CIA MERE MAN i n e h m, neat Mafq...» to as. that ll f ,“,';"§‘,i.'l.l.§"ons¢1ioo. i? mnugqlollliil a wuaqntiaardianliationl. >%/’ The People’ aper mgr" §“' ,_,,_,.__--"‘ ""---.._-_--\ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew cluumorrnrowu. cannon. MONDAY, GERMAN TOWNS CAPTURED B NOVEMBER zornbined Parade Features Opening Of Navy Week Here‘ Ilulrition Director To llisit Province N . l9 —- (OP) - Lfiiri-‘lli,’ Diigctor of Nutrition p the Department of National Mmjnd Welfare, left tocia flolr a . NlWyWeek Dn dS t d in Charlottetgwrel ewltha l“ 63.31.3012‘; gilrifliigttoi H‘t1M' 6' s" “Que” e’ ra n who left the gs and S“ Efiflifi "W drew up in formation to hear l1 Hamill-Wide broadcast by the A 9155 D. m.. as they stood at at. “m!” ‘h? 118m of the beacon went ___ __ l Wnar Situation By ELTON C. FAY, Associated Press War Analyst lava the Allies launched the biggest offensive in history in the midst of a supply shortage? if taken at face value, two items of news might give that Impres- Six armies of thousands of men and tens of thousands of heavy » weapons are attacking the strongly-fortified western border of Germany. .- ' _ . l Military leaders'announoe they have been expending 35 days‘ supply ‘ - - ' aion. of ammunition In 10 days. The answer apparently is something like this: Even though the recent and current rate of supply expenditure at the front is well in excess oi receipts, a the European theatre oi operations fonsive. The aim of most military planners is to have a margin of about Last blight l Presumed Dead ‘ ckpiie has been built up in sufficient to make possible the oi- Read by Everybody 20, 1944 LONDON, l 8 PAGES MAXINE or a MERE MAN The surest way to control both in a private family and a kingdom is for a huaban and a prince some- times to drop their prerogative. Mail. .00; the r lnces s. olsnssoo. sumo-little» “Delirverlelilv. $5.00. Y ALLIES A"““"‘ °'“°"gilAdvancel Reported iAll Alongwfroni: Nov. 19 -- (CP) —:Aliied armies fought eastward from Holland to the Alps toduy us British nnd American fo rccs captured Geilenkirchcn, 12 miles north l of Aachen, American troops invested one-third oi‘ Metz and the junction city of Bla- mont ~10 miles west of Strasbourg was seized. The Swiss radio said ihc French lstArmy had fought into Belfort, Oil ihc south- capture two other towns East oi Aachen the ‘ern route of invasion into Germany, in a I United and had struck into the province of Alsace ‘.0 thrust N lélhmilcs east ofmBclfort. Msritlmes. He will visit two months’ supplies in a theatre. Because German hold-out forces atill Sh, t 1 t A l“ gm m]. “rd o g o 2:, Charlottetown and drederic- 3:18 $1,150 mgivingb ‘to Charlottetown deny to the Allies the use oi some Atlantic ports while others are being foilres miles riliiy suxddcnly ‘fluid Ed up to confer with officials oi 0i on! the first 61W. restored only after prolonged repair efforts, the stockpiling program fighting 3mm Strong jndlcaglons, Provincial Departments of Health glghlzfllflfagfi igutsieeotiggrsilafoléalzggillifil may have fallen behind schedule in recent months. on new developments in nutrl- clues acres m t f "l" lottewwn ti. vlectcgrliiirlys. '8'?) ' , ed on in guick succession. Lieut. llllied Aircraft v» ’“ “m” R‘ °' " HOWGVGI’. ll! ""159 ' the bitter German stand west of} a m onths th re has been u comparative lull in large-scale combat. ' l the lthlllc was cracking at last. , ‘ l I ‘ h zvaitheamtv-iesnonfilng saving in sunnlies. d _ _ _ F1 ‘t L‘-l)}?€i_a&lilXi:LB1'li;lSll a The second factor in the reckoning of the Allied High Comman v ' _ I ' ' ‘F f _ h is a vastly increased tempo oi p-oductlun. General Eisenhower and ‘ . Ziilsliil-ticllljclrf‘ “l Robert Patterson, United States Undersecretary oi War. make this ‘ > ‘ m0 road hub or ’Gemnkirch‘,h plain in their appeal to factory management and workers to turn out - f?“ m Eruish tanks and Ampricnn! more supplies, including thc critical item of ammunition. ' _ chamme ratings while Mam Portion Of Line Already (bmpleted: Will Surgoon-Lleut. E. S Glddings 11nd Emu-sh Quail, was in command of the lupport Offensive LONDON. Nov. l9 — (OP) — Allied aircraft today EFl/e C1055 npml to the mighty Allied smash ‘long {he Western Front while polish-based heavy bombers were unded due to bad weather fol- mlng i double-punch which 000 RAF. and R.C.A.F. L-nnca-stei‘! and l-lallfaxes threw at Minister and m: Ruhr Saturday- Blzl, Allied tonubcr fleele frcm llaiy smashed at Germany's south- m, supply bases in rounding out a week-end which saw nearly 5.000 Allied plans; loose a tornado of destruction en enemy front positions and renr nrees _ An RAJ“. spokesman said “there has never been anything like" the dual Munster-Ruhr blow. 3rd Division Men Enjoy First Leave By ROSS MUNRO GENT. Belgium, Nov. 19 — (CP Cable) --- Troops of the 3rd Canadian lll ntry Division had illeir first mil leave of tile west- ern front campaign in vhls Bel- lsn city oi canals. ancient build- gs and friendly people. Ailcr lflc ilfliilt! oi zhc Schelde was ended. illf.‘ 3rd Division - whlcll has fought acres France ind llu- low countries since D- DB‘ ml‘ lo Gcllt on lcnve on T ration of the Burgonlastcl". one cliy was thrown 0pc)! to these rllldtlillllS and thousands of ihcln hula-fled private homes. bums gfllfff; lived comfortably in ‘bl lugs put at their disposal by .e_clvlc authorities. “$0110! _=\ week rhc division h _lt easy 111 Gent, enjoying the “Pllflllly of the citizens and llillls ln all the speclrf enter- sulment arranged {or 11, nce in Normandy ision has been ‘he movc all the time, with or trfxcfiption of a few any: out m o ne ut the and of July to gage for the big Canadian army A 0 Sllllill 0f Caeu launched "It. 3——illf.‘ attack which helped [all squid destroy part of the Gel‘- 1 f1 Anny in the Trun Ga lcuthcnst of Falalse. p All! Losses 0n i-llle Are lieavy MACARTHUR/S HEADQUART- gls. Philippines, Nov. 2o _.M°,,. d) -— (AP: - Japanese casual- “ °l1 l-wyte Island have passed h . headquarters reported to- l. and sharp fighting continued a, "4 l-lmon. at the northern end Ormoc corridor. ' rolhrgrican casualties total 5,691 ma“ c cam elgn-1,133 killed. ll‘ up"! an 4.402 wounded, to- “H communique said. ,4 .1,‘ "W! disparity." it add- ldy" due to our long-range artil- Coming Events lffhow — Mt. Stewart Tuesday. ‘ 11-10-21. "Mme. Iio-rI-Elall Tum] M‘ ' ll-ls-il.’ "Sh" “Well. Wednesday. 11-30-31 "a "Ylns live and dressed ul- ‘hllrls too market. m m; . El"! 001d Storage ma. lcle-siv-tal. "Wnloao ‘i ‘ h“ ah lhl cars today, flour, m‘ ‘ill-I. and barley meal. N. . "l Cutcllife. 11.19.11 ‘I ital l); In; om nee. Oddfellowl m“. Bill. Wednesda , N - ' 39nd. Webster's Orclhestrz. .mcnt would have to comc from the charge of the Sea Cadets. Church Parade The Church-Parade by the Sea Cadets on Sunday morning was an- other evelii; in keeping with the cele. bratlon of Navy Week. Cadet Ma]- or Elmer Blanchard was in charge. Sub-Lieut Gordon Gallant com- manded the Catholic section which a“ ded Mass at the Basilica and the Protestant party, which atten- ded divine service at St, Paul's An- slican Church. was commanded by Lieut. J. O. Diamond. There was mucll favorable comment 0n the smartappearance of the cadets. Navy Week. sponsored by the Navy League of Canada. has tvlo ob- jects in view 1n its appeals to the lmbllc for financial support which appeal will open on Thursday. The‘ first object ls to strive to inculcate: in the mind of the average citizen a feeling of pride in a Navy which. only possessing 1'1 ships and 1700 men n 1939. now has more than 700 ships in active service and a navy personnel of 80.000 men. The second object is to express in a tan- gible way the deep. sincere appre- ciation which every Canadian has for the heroic work done by the men of Canada's merchant marine in keeping intact the lifeline to the c mother country. lelcphoncflStdke Affects 24 Cities COLUMBUS, 0., Nov. lo __ (A P) - A strike of telephone operat- ors winch llacl affected 24. Ohlo cit- les spread to the steel-making cen- tre of Youngstown today, with maintenance men Joining the walk- u1. The regional war labor board in Cleveland. which submitted the case to the national board for “ap- propriate action," said any develop- parcnt body in Washington. The strike began Friday when operators in Dayton quit work ln protest agalns’ a policy of the Ohio Bell Telephone Company of 1m- porting out of town operators on a salary-plus-expenses basis. said Miss Jeanette Reedy. president of the southwestern division of (he Ohio Federation of Telephone wor- kers. Sistcr operators in other cx- clmllgcs followed them in a sym- patlly strike. The company has contended that "lt is only fair" to compensate op- erators from out of the city fOY Ml". dgd_el_fpenses._y__ Canadians For Oversabscribing Seventh Victory Loan OTTAWA, Nov. l9 — (CP) - Prime Minister Mackenzie Khig. Finance Minister Ilsley and Graham Towers, General Chairman of the War Finance Committee, night broadcast their thanks to the peo- ple of Canada for subscribing more than 31.500.000.000 to the Seventh Victory Loan. In speeches prepared for dc- livery durin a 15-minute broad- cast over te national networks oi the Canadian Broadcasting Cor- poration, the speakers said th during the Seventh loan's three- week campaign for t1,300,000.000 Canadians had subscribed possibly as much as 01.510.000.000. The campaign closed a week ago and on the basis of preliminary stat- istics subscriptions now otalled Il,500,0Y0,000. "t ls particularly significant that. in the sixth year of war, the people of this country did not slscken their efforts," said Mr. King. "They increased them. For the Seventh Victory Loan, the Canadian people were presented with the largest objective they have ever had. This objective was at war record as written It is not to be denied, however, and the Low Countries still is less port of Cherbourg is in full swing, Le liavre. some of the smaller harbors are working and tons of sup- plies pour in by over-thc-beach method. But Antwerp, the great port nearest to the battle areas on the picture until dredges and mine-sweepers can clear the long channel in from the North Sea. A Big Winter Red Army Predicted Senate Leader And Caldwell Reach Ottawa UITAWA, Nov. 19- (CP) —}i0n. J. H, King. government leader in the Senate and M. J. Coldwell. C . F. leader in the Commons arrived in Ottawa today to prepare for the reassembling of Parliament on Wed- nesdfllfi Senator King said he expected the senate, which has been called for 2 P. M. Wednesday. would adlourn in time for the senators to listen to the proceedings in the Commons which cpcns at 3 P M. The HD1191‘ chamber would likcly meet again on Thursday when the mEmbF-PS would have an opportunity to dis- the supply-port situation in France than satisfactory. The deep-water good results are being attained at Mr. Thomas Ambrose Rodd, Mil- ton, received word Saturday that his son, Lleut. George Parker RoddJ previously reported missing in flv-l tion, has now for official purposes‘ western front, femalns out of the. been presumed dead, The telc ‘ gram stated that Lieut. Rodd _ls presumed to have met his death ml —-— action. Feb. 1, 9 the Prince Edward Island Bigh-' y lenders before the outbreak of in September. 1939, and rcccivoil his commission as Lieutenant ill 1940, and went overseas shortly thereafter. the army. Two other brothersl . , N . l ‘- ( P — LONDON 0v 9 A ) John and Wallace, are at home. Russian troops, in a six-mile push beyond the severed Buda- in M ,_ _ pcsl-Miskolc railway, today cap- Llel-‘i- ,R°dd,5 motile‘. y I tured the important communlca- ‘WE-- l943~ H15 father ‘.5 "feicm" tlons centre of Gyonkyos, 40 miles Q5 the 54mm Afllcm‘ Wm‘ northeast of the Hungarian cap- ital luld only 23 milessnuth of. the 01d Czechoslovak border. Mos- cow announced tonight. ‘ Seven other localities W818; captured on n front extending‘ from the approaches to Miskolc, 85 miles northeast of Budapest. down to the area of Hatven, key rail Junction 26 miles from the capital, the bulletin said. Berlin said the battle east of Budapest had entered a new as- sault phase with the Russians now massing 35 infantry divisions and seven motorized corps, possi- bly 400,000 men, around the Eun- gnrian capital. Although only reconnaissance activities were reported Ger- man East Prussia and across Po- land, Moscow dispatches said tclbllslled services which now go as i111" Red Army mllliiall’ men 851d far east as Ceylon and as far west! flatly that the lull along most of as Sydney. When the R.A.F.'l‘.C.‘ an fittawa (By the Ottawa Staff of The Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Nov. 2O -- (CI-‘l —‘ The Royal Air Force ‘Transport, Command _is laying clown new routes of Zlll‘ communications to 111C far east with but. AlllLD0l‘\’1ll—ll_fll' Montreal-was the hub. And it has. been intimated that Canada inherit some of these already cs-l cuss the government's stand on the reinforcement question. “Some thought it was not 11cc; essury for the Senate to meet . Senator King said, “but I felt We; should be on hand. l ullnk there‘ will bc a large attcnclancl‘. M1‘. Caldwell said he had can- celled his British Columbia speak-l 1m; dates to be here a few days be-} fore the House opened. He main-i tained his position of clcclllling to comment on the governments stand for continuance of the voluntary gygtem to provide reinforcements; until he had obtained all the facts.‘ aumvcn T0 DEATH s1". JOHN'S. NFLD. Nov. 19 —. (c?) - An aged widow, Mrs. R. Leonard. lost her lifc Saturday- when she was tF-IDDECI in a fire that broke out in hcr home at Woods Island. ‘milked 0* "l cannot too warmly express Lllc Government's appreciation of this solenoid achievement of Can- adians at home and abroad." Mr. Ilsley said that "the turn- ing cf the tide-victories where once we knew defeats-has not lessclled the determination of Canadians to put their finest ef- forts into the war." "Each new anticipation of early victory has only served as a SD11!” to our efforts. such has been the victory loan subscriptions. No finer r-x- ample can be found than in that portion of the Seventh Loan com- posed of the urchase of individ- unis, Here t e minimum objec- tive was $000.000,000-a vastly larger sum than ever before ask- gd-gnd yet you bought more than 50,000,000. "Yodqwanted to invest in vic- tory, and to do it you began to pract’ new self-denials so that you could buy at least one more bond than before. Such ‘the spirit of the Canadian people’ Mr. Towers had a Il-‘Mlii W011i of thanks for the 100,000 canvas- tlle eastern frollt~would be broken pull out of Dorval an official said shortly by another great winter there is nothing to stop Canada offensive, perhaps the last for the from exploiting the routes. Russians. The R.A.F.T.C. flights now click smoothly to their far zllvay dos-i tinations 11c matter w :11 the W011- ther condidions. Unlike the early clays of the ferry bomber scr_vlcr_.".. alternative routes now are available and meteorological services arc nearly perfect. So. for when a. fleet of bombers tnkcs offl for Karachi and the wsntllcl" is bod ; in one spot the flight is plotted by= way of another route and the bOllliJ- l crs arrive on time. An interesting fact in the supply of bombers to the far cosh-and thcy . are reaching there in great 1111m- bers-is that many of lllrm 11y 1°. their bases of operations with the‘ Iwontinuediion pngififol. 5) Oldest Member 0f Senate Dies BATHURST. N 8.. 0V. 19 —- (CP) — A funeral service for Hon. Oncsiphore Turguo 96. oldest ‘.- of the Canadian Senate, who died of pneumonia at his home hero Saturdav will be held tomor- row morning ct Sacred Heart Cathedral with BLsllo Camille L1;- Blnc of Bathurst celc rntinlz Pon- tifical Mass of Rcauicm. Burial will be made here. One son. J. Grav 'I‘urtzecn. mem- bcr f Parliament for Caribou. B C. cnroute to Bnthurst from the Paclflc Coast but. will be unable to nrrive in time for the funeral. Ano- ther. l-lcn. W.F.A Tulieon. new- lv appointed Canadian Anmbassa- dor fo Belgium and Minister to Luxembourg. is recuperating from illness in British Colzunbln and al- so will be unable ro attend the fun- vral. A nephew. Frank C. Isfahan, has arrived from Ottawa. 18 Injured In Train Wreck WAYCROSS. Ca. Nov. 19 — lAPl—b‘ifcccn c of (he luntic Coast lim to-Tampa west coast left the rails in swulnp near Hortense. 6a., Saturday, 111-. luring at least 18 persons, none seriously. _ Only the tllrec-lllllt qlcscl cu- gine and three roar cars of 11113 ill-conch train remained on the Yanks Land 0n Asia Islands tracks. Some of the concllcs ovcr- trned, sprawling t0 the wllicr- ~ -——- u MACARTHUR/S HEADQUART-lbound edge of the desolnlc right- ERS. Philippines, Nov. 20-(Mo11- -wav. . day) 4 (AP) -- American forces Difficulty in reaching tllol have landed in the Asia Islands. scenc because of the iOlTJlll llzlzll-l 130 miles north of Sorong, New pcrcd removal of thc inlilrcd but, Guinea, headquarters reported to- Dllyslolflng who furnished firstl day. The Asia landing was madc Sunday. while moppi -up og- erations in the occupst on of t e Mapla group were completed, a C0n1llll1_i_i_lqll9 announced. champion was seriously hurt. Most of the! victims, a doctor said, sustained.‘ minor cuts and bruises when they] were tossed about in the all-steel, l .--=_-a.§°_*‘£i‘°=~_,~~. f." .,_. , l running ilton. i illlo Ill(‘ lgcrafll. 2 I Gcilcnkirchcll. oiling Ahead l;- Hill)‘ l -.‘ Ah ; ci rwzl lll fast New York- l M" ,0l‘mous drnlll on lill.llll.l'_\‘ operating undcr command. IAbouL Lwo months ago British Army putruls were reported to have entered German territory cast of Nljlnegen but this vrns the l st lliliC LL-Gcn. forces lluvc driven into Germany in force.» Tllcro was still no indication of meut- Rodd “$934k sergeant mgnny major activity along the Hol- landsclw Diep-Maas river front across Holland. a rcncllcd by the 1st Canadian Army H9 enlisted f“ active smflu’. mltl bv British 2nd Army forma- tions llC2ll'l_V tvro weeks ago. Hcrc vans the situation tonight on the sectors extending some 400 zllilos south from southeast Hol- 5 bwiher» Harilld- i5 “l” milnnfi to the French-Swiss border: British Clllilllll! 2nd Army fofces, in- American infantry. struck heart of the Siegfried died miLillz‘ positions by capturing Glcl- Unlls reached 1-2 miles northeast 0f cllkirchell. 5 To the northwest, Gen. Demp- 'se;.“:. I01‘ continued their rlrlve Holland. reaching to 115.111: 11ml‘ Ilcldcll, '7 1-2 miles soutlllvl-sl of Vcnlo, a main gato- ‘.\'Ilj.' inln (iCflllillly from Holland, ' (A ltuulcr war correspondent in n field dispatch from Field linrsiml Montgomery's fiend- quarters said: "The great new llllietl drive on German soil is going wn-ll" and a. spokesman for tllc Field .\Llrshni said “it has been .1 day of slow, steady pro- gross") The American 9th and 1st Armies. were attacking in close (‘fl ullction with the Briiish 211d lllc _l:.int drive tllrcutenccl both J‘. ‘ll and Durcn, northeast and m‘. of Aucllcll. "Tllcrc are strong indications lllc oncnly is reaching the break- in: point in one area under the l l-iblc weight of the 1st Army's i\l‘.'l(‘l\' Dml Whitehead, Associat- ccl Pl wnr cozrespozldcnt, rc- porlcci tonicllt from the from. 'l‘llf‘l‘f‘ are signs, llc said, that "the torch crust 0f Nazi resistance pro- tecting thc outer fringes of the ltllluclnlld llnr. been smashed in spots." but "there is no break- insffyncgm fhrcluzll by the 1st Army" as vet.’ “More Ammunition” Is Appeal From . lien. Eisenhower ALLIED QUART!" S. 1.1T’. _ ‘he G SUPREME PARIS, Nov. i9 —- reduction fortress city of Ancllcll M191“ . . l 3-0:; b‘. a shortage of am_ cllzlurc malaria. irregular i D. Elsenhowcn ‘l-"smlir?" ‘Gm. Ei-lnhc-u-cr declared Dclnpscws front Mean Much To War Effort In Chino. __ , __i__--—._._i_~__;. . i lly FRANK L. MARTIN NEW DELHI, India, Nov. l9 -— (AP; - A turn-year blanket of Sea. Ballets Hold secrecy was lifted today with dis- . closure by American Army Head-' quarters llerc that the main por-i tion of a fuel pipeline which ulti- mately will reach from Calcutta to China across Burma had been completed. Already the longest military op- erational pipeline ill the world. its construction was one of the wars most remarkable engineering feats. When completed it will at least have double the capacity of the Ledo road, which it was built to supplement. So for it has crossed three rivers and when finished it will cross several more. Allied forces in North Burma already are being sup- plied gasoline hy‘ it. Along railroads, highways and streams it follows the main ar- teries of travel northward frcln command of Capt_ tended Mass at the Other fi'c itl t v were: Cagt] all ‘Dixlifimcégglf Kilmuir MacMlllan, and Lieut. Har- old MacPherson. As m; “idols l» Cl u 1t l‘ 1" FEW“ fro“ wlieiii h svliiiigs Iggiihiiii. Bliitriii: §§f§°c,fm",‘§f§°‘d Co: J‘ R Pam?‘ toward China. The exact courselln "om of txgeaxz-fiagiiggteitiliwfalfge ,_ til ' 1' 03k ft thg ofes tlile eiieclo road (ha: grifgewere about 100 cadets l“ in Assam cannot be disclosed for. military! reasons. A spatch from Chungkln . said the line runs from Calcuttgl QUCbEC H218 888d through the Brahmaputra Valley; P - xtolAganl and then across the Pat- ‘ QtQtOCS 1‘Ol‘ Sale a angc and is constructed of .___ ‘ogrneariidariixcaiiritll: gigregii. is usedi QQQEBEC‘, P“ 19 _ " ue ec on - ~ §° gm “wiglgamlc “mks 01' supel" dispose o}; lriiooflgliilvisilirglscgil Xggjgifitaikslijslltldlffi adnd on}? 0P1»! fled seed potatoes for sale out of ,“ _' _°, 8° 835° l"? l"! a crop of approximately 200,000 the ILilIlDS felrylng fuel to Mal,- Gen. Claire Chennuulfs o s 14o. bushels‘ U“ Q“eb°° Agmiumml All‘ Force ill China. ' I v .Departme_m _all_n_oi‘ln_ccli._i.oxlzght' Will Free Air Transport i The effect of the pipeline in China will be to free much of the air transport and Ledo road ton- nage for carrying guns uncl other war ESSCllilAlS to the Cllincsc and’ to the 14th Air Force. It ‘ill’ it WlLL Do we. To PRAY As WELL As WAfcH on Busy Sinner cRosslNcs-Y mean Gcll. Chennault will have gasoline for a vastly increased air force while motor transport cani fuehas it travels lnsicnd of being‘ required to carry its own fucl. 1' Brig-Gen. Thomas Farrell, for-i merly of New York State, who is the chief engineer on the Job, said i HEAD_lsll'lIcilon crews oitcn worked on‘ of the mills 0f fhc nlollsoon 11nd in 130- 3150. through lli . “Alllccl ilf-Zlliillil mcll llnvc a-i _ ll r o ‘,1 o l. HllVDl the rrm’ vlcfr w‘ of all limes. 'l‘l1c\' llOll Gcrlnall soldiers." The Allied Supreme commander llppralczl 1o munitions workers in the United Slnfcs to turn out am- lllllllltloll. especially arlillrry‘ shells lit lop speed. Ill Llli zlrldrcss on the nrlny llour program. broadcast ill (he United States over NBC. Gen. Eisenhower emphasized the en- nmmunition rc- l. l n1‘ c llblc lnil- ‘ 06mm... .l1:1vs (‘lllilliiilLCd more than a mil- l l suiting from the stepped-up tam» po of illf‘ war. ‘Today wc nrc flriniz ammunit- ion lhnt we would not llnvc uscd we 1nd bccll content with slower k (Continued ‘on page 6. lColiiit) ' Revolution In Bolivia flipped LA PAZ. Bolivia. Nov. l9 -IAP) am M nearby Jesup repmmd none,‘ untl ncxt February‘ or March ill‘ ‘Lake Ochrid on the Yugoslav-east ~~Tll0 Liolcl-lllllclli nnnollnrcd lo- lli n l'&“\'~’Jlll'l".ll ind _ ll. L‘."'~'i‘l‘(‘fi ullri illc lcuclrr.» zvrz"! cd. nc-m dis- . snnnrlounplr, N.s., Nov. lo -- i 4 W. ‘Slates. ls laid by Chinese, Indian] so far an equivalent of more than; two Liberty shiploads of pipe al-l ready had been used on the line! and lunch more will be necessary.‘ before Lllc job is finishcd. The‘ pipe. brought. from tho United and Anlcrlcrln crews directed U.S. pipeline experts. American engineers by ; and con- I 24-hour schcrlillcs. ill drenching heal. ‘They have had to d k1 meals. n11 5 n dis- NTO . h“? had t0 Slrllfiillfl‘ higtizlrilgm nlid miixllilsillil ‘(affix-z Waist-deco swamps and‘ atures: Vancouver l.» ' - Eamon- ncross boiling 11101111111111 strczllns. iron 24, 36; Regina 7. ‘Wlfllliilci! 23. 32; Toronto 33. 42: Ottawa 33, 3: Monti-bl 34. 41. Quebec 24. 3c; FORECASTS s . , Lower St. Laurence. lnke .21. J1‘ , Gill , , ‘ ‘Slidize anfci llWilflillllllglelgflYiigtLri _ ’ I iModerate to fresh winds .1011‘ and Tito s Partlsans lccchcs crises, They British Troops l cool. l1 tide this and tonight at 2 Sun sets this afternoon at 5.28 and rises tomorrow morning at 8.0.3 . First uunrter moon Novcmbcr 23rd. 4 53 A. M .' Summersldc tide eighteen minu- tcs llltcr than Charlottetown DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown - Summerside — , Mcncton lnn-l ., Leaves Charlottetown . A M. 30 A.1\l : 8 Arrives Charlottetown l2 45 P M. hi. 8.40 i’ . SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown 11.30 A.M. nd 4 l’. M. Arrive Charlottetown 2 l’. M. and 5.45 P. M. . CIIARLOTTETOWN - NEW GLASGOW (Daily except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown l i’. M. Arrive Charlottetown 5.50 l’. M. afternoon sf ll 15 15. now are [lgliilflg a]. ongsldc Marshal Tim's Yugoslav Army in Montenegro and Homeg- ovina and are in contact with the‘ enemy. Alllcd headquarters cuncecl today. The communique also reported‘ that British pnratroops have ism-j 5 dcd and are aiding Albanian forccsl in harassing retreating Germans between the Adriatic coast and‘ Albanian border and lust north of the Greek frontier. The Gcrnmlls announced Saturday nlcht the abandonment of Tirana, .‘ll'.‘flliliil‘l cnpltal. to Albanian oat- rlzls. and now hold only the nor- lhrrll purl. of the cnuntlgv around; Scut-lri and Kukcs mm ille port cfl 11-20-21 “clturilp Cuuntyfls first} Durafzfil ‘VP-‘i 9i Tllllllll- p E | _N 5 hunlillg fatulllv illc season Imus-on cfMontmccro and Her“ DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Saturday.‘ olllln-sfl mo life of Rolz- orirvvhln. Yusoslnv provinces nloru: Znsld Young. 23. of this town, who lilo Aflflfliio illfii "will °l Albhllla-l Leave Wood Islands-moo A. M- o.“ killull when his 1111c discharged Hire-films w cut o" ills retreat of and oo . accidentally as h: was hunting‘ U105!‘ Gfrlflllfli fli-i-Elfllliiflfl i0 hold‘ Leaves Cariboo-it-M noon and . lob-um. l the line in northern Albania. l 4.11.. :-. as. sers whose work was to a great extent responsililie fog-l thsnsuciactes; "Nothing coud disclose more of the loan. e so la - clearly the determination of our members of the‘ clergiwfithenfiiivgafi peo lo u. put forth, in every di- psperl. ti" 115° "g d c nulbub rscion their utmost effort w- plewre m" "m ' ° | wards the winning of the war. ed to the success. not only reached. it was exceeded FERRY 3'55""? by a hugs ma in. “i\1"\i\|f\