M MAXIMG OIL ERE MAN _.-_._- Wf/ ///' MAXIMS 0F A hll-lRl-I .\l.\N "°'""‘"° ‘T. 3"“; 1.1.“. ‘i? , nd semi‘! 6 i I1" l1 ‘ v 1.32s. ......... The Peoples Paper Mflilm. Read by Everybody ..‘.:‘...":.. 1TiiIIJ;“.‘.T...'-.‘.".‘.‘, .3?“ _______ ‘ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew M dflilhnwll“ C‘ V" "7 N n w. ‘n .' _ > —A_— ‘Cw C i Vmlvi-hw-WVMRV i v ' ' ' "‘ m‘ — . __ .‘ . _ _ ,,_ _,._1___¢ ri._.;.g,".:.f... ‘tl......'... .43.- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1940 T‘; PAGES é;;l,“,,*,|.,.;.;...s.... Cre Into Koritza; Big Italicin Base Fascist Retreat Continues; Crowds Celebrate Victory In Athens. (l!) Max Ilarrcison Associated Press Staff Writer) ATHENS, Nov. 22--(AP)—Greek foroel marched proudly today into lerltza. third largest city of Italian-occupied Albania, one of Italy‘; two mim- llrlscs fur ller attempt to overrun Greece. Greek eohlnllls, headed by cavalry, were reported smashing alld pur- mln; Ffl§l‘l.\l troops beyond the town while other; we" "in to b, ihrrolenllll; the second main base, Argiroczlsto, eight miles within Ai- illlla llllli about 5U miles south 0f Koritza. ,\l| (lrvcrc rejoiced at the capture at lCoritza in the Greek invasion rt Italian-brill territory. It was from there that an Italian army set out t; days Ago lll a luekiess attempt at conquest. The DEB tnoutrd: “On 'i‘n Rome!" Greek news-papers now call Koritza a “liberated Greek town." There were reports that a great number of prisoners and consider- Ihle stores hall been captured in the valley town and that the retreating ltlllsns \\'(‘I'(‘ harassed by gunfire from mountain empiacemellts. EAST lnlK -\.rcl . hffi rep it‘ llt patrol. llls 1e.” n01; l\'.i$ lllltlll oi .\l.ll 1.. .\l here irorll 'z‘toll.~ Bl‘ llol‘ so Hall .,;"R“‘~’l'\'@ Wedllc hi llal], h, Q11 Three Airmen Still missing In llue. Woods (By D'\rel- 0 Donnell. Canadian Press Staff Writer) e.. Nov. 22-40?) funnn E. J. Be- _Ql...l\lll, speaking from an 0d hospital cot. in a tiny ' lei.- lln the shore of this tl l Quebec lake, describ- hc had purllchutcd f llll a falling \.l Force patrol plane. of tllrce crew-mem- . l Sillt", was llllfl crllnp hl-re early this morning while a lllllfl nnd air search con- Royal brought others still miss- whiie trying to al after an Atlantic liflPfl frost-bitten. Bf‘.- ille nlcdicni cnrc l-llnarll Montreal reek. soon hirer the plight of the missing nllln bccnllle known. WM- thel" (‘fiilfl.ll'l‘l§ prcvcllletl n plane from tnlzlllu hllll to hionircnl t0- dll". The frosl. bile was cllll- evternlll lll,llll‘_V. Tl tilc fl'r\_‘v'. an Mime slzlllv lllld rain storm halt- tc" the a-lirll sr-rlrcli for the mcn ltzil l ‘Wing nnd llfor':< of more than 150 men tak- ~. a St‘7\l‘t'l\ by land. Some hampered who flcw early this Benoit’: alter- t he f-‘rcnch - Canadian IpOtlsmt-ll wllo began seeking the hers Sunday were joined ycstcr- lll’ by .'l'li\l‘l1\'llllill(’l\' 100 R.C.A.F‘l llt"i in clllnllll: at Quebec City. lic-rrlbilll: how "the wetl- lhrr cllwlll lll on our base and we lfrenorrlerl-d to head for lul. ‘said the pntrol lalane had Wu in lhl- fill‘ l4 hours when F0. Mont- l. G. llfrllnl-llson of Saskatoon, the of ‘nte lncll still unreported. (Continued on pflgg m, Co] 7')‘ Coming Events l ._.._—l Rtscue Wednesday December m‘ _°°<1‘-l‘ Supper. Cape Traverse L~709-ll-23-ll. "Lmvflll 5E7)“ l t. » . ce. Vernon 'l°l‘°°“ll1ill'l1>.v November 25m. ' L-765-li-23-li. sday. Decemb r lnd gates“- Peters Cathedral Tga "Rummage sale in 5t, 53mm")! at 6:30. L-470-11-16-2s. James L-BOS-ll-IQ-Sl all“? stile Saturday afternoon 0M in," Elm“ Bur. s. s. McDon- L-6l9-ll-20—22-23. l 10H gittlllhltanse Wed 15 all. t. G Emeeumlilc tllds‘ W mm ' ‘Sale °" Boslllc lllillllkfll‘ llrllllv "C Wiles tmbg o" Gm“ SUDWY- Tlivon Pres- nesdav. Novem- L-754-1i-23-20. no “m Ctl-eltotllisillf, 9- G. I. T. Concert in Milmlfly. November . lll. l Pmmilfl lOr Red Cross L-"lss-ll-éa-ll. .. lciilhllzér‘ co. whit!‘ tblfliiiLflstiléS-rblfd poultry. all L-"lsl-lrllzlzilb Dec. a1. ‘f: gllflilliltld Cakes in aid - liar 5mm“ . P afternoon mrlllfi °"‘° lo liliti‘&‘ ll l . We Bllboer ln k r El Itller sl-ilanll Tuesday‘ Nov- B in rad o! Churgfir serve from L-roo-ll-zs-m. ' It. was the some story March Athens populace to the southeast lll-here the Greeks were driving the Fascists toward Arlziro- eastro, a town 30 miles from Port. Edda, port. on the strait of Otranto. opposite the “1loo1" of the Italian boot, when». Italian troops and sup- plies have been moving into Al- barlla. Flags snapped from every Athens building, Happy crowds ran through lhn streets. A throng in front of the army headquarters building roared an ovation for Premier John Mclaxas wllcn he rlppcllrcd on the steps to announce the news. The time of the Greeks‘ entrance into Korllza was somewhat confus- ed. Onc report had it that they entered in the nlorrtine. another that it. was early afternoon. Per- haps the confusion arose from dif- fering hours oi movemcnt. of the LONDON, Nov. 22—l(‘Pl-—A Reuters dispatch from Athens tonight said that Italian troops in flight from Kllrltza were he- ing pursued bv their own tanks. now manned by Greeks. Th;- Greeks were said to have captured the tanks from relu- foreements rushed tn Koritza from Pogratlctz before the Ital- i.".ns fell back, advance guard and the main body OI troops. ‘Pile best account of the occupa- tion follows- Elriy today (lrcck batteries in-l stalled on the lllfl-Ill summits of the hiorava Mountain rllllgc turned a storm oi fire on the last Itlllfiln positions in the arcs. Thls Ire neutralized the Italian resistance and Fascist troops fled, leaving valuable wall" luau-rial. 0n; killed By explosion in Montreal MONTREAL. Nov. 22—(CP)—One man was killed and three others were inlurcd tctinv in all explosion which ll-rcckcd the top i100! Q1’ l lllfN-SIOTOV building of Dominion Ollcloth Company. causlntz damtllze estimated at $100,000 and affecting power lines on the street outside the structure. The blast resulted in the death 0! Joseph Raymond. t1, whose body was found near a. cork-lzrindins bm on the ton floor. Cause of the 9X- ploslon is not known definitely- Plallt. nlallntler Kenneth Robertson suzlrested some forcirm mil-W?!‘ m!" r1.lz throuah the breaker on the ground floor, where scrap cork ‘t: broken up. had become heated passluze to the storage bill on the top floor ‘and caused the blast». lLS. Vice-Consul, llewsmen said Arrested by Japs NEW YORK. Nov. 22 ——(AP) — Domci. Japanese News Agency, in a broadcast pick-rd up hereJoday said that Japanese police had ar- rested United States vice consul Linden in Hanoi. French Indo-China and "United Siulcs newspapermen’: for taking "photographs in the mill- tary won-c" nt Haiphong. Tile broadcast lulded that consul Reed had protested to the Japan- ese authorities. He was quoted as saying that the photographs nnd LARES MARTIAL LAW AS WAR Reds advise Bulgarlans not To |oln Axls Observers Expect the Small Slav State to Eventually Join the “New Order” Alli- ance. By_ ROBERT ST. JOHN Associated Press Staff Writer SOFIA. Bulgaria, Nov. 22.—tCP) —Sov1el. Russia. has advised her little SlliV friend. Bulgaria. to steer 01cm" of outright memberships in the cxpalldinsz Axis alliance, aquat- iflcd source said today. Nevertheless, despite underground tension in the country, most ob- servers are convinced that Bulgaria ellfllllllllly" will loin llitlcrnndMus- soillll lll their “new order." some Bulgarians — Communists, Liberals. lulPlilflCfllhfi and Ailrariaus. who rcllrcscut a large section Hlllstilliflll uubllC opinion-are argu- ing that so ions: as Russia herself is not lll) Ulll-Pllllll. party to the Axis military alliance Bulgaria should stop short. of joining. _ Bu‘. tillllutlilll Kind Boris risks lll- tcrnai opposition to a DIO-AXLS nlll- ilurv policy. diplomatic circles say. Bultlarin ls not slronlz enough. eleu with ltussltill backing. to resist. otlzol dctlltlnlh Illtlcl" is believed to have lllliflt‘ to the kins. who recently vis- itctl Berlin. llulellriall ministers may ilO 260 Men The Military TTallling Centre at Beach Grove Inn was a hive cf activity yesterday as the second batch of trainees reported for then- JO-aav training period, star early in the morning a wntlnu flow of recruits reported at the camp and before nllrhtlall 260 young men lIl the 21 and 22-year-old hlass had finished Gllfplllllfl. _ Oulv 13 of their number were re- leClkfd as medically unfit by the tnecllcal authorities at the centre. Thlslcaves a total o; 247 men for lfMIllIIR. but it ls expected that l-llree more trainees will arm-e to- day, brlllillllt! the number up to 2o0. _'lllc first batch of trainees. CDH-Slfllllll: of 217 men, went mm camp on October 9. but only 202 of them finished trulnlnlr as a. total of l5 had been rejected, Those of the 11-year-old class. granted postpone- lIlOIlL from the first period because 0i season-able employment, reported for trallllltn yesterday, to Berlin next wcck to learn exactly what is expected. The result. some diplomatic quor- L013 sav. may follow the pattern 0f ltlllllanla—tzrtlcluai introduction _ of rlro-Gerlllan leaders in kcv cabinet posts. then complete ‘lilo-German lolltrol 0i the ttoverlmlcnt. econo- mic subserlvicllce. and finally an invitation Ln virtual military occu- naliOll which the country may be forced to accept unless the ltllssian attitude chances to more positive oppos‘ ion to German aims. _ Some parliamentary cicnutlcs. ap- parently with the zovernnlcnUs ta- cit consent. delivered lhclnsclvcs dllrllllz the day of vioientlyWortlcd (lclnnntls for territories now held by Greece and Yugoslavia. Wheat policy To be announced in February OTTAWA, Nov. 22 -—lCP) -— A goverlullcnt policy for handling next _\'e.'ll"s \\'ll('.'\l.C1‘0p is in llle lllakillg tlnd will be llllzluullcccl wilcll Par- liament lllects lll FOUl‘ll1ll'_\‘. 'I‘:atlc ‘ " 3. "Kiln on told the lions? illl ' c lllldulonnl clevrrol" and age spare is bclug provid- orl will. the intention oi ellclollng: ' to dcllvcr all their 1940 Iv ill, 1M0. cud of the m. crop yxlrll", the hiinlster sultl. - Ml". lyfaeKlllziozl did not. discus- ltlllllltlflll o ll . Dxp.ll"'l only after w ttll- v hcai fault.- wlrc lll ricuil lll e Depar- provincial. It was rumored in thc House lob- blcs lllnt. adjuulallncllt llnill F-Jb- rllzlljv would be taken next week. possibly on Wednesday. During the question period Navy hiinls..ll~ .Vl1\l’(l0lllllfl shad that tho site for lilo proposed Royal Cun- ndian Naval College had not been selected _\'cl. The question urns FnlHKl by Per- cy C. Black 1Com. Clllilbcflftlltll who Nffifllfil to llclvsprlpcl" leports cnr- ricd by lilo Canarlrln PITSi that till- naval college would be located lli"il' VlCiOflll. Thlese reports gave as their fource R. W. Mayhclv lllib. Victor- a_ . Mr. Mllcdonald said it was true that quarters were bring obtained on both cast nnd west coast for training offices for three to foul- month-periods. That. was probably (Continued on page 10, col 8) Expect new Battle over Aid to Britain (By Richard L. Turner. Associated Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON. Nov. 22—(AP)— A renewed congressional battle over assistance to Britain is shap- lllg up for the coming session of Congress with proposals that Unl- ted States ships be free to carry cargoes into the wlr zone and that the Johnson Act be repealed ap- parently destined to become the principal issues. several senators reported today that. in the aftermath of the elec- tlon-in which both parties urged all possible material help to Great Britain-they were receiving quan- tities of mail UfiIlIiR action-tapro- mote the program. In addition. various organizations which have been in the forefront of the move to help Britain are busily urging that election pledges be imple- mented with congressional action. been token upon order of the Unit- ed States consul-general. _ _ J Not only in this province. but at the various training centres throughout the Dominion of Cana- da. vounl: men trekked long dis- tances to be on hand for registra- tion procedure . It is estimated that 29.000 trainees reported ul. the (amps in t-he different provinces. The trainees form Daft. 0t the Non- Pcrnltlncllt Active militia. So anxious lvcljc some o!‘ the boys to gel. "tum uniform" that. they or- rlved at the camp early Thursday cl/ening. '1'llt3iI"11‘l€ll£lS began ar- l‘.l\'lill.{ lIi the cltv early yesterday lll()l‘llil’1f;. Trains. cars. buses and ‘trucks were crolvtred with recruits COIIIlIlI-I irulu all parts of the pro- vince. Many youilrz men travelled over roads WlltCll were almost. im- passable. due to the wet. weather o1 the past. lew days. Thls did not prevent them from reaching the Lruininlz centre . lld some ct those 1mm the most (lbiiiliL parts nl tile Island were among the ‘iirst to ar- rive. Army trucks from Beach Grove operated a continuous taxi run irom tllcre to the city, where re- cruits were picked up at Llle Arlll- ouvlcs and transported to the cell- lrc. The men ctlaerlv awaited the tans which were to take them to ltii'll' lit-w llollle nnd many new alc- tilltillllklllCCé were made amour: the boys as lhcv rode together towards the Centre. Like their predecessors in the first group oi trlll -cs. llllG second batch Australians Get “Wings” O'I'I‘:\'l\l'A, Nov. 22.--(CPl -— Sir -- ll tjlusuuh‘. Australian Illgh llllller lo ("illuUlL btldylllt- $t‘lil.l'll, . "wings" oi tile ltolut Cllililtllilli Air lwlrce to lllc illtll erollp 0i Australian student pi- lots u) reach Canada lor tralllln under the British Ccmmonwcaltl llil‘ training tron. 'l‘llo L‘\‘l\.‘il'1tlilV was held at No. 2 \t'l'\'i(i‘ llvlnc tvrlininc; school at Uplands Airport. The Australians have eolllplctt-(l seven weeks of in- lt'l‘llit‘l.lllil\‘ u-llilllng and now go on to lll-c weeks of advanced luSlPHC- lion here. ltalians admit Loss o_f_lifloritza ROME, Nov, 22~-(APl—'I‘he Ital- irllls forlllnlly acknowledged today the loss of their major Albanian base of Korllza to the counter-ici- vrldlng Greeks. and Gen. Ubaido Soddu rushed up Fascist re-lnforoe- mellls to fcrnl s. battle line. The general was given command of the Italian campaign by Pre- mlcr Mussolini 12 dflys ago. While the hisll command! of- ficial communique made little ap- parent effort to soften the fact of the forced withdrawal from Kortt- m~ncknowledging "considerable" Italian losses and saying merely that. Greek looses were "equally so, perhaps hcnvlcrK-Itallan infor- mnnls claimed the retiring troops were but, two divisions. s snlllll part of the two Italian armies in Alban- is. The high command likewise ul- nounced that in the Egyptian theatre of war British warsh ps had bombarded the Fascist positions east. of Sldi Barr-ant and at Uadi Makiila. but. claimed there was no resulting damage. (The Cairo com- munlque did not mention this tw- Lion.) British air raids on the fortified island of Lcros in the Dodecanese were claimed to have bcen inef- fectlve. UPIIOLDING PilDAGOfillliS BRISBANE. Allltffllllir- (CP) — The Queensland legislature has in- troduced legislation nronibitiplz any person visitinlz a school and ablisihiz n teacher before the pupils. “to {Second 30-day Camp Upens; Report Sidelights at ‘Reach Grove Inn Military Training Centre Revealed to Newsman. Soviets deny Approved move By Hungary Moscow. Nov. 22—(AP]— T355, Soviet Russian news 3g- ency, tonight flatly denied n- lwrts that Hungary's adherence to the German-Italian-Japanese alliance had been made with the co-operstinn and approval n: the Soviet Union. Tm spoke of reports tho the G’ ‘lilo-n newspaper Hamburger Fremdenblatt had made sir-h an assertion and added:- “Tass is authorised to state that this report lines not cor- Teflltond to fact in any extent." Rome Radio Hints Italians Plan offensive NEW YORK._Nov. 22-(AP)-—Thc Home mtiio cfalmed tullilzht:—- “The temporary Greek clltrv into Korltza lllPilllS absolutely nothilnz, because once General Cubaldo Sod- dus troops are orrlalllvcd they will occupy all of Greece. lltl-lzllly flying throulzh the entire coulllw. “It. will be foolish to stlv that the Greeks are. not brave fllzlltcrs. hlll. oven they will he helpless against what is to come." Heavy raids 0n Britain; Are widespread LONDON. Nov. 22—~l(CP>-—Gci"1' ninu planes struck heavily tonight al- the indultrial Midlands and at wcattered areas over nearly all 0f Britain. in one of the mist iride- spread raids of recent weeks. The llxauit upon the Midlands particularly vclcnt. A Sill‘ um in its western .~eciion reported that raiders flew ovcr ev- cl-y fcw minutes and drrpped both. ll1C0lldlllflC5 and heavy bcmbs. Late in the night. conlpsrlltive quiet returned to London after op- ening flurrles in which at least two houses were snlnshed. Three separate formations at- taskcd a tclvn ln the eastern Mid- lnltlds. Tile Liverpool area. on the west. coast: the northeast, nnd the south‘ also were under attacks. High explosives smashed tWO shops in the northeast: at least one per nus was k"lrd and others were. ‘lwlicvcd burl. under the wreck- age. A dozen bombs or more hit the’ south coast, and there were several casualties. During the day the counties sur- rounding Iondrm and lho scufieast coast were under intclnlll-tellt at.- tack. The nuvg "r of casualties was described officially‘ as small, and it was announced that in these dlly- light." forays two Nazi bombers had been shot down. Frenchmen Join lie Gaulle; Are hitter IDNDON. Nov. flit-lsaturdayl- (CPh-The Dally Mall sold today that. "more than half of the crews" of two lar e ships sent to Britain by the Vlcly government to re at- rlate French sailors and sol lers have offered to 10in the Free French forces of Gen. Charles de Gaulle. The newspaper said: "The men were bitter. Said one. addressing them in French on the uayslde: ‘We have brouzht these 1pc take back Frenchmen. If you still want to lzo back and live under the Boche you are welcome. But do so without our helpi" The Daily Mall said: "It can be revealed now that 50 French naval officers and 1.500 rat-ink! who last September elected to return to France have since decided to stay and fight with Gen. de Gaulle. “The flow of French forces is llrowinll rapidly. sometimes reach- orevent status of the teacher being 10110391" . . _, J tn: 140 a week." , to standard silvers. or what is lnlnlll- l Says rumors 0f Separatist Move false MONCTON. N.B., Nov, aa-(op) -—"M1sohiev0us rumors" oi’ g 59p- aratlst nlovelrlcut lll the provluce of Quebec were dented cllluhfillCktt.) 1011mm by ltfiftlllitlt,‘ Cardinal Vil- iencuve. Al't‘lil)l>j;iui) of (Jllcbec. ln a public atlurl-s- at a clvlc i‘t‘€f.'i)_ tloll to him here. "it has been said. and even more, muted.‘ said the Cardulal, “that 9 FTf-‘llfill-Sbfiflklllg Canadians who wlllbosc the uvtarlvhclnllllg majority 0f The Drovlnce of Quebec. were txlllujmll 111.1111: l0 t-sltlllltsh separat- ism in their Dl'0‘.'lllCt?. and that the tlulllillzlllt lllllllvilift‘ 0f such ll sep- aratist muvclllelll was the Catholic church. lllldtli‘_l8adtfl'Sllltl of the Cardinal Archbishop of Quebec. _N0t mulch notice was lllkell of this xzossll) H1 Quebec. wllcrc no re- sponsible person attached lllltllle llll- llcrlllllcc 1.0 u. but. utltoriulllalclv in some places it scclns 1U llavl-llrtlllgs- ed suspicion lll lllt‘ lllllltls (,1 ln.lll_v Llllll. I availed lnvscu‘ on all occa- sions to but an cud lo such lnls- chlevous rumors." His Enlinellce asked: “What llap- polled lll Quebec. lust \'t‘tli‘ and this year‘) Has it not lll-l n ll‘.(‘ err-lll- est single blow slrurk llli‘ (Jul llllltv in the pas fllltll'l<'1‘(‘L‘. . what seemed to be ullltvs darkest hotlr? R.A.F. Bombs Stavanger fllilli l LONDON, ‘Nov. 22 --(C‘Pl-~-Ro_val xv {lll 4 ,. Air Force pilots lll Lo-kilccrl-Hllti- son l)('»X‘lll)(‘!'5 left tho Nazi nlrfteld at. Siavllllgrr, Norway. ablaze today in an assault. "as slit-k as i! wasl hairy." [he Air MlIllSllT announc- ed. "The flfnl. aircraft i0 the llnlloullcrlllellt, uttered lhe airdronle and its bu: lugs with lll- celldillrics and tho-e whiel-l follow‘- ed added greatly to the destruction lc-ly of bmnbs. 'I‘his llrl se in?‘ the l‘r*"l‘fOl'lllf\llt‘€ of the lillnctl TVPS-lllll . planes rcficctctl lllc , w mcnt. which i." blunt; made here United Slates azd in lll‘ war. arrive," srlltl SENTENCl-ID TO THREE YEARS KENTVILLE. N.S.. Nov. 22-401’) —Ai'l.'eslc(t ilcrc in the \'\‘llZ'ti' 0i l-llc store he allcccdlv robbed, (leortze A. Landry. of Sackvlllc, . ., today was sentenced to three years in UUrchCSLOI‘ by Jlltltw H, W. Sailp- hurl‘. of the Colulty Court. Local police lcstlflcd a sum of money sold to have been taken lltllli the slnrc cllsll register‘ was found in Laudl'_\"s C ell. .\\i\l.\l\‘.\, .\-i..l. r~ ‘l 'lllll'l\ ‘i PPR‘ . "all lllilrlztll l?’ licvc: Iflllldlll. I I lZlW » _ , i/lrls of l-Tur- l‘.ll'l\'*"_\‘, lllrllllhllg l-lzlll- -ll';» \\"l\' L-Xlull shortly 1-0 i Q Nation Prepares To Fight For" LandAnclLibel/"lffly Believe Von Papen Returns With Virtual Ultimatum 'l‘lgl Power Friendly T0 _ Britain. r (.'\l’l tonight -_' il<'l"ll flllfif ‘ "hi"! Alnllrlunrinr, Flml- ‘l1 Pull-n, returned lmlll ‘l’ ' ‘~ llf<'<lllll:ll>lv 01TH ‘ ll llllillylrlllll lllnl M-l. H. .1... ,\xg,. flllllllll‘, lrlllnwpgn 4\1'(lr-r_" sflClllllltl l): _\-' C Tlllrkev, llonkll“? "" \ll.'il llarllrlncl- lcs. ul-o v. ‘ Euler‘. lll lilo. ul.'ll'llnl l:l l _~.-~..;»,_ The orllcr ll.» Qfivctive lmlllelllrllc". (lnQ-mfjnfl] per-loll. An annolrxclnent said:- .\.iinlst<-l~ and coun- . as .\ rl-suil of ii. -'-'. ll. ll.l\e llUUlllFl ‘l- pllllflliilll lllzlrLltlJ of this announce- olllll 2n the ills- . lll. Klrlnreli. Edlrlll‘ . 'l‘<-l;lrtla_l, Cllallnalz- k1‘ . “Corps (jcil. All ltiza Artuokullll. Cdlllllllllltlvl‘ ul Llcndarlncrle, is up. charge ln rile-so pointed to take dist-riots. up is taken .l;lcrl m section 86 of l~l»ll.~.:z'.ll!il>ll," UtlitWlll l)l"lll‘.'ll'. under the Ytlll ~ l to stand‘ tlsidt- .f 1 and Gerrrlanl lroopw lilil-l lrl rltiack Greece it.‘ illtl of l lllll press said anew! Mr. R. G. M. ILAHLS after ilvc o'clock lll llle evelllllll when lullulllu was com- plctccl vcslt-rcav .li lllc 11th i‘l‘u\ill— CllLl Live Pox Show, conducted by 1-116 Silver Fox Breeders’ and Exiti- bimrs‘ Association of Prince Edward Lsialld, The llazht was pool- all morllinfl. clue to cloudy skies and falling rnlrl, and bvlrallle worse lll lhc afternoon, so that at. four o'clock lile lxlllcry of lllptl powcrlui llullls had to be lurlli-ti oil over the ludlzlnl: table. The champlolnslllps ‘nnd Jiisl. lx-cn dwllled and lllc (mass illifllllliil se- lection was the extra llullt colored pllllllluln pups 'lhc brll‘ ant llulll. drclv out their character trs ln a vivid way, and :~i‘ltl\\'L‘(l spell-altars wily silver foxes. or any brlvllt. col- cd pelt. is cllllnllccd ill beauty “under the lights." Judlzlne was concluded with I. novelty‘ class that had to be split lnlo two sections. duo to lhe vrlrlciv o um Ill the first there were freak crosses. the oiisprlllt: o1 willlc med males. mated with red or crom females. The second class were of the silver blue. or blue \'t\i'- tctles and many of them were very line types, Review of the Day's O >1 >-. Jdugllll: started ill ihc morning: shortly after nine o'clock. the first class called ix-illlz light. platinum ic- male pups. nnd Elan-st T. Million- Ded the table with a sparkling speci- mcrl. Then followed cllzllt classes for arlv known as lll\i'(‘|llSl4‘l‘t‘.(l silvers. These had never bcforo bccn ac- corded classes at a nrovinclnl show. but, iudlrlmz by the cxccllctlt. rotten- tioll they not vcstcvtlnv. they will be a nerlnoncnt feature. Adult pale silver mrfcs was lhc first of the four classes called. and the Rcymonti much. Southporr. llilfl no less than four first nlllcinps. 1n pockets. . ‘ ' tllfl not wan’. l tight l, l! t‘ scouted necessary. Said “c newspaper Cllnlhurb‘ yett- l "We sl '-" not lllrllte war but war co ~ to lls we shall . fllllcl. .i" llltztctl-lve .l:-e llullll: um. t.-\i - " pally llt‘ll' “as illlllli'tlltilt‘l_\ flames. ' The original plllsillns. separate roll. The l-jlllorarln ment and the Tile lion |ll ‘cull ills ll ll" L (Continued on page 15, Col i) nil nvcr this citv. lower] by a scrim-s of lesser ev- ap|l.'\rcllll_v when the flalnl-s reached each Lunch Wagon Crash fatal D!\!t"l‘.\10ll'l‘ll NS. N lCl')-—\Villililll Dixon. oi i killed l<'lll'.;lll will-ll lll» lllobllc i uaullll (‘l.i.'~lll"(l llllll n wail-r- l ‘l ~l. ,\rk.. l 1'5 ,rclam;.;i¢n.l;,. ;“* r Awarded/it 1 1th Live Fox Show of S’side has l Explosion in U. S. Oil Plant = \ll l the Linn Oil Ilviilllllg Grand Champion F 0x; Trophies Presented as show concludes. r \'. '!‘Z—— still at (‘onl- llclllolisllcri by blast was fl-it It was fol- fire refinery fighters confined tlll- biave to the sinlzle still willrh was used for producing gasoline. ant is sclllluvcstcrn edge of l-tldorado. a lfl\\ll‘l'lllli\ l"\|)ltI\l|\l\ tonight. The biz tubular lll\lllll‘l'_\' was l‘ll\t lllprfl in caused There was nu immediate rc- port of anv casualties. depart- fire at the M!‘ 22 ~- )-.l ri lllllutll Tilt‘ sf"t‘l'llliI\\l1i'f‘l and l~lll- til his Llil i. l “Ill? tli lll: llad llo relnlivs snlll Dillllll. lllitliil 50. to be a llllltnr- f‘ Pollen l a near-illu- ll that ITO-BYE. L} .1: -l. k- madame slam MODERATOR "Thl- rhurl-ll is -lll-l l.i wli-ls lPTW." said ‘llillll |¢.l~, p. . a 'i'llliit'_ lIIllIlCIAlIlF l-l l1. ~ (‘hurl-h of l.ln.l‘l l n. lllust be lll-lll- nilrllll ., < rllurl-ll lllllflll t'.i'"-' »ll~ - ' l ministers in \l_').ii‘t' quickly ItlI\lII'l\i‘Yl ‘~. \- wcstcrn fit-ills ll .. Sllskail-llvllzlll the lmi-Yll nnxllllls ill 511.? l l l,- .,istr_v, llul \\lllit“ll l'.- ..l take their rl-lll- - I 'll!i --- “ in crash ll.0.A.F. Blane \)'l'l'.~\'l\'.‘\, if l.. L Charles Harold kill‘ .tl=.'1 or Ulrhsl. s, Oil‘... n for: orllstlcd nl- r miles east o! t MISFDRTUHEI l6 EASY TO BEl-‘lli’. ' WHEN THEY FALL. ON THE. OTHER Ilhlllxlbi‘ _\ l, ,_ "WT- =1 manual tw. l» l ... ltillllWsl I .\l.lrlllllll~ l‘lllllll r- lllr llllitlPllill‘ K.lll*, Jlliil coilll-l ullll ilzl"! lslltltvrrs I\I' \llll\\llllll l». g ;~,.».~l. '1» .. vvrl ll.;‘l - .lnll Zulllll‘ .\ l F " Kris Nl-lv lllrl ll Nev 2'1 Sulllnlel ill‘ 11'» " er than ‘l l 7 'r|t|-: rul rllll-v \=. l 1.....- ll.» all l " " l‘ l lmllr-s Toll-ell" ll I‘ l 3.15 P, M. as: "L