uni... ‘ for‘ A MERE MAN _-—-@— ..'."u*~.:'-:-.=..-.-...:-:'.rc..: our: GilllfllI. Ieulel $511131..." Curl!" T" N Ill-I Cont. 3mg Developments 56th Anny Front By Swims M11118 w correspondent $131.11 u'.“s.roii.c|:s on r111 ‘WAGE . BHINE PZIONT. M_|1_(CP - lea )- nm ti; developments W"! ‘meted late tonight from tho m, Anny group front: - L 1,, northern "l9 "mm-n wing of the “in”! ltitee ’lth Army strikiiil u, German border has Illillfi 1p with the United Stiles 3rd lnuy south of the hula"- g, German troops iu Blilcll‘ m fir; east. bank bf the Bhlnfi m, been ordered to. shoot lily Gum!“ (poop! ltblllptlllf t9 m" [mm m, west (Alsatian) ink without orders- y Air raid wardens and p01- kemen from Stuttgart have been flung into the German lin- g west o! Cclrnar In 99'5"" Alsace, still wearing their unl- firms. llcwc To Bo Fraser's Flagship MONTREAL. Dec. 11 — (OP) - Oamiilien Houde. firobrand o1 muni- cipal and provincial politics more - a decade, was elected Mayor of Montreal tonight, four months after he came out of in- ternment. Mr. iiouds defeated Adhemar Raynault in one of the closest el- ections in ea-Ps history, mov- ing to the front in late returns af- ter the lead had changed geveral times early in tho counting. tho chief magistrateb chair for the fifth time. drew most hls support from the French-Canadian sections of the city. English-speaking dis- tricts were strongly pro-Raynault, but the retiring mayor also collec- speaking districts. The voting was considerably hea- vier than the 22 per cent of the electors who turned out for the 1942 campaign when Mr. Rayriaull. won llflflflllv for his third ifirm p! office. The approximately 100.000 ballots cast however. was well be- low the record 150.000 compiled when Mr Houde was elected in 193B. for a term which ended a few monihsbefore its time when Mr. Hcude was interned. ' His internment came after he had urged reside is of Montreal not to comply th. national registrat- ion regulations. Mr. Raynault conceded thc el- ection three hours after polls clo- sed. at a time when Mr. Hcude had run his lead to about 10.000 votes with all the English districts showing ,.‘ e returns and with scattered polls from other districts '- still io report. i for the war against Japan. The 76-foot Howe. with her 10- » 11-inch main battery and in- rable smaller .000 tons of are are incorporated --- issioned in i942 V-Z BOMBS IIIT NEW YORK. Dec. il-Several - nloscls of v-z bombs‘ were hit by Belgian-based Allied i er in a concentrated attack on 1- Netherlands rallyards at Ley- . the BBC Said tonight in a idcsst heard by NBC. oming Events J‘ rnl Royalty Concert December 91st. 12-12-11. “iiizelbrock School Concert. mo. 12-12-14. Rm December a 1 r "1- 5.011001 Concert?‘ (ll-mill. "Dance Graham's Road. Hall, lilllesday night, Dec. l3. 12-12-21 12th. Ail- 12-11. in Mount Hall. Monday. Demmper 12-13-11. Concert. 12-13-11 Concert, Dcocmter . M. in Mbrshtield 12-12-31. Dance. sale of lunch- Hall, y Dec- ié-ia-u. Qu on??? tyu$n ee un . - 82nd. 12-12-11. "hit call for bulk wheat to- - R. L. Dickieson. 12-12-11 "Next shipment ‘ hogs ’ b: p . ,‘ m keigombeer 19th. Boclizkidlcfl "Bum u '_*"- d,“ ye and creased "QM View Hall '- Orpckin 1m Ii cent‘: ‘gnllflslmos Concert . December and "Femscuih-Gzhooi masdlly. ilecember 110th. ‘°‘l'.“‘“i'“.- Dec. 12-19-21 “Mics h - Oorv ttci. ma tes and destroyers . bee. iafmngreb“ wliafifi. s ° the iaigity Mlple Leaf on ~ Cc. 11.13111 unnels joined theanew and ...__ - vita] battle with m» it “Qsnhope . w“; qweh.“ was cl 0 retribution as the ~» f-‘vncert. Community "h" "°" l" “mg” m. m“"“"' ”°°- - whicllhU-bcats '11:? rci-nitifv scum . ""1141 to attempt w blockade o - thport Institute out and m” "m" ‘W We Maritime Ileetrio ' 1 n fivuccr 1M top market prices. Is- mm- - m“ 1 ‘ Cold Storage m. 1140-11. mpg_°fimmy_ ‘Q’ w“‘“‘i,,e,,fly“',‘w'.' l?“ Tllflly- ""1"" fifiugir m ilbuilslsnllvr ‘$1115 l“ mi Movies, I p. 11L l" submarine craft wore gathered 12-11-21. noun the Ravel Navy crack Wes '—- om Approaches GNIJD under the Although the English vote W85 strongly pro-Raynault, it‘ was not a. heavv ballot. Notre Dame De Grace. for instance. gave Mr. Raynault a margin of 7355-14108 votes, but the turnout was only about 40 per cent cf the eligible voters in that d55- trlct. other predominantly-English m, districts. such ns Westmnunt and Cuiremont. a,- wcli as 50-50 Vcr dun. are separate municipalities and had no cart in today's voiinE- Mr Honda was elected for I three-year term. A1011! Wllll ‘he elections went a Nfirrfldllm ill which citizens decided that the two vear term of previous years should be replaced by 0. three ' yfiflr term.‘ lletcran Vaudeville Actress Passes PORTLAND. M!“ Dec. 1l-—(AP) -Mrs. Mazitie Walker Fielding. R9, veteran vaudeville actress. died 10- day at Peaks Island. She was a native of Nova. Scotia. She and her husband. Harry Fielding, toured vaudeville theat- res throughout New England un- der the team names of Maggie Walker and Harry Fielding. Mrs. Fielding was an intimate friend 0f Nellie Cohan, mother of George M. Cohan. and appeared on vaudeville programs with the Cohan family when Fielding was produce at Keith's theatre in Pro- vidence, 12.1. Fielding died 1n i938 She leaves a daughter, Mrs. Pau- Mayor-elect Houde, returning to m tcd a heavy ballot in many French- s91 727/’ I The People’ Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLUYTETOWN, CANADA/TUESDAY, DECEMBEMR O12, 1941i IfiOO-lleavics | _.__ N. Dec. l1 - (OP) — Hundreds of Allied bombers bat- tered Gennany todav in raids which were highlighted bv a 6000-1011 blastinx of the Frankfurt area rai network by the mightiest bomb- er fleet in history-more than 1.690 American four-clarified bombers. Accompanied bv more than fl hters. they struck A: few hours s had begun t e tv assault by blasting the 1n- al Ruhr. he British fore: pl nt t Osterfield and rzpl nlaants at Heiderich and Bruck- ausen. Al: dusk another blll fleet of Bri- tish heavyweights with escort of tflre nd Mustanms was seen crossing the Channel en route home ‘from what probably was the third ‘bis raid on Germany. ‘ "The aerial offensive apparently ‘was continuinll after dark. Berlin radio reported bombers over the Hannover and Brunswick area. imultancously with the er- ican heavv bomber attack on the Frankfurt argtaé gage‘ in $013111 o! u s an r ar- fir“... ‘$.52 1.000 blil bombers and fighters of the United States A11‘ Force from ftalv struck crime tar- ts in Aus . “The U.S. 8th Airforce annada after levelling off 1P9!!! Bflil-lh bases and picking up its powerful fighter escort thundered toy-hide fiermanv in a column 300 miles s. . orPrelhnlnary reports said lhc Luftwaffe kept out of the skv while the four-enabled irihnts showered bombs on the transportation svstrm of Frankfurt. Hanan l0 miles east. and Glesaen 30 miles north Conservatives 1'0 gflppcsc McNaughton LONDON. ONT.. Dec. ll — lCP) _..The Progressive Conservative us!‘- tv “will most certainly contest; the Federal election in Grav North con- stituency." Harrv A. Willis. the p81”- ty's Federal chairman for Ontario. said in an interview todav after an Owen sound announcement that Defence Minister McNaughton‘ has accepted an invitation to b: Liber- 111 candidate in the ridinlt Where f1 lav-suction will be held carlv next year. "We have a vigorous candidate in Mayor Garfield Case of Owen . .1 c int nd to mnke a 15602511111211? foivthat eseat." said Mr. 1 . ' will? will be the first time since the outbreak of war. apart from the general election of 1940 that official Opposition and Govcru- mcnt candidates have 0P90sed 0116 another at the D0115- (lt will also be the first time l1 Progressive-Conservative candidate has gone the D0115 110d" ‘he new name of the party and lbs MW leader. John Bracken, selected at the Winnipeg convention in De- cember, 1942.) $20,000 FIRE-ODAMAGE MADAWASKA. us. Dev- 11-01 P) -- A business block housing the furniture store of Luke o. Guerr-l one of Edmunston. N. 13-. a fflmllyl apartment and a civilian defence .line P. Stephens, with whom she lived. and a son, Gladstone F_lding,_ifi_isaden Calif. LONQON. Dec. ll — (OP) -— Canadds secret naval ival‘ thllt preceded and complemented the in- kasion of Nonnandv is a soviet v0 ngec. , In an exclusive story in 1411150115 Iiveninu standard Naval corres- has told British craft rtracsnrsuor“ O up to brinz off the greatest wry wittlfwht “llsuifaililé $31111? selves. outstnndlna 10;! %llflgl t ainkiifi of H. . . . msbmkan in e curly stages of . . a the {beers convoyfwiee Atlantic uedrons First nh of th compo-lira was i0 Nll/Oflutehi IIIIIISII 0118111101 E0 U boa forces in 5 HT INDIN 12-11-11 001M n01’. the Hench port be reinforced. Th ‘Details Of Pre-Invasion Naval WarAre Revealed "Mlowc. w 1k ca. p.111 1:11am rumflgl-‘ayhncvies, 13"?) cm" ‘$1.’. w“ 0" nd from office was razed here today by fire,‘ which caused damage estimated un- fficia yVat__$20.0c0 one consisted destroyind the U- boats already i the French p016 and the third was the convoylml oi the tremendous invasion iirm- adas as they moved with frelknt- th toughest. Germm- toethe end. threw flotilla alter tilla of submarines into the Chan- nel to fight and sink under the hammerin of the Canadian and 351F050? gcpsilazis rislocd their re- maininll el bl k d . if?!‘ ‘€i.°£““’.§hnc.%° 1.5.1.”. destroyers in an attem t 1'2 y the the beaohheads and cap- tured harbors of Normandy-a nev- er-eudinz shuttle service that call- . e . m M bwllffbtl’. 1.212%?‘ the oddthe initial sweeps and iron - t glzrannel wggher whaicll. seamen is always and often worse. “but onlv ....."8i' the bu: shins tak- o! i» in; troops and supplies in the front antic naval ef- ir Ralph leath- u 2E “E- ‘- 01 ltmnest yr" Q"' r---'"""' VN"“"'*'---<\ I ‘_ ° By KIRKE Creation of a massive British commitments . ‘- Japan. 1t makes good Prime gress long ago that Japan ultimate of seapower. crippled navy, the British Pacific Situation Las . up?‘ L. SIMPSON (Associated Press War Analyst) "Pacific Fleet", to operate against Japan as “the strategic situation dictates" is bad The move is more than first formal implementation of Anglo- qt Quebec for joint action against Minister Churchill's declaration to Con- news for Tokyo. ly would face the supreme challenge In itself of greater power in all fleet categories than Japan's now Heat's appearan in those waters will virtually double the already heavy sea odds against Japan. While no over-all Allied commander is created the British fleet will operate under direction of Admiral Nimitz in the central Pacific or of Gen- eral MacArthur in the southwestern Pacific as occasion requires. Read by Everybody PARIS, Dec. ll .- Army meanwhile seized Multiple attacks by deeper inside Germany buffer zone before the Coupled with ' in northwestern Leyte by capture isolation of Japanese drive into the southern end of the Judiee to contemplated ' “ Beweeu them the British and dominate simultaneously both the China Sea. As Gen. MacArthur o moves on westward. the Archipelago to that sea ed conquest ’ Houg Kong. By STEPHEN BARBER. ATHENS. Dec. 1i-—(AP)-As 1e- inforced British ir00ps confronted E.L.A.S. guerilla forces of massed inside and around this capital tonight. a well-informed impartial source said that the Leltists’ leaders were ready to of- fer to withdraw their forces from Athens and the entire Department of Attica in return for guarantees they would not be prosecuted. As British reinforcements arriv- ed, Athens lmd a quieter day. al- though therc was still much snip- ing from buildings in the canllalb central squares. The E.I...A.S. still held most the commanding hcights'in the city but in sections cleared of combat. shoppers were out in tile streets and near-normal life resumed. Meanwhile, measures were taken by British and American relief organizations to distribute food and medical supPllei m "m" shortages created by lhe fiShYlnB and the general strike which hi8 prevailed for more than a. vycck- said today that Flcld {Sir Harold Alexander. Allied .Supreme commander the Mediterranean. has been sent to ‘ Grcccc “with personal lnstruc-- tlons from Prime Minister“ Churchill to end the ..ifh_iinli thcrc as quickly as W881" m’ I i l-‘icld Murshal Aiexanser was‘ accompanied by llarcld Moog Millan, British msident minister‘ to Allied Mediterranean head- quarters, The Mull said. ( WASHINGTON. Dec. 11—(AP) A Greek-American delegation to- day asked the United States State Department to mediate in the battle between British forces and Greek ‘resistance groups. Tile delegation also protested to the British Embassy. culling upon London to “cease its bloody ut~ tempt to shackle the Greek people once more with. dictatorship." While American ofllcials ho e Britain will make peace wih Greek resistance forces quickly. it was learned here the United Stat- es Government's attitude is that it has no military responsibility in that area. This stand is based 0n Whit,“- flclalsources here called an in- formed agreement approved by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill that Greece and Yugoslavia would be entirely 5m‘ ish zones of operation as far a! ppm; of the British and American chiefs of staff were concerned. This agreement did not affect Bus; plan operations, on which Church- ill and Premier Stalin have con- ferred sepfllltfily. WORKERS CRITICAL WELLINGTON. NEW ZEALAND. Dec. ll — OP-Reute New Zealand Wagerside govemmen The Union called upon the New Zea-land Government to voice the proval to tho Unit- ed dom vermnen. Communists and rcprepenietiyel s ho Trades c Christ- church pasaed a simllu resolution. POKER FROM PERSIA Poker is really Persian. with ed- eptutions from English, French 25.000- ” raids by jet-propelled planes are _ the ‘ front of Oruioc, the British move marks the opening of a new phase of the war across the Pacific. Based in Australian waters, the British fleet will be available to complete the “sons in the Netherlands Indies and to South China Sea Itself without pre- naval operations farther north. American fleets in the Pacific could north and south approaches to the oiupletes the conquest of Leyte and passages through the centre of the Philippines will be opened. Complete denial of the China Sea to Japan for shuttling reinforcements and supplies to far-scatier- 1 either in the Islands that fringe the China Sou or on the south continental coast can be foreseen. The important part of the British announcement of its new Pacific fleet under Admiral Sir Bruce Frazier. is the recognition of tlie Pacific as "an American area of responsibility" in the war against Japan. That leaves the question of strategy iii the Pacific and refutes any uggesilon that the purpose of the British naval rc- organlzation was aimed only at expediting recapture of Singapore or in American hands Total defeat of Japan is the objective. Report Leftists Seek Terms In Creek Cgpitaf international At A Glance (By The Canadian Press) WESTERN FRONT — U. S. . "my lakes iour towns. villagers west of Durcn: IIIECIIIIJ in Alsace falls to 7th army which strikes elklit miles north of it towards German 1701110113111 army clears Sarrzuamlnes. AERIAL — Record size fleet of 1,600 U.S. iiciivy bombers drops 6.- 000 tons of bombs on Frankfurt Hill network: s no.1‘. licuvles hammer Ruhr. RUSSIAN_- Paris. Algiers radios rclwrt Russian troops iirlit into Budapest but Moscow reports on, callture of two towns north of Hun-- garlan capitnl and gains alone rlunxary-Slovnklu border. GREEK — Left Winn’ E. L. A. S. leaders reporlul ready to offer with- drawal from Athens and Attica area, on condition insurgents not prosecuted. PHILIPPINES — Japanese for- ces south of Orrnoc un Lcyte island destroyed. CHINA — Chinese ca ture Liu- chai and advance 17 nil s beyond it; clear Japanese from of Kwelchow province. PACIFIC — ILMS. ilowc. 35.000‘ WP 111111051110. t0 be flagship 0f Ad 4‘ of ncw, m 1il Fraser. commander B tlsh Pacific fleet. l5... sun Banking Associated Press Staff lyriicr LONDON. Dec. 11—(AP) — ite- pcrts reaching London from many sources indicate that Germany is. gathering her forces-including. two new V-weupons and a nc.v' type of submarine-for a 1945 counter-offensive which she hopes. may turn the tide of the war. ‘ Two enemy V-weapons—flie fly- lflk bomb and the rocket bomb-l already are in use against south- ern England and continental points. German production chief Albert Speer was quoted us saying recently ihat "V-i!" would beresdy for use against New York before the New Year and now there is talk in Germany of a "V-i." but no hint as to its nature. Meanwhile it is a matter of oili- clal knowledge that the Germans have developed a submarine equip- ped with radical new devices for underwater breathing and it is pouible that some of the craft may even now be at sea. Known as the Sclinorkel Spirall submar- ine. the new vessel has been dub- bed the "Snorts” by the British. London newsgupers have told their readers t at swift hit-run possible. and ha; England can z-x- pect V-bomb attacks until the Nuis die in their last spasm of resistance. . ‘"1110 new rockets are impossibl to sto at their source, as they are manu actured in vast underground factories," the Dally Mirror said in a dispatch from Brussels. "Their sites are smaller than buzz-bomb lites. and infinitely more mobile. V-Ts have been flred from a city square. roadways. and small clear- 1;; ' case 1y‘ -\_ By E. ti‘; JONES I‘ "l3 Witnesses“ dive Evidence At Inquest. ~ Coronefs ‘Iiguiry Into Death Of Roy Rose Of Red Point Concluded. “We. the undersigned jurors, empaneilcd to inquire into the cause of death of Roy Rose which occurred in the Prince Ed- ward Island Hospital on Dec. 8, 19-14, from evidence submitted, find that the cause of death was hncznorrhuge, concussion of the brsiu and shock as the result of ‘being hit by an automobile. in our opinion driven by Ralph Burns on Wednesday, December 61h." was ihc verdict returned by a coroner's jury last night at an l inquest lucid at the Cutclllfe Fun- eral Home. The deceased Roy Rose nus found in an unconscious con- dition on the side of the road mriy ‘Thurszluy morning. Decem- ber 7th, (l 11;; lhe following day Wiillfillt 1 gaining consciousness. The vo ' signed by Wil- l m. foreman. B. Byron W. R. Jcilkins, James Brown. H. L. Hardy, J. A. Mac- Kenzic and Geo. W. MncLeod. As a result of the above find- |lng furllicr prosecution of the rests with the Attorney- Genernls department, Mr. Gordon R. Holmes. who represented the Attorney - General. stated last: night. Coroner Dr. I. J. Yeo conduct- ed the inquest. Dr. J. l). McGiiigan was the first witness called and on being sworn told of performing an autopsy on the body of Roy Rose. He describ- ed ln detail the injuries suffered by the deceased, stating that there were several marks on the face ‘and bridge of the nose; also a wound on the left side of the head about two inches long to- gether ivith another ivound on the ;lcft leg five inches in length. ‘There was a compound fracture of this limb. in addition to other injuries which included a. swelling on lllc loft side of the spinal col- umn three inches long and inches wide. Cause of death lhe witness stated was duc to huemorr- lingo resulting from injuries: also the injury to the spinal column: injury to lhe head causing con- cussion of the brain. all being as- sociated with shock. Dr. H. H. Pierce. who performed the autopsy on the body with Dr. McGuigan corroborated the previ- ous vritncss‘ lESYYlUCIIQv’. Clive Bruce. alderman of East ,-..- - ,. ,. » , . (Continued on page 9. Col. 5) l W 0n V-Weapons " ' ' 1 Reports from neutral cuuniriésl place Gc1'111n'1j."s iluhipi‘ plan: nrJ- ducfion ut 1.500 craft n month dc- spite the Allied aerial onslaught, and there is some talk of a Luft- waffe “comcbnck" based on jet plunc activities. ' These craft already are being used for reconnaissance behlndfh: Allied lines. have attacked bomber formations. and possibly will be the German dive-bomber of 1945. A report from the front inside Germany says the enemy has found a way to "dim out"'his ar- llllcry. reducing the flash of a 105 mm. gun to that oi a pistol. This would give lhe foe nil important means of hiding his artillery con- ccntrations. "The Germans still haves lot of fight left in them." said the bou- don Herald. but declared flint U18 enemy manpower shortage and Al- lied air superiority are factors op- erating against the enemy. ll-Bombs Killed 71.6 In November LONDON. Dec. (CP) — German V-bombs 716 persons and seriously inlursd 1.511 in the United Kingdom dur- ing November. the Ministry Of those killed 269 were mvn. 34-5 women and 102 children under 16 years the Ministry announced A- mong the seriously injured were 197 chiltlrcn and 790 women. Damage and casualties wire in- ings in the woods. Next day the and Italian nmel. men Ihc lire them move on." fllcted on Southern England attain last night. the Ministry said. l" PAGES They de rive the world of the sun who MAXI M8 OIA MERE MAN ~ eprive life of friendship. I Subscrlp The 7th or army drove into the out- Woerth. eizht miles north MB-Rlfitlt Line rom the German bor- . Ahead of the Americans in the Siegfried Line. the Germans have been fzeverishly strengthening the fortifications bv the forced lab- or oi 10.000 foreign workers, The Germans were in retreat to the east bank of the Itcer under relentless blows of lhe lst. army's renewed offensive. which after two days. has hammered three miles through rugged dcicnces at the edge of the Cclosir-e "plain to a point miles deep into G-ennanv The 3rd armv advanced from the south and reached the border three miles northecast of Sarresuemines. lit-Gen. Courtney H. - Hodges’ forces broadening their assault lines miles. seized heights 0- verlookinu the Boer on the south- ern end of the front. overran three more villaacs 11nd were but two miles or so from Duran. kev to all er. 1.600 United States heavv bombers. the greatest bomber armada ever sent aloft. in an effort to isolate the Gennmis and sot them up for decisive blows. The attacks exceeded even those bv heavy bombers which ineceeded the Normand-v break-through last summer. Failure of the Germans lo mount effective roimter-attacks in this bnttlc SWIPIIIIE 2i miles west of Cologne indicated that they were pulling back to fortified positions on the eastern bank of the Roer. lfiavjisuz onlv screenina forces be- n . Report Russians Enter Budapest LONDON. Dec. ll — (Paris and Algiers broadcasts said tonight Red Aruny vanziibrds had entered the flaming Hungarian capital of Budapest. Advices from Moscow said part Mail. $4.00; other Provinces lU tlon Delivered. $5.00. Nazis Rehearing Across Roer River (AP) — The United States 1st Army was driving the enemy across the Rocr River today as the United States 3rd Army pushed to the Saar Basin from the south after breaking all organized resistance in Sarreguemines. The 7th Hagenau, greatest base left to the Germans in France. the ihree United States armies were pressing the enemy back on the west, and forcing him on Siegfried Line. the south to yield the French Gity ‘Protests Lay-tiff At Bruce Stcwarts Report On Civic Finan- ces By Councillor MacDonald. The City Council last night senii a telegram to the Hon. Angus L. Macdonald, Minister of Naval Ai- fairs. protesting againstthe lay-off‘ of 130 men at lhe Bruce Stewart 8: Co. Ltd. shipyard. The tele- gram asked that a boat be sent in the Bruce Stewart plant so ihat work would be provided for those men during the winter months. Copies of the telegram were also sent to the Hon. Cyrus MacMillnn, Federal member for Queens, and. to Premier J. Walter Jones. The Council was presided cvrr by Mayor J, E. Blanchard. Couns. P. G. Gay and A. T. McKlnnun were absent by reason of “ID955- Lt. Col. K. S. Rogers was rcs- ent on behalf of the Assoc aied Services and requested'the~ aid u! the City in erecting two slides lul‘ the children as well as for the flooding of certain areas in Roch- ford Square and Prince Street School grounds to make free ska;- lng possible for many of the chil- dren. His request was granted. Civic Finances A general summary of the City’ financial position was read b; Coun. B. Earls MacDonald. chair- mnn of the Finance Committee and carefully considered. Coun. MacDonald first dealt with the collection of taxes. "The taxes on current account to the end of No- of Budapest already was in flames, and that the Germans had thrown in r tanks and (Elite vember this year were $182,231.00 in real estate and personal prop- erty as against $178,985.00 for the l- S.S. Guard; units into the battle for the citcy] with orders not to buduze an, in . Another Berlin broadcast said} that a tremendous Soviet offensive was imminent in southwest Poland. aimed at Krakow and rich German industrial Silesia. The German; said that the Rus- sians were massing men and mat- erials at their Vistula bridgehead nt Barnnow. south of Warsaw an: a long dormant sector of the ens:- ern frc-nt Start of the offensive. added the German report. "depends on v- arable weather." ‘ Freak Wind t At Savannah . _____ ~ i SAVANNAH, 0a., Dec. ll —(AP) l — A freak wind coming out of‘ the northwest in gale-like prop0r-‘ non "blew the water" out 01' the‘ Savannah River late today and‘ caused postponement. until 7 a.m..' tomorrow cf the launching of the! Liberty ship William l... McLean. The vesel. named after the late publisher of the Phiiadelpnla Evening Bulletin, will be sponsor- ed by Mrs. Hazel Palmer of Ath- ens, Pa., mother of a 14-year-old boy who led all newspaper carriers boys in war bond sales. ' The wind blew the water with such force toward the Atlantic Ocean. 22 miles downstream. that a tide which normally would reach '1 1-10 feet at Savannah got onlv to 4 5-10 feet and then started rc- ceding. Suspect liog chewed Head 0ft Master RAINIER. 010., Ded. 11 — (AP) - Sicrlfffls deputies beat through the backwoods near this Columbia, River town today sci-king a. dcgJ suspected cf chewing off the head 0f its master . i ll — (CPi _‘ - k‘ imans _ o; to woods nearby at the Home Security announced tonight.‘ 0f lhyesi-IBBWTE. The decapitated body cf George‘ Roe. about 60, was found in the isolated cabin three miles ; from here. His huge 00¢, described 5-4‘ ‘by neflfbv farmers as vicious. fled‘ Sheriff M R Calhoun, said the condition of lize body indicated liie head might have been chewed ' away. i Calhoun said no definite clue to the cause of lhe man's death was found. approach l “d same period in i943," he report "$3,671.00 in poll tax as against S3.- 32l.00 for 1943. This shows an in- crease in current taxes this ye-il‘ over last year. "In arrears in 1944 we have col- :(Contlnucd:on“r‘~i~':€"_ f 001.7150 l MORE I S“ pPmG. Quays A Lof-(A Folks NEVER Know ‘THEY ARV. 0n 4am ICE unfiL 11m FALL function! >0 ‘rd’ q:§_ —‘(/1\y-¢s_> ‘ ‘Til “ ‘i y L U0 . .. TORONTO. DJ.‘ E-i - 1G,‘; -_ Minimum and ma. mum lumber- aturcs: Vancouver 26. 4i: Edmon- £n£1.Sgz‘;.‘re.-;z‘ina2p. 311; Quebec . : n Join 1 t 2'7. 32: Halifax 32. 37; Chagllilcitglllfiwll 30. 32 - FORECASTS MARITIME PROVINCES: Gales with snow and rain. High tide this mcirulnir 8t 9.35 and tonight at 9.06. Sun sets this afternoon at 5.18 and rises tomorrow mornirur at 5.29. New moon December l5. 11.34 .M. summerside tide eighteen tes latur than Charlottetown DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown — Sumrncrsldc — Moncton Leaves Charlottetown ‘I A M. 11.30 Al“; 5.15 EM. Arrives Charlottetown l2 l5 P M. EM. 7.30 EM. SUNDAY SERVICE IAIVG Charlottetown 11.30 A.M I P. Arrive Charlottetown 2 P. minu- lfld 5.45 P. M. i CIIARLOTTIJTOWN — l NEW GLASGOW ‘ (Bally except Sunday i Leave Charlottetown l P. M. . Arrive Charlottetown 5.20 PM. Y HIT BY RECORD AIR BLOWS 7.11.1518 Elected ‘m PM MAY 01' 01. M9111‘ ealfoneeci; Rail