MAXIIAS 0, A MERE MAN mopllll" I ItOlI 1| you know how to spend less on... you rot. you hlvo the chu- pharloitatowo ossrdisl. In 00min. .‘,,,..|..| Ousrdlss. funds! llll NAZIS USE BIG 0111100 PLANES AT \\l. The Popl ape ti‘ Cl-lARDOTTETOWN. CANADA, wEnNlzsbAv, liliclilvllslslilzt,’ Covers Prince Edward island Like tile Dew Read by Every body 1942 [limited States Subs _S_ink ,5 More Hipgponese Shgiips Social Security Plan Set Forth In Report Ask For Resignation 0f Mitchell . 1 - (or) “TAM” n” ri-sao da's W0 gland. org tlons. the Trades and Labor C ngross snd the Canadian Congress of Labor. ill . jnint ictter made public today cup-d on Prime Minister Mac- kenzie King to ask for the re- ugnation of Labor Minister cll. hlgllfi letter addressed to the Prime Minister, was dated NW- 27 and was signed by PJL Ben- ougll. acting president oi the brides and Labor organization and All. Mosher, president oi the Canadian Conrrou- Con- gress officials said they had not yet received n re ly. A copy oi the etter went to Mr. Mitchell, whose oflice today said he had no comment to make, The officers oi the two Labor organizations said in their letter that in tile year Mr. Mitchell has held the Cabinet post he has been "found wanting" and has lost the confidence oi tho organized workers oi Canada The workers wanted "n satis- taciory Labor policy” and ap- plfilllllrllt oi s. Minister “who will be strong enough. to ad- minister that policy without lenr or favor." Delay in making l rllallgc would result in "seri- ou-r consequences.’ The dbl-word letter referred lo the resignation of Elliott M. l.| tie as director of National Swirl-live Service and said the nwmnslbillty lo? “the lnllure oi the manpower program” rests on Mr. Mitchell. Boston that; Entertainment -.|n Niglitiiubs .. BOSTON. Dec. 1- (AP) ~A ban was clamped tonight on l\'l amuse- ment 111111 dancing in 1.1.71 Halon nlzht clubs, hotels and restaurants t: an aftermath oi the Coccanut Glove ill-e disaster, while separate 0111' and slate protes produced "Ellmcnv llllt the night clu‘: was oi "illltlflfbOX construcWn" nod that llhlllCS had raced l}? L-r- mlll lllYfi-llth draperies that luJlC- ed like gauze." The first witness before the in- gust was Maurice Levy or Boston. t had lost his wile in the fire. ‘llnsilaven and drawn. he testified that a man at the next table to his W8‘ “bother. " by a light in the d had unscrewed the L"! said the bar boy had light- id l match to replace it and this hid lsnlled a paper palm tree. The fhmes loaned to the osillzl decor- Illons- which he sold "Too ed like "Mo." so swiftly 111a u... flames gnovehe shidi that they‘ i" behind nln. when e and hlls file raced for the stairs. but were loleet ahead oi us" before they "filled to leave the asement. lie testified the clu was "pock- :d and in response to s question ild it was "over-crowded." ("hi1 J. Kearney of Boston, ex- millle secretory oi the Bartend- errand Walters’ Union. nine oi gloss member's were bllrned to uflvlh. told the lire. lnqu-sst he he- tlfli ihnt "the sailor who turned W! the llnht can be equally re- muslin:- for the disaster as the My who put 1r back." taming-bionic "Bneelol lo Murra rtlvor m- ‘il- D y y 15-2-21 , “Show Mt. stewsrt Ihursday. ' u-z-a d"g$gfiliflrsdwll:ehlngataéhlp dressc-l V O [fill Ill Boyle, 11-21-101 "(mum-ins h ev ry hid . {an no wlohoiaouo‘ uonowih. "lswn. s-le-ao-twtl "ctlllwilna h Prlds. W1 OI‘ QVGI’! ’~ riir..°i..ll.°.“° W "on "Fevlllhr meeting of the Wo- ch Auxiliary H M O. l. "lone 11-111 be hold Pride eve- "l December 1th. I-I-ll ti Dec Ilnq hell [finding live hi)? ‘Riliildfl V. Summeraide p.m.. Isn- °" 3 om. Momma and "twin: hos: lhu week as lol- l)". Carleton Siding, Thursday A. ‘M11111 10.45 Albany afternoon orellltl. Friday until noon. O O. e" and A. O. Green. 12-2-11 B Douglas Amsron Clnl Inn Press Slsfi Writer LONDON DOG, l-(OP Olbl )— A Dost-war’ Britain freed fl-om went and insecurity by a revolu- tionary social security plln w" Sh" W118)’ 1n a report written by he Government Planning Com- mittee of Blr William Beverldge. In molly worn. both in the var- iety of benefits it onvfss es and rlnae oi regulation i would shelter from bi h to death, 1g i; the outline 0t the most sweeping plan for government-sponsored so- cial secur ty ever set forth. Issuance oi the Beverldge report. -—to which op itlon lines were reported for even before its contents were own fully-still leaves the plan a blueprint rather than s reality. It is one aspect oi a broad ride of new ideas about community re- Bpcnsibllltv in future planning in Britain. however. llnd the House o! Commons already has been ur- ged l0 Bive it an earl and sym- gzthetlo hearing so ha; l; em put into operation o; soon in the war is over, - 30 broadly is the Beverldge re- gm written that there is nothing it to prevent British workmen from moving to the Dominlons and Colonies and still enioying such of its insurance benefts as Brl. gatlsns may arrange on s reciprocal 200 Invited To lnvestiture OTTAWA, Dec. l — (OP) — Al- most 200 rsons who have been in- vited to %1ursday’s investiture at Government House. as recipients o! , honors "or u relatives oi the” honored, will be guests o! the Gov- ernment. of Canada! during their stalyxm the national capitol. e lnvestiture. by in: the iii-lie“ ever held in Oanado. will be the first occasion in the second Great war when the Govemor-General has personally presented swords to a large roup of bottle heroes and others w o have rendered salient or efficient lervlce to. the armed forces. All told, 35 of the decorations were won in Canada. Seven ol the men to be honored have died or been killed and in their cases the awards will be re- ceived by next of kin. These, with the 58 men and one woman who ere alive to receive their honors, and relatives accompanying them will travel to Ottawa. at Govern- ment expense and those who do not stay with friends or relatives will be quartered in hotels at Govern- ment expense. Eech living recipient of s. decor- ation has been invited to bring two relatives with him to witness the ceremony. which will take place in the spacious ballroom at Govern- ment House. Mobile Surgical iinits Follow Men into Battle SOMEWHERE 1N ENGLAND. Dec. 1- (OP) —The Canadian Ar- overseas now has mobile sur - a limits which will follow e lighting men into battle at such close range that urgent surg ea operations can be Pfiliifmed "l hour or two alter s soldier hes beenwounded. t l manoeuvre by thgnmgdlcgsclenservaig: oi 1st Csnstb tan Oorps which lasted live d3‘. new units were tested in e e . Canadian nurstnl IN!" 4°?“ battle dress w accomlmW tho of’; tors oi these well d‘!!! which wortligslosaly '1 “m” “in. manoeuvre was a 8011031 trial m improve efficiency of e medical services in l‘? Qgog attain amine-e as casualties, and scores of n plile m - 3228.» $15K": ...§§i'lZ'..n"§wo mue- ui ent oi those units rs! iigh and portable. but V?!" '9 “P prov-red surgical facilities ll oom- orshensiveusl‘ mg; is mm hoop as mo“ in gimme my Canadian Ar- my Hospital. I 42 Vessels Sal] From Iiokehead Ports 5x335’ , , 1- (OP - rhtiiev-two-egaolhneeim I tom lmllnll of I IP51"- "‘° ..“‘.‘82"1'..-'.ti'.’.'§'..‘.’ .2‘)? an - A v3.11. oi the vessels oar-rte; grllfl and two others saved with flour and mwlprint. At midnllht last nldht tlb ration insurance retell Idvsrlced ans the omit il-et y-nierdsy loo-l- oo o1. lull speed to clear by the I Destroyer is included in New Bag ' Latest Successes Raised To 148 Num- ber of Enemy Ships Sunk or Damaged. By JOHN’ M. IIIGIITOWEI. . 1—(AP)- sluixnannes, who often stnlk their quarry in Japan's closely-guarded home waters, have sunk five more Nlpponese ships, including a des- troyer, the Navy announced today. and damaged two others, one oi which probably sank. This bog oi seven vessels raised to 148 the number oi enemy ships announced as sunk or damaged by American undersea action in the Pacific since Dec. '7. 194i. Naval Officials said this total represent- ed one of the greatest contribu- tions msde in the steady campaign oi American forces to reduce Ja- pan's ability to maintain her lor- ilung supply lines in the Western Pacific and the Chino. Sea. The ships announced sunk in today's communique were a des- troyer of unidentified class and size. a 9.000-t0n tanker and three cargo ships oi 8.000. 6.300 and 2,000 tons respectively. In addition, a 12,000-i.on cargo ship was damaged and believed sunk and a 6.000-ton cargo ship was damaged. The total lnnnogo sunk or damaged was 4d,- 000. News Briefs A BRITISH PORT, Dec. l- (CP Cuble)-—A new continggllt f of the Royal Canadian Force, composed mostly 0t ground crews, arrived in the United Kingdom today to swell the strength of Canada's over- seas air arm. OTTAWA, Dec. 1-—(CP)—Post- master General Mulock, because of the "acute shortage of space a- board ocean planes,’ asked Carl- adions today to confine overseas sir mail correspondence to armed forces air letters or to the cir- graph service. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA. Dec. 2- (Wcdnesdoy) — (C?) -- Aus- tralians and Americans slowly drew lighter their ring of mcn and steel around the entrspllfll Japs at Buns in northeast New Guinea and the enemy. aware of the growing Peril. l! sending four destroyers in an npparent reinforcement at- tempt, the high command laid today WASHINGTON. Dec 1—-(AP)— Canada and the United States an- nounced tonight they have resch- ed an agreement; liloklflg toward a post-war world in which trifle barriers would be lowered mid the production exchange and con- sumption oi goods greatly efllflfli- ed ior the "satisfaction oi human needs." - BERNIE, SWITZERLAND, Dec. l-(Alfl-Mcthodical des- truotlon of Italy's industrial cities by It.A.F. raids has crcflt- ed “on immense desire for ace" in the Italian mosses, s ulnnno wspaper said today. CHUNGKING, Dec 1-—(A.P)-- More than 10 Japanese divisions Ml stationed in territories about Yunn- an province for s Possible cam- pai n to close this ‘backdoor’ of Chfna, an army spokesman dis- closed today. ' International At A Glance (Canadian Press) Moscow - DQ811011" we!" stiiien resistance on Moscow front as Rod Jaw: close about their flanks; use of trsulWTt plnnss lndiostes Nui lsnd corn- mnnloalious may be severed- NOITII AIBIOA-Ibrious slr notion develops so Allies approach “no; fish- raported to 511'. 7111» unsalted tllsss in Al- rios. new GUiNIA-Allies imam- IBUO ‘DIN "PM! ' lug renewed at to reinforce troops wltllbsdktolllltllllll- NOB‘!!! AMIIIOA-Osnsls and United sister resell t for hear trade, lower i wslls. to, oeonomio err-operation si- the war. BRITAIN - Ilvortlli "I!" published, calling for great social reforms and insurance to protect I610 hill. _ ant-tn nation from want. ovorcllnildencs. President Roosevelt st s. press erlcsn people should not be snd downs oi the fortune. oi war. that the war will not be long, 0r lie ahead." o s o the United Nations, is still capable be long and llurll. leadership recognises a possibility, Europe and intends to menl. oi Oliver Lyttleton, British ible to strike s much heavier blow in 1943. - prisoner allies. psychological ss well as lighting War Situation Last Night (n, William r Peacock, Associated Press Wsr Analyst) Th? flnmafil‘ vllonle in the war Picture brought about by Allied successes in Africa impelled United Nations‘ loaders to caution against conference remarked that the Am- duly elated or depressed over tho ups Similarly, Prime Minister Churchill spoke soberly to the British people. "Nothins that has happened yet," he said, “justifies tile hope that bitter and bloody years do not Certainly the Axis, though pant its peak of strength in relation to oi deHvering and lending off many hllril blows. No one can have any confidence that the struggle will not Nevertheless, evidence is accumulating that the United Nations’ however. remote, or early victory in __‘ “ it to the full. ‘ One important straw in the winii pointing that way i; the 3pm,. Minister oi Production, that plans have been made to bring "the maximum impact against tile enemy in 1943." By way of explanation. he said it might, for instance. he poss- in 1944 if little or no fighting were done in 1943. But the decision is to hit the enemy as hsrd as possible 5"? 11090 0f Qlrly victory likely must be basid on the expectation that Noll Germany can first be greatly weakened by tlclcrtlon of hcr For all practical purposes, Italy now Illls into that class. The osm- palgrl to knock Italy out of the vvnr already is well advanced on ti“ fronts. Mr. Churchill's uddresg, was an invitation to the Italian people to revolt, Of Germans at Vichy. Plan Golft Reception . Tomorrow Civic Function T 0 - night In Honor 0f Local Hero. Tonight's civic reception in hon- our of Lleut. Rnbert C. Macmillan. D.S.C., will be followed tomorrow afternoon by a reception on behalf of thle Provincial Government which will be held in the Confederation Chamber. There a presentation will be mode to the naval hero. Owing to limited Seating capacity in the Chamber invitations will be issued only to the Lieut. Governor, Pre- mier, Mayor, Members of the Gov- ernment. officers ccmmsndlng var- ious military units. fnief of Po- lice. R.C.M.P.. Lleutcnants Mac- Kenzle, Sl-law and saunders. and reprerentstlves of various organi- zatlons. inspiring Career Lieut. lvlocMillan was iron‘. in CIPJiflOlZth-Jlvfl in 19,15. He was one of the ratings in the R..C.N.V.R. for two years before the outbreak oi wnr, when he enlisted and ob- tsineo a Commission. He sailed for England in June. 1942. and spent four months in England on HMS. "Kills; Alfred," a naval school which he rvos given an exception- ally good course and from which he graduated with distinction. From there he applied for foreign service and sailed for Alexandria on Nov. m by way or the Ca-pe oi Good Hope. Ll-cut. hincl/llllan had his Christmas dlnne; ill 1940 0n the Islam oi st. Helena. in llle.very house in which Napoleon lived whdls in exile. He had his picture taken by Napoleon's grave. In March, 194i. he arrived in Alexandria and was there until Sept. B, 194.2. He was posted in the Sues Olmsl and at Port Bold, ‘ro- brnk and Bengssl. In 1941 he had his Christmas dinner in Bengasi. Lleut. .MscMlllsn won the Dis- tinguished Service Cross in July. I941, "for outstanding zeal. pa- tience and cheeriulness and for letting on example cl wholeheart- ed devotion to duty without which the high tradition of the Raysi Navy could not have been metri- tsined." This was during tho first siege it; igrrgT-o-“nrr hi“ t... barlan Becomes Chief A Of State In Africa French Admiral says Marshal Petain is Prisoner LONDON, Dec. 1 —(CP)—— AIL nllrul Jean Dal-inn, noting with the assertion that Marshal Petain is s prisoner of the Germans at Vichy, i188 taken over authority 11s Chief of State in French Africa, it was announced tonight from Morocco. ‘The Morocco radio said Dorian, who is err-operating with the Alias, had set up an Imperial Council to advise him. This was announced alter Dorian had conferred with Auguste Nogues and Pierre Boisson, Governors General ill Morocco llnri French West Africa, lVlllCll em- braces Dakar. v Figlhting French opposed Fighting French quartezs in Lon- on. who still regard Dorllm a. a traitor to France because o,’ his Vichy record, said thr-y a.~:~li-.1ed that Damon's IISSUIIIPIIIWI‘. o1’ his new powers was in ull ollort 1.0 strengthen his political position. Presumably, it t5 his intention to set up a lull-ffedged French gov. erlrmetlt in north and west Africa. As the one-time political heir to Marshal Petoin, Darlan 11.15 con- tellccd nil along that he is ltcting ln the name cf the lvial-sllnl who is unable to speak independently from Vichy. Pctain. however, according to Vichy broadcasts, has Sblilpppd Dorian of his authorlfv as a Min. ls.e_,- and as‘ his uresulnplivc suc- cessor, Rloting at Toulon The announcement from Morocco ‘Allies Use Air Might In Attica By BLAKE SULLIVAN Associated Press Staff Writer l/ONIION, Dec. 1 ~-1_I\P m The Allied Forces lll harsh. A thrown CVGFj/lll‘ ' lil i“ armory, from Lain-tailed fig: . . .1‘ l ly non-slop assault u; To; fr, B1- zerte, Slax and Gabe-s in the 121st 24 hours as the halt‘ f Tunmln continues at a err“ ‘ ' il.. Contrary to crlriier reports. ‘l: Germans and Italians were show- ln! n0 til-position t0 wilhdruxv and were reported reinforcing b1 sen and air the 20 0'70 crlhlmr cps and thousands of 001111111111‘ z: pTwel-“Eihrnn... " Associated Press Correspondent at Allied Headquarters. who witnessed ulr battles over Greece and re- ported the first great clashes between the lit-mum air force omi mm-ricall four. x flying from lirilzlin, Quill the struggle now taking place in North Africa was unequalled in inten- sity since the asnult o1‘ Britain in 1940-41. Iinund-lhlnclnok Allied 3|. sauits were reported in some llis- ilillfhvs to "c mallc Axiv air bases at lllzl-‘ric virtually ullten. able, with Iilticr forced to with- draw some of ills planes to op. "l"!!! bases in Sicily. a and air force men tlllcy already had eitablished at the tour strate- gic points along the coast. For the lrst time Allied Airman amount- ered in the ares. Germany's fast- est highs-altitude lighters, F9”- Wulf 190's and rm. scbmiit. lows, But evidcnli, ‘r _ Army wit-h 11.»: ~ forces and (‘our 1 rallied Frenchn:._--- wey.» mnkin Progress in l1 trihle or quadruple drive to slice the Axis-hem wast. line into three or more isolated sections. Tho Allies were nearer than 1'.’ miles to the . mi and llppearcd ‘ '1‘ rsilrvay to 71x. nhvrll base. lo wedce nearing m (-01.1: oi the impel‘ .od Blzerle r-s rind pressure wns l Meditcrrnuea from llll't‘l‘ : steadily r Tony Martin. Is Discharged By Navy SAN FRANCISCO. Doc. l —-tAPl .. Tony Martin. forms-l‘ racilo sing- er rind nlrrc l‘. 11'.- l1 Nrilof spec- ialist in tho. U11 rd Sltes Navy. hos been discharged for “unlit- ness,” the 12th Naval District said today. 11¢ was ordered to report to his draft board. The Navy mid ltlarlin, p princi- pal Witness in the recent. nouri- mnrtlnl of Lh-Cmrlr. Aim Arofl’ hero, 1- 1's ilililflfld tiorl while 0;. ‘Treasure Ts 11st, c: that h4- told naval (lfllcers ire would report. to 11's draft: board in Beverly llilis immediately. ‘Ho was qllolwl .15 snvllao ‘o dl:n'1 “vranl. to walk nrounrl in civilian clothes." Th1 Navy snld the OlldPr was "not s dishonorable disrilaro» 1111-1 doc" not cnrrv snv dcrrndntion." Tl was issued lw "up "lllfflflli of (Navy) 0801f‘ as evidence ilfclv oi internal, ycvmovln Fiance, wnoro l"r-t 11g by‘ iundlwl- of salllqll nor. n51 3mm)" "illbellerl nlltllnrlvcs to rop their attempt to reopen the 5:681! oriental that was closed but RY W 8 l . i thg Tam éyéefirene 1 <11 lurs scuttled ll or ers. ~ , (by German officials, nlmlllfrgg-l L) ienlngdsof T0lil0fl's Hugh le Seyne o i341)!‘ . which were still envel- t hulgkc th ck Dull of smoke from tank: of the ileet and blaguld oil War-ZS Years Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) Yggs. gear! —Bdrll.id1l troops in a e Passchenda‘ £4 30513;: “,3: nounced British wok 11,561 prison- ers on Western Front. during Nov. ember. ‘rurklsh attacks on British Positions northwest of Jerusalem repulsed with heavy losses. aAKING 140R‘: Biotin IHE All PURPOSE FLOUR Mls ADA Personnel 1n Whshinoton. Three p Lost From Schooner l l More" “ S.=..?‘°1..1 .75‘ mph" T‘ -~ \ 1 hoover sea‘ from t ‘ t I}: 5ft 'v\"\‘v1~ Arthur J- will 1"?" " 5"“. 11.... gwepl, over the liahlnl; 105-“ in! s. recent blow. h“ 98m" "‘ poéllsiz: tfiiyiea curried sway (illit- Fenwn Tanner, so. and mm Vin‘ cent Parks. 2s both of 1-"“'~’"' bu; 11nd ‘ml’. " D"“":‘l Emmy of g/lliltlli! Lzllimc, N5. Crashing down on the schooner at the hellzht o! a B0113. the “$10113 carried awn)’ m? Wm" m house with tile three men. c storm later rllilmd 0“ "h" 5MP‘: canvas, and TOP 9' dill’ “M. u h" she ran bclorc the wind ulth lmrc sticks. The storm Slill- ‘r nllvl- ti‘! had been two l. ;. .1". 1.11» l.. lrlg banks. It W11.» not 11..t.1 lldIW that she linnl nadc port. lmdl)’ battered nd ulld r enlellicllc)‘ ball (Mm Tan“... 1 been substit- utin for one Lylms lclrulnr mast.- er, opt. FOStEl‘ Col-lurch. who was 13,141 up ashore b_\' illness. enoisnnoiliiiininfiono LONDON ~(CP)- An iron lung made from wnlzri. canvas 11nd scrap metal by a ornlserk slllpwrights A o PAGE—SW Are WI! angry that others dis. llllwlnt you? Remembq» you “n. not depend upon your-sou, MAXIMB OPA MERE MAN Annual Subscription Delivered, $5,!» B! llnlll P. l. l. It“! to other Provinces nnd L‘, n. A. up; i 1"li‘('l€ml.‘llt in thc Stalingrad late. (Stockholm accounts from Ber-I .lin quoted r1 military spokesman as , |saying the "grealesi. tank battle of the war" was being fought. on the | central front and the Nazi position ’ was "very grave," with e compacti wall oi Russian tanks pressing s- gsinst Nazi lines. Stockholm] 1 . l and London both Fhld street fighting was in progress in Rzhev, 130 miles northwest oi Moscow. and that th¢ key defence city was surrounded. (‘The German communique spoke of bombing Russian troops, camps and rail facilities on the central Don day and night. suggesting yet a third offensive in the Vororlezh sector midwal between Moscow and Stullngra . ‘The Germans said Russian attacks between the Volga and Don. in the Don elbow, and on the Tunpso and Tcrek sectors in the. (‘aliens-ls zverc frustrated. "Sontllvew-st o! Knllnln and near ‘Forcpr-ts "IVUlYICITd fighting is cnntinultrr" lilo communique said of the central front.) Hitler was said to have appealed directly for recapture of the vital wzhev-Vvrizmo rsllwrlv which the Russlorls haw- out 11nd to have or- dcred the Gorlllnrls to nlnchhle- mm any retreating Nazi units. Rod Stnr said l1 captured document hunted ‘Hitler as lhylf‘! the loss ol Rzhov would "equal the loss oi hull of Berlin." I n Postpone Limit 0n Motor Trucks O'l"l‘A\VA, Dec. 1~ 1UP» —Pri¢cs Board Officials said today that Christmas tree delllerlcs will ben- " ‘ ’_.‘"L;'i' posi- UOilllllBfPlBl item N1Th30 1o Doc I ' Llke-olUb-er commodities, Christ- mas trees would have been allwicd immediately by the order llfnl‘ _ cor. "ierciul lrllckngc to a fin-time ‘l radius from homo lmsc. New 11118: restriction will not. nPPlV ""1" .1 three days nltrr Christmas “MPH ll1-~ tron truffle is ended hiovenlent. of Christmas il'¢‘L'§ Hill has hccn sllblcft to prim’ l)!‘ mil. bv Tivnhrl" Cfilllrbf n1lll1.ll"l' =inoo Nov. l5. and ‘finnslllorl Cm.- liYllfil‘ T f‘ l1Vl(\\'(‘.flil {all no es- ‘cr- l..-.< l?“'l\ llcsslbr ‘HY ""1 shipments .1 crvmodalion for such will be available. in By-Election Q LA MALBAIE, QUE. Dec. l —1 (CPl-~ Complete returns lrrm the. 151 polls in yPsl/‘rdhyfs FcdcralBy- y Election in Clmricvolx-Srlguep riding tonight gave Frcderic D1)?- ion, Quebec City lawyer. h lead 0f nlmrl 1.000 votes over his nearest. opponent. Mr. mrion. running as an Inde- pendent. polled 9.697 votes. com- pared with 6,707 lor Mrs. Pierre Cnsqrnln, an Independent-Liberal who was running for the sent left vacant when l-lcr husband was ele- vntecl Cnllrt. Three other independent-Liber- als were well down in the voting. .i, While Bolvin. Mayor oi Bile Bl. Poul. hnd l total c-l 2.578. Whllfi Drool. lmcrnlx of Glllard had 211 an! ptglouard Gnudrenult of La Mnllxlie had 1R8. Al‘ Mr. Dorionfis opponents except Mrs. lost their deposits. 1.01m 111mm: ummzm-cr munon ~.rT:l3~- r1..- Kine has and englneroom srtlilcers saved the life of a naval rating when the ship was in a foreign port. Bhlp- ‘mates pumpod the "luml" b1." hand for two days and two nights. snnrovcrl the conlerment of s bar- onelcv oi the United Kuwdvfli ilw" Sir John Iflilflfi, retlrlnl Mayor oi’ London. to ti" Quebec Slivem‘ ..‘.'2'."'£..... 2.00 p.m.. Casgrsln b-m. 5O Tramnisport .Craft Wrecked qBy Red Airmen Soviets Draw Ring Tighter About CermansJ-luge Tank BattleReporteal- k3)’ Edd)’ Gilmore, Associated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, Dec. 2P-_(Wednesday)—(AP)—Russian alr- men have destroyed 50 big German transport planes trying lo supply Nazi troops fighting against 11 Rod Army c11- arell and the Soviet Armies (Hlilllllllli to advance in that sector and on the central front west of Moscow, ll was announced early today. _ l_‘he regular noon communique yesterday and the midnight bulletin disclosed that approximately 6,000 more ' v GQPIIIZIIIS had fallen on the snolv-l-overed battlefields in all increasingly stubborn effort to hold up the Red Army. Twenty of the big tri-motorcd Junkers were shot down and 30 were destroyed on the ground on Monday, alone as the Germans attempted “to bring up supplies and war materials” in the area west of Stalingrad bc- Lwecn the Volga and Don Rivers, the midnight bulletin said. Soviet reports on air activities generally are n day 3 French Subs lieach Africa LONDON Dec. 1-—(CI’)—-Tl\e sea-going Low-ton French aub- mflrlno Le Glorleux joined s 51!!" slllh. the Casablanca and the smaller Marsouin ln Allied North African ports today as “i9 "my unit: cl this French flPft at 'l‘oui0n lo escape cap- tllfii. destruction or internment. The Morocco radio announced tonight the arrival ol Le Gior- ieux st Oflfl after n voyage which had taken it to Valencia, spaln. The submarine stopped thrre less than 24 hours. The Casablanca am] 1h, M“- souin arrived at Algiers yester- day where they put themselves under the r crs of _Ad,mil-al Jean Dorian. A fourth submarine, the Iris, which escaped from 'l‘uulon, was interned by Spanish nu- tlloritie-s at Iiarrulunn “lie-n it failed to leuva in 21 hours. the normal period allowed a bellig- erent ship in s neutral port under international lmw. Launch Explodes, ISKEAIERTON “faslr. Den 1 —- (AP) — A usnllne launch with all ated 40 lo so workmen aboard exploded and burned shortly ill-lulu 511. '1- todny cnrouie across 1h. harbor from lireml-rlon 1n I'm. 11111:. 11rd. a w 2 NY Will Muss W115. (.0 to SLmDAY School So 11a can . hvAb m: (GATHE- HWISELF 5 .28 High lilll‘ lilis maturing :1‘. and tonight nt 6.34. Sun sets this afternoon at. 5.20 slag mes tomorrow morning at New lnoon Dec. '1. libs p.m. Sllmrnerslde tide 18 minutes lat- e.- vhon Charlottetown, CAI! FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNuAY Borden-Leave 9.05 an. 4.30 p.m 7.00 .m.. p Leave Cape Tormentine -— 10.30 s.m. 1.15 p.m. 3.05 p.m., 5.45 p.m. 8.15 p.m. SUNDAY SERVICE lMsy 3 to Doc. 2'1 inclusive) Leave Bordon 9.00 amt 6.46 P- Leave TualllQnI-IIIQ iii-ll l-ll- r an 9' Dirlvlxcsrr svlifiv’ chaelolueogafl""'“" c! ,|,gu|own 8.10 s. In. hfii“... 6- o -» . a. Ann; Charlottetown D- "; p, 1a.. 7.05 p. m.