MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN Work discovc that costs him III Chu |lI1l' l nln‘ Guardian. Founded rs to mini his dig- “fly and the VIII‘: of everyt rlntiumwn Guardian Two Cents. ‘I81. hing Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ciiirafirr MW" own, CANADA. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 013," 1939 8 PAGES. MAXIMS OYA MERE MAN one may have the pI;plwt': on for rlxhl-eousneu L ut I a prophet‘: surenesg of God. Annunl subscription Delivered I630 H1 Il.|l—P. E. I. 34.00: Cnnnda and U. 3. 5.1.00 RUSSIANS INVADE PO lnnnnn NAZIS ATTEMPT Allies Continue Cams In Drive On Western Front nlnlosln M ralnlnlnln Illlhhlh lihmlafilflh TO STEM FRENCH AD I/“ANCE British Mission In Canada orrnwa. Sept. 17-(CP) A British Mission which came Valiant Polish Troops Fight French Troops-Advance North! 89° East In’ Mo§_el_le River Valley. ‘ (By ('harles S. Foltz, Jr., Associated Press Staff Writer’ ll.-XSEL, Switzerland, Sept. l7—(AP)-—Ger-man forces on the western front, strengthened by men and material withdrawn from the Polish ought to have struck at Fr slowly tightening on the Moselle River valley. The regular west wall troops, who until the last two days have relied mainly on declared in dispatches to ha not the actual orders, for an offensive campaign. Reports reaching Basel said a heavy German attack began at dawn today_ against the area 10 miles east of the Illosellc. French Gain Important Highway The French were said to portant highw River. Basing‘ their The German attack. based on the snuourg forest and the sum‘ love: near Orscholz. Wis reported to l:o.l'e s:rucl: southward, support- ing another German attack west tmn Alvrzlg. Boon German actions were sup- pcrzc-.l by heavy artillery fire aim- ed at rcntls over the frontier hills across winch the allied troops must cross to reinforce their com- mics rs. Germany. Ssntm rd along the Saar River L‘_".e G ans were forced to take me dc.‘cnslvc in face of a stub- born P:'<-nch drive designed to teach the Nied River heights com- mmndllxq Sn.a1~lo.utcm. it. was said. A French force was reported to have captured the village of Ker- lntlrn during the afternoon after’ Ibnttlc with German troops on rsaciaruy hzlls overlooking the Saar ' .9)‘. Polish Republic llear collapse CERNAUTI. Sfipt. la-—(Monda.v) “_~‘\P'——LlLl‘ge sections of the Po- il.':1a'.my started nourin across lat‘ lronlicr into Rumana early Mill‘ following flight of President lmflcc Moscicki and the tnpparent D” of the Polish Rx-public. ~.sL.ckl urrircd during the day Vl_ i"0l‘(‘igll Minister Joscrplr wk and a government party of \ .r. Bock immediately arranged to meet with the heads of diplomatic "ll-“Ions to Poland now establish- ed here. and was ex ted to tell ‘e’|‘1‘-“jl1‘»llllot their misson was “now ct" The plans of the Polish Gov- ernment, however, were not im- ‘“~"” ' "ly clear. There were some B Or that it would go on to llchnlcst. Ru.mnnla's capital. BODY FOUND (GRAND FAIJB. N. 13.. Sept. 17- lCPl—'I‘l\e body of Merille Poitras. 9- Of Powers Creek. was found on road near that community early samrdav. He had suffered skull all“ Jaw fractures. Whether or not been hit by 5 car was un- Coming Events like for Notice: in this column 8 cents per word. “:"1‘&1klee and Dance Bradnlbeno May. 1..-eqs-9-re-21. "'I‘a1kiep—-Mnlpequ Wednesday- e L-M3-9-18-21. Rcserv 8 turd . Ocbobe 7th Philauiea ‘i?.urn:1yage sale. ‘- L-937-9-16-3i. ' O for "Y. .c. A. sownng Alleys 3?“; Monday Sept. lath at. 1:00 L 966-9-18-2i. o. A. liummace Sole . 30th 7:00 p. m. ulldlng. Proceeds in O. A. L-966-D-16-ill. to W‘ Reserve Saturday Sept. so for en . ' ct at Holmnns. "Y. M. Belumm, A3"-‘elation '14 of v. M. ‘I ntte.ntionEl”‘l;;nll 1:3‘- . . CI -*°nR""°"..‘Z" lhchl ay from the Moselle almost to action on the Buschdorf and Tunsdorf, the French have been pushing steadily to the north and northeast. This movement, it was said, threatened to isolate Ger- man forces still holding forts between Perl and Teitingen. campaign, were reported to- ench lines which have been defensive warfare, now were ve obtained the equipment, if have gained control of an im- the Saar German villages of l FIRST STAGE! for NEW GREAT} own llElR on (By The Canadian Press) The first stage the second Great War neared an end today as Soviet Russia srnt its tl‘OC{.l5 llllO Po’rm(l to claim the areas inhabit- cd by Ukrainians and White Rus- slnns which once formed part, the Russia of the Tzars. High ot- flclals of the Polish Government are rcpozted to have crossed the frontier into Ruma. 21. although Polish soldiers conti. . the hunt against the invadimz German forc- es. With certain important dif- ferences. Poland's position re- scmblcs that of Belgium in the first Great War. The greater part of its territory is occupied bv enemy forces. Unlike Bclynum. hcrvevcr. Poland has no allies at hand. The second stage of the seccrd Great War must be fcuiht on the west- ern front and elsewhere as Great Britain and 1’-fiance rtrlvc to smash the power of the German Reich. Only when that power is broken rnn Polish il‘l(if‘li-‘.‘l’ldt?TrCe be re- stored. in the first Great. War a small corner of Belgian territory flew the Belgian flasz throughout and in it the Belrzian army remained intact. With Poland it may be dif- fcrcnt. Beset on two sides the Po- llah army may have to resort to guerrilla warfanc to co'ntinue its -rt-slslnlice. i According to information from parts the nrlrance of the French forces on German fortifications in- lhc, Saar men. (‘0iliil‘llEd and drew Gcrmnn rsunforvsemcnts from the rust. What effect. if any. this may have on the Polish situation 10- : to be sem but as lnmz M contlntres in Poland it is corslcr~r~“‘v- German forces will be ne€d‘.‘d there. Flszhtlmz in the sear r(’s10n dc- velonecl into n tzcneral hntfle. re- miniscent. of some of the crest strugszles of the first Great War. Hundreds of thousands of troops were engaged. War Briefs LONDON. Sept. 18—(lVlondny)- (CP Cable)-The dlplomntlc oer- respondent of the Dn.iIy_llernld (hbor) predicted today that the "British and French Govern- ments will not regard the Bus- slln action on necessitating an lnunedlatg rupture with the sov- iet Union." The Express diplomatic cor- espondenl. said: Ennis‘: invas- ion o{Polnnd caused no surprise in London diplomatic quarters. Some such step had been Antic- lputed for some time xxx.” l LONDON. Sept. 17- (CPCIble) -The third Sunday of war found Iandon quiet Ind the streak comparatively do.-netted except at church times when the crowd! gathered briefly ln__fr;ont_ of ,._.__———-——-D ,_ _.__ to Canada 10 days ago, headed by Admiral Sir Percy Addison, to survey .sl‘blllties of acquir- ing munit ons and supplies in this country for the British Gov- Two Invaders‘ ernment, is ex (‘il‘d to be _ u-—-1 :‘:‘’..'.“‘’.I‘.‘”.:‘ .i;tl.‘i§ "d..a§"°... 2:: W111 Resort To Protracted flciala headed by Sir James Rae. an Under Secreturv of the Brit- ish Treasury who is reported to he on his way here. Air Vice-Marshal R. M. Hill of the Royal Air Force arrived here today from New York. where he dlsembnrked Saturday from the Aquitanla. Vice- Mnrshal Illll said he was here to discuss “supply a/ml other matters with Canadian authori- ties." He said he intended to stay sometime and planned to open an office here. Operations of the mLsslon have hccn carried out quietly, and no details of its investigations have been made public. It is under- stood its members are surveying various manufacturing plants and making studies of Can- ada's productive possibilities. Gflllillhifllllh SURRENDER or Plllllllll our Capitulation Of War- Guerilla Warfare In Event Organized Resistance Becomes Impossible. By Robert Rieifel llavas Staff Writer LUBLLN, Sept. 1’l-lCP——Havs.s)... Poland‘s battered legions tonight fought back at German forces. ,st.rlklmz from the west and soviet Russian troops who Cl.'QS.“(.d the eastern border late last night to strike at the Polish army's rear. Dispatches reaching here said Po- lish forces went into action immed- lately against the Russian invaders. The heaviest fighting was under way in the northern and southern sectors of the new eastern front, since the great Pinsk marsh region prevented any great advances by the Soviet central contingents, Po- lish sources claimed. DETERMINATION NOT LESSENED Diana/tches said the Russian at- tacks had been particularly power- ful in the northern Wllno on Molodeczno, and in the extreme south on the right, closed to Rurnlmia. Polish military observers nssertccl the Russians were advancing west- ward toward objectives which targets of the German eastern thrust. POSSIBLE GUERRILA DEFENCE Commenting on possible Polish guerrilla defence operations in the ,or Prlpet. marsh zone. the central part. Polish military observers that it was im a well-defined during the Great, War. The marshy ten-aln w operations by enemy me land units ex Polish sources claimed the Rus- ‘sian invasion in no way lessened l, the Poles‘ determination to resist to :the end. If the Polish command find it impossible to continue or— remote are some parts of the region ganizcd resistance against the forces that in 1922 Polish Government of both the Nazis and the Russians agents investigating condition there found groups 0 protmcted guerrt'| had never heard of the Great Wa it. may wage e Pinsk marsh zone. it warfare in th t d Mom wafhsaicl. L 1 1 ed lfmd lprutgei éubeeqduent campaign - e S l nvas on occurr or o 5 n epen ence. Saw Exnec e 0v 9 about 800 miles About 1,130,000 persons live in the nlong a frontier l‘(‘{ZlOll, where the Russians were marching bank of the Dnlesfer west of Kamenicc Podoiskl in the Tarnopol region. This area is ‘life in of Eastern Polan/:l.. recalled l ble to establish‘ mm in this region o.uld make r chnnlzed Lremelv difficult. So f residents who Electrical Storm Hits llova Scotia HALIFAX, Sept. 11 -—(CP)— llalifax county bore the brunt of a hall, thunder and lightning :turm today which caused dam- age estimated at many thous- nntls of dollars. At llsclrettfs Cove on St. Mur- ':arct’s Bay. the wind and hail- tones, as large an golf bulls, .-relied cottages, destroyed crops. wrecked fishing ‘boats and struck down giant trees. At Halifax rt house in the western section of the city did not have at least one window smashed. No deaths were reported. Luckll_ only rain visited the Annapolis Valley in the western section of the Province. There ft-arful farm:-rs watched the storm pass over without dam- aging the trees groaning under the weight of nearly 3.000.000 barrels of apples. Cape Breton ‘stand rt-ported heavy lightning ‘out no damage. Yarmouth County in the southern end of the Province experienced considerable darn- ace by lightning. The light- house caught fire and 1,000 gul- lnns of kerosene oil stored in the ground floor was removed before the f"~'~‘--s reached it. TAIILYTWPS Allllllllslll T0 o_l_l_sslA l 5 1 I‘ . V’ - » __ lo g. nnln from Bogosowo. near ms.rs.h rezxo-n. onl 20 per cm re- - - entarllv (flven thx; Inrtgrlan Frontlier. clown tohoklgpy sélfiliingicoalrthe kg m‘i1n‘i,:';1ioallti(e.<_ Tihn FaSClSt Press Silent on the Dnlester rver, near 1 e 11- cf ty is nsk. th 11 porpu 5.- Hours race’ mnnian frontier. tlon of 32.000 in normal times. On Invasion C0111- fB.V TiWi€:Vi" IE‘-:w‘,‘;it‘t‘::;,‘“"I“,‘::Pr, H I 4 “#"—#r >7/WVVSW ’7f"~_—\ I I7 -—~ ment "‘ Acclalms (A or on rc.s . . Bi2RRLiN, S:nl. 17~ (AP) — Soviet - Japanese Germans fonirrht expressed the bE‘- ._ lief the complete surrender of P0- 3 I ACCOrd. a or . r . . Offensive Notlnrr that to mlzhty fo ceino. ‘ Rucsin nee l‘|'ll"}~{,‘ilin~' into pas E a . By Edward Kennedy Poland on an 8720-nail-5 front.‘ 3 h Associuted Pm” Sm“ Wm" German high ctmmiwl Cl“ ‘"9 n I ROME, Sept. l’l—-(A.P)~— Fascist that tho caclhrntlcn of lnng-b€- Italy greeted R.u5sia.'s entry into P0- -lmn Wcrsaw was imnilm"-l "‘ land today with marcauons that she Tn rcsr)on='* to B ‘hm-'_l<lt8St ED‘ hml dropped her former animosity .793}{Q1-thpPfjH=h(‘lf1DliEli‘§ snrrcn'l- I-IAJVEILTON, 0ut...r l"_l_o1d SHANGHAI Sept. ”_(AP) _ wwm.d men. s_ 3. R_ and Wm, M. the l-Il;zh1<;nnunand Ertnsirtttzg ;§;r'f’)—m'1I‘l;e grfifiglge n oveylegwokmg Jamnese ‘mobs were reported to. Hslgns wluifizlrity with Germany ll‘. t ll 9 c r '*"’:'.‘TS 1‘ 1 0,1. icr mil a.ry y. Aei\‘natCl“eIl1is=arl‘?S to the German Hamilton Bay became the rallylne gufihgeworhaggeogeeafgafggmgflimn" wmle no Omaha, or Scmpomcml lines. point of thousands of t§l1“9dl9t"-_‘3 aandmobservers predicted possmle dr-_. ‘comment \\'ag_; made immediately on, today for prosecution of e war a M )5 to me R mva,-non of Poland, me velo merit, of maior UMHD ET . » 1, white Flags galnst Germany. E Ch Se resjsmnoe fascist p1e.§ acclaimed the sovie A‘ “ °“§"“°'“-V “”’e“-ded ‘)3’ am” The report of the Central China. -Ia nose accord ta hrllel-L border «mum s~~~ux-ted we no: dMl.‘“‘““*“ .9:;‘.°::l:.:;‘ ...*;l:.'. mow was mm mm» Javanese as... .,..,-.....l n,.,,,,, ,,?;1,,, _.,,,.. .l..n;ten{‘§,§i :01? l X? éity ‘éaiiiiui zit mgr. s resolu- neys gsenlcuv).corg§3x;§mg){]t§r& fggragl Tol(|g[~n]0 0, L.,g,,°,,, Sm me ,'.. Prflsh o cor Nit ‘..-‘E .Y ony esu Ty 0 ' ' ‘ ‘_ .. . . - ' M H 1. vn»1<=»-mm W1“ “W l ‘l:".r:%. .2:::.s‘! *.:°.°::r:‘*":..l‘°"..‘:f em -z-ram as a now was 2: ;:°°.:.:$.‘;.::...:...:.‘;.z {,2 (ifmiiénp ni)[m‘,;e1‘:,T“imS at 10 l‘i\'rrt11ilitVy0‘f tliri-i German Govern- giggnigwmiggfefegegidgselr gieocéug ‘ bution to me defezilce of what nrigtixxlti . - > , ‘ - - bc.lldtl “ oipeuce s PT€‘Vl0“33"- mp’ Hlqh Cowman.“ m“..”t'. {(fln%,ia:,i,t.:|rsefw;{;,eV,}.3,e,.1S, sat D3"1°n 0“ We Manchmlkuomboemer CXiSCl‘illi§1lli(l‘l¢3leV.\s‘i)r‘l1fi3." summarized as sezles of vital blows urT?1VP cgrd Wag ma fifit victim by the new Tokyo-Mtgscowmtfl E . NO“,wMm_S emphaslwd the “w_ 37- '-he °1"”“b““-‘z d°f°"°° "I P?‘ ,,r m',. '.e,.~,.d ‘g,.é,,‘L W}... to be D°mel ti?” I‘,?'p:’n°1‘B roviggt ‘Wu, nmlzlo l(‘C(‘DLl0ll me accord received lard. Three strcmhnlds of st.rat.v«‘r , 1/ dr 1- di n QM ‘sh? died northwcs rn' do 85 8 f n_‘ in B,.r1m_ :'“I’°‘;(“m‘1‘;) ,E2.€]a,f§ I5-‘..-. fwgrri‘ lnfl1urle‘:nasuaffer'ed' when 8. 2{,i.".§;‘“r4'f)euS.-mE§rrn§-°eu rinrliv Corps i.VV“I*““‘1‘" “‘"":§“:'€""S§§3°‘;)e °rm§g";‘:; I r . l. . . _ * A _ - V ‘ -. (l).0ll11 .- was vv rfibamm “mm. D913. 1, 70 mrlps ‘ ('-rrman ht‘rcp§.;l}<1) sifruik fllilfl Nglsfh were sslddto hme been hurled buck mlmm “jomd ‘(men the chances of _c.n|1(.hea£f, cf Wnfsnwi find ihf‘ l ' "7-Pr, 5 I‘ ‘ P“ an n ‘ ’ 1 Rh by the 3 wmcie‘ m J anew Ilnllnn })zZl‘IiCi1')£l.lliDn in the war on M‘ O, B,.,.5¢_L=¢-wk r'Brze,=:q ’\tlantc. slnklrg th. vesse W Heretofonc, t was so . ap - kGm_nmm,_$ Side. U“, fascist Dress S"; Bu rvm, wh,.,.(, gm p~15(,mar_; lc=s of more than 100 lives. had deln ed further advance to‘ NW no Such mdicmmn .2 g‘ '3 d mkkn 'r'h.e my out— Mnrmr"t died on the rescue ship the inter or because of rear of a on me wmmlm although up w 3 flag‘ {,§§“’,(f,t hm, ,,_»,..gay been City of Flint. Soviet ntntack in the north. _W,,., mm ago “mm ,1, m.“ ,,, ‘. ' A V .1 b ()5-1-non ,_ A _g_____ __,_g_ _—_T——,-——~- ,_,_ lmllnn l1c\\‘.-]).’lp('l‘s nbout Russia iggfggedggrrirxfyurfprnm é-Xst Prusisin. " V was unfnvor.\l)lc to the Soviet. re- R fist-Litcvsk is 110 miles due cast ll l-!:lll<‘.L<il5l)1ll(llE‘S1§3l)l"‘5:‘1'Lt1 ‘hgggny M WMFMV’ ~ ‘ ’ A A rfliglu flu»-:1 flzfr‘ Piiipmerrisisl while 0"‘ "he wesmrn fro“: We H131 - t not.1iitlac\irirl1gpBtitnlngnnd Pmncc. r*.*~nm-and a.=sert.!’(l h an ins“ ‘ , . . ” I W fpd 0,, mt. Frcvwfh contrnuetl to mm c German soldiers hm hm“ '1 ' C ' ' in Polnnrl for valor and efficiency. «rd there had been local engage- ments nf-qr zwrlhrllcckcn. Meanwhile. B:-rlln ltse‘f was c0Tl- (37 Th’ °‘“"""' Pflssi invasion V mourns’-ueaonnaa-1.0.1:) _ Ill(lir-ailohs were that the Russio- .lapnnc.<e unrlcrstnndlng might have lrrmlyzlit Japan once more llll.0 co- rtr-rncd about.‘ rm mvstcrlnus <‘X- MOSCOW—Russlnn nrmles much into Poland along 5°°‘"“‘“ .,,,,,.m,,,,,, mm W. R,,m,_B..,,~,,, ""“°“‘ ’“ “'" “M” ' ‘"2 “iv l‘ront' reported penetrated so miles. ma. point within as miles of fl-!'r— mm. smw c-cnoml Jllichi Tcrauchl. T‘”“‘ ""”“ “"”' "‘ "" ” ''_'''_"_ ' ,, ,, ,, hczul of a Japanese mission. left ~ ———~—~' ("W ' *' " ' ‘ mnn forces, occupying dozen tmmlz me“ Weak FCSISNWO93 l"‘°“‘*"’ y(-_<tm'(ln_v for nmln in me company . . _~. 7_ C 7) .. l b 1. f f . It 1' n szcrcral, an Itnilnn ‘C-HUT“!-d 0“ .“- “1 tlon of Ukrainians nnd White Russians in Poland gven as 0 in n jgdnnlml “win” Gcnlmn wmlml who came hero n few days nun. lthe second Great LAND i War Spreads i To Soviet Front’ 3 Moscow C1ai?n's‘ Push Of 1 Red Armies Across Polish l , Frontier A Defensive Measure l (By Witt Hancock, Associated Press Staff Writer.) MOSCOW, Sept. 17--(AP)—Soviet Russia's great Red Army, marching on orders to “liberate" their “brothers” in Poland, moved into that embattled country today along the entire frontier, from Latvia to Rumanla. A general staff communique tonight reported occup- ation of a dozen towns along a 500-mile front on the first day's march, penetrating as far as 50 miles inside the Po- lish border at the farthest point. France vs ll-SS-ll Soviets ‘Neutral’. ‘ (Hy TiI)’10T HGHIIV. ASSOCia- (By J. F. Sanderson, Can- led Press Staff Writer) adian Press Staff Writer) PARIS. Sf-‘PL 17- With LONDON, Sept. 1'f—Whil( War Russian troops moved east» ‘ spreading to a new front as ward across the Polish fron- Sovict Russia sent troops tier the Soviet Government into Poland, informed sour- today informed Great Bri- ces said today France faced tain that it will continue tq ; the possibility of a state of pursue a policy of neutrality" war with the U. S. S. R. toward this country. French reports meanwhile Prime Minister Chamber» lzmnounced 2: heavy move- lain and Foreign secretam ment of German troops to Viscount Halifax in a series of Sunday conferences stud- ied what the Polish Embasq, in London charged was 11; “act of direct aggression“ by Russia against Poland. Moecow’s claim of noutr-ab ity was disclosed here by the Ministry of Information which published the text of the note addressed by the Soviets to tile Polish Am- bassador in Moscow, which was also communicated id Sir William Seeds, the Bit portance to note. Aerial act» fig}. Ambaggador in Russia. ivity has been reduced due The chanoellefles of En. to weather conditions," theflope we;-3 fluvywn into con. Commlmilllle 8flid- fusion and doubt by the nu‘ French advices said their enfipely max order; troops were holding firm at from the Kremlin to the Red Perl, 8. mile and a half in- Army to push across the side German territory near Poflgh frontier, Luxembourg, and had turn- ed back wave after wave of Germans attacking east of l l l r l the western front from P0- iland but declared French i troops had advanced all along the frontier with Ger- many. The high command’s night communique said, however, ‘activity had slowed down somewhat after a day of hard fighting. Aerial com- bat was said to have been hampered by adverse weath- er. ‘There is nothing of im- i , the F0 Office apparen to Saarbruecken, 40 miles discuss rent Britain’: tic‘: under her military pledge to n southeast of Perl. W] L British official dlbi dfiklfl i Gemm" T'°"" Shm“ comment. but than :84 no lb dimtion at present. that they rm’- ga:rd-ed the R/usotsn rgove in a. The French General Staff de- r1ru'ed Germany was shifting full divisions of troops and large air force unris from lllc eastern front. 1 Lina (Continued on naozc 7. Col 5) : (Continued on pace 7. Col 4) PllL|iS|iiGilV’T llll|TS _[}llllNTRY CERNAUTI. Rllll’lfl.l‘lifl_ Sept. 17 — 1 President Ignace Mosclclu of P0- l land and Forcign Mllll5LCl‘ Jozef Beck nl'f‘l\‘f‘(i here today from Lhcrr l invaded lronlc-land, slulmlnng rc- troat of the Polish (':m'I~rnmcn' from Polislw .<r>‘.l The Forcirxn Minister immod- ‘ int/sly nrrnnucrl lo mccl, the heads 1 of the diplomatic missions to Po- l land. now c.stal)llshc<l here. i It was rcporlml rcllablv l Beck. a veteran follower of the late § Marshal Pll.<u(l.\k1 and Polish Min- l zxtcr of F0l‘(‘lRl'l Affnlrs since 1932. would inform the forcnzn diplomats lie AVERACE MAN STAR1’S BLOWING WHEN HE cars 40 4+»: foe‘. so DOES A that J l u I l Thc niisslon came originally for .- ~- "")1l,0\i'l'O Sept. 17 ~-‘(Lin - .4 t L5 .m It‘ H d: their missions wcre now ondccl ‘ H t - ~ ‘ V. 1 L ,.; (‘EltNAU'l‘l. llurnanln-—Preoident and Foreign Minister of Poland ‘£3-:;lrIii‘1nofi‘l‘ci(nls W 5%” q(?q“’m:j?:\l untti t'!r£<‘r‘in1(:r)ii)oCri"x<><‘*p=iyhxfizgxrlnnuiigcfi ixlligfiiinum and mlnlmlm m:p(H:-I -.. .1 . . . . < P t H. t d H" to I I : Polhh I ' Mme“, €r3fiLi:\mAIi1crl‘10‘$i:§m::(:g?o1:I§rioi'-1c$lhat.' near the Polish-Rumnnlnn fmn- 393%“ E3 ' llhc m'ls=.l~.n chsm its plans and 1/101" lmd hl‘fi")' I’ll‘<‘(‘S .W‘‘"‘ 9115' if E 5:‘ (5 an e llERLIN—G¢-nnnns expect complete surrender of Poland shortly .spnm its time ma nl.V sl(zl1tsceinE- },‘:;.°,’.‘,2‘3.,."l‘n ',;}f,,}}‘ms‘\nf=;mOr:m(_I‘\_nnv 4:» ’*‘>"“":‘ ' ' ‘ .1l l H with Russian and German forces meeting on line but of Warsaw. l Ruénanws $11 1;-3,-k1,1l,;m Ru_::lalg:l§?1l;‘V 5., R7 ANKARA Tm.k..y‘ sgpt_ __ ‘ woul try to .n x‘ mm‘ cssara 3. W‘-nmpeg 30 -,3 MP‘ Diplomatic circles heard u 1 ti Rumanian rcclon which was Rus- T ‘ 55 M persigtvpnt ,—q,¢ms today of n.egotia- LONDON—Pollnh Ernbuay churns Bunion action is not of d rec l‘ S Sl1?SV0g‘yf0ro(;nt£:"], a;go‘,1;”p}, R‘:-:t‘r1:aJ:_;s Otgggg 52 F21 lions far; 71;?! ":gmb°‘&W’:‘;‘n;1;‘; aggression”; British Government silent. on course. ‘S b I tings“ bf tn‘; “SON” nm,'N(.r in Montreal 93 r f)V - . ' ‘ ‘ .1 V t§_zh.m;k,nd_c,)11p ‘ u Hurliar-est. loclny thal luunnnisn gA‘i“nI7:e°John 69 -:5 1; wnskl1n<§:Si0§gluF'°wT;ill§g PAll.IS—Posclbllity seen out rnnjor conflict between mi-ans and rgilttlrgtv lmognty would be re- mm“ Hf 1-ac . ______ . . . V , _ "_ _ ivvlfihtalxilrrsuxifl ilcw days for Moscow at him‘ "°“‘d '5“ n'"'°° wm‘ "“‘° °{ '_" bean” heme" find Russia’ NEW YORK S,,.m_ 17 __(Ap) _ ‘ It was believed that Germanys Ch“‘1°”"mw“ _ ‘ ‘ N18 iYl"”“ii-°“ °f Jospph sum" for Brnun “m“"fl’ "dud .0 ha’ Pound’ rnnce reports heavy mo". (‘mt H A Pczlcrsen. Master of l 1‘"~t°"u°m ‘Ward .R‘mmma1 “W Maritime ‘Provlnct-::—— Fresh nl dlsmlsslollsdli? "l;‘;"*;‘o'€"‘|" “W35 menla of Ge-rmnn troops from Polish to western fronts; any French re» ; :5,‘ unltml States liner. .fAr~r‘rrerl<‘.rnxr‘ ””‘“"('d ‘O Wmmmc ox. strong winds; fair and cool. from sp on 1!! - l ‘: "t d to lmc o cos 0- 3 ~ - ._ -«_ 0‘.1scrvcrs painful out that de- pulse two Nut attacks. '};i1u[;l]l‘\(l”“1;iLi)«'Il‘l€“hP was mqculng 2111 BY 10 lnrlrr. to §)|r1n. lI;2L Hmh “do ‘M5 "m,.,m.,. M ]_m o llgations 0 - I R | | - l .l l; . Knflrlslnll, ml alrplmw Wm ' sun sols this evenlnr; n r nut Fmnce, she loci no t.l1medrnnkirr;g WAS|"N0T0N”G°""'"m''' “‘ ma. on “M In nm‘"“ ilw \~\1l:lr\.'Il‘ln" which lmtl l0Y- “";?3r_i“,‘|‘l"r"‘;f"“N were NW, l to rises tmnnrmw mornioxu 11: T» ~l‘l I wglndn‘ fin-slrc|hfnr‘rhc‘on|r§tnr\l;l"l; :30?” ' nwnlts further sdvtcen. l l>o.Im~‘(l the K;\dflrl).<tnn.b “M ‘W hm: ;)‘mbJd‘n g‘,0_mm, ‘mp 0’, the S (garter moon .‘x:‘r\t_ :0. on sun V‘: . . in .x. t .9 so mil . - ' . ‘ ‘ ,. . . i-i“00'l)S 3”’ "“‘‘‘‘m “long her hon‘ ' il\!lYl'f’ili‘i\:(‘2if‘l”il‘l5lll.]l'f‘DiiN'i with rnrv i P”mh‘m'm'mmn rflndb 13°. Summ<\“si(le tltlc tv"_'lrl~n ml:'.- uer, I 1 d Tu “sh D e” ROME—IIL|y greet: Soviet Union with indication: of frlendlint-vs whim ‘mm and ..dl_mpp‘.M.m.1m.,. y :lcr'rvy‘L-(l u]i“-ileDnlc73£‘(;f»CIl€1:;l‘(3l- R rmge ‘Ms W” um“ Chm_m“,m“.n_ ,(_t- . rt,‘ 1'. 1' . -, . .~ ‘ k row . . - hn'Eh:tr:x:;c:l ‘men the Russlmv with Rm“ "'0 “tn! °' '°"“"""V "“" "°""‘“' “'35 :‘\lI‘i:?L‘.'}'m&Vy Mme ‘"'° ° °“ rllrcctcd bomb lrllllmz and rnlurms me can nanny s.uI.r.~'os German non-n‘zrzI"f‘-<%10n i«1’9fi1f»Y I-hfii l The line said that Pcdersen and "f“;“V 1;} ‘$19 $9“ R“m“m""“ -—-—- K 100 P“ W0 “r"“""‘”" i""‘, “°',,‘:|‘;:"r'.‘I.u.:.i;‘,i; OTTAWA-Cfibiflfi CONN“ “D0093 ‘° mm “"d‘Y- ““l"‘°~'“’“‘“' 3 "vcrc nbctirrl the American F‘;r"rp- Vilwljfi‘ rHm‘fi\m7»'u_mv (‘NW nu 4_§_6¢;g.v§; Borden 945 Al\ .. . .. ., .- " avv _ , _ . H.-_ . o I " - M» - ~ . .. A . }‘,C.°.,,,’Z;,;,”.,‘, with the soviet is more Liv of Montreal Ind Togonto stock Exchanges umfer with the newly cbI;':f:;:Tl"“hll_V :"l"_I';h“I“;“ Sm” WW. ,,,m,,,.¢,.,,,,,.m5 .0 ,,,-0:,“ um ll U.,“.,_Q -1-,,,m,.mrm, mm A, M,, ltnnort-mt NW‘ “"3? V‘-“" °°““"‘ «mun mun nu!-nun on-our noun. mm 131- 5;; the saw of Elite. Irontlet 305 P. M-- 630 P M- N011.