OIL MERE MAN M bglnfirll ortler thutfil MAXIMS In '$|l:o¢heaveu is on the lid: the Read by Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Everybody MAXIMS OI‘ A MERE MAN Consider-a‘ for women ls the pleasure of a nation's progress In social life. "only; Gulrdllll. Founded 1881. ehorlotie British- 2ncl Army Opens Strong Drive In Holland loan Total $4,249,300 In Province- ptgl in th eventh 133;’ loan in this. Parovinoe has reached $9.300, it was an- nounced t night. Belarus for the loan are believed to be ul- ‘m “igpli”. ‘ by the peo wgfmthisi‘ Province has gfllflhtd he loan to more than l per cent in EXG~I of the $3.300.1)00 “diamant- the totals are u "W “Tmflifir; .“"-“:°= oun o s umm r- P-"“°°si:,oa4,o:yso; Charlottetown, 51,3 0,600; ueen's County out- side Char ottetown_ $726.51] King’; County, $lD6.9.-r0. Souris Veteran Returns liome After long ‘War Service A veteran of both the Sicilian and Italian campaigns. Pte. Frank Praught of Sourls reached the City last night en route to his home. He was met at the station by his wife and Mr. James T. Robison of the Veterans‘ Welfare Division. Pte. Praught enlisted March I. 1040 and after some weeks of train- ing at Petawatva left without em- barkation leave for England. There he joined the 1st Field Company. He landed in Sicily in the assault on that island July l0. 1D43...Whan Sicily had been cleaned up he was rent to Italy in the second wave landing in Italy on September 3rd. He participated in the battles of Campobasso and Ortona and in the assaults upon the Gustav and llitler Linea. On June 17 of this year he was invallded to the 14th General Hospital in Italy where he remained ten days. From there he was sent to the 22nd General Hospital in England. A fcw weeks ago he was "boarded out" for medi- cal reasons and sent home in an En- glish hospital ship. Pte. Prauglit has a poor opinion of the fighting quality of the Ital- ian soldier. The German soldier. he said. was a "different matter." The German would fight hard and. w lone as he had a chance. to the very last. NOMINATB LABOR MEN BELFAST — (GP) - The 1111791‘ party is planning to nominate 25 candidates at th.= first election for the Northern Ireland parliament after the war. At prea- ent ths party has only two rep"!- sentatlves in the House. Coming Eyents "Bhovr - Craoaud Thursday. 11-14-31. “Chicken Supper in Long River liail, 'i"hursduv, November 10m. If not fine. Fridav evening. 11-16-21. "'i‘ryon Baptist supper and Bazaar in Church Hall, Wednesday. November 15th. “Dance. Iona Hall. Thursday. November 10th. Miilview Orcllfigtaia‘. "Rlsnmlaee Sale, Holy Name n Pantry Sale. Meadow Bank W- l. Friday afternoon November bec we will organize such a no v. 11th ‘ _ _ , . . . ‘i “°*°"_"i'_‘“'"°~ “ ‘° “y ‘fiftieth? ‘ti? igffriirwifrriiifiirfffie British Parliament "Card Party and Lump, swan I are declccd w work against lsolat- __ liiie Bay Hall, November l5. i°n~ - -' LONDON, Nov. 14 — (C?) —The 11.15.11. House of Commons voted today to‘ “Bocial evening in Vict i Hall. mesdav. November legrrracood °- 11-15-11. "Hunter River farmers loading a?“ hogs Friday. No slaught- l bennits required. Book. 11-18-51 so "‘__ Dam Pownal n l1. w d- {Ia-dv. November 1am ' aids M overseas cisarettclfumth “Lemuel Crasweli uni din gr bulk barley Wedneldaytullov". ' age. Bring own 11-14-21 “tlhleken Raffle Musical us. t"=~“'*"-» an. we - 11-10-11. “fiddly. November 1 ti??? sorrow’ t. iibngmftilfrii We‘. ii§°.'“°°w;' _ ‘Y- 11-14-21. fa"! Pm and D in In. ‘h? “all. {hursduvfnclelo bu- nmwg 5mm v . A u. n . general 0g . s , _ m Pr?‘ awrdav Decsmbelrblgaifi Eunice. in: th ir "m; Guurdluu, Two Cenll. WOMAN £13014. Nov. 14 — (AP) J1me British 2nd Army today opened a lmmk drive in southeastern H01]. 5nd» 51911111118 across two canals and Ovvupyinc at least two towns while he Americar 3rd Army 150 m“. es to the south struck to points two miles from the fortress city or Metz. , As American forces closed in on the city on the south and southeast a front dispatch said its fall gp_ cured to be but a matter of days, not hours. M the flaming around Mctz thus IDBGBIBG to be rushing toward a svv t and totallv unanticipated cli- luaxbethe British 2nd army lashed out hind a roaring barrage of 40o Runs in a strong drive east of the Netherlands village or Nedgywggrg’ 18 miles west and slightly south of Vanio and some 38 miles north- west of Aachen. An hour after Field Marshal Mont- gomerv sent his forces churning towar the German border a fipokesman for the British 2nd ar- mv declared "the attack is going B to Dian." All Associated Press field dcsputch said the assault was making “smushingiy good head. WE .. y. The rest of the British-Canadian front along the 11m of the Macs (Mouse) River and the Holland- sche Diep rluminz west across Hol. land was quiet. U- - 3rd v-Pmv forces, who open- ed their winter offensive just a week ago, met astonishingly light resistance as they smashed in upon reputedly lmprcgnable Metz. As the nearest forces from the south and southeast. other units acivcmced to points within three miles of the citv on the west. Paris radio reported the Gccrman garrison of Thionvillc, heavily-for- tified steel centre l6 miles north of Mctz, ilnd surrendered. For sev- erai-weeks American troops have ileld the part of Thlonville on ms west bank of the Moseiic. with Ger- mans clinging to the eastern half of the city. There was no Allied confirmation that the citv had been captured. rv Declares Majority 0f Quebec People Loyal To Canada HAMILTON, Nov. 14 — (OP) _.. The Devble of Quebec "have our- selves to cure our own ills" but it would be unpatrlutic for other parts of Canada “to piav into (he hands cf our isoiationlsts bv ac- cepting the idea. of a sc-purub: state on the soi.i of Quebec Province." Senator '1‘,D. Bouchard said here tonight. In an address prepared for dc- llvery before the llulniltou Junior Chulnber o: Comnv tcc. (he Quebec.‘ behavior" said “tile tulle liars arriveui to nave the people front L110 other’ provinces learn that the majority the Wench-Canadians who are loyal to their country should not he left alone as has been recently sug esteo bv some EhKllSIl-SCi-iklflfl poi 116111115." “The lune hus collie for us Freufll-Sbcuklhg Canadians to react uiainst the small but influential section of our compatriots who are not unlv working to disrupt con- federation but are trying to impose on us a government in which the will of the people will be set at naught and our economic Will be patterned on the fascist model which has sent Italv to its run." Mr. Bouchard said that "it is truc- enouvzh that it is ourselves who would be the worst losers" from nnv spilt between Quebec and the other provinces" but why siloulu v defeating the unrelent- s of our common enemy. get together and build a . Canada measure up ‘to the bot- rntiailtics of the people living there- D- “T can be done by ogposh the ggllcv of isolation of t a wig main races in everything. In LONDON, ~ (OP) Blackout I6- Bearlng oattlc Lady Nelson. WllS splinters from bombs. tiroppcd by German planes, struck mm in the leg willie he has ieaumz: a convoy o1 nmbulallcxs back from me lront but tueJlmpumnt-cs were scarred bv shrapnel." he recalled. L. lottetown, who was running acrossu flelo mar Fulalsc in PTZIIICE when Allied planes ' bombs near _ necessitated amputation of his left N111. - Vote To Prolong CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1944 War _ preaching " war While it ' aEJZEIFLZYFNag By KIRK! L. BIMPBON. Auoclated Prces War Auulylt The death of the giant Nazi superdreaduau in. Norwegian waters by six-ton British "blockbuster-f came too lute in the European war to be of prime importance on that front. But its sinking will have effect in the Pacific area. Already badly crippled in previous British air and submarine raid: upon her hideouts. she had been living on borrowed time for mouths. Her destruction sooner or later was certain. She had become u Nani liability rather than a military asset, a naval lame-duck fleeing up- ‘au ground forces in Norway. . The ship did have certain diversion values for Germany’: Japanese .. . n, .._.. . Tirpltl, sunk lu afloat a ‘I most Bay of Bengal immediately. .1 comma can be broken. indicated. 2D-Ton Rockets Proved Failure i LONDON. Nov. l4 - (GP Months or unsuccessful cxncfuuzcrlts with filo-ton rockers have delayed the Germans’ V-Z time tubic lure. convinced tllenl it would be 1m- possible to use rockets against North America in this war. a usual- gdwell-informed source sugczsted ny. The monstrous rocket orilzirlaily was designated us V-2. this infor- mant said, and had a IZ-ton war- hznd. Large supplies of critically needed will‘ material were Elven (on priority for its production. he ad- ded, continuing: the rockets were Hundreds of _ IO BXIJEITImCIIIKII to ; _ launched _ zones but failed mach (he groluid. German scientists theorized that friction created by their great weitzht and speed caused them to disintegrate in :he stratosphere." 32 N. S.-P. E. l. Veterans lire Back In Danada HALIFAX, Nov. 1i — (OP) — scars from France and italy, a2 Noun accuu fznu ram. 1. veterans returned to Canada to- t 1n duy. catching the first gumpse of a their homeland m manv months from the deck oi tho hospital snip lrrlvatc wliircd Alien. of Triuo returned to Canada when was hit E 2 F5 Q. 5' ea o r- Z E A victim cf irzlstakrn identity was -Cpi. Vincent lvrcCapc. of Char- dropped a stick of shrapnel wounds the life ni Britain's nine- strictioxis on all passenger-way- ing aircraft flying between Eire F rench Seek — By John M. lllghtovver wnarfnvcvmn, Nov. 14 - (AP) — The Hench are seeking apr- roximately two billion dollars wor h of United States exports during the next l2 months for use in rebuild- e country, it was learned! mylm em nts f the , rrang e or curement program already are nes- ring comp etlon. Some of th may be shipped on land-lease be- cause they are considered necessary to France's war effort aaginet Ger- many or Jo an but the great bulk will go part y for cash and, the oi’- ficials. hove. Partly on credit. The French program. probably the farthest advanced of the cc- 11-16-21. -~.v \s9-\ v vrA onornia plans to come out of lib- I prolong: year-o d months. and Britons 1331;.been_1cmoyed_.;_i{quse_of__Lords.“_ Material In The U. S. g erated Europe, culls for purcha- sing 700 locomotives as well as oom- parable quantities of railway roll- ing stock and track trucks for highway transport: huge shipments of cotton. fertilizers and other raw materials. hugs pro-iiibseration of Franco t It the I'l- vages of war had not been as great as officials first bellcved- Th! amounts of factory equlpment d0" glrgd have been sharply reduced and the amounts of raw materials required to keep existing French factories running hut/c bwl 81'"!- ly increased. Similarly there was a ' in incl-sage in fertilizer and other food producing materials. parliament for l2 more The pleasure goes to the Rebuilding W modern battleships must necessarily ‘ ‘ _ against the possibility that the Tirpltz might be repaired null seat to sea in suicide raids on Allied Atlantic supply lines. That deferred the day when the full weight of British capital lhlsv power could be thrown against Japan. battle strength of Britain's Home Fleet obviously can be shifted to the The only sea. force of battleship calibre still in Axis hands 1| what is left of the Japanese navy. The London Admiralty is just as anxious to come to grips with it as Admiral Nimitz. Furthermore. the availabil- ity of British heavy craft from the Atlantic could t-emeudousiy strengthen the hand of Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten, Allied southeast Asia souo , for amphibious operations. The more big ships there are available when the Allied trek back to the Malay mnlnsula-Singaporc. Sumatra and Java belius- sooner the Japanese hold on the whole southern end of the China Sea. In view of now favorable weather conditions In Indian wafers. action of some sort against Japa It will come the sooner because of the sinkin of the Tirpitz. Maj-Gen. Fo-ulkes Heads Canadian 2nd Division ' outfit from which the troops were was slow but steadv during 1n Atlantic waters to guard With the Tirnltz sunk the main the “reld areal is clearly By JOHN DAUPHINEE LONDON. Nov. i4 — (C Cab1e)—. The second Canadian division-the taken for the Dieppc rcconnalssalzce in force ill 1942 and which took Dicppe this ‘wear as the Canadi army stormed along the cwannel coast-As commanded by Ma_.-Gen. Charles Fculkes. 41-Year-olt Der- manenerforoe nfflc-cr- Canadian m! ital’); headquarters n London an- nounced tonight _ This dark-haired officer with sharp features and keen expression, who comes from lnndon. Ont. also acted as a corps commander durini; the recent illness of Lt-Grn. Cre- rar. ccmmancler-in-chief of the 1st Canadian army. At that time La-Gen. Guv Simcnds. cows oom- mander. was actlrlz army com- mander. w 5 Dttavva Papers Say King Unlikely To Demand Vote _.__. OTTAWA, Nov. 14 — (CP) The Ottawa ‘Citizen and Ottawa Journal in newspage stories on the assembling of the House of Com- mons on Nov. 22 today said Prime Minister Mackenzie King, instead of insisting on a vote of confid- ence on the voluntary system of reinforcements, will place the facts before the House and be governed by whatever decision the House makes. The Journal said:- "When the House resumes, Mr. King will state his position in support of continuation of the voluntary system of reinforcing the army. "But having long underlined his belief in the sovereignty of Parlia- ment, Mr. King will qualify his position by making it clear at the outset that if the House wants conscription he will accept it. "Then should the House de- cide that the ‘Zombies’ must be sent overseas to immediately rectify the army‘s reinforcement shortage, the decislon_\vou.ld be Parliament's, not Mr. King's. “And the vote would not be one involving 'confidence’." The Citizen sa '- “It is the stated intention of the Government ‘to place all the facts before the House‘ and bc governed by its decision in the light of information which ls given and the discussion which takes place. "The House is not being recali- ed for the specific purpose of asking a vote of confidence in the Government's policy, as it has been outlined. It is not being called. either. to endorse a policy of conscription. Rather, it is izc- lng brought back so that the sit- uation, as it exists at the time that the members are here, may be fully revealed. and discussed. Woot- ever action is taken will be in the light of t eso discussions. ~-"’l'he and! tanding is that the door -is not shut against any plicy which Parliament, when l‘. as the facts, may deem it wise to take." Souris Man Tells 0f Battle 0f Wits Gen. Foulkes, a native of Stock- wn-on-toes, Durham, Enilland. did not go to Dieppe two Years alzo. '1‘hut expcditton was headed bv the then divisional commander. Mal-- Gen. J.I-l. Roberts. and Foulkes did not become a Maior-General until January. 1943 But, he was in command of the division when it swept last summer through Normandy and along the channel coast to get revengv for the heavv casualties suffered two years earlier m a frontal assault y taking Dieppe from the rear. (ton. Puuikts has spent more than 20 years in the Canadian ar- my. l-fe came to Canada 1n 1908 and was first commissioned as a. Ident- in a Canadian machine gun corps in 1923 and his promotgon vears of peace. Then came the war, Foulkes was he returned to Canada to help train another division, returninsz to Eng- lnrrzi in July. 194i, us Brigadier General staff at headquarters of the Canadian annv overseas W Gen. s London, Ont. his home, h and 10-year-old son Philip now are Home Brew Drink Fatal To Lumberjacks MURRAY BAY. Que» Ncvl 14 ._ (CP) -- I'wo lumberjaeks died and two others were in hospital here tonight after they drank a home- made drink distilled from a variety The two dead men. who were celebrating theii return from four mouths hard work in the Lake St. John district. are Gerard Carre, 1'1; and Joseph Edouard Dassylva. 18. of nearby St. Fidele. Their companions. who were said to be "out of danger" in a hospital here, are Albert Ncron, l8. of St Fidelc: and Joseph Savard. 20, of equipment; It has recently been revised as a uit of the discover upon the (cod required and an Pei‘? Qfiualilllhl- After spending two months _ JPrench hospital under the eyes of Gestapo agents, Corporal Ambrose‘ Jury lnte tOdBY after 30-minute de- Maclntyre. Souris. P . E1. cd to Canada _ y deadly battle of wits waged between French doctors and nurses and Hu- ler’s henchmen. the wards of the hospital daily to pick out prisoners they considered fit. for removal to camps wlule the he French medical staff “shammed“to keep the wounded in thou beds the city from the Germans in Aug- ust. the visit o1 the Gestapo kept every prisoner wondering whether his ra cards for the day". Corporal Mac- Inltisrre said. treatment of prisoners thouah the Gestapo agents searched everynlow patient for valuables. giving lum n (e receipt which Bald "was scarcely worth the Dam. ' 1 1 _ _ _ was ten on." living ml, “ML” C Landing in trance with i111 North Nova Scctia Corporal Maclntyre Pia wen which ' the o ning hours of th; 1111755101.. and fnally was cut off bv the Ger- m ans. hMarched along a road well be- prisoners was for Germans. The group. lilCllldlllR Macfntyre. was straftd by Aliiec. planes 0n June ll the wounded prisoners .he Moscow broadcast by the RlISGiug; night of preparing Spain ns haven for Hitle criminals. Quality that Satisfies "sauna" _'I'BA, 8: COFFEE 10 PAGES Mull. $4.00; other Provinces & U.S.A. 85.0.. Subscription Delivered. $5.00. . ||iam Ifliflyan Dies ti: Wound In Back A ifillfiC fatality occurred in Charlottetown last night when William AIcNeill, 27 King Street, better known as "Bill” Ryan. died =11 IIPPYO-‘iimaleli’ 3-50 in the City About 9 lfclock last night Sgt llcc received n call Ryan, brother saying that he (Stanley) we! at cr had just died. Sgt. received further information to the c-ffert that William had stag- gered from his house at 27 King lstreet about 8.30 last night and llari collapsed on the from where Stanley and one Arthur Clyke, 28 Union Street, had rushed the injured man to (he Ci ' Hospital. by, nit-Innis iiiiti (Isl. Duncan ivlavPllali thereupon uncut to ‘.17 King street l\l1(i searched the pre- mise-s after having talked to Mrs. Mcivelll. ‘Iiae officers took pos- session of two long bread knives upon vilc curl of one of which tllerc was n substance resembling blood. ‘they luck Mrs. McNclii to tile Iioliee station. Accompanying her was her (laughter, Mrs. York Gallant vcliose husband was lost in action on a Canadian destroyer. Coroner Dr. I. J. Yeo was sum- . Hospital a o'clock and is- ir to have an in- quest. A jury was sworn in at the Hospital at 10.15 and viewed the body. The inquest was then adjourned till this evening at 7.30. It will lllPPL at the City Police Court. Tile nnlnes of the jury are: Byron Brown (foreman), iJtilllCS Bl'(J\\ll, Major McKenzie, ‘Alex MCLCIiJl, William lulylln, Ro- land Diamond, and Allison ‘Mc- Lend. Ryan imol :1 wound in his back. ‘below the f: shoulder. Apparently l lt was I‘. only injury’ on the body. All will be hcln today. Beslr s e daughter, Mrs. York Gallon’, Lilere is a sou, Donald. age i) years. The lute William Ryan, who was about 45 years of age, was an athlete in his younger days and a hall player of consider- able fllliliiy. For some time before his death he llad- been employed a‘. tile Charlottetown airport. With Nazi fission» ils Found Guilty HALIFAX, Nov. 14 - for) ll] A return- todav to He said the Gestapo men toured Until American troops arrested nsfer to a camp was “on the e said he saw no oases of mis- the returned man the column oi ind enemy lines. evidently mistaken After the Antérlcans llberntcr. Sbfllli °l 1°11"! vellum)?" t" "1181 3V MW" iimitisl irelfltfrgnrltfrrrilliizlcganiuxilrltirnt‘all~ 1'5""? m" 5 ‘m? @1551 ci- Canada aboard the hospital still)‘ Lady Nelson I accuse r5656.) LONDON, Nov. l4 (AP) Gen. Franco was accused in commentator I. Yermnsllev t0- a r and other war .1 SHERBROOKE, Que.. Nov. 14 _ (CF) _ An ail-French liberation found Mrs '1‘ Proven- tell oi a. cher, 55 year old Sherbmoke for-U time teller. guilty of interfering with .'rrln_v "eel-lilting. The jury recom- mended her to the mercy of the court. Mrs Provencher, who last Thurs. (luv was acquitted of a charge of. conspiring to interfere with re-i cruiling and inciting army deser-l‘ lion. will be sentenced at the eliti- of the crinlinai cssizes term. I _______.________ I I Are In Accord On Manpower Question) WINNIPEG, Nov. l4 — (CPY — C l? McTlzgur of ‘Fol-onto. lyclticnwl Cllillliuhn of the Progressive Con- tolc! tire Vl'i:\.ni')cr' uckr-n club ill n luncheon 111i.- ress today that he and (he nation- al lender. John Bracken, are in ae- eerri on the manpower question. "A fiction has got around that there 111:5 been some diffrrerce of. opinicn botvreen Afr Brarkrn nndi uivself. There is no foimrlntion for‘ this idea fact." Role On Western Front: OTTAWA. Nov. Canadian i‘Iiil\\'fl\'il1(‘il have been vinfvizn: u significant part in the bani to keen supplies luovind w Allied forces in Europe. The_mcn who make up the first Canadian nrmv railway operating group are nearlv nil ex-rnilroad- crs and from their vrnrs of work ml Canadian lines tilcv brim! a vast store of knovvicdllc that helps lhzm override lnziliv oi the difficulties in lilc drive in get. lzooris to the from. u deleuw department re- lrlvse said tolliflhi. Oiri, imttered cuuipment is rc- pllircd improved and fitted to cur- ry out ulcre work than was intended for it. ‘fir: mcll sav they cio four times is much work u: Canadian rm‘. nvs and that the llllazc carried on Canadian-pp- cruted tracks in npriilern France C(\i!l‘l\l'(’S lav-ournbiv with that car- ried on tracks ln Canada ll — 1GP) -— A box enr has no nationality and‘ Alllrrl wnr equitrmexit lhesc (lav is rolling along in captured sto that rmiv n few months nszu S bcina usad by the Germans to cul- material to Germanv and rv their Italy. it has become commonplace Lulvrellcc Mclnnis of the City Po- from Stanley of Vi/iiiiam Ryan, the City Hospital where his broth- Mclnnis sidewalk speaking y fr: . 1 Ra zlwaymen Have Vztal Id???‘iMfsfl-"iiiiié?hi. QVPI‘ i Hospital. His wife, Florence Elizabeth MeNeill, was taken into custody by (he City Police on a charge of murder. Chief of Police Birtwistle stated that Mrs. ltlcNe-lll admitted having thrown a knife Alternative Courses Open To Government , When Commons Meets‘ i _-i, i i i BY ILK. CARNEGIE (Canadian Press Staff Writer) Police s... Bar, Seven Cans Di‘ Moonshine OTTAWA. Nov. l4 ~<cr>»-- Thai Hcus,l of Commons will reas-emble‘ Nov. 22 with one big 105 barf)”. members —- deciding whether the] voluntary method of supplying‘ reinforcements overseas should bet continued or whether compulsloni shwld be ‘ntmdumd’ he first indication the Cuv . .‘ '1‘ The wbmet met 1°? 2 1'3 Mimi Police had last night that there was this afternoon. but no statement grglblbiehon gigighstreet walsa about was forthcoming at the close. i 5 “' e“ ‘i ~ “"6"” c "m5 Evmenfly me cabinet has not yeti received a call to go to 28 Kin: wcrked out the procedure to be sf°°ii4§i§a§fim°iihi>arifiegiribgkfii followed when speaker J.A. GlerrfflgL were umible w h-Qd such B opens the first sitting. One minister hwfler- 591d: "I ca" 59c "0 09191‘ man in the act of transferr sev- Dfocedufe than for the Gfivefluucflt. eral cans from one car to another. to state its position and ask for al when the officers approached. the vote of confidence." |man ran away leaving his car ancl Others agreeing a vote o1 0011-. the cans in the officers possession. fidelleo would come eventually. They t0ul< bfltll C81‘ and 08115 iu flit‘- ‘suggesggd ma; unless Same ‘ma. Police Station. Examination of (he peered . developments intervened, °°mem~5 °i ‘he “m5 “mvefl w b" the proceedings would star-t, wmh a moonshine. Prosecution will - “ministerial statement.” The-y said W‘ Prime Minister MacKenzIe King would place before members the Government's views on voiuntary service and compulsion and give a detailed account of events which Report llitler as. l= flvnvalascins igrhe llalppointanenlt of General Mc-i ___. (ill-E on as his successor. . 355m“ SWITZERLAND Nov Ml. King would then suggest ai 14 _ (CELReuter) _ Hm“. new L, full debate» on his statement withi 1n Obersalzbvu-z recmm-Mm“ “um all members, whether in the cab- the throat ‘operation which he un- lnot or private mom-bus, free to derwent in October at the hands of express their views. One authority‘ Professor Eicke, s, Viennese Sur- eflid such procedure would be within neon. the Bascl new aper Arbeiter parliamentary rules. I Zeitung re rted tormzht. gmuld we day-me o, ,1 1.03.0311 His con ltion requires constant vote Show a majofltv for sendmgy attention .thc paper added. the home defence army overseas "'“‘"'" W" ' ' ,at once. then. according to some number but while lookln saw a ' . th t ld I wildfire... i °’“T°“‘....‘§’°En ‘Geffen To HAVE t wi or Commons. dissdve Tnuzc An‘ Missso ‘Plvrliarncnt. or resign and make gvlaéenfgexltthye formation of u new 414A" {o As tonne observer put it: "anything A mllzn. a ." Doubtiegswrihe Government will keep its own counsel as to what action it would take until the sit~ ‘Il/‘Xf/ nation develops. If a govern- c)! w“ Q ' Wit x ment was fomlcd the atutudc to i! ' of The Progressive Conservatives the C.C.l=‘. and Social Credit would be important. Their attitude. hcw- ever, probably would not b, mad" known until there is likelihood of silch an eventuality Russell Boucher. Progressive Con- servativc membcr fcr Carleton. 1:vcf‘:n.i:l_v r-wrrsseci the view of the average private Progressive Cin- servetive mr-nlber vvh in a state- rrcnt. he urged "um-r. ricted policy cf inrmccliate support for cur army ozwrscns." He added: "nnv public men who i.v',‘r*~"s ill this should rrfinquish Mctecra;;l._._._,l UL“ 10mm‘; l b-NA l~'°“°’-'~“-l elPéy-Vmi Bag“? Nov. l4 -—JlCP. - Allzlilllum and .l.a n? or .- so cna on ~ . . . _ Should be Nomad H M an wntsibhhl‘ maximum tclnpclatules. Vancou ver 29, 45; Edl110l“On l0. 39; Re- ] gins. H3. 24; Winnipeg 35, 36; Tor- onto 34. 52; Ottawa 24 45: Mont- Saint John Meanwhile. m-elnbers Parka- rrxant. are getting ahxi as where they will live While 1n over- escrvatiorlsm _ erowfiri Ottavnrr 1A sum-am of , __. Moncmn 213 _ Han!“ 3L Elegrams poured into local hotels. 41; Charlonetown 33‘ 4L I FORECASTS: Moderate i light scattered showers or snowfiur- I ries. High tide this morning at 11.41 and tonight at 11.19. Sun sets this afternoon at 5.3! . , , i t vfor Canadian ruiiwavmcn to make m; m“ tomorrow mom n“ a up a train with boxcars from Oerq imam", Italy and France. _ , . Along tluir part or (he line the. Candiaus have established nu op" crating system that rivals that oil ‘New moon November 15th, 1.29 P M. DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown — Summersidc — _thc best-run lines at home. ’l‘h_eru Munch,“ As an area whcrc the loccmotivel; are serviced ulld overhauled. ‘ Leaves Charlottetown ‘f A M. All along the line, spaced with all average run of about l0 minute: [between each, are blockhouscs ll 30 A-M : 6 I‘ M Arrives Charlottetown l2 l5 I‘ M. 5 l5 RM A0 P Here are stationed men who seon SUNDAY SERVICE the trains as (hev bass bv Durtifiul-i Leave Charlottetown 11.30 AM. arlv looking for brake trouble or and 4 p_ M shitting loJds-wunditlons which “m, char-loom“... z r. n. ‘the train crew might miss. If an)‘- thing is found it is reported to the .ncxt block house. tir: train is stop- Tocri and checked over. For communications the Can- i adian section of the line uses a tel-- lephclie system as well as teletype Leave Charlottetown 1 l’. M. jmnchinfs. Tlgse are generated “by, Arrive Charlottetown 5.50 P. M. i lo te egrnp opera ug sec on composed uf signallncn from the! PEI-N s FERRY SERVICE DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAIS Leave Wood Islands-mill! A. M. and 5.45 P. M. CIIARLOTTETOWN — NEW GLASGOW (Daily except Sunder lRovai Canadian Corps 0f Signals and ivorkinil M part of the railway operating uroup. Bv relay system. l bl ll rl 2.00 P. M. align alisigngahilljlighe tile "Leaves Caribou-ll.” Imm lull trains are being run. 4.00 P. M. .._l