MAXIMS 01A urns MAN " i-i-u nu is the purest impulse o; ...l"i.rr.l’.. mo» Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Oil-I‘ Goodness may be vanqulahc‘: but i MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN heart remains upon its s c. . o rdlan. Ioundod m1. . M M: QMIAI, Two Cents. h CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, ' TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1944i 8 PAGES Mall. smog other Provinces o u.s.a. $5.00. Subscription Delivered. 85.00. RENCH ARMY IN BIG BREAK-THROUGH City Council Takes Stand With Legion For (fiopgription ._.___ The City Council in special ses- sion last night unanimously en- dorsed the stand of the Dominion Council oi the Canadian Legion lwlieiarlli rggarglelkrgoghe conscription of ' s. Mayor J. E. Blanchard presided at the session and all Councillors, ¥‘“l.rr%irr°..’§.°°"§‘§2l °f %°..“.‘.“' "" r , Q)‘ -_ both absent b re i illn wig‘ press?‘ 1y ason o ess- c reso ut on was moved by m; officers of the Coun. J. T. McKee and seconded ion at n press by Coun. P. G. Gay. It read as rlllzrence here today said they do follows: l believe overseas troops can be "That the City Council of qruately reinforced throufln any the city or Charlottetown u. _,. having Home Defeflce cede to the request of the Prov- " encoufileled w vmunte" for lncial Command of the Canad- "erseas serv . r _ Thmfflflfggead°vgyl°gohfg$f§ieg llrlrrrullll ‘ll: rfifrrrrlrrrllrilllllrr ' , ‘ f the Dominion Council of the . troops would prefer to await ° Legion in regard to conscrip- aw liome Defense roops Expected To eversc Decision VANCOUVER. Nov. 20 - l-llah- ' Canadian a; WF§.......;;.T;;. s. LL-iicn. Crcrar Promoted To Full General By KIRK! L. SIMPSON (Associated Press War Analyst) A surprise French lat Army dash through the Belfort Gap to reach the Upper Rhine close to the Swiss border seamed likely to force a German retreat in the south for a new stand behind the Rhino itself. The southern end oi tho west front would be the logical place for such a withdrawal. Rcputedly powerful fortifications of the Siegfried Line llo east ‘of the Rhine from the Swiss frontier to Karlsruho. They offor the enemy an opportunity to find auhlIOTC€|Il6n1S in the south for his hard pressed troops in the Saar area and the Aachen sector. where tho main weight of the Allied six-army offensive is striking, without weakening his lower Rhine front. Such a “dlsengagemonfl move on the south flank would not great- ly shorten tho Nazi defensive front. It would, however, relaaao first lino field troops, now deployed to guard the passes of tho Vosges, for sup- port of tho American 3rd Army's thrust at the Saar Basin 5 tawny and urudglngl giving ground hcforo the combined British-American throa- armp advance toward Cologne. . Secondary troops, undcpendable for field operations. could offer stubborn resistance from the Rhine fortifications along the upper river. It acorns obvious that tho supremo need of the fog g; um Ameg winter break-through campaign develops is adequate first line re- serves to meet the Saar and Aachen areas attacks without weakening the still dormant but critical Ncder Rhino front in Holland. By every sign it is in that souihem sector that the German com- mand expects thc cnlmlnn Allied attack to come In duo course. It is there, guarding the Netherlands extension of the Siegfried Biggest: in... In lDay OF Advances g LONDON. Nov. 20 — lthrough in western Europe § three places near the Swiss meni by Gen. Eisenholvefs The French drive, ihrc (CP) - The French 1st Arm since Normandy has stormed frontier and headquarters aiening i0 out flank German Mountains to the northwest, was ihe most sensational devc l Allied progress. . News Briefs . l LA PAZ. BOLIVIA, Nv ‘$0 —| l (APz-Folu‘ men were cxccu tu- i dav in the cltv or Oruro zcr an un- mucccssiul zine-mm to overthrow the ‘KOVCYIIITI 11t of President Gaulberto .Vllluroe1, rz was announced bv the ‘ lzuvcrnzncnt radio. ‘ They were liJlilllcd as: CJlUllPlC- The United State 3 d struck two miles dgep info ‘$219.’ imflflys rich Saar industrial basin n a new mvasion of the enemy homeland and a field dispatch 531d all resistance has ceased in L115 Lorraine city of nyglz, French and German forces were Wilding slwts across the Rhine for the first time since early in me war. On the north cm end 0f lhg boil. lug wcstcm front, B y in the greatest break- in forcc to the Rhine at the BBC tonight broadcast an announce- thut the fortress of Belfort has fallen. positions in the lopmcnt during a Vosges day of ____ _:——————| Berlin Claims Soviets Begin Winter Drive . from the iloverhment to x0 , _, _ _ ~11; 2 d ell-gas. Several officers said their u" °l me" h" “mun” w‘ Linc. that Allied reports have indicated tho cream of German shock “moo m“ bananas “Voila closed in rollalrdl lllenlfinblg LONDON. Nov. 20 — lAPl -Rus- m were "ready to so" once these 911 we” glVBIl. 1m prcss conference was held t prior to a private meaiinu of o oiilcers. who were summoreci Vancouver bv llIaL-Gen. G.R. earkes. General Officer" command- - in chief, Pacific Command. to lsn a CflJUDBllrfll outlined last week . district officers comrnandirur bv fence Minister McNaughton cal- ulated to reinforce overseas troops y having Home Defence Troops egforcement should be endors- o .' New Truck Tender The Council also accepted the tender of F. R. McLaine for a. new truck equipped with snow plow. Ma or J. E. Blanchard presided at he meeting and all Councillors with the exception of Couns. A. T. McKinnon and A. Butler, both absent through lllness—were pre- sent. Three tenders were hefore the Council for consideration. Al- olunteer for service overseas. The whole of the 6th division. a are proportion of which 1s com- sed oi llonr: Defence Troops. is‘ rationed in British Columbia. The iilcers said virtually all the Home,’ efence Tfi-oaps In the dlvzsion have ecelyed lull combat training. ' Brnl- All, Rov. a Brinade Com lllldfif, said some Home Defer. c005 on (he verge of “Reina act- ve" had volunteered in previous ecruilinz drives. Those who re- lCouncil of the League. ' formity with the request, Dr J. lison lyIcLcods tender was $3744.45 and that of 1. A. Horne for $1139.45. A letter was rend from the Health League of Canada asking the Mayor if his Council would appoint two representatives to IlIC In con- D. McGulgan and Mr. J. Arthur Lewis were appointed. Before the meeting adjourned troops in the west are concentrated. virtually tho whole line south of that sector that no German recourse but retreat or th Yet the massive Aliicd drive along is making such progress c bringing in oi heavy reinforcements from the east or Italy remains. _Fate Of Homew Defense Troops To Be Decided At Parliament Session Attacks 6 Enemy By Jack Brayley Canadian Press Stair writ" OTTAWA, Nov. 20 - (c?) Jrm . domestic dues- 11011 Oflllc war-whether or not arm)’ of 60.000 most controversial the home defence GEN. H. D. G. CRERAR OTTAlrVA, NOV. 20 - 1GP» Gen. H. D. G. Crsrar, com: of the Canadian lstArmy,l1 l.‘ promoted to the rank of full ge- neral, Defence Headquarters an- nounced tonight. Thc announcement, Defence Minister also contained the promotion of Mal.-Gen. Charles Fcullccs of London, Ont, recently ldezuificrl as commander of the 2nd Division in Gen. Crerars army, to the rank of Lieutenant-General and Brig. A. B. Matthews of Ottawa to the acting rank of Major-General. There was no indication as to the meaning of the promotion of Gen. Foulkes-ancl Gpn. I/Iafihcws. A Lieutenant-Generals rank usu- issued by Mclvaughion. "the following resolutions were passed: P. G. Gay and J. T. McKcc "that the tender of F. R. Mcllnine for suvlllying the City with a three-ton heavy duty truck. eqululml “l”! hydraulic hoist, snow plow, 11nd dump box as per submitted speci- ficaf ons at a price of 5363a be ac- gcptcdr this being the lmvvst len- er.“ "Resolved that we, the llfayor and Corporation of the Clzv of Charlottetown in session us- sembled do extend an expression of our deepest sympathy to Mayo!‘ F‘. W. Storey of the City of Mone- ton in the heavy loss which he has suffered 1n the death of his wife now cnfled to her eternal home at such an early age." (This resolution was moved by Coun. B. Earle MacDonald and seconded by Coun. P. G. Gay. after the news of Mrs. storeys death in the Moncton Hospital yester- day morning 11nd been known to the Council). nlneli "were the men who were perfumed to wait for Conscrip- fill Brig. Cl.A McArihur who re- urned to a Canadian eekv are said he h ome Defence situation carefully incc being lransfemd from over- as dutv and discussed the pro- lom with his ccmmandinr: officers, ‘Ulllhy occasions..nnd._as a result s opinion is that n campaign for oluntecrs will not succeed. LL-Col c A. McCartcr. of ver- onsa . ' sked these lads time and 21in whv lhcv 1':fuse to wlunteer or overseas service. Their replies e always the some: Thev are filing for the government to give" , egrdcr and they or; ready ta o- oming Events "Show Morell, Wednesday. ll- "Card Part i1 Holy Nam Hall. edmsday. ZZVMI. at 8.15. a 11-21-11. Jlyiryliuz llge andkdresscld DOllll~ ~ "K Dmaretures. s- lam: Cold Storulto ma. 101-1741. "Hunter River farmers will be 1111s dressed hogs Dec. 1. ‘W. 11-21-101. “Unveiling of Honor Roll in New n. .- llllltlllbglltyllldéchool wedlnre-Zclell D r o. ‘hi’ ‘ill lAliics llave Gains, ‘Losses in Italy ROME. Nov. 20 -- (OP) — Brit- ish ilth Army units, driving to outflank Ravenna in Italy's Adri- atic sector have made some pro- gress ncross the Ronco River west of Ravennns airfield but farther inland a fierce German counter- attack has knocked Polish troops from Monte Fortino, s small peak overlooking two secondary roads to Faenza about five miles to the west, headquarters said today. The Polish troops repulsed two Nazi charges before being forced to withdraw. Charges llnfair Treatment For liucbcc Workers QUEBEC. Nov. 20 — (CP) — Alderman Josoph Mat tonight told the City Administrative Com- mittee that "more than 3.000 war workers were laid off recently in the Quebec district while in other parts of the country there is a manpower rhor o." Mr. Motto add that ho "want- od to protest against such an un- fair treatment of Quebec and also against the way our workers are being asked to leave the city and seek employment elsewhere." Speaking of what he 11nd des- cribed as bcin the situation here, Mr. Motto as ed "if certain per- sons wsnt s new do priatiorr of Acadlsns, why do not ney say w?" French-speaking Acadlans wcro do rtcd from Nova Scotia in the ill hpentury‘ and man of them settled in w at now is hs Stats of uuisians in tho United States. Nazis Taking Over Famed Monastery DONDON, Nov. 20 -- (OP-Reu- terl-Raports from Poland today said-tho Germans had ordered the Paulln Monks of the famed monasi r tnry Jasno Gora. near Czostochowa. to vacau their buildlnaa dressed D ult d ll. . Klnnon, Myrrayyitivrzilv ll-Zl-Zl. an, _ —- "vm “firrlfbvsblfirlfifrifidfiyl "Chimp Supper. um s n 1 lllagpwednesday. Noveenber 5:233. - M. 11-21-11 “Bean m" 0?? “ariilrihr "mu m.» women's Irlstliiutnfl. -a1- . "H" glliltlnguéianvcveea Oéidfellgws ' . nes a , o- "mbti 22nd. Webster's Orcyhestra. “'20-” ‘Pic Social in m“ 1nd Islflfl HA1] "v- ll-IO-Il-I. "Jlut ' __' ' ppo.r‘rlé’rl.°‘irr‘l‘lz'“°"f ova ma- addrua. Walter luwktkl "Rllerve Monday h; u‘ - “m” Hlll- ll-fll-ll? new" hug-i 1M," ml “ilaufor sale. Un- rlottoto to- ky" A- Mcl-‘hsil, New lvgven. 1l-21-2l I You r t a...“ "v ma Dance or Lot us" flfdlgwdlty ‘mat. Nov- ll-Il-ll. u <- Mlular 5h,‘ Md session Al ha Re- va»... .::...::.~vll...?,’I".T°.".' |lT .’\la|’~i\|f\ Moved and seconded bydlulmsa -‘ made ‘ should be made available to rein- force the Canadian Army overseas- wlll be t-ilrcahed out when Parlia- ment reconvenes here Wednesday. I_t ls u. question which llas spot- ndlcally occupied press and Parlln. ment since the home defence army lvfls formed in 1941. but the latest wave of alsunlent has reached a new 111211.. ‘lue Carladinn Legion has deman- ded the draftees be sent overseas and n. group of Toronto girls have offered to show an example by shoulderlng arms themselves. The Shawinigan Falls, Que. branch of the Canadian Legion has offered Prime Minister MacKcnzic King the total membership of the branch as relnforczments for service overseas. The conscription issue has dogged Canadian politics for years with most vigorous opposition coming from Quebec where men were kil- led and wounded when it was en- ally goes to a corps commander while o. Major-Generals rank goes to a divisional commander. LL-Gcn. don, Ont.. has been commander of the 2nd Canadian Corps tached to the 1st Canadian Army while LL-Gen. E. L. M. (Tommy) Burns of Ottawa has been cam- mander of the 1st CanndiarvCorps attached to the British 8th Army in Italy. Gen. Crerar thus becomes at least the sixth Canadian to hold the rank of full General. He ls at least the fourth to hold such rank in the Canadian Army. The others are Defence Minister McNaughton, Gen. Crerafs DTP- dccessor, promoted when he ro- tired from the army Sept. 2'7; Sir William Fenwick-Wllllnms, nutivo of Annapolis, N. S., a General in the Brit h Army in i868; Sir Arthur Currie. native of Napperton, Ont, promoted a General in the Canadian Army in 1919; Sir William D. Otter, nalivc of Toronto, promoted a General in the Canadian Army in 1920; and Sir George McAulay Kirkpatrick native of Kingston. Ont. promot- ed a General in India in 1927. Gen. McNaughton said that Gen. Crcrnrs promotion was in roco nition of “his outstnndln: serv ces to the Allied cause. His skilful leadership of the 1st Can- adian Army in the campaign through Northern France, Belg- ium and Holland has contributed greatly to the successes achieved by the armies of the United Nav- ions. His advancement to the rank of General will be recognized by all ranks of the Canadian Army us a well merited tribute to his outstanding personal qualities." ‘4s,ooo Wounded Flo..n To England Subs In Atlantic AN R. C. A. F. BASE IN NEW- FOUNDLAND, Nov. 2U ~ 1GP) - FlL-Lt. Peter G. Hughes of Courtenay, B. C., has sighted and attacked six enemy submarines since he has been on Atlantic coastal patrols and his friends are a little Jealous of his rccurd. F0. Ronny Bcclford. Sydney. N. ., and Edmonton. and F0. Earl McInnis of Iroquois and Kitchen- er, Ont... have never so much us seen the pcriscopc of an enemy submarine and they have almos" completed their third tour of coastal operations. ll. S. Man Dies At Age Df 1 3 TRURO, N. S., Nov. 20 -- (OP) - George A. MillTilfl, 103, died Sunday at his home here. He wasl postmaster at nearby Cove Road, for 26 years. He was believed lo bl.- the oldest living mcnlblrr of‘; the independent order of Good‘ Templars. Nazis Expecting Drive At Warsaw NEW YORK. Nov. 20 - (CPJ -- The Polish Telegraph Asnncy said Th RI l. I today in a London dispatch that an [imminent Rod Armv offensive n- gamst Warsaw ls beinu awaited by lhe Germans. who are minin: fuc- Branch opposes tories. hospitals. filter Diants and houses in the Polish capital. l The Pods-h Telegraph Agency said a ' t‘ d ltllls news was broadcast bv the lPolisn underground Warsaw radio. _ operating again in the vicinity of __ lthe capital. uftsr being silent since . --— fthe defeat of last summer's Polish THREE RIVERS. Que" Nov. ZD-‘uprlsinu in the city. - LCP) — The Three Rivers sec-l The GPifflBfls are removing their lion of the Canadian Legion has,slck and wounded irom Warsowh puggd g resolution rllsapprovinglhospirnla the broadcast reported. the stand taken by the Legion Provincial Council which favored —"“"__’_I"" I conscription for overseas service. , it was announced tonight. - ___ I coupon. N0v._20 - (er-m... |ler)-The uh- mimstrv announced lwday. that more than 45.000 [wounded have been flown i0 Britain from the continent since D-dnv ln aircraft of Roval Air Force Trans- port Cormnand. ~ The casualties include servicemen of all Allied xiations. The resolution said that "we (the Three Rivers section nlemb-l Lcytc Island era) believe that conscription is. a political question and we disap- prove the provincial council sland- because the Canadian Legion con- stitution forbids any direct or in- direct politlcal action." '“_ ‘ by the, land t . . Higher Wage m k a. ..“.’.‘;‘€J'°.“r’.‘..ri§;£“2éf.¥.’l§’3 and continuous armor-led Scale Advocated Many Longshogamcn lldle At Halifax pressure. and maintained tirir grin around trumped enemy remnants in northern Ormoc corridor. head- HALIFAX. Nov. 20 -- l quarters reported today. Onlv about half of Halifax Fierce winds and torrents of rain. lon _ hammered the fiIhi-ina fronts. dis- sen. wate ront official; cstlmatc rupted c today The rate of 'll‘lDl0\'ill£‘lll. expected to continue the the slack period which will not end for offensive and defensive o.ct-= CP) - 's 2. NEW ORLEANS. Nov. 2D —- (Al?) -William Green. president of the American federation of labor. sounded a keynote of higher Wane scales in openlnlr ih": unlllléll con- vention of the A FJ... hero today. He declared that hlizher wages were justified for labor to maintain prosptritv in the post-war world became of teohnoloaical develop- ments whirl: enable the individual worker to produce more uoods. The workers of the United States must produce the income to m! the public debt and obliaations o war, Mr. Green said. "and lhov cannot do _lt if they do not hnve Ifirliilise vial. can "l" na .. - ing reach, be sold onlv by puttinl fli- to the hands of those who buv the money to buy tilvm- Mr. Green. without calling the C I O bv name. lllibilnlccll ‘in ddcss for" use W0 P honle of labor to come back rencayfliver to navlaalion _ i units with ll.” Guy Simonds 0f Lon-, ab‘ 6C0 shoremrgn are onlulovcd at 0112-; - di LONDON. Nov. 26-40?) —Prim'e through until the closlna oi the St. Laww " ‘Baluc bordar it was lcurnerl today. Cu ‘on and two civilians. Mulzurl Brno and Bcrnnndo Iaovaza Bel- tron. WASHINGTON. Nov. 20 — (AP) United States carrier-baud planes (izscruvcd at least. ll0 Japanese lplancs and three cncmv (ncvchzrnt ‘ships in raids Saturday o1: lvianllu Harbor and nearby ulrfields. the navy reporud tonluht. COLUMBUS. 0., Nov. 20 — (AP) W‘ labor board today ordered im- n. Le rcrlnlnutlurl of the SLTIRC Yul iclcnhozro operators in 2'1 Ohio cities. ticcl-rlrirr: the dispute was "a threat to the eifxctlvc prosecution of the war.’ ‘ MONCTDN, N.B.. Nov. 20 —- (CP) —A resolution urnlnz "full and un- 1‘C:."I'\'G(l implemcmatlon of the will of 1hr; Canadian people" \\'1ll1 re- purci 10 scndinz Home Defence ‘Trupos nvcrceus._ was adopted to- night at a special mcetul-I of the hloncmn Branch of the Canadian Ll uicn. LONDON. Nov. 21 e -Tlm.<da.o' ‘he D' Sketch so d‘ _ '.\.'c.=rrl1\.1.1 iu miorrnnl-i ion received lav two Diplcmutlc sources lu-ro the Nazi Dartv now 1s iln possession of Ilitlcrs will-and till‘; inrlicut-cs Hitler is dead.” Thcl -\vi'.l, flu: zskltcli added, leaves all, Illllcfs qyropcri v and Business assets to the Nazi burtv and dislnhcriisl his relatives l Twice Pensioned Alter Long Service romotcd to 1 HALJFAN. Nov. Z0 — (CP) — Tv.‘ "c pensluucd off after 1on2 army, svrvvo - n1. Silas Smalc is " l " are of Til and ~cts its for keeps. s. .. the curb 11k of war. he has been n11 ordcrlv rt military Dislrlc", .N0. Li lmudqunrters. l-Ic l1rst loinhd, ‘the B sh Armv in i889. Pen-l ‘SlOXEL-il 1912. he promptly joined; the Canurllun Army and again was: lrllschl (i in 1933 after another 20] l yours l At lln- outbreak of this wur. lr-H was rrcullczl again and in the last] five yours rounded out a span of 47 yours in the service. crvicc. | grlamaicaflllas ' , \ Representative ‘Gclft Restored l KINGSTON. JANLAICA. Nov. 20! (CP Cablch-Rzstnruiinn of re-I mrcscntatlvc. uovcrnrnent for Jam- lnlca, which was taken awuv in 1B- ‘ 6a after a rebellion. was proclaimed formally today. A crowd of 50.000 conurclzntad a- lhuut ihn sinus: of Queen Victoria l hero heard the proclamation 0f the lvclonyls ncw constitution. Simul- 1 i-ancoualv. tho order was rend in the fllllélflllill towns throughout the k1- 1 constitution provides for the n of a new legislature. inns. Leader 1.. fAppeal To ll. S. , .11 . . ’I‘hc l clesiio .Mrni.saer Mlkohczyk of Poland has liDDBfllBd mrectlv to the United States for HILCYVLIIUUII ill his coun- try; long oispuic with Russia, seek- Imu clear-cut puaranmes or - Wfil‘_llldElJi.'l1dCll(‘c us well as n new l Firemen Burn T. B. Ridden Dwelling l l crucumarr. Nov. 2o - (AP)- lFlTBlTTCIi helped burn n fivt-room Amuse in nearby Glendale Sunday. .'1‘l1c tenant ,ln hospital, and four of his children nave iuberculosis. Dr. E. Bchoenliiuz. county health commissioner. obtained per- lnlsslon from the stat: fire marshal unti city officials to have the build- lnz destroyed because "it was no full of genus that burning is the oulv wnv iu protect 1hr- uublic." The village of GliTZdRlE will ‘Dav the the Maas in‘ southeast Holland and Allied armies hammered out Eains in the Aachen sector against stubborn German resistance. 1A Stockholm dispatch quoting a report from Berlin said the Ameri- cans cast of Aachen were attacking Will-l 200.000 troops and 1,000 tanks and had beaten halfway through the Siegfried Linc.) The Paris Radio said a French armored division, which smog-lad u; 20 miles in 24 hours to the Rhine, was assaulting the French city Mulhonse in a. rampage through Alsace against the expo5gd so“. them flunk of the German armies. Reports from Switzerland said the French were throwing fl bridge across; the Rhine for an imminent new invasion of Germany and qn- other uconflrmed story from the frontier said Allied troops had occupied Mulhouse. sian troops fought their way todav into the outskirts of Miskolc. l-Iun- gary's fifth largest city. and Bernn eclared that 1h‘: Red Armv had u- pened its grand winter offensive cn the frozen trrraln of western Laz- via, where 30 German divisions are pinned against the Baltlc Sea. German (scape roads out of Mis- kolc, 85 miles northeast of besie- gecl Budapest, were cut on the and west as the rough Csaba, less south of Miskolc. a Russian com- of munlque announced. Russian troops in l-Iuncarv also movcd to within two miles of Eger. another mountain town command- in: the invasion roads to southern Slovakia 22 miles southwest of Mlskolc Moscow did not confirm the Lat- vian drive which Berlin said was sprung from the Russian salient around Prlekulc. 2O miles easi- southeast oi the Baltic port of L .- (A Renter dispatch said the en- deavor to bridge the Rhine was be- g made near Kembs, 12 miles north of Basel. Artillery fire could be heard inl Basel. Switzerland, and German troops and long lines of civilians could be seen fleeing toward thel Rhine I‘ Naval Awards ., OTTAWA, NOV. 2O — (OPT -- Two poslhunrcus awards to Royal canadmn Navy personnel who lost. their lives at sea are included in al list of awards to officers and ratlnfls,‘ \. nilrstosch 'r LAKE crrv. All’) — Bally McClure, f.‘ a. war bond. Sh penny a dav since May. l94r3—when she swore sucker. 1. ls. one of two harbors availablr or any German escape bv sea. Trades Pennies For War Bond SAL Nov. 20 -- 11. carried coffee Jar containing 1,875 pen- ool today to exchange for c has bsen saving a off hcr daily all-day approved by the King and an-y nounced today by Na/vy Mlnlslfll Macdonuld. Posuuunous mention in dispatches had been accorded Lieut. FJ. BOWL of Toronto and Edmonton. . good service in the bfinlbflfdmenl of enemy positions at_Anzio.“ BOWL mentioned in dispatches previously, for his part in the action at Sal- erno is missing on active service and presumed dead. , .AB. M.H. WOC/d, of Mount ROYBl-V Qua. received 1:0'~tl1v.1nous_mcntion_ in dlspalcllés for gocd service wheni hi5 ship — H.M.C.S. Valleyfleld -- wng torpcdocd in the Ncrlh Atlan-, tic last spring. J The other awardsz- _ For good service in action with liqht forces cf the enemy. July 25" 2m . ~Bar lo Distinguished l-‘lyifls, Crnrsw l Lleut. C.A. Burk. Toronto. . For good service in attacks 0h" encmt-"s sea communications. A PlAlN blur is Always Mona murmur lF Dlwssrs uv A an‘ y _ Distinguislvd Service Cross- Llcut. Cal. Benoit. Alexi-Gen. P.S. Benoit lrclircdl lluillcr) 087C of Blurk of Nsva Scctla, Halifax Licut. RM. Hos-Pm. Mrs. Helen 11 Toronto. Nov. 1:0 - 1C MEPEOROLOGIC AL OFFICE, .P| “hllllllll- temperatures: m and maximum 1,133,,“ H053,“ Wm, .302 M01115 Vancouver 42. 48: Edmonton 3i, 43; Sta Halifax For outstanding leadership, skill nnd devotion to dulrv in Cflhfldlflll destroyers in a sucrersful with trawler; and U-boais. “Disunquphpd sfr-rvicc Medal- AB. RC. Deane. Toronto. FormerfKing C-arol Arrives In Brazil n10 pa: JANEIRO. Nov. 20 - (C? Renter) - Former K1112 CurOl of Romania and lllS party mnycd hrrn today bv ship from Mexico. The former King, who had bvcrn living in Mexico. salduwhcn lie lbct ihcre Oct. 9, he had no plans c- yond Brazil.’ Married Few liours 3 O (I CALGARY, Nov. 20 - (CP) —‘, M1‘. Justice W. A. MacDonald to- day reserved Judgment l" mlllfeme Court in a divorce action of a couple who were married in the morning and separated in the afternoon. Married on the momi oillllay 2 . i939, at the Calgary is rars Office, th-e couple visited a Cul- garv law firm a few hours 5318K‘ and undertook in n so oration agreement not to live wih each other. Later the husband. now serv- ing with the N cast coast. brougl action l owner I700. against his wife. , Regina Z3, 30; Winnipeg 28, . Toronto 34. 36; Ottawa 22, 40: Mont- ] real 28, 35; Quebec 24 37; SulntJclm mum; g 2-1, -; Moncton "" 39; Halifax 30 42; Charlottetown 3s_ lng to strong breezes cloudy and cool followed by rain 5 ill; nae} Wcsl: Strong winds nd gales with rain probably part snow in New Brunswick. Maritime East: Winds increas- or galcs, r probably part snow High tide this nftcrncuu . nri tonight at 3. Sun sets this afternoon £5 gfioeand 5K5" rises tomorrow morning a First quarter moon November M 23rd. 4'53 A Summersldc ride elahteen minu- tes later than Charlottetown. DAILY AlB SERVICE Charlottetown - Summcrsldc — oncton Leaves Ciaarlottetown 7 A M. Couple Seek Divorce l .. ., . ,.. arrives Clllrlottttown 12 4s r M 4a mu. . . suupav ssnvrca Leave C‘ JtlklflWu 11.30 A.M Arrive Charlottetown 2 r. M and t P. M and 5.45 i’. M. OIIABLOTTETOWN - NEW GLASGOW (Daily except Sunday) Loava Charlottetown l I’. M. Arrlva Cirrrrlotfetown 5.50 l’. M I’ E I —N 5 FERRY SEBVICI DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood Islands-infill A. M and 2.00 M. Imxéves Carlboo-ILDD noon ant o M.