_ ~.._-..-_ . _ ___"_~_ ' " Post-nuptial‘. Shower" Nold At Long Rlvor On Thursday evening. Sept. 21, I939, the home of Mi‘. and Mrs. iR/hn Gillespie, Long River was the scene of a. happy gathering when about two hundred relatives and friends of Long River and sur- rounding districta assembled to tender a. e‘ mower w their son James and his bride (nea Miss Helen Graham. S ring Brook.) After the bride an room had f-aken their places in lent of honpr. a heavily laden basket was cariied in by’ Misses Rub Camp- be11 and Leone Eaynter. es An- nie MacLeod and Ruth Paynter opened the , while Miss Fiorrle Paynter read tho. accomp- anying verses, and Miss Marian Gillespie arranged the ifts nicely on the table. Following is an ad- dress was read by Mr. Elmer Payn- tur, and the presentation of alove- 1y WZUIIUL! dresser and a purse of money was made by the peopc of Long River. Mr. and Mrs. Gillespie thanked the people for their kindness. Lunch was served by some of the ladies present and the remainder of ihe evening was pleasanty lriliiccl awn‘ . At a late hour all wended their way hQmz-lvard after wishing vhe bl‘.(il‘ "and gfioom many happy years ' ‘i e of 11c. ing is the address: . James Gillespie, 1r f (is and neighbors have . d here this even ng to hon- u in the event of your recent age. and to wish you a happy prosperous Journey through You, James. have grown up fun c111 llooti among us, and We 1 111.1111’ 1111c Qiiflliiies. .111 you have decided to 1111s 1li‘l{,'hl)Ol'il0Od with 1 r-Eurmlni: partner. Although have not. known Helen verv long we all res-mot her and exten to llcr r1 welcome to her new home. '1‘ 111c has always been noted (p, klllil hospitalitv. and we trust Jiincs will be as fine a man as his WTYFIIIV grandfather. We ask you to accept this gift presented to you with the very best wishes of your Long River friends. lPatriot Please Copy.) Former W. I. Superintendent To Ottawa wigs Elizabeth Macmillan unis;- cci ill the cltv 15st night 91'! W“ e 11"'11 5:. Johns‘, Newfoundland l0 Giulia whore she has received 8J1 1111po111fn1e11t as demonstrator- iect-t um with the Publicity Branch 0 the Dominion Department 0f F1811- eries. Miss MacMilian a. former Super- visor of Women's ‘Institutes in the province. has spent the 0115f- “Wee 11nd one half years as Director lnvailable at, all Sunglo Dealers on T81‘- Question 0f Territorial Waters Raised Tin Central Guardian Thhoollmnllnurvnllcrunol DQIIIICUOC but olvifldng oi ‘onqwwnai-unrnnyholncotocl nlomb 0 won! ctr-low pu- ohloinulnnoo. L!!! INSUR- b-WIBOJI-fl ~31 .°“’f.‘ill. "alsuunymgr- l 065. Y. D - . 7:30 p. m., Sabbath, Oct. 1st,, Prim 11 a. 1a.. Kinross 3 p, 111,, BirchI-IDl7p.m.R»ev.J.H.B op. mnistor. L- CONFEDBBATION INCI- UIIUBCH 0F SOUILAND-MI‘. MacDonald will conduct oerviou SaIbat-h. Oct. 1st, Milo I1 n. m, Coleman 2:30 p. m.. p. m. Summer-aide L-BCI. CHURCH 0F ENGLAND Ser- vices. Sunday. Oct. 1: ud-- St. John's Chunch: Sunday School a. 111.: Evensong-Jlzoo p. Springfield-St. m.; l G. R. Hartman. L-895. FIRE RESISTANT ROOF. -- J. M. Asphalt Shingl s am famous for their weathering q alities Reason- ably priced. Applied over old Roofs. Many styles and colors. Monthly payments under the H. I. P. L. M. Poole 6t Company. L-894-28-30-Oct. 5-7. mercial rations for best color. Man rancher; are doing this on the Show Foxes this season, Puffed rice P. E. Island. BREAKS ARM-Master Ray Hen- nessey. popular young son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Henneosey. Brighton Ave, Charlottetown. had the misfortune of breaking his aim by falling off a fence while playing near his home on Wednesday. His many friends wish him a speedy recovery. DISCUSS CAMPAIGN-The ex- ecutive of the _Prince Edward Is- land Tuberculosis League met last night. with Miss Hazel Hart. Ottawa. from head office of the Canadian Tuberculosis Association to discuss plans for the annual Christ-mas seal campaign this year is scheduled to stnrt late in November and is killed in this Province until Mon- day. October 2nd. No game birds of any kind may be hunted or kil- led by the use of a. rifle, or auto- matic shotglrrl, or o. shotgun load- ed with a single bullet. Pump guns are allowed if the magazine is plugged so that it cannot. carry more than one cartridge. The sea- son of Ruffed Grouse opens on qcsgdber 15th, and closes October 3 . SECOND AND EIGHTH BAT- TERIES WITII FIRST DIVISION —’I‘he 2nd Medium Battery (How) and the 8th Medium Battery (How). Jubilcc Guilds of Newfoundland anld l-abratlor. Her many file“ 5 throughout thQ Wu‘ M355 ftfncMillan ever! omen in h" n" polimznflvfaclvlillan is a. native of Al- West Grain Yield Exceeds Forecasts ININNIZPEG. Scot. 2'1 —(CP) — With threshlm return! W915 "w" encouraging than flit mflflt WWI"? tic forecasts of a. month B80. Weit‘ err. Canada's 1939 prairie Wheat- yicid s estimated at 467,000,000 1:11;» is, according to a. report l5- szicd today by the Seacle Grain Ccmpuny Limited. 118515 yea!‘ Prairie forms produced 3261390990 511331915 0f ilent. ~ rt-port. estimates Manitoba's t production at 61,000,000 . .\"s. based on on average yield of l9 bushels to the acre. Sask- atchewan, with an average yield of 11.5 bushels an acre. in mooted to produce 251,000,000 Abcrta harvest returns indicate s. cw) of 155000.000 bushels at 18.5 * ‘lcls to the acre. c only damage of any con- wm-e to the new crop, other 11 lack of rain in southeastern Sskairhownn, was from grass- holzncr the report adds. The in- sects t l most of their pillaging in w "n. and southeastern Si ‘r1591. .l".1. n. mo of the smaller areas in the lai- - crop districts. particularly in Saskatchewan, suffered disappoint- inc: returns because they did not wécive normal rains during July. 'I.1r:sc low j,'it"l‘l. hcwcvrcr, have l1 r11 of." ~t by n itrr crops in oth- rr localities irithin the same dis- Lr ri . 'l‘11e report. estimates that more l, ~11 '15 per cent of the new crop z Ii grade No. 1 and l! northern. prcdicuon may be altered if 1 ncrthcrn districts. which still hat-e about. s. week of threshing n- lwrd c-f 111cm. suffer any damage frcm the weather. nmrns ("ROKI-IN-At Kensington on Sept. cmbcr the 14th. 1939. To Mr. and Mrs. Aloysius E. Croken, Kensing- ion a_daugl1ter.'_M_i11ly Rodi (‘RICfITON-At San Pedro, Calif. on Sept. 15th, 1939, Mrs. Crichton (nec Adelaide MacKayl formerly of Murray Harbor South, P. E ‘”_“\ Alex both local units, are listed among the units comprming the two div-1- siom o! the Canadian active service force. Both are listed an being with the First Division. Altogether. in the two Divisions there are 28 In- fantry Battalions, l2 in the regular br ades, with each division and an ad itional machine gun and tank unit attached so corps troo . 'I‘-here are three four-battery b gods; of Field Artillery with each division, and two addi ional brigades, each of Field and Medium batteries, attach- ed, making 56, all told, though there are also several anti-aircraft units and a searchlight regiment. PERSONALS Miss Francis E. Gallant of Boston. Mass, was called home owing the illness of her sister, Mrs. Sophia Doircn. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mason of St. Mangareis Bay Rd, Halifax County are spending their holidays 0n the Island. This is their first visit to the "Garden of the Gulf.“ Misses Hilda, Gertrude and Mary MacDonald and Mr. Norbert Malc- Donald. all of Cardigan. visited the On their return Mr. and Mrs. Alfred J. P. Gaudet, Mrs. Arthur Gaudet, Mrs. Ben Perry and Miss Tina Gaudet. all of Mischouche, we're recent vis- itors to Charlottetown, the guests of their sister, Mrs Edna. J, Gaudet, 198 Sydney Street. Rev. H. _J. Dclron of Milk River. Alberta, Slstcr Mary Leonard of Seattle, Washington, and Elmer J. Doiron of Boston, Mam, arrived in the city recently. cnl'ed home ow- iIIlZ i-o the illness of their mother, Mrs. Sophia Doiron. Supporters 0f Garrett Fortune Claimant Indicted PHILADELPHIA, sept. 2'1 -(AP)- Eight persons who supported the Clllllfl of Isaac Ne_\vton Sheaffer to the $20,000,000 Snuff fortune of HFIIYAP-ill in. Garrett. were lildicted on Bl counts of fraud today as hearings to find heirs to the for- tline entered the third year. The grand jury called four wit- nesses, including Albert D. Os- born. New York handwriting expert, tire returning ‘uh indictments against Shenffer, of Newark, Dt-L, and others who supporied his claim on the grounds he was porn to Mrs Garrett, heuess before her marriage to Walter E. Garrett. am, money in ban 1 m . immler, Church; Matins-—ll:00 fro. Al? lggllldms ‘he will» (Swen pol- ent said, and South America, South A: China and elsewhere since 1936. Gerrnunaenti 11' a. steamshig n “u: n8 1m aboard States from Southampton, 516117. did not sec him go ashure and Knickerbocker had fled to Amerigg, 880MB for Goebbels, Ribbentrop and Hess, four for Goering and two for Himmler and Ley, campaign. The 6,5 ma“, as he was not speaking 111 a legal expected to eclipse former years in 5en5e_ result-i Outstandln authorities! on --—i the sub eci such as Pro c5501‘ ranmmcs season - oun- 1mm“, ‘J ’ l. o; Columbia ners are reminded that, since Oct- Unlverglfy, y ma; three ma- ober 1st falls on Sunday, Hun- rim m is still 1111-, limit. garian Patzidge may not be legally They ee that a. country. by Jefferson in 1793 when, as W Act Valid, Say Provincial attorney general, begun a study of the judgement, saying the case probably would be taken Correspondent lanes Agents Cf Nazi Leaders IDNDON, Sept. Zl-(OP Cable)- ‘llhe British Broadcasting Corporat- ion tonight Slllnmflflucd the repl of H. R. Knickerbock . Amerlzati nowspflpilr correspondent, to the Reich propaganda minister Goeb- ‘D018. in connection with Knickerboc- rer’: charges that high German ieadors have laced huge sums of . abroad aginst their e future flight from the Knickerbocker In his reply named lgenta for Dr. Goebbels. Joachim Von Rlbbenixo . the Reich foreign minister, Rudo f Hess, Fuehrer Hit- lers de uty in the Nazi party, Field Marsha Hermann Goering, Reich 1 air minister named by l-Iitler to suc- ceed himi Robert Ley, leader of’ the German abor front and Helnrlcih head of the Nazi police. - These agenfe, the correspond- placed funds belonging to the Nazi eaders in banks in Norm rica. Knickerbocker said he found a. bound to the United the a- ls led to Goebbels’ charges that The correspondent named three (By Andrus Berding, Associated Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON, SCPE. LET-Ques- tion oi how far to sea a country's territorial ivaters extend has been revived in the United States bi! the war. President Roosevelt has said United States tierritoruil wat- far as American in- ferests requirg, but it is believed its own action, rullnol. chanzfl this limit unless. through negotiations, it induces other maritime countries to consent to it. I The three-mile limit was first proclaimed Officially by Thomas score- zary of state, he addressed notes to the British and French minis- rs The three-nllle limit was there- upon adopted by the Unit-ed States 51X years later the three-mile limit was extended to the IZ-milc limit through an act of Congress authorizing the exercise of cer- tain customs control and Jurisdic- tion within that zone. Nevertheless, for nearly 150 years three miles has remained the limit of the territorial writers of the United Siaets. In the l2-m11o limit nations generally have ex- ercised in recent times only very limited control and jurisdiction. Unlted Slams destroyers arc patrolling an area 200 mllcs out to sea to guard the rights of the United States as a. neutral. What are they going to do lf they sight o. vessel which they have reason in suspect. is vio- lating America“ neutrality? Some authorities on interna- tional law do not believe they can legally stop it. search it and perhaps seize if and ifs cargo. The United Sinlcs republics mpresentcd at ferlencie of American nations at. Panama. are considering how to keep belligerent activities a cer- tain distance from American shores. Legal exports hOIl‘ are searching to sec how this can be none under international law. and other Canada Temperance Ontario Appeal Ct. TORONTO. SEW. 22 —(CP)-The Ontario court or appeal decided io- uay mat. the 01-year -olu cannon ‘Icmpcrliilce Act 1S vzlliil in Uniarlu. immediately H011. UOYGOII Conant to the Privy Council. ‘lhc IlIZlLlLI‘ cannot be ciei-sriniiicd UCZZIIIKCIV un- tii rca..ons for the jlitiglhtlll. are studied. said Ml‘, Conant. The decision of the appeal court gives a. federal law priority over tihieGOnLario Liquor Control Act of Four justices of the oliDeol court answered in the affirmative the question of the provincial attorney general regarding the validity of parts, I, 2 and 3 of the C. T. A. which rovide for the enacting of prohibi ion by counties. Justice W. T. Henderson. however. dissented, expressing the view that the provisions are outside the powers of the dominion par- llament. The theatre of conflict for the two laws has been in the counties of Peel. Huron and Perth and in Manitoulin district, The three counties voted themsel- ves drv under the Cnnado. Temper- ance Act, but in I916 tho Ontario Lluuor Control Act permitted sale of liquor in government stores Mid clubs. Linllor stores were established in the three counties. Moscow tonight with the ing the day Blioquy the con- _ THE Extend Trade» . Agreement With. New Zoaland- t Sept. 30, i940, with removal of the special rota on wool flow ma, was announced tonight following cabinet council. lend spire Mlyt mm: w“ m‘ loaurénevenlniu or.”- "vfililéidiimufii ’°' ‘” t. on wool or carpo . item 512 in the ‘customs tariff, ha: no s1 . nifioarloe 0 er than ow tgo Government's policy oving but it hfllilflened got no imports of any consequence entered under this u cession and it i; now be- ing removed by B-Rreoment. This was the only item of in- formation from a long afternoon cabinet session. Another meeting will be held tomorrow afternoon. SOVIET — NAZI (Continued frm FR I) Soviet Premier and Foreign Commissar Molotoff in the Kremlin. It was not disclosed immediately whether Joseph Stalin attended. The German Foreign Minister arrived lees than five hours earlier, accompanied by Albert Forster, Nazi leader in Danzig before the Free Cit-y was annexed to Ger- XIIRII . Y His visit was described officially as for the purpose of discussing “problems connected with develop- ments in Poland" but there were reports that it might produce de- velopments rivaliinnz in import- ance the German-Soviet non-ag- gression pact. Diplomats nld the possibili- ties were three-fold: the sign- ing of a. German-Soviet mili- tary agreement; formation of n new Balkan-near eastern Bloc under the guidance of Turkey and Russia; and l. joint Ger- man-Sovlet requut that ‘hir- key act as intermediary In li- femofs to negotiate peace In eastern Europe. Credence was lent to reports that Japan was playing an invportgnt part in the Moscow negotiations when it was learned that the Ja- panese Ambassador. Shigenorf Togo, cogferred last night with Molo- to . Weather Halts Search For Planes MONTREAL. Sept. 3'1 -—(CP) - lnclement weather that Mt moat of Quebec 1n fog or drizzllng tonight to have halted tamvpomrily the search for crews of two planes reported missing in the wilds of fa: eastern Quebec. Another plane left Montreal diur- with MiohonlAhde manager Quebec - ways, to 10in in the search already underway for Pilot Joseph Fecteau and two passengers. unreported since they left two weeks ago on a flight from Moixte, on the north St. Lawrence shore, for lake Mel- ville near Labrador. Meanwhile, another search on foot was being organized for Pilot Clifford Frechette and radio oper- ator Edward Gaynor, unreported since July 3 but whose plane was found intact on the Magpie River, about 80 miles in from the St. Lawrence shore. almost dluo from the west end of land. Seek Stamping north Antiooati Is- Dut War Sparks In Balkans (By Lloyd Inhrbal, Assochtcd Press Staff Writer) Th-Slpurred will spread BUCHAREST. Sept. by fear that hostilities into southeastern Europe and set off a serious Balkan conflict. dip- lomats sought tonight to stamip out all possible sparks of war. The Balkans apprehensfvely awaited the outcome of negotia- tions 1n Moscow between the Turk- ish Foreign Minister, Sukru Sato- coglu and the Soviet Premier and Foreign Commissar Vyoohulnff Molotoff. - o Govemmonts hoped for nusian and Italian guarantees of the Balkan status quo with the possible formation of a strong neutral Balkan bloc under tho aegis of Russia and Italy. A previous, Soviet-inspired ef- fort to organize a somewhat sim- ilar Balkan edentiun lust May failed, chiefly because some no- tions refused to participate under the terms then proposed. Savings Deposits Increase In Canada orrrawa, Sept. 2'1—1'\irthcr in- crease in notice (savings) deposits in Canadian chartered bunks on, CHALIQDOIDTLETOWN__G_IIARDIAN Consors, Explal 11-1111» Rule "Roi, Political Speeches .,__._. OTIIAWA. Sept. 21-01mm: S. ‘rlwmnoon. director of censorship, cold in statement‘ tonight that tho doc n to confine bmodoasto of a to radio political studios for f-bo duration of the war was reached prior to the announce- Oorporation an Scot. M, when the corporation was asked to inform all broadcasting stations 1n n ssis of Quebec an- t s. provincial election would be held Oct. 25. In Quebec today he protested durin fol-view the r g claimed it would “prevent free dis- cussion of questions of vital im- mtéliinoqto the electors of the nee.‘ (In the same connection, Glad- stone Murray. C. B. C. general manager. said in Ottawa that tho nsiblo only for the collection of speech manuscripts instance is exercised by the cen- sorship committee.) A “Quiet Night" 0n The West Front Described (By Taylor Henry. Associated Press Staff Writer) PARIS. Sept. 27—Fort,una.tely the handful of French troops hold- 111g the little farm which its de- vout German Catholic owners named Saint Paul in honor of the apostle do not read Paris com- muniques issued by the French general staff. . They would have difficulty 1n recognizing any relation between the coznmuniques and the fight- ing which has swirled about the Ianm the last few days. "Calm night." was the way the general staff today described the lack of action on the western front. _ But it was anything but "a calm night" according to Fm news- fiper tches received in Paris night, 0r the unshaven French Poilu stripped to the waist 1n the stone granar of the farm. The red hot mac inc-gun barrel blist- ered the naillfs hands as he tap- its butt to swing an arc of re on the little crossroads where a lane leading to the farm leaves the main hlghrwav. It was anything but o. calm night as a shell from a German mortar dug a crater onlv a few hundred yards away spewing farmyard muck into his face It was a ng but a. calm niaht whm comrade, kneeling lust to the other side of his ma- chine slin leaped uo clutching his throat, than fell backward in a crazy dead sprawl in the moon- light. In war men fight and die on "a calm night." For the general staff in Paris “a. cairn night" meant that looking at the long western front from Luxembourgh to the Swiss border there was no major activity there, no operations in force, IPor the silnple poilu in the ad- vance positions on German terri- tory it meant artillery bombard- ment, alarms as German patrols sneaked up with machine guns in attempts to retake in-divdiual farm buildings and hastily built cross- road dugouts held by sections of 10 or 15 moot. For the Frenchme who captur- ed Saint Paul farm hree days ago it meant even more than that. For after all-night attacks by raiding parties on the farm a German bat- talion launched a dawn drive. send- ing wavu of troops against the machine gun nests which form wfhat n. dlivisiorml commander would refer to as an "organized advance position‘! Poilus holding the farm which, although only one of nfsny posi- tions, was a matter of life and death for them, repulsed no fewer than’; four attacks during a. "cal-m n ~ . ' Southport Native Injured At Nalifax . Sept. 27-(6?) —Ex- plosion of gasoline in an utesian well driller today caused serious burns to Jack Maclnnis of Halifax. native of SouthDoi-t. P. E. I. MacI-unLs. who was operator 0f the drill. was taken to hounitill burned about the right arm nd leg. 111s condition was described o- night u; “fairly good." $2M. Nazi Steamship- Lincs Close For War’s Duration NEW YORK, Sept. 27-(AP)-0f- ficea of the combined Hamburg- American-North German Lloyd Linea throughout the United States closed today for the duration of the war. Officials said about 400 em- inent lust Sunday of I. ovin fol election campaign in Queggo Privy- Tlu rullm, mods to ensure that the ddenoo of tions "gvorounot contravened in the heat o po iicol speeches." was con - ed to the Canadian Broldcastfnvg ~ and that the censorship in this d Second French Shipping Loss ls Reported ‘Ibcoccondmnohsbiwinl sinoeihewm- fldbyl B80 and the fourth 0f I will!!! inthreodn U- A . -....~ leurmmn- u. - mud y gaund $1111» cooking to ‘Destruction ‘o: u» Swedish freighm Silesia near Btavanler, Norwgy, resulted in renewed pm- sa“ ~e..m"fl".l.i"r..."°l"uu."“~ rm e muuéi" were contraband (woodpul ) to . Tho l.&6-ion eels wu bound for Hui Ian Her crew escap- od in l. oboo . . ‘I110 Wench lost the new LOCO-ton collier Pbryne in a. submarine ut- tack oo close to En land that guardsmen were ab e to rescue tho Germany also claimed the des- truction of n Biritish destroyer but gave no other details in a mic-lino communique. The British admiralty made n0 comment on the claim. Tonnage losses rose to 200,504 and the known death toll to 739 when Britain gnnolmced that. l1 seamen were loo with the Huolaido, a freighter reported destroyed Sun- ay. By nations the losses in ships were: Britisn 3i. German 9, Drench two, neutrals I0. Another Polish submarine, the GOO-ton Zbik. limped into Swodish waters today with M men who re- ported they had been at sea. 20 day; without fresh food. The men were interned at Vaxbolm altmg with the crew of two other Polish undersea boats. Reports of a naval enggfiement. off Norway went unconfirm . STRIKES (Continued from page l) 7 1n a steadily ascending starting from zero at the bottom and reaching dizzy altitudes at the t0 ." Specifically. the raids are to be the pound (8154 seven shillings in in 4.47) un i1 March 3i and seven shlllngs sixpence ($1.64) ereotte th r. The rate hitherto was five shillings slxpencc ($1.20). Sir John sliced the existing in- come tax allowances. .'I'he deduction for earned income was made one- sixth instead of one-fifth. with a. mwmum of £260 instead of Allowance for married taxpayers was cut from £180 to £170. Deduc- tion for each child ~15 reduced from £60 to $50. _ This meant that unmarried per- sons making more than i500 and married person; without children making over $170 now were sub- ject to income tax. GERMANS’ PROBLEM GREATER The war. said sir John, "increases the scale in which the national ef- fort and national sacrifice must be measured," adding that. "nothing can prevent the modern war from being the most potent instrument for the destruction of human wealth - - and life.” "However serious our roblem may be." he added. “the f ancial ‘problem that confronts Germany is finitely greater." The pound sterling. he declared, remains an accepted medium of in- tcrnalonal trade while "even before the war" there were “over 50 dif- fercnt kinds of marks, each showing ‘the different degree of depreciat- on." “At present." he went on, "the German mark has no position an international currency andis keiy to lose rapidly its value as an in- ternal currency." Even Sir JOhn's rosiest. hopes of tax realization will leave a gap of ggrhaogs more than £750.000.000 ($3.- 2,5 .000) between this year's rev- enue ahd expenditures which mus be provided by borrowing. Beyond saying that huge public loans would be floated and inflation must be avoided. he ur all to save capital for a new not onal loan when 1t is re . EMPHASIZES NEED FOB ECONOMY I-le emphasized the need for pri- vate economy and promised every effort to assure the nation of “full value for what is spent." O m a 0 i-Iow war costs have risen was gfiaphically disclosed. he said. by e fact that warplanes now cost lay and an army field "costs nearly twice as much." Sir John estimated the new beer taxes would yield 211,000,000 this year and £27,0Q0,000 1n the next full year. He estimated the new surtax roduoe £5,000,000 this year .000 in. the full 194041 year. Among other estimates of increas- ed revenue were:- Tobaco £8,000,000 this year and 6,000,000 in a full year. Spirits 52.000900 and 53.500000. Wines £1,000,000 and £2,000,000. I t! Q- n - N. B. Telegraph Manager Retires After Long Service MONCTON, N. B. Sept. 27-1110 retuement after fifty one yearn of loyal and faithful service of lief-berg iaherty. manager of e Scin John. N. B. ffico of the Canadian National ‘relegrapbs effective Sept.- 29111, and the appointment of G. Whitney as his successor. is an- nounced by D. A. MacNeiil, super- intendent. The appointment of Robert L. mam as inspector at Moncton succeeding Mr. Whitney is also announced. Mr. Flaherty was born at Galois cooste ‘LCJ. Construct; Noncton 3N|Ilgar i a its? Hymns Replace Martial Music In Warsaw szsr. . 21-min- Humns won III, u flnfo“; mili- W1 “i? come “Izaak to Iifiowto toll story of the ‘ in: hours of the German siege. An official Borlln- unoemcn said at 8:17 p. m.-C-:I'f p. m. AHI.‘ —that. the city had sumndocod u "Wiopc-lly andxmbobly would be occupied Semi- J. The station-silent since enr- Monday-returne’ suddenly to tho air at 2:15 p. m. to dea- cribe the “destroyed Inferno" -..l~:.--...-'-.:."- ""1 m m an urn o one u ruins. ‘Flue broadcast The announcer told a story of the deaths of more than 3,000 civ- ilians today, the failure of e city water supply and fear of p W and still of the racism tho Polish troops on the dag of the niece. At that moment, he acid, Gor- man bombing planes were throw- ing incendiary bombs into the centre “I411! to time It loaned u if the studio Ill being shlken vio- Ionily. This is how the announcer des- cribed tho situation in Warsaw: "Food situation is tragic. . Our wu destroyed by today. . . Dead and wounded an lying in the streets because tr tio and oom- munication facilities have broken down. . . Fires raged unchecked. . . . Destruction of the hospital of the Child Jesus shortl before noon calmed tho deaths 1'1 nuns and three physicians. . . Pollsb anti-aircraft guns bro hi! down r 8U. . . eight raiding plane; yes About 500 fires are burning. . . About all that is left to burn is . . All ublic are either aflre or badly damaged. g ou desperate Nazi - in Mme places they have battered their positions with bay- onet charges. . . We expect aid from our allies. . . The city is razed but we live on." .Struck By Train While 0n Guard Duty, ls Verdict CALHOUN N. 3., Supt. $40?)- A coroner's Jury found. today that Lance Corporal Emory Rogers and Private J. Aurelio Cheverie met dea/th Sept. 14 when struck by s freight train while on guud duty at s. bridge near hero. No blame was studied to anyone. Fellows soldiers expressed opin- ion that one of the men had caught his foot between the rsllwa ties and the other guard was U? to help him when the train h t both. Convicts Are Captured After Fast Chase MEINOMINEE, Mich, sect. I — (AP)— Four convicts who fled from the northern M21 Pri- sonutMn uottolli ilodwwore t, and the them on ifht rescued. their uutomoblo overturned on a sharp curve five miles north of Meno- minee tonight. The ,. ollmlxcd o 90-mlle- an-hour chose after the convi to neg: a polite ‘fir-foods at the D0331 en nee on sped away nadir-on. fuciilode of shots. Lady Twoodsmuir Receives Lottor Cf trnak SEYILEMEERJB. m9 ‘ Nourn Passing Cf Uri,- Sophia Dclron Ycctorlcy PM \ ~ A wide circle of friends ' sill. "$1 s‘: if ’ " W85 B light a the h. l1 Gall ca‘ mtg 086D ant and n ., mu‘ will’!!! She made her hon“ w” ‘QWWBIR Sisters survivez, my, '12:: tAnnMartinofthis gym Fffltwes E. Gallant 01' 30,90“ Mo)»: nnd also seven grandchildnn; w “.7135 her “mess MS- 1301mm. us... us“ i» we M- the last rim“ M“ edmauefei-ec his of the Catholic ammo; Daily War Survoyl kThoClnnflnqrhq some. Russia 1| book I “My IS Joachim Von m u" Nazi fore minister, again Moscow. atever may be m4, turc of the Russo-German n“ loom lobed or under negotiation. I8 8.!‘ R0515 is not; going go b. ~ $116110 DGTLIIOI‘ l!) any “fumes” 311w Nazi government now brook the Soviet government with g d“ we of consideration and respect; 11l- 18 entirely new. The mere fact that one of the kev Nazi ministcn e5 l-WO trips to the soviet mp1, kl within s. few weeks “ ‘M’ mianv hasbeen h habit of talking buglnaag wm, o nations on German soil or not 5,1; 811- In thc past this hns been pos- sible because the Nazis held one trump cards. If looks as if tho 00m munista hold the trumps in the pm- mait "m" Prim Minis m, year ago e ter berlain travelled to Germrmvfi op der to confer with Hitlcr and hi; aides and the Munich nitci. sewing the fate of tho Slidctcn aroag of (macho-Slovakia. was made on . iv travelling to Clermanv or mg settlement. f In other discussion; with 0mg nations. 1es= pleasant for the vigil- ors, Hitler hils insisted on delemteg 60min! to Gennanv. Such were m. discussions with Kurt Von Chusdv- ping of Austria prior to the mama. lion of that. country. uriih Roche. of Czecho-slovalrla, w“ to the final desfnvtion oi" mat nnivlm, fin the. eve of the Pcliah invoairm Germany's last UPTPZYIVVOVI’ offer was a demand ihn‘ .~ ‘Polish mne- sentativc come to Berlin. _‘ . Canadian Press Furnishes Four News Bulletins 7i TORONTO. Sept. 25 —(OPi a The Canadian Prses, co-opcro news associiuiou o1 thlrl» Kl ~ dill! newspapers, 1min. u: .1. to the Canadian Broad . poraiion iclir 1.'1-i1l.1.| l 11. .1» bulle- tin; daily for ouch u; ziic wgionl across Canada. The 1111111111115 an pie on the air nlorninu. 110.111, mi - evening and at night. The day -and-i1i1:111. 5CFV1CC luaxk; the final developilu-lil. 1n Claiiadhn Press news 011 the flit‘ fronl tllc W110 when a national 1111211‘. luif-vliii W5 first made fl.\‘fIil1iilii‘_i0 '11P Canad- ian Radio Broadcnslnig (‘villlnlfiflioill in July. 193a. It reviews ‘~ v time bulletins provided in t" graph com anies for 1111- 1111.1 years for istributiou 1o 111d! radio stations as a M011 -,uznp ran ment until CBC “out on air n daytime 1101115. The new; bulletin sci’ available to the CBC wi a; in the national ultvwst. the atop-gap t1a_\"1'11<- hlile véided to the‘ tcllt. r emcn , l 1.» , <, thye “Cggiadiand Plus for‘ "l9 nses of Cfllflllilil’ 11:11, which is done at. Halifax. Moliirvzl]. Vancouver wmnjpeg and Villlctllivof. 3.’; to 1s made out oh as w o ________________. S EE FIRST ICE ice had formct osterdiayfll rain will“ r coped i» zero during i716 Hard or Hearing Canadian Praises Aurine Ear B8188" A simple home trvilillllili “W.” is bringing new hope and [Willi-lag to sufferers everywhere 11 1 _=} N of New Brunswick, \\'I'ilL‘-\- E used one bottle of vWRIN wow BAISAM‘ and it hos bot-ii n on derful help to me. for 501110 111m bwgvl“ l? ‘:31: l’. e a c "h {Jllgltldl did had to havclrwflfli‘ so often that I feared I 1rd" hear lainly again. 11M" "fclhshefltmfl the c ock strike for mi" i radio was a thing DOIRON-In the Charlottetown A a1 com ed Mm Jun. so m“ . AM lfcsnit 1 Sept. 27th. Mrs. Moses w Y "it 9g? more» W" l ‘ma’ M“ ' d m ' i i n1 goo o1 dove. Doironr.‘ 29 Alley Street. axed '16 gltéilrll-lsiv ill" ' m‘! Show“ mwg; Bu" o! the fir“; “f” “ed “p m BT30; cipcercfxintnninfint go n oi- FTDIII ltirégrxaifhnelyclbik: striliiuv illli‘, “w; . _ - - . . yours. Funeral from her late resi by the mum“ murtmem. {jgmg p011? or nealrlnllfl-IDOIB with fice of the Western Union teleitroph on the proiffilmm“ pa‘, en ilffii". Zgaflsleytoshstfiidgunxgtm; cm m zoo Prince Street z M $.11, $3330; afo 301mm in: 5mg ‘gnsatm efloiggg; go"; ggngafiagliieswlllilk elaaaiegrlgvl: orrawa Sept 2a —(o2>> —Ludy 111:2?‘ inntriigngusble “$112515 “Wm - ~ - e . . o , , - ' ' “ , Basilica, thence to the Roman m," s‘; bedroom, Wm, [n39 gram, ‘159-7340989 on Jumpgo Aul- 39- OPeIat/Or and, recognizing his ablYi- gwagigghimlgf“ Iecfiladn‘ gm rewmmelld AURIIN Exfigu-EAIQ C““‘°"° c°m°i°ll~ -——- "W'- - 1""‘"°°° “m”? h“ f‘? H"! ‘1-534-“597” °n Al" 31- 1°”- cnmoap coLoas k511i“? Ydiilgiigisendigntivukiigr 1;? for some fir: wit. m1- infant 55%,‘: 12;“? qreucivwuii will do the" , II - - ~ , Il- iunv-aiaa-g-"Aaqr. 8mg’ §,"°,§,l£1{‘,',',‘,'f,,§,'f"l Ialiffllalrtiaoofrgiiyf. 0:13: rig?! ‘oil-gray DURBAN so———um Arm“ (C?) __ camte dlsutrict commercial {gent drag Isvlglzslgttlgix‘, M‘ mince Staking“: g ." Before ygléoigmtcsl. Iigccwm ~ "m" on Prince sum and I depih of cmnsmn. Aim. _- toe) - ' m“ n" in that camcl un - - give heal-ins de 1- AM s... 1m - invaded Hungary advoncin Favorite for the Durban Gold Clip the takin or th w lines the most northerly po t in the U311“; 1.11m, BALS ' 3 7i feet with n right of way i0 Gordon Bird. an Indian m the d ' R w o! a c. m or A rare hard a N D M L through the Carpathian Moun- Fun,“ “we, Inspect,“ m‘ Blood ma", w“ the m,“ m m_ M1 o R91 was sold two days before 1n the Mgflflnm pgoylnogg by mo British Empire whore any baby hu dam-t he“, you loo. If yvill “d hum :_ . . ac edfl time. Germans reported retreating h“, bfmmimmcn, my ‘ up m, m m‘ “ca, “m, o, m. “nub me rtulnno byhw. {green who has Canadian National nlemphs on been porn. of hearing, have rilwxllggm R 11:3? gii§iin§w$f§pf$eg°io"$,npfl} noon between 3 and 5 o'clock. If ian Army Service 00°11»; when the Wm e up t" a gigiiiii-ligfii.“ he ‘$3 "Kill-lg?- nu¥§51§§°i§a§3 ‘nflfime%uye%hgo' “c? m l“ thixoeduarfsttnfflipf is quick. UNDERTAKER Amt. "l" aldflpglvi-éaggvmgeggggeflfirigsl Mrlliiilil 01"“ M" bm- as NOT our of the isiiut Johgpgffcc on July 1. roi- Lffihe balm, whgl ‘an also b0 d ‘ com only a m} ccfliii: ft gsvbliylroggf, 0°“ __ __ I931 _ _ n eAi-c lnuon ream bukggnd not Pill’ - EMBALMER d Too Late To Clasify iibnmiil“iwiiismii-eigcuhbiiaeimiffi nTM-"vlififir" W» d fiqfnopi. neiifiiisiiri- mwérlwhmwy‘ m” $95,? 51%} m“ “m” I ‘mnmm- and tecomgieelfld - by v c1. n ma. In _________________. - v as manager -——-—-———-——- Mac "Q"; wnmfl" 0mm um am. ‘re ‘ 0:» “Mme”?! m‘ N." phy here, J. aumvanain recalled John office is a native of Saint _ Mnuaotmrm. Australia - (o5) Tn! JENKINS PM“ f FOB SALE-HORSES IN For further riicnlm apply to nlvl Ill . paying with the lads grandfather John. I-Ie entered the lervice of the -er:eorgg gum,“ . mime - l. 65mm; . - in! Percheron Horse a i-a yrs. s. Deslloches, oliclior. Canadian wemn cont, u would have In Ill . Now as, BlfllWl-nlth in Wggtgm n h will" er" 1' B "h ‘I lime mm ‘I'll! “aux/in. mw . '~ PM” m sound well broken $100. Herbert Bunk of osmium... m been "in M» 1M m "In “ ‘ of club for the 80th 1n that of?! £P of: rep I warrior-lulu“ "£30 meuun 1c '~ 2' ween. Ilndorhfon, - n-m-s-sc-cl. nhw” , . m4. ' ' 1.1.1.3. from um. man-Minion! - $22-21. u.