reported tonight as mediation offer of lomzltic history. Reports reached London of cavalry near the Dutch fron line by rail towards that re que places great reliance on mechanized units for a mass break- enemy lines, and it is considered cavalry u of considerable value in support. Invasion of Holland would give Germany military advantages. Establishment of German air bases t would make mass raids on Britain return flights would luable gasoline and on the Dutch sea coas considerably easier. The distance for be shortened by 300 miles, saving va time. Yiar——t25 Years Chatham in Rllii] Coming Events late for Notices in this column :'_:_'_.._.. Btanhope, Friday nlght.425 cents. L- Kcnzle-Wigmore league will held ln Clifton Hall, November 14th and at seven o'clock. L-t50-11-1u-ll. if, on the 111211.. November 10th. ltionday. L-4ti2-l l- lO-ll. r and Bazaar, Bradalbane Hal November 10th. Proceeds Womens lnstitu musical comedy by glows in Wlltshlre Hail. Fridav. 0v. l0. . Ll-407-ll- 2i. of cows and bulls for bologna Phone or write us for prices. 1s- lsnd Cold storage Co. l BDeeial meet dill! event , W100i. All farmers invited ibwldsily Car Batter s ‘Mt-ion guaranteed R. L Covehead fiUlllfilpiylflly Hal day evening. November mil. Bazaar, Bingo. If not flne ThlliTdly. llst stock with local lflcllftlfy. 7- MAXIMG MERE MAN ————1 Thefels praetieal eornnwn dense llukinguvenhiitisesqsietlynun nithoutrsdstause. ‘n11 Ohrlotietown Guardian Two our; Iovslng Guardian. Iollslol IIII, itLAsii 0N Fear Holland Aim Of German Troop Movements Would Place-Tltfarplanes Nearer British Centres-—- Chamberlain Repeats De- termination To Make End Of Hitlerism. (By Pat Ussher, Canadian Press Staff Writer) 9—-(CP Cable)—Ominous German troop movements behind the Netherlands frontier were hopes of armistice, based on the peace Belgium and Holland, faded into dip- LONDON, Nov. liiiiiied could co bombers and pro German losses in a date show the need i this kind if air raids are to be lull effective. Chamberlain indlsposed At the Mansion House “_“_' today in hono i tn NOV. 10, laid-German cruiser nee by we névflorde Kmuflbe‘! “w” d by H~ M- 5~ John Simon read a s c (FRiver, German w have been made biyiee Fast Africa. Attempted Austrian ter Chamberlain. It sta invasion of Serbia repulsed at Semendria on the Danube. Cos- we a“ assured sacks entered Posen. Ago Today I-fl-I lesntsperword. 14m. 11-178-11-10-11. "Regular dance at MacMlllanb, 26-11-10-11. P "Kinkora Hall-Tonight's dance lat ls postponed till next. Friday. L 4J1 11-10-11. "The annual meeting oi the Mo; If not fine ' ‘Chicken Bu te. 11-3-10-38-11-9-10. “Women's institute bazaar and Kenslngton "Regular meeting of Charlotte "Cattle-We require a quantity ovember 10th at B a-ioiili-o-zi. "Buying 'l e . . . lckleson. L-fllfl-ll-i-i-lll-ll. ‘"““ so rinBta 77-11-10-155. "Esstem King's 40t-ll-9-2i. the presence of German tier and the movement of gaso- glon. German military techni- the use of tanks and other through attack on nits would be important is slower m“ imifiemwfifi ‘Iweezsmuir, uoverrlor-ueneral l ttocks oil protection of “until that Europe has been in the threats which for so of her in "stiff- necked" German leaders and saw lsiaotory response ueen Wilhelmina sin would not freed fro long have paralyzed the life little hope oi a sat to the offer of and Kin leopo Hitler, " n view of nce._ The s ech was read b th oellor o Prime Minister W85 ill and unable to "Runlmage Sale, Holy Name smlflnwm’ h” bee“ Ball, Friday, 2.30 P. M. one xwpt “"“"“"°"“ s'ii"s"ssil"“ "Corns to oiliolr s 1n “i e.‘ ‘° Kmgmn mu’ “maxim "W" sl-iwini friends and allies formal being passed upon. in the Munich after Hitler left beer cellar just banner for Berlin was given headlines by London afternoon ' a rs. There was some specu- on that it might have been be present. ‘ihe service w for broadcast on the National network u‘ d" 5 a” u 0i the Canadian Broadcasting C0!- launchlng a full gainst Britain. Josie war s- side of the German gov- ere h“ bee“ ‘he “me Jchll, Fredericton and Moncton l"! 101' P98“ B5 the" New Brunswrci; honors it. wur dead. In MollircaLtthe Ceflllfldilafilh 1:2?- l 15h lllg wummor e- (Continued on one ti. 001 0 1 VtiXC‘€8,0n(01ulll st. James Cathedral International lit A Glance aw? Indies Auxiliary of Probes: ufitserlaxfi. I1 offlh ll F!“ 3230 8.0 mmanueamm “mg 5L bu“ Belgium boosts mu _.___. ernment, th "Dance 1n Mlllvale School Friday genwnc des BERLIN-Gestapo Li-DBQ-il-i-IO-tf some persons nation attempt; re- ; Fuehrer ——-— Hitler assassl "Morell shipping club will hold ‘m; m." at Morell on Pri- "uped b, on‘, LONDON-Chamberlain wai- may st my moment Dressed Chicken and “violent conflictt" attacks Brlnuis your Radio and necked" Nazi lenders who W "chlirfid- slim‘ no language but that of force.” PARIS-French re nhope- German thrusts at north l Wednel- of western front. OBS - Finnish Gov- given‘: Atfigllaixne, te to discuss new re- e m8 6 oscow dcleg-tion; lim- child?“ °l Qgluugimgghmwlzfiihold B IIELBINGF - ernment m?‘ i 1 Club om from afiegilmmifgfow m teygiilutuuil ted °“ "on av. neggiili- igtltoiililiie “"°“'"°“' mam ' I MOSCOW-muted Finns neeeili main Russian demand. ,.-.-_.< m-m ///'/// ‘II-W Q»? ——-$- »...___ m‘ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Canadians Commander Pictured for the first time in khlKl service to Cannda and ccmmander-in-c y s. regiment at Ottawa. urli‘é“3i‘°&‘3 Dominion IXIBYOI‘, Si!‘ To Remember Great War Dead 13y Th; Canadian Press morrow to remember Throughout Canada. 019mb"! his ' uniform, Lord 0! hie! 01 Hi9 Uanndlnn IOIOES, XBSPCCLS a l’ ast ffort m pro-e- from Chancellor out‘ gznzgasrl; are?“ w“ g W1‘ PM‘ wiper‘ momentum, the dominion willpause w the soldiers “wig; who gave their lives in 1914-13- alns of 80m’ the Canadian actlveservice forces. 1,0 now in training for the of Remembrance Tower on Parliament Hill. Pr Tweedsmuir, governor-general, poratloil. Stores Will be Closed and the oulcl- at the Cenotaph Dominion Square. Observance will be on scale in Toronto. with the active service units veterans for a ceremonial at als’ club band the music for singing of hymns Ralph Day will read bert Matthews will participate Toronto. u’ In Winnipeg also soldier! day. before and recnii taking 1n the border the state of dedioet wry detachments also Oenotaph in front of the citly h The Origin Wll P da will be massed Vancouver Cenotaph, with veterans “s il riurilinli to the mediation struggle t“ Pimp?- W We" e that l; would be 3mm veterans of (he first Great Wagaln and would observance domlnlons and anniversary oi the $130508 0i beta-e arrrlitlce. In all centres, two min- utes silence will be observed startins l‘ t the at 11 a. m. At. Ottaw tile cahadlim lesion will hold a Silflllfie at the Peace llTle Minister Macltenale King and Lord H Halifax will see the usual oil-redo The w” “ever shmud have “me of VClClCills oi the arlily, navy and wme air force to the city's war memorial. in Saint B5 Oil a largo several Joining with the all. lav a! _..,»- ter the two minutes silence. special —Netherls.nds. hl- prayers for Km; ter defence line. with victory billzatlon to 800,- 000 men; possibly two persons klll- addres. Lieutenant-governor ed in mysterious clash on German- Netherinnds border. . empire and peace will follow. Mayor the memorial Al- in the observance at the University of from cbill uni ill oin with vet- estloninl in fiamfidhmfifl 1 do“; gt the cit Cenotaph. Many offices and stores in larger centres throughout Manitoba will remain closed. for the h urchin troopsinC ary.A - melodic “he ad 1”" e:““‘;,°“1 held in Lsulbridse the @- and a peace arch. In Vancouver, nova and ceremonies in Parliament square and Me “i-l Park. CHARLUVFETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1939 MAXlMS or a l." MERE MAN ' Reel giving and receiving must be I reciprocal in spirit, and absolutely ‘ dependent upon each other. 11 PAGES ' swim-swirl": ... .. .... with the rs Governm ceding Soviet Russia a naval base mt the nor-them entrance to the Gulf of Finland. The Finnish delegation Went more than an hour in the Km - lln conferring with Joseph Stalin and the Rim-slam premier-farcical oommissar. Wfleheslaiif Moloteff. lnterrppted by the three-day anniversary celebration of the Communist revolution, the talks were resumed at the request of the visiting representatives. head- ed by Dr. Julio Paasltrivi and the Finnish finance minister. V. A. Tanner. If as was reported, Heislnzfors a Russian naval base at the north- ern gateway to the Gulf of Fin- land, observers said there was little doubt a final accord would Informed Sources Believe FinnishRussianAgreement Near As Talks Continue was agreeable to establishment of‘ ensue. The Bovietb second most impor- demomi isi for hlfmrltiei- Robe Bredng is a secondary matter. al. it to the Finnish port of Lurlahary. As Molotoif has previously stat- ed. Finland is wiilinlz u» cede the islands o! Se . Lavansari and Will-Pent. off the Soviet naval base at Iircnstadt. in exchange for ter- ritory in Karella. The Russians. it is understood. have given up their earlier demand for a mutual aid treaty modelled slim‘ Ose imposed on Latvia. $190M; and Lithuania. Dist/end they now 58k reinforcement, or the Soviet-Finnish non-aggression noel. nor participate in any comhm- aliens directly or indirectly hos- tile to the U. S. S. R. -» ~ <_.._.L7 tions and citizens. Space will be provided wreaths on the Monument. Grafton to Monument. of the Provincial Building. Chorus. (luring the SILENCE. Program z ' J REMEMBRANCE DAYJ SATURDAY, November ll, ' I939 From 10:45 until the first stroke of the eleventh hour, the Fire Bell will toil at intervals of ‘ seconds. Parade will leave the Legi the Regimental Bend of the Horse arriving at the Monument at 10.50. on Home at 10..40, headed by ORDER OF CEREMONY o CANADA . PLACING or WREATHS LAST POST TWO MINUTES SILENCE REV. DR. R. MOORHEAD LEGATE, Hon. Chaplain SELECTION BY BAND REVElLLE O GOD, OUR HELP IN AGES PAST ’ GOD SAVE THE KING Wreaths will be placed by His Honor the Lieutenant- Governor, The Premier of the Province, The Mayor, The nesldent of the Legion, The President of the Ladies Aux- iliary, Officers Commanding Units, followed by Organiza- All returned men, nursing sisters and others who served Overseas are invited to be on irrade. Dress:-—Merlals and Khaki Berets. The Route of march will bez-Pownal, Kent, Queen and The return route or march will bez-Grafton, Wey- mouth, ichmond and queen to leg-Ion Home. our the Lieutenant-Governor will take the salute in from The singing will be led by the Charlottetown Male In these critical days of War every ex-service man and woman is requested to meet at the Legion Home at 10.15 A.M., to join in the Remembrance Day Services. All oars and other vehicles an requested to STOP THEY SERVED TILL DEATH WHY NOT WE. filial»! KN-nurcifiioanra fi VAST GERMAN Pllillit PllllER llllllTS BUMBER Authorities Silent As Press Charge Jews And British Secret Agent Responsible. (By Edwin Shanke, Associated Press Staff Writer) BERLIN, Nov. 9~Auth0ritles held a number of persons for qugs- tionlng tonight 5,5 they pressgd an investigation into the a/tternpt on Adolf Hitler's life last night ll; the historic Buel-gerbrau will“ in Munich. Qfficlols would not sav haw many were ltrrvsted but emphasiz- ed their detention did not mean necessarily that charges had been placed against them. Seven persons, including one wo- man. were killed and 63 were woullzicd, 29 of them gravely, by an explosion in the cellar. Nuns used the word “mirecle" in commenting 0n the escape o! l l Prince Edward island Light for those wishing to place i His Hon- Icuers to clear away the wrec lTo Pierce Flank yTurned Back Excel: In Quality I 1 Hitler and other vemmeht heads, Dfilnllna out tha the customary program for the observance of the unsuccessful 1923 putsch was changed in order to enable the Fgxuchrer to return earlier to Ber- l . The explosion occurred as 9:21 p. m.. Just 11 minutes after Hitler had left. It demolished the interior of the famous Nazi rallying centre in the early 553's 0f the National Socialist movement and tore off most at the roof, Hitler carefully examined Dhoto- graphs oi the scene when he ar- ._ rive-d this morninsz at the Chan. oeilery in Berlin. Nine Feet of Debris The rostrum from which he spoke last niglhlt lav under nine ieet of debris, leading to a tiheory that an explosive had been placed between the Cellini: and flooring directly above where he stood. It required eiizht hours for res. knee lllld recover the bodies of the dead. The oriczlnul reward oi 500,000 marks ($200000) for information leading to seizure oi the Demetri-a- tors was increased to 600.000 marks ($240,000) by an anonymous offer, Henrlcll Himmler, head or e11 Nazi police forces. tonight offered an additional reward oi’ 800.000 marks ($120000) in foreign ex- change to anyone abroad provid- lng information leading to the sr. (Continued on page s, C01 7) liazi Attempts PARIS, Nov. li-Gerinan at- 1 tomlois to pierce the extreme north- l cm flank of the French defence l llSfll‘ the Luxembourg border fail- ed today under French counter- ‘ fire, advices from the front said. x A sSllCS of night infantry raids turned back. military sources . "rted, without rlcilicil is‘ iiory ‘octwcen the M0- - sclie and brlar Rivers. Authorized (llciltfld a renewal of offensive tac- tics which 50 far have been de- Wifiwm 9°“- feated during the da nightfall last night. of the French outpost line. aimed against hills which parallel still were 1n the preliminary s Finance Minister her allies.” d Germany's aim "total peace." neutral." he sai IIMIDB yielding any commentators de- clal-cd German activity was entire- lv lccal although they said it 1n- ThdFrelwh (“Nnml Uolnmunlqui said: “No incident of importance y‘.- On the political front, members of the cabinet will meet, tomorrow with President ieoruh in Elysee Palace. Apparently blv a lin- rlnl, military advices said. Cler- I I ‘st-issuance Situation Relmnrccd enemy patrols slip- ped throllgh the darknes until they reached the isolated positions Lighter attacks Vlllfin: (Laxscrfllfzedl as 5 e °' resting easier now that the first big we,“ “outlet rush of potato shipm h 1 m Ger?“ pleted and the shortage in bags, were cave-l- an or e as . several flux the French sum (he? affect the slipping of the remaind- mm was thought that the reported assured the Ummd 5mm thin ha. shortage in bees would cause some _ inconven g yoyzofi w?‘ $113812, the marketing of his crop. Potato 5 “in g m k1 “mo; . the amount of “Jags on hand is suf- og a; ~§e§mm°¢m 3K“ ficient to handle the, remaining minister sol the precerlt conflict was “total war" willie the allied all: was a ported to be good with the price “America has declnmri 'h¢=,r5e1f Mountains remain steady at 50c a . . .“lf Ameri- can neutrality should ever be oom- promised it will not be by any act rapidly and are only bringing the of France or hei- allies. . .Whlit farmer 12c o. bushel. Harvesting weneedisnotmenlwuiiirsnsnnd gfthiscr Shooting And A Kidnapping In MysterioizsAffair Extraordinary Defence Measures Taken By The Netherlands As Fear Of Invasion Grows. (By Max Harrelson, Associated Press Staff Writer) AMSTERDAM, Nov. 9—(AP)—A mysterious shoot- ing incident on the Netherlands-German frontier in which two persons may have been killed and several abducted into Germany was reported tonight as the Netherlands began precautionary flooding of her vital “water ine” defences. One report of the clash was that two persons were killed. Another authorized version said only one person was injured. Both versions agreed several persons hzld been spirited across the border into Germany. The incident heightened nervousness prevailing in this country and neighboring Belgium as a result of rumors of intensified German military activity on the western front. Belgian mobilization was raised to 600,000. An official announcement at the Hague said that all Netherlands army leaves had been withdrawn, a move which placed 50,000 men back under arms. The announcement said the gov- mil‘; w s: m... us... .....l ar in lluest iéitféffieimételfifiitlstl°tfi w ...... orlii Peace A I Flood Wide reas Utrecht Provinces reaching eastward between the Mans and Waal Rivers, the Neth- Premier erlarids’ first line of defence. , Authorized persons said only dresses Canadlanc that "several persons" were in- A wide area was flooded through ' and another volvcd in the border incident ' Lea 11¢ and that "it appears‘ kone was fiinfirlctan g him, and o ers a en over on ti‘: Geligrdnand frlontler." '13?‘ ‘ 0s_____'__ a now ge owever a versions differed so widely "it. B05701‘: "m" 9 “(Can-camm‘ took up arms in the prevent war l: quest, of fileace and security uni" Slut?‘ mitt’ “l” ’é’i.ii‘>‘é=ii° or‘ way. e r ' y; view o the ooh a or 3th.? i‘3.¥““‘e’§li‘.’li.i%“l.‘.€§€ai Vehloo customs post, on the Neth- League erlands southeastern frontier, said Th, ‘ooumfles annex“; by 99;. the shooting occurred on Nether- many“ were only the "gtgppinfl lands soil after ‘occupants of a smnesu m a pm‘ am o; V“; gem. Gem!“ allmmwlle fluilhled- 6°55‘ torial ambition. tie Premier declar- ed the frontier on foot and EXHIMZ- ed at the leagues annual dinner, ed occupants a Netherlands where he was guest oi honor. machine near the customs barrier. Although he admitted that a posi- One oi those sold to have been iion of strict neutrality is unten- killed was believed to be an occup- able for any portion of the Brit-sh ant. of the Netherlands car. The 90101"?- the Premier PXP\'("~""d m‘ victims and several survivors from belief that his OWMYY WWW P" this vehicle were reported taken have devlflred a stale 0f W81’ “WES that» Gerrtngny a few minutes after e shoo g. An attempt also was made to push the Netherlands automobile across the frontier but the barrier blocked its passage. Venloo is opposite the German munitions centre of Essen, near the top of the Maastrlcht "penin- sula", a neck 01' Netherlands ter- ritory which jllts between Ger- many and Belgium. Officials" Silent Official explanation oi the extra- ordinary measures was lacking al- illougll ililornied sources stressed that the two lowland countries are determined their neutrality will not be violated despite rumors of in- tensified German activity on the La impossible to say at this omcnt what really happened.” They said an inquiry is under (Continued on page 8. Ool I) m lDER or A toot ‘lliflli ls mi ilsllzlllm 1o Sole tin {slim lltw smurf ills liiols! wide area was flooded through (Continued on cage 3, Col b) _____€___. TORONTO, Nov. lk-(CIW-liillni- mum and maximiun temperatures. 8 lias improved .____ Farmers in the Province are Vanoovor 8'7 Edmonton l4 Regina 27 Winnipeg 21 Toronto 25 Ottawa 10 Montreal 2i High tide this morning at 9:50 and tonight at 9:40. Bun sets t-hls afternoon at i138 and rises tomorrow morning at 6151- New moon Iglov. 11, 3:54 a.m. Bummerside tide 1o minutes 1st- er than Charlottetown. rue can FERRY SAILINGS -_._- cnt is com- which was reported earlier, will not EAIJLJgMF-lib Oqu» mau- er of this year's crop. At first it ience to the farmer dealers announce-d yesterday that shipments. Movement in seed potatoes is re- nf 06c a bushel still being paid. leaves Borden 9.445 AM“ 100 P-M- Leaves Tormentlrle 11.00 A M. 3.05 P. M. SATURDAYS ONLY men 4.45 P. M. 5133 ¥orinentine 7.00 P. M. bushel and table stock at 45c. ‘Pilmips are not moving very is well advanced and s ow fine aye will finish it. ...». ., _, ....