ITALY IGNORES AN TI-COMINTERN BI RTHDAY MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN -__-_-_- view rwordl. lon Take the u mmgof the m} Charlottetown Guardian lornlng Guardian.- Ioiuldsd J. F. Sanderson. B ( y Nov. LONDON. tile United sounded in hostilities. Ocetllvhe Government will of the loan rets but most guesses pu 500,000). ls rationing. Although the that butter and bacon spite the opposition of tiie L tioning to go into immediate range. " ' v Coming Events Bate for Notices in this wiuulu 3 cents per word. i: . . _ _:_.A .. “W- ._ "Talkies - Crapaud Tuesday- l-‘inal snow. ii-28ii-li-o-zi. "chicken Supper and Dance, lona nan, Wednesday, November ltln. Li-Ztili-Al-‘l-ol. "Come to Bean Supper in Lot 65 llall November 8th. Admission 2st: and Sac. Dance after. Ii-Bol-ll-a-ai. "Goose supper at. Wheatley River, “Thursday Nov. 9, aid of lmiicd Church. L-SIO-ll-ti-ili. "Dance at Kozy Korner, Vernon, Monday, November 6th. Webster's Orchestra. L-293-1I-6-li. "Memorial L. O. B. A. goose Iulincr and bazaar Tuesday, Nov. l. 4:30 io 8 p. m. L-301. "Masquerade dance St. Peters Thursday. Nov. 9th. Webster's Orchestra, L-295-l1-6-2l. ‘flilnkora Hall, Bingo and dance Friday evening, Nov. 10th L-300-1l-6-2l. and dance. St. Thursday. Nov. L-296. ' ‘Bean supper Andrew's Hall, 0th. “Moon Over Shadow Lake". musical comedy by Kcnsington blfllkrs at North Wiltshire, lvloii- tlfll‘. Nov. 6. L-28l-Il-4-2i. "Armistice Dance. Bonsliaw Hall, Ffldny. November 10th. Admission lac. Lunch l0c. Red Cross pur- 1’°‘~°5- L-286-1l-6-li. "Women's Institute Bazaar and Musical Comedy by Kensin ion Players in Wlitshlre Hall on cv- ember 6th. L-2Bt-ll-4-2l. _"Clyde River Bazaar “8111112 November ath. lunches. Ii stormy following even- mtl b22l-ll-6-2l. "The Ladies Aid of the Church QT Bwtland are holding s hot; chicken supper in Cape Traverse 11811. Tuesday. Nov. 1m. L-298. and Social Sale of "Notice-New hammer mill in- Fltlllfll. coen for crushing five days l‘ “Wk. H. J, Clements, A. H. Roper. East Royalty. L-Iipii. J "B1080 and entertainment at “hiwtonb River school Thursday. Nov. 9th. If not fine Friday. L-303-11-6-2i. "l-lesr Don Messer and his Is- landers in Long Creek Hall Wed- "Wlev. Nov. a at 8:30. Admission 1° and 25c. sole of candy. L-itev. flW-‘hlciten Supoer, Bingo, Rus- Btm H811. ednesday. November ll- Iii’ weather unfavorable, Thursday. L-acr-ii-i-a-a. opCattle-We require s uantltv P‘ cows and bulls for ologria l 1011c or write us for prices. I5- "ld Cold Storage Co. L-QtiQ-S-SO-tf lodfifuiual Meeting of The Char- voiiiidiitnsssdaciiii Pimdtiiceriiizrianid * on i1 8 CU - '1'" 1N1. Tuesday. November m1. Y-RQI-ii-fl-‘H. o of life and 5-(CP lCable)—'l‘he ' l t d ‘t mem ton‘ghgiflggpflilfiilllhflslilxSalflilrkei. while warnings were the press against “this false 'l‘reasury officials worked _ lion's war chest with cash to buy Unite munitio s while naval experts discussed means of trans- porting them across the submarine-infested Atlantic ask Parliament this power to raise the first public loan of the war. The amount and when it will be offered t. the total at i250,000,000 ($1,117,- Anotlier topic to be discussed Government has announced will be rationed in mid-December, layed until the new year de- abor Party which wants ra- operation, and on a wider the whole scheme may be de ‘Inc Dents ake Advantage Of Arms Supply Warnings sonfidéil Against “False Lul ’ ’ In Hostilities In General De- light With U. S. Embargo Repeal. Canadian Press Staff Writer) British Govern- to take full advantage of lull” in general on plans to swell the na- d States planes and week for the public are sec- in Parliament this week The press generally hailed re- peal of the United States arms cm- bargo as severe blow to Ger- many and a. decided advantage to the Allies. It emphasizes Ger- many's isolation. it was argued. be- cause no matter what economic help Russia may be able to give nor, it would not counterbalance the materials the Allies will buy from the factories and mines of the Unitcd States. Waiting, Watching Meanwhile the Sunday Times em- phasized that_ “we still are in the gtnga of Witltlllg, watching and guessing." Many commentators at- tributed the lack of action on the military side oi the ivar to deter- mination by Adolf Hitler to eXplufe every possibility of winning the d lomatlc war before real flgnt g starts. They were agreed this lull “lac bound to help the Allies in the end because it. gave them an unex- nectcd ciortunitv of strengthen- ing their forces. But they warned it should not be taken as anything but (Continued on page '1, Col 3) _______.__ international At A Glance (Canadian his‘) G OSLO-Norway r6 0 S H" manyhz demand that City of Flint- be interned. BERLIN-Gonna” intensify sea wflfiiifl‘ in 1,, United States arms repeal. MOSCOW— Finnish delegation awaits instructions from home 011 Russian talks; hope for com- promise. LONDON-kllons rrrsiso ‘United States, Norway and Fili- land for actions hailed as Allies and weakening Gennsny. expected to reaction embargo approach ROME-Italy ignores of Inti- nf second BHMWTSWTY Comintern nact. PARIS-Nazi artillery bombards evacuated town of Forbacli. NEW DELHI-Hindus and Mos- lcms tan to anco on India's Doll- tical future. Fatally Injured In Jump From Truck , N. s, Nov. lS-Wil- llam A. McLean. B1. was 1110111? injured Saturday when he lumped from the running board of a mov- ing truck and struck his head on n stone. An inquest will be held Nov. 8. The trudt was driven by Jll-WDII Rubin, a cattle buyer from Mone- ton, N. 1a., who had given Melee" a short, lift alone the Nfld- W" Lean jummd vii 88 u"! W" passed his destination. Rubin took the injured 111811 1° his home. where medical examin- ation disclosed a fractured skull. He died while on the way to b05- er9 "Masquerade Dance. Lorne Val’. ley Hall. November 8th. Luc . d0" rtze for Mam ' w ‘e “emeripaia-ii-c-zi. CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY: NOVEMBER c, 1939 llicliilntlls 0N GOVT. IN lNll|_A_ FAIL Hindus And Moslems Disagreement Con- tinues Deadlock. NEW DELHI, Nov. lF-(CP- ReutersF-Fatlure of Hindus and 114N191!“ i0 W?“ on plans for the future government of India was an- nounced tonight by the Viceroy of India, the Marquess of Llnllthgow. Tile Viceroy made it: known that: in talks with Mohandas K. Gandhi, Rtilcncra Prasad. president of the Congress party and M. A. Jinnah, leader of the Moslem League. he had offered to include representa- tives of both the Congress and the Meslem Iréasue on he excctlve council of tit-e central government —dan offer which was not accept. e In a statement to the press, Lord Linllthgow expressed regret that the deadlock which led to resivncitton of five provincial min- istries of the Congress party left ill-P Bov-ernment "with no choice but to use the emergency powers." These vest authority in Provincial Governors in the event of break- down of constitutional machinery. Despite “complete disagree- ment" between representatives of the major parties, the Vice- roy said he was resolved “to try again hi consultation with theleaderI-of. hnd. the Princes to see i even now there may still be a possibility of securing unity." “COmDIex as the problems are, I refuse to regard them as insoluble,” he said. “I prefer to believe that. like other human problems they will yield to patient discussion in a spirit of goodwill." _ The viceregal statement out- lined the sequence of events since the outbreak of war, including his talks with Gandhi and Jimmah. and the Chancellor of the Cham- ber cf Princes and more than 50 other people representing various parties and communities. It also reviewed the Congress party state- mcnts and the Vlcer0y’s tthree- point declaration of Oct. i8 under which he sought to set up a, con- sultatlve group to resolve the marked dlvergencies of view between the great communities of India. But, he said, the reception of the declaration in British India by the Congress party was "definitely hostile" and “them remains today entire disagreement between re- presentatives of the major parties (Continued on page '1, Col 4) Roosevelt i \ By Richard L. Turner l Signs Neutrality Act Saturday Associated Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Nov. 5-—(APl-—- President Roosevelt signed the new United States Neutrality Bill Sat- urday ln a chccrful little White House ceremony attended by a. lub- ilant group 0f Congressional sup- porters of the measure and one "w good natured opponent. Winthin the same mlnute—12:04 ‘Mimi i p.m. EST—the President also af- fixed his signature to two procla- mations, one re-affirming the neu- trality of the United states and the other closing American ports anew to belligerent submarines, ex- celpt in extraordinary circumstances. The three presidential signatures in combination signalled to the world that the nations at war could now buy as they liked of United States arms, munitions, im- plements of war and raw materials, so long as they pay cash and haul the supplies away in non-American ships. , To the American Merchant Mar- ine lt signified that, until the war is over, its ships are forbidden to enter the port". of the belligerent countries, To globe-trotting Amer- icans it meant that no longer could they travel on vessels flying the flag of any nation involved in the war. A third proclamation was ln the making, to carry out the provision of the law empowering the Presi- dent to mark off “combat zones" which vessels of the United States may not enter. Administration leaders were uncertain, however, when it would be completed. These reurictions are intended to safeguard United States neutrality by preventing "incident-s" at lea such es in 1910 inflamed public opinion @4111" %xfl r---"?"*‘ ~"""---_.._..\ Shift Of Attitude Seen Since Pact Signed WithNazis Bolshevist Tone In Fascist Press TwgX ears Ago. By Richard G. Massock Associated Press Staff Writer ROME, Nov. 5-(AP)—Ita1y came to the eve of the second annivers. ary of her algnment with Germany and Japan in the anti-comintern pact tonight with the ideological alliance shaken by war tn Europe and shifting polltcal alliances. Thus far the anniversary mmgy. row has been ignored in Italy in contrast to the strongly anti-Bol- shevist tone of the Fascist Press a year ago. Moreover. diplomats were specu. latlng whether the alliance against the spread of communism would survive the newly-launched collab- oration betiween Nazi Germany and 101151. menace has been increased." ed military alliance little more. Soviet Russia. 813-10161111 Stalinjis the supreme chief of the Communist Intiemat-lltaly than to Germany. Observers Reczl-l- Strong Anti- By contrast. it was recalled that when Adolf Hitler welcomed Italv into the pact two years ago he ex-' pressed satisfaction that the "com- munity of nations ln tinited do- fenee cssinst the Bclshevist world Diplomats observed that as a re- sult of the Russian-German Tieup, Japan still was far from n, propgg- wit-h either Germany or Italy. Foreign circle; said the pact anniversary finds It- Hly in principle a good political friend of Germany and Japan but 5min. Hungary, and Manchou- k1l° B180 Joined the antl-commln- The sound a m item pact. but the bonds with Ger- finds Gemann "@1511? Olthe Dachmany appeared to manv observers Y at war and receiv- lto have been loosened 1o;- {hgm m; lng the aid of Russia. whose lead- twell. It was pointed out that. the Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ‘ll TLERMAY PLAY WAITING GAME. BFLFF German Militarists Believe Frontal At- tack On West Fol- Y (By Melvin K. Whiteluther) (Issoclated Press Staff Writer) COLOGNE, Germany, Nov, 5_ _(AP)—Despite a popular impression in other parts of Germany that Adolf Hitler has decided to risk a \.'3Si.€l‘l"l offensive now. it is far from certain that this feeling is correct. On the contrary. there are 1:1- dlcations that Nazi higher-ups do not know what. their next move will be or how the war will tie- velop, There are even some grounds for the belief that Hitler is con- fident of German aiblllty to hold out and may accept the British- French tactics of fighting a long, almost exclusive trade war entail- ing German attacks on British shipping and harbors. A Colonel-General, highly placed in Nazi circles and well known a- broad, said two days ago, "only the Fuehrer knows whether it will come to a western offensive. And I lcountries were closer politically to ‘don't ymqw whether he know; yet)- Mllitary men here in the west still express the belief that it ‘ "(orator - ‘ground Ring Rooted Out By South African Authorities JOHANNDSBURG, South Africa, Nov. 5-—_Vig1lB-nce of South African authorities has exposed an under- ground Nazi organization which has plotted national uprisings, and sabotage to factories and essential services. it was learned authori- tatlvely today. The Union Government has for some time had its eyes on Nazi activities in which Ger- Key Frontier Bity Under llot Artillery Fire man diplomats were involved. PARIS N 5 _(AP)_German n forestall“ m “lend re‘ artillery I mgtliiodlcaily bombarded belllon and disturbance by ex- lwlllfl! a number of ringlead- ers at the outbreak or the war, interning 200 others. 131056 eiflnelled included Dr. Llerau. former German Consul- Gflileffll at. Wwidhoek; Herr Stil- lei‘, former counsellor of the Ger. man legation; and Dr, Rudolf Leitner, former German minister- to South Africa, More than a year ago m o n- today near French posts German Warndt Forest. sources said of Forbach were removed at start of the war. mans apparently were and Warndt y Counting Saturday s ization called Jnislands was Own these observers estimated to control Nazi activities in the Union and elsewhere. and was linked with German leizations and consulates. A more active Nazi Was appointed German consul at Durham. A new consul who par- tlciirated prominently 1n the Aus- trian anschluss was sent to Lour- enco Marques, in Portuguese East Africa. These changes produced ihcreas. ed propagation of subversive Nazi doctrine among disaffected ele- ments tn the Union. The Auslands was in close contact Osse- Weibrandiivuz. a body formed in the Orange Free State nominally for cultural purposes but actually based on Nazi lines. Former Mayor 0f Bh’town Dies In West CALGARY, Nov 5—-(CP)-A Lib- eral mcmber of Parliament for Queens County, P. E. I., from 1025 to 1930, Robert Harold Jenkins, ca. died in hospital there tonight fol- lowing a lengthy illness. Mayor of Charlottetown for two years and an alderman for six years, Ml‘. Jenkins came to Osl- gory in 1900. He was deacon of the Fl ‘ Baptist Church. member of the Calgary Club. and member of Zetland Lodge, No. 83, A. F. and A. M. He was a brother of H. M. Jenkins, prominent Calgary grocer. He was born at Mount Albion, P. E. I., on June S0. 1873. Surviv- sai-reguemlnes and Bitche Rohrbach Plateau farther ea The French countered with lery blasts of their own as held infantry movements minimum. A morning war ported the nl8§ht quiet along the to was genera regions east of Bites." The evening limited to two words: French military dispalcllfifi Forest important The Hench a German attack area. several days then more German mining ago and all the time Meanwhile, ited States‘ decision to lift BXIDS QIIIDEYQO. government purdbases of in the United States Saturday French broke up a mass deep in French territory. Program To Be Expanded asked in January to authorize new $1,300,000 lng are his widow, two daughters, gle-ruglsiw and lit 2.400 more 111*- Mm-ggegqgg; of the house naval commit. public the details struction program after a conference with Lloyd, member of the Ottawa Citizen editorial staff. iii. FOUND DEAD Saturday n o rat ons. mVER-Nms- N- 5- Ni"- Pwfl‘ “lliiiggh, ‘who frequently s eaks for negotiations are Soviet dernandfi 11am H. Davidson. 51. Canadian the administration on niiva matters for a naval base near Hangoe, on Nfltlimfll Railways WWW-hill!“ said he would introduce the nec- the southern Finnish coast, for foreman here, was found deed 1n easel-y legislation. The program was cesston of territory north of Len- a railwa oar Sat ay. An inmnet terminated. he added. in the light ingrade; and for demlllterimtion will be old Nov. . of world exmrlttlons." of the Finnish-Soviet. mutin- the key frontier city of Forbach in the Military the 10,000 inhabitants the French observers said the Ger- trying _to smash all approaches to the city French communications with Forest gun emplacements. operations, about 150 more on Frendn lines between on st. artil- raids tlif Florida front except for "artillery action on both sides in communique was‘ "quiet day." as- serted their guns in the Warndt I dominated Saarbruecken. pursuit planes German flighb WASHINGTON, Nov. ll -(AP)—- The United States congress, will be .000 naval expansion program calliniLofor 95 additional a of t.he huge c0111; ‘l Adm ral Harold B. Stark. new chief of na- woultl be folly to attack frontally either the French Maginct line or the German westwall so long as powerful armies occupy them. Under these conditions, if a dec- isive victory is to be fought on land. the two heavily fortified bul- warks must be flanked. To skirt the Maginot llns the German army would have to go through Switzerland, Belgium or the Netherlands. But formal smur- arices have been given those neu- tral countries that this would not be done. But even disregarding these assurances, winter, with its rain, snow and mud is setting tn and soldiers don't relish this. Tl.e heavy concentration of troops along the Netherlands, Bel- glan and Swiss borders since the Polish campaign ended- a move- ment which distilrbed these three countries and created the suspicion abroad that a plan was afoot to flank the Maginot line or to at- tempt infantry attacks on England thrcigh the Netherlands —ts ex- plained here on tactical grounds. Sufficient: room for troops with- drawn from Poland was not avail- able directly opposite the French frontier, it is said, so they were spread out in regions from which they earlly could speed to the west- wiill over good roads and rail- roads. Mysterious Sea Disaster communique re- JUPYFER, F'l&.. NOV. 5—New evi- ldgnqe of a mysterious disaster at sea oif the lower Florida coast swept into shore Saturday adding a new puzzle to the two-day search for the identity of a vessel be- lieved lost in storm weather. life boat, in good condition reported they repulsed and still stowed with jacket-type in the Forbach since German shells have fallen in French territory uteri 1n since the war started. France made ready to take full advantage of the The official Journal gnid Eugene Auguste Marquais had been named paymastei- general for supplies lifo. preservers, was found in Hobe Sound, about five miles north _of Jupiter where Friday a six-mile long oil slick and bits of wreckage started an investigation. The lifeboat bore no painted name on its exterior, but inside near the starn was a copper plate engraved with the naime ' 8e- Berufsgcnossenshsft" (Sea 'I‘ra.de Union.) Soviet-Finnish Developments Believed Near GFORB. Foreign Olif ice spokesman a negotiations in Moscow, here today 8 PAGES _\.. We learn wisdom from failure much more than from success. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN "1 i" ORWAPYIREJECTS DEMANDS ldritiish Move To _.A-._4 Annual Subscription Dniivorod .00 llit-P- l. ll I. $1.0M Clnldl In! U. l. ILOO. 4n Refuse To Hold City Of Flint On Nazi Orders American Cre-gv-l-Taced With Delicate Problem Of Moving Ship Elm Port. OSLO, Nov. 5-( AP)—The Norwegian Government to- day rejected a German demand that’ the United States freighter City of Flint. be interned despite the fact Norway had released the ship and interned her German prize crew. In a formal statement the Government said the Ger- mans had brought the captive ship into port at Haugesund contrary to Norwegian orders. The German commander was quoted by the statement as saying he acted “according to orders from my Govern- merit." He said he wanted at Haugesund, 75 Nov. 6—'I‘he today adopted an unusually rmerved at- titude toward tho Finnish-Russian leading many observers to believe impor- tant developments might be near. Although a report from the Fin- nish delegates had been received and negotiations presumably were halted until new instructions could be formulated, the spokesman said "nothing of. importance happened Chief stumbling blocks to the to run the British to confer with the German consul miles south of Bergen, before attempting North Sea blockade to a German port. Previously he had given as his reason that a sick mem- ber of the American crew needed medical attention. ted the ship and found the A Norwegian doctor visi man’s injuries “insignificant” the communique said. The German commander was said to have agreed to refrain from anchoring but did s0 anyway. The Norwegian announcement said this violated litter-national law and that in consequence the German crew was interned and the ship returned to her American oom- mander Frill?" A protest “against the way in which Norwegian authorities acted" was delivered by the German Charge dnfifaires Saturday but "the Foreign Minister" on the not showed that the protest was with- out reason." Further discussion ensued and the German Government "de- manned that tn- City of Flint be held bnok as lonil as the case was being dismissed between tho two Governments, but the Norwegian Government found no legal basis for taking such steps against the American boat," the communique said. "The Norwegian Government has explained the whole action in this matter in a note which today has been delivered to the Gennan charge dnffaires." Meanwhile, the question of how to get home or t: a British port confronted the American crew of the freighter, anchored in Bergen harbor. The Government statement dis- closed the Germans already had made one protest in the City of Flint casfl. afvulne on Oct. 22 that Norway slicnld not have ruled that the ship on her first call at 'I‘rom- so must leave territorial waters 1n 24 hours. ist/er ‘told the ge d‘A.ffalies that he agreed with the German Government. , In Bergen, where the City of Flint remained at anchor tonight. the American crew was held aboard the ship, denied shore leave by the Norwegians. The master. Captain Joseph Gainard, worked thioitgiiout the day on a l report for United states State De- ‘ pariment. Banana Crop lln Jamaica illtlrtl llit KINGSTON. Jamaica, Nov. l5 -—(Cl' CABLE-Seventy - five per cent of the standing crop of banana trees on this West In- dies island was destroyed by a nine-dry tropical storm, it was estimated tonight. The colony was in the grip of wind and rain all last week. Authorities snld that not only were millions of trees flatten- ed by the gale but next year's crop iwns seriously affected. The banana trade will be handicapped for the next six months because nf the storm, they said. Delayed reports reaching Ja- maicit today told of scores of small houses in various parts of the island destroyed l\\’ wind and floods. Mrll and wlrc serv- ices were disrupted. The Department of Public \V0l‘l(s fact-s a gigantic task in clearing blocked rcntls and re- habilitating villages. A conserv- ative estimate of the total da- miigo wrs set at £100,000 ($500.- 000i. Two deaths because of the storm were reported from s re- mote section of tho Island. ship's , before the vessel anchored, lllay Seek Training Planes In United States UITAWA, Nov. l$—(OP)-—I.m- mediate steps looking toward pur- chase 1n the United States of l portion of the great fleet oi nir- craft. required for the empire train- ing schools in Canada are expect- ed by observers here u a. result 0| the removal of the United Stiiiel Arms Embargo. President Roosevelt's proclama- tion o! the new neutrality act lift- ing the embargo 0n sale of vca! materials to‘ belligerent COUIIIIlBI has altered entirely the task d those responsible for Canada's ec- onomic war effort. In the absence of any official statement, the extent to which nir- craft will be required for the trrin- trig scheme is a matter for npcczip latton. But. it has been estimated at: least 300 machines of variant types will be tmmcdiawli.‘ necessary for the initial effort, tots or Fetus MM so l\\c.i-\ (new NEVER MAKE A Hn’ TORONTO, NOV. 5-—(CP)~.\lini- mum and maximum temptrntin s‘ 4 Victoria 4 Dimonton 2'7 Calgary 33 Winnipeg 2~l ‘Toronto 37 Ottawa '24 Monti-cal - Syriopsls: The weather has horn mostly fair and mild in the ii-cst- cni Provinces with light rain and snow in some sections of Ontario. High tide this evening at 6.21 and tomorrow morning at, 0.34. Sun sets this afternoon at 4-43 and rises tomorrow morning atrfi-45- New moon November 11, 3.04 s. m. _ Summcrside t‘dc cg: W". 1'11"‘ lites later than Char-O til/Obn- “rna can FERRY sinuses ._.__. _ d 945A.M.lt“»PM. Biporiiilentine li00 A. M. ‘£05 P M. SATURDAYS ONL! Le Bo d n 445 . M. Rivals Tdrriientine $.00 P. M.