadian Naval Service in war. 11.0.11. Photo. "Kramer And 29 Others Convicted L , ~11 . Ts i toe) - A British humor; court today convicted Josef Belsen mer, “ of ." and 20 of his human mis . cf consult/ting atrocities at give Belseu and Oswiecim concentra- tion camps. but acquitted l4 de- fendants. including five women. Sixteen of those convicted were women. Tonight the 80 sullenlv awaited sentences of death by hanging or sbco . or of ‘znprisomnent and fines. be announced tomorrow after deftéze lawyers‘ finish pleas. Maior endants convicted with the brutefaced, ZCyear-old Km. mer were Irma Gross. 22. blond “cueen" of the Belsesi gang. and Dr. Frito Klein. gray-haired phv- witnessea said. bick- for the ecim gls Each cf the 8o showed no emo- thei ' mnslsatm lnto'c1eman"ml.m_ w“ Saint- John Man ‘Buns Cvsr Cwn Son t. - - {By The Canadian Press) BA NT JOHN, N 3.. Nov. 7..—- Four-year-old Cirrlstian Gallagher we. fatally inured today when rim over by a ck driven by his father, G. L. Gallagher. The ac- cident occurred on the driveway their home at -Ketepee, The Fire Destroys Barns At» New Arman Fire of unknown origin which was discovered about 11 o'clock Lsterday forenoon destroyed two ms owned by Mr. Wilfred Cur- ley, New Arman. Also lost were two horses, eight calves, and she season's harvest of hay and grain. The cattle and other stock were saved. as was the farm machinery. Mr. Curley had driven his ch - dren to cs/toh a bus and when he returned the fire was breaking although gs cred it was impossible to save the buildings. Fortunately the wind was blowing away from the house which saved it from catch- in. » . it could notbelearnedlfthere was ‘out: insurance on the bulld- Vings the loos was estimated at nearly $0,000. B Berlin Recipe For ilerring lloads recipe published in the press: “Herring-flavored bread: Take herring head, remove eyes: boil head with bones. strain ofl ll uld and mix with flour. adding t and vinegar to taste. This should be served with onion rings 011i egthopped turnip to get the full e .' Prominent Edmonton Lawyer Dies At 68 EDMONTON. Nov. 16 -—(OP)— Henry Arthur MacKie. 0B. prom- inent Edmonton lawyer an reel- dent here since 1905. died at PThe Po ‘s aper s Work Proceeds At Snell's Pace In Commons OTTAWA. Nov. l6—(Special)- Already weeks behind in their work, m ‘ of the Commons to- night closed another five days dur- ing which progress has been made at less than o. snail‘; pace. It is no longer rumoured-bu: accepted as fact-that with the lack pace shown so far this season. ‘the members rwill be icing home fter a sho illness.- He wstfdiabniewetlvs m“ cl gm 101" Qhricimes on a . ort Parliament for orrtcn West WWIYQTQP 811d -, nm~»1e1'l"'te"192t.m'8urvrvcm'1n- 1118c 1mm! - elude a sister. Mrs.‘ Emest Le th ow Year to again kc up 5mm mm,” cm. \ also; r unfinished parliamentary ‘ S: Pearl iiarhor .Prohe llncovers Story WASHINGTON. Nov. l6-(AP)— The movemmin of the United States cruiser Boise rior to the Japanese attack on earl Harbor that ope ed the Pacific war be- came e. cuestlon for Congres- sional investigators tonight after Republicans hinted its crew sisht- ed at sea the Japanese fleet which attacked the Hawaiian stronghold. No more than hints came oat at the Senate-House committee's ear- ings on the disaster. Representat- ive B. W. Gearhsrt (Hop-Calif) told a reporter, however. that he had information .the Boise, on con- voy duty, had seen the four Japa- nese carrierstand escorting vessels which launched death and destruc- tion on Pearl 1-larbor Dec. '1. 104i. "My information is that there was a fight aboard the Boise over whether they should break orders for radio silence and report it and the captain decided they. should not," he said. filONllOlt Nov. l6 - (OP) — Alberta's 1H0 wheat toga was gther failed to see the child and believed he was in the house. lalivenr Discharged Bound Husbonds Seek To Join War Brides ‘ i Have Difficulty Getting Passage On East- Ships. ' . back in September. it was the in- tention of the Government to have the slate cleaned of by -November 26 when the Dominion- Provincial conference‘ re-opena, ‘That now admittedly is sible, and the resulting schedule one they will stand up and cheer. Given a week or 10 days Christmas, they will come back tc Ottawa perhatps to work another month, then return home for per- haps two or three weeks before the opening of the new session in mid- Pebruary or early March. This weeir was weary, like all recent weeks. and the slow pace began to tell on the tempers of the cabinet. Ilsley Itiled It was this week that Finance Minister Ilsley, usuall a mild man, lost h temper. an waving an dmo ing finger at Progressive Conservative leader John Bracken told the Opposition if they did not like -thc We)? things were going they‘ could call for a vote of nun- con deuce. Warming as) w it, Mr, llsley came out th the astonishing stat-e ant-that will not soon he forgot en--thst the Cabinet was responsible to the Crown andnot to the people and their Parlia- men . ‘first one sentence will echo and reccho at the next election and it lg certs . from talk in the Lib- oral lobby that when Prime Min- ister gets down to business next wee , one of his first. duties will be to give the bOld M1‘. Ilsley a anking. l m e House s so settins to the habit of calli-bs map votes, that the electrical vet-em in the Com- mons is brea down. Wednes- day when three votes were called -two on the Govetmme t's refu- sal to produce departmen a1 orandc and one on the fuels were blown when the divis- icnbellsrangfotstotaloffl minutes. " Flag Debbie Lively l "rm": “we l..." n . . ve y. urc . e' uive mnservstive, mn- tpire-lovlng patriot from onto, voting against his own . l‘; ion with one other, Mr. Churc deeiimd a» send the nu enema to a e. on giroupde that be sai bled hewas one down the-Union flew on the debate con- m file of 0M0, GunHenryEAmolrLchiefodtheArnryAir Prunes. has revealed the development cf a jet pro- ,ulsion device which speeds take-offs of giant B- . 29 Birpenforts. The bomber literally leaps off the runway in tests at Fgiin Field, Fla. General Arn- As‘ ommodore apprpafla _ ~weet~bound freight freirht cars were derail and When the session first opened _ which faces _the members is not i -th0 o; ' g: vancgaver. 1.1km 1.4. atomic warfare. 2.0 Persons Iniured In Train Wreck LYDICK. 1nd, Nov. 16 - (AP) -— The New York-bound Advance Commodore Vanderbilt sideswiped a freiaht train today and seven passenger cars tipped over. injuv in! between 20 to 25 persons. State police. hospitals and news- papermen had no reports of fatal- ities aboard the ld-car all pullman train of the New York Central system. No Canadians were in- cluded in those known injured. The seven cars that. tinned over were five sleepers. a dormitory car and a lounge car. Six cars were derailed but remained up- right. while two oars did not les/ve the rails. Two hrmdred and fourteen passengers were aboard. railroad headquarters in Chicano reported. . The collision occurred about u isdilfmil theC es west 0! Bout-h Bend. eds spilled in the path of the oncom- cars were demolished. Physicians and ambulances from Surrounding cities were summon- ed and thelniured were taloen to hospitals in South Bend, Misha- waka. and Ltaporte. Relief trains were routed over the Misha“ W5‘ N‘ lines through Niles. mm“ Political Crisis Stirs France PARIS, Nov. lC-A oltiical cri- sis stirred France oonig t after the resiznation of Gen. De Cisulle as interim president was handed to Felix Ciouin, resident of the con- stituent assem ly, following a dead- 5'1 lock with the powerful Communist Party over the new cabinet. Sources close to the French lead- er, however, said his letter of res- ignation which will not be made public until it is placed before the assembly, indicated a willingness to continue efforts to form a gov- ernm t. There was a flurry of goiltic conferences during the ay. 5W3 BRIEFS OTTAWA. Nov. 16 -—- (OP The Canadian Govemme been ‘ the ecnso of the Y‘ statutes and revision- would include a consoli- dation of the Criminal Code.- b” .'.i‘”.t"'<>.....fi....°‘" “W hi t; y e . u had not been so dified e 1027. berfromBtJo ifax 'Al1 mom a _ g , Read Eveybody f- Covcrs Prince Edward Island Like gDew cnAnaorfrarowrhcar-IADA, SATURDAY, Novas/lean 11, 194s 0MEN‘T'R1\PPEv 1N vR1F 1-4 miles west of Ltvdick which their total 5m able in . than“ MAlilMS' ’OI' L dens amt v. old, in his final report to Secretary of War Robert. P. Patterson, urged aerial supremacy and top-notch anti-aircraft devices as the best defense against Croat Interest Taken In P. E. 1., Live Fox Show Secretary Walter R. blhaw has received over 570 entries for next week's Fox Show. This was con- siderably over the capacity of the showroom so exhibits had to be cut. down pro rata. e es Rover-hing the show stated all entries had to be in the hands of the Secretary by November 15th. Rtegrettabiy some entries received since that date have had to be declined. Indications point to this year's show being one of the best. if the best. ever held here. r est n r of ranch ex- is from Johnston Brothers. . Each has foxes in his own name and ‘.. amount to 70. “to be cut down Buanmerside with 40 Summerside and bulk oi’ the ent~ ll. S. Navy In No Condition To Fight Now WASHINGTON. Nov. l0 —(AP) - The ranking officer of the United States Navy said today it has been so weakened by de- mobilization that it couldn't fight gushes " tries. in fact cinitv has the ries. e miral while endorslnil peacetime train- ing for all youths of l8. Questioning by members of the House of Representatives military committee led to the Admirals appraisal of the Navy's present us o n. . The chief of naval operation: was talking about how fast the Navy is releasing kev men. breakina up combat teams and disintegrating the units that smashed the Japanese fleet. ‘yes’ to that question." The atom bomb "may require us eventuallv to build stronger ships quite different from those we have now." said. . The present atomic bomb. he said. cannot prevent. fleets from ctbcratinz. "Ships." Admiral Kind said. “can withstand a create: shock than buil s. .. .. .. rec- ent war we had to spread out the formation of shl to meet th conditions of air O ps attack. We cm readily arrange our formation to ensure that not. more than one or two ships would likely be lost amount cf. material avail- the would for mskinl The late of two men aboard a scotw which broke adrift at Borden late yesterday afternoon was still unknown early this morning. Nor had vhewlwreabouts of the scow been located as far as could at the tine of going to press. The socw was part of the dredg- ing equipment used by the J. P. Porter and Son construction firm» of Dartmouth, N. 3., but officials 01' the company at Borden would not reveal the ‘names of the pair aboard the scow. Grave fears were being held for the safety of the men, however. From one Borden sourcc came a report that one of the men was a Mr. Gillie of Bummerside while the other was e. Mr. Allen of Tormen- tine, N. B., said t0 have been a for- mer resident of this Province. The names were not confirmed official- ly, however. It was thought possible that the scow drifted ashore in the vicinity of Cape Traverse but 1f so, ap- parently it had not been located. It was in that vicinity when dark- ness closed down, an hour or so after the accident. Apparently the pcow was loaded with material dug up by a drmge near the ferry piers at Borden and was being towed out to be dumped when it overturned and then broke free from the tug boat. A strong wind was blowing at, the time and a heavy sea running. Apparently there was no way of lcnowiniz whether the men survived when the scow turned over. But hope was entertained that they were in a wateretlyzht ment and that they would be able to live aboard the craft. It was understood that arm-nie- lnents were being made to send acetylene torches out to cut a hole into the steel tanks and release the nuen. in the event of the scow being located. Victory Loan l Total Reaches $5,585,905 The victory loan total Province has azmormtod to $5. 050, it, was announced last night ,- repmsentina 157 per cent of the minimum objective of $3,300,000. In addition members of the armed forces. chiefly airmen at Summer- slde, subscribed another $404,900. ’s Brand total to $5.585.905. ad-airlst 3.179.000 in the eighth loan. At the time of the lest cammfliim there were probably six times as many serv- icemen stationed here. By districts the results were: Summer-side. $1,055,050. oa- 183.48 per cent; Charlottetown. $2.084.- 250, or 178.12 per cent: Prince County. inciudinil Bunrmerside. $1,745,750, or 148.57 per cent: Queen's County. including Char- lottetown, $2,741,800. M" .l6l28 per cent: King's County. $693.- 500. or 168.17 per cent. . And of the Canadian National Rail- way came second in the Maritime colon. Loan officials said that they believed that the Province not only set a record for this loan but for all the loans held nrevi ouslv. both in individual sales and in ever-ell ebiective. Released Prisoner Gains 145 Pounds three months ado was released from a Japanese prlsoner-of-vmr camp. Bombs For n; nowsnn w. nuns-sass! Associated Press oieuce Editor PHILADELPHIA Nov. l6—(AP) -Atomic bombs cheap enough a0 that. tons of thousands of them may be dropped in the next war wens predicted today by Dr. heimer. the scientist Robert 0P0"! who heeded the makln c! atomic bombs at hoe New Mu- Alamoe, Oppcnh 1m spoke t the oast-war.at:nio 0119K‘! con- ference held jointly by the Ameri- can Phiiosqihic B00100! ‘Ind tthl notional Acadglyh of Sciences. ‘ dZWt-ttwm- "i. sht-b-‘fitlal’; a “wens ‘ atomic weapme wars w-ni-Tdiénuummtme Predicts “Cheap”Atomic .1. nical novelty whatever. just doing Next War project cost m 32.000.000.010, and we dropped ust two bombs, it is a...“ ‘t. e . undertaking in atomic armament- and without any elements of tech- thing; th have heady beendone .."'....’“l. ..r"'* 122.‘: ‘e som e a r 1,000. yAtomic weamls, even with zshhat ‘we know ay. can be cap.’ H aid that ex for the ro- teai a hills the 2%.. bomb, d; Nag l, would have "taken out l0 5111M’! miles or a Yttlc mm. Grm steel girders cl factories were twisted aned wrecked. be d0- compantr i . Babeorlpflon Delivered. iii-ll. Hill. U-IO; other Prod-nods I U-IA, Ill Fate C; workmen Unknown a After Borden a Accident- Fire Threatens Entire Town ROSEAU, Dominica, B. W.!., Nov. lc-(cr caplet-A tire that started early in the day was'sti1l raging tonight and threatened destruction to the entire capital of the island. Two blocks of buildings have been I destroyed as efforts contin ed to brill: the fire under on- trol. No estimate of damage could be made. Population of Roseau is 9,000. Attleefliing 0n Train For Ctiawa .1’ ‘PM. ASP) today ending aid toric seven-day stay in Washington Tarzan-Like Burglars Operate In Hamilton (By The Canadian Press) HAMILTON, Ont., Nov. Iii-Bin glare, in Tarzan-ilk n. Visit cit-t; GtLACE BAY, N. 5.. Nov. l6 1 (CP) -— Governor George 911i clair oi’ Charlottetown will make an official visit to Cape Breton Kinsmen Clubs shortly, Dan Col- lins. 1H sident of the Glace Bay club announced tonight. 410$: V1110 ltlvr Greatness fliRusT uron ootrr Aiwms iittow Wm 0o ‘Nlfii ti! H METEOROLOGICAL SEIRVICb Toronto. Nov, 16 — (CP) — Min imum and maximum temperatures Vancouver 3'1. 4d: Edmonton ii below, 1 below: Regina 11. l6; Win, nipcg l6. l0: ‘Ibwnto 36. i6: 18. 25: Montreal l8. 3C; Quebec l 23: Saint John 26, -: Moncton l , 22: Halifax. 94. 30; Charlottetown g0. 24: Sydney 26. 34: Yarmcutb l. 3B. Forecasts: Lower St. Iowrence: his‘ cold. followed by easterly winds an light; snow. chiefly ‘h western C . mice 8t. Johnz- Fair iallt Shore: Decreasing west and west winds: fair and cold. Mal-ltimas: Fresh westerly will! fair and cold. - High and tonight at 8.40. Sun sets this afternoon at i. and rises tomorrow momlfig at Full moon November f , l0. A. M. Summersidr tide eighteen mill utes later than Charlottetown. N.s.-P. . ssavrcs c: rm. a) u". oofl meals e s. n. cal ‘LT-scans..- llan. salt p.111. clan-d. and som of these wrecked factories were miles apart. ' I tide this morning us!”