MAXI M6 OIL MERE MAN .1 fair any of being l0. n. that cln bear s rermi‘. Ind mend by it, ll he lo not who, ls In The Pe m. tlhltrloltvltlIll fluflllhl tinudh r. Powers French l RESI guremedied. Ol'I‘A\V.»l, Oct. 23—(CP)——Alan B. Pia ' of Ottawa, since Nov. 2, 193a", .l lurmllcr of the board of gov- elncts of the Canadian Broadcast- lzzg FOIJOITtLlOKI, announced today llo i 'i tendered his resignation l hoard to Munitzons Min- w under whose Jurisdiction 1C i ‘is, on Aug. 30. tor of resignation he iii‘ was taking the step be- "l Luci that, as a public trust- ‘~ nili not continue to ac- lonsibJity for the internal n and executive direction . rporation when I have .~..e:i to have confidence in cased the view “time pre- ..ll". ns seriously hamper trpliailoti in fulfilling ‘its ‘n .Il the war emergtncy and survival as an effective of national un.ty after- Zviter Mr. Pluunt said he nlcau to suggest he con- tIn- "unctvork of the Broad- nadcqtlnte. “On generally agreed that (115 an admirable frame- ‘ the development of a ncn- a.l, business-Ute, and effect- {Qlll of national broadcasting. Defects Unrcmcdled Ill have taken this step ac year had not my col- g.\"vll me some reason to 1 the serious defects re- nt- thc reports prepared at lnzmotts request, by Mr. J. torn and myself would be I have, however. finally _ ll to conclude that such case. l‘L3 mentioned by Mr. re 0t a confidential na- ‘ icok the form of a. survey rporatlonks organization ril \\‘0t"kfngs. Mr. Thomp- "o assisted in preparation of " is a chartered account- l".\llllf became one of the first 1 originally appointed for ° "_ after \".~.ich he was reap- [l iPl‘ ihwv- y."nrs_ Hs term of i lllfl have expired Nov. 2 ii. announcing his resignation u saltl ht- had resigned before the iQP-likiiiiifid on page 10. Col 8) Lummgl ve|. _u_ “iill lat Nlilllka m this coium "-~. 3 cffn.‘ v” ‘"5’ "tithes-Mt. Stewart Saturday. L-616-l0-24-bl. "Talltics-—Frcnch River Monday. L—616-i0—24-;l. Wednesday, October use Supper, Cape Tra. L-878-10-24-li. 6. F0 t , we" Yxerfuslciliill Hall. Oct L-oiitl-Lo-iit-ii. "Christian church home cook- ‘r1 m] . ‘Wwminfalgitusictgzryé. Oct. 26. "Strathcona. re-ooencd "W lltanagement. Lroflii-IO-Qit-Ii. ' ‘ Co - m" Cliiiiefy will be canning ill k iiiflfélamt. s...;f°”" m“- L-703-10-24-8i. cken Bug "Ilusvt-ve 3PM. ilul Go ‘ ll.|ll, BI ' ‘Dunc 24h we under "Ciii pél’ Brookileld l-ull Fliiwht. 35c an 36c. n-sao-to-u-it. ' "Wins dressed point daily. ' M~ McKiiiiitm. Murray giver. Irfi-lo-QS-fl. "Yiiiiiw. Stanley Hall Thursds ‘ififllfi’ 24th in aid ofwar wor f i i» Orchestra. L-657-l0-23-2t. 5,"? “Md Dfly. Oleary. Come “Lina Fox Field Day ‘Tuesday. sfnluhi‘ 29th. at ranch of Daniel Ullpnriigiii. Fox Illustration Farm, mm"; h" 1 D-m. Demonstrations.- MN iirions and discussions on pm-s a different type; by ex. -» ddrcsses will be given by Vmmiiimt fonnon. 11-674-10-8-21. D .1. Reported ENSFRDM uctnlln ill PRDTEST Chargresfiilft “Serious cfects” Have Gone dim Two Outs funneled llll. Axis To Get Bases Qbservers In Switzerland Hear Proposed Agreement Now In Hands Of Petain Government. ‘BY "hail" P- Fem, n. Assoc- iated Pres: Staff Writer) BERNIE. Switzerland, (m, g4 -e—dThursday)_(A|>;_.A pmpoh new French-German Qgrgg- mem- Blvlnl the Axis powers air and naval bases in all France and the French em- Dlre but not handing over the gronch fleet or involving the rench ln war axainst Britain, was reported tonight to ho in the hands oi’ the Petaln Gov. ernment at Vichy. ' Reports from Vichy sald Premier Petain hlmsel may go to Paris soon to sign the agrgg- 51:111. which also would extend e frontier oi‘ the unoccupied zone north to the seine, This would give the Vichy reg- ime ii- Dnrt oi’ Paris—ostensibly m‘ the Purpose of returning the seat of government there. Naval bases which would fall to the Axis would include, the re- ports said. those at Dakar, capital of French West Africa, Toulon, on the Mediterranean coast; o! continental France; Casablanca, in French Morocco; and Bizerte, in Tunisia. The air bases would include those in both North Africa and Syrilb-stratleglcally located for a possible drive against Egypt and the Near East. The French navy's 10b would be to defend those bases against attack by British forces- as it did at Dakar ~'I'he agreement, expected soot‘ l0 iTDlRve the existint! nrmlstici- arrangement. also would bring about the release of all French war prisoners. The new frontier line between occupied and unoccupied territory would be moved north from Tour.- and the Swiss frontier to follov the Seine. Paris. which straddlcr the river. would be imrlcr a spec- ial regime, part ruled bv the Pet nln government and part by the Germans. Despite vice-premier l.aval‘= anxiety for a definite pPRCP settle- ment. it was said that Petnin ano , others of the cairnet refused flal- l lv to pav the nrlcc of nllvinfl France with the Axis against. Bri- i l t (Continued on page 7. Col 3) ;Prisoners 0n Devil's Island rlleieased? MONTREAL, Oct. 24-(Thursday> —(CP)—'I‘he prisoners on Devil's 1 laud. Frances- {alnous penal col- (ny have been released because ot 112k o! food in the colony and lack cf money to pay the guards, the (azette says today. he newspaper quotes a letter re- rived in Montreal from residents c the British West Indies Island of k . Kim's saying "we have had 1 cnchmen arrive here in dug-outs f :m Devil's Island. the French tsnal colony. There is no money to 11y their wardens, and no food flrthccmlng for the prisoners so they just opened up the prisons and allowed the prisoner: to cape." The letter goes on to say that the rrisoners are scattering throughout ,the West Indies in large numbers Land adds; "Our chief of police has wired the governor not to let any more arrive. as we cannot accom- modate them. but I cannot see how | g-lo governor can stop them for there are hundreds of them to come, criminal; all, and. some of the worst type." British Ship Dancels 80$ AN EAST OOABT CANADIAN PORT. Oct. 23 —(Cl>) — The Brit- ish steamship Scottish Monarch cancelled an SOS call today after reporting herself in distress on the Atlantic. No details of the lLBQI-ton freight- er's trouble reached here. A salvage tug set out from this port when the first call was received during the afternoon, but it. was not dLsclmed whether she would return or eon- tluue to the ship in view of the cancellation. The Scottish Monarch is listed in Lloyd's register of shippingaa own ed by the Monarch st i“ pany. She is registered in Glasgow. Scotland. Q ople’s Paper Pilliitiiii! MI I display for the 75,000 spot-tutors who saw the “n31 all“ s from the ll.(.A.l-. station marched pzst a reviewing stand u B Infill. uhu were marching at attention, were unable to reply, II/ ’/// w..- ‘Qfi Read b Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CIQIARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. THURSDAY, ocronaii 24, 1940 r-m/Mfc-Yflr w" mergers“ events of the international plowing meet at, Si. ‘Thump; 14090 n“ spectators cheered. Although many Everybody 14 along Hi1‘ liln- railed greetings, Till M VESSELS MAKE By Bob llaldorph Canadian Press Staff Writer GLACE BAY, N.S.. Oct. 23—(CP) carried their l2 men brick to port today hut. lrxotight no wcrd oi’ two l_ her ships and eight seamen miss- Jlg in the backwash of ycstcrday. storm. l Battered and strippcd of boats and gear. the Calcium Moon and the Ethel J. Roy stragglu more than 24 hours after the snou 21d wind storm ilammcrccl the f‘~ l; the silips fished off this hoibl 11:11 vessel carried Ncufcuncllan: seamen, Still more than 24 llourg overdnv v:re the Bluebczlrtl, maimed by five 1 Jcwfcundlanders, and the Alvin W. arrying three Glace Bay men- tvo of them father and sou, “We haven't laid eyes on the-r lnce the blow struck." said Cap: J. Blunden of thc Ethel J. Rcy atest oi’ the vessels to reach a hav- n. Capt Henry Spiccrl; men on he Carolina Moon also report-ed eeing nothing of the two still-miss- ng bcats. Appearance of the t eilqllicilczl ircpo tlut, tic Blue- lYiTfl m"'glit. have ridden out. the tiie. but waterfront men gave the ‘l8 . Alvin W. scant. chance of snvival. She carried Cant. Walter I nk, his son Alvin and John 'I‘ur- lzer. " Belt-f was cvnrcsscti the Bluc-' l"‘l'll'(.l miuht. have been |ll(l\\'ll 15o l ‘I05 to the shore of Newfcundlnntl. r "cs5 Cabot St 111.5110 is register- t‘. here, but her crew are nllN-atv- 1 utidlanders, like thew cf the Car- , ("no “con and Ethel .l, Roy, The Blnrborurl ("ll‘l‘l".l Capt. Jack : Havmail and four men. '1 The Carolina Alccn was firat to‘. reach port todajv. lualcng harbor at‘. nearby Main a Dion and then.’ Ymping in hero. “It wasn't any pic-, nix" commented Cant Stiiccr as Hs vrcnry crew tied up their dam- aged vc==el The two vessels "\ ‘I AT [DNIJUN TAPERS UFF LONDON. Oct. 24.-— (Thurs- day)—(Cl’)— German raiders resumed their aerial assault on London at dawn today after giving the heavily-bombed cap- Lxi. one of its ouletcst nights n mare than two weeks. A fair] heavy burst of antl- IIIOII." re reetcd the Nash roaring over n the new raid. The Germans be an their night attack on ndon last ni ht. earlier than usual but. of r rnomentarll heavy stab the ra d tapered of before mid- night into the ll Most attack of the last l7 nigh . The outer defences. and a heavy rain over the channel appeared to have turned back the main Nazi hrusta. Early toda the sound or ex- loding bom s could be heard in {he city. but from afar. and the flashes of the anti-aircraft guns rose over the distant horizon. This period of relative quiet was in sharp contrast to the early ove- nlng when buildings shook for a "me "nil"? JFDE“°.P._PI_,‘T$‘Z (Continued on pogo 10. Col '7) n- S8 IBNG‘ 15MB Hftcl" a nili-aild-tilck battle‘ wztll. a powerful gale, two little ves- . ‘sels of the Glace Boy fi>hing fleet l hctuc 23 l’ l i i l l l l l l l Attempt Against Life Honduras President Blocked TEGUCICIALPA Honduras, Oct. ~—lCPJ——Tll0 government dis- ' c csccl ltitlfly illc tilwartmg of m; at- iiifil tle life of Gen. Tib- i L10 (- as Andlno. President of Isntlilras. and said several suspects Wvl born arresxtd f0‘: luilitary l lnpt .. l. _Thc plotters. it was charged, first ‘|..l'.lllC(l to kill the President during t l lllCl([)i.‘ll(lCllC(.‘ Day celebration m ‘éiptclllllvr, then fixed an attempt l .. re rnilv. Gcvcrnmcill officials said that. 1 ere had be: n no dlstttbanccs, and t 1t. the. country was quiet. China Welcomes Growing Power Df Great Britain (‘hiuesc Consul Gen. Iixpresses Confid- ence in Defeat of Axis Powers. “I think that the 26 months cf hostilities tiicv had been engaged in previous to the outbrt-alrot thepre- sent (ircat War. have so weakened the Jntlhntu-t- that they wolrtbcirec to do their worst lli conjunction ‘with hvr I\XlS partners, Germany ‘and , Italy," stated Hon. Chao-Ying Shlh. Pil.D.. Chinese Consul Gener- a. to Canada on his arrival in the citv inst nluht on n brief visit. \;iuna and Canada." added Dr. ‘sillh, "are not as vet allies in law". but in deeds we have been allies. "Britain." he stated, today in a much stronger position than when she started out to beat, Hltlcrisnl last year. and the confidence now expressed by Prime Minister Churchill is welcome to all the people of China." This morning Mr. Shlh will pay courtesv calls upon His Honor Lt.- Govemor IePage. Premier Thane Campbell and His Worship Mayor B. R. Human. This evening he will bc the guest of the Charlottetown Y's Mons Club. with other service clubs co-otaeratiug. at. a dinner at the Charlottetown Hotel. He will deliver an address on the Far East situation. Among those in attend- anco will the Heat-Governor, the Premier. the Mayor and mem- bers of the City council and other dlrrllitaries. Dr. Shlh is activelv interested in the activities of the YMCA. was a director of the Y.M.C.A. Wuchang for three years. l-le is also a past president of Rotary. He has held his present post at Ottawa for a Year and a. half and has been very much impressed with the Dominion. Previously he was an expert in the Department of Intel- ligence and Publicitv in the Min- lstry of Foreign Affairs in China for a vcar. He had also been n- sui at the linnbassv at Moscow for two years. and served ten years as head of the Political science De- partment at the National Wuhan University. The distinguished vis- itor speaks English fluently. Dr. Shlh will leave on return to Ottawa on Fridav morning. winding up a three weeks’ trip duriml which he visited the Maritimes and New- ‘ foundland. mMorTt‘i;1“efl%Trade Board Discusses A ‘G l A CE BAY‘ BetterAirServices Crews Safe After Nip. And Tuck Battle; Moncton MarlrSllcceeds Mr. With Powerful Gale Mutch, "As President and: at MONCTON, NB" Oct, 23.-.(CP -—>A _need for improved air . Wltlllii and to and front the time Provinces was among SlllJJPClS dealt with in a repolt presented l0- clav bv James l) McKennu. Saint John. at an erccutivir meeting tho Marltllne Board of ‘Iraclc audl the Board's mission Mr. McKcunzl is <lnlirlnzlil oi‘ the Ccmiziissioil. "Recciltlv the Conlnlission i lms , iservlces." ho soul. “There has born a general impression. lllltl l‘l;,'lill_\'_ so. that there eXlsts considerable room for llll])l'0\'(‘lllt‘lllS in all‘ trans- i ‘n portation within and to and fr the Maritimcs. Action has nlrc been taken in that connection \'.'l has rcstlltcd in mint‘ chimqrsaln new service. but there 1;.- 'u appar- ent need for further (‘Xlcllsicn and developments." At present. he said, “there exiws l1 need fol" direct. air services lie-l tween Saint Jclln and llJlllZlX. it connections with other il‘l.< of ti Marifinles, incl. in: 5 " and tho Svdnrvs, and n link between the l\l.'il".\llllt‘.§ Newfoundland. l "In connection with Ncwfotmll- land. the l\’llll'llllll(‘S offer ‘lll(‘\llill'f~ scr- and vices It is be l‘l‘i‘tlllllllt‘i lllmt , consideration bc elven to ti‘ . stall- lishmcnt of commercial air com- munications with Newfoundland at the earliest possible date." Mr. McKenna said the Maritinws are “particularly susccntlbr to air transportation" for the follow-int: reasons: Relative slowness of other means of transport: l'f‘lftti\’(‘l_\'fli'(‘ill distances between the Mnrltlnlcs an Ythe more populated sectionsof Can- lada and the United States: their-r- minal character of the lvfaritimesa, and their strategic position in rela- tion to trans-oceanic firms: and trans-Atlantic steamship Sf‘_i'\'ii‘\‘~=._ D(‘.\'(‘l0lllllf‘lll3 of comlnerclal nir transportation thronehout the . world aencrallv has been dependent upon tzovernment aidlin the form of airports, aviation cuirlc: and mall contracts. said Mi". lVlcKcrlna. "Tile expansion of air transport- ntion in the Maritlmcs lll{(‘.\\'l$l‘ is (Continued Site Df ll. S. Base in Nflti. ls Decided WASHINGTON. Oct. 23—(AP)-— Frank Knox, United States Sec- retary of the Navy. said today agreement had been reached with Great Britain and Canada on the location of an armymavy iiiW-"i and air base on the southern silorc of Newfoundland. Without giving the exact loca- tion. Knox told a. press conference that the chief base would be lo- cated at one point and B- fivinz field some distance away. A survey crew already is at Si. John's. Nfld. making lirciiiiifliifiii“ to start work on the first of the string of new bases in the Atlan- tic acquired from Britain. War—25 Years Ago Today Oct, 24. lDl5--l<‘reilcll troops on the Wt'sterti Pruul vuplnlw-ti “'l‘lu' Curtain," strong German pmli ou north of Mcsnii in tlic Clifliiuavzllv. Venice bombed by Atlstrlan nlnuvn. Allied troops advanccd to the aid of Serbs in southern Serbia. on page 10. Col 7) Transprlrtalion Coln- l l, aiven considerlilife ilt[f'llll(lll l-o illX“0 ti . l0: Sutldell Death“ 0f Montague Business Man Ono of llii! (llricsl inlslnrx-s mcn in v, Mr. w. l. Poole, (llcd ati cllllv last lliulll. He WdSl Altilonuli he huti been univel tor tllll-e Yams. his lit-nth was un- expel-loll. Ml". Poole “its born at Lower when u tonnu man he tl a mll'.\' mill lit Sturgeon. , a111,... -lll uni-s llgo. he came Nlontllglnl; all... in partnership will: Ml". G. A. lllolnpson, founded the firm oi Poole x '1 hompson, gcn- eral luorcllzliits nntl oxlwrters 0f tarlu urollncc. For nlany years the buhii ss wh one o: the largest in Kin: s" (.'<)ill\l‘. _ ln addition l1) his connection with the film. Vi" Poole was president o! ~ ' - h‘ 'll'lc company for i '. of fox ranch- l l (‘out ti. In l"l‘f't‘lll jlviill», ~11 tltooiltinuint; nFliYllltYS. Ho l in laizc n keen in- lvll-st in tzn» film of Poole A: ‘Flivxllpstui. flllfl only last sulllillfil‘ m.) {n s ' ", N.S., on . t‘ sons and four , : .I~l. Poole, Pooxn nlanagcr Bztilk of Nova - c; b‘ \ h‘ S'.'(lllt*_V Fxlward and an-, n, married, . ml Stairs. ll..~u surv to. . . Low r Afonta- , Vancouver. . ‘i iznn several a‘ t '1: . or .\10nl.l.:lle urn Hitler. FrtliiDD Confer; Details Remain “Secret l l ‘ l bflfllfl] _-.' -l _' \\‘ll.‘i Vll-e-Prcltlier Lani oi Ftuirc. Informed Ge -i ~ votivcrsatltvvls were i, _ l“‘l'.lnl-l~ tllltl Spain . for reorganizing; AP» -—Hl'.lt3l‘ Flzlill-o 0n today lint) Europe. else con 'l"l'llI1'.lt-l issued hours‘ mo". Franco said ti ‘in the cordial ship tinltiilz both 11.: elven regard- ‘ll.\\4‘fl. an iolczgn minister. uilu sit ‘.11 0n ).c.\‘('l‘— i ilf“'flllll)tllll(ffl Hil- (is; r..tl “ two's foreign brolllel‘ -la‘.v,Sl‘i"rniio The ("wim ltlillaa t ‘ ,' l nlnllsivi" and l Stiller. Nazi sources clalmczl todnys ntcvf- lnlz could he lvuzlrtiod as a (‘(lll(_‘l‘('tt‘ result of Sort-alto Elmer's visits to Route and Berlin a month ago. Oh- servers fl$$llll‘i('(l here tho spndc work thou clcarctl the way for the facc-ttl-lact- lll(‘t‘llllLZ l)"t\\'(‘!‘ll tin‘ two clrefs of stale lor thorough d11- cusslons and pcrhaps binding decis- ions. Fnllfiwllll! the. Hitler-Laval talk. somewhere in France. the vanquish- ed republic became the object of marked attention front both Gor- mzuly and llriiniu. ‘Fills much Pun he said (iv-suite tile absence of Gor- mnn llllcfllltllflilflll of that mcct- tug. ‘ of lllViln how lirilisH liiillllit l< ilwjii‘. Hliit from flu vl-vv :'§.~'<' Tlriinin MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN “any n man thinks he is buying trlvasure. u-ilen he ls selling himself a slave to it. ulnun Svlhltrrlyllnn Delivered $5.00 lit \IlriI-—P.l'.'.l H00; (‘nnudu and U-S $5.011 PAGlES AEIAILS IN SMASHING INVASIDNPLANS REVEALED Nazi Ports From NorwayToFrance Blasted To Bits Germans Must Plan Rebuilding Of Hamburg After R.A. F. Spreads Ruin. l-‘J-\'i>".J-\', (Al. :3—~-(Cl’)—.~\ victory ill a SlX-“Pvlvn-liillf,’ zlurllil cutultiz-wll I t: that .~ln.isll<-Ll a lull llftfga ijlvriruln at}. _ izllly ainlollticcll today and put <lu‘-\ll as i . more lllwlllc (lclcncc ill tillzse lslzlncls. lllrotlqll its ll(‘\\'> $CFVI(_(' the Air Alinisiry told the Qbyfl; _ v rollc llle zlir over a. zxluo-llllle .\..1i front, zlIli'i"-l;lt<:l_v ."llirlvl\:llg Zllltl illiifffvlllg, until liv- ilcrmau .n~ VHSlOH 1'5"". \\".'ls illillPlFPil at last and Gtifllltifl lilvasfon spring- bonrtls wrcvlnwl from Xfliwilc, Nor-w av, to l-“iordeatlx, far to the south in Ffiilifl". lt uw peril fl('l'ii<~l xlle cluulvlr-l. ruxll if uis accompanied by a Clllllltill. “The threat of invasion still Ilcrsists," it was stated, "and will pcr5l=t as lung .1: ulval units, barges, troops and air forces are '11 Villa Ol l- ~ the uuv-"t suww" "V" success ‘~.""t announced filrlinq ti;- n-"ite oi k‘I1lllk‘(‘lll\‘.'il"-l "lg the extensive coastline of euel1l_v~ovcllt"-"Pd Clillllll'll‘\.l. l1 \ A’ liilllllFtl out that lie-spite the battering the til-r- uulus llrlve l'i<‘-‘l\'t'(l at the hands of the Royal Air Force, they are “still there." 'l"ue Air .\Iinistry said that the invasion ports “tlollllrltws will continue to he battered by bombers of the R.A.}? \\'ll<'i‘.t"lf’l' it is Cl\ll<ltl'.‘!"l necessary." ‘I !l-- iilllliillllfiflllPill v. .= also accrlnltlaillcd b)" tl1r=e ollivr d"- t"l;l.. ‘tins to <how llmt the Roy: .~\ir Force is rievclopiiitg quit ' intv- an iustrnmeilt of dcsurty- for Britain :~— Nit/is’ productive capacity for war has been affected by the hut which lllglit llllllll night hzlvt- fallen from the for interior vii ‘lr-i" nhluy in the ilernlan-llcld French coastline. 2 The statement of Capt. Harold H. Balfour, the air tinder- secretary, that the lmslllfln achieved by the air force was "one of the grout victories of the WHY." Fruit. llwlfivur. in a speech, cited the growing intcl"lsa:l'orlal- l~‘lll oi the l\‘..\.l"‘.—mentioning that Llniterl States. lihilisll, Czech nnrl French pilots daily are fighting alongside Britkh Fmpire av§ntl"lz-=--—nll<l rli-clarcrl that never was there a force more chal- lenging to "time Nazi evil." “the (llwturl la... is in bleak the ruorale of our civil p-wtullzl- l tilln. in". as l m: a< il"'_\' n. 51cc? military objectives to concentrate on thcse methods, then inst so long will they be battering nae- losslv rtgtiilsl the uuhrezil<aivll= spirit of our people, while our own form» 1's engaged in tnslts which will bring ml tovmrrl victolflv." The \ll‘ Aliulsluv tuft Flvpi. " a as the (l7l_\' the lui-gllticst Pri- ti=h effort was hcqun agmlnst the invasion ‘v71’ did. not ma- tcrlxllwe, and it '" A LOTT/A tombs you. lN LOVEAN‘ ca’? oven m" BY MARRYl NC ‘THE doc... \\'.'l i luv-"u- the (Tomlin plans. "Fverl now the story can be " "u": i" "ht." the Viulstrv ' .. ~. - I . vs" ex" _ m, F... i _ l, know o? 171 'v'~'*'i"'\"»\'"< fwd l of flu‘ citvvf H" their! c‘ l? -\ T? .,l..,.v.,.' T'\l‘< t was‘ "to ~10 of Wlh-fitjvv" ‘Yn fulfil“- (Continued on page i0. Col 8) Chinese Army TORONTO, Oc. ‘J3—~i¢.IP~~'.\l.i\ I Illliilll 321G nlilxlnzuzn ivllipttld. In Offensive . Dawson 3" 35 vflutoria 4“ 54 -— _, <1: nolvc. KONG. Oct. Edtntuhon 1",", ria,\'>...ll\l>l--.\ l.u-.:-.- t y Rf“='"“a i .3 has Iauilvliorl h pom _ .ivc W‘ 111131)‘?! do L, ilpnnlst tlu: Japuiltsl‘ 1n C‘ eiullut: 'l"~>i'°-'ii0 “‘ provlu 'e ‘ ' ifsli -i l‘.Ol hwnrri Oztavra it‘ 54 * ll"l‘r'.\ll>: lizvvr, .\lrillil”(‘ill "D 55 ovum (‘Elms-sol Qtlrbct‘ iii ~32 Saint John i 4'3 . v m {lgfelztis-ffllilllflifl. v ‘C’. . Lictoxvll i“ 4i (Pévlnvt ill» l.‘ c . . sudden rcvixni o: tnziuiuz; on lnauvl ‘OREIAST i fronts. _ i , , ._ i d l lfzlnachou; comm; of ("l‘l‘lZl.ll‘.E. 3l-"Fm""‘ 5"‘- “m”! “ " l “r ‘wlllvll lnls lwnn l ~ l‘ la l- luorlcrato gains; cloudy nurl tuiitl ,f‘.‘~l‘ sizlvv yin. m. ‘t \ . c with lyr-vnsltlnnl showers. Chlvnhulu: lrl- .iI\ 105i ilPK southzvosi oi . ' _ n, 'l'ill~ Jliliilii‘ Sxlzipsn Lgli‘ so.‘ rsc l'f‘.'l"llt‘tl iiu. we" r-rlrlv in iin- ha", ncmrrvd m war. but havi- hm n tumble to push c. for lwvouci u. sivvil On'..ar"0 bu’ '.l"t~ ’ll\¢\'<“' lllrlt- I fl and warm. It his l .n "w l‘! w“ Pi " ‘ v l-hllilgl- in lwupvr-l" Grerar To Visit Hull ‘m. ..t'~~ i. Its records tho negotiations with ' ' ,-, tngnnf-tl - molu l‘? v Franco, some Nari political observ- n d “ crs compare the Poiain gm umeni , g1... . w y .. "lot ‘to the first. (iornlvgn cabinet. ltczirlwl i "my $1,... -,..m@-,~.».\- Hm,- ~ i ,. i121: 1v Phllll Scne cmanu nftvr til"? --- v - . . no. WflTlQrhP similarity. they. sai .(_oll'\"\’\‘ AW l '. ‘ Full muull O." ‘Jl, "104 a u: co nstcd in the fact both we l‘,n',,l,l' D t’. l ‘"'_‘(';,,, If iilivil’ to prove more transltrlry‘("1,“.“‘,l, _ _ .," _“.‘,““ » _ , , Ml lvmhu; ..\"- l ovriullrvlucrlzs. ll.“ “r Hm‘ ‘ m‘ " l“ “M ‘“' , C. .1 .-»,.;,-_\, l ' ,__ > ll lu ill- l"lll‘. tiillllll.l“rl t- ~13‘ "m "- ‘ . ‘ . . . . \' . ' l CHl(‘.-\ll(). om. lap» . “vll- ,, "§"i\‘"'f-*~"1 H I f" Iwy-i-H; \~_i . l-h...“ u. .ll=illl.\<lli. tilltfllrtl "ma shot" "i" ""‘~‘ ,. '" ' I ,' 'I'IIF rut Hum ~ \u l\"‘.~l n1 (‘llltvli'tl\' t>lv"|lll/ l unluillulu. ‘I-‘Mi “" ""“ ‘if "" "' ‘ y‘, . . ' t‘ \ ll v‘. ti, ' to fnl- vlulrs‘ lllll)l'l.\tvlllllt‘lll .1111‘, i'1»i~ii\ viii" i’ i ‘iiii -‘ "i‘ i; > tvnvtl $ill."ll0 for ovntilulz Sl.- ' A? .unl\ l‘.iill'll.\ . ‘ "' haw; ll.»~_..~~.\, g kililTflM in tnXcs on his 19315-39 iu- \l\it a number ui‘ impu: in‘ tlc- 1p no; ‘limp gvfilllr‘. |lt‘llt't‘ points \\'.‘ ill tho culunulud “15 P, ,\L