MAXIMS OFA urns MAN un-xu-u- e‘: h tomorrow w. -‘-; m; I adul- fi m. tlodlll‘! n uni-flu. I've 00ml. Vi in llonadians, 11 Americans tut at ..sea ‘ Nov. 5--f'APl— m€fi5§1G$gs§sei"vice announced um that 19 persons, two Can- fllllillld l7 Americans, gain t0 ‘m; for service ivltii the clv ion w] corps there were uboud drip sunk at sea and were pre- e press service said it had b=cn led to make. the announce- ehnlf of the Royal . and 11m no firrther infocuia- . 1,9 available. fins not announced from ulvit the shin had led or when linking hnd occurred. . _______________ inscription not dated problem ‘IORONTQ 0111., Nov. 5—(CPl— my mind. 1 uscrlptiun is not l Dill. pzirt of the ~f our most effcc - ‘ ulon for me Lt. C01. K. S. ld members of. ,- ;¢» All: V to l: retired rerentlv os depu y- ‘ rvi notional defense for na- ' services to take an active ser- 1- naval pusiloil. ‘lbelicve, lpue that all scur- ' l1 talent -e1l services-and ‘ culd be cheerfully . - n1 of the govern- __ u time of war." Lt. Col. Ma:- 1 n asserted. believe that we must submit. ' iuiiv to all regulations estab-l 1 - to use these resources lo nest lire. Conscription of mzmpovlz- llonlv one of thew! reitulutvlns 11 it ls nrcr m". we must carry vllsucccssfu oosevoligto. peak today- WASlllNGTON, Nov. $- IAPl-The White llouse today hbclicd as important the lffvrh which President Roone- M ls to deliver at 4 l‘. M. ll-T. tomorrow to the Inter- Igilnal Labor Office dele- F The lMrch will be about 2o limit-ea long and will be hulcut. Reveal U - Boats Active In Newfoun Mlllllfll Nelles warns “only a short time" before ‘illishbmarinesmwill be close to Nova Scotiu. Coming Events! _u_ Nollru in till! I cents pa! word U! for column 1" u» bu whit swml: 31 45,111 m‘ ll |Mdan Institute Cake Bole 5 sallmlfly. November zith.‘ L-408-11-6-ll. u ‘m "lilo and Mm“ Dance in KIHKOYB Y 018M. November 7th. T"! orcneltrl: L-374-ll-8-l1. u "i xruéve, wcdllesdfly. December m l lll Peters Cothedral Pea fill, 11-316-11-6-27 u M" lfnleci. . . y 0| us in Varlet fiiglg-khlursday m hi,’ m - Obox social or war pur- L-ISB-ll-l-M, I ‘Gill filial‘; 508s everv Tuasda gahnfldée‘ Worse Dingwell L-ial-o-is-M-rnur-ri. ‘ I m , M°v§§"i’l1z$rl‘ul'cs and Dance in womenfllfllihslfloylanber 7m. L-37d-1l-6-21. . hulls Al ' lllfl district n- “mg . "°" ‘M is: liiyisetwrmnl-u: m! Tiuckimr service, rm i A C Mn and 0 Concert, Z c. < i‘ - G obod wpycpliclgi‘, “if,” s, u» ranawllll d l-ll (,9- Moscow Stopped RUSSIAN MOSCOW, Nov. 5--(AP) -The German drive on Moscow has been stopped dead everywhere and in at least one area of the Do- nets basin the Nazis are in retreat, the Russians an- nounced tonight in a broad- cast. The Germans now are burying their huge tanks for use as pillboxes to coun- fer a big Red counter-drive, the Moscow riidio said. i, Trenches also are being dug for Nazi infantrymen, it added. This development followed a big taro-day Soviet. land and air attack which it was said destroy- ed 176 Null tanks. 25 iicld guns. 3. long 5upp‘y convoy of 350 am- munition and infantry trucks and 30 tank trucks. ' A; Tulzi, 10o miles south ofi hfoscoiv, the Rilssiuhs said the, fighting was COllllillllllg——"bllt the. cilciny is not fighting with the | some ardor as__yvhen__he__began the I (Continued on page 2. Col 5) Many articles Affected by new Lacquer order l ll/IONIRIAL, Nov, 5 - (GP: - Tlrbic cups, Lll‘€& ornaments, nail polish, auminobiles, washing ‘nay chilies, raclos and even lllllbflllihi handles will be among the many things affecled by the new curb cn civilian use of lacquer announced Monziav by Douglas Lorimer, Do- minion chemical controller. Ml‘. ilorimci" said today “the rea- son we cannot make commercial lacquers today is that the nintefinls required to make them are nced-"d fir all‘ lanes and shells. Whicli d0 the pu lie want, shells or shin ailtzlnzbics, planes or paint bro:- inndles?" And Mr. Lorimer had some tips for house-wives. I-le said they would have to be careful not to spill per- fume on dresser iops because the new substitute finishes may not .,., -r...~ .1 1 Thorson says Nation's health Disappointing Only 56 Per Cent 0r Men ‘Called For Training In Cate- gory A. OTTAWA Nov. fv-KCIO-Modicai ggrlz-‘mlllgitlvrl of men called up 101' Sen)?" 01y training under the war Olmfes Act has revealed a disap- Rilmsiiég qfiialggglilllltlaldlllgfir HServices Colmmoils today, » e case of n compl ti 1 workdof m: d1ekpall'tmx:ll1tell/Irf”111zk;€ svoiik colt largely ‘l/ith mobilization, Invfor of the Department of Public lllfltiilll and the contriouzion 2911M! made by voluntary orgamm. ions towards Canada's war effort. d5 l-Olfll 01. 123,45‘! men were call. 6“ up for training and 113,524 actu- 110! lvbultcd woth an additional l.- 104 lellOrtlflfl late, Rclcctions for medical reasons; arm- q“, mm llsébtgacd training oft-lilies, numbered A total of 43,300 applications for Dustpsilclncnt of compulsory 111111- faliv service were rcccivcd irnd 23.- llillmgrluited. Farmers rcvprcsenicd d 0i thcsc applications and bcstponcmcnis were granted to 10.: 04ft 01 the farm applicants, There are some aspects of i115 system that are not very SflliSflQt_ QTY." Mr. Thorson told tiic l-l . he culling up of men for mil. training has revealed that the is , ray equipment was a total 105s and Covers Prince Edward. Island Like the Dew cnluzboorsrowiv:icaliihnlzirriuizsplsv, Nov Passe"... 1941 Funcls Subject To 0f finds to have been Hospitals burned At Samp Borden IZARRIE, Ohl... Nov. 5 -(CP) —— Flre today raged through part of Canada's largest military hospital at Camp Borden, l4 miles from tiers, destroying a. half-down build- ings before it was brought under control with inc aid of ZO-ton tanks used to level wooden buildings in the path of the flames. All patients of the GOO-bed hospi- tal at the huge military camp were evacuated safely. An official state- ment said tfwre were about l0) men confined to the hospital. - The statement said the fire was believed 1o have been caused by dc- fective wiring in a kitchen Joining two of the l5 buildings which com- prise the hospital. Valuable surgical x-ray and la- boratory equipment and patients‘ documents were destroyed. The of- ficial statement said that the x- of health of Canadafs youth is l‘ ich below what might properly be cork; sidcled the standard of fitness for, YOHIIB men in n virlle nation." From a total of ‘zusoa nicn ex-i amined only about 56 r cent were‘ placed in cuiccorv A. t e only cafe-i Lory accepted for training at pres-i ent bv the Defence Department. In an effort to meet this condit- ion an interdepartmental commirfee including representatives of the De- fcncc Department. pensions and health and. war services had under consideration possible plans tn le- (Continued on page 2. Col l) Norwegian tanker Sunk in Atlantic NEW YORK. Nov. 5-—(APl—T‘he 9.739 ton Norwegian motorship tank- - er Barfonn has been sunk in the North Atlantic possibly in the con-l way attack that resulted in the nr- pedoing of the United States de- stroyer Kearny on Oct. l7, marine circles said today. Marine circles said that several frelghters had been sunk in the Kcnrnv affair and that four nod gone down in the attack that sen‘. the United States destroyer Reuben withstand stain removers. Thev will, mt have to worry about the effect of spilling nail-polish “for llli! simple reason that lll 015 I they w n _ have any nail-polish to spill unles; Mt. subsll utes for the present type or. found. ‘they will also hove to be, extra wary nf hot plates on dinner, tslfes marking the substitute lin- ishes. _ dland Area TORONTO, Nov. 5—tCP)—-l~ull U-boals were disclosed toda to have been operating as recent y as last monlii olf the northernmost up and south and east of Newfodnl- land, almost at the star of the North Atlantic shipping lanes to Britain, and fur w thin the Aiucri- con defensive area laid down by President Roosevelt. Navy Minister Angus Mlcdolllilfl disclosed the scenes of attacks on the submarines by Canadian forces in a. speech at the dedication of a new corvette at Oakville, Ont. Earl- ier, in an interview hare. the min- later said with the approval of Rear Admiral Percy Nelles. chief of na- val staff, that the U-boats were op- erstln within sight of Newfound- land s or s. A Canadian corvette had attacked and aslbly sunk one submarine lo- cate where the Strait of Belle Isue debouches into the Atlantic and a coastal plane had attacked another located at the strait. art of the shortest route to Brita n from Con- adian seaports. Mr- Macdonald sold. Tonhzht at a dinner at Oakylllfl. Admiral Nelles warned that ll l8 (Continued on base 0. Ool 6) Japanese lluit India NEW DELHI, India. Nov. 5-(6?) —Vlrtually all Japanese in India. includi consuls-r officials. have left. the country in an exumllle 3' “lreement, it was ulnounce-l today. The evacuation snip Hilemaru sailed from Bombay for Japan Mon- day with I91 Japanese notional! from India and tho middle out. lll- Jamcs to the tom Oct. 30-31 with a presumed loss of 97 lives. Allison passes SACKVILLE, N.B.. Nov. 5 —1CP) —Mrs. Charles W. Fawcxtt,’ n re- gent of Mount Allison University‘ and president of the Mount Allison Art Association, d'ed in the Rural Victoria I-lospilal at Montreal last night after a few weeks‘ illness._She was well known in the Mnritimes and bod many friends in 01.1101‘ parts of Canada. Mrs. Fawcett is survived by her husband; three sons. Lieut. Chor- les 0., Saint John, Edward 8., Moli- (r1351 and Jun at. home: one daughter, Mrs Allan Crimmms. iMontrc-al: her father, A. C. Chap- man, ivfnncum; two brothers in western Canada and Ono sister. Mrs George McCoy. Toronto. War (By Kirke L. Sim on, Assoc. latod Press Staf Writer) Russian spokesmen are ‘om- inously silent as to the piiilht of Rcd armies in the Crimea, where the Germans claim they have effected another break- through and have cut their foe into three segments for progressive annihilation. On the Moscow front the gravity of the situation from the Russian standpoint is ad- mitted, although Moscow re- ports that the offensive on l1; central front has been haloeu everywhere with heavy Nazi losses. . . ' Whatever hlpponl to Mos- cow, however. it 1| tho men. aeing developments on the south flank of the battle line which are forcing Britain, Russia's oily. t0 "lll-t m!!!" rove her most critical decis- ljon of the war. » Somewhere British EmDlTB trawl awn must sinks back at Axis foes in a uneven-effective counter offensive than sustained Bri- flgh ‘f; eiaombing in the wall. has rov . 3.5m. prestige demands it at home and r . Yat- Noll initiative at tho louth and of I of Interpreting Thorns. ..::.:'.c.*:..:‘ will run into some thousands of dollars." _ Threat of Rail strike grows WASHINGTON, Nov. 5—(AP)-- The threat of a. railroad strike in the United States grew more serious tonight despite a (icntlai board’; recommendation that 1,250,000 railway employees be granted temporary wage in- creases and that 900000 of them be given vacations with pay. .,. Chiefs of five operating bro- t-herhocds stated at Chicago that the recommendations. falling short of demands. were "most disappointing" and said they could not recommend them to the rank and file of union member- ship. However, no strike can be started for 30 days, under the lckes says ll. S. May yet face Gasoline famine SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 5-—(AP) -Tiie United states may have to supply Britain with many more tankers than it has loaned in the past and it may yet be con- fronted with a shortage of do. mestic as well as aviation gaso- line. Harold Ickcs. federal petro- leum coordinator, told the oil in- dustry icduy. Although some of the 50 tank- l Unemployment Relief Prince Edward Island may have to re- fund $27,360 which Auditor General PT°5l'~iin the form of’ a credit); Alberta ‘840-551 and British Columbia, $2,- ers originally loaned have been returned and the projected re- lease oi other; has been announ.‘ red, American commitments, Ickes: said, require the furnishing of: additional oil boats "in case Bri-' tain usks for more. Addressing the American Pet- roleum Institute, Ickes stated thntl even if the American oil lndus—| try doubled its loo-octane avia-i lion gasoline production 'bv Jail.‘ 1. 1043. bringing the output to about 100.000 barrels daily, the supply would still be far short of the needs of the United States. Britain, Russia and China. “We are not even sure." h‘? continued. “thal- we have suffi. cieni. capacity for producing all the ordinary gasoline that we per cent capacity and the demand continues to rise " Jan Steamship Sunk by mino SHANGHAI, Nov. t! —tThtirsdayl -tAP>-The Japanese» steamship Klhi Maru. carryin 342 passengers. sank Wednesday right after strik- ing o, flflntlllg mine 130 miles off Korea, the Domei ssency sold t0- day. L-hHl-O-I, l d1 J ul f‘- ifl-lifilsu... 3a’l?'-'l'.l‘l°&i»§§." a (OOMIHI-IOIIBNUQ@Q Provinces Inquiry “unadjusted”. OTTAWA, Nov. 5 4cm _ The Provinces have failed to refund $3,- 790389 of a total of $6,360,240 in un- employment relief advances from the Dominion which it Vas consid- ered they had not been entitled to receive, it was shown in U16 annual report of the auditor-general, Wat. son Selior, today. The report, tabled in the House of Commons by Finance Minister Isley and covering the fiscal year 1940-41, said that in 1932 the audi- tor-uenerai was directed to conduct such an audit of provincial and municipal accounts in connection with unemployment rellef expendi- tures as he deemed essential to safeguard the interests of the dom- inion treasury. These examinations resulted in recommendations that $6,369,240 be recovered, either because the ex pendituies did not qualify wilful.‘ the terms of an agreement. or he- couse the claimant authority had not adequately proved its claims. "Of this amount. $l.076,2l9 was refunded and the dominion govern- ment has waived the right 10 re- claim with respect to accounts Io- talllng $1.523,73l." Mr, Sella!" said. He said counter claims had been ruitcred by British Columbia and Quebec in particular and the long lapse of time since the expendi- tures were made and changes m administrative agencies now pro- vided obstacles to adjustments. The unadjusted amounts by pr.)- vinces follow; Prince Edward Is- land, $27,360; Nova Scotia, $97,806; New Brunswick, $59,001; Quebec, $916,074; Ontario, $379,112; Mfllll- toba, $210,978; Saskatchewan. $4,227 033,640. Total of relief expenditures by the dominion, including loans out- standing, was $859,376,946, Mr. sei- lnr said. Nall was only Indoor rink in Prov. for years Building Was Built About 60 Years Ago. Among the crCwds of citizens who witnessed last night's file were many former hockey players and fans of middle age and over, who recalled many exciting events which took p lee under the not of the docmed" building when it was known as Hillsboiough Rink. Built. about sixty years ago, it wa». for many years the only incicor rink in the Province. It vros not, however. the first. rink which Charlottetown boasted, or even the first buili, 0:1 that site. The fol- lOWlllg deta-is of earlier rinks are taken from “An Island Scrap Brcrv." written by the late Mr. Benjamin Bremncr: The first indoor rink was open- ed to the public under the name of The Charlottetown on the 10th of January, 1872, and the event was announced by R. R. Fitzger- ald timer Judge» as secretary’ and v "v10" 'I‘ll(: building was sli- sfiape was found impracticable for racing competitions or hockey lllflylllll. Th c la 1 te r game was just then coining llzlfl vogue v.';'lli ihe younger patrons .. y followed the ccmpleton, on _-n_\" Street, of what was known as The Citizens‘ Skating fiaruszmlilzslfmn; Vichy reports Capture of British Plane and crew Accused takes Stand at own Murder trial. 'I‘\')R.ON'I‘O. Nov, 5—(CPl—-H. A. W. iBili) News-ll, changed wit the silk-stacking murder of 11.5 wife Aune. declared frcm me w-t- ness stand at his m rd trial today that he was “covered with scars" and had "lost teeth" during his sc- joum in Don Jail here. Nowell is a member of the Royal Canadian Air Force. Mls. Ncwell's body was found Oct. 6, 1940 under a clump of bushes at Toronto Island after she had been missing a week. A punc- ture was found in Newells uni- form trousers and blue clath fibres found on a bush near the bodv evidence has showed. In his testicncny todav Newell charged that foilc-whg his second trial an offer had becn mode to him to drop this third trial if he would sign a pipew withdrawing his charge that SQPTQIIIII of De- tectives McAlllster had cut the hole in his uniform. "I was thriwn into the hole (at Don Jaill so many times that 1 cannot remember all the times and only remember the worst times," he said. "I was taken out vrcrrv. Nov. 5—-(APl-V1chy sources reported. that _ the entire flew 0g a British pane l0.l(l€(l with de Guuiiist Free French 9Y0- pagandzi and with instructions for d‘; Ggullisl, agents had been cap- tured near Perigueux where _Bl‘l- tall parachutists were claimed rounded up on a previous occauori. The plane was forced down by bad weather two days 6E0. mi‘- T9‘ I id. plllnfapnrachute troops repflfwd landing in the vicinity’ 0i Pcngmmx __,;|1 of whom were claimed cap- tured-were said to hove been FTCIéChHIOlslOWT-‘TS of Gen. Otiarles do au e. v RepDflS here said they “We mostly natives of the region who“ were ‘sent to hide themselves unti. (jlppoftunitlcs to commit sabotage occurrixl‘. t'I'h‘s dispatch is the 111"“ mm‘ 1.10:1 fiom Vichy of parachute troops havinlr been found in France. But refugees arriving n New York some months ago told of pnrachutists systemai‘cally' drop- ped in French districts to bOYSIEI‘ mcrale and aid in 01191351"! ‘he Nigcllgucux is one oi ills’ lame“ erntres cf llllOCClllYCd France that ‘s near Bordeaux in the occuplw zone. and beaten across the stcmach with rubber hose and asked to sign a statement and ‘I would not‘ do lt....I was asked by the govern- or of the jail; he asked me himself." Turkish torpedo Boat is sunk LONDON, Nov. 5-—tCP)-—The An- kara radio tonight said the Turkish torpedo boat Kenah Dcrc was $111k lg an unidentified submaifne in ‘he csphorus Straits after the cr-‘w was put ashore. s rsAn opp nnTJTvivsb ANTIGONIBI-I. N. S.. Nov. 5—tC Pl-Richard Wong. five yea-r old son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordie JV-‘nl of Antlgonish was drowned in a brook here toclav when he fell from a. bridle while playing with other children. 1 q R. F. drops- Neavier bombs 0n Nazi targets l LONDON. Nov. 5-(CP'——R0yal Air Force bombers dropped heav- ic." loads of explosives 0:1 Germany and occupied tlerlitn-ies in the last. llzrce months than lll their heavy summer raids and averaged l0 utluclfs a day during October oil siiippiilg off the Enrcpcan coast, an mfcrmcd som-re said for y. Attacks on v targets in the Rullii‘ and the Rhine- land were resumed inst rfght after a lull caused by bad weather, Dorks at Eunkerquc and Oswnd were hit and a large merchant ship damag- 1o PAGES to face adventure, kee ful enthusiasm and hold high the torch of duty, the world is at their feet. MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN If young men and women fear nui their youth- reshness, and Annual By Mal Believe May Be _ -_ ._ _ _ .._._ .. ..___1 Subscription Deliver-ad, 83.00 l: l’. IS. l., Illlll: Cunutlu find U-B. ‘$.00 IiRIGULTURAL HALL SWEPT BY FIRE, LAST JIGHT oviets Report azi D1108 On Loss v $40,000 Probable eight road graders 1n- cluded; 400 tons of coal stored in building; Orgin of fire unknoxvn. One of the most disastrous fires to destroyed the years completely’ night, leaving the large wo ruin. llzimzrirc was estimated unofficially" lll $ll‘t.ui|, Q e origin of the fire. which wzi 9.40, was unhnmvn. Flames roof of the building when f few minutes later. Purl of the stock of th visit the city in Agricultural llnll lust uden building a smuulril-rini, s discovered at il]l1J1'(l.\ifll.iiri) were shooting thi-ilueil the iremen arrived at the scene o. e Government School Simply, housed in the some building, and some road machinery as wcll 11s ltlli tons cf 00:11. ivzis included in the loss. Shortly after ilic DlZIZE was dis- covered the sky was: illuminated a5 the flames shot up from the roof thrruving on o light that - ' for lllll"‘ around. A black smoke ‘he building t 0f 111i‘ llP-f-‘Qlll _ “'35 tinder as‘ the round 1n form, luring one Wp-“cd Sh; blfiillfllVllrll of the o. Pound Mui- m, 911-01., m ket. Home of yore. It was geiier u,,w,,\.,... m-_, cusly yiiironizeci for s-"cile )'(‘fl'.5,' we“ ]l1:!‘!1y|\< , ,_i,.,,. h. ,‘,'1‘,,.,n principally" for pronu- win and n ‘m, ,-,,. u. _ p,‘ Sn-ut-Q littllll‘ llk-“iilg- M" l3"(‘-\\1»'~‘ "I us‘ lure was iltlfllllvl‘ npnzoxi- lllfllciy 100 feet wide and 200 fee; ionnz. ‘:11 difficulw to s11 ated from ir. lav only .1 lastly. was undniniigccl 11nd n garage zinc‘. barn on the opposite slde were unscathed, The house of My. GPOYQe Ryan 0n liw east side of the building and liflfJsg a lawn, caught on the roof but was quick- ly extinguished b fore c. isinp ‘dill’ damage. A continuous stream of flying sparks presented a real menace during the height. of the confiagration, The Hall, which was located on FHZYOY Street, was originally the Hiilsborough Rink and was me scene of Cllfll'l(ltlt‘l0\l.‘l"i'S early hockey wars when the Abeuweits and Victo Us battled it out for hockey supremacy. There was some doubt last night as to the time it was erected. some thought it was built. in the early 1880's but Mr, GFOTF-It‘ Ryan. who lives next door, said it hurl been erected in 1890. The Provincial Government purchased it about 40 years ago and since then it. has been used principally by the Department. n’ Agriculture. A Bill's motor mechanic cours was b01111!‘ conducted in th building Thirty _\‘Olll'ifI ladies ot- tcndcd these classes there p.351“- day afternoon. They usually con- chided urork 1n the building at five o_‘clock. During the lost war, the build- ing was utilized for n drill hall. Some garage tools were includ. ed in the equipment destroyed in the fire, In recent years the provincial department of pllbllc works and high-ways 11:15 been storing road machinery there Last night M." L, B. MacMlllzm, Deputy Minisici" for the depart.- ment said llf‘ could not give a definite list of the contents of the llllllillliq until n check-up is made today‘. However. it was probable eight rend fifiltlFfg were there, but no tractor-g In addition there were probably 30 1o 40 ll(‘.ll\'l' tires for road cmders and 400 1011s of slack coal In‘ gowrniucni‘ limicliligs in (Lhsrloltetown It was bellevrd the coal would v n be onlv sliuhllv llillll'i""f' liv the fire and 10w of wzver w.“ being poured on ii. insurnlirw- or ‘he buildlilrz and it contents \\.\~ helievcri to h" hbuiu $13 PO11 Th». of course did not include the rnncliinei" tCniinuad on page 9, Col 7» Rumored China . I y. n......:$endlng troops iTo aid Soviets ed by bcinlr; durinu, llflillli Ulflllh" along the coasts of Norway and the Low C;untr.c:~. In a dxswn sortie over northern- France an ammunition dump was.‘ blown up and a (Jerman truck column machlne-guilned. Later in the day RAF. fighter pilots, keep- ing up a running offensive over the same area, iopn 1rd they had encountered the heaviest anti- aircraft barrage they had ever met. One fighter plane was lost in I 1 _ Help the War Weapons Drive gggymjgfgglf; “gym ;‘,*;;,*;.“';“,‘,§;% and German gun positions. The Canadian squadron of the , czastal command kept. up its at- ; tacks on enemy shipping. oile Hud- laon bomber hitting a large ship g off the Frisian Islands. Other ships . in the enemy convoy were machine- 1 gunned. Drawing p, large-scale prture 0f ' the RA.F.‘s operations. an in- ‘ formed source said more than 10.000 tons 0f bombs were dropped on Germany, Italy and German- oocupied territories during the u:-;%~_____, fflonlnuelolpagol. 0017i. NEW YORK. Nov. .‘|--t\I'l-~ Roundabout reports frmn un- identified lwurccs “H,- fi‘l't‘l\" ed in New York tonight to L the effect that (‘llincsu- troops are going to the old of Russia against the (lerman invaders. The Morocco radio said the Chinese would send 40,000 troops to Russia, asserting its information came from China dispatches which said the Gen. ernl commanding the Chinese filth llrmy had made the dc- clslon to send help, Later the Swiss radio. heard hen- by NBC, identified the lllth army as consisting of Chinese Communists and sold reports from Yovth (‘Mnu rc- lated that 100,000 of’ those troops would be sent in Eur- opean Russia at Russia‘; re- quest. Whether by "North China" It meant Japanese-controlled areas the radio did not any. There was no confirmation of the reports from other loin-cos. Testifiod bullets Were fired from ‘Police revolver i SYDNEY, NS. Nov. 5-—-tCPl-—A Royal Canadan Ivioulv d Pcfice- leis. he examined from a revolver idia. longing to the Glncc Bay police. The bullets tested by Sgt. Jazncr. A. Chllrclimzm, bnllzsfics expert, had previously been identified as having been found in the body ef Hllllilll Blllfll’ 0r in lilo room where the atzcii Glace Bin‘ merchant was shot m death with his wife last. June 17. Frost is charred with the double killing. He is on trial on the charge of murdering: Brody. his landlord. During the day. defence counsel J. W. lVf-zirltlin drew from r-rwn." wlillasscs testimony t1 i fered from (iiffcrenl ical nil mcnts. worried over '. flculties and fnmilv i posses and was subject m insomi . (‘llAll(.'-l-?f~)‘lm'fl- MANS- nAusiiTi-in AMHERST, N. S, Nov. 5--(CPl-- Bernard St. Peters oi‘ Amherst uh 1 charged with mansianzhter todilv 1r. connection with the rvccm rlenili of’ ‘Everett Cross o1‘ All‘ll‘.‘l"'i in’ n hunt- ‘ ing accident. The information ‘W! laid by Cpl J. A. Nilsson of ‘he Royal Canadian lviolmtcrl Police. Magistrate A. _G. hicKenzir- uri- journed the hcarinn until F‘l‘l(lf\\'. MANY \ AN ARGUMENT 11A?» been won , BY A Coop w‘ QW-unas/ /u b. ..f ed as b.‘- town TORONTO, Nov. b-wCPi wiini- --uum and maximum lCIllDl rutures: ll 2:31! i lll l 1B Vii. olur l o: Edmonton 33 3i Regina ‘.14 Ill 1 Winnipeg 2h 26 l, Toronto 4o 5o Ottawa ti’: 47 llluhirvnl .7!) 4h Boston 1H (‘.4 I S\'\'0P<l\‘ The ticiflliel‘ has 1w n rlivurll‘ and cool lll l l On- Wlllll‘ lll .1 {r1 he \\‘i':\Ill\‘l' l our? .111. lllch ‘hie 1hr;- nlwu-rinr-r. .1‘ l’)? and toninlit 1 ’ Sun sols llllF pill l" "n .‘ l1‘ nil. . rises 10mm": has: quarter" moon Twu. l.’ 135.1 n. m. Siumnei-sifle tide lil lilliillfvs lair-r i than Charlollctoxvn. BURDEN-C \I'I-‘. TORMENTINE RVIF (mime r-E.\"ci-:r-l~ ‘srrrvnlwl Lenn- Bordrn 9.25 AJL, 1.00 Pi-W 1 i ' uizli3il-"capl- Tormentfne 11.00 Am 3.20 RM" 5.20 PM“. ‘ Qundnv service lrnve Bnrdrn “"1 . ’ ‘ .5 not; I .1 (Iuv "lir- l lliglfilrligfluikil A.M.. nlilllso 1:“. WOOD ISLANDS FERRY (DAILY. mcuvmuo Sl'.\‘ll.\\'§l ves Wood Island 6.30 A. M [Ad 10.00 A. Al. and 1.30 P. M. Leaves Caribou 8.15 AM. ll-ll noon and 8.15 P. M. 4. \ \ l p. \ \ \ \ . \ . \ \. \ \ g \ .. l 1 I. l N g N N l 5 41$"