MAXIMS or A MERE MAN ii-u Always be in rem lllfllls ranoe of your u“; and‘ that time loat never re- w? . u rfllal. Two Oeltl- ' clho.::ii:"li::rdla-n., handed IMI‘ >;/'%/’ The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew (HARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1942 v/zwqgr" w” a..-» --... Readb Everybody S PAGES Then in no such thin: aa living right so long as one oontinnea to think wrong. MAXIMS 01A. MERE MAN . Annual subscription Delivered, 86.00 B! Halli P. E. l. $4.001 l0 other Provinces and 0. B. M." ONSCRIPTION BILL 141 T0 45 tiussian Position ls Most Critical 0f War MeasziruewGoes ‘United Nations Naval 1 lloronezh May A Units In Daring Raid Be Birthplace ‘ Jul 23—(OP)—'I‘wo Lvbmofi effecitive‘ attacks don ‘ . . nava forces un er filwfiidétiemli German coastal batteries on the French coast were Ede by units of the Royal Neth- “lhnd, Navy, a Polish Navy unit end a number Ol light British ioasial craft, it was disclosed to- i ht. “and, ol the action were pieced together from various reports iss- . “e2 glitter of light coastal craft. , commanded by Lleut. G D. K n =1 55 a: Richards of the British Navy: found a rm-ce of enemy mine- sweepers oli the French coast heading toward Calais. The patrol. which included Netherlands and Polish cmft, opened fire as soon as contact was made with the en- emi- Encmy Runs For Cover Although the enemy ships had the advantages of heavier arma- ment, grcatcr numbers and shore asslstuiicc, they broke off the en- gagement and headed for safety. Meanwhile another Allied patrol, under vlie command of British Lieut. (l. L. Cotton, including a Netherlands Nov unit. sighted a large cnczny tan er screened by armcd rrnwlcrs and a large num- bci- of E-bcats. The Allied force closed in_for a determined attack, despite heavy fire from the enemy. One British boat was bit and her commanding officer was wounded, but she continued to at- tack at close range and scored a torpedo hit on the enemy tanker. She was then engaged by two armed trawiers and a number‘ of ill-boats, but succeeded in " ing the guns of at least four E-boate. Ill Tight Spot The engines of the British boat were put out o! action. she lay without power within three- quarters of a mile of the enemy. which held her under a search- light beam and continued shelling. Despite this. the British crew e- lected repairs and succeeded in restarting the engines, returning the vessel to her base across the Channel, A Netherlands Navy boat mean- while carrled out a brilliant at- tack. Under a. hail of fire from trawlers and E-boats she closed on her target, rapidly broke through a gap in the screen of es- corts and fired a torpedo at close range. A large column of water was thrown up and "the tanker was undoubtedly damaged ser- iously again. The Netherlands boat passed close under the enemy's stern and through the escort screen again, returning with only two small holes in her hull. a Hull Sketches Outline. 0f Post - War World Speech Taken as indication of rapid Strides US. Hus Taken away from lsolatili. 5 WASHINGTON. July 23-(0?) Siaie Secretary Cordell, Hull ’ sketched in broad outline tonight 1 a’ post-nor world dedicated to the economical and social better- ment of mnn everywhere, operat- ‘ ing 011 the principles of co-oper- ' aiion dial: govern the war ef- forts cf the United Nations. "It is plain that some interna- tional agc-ircy must be created which can, by force if necessary, keep the peace among nations in future," he said, a statement that rmpinxsivcrl the rapid strides the United StiliGs has taken away from isolation in recent months. Hull's outline 0f’ post-war pro- lecis was one of the most specific let made by a- high United Na- tions‘ official and amplified the Policies previously advanced by p Bflil5li Foreign secretary Anthony ~ Eden. Vice-President Henry A. , Wallace and Hull's Undersecretary of State. ‘kumner Welles. It was delivered in an address Prepared for broadcast over United - Blazes and Canadian networks and . for short-trove to the world. Pleads For (Io-operation '1 Hull pleaded for international . til-operation after the war. lower- lrs of trade barriers, ultimate re- duction of armaments, establish- ‘iColfiiinltyfizdrflflmfZué-Vilfldol: ~ Ontario Airman Awarded D. F. M. homo _ _ N‘ ‘My 23 ‘c? ffifllfi) a British can army in its fight against cool. 31-year-old “tail-end Charlie'- ihc Axis on the burning sands of . Ont. has been ‘ deputy air offlc r-in-chief of the . distinguished flyinfl e m i‘ we“ com gnly .1 u‘ My‘ old‘ brmgm‘ ‘he Flt. Sat. Thomas O. Mcllq om Carleton Place Bwarded the ers, l! was announced today R 001m a Fockc-Wulf remen a few nights later. Coming Events d-o- lite for Home: in I cents on word “Talkies-South Monday. "Madam Prince Street. "W's. Bloomfield on July 29th “W?!” aud Church oi "116. ednesday, August Stir. 1M5 Myg turdav "Bell at r" ith i Tmney and Rgndoldh Bvriott. U DTIh -—_-—___ at '1 o'clock medal for destroying two Nazi flaht- 5- F- mwnfiozi m M : ' . (Iiquham is credited léllhphgélflffie “Kmmx side by s,“ LOUD-plane attack on Cologne “d Empire airmen in the skies over gMr-sscrschmitt in the assalll I! "i" "l!" Canadign airmen-mom E "Talki Mt. to B d . ee- 5 wart stairway” _ 1-22-31. Doyle Readlnqshlalii "Come to the tea at st. Anth- "Pcct d w. r. u n1 will be held ggnaonshaw ltd. committee to providenfiaiamnlm: "n fill‘: “withing: Y. ll l n o ad: b Oh lea ———- in: rooms fling orders for bulk wheat. service me u L” ‘T 5°“ at once wh t eed l-ler- announcementm v rs. Sect. I W“ n 1-24-11 Ferle. natiggl suing director- Ind _____ George Pi , direc r "Talkies-Madman ma" mg and auxiliary services Gene 7424i. Flo. bumrwordmlislligg fleet has i la ura s st Belfast on Julvvwtoli s largest initial catch reported for W d‘ 1-22-21. many veers. W‘ Allied Bombers Raid llong Kong? LONDON, July 2t-(l"rlday)—- (UP Cablel-A News Chronicle dispatch from Chungklng today quoted the Kweilln uvaIOI|I0nd' ent of the Chu ' ing newspap- cr "Talrungpao" as sayin that allied bombers had attache lion; Kong and Kowloon twice "Ill month. The News Chronicle added: “The targets, the correspondent said, included ha...“ ........a, pctrol stores and Causeway nay. Jar-dine Hill fortifications and Lyemoon Pass also were bourb- ed as well as Japanese troops, causing heavy losses." The dispatch said the Ill-ll occurred during July ll and l2 and that Chunglring clrclea were eagerly awaiting official confir- mation of the correspondent’: story. Many Ganucks In llesort War OTTAWA. July 23-—(CP)—I-lun- kilinI and 911W‘ dreds of members of the Royal Can- sick cattle. ‘I wou d 0f Red Drive Soviet Position Grows Worse At Rostov; Ger- mans Press Attacks With Great Violence. (By Eddy Gllmore Assoc- iated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW. July 24—(Fri- day) — (AP) — With large forces of Axis tanks and mechanized infantry beating at the defences of Rostov, the Russians reported today that their hardy-pressed ar- mies had fallen back on one sector of that critical front after repulsing seven at- tacks through yesterday. Meanwhile, the Russians said, their forces defending the roads to Stalingrad, on the Volga, repulsed strong enemy onslaughts yesterday while in the Voronezh area at the northern end of the blazing front the Russian successes continued. The Novocherkaask area of the Rostov battle, some 20 miles northeast of the city proper, saw perhaps the most intense fighting of the day, Russian reports indi- cated. At the northern extremity oi’ the SOO-mile Don front the Russians made further bloody gains around Vuronesh, killing about 9.000 Germ- dispatches said the nar- row terrain was so littered with German and Romanian dead that the Russians walked over corpses as they pressed forward. The stoutness of the Russian Do- sltion at Voronezh constituted a D0- "TcdniiiFdnfiuaye a. col v Recommend _ Meat Inspection In Saint John , NB. July 28- @5131": of civic. rovin- clal and feder health an I811- cultu-ral re meentativea today re- endedpthet the Olly WWW“ and Board of Health draft a by-lm governing the sale of meat insa m John and that glam be made establish an ab atoir, munlclpally owned or controlled, for tho slaught- cring and inspection of mm w"! heir)? c.w. Maclvlillan. chi" "led" ical health officer for New Bruns- n, some dealers made ing to farms and livestock, even n't put it PM! wick, declared a ractioe of go adian Air Force are supporting the them to buy dead animals, if there Egypt. Air Commodore W, A. Curtii, ercnce here t ay. Other Canadian squadrons with other Mata and Oeylon-"iu fact. all ov- er the world.’ said Air Commodore Curtis, who will return to Britain shortly after a brief visit for oon- ferences with high rankinl! officials at R. c. A. F. headquarters here. ‘lie revealed that some Canadians had been fighting in Russia and had returned to Brlain on leave. but declined to go into details. And bere of the . . . l". and the R, A. I'M-could be found in hundreds of R. A. P. squadrons. Salvage To , Re ‘ Help Servicemen g; we; "135 )_;t‘l?:: to olaoe VIRO 0 d on the doorstep M‘ m‘ o1. 7-22-bt-20. leotor will provide recreational fa- was nobody around to see them d0 it. ht and sold s“§,hpog§§‘°§cai°§§d veal calves meat to market in early Ylmmml u’ hours. he declared- , Fredelcton, field mlicsvinrgtriiewii. the llederai De- partment oi Aaflevliflrs- "id “l” alaughm-ln; o; 1,000 head of live- may a. month would entitle ‘h! c1 to have a federal inspect/W- geunciuor All. skalins said he personally had seen many 5W" selling meat unfit for consumvilflfl- lloney Restrictions 2S - (OP) — UITAWA July iii-actions’ on u» industrial use was snnounnd tonisht artlme Prices and Trade Board. Industrial users will be llmligd, in each 941 to the amount of pcrsdd yelr- s» it inma- ciuned for Canadian troop! at home afffllflfdflflfTw OFT", m", England under a new system for use of sal vage funds announced at- a m!!! 44-!!- conferenee here today- from the sale of ulvllv, over in crltilenl fir"? tllméd tertainment. ewoannsmuo orims isnom a. . Jul aa-(o 1M l" ... . v - vm landed LOU , Pl-Gettlng awn in a eta 0f yOlllfltlfY J the gugly and demand stueiion McGill University Faculty Changes ,M,-mna1., l as - 0e)- ‘line ado-d of Glvuvgmors of cGili l; wday appointed Dr. J. Upmgmlll, heretofore dean of gradual» studies and resewdl. II dean of the facultv of engineer. Sim???‘ tfirmnsrn Prof il...'°'."'.i nlorhembty. wm‘ m- md Dr. O‘Neill en Dr. Brown llv devote his entire time to g. 1L‘ |— WWar Situation LastNight Third Toehold 0n llew Guinea (By KiRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Aus- tralia, July za-fAPi-Some 1,500 to 2,000 Japanese troo s were dug in tonight at their t lrd toehold on New Guinea, the great island just northeast of Australia, - ing a tentative new threat to rt Moresby, most advanced Allied base in the south seas. The landing was at Buna, 110 miles across the narrow neck Papua from Port Moresby on the eastern peninsula of New Guinea and on the northern shore. Allied fliers inflicted heavy casualties, sinking a transport and landing barge and destroying a seaplane, o. communique said. Island Airman Killed In Ferry Bomber Brash MONTREAL, July 23—(CP)-'I‘.he R0 al Air Force ferry command t ay released the names of the five crewmen who were killed yes- terda in the crash of a ferry com- man Hudson bomber at nearby Ste. Genevieve. They were:- Flight Lieutenant John Kingsley Rhodes, RAF, Roundhay, Leeds. Englland. Captain of the aircraft. Plot Officer Francis G, Mclnnls. R.C.A.F‘., Armadale, P. E, 1. Sgt. John Lionel Anderson. R. A. A. r‘., Kogarah. New South Wales. Richards. The ominous German boast that Nazi forces have crossed the Lower Don east of the Douets Confluence on a wide front remained un- confirmed’ u this was written, encouraging hope that the Russians have averted so perilous a breakthrough on that vital river front. The Nazi battle design must fall short o! decisive results while a Russian stand along the loft bank of the Don is possible. The Russian defence line still guards the oil fields nf the Caucasus, communications between Red armies of the south and those od the north and cast and the Allied supply routes for Russia via the Persian Gulf, Iran and the Caspian so long as it lies unbroken along the Don, O I O I O I Moscow confirms Nazi claims of close investment of Rostov on the right or north bank of the Don near its mouth, stating that “the battle of Rostov is on.” The implication is that Marshal Timoshenko has elected to stand siege at Rostov rather than fall back across the Don at that point to stand along the left bank. It follows that if Tlmoshenko has left a heavy force on the north bank, he has some other purpose in mind than merely outpost prougcg- ion for his Don front. He still may hope to use his northbank brldgg- head for counte attack operations, once the enemies could be brought lo a stand against the Lower Don and‘ its marshes. U I O O U U The fut that Russian forces still were fighting north of the Don in the Rostov environs, according to last reports from Berlin, tends also to challenge the Gcrrnan claim to a widefront crossing of the Don '10 miles eastward above the Donets inflow point. Moscow also admits a. further German advance eastward in the Don bend toward Stalingrad where Berlin said little Russian resistance was being encountered. The indicated explanation of that is that Timo- shenko is still falling back upon the Don to keep his lines intact around the perimeter o! the bend and thus guard at least the narrow, high- ground corridor between the Don and‘ the Volga east of the Don bend which is StallngrarPs last protection. That corridor is less than 50 miles wide, which sufficiently indicates the desperately slim margin remain- ing if the Nazi steamrolle. is to be halted short of cutting 'I‘lmoahenlro'a forces apart and isolating the Caucasus frmn the rest of Russia. Cardin Says Quebec S t. Ronald Edlred . . . L"i’=’°‘%*151’“i§3éci“§i35%ncc"- Submit To Conscription ph , ‘R.C.A.F_ Vancouver. ‘line plane crashed in an oatfield on the farm of- Joseph Iegault be- tween 90mm ma,“ and s,“ Gen” Hanson Takes Former Minister of Public Works vieve. A man who was watching the progress of the bomber through the To Task 1n Flery Speech- sky said "the plane was coming _______ -' from the direction of Dorval airport. .3__ CP,_H _ p_ Suddenly it burst into flames and Jexlqavllgfxllffélllfer ‘ mnflswfi?‘ o, nosed toward the ground." t . t m “We works who Another witness said the bomber leflfiggr Mggkengie King Cabin“ Miffiédiletli ltlienflguitlgunfderry because of the soverlvw“ 901W m‘ J l_ 5 i overseas conscription, said in the ifiénliiiiiiticrscidginirliif u v n House of Commons today that Quo- ._.____.. bec would submit to conscription for Pilot. Officer Francis G. McInnls overseas because it was the wish is a native of Selkirk Station, Arm- of the majority. adale Post Office, which is about Mr. Cardin spoke on the debate 30 miles east of St. Peter's, He was on the government bill to permit well and favourably known through- conscnpuon m, service overseas by out the eastern section of the pro- ordephhcounclL Me- " the law ls enacted. a‘.- He was 22 “d jmned the Royal ihOmleIlt Ls the worst law that hus canadm‘ A" PM” ‘m July n‘ m?‘ ever been passsd by the Canadian About three weeks ago he receiveg democracy we Wm submit to m,“ his wings and has been statione law“ he gam “we Wm obey m‘, m“ Mmtreal ever since will“ fly- lawl There will be no trouble." klgevflrllg Zkiiiu1ii§§ync<=°T§Ti§iit' for a Mr. Cardin snid some had gear in St. Peter's South school an)? clairbrlegd alley u "imvslg? “gsadlonynh ad previously attended Prince Que w enmie com H he s-Md Wales College in Charlottetown. Well, let - em l c, f m m His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jorge! "...We are not afra d ct e d. A, McInnls. were notified of c we are citizens of this coun ry, an‘ sad accident by wire Wednesday 9V‘ there is no majority in Canada hm enlng. Besides his parents there are ,5 suing so wlpe out the minority of two bYOthQTS- at h°m°' and ”' 515m“ the Province of Quebec. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, July Zk-(Frldayl- (APl-Allled bombers made five attacks Thursday on new Jap- anese installations near Buna, Papua, and left a 5.000-ton Jap- anese transport burnlng, Allied headquarters announced today. Buildings and barges at Go- na Mission, the tlemcnt on the northern coast of New Guinea whore the Japanese suc- cceded in nllsembarklng between 1,500 and 2,500 troops Wednes- day, were rairlcd lav Alilru dive- bombers, a communique said, All the bombs fell 1n lhe tar- get area. Fighters also Attacked ll-e Gona toehold where an antl- nlr craft battery was silenced. lllfgrlyi Jane in Montreal, to mourn C m I _______i oss. r ca m My W“ “Wm” "°"‘ "am" 360 Per Cenlt Boost Montreal last evening and will ar- rum” Home Leader Hark five at Bmde“ this ‘MQQQL 3 sorfiaoflosigowed Mr. Cardin with a $1111 13° all“; ‘1}.‘*"§m‘,’,{ Qfinnun-Qlde fiery speech in which he took the °'~"' .' tertotaskfor and escorted to Amlvildiflelghfiilivlie §3$e§>r“iiiiscxii§§i's remarks and WASHINGTON, July 2&—(AP) m‘ The m‘ i°n bride honors directed criticism at the cor"- ——A 360 per w“ Increase i" "m" buried with m1 ‘in rats were not party which he asserted had sac- a1 ship construction over a year The mmra1l%rralm§t e rlflced any chance it ever had t0 ago-and development of an air arm completed as n“ ‘ mum power, by opposing the con- "which will provide the ._— , m; ti t t ffensive Halifax Plans , wg-lispttliilld Cardin that the lat- 25122351: navalcliisltgilclygsgs ogre re- Housing ProJect d ilt b, tl . House of gelptfeseiilgtlgvlrws lllavnile Committee. ,.1 action-A nar- tfarllfidlgifi toga 0011191105994 H51‘ In U. S. Shipbuilding .____ (Continued on page e. C01 ll Claims 7-day Week The committee also reported that Q5 per cell! 0f Will‘ COIIlTBCl/OTS 8T8 not profiting unduly, but recon:- O if housing situation was found tc- c A m, new,“ nllzllt as the city council. by a. vloifi Plan Bad FOP MOYHIC $$d€ge rgrgtlrflinz me p“ can, of 9-1, authorized Wartime llgus no f; from nehnchmg themselves at pub. Limited t0 construct some J0 D79“ VANXUVER. July 33-(OP)— “c ex_penae‘,, fabricated houses in the north end of the city. Ardmore Park and t ‘ S are: ricer“: azspzriuriifii- c‘ n . wet mowetilhté limped to a. cost nl m0.- tllw mnnnuous pmdui; c» crew "'~°"*l~.'*::..r:rls 322...???‘-J.':.;::..2":at.’cr-n.. i-igilsgfncigkbii-dtlgizinri-ess prevent/ed morale of shipyard Wofkem building on the Commons and ctltrgr lung was needed for military D chsTown Man po l. no To Broadcast _ J r za-ror»... cnllifd Pllahwagulryll‘: "Lgltegcwgrom Igritain" broagé " " . "' - ta std (CBC-lltolli rec-cat. '*-.'...":=."...::*z.lr2z. gamer oflinaniTn-vs. Two ycuns eom- ("We film“ “M” nk ranicns suffered mom and facial Charlottetown: Stewart (TB - “gun” initials unavailable). w. Clark, engine rifzcr at North Van Ship Repairs, Limited. today hip, ' the commission investigating The report said that 3,230 naval s in the classifications of combatant and uuXill-"lly ships and patrol and mine craft, were bulld- ing as of June 20, 1942. as com- pared with 69'! a ycar e80. Bo sharp has been the speed up in ship construction. that the time for completing a battleship has been cut from the pro-emergency average of 42 months to 36 months. aircraft carriers from 45 months to 17.3 months, heavy cruisers from_ 36.4 to 22.7. light cruisers. 33.8 to 22.3. destroyers, 27.2 to 11.6 and submarines 21.2 to 11.5. Charge Conspiracy To Promote Revolt WASHINGTON, July fi —(A.'Pl ... A widespread consprzcy to pro. mote revolt in the Uni-ted States army and navy was charged rday in an indictment against 3B per- Dlsirlct Court here. The accusation. carrying pen- dltles up to 20 years in prison and $10,007 fine, climaxed nine months’ investigation by n. llhderal Grand Jury which reached into all parts of the country in hearing nearly ‘lmo pages of Witnesses ‘The defendants probably will be arraigned Wrrhingion next Thursday. a justice department official said. with the trials pro. bably starllrv in late Septzmber or early October. To Senate Now! King Speaks Hanson Urges People to Unite With? out Regard to Political Views. llbmmons Told’ Second Front Secret Matter Another Huge Convoy With U. S. Fighting Men Arrives Overseas. ByedDrew Middleton (Asaocia Press Staff Writer) IDNDON, July 23 — (AP) _.. Ihe government declined flatly today to let the House of com- mons in on whatever plans it has for a second front, but ‘he tenor of its statement coup/i. with an announcement that Britain was dissing deep info her remaining manpower aroused speculation as f0 whether a decision has been reached on an invasion of Europe i0 help Russia. Further it was officially an. nouncs-d that another United states convoy. one of the largest ever to cross the Atlantic, had brwsfnt nmny Amcrican soldiers and airmen to flllgtnent, thp Allied divisions in the British Isles. The convoy had d, safe crossing and its‘ personnel is scattered over fr? British Isles in training bl]. es. The secfind frclnt was the day's maJor pc ico-miilar toric in ll British circles, y l a Sll‘ Stafford Crlpps, Commons spokesman for Pr Minister Churchill, gave the muryberg of Commons lo understand the gov- ernmrnt would not tip its hand in reply to d frequent gzvernmecat heckler, Aneurin Bevan, Labor. Bevan questioned the wisdom of adlourning for d surrmer recess while the country was agitated over the governrrentis military intenticns after Sir Stafford a11- Munced the proposed rece=s dates. “Whatever intentions the gov- ernment has in mind, it would be quite impossible for them u; a_-l_ nounce ifnam ei her publicly or in 59"“ $551011." Si!‘ Stafford re- plied. To bolster the armies and arms factories for whatever test the Dlflflfiolls Russian situation might 31mins; hisnriiviemde“ if silnllmlmlcd n e rs a: f 1924 and in 1e94, ° ‘Ihe ls-yeaixolds will regi for the fighting services _Aug, the oldsiers will sign Saturday employment in war plants. Commenting on the call-up, she Sim‘ Sold it "marks the bccinniirg of the end of our calLup of man- p wer." stei- l5, for O llazis Make- lleavy Raid 0n Britain LONDON. July 2a _ (FRIDAY) -—- (QP- — The hraviest German air attack on Brutain in weeks broke over tines sections of Erl- sland early today, with Nazi ra d- ers scatlcring bombs and toms defying intrnse aniLaircrafg, iii-e. The raiders hit at the norm and east Midiaizds, caeicrn En- gland and east- Anglia, sending down showers of flan-s and fol- lowing them with hish explsives. The Germans flrw over after another day of RAP, attacks an occupied areas, British Spitfires flow fast and low over the Germin-occupicd coast today in their fifth cc:1. secutive day of such raiding, spat- tering mazhlne-gun fire and pouring bfllflbs on enemy troops and 81in Positions and road. rail and canal traffic Although the ‘an Ministry said the operations were not on a lalicge g: n- lcnsive. and stiff oppodticn from imphed in British announcement of the loss scale. they were descr the defenders vras of seven of the swift fighters. Reconnaissance phrtrgrap‘1ssl10w_ sons vchlc-h was opened in Federal ed the RA l", attack on Duisburg Tuesday was one of the most euc- cessful ln the Ruhr CONVICTED FOR SALVAGE THEFT MONTREAL, July 23 - (CH- testimony by - 150 Leo Moreen, 33, and Albert tBHIgQt- o ne Mar- after lice caught lfilegn] wiig“: S O 911 odd of sa vase emu“ m me 32, were sentenced tcda month in ja=l by Judi!!! chand each a few 110"“ put on curihs by north end of the city- OTTAWA, July 23—(CP]‘ —The House of Commons tonight gave third reading by l-il io 45 to the govern- ment bill to permit conscrip- tion for overseas service b] order-in-council. The bill now moves to the Senate and when it has been finally approved by Parlia- ment and given Royal assen: the government may. if '_ believes conditions require it, have men called for com- pulsory military service made liable for overseas ser- vice by order-ln-council. The C.C.F. party mem- bers, led by M. J. Caldwell, House leader, voted against third reading of the bill, although a few minutes be- fore they had voted against an amendment by J. S. Roy (Ind. Gaspe) which would have had the effect of giv- ing the bill a six months’ hoist. The vote rejecting the Rog amendment was 150 to 37. Conservative House Lead- er Hanson, in his final ad- dress on the bill, urged that Canadians unite without re: gar-d to political views in this time of danger. In the vote on the main motion to give the bill third reading, Que- bec Libcrals and members of tho C.C.F. rqprcsenied the main op- position. The C.C.F. has opposed the bill on the grounds that conscription. of wealth and industry ShOllld be applied simultaneously with tho conscription of manpower. The House and galleries wero well filled as the Prime Minister defended his course on overseas conscription, Mr. King spoke immediately after Conservative House Leader Hanson had finished a speech with a plea. for forgetting political party differ- ences and for a union of forces to win the war. Mr. King said that if the people did not have confidence in the (Coniinued on page 7, Col 4) _______?. . 410s l5 fill: QNLY Knlo or a Srthsh MOST or us Wu. H“. Evan MAKE in ’llllS WORLD -__~_—T'_ fr-i-I-‘i-‘f?! f?" High tidc this evening at 1.16 and tomorrow ll10flllllL! at B. . Sun sets this cvehlnR It 7-37 W‘ rises tomorrow morning at 436- Summerside tide eighteen mlmllkl later than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SERVICE BAIL‘ EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — Leave 9.25 mm» 1,00 p,m__ 4.45 p.m., 7.55 o-in. Leave Caps Tormcnilon — 11-“ d.m., 3.15 p.m., 6.45 p.m., 9.10 n-III- SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. 27 inclusive) Leave Borden 9.00 a. m" 5-45 P-m‘ Leave Tcrmentlen 10.15 l-Il-a 8.00 p.m. P. a. l.—N. s man! sanvwl m“ Wood lllllllll 1.00 m. 11M "ikeaveiucnirlbon I um. l run. lrll 5-30 p-m. Am snvwl Charlottetgzgéalgllmerillh‘ Leave ‘Charlottetown 0-35 n. mJ .45 p. m. Leave Summerslde 1.10 n. m4 l.” "like Moncton ll a. m4‘ all $1. . m. n Dally except Bind!!- '““’:'.'.<a<=z'..~ ~1w ~