iBring Joy OI A MERE MAN M‘ 0h, darn ll. how forgetful of if’ ///' “ ='~ ~ ~ tuna-Haunt»- MAXIMS MERE MAN OIL m“ . Wfll I'm glad ll; racket h well -.~ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew I lensing Guardian, Ionalded 1081. CIIAIEIlQTTISTCWN. CANADA, ’I‘UESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 193s 8 PAGES Annual lubaerlpllon Delivered $5.00 B! IIll-P- I- 1- 34-00: Canada and L‘. B. “.00 Trkrrmzovggn - ITALIAN DISPUTE A CCENTUA TED INSURGENTSMMCAPIZSIIIQE FTkA 153E fiwfizy Province - wide Silver Fox Pelt ShowOpensToday First Event ofiTs‘ Kind Will Get Underway This Morning At The CanadiaiNational Hotel. houses as Silver Fox bercpectfild to ger and no drenfiglt when 193? show 113$ this will succiff m BATAHINIAN inmvr BLAIMEI] Borjas Blancos Falls To F r a n c 0 As Troops Launch Maj- or Offensive. ._ IIINDA . E." PJ-Slliie 5 a; C re M 0 Bot Bia lnlllflfllln radio rt ultimately at Barcelona, the Gov- ernxfint ca. ital. J ‘ c011 Bo: as Barrens, the- lnmrgcnte Nmrted the en edtheProvinceof yp xIfaI-n "w vicinity of the Sierra. de 1-1611. where the Government has erected a. strongly fortified line. The Insurgent columns in the mountains and those at Borjas Blancas apparently were m- MWTIIXS in term a Junction at Monfiblamch. 20 miles to the east for a combined push against ‘Ibr- "milmlfl. 30 W188 ll Uiil southeast. Morwbldnch is a Junction on the curving main Iierida-‘Iurragona. highway. Insurgent plans, flying e11 an gage“) m“ forces. es from frag thamghmy- diam , one on Ovlernmcrrt whee said the rim-them defences of Catalonia “WM “W1? hydroelectric centre were holding firm agningf; 31mg- Iegllw trocé we ‘mgontled w? 1'9 11-.‘ - alrfrrismrer the Segre River sec- Fmnco used his tithe-tried metros of sin-rounding and slashing off Government sectors in cries-cram IIOBIQ inward his final goal. Hi5 nsht wins turned southeast in I- wnoelm to cut off south- mmomv"aha at" ea; O OTIS!!! Mountains. 0n left of the spear-h now e Segre Ri it?» mutiers a? 1M . vea- ws-hum of the way man-fog . llmawning from the rear alignment troops along the Ebro Santa Pals § To Many Santa Pal: and the mcmhw 0T the Santa Pal Department 01 the Guardian Saturday for er season. noon approximately” 1005 parcels had been delivered needy child- na In this Oi . nks in "I contributions o kind friends man? a little heart was gladdened at ibis season of general Joy. A few Santa Pale caznc to the rescue Saturday with were much - P" A W - lllmfi becw. “W35 SANTA PALS 8A Charles daon Prowse. D001“ Macbeth. AMY-l. lhrion and Marilffi comma rvrun cm==nn l . Aucti do Vernon 1'11"‘ fir. “ti. am. L-Imd-ii-QT- ..._.._. "Borden lam Club ioldin hOII m 1=;\§'l.°‘"" "T-$3i'f57r- 335'. , ._..___ "Dame in n ma. Wad- hv. I‘ 9"’ ' u IL-NIDON-IPIIIPII. Sm" 51$... 0e, r.- ‘ua-aa- . _ ......._... _ gafutsM-razrrsrilnsa. -' , ‘a-urw-o. Q In! Decanter Whb ‘as dam. . was made und feted their work ' Y first Province-wide silver fox pelt ahcw in Prince Edward Island will come into being today in Char- atwwwn. True it will no: be ready for the mlblic, or even for exhibitors today, but the 250 pelts among them the aokrwwledged "creme de .la. creme" of the 80,000 odd silver fox l-trles, the annual product of Is- nd fox farms will be pnced on the special tables provided for them in themalndiriingroomatthecan- Milan National This sirow oommi set techie: while in e afternoon the pelts will be placed and Judging is expected to be complete tomorrow wl h ribbons and awards placed on winning pctts for successful e Canadian presenmxim of trophies will rogram. , Thursday the show WlII be to tléi publitc) with mlsnnoiréifinal 1831011 B-Pile Dari my cost of the exhibition. The show will con inpe until 10 . rn.. wihen the pelts will be tra erred to the fur auction corrvpany which will mark them. Pelta on displa wm be the £0- duct of 88 0t Rovinceb slver fox farms. there had been talk of silver fox pelt show remained For ears a. vIrmial ifm it ended 611$» and 1 0r.» Jaws . Han mum fogalvnnize conversation in- to action and by radiating sparks of en/tlursiaewn and selecting a cem- mittce. who backed him up togeth- er- with co-cperetion from fur con- sbnment houses and ranchers. make possible "a show” that WLII really call for e remion of admirat- ion when view by silver fox conn- cisseufs. A manila of preparation with a thousand details to be attended to is practically clumxed now. There remains the final act of appraisal and the placing of the awards on the meritorious skins, The main object of this show, it was explain- , is of course to give the breeders 0f silver foxes an o pcriunity o‘ comparing a rectifier; r31 the cold that all m It t y B 6X99 911°?» The ‘Ilagt that the select qllelity chow pelts wi‘! be trademarked and offered for nle as a group of Prince Edward Island skins should go a great disiance towards creatingkla avomble oppression for Prince - were Island pelts in world markets. In addition w the fox pelt show seal of quality the Provincial De- tmem of Agriculture has kindly oancd its fox fieldmon, W. Fred the committee and 11s that come up to ty dard set by the De- tmem will be marked by a spec- committee arui worked are particularly general high qual- es ‘mere were very medium quelit , it that the mn ere ions carefully and Various plans have been suggest- ed for meeting competition w ich has developed from other countries since the days of pioneer ranchers ce on classification pleased with the ty of the ent few of them in this Provin ‘and the best brains of the fur trade in Canada have been workim on it. One plan is the for grad toting or Miller 33$.- fox pelI. branded as is in a progfil‘ authority. §bmla< ha an Ontario ve their pelt shows and their quality peliswvillbesoldateudtlonesahcw noe Edward mill. its. Now Pri aixiitlle late in the game but nevertheless never loo ‘ate to follow suit, “angst? the selection mad: 9mm D9 “um” miftee‘ l gtzlirgliiiyshagwd ‘IIilghet witah age De- partment of Agriculture seals of ap- proval will be sold by one of bon- 50 Persons Insurgents a Bnitidi Vice two British . , , 11-188-12-21-11. p. 4: “ i If Jay‘ V o! Bum» For don’s leading auction “Prince Edward Island Show Pelts." This ygcaris shDW is be the of around the entries of year at least have doubled. There will be surprise in store for many persons, the committee of classification believed last night. When the piercings are made by the ranchers who have unheard of will enter test Strange to say. and mnirury to the show com- and classes dpredornlnate in oubt due to the many more pup case of There 9W I'll 04f IND Perl-S. Edges many uherto been the “hall of fame". The acid will be one of quality. the expectation of mlttee. m? numbers. i. fact there were pelts marketed than is the adult skins. it was explained, is every large i_ particularly ln the h 1 U G Dawson WESTIO ghter classes. 0d.’ side are the show committee incl d Lowell W. Hancock. chairman, Lt. Col. D non, D. S. 0., E. Claude Smith. don cMillen. Cornwall: em. Kens : H, G. B. G. Rogers. Surnrnersdde. Trophies described as “g challenge trophies" are as allows. » Grunt» l of Show“ o he ward Island. Champion Adult Silver Fox Pelt Hon. 'I'he.ne of Show-donated bk A. Campbell. M. A. Province of Prince Edward Island Champion Silver Fox Pup Pelt of ted by Hudson Bay Company. _ Best Dork Medium Silver Adult Shc-w- dorm. Pelt of Show- Best Dark Pelt of Show Show—Donare:l by the National Railways Best Medium Silver Pup Pelt shcvw-— Donated by Domini _°l; (Ccnilnued on page '7. Col 2) lleath 0f Mrs. Dahon In United States received f th death 0m was o e in iheir annual pilgrimage to religious Charles W at 10 o'clock Sunday! evening in her . . the late Hon. word Island. She is survived bv the follolwi sons and daughters: Dr. C. ard Dalton Mrs. Edward Islan d. The funeral will be bold on Wed- oward fromDnl-I ngsdav morning Som l1 Bolton's home. A funeral service in Charlottetown. acme of her moi-tiers deemh. Arrested By E sp i 0 nage ui-tugilraln of Nationalist o dim mmlahm tun Salli‘; ma t?‘ °‘ romroarommoaru In; C0 . . . Charlotte- town and C. B. Rogers of Summer- judges. Members of the u . c. Summnsid _ A. MacKin S. Coffin. and G. Charlottetown; G e Maiclntyre, Montague; Gor- A. L. Rog Mutrtert. and erpetual Ion SHINE-Fol Felt by T Hon. George DeaBrisay Dehilcis, lit-Gov- emm‘ of the Province of Prim» Ed- Medium Silver Pup Best Medium Silver Adult Pelt of Canadian of Shcw—Donated by Canada Packers, Limited. _ Best Light Medium Adult Pelt of on Sil- , Ltd Basal. 1m Medium Silver Pup E.I<.>'W:PQII=?L%Q_)_>Y__SIII¢3Q§I Mrs. Char- es Lieutenant Governor of Prime Ed- in How , Somerville. Mass, A. H. Orsrtelfen. Chicago, Mrs. Poul Murray. Charlotte-town. MTS- W. J. Cox. Belmont, Mrs. Walter Spillelne. Belmont, Miss Irene Dal- ton. Newionville. Mass. Mrs. Dal- ton was before her marriage Annie Gavin. native cf Tlimtsh. Prince ervi . e. Mass. will later be held Mrs. Murray left for Massachu- vesterdev on receipt of news (mm:- rcee. The pouch also was were cooper- tion of the espionage. in- Bri- leit to the AS CHRISTMAS IS CELEBRATE!) Wars Rage, Troubles Loom ——Day A Fam- ily One Throughout Empire. By The Canadian Prose Peace on earth — shattered by staccato gunfire and bursting bombs on far flung battlefront; 1n Spain and China. Good will toward men-imperilled by nationalistic animosities and rac- ial outbreaks in central Europe and Ralestine. Such was the piciure that Qan- adlans saw across the seas Sunday as they celebrated in peace the Christmas holida , _ A symsbol of t fact this day is o family one throughout their vapt N. the King and Queen goth- er about them in snow-covered flnrgham. in Norfolk, closest relatives in England. A gay Christmas tree, personally chosen by the King from his es- tate, dominated the celebration as $119 giro young Princesses, Eli 9 W’ ecmrerr. and Margaret, rpened their gifts. Attend Dedication Accompanied by the Queen. Queen Mar-y and other members of the hoirie party. the Kin? at nded the dedication of a tabe‘. the memory of his father, George V. in Sandrimliam Parish chm- As a. Christmas gift to em world. the 21 American u'b- lics signed at Liana, Peru. a. pac for intercontinental solidarity against foreign 55.011. .,:...In.$ . ..-~birthda.v of Christ was (Riser-ye -~as last ear-under the threat of death. 1c Lens of thousands prayed in snOW-mantled cathedrals for an early peace, Insur- llen‘. umles pressed forward at Christmas dawn in the third day of a determined offensive against the Government capital, Barcelona. - And in China. Japanese bombers continued roaring overhead, system- atically raiding important ci ies in tihres provinces. The mass of German citizens eb- served Christmas in me old-fash- ioned, christian way. despite a Na- ?! edict for a nee-pagan celebrat- on. B» Strong Denunciation In Rome, Pope Pius XI. aged and irculblcd Poirifi’ the Roman Camhoilc Church, rested and prayed after the exertion of celebrating three meses and delivering a. strong denunciation of svha‘ he termed Italian disregard of the Papal con- cordat. In Palestine. where n temporary lull was observed in the conflict between Jew and Amb, the LAM-n Patriarch, Mgr. Luigi Berlassini issued a. Christmas message of "Rood xviil End osl wishes or atinz in the hoy town of B e- hcm" to the Americas. Tycn y thousand British troops maintained the troubled peace n the land of Chrisnls nativity and an iron ring encircled Eothehem while the hol drama of the gentle teachers birth was recnacted. From m until nightfall ldnight Sunday. count as thousands made shrines to nay homage to the Prince of Peace. White Home Celebration President Roosevcl‘ of the United g Slates. after attendin": services in _ Waslung-ton._spent a merry (lay with four genzratuons of his large Emily in the Whip House. Brliain got out car muffs for the snowy day. perhaps the colde=t Christmas there In 10 gears. It cherlshedpthe tenorhoo C rlstmus (Continued on page ‘I. Col 2) King _Ackn0wiedges Canadian Greetings OTTAWA. Dec. 26-—(CP)-—Gover- nor Lord Tkvecdsmuir sent m6 CH0- adian people‘; Christmas greetings and best wishes for the New Year to King o Queen Eliza- beth cnd race ved an acknowl - ment, It was ced here on . _ Hie lllxoellenc nwssage reed Modesty the Queen our eings and gqood we": or C and the cw e King's reply: "The Queen I sincerely thank you for the kind and loyal message which you have sent us on beh of the peo- ple Olmada." posse ofdfiwnlsh namu of two matllrifmeubjachig: can a =- m-m-n Mancton Observes Boxing llay _ I (O. P. h Guardian's SpeolAl Wire) MUNéIIUN, N. 13.. Dtc. Bil-For - the firrt time in many veers Box- ing Day will be observed here tc- mm, by numimos business es- tabi whose doors will have to BRIM ncnmtl ch. the West- ' glmr-‘m-igp weather. City churches 88 Lives Lost in Rumania Train Wreck BUCHAREST, Dec. 26-—(AP) —-0fflcial circles said today 88 Pflrlons were killed and 250 eer- er of Frekatzci and Etulea. It was feared deaths might tolnl 180 because many of the inlllrbdwere saldto be Ina hopcleau condition Most casual- tiu wen pennants, workmen. amall tradesmen and soldier: on their way home for Christ- mas. Two relief trains carrying doctors, nurses and salvag‘ e- quipment from riuchareat, a Ill 200 miles to the south, reached the wreck today. Th1: lnjurzd were fouled in cars for transfer to lie town of Bolgrnci One wrecked locomotive and seven coaches were mlled ulp as an investigation comm ttee, headed by the minister of cun- muniol and public health, hurried w the scene. 'I‘wo stat- ion masters were sold to be un- der arrest. Bccauae both trains were lo- cals officials said ii. was impro- bubIc any foreigners were pas- aengere. Enjoyable Ghristmas Festivities Peace was the theme stressed from Inflniv culmlis Chrwlnws PM’ as Prince Edward Island vuletide were cronies! for all services- Sgvecial Christmas services were held in Silmmerslde churches and in almost every church throughout the Province. Only one serious accident was rerported. Mr. Raymond Hambly o4.’ Oh suffered serious in- juries Christmas night when he was struck by what Mounted Po- lice said was “a hit and run driver." He was taken to hospital. Yesterday, with the weather man on his best behavior. young P600115 took to sport. Skiing and skating parties were evewwhere in evi- dence. A 1: card was staged at the Sporting Club last night. At Government House Governor and Mrs. DeBlols played hcs-t Lo 925 needy children. His Honor pre- sented each with a bright new 25 cent piece. the boys with a. hockey slick and puck, the girls with a doll. condzv and ice cneam. His Honour was attended bv his aides while other willing workers asvlsted in passing out gifts w the children during the afternoon.- Muslc was furnished by Mia; Iiil- lien Farie, pianist. In Charlottetown the Canadian National Hotel was ihe scene of manly cheery Chris-lanes dinner parties both on Sunday and attain yresterdny. Guests were personally received by Mr. A. H. Mould. mun- ager of the hotel mid lVLrs. Mould. Special Christmas music was ren- dered by Miss Kathleen Horn/by. Expect Surrender Of Rossiter Today HAL-WAX, Dec. 26 —(CP)-— Royal Canadian Mounted Police said tonight they understood ‘Thomas Rosslter. Halifax man sought. on a conspiracy charge since Dec. l5, would surrender tomorrow. Rossiter is one of 24 charged with conspiracy to defraud the federal government of $4,000,000 through illegal importation and transportation of liquor. His sur- render would leave Jack Creighton also of Halifax, the only one of the group to evade police so fur. Twenty two already have appear- ed in Magistrate's court here and been remanded on $3,000 bail to Jun. 3 for preliminary hearing. Said Seeking “Truce” Terms With Japanese HONG KONG, Dec. 26-—(AP)— Reports that ang -Wei,ior- mer president of the C inese Ex- ecutive Yuan (cabinet), was en Kn use H1738 n8 "truce" teams with Japanese emis- mrles have caused lively discussion in diplomatic circles here. N!“ P600114 "were that Wang, head of the ao-‘alled party‘, would arrive today, tonii is whereabouts was n mystery. e left Chungking. provisional Chinese 08191001. on a “sick leave," and was i be "m b; w" W; m", -- .. gggotiatiohs could Boqmuce J :4 B‘ impe not be irm- Prominent Halifax Businessman Dies HALIFAX, Dec. pa _(cp).__ William G. Hnberiloh. Halifax businessman and only eon of mo, late William Robertson. one-time president of the Union Bank oi’ -~prcg*ra.m are com e/ce Rift Paris, R nnusrvm m mcnusr REARMAMENT Calls For Stronger Defences In Record Peace - time Prol- gram. PARIS, Dec. Zfi-France WASHINGTON. Dec. 36—(AP)_& President Roosevelt was reported authoritatively today to havg dead. ed on a doublo-borreled recommend- Rllfln l0 C011 Jess for United States defence reinforcements of unprece- dented peacetime magnitude, Persons close to the Administrat- ion said the President intends to re- port. in the annual message he will (lelflvr personally to a join: Senate- | House ses<lon Jan. 4, that the sec- urity _of ‘he nation and its neigh- bors IS threatened bv the armed Thus. the next move in Premier Mussolini. A week later. under present ar- rangements. p, specii; DfESen‘ detailed recommsn for an army air force of some 10.000 planes and numerous other mews- iues . administration con- official channels he would Thus. the ierrmintes a quadrupled military air fleet of at least 13.000 aircraft. in- cluding the minimum nf 3,000 Con- guess authorized for the navy in his year's fleet elfliansion act, _ Supporting the proposals con - SlOllfli circles have heard. wig be "swirillng" evidence that German '5 aerial force and aircraft factor es ared w xvar demands threaten to upset completely the world balance of military and political power. From usually well-informed ad- ministration and legislative wurces (‘Dine reports of these developments Ill Diwe would name the Ger- man Fuehrer, this rt. said, as his representative, wh_le the sug- gwtion intimated that. Prime Min- ister Chamberlain of Great Bri- tain might stand for France. This reported suggestion, how- ever, met with a na mfusai in Paris where it was. considered an Italian" manoeuvre to make Italy's demmcinticn last week of the 1986 Hench-Italian treaty regarding Tunisia. an entering wedge for further expansion at fiance's ex- P9009» Such an arbiimflon agreement. the French intcd out, would put the Fmench- talian quarrel on an entirely different plane from the one on which the French main- taln it now stands. l-‘lul Ended Differences N ra 1. Details of the new reaminmen»; . They were shaped in close co-olpem-tion with General ItIflIIll Cmig. m-my chief of staff, and ohm‘ military advisers, 5111C?‘ Fhlrcpels uneasy peace agree- ment was reached at Munich. War and navy department budgets a1- reazly have been approved. 2. Convinced that United States air power must be quickly augment- ed, lVLr. Roosevelt has been unmov- bv the arguments of some congres- sional critics the‘. the United States, protected by two oceans. needed no su:h force as 10,000 army planes. 3_ The President and intimate advisers are confident congress will approve at lmast the basic recom- mendations. Christmas Week-end Deaths Reach 361 In United States NEW YORK. Dec. 26—(AP) -'I‘he United Siateepaid with mo.“ than 400 lives for ita Hench quarters pointed out that Premier Mussolini himself. following the signing of the i935 level-Mussolini agreement, said all differences between the two ne- iions hvad been settled. Paris 0f- ficials said that since Italy d6- clared that agreement invalid Iiely alone was to blame for the Rome- Parls diplomatic differences. The French note was sent to the Italian Foreign Minister, Count Galeazzo CIBJIO. lyyAndxe Francois- Porwot, french Ambassador to Rmne. It answered Italy's 00w which declared annulled the 1935 pact. The pact gave more than £4,000 square m1le§ of territory to Italian Libya and Italian Somali- land at the expense of Tunisia and Hench Scmaliland. Tour of Military Fmiare Christmas holiday weekend and at least 301 of the violent Deladier w tmvel by deaths were caused by traffic warship and to review hluge accidents. parades in Igorsilcaa FratncehstMed- De _ 6_¢A_p)_. terranean Ian epar men , Srlizcilidgln Locke (Ea edy imp Tunisia. her North African_ pro- hundreds‘ of homes in e United iectorate, in a war vi military Sat-Res during the Christmas week- fanfare. _ end, with o. least 361 known fat- mlaxlier announced his tnp nlitie. in n mountln toll from fgnfgflvglry “mauled u; Stan; Jan. highway crashes. suici es. alaoctingu, fircs and mxlronrl accidents. _ A prevailing "green" Christmas. with its attendant restriction of icy roads and snow. was credited w ih a smaller death count the inst Christmas. when more than 500 ‘L their lives. v ‘i' and other cities enjoy- " ..v.~u'.g-1ike vreathcr. _ Texas hcadcd the country-wade list with 21) fatalities, followed by Pcmusylxanufs 26. New York. Mich- igan, California Wl n 25 each. and 20 in Ohio. _ Seven sales and the diSIIICi. of Columbia reported no fatalities. Traffic clnuned lhe greatest num- ber of lives with a_ known count of 295 victims. Fire killed l3 wvhilc ll died by gunshot. l2 by train crashes six by .‘.lllCId(‘. three by drowning, one by falling and 23 by other cau- ses. In Louisiana. a man was giiled in a resteumn; brawl when he ooJected to the use of obscene language in the presence of women. IZDOIIIAM Supplies Scarce “As 2. after the tension over colonies arose and touched niff ang-n- de- monstrations on both sides. Former Socialist Premier Leon Blum, fighting to retain control of his powerful party. meanwhile. made his bid on a platform oi close cooperation among France. the United States. and Great Bri- tain to curb Italy, Germany and Japan The veteran Socialist Leader op- posed an Insurgent group led by Paul Faure, the partye secretary. which was urging the party in its annual convention to oppose tri- povwer friendship on grounds that it might lead to “idcoiogicnl.we.r." Blum declared that union of the three great democracies would mean a world front strong en- ough to support peace, He urged that Prune/c seek to Mien close ties between the United States and Soviet Russia to oppose the totalitarian slates. from SIMIYWN ‘HIM “SM morning. 4 Halifax. died here Christmas Day after an illnes of aevem weeku. _ At, the same timc_ France, was reported circles to have instructed its Ambassador in Rome to ra- Ject any proposals casting Chancellor Hitler of Germany in the role of peacemaker between Italy and France. On Christmas Day at Paris, ii. was reported, Premier Mussolini had lei the Paris Government know throu h un- Widens In ome On Colonial. Issue Daladier’s Trip To Africa To Be ‘Hands-off’ French Territory Demonstration. told Italy today she accepted the Italian note renouncing the 1935 Laval-Mussolini terri- torial treaty but that the accord must stand as the only basis for negotiations between the two powers. the colonial issue was pui squarely up to Italy as Premier Daladier, despite Faeeiei cries of “provocation,” disclosed plans in make his tour of Corsica and Tunisia a mighty “hands off demonstration” to in informed suggest that French- tiling differences arising from Fascist agitation for Tunisia and other French territory be submitted to arbitration. IIUARIIIDEINEARS S H 0W1] l] W N flee a french note mfuslm I further colonial grunts. It was a. ply no an Italian new which held invalid the 1035 Melina-Frauds‘? grmelewnent on positions in North - r . One hundred Italians who ha! lived in Ivrance for many years ro- tumed to their native lend as the quarrel between Home Paris approached a. show-down. Hepametcd from south»: Rance, the halians were rcceiv cercmonicusly by authorities at V iia, on the frontier, with a Crhristrnm dinner and prerenta. Daladiei-‘s forthcoming trip ta Corsica and Tunisia, on which b WIII leave Perle next hlcnooy, w described in the _ Fascist. press as having both a military one political cimrec ter. Some writers asserted a chief aim was to make more difficult the ap- ent rmssion Britain’! ' e Mirustar, Neville Chamber- lain, when he came tioRome Jan, l1 1n another stage of hi5 European appeasement policy. Bolh Corsica, Isand Department of France near Iwly’: arena and Tunisia, French ra. in Nvrth Africa. have been mentioned by Fascist demonstrators a t France. The suggestion has been that Italy wens more rights for the many Italians in hhesc places. al- ‘K122115111 the Italian demands have officially forfrlulated 1 r ',:_ You ‘ii-NNK or SOME PEOPLE (as luesvoo 444mm 0F 44mm! Maritime East: Fair and moder- ately cold. followed at night by ' increasing winds and prdpqlyly Germans Observe Christmas w» m. » --,-- t.‘.?.‘.38.’"?.l “.2...” ".....,.,..‘°" ' BY GERAUD JOUVE fruit cropnand partly because cf Mines: “m Copyright 1MB by the llavas New! me sett g up of war reserves. Dwwmn 45B 4Q Kelley Butter and lard, "often so Victoria 36 Q BERLIN, Dec. 26 --(CP-He.vu) scarce," were included in Christ Edmonton m3 1g -—Food supplies were more scarce mas packages handed to 400 poor ine 10B 10B than at any time in the history children in Berlin by ‘Field Mar- Winnipeg 133 a ' of the Third Reich as Germans shai Goering. Cake and candy Ottawa um 3 today completed celebration of shops were sold out several days Monheal 1o 1g their first Christmas since Austria before Christmas. Oranges and Quebq; g m and the Sudeienland cwme within tangerines traditionally decorate Saint John 1s 5 th; lrliatifinaltbraliéders. k d h u genran tables at Christmas time, 3311f“ 34 1g o ca ac v y mar e a_ o - ut is year they were not seen hgrlqeegwm day Ghnaneellor Hitler m unldler lrnostts Christmas trees. c u m expec re urn rum ercian a e to obtain limit- mo ntaln retreat at Berchfas- ed supplies of citrus fruits as- mgm$fim°ffffioz w gad n Jan. i2 to take up the ap- signed small quotas to their most sun M‘ mp, ‘(fa-noon M, L“ pcala from “the oppressed Oer- faithful customers. Housewives and m“ wmqww morning n mans‘ of lMa-énellend" and “the found it impossible to obtain 7 33 ques on o ennany‘: rein on: sufficient s for the bckin of ' '- with Cache-Slovakia. and Hung- traditionalmGerman chiffon“ m“ “m” "w" D” a’ “a BYY- CHXGS. 5° “mom While the Gennan masses had Moat fruits. including peers and ‘ma; M“ m“, ch more money this Christmas. they prunes, were almost as rare. yor n“; c‘; nggy 351L131“ lwcre unable to buy the food they the first time canned fruit was have lavdea Ml l. 1 p a\ sought, partly becuue of a poor difficult m obtain. rmmeuouanfisym. ‘ ;._. ' W‘ f; “Ti ""~*=-=->~i-i--w_.,»..-,, f