CIA MERE MAN logogwighfi mullohltlicr who will not i} Qhulottow _ Gulndiun Two Cont!- Inrning Uuordliu. Founded 1M1. 1f"? —--4" ""'~---___-~ s Read by Everybody Covers. Prince Edward Island Like the Dew MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN no are here to row out of in; temporal into the e ernal. _,_.. . __ A ...._ _ » . ~ _-4 CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, 21, 1939 Annun Subscription Delivered 85.00 B, Mll|—l'.I!.l. $5.00; Clnudn and (1.8. $5.00 10 PAGES Action‘ Taken To Emphasize War Aims 0f Allies Hundreds Of Czechs Believed Anxious-To Take Up Arms To Liberate _I'_‘_a_1_therland. p By J‘ F’ Sanderson ' portion of her food supplies. Clllilflllll Press Stall Writer LONDON DEC. 20 —- (GP Cable) _ 'lhe British government wll. give formal recognition to the Cz.c.u national committee headed by Dr. Fduaro Bones. former president oi Czecno-Slovalca, and Jan Masaryk, Czech minister to London, diplo- mlral Jean Dorian. common er the French naval force . Churchill, first lord of the admiral Y No official announcement con cerning the conference was _ but observers noted that it con In an atmosphere of secrec . Ad-t o conferred .icre for several hours with Winston issued. 0N DISPIAY AT EXHIBIIIUN Trophies Presented As Annual Dinner Is Held In Char- lottetown Hotel. About 200 high quality fox pelts Wm on display at the Charlotte- town Hotel yesterday as the 59¢- 0nd annual Prince Edward Island sliver fox pelt show got under WHY. The Delis were graded and Judg- - ed by Mr. George Callback. Sum- mersldc and Mr. w. F, Burke, - Provincial Fox Fleldman. at Sum- m-ei-slde previous to being taken - here yesterday. The average qual- inatlc circles reported tonight. The action would be taken, they mo, to emphasize the allied war n.m of llbbftltln the Czech and slovak peoples rum German rule. Recognition for the Bones com- ntltee would mean it. would h:t.e authority to enroll recruits for the Czech legion now in training in France. Canada isregaroed here a. c likely source of hundreds of Ciechs willing to take up arms to liberate their father-land. France already recognizes the Benes b committee as the central authority of the whole Czech na- tion. lt ls likely that Bfltfllh and France will share the cost cf the Crcch legion in the same way that they are splitting the co.t of the Polish legion which operates under cided with more vigorous allied nav-| al operations and growing measures to protect Bri‘ain‘s fishLng indus- tl‘ . The Aberdeen trawler Star of l Scotland was towed info port with. two of her crew dead as the resu t of machine gunnng and bombing by German planes. Two other f sh- ing trawl-era the Straihclbyn and the Strathranuock—-Were unscathed during the raid. though the former was attacked tw'cc. It was intimated that the British Izivernmcnt feels the Revel Navy has a right. to fight. battles any- where On the international seas. re- zardle=s of the Pan-American 300- mlle “safely zone". Discussion Avoided the General Sikorski government- in- exile. Discussion of whether the battl- Czech sour0es_ indicated they beiweep the scuttled flex-mm pocket rould raise l.600"men in taui tat-lleship Graf Pnee rd tbrre done to fight in their legion. Dr. Benet and Masaryk have been livlng ln London since Adolf Hitler and his German army entered Prague last March and their coun- try cauie under complete dommat- ion of the third Reich War the British cru’ser5 off the coast of Ur- (Continued 0n page 9. Col 2t During the first Great succe slully for the formation of] n Creche-Slovak re ublic through. Mic measur“ as Bflnlli wnr fines continued to harass the Greens had a. national committee in I N I 8 c R E E T Pittsburgh, Pa" under the late Dal Thomas Masaryk which agitated H fi L I a n N I A s the treaty of Vera les. ll N French and British naval . t L A leader; met to m: new sira- A R E lining fleet upon which BN- lin depends for a considerable ____ c‘ D 'l‘hree Women Given ' ' Two Years Suspen- Comlng Events] ded Sentence For _Q_ lty of the pelts exhibited at this show is considerably higher than those of last year, the judges state» As visitors enter the door they are presented with a splendid view of silver pelts on a white back- ground with colorful prize ribbons attached to each. In front of the stands facing the door were 15 beautiful sliver _trophies which were donated by various firms. These tfC-plllPS were presented to the winners last night by Hon. W. H. Dennis at the ban- quet at the Charlottetown Hotel. The show will conclude today. Remarks were heard at. last night's banquet by the follow- inl-v: Hon. H. Dennis. Deputy Mayor B. R. Holman. Mr. W. Ches- ier S. MnLure, C01. U. G, Dawson. Mr. W. F. Burke. “Provincial Fox Field Man, Mr. W. R. Shaw, De- nuty Minister of Agriculture. Mr. Lcwe‘l Hancock and- Mr. Clifford Rogers. Summerside. Mr, Inwcll Hancock presided and the entertainment for the occasion was supplied by MYS- Arthur Roper with Mr. Albert Bl-mchard at the piano. A vote of thanks moved by Mi. W_ R. Shaw and seconded by Mr. W. Chester S. McLure was tender- ed Mr. Hancock for higofforts in connection with staging the show. Folloiving is the list oi DFiZB winners:- CHALLENGE TROPHIES Grand Champion Silver Fox Pelt Of Show Doiiats-dty Hen. George Des phrey, Kensington . Letter Writing. HALIFAX, Dcc. zi-(CPl-State- llie for Notices in this e o I u m n 3 cents per__word. "New Glasgow School Concert Hide)’. Dec. 22. L-l6l9-l2-20-2i. sailing of trooyrships I10!!! l-lilfax 0n Dec. l0 had been broadcat from Gcnnziny "(hat night“ w's made from the “Rice Point Concert wtl be hel in AllCll Hall Dec. 22. L-B "Buying dressed poultry daily. Mwulean 6a Boyle. L-l6l3-l2-20-2i. irate J. L. Barnhifl. viersons charged with letter writing, Magistrate Bambi "We buy goose and duck feath- said: 0h. not mlxeo. Henry MacFiu-one l» Co. L-ZM-IZ-‘I-tf "Meadow Banks School Concert. lmllghf, (Thursdayp went out I heard over L-l5B4-12-20~li. r-lcck—u"rd niahy—that thePc troopships lefl and how mzny had left... "RE-‘erve Thursday, Dsccnilscr 11st for Fredericton Christmas cou- wb [ruill-lJ-ill-al Where? Fort Aurustzs Sclwcl. When? December" 29.11. L-159-i-l2-2J-27 ‘D““°°' ‘"r< tkt- these. This was first occasion this ha-pfened." L-495-12-18-2l-26. "Trinity Mission Band Coilzert Thursday. December 21st. mac. L-l9—12-'l-ld-2l j ..~,,s fro": Jr.. Dleaded no! His case was continued for "ll ‘\' n week. All four were charged w‘th at- Wmmlnil to communicate to per- ‘905 l" "*6 United Stars infcnna- tion on sh‘p movements here. fm formation was laid by Royal Can- “Reserve December 21st for 1mm River Smool Concert-if not fine Irrldoy. L-l6l6-l2-20-2i. "Hartsvillc C rt ostponed until Satuixlay, Uggeciiiber gfird. L-l535-l2-2l-3i __ _ V ~____ _ "Geo. Leightlaer Co. Wntcr ‘(Continued on page 9. Col 6) gm???- buying dragged poultry all —-—i_-?- "d!- Tpn prices. Try u.. / Lr-‘Z0-i2-2-l7i T h! "Poultry - Buyng live and firmed poult all kinds. P ms .0.) Burk" brine? Island Caldaystorage °~- Ltd. L-84l-l2-l3-tf. Near Collision LONDON. Dec. 20 ~10? Cable) —Ouc of the troopshps brin lng Canadian scldms to Great Br In it escaped a disastrous collision by l. few feet in a dense fOB. 1t» W“ N‘ vealed tonight. The fronpsli p pas ed a0 close to an outward bound Brltlih V6803! that llicbcots swung out on dnvlts of the lnttor craft were carried n- W v tove in. efhgrstescond mo». the Bemarin- re- turned to a Ertlsh port ‘for repairs The troopshi) docked with slirh. damage to her superstruoure. ‘The fog had reduced iisiblity i0 l chill- length. \- Th Buying live hogs It Albany. Enlur-‘QRY 21st. FTidly 22nd rt G erflld until noon. sgvnled G. C. reen. L-Sdb-IZ-lil-li-M Thu tf "loading live hogs Kenslngton Thursday. Dec. 21st tln a p. m ~H~YVYH Buman and Ray Bagnall; unter River Friday till noon. ' L-16lil- la do-il i"Plcase note all livestock ship- {ihnil clubl will load one day later in customary during Christmas wit New Year weeks. Tuesday and Tcdneadly instead of Mrurlav and "may. Livestock Marketing rd- L-fl-lii-Zl-ii. mcnt that information rezardlpgl bench ln Mags-L traws Court her.- today by M13- Hmring the cases of four Halifax lndlscreet “I was very much put out on two or three occasions. Wlvn trozpsh p5 the rarl'o that night bs-tvrecn l1 and 12 o‘- csme over from Ger- had "Pow d'd they get this infrrm“ ‘ion? lt was probably writing leg. not the ucrc M“. C. smith. lfaflan Buck- ‘cv and Cmsfance Bell. The fourth. (Contnued on page 7. Col l) l -i—i—~—————~—_— Freezing Rain In Many Areas SAINT JOHN. N. 13.. Dec. 20 l. (C?) MONTREAL. Dec. 20 —(CP) cay to give Quebec province eztppiest weachcr of ine winter. A followed by a heavy snowfall to- -in the areas around Quebec, Three iLlVEFS and Sherbrooke. n _.__I_ ‘flu-re of the four defendants f s wedlflglgOfl Haiti. BingonndzPlttnfe pleaded guilty and were given two a 5 l)’ 111811 I Deflfimllfl il- veers suspended sentence. The? Captain Takes Own Life - (By Harold K. Milka, “ ‘ ‘ -‘ Press Staff Writer) BUENQS AIREB. Dee. Zfi-The commander of the scuttled Ger- man battleship Admiral Graf Spec. Captain Hans Langsdorff, today wrote a, tragic epilogue to the wars greatest naval battle by commit- ting suicide. Langsdorff. 45. veteran of the first Great War and leader in numerous sea exploits, shot. him- self with a revolver in the naval arsenal where Argentina interned him when he arrived from Ur- uguay attache destroyed his priz- ed battleship off Montevideo Sun- day. “Prom the first moment he made up his mind to share thc fate of his magnificent ship." said a Ger- man em am ouncement. Langsdorff, who won the admir- ation of friend and foe for the l humanitarian treatment of pls war ' isoners, took his own life exact- - y a week after the Gref Spec en- gaged in a 14-hour running battle with three British cruisers off the South American coast. (Continued on page l. Col l) - l “FUX PEiTS’ CHAMPIONS AND PERPETUAL Brisay DsBlols. wen by R. S. Hum- -—Pe:.estill.iis and movorlsz Li/lfd Road. round the going hazardou. in thl. uisJict tonight after rain had froz- en lnm ice on sidewalks and roads. Rain. sleet and snow combnecl to- A S daylong ru.n storm in Montreal was night. Ram and sleet were rcporcd EIERCE BATTLES R Henry Van Dyke Almost‘ §criptural Santa Pals Who Pause to do Good Have the Best of Life. i “Thanks a lot” are due to the many kind readers who have rallied to the cause of the little ones Santa Claus may forget. The response yesterday was heartening. Again the lines of the old ballad are happily ap- propriate: “I saw three ships come sailing in .011 Christmas Day in the mornifig.” For provision can now be made for many little ones. certainly with what may come in after this morning's list has been published. And there's another ship in the offing with a cargo such as the Laureate Masefield has described in his verses about the ship that “wanders the waters of thought.” Hope, mercy and courage, all gentle and beautiful things, contributed by a human sympathy that makes them more valuable than any articles of commerce. They who have paused to help the needicst along the earthly way, whether by land or sea, have best prospect of Man of whom Henry Van Dkye wrote in the story which SURVIVBRS or cnlunus lANll_|_N u. s. Captain O f Scuttied Luxury Liner. Tells Story Of Events. By R. J. Anderson Canadian Press Staff Writer NEW YORK, Dec. ZO-(Clfl- The 5'79 survivors of the German luxury liner Columbus, scuttled off the United States coast to avoid capture by a British destroyer, ar- rived iri New York today aboard the U. S. S. Tuscaloosa to the tem- porary shelter which is extended u» castaways of the sea. First so step ashore from a navy A GNG i. Finns Meet. Red Drive With New Show 0f Courage Russian Warplai-i-e-s Active In New Offensives In South While Zero Weather Stall_s_l_)rive In North. (By Thomas F. Hawkins, Associated Press Staff Writer) HELSINGFORS, Dec. 20--(AP)—Fierce fighting occur- red across the Karelinn Isthmus in sub-zero temperatures today as Russians loosed hundreds of tanks in savage drives and directed 200 Red air force planes in widespread bombing attacks on the rest of Finland. The roar of artillery could be heard from one side of lull H\J *5" 3r Qh-Iimlfl. I barge leaded with ~80 survivors, captain Wilhelm Daehne of the 32.- OOO-ton craft said two frrmen were missing but that the other 569 men and nine women stewarwsses were "all right." Quickly and in good or- oer. the men were mwrched to de- lentlrn quarters at Ellis island im- migration c~ntre where beds and reaching the goal of their seeking as did the other Wise . hot food awaited them. The Tuscaloosa. wh‘ch picked up t-he seamen yesterday while the has had an “almost scriptural influence” in its way around Cglumbus w“ settling in flamgg the world in many languages. The son, Tertius Van Dkye, in his recent book about his father, has found in this story the “clue” to the life of_his father-the tale of one who -set out to join the three Wise Men but who stopped to help some one in need and arrived too late atwthe appointed place: Through"yecfrslilfjfiiirneyed on," losing the road at er 1w times but never failing to help the needy folk along the way as he was able and never surrendering the quest which was at last rewarded in his sight of the “King? The moral is not far to find: who pauses in the way to do deeds of kindness in the living present is all the more certain to find the best in life, here or beyond. reached the end of her rescue trip in d'rvy weather. A drenching rain failed to dampen the spirits of the rescued seamen and they waved and shouted greetings to a fleet of tugs and cutters that escorted the cruLs- the harbor. Hearing Today Tomorrow the men will be given a hearing to determine their exact status. In the meantime. they were treated as seamen in distress and if it is determined that the Colum- Better times have indeed come, but there are still' bu; was an “named merchangm," other forgotten little ones, and there is still an opportunity open to those who wish to give out of their own Christmas happiness, their prosperity and their good-will toward 0th‘ ers less fortunate. and receiver. Only two more days to go. YESTERDATS SANTA PALS Klnsnicn Club, Charlottetown. _ Mr, Loman J. O'F‘arrell. Mr. J. W. Cann. The Carleton Women's Institute per Mrs. Stewart MacMickeri, Sec’y ircas. Mrs. Erle Thomson. Carleton. Miss Katherine MacFadyenj Riv- erdale. Mrs. Harry Tidmarsh. Miss Nora Noelle. Blake. “iiss Maureen Blake. - and Mrs. Stewart Inman, I Ominous In News Briefs la. i! s Helen Tldmarsh Mllsier Stuart Chandler. Mrs M, H. Brownh Master Paul DesRoc es. QTTAW p _ Mrs. Wesley MacPhee. Mt. Ed- A‘ w Mr. and Mrs. H. K. S. Hemmlng. Miss Ruth Christie. Lang Creek Y P S. Mistfrr Gordon Quigley. Mas Barbara Qulgley. Master Arthur Coffin. Miss Margaret Coffin. Miss Rose Longwcrth. Miss Marjorie Splllett M's Janet Marcia Spillett. Master George J. Rogers. Master Thomas N. Rogem. Miss Rosemary Rogers. Mrs. George Rogers, Mrs. James MacKay, Brockley. Miss Doris l-leartz. Miss Emma Michael. later Rogers announced tonight. ended at 12:20 a. m. hard-fought negotiations A little help now in the shape of a Santa Pal will make Christmas worthwhile to both giver i they will be oerimtted to remain in the United States 60 days. In the glare of floodlghir. and camera flashes. the German sea- men appeared somewhat bewildered Among théil‘ number WEYS VEtCYBTiS (continued _on oa2e_§._ _o~;1_3_)__ Portents lFor Nazis And Reds Events Week (By Kirke L. Simpson) Of WASHINGTON, Dec. 20 —-(A.P) the 65-mile wide isthmus to the other. Finnish aviators rose t0 meet Red army aviators in fierce dog-fights in the winter sky. The Russian drive was stalled in the far north by blizzards and temperatures of 25 degrees below zero. The Finns said they had withdrawn to Korneitijziervi, but mentioned no fighting. A little farther south» just above the Arctic circle, _ ‘ Finnish forces were reported in an official communique to _ have stopped a Soviet thrust to cut the country in two and i to be advancing toward Salla, capturing “much booty” en l route, including three tanks, 30 army trucks, numerous - machine guns and considerable ammunition. While battles raged along '__ w Finland’s eastern and south- eastern frontiers, the nafion --u¢vn-p Dash For Liberty»- . . s: ' ' h moved to stre-ngt en its GEORGETOWN, British Guiana defences by calling to the Dec‘ 20__se,.en remgces n.0,“ me colors all able-bodied men French penal colony of Cayenne - - y, were taken into custody by police 40 yems of aga A" rese“ ‘here today when their slnflli, open ists under 40 already had $0.... was swamped off SDIIYYO, They been summonflL wegefiqadtheir way to Venezuela. ' 8.1’) 0m. (The call adds an estl- one ma“ claimed w b? Brmpm mated 15,000 men to the giving his name 8s LBWis lwflsifi. Finnish" army, estimated by Another said he was Char cs cc . . ' '- .11 , d 'l'.:'i..d authoritative sources at 400,- Guclmm m ‘an a“ a ‘I L W 000 at the start of the war. he was Parades Roberto. Spanish. Thev said they left cayenne. off the coast of South America, Dec.. Estimates have put the 6 Russian forces attacking 311 will be deported by author- Fmlam‘ as “igh "s 1'5"” “*5.hff°liini°°ititllill° “léibifl; 000") iciiid Keene Frenchman. ' sirf. ring For the second successive from exposure. ixcrc ulvcn mfilicfll CBFG. day air raid alarms sound- ed in many Finnish cities. including Helsingfors, Turku (Abo), Romma, Porvoo, Salo, \ Mont-awe ‘iaselka, Vzirtsila, Laseklir Sortavala and Janisjoki. A morning alarm in the capital lasted l1 minutes. Another tonight continued for dlkminutes. k Sixteen casualties were report- 3 bacon oven ‘(tun inductee AND You BREED DKSHSTER I (' ed at Laskela and ll at Janlsjoki. The Films reported a Russian Zil-Tho first Canadian division will be support- ed in the field by a squadron of the Royal Canadian Air Force and Ml$5 E- Webiiel‘ also will be aided by specialized Miss Reta MacEachern. cowl unite lmwntln to between . Mrs. Charles Carson. 8.000 and 1,000 men; efencc Min- PARIS, Dee. 2i—('I'hursday)—- Anti-aircraft guns went into act- ion during an air raid alarm in western France at 11:35 p. m. (1.35 p. m. AST) last night. The alarm BUCIIAREST, Dec. M-Rnmania tonight agreed to double her oil‘ shipments u. Germany, The Go":- cmment consented to l new trnu agreement with the Reich after which seven! times broke down and pre- -A pre-Christmas week studded with disaster for Nazi Germany. and with ominous portents for her outlawed partner. Soviet Russia, throws its heavy shadow over the man upon whom the events turn as a pivot, Adolf Hitler. The unchallengablc events of the eek on the sea front will keep Lilm grim compang, in his holiday- making. By hls order 100,000 tons or more of German shipping, includ- ing the pocktt battleship Admire‘ Craf Spee and the luxury liner Columbus. have been scuttled by German hands to save them from enemy seizure or the rusting idle- ness of internment. Captain Lanws- dorff of the Spec has ended his own life in Buenos Aires. u he ended that of his ship by Hitler's command. The tide seems to have turn- ed heavily against Germany. air attack on the railroad at Kodka. 60 miles north of Hariko on the south ocast, had failed. SURPRISE BATTLE Lynn lleinzcrlln i By rltcr Associated Press Staff WTFH THE FINNISH ARMY ON . THE KARELIAN FRONT, Dee. 20 -(AP) -Eleven Russian and six Finnish planes fought a thrilling surprise battle behind the Flnnsh Ines today as the Soviet brought up cru hing force on land and in the air in an attem t to break through the Manncrhc m line acres. l _ _ the Karelian Isthmus. TORONTO. Dcc- '-‘0-~\¢-P>--»\-- The roar of Russian artillery w;s .nium and maximum tors.)- 1:: heard along the entire Kareliah Dawson ‘i camp at plcn cked their prison menu cream In memory of Mrs. Thos. Mich- ael. Mr. John Michael. Miss Helen Holman. i (Continued on page 6, Col 4t New Street Lamps Shed Faint Rays LONDON. Dec. 20 ——(C.P Cable) —Sreet lights came back to Lon- don tonight but they took a bit of seeing. Famous thoroughfares like Strand and Whitehall, Poll and Bond Street had gLlmmer like close range starlight. The system will be fast as suitaiole shaded lights are available. The glimmer was the cqui of a. candle at a feet. or if you want t technically. .0002 candlepower. the Mall a ghostly extended as tones of 10 PICNIC FOR INTEBNEES ' JOHANNEBURG. 500th Africa —Brought to a. Jotunnesburg den- tist's 0 f ice from tho internment Windhoek, enemy aliens in the u ry. vary a th orders hi)’ cakes. Nazi raiders like the Spec, Nazi submarines, Nazi mines and Nazi aircraft have for 16 weeks token heavy toll of Allied and olpitoted the fall of one Rilmlniln cabinet. The new pact a for nmlnin. to send Germs ny 190.000 tons of oil monthly. The first eight month; of this year Germany avenged 120.000 will. N" I111" the lf-lfl. of the war the figure had been ant to I-bout 80.000- OTTAWA. Dec. flr-(CH-Ltbor Minister MeLlri-y [lid tonight he had udviled ltcel workerl on the Saint John dry dock and Shirl Building Company Limited that n strike started yesterday for hlghc wage: is illegal 5nd that the men should return to work immediate- ly. Chief conciliation officer of the department, N. S. Campbell, i: pro- neutral shipping: yet London reports British import and ex- port totals rising. From France comes an official rceupitulntion that 50 German U-bonta have been sunk in the war. British submarines report they have scored heavily against Nazi sur- face warcraft. (Continued on page 8. Col i) i ccedi to Saint John to investigate - Mr. Archibald was born in Mus- . “'—'“'_‘_ . . the of nation, the Labor Minister i quodc-‘ooit. N. S. and Was educated “slightly; g1“; Faint‘ mg “I l’ m laid. at Dzilhomle University. Halifax. ‘J Sun skim this ‘akfcrnmn, H, 4 21 , Dec. 20;- (hAfidL: snggayflgchgllbiiilggfafglllt ‘nognf/‘il? riscs ifiiilOfpcnAv ui;>;-ii.li: a. Possible repetitiomo t e - y - ~ ' > e -- .. .. , . “m”, flood at 1935' m which ‘*5 o o a Fkiward island and from there went Full‘ moon Doc 2G‘”|‘._R‘ .i. .u _ . f in Erie Pa whore he n» an 7,439] Sunlmcrslfic tide (will mlu of life exceeded 500. stirred anxiet. . » . » r a in l t” ‘Mn Onflwwvnwvl‘ tonight, ghyguqlmui, "ngymgggtgrn , Presbyterian (‘hurch Later he ser-l i‘ -5 a ‘ >~ ‘ ' Luzon Island where the owolk DEC. 2i. lint-Princess Patrician vcd in the Mission fields in Alberta THE (‘H Hm“. d“. n. . 9080?!!! River inlmdeibd l Wide Canadian Light Infantry, first . He came to Vancouver in i918 nvd BNB- 501W "in! BMOIHPBNN the Canadian unit in Fiance, landed wns appointed pastor of First Un-l Lmves isnrdcn 9.45 A M l on P M lbw“ °I i “*1” “fyphmm a“ at. Havre. Germans repulsed allied ‘ted Church here. He. retired from WM“ Tllimelmli" 110” A- M" mu“ gunned‘ h°m°'°” in In“ attacks near Gialons and La i Mount Pleasant United Church twol 105 P M omtmldhrup nomnnumcatlém n w“: Sauce. French advanced between years ago because of ill health. f SATDRDMS (“mi lmw-m‘ w deumm, m, Extent the Alsne and the Lys on the He is survived by his widow anil waves Borden H5 R M of outta and pwmy change. Wwwm Prwt- one daughter. Leaves Tormentlne 1.00 r- M. In Finland. Germany's doubtful’ RM, A D_ m.ch,bald_ “friend, Soviet Russia, ls meeting Masmr of the Oran“ Lodge t 0f Orangemen in B. 0. Passes Dec. in westerly wlmls and gaics‘. casionnl rain; part snow in north portion. ynopsis: Light snoivliilis i I VANCOUVER. 20—(OP)— the region of the lConfcrcnce of BrTsh Columbia, ‘ died mow. front. where temperatures were at Vancouver 45 IL) zcro and below. Edmonton 27 -3l Today's battle was only a part of R931“ n 1B i- — Winnipeg '21‘) (Continued on page 9. col 5) gggggg’ L. Montreal '3'- ; -‘ Qucrcc 1i x ) Saint John » I - ; l-laliiax -~ -- n ‘"71 l; Charlottetown J0 v3 Maritime East: flirting‘ souihcrlv oc- or Slcct g llflVl‘ occurred in northern Ontario. also snow and rain ln casivrn l\l\l1i<‘i'~- it has became somewhat colder lu Grcni Ilnkcs, [hr 65- Gmnd weather has been moderately cold and in Manitoba and cast Saskivlrho- past President oi the United Church wan, but rnmparnilvclv mud m il- herta with light rrun lu soml- (|l\— tric wu.,- I t . I v I i . F I l r‘ I _ . I l l I i i i o-—_c--.-_ -y_-‘____