i- MAXIMS o; 4 MAXIMS n i. flu incredible mt um when >7%/’ //" '_—' "-""""'"""""""'- The People's Paper "vast" Read by Everybody ....=~r~:e--..,..-i-~fl-..........a-.r.-~i Covers Prince Edward? Island Like the Dew gar-rav- ¢w¢;-_;-__§5- g1“ CH Y — - D ARLUITETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18 1939 12 P ES ‘" ' "MW" "M" W" ’ AG Ir fll-“I. I. l. 04.00; ouun n! u. l. use. ALLIES TO POOL RESOURCES Germans Close Czech Academies After Qgtbreaks Nine Shot In Demonstrations In Protectorate Of Bohemia- Moravia. N01. 1'! —(0P) —Nino Ozechl nave been shot to death as said a result of "demonstrations" and “resistance" to German authority in the protectorate of Bohemia- Moravia, heart of the former Czec- lio -Slovak republc. the German pews agency announced tonight. The agency said tlta-t this and other extraordinary measures, in- cluding driest of “a. large number" of persons and the closing foi- three years or Czech academies, had n sufficient to restore order in Prague. the former Czech (Wdplldl. schools and the Karlovy Technical Institute and taken away E200 stud- 1 eiits. both young men an young women, to unannounced destii\8.-~ 1,1 i. [Nile disturbances were attributed to "o group of Czech intellectuals associated with Bones." Dr. Eduard B81105, last president of independent. Czecliu- Slovakia, went into exile following the break-up of the re- iibli: last. March and the cstinb- lfllllPllb of Boliemiii- Moravia as a iiroicctornte under German rule. Tllc agency said the nine “perpe- iriiiors" were shot "in consequence" oi a snubs on Germans in patriotic demonstrations on Oct. 28 and a- gain oii Nov. 15. it was not made clear immediately whether the nine were executed or killed in fighting. Shortly after news of the dlsor - ers reached Berlin tele hone com- llllllllUdLlOll with the ol Czech cap- itnl tins suspended. Tilt‘ earlier dispatches said shots ' were licnrd at Masaryk College but. thin "apparently" no one was in- uicd. Liitcr, a report circulated in ragiie that the nine Czechs had beensliot after a raid on a secret printing plant. Armored cars manned by elite Illardsmeii patrolled Prague streets during the day. c. late for Notices in this column 3 cents per word. "Rummage sale tonight, Trinity 52cm. flail, 0:30. 14-754 "D1". Bell's Office, Carleton, is Closed uiiiil further notice. L-lfl-ll-IB-ll. "T17; our special Goose Dinner 511111111X. November 19th from i» to 8 P. .\1. Pooics Hotel, Montague. 14-720-11-18-11. "Lantern Slides. Lecture and Box §ociiii at Pleasant Grove November 22nd. If stormy, Thursday. L-725-11-18-li. ' Gvt n Roast Chicken at Hamp- ;11~ w. M s. suie today, at iei~.-,-.r. ll! mire so... L- 123-11-115-11. "Buying dressed poultry daily. Pd highest prices. W. P. siiuti - L-GQZ-ll-ll-Iil. ‘ nding Sprliigliill coal a‘. ‘AM/ll. Sliturduy. B, C. Webster. Ii-751. HVBlllflO and dance in Sen View °-i._MOlid8,V. November 20. 110i fine first fine night. L-750-11-lB-2l. B1"BOI‘(A(‘II Town Iinll tonight 11110. Dressed geese for tirlzcs. _Arliiiissloii free. Card Party, Mou- ‘Nl Iillilit. Bedeque at Mrs. W. A. (union's, L175’! .. v lluiiter River starch factory fiflifli Wednesday. Nov. 22 to Sut- g-‘Hll’. Nov. 25 except as arrang- “ L-745-ll-lB-5l. “B11130 and Da-nce, St. Teresa's §{Q'.'X-,,X\;$§11(1)<>rsc<1lpv.t Novciifnbciéyt 22nnd. es ta. " n n6 “tummy. November 23rd. L-133-1l-18-2i. "Dance Orwell Hall Wednesdo . xgvfmyber 22nd. Lunch served. Nf "n31 first 5119 niilht following. Lr-732-1l-18-ll. h“T1ie Ham shire w. M. s. will ‘ind a 500d sn e Saturday afternoon Rovers Hardware. L-ssa-ii-ii-ia . o! ‘Cattleuvve require a quantity. Ph rows and bulls mum" or wriic us for prices. is- ‘! 501d Storage Co. L-989-9-30-tf zfiigflttlng and cleaning Plant r ‘_ "1 lfiiown Pm‘ Sales. Queen Std simian F“i‘f‘i‘l"‘»"é£l ’ ‘ 00C l S l (D ‘hmugh the organization. Irbll-ll-IT-fl. ‘Flip news agency communique “For some time a group of Czech inllfllefililfl-ls associated with the fugitive former president Ecnes have sought to disturb ace and order in the protectors of B0- hemlu- MOfBNla, with greater stgialler demonstrations and resis- rice. "Investigation gstablishod that leaders in these acts of resistance were w be found particularly in colleges and academies. "In Consequence of tire-fact that BERLIN, Nov. l7--(AP)—A Prague dispatch to the German news agency today said that nine persons had been shot to death and a large number ar- rested in connection with stud- ent disturbances there. Telephone unuflllllllfllluflll with Prague was difficult and few details were available. It was established during one call. howlvcr, that reports in informed Prague circles were thnt the executions followed revelations made after a raid on an illegal printing estab- lishment in Ohe home of II former Czech government of- fldflltl. This cull WM interrupt- e . Another connection estab- llthfid with an American offi- cial in the former Czecho- Slovak capital disclosed that the city was quiet and that the general population heard about the executions hours after they occurred. Berlin official and other us- pally well-informed quarters were tight-Upped and 331d nothing was known beyond the D. N. B. communique. on Oct. 28 and Nov. 15 these ele- ments assaulted individual Ger- mans, Czech iicnzlciiiics have been closed for three years. nine perpet- triitors were shot and a large num- ber of participants arrested." Earlier a government. spokesman said that. order prevailed iii Prague and that a smnl element was re- sponsible for disturbances there. To- night the propaganda. ministry iind other officials in Berlin said they knew nothing more than the infor- mation contained in the communi- que. (The Czech lcgntioii in Paris Fri- day niiiicunced formation of o. Czecho-Sloyakm nntioiinl committee to exercise sovereign rights for the physically non-cirlslnnt state. The iiinln purpose was said to be to cnr- ry out. (he Oct. 2 accord with France authorizing formation cf a Czech location to fight ivitli the French nrniv agiilfist Gcrnrny, Former president Bones is a leading mem- ber of the committee.) Former Kaiser Buoyed By Hope 0f Family's Return DOOIIN, THE NETHERLANDS. Nov. l’! --(CP-llavusl —Foi1ncl' Kaiser Wilhelm was described to- night by sources clnsc to his exiled household as buoyed by new hope ofa. llolienzollcrii restoration in Germany. The 80-year-old former Emperor at. one time Cfllllllmplilhfi moving to a. safer haven at his estate on llic Island of Corfu, but he has ilclinlicly abandoned such plans. it. was said. Wilhelm was said to have assured members 0f his sinfi only today that. he could guarantee tlicre was nu reason to fear a pos- sible German invasion of tho Neth- erlamls. Ilcpnitcd to be under the close watch of the Gestapo (German secret. police), the Ear-Kaiser in con- tinuing lils normal routine-chop- ping his quota of wood, studying, writing, and following the wars progress on large mun! indicating tlzc position of the German and Allied armies. Recent developments in German!- particulzirly persistent rumors of increasing mnnarchiiit sympathies» w re said to have revived Wilhelm ii hopes that a Iloheriznll n might up’ occupy a throne In the Reich. Ile was described as seriously dis- turbed. however. by reports of "It arrest of the former Crown Prince Wilhelm. (Zurich dispatches recently Y9‘ ported the former Crown Prince ad been confined to his Polflllllm estate because his public 8009"‘ lnee invariably provoked pro-mon- nrohiai demonstrations.) 01' UNABLE T0 HY PLANES INTI] CANADA Warcraft M u s t B e Wheeled Across Border T 0 Avoid Neutrality L a w Hold -Up OTPAWA, Nov. 0GP) — Technicallti-es of the United States neutrality act. forbid flying war- planes that. Canada and Great Brit- ain may buy in the United States across he international boundary, and Canadian overnment officials, like United Sta airplane manu- facturers and munitions export lic- ence board officers, have given the matter careful stud-y. Normal tramportatlon of the P14111118. such as by railway flatcars and Great lakes freighters offers no difficulties, but in that Case the crated and at some Canadian airport or transhlpped to an ocean freighter for transfer to Eilifiland or France. any planes. however. would be required in a hurry, and fast- est way would be to fly them to the border. land on United States soil and wheel the aircraft over the line after customs forn-ialities had been disposed of. The pilots of the new owners could then climb into the to the imod to it in Canada. Tractors might offer a solution to the actual wheeling of the air- craft across the boundary or they may be mB-nhnnclled over the line by o. husky groundcrew or towed over by a truck. If its wheels re- mained firmly on the ground, there might not be an object on under the new legislation. it was considered m have the lanas taxi into Canada under ther own ower if facilities I01‘ such an opera ion are available. United States ocean shipping is bflITcd from use for transporting aircraft to Canada, but inland wot- er shipping such as the rcat ilret oi’ bouts on the Great Ln es, is not considered under the ban. tAl Bapone Under Gare At Mental_ll_ospital BALTIMORE, Nov. 1'l—Behlnd a barrier of secrecy, "Scarface Al“ Capone. ruler of Chicago's gang- liind in the fabulous (lays of pro- hibltion. tonight began treaties-int calculated to relieve a brain dis- order tliat attacked liun 1n 11115011 more than two years 118°- Union Memorial Hospital auth- orities and his attending hyfiiviflfl Dr. Joseph Moore. wide Y-k-YWW" isypliilologlst and an irlfilfilflwi’ Bl the Johns Hopkins Medical School issued a guarded statement. assert- 11y; Capone would be treated a patient and not as a Public Der- sonalltyf’ But they turned aside all Q1185- tions relating to his present 0011- ditioii. the probable time reqllilfd for medical attcntlon._t.lie type of treatrriciit and possibility of his YCSDCIISK Capone is suffering from par- esis, a. progressive brain paralysis. Hospital authorities 81119110511“ the former gang czar would be allowed no visitors and that tilt SBO-a-dny suite on the fifth floor of the institution would be closed to all except. liospilnl attaches and members of the fumllY- ' His wife. mother and brother. who accompanied him to the hos- pital yesterday after his release ‘by federal authorities at Icwisimrif. Pa, were reported to hove been joined by snot-her brother and taken quarters at a midtown howl- Mcantlme, police commlsiozici" Robert Stanton spiked rumors that a “heavy guard" had been placed about the hospital to thwart pos- sible gangland reprlsals against Capone. In Washington. Attorney Geneml Frank Murphy said he was not under "personal surveil- lance" by the Justice Department. Police Seek To Solve Mystery 0t Disappearance MONTREAL. Nov. i'l—'l>olice are investigating the week-old dis- QppEBTBXICG of Col. George E. Bcauchamp, medical officer in the quarantine service of the pensions and national health department. who inst was secn when he drove away from his office Nov. 11. Inspector Armand Brodeur said no trace has been found of the 58-year-old officer or of his auto- mobile. Brodeur said Col. Beau- champ left his office for the waterfront iit about six o'clock last By The Canadian PIN! Anti-airman Ira and shrill sirens sent civ scurrying to sh four coun Fri y as Gennan lanm covered lies extensive scouting flights since the outbreak of war, Anti-aircraft batteries opened fire on the Nazi squadrons in Great Britain, Pounce and Bokium amid a- larms were sounded in seven dis-t mots of Switzerland. The German planes were sighted 1n localities within a vast area stretching from Switzerland to western England and from the Shetland Islands to the Mediterran- . CED. Prnogagaurda. pamphlets written in Fre and containing bitter at- tacks on Britain were dropped in France and Switzerland but no bombing attacks were carried out by the planes. The Maltese cros on the Nazi raiders was sighted at 31 points in the four countries. At many places as the enemy planes were sight/ed going and comin . A single plane ivas seen over Be gium. It flew over the Gard region at a height of a- bout 20000 f n as anti- . eet. As soo aircraft batteries opened fire the plane fled. Thirteen cities in England. Scot- land and Wales had alarms and a solitary plane was ighted over the Shetland Islands. Six Swiss Gillies and towns reported that they had sighted Nazi planes and alarms two or more alarms were sounded we Anti -aircraft Guns Roar As Nazi Scouting Planes Active In Four Countries the Mediterranean. In land two German planes were s1 ted over Cheshire d northern Wales and were being carried out by the air- raid precautions organization at the moment the plane appeared. A5 it had been announced iii advance that the public realized warning was be- ingngiven. most of the British towns and cities business continued as usual and ere was little interruption in street traffic. In one police tribunal, however. the judges suspended 001111- PflDUs of some schools were taken to underground shelters. Office workers in the principal cities ran m windows in the hope of seeing enemy planes. Inhabitants of citiies in Cheshire and Iiancashire said that after the all-clear signal was The French cities where raid a- larms sounded during the day weie Lyon. Mamcille, Nimes Annemassc. Armeoy, Clermont-Ferrand, Chatel- lerault, Poitiers and Dunkerque. The average duration of the alarm was about an hour. No difficulties of any kind were encountered in carrying out air raid precautions. In Switzerland German planes were sighted at Schaffuussen, Basel, Borne. Iiucerne and Zug. Propagan- weie sounded in i0 French cities, including Dunkerque in the extreme northwest pear the Einglish Channel and Marseilles in the southeast on AEEEFUXOEPELTS ELIGIBLE E 0R MARKET PLAN Delegation Returns From Interviewing Federal Officials At Ottawa. OHARLOTPETOWN, Nov .l'l—. All grades of fox pelts would be ac-l cepted under the Federal Govern-= merit plan to assist in oo-operative marketing of furs, Major A. S. Robertcii, Vice-President of the Canadian National Silver Fox Breeders Association said last night. Major Robertson, Mermaid, had just returned from Ottawa. where, with Mr. George A. Callback, manager oi’ the Fur Marketing Department of the C. N. S, F. B. A. and M1‘. J. Lester Douglas. M. P.. for Queens, he conferred with Federal Depart- ment of Agriculture officials. The department's decision to ac- cept all grades of pelts removed Red e55?" Basel and Zug reg sumed that in several cases same planes ferant points Campaign Going Strong Rm Cross war Apnea-i opened yesterday moming witha. 'Ba.ng" with all the cunvassers set wmake the returns go “over the top." some of the contributions received during the openLng day include; $100 from each of the following:- Hon. B. W. Icpage, Lieutenant Governor, De- blols Brothers, Dr. W. J. P. Mac- Mlllan, Mr. George J. Tweedy, Mrs. V. L. Goodwill. $230 from the firm of Moore 8c MacLeod. $150 from Canada Packers, $150 from Mr. and Mrs. C. H. B. Longworth, $100 from Mr. G. F. Hutcheson. Brief Earth Tremors Felt BALTIMORE. Nov. l7—(AP)-— Reports of another brief earthquake, similar to the one which shook four states two days ago, flooded newspaper office telephone switch- the "biggest objection to the mar- keting proposal," Major Robertson snlil. Pl'l‘VlO\1L'y the government had set the lowest price skin eleg- lble at $10. The Department of Agriculture, under authority of an act passed last May, ls prepared to make a. 50 per cent advance to ranchers on the value of fox skins shipped through Co-operative Marketing Organizations. The amount would be on the same bsriis as that ordinarily ad- vanced by marketing organizations. The rancher getting the money would be required to pay interest until the skin»; were sold. Under the government assistance plan. however. the rancher would not be liable to return any money in the event the skin did not sell for the amount of the advance. Under normal conditions, Major Robertson said. the chances ' a rancher would be called on to rc- turn an advance by t-he fur mar- keting organization in which he was concerned were "practically nil." Under wartime conditions, however, it was different. y Any (xi-operative fur marketlngt organization in the Dominion was at liberty to handle all or a por- tlon of its furs under the plan, it was said. When the scheme was first- pro- posed fur marketing organizations in this province sought. to have the government advance 80 per cent of the value of the skin. The department took the stand, Major Robertson said last night, that it was guaranteeing without strings i-he advance and for that reason it was equivalent to the former 60 per cent plan used by Satin-day evening, ostensibly bound for the waterfront to meet o, ship, fur pools, boards here tonight. Frightened citizens reported rntt- tllng dishes and moving furniture and sensations simfar to those Iiiot/ed during the earlier shock. YTime of the shock was set iinof- iicially at about. 9:35 PM. International At A Glance By The Canadian Press BERLIN-D. N. 13.. German News Agency, reports nine Czechs shill- iio death as result of demonstra- tions in Prague, many Czechs ar- rested; western front quiet. LONDON-British planes photo- graph German naval base; Allied Supreme Wu- Counoll ‘pools coon- olnlo resources; first air raid alarms of wur sound on England's west count; Britain calls for more men and women for auxiliary work. PARIS-French high command fella of "local activity" on western front. IIONG KONG-China rushes best troop: to meet Japanese thrust at southwestern "lifelined APPOINTED DEAN AT MONTE Al. MONTREAL. NOV. 1'7 —(CPl - Rcv. John Harkiieas Dixon of ‘Tor- onto, who has acceptcd the rector- shlp of Christ Church Cathode-ml here. has been appointed Anglican dean of Montreal, it was announced (today by Bishqi Arthur Oarlisie. da pamphlets were drCifJped in the ions. It was as- the were sighted from dif- BETA I l S DE NEWAIRPURT EXPENDITURE Belated Reply From Ottawa Promises Completion Next Spring Promise that the remalningwork on the new Charlottetown airport will be finished "as soon a; the ground is workable next Spring" has been received by His Worship Mayor Foster from Mr. V. I. Smart, Deputy Minister of Trans- port, Ottawa Failure to complete the total programme this year is attributed to "lite wet weather encountered this fnil ” Mr. Smarts lettci- is dated Nov. '1. but the envelope bean the post- offlce stamp, "Ottawa, Nov. 15." It is in reply to a letter from Mayor Foster. Oct. 31. to the Con- troller of Civil Aviation with re- gard to the progress on the air- ort "Gravel," states Mr. Stuart, “is now being laid on the runways for temporary surfacing and we antici- pate that the runways will be ready for use as soon as the ground freezes. The remainder of the work will be finished as soon as the ground is workaible next Spring." Attached to Mr. Smartu letter are schedules showing the total a- mounts enciii..bered for construc- tion to date, and the actual per- centage of the "ork completed by items to Oct. 21. These are as fol- lows: SCHEDULE “A” (Total Amounts Encum‘ v3) Preliminary Field Develop- ment - - - - - - - - -$ Hard Surfacing - -- - - -$ Departmental Super- vision - - - - - - - - S .00 30960.00 2124.00 l 927110.00 SCHEDULE "B" (Progresl Bv Items) to October 21st Construction 7o Comlllfill [Slumping d: G-rubbin-g- - - - 86 ‘llflflfl Diversion lGradiiig - - - - - - - - - - - 10° .Ditching - - - - - - - - - - - 100 Gravclling - - - - - - - - - - 10° Fencing - - - - - - - - - - - - 10° No. 1 Landing Strip Grading - - - - - - - - - - - 9° No. Iinndlng Strip (‘irziclnig - - ~ - — - - - - - - 1°° 3v Landing Strip o0 - ioo 10o qty.» ~3- . _ . . . . - . - - - 4s 1W, t-Du . . . . . . . - - - - av Glrrivicl lDFRllll\\'l.ySNO. 1&N.2 83 Smoothing, Dragging a Rol- ling - - - - - - - - - - - - 21 BHINAMUVES TUPRUTEBT LIEELINE J ap Troops Drive T0- ward Supply Forts. I-IONG KONG, Nov. l’1—(AP)—— China today rushed some of best troops, Kwangsi Province units, to South Kwangtung Province to stem the advance of Japanese forces driving toward the 611111856 801M1- wcstern “lifcline" supply routes. ‘Iliese troops, who had been oper- nlliig in Eastern Kwfl-HBWHK. W916 dispatched to the areas west of Pakhoi where t-he Japanese were pushing inland and northward to- ward vltnl routes. The Japanese stated tonight that their forces were consolidating con- trol of the area around Yamhsien, about 30 miles inland from the place where the Japanese landed Wednesday under cover fire from warships. The landing place was 45 miles west of Pakhol, treaty port in the. Gulf of Tonklrig, Japanese officials asserted they were straddling the road from Pak- lioi to Niiiikiiig, Chinese Army l-Icndqunrtcrs in Kwangsi. ‘This would put the troops still at least 60 miles from the main highway be- tween Kivoiigsl and French Indo- China. England, council today decided to pool Great Britain and France in On the war front, the Air Arrangements to cover council meeting. Supreme War Council. Ahsoot sinaulta-neuudy tfllfi 0t the British Enlpimh - 000.000 inhabitants pledwd the wealth and manpower to defeat Adolf Hitler's army, and the War Office called f0!‘ 40,000 men gnd women to man home defences. The day also brought from military experts a hint that the Gennan High Command In ‘Igfering from serious dimen- n. The inter-allied oouncl to draw up rt prop-m jointly, avoiding competition in buying goods abroad which are needed to complete their pro- grflmi- It also was agreed to share deficiencies should any arise dur- m-il the course oi’_ the war. The task will be accomplished by pemum- ent Anglo-French executive com- rcrgttees which now are being form- (Continued on page l, Ooi d) ll. S. Society Predicts New iProseeutions important German naval base" photographed by the Royal Air Force during the day. The announcement said the R. A. F. planes flew over northwestern Germany and encountered heavy anti-ain- craft. fire, but. no other defaill were given. 1v l Cooperation Is Reached Between‘ France Important Ge-rr-nan Naval Base Mapped By R. A. F. A While War Front Quiet. (By Guy Rhoades, Canadian Prosl Staff Writer) _ LONDON, Nov. 17--(CP Cable)—'l‘he inter-allied win‘ the economic resources of their war against Nazi Ge!- many, bringing cooperative efficiency in 11 weeks to a poiM reached only after three years of the first GreatWar. Ministry announced that “ac had been successfully the closest coordination 0d efforts in the air and economic warfare as well as in ao- quiring war materials, oil and food, were drafted at tho The council’: decision was announced early this eve;- ing after a three-hour meeting, tho third such held sinol the war began. It was attended by General Maurice Gamb- lin, French Commander-in-Cliief; lemin, Commander-in-Cliief of the French Air Force, and Admiral of the Fleet Jean Dorian of the who flew here from Francs, and Prime Minister Chamber- lain, Foreign Secretary Viscount Halifax and Air Secro- tary Sir Kingsley Wood and other members of the British General Victor Vull- French Navy Nazis Seize Newsprint For South America LIMA, Peru, NW. l'l—~(Ai'P)-—<b gents of the Swedish nteumsh-tp Valparaiso won advised today that tho ship, marrying o. cargo of navi- print, had been seized by the Ger- man Navy and taken to a. German port. The Valparaiso left Gntlicn- burg, Sweden, Oct. 15. News of the seizure caused 00l- oern in pimltstiing circles hare sing the available supply of ricwrpmm ha; been running short. The cargo was consigned to Peru, Chile and other countries on the wet mast of Scum Azlnierlca. (Lloyd's registry lists the Valpem- isiaonnnvessel 013.759 tons will: in i917. owned by the Rederaktieh Nordjernan Omnpany, Stockholm, and managed by A. A. Johnson.) You (An Wonk By Howard W, Associated mess Science Editor PHILADELPHIA, NOV. 1'7 --(A.P) Preciiitioii that Germany soon may be expected to persecute Christians and Russia to persecute Jews was made by the American Philosophic- al Sociciy today by Carlton Hayes, Columbia University profesor. The society oldest. scientific body in the Unite Stats, devoted most totalitarianism. Prof. Hxrvcs defined how totalitarianism differs from all previous government systems, “In Rusig, Christians and in Ger- many Jews are first 0t rid of," he of Christians and Jews iii Russia. for if you are to erase the most COIISlIA. memory of the western mind you have w destroy Judaco- Christianity in its roots and in its flowers." he said. But they came from military training. Now, lie said. B. new genus of dictator llild arisen. Mussolinis father, he 54nd. was a blacksmith. Mussolini ova. educated in a minor normal school, his ca- reer was “that. of an unsuccessful school teacher and a second 0r third -l'l'll(! journalist whose military service was brief and inconspic- umis." Stalin he declared. was generated by a peasant shoemaker, clizmlssed from a. theological semiiia and furl-her schooling at 17 an "self- trrtined in the strong- arm arts of highway robbery and factory disor- m... ~ 0 Adolf Hitler was described as son of a minor Austrian customs offi- cial. with a minimum of formal schooling, frustrated efforts at painting and (lrlillflllf, iiglicr than ccrporu iii four years of tlic flr~t Great War. “Not. one of ihcsc world-shnkini! despots of our day," lic went. on. "comes from whrit we would doom respectable niileccdr-iiis, not 0111‘ of them was well educated or h“! impressive military reputc." Q» of today's session to discussions oi t said. “Presently it ivil be the turn . There always have been dictators, l families, from good educational ori |\ll(l riiiik iio ileum To new FRoM DMNQ A ‘illlllf. {ml 00mg it Y l TORONTO. Nov. l7~iCPt \l.iii- miim and maximum tenipcruiiirr-si: Dawson 11B 1 Vancouver Winnipeg Edmonton Toronto Ottawa Montreal Zr: High tide this aftcruotu d‘ and tomorrow mornliiil 11¢ 3-10- 3.58 Sun sets this nftoriiorm M 4 39 and rises tomorrow morning B‘ .03: g , m First quarter moon N0lfilllt0l’ . '7 21 p. m. _ Suinmerslde tide ljlFhlffn m1“ utcs later than Cliarhtlrnonu n"; CAR FERRY s.\ii.i\i.~. d 945 A..'\'i 100 PVl 523:: BggflufrilPlli-llll‘ 1100 A M»- 705 P M. SATURDAYS ONLY Leaves Borden 445 P. M. Leaves Tormentine 1.00 P. M. ..~\-.;--.~. ..