NbvpMplsR so. 1944 e N a Y. . vevigvyt Thorn 5...? titflirmilfi‘. i‘ " = °ltv lei-cue basketball ° "m" with a fill” t tih n conversation with {:11 ever the a. c. a. n. All-Stare the opening enc f th league Ollhter. whil 1 n 2§...¥.i‘.i"“""“"""=~th5 "beat utpsteh o‘ m’ “m” " m” tum g.“ e Air Force ouiw-e . “l?” ll minutes overthn " "ell" k2: l'&‘a"°.°.."‘°t~ ° "’ . "i! coee. fut bcsketbal all the wa . . d 1, h w- y and altho h v=..;:":..v..."..‘.§“.§“l§.int»- i..°.;.‘.‘.§i‘.i2“€fi."il§.. heath“ ' t e a - vi.ii.“‘t‘.'.‘.““%l..§‘.“....°.§35“..r one an "we n. a... '" oi getting over this diflicul ‘p ' _ tire meeting tonigh an,“ Just what course will be The officers in charle 0f aiTi-lirs have but one R18!- d and that is to make the ~ .:"".:-*: v2.1.5; _, oun o e ghabtlaelllesirthey will likely find grid means ,,. a m.» will m; rgavlged- ve t quick fie d_ goals to take anhB-stlxgie, The made it 10-5 with another fiel cal a minute later and in the ffiul minutes of the session the teams battled it out evenly ‘silage gigging two more field goals’ 0 . _ m‘ ‘or one ggigalflflil were account on two .1. of overcoming Q I U A pm; vlhlle back it allileflfed the City would not have I'm hm N u enlfl’ in "w 1"!"- Th" Trail m6 with but five min- " "m" °,°"“,,‘" §‘,“,“,,,,°'Z,°§ . ill-e! in the second half .23‘ r0515? eidegrln iglscluded. not ‘h’ '°""' "m" °° Pilll the were m: by reports the last lew the boys haven't Elven UP lllfl by anY mean!- e a o ti the have been work- “$2.1; beh nd the scenes and may one of the players con- ei slated that they are ready 1,9 g “well-balanced squad if i backer curl be fofllld. . be hoped that their ef- “towobtain financial support v prove successful. For with the withdrawal a vacancy ia left .. mould the civilian team make . grade they colfid step right .. the breach. providing of the league is agreeable. and ., iciledule could be run on u lily drawn up without hav- . ta revise the list of games .. the league be cut down to .. teams. I O O enalt hots. filing minutes clinched the Navy ry. Y. ‘learn In Overtime Win bed by the aaneetional playing of Elmer Rice who chalked up nine- teen points during the encounter the Y. M. C. A. team after com- lhfl from behind several times dur- ing the game finally aank the win- ning baskets in the second five minute overtime seaaion to whip the R.O.A.1". Officer: 39-35 in the second game. Airmen started off with a rush féonpot thrlee {Sbthlgglg ‘baskets with- I 78p T0111 for a 5-0 Ielarimabut etI-XC opponents {fldlll-ll! e organized, lnvugh wIth four succeaaive cflglxg koala. a penalty shot and another basket to take an 11-6 lead. Air it???‘ cslrlélreogn ssaitn to icore eight ltvll-l all he tllfeslled 0119 It l0" margin but befollf: ‘the fir? lllalcll -- 'l meeting. however. and then ended the Y had again crept to eryrtal-cleilr picture of the hOc- within 5t distance u they tllilllliln wlll l" “mil-Md h! made the score read 14-13 in the 1- one who are Patiently valt- last half minute of the first half l hr the 1W1"! l0 Bet 11ml"- Three field goals at the start l- _ , _ 2f, the Széétiléd cllialf gave the Air rce a - a vantage; again the milk McCooi, rookie netminder i _ H u» “Kama Mum! ma“, who wnnera fought their way to with been making good over since in sflpoigti as the score read 20-19 I m1 o! we “as” with some ncfnut; ficera. For the next five .. net-minding. is not nearly be with “it twee tea evend as could rs e . tiivllllxllilsi nélltrileh a tilactfvliiliich other whippigg irfafrilcladn gggfsn earyricae y e oow- m" v n6 ‘ntmhw Ewen to Prank naily Rice: basket knotted m‘ . ‘Iinniiviv the second M11130 '-~ felt those veers ahe wee i - in the shadow oi’ Rebecea. T a d iii the shadow of the. depart- - Paul Blbeoult throughout our - hhii "mllaigfl at Owen Sound l- itl no fun." said Frank Mc- "i Mable Leafs’ goalkeeper. e "flu l"! wasn't there. but ev- Dlllei‘ ahriekad hi! name. I'd tr conversations he was coming I. Then tllcrckiabe word can. i. would hung ontn hirn, n11 ' l ‘tine l lwas flglllltgingl for the regu ilr oa e b. ‘v ' lllnallv magic it. eigsni will.- a iiidirt have a breakdown.” . - o Pith! McCooi is a worrier. " liogéllvflgel young mtaen who ll axary t t iirit National Hockey‘ Ilreallrziu: be cut such “H- with the Leer; 1e men ion and approval of llilll fellow. Any playgi- who iona.l federation for the athlete; to r and stew; iike he do“ i, “b compete for more than 2i davs hut on edge, 2e expected approval within a few ~ e a lays. . . bi f Stockl im ' that 2 lgéwglknlfol; tggg? W32: l-liixeizc; wbulldulcoresponlccll foigthle 1d- me NJLLU» he Sim rottisbladet as a sportwritew re- Ih my chance finally came Leafs were 0 1 t] g Mllhrner. ‘gig-lily Eiéilllii ml’ Rove me some uneasy O 3"!’ Rama is e. season opener loliftCooi. He came east to I l spot with the Leafs "" i ililftofs ndvice. He was Hehortlv before he hit To- tiiy n“ ll lonesome kid in a‘ Ichedow that the club has hit 8 fl flame any NEW YORK. Nov. 29 — (AP) —— imlletus was added to the 194.5 ill- 000i‘ track season todav with the announcement that Gunder Haegf. one of Sweden's two great dd e die runners. and Haklon Lid- man. hurdler. had accepted an ill-- vitation of the Amateur Athletic Union to compete m the Unitnd States. Dan Ferris. secretary of the A.A. U., said there were a iew things to Haegg from three months of milit- ary duty. The two runners plan to arrive in the United Statics between C tmas and New Years and will run in various indoor meets start- ing the latter part oi January. Neither had Derf on th boards. l-loerog. who toured the United States in the summer of i942. holds the world's two-mile record of 8:- 42.43 and the 1.500-meter mark of .. “ll ‘§°l"l>l°v°§°€ ‘it'll mtfmlév‘ i e‘; I cor o 1_ . u as on - 1m wnfldmcg oylgfslnfmtth’ ered to 4.01.6 h.v his coun . . e . , °'- Arne Anderson. Anderson 1113i M“, think his n“ mm by l the trip although he wee - @225 llllll» bellied send: vlfidlnan Ls the outstandink hlur- llle top of fhne gtlillrlrilivivrlgdwzfifli‘ (rim “til: llsigfnefteltfeelq lo rtmlvht-n him out but he hurdles. Last year he won Swe- ran‘: losi- the jitters. |derl'a award comparable to the ' ' ' Suliven trophy in thc United Sta "rbllli-g-I vic- t goal and capital- M Navy And Y. ME. 014T Team Win Opening Tilts Of Basketball League ~86 in an encounter that re- b t ft to f0 extra. five minutes of pla Y. took a 33- basket in the first 2o vllv only to have Wise a minute later and minute and a. half left to ill°“...§'°: ."l.'"°‘ .2“. B. Z A 35-35 andq er a raced in close seconds later gulls: Proved to be the made onds 5907M pinclair Illhk both instances. The scoring: F rat Game All Star! F Ramsey Patterson Aahi y . Schecter , Duncan .. M3559“ 5| HOOr-eqcle-g ol own-meg 0| eoeoaoog all I-erlrifill: Second Game "1! Q ‘*1 w D. McDonald Officer: Sire-town»! c; c: .>occ»»-o >-l or-ooo: col OwOv-eOOs-e filv-ar-‘Nv-npe: calOOl-QHQH: Total . . . Swedish Track Stars ‘To Appear In United States During Indoor Season A. ii. L. Team Standings Eastern Division W L T G 0G 40 33 50 59 1M 49 (I Team Buffalo Hershey Provid ence Weete Pittsburgh Indlanapfill l Cleveland St. Louis Q uaqouaww wqaaiqwa n»u~%n~M ss:s’:%: 2 Games in Nat. League Montreal Canadiells over the rce another at lead any-Cullen's seconds of “even it up aent the losers ahead 85:3‘ fitlllih: play. There was exactly one minute left a long one then the same player for‘ wlll-ll hi; et with Doug McDonald add- ini’ an extra clincher twenty acc- from the end to give the Y. . C. A. team their 39-36 victory. handled both Bamako-rad turned in great offici- 2 u pa... 5 § .- 0| MoOn-b-Orc?’ 5| s-equimm? E i" NEW voax. Nov. lie-lap)- American Hockey League standing izralclilding game of ‘Tilesday, Nov. m. ‘ll Tonight have chance to increase their margin second place Toronto Maple Leafs to three point! t0- td night when they play hosts to the THE CHARLOTT TE? GEORGE MONTGOMERY ANNABEI-LA KENT TAYIAOI Every secontd . . . stirring! Ever! moment . breath- . . . ea they share dan- ger and c ‘ ‘k . . . thrill you in a stirring break for freedom! SOURIS - THUR 8 P. M. MONTAGUE — FRI. I P. M. MONTAGIIE SAT. 1.45 AND 9.45 it i. Louis At (lamp Shanks CAMP SHANKS. N.Y.. Nov. N— (APl-S. Sgt. Joe Louis. world's heavyweight boxing champion, re- sist in the camp's physical con- ditioning program, the camp Dub- lic relations office announced. uis will coach boxinz. hive lec- SUITS and take part in boxinrz de- monstrations, the public relations officegsaid. Louis recently completed seven exhibition bouts in the United States, which followed 90 similar appearances during a six-month tour of England. North Africa. and Italy. RALSTON TAKES— _ (Continuedjrom DM6_LZ____ ifying additional numbers of men will he passed and put into efffict without. any l‘€.‘lEl‘€llCE_ back alzaln to this House for ‘u vozc of confid- eilce or aDllrovai ' Will Hold GWW to Acflllllll- He warned he would hold the government. particularly Mr. Kink and Defence Minister lvic-Naughlon. ti} "strict accounz" in carrying out vigorously their declared intention of reinforcing the army with train- ed N.lt.M.A. men. With the now- ers now taken ill-Ln: was 110 "(C158 for not zettinlz the men there in time to meet all requirements and permit oi! lurtiler luiaves ior men from the battleile s. ‘ (PTDKXGSSWO Conservative) amendment Ls in fact a motion oi want of oonf ence because if would be lost." said Col. Ralsto "and the government. instead o iv .,it must d0. to dis- glceqeeam glmv-ecv-emld; time to time. would cease to func- tion and the whole matter of dis- pa that: men which I have so earnestly advocated woul thrown into the realm of tainty and suspense. A "I have come to the conclusion that i will not by my vote permit that to happen." Defeat of the government would mean attempts to farm a new Rov- elnment. the necessity of the new government finding out if it had lhe support of the House. deiavs and uncertainties, perilous illSfiilltlOD and a general election t‘I wantcd reinmrlx-nlents and l wanted them quickly." he said. “l was not asking for :1 Rcnerai elec- tion to unite this country into aa- ute po‘ticai turmoil for the next two months." v ' Mr. rilng, he sold, propounded a strange doctrine when he said a. Minister should not resign if he was not prepared to become Prime Minister to carry out a new pol- icy. In any case he (Col. Raiston) had not asked for a new policy. he simply asked the government to carry out its own polic as stated in 194.2, overseas conscr ption when necessary. "The Prime Minister gave the impression In his speech he was in genuine search of a auccee- sor," he said. "The Prime Min- ister was not in genuine search_ of a successor. “He asked a purely hypothetical question, going something like this: ‘If I went down to the Governor- Generai tonight and offered nu resignation and recommended Oll to him, would you acce t?’ T at was rather hypothctica. As n matter of fact I said no." Col. Ralston said that in con- versation later Mr. King indicated he (Mr. Kin l asked the question UIICET- i1 lo 19 i9 13 6 " The order. crediting out of curios tv and had no 1m911'4in expectation of a British attack. that the 93-: 'i - - . lded 1M0 lllc crossing cult FUR THE SKATE TO-NIGHT AND auAKl-z THE BLUES Reports Of P’ — 5291M erepnom 0g a new ‘$115111? ennouncig that the Rlecalt $55“ crossed the Danube. in tome 5mm, 0f mlflflapest on a front 93 miles wldn and 26 miles deep and captur ed the important town of Pet; 511d 330 other places, dhlitlarshal Stalin: order of the day n" 31V! the exact locations 01 the large-scale ¢rn§ing_ bu; pa” ls 98 miles slrutilz-scsi oi Budapest asmis lgiolltacs, another important CO I‘ 8 , third? Bat-arm‘? Elli?“ whu. . Yugoslav Partisan forces with id _ ahal Feodor Toihu a M“ raine Army in the advance, implied north rll Yugoslavia, 1,000“i'arade Stalin Confirms Via/ant’ khin's 3rd Uk- befo exten- l l3 Pictou Men ETOWN GUARDIAN carers sxsrmc INVIGORATES nonv AND MIND New Drive The German Radio. which has‘ be“ lalklna of this operation m1 gtwfiegrfi admitted esday tn, l ace and id .‘ had been evacuatfend. “might Pee‘; The Germans, acknowledging m... ggféfllnliv abDut Russian intentional .t at it could not yet be forc-; told Whether the Red Anny would- gm aorthward along tho wesii pm in £1: rleiléernube to take Buda- westward. or would continue A German tit _ contended on ltlhel algcrilzpokw {WWBVBT- that the Russians were.‘ PlB-Yln; a risky game with thisl Operation," uiiicll he said was aimed‘ a‘ M11111"!!! a decision in Huwarv’ the rlzstllfrma“ "Oops that ilzid ‘lei-t, a a, - weight felt?‘ cwld make the“ .. in Montreal MONTREAL. Nov. N - (GP)- Morg than 1.000 young men, chant- ing "a bus la conscription", (down guns, paruciid lilrougli A/iuntrvrills financial disilic; zonight smashing ilvindows at the Frcilcll-ianguage daily newspaper Le Canada on St. James Sure-ex, and also at the fices of National Selective vlvc on Notrc Dame street, bincis fllvlly. The mm ilIE-(l paraded from an east-end market hall where they llud heard Andre Laurcndeau, Que- bec leader of the Bloc Populaire. say that a majority had "no moral right” to "bind French Canadians Ser: three ‘Io a conscription measure.’ Situation At Terrace, B. 0. Has Improved VANCOUVER, Nov. 29 — (GP) - Reports tonight from Terrace. B. C., said that Home Defence troops oi’ two regiments who pic- keted a Saskatchewan Regiment scheduled to leave last night for a new posting, had returned to duty late this afternoon. The troops train left Terrace this afternoon carrying tile troops to another station in British Col- ulnbia. Reports from Terrace said that officers of a French-Canadian Regiment from Quebec and a Manitoba Regiment recruited in be all parts of Canada appeared to be on friendly terms with their men, and that a general easement in the situation was expected. There were a few parades through the business section today but no disorders occurred. The men appeared in good humor and sang as they marched. The liquor store and beer parlors in the town oi’ 1,600 inhabitants re- maincd closed. They were shut down shortly after the disturbances began lost week-end. Except for the trouble at Ter- race and a minor demonstration at Port Albemi where paraders marched through the streets last night carrying banners with anti- conscripticn slogans, Pacific com- mand officials snid that British Columbia camps are functioning normally. DRIVE TOWARDS- (Continued from page l.) France remained in German hands -two rectangular stretches of bor- derlancl in Alsace and Lorraine and the long by-pzlssed and lic- sicged ports of Dunkcrque. Loricht. and St.Nazaii-e. Enemy troops also held some land at file mouth of the Garonne Estuary leading to Bordeaux. There was little change in the situation on the British 2nd Army front in southeast Holland but Lt.- Gen. Dempscyls forces ml thc West s e of the Mans River were brought under increasingly llfiflvv flrp by German llrtillcry between Venlo and Rocrmonci. fllipflrefltly Wllh conscription) and similar 510-. Seek New Trial i Convicted Of Robbing J. L. Stewart Of Cardigan. HALIFAX, Nov. N —- t _ CP) ll"! qllF-lhlll! 0f a conviction or a new trial on charges of robbery was dismissed by the full bench of the Nova. Scotia Supreme Court 1 todaqy. I T e convicted men were Harold F. Davis, Joseph Davis and Isaac Gaudet. They were found guilty, at the October session of Supreme Court in Pictou. of’ robbing James Leigh Stewart of Cardigan. P.E.l. In handing down its decision. the full bench suggested that the three petition the inister of Justice for a new trial or the aet- tin! aside of the conviction. Grounds for the appeal were 81W“ by the defence as mis- direction by the trial judge and newly-discovered evidence. The nofilcc of appeal stated that Stewart. who alleged that the trio robbed him of $75, later went to the men in jail and admitted he mid cilmmllled Perjury at the trial. He \\'fiS alleged to have told them they were in no wrlv con- nected with the robbery and that two other men hnd committed it. i The appeal then stated that | Stewart made a statement in writ- lllg before C. L. R. Gray, solicitor for thc tilrco, and a statement to tile R. C, M. P. Later. tile R. C. M. P. izlid a charge of spreading false news against Stewart. This charge was lvitlldralvn, and a new charge of committing public mis- chief waa laid. Stewart; pleaded guilty to public mischief charge ilnd \l'as sentenced to tlvn years in pcni-I the tentiary. Subsequently. it was stated. he notified the R. C. M. P. that his Ztfigflmfillls admitting perjury ‘oer-e 8. Discharged Sailors, Airmen Subject To Army Recall OTTAWA. Riv. 2a ~<cPi - Certain catelwrles of m-ell dischar- ged from the novv and air force up: subject _l.0 militnrv uni]. Labor Min-W istel- Mitchell said tccluv in the Commons. _ c said the llzlvv and air force, stlDllltlted illc catekorlcs ill lvillcll‘ tile discharges-ail surplus per- sonntb-were placed. Recent and future graduates froln the commonwealth air train- illg plan-estimated at 10,000- wlio will go into ll civillnir _ilr force reserve under a recent cur- tailment order. are not affected by today's announcement. an air force Appeal of three Pictou men for , rowel TAll TALES t. N FOR ABOUT cop's AMAZIN’ Klurouci , ram/LL d t, M!“ m‘ lb n _p\en\y\ New York this big, lough-spcingied program {R60 K(_'| wlll. Boston llfllifl HF: ipeellcnd iy llillliOY W. m. "i, swap b. Iho VD!“ ._,._,,.u_ ,_v_,____‘,_rw_’w_x__ui_;_ “snail, ma. Io rlcp ~-|.c.-_ BIG DANCE AT THE SPORTING CLUB TO-NIGHT MODERN AND OI .1) 'l‘l.\lE DANCING Music by DON MESSER and his ISLANDERS ADMISSION 35 CENTS DANCING 9 to 1 In Aid of Canadicns Juvenile Hockey Team Serious Jap Push Reported In China CHUNGKING, Nov. 29 — (AP) — Japanese vangllards have made startling advances inside Klvcl- allow Province toward its Burma Road capital and junc- tion point of a lliglllvuy network linking Cllungkirlg, Kunming and other Southwest China cities, a U. S. 14th A‘ Force communique disclosed iolll it. The Air Force bulletin. relayed by tile hcurlqllrirtcrs of hlzlJZ-Geii Albert C. Wedcmrycl‘, zlllllouilccd that fighters strafcri enemy cav- alry troops on the Pachai-Tnikisllii- Road yesterday. This indicator! thc Japanese hnd citlzcr r through or outflzilikcd some of Chinese ulliis lvilirll lltid INTI‘. exilcctcrl to cicfclld Klvciyalig. iTilc Jailrincse nevus agency Dcmci ilrondcast a report that 50.000 Chinese were fleeing t0- lvard Kweiynng along the soilth- \\‘6Slt‘l‘Tl highway and the Kwan- pis-Klvciclloiv railway" airci" Jnnilll- ‘ ‘czlny occupied Niill- , c-sc forces yl-r tall. The report called "the remaining important stronghold" in Klvangsi.) Rumored 6th Division Will Be‘ Re-Orgaliizud VANCOUVER, Nov. 29 ~ LCP) — Tile Vancouver" Province lil a ncviis- t lc ~ page story toda)’ said lllot Cililudinn Army's 6th dl'..slon_ will be rcurgiiilizrd iiunlcdlui. brig c; camps lit SlX British Co.un nlolld \vill revert to stlllus of a m1. itary district. spokesman said. Those not subject to military re- cull lire: 1. Men with service Dvcrscus. tile [ligil sous. or over tile . torial writers of Canada provizl g such service has not been tcrmill-l ated on grounds 0f misconduct or‘ inefficiency prior to elllzagcmentinl llll i. Confirmation of this r9110?! COW-d Ii"‘lll Pacific Can- not be obtained liillzri llcnrici ::l".e.... Reoruullizzltioli of loll. comprised rlznos’. VIlIIYCI-p llcmc (IPICIICQ units, lvslllli he second step in conncciion three infantry diviriuns orgcnizet Kwcifwrlllli. ' lil [Til- [P03 will bc closed ard Pnclfil: com- li? rho ma: iReportl ;0f $200,000 3F ' Stardust LONDON, Nov, 29 -- 4GP) ‘Th6 . it-txlrtcci iodav that "m e Californian iuvellurse . "' hurl offered 3200.000 for the Arzn Khnrfis famous stallion, Stur- dust. lvilich is now at a stud farm ill Ir (l. Till: AGa Iiilzlll is in . o llf".\'.'i‘).'ll)(‘i‘ ' r HI Illv fovlil (lid ior. kliliv.‘ u-llull-r the uifci- Il-"ii been nt-(reiiil-ii 'is-.nfi... pflonvoy Sunk HIacARTIIURXS IiPJADQUrXR- ’l'I-II{ 30 — iThut-szlzlv) i.\ - l-ivr- - I1fllT1I3II"' l . a lliW figllicr pi I lip JLli i: ' mlllhv ' j ullll “hillrsriny ‘ sending illl rstiirlutcii ~i. I'll- i filly troops: in dclliil ill. sen, sink- | lllif l0 transports .\ml illrec des- irlivnrs. Piling; info IIiL‘ sixill iavze coll- . vnv file Japanese have sflll in . 110x11‘. the fightrrs- erased eight i lrlillsroris far from illlrir coll] at ' Ormoc in accounting for thc 4,- ! 000 irnops hut uliltr cnemv sul- i fliers got llsllore from ilvo iinrkvd l transport: at, Ormnc which infer \\'l‘l"‘ slink. Kai-Slacks Reported To Have Separated 1h,»- (‘llll (litr- oi lllc 'f‘ii" llllr: ‘Yllll r President LONDFIN .\A.lAl l i and Mrs ~ parated and r- ho‘: homo i2: .\'iirlmi, l Slick ll for thp defence of Canada 7th and 8th divisions lvrrc F1,‘ handed in Scotcmbrr, 10-13. 1. The Gill (iivisiozi ins l)l‘('|l :t.ii-_ - iollod Ill Briil=h Columbia and (There was no report of the Canadian forces in Germany lie- ing engaged in action, other than routine patrols.) ticn of going to the Governor- General. Mr. King interrupted to say that was not correct and later improving New York Ran era at Montreal in one of two sc eduied National Hockey League Rimes- Rangers, however. who have been actual operations. 2. Mfil who liclvc served tiircn YOAYS or lllore in Crlllllrln Jllfl, km hem“? my name is __ think I'm ggtln ills.- iii." Mull i lllllllfifl fill‘ . . .e| fig’? REMEMBER WIIEN . ~ never saw thinqy n.5,‘; “ll "5 “W <l° lh the, Detroit's Joe Louis knocked out l»... ' w: , , _ ;Charl'ev Massera in three rounds at l hicogo 10 years ago tonight in his 1w wlnt I notice mOStu 11th professional fight. The Brown m as an amateur out wast, Bomber-who later became world's a lllo name zcnerally fast. 9° r h a nothing. ‘Tiley certainly- . ,, ll loll in a hurry in gneimonths later ‘ Went on. ‘Bzalfilaalélfifollr rounds and recelved O Another funny thing of letters I receive from home," he smiliilgly relates. "The folks ask me what I thought or New York and Chicago and Montreal. They don't know the fate of rookies in thc N.H.l.... where the newcomers sleep in the upper berths. if they can sleep at ti.‘ O ' u 1min]; I llzht h o;- l“ ave given up, t. fillnrfloiind. whlit with. the‘ .1,‘ nu that "ilul Bibeault h‘ an]; _e_-41d_ n r¥tiiat thc-v e ' - heed the n \ dllrd wigh a mt "Moped. k mY was tile Leafs’ ‘v -~ Ina told k‘ l Bllilkeepeci-frl ‘O ‘. "They haven't yet figured out that we play at night, shower and ,_ l dash for a taxi and i; train. A guy "135 been around the ch-fldoesnt have much chance to atudv es dismvfl-ed m“ scenery when he's getting dressed Puck-carrier is °l‘ “lld1'°"°d-" he doesn't have ~ because n " Y1 on him, O O O If determination is any cure for the shakes. McCocl should cling to h place with the leafs. He's been under the watchful eves of many pro scouts. Frank Boucher oi the Rangers watched him time and again but didn't flsure the led would make the big time. out McOooi has fooled them all and is riding higher and higher in the ‘ crrisomq min to h“, l" tmlnrglnkfirvund t e Leafs’ ' l mot at ybilhd have no one ma,“ w u for minutes on t’; They yfmzlghto agent‘ for ‘ i E l1 l , .“°h before in”. M m... ' °b""“l'l°"- estimation of Toronto fem. T ZIMWIKI" showing much improvement ofilzte should make lt plenty hot ivr the league leaders. In the other game Chicago. re- cent; winners over the stron! D9- troit Red Wings tackle Boston at Chicago in what should be a hlEh- vd spirited display. n A. ii. L. Results Cleveland '1; Pittsburfth S. Providence 3. Bllllflli‘! 4 DANCE v CLUB THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 30, 1944 DANCING 9130-1 ADMISSION 50o sponsored by Ladies‘ In: gresaive Conservative soclaiion. asked if at ii subsequent meeting he had not said he was prepared to resign and asked if any Min- ister was prepared to take h place. Col. Ralston said he was not going into what took place at ‘ other meetings. Col. Balaton said he knew weakneses and that the heights of leadership" were for him. Tile proposition that a Minister who disagreed should not assume the leadership rather ' thlm resign could not be upheld It was up to the individual to say what responsibilities he wished to assume. Shortage Of R ‘orcementa Reporting on his trip overseas when ilc found a shortage in ro- inforcemcnts, Col. Raistcn said he he knew the situation arid had lir- known it sooner he would have recommended action under the N. R. M. Act sooner. That was all there was to that. The situation might llnvc shocked Mr. King bllt it shocked him mo. Tile time of the recommendation had no relevancy to the issue. He found the infantry reinforce- ment pools almost exhausted and found a possibility that in Jilllfl- ary there would be not only no infalltrv reinforcements in thc Uni- tcd Kingdom or the two battle- ereaa; but the unite would reported to thcCabinct as soon us still A front dispatch said that while Gannon tl-cnps opposing thc Unit- ed States 1st Army's advance east l5 of Aachen "lere butting "D tough resistance at most points. they were in many instances not up l" the calibre of clicnzl‘ forces er‘.- e tei-eLqnrlier _7ill_til_e_ v slightly under strength. Hc recom- mended that 15,000 trained infantry be made available from tile N. R. M. A. at once and arranged for a sailing Nov. 2'7. Ilatl action been inkcn rlt once thc men could have been on their way, The (liffcrcllcc in tile Cab- illct was not only on tlic question ni all llDDCflI for volunteers. thc success of which ilc doubted, but whether if an nppcnl failed action should be lllkCll by compulsion. Col. Rnlstoll said llc irlallc the recommendation reluctantly. He believed the voluntary system preferable and look back nothing 1m hrarl snid in silppori of it but it had failed in be "a dependable source." While in favor of milking all Home I)f‘l0lli" ll'ill"‘§ available for oversrils service llic IO-mem- bcr Social Credit party threw its support to the Liberal government imjw ;ll<~ of confidence . COTTLTOllS. rail during the Chrlstmfll season. LONDONTT: V7615.‘ “L Civil ser- vnnls entitled in free "ill llilveliccs-flil r; will not be pel-lnlticd to travel by} and ills‘. whose services have not been tor-i mlllnted for misconduct or ineffic- iency. (Previously tlvo years scr- vice cleared a mlln with the army.) 3. Men discharged on compas- siullaic grounds. . Men charged to civilian posts of lllgll ssclltiiliiti‘. 5. Mcn discharged as medically unfit Those liable to recall:- l. Personnel with over-sens or home service will: were discharged on grounds of inefficiency. 2. Personnel “hose services lverc terminated on grounds or miscon- duct by sentence of court-martial or disciplinary courts. 3. Personnel who resigned to n- void court-martial. 4. Personnel discharged because their services were no longer re- qllircd. Tilese definitely subject to re- al :- 1. Mrll not covered in the lore- gciirg categories. 2. Navy probationary who either rcsigilrd or qualify. 3. Men discharged as unlikely til become oiTicicnt or suitable. T0 PROBE ‘an... surrul NEW DELHI - (CPl Formailrn of a mo" committee of the Vi<‘£-l.'1y's ,E.vcnliiive Celilicl in svrllrc R~S\lC- lirv nf iced )lI'C!‘lll'l‘l'il(‘Tll. officers failed to brizntie czllilps were set up Prince Rupert. Terra". George. Vernon, Navnlllo Port Albcrni. Illrini: your furs lo us ful- lLlllllflil is llnilclillccrl by i l eSll‘. JP. Si’ vastave, Ibod Membe .. . ‘ MINK. .\iL'Si\'R.~ ' ti». with‘ “.70 will be buying dzliiy throughout lilo >.‘il.\'ilfl SILVERS, MARIN-JD SILVICRS and l'i..i\'l‘lNll.\I TYPE FOX FYRS Also Vi‘. RED FOX. cit‘. Iiclil-r prices m‘ if mnrc con- vcnicnt in ynll we will examine slime lli your rum-h. No long lvzliilnr." for your ilioncy. \\'c pa)" spot cash. P. E. I. FUR TRADERS (W. R. JENKINS) 212 Grout Georgi‘ S