MERE MAN d to know how to live and I...“ Guardian, Two Con", gussuius Secrecy In Washington _ _ Eastern C rzszs Ominous implications for future of U. S. - J ap piations seen in resignation of Konoye Cabinet. Report Gov’t lluits Moscow For new Capital Believe Moscow Will Be l)efended Foot By Foot; Kazan New Seat Of Govern- N, B t. i’l—(Friday)-(A wmxlcadcrscof Russia's govern- mll-lv today to have left to llle desperate ilrills of urnily nlld it was believed selling up a wartime KllZil“, 450 miles to ‘the io roillflluc the fight. wns no immediate official lntioil oi the reports, winch clirible sources Just United stat/es Ambassador, el ardt, and his enl- oving Moscow in Cver WASHINGWN, Oct. 16 -(AP) ——Imposing a rule of strict sccrccy, President Roosevelt conferred with his military and foreign affairs ad- visers for an hour and three quart- ers today. while on Capitol I-lfli some legislators predicted that ev- ents in the Far East might lead to a Japanese-American showdown. The situation in Japan, where "he cabinet of Premier Prince Fumim- aro Konoye has resigned, and in Russia, where Moscow is half ring- ed “y the Nazis, was believed to have been canvassed. 1n Congress, two lilen who are usually poles apart in til" outlook on foreign affairs agreed ' of ihe Japanese cabinet resignation bore ominous implications for the filt- ure of Japanese-American relations Senator Gerald Nye (Rep-Nu) sald:- "Of course, we can't tell much until a new cabinet is appointed, but the resignation of the former one apparently means a COmDlPlv‘ military sci-up in Japan. If it is to re on nll-oilt pro-axis governlnerlv then we w'Ii face a most serious hour." Sonrilor Lister Mill sa‘d:- "It looks to inc as though Japan (Wm-Aim (Continued on page '1. Col 1) a capitol in imtne . ~ow radio was still l.l lo midnight, but llt communique at that ii The illusions. arm vllilllrn-loi of the government from iConllzluvd on page 7. Co] l) ilusciab Far East Army is intact hiCTil army remains virt- . eventuality arising lroln the czloulet crisis in Japan. a Soviet soul-re ill London snid today. * declared that reserves will-h hid been called from Siberia lo -_i;\' front had been drsu ll mainly from new conscripts without Icalienlilg file permanent military cslaollslllncill. in the Orient. lie lllslStNi that the Hell nriny of the Bus} uas boner fr. lllccilailiinsd vrar than the Jul ailese. ‘Nu slab iii the back cou ti W05‘ us.“ this informant declared. Studio suspends. Deanna Durbin HOLLYWOOD. “Oct. lrcss Dunilnil Durbin the studio which _ ile and wllicn sue hesglrn rescued from financial dis- Motthcw Fox, Universal Studio "Lflfiliresldent. confirmed the sus- flliloll but declined to discuss it. us Durbfii also remained silent. the Winnipeg-born star said they believed Ihe ti’ involved her demand tor ore personal supervision of oust, £11m and story of her future Coming Events "Md to buv Chicken Bole, Belfast Church turdsy, October 18m. Rose . msvecroctoberpflllth for Wilt per and Dance in . M0398 , October °°"°°Yi by Beach Grove Inn Kinkston l-loll, October lunches. Proceed; for dmissicn 25 and l “with and old time danci id glleeting or Rural Mail cour- 4 I I I inst Cicfillilll trJo ."_ [ruin tilc trust nnl. ,ln defence of 15-year-old girl PORTLAND. Mc., Oct. i6 --(APi —Coille.iitlll".g illlii ho fired ill de- fence of fl 15-year-old girl, Herbert ll. Cox. Jit. 16. il Vrgillia school- lzoy, wlls held llcrc toiligilt us a "fugitive from justice" alter" alleged- ly COlliHSJig liint he hnd iSlllif and killed a nlirldle-llged iilzill curly hioildriy lllflflllllf! willie parked on n lvliirylnlltl roadside. Dcfp ill u hfarylaiid thicket a bullct-toril body W115 found today, tentatively iilrntiietl as that. 0y Grniugei‘ G. Broulllink. 40, of Mt. Olive. N. C., who hild driven his automobile and trailer m Alum“. drill, Va. as a defence project worker. _ Polite said a warrant would bc issued as soon as a positive identi- fication is made. In a toienhollc conversation lvi'h Bnllfillorc lmiirre. Cox wns sllid to have coitlcsscd that he Sllfil a mnll he knew only as “Browning.” when lhe lnltcl- mode comnromhlng ad- vances loword ififl Mnv Price, 15. in tllc front scat of Browlfiufs car. With Cox ill the back sent was Mona Ellen Cunningham, 14. All three of the youngsters were from Alexandria, WilOTQ they lived in a trailer crimp. and Cox said they were running nwny tognher when Browning offered them a ride to Baltimore. Fear luneniiurg Schooner lost With B-man crew HAMILTON, Bermuda, Oct, 19- (CP Cabieb-Belief that the over- due Lunertblirg schooner Jean F. Anderson hild folindered in n storm with her six-man crew was expressed today by H. B. L. Wil. kinson, to whose firm the ship's lumber cargo was consigned. The three-muster! vessel, last reported ioadln lumber Aug. 2'! It Jacksonville, a., was to have sailed from there to the Bahamas and then to Bermuda. she is now seven weeks overdue here. "We have more or less given her up," Wilkinson said. "She evident- ly has come a oropper somewhere, possibly in l. hurricane." Wilkin- son said he was llolnB 110ml w buy another cargo to replwfl 31° one aboard the Anderson. He declared the wife of 62-year- old Capt. 8t. Clair Geldeff- ‘Of Lunenburg, N5. master of tnc ship, had been making Ynqlllflefi about the vessel and he had re. plied uni week "not slvins h" much hope." Besides Geldcrt. four Lunenbur! County men were aboard in addi- tion to 18-year-old Seaman Charles Turnbull of Bast Orange NJ. IT'S Till WIIISKERS DARLINOTON. B. c-(CPP Mary find‘: little lamb and M- 5- Plyer here has his gilnt, which fol- low: hbn about town on business cllll, and mm ole door illl his lotion at Oddfellows Hail t. 1 l. 68-10-1641 , master emerges. l q ‘ sonilslviliriil-Thii Petain places Blame for French defeat Public Trial Will Be Held For Five Of Six Men Named. By Taylor Henry Associated Pres; Staff Writer VICKY. Oct. 16—-(AP)—Witl1 the hindsight reflected by a spec- ially chosen council of political Justice. Marshall Petain placed the blame for Frances defeat today on six men who were returned to office time and again by Hench voters. In a broadcast to the nation the Clllff 0f Stale announced that a public trial will be ileld for five of the six. ‘who’ already ilave been in prison for lnore than a year, As for as the accused ministers are coilcerlled, the Marshal's lie- cision foiled to change their posi- tion. They have been in prison olvnitlllg tz-iril. Tilcy are still in prison strolling trinl. Tile accusation submitted to Pe- toin by the council coilc~ci'iled:-- (Continued on page '7, Col l) lllay raids follow Night attacks on West Germany LONDON. Oct. l6—(CP)~‘1'he Rovul Air Force roamed the Chi-fl- fi."\v over Germl-n- .n r: 5 '. llollzlrd and ilortllmn France during tcday attacking lln Ellillll’ ship in dock, ailti-aircraft < osscis, a freight lrnln, n motmizozzt and a petrol store and leaving thcill burning. Tirol-e drnvllgili: altrltrks n ilt raids over western c foil )\\‘( d Germany. ncolil r. hills : r1 on filo F. ,_ I I ‘iligL/lir Miixislry said that during! Wednesday nflvrllnon Hudson alr- (‘l‘1li'. of llic nlizivzll cllmllloild boilb- ‘ cd_ (lllll lllIl~"ll iv zit Esbiucrg. Donmar the dxivliallt raiding. clllfnlisilill liisits Canuclis ElZClLAND, . (Jul. i6 --lCl’ Cnlzlcl ——H0il. J. L. ‘,R.aiston_ Criuacllllil lllllllSlel‘ of mi- tionnl dillcnce, tozllay paid the first visit of his currcilt trip to Cihad- aii troops. Col. Rcilston spent an hour and a hull with an Alberta tank regi- mcilt nlld rode ill n tank down a bumpy road. lie went from lhe lallk outfit to a Royal Canadian Engineers’ survey company whi~l ulnkes mops for the Canadian Corps The Canadian tall? brigade had just returned fronl extensive battle in wnles. Col. Ralston inspected a guard of honor commanded by Capt. A. J Mllls-i" of Edmonton and Lieut. E ll. Watkins of Olcls, Alta. The Minister told the troops: "If your regiment is as good as Your guard r don't think you will need to {like your llnts off to anyone." The party then went to a tank pork ill il grove of trees where Col. Rslston, Gen. McNaughton and Gen. Crcrar inspected the huge ve- hicles. _ Col. Rniston crawled into the turret of a tank, took his place in the commander's seat and was driv- en along a rough road. Maj. Iunes Fraser of Halifax was present as the visitors inspected the map-making and lithographic apparatus used by the army in the field. s Undersecretary visits N. B. guest children MONCTON, Ni. Oct. 10- lcPl-Geoffrey shakespcare. Bri- liish Undersecretary for the Domin- ions, arrived here today on the last leg of a Dominion tour during which he has looked into the wel- of British war guest children brought to canads. In an interview tonight he “m he had found the i-Jiildren healthy and happy. He llvas ompsnled here by Mrs. Isabel Snow, Ottawa, 1'91!!!‘ sentative in Canada of the child. rents oversas reception board. mic this afternoon he visited sflCkViiii‘ and met n number of the children who came to Canadn from "is Q19....°°“""7 v / firm “we . ' g n dropllsd l Buulounc clocks in occurred‘. e-l: mined docks and manoeuvres and shooting practice Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew after Local Airman Missing after Air operations 52L Observer Ernest A. Tredenick of the Royal Canadian Air Force is ‘missing after air operations," his sister, Mrs. John Matthews, Char- lottctcwil was informed yesterday. There were no details in the cab.e from Eilgland. Sgt. TFEClCTllCK is a native of West Devon, P E. 1.. 25 miles from Suinmcrside. He lived there (luimg ills childhood. At the death of nis parents several years ago he went to Olseary where he lived with nis sister, Mrs. Matthews. About four years ngo he came to Charlottetown with his sister when she took up residence here. He remained in the city until he joined the Air Force. He attended Prince of Wales Col- iege two years and enlisted in July. i940. H3 completed his course at: - inrvis, Ontario, June l, 194i, and after a short leave here left for ov- crsezs. BJilC-PS Mrs. Matthews he has an- other sister, Mrs, Charles McNevin in Marylmld.‘ U. S. A., and two brothers, Sgt. Irving Tredenick with the Royal Canadian Air Force. sta- tioned at sllillillersicle and Vernon, Tredenick, shipping clerk at DeBiois Ercs, Chziriotetown. l The cable to Mrs. Matthews read‘ as follows: "Regret to inform you that your brother Can R72506 Ser- i l grunt ElTleSli Ashton missing as the result of air 0,101- aticils oll Oct. l4, 194i. Letter ‘o:- lows from R. C. A. F. Casualties Officer Gloucester records." No announcement in wake of‘ Cabinet our/rum. Oci._16—-(CPi-A 1;“ 54h.- [fight (lilfiffflign> l'l1!("lil‘! of cabinet council was v bombers were repnrfcrl held today uililer Prime Minister willie dill-inc Tllui l.l_v's due . Mockcilzle King: but no announce- ufions one fighter lost. One cn- monk were mode when it ended. only oircrllft wos "PSIIYFNf-‘d dllFVill It had been thought a statement nllqilt be issued describing new, price control measures and other economic steps by the overnment Wlloll the meeting en ed without} a statement being‘ issued it was‘ believed there woifd be no major announcement. now until safur-l drlv at the earliest. since Mr. King will be in Kingston, out, tomor.‘ row. The cabinet ivas understood to have bich iIlVPll the iritcst devel-V cpments of the world situation, but‘, it was imported tilat there was nol, extraordinary discussion 0n these. matters. l The Prime Minister will leilve Ot- town tomorrow morning for King- ston, wilrre he wil‘ speak nt the. unveiling of a portrait of the late‘ Hon. Norman Rogers. Minister of‘ National Defence who was killed in an airplane crash last year, rind nt a dinner meeting later in the day. Interpreting The War News p ‘ “"*‘“By"KI‘RKE L SIMPSON Associated Prcss Staff Writer Thundering Nazi blows on the outer defences of Moscow find a dfstnnt bul dramatic echo on the Tok o end o-f the German- Itslfan- apcinese Axis. Whatever else the Japanese cabinet crisis may mean it is too closely interlocked with the developing siege of Moscow not to be regarded as an important piece dropping into lace in the jllg-saw puzzle of ftlei-‘s war p a ns. Whether Berlin's guarded claims that the caaitulatirn of Moscow is immedln ly impend- ing is Justified remains to be seen. ‘There is no reasonable doubt however. that Nazi un- dercover pressure in Tokyo, timed to coincide closely wth the German lnvesimem Mos- cow. had something lo o with the Konoye cwblnetfiugt. i.- us" Y’ ]nvw*"<""" »“"------<\ cuiiiztorrsrovvu. CANADA, FRIDAY AliMlT CONTINUED BREA 1 Jap Invasion Siberia Possible More Belligerent Japanese policy indicated fall of Konoye Cabinet. that scvch wlceks of Japoilev- Amer‘; nglggumiol-l; an W3“; i\'IOllif1fJ,ll(‘ lvlls a survivor! ‘ ingtcn so. taken a decisive Uflpl. u.» Jlmes film“ _ 11° “d 919m, mm?‘ ant turn for Japan. This was will). were HSICCD lll the stokers quoit- l TTGGEIHCM (Continued on page ll, col l) Read by Everybody [ocrosizil 11, 194i v10 Of lTclls of escape i, In sinking of \ Corvette Levis 1 Seamen Describe How Torpedo ripped into Hull 0f (‘raft; lie-- lieve Sub Sunk. By MAX HILL Associated Press Sta-fl Writer TOKYO, Oct. l6—(AP)-Prince Fumlmaro Konosels tilird Japanese overnment collapsed tonight ill‘ e face of o. grave impasse on na- l - tional policy toward- the United! HALIFAX. Oct. 18—(CP)—TWO States and Russia. l Royal Canadian Navv stokers, Wal- The Milli-ll. not three months l fer R. Jones of Halifax and Ernest 0m- Was ficl-‘upiiid during K105i 0! l W Foster of Lawrencetovvn NS. “S tenure with “Famous WHSIl-ltoid ilel llrn today of their mirl Egg“? newgatians and illdeld-i enlclllollsl cope from U10 lorpcdood ossness ver le COZl§C(UL‘ll('l‘S . -. - . . .- -- u "emulsifier offered IQVw-lll ‘ fi{l.‘.‘.“lil“‘i‘vilfliiiiil...‘ci"§f..t».i3?§ bylxagganlzrlllfi‘? av“ miilhxRuséi“ d i lllev are oll “euro e sa onov oll ’ .~ L, ' . his ministers tilild resigned psi-muse. ‘Elle Pun“ Emaid Ifglgndirg they could not agree “on {he My snto fll A. 11%.. Riflllirléllll o ‘our’: to pursue national policy." first "n5. w" i“ gm S“ m? 0 " Ilevis, Anolllei seallllzlil fiuin PEI. cbservcrs cansldwed this w memlfitolzci‘ llidicrlllll Alex MacLeod of vrs when the torpedo ripped into liie iiull of the vessel Just for- wrird of the rllrlin. Tile explosion "'0 fl huge gill) ill the starboard , slilnsli-sd lllYOllElll the floor of the stokcrs‘ qullrlers and opened ll large hoe in tile deck plates. He sold he was dazed by the coilcussioil and, liexlrlilg the hiss 'lli‘ escaping stounl and the guvgle l of wafer DOllYllli; filrouuh tile Levis Cabinet collapse as war lillk i . torn side. lilting-ill he was ill tile spread and international eircles, l engine room. He. outollioticzfly rcdicteil “events will move last; gfvpcd about in tile dilrkiless try‘ u the Far East." | _ . V.-. _- Quaiificd sources of several, nationalities said Japan's iflilTll-I led as a major factor 1n the call net collapse with growing nlillr pressure for action against Rl now that ihe fate of Moscow l.. is in the balance. Z l SHANGHAI, Oct. ii-lnluivl‘ —iAPi—-Stook market nilzir-m - dropped as much ns 20 per eeilf today in reaction to the Japanese l (Continued on page 9, C01 2) al ressure now was so strong it! , n cou d be relieved only thl-ougil, new military adventures or u.) ' _ , “"'""“" “P"""'- l , Convicted of crime, informed sources foresaw inc‘: iik llh: d I ' ' . _- lli€é§“i“.l‘.l. l Alilllhff °°"l°*$°‘ gélovgrnmreilélr, whiilcl; fllilylliikf‘ plilCPl r1 fly. is p0 cy woud be ill, -l ‘"1 acteiuzed, it was believed, us lie-l OTTAWA‘ 0"" H‘ “(cm- The cessary to brzak the sil-called office of Justice hllilislcr Lspozilie "A3513" emlllilemcfll? l?! Jfli1=lh~ announced today immediate release military and economic measures of - - \']_nl'\'1n v-‘m germ n the United Stale- on clllml ‘.'-1.1“"‘.'?“.‘.;'... . . ' ax illflllil> 5ill.-.ilL( fol int-lull gégtggmh “(m the: Bu“ n” lyorlill as cheque», a. ti‘ ill" now icClnlpfilfhi, Quuflgrg in LLindQn €0llll'.\.hf‘ll by .lllt)i.llf'i' Inillll. regarded a new pro-Axis cabinet, An inquiry was. instituted illillied- as a fozegone ccnclusin; in New York, informed observation was in the effect that Konoyrls rrsigila- lion might mean surrender of the tl-"'.llculs...tl1et_heve-vsnwd er fill Lately lifter the other man's con- {Pssion and officials sold earlier to- llxly lllltt if life rcport of V.lilfs iniloreiire w.» vrrlfzed lllS rcljascy would be lll'l‘1lll‘,;l?(l through the JllS- - tire (lcllilrtllliillJs rciilissioil bfllllCll. l Vnht, an Edmonton man and former ileulcnnflt if: file Royal Win- nipcl; Rifles, was sclltcilced last lCcnl-inucd on page 7. Col 1i Nazis hiiit at July ill Brandon, Niall, when y u nuhlbcr of lilorclllliils identified S ' I ll m n5 oilu who had pnSfil-‘d bOLlUS l cilcqucs. According to the lepreseiltzilioils (o the justice (ilfilllfllllfilltv and a slotcnleilt issued in Wiiliulwg W5- tcrtluv by Allilrlll-y-Goileral Mc- Expcctcd soon L‘ -l- zi mull allied Russel. ’l .5 .1 ;u. now serving time in‘, Burwilsh, Ont, rciorinlllfilb’. 111151 333a 3 5 confessed to lilo crime for lvllich l Vnllt was convicted. Leading To BERLIN, on. fc-<AP>_0l~l~nlall ' ‘i v '1 south an wcst of CSCOW ‘ l d nt zoinls nu . a l D claimed tonight to stliild within 6O areas. Nazi commentators. implying that a specilil..aiinoullcenient could .more that collapse of Rod lllillloiy power was ill sight. standiil that the Russians hull nlarshn ed their last material re- In the far south. us well as oc- fore Moscow. Soviet catastrophe no v armies beating miles or less of the city in some be expected soon, asserted ollrc They lmsed this on the undxlr- scrves before the city. med. German-allied Rllilltlll ‘ " l » d Odessa. the Russian groin port Jll| vigcgum the Black Sea. after breaking on me b; c, a drying)- through its suburban defences at 14¢;- my the end of a fiil-dny siege. '1ilo l-liy . ,-(-,L_,,.q _—_-.-—_ —... -» .~ ' ~ e :0! v that ~ llllllllbé-s were canned out ullll sucl ltgi - (Cmlmlued on W39 7- C91 7) illill; speed that elxt-ls bl the i'—~ FlfllCll and Ill'.li:il llldl‘ offices vrcrr- nlpossible to execute. The CCIlllllflll(la“l' oi the British Exlledlflollflry Force oiled svvvrul i ilces of‘ such ordcls. One. is- , Gen M:.x'ille Wcygiild. nll..d coclimnudcl‘ ;ll chief. coiled for a counfer-oltork by British weeps cvcn n5 they were being lak- cn from the beaches of Dunlrcrque lie told oi another instance lll which the British war office, fict- iilg oll faulty infllmotion received lrcnl lilo French, ordered an zltlrlck whfcil had brcrni" impractical be- fore the ordcr was issued French Failurel At. another time. he said, s French General failed to appear at a conference at which a counter- atlack \\'~'.lS to bc arranged, so Illf‘ Recruiting Officers In conference HALIFAX. Oct. 16—lCPi-Lt.- Col. James Mess of Ottawa, d‘.- rector of recruiting for the callou- ion Army, was in the city today for conferences with recruiting offic- ers of Military District No. 6-- Nova Bcotia and Prince Edwnrdl Island. 'I‘he coilfeicnces opened today and it was understood they would " tomorrow. No statement was issued. N “\“ “AKI I i llf§§0 CANADA IHIE All PURPOSE FLOUR M “ British forces had to go ahead alone. persisted in reiu "m; to withdrlllv to cover- the DillllUfqlle evacuatl il lllllil the final moment. when ulol- at last joined in the movement, the dispnchcs reported. the French iroo nenriy caused chaos in the Diln erquc ares by blocking roads with useless 0flll“‘tll0l'll. -— The Gort dlspatche: were pub- lished here as ii special menl. to the London Gazette and issued by the will" office. They cov- ered the peprlod fronl Sept 3. ‘i939. when Lord Gert assumed command c: (Continued on page I, col 0 iiS |Uillt<~d Stores, was left behind to- Gen. Cort Tell Of Events Account throws light on the lmltic oi France and the difficulties fllced by B. I5. F. _.___ l »(CP,i-Gen. ‘ Still later, the French command- supple- ‘ MAXI MG OFA MERE M AN .\l| lliiii is human nlllal rclrilgi-ziai- ii‘ it ifocs not. iidvuhrc. r\llllllll| blllisvrlpiliiii l’l'ii\l‘l"\'li, 511m H)’ Milli: IKE. l., ‘L00; Lasluiilii llllll l..\ 5.1 (I0 PAGES, A Heavy Losses 0n Both Sides; Reds Fight Un Soviet army reported throw- ing fresh tank forces into ag- ing battle before Capital City. (Iiy H0111‘) (I (‘:i.~..~.id_\'. Assncizlied Press Stuff Writer) 3IU.\'('U\\'. (let l7—(l“i'iilziy)—(Al’)—'i‘he Red Armies, zidnliltediy Ilreliciled and illeelliilg on the llppriluchcs to llllllvriilcrl Blow-lily. fought on today’ with uiltlinlinishell ferocity, elziilniilg ii heavy‘ toll of the ilfilillllillllg‘ (lcrnlzins A even \\illii‘ ziriinlnvlcdginl: grout losses‘ of their own. The liernlliil frontal ilSSlllIil. inlpicnlciltcll with elerjv- thing‘ lilo Nazi Army zlnd iirscilzii eoud produce, urns ill-lug nlui by Soviet forces still “zilive and struggling" with tho ziid of fresh Russian tziilit formations, ilfficizil dispatches tieeizirrd. A eonlmuniqlie curly today summed up the situation in [his nl:inlici':— "in the course of Oct. 16 fighting coiltiilucd along the -_wh0ie front. ii was espeei:iii_\' fierce in the western (cen- tral) direction of the front. l “In the course of illc lighting in the western direction of the front, both sides sustzlinc ' ' ' lo " l" (But, with novices from Moscow confined to llieogre government dispatches, if was reported in m- lormcd W.lsil'l toil circles that Ull- Laurence lfi were 1' ii- lll. S. Ambassador int: Mo. 0w ill n l fill tiiploinaiic T ‘t \\‘liill!. Will wliilrilalilllv also include U the iin goverllnloiit. l 1lT0l}' Stockholm reported] n so l- lfli, their n1 "ions were c v- _ _“*" ihg the Rcd lffllplifll. None of ithel wAsnucTox» ol-‘i- 16 — diplomats spcei led their dcstill-l mPi-lllfvrlllrll sources report- nticn. but iilforhleri quorurrs ill l"3~~\ ed today that Amcrii-ziil flfllilil\_ ill"l‘f'lll. litin, suit! bolll llll‘ Russl-fil‘ 53am- L-durpm... A Suqnhurd" poverllillcilt and the dililflilllllg wgre. hrfllipriiil: to establish themselves at and his embMiv “m” “we ha“ crowded Kilzml 450 miles ens: of‘ m“ _M°§“"W n" 1'" "lldlficlflfled Moscow. lvlollth ago arrailge.ll-rnlsl destination in the interior. were lllllfil‘ at Kazan for §l|(‘hl Kllzlln, 1.50m 4M milps m“ Eiin- l 0f Blast-nil’, previously‘ hii- llcvn mouth-fwd as fl llfiwxiillv [Pyn- ]I(I|'ill')' Soviet elipiiiil. Reports indicated fii.lt all of 111v embassies in Dloscow were |'~‘-'"'i"t.' "F IWPPuring to leave the capital. a move rind the Unilcd St (Ctilihlllctl oll page 9. Col 3) Baxter left behind When clipper leaves RECORD TERM BATTlURSTiNfiBf. Oct. i6— i --A record term of labor lengthelic lnciliv when 600m‘. °' ‘ lli, \\'.I.S elected _ ll (if Luahlii‘ J-ilh (‘0llSt‘L'llii\'\‘ ye. otioil hos been i_ll NEW YORK, Oct. 16—(CP)— Beverly Bzixler. lll(‘llll7(‘l‘ of the British P.ii"lllllllenl, who has been lLClllYllllI ill Cululllo and the dlly when lllc Atlantic clipper de. _ _ _ _ Joules A. Wh pulled loi Beirmldo and Lisbon. was reqneflefl 15H‘ Air line officials sold Baxter was dud, Sign of myvlon,‘ refused passage becnlue he hlld no visa to f licl" Berllllldll, and ‘tilall 1e lillllllfii vol \ my lht» Blililnll [.',0\'l‘l‘llllli'lll required such zlutilori llioil. . \ Dnxlw llrgllcd llilit he did not NQ BQDY \ ilecd sllcil a visa, because he is a British subject. Bud A duoouza l CAN CARRY A ‘l CUP L)‘ COFFEE Will-loud $Pl\.l..ll/§;‘ Dunlzerque Canadians were Selected fer l NIETEOROLOG lCA l. Sl-lRl/IC Toronto. Ocl. lff-lcPl- ' lllliliil lilld iivlxilnuill leillpeillill - l). ll .. . . . ‘.51 Dunkerque action we -- s. Ellll . . ll iM-glilo . <13 ___.__ Winnipeg . _ LONDON OCl. u; . . iCPl _ inc TlWOlllO .. 1 lifsilzimrlllx- Ui ...- l (loll. eomiilu 1* - , (\)1“‘“;"_"_j i- ~- h; I or of‘ tlu- lifilii<il ' ioiiurr lure-P l ‘LHJ " ‘if ypublisilollltxluy". r _ ill tllul _l\il ul-l U5 m '- l uultrv bliillllifi oi tile Llllludulll 11" BQQTON‘ o“ IG_,API__J.U,_B_ my ups under orlllls to IOJYL‘ Eng- _ , _ ,l:liid for Duilkerquc to hold the, l: i 1°‘ ‘lJl‘i(lg(‘il(‘£\(i position nl. the Frvficill . port during the evacuation of Blih‘ ‘Lllj * i$ii and i‘l'(‘ll(.‘il troops. l m l~ ‘ Lord Clori wrote flint on May 26. llc was uncertain llolv for lu- WvlLd and lolliirlll at. 8.10, i l)l‘()\'l(lC n ilucieus of fresh and w‘. llruillcd troops on lilc bridgelleaid 1 P-Slliflll. This request was at ollcc llgzroorl to. Zlllii orders were gi.'s-l to dlslnlcil '.ll(‘ brigade to Duiikvrquc oil the illelil ‘Zlitll-‘zitll May. ‘Purse 1 orders were. however, cllillseiletl oil 4“ l, l Iii ii May." " ‘l‘llllll\,-,h the Gorl dlsiulciles ilulki‘ no illi'lili‘l‘ illclllioll oi llle Uuilluz-i llliS. lilu vvllelinlltin iuls bflllfl xi"- ried out s0 sucrcssl ' in’ Mill‘ ‘ flint prcsillunblv t was derided by liter 2h: 3.‘!!! I’.M. H20 RM. WOOD ISLANDS FERRY northern Now Ellgllllifli-a ' (‘Ollllll\l0(i. cool _l<‘ritln.\. sutur- illcrlnsiilu CilllLllllOhh illld unfit‘- Synopsis: Tile tVWf-llllfll‘ cniltinuel be successful in witllllrlllvillg the “wdifl-ldfll‘ “"11" l" ille- P7317“ who“. U; H“. B p1 F‘ “mm, me Provinces, fair in Manitoba mid Dullkerque lli‘i(l}.!(‘il(‘fl(l, nllr could Selskotclllwvnil. but silouers are oc- lli- jllflfll‘ how illucll fighting iric-‘currlllg in Alberta. ll has been tl-orps ulluld il1\\'(‘ lo undertake '.l'ir-, full" lliltl cool today in Onltlirio. Lin; the \\'lill’ll'll\\'e1l. l y , _ _ m‘ He. went. ouz- l High lulu this lilollllnZ f" - "I iuld. limit-lore. naked iilf‘ \l\':li' y _ . n Office wileiliei" ll would be p life’ _,sll"t~“‘l5 ll“? “£31 11$‘? “i "Glfga 6 l Ln semi will nil iilllinlr)’ br oil m-gs,.l‘li_l,k,nln\‘ ‘ ' ' ‘ ‘he isL Cuulillillii division . log ‘ ‘ “ “‘~"" l BORDEN — (‘APla 'l‘()il.\lllN'l‘lNB SERVICE leavi- Borden 9.25 A.M. 1.00 9.“. lmltic ‘Fapc Torniolillne 11.00 .\.‘.\L Lonve-{Jvnod Islands 6 A.M. l0 A M. ll B. E F. co illnilder there u.»- and . M. llflo ilcccssii (liIiilOYlllQ n Cilnflfilflil‘ Leaves Caribou 8 A.M. 12 noon brigade to erque. i Ind 4 P- M-