MAXIMS 07L MERE MAN --n-—- Qoaui tom y and folly are old compen- iéwaau an m1;g_,f,;'f1§?,'..rTI,"'r-. cum. German Troops A Rolled Back Eight Miles In Russian Counter-attacks flurprlso attack in_ Tula area sent German; running in their underwear, Moscow story says. MOSCOW. flhil back ei mi plifllflstd pd ll Len m, Md army units who still are [l] in a broadcast today. "Ihey re Nov. l8—('l‘uesday)-—(AP)—German troo h gilt miles in n Russian counter-drive outslidse Tully: $13: Nazis "running down frosty streets in their underwegr" ingnul two-month-held German positions were overrun lfy advancing, the news Agency n,“ n, and ran, and ran," the Soviet account said of the Ger- lmi “panic-stricken rout" at Tula, a munitions centre 110 mile; you", . i illnounce age limit for officers UlTMVA. Nov. 1'i—(OP) -—- Age ‘l. regulations for senior officers the Canadian army in the field, will-e Jun. 1 next. ivhemhv Maj- -Generai.= retire at 57. Briyadiers 54 colonel; at 54 and lieutenants- ...» at 51, were announced to- m bydefeliee minister Raiston. At tile slime time it was announc- .. the maximum ages for appoint- nt weird be, Major-General, 53: Igadier, 49: Colonel, 49; and l implant-Colonel, 45. niese iezillntioits apply only to men in l-nmnnd of active forma- .'\I s and iieid llnits and do not ly to line oi’ communication 0r ieilliits. Coming Events r-Q-e bu for Null r in this column per wuril i“ h. 3;: -—- "Show-Murray River Friday. 11-121-11-18-81. "Wanted to ouv Cnicke ' ~- Cold storluzc b-ill "Cfwaud Masonic Supper t- IML L-Trlii-ll-Yg-sli, lbw 4'94! "chm"! $11Pl>cr and Dance h" llllll. Tilcsday, November 18th 1 [4-663-11-15-31 "WW H096 River runner’: I111. Tuesday, Nov, 18, L-WW-ll-IT-H. "Chicken .- llll. Novembersugflptlfi Cmbfldge le-‘IOG-ll-H-Ql. d2"’§§.%’°h’".....°°” lovsilter 20th. SLFBSO-II-lfifill: East School, ier’s Orchestra. L- 2341-18-11. "Benn su 3i fly- cuuphtll, $53.33.. ‘?°i§‘§.°£ LHTZQ-fiY-IB-Bl. _ .__ ‘Bu: rices hl h Bu "P111111 -- "Iullllloclr 1mg ' y “ h! Dillon eklgrliosngllgch $3.00 per L-667-l1-l5-4l. "You g ggzlfizgtettllixi‘! lé’.“'-rw?”d% u l. seller. sense L-067- i-ia-li " Get o %___ m .,.,..;ll..i;.i ‘tell ~ c ht ’ M, Dull“ gdsulfitllgiliz on above L-eel-u-ie-u u m it: Belle at .. “m. York Bag" Play Meet My . Wednesday, Nov- "l" “llh- 8-15. L-‘i00-l1-l7-2i ll Chicken 5 hm "iliier at Hebcr Weeks, h, lamiig-sllcsdily ‘Elegant, Novem- d of ch L-650-1l-l5-lB. Bun per. Ch V mini“. fifiemtllr” 29th ovembci- _ 14-715-11-18-11. 01kt“ s m Pm}, mill — Dance -— New m! H ‘Moe. Pisquid IWBmber 20th, web. I hilt.“ "Molten all, wad d water. "<'§i‘.§.¥iu§‘.°“'“"° n Lr-'ll'I-11-l8-li. Warp“ '* m ~33 hi“ .1.';2!°r.‘.‘.5...°"£‘.° as"; ootf Iifi prices. lslm Cu’? "fioileeting Th“ Ill 111,1 W‘ "B?! Tuesday Maggy,“ Gimme Dingweli, IrIMJ-IB-M-TJIUIJFX tau - bt "M" PM Area open 413a m. wanted, L-TN-ll-IU-ll. N ,,,i-,;;§m;.;.3f'l'§'r“£°.§ ‘m, Pom“?- ll speak t-m-ii-ia-lt. . lime l“ "is dance me sale W“, "W" um. Wed- , Club. m, Anmm“?! ' “W111 um old time‘. ""1- an "Southport e Soviet artillery o ed Germans in the 13$ wlalgthog- “l; dew-n Saturday. And the soviet; said this is what happened- Tflc 12th and 31st German in- fantrv housed in the outskirts o: the city "retreated before om- men ihrvwlnz away their wea u... nut‘ our cavalry caught up wi h them, The Fascists in one position we” “Inning down the frosty street, in their underwear." But first the 855th reserve regi- ment cracked and abandoned its Eositions on the left side of the lshway. ‘Then, the 394th “panicked and turned tail. ...The officers shot, at the soldiers hoping to stop this rout, but the regiment gave way to the gencrainpanic and abandoned their trenches on the other side of he road. The Soviet artillery early Nov, 15 powerfully shelled the German pd. sitlons, then the barrage was trans- ferred deep into the trenches and the Soviet infantry attacked the German flanks. Throughout Nov. 16 we continued the attacks. . . everywhere thev ‘ are traces of the panic-stricken rout of the crack German units." The Tass account oi’ the Lenin- grad offensive said: "Soviet dive bombers co-operated with artillery in smashing the German positions to pave the wav for the infantry sweep. Repeated German counter- atiacks to regain the lost positions failed. We captured material and inflicted many casualties." c» Pilot reported A Missing Mrs. Boyce McKle of Southport, has been informed her son, Sgt Pilot Allison Boyce Mcliie ls miss- ing. Tne message said the airman was missing alter air operations overseas November ll, There were no other details. Sgt. Pilot McKic received his wings at Dunncville, Ontario, in August and went overseas in Sep- tember. He attended Prince of Wales Col- lege here and ieit in mid-term when he enlisted in November, 1940. He joined the R/Oyal Canadian Air Force on his 18th birthday. He was better known to his friends as “Buddie" McKie. A brother, Harold McKie is also serving with the Royal Canadian Air Force. l-le is stationed at Sum- xnerside. ..-.._. New sub-machine Gun invented By Australian OTFAWIA, Nov. 1’i—(CP)—'1‘he Owen sub-machine gun, plans and model oi WhlCll the Australian gov- ernment has undertaken to PWVldQ Canada, was said hem today to be a short-barrelied weapon which tired from the hip, “It is about a um. cousin to the Stan." said one 0X The Sten gun is chino carbine and classed as a mo | its production is expected to be part of Canadas o LONDON Nov 19__(-rue,day)_ ll . Wm - mm“ "m8 program u,“ m m“ n __ - . - ' minutes. After the to House —-— , N m r Cmmnm whue h, with“ melee“ §lim‘€"“£t.‘“b Interpreting e €32§f'l“.°°l....‘l“’°l‘....ld"°u..t.“3§§ oa s ri e lattes. use’ ° “n c reserved list and made avails. ' _ " 1 ‘ d w” become m er. m.“ m ma, l, the Qppfmflmflg i m 1mm disclosed to waiting newspaper Jiands armed witi mo om l.°'.l.:i.:i".§u.lit-.E".§rt.... War ti’ “dill-tel” ‘€§'=il°»<=~“”°l-' .. ,"*.*l‘.:.‘:;‘-a..... Slows steel; l2l:...l"t. 8.°"‘&“.“.f..é2 = ii;~¢,i;~,.;.:g:: in; parts, can be turned out quickly ' d m; ‘zglzovfumlfi E“g"ub1fi_' Neither Hull nor the Japanese i I newspapers, Polish sources said F5" Somhwesn most“, cloud, a“; “d l5 ° '0 °P°““' n‘ 1°“ w“ ""‘"* inc Ind civil engineering oocu - mplmna“ h“ mum w Mid w may‘ and north port-ions, with occas- llll 95m l“ i’ u” mckmm l“ (B l"!!! 1- illllllliml glam and will e avail lo “m” m“, pregnant wmd" hm‘ m 1"“ 1 ‘ ionlt‘, light. snow or rain extreme m,“ of “the Woolworth gun. (Anne ‘my p”, sq" wi-im) m, ‘Meme “mo” and munuou government circles it was indi- WASHINGTON, Nov. ‘i; “Ormcas, “omen q-ueéday and more was no indication he" With Ketch and all the out- work between “an,” md Jun cated that the conversation had ___ (AH-President Roosevelt as - wedmsd“. rm“; ,,.,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,.,.,_ from official-I lilllllbll l8 W W111 on: promonto y of the Crimean not been entirely one-sided. WASHINGTON M“ 17__(AP,_ ed Congress today for $6.6B'1.- , “use consideration the Oven Peninsula in Gel-mm hands. T59 re,” w“, b, enema by Hull was noncommittal and An efiecfive sum-e o, Unwed Mme 359,00» additional for the un- , my, p“. ml. morning at i001 h" l“ l"- 1‘ "Fwd "° M" m" 3'8"!" "min" °" v"'“"""' raising m linut for INQWI- °““""°“-‘ i“ h“ 9"“ °°“‘"°“°° Workers (c. I. 0.1 slowed the flow "=11 5'1"“ “Ymv- ""1" "1"" ~ and tonight. at 9.51. “n” "Y m Ammu“ “w” "m '°‘""° "°""""" ‘° h“? tlon a men from military service i“ W WM" “W” wit“ of fuel to steel mills w it trickle 11-" 1" "him W" ='"'"""=“ i Sun m. lni. illlérllliiiil u. 42.1 --——-——-"' I"! "l0 N0" “Wk ‘kWh m gverago of live years for e '~ today and John L. bewis, bellger-l i" "dlliliii". Th" P-“UMM-‘i m‘ i rind rises roman-luv moi-um: lit 7.03- "11" P'°" i‘ b°°"'°""¢ m st vsrie of construction (Oonttnued on page a col 4) cntiy’ defying the United States Plullfll “@5900” ‘"1’ "1’°‘“"“* - r - Th, 3...‘, '11] b, u. _____________' soul-mam, m u... groom, dmlared production of defence Wllill- New moon Nov. 1e. 8N pm. Will Sllrvtiy illllflllflll "w" ‘hdfflmumfi, “fin tive Dec. 1o. “the army is not oing to shoot our muugmlufl "igllll" "1"" {fit}; , l m m? ' WW5" °" ' ' The tie-reservation oi this large . , people and the so diets are not @- 000. or e ur .v u Summersitle tde r8 m nu , tuned swim’. 1.909 Iflllfl MP"! m, men mm“ n e n u, mine coal," Philippines. or (hen chariotteioun. ln d m‘ Km“ "0"", u’ m‘ their IiYs-sfollowed labor Minister g g o President Roosevelt. who bl —-'% SE “gag”, ‘h u" no. Ernest Bevin’: f of chou cs ukekd for a personal report on hONDTtgN. Nov. lB-kidlhigsdasii-p BORDEN-(g.;_I|;I€,I'I(‘%RMENT“ I -end i ti i ‘Pi- ony man e n . . , .--._._. lim- md Kwhnitfflt- "h" ‘,{,*,,i‘,‘:.,'",':?;..;‘_ l? w“ .2: lhiih U" Frlnca lit.’ v. m. vxllligoltiénm fggnfetmlg: git: Royaol sinking of Friday was lmiul mi on suNuAYi OPIAWA. Nov. l’! - OP) — The ll "ll" h m“: mi will be presented the eh in "ca tivc" coal mines, Lewis zeliman Edward Mitchell, 50, one of Bo d", 925 AM“ Loo n“ hgwiyqormd diyum d nutflflpn e G u ahflnvg, b“ y“, o‘ 03mm mm “on; ‘m, _____ sen lnste a letter which he also the oldest members oi the air- “gags! P - °' "'"""“°“" °' ' m m “fir: the ‘t. m: new methods o1 line with the coupon Nov. n-loel-aoysi "m" Wim- m“ “m” “m ‘t ‘m M“ ‘is... ‘c. . Tormeniine 11.00 Au ‘hm N“ mum“; mum i. m. Illllltlkfln-I ‘N hm‘ u,‘ problem o‘ ‘etma ma" women in“, A“, “n,” f w‘, pun“ cnned m“ This communication recited the nounced today, 81° P M RM, plans for en immediate survey P; Mzflnflm- n” mm“ war work. “Eva-hi ugh in; seesaw- on ooou- "l"! ""16" °°11W1°l°fl m“ I41 -———-—-—-—-—-— sung; ‘tryk-g k-ywp Burden 9.00 nutrition in (Jmaldlgn war indus- ma. l, m m. u.“ . today celled on men pied “w” m“, m4 is", mi“ Mien-moi! WWIIIQM with $1991 ————-——*—— A" an,‘ “5 p314 m,"- ("ape rur- trles, the at announced to- ” ‘M62, m, “m, l,‘ “n, and woment irhindustrhfor a mic smoke pouring: 30m “this? tenets at mgaunissumhigiei 0x31 “trig; 0:32‘? (i0. (IO-BLACK SHEEP flénhne 10.05 AM" m“! M“ n“ - ‘P91’ N11 ""0- P1'°4 011 one lace rM sryauncun- ' —-——— __ 1 The rurvey will be mm em {i}, ",',',,,‘,,f,f,'_“"‘ ""°° M‘ by M 33th theoq% ha m, hmimm :23: lflefiments with commercial m€flsloPPEggtflLwé §g§lf‘.“‘%:.§$.‘-".7 woon IsLAxns rumY all lllitolgglfflwiwkaielgilltéllli-fiel, ,,,""",‘,,“',Lf,'"n"""°_,,,,,',,,'§§,",'fi u um soon durine s at. u a guerilgmrne rlhl ma? ileum Bgmuusu M "it W1 ludultlv Chinpemylllni n» moi flowed i" (DAN-Y. wmimuo sunburst m. "we , when ingdequato “so, Kmh melt large industrial punt in the north scattered on a flying teid were et- ifglh "w Pfileltltm "14 tweed from wool or a flock or 911M ‘ d 6 a" A M m” u M“ '° b’ m’ “m” M "M" ‘h’ h“ m“ mm‘ “rrhitmia. believed the o i mFkaxt-ri and ther tar ts were @115"? ‘tgifltutge: Blivfrlgpggtveg: m” koinlg: "llrgrrlisgnwérnlréilrlg l0‘0.0ahe‘\l“ii‘lli‘lldl.filil ll.‘ M. ' ' lllnem, r. and inaccuracy. luk- ~~'- .. ° t .. o, mm" ha‘ ' ° ° “ ° m, f“ m, thing reasonable within our power" j, smf, m ‘Being dcst-roy- lkgatie-‘sbtgnmu M5 A.M. 11.45 noon is informed observers in (lovers Prince Edward! Island Like the Dew w iss, MAXIMG 01A MERE MAN Be neither silly nor cunning, but CHARLOTFETOWN. CANADA, TUESDAY, Novel/lean 1s, 1941 lAPAN MAY HAVE DECIDED Io c 0' \ b f s‘. i. . -\. assault» a .'l Elimfirléi/Z" “dfiflfiitflr ‘£71 LUCIA TRINIDAD LN WASHINGTON. Nov. 1'1—(CP) officially today when ncsident Roosevelt signed the joint resolution sentltlves repealing all major elements of the Neutrality Act. portion or the Neutrality Act opens to Uncle Sam's shlpm) The action of the n ‘dent in signing the resolution paved the war supplies to sail into peril along Cans under the protection of the United States fleet. resulted ln the repeal resolution passing the House by only 18 votes, The core of the opposition, they voted against changes in foreign policy. But they were strength made the division perilously close. The biggest group voting with the regular Congressmen, most of them D and used the occasion to put The second group is more believed was a "back door" state oi undeclared war, sending them into combat areas and still others who must bo strengthened before risking out-anrl-out war with Germany. =__.__~-~—- _--.— .1; —..—-_»___~_-;~_.= _—__— -_-_~__ Japs rgpqiflgd Heard ll-Boat 40 Rushing Troops Miles from Halifax Into lndo-Ghina SHANGHAI. Nov. 17 - (AM- Japan has requested the Indo- China Government to provide fa- cilities for 50.000 additional Jap- anese troops in the French col- ony, which woiuid establish a Jap- anese'force in that strategic coun- pressuro on the White House. difficult to deflne but it included Cong BOSTON, Nov. 17 —(AP) — The new trawler Surge, con- structed tn Cleveland for l. Boston fishing company, reach- ed its home port today, and re- ported hearing a radio wamlrig yesterday of a submarlnds pres- ence 40 miles south by west of Halifax, N. S. Captain Henry Atwood, skip- per of the vessel on the nine- ggyo gérggrfiptiglargasfiogzlfi, tggcofii‘: day run from Cleveland, said he in to trustworthy reports re- ‘hflml m‘ ‘mmml "m" ‘he ma,“ hem tonight Cnpe Race radio station at The Wench hmfe not yet n? Newfoundland when he was 200 miles east of Boston, and only gnecflafgmefgy ctgmtggnxgggesa, ma: 150 miles from the lubmarineh vemmadeneral at HMO,‘ but reported position. the Japanese nevertheless are rushing fresh troops into the col- on steadily {he Japanese, it was disclosed. contend the additional force is necessary “for defence." These events have led the best the colony to believe that some major de- velopment, either against China m- ‘maiiand, will occur before the end o1 November. 90,000 to he Made available To British Army gstions w be made to improve ‘moonstone-assault Prlilllletltaeentldtililflb. U. S. Repeals Neutrality Law e r \ t . a \_ "mu" w. 3 (By J. I’. SANDERSON, Canadian Prelu Sh“ Writer) others who were willing to arm shi took the view that armed forces of the United States n: isttaomi with when use i ’\ ‘x v —The isolationist cycle In the florelpn policy of the United States ended of the Senate and House of Repre- (Thc shaded portion of the above map indicates the extent of sea area which repeal of the major way for the arming of American merchant nhlps and swept. aside the prohibited zones of the Neutrality l"! permitting ships loaded with dlfs eastern seaboard, Britain, Russia and the Medflcrranean, Meanwhile, political observers here had completed their examination of the vote last Thursday which 212 to 19f. found, came from Republicans and lsolltionistg who have steadfastly Joined by at least two groups whose combined opponents of the Roosevelt foreign policy was composed of emocrats, who argued the Administration "m" cope with defence strikes ressmen who rebelled at what they ps but opposed Roosevelt and Japanese Envoy liold conference “Many Things Were Said”, Cryptic Com- ment By Japanese Admiral T0 News- men. (By Wade Werner. Associated Press Staff Writer) WABl-HNGTON. Nov, l7-—(A.Pi “Resident Roosevelt talked today with Japan's special emissary. Baburo Kurusu. who flew from Tokyo to Washindton 1n 8n BUM‘! to settle Japanese-American dif- ferences and arrived Just ahead gcvemment that "there is natur- ally a limit to our conciliatory at- tzltude." Kurusu went to the white House with Japanese Ambassador Kichisaburo Nmnura and Secre- tary of State Cordell l-full, with whom they had just held a pre minarv conversation lasting 23 of an ominous warning from his, Annual By Halli s PAGES‘ Subscription Delivered, $6.00 P. IL‘. L. H.003 Cunnlu and 0.8. $6.00 0 T0 WAR WITH U.S. ‘Ice - breaker Makes voyage North of Siberia SEATTLE. Nov. 1'I—(AP)--Blunt- {loot-ad and bow-sided, the big soviet 0e- reaker Krassin lay at a Seattle Pl" iodlll’. beiund her a IOiDO-mile gglpslalggllgh ice-bound seas north hfrhe vessel came here for over_ haul and for repairs to her pilot ouse, smashed in a Bering s" storm; but in so doing she also demonstrated the fantastic roof of the world ocean route is actuallv ” Capitala out serious que Wliiéite Sea. e Krussln is specially designed for crashing through noes. He, 10 boiler: consume 130 tons oi coal a day tinder certain conditions, and henthree propeilors can drive hoi- flgfllnst walls of ice with terrific force. If this fails, :i.e is designed $0 that the force of ice will push h" 1111f on top or the fioe rather than to crush her. Once there, the ship can be car. eomd back and forth by shifting ‘voter in huge tanks. while her slurp keel gradually digs her deep- er into the ice iintii she slips into open water again. In spring and summer, the lane thus opened may remain open for merchant ships for ‘JRYS 01‘ even weeks. French era-it Fly Tricolor alistically resolved to g0 i0 capitulation in the Pacific. Japan's proved. These are that the China and drop its alleged meni." Nothing said in the Home 5,18. gested that the Government was 801112 t0 be clwcked in any way, and barring the single possibility that it was a grandiose and m. ribiy hazardous bluff it appeared that the United States could not make friends with Japan short of Zemng out of the Far East. Moreover, Shanghai heard on good authority that Japan had asked the Indo-China govemmem 0i Vichy France to provide 15,. ciiitics for 50.000 more troops in that colony “for defence" thus creating a. force of about 190‘. 000 tliele, and was nOt waiting for VichyV; answer to rush them Ln Simulation at once arose that '21 LONDON, Nov. l’! —(CP) —Royai Air Force Spit-fire pilots returning today from sweeps over northern France reported seeing two small French fishing vessels "bravely lly- ing the tricolor" although oniv a few miles from the French coast. the British Broadcasting Corpora- tion sald tonight. One plIOt said the henchmen M a , 1 d- l! nese attack against scum ‘lzfllelfiiliqgghelr “m5 and Wm‘ China. or more likely against ‘Phal- - e -~ llind. u-hicli adjoins Ludo-China and lies above Malaya and Sing. apore was in sight. to join Britain, pledged the United States in war upon Japan Within an hour of the start of any 5110b CORY-Vet. announced the ar- rival in Singapore of more Indian Seek Maniac 'ln stabbing EDMONTON Nov l’l—(CP)—-iA ‘°°““““°d m‘ Pa“ 8i 0°‘ l) - . - __._________ man described by police as a "man- iac" was sought today in connection, with the fetal stabbing of Dorothy Hammond, l4 year old schoolgirl, on I , , Inquest into 3..fé?..°i‘”3.‘.“...‘.‘t §§t$é‘.i§‘°§.‘i§r§‘.."s‘ . Chief Constable A. G. Shiite of, the Edmonton police force, after a I I Joseph 0 Brien weekend of frilitless search for the! assailant, announced the girl had‘. That Joseph O'Brien, Moreii Rear. , came to his death "by accidentally been attacked with such ferocity] that the man who melded the knife. ; going over Wright's Bridge," was the verdict returned by a coroner's must. have been a. ulmiifl lrl‘s chest. throa the hunting knife with a four blade sunk to the hilt each Two of the wounds close t0 heart were thought to have cause death. The gills hands were cut badly apparently as siie tried keep the knife away (r0111 her. c. t and head l and -inch time. i jury also found "that there is n0 protection 0n the bridge" 110d Pec- ommended be placed on both sides of the bridge for the protection of the public." was 25 years of age. Build new road to | "olafrieriitiwtllhozid in his car after '?»lniisngl(tllg into six feet of water at W ' flijlifs Bridge, three miles {rpm Clmriottctovm, last Wednesday 17_,¢p)__p1ve m- niglit. He was alone in the C011 ______-__-.____ LONDON, uloilnbo e & “Mk lir a ‘ eight ihousun n rers (Confirmed on page 1v CO1 3) ‘improving a iiigliivliy to open up a o News Briefs new supply route for Russia by wayl 0t‘ Balilchlstnn and Eastern Iron. said a Reuters dispatch from New ‘i Delhi, India, today. ‘ 'l‘he road. ivlicn completed, will l connect with the terminus of tnc . Indian railway in Bliluclilsinn and —-_—— _ l run through Eastern lrnfrlogwcsvhg rmyv-h He" me norbheaswrl‘ diplomatic relations with RWSSML Vichy France and Julian. l‘ was announced early today. to avert s. work stoppage. unless Washington made what would _ House of Representatives questions save from a single speaker who was more a friendly inierlocutor than a critic, those "minimum" peace requirements which the House of Peers already had ap- .Chi_na and the‘ Netherlands Ezist Indies claims is an economic biock Japanese ‘, ‘ha, jury at the inquest last. night con- , ' ducted by Comner Dr. l. J. Yeo in . the City Police Court room. ‘Thel “that a strong iron rail} tion By States Appears Only Pe_c_1_ce Aid’ Japanese House hears With- stion sweep- ing demands to main- available for movement. 0y U s I o s ; supplies t R .=' ,' ' ‘ G.........°.."elsateusslgviti tam Peace 1n Paflflc- (By The Canadian Press) In anatmosphere of gloom, the Japanese Parliament 28W! U19 impression last night that the Japanese had fat- war with the United States amount to utter heard, without United States stop helping participation with Britain, in what Tokyo l. 50E search iFor reported Crashed plane , HOULTON, Me, Nov. il-rAP) ,—Unite-.1 suites and Canadian of- _ficials started a search today latter recalling reports time an [airplane had crashed in virtually impenetrable sivaniplands on or near the international boundary at Amity, l5 miles south of here. jest Thursday. i State police Lieiit. L E Olleleftc said that the wife of an Amity‘ farmer reported seeing a para- chute flier tumble out of a plane. which dropped from sight. behind a hill about a mile from her home. A 14-year-old girl living some two miles from the farmers hoine told police the same story, Oueleite said. and added that slie heard “an awful crash" after the plltne disappeared. 4m: Wire's Retmvcs AR: Niven As Bap A°= HER Huseano Qaiufs ‘EM / l i i | l i l l7—.\llnilnilm TORONTO. Nov. and maximum temperntureslgg , . an ‘lilllligll. 111 4'1 ‘ Fkiinrnton 3Q Rogmn ‘its m Winnipeg 13 3° wronto V‘ ‘m Ottawa l4 m Montreal l7 77 goston Til 47 Synopsis: Light. snow and sleet have occurred in southern diet-riots of Saskatchewan and AJccr-a, also