or; . Qua-ii i Maxims A MERE MAN »l>arsntallldlebl ll lollwredlry OIIIUI§OQ pernicious -? _ “_* i ltesuws Guardian Ive 00ers. flfifl, o Ieualol url. CHARDOTTETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1939 6250110 - BRITAIN EX CL UDES BIMMGFRLAIN REGRETS IiERR HITLEITS STEP Liquidation Of Czecho - Slovakia Is “Shock-to- Termed Confidence.” cuifbaa’ ‘ma’ “Gill. we) L0 -~As o a me ialrlgave hlsre y totheconp day by to lerllnpoapgvtiumgl‘hrlhnnfl NDON, March 15—(cP Cable) Chancellor Hitler and his vast hlne ed til rule fo- visit trade em- lisariss. The A t parliament 1h on” tel- declare "l btteri; German act rrsrettthe . loll, which he described as a "shock lo confidence ail th e more regret- sbls since confidence was beginning lo revive." ln grflve times both Ml‘. Cham- berlain and Fore count llullfax no In lalnng over Bohemi‘ lvla. was for the flnt I Secretary Vis- thnt Germany, and Mor- nle effect- ing military occupation o! territory Y populated es. 10rd liniiiax 3o oi lords and m e time as Mr. Chamberlain ‘shock to confidence," . non-Germanic . P60- kc in the llouae the same refer- to he Poland Is wlmysma m ye“- IY- uni an troops to- dly established s common front- ier with Poland, marching across Osrpatho-Ukrsine and reaching the Polish border at I-lavoczne and at Sianki at l s.m. Tile small detachments of Hun- garians. who had fought their way the e tip of demolish- Osecho-Blcvakia through a raging blizzard. were received into the Polish guard stations and giv- 31°08. warm welcome by Polish '17"?! drinks immediately. The Hungarians had advanced across approximately so miles o! mountainous terrain by way oi the Ung River Valley to Siankl and by wa of the Lstol-tza River Valley. fa or east. to Lavoczne. Realization Of Dream Polish military sources said they were "happy that the 20-year dream of a common frontier with Hungary has now been realized." With supporting forces expect- ed to follow the Hungarian ad- vance guard, the eastern tip oi CarpathoUkraine and its capital ~of Chust was cut of! from Slovakia and the Czech Capital at Prague. Poland. keenly watching the Czech debacle with an eye to her own_fu_t_uljpe,__ye_sterdoy gave formal SLOVAKIA, F Common Frontier With Established By Hungarian Troops reoolnitio to the in- dependent state of Slovakia, or- oniy the dsy before under Chancellor Hitler's tutelage. The prompt action was accoun- Dlmied by a pointment of an sn- voy to Brat ava, Slovak capital. Althouzh Foreign Minister Jos- e h Beck in a message to Brati- s vs said Poland al- Siwsr." M‘ i. no.3; “AW. "’ rln a on, Poland generally elt apprehension over the Browtn o Nazi power to the south. I-‘soc Resistenca BUDAPEST. March 15 —(AP)_ Hungarian troops mrachlng north- ward to occupy Carpatho-Ukraine of the fallen Ozecho-Siovak Ro- ublic were being resisted tonight y artillery and. machine-gun fire, n foreign office spokesman an- nounoed. The spokesman admitted that there had been Hungarian casual- ties, but said the number of dead was not known. Trains and trucks were rushing more Hungarian troops into the region and tens of t ousands of soldiers were on the move. A general oi the Hungarian staff sakl resistance was so vigorous northeast of Munkscs on the Hungarian - Csrpatho - Ukraine frontier that "a "field campaign may be necessary. Scores Extravaganoe Gf ii. B. Government ____._. '“‘““°" 3' “"9"” Mwh “f; lie German ‘s orces re "T1" P\'°'°i ‘m “"5"!” uurchi lhroumy “lg time-worn Government for the revitalization mull-W o! Pram. m. Chamber- of industry has slsrlally felled end lain was taunted a Labor Park industry today is at a low ebb M illakesman with a of Bri- q, pggult of this failure," char!" taint; "humiliation and shame" a proposed amendment to the mo. lhroulzh tile German co . ugden, who In addition, Anlhony relished as lllilnills ago 1 Foreign secretary 18 ment with Ml» Chenlberairrs foreign pollc, renewed his request {OTB-I'll- lllrly Government to "banish from W!" 030K111‘ hauntin g fear." After quoting from Hitler's auto- hllsreulneal book, when outlines his plans. ‘Me n Kampi,’ Mr. Eden laid the Dreseilt European situation “'11s beyond party controversy and Cflitlfll ioz- estublishmtnt oi a coal ‘Will ilovemment of all parties. Trade Till] “POIGQOIICC" Mr. Chamberlain and Lord Hal- ifax both announced th laced visits cf Oliver Stanley B a. ‘Trade President and lid-Son. Overseas ‘Pl-ads 8 lo Berlin for trade talks flyooroorlate" now and had been fiastoogeg." m r. u eon w 0 his bed led isits "ihfiic ncrlilfirnv ma? was understood Krnderscn. British ‘Berlin. had been ins Orm G llso 7.121%"? 0 “nlemblated at Munich deprecated" ahead with Mozeow and can capita‘: Nevi Germany's lhe east which ‘was not V! Mr. Chamberlain landlord Hal- ‘Corl-tinlled on page ‘l, Col ‘ll , comm {vials . Bate ior Notices In um z column 8 centsperlgrd. essays: "Don't min the t-acl mm 00m- 91W s. mu, lnsrald a t. xsllaa-a-la-‘il. 8:00am to 5t. Patrick's Concert in l‘ o dell. Mlmh 17th. l‘ L- ITI-S-lkfll. "Hockey tonight at New Gina; Bsyvisw m lmuerials vs. mun 1d cents. A .: l-I-NQ- n l pun-i bale ; " "mns-Qaflaifast ‘l m hrnavselefi "W; ‘b-ii-‘ihiiizm . L-nsl d "Playoff game at Stanley ic- t. Mal-gate Clifton. Ad- “. 1.4m #121’ at tion that the New BrunE-WMK 14°8- o supp]. Ewe Ircsolvey itself into com- ‘Ilhe amendment. introduced to- day by Opposition Leader Squires. will not be voted on until con- ciuslcn of ule pudsvt Debate- scheduled to be Wound lli) Friday by Attorney-General McNsir. The amendment also chi-rt“ that “no solution oi the llllfim" ployment problem has been reach- ed" that the “reckless and im- provident finsncina of this 00V- ernment has resulted in a serious iumairment of the credit oi the pyoviywgj’ the Provinces public debt has advanced to "alarming przportions." that in creased expenditures reflect net;- llgence and waste. and that tax- ation was increasing beyond W! peoples capacity to boy- ___________. l.‘ Newly-discovered Ambassador to Iron Ore Deposits 0f liigh Grade, Glaim 15 -—(C P)— its the heard today of annual seasaon its on. :16?!) the first authoritative dis- closures about the rich NR"?! ioluld recently under the lakrcalliid with prod cti bodies on the North Arneirlicsrcontinent. The steep rock disoovsrllelsg’ rig “N01. th br- m produced :lD in Ontario near % Superior. "Finale Plan" Of Palestine iaiunntonlalll “i: “A it? a Opposition Leia lie r i lnal d" Scores Liberal Alibi Regarding Unemployment, JJITAWA, Melon 15-40?)- of snrployment during predicted in the House oi Commons today by Labor Min- ister H.088’ introduction o! the Government's annual bill to authorize ambiance a year ago, Mr. Rogers said the general relief situation reflected lmlplovemeat when viewed "over periods of a. considerable length." Thus the average number on re. liar by months in i938 was lower than in 193 . (Con. Toronto- Greenwood) described Mr. Rosrfl speech as the most complete and most frank confession of failure ever uttered in the House. 1H0 charged the Government with fail- to face the problem of un- employment and complained it had not initiated a single pends/n ent measure to imiflove the len- eral situation. Mr. Massey brushed aside hous- ing legislatlon. assistance for min- ing loads and farm placement. mentioned by Mr. Rogers earlier. as temporary pailiutives and prom- ised to outline eleven constructive suggestions for permanent meas- ures when he resumed his svwdl later in the Week. The underlying causes d Mr. Rogers, were in international trade urbanos. At the moment there was reason to none international tension mldht lessen. and if it did and unsound trad- ing methods were slop?“ 99nd!‘ mm; would improve. If not Gov- crnmmts should be PrOPB-Nd 1° e ‘ as they had in of un- ‘Ihe evens! mon manhu- fcr empl reosi aid in i008 was 48.180, 20.8 per cent isls than the average monthly num- ber for "Vi. __________...... OAOII AND CIIOIDI anluaoumm - (or) 9 . F331”? °3'°z§§ ti»? $11‘? city mm played. For Euture Is Submitted I "wfiw? Giggle ssshcmovedforbhe mm Covers Prince Edward . Island Like the Dew i mCH 11v TRAMBETALKS i FRANGE mans" ENERGIES FR ‘NEXT cmsls Gajda Appointed “Fuehrer" 0f The Gzeoh People Report out of the central European crisis. told French deputies in eflcct to- day that Erance had no intention of intervening. In a talk lo the Foreinl Affairs Committee of the Chamber of De- puties he said alao that there were “no plans for n tiorls" with Italy over Fascist demands French terri ion oi Bohemia and Moravia Gajda, however, clamation cal for “quiet and order" and su 0f which he said had been forme . Hitler Wins Many Victories In Third Month (By The Canadian Press) The ides of March again for Adolf Hitler. for 0n preparing for s possible “next crisis" in the Mediterranean area with Italy as the challenger, back- ed by Berlin. lmplied Warning Berlin's implied warning sgainstw central European intervention came a note tollinl action in macho-Slovakia he to the long list. of msior achieve meals accomplished in the month oi the The series year declaring that the German occu- pation being carried out "in full accor with the Government of Prague.“ Frerch ofllclals made it lain even before the arrival of the ger- man note the France was stay- ‘lug out oi bhe mech crisis. Am- bassador. ‘Robert, Coulondre had been. instructed to inquire last night. at the Berlin Foreign Gi- flce about Germany's intentions to- ward Czecho-alovakia. but it was believed he did not bother to d0 so when developments out-speeded election I Y“ public tutor TWO repudiated sailles, 50W German army of corpsn On March her bonds with Poland and Rus- sia as a rwuit of Hitler's latest coup. ‘ri-le Foreignldinister said France and Britain were not bound byany judicial pledge to go to Osecho- Slovakilrs aid since the guarantee they held promised hinged on a similar pledge from the Reich. which had never been given. Win Race Against Stork At Sydney Japanese Bombers Destroy American Missioll School SYDNEY. N. s. March ill-Two“ slww ploughs and several citizens a nearby rural district was forced to remain in her automobile while an ambulance. a private cal- and attached to the institution. Company were called upon. They cleared the road and got the wom- an to hospital in time. Hhli an hour later, hospital; authorities gave the time-honored dluced through apprehension. value oi the ion was “less than $100,000.") two German military governors a1- ready had taken over administrat- issued a pro- ling upon the people . t the "Czech National Commgt. ee" have come By carrying out his coup against another third began in the first of his . lit was in March. 1958. that he won the last under the Weimgd m Gel-mama years label", in March. b0 the restrictions of Ver- reotored universal compul- military service and uc to 50.000 men. 7, 19/56, Germany le- occupied the Rmineland. She ob- SHANGHAI. March l6 - m American Church (Episcopal) Gills- Tsiohang, Yangtse else authorities over bombardment of the mission March 8. Messages a police cruiser to the scene through foreign channels contain- becs-me stuck in deep drifts. ed no details on damned 0r 0MB‘ Police Chief w n. ‘Tracey lied attics in the new attack- of Mis- The student body had been greatly re- The stated at WABHDIGTDN. March l5—-(AP) OO-fikO-OfiOfiOr THEBAlIll RIDES our slullll m BAY u_r_luvnv LONDON, March 15_(cp)—.\ Reuters News Aaency dispatch from —— an v rd“ ‘l’ °.'2.’;?“li.a‘€“”i§fl‘ Gil; Stféllgtlléllfl B01168 l-he rusclslmrleaser. nulgr Gajda. Gkmcester School‘ Wibh Poland And “was?” P“ “w” r m“ e’ _ (A, ‘m. an“, emu, Makes Yarmouth RllSSlfl A8 R6811“ waslepor to have reslsned Tues- Fo R ' - day. a w: Slovakia eclared lo m- l’ ellalrs- 0f Hitler Coup. ggacendfilglll. may um hassumbal the -___ B" n W Yanrmura, u. s. M Ch 1s- (né The Canadian Prue) ‘ggmggrlgy "m" ‘file? b? the (om-crew of Captain Bgn Pine's P , llLasoh Min- The" ‘Wu n“ unniadme mum Gloucester fishing and racing f‘ 301mg, w: Gevr- loam,“ M said,“ powers as "math schooner Gertrude L. Thebaud to- manyh implied warning to keep 1-";- u two m,“ govemors and day sang their praises oi her stout timbers and fine sailing qualities when she put into port after tak- ing a battering in rough Bay of Fundy water during Monday's storm. The Thobaud. defeated by Capt- aln Angus Walters‘ Bluerlose Lunenburg in the International Fishermerfs races last. fall. dock- ed st this port on Nova Seattle's southwest tip for repairs after heavy seas swept her fore and aft. "It was the worst blow I ever saw." said one fisherman. "The wind canlc up fast and the seas began to pile up. The men who were not below were ordered to remain in the wheel-house." Hurricane Blow Shortly after noon Monday the wind reached a velocity of 80 or 90 miles an hour, several crew mem“ said. Warned by radio of the approaching sboml, Captain Cecil Moulicn who skip red the ship inthe races last fal, attemm- ed to make Yarmouth. As the blizzard enveloped the ship, however, they were still some distance from port. With visibility ell to zero and the wind racing the riggings. the skipper hove to and decided to ride th gale out. ‘ Caused Damage One see caused all the damage. The men saw it coming and those who were not at the wheel dived below. There was a tremendous crash as tons of water poured Pence Am! Pom liberated the last military clauses over the am. of the Versailles Treaty. She dfi- All i2 dories were nearly lost as P6806 MW 08-11 b0 m-illlw-Ylitd nounced the Treaty 01’ I-Oflll-YHO- the cradles were ripped away. All only by e bale-no: oi forces. end On March n, lees, Hitler look hoops which linked the riding Flume must bend every effort lo- over Austria. sail to the malnmast were tom ward tlon, Ioreign Minister And now. March, 1089, Hitler loose. The pilot house windows Bonno sold to 11M debllflfi- 3° has mun-led a plotecto ate over were smashed. stressed that Franco mlust. tighten Qgegho-Slqvalda, For 24 hours the Thshsud re- lblizzard passed headed for Yarmouth. Captain Moulton said the storm was "bad" and the ship was un- der water as often as t was a- ve. Carpenters eiiryted repairs today long the deck. Quebec Budget Debate Concluded QUEBEC, March ill-Budget debate was concluded today in took put m a mo‘, a351,,“ mg mg Monday 6s by Japanese the Quebec legislative Assembly stork early today-and won. mbfl‘ STwPi-IY Bil/Bl‘ Ml ODIPOSMW An expectant mother. Mrs. James Projectiles were said to havebeen amendment met defeat by a 43-14 Morison, en route 1p hospitaiftlom owersd on the property despite div-lawn, No discussion was provoked by the amendment ed by L60" Casgloin (Lib. Riv-lore du Loup) which charged the Government with increasing Quebec's Province’! consolidated debt by $95.000.000 sent; bhe cruiser after being in- (T110 Browne-l mud since its election in August. 1936. formed of the situation. After the sions aid in Now York that its and called go,- "reducqon 1n r stuck, the city school in Tsichang was in charge‘ spending;- snow plough and equipment o! the of Drowns“ We 31°“ l" Pi"- - But Premier Duplessis shortly Sydney and Whitney Pier B118 8"!» 511- l-hr "NY Will's WW1‘ after cliticired opposition mem- bers icr "losing the tune of the House" during study oi the budget estimates for the provincial sec- retary's department. " 1 J bomb. re epcrted m? moth" md “by do“ to bfiwifilssa s23. Prov- I! Sentenced T0 new territory rol- the Reich. .____..____._ irlcs capital, today. then to have Gas Chamber A Government spokesman, lvhilel T d flown on 100 miles in northwest Saying that a protectorate over wo l e China to attack Psodli, western ,_____ gohmlg and Mcravl" was a no“ Le LC") in tern-lama of the Lunghai Ram-ood- oamraun. Calif., Mnloh 1s- form Ol government and would ve 8s g .__-__-_-_- Rodney gum 31‘ w“ ggntgnued peqmm gpednl measures. gave b. NQRTHEASTERN Am 555E today to death in a. gas chamber sketchy idea of the probable fut- . Ont, m-rch 15- for the "lot/ers‘ lane" stalbbinu of ure of the sturdy Slavs who llntll, Leona Vlaught. 20. She was killed 8 PAGES =fr’u°1t"'&’lirr“"fi scut, rumors to while the crow prepared bait s- - MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN jun-i ‘Iilsrsanwlloovsrworksisdraw- lmonhisoapiialofhealth. Annual Ishaerlptios Delivered IBJI I1 Hill-P. l. l. ll-Nl Ollldl all IJ- I. _-O9 QWQRMAN vnssfl? TA 1'5 iHitl e r-Follqws Army Qccupymg Czech Homeland Worried Eur-Sp? Asks “What Next?” As Nazi Frontiers Are Pushed Southeastward. (By Lynn l-leinzerling, Associated Press Foreign Staff) BERLIN, March l5—(CP)—Chancellor Hitler plant- ed the German flag on the ancient lands of the Bohem- ions and Moravians today, setting Germany again on the eastward course of Empire. A worried Europe asked “what next?” The Fuehrer himself stepped over the former border of shattered Czecho~Slovakia into Bohemia during a snowstorm late today and went to Prague. His grey-clad soldiers already had taken over methodically the rem- nants of the little Republic born of the Great War and had entered newly independent Slovakia. In Prague a sullen Czech population had hissed, booed or watched silently and despondently as the German army, formally occupied their once proud capital and planted machine guns in the streets. Bohemia and Moravia are embraced in the Reich's borders and under control of the German army. Sullen ‘Etch Grovnis iiiss liazi Troops (B MELVIN K. wurrnnusufl Xnociaied Press Foreign Staff) ' PRAGUE. Mil-Rah 1b--(AP)—lM0ll possession Bohamh Takes Command General Johannes Blsskowi eorlrumnder of group three of the German Army. took executive power over Bohemia into his hands on Ilitlerh orders. He named Konrad Henlein. Budetcn Nazi leader, as chief of Bohemia! civil administration. Henlein was in- strumental in bringing about the German annexation of sudetenhrld hst October. And while these developments German powcrdoeplnmu muumok and Mnralvia infill . 12's.“ h" have... grew‘ _ B8110 w s From Danzlg came reports of that’ oomplemw widespread whispers that the “iev- arable moment was at hand for um the liberation ofMerrleP-Ger-lnsn- io cany , irahslbitled sbrip of Lithuania which makers of Bohemian came under domination o! Memel more recently Nazis at the last election a few weeks I80. However, there were no definite inci-icatiorls that a Nhzi coup nlon i-he Baltic shores was immune-lit. Watch Developments The lightning-like aAncs-ptiom of the 001g“? “proceeded without lotest om o er Euromsn pow- grs. But, chancelleries roughout the mlopeen continent coseLy the remaking of central and Poland oaths the northeast the ctorlmls cit quietly at ‘l fo owinlg h s r o0 - umns o hisqgoms who lvsrs hhsed and booed by s en, tearful Czechs —thsir 20 years of independence now only a memory. lomporary Gv rnment As the Fusluer entered Prague the Prussian mill already had set up s temporary mill and civil government to rule elnis. and Moravia as plotectorates of the Greater German Reich, in which they are to be simply cultural ls- an . within an hour of Hitler's arriv- rd was raised over the old castle, towering above the city, in which he slept to Hitler thus carried eat "iron Chancellor" sion despite achievement of a long-coveted common frontier be- tween Poland and Hungary through_ obliteration oi Carpatho-Ukrsine, easternmost section of macho-Slo- vslkia. The changes gave Poland the s/ppmmncc, on the map, of being pori-ly swallowed by German colossus. a ‘protectorate’ over Bohemia and Moravia and spon- sorship of slovakials independence. ny's contiguous border with Poland in effect was st 200 miles. The Polish prom responded to the situation with a call for inner mnsclidsiion in the face of expanding Ger- many. glrlands for res Germany as there were =:-_-—-—i ___~~~ (Continued on pegs '1. col s) _____.__,________.___ _ , No, HORTENSE, You WOULDN'T CALL a bruflsr ounce. fl l-‘GUNG ‘Sfolflou Berlin Unprepared In Berlin, only heavy boilagged streets and buildings indicaiedtha-i. stirring events were under way-l The populace had been prepared‘ for some new development by "Czech terror" stories printed in‘ profusion in the controlled llleF-fl; but there had been no inkling o. the Great War peace had lcngfy . -—- My“ w. -mf rmed persons old today the M _ day ‘when their automobile was Unlf-filmglam gm imgrfizflwes 5;; gigDsfirust mo? n1f§§ril'i“nm%§ Zéiggrsfislbiieisflyilwolatalmolx $1M l “lllld-llll ' ' r MSG box“ Pacific J?’ thin noor "m" $3,, " ‘f? "3'l."f“.,‘:;" ‘Iilemmeiilmgifletllficstimtnaet under the old llapabure Monarchy t ihil vmlfl- WM“ 1' 1' "m" gvlirlifiildoulbylodly‘ would beioealed he stood beside the parked oar and would take parlicllle-r pains to *- “magma olwgsm from a m N“ Enlltnd’ would Muir”?- md smokeduhe matched herdlef T‘ {ONTO March l5— (GP)- klt ‘ i levelocrging down an smbank-i hVlt-ni “The blvllgcbaalily wlgruld Hmeggnrlleéi-jed not m! y b‘ rem“ o (omllmled °“ “age 7' c“ ‘n . §i,‘,“,L';‘““‘ “d maximum “mm: pleat. Both mm mirrored owl ulsvguswlw for at lent 900 ,~_ _____,___.____. mwsoh m, a‘ 1%" ' Vancouver 37 ' E At A Glance “mo” 1°“ UTOPE Regina 39b - éyinnipea g" A OIOHIO lo as ansdlan Pr France, b Implication, to keep oimw“ Orange Pekoe Blend uu.r.:.v...... .. ..-.-.... .. ....... m» I: a . . ' takes on oi Bohemia Minister declares France does Bum Job“ m 46 A mdoMyhlgw-mcsee: lluliil-zilansirll-ilsyl numlmdNm-(llmmszyliialn calls “will” f, i; “c” an. s :*l:r»=-l;..":r":.:.:~.:"rn; °‘“"‘° ‘m Illl e onna ' l Gerri-J; civil gdministla orl up: mange whack. m“ M“ FORECAST i t M II ' ME- W» "l"! ti t: f i f - "BERLIN-Europe us‘ "What crisis wit mum; officials 10%? l?“ "fficnfilfi," flames; neat?” as German tron lars are non-com l; some believed It- wind. “in snow and “m, page?“ Igllfir ‘agdvaunawnre of Hitler's ln- d; h lug: gwlomomln; sq, 1M hu-hh‘ ' U1 OD - :1: q of a BELGRADE - Pro-Catch de- Bun be libs evenirw at 6-06 w! heal-d of thrust in Kernel. mnnsttatloul break out near rises tomorrow morning at 811. - n t “‘"’§.§§rll‘§ “more Car wsiiasw-ulingsrl. gm “Glyn. lioialnilim lac}: o-Ukralns lost ee so mil moss Carpatho- tll arlotte Emails-y and N...“ hm“; rue can ruglpsbr alumnus i units. lluoeaus and B : Polish lsaveBordsuii-lt sull- l h I rains-Genus run trooosvnloonn Tvrmfll-lflolll-Ifl- v-II- fie-ls...ss~ a sulideursaas ll: