III CHARLOTTETOWN. cannon. vvsDNssoAy,l~lovizll/lnsii 1, Ad... §W}/ ,1” I The Pople's MAXI Mi OIL HIRE MAN ' jplyu" w)’ w‘ ‘ Paper o Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody Docket a . fltba mu who can I ‘E0 Midgell “Killed In Car Accident local Seaman ls Honored ____. 0 t. Ill -- (CP) '- ltiyilforii Butchiider, ,\Ily st.) Chill-lotte- n“ ily was awarded U10 “Ian Esisialr M b till: real beadoularten laid tonikht ase. laliefliletarzeftatiml sulil that h ilagin ui’ the tor- miliii ‘tailksei-‘ile ‘lives the sen- ; room 1:“!!! placed‘ m: h." d '34! un inlpur an , ill-swift‘: the ship for four t: to port." Federal tlabinet llet For Sixth liae In Week Crisis Over Overseas Ser- vice For Home Defence i Army Is Rumored. By JAMES McCOOK orrnwn. Oct. 3i (c?) - cabinet ministers today assem“ ledin their sixth session since last Tuesday, plowing through a 1on8 schedule of business understood to range itoln further Canadian par- ticipation in the war against Ja- pan to home front roblems. Authorities concen- trated cabinet sessions are com- mun at this time of year, with meetings five times a week not llntuusl. Only in the fall months ,luvc the ministers relief from duties in the House of Commons and lass pressing business which was held over has to be consider Speculation continued on Par- ment Hill that vital decisions ave been made at recent sittings s! the chief executive body. Early announcement by Prime Minister Mackenzie King of fur- ther Canadian participation in the Ilil‘ against Japan, associated with 2713118 for ptlftlfil demobilization oil ing the defeat of Germany, n .nucd 0n. page; 7,lCol.' 3) H‘ Expect Settlement In Packing l-lonse Dispute Today mnoirro, Oct. '_ ._ llr. Justice 5.5. Riislhnrdsiclzilm- loafer investltrszintz o. labor dis- efectlne the three principal w z house chains across Cnn- t and their 12.000 Cllibloyfirs. knleiglgiahtvgguvdblfi bexoected that a “grog. . reached i0 9 B5 presided over conferences 5mm Dllcklflll company iieuds m” lwlon representatives here mm ednesdav lost. Companies umllém are Canada Packers "m ed, Swift Canlzdians Cum- - Bind P Burns and Company. flupufite llflllltv was ordered after a Packkuhflrose between the Ifnitcu (mo) mill‘ Wvhgflrs of America “mm-I "ll! the Companies con- ” the Unions demand for a m; a {cement in all plants. the f0! system and union acc- Coming Events ‘WNW — Canoe Cove Friday. . 11-1-21. i "m" — Orenaud Thumia . ' 10- 1-21. Nth for Iiaotryfifnngeiliglioilheamd Il-l-li. u M" Annual Bazaar, 1min. Bgv 1m . Wbegrtxigatriiaig,‘ November lO-H-Pi. . ._._ ‘new: m at - gm my" “m. Anna School, Y. Nov. 3. Milli- Ilb‘! Orchestra, 11-1-8-21 as i"- Dlnce, . hr. Novessizxl-“ifidfl itxnfiiitigfdm" 10-91-31. as ' ‘i- lllsoursa . I“ h!“ 31d Dance. St. Peters m“ 0N eatrs‘. 000d Drbeili-(iiizii. "milieu lnstitut n mu‘ e Meeting in m, n a dckuSatul-day. Noyflnnfil- "chicks n") n SMITH‘. ind mlglbgtiltgiurl“ m“ nfiiifil. i‘ sfgfffill"! live h s for Davis B4 tinsel. ursdav and week. At Albany and G. O. Green and A. C. _i_ Men Are » Children on their way from school yesterday evening discov- ered a twisted and battered car in the ditch near Mr. A. J. Mac- Donald's store at Tracadie Cross- ing. In it were the bodies of Al- fred Pyke, local Ill/LT. bus driver, and his. friend, Leigh Moore. According to the Royal Cana- dian Mounted Police who were im- mediately notified of the double fatality, no one saw the accident but it is thought that is occur- red about S p.m. Coroner I. J. Yeo was summoned and viewed the bodies, then called for an inquest at ‘Iracadle on Thursday, Alfred Pyke had been at his home in Mldgell visiting his fath- er, Mr. Addison Pyke. and his two brothers and three sisters. As his regular Cliarlottetown-Sourls bus run left the Queen Street terminal at 4.30 p.m., friend Leigh Moore offered to run him into the city yesterday in time to make his trip. Moore had only purchased Ill-S cal‘. a. Ford roadster, the day before the tragedy. It is not known hcw fast he was driving but ex- perienced motorists, acquainted with the locality, say that the curve where the accident occurred is n dangerous one. Pyke was 25 year-s old and his friend Moore. ill. The latter kl survived by two brothers, Lou and Ray, and two sisters, Mrs. Arnold Roper, City, and Pearl, who with the Charlottetown Hotel. Bothy his parents are dead, Arthur Pykes mother died last winter. He has one brother overseas. Although Midgell was the post office address of the homes of the men it was learned that ac- tually they lived at Milburn, a few miles away. Moore had been employed in or near Charlotte- town for about a your. Recently he ha“ bee" Wflfkllls nt a house under construction near Bfllvedggfc sertrlce Station. The bodies will be sent to Mil_ bilrn for burial Funeral ai~_ ranger-lento were not completed last nigllt. Mysterious Broadcast BTDCKHOLM. Oct. ll - (AP) ——A nlystcrous German broadcast on all unusual wavelength tonight urged the people of the Reich and thlgGermsn Army to revolt against .er. The newspaper Dagens Nyheter. which monitored the broadcast said the speaker culled himself CoL-Gen. Ludwig Voll Beck and ridiculed Nazi reports that he had commit- ted suicide after the abortive a.- tempt on Hitler's life July 20, The broadcast, in German, was first heard on 282 meters at 6 p. tn and was repeated two hours later with an admonition to list- eners to keep tuned to the station in the future. "When I give the signal you must take every Nazi n prisoner and as- sume operations of all railways, ra- dios nncl newspapers,” the spea- ker said. "I order you to organize into fighting groups and equip yourselves with weapons immedia- tely. Prl-pnre to take over the S S arsenals." The speech appeared to be dir- ected principally to officers of the Wehrmacht, including "my comrades on the general staff who will recognize my voice." Loan Campaign Lagging In ll. B. SAINT JOHN. N. 3 . Oct. Ol- (CP) - After clslll days of the Seventh Victory Loan campaign, New Brunswick today passed the one third mark of its 35300.00!) objective. Subscriptions of 81.216.- 600 today raised the total to 89.435.- 050. National War Finance Committed officials at provincial headquarters said New Brunswick was “lflflflllls behind," with the camlllllllll Bell‘ ernlly "not going as well as might be expected at this advanced date in the drive." Sales in New Brims- wicl; were “down" in comparison Sentenced To llang Posed sentence. Leger was char The and lo minutes. llancton Man DORCHESTER, N.B., Oct. 3l— (CP) — Arthur Alexander Leger, 27, of Moncton, N.B., tonight was convicted of murdering his 20- ear-old wife, Norma, and sen- enced to be hanged Jan. l7. A New Brunswick Supreme Court Jury brought in the verdict with a recommendation for mercy, and Mr. Justice C. D. Richard im- ed with having shot his wife her parents’ home at Moncton on Sept. l5. Jury deliberated an hour ll. S. Ambassador To llhina Recalled __.r... WASHINGTON. Oct. 31- (AP) -President Roosevelt announced tOdB-v the resignation of Clarence Gum. Ambassador to China. on the heels of zlle recall of Gen. Joseph Stilwell. The President emphatically den-l led, however, that the two with. drawals have anv connection. Against Large Scale Victory llelebrations CANBERRA, Oct.- al - (c?) _ A recent public Opinion poll, showed that 85 out of every 100* Persons were opposed to ally large scale Victim‘? celebrations lifter tile defeat of Germany. 'I'i10se iuttr- viewed felt the celebrations would be 011i 0i Place 11 staged bcfoae Jui-‘a-n too was beaten. Bracken’s Statement j War Situation Last Night! v"_%'~‘ .__.._._____l___- By lune 1.. aiaraeal, anus-ass m- am Analyst. Aliied success in driving Nazi forces from the south bank of thc Mass in Holland achieved two goals. Early use of the Antwerp communications hub was brought within sight to bolster an expected renewal of the drive against Germany: Siegfried Line anchorage on the Lower Rhine. And it freed the whole length of the Fiushinp“ ijmegen- Arnhem hard surfaced highway except its extreme western end on Walchern island. Elimination of that lest obstacle to full Allied use of the road is in progress. With final clearance of Walcheren, first movement of priority traffic for Field Marshal Montgomery's troops should be possible even before Antwerp can be put into commission as the main Allied left flank supply base. It. seems unquestionable that seizure of that road to supplement the anticipated of Sebelds Estuary approaches to Antwerp and its extensive and undamaged dock facilities for seagning craft fig- ured importantly in Allied plans. The considerable port of Flushing on the south shore of Wilcheren Island at the mouth of the West Schelde Estuary offers good Weather protection for shipping, obviating delay while the Estuary itself la cleared of silt or enemy-placed oh- structions. Allied spokesmen have made no secret of the fact that it was the supply lag that gave the foe a chance to man his Siegfried Line defenses after the retreat from France. That handicap has been virtually re- moved now. Little Allied delay in moving in hcuvy force to crack or turn the north cnd of the Siegfried front is to he anticipated. There will still be some weeks of relatively good weather in the Netherlands battle theatre. Allied commanders can be expected to make the most of it now that they have gained elbow room south of the Marts and freedom from danger of an enemy flanking attack. On Field Marshal Montgomery's right the United States 1st Army has virtually been marking time: since the capture of Aachen to await‘, completion of the British-Canadian operation south of the Maas. Itsi ‘Germany and Berlin itself b - The order, issued the day after the lst Canadian Army on Oct. b launched the operations to clear the Schclcle Estuary by crossing file Leopold Canal in Northern Belgium, told the 15th Arlny troops that the tiefcllcc of the Scheldc and tlic approaches to Antwerp occupy a decisive role in the fur- ther conduct of the war and fu- turc of the German people. "Defence oi’ the approaches to .Antwcl'p represents it task wllicll is (ieclslve for the further conduct lof the xvzlr. Therefore every last mall lll tile fortifications is to know wily he lnilst devote himself to ilol task with tile utmost strength. “Alter over-running the Scllelde 0f Seed Potatoes cial quota is $3,300,000. At the same time figures the rural communities of There is a heavy nlovclzlellt ohcgueoh’; and King's counties, MONTREAL..OCL. 31_-— (CP) '- Pfili-llKSSlVl: Conscrvuxlvl: du John Bracken Lfllilitilt ' lss statement dcnyuitr dlsuillw , 111 the Progressive Conservative, purtv and said the u 110ml. 1111' luLr-smnutcl people anxious jd-l bout rlrzllt now 1S whore oucs tllc Lullral party stand on their ironic conscriut army and communist to- operation.” _ he issued a ZoO-lvord stutclllcllt arising from J. (iisiliilflll to iii‘: '10.‘- ollw Star from its Ottawa. (or- respolldenl, l-Llt. Artist-strung. lvu‘. Bruckclrs st": ‘ilirlill. Lollous: 17.011 ca: d berai party u 1§i€d l My attention llus to all article bv u pl-opogllntllst rlanleu 1min’. 11.111“ strong, \l.‘lllCil flJDUllT-Ji in the ‘lor- onto Daliv star vcsicrd v. unto- iined Ottawa, Oct 3L‘. and \\_ll.li the headline: Bremen-Drew split. xvicl- ens. _ _ This is lust another spurt ill the sticulll ul venomous iillLl culllelll- plated ulupzlgalluzl \\'iliCi‘i_ has llccll emanating lroin this SlClJdll of the press. _ Certainly I am not ill accord with any irate, canlualuu against the Province oi UUEOUJ. _l have trade that clear on ulore tuun one cc- casioll. UOIILIJIV L0 the ruinous.- sentatlons carried ull by inc Lao- cral section of trlc t ress. l. have seen no evidence of Premier Drew indulging in any hate klllsvvfi 0111\- paigll. buch a construction ls u ill-l- rnellt oi a svariou llliuglnuuoxl nll.! a luullaiced eve, No one has beer. moi“. eloquent ill ills bruise oi ulc crunch Ualiudiuzl _i)itl.l.21i.\ui|5 ovu- seas. in common with ueurize ilrciv. I have been uutsuuizcz. 111 my cri- ticlsln oi‘ QUBWCS Liberal leaders. The liberal nzirtv divided at this moment ill its lnnzrlllost councils On tile ra-ilv urgent uucstioil oi pro- Vifllilfi TCIIHUIIZCLHUIILS AOL‘ DUI‘ DQYS Overseas and still playful: politics with it, is sadly m liccdul other ls- sues-—and also mme able aiwlolllslfl Its bollcv of cal-operation with the comm ts nelelds considerable ex- plaining as we . Mr. Armstrong's effort this time has overstepped tile marl: in clums- lncss and drawlnz red herrlnas- 1119 game is as clear as it is clumsy. ‘rhere ls no laoic of unity m the Progressive - Conservative party and everyone knows that. What all fair-minded people are anxious a- bout right now is where does the Lahore] portv stand on their home conscript army and comlntnist co- "/ith__other_ provinces. OTTAWA. Oct. Si - (C P) — Buying by the armed forces. nOW with 03.5 pel- cent of their minimum objective. featured today's progress of the Seventh Victory Loan nat- ional headquarters said tonight. With predictions that their min- lmum quota of ssoaoomo would be passed tomorrow. the armed ser- vices announced a total of £18,182,- 600. about M83190 below the zo- tal they ra scd in the sixth cam- aign. The army is leading ' with 230,065,550 for 06 per cent of ob- jective while the navy has 84.480.- 500 for 93.3 per cent. The R . A 10-31-81. Haa.-\va.A O . I‘. "DOING ‘13580300 ht 90.9 DB operation. v present, was learnt-d vcstcrria,v.‘54_6 - l f 1L $134M) IJJEv-IBK ?1h§0‘§éfeb{,°.h§f° "TV" ‘S 3 l" Live lcveiiiilnz in: iiclrl, loiimvttil] for C ~ ' J l . The bulk of the shiom n‘ a‘ . » present are of the Irish Poéisbloi °f l1 33°99“ °ble°""°- variety. They an) gum-r to Long Island, blew Jcrscv West Virginia. ‘file uemulzd was said and‘ to this fall. In addition dealers have} need of potatoes for spring de-llisted subscriptions by di liveries and it will be IIBCGSSHTYiICIOWSI$l1m\1“i.Il'SiCif‘,$396.750§Pl for growers to llold some to sup- t county oiltside Siunnlersizle. s; lily the demand then as the olcai- , 4n‘); Charlottetown, $664. ors cannot store the quantitleslQucenls County outside Churl needed. Some lllurkets do want to buy seed until just be- fore planting time. A patently PEI. growers arel ailx ous to\scll this fall in case. there is n repetition of the situa-I atloli lust spring when there wrist little market luncugil the mu‘ lltlflltlfld‘ had been 800d. Mr. S. G. Peppin. in charge of I I Veteran Mining the seed potato inspection services‘ Cl‘ the - i _1 id l ~ . think thijioilhriacefrceagt. N. . yesterday would greatly damage] ‘QDHITOCS still undug. Expect Outline 0f llanadas Pacific Role iélltlttlll“ .111; health. He conducted fl gcn eral store for lnany years. 700. One large subscription was rvllfll‘ the Island Telephone Company. >-. EX, N.B., Oct. 31 —- lCP SUSS Markham, 90. once coll -—John d with manganese nlilling a died at OTTAWA. Oct. a1 -_ (c?) —Us-i lllllly well-informed sources said: he"? lfldlll’ they understood Primei Minister MricKenzie King shortlyl would announce an culling of Canada's Pacific effort and kin- dred DIOBrarr. of partial demobili- llestroycd By zatlon. One source indicated the , ann- mlllcemellt 111181": be made Within .43 llflllfs. but cabinet ministers. at-i lending the daily succession of meetings. were silent. The announcement when it com- es. mlsht disclose that a third each of the navy and air force and a division of the army will be en- listed for Pacific service on a re- voluntnry basis after leave in Canada and with campaign pray ml a basis similar to that being offered "-‘ _h troops. 18 Jap Vessels er by American submarines announced bv the navy today. along the enemy's sumllv lincs. rn ses t0 974 the rllnnber war started. ‘Armed Forces Have 93.5 Pver Cent Of Objective cent. Al. th start of today's sellins. "l! nationai total was $513693"). $5 n result of Monday's purchases t0- iwnmg ilmviliihsoiislzss tiio aimiiiig compare in the sixth loan. The same stase is “$00,”; minimum oblBi-‘lll/e oogin analysis of the flsures BMW- ed that individual Canadians have pun-hum $231,746,850. an averalfl of about $33,300,000 each day of the loan. In the sixth loan the daily average for individual pur- chasers was 935.700.999- 703,650 subscribed. it was ullllolu-i ced by headquarters. The Provin- seed ilotatoes from this PYOVlllCe at; y“ Queen-S No.11, Rusyico, yi-hh‘ by Springfield Mm 45 5 W1- l-eniififllfllblll arranged today to distrib- mincypanvi In King's County, Dundas \v:tll secret lnrdcrs since 1940 when Brit-i ywas ahead, followed by lvforeli with loll. quota :7 .,, . Churchill not town, $262,500; King's County. sili- ted yesterday. a $50,000 purc c ‘~\\'_ nccted with milling operations inl iAlbert County and lntcr associat- tlilssex after a year of fzlil- WASHING/ION. Oct. 3i - 1A? —De.structioil of i8 additional Jmp- . anode vessels including on: destroy- was This blow hv submarines battling of enemy shins sunk. ilrobublv sunk or dam aged bv submsrlnts alone since the illlfi indoctrination ofil released showing the standing ml parlance c: holding the enllroachcs 130th‘ to Alli\\‘(‘l']). Oct. 31 lCP) ___! n ‘nu-s assured oi extra foodl risllllzls tables as the gov- LON DO utc 20,000 ions of food stored in 58 3 pel- cent of a $12,000 OiljCCiltt‘ Illll was ilrepnring against invas- LONDON, Oci. 3l~<CPl— Pririlc i\'Illl1Sl(.'l' Churchill, seeking to pro-. long the tenure 0f lllc present; pal-nutrient and his coalition gov-, crlltlleni, told the House of Com-i ' .".'illl§ difficult to, lvlicve" gnillst Germany» cull t-o clvzled bri 1e CilFlSlYflliiS or levtll Easter," allcl that he (roulrly liner, medlct the end before early, suiilrnci‘, ' "ll. would not be prudent" to as ulnc that it will tuke less than, l 18 mcllllls after" Hitler's downfall to Uzieut Jixpazi. he warned, but ed that all (‘iCCiiOn milsl be ' ll . after Gerlnauy is disposed of. wiltlhout wailing for Japan's down- a . - l Mr. Churchill frankly fidllllblédi that “litany higll military authorifl tics with every means to jurlge"l were more ilopeful than he on the, end of the war with Germany, us‘ for Japan, he said his "forecasts: must be revised every few months by the combined chiefs of staffs)” His picture — in contrast with his declaration only four days s80 that "up are in thc last lap..- , come as background for his demand i for another i2 months reprieve for parliament, already nine years old, and retention of the coalition cabinet until after Germany's de- feat. The House of Ccmmons Rave their louder nmld cheers every in- dieaiion hat his wish would oe ' ilrnllieij,___wll.ll0llt_ _dissent_giyillg 1. LONDON, Oct. 31 (AP) Tile Red Army, advancing to- ward doomed Budapest on a 60- mllc wide front between the 'I‘iszrt and Danube rivers, reached points 43 miles southeast of the Hun- mpilnl today and fought. th~ Germ n in tho streets of the large ralluay" junction city of KCFiWkClllPi. The illrusl» into Kcscskclnet. Htlllgnlryfls third-largest provincial city, 44 miles southeast of Buda- e . and 20 miles ivest of the ism, was nimounccd in the So- viet daitv communique broadcast from Moscow and recorded in m i2 PAGES By ROSS MUNRO WITH THE 1ST CANADIAN ARMY IN HOLLAND, Oct. ~31 — (CP A captured German order, issued by Gen. Gustav Von Zangen, German 15th Army, showed today that the enemy High Command feirs that once Antwerp is being used as a supply port, a death blow might be delivered at Northern efore Jhe win ter. fidttti. lnlwlznr lVlAY suzu DEFEAT 01g ENEMY Captured Nazi Order other Phi I U-SA. l5.“- Dsiivcrsl. .00. Cable) — commander of the Battle For Antwerp Is Won By Allied Forces By HOWARD COWAN Tile order, tinted 15th Army LONDON. Oct. 31 — tAP) — Hcurlqliuricrs, Oct. 7, and cap- British and Canadian armored; turcd in llle Scllcltle sector, said: for s, operating under extreme dill . fought tllrough to the Malls (Mouser liver llortll of Tilburg tonight and closed within n half-mile of the Gcertruidenberg bridge, one‘ of the main escape routes for Ger- lllall troops fleeing southwestern Holland. left flank successfully bore the brunt of a. Nazi diversion assault which rfmificaums» ‘he Erhllnsh WWM "The ham‘ “Km: PM‘ “s, dented American lines but failed to affect in any way Allied overall . 259021,!" baessg: Fofiétzgrlal 1 nd Qatar", is ,,‘},",,‘k',,§,',,f“§,,,'“'f{' operations. i m ° n a " , large and completely protected Gfll- Dflmilifiy. flimlllllldflr of s" a??? “gishngki?! ‘alaegm in ‘hi.’ Nu‘ mum“ “mm “l “mi iiill‘b(ll‘. They might deliver a the Brltiih 311d Aflfly- "It l! I a .‘ o VIVtIC e- on as eon reduced to hold his western front. It (19,111. blow a; thi- hm-th Gefmgn question how fast and how far came no a e and lacked the power to accomplish its objective. 1 illstczltl and m. Berlin itself bg- buck the Germans will go.” ¢=:— -~-~—- v“ v smue-as. (cl-e the m5“ o; “qnterg- ‘ Zangen expressed concern over Canadian troops to the west. rumors which had spread among clelmnl? the “Blvd”! illllllulllihes oan ota n . . . M we lacnlvzlssavtd ‘arr ~ . l - - ' ‘av m south Pa H If W M k mi ‘m: tgaioggifiiiviipeilse ?§“o‘2i“..‘i.§“ill‘1’ll.‘ll“.ii‘.§fi.&i.“2%' a - a ‘lnlenlilling to confuse the German m,“ u. , , f _, 1 ' soldier in this battle task ordered T“ an firm?!“ If“? Sn)‘ 110k“ by the Fuohrer. Whether the e,ffl‘f,§,,"1“a'f“;h"' 91“ wmchir" ‘———-—i~—"'¢~~~~1 '— a ' _ kllO\\'-Ii-i1llS in some headquarters scheme ggtuayy ‘?r,§,;‘...‘.‘,‘{‘°fi,e‘°w' ‘.9 are participating in such non- ‘my - . . ' t "' v “f H M ‘The seventh victory loan caln- sense. which then quickly reaches mid ‘iinzawiliiiicizl-gn.siliiguligdhliliggn poign passed the hHII-V-‘lly nlllylc, ll i‘ ' I don't know. This Ldcclarcd the posltion of the Nazi here yesterday with a total of rl,-, on however, to four." l garrison \ “‘l'_l‘DEi€S8." Highways south oi til-z Mails were v.crc_ ordered to instruct i black with Nazi transport movlmt =tue troops "n. inc clearest and Willald the few" fixed anu-ovnloon “lei-e; most flcrual manner" on the im- ggggixes left standing across the Canadian. British. American Polish and Netherlands troops pur- Sllllll!’ tile retrczliinz: Nazis lawless the lint and flooded Netherlands countryside were forced to lcmain on tile roads and llilzlz- ways as even lnianrrymen found themselves Wfilifllvilll‘. ill knee-deep! mud the instant they left hard‘ i Home After 50 Operational Flights Flying Officer James Homily of Mr and Mrs. J, J, 119ml; Fitzroy Street. Charlottetown. rived home last night from over- seas Via New York. F0 Horrlby enlisted in the R. C A. F. or, June llth. 1940 and after training in various camps throughout Oll- tsrlo and the Maritlmes, 1-1: 1.1 England on March 10th, 1943. F0 Homily made fifty operational flight.- over Germany. He now ex. Denis to be allocated to instruc- tion work in Canada. 275-llcd Hospital At Windsor, ll. S. - HALIFAX, Oct 31 — (CP) - A military hospital with a 275-115»: 118115010’ has been built at Wino‘- ,§0l'» N. S . the army announcer lhere today. The hospital. a tem- IPOrarY structure. is one of the big- 295! 1n the east coast region. Primary use of the hospital, the 117ml’ said. will be for the care of Canadian soldiers wounded in Eu- rope. It will be several weeks before it goes intc operation. '18]. C A. MacDonald of Syn- nel’. N. S . has been appointed commanding officer. Expects War_ To Last Two Years '1 Conflict With Germany May Not End Before Early Next Summer. l __ ‘Red Army Continues Advance On Baddpest The Fettou ‘tafe no Ens m View ttntnaiir sees me rlmsn! sccllllfi rcnciilli: to his bill to pro- long parliament Leaders of oppo- sition group. chimed agreement that, the time for a general elec- tion had not arrived. Arihur~ Greenwood, opposition e". said whatever government \ s in power after Germany's dc- fcat. the la-bor irariy would give ii whole-hrarted support in prosecu- tion of the war against Japan. The prime minister's election references were interpreted as in~ dicatinl: there would be no general election before next June at the earliest but that one would b’- held before next October Mr. Churchill‘; reference necessity of seeing that the fight- .\lI‘ ";.'OZ’.'..\LC ' ti. SERVICE Toronto. 0c’. 31 - w?» - Milli- mum and maximum temperatures, Vancouver 52. 52; Edmonton fill 32; Regina 25. '78; Winnipeg 33, 39| w the, ing services had the fullest possible “New 96- 60: Ottawa 26. ml opportunity to volel at the next)‘ M°mreal 30' 51- cleclloll drew pro orlged cheers from the Héausefl m 1 l 705.6551‘ t " i on-. vulgsiolioiric cignniisy .22. cliirlniz it illtzrli-lm; Pwvlllcefr-i h Fresh (the warl to a speedy end at any w“ M v cloudy Wthlg t lcat- time," but added that "against; that; tered owers chiefly in New Bruns- must be set ti... fro? oonltrvollhiofiwlck~ ggmsgg,"fiteigegggllvanglglfgg “fail, aniglgliéntlztm tgislgfgerrioon at l2.ll Viousxy known amomhulzqgggz mun} Sun sets this afternoon at 5.4! cigiiezf ‘flljnaljfflmm and the orig rises tomorrow morning a» vigor of their oounter-attacksli "his 1 N b along with the Allied supply prob-l 7th_ grfgg $9114," moon ovem e] lem. Mr. Churchill said that "in, gummemdl, “d? dihwen mLnu-l all these ctiilgcltlmitialtlcltes I certslglll‘ tes later than Charlottetown. , r n ee. mnm" p" c 5 teesssua? -. DAILY AIR. slsnvlcs; ;§¢.5nllnil:=9_qtit>nse..g.-£*l- ll , __ , _ r. Mohcton .- Iaavea Charlottetown ‘I AM. ll so A.M.- s P Arrivea Charlottetown i: 4a r M. s is P.lVl. use r M. SUNDAY SERVICE have Charlottetown 11.80 AM. and t I’. M. Arrive Charlottetown 2 P. M and 5.45 P. M. CllAllllflTTilTOtVN - NEW G ‘ ‘London by the Soviet Radio Mon- or. The Berlin radio, said the Rus- sians continued their pressure in Poland on both sides of Pulutsk. 28 miles due north of Warsaw; and said two undefined Soviet pene- trations were made along the Nurcw river. Tn the progressing campaign to LASGOW (Daily except Sunday) Leave Charlottetown 1 l‘. . . Arrive Charlottetown 5.50 I’. M I E 1 —N. S FERRY SERVICE clean the enemy out. of Yugo- slavia, Marshal Tito‘s Partisan [Mug [NCLEDING SUNDAYS headquarters announced capture Leave Wood Islands-MM A. M and 2.00 P. Al. 4 Leaves Carlin-IMO noon and .00 .I- oi‘ Imolski. 38 miles east of Split, anti said the Purlisans wrrc pur- suing the enemy toward Mostar. 3 . :: if. f“ "-.~;.._.::'