The SUM THE WESTERN GUARDlANl sc.EN’1‘—lisin. John road. 44 Water street E.|lt—Phone 239.1 UMLIEESIDI, AND rnmcs cormn —-"W News, subscriptions. Advertising should be left with Mn. Pond rdhn may be bought daily at any of the following stores in |unmel‘lldeZ- gou Bookstore. Water St. Toronto Bakery. Water st Tha~Guu'disn will be delivered Gnurlien Dru.-;¢ Mark Gnudet. 8?-‘Gr'avl::lile sstti W 310 home in summernlde by . or Buy at 20 Der thy or loo per week. Pinon 239-1 1 thl ye your order lo “M boy responsible for delivegies on :5." In M .This column is reserved for news or local interest but advertising of a newsy nature may be insen- ed at 2 cents I word strictly pay- able in advance, 45 SS FLY SPRAY at Taylrr mg co, Kenslngton, L-11:1. ..1w0P1NG and Roof Coating to k at Braces. . mu “ 5 C L-434-9-17-2i. --WH!’l'E ENAMEL snv Tlkht at Braces. L-484§)§1»;5f’;l;.,d. —BUY DOUBLE ltion. at Bruce's. 14.15‘ —DOING NlCELY—-It Lo pleas. ink to report that Mr. T. A. Mac- IV°"' who “"5 been quite seriously ill at his home in Sulnmerslde is Illflklm 8 l'0Ud reeovery.—s. and single _ 531791 Runs and Dominion Ammun- ' ..s.\\'l~: ‘.20: per box and bring «- mzr.-. blllds. Buy blue new i long range cartridlgels; lat. ' _ K f‘ -l‘R1£E with each Film sent to I —W-‘NTED at once eXpel‘ie1i:‘,(-d iousekeeper, h°m°- Ph°n° 352. Summerside. for Summerside L-18. —lN sr JoTrN_lvlr. and Mrs. L. R. Allen aze vlsitiing in St. mans fcl‘ Develop ng and Print- _;0hn_ N_ B Th“ . ; cu: _«_l x 6 Enlargemsnt. Overnite their daughtér’ ML-VS flgcggginlgg .“:°§ “1‘,".';"lgeD 3“-'E’mId Pm“) 5”‘ her return to Rothesny Girls :L“l~‘”‘ '“ ' ' 'L_‘88l_9_14_l5L -:'Chi§)l at Rothesay near st John ...\iU(‘ll lMr_novr:n——'rhe _ —% ally ir'.5u:is of Mrs. w. 3. Ram- you 0c15gkeF(‘j0)§ceRAc§grHoPiREewiblclatgl . of .\’luipeque will be pleased to am Lllill. she 5 much improved cm her recent illness.—S. DFOX RANCHERS ATTENTION: e have 100 Tens puffed rice omse ground) contracted for, for like Eduard island ranchers. lear co‘.or can be had by mlxlns is lllf.l,i'(‘(.il€llY. w.th your commerc- 'leeus. 9-T3T' - ——CO.\ll’LE'1‘E line of men's suits mi orercoats now on display. very crlera'.(‘l_y priced. Maurice Milli, 'lo~.hlev:, Sumrnerslde. L-926-9-15-2i. of $13“ producing clear colored pelts. ground) rice at all Sunglo Dealers through September—0ctober Novernbe can secure puffed (coarse and 1‘. 9 -TST- tf. --R.E'[‘UR.NED FRJOM OTTAWA —8enator Creelman MacArthur re- turned where he was attending a session 8. last week f.cm Ottawa the Senate. —-MR. AND MRS. George A. Callbeok. the engagement of their da\l‘Ii'l[9'f' Margaret Jean, to Hamid George Speers. son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Summerside, announce __5,N(-Lo (:l—MPR0vEDvr FALL ilam H. Spears of Regina. Mar- .”lL\.(; RA-“ON mm M your rlage to take place early in lcr an cube or meal form. rhls October. L- ewly improved feed insures you _FUNERAL-—?ERvICEs__rhe ear colored pelts if fed accordln - lnsmlciloils. 9-Thu-Sal--TUE-it . ..FORTY HOURS DEVO’l‘l0N— funeral services for Miss Eliza D. Ramsay were held on afternoon from Saturday the Summerside _C -V L 3 H ch ch Presbyterian C_hurch Rev, Wm. "}~a1rl‘3.§T Plolang §o$a?1lpa§§u Fliilrty Verwolr olllclatrne. old menus or the deceased lady attended the curs l wotion on'Sunday afternoon ev. Naznire Poirier, P. P. beinz service. The pal bearers were sislrd bv nlelzhbaurlnz :s.=ts. Roy. F. X. Gallant ES- out Ear. REV. Urban Gillis. Wel- gton, Rev. Dr. Monaghan. Mis- :c1le; and Rev Francis Arsen- lt of the Mission Field of West- n Canada, who is at present <ilinz ris old home in t 3-,, 'I'hgrg was 0 vrw larlze at- ll"1nce. the Forty Hours will close l Tll:sd:ly morning with High 355. v -.\l.-til. COURIERS MEET — no annual meetkilz of the Prince ountv Rural Carriers was . Saturday eveninr. in the Town . summerslde and was very 'gl-ly attzntisd. The president Mr. A. Wotton. nresl"l‘-‘.._ Repe- ntatlves from the Provincial As- riilion were prssent and discus- Messrs. A. S. MacKay, Ernest Mills, Willard Phil-lips, Dr. J. A. Mac- Murdo, Heath Strong, K. C., Char- les Rogers. Interment was in the family plot in the Peoples Ceme- terV.—-S. —IlV[PROVlNG—-The . many friends 011 Mr. Russell Callaghan of Eibbsfleet will be pleased to learn that his condition is a little im- roved. Mr. Callaghan was brought tan the Prince County Hospital last week. with a broken leg and suf- fering from shock, when the wagon in which he was driving was for- ced into the ditch when a motor truck swerved suddenly to his side of the road. Mr. Callaghan has been in n, semi-conscious condition until Sunday. The doctors enter- tain great hopes for his complete , .. D,-;,_,l_9m5 of the rural recovery. owing to his serious H, The question of the mi‘e- condition his fracture has not .53 cm was the main point been set.-S. .t "cl _: <.l but lotking de- -—*— 33...... "Ci.-W;-a ow rrmltfer. The -—MAGls'rrtAra's covar- rclinn cf officers for .the crlmlng it resulted in the following ap- -ntmrnts: Présirlent, Mr. F A. ’ t*n_ Victoria. (re-elected). iv-Pre-=idcnt. Stzmlev Arthur. Al- rtcnz Snort?’-r_v Treasurer. Harty . Cn'~v~"n, st. E‘ean-or=- Record- : o’fl.~>r. Frziswr MacDonald. lcomfield. *1. was decided to hold mail cclurisrs ficnic at Caven- sll next surnrne: 3- -MSSI-‘.l') AWAY SUDDEN'LY— = were slwcksrl to learn of Magistrate Darlby held court on Monday morning when four cases were heard. Two cases of illegal consumption were heard and the parties found lzullty and each fined ten dollars and costs. A man from Charlottetown charged with driv- ing a car while under the in- fluenoe of liquor was sentenced to two months in jail ThLr. was a second offence. A case against a man from O'L»eary charaed wi\' receiving stolen goods was held over. At Alberton on Friday Mag- .ll’ he .<l"""l1 p‘"l'I".’ rt‘ Mrs Ban- ‘istrate Darby heard three cases. Til. of 1\l—w York. who dropped Two for illaral consumption and “ml at the homo nf her brother. one for driving a car without a Tr. Lambert Glllis av Mm Barxtrin was formerly "l‘ir Glilis r\f Nfl<c1l(‘ll':, Mud was “n- brnther. at the time ' Banlon ,nr: 9 l"“"“l’i(‘ul‘ after 'rlllr*‘.l mtrl walked ll”m?. On rut- "-lli the hlcure she ccmrfained l a min arvi f-all to the floor and ’l‘%(\'l away almost immediately ' “ <l~c‘or was called and sa'd t‘li‘l \\-< due to a sudden heart. rl7ur~. Mrs. Benton visits her o'd om» rvetv summor and expected 1 lvturn to New vr-rk this week. ‘Lt l‘..°.rl b"m in her usual health '11 iv»-l attend-ed Church on Sun- li' ‘.\’iurh sympathy is extcned Miscouche horflv before mldn"'ht on Sun- license. Each were given s nom- inal fine. A case against a woman at Miscouche for a violation of the Excise Act was adjourned-—S. War Briefs (Continued from page 1) sources here. that Gennany af- icr uvcu nnlng Poland, will offer to end the war with the 0 l"r twnthw in his sudden western Allies. rsm'cln'!~‘.. Mrs, ‘Rant*n's hus- —-——- W1 nl'."ierea='«d her. The iun- BUDAPEST, Sept. 18 —(AP) ;ll will be held this morning from W ilnhn the Baptist divurd‘.-i Mis- C 0 8. PERSONALS (‘Miss Jeanhnavies left on Mon- ll’ on a visit to Montreal.—8. m*Mr. Flank Maclnnis of Bos- ll is visiting hL; former home in 5llmmerslde.—S_ u~Miss Marian Lockhart of Ken- llkton returned home from Char- .:’1“’"0Wn where she has been vis- * lllz rela.tives.-6. —The Warsaw radio became silent suddenly at 10:10 P. M. (8:10 P. M. ADT.) tonight as Colonel Vlchtv Liclnskl was telling of fighting against Ger- man besiegers in the Polish capital. TORONTO. Sept. 18—ln a wartime setting. the Ontario Legislature meets tomorrow to uuruhal provincial resources behind Canada’: struggle ainst Germany. A meuur... vulously designed to facilitate production of food- ltuffn end war s|IpI7“€ and to aid enlisted men. will be 9“- ~1_Vil=s Alta Cam ll of Gra- ¢,d_ . lznl-Ins Road is actiupbenight aupei'- “Premier H burn, promised Htendent at the , ince County the co-opera on of Conserva- ‘lsllllal for Miss Cameron. who age, 9,", Indlcgtcd ll on sick leave.-8. ‘Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Morrison °l Windsor. Quebec. arrived on tlve 1 that all Ontario munlci ali- tles will be asked to pure own their administrative ooetl and nee itself will mat: a 5“ the mouljdfiil on a visit to Mr. Mor- um; gmm, J ll! parents. Mr. Ind Mrs. _..._. “mes A. Morrison. senior.—8. _ -—-— now.-:. sent. 18—G|nselrno we zlllrs. John Murray who lmd"' nutlnninl, Foreign Under- mlll a serious operation in the swnun, M, be... mm“ 1;. lm C9 County Hospital is so far sllsn Am or to umaon. “MM as to be able to 163" it no umounoed ton ht. The "‘° hospital. she is oonvslesci at ""3 llllrne of her sister Mrs. ar- lgrgfgéllgr. Harvard street. surn- b,.,,,,,, yuigg. Minister. _ '*'—" AW 3 18—Prtme M 7g’!!! Delezarde of the staff of "am fi'..,...‘3‘.'a‘; mu; ma "8 Alllladian Nations. Fox Brloed- M. 0,“ wgfg 1.. cnblncl m Mfoclation is ting friends ""10, 1, , gm. 1.; ch“. gt M re. l.-:..r.r.*;““‘o& :2: ...'.‘a‘...'.'.‘..i.°"a'.: "‘° star: of the Experimental ' I1il|i_ hndbee no! t Me my when Clount l')|lno Grnudi in Government IWO 1“ fun» was was amrare mi afiaufilfif‘ according to well-informed Kuty.) ed the Soviet Union has at least TODAY IKO lAD|O'l GIANT [NOW 0! INOWII ALSO srioi-i‘ sunsscr snows AT 3.30—'l.0o—o.1¢ S Ulfllvlllilielulu BUFFER STATE _(Continued_fl,‘.°m.-D6«8le 1) Ill-Dted by the collapse of the Po- llsn slate and to assist the pop- ulation of Poland in recorlst.ructir~_1 conditions of their state existence.’ First reports said had taken Dulbno and ’I‘a.mopol in the Polish Ukraine, Barancrwicze, a rail centre 50 miles inside the Po- rsh frontier and Glelbokie. north- east of Wilno. (Paris reports said Wilno, Lith- uanian capital which Poland seiz- ed in 1920. had been captured by the Russians. Rumanian frontier Glspatches said the Soviets took ‘figure being a. bhisti ,“Gunga Din” Thrills ,Larg Audience At _ capitol Theatre S’side I ‘ “GllD8a Din" a sensational screen drama of British army life in India. lwlth romance. adventure and im- tuous headlong action, thrilled 0 ll-We audience from the open- llnii scene to the last dramatic mom- en when Gunga. sacrifices his life for his chief the Capitol at Thellhfi last evenirig. ' The RKO Radio eatum Ls adapt- _ed from Rudyard ..'{i ling’; famous i 23. its central . or ental water-carrier. ho develops from a. humble servant into a heroic fight- ingoman, minatinz the adventures of Gunga Din are three sergeants, a. st-ronx—arm scra ping trio who meet an attack by tri: smen of the mur- derous cult of Thusee as a British military patrol advances from a British outpost. The Plot includes a uest for a secret treasure b the b isii and his pals, a love in w ich one of the ser- geants is enmeshed, and 3 finale which shows the imprisonment of the four adventurers by the native rebels. terminating with an assault by the white infantry on the Thug herdquarters, Cary Grant Victor M:-Larzen and Dourzlas Fairbanks. Jr.. fill the roles . of sergeants Cuttcr, Mlcchesney and Ballantine_ with Sam Jaffe cast as Gunga Din. and Joan Fontaine as the Kill in the drama. Zalcsczlcyki and Snlatyn on the border and were drivirw toward Foreign military experts estimat. 2,000,000 soldiers on her western front and that between 500,000 and 1,000,000 obably were partilcipat- ins: in P0 and. Poland '5 Grzyrbowski. Ambassador. Waciaw received instructions from his government to leave Mos- cow.in protest. There was no im- rlriedlate indication when he would eave. British and French diplomatic! missions still awaited instructions from London and Paris over the lZ€‘W€Si4 develop-m-ent of the war. When he informed 24 other na- tions of the Soviet march, Premier t S t. rat the Falkland Islands, ‘ t ulation over the army's subsided when tinued reports that an mlglll be proposed as soon as Po-‘. land's fate has been se Germany and Russia. German aircraft the assert/:d:—— “It is gratifyi to greatly superior in performance the German." Vyacheslaff Moiotoif told Britain and France that Russia intendedl IO rema n neutral. He cl land th ‘ Soviet intention was to gcmtect C e l seat of the Polish Government. and 11.000000 Ukrainians Russians in Poland. hc White Excitement of the Russian po - and they no longer feared war with Germany. soviet, newspaper in their war gave the bulk of | dispatches. | reports space to Berlin Diplomatic quarters heard con- armistice ‘- RUSSIAN ACT (_(3>_rjltiflled :from__Da£re_i_) here still was a disposition to be- lieve Russia was not playing in with Ce:-many so much game of her own. as playing a Meanwhile a communique proud- ly related exploits of the Royal Air Force both on lan tailing how one South African pilot ‘ d and sea, de- ank 9. U-boat. Iwarm the blood and stir the pulsss -of all true lover< of adventurous ro- mance. It is unioue in carrying the spectators on waves cf stormy action into a land of almost advance some time today and were approach- easy corner of Poland. Zaleszczyki Viewed from any angle. "Gunga Din" stands out in bold relief as a thrillintl melodrama warranted to its appeal. unbelievable extremes. of parzeantry and poverty. of rzorlzeous palace‘ and gionmv retreats of stranne heart: and rrallant warriors: in vista of fancy far removed from the everyd-av. commonplace existence cf gle avere ge dweller in drab civiliza- on. Polish Resistance (Continued from page 1) ZTe2s—mzykl.’»rlvhlchVVwasV 1; temporary Sniatyn. Military observers believed the Russians had reached Kolomija. ins Kuty. (These town: are all in the south- NAVAL SHIP __(ge1tinued from Egg 1) his duties at Buckingham Palace when the Naval Reserve was called up, being posted to the Courageous. The Courageous was one of Brit- a.in's oldest Aircraft Carriers. Or- iginally launched in 1916 u I erul. ser, she was converted between 1924 and 1938 into I motorship for us- going planes at a. cost of £2,000,000. She was the first British warship to so down in this war. sub Perishel The first brief communique by the Admiralty said the attacking submarine was “Heavily attacked by destroyers and is believed to have been sunk." This led to the theory that the commander of the German U—Boat, spotting the big floating air base which presumably was engaged in convoy work in cooperation with destroyers. decided to take the 1,000 Nazis Resume Battle For Polish _(_lapita| (By Melvin Whlteleather, Associa- ted Press Staff Writer) . Sop‘. iB—Oe'rman and Russian army officers were draw- ing up an occupation line for lh<L‘..‘ armies in Poland tonight as it was reported the Nazis resumed Lllelr batt force the leto WEal’SlW. Detachments of the two armies of occupation met at Brest-Lit-f ovsk. the fallen Polish city where surrender Rlussian revolutionists and Ge mans signed their separate peace in the last war. (Officers wearing the Nazi swas- l tlka eiochanged friendly greetings L MERSIDE ‘GUARDTAN AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE lA lVIIJ'I'IJAl. CODIPAIUY A IlOIl'I' ll. LAPTHORN and L S. STEVENSON District Mlnnger-3, of in _ ‘. _.._.... 1-. I “ll Richmond street. Charlottetown All. PROFITS FIJI! I’0lI(Yl-!0I.l)EIl§ War—25 Years “3°_“1"al GERMAN SUB I.I FE ERANCE RSINKS torpedo at the hoping to escape. pounding of shells charges directed at her by the de- the full complement of the Cour- ageous plus the personnel of the fleet air arm--normally 48 planes had a When sunk she or crew.“ Whe:e the Courageous went down against U-‘mat. attacks." This was taken to mean she had been conveying merchantmen as well as carrying planes in Britain's efforts to drive en-emy. submarines and shipping from the seas. Six Newer Carriers The loss of the while a severe blow. Brita‘n with six other. mower air- craft mrriers—the Albattoss. Royal. Eagle. Furious. Glorious and Courageous. Great is on the Polish-Rumanian front- ier about 30 miles frc-m Russia's western border, Sniatyn is about 20 miles further in Poland to the on almost a direct line. Kolimija. is just north and east of Snlalyn.) Soviet tanks and motor-’zed force: apparently planned to occupy the territory :1 lg the entire length of the provin:e of Tnrnopol. through ward driving German troops were “mod and mm, mm} they wag. reported 50 kilometres (about 31 miles) from Kuty. Obrervers con- sidered it likely the German and Russian forces in southeast Poland would meet at the Polish-Hungarian frontier. Russ’ans "Against Germans" Major W. H. Colbem. United D35Cl‘iblYlE all e“°°'~’-"W" Wm‘ 3 State: military attache in Poland. communique know was to I hat the R. A. 1". mach e reported a Russian tank command- er iold him the Russians were “a- I gainst the Germans." lqulckly . " Major Coibern had crossed the The minister of information also Dniester river in Poland yesterday. announced that a. British warship . landed 33 captive German sailors Russians and gave them cigarettes. ) to be in- erncd. The bulletin said they were from the ship Carl Fritzen. sunk off lsouth America Sept. 4. l i Windsor would take up a staff pointment abroad as a major gen- eral in the ill‘ Courageous thrilled to stories of heroism of Bri- tish seamen who sang and joked af- ter lsrapfrw to the sinking ship. visit the two princeses at. )3 Castle. Scotland. Queen Mary ruled a messarze from Marlborollilh House t~ British women explresslnz “admiration at the way my cou - -trywcrnen have come forwlll‘ TO TAKE APPOINTMENT Another development tonight was he announcement that the Duke of all‘ m . The public. shocked the sink- ng of the veteran alrp ne carrier by a Gemtan submarine sea from The Kim received Ernest Brown. Rona minister of labor. and air Lindsay. former ambassador to the United States. ioni ht g . left London to Queen Elizabeth almorel in their thousands to give help in the I present emergency.’ Steel corporation ‘Head Dies At Home l 1 i mow rolur. Sept. 1il-(A.P)- Charles M. schwab. 77. Ohainnan of the Bethlehem steel Corporation, died tonight at his Park Avenue apartment. Schwab returned here recently from Europe. He had been in ill health several times within the past five years. His wife died Jan. 12 at the age of 79. Two months after her funeral. he closed his home which for decades has been a landmark on Riverside Drive. Al- the same time he closed his other homes at Lorettlo, PL. and Bethlehem. Pa... and n molllh 169'»? put the Riverside Drive mansion up for sale. >_ It was assumed that lodI!'| gcgslrm, which opened 51 Chi’!-‘O o'clock this aflemoon and lot until nearly 11:30 tonight with "1 gdjournment for dinner. discussed the Russlsn Invaulon of Poland. but it was not be- lieved that development ne- negotiated the Inn! meetlns. ._____ BELGRADE. Yum-lull. Heat M + m—aaaIo rllsn-Wits W" 3.ch.,.a-st, Iurrmnia. tonltht uld ihui Soviet force: I - in; westward throlldl 00'1"“ em Poland ll ‘'95 "5 Polllhdl "- he said. the I . Five more are under con- them the For- awav while being 18. She is being midable. ran launched at Belfast Aug was not damaged and now ttled by southwest; Kuty 20 miles further preuued for sewgce to 1 odds against him by firing a Courageous and Just what happened is shrouded in Admiralty secrecy. But it was conjectured that the U——Boat pier- ced the ring or destroyers by a dangerously deep dive_ came up to the surface to release a torpedo at the unsuspecting aircraft carrier-— and perished through the terrific and depth stroyers. The U—Boat commanders] be; bombe big game had succeeded--and fail- "K d °' 5h°”°d' The Ministry of Information said --was “About 1,200 officers and men_ reduced complement of aircraft and there- fore presumably a somewhat small- was not disclosed. The Admiralty Russian armies would not go. Reports were heard here to Bohemia and Moravia in what Warsaw as the capital. About 120 miles to the west of Brest-Litovsk t_he attack on War- SEW began again, D. N. B. (Ger- man news agency) reported. It was not stated whether the city was Poles Refuse To Surrender The WP0l’l€d action at Warsaw followed the asserted failure of the Poles to send a negotiator to dis- cuss the capitals surrender. The Germans had been waiting since 10 D. m. Sunday for the emissary and during that time hostilities had ceased at Warsaw. chnncina the United States neu- said she had been «perm,-m1-as trality law. Officials declared that Vela, good service In pmtecung any change which would make it ships of the mercantile marine P05-Slble for Great Britain and France to obtain arms "could only mean the first step toward the Salted States’ entrance into the ar." While the R1L<sia,n and German armies pushed their occupation of Poland. informed quarters said several general points already had been agreed upon. Among these were:— 1. No Polish state exists. 2, From this fact. the two gov- ernments draw the natural con- sequenccs 3. The two Governments are agreed the situation of minorities under the former Polish Govem- ment demands revision along the lines of ethnlcal (racial) develop- ment of each minority. cerned with fixing a line in P0- land beyond which the German and lllf.'.‘.t and shelled R.h'elm;_ British th t ; 0.’ Ge th ' the best the Poles could hope fgr‘ ”_“*:*fl_“_€.5.‘_‘“‘.‘“i was a possible protectorate similar, used to be Czecho-Slovakia, with with officers bearing the Com- "‘““‘5" hammer and slnklm (By The Canadian Press) l -—-—- The two commands were con- : Sept. 19. i9lai~Germans in their ‘Bil '1'r“"-OR HENRY’ (Associated Press Staff Writer) PARIS, Szpt. la »(CP)—France report-ed tonight it had sunk her fitst enemy s:‘:marlnce since war was declared against Germany. A general staff ctmlnullque re- ported the attack on the submarine was carried out “with success." Tile rommuliique illdlcated the only action on the western front‘ today consisted of artillery bom- invasion of Franc: (‘fllitured Beau- l . ..n _ A _ _ lbnulh Alllciln troops ccculilcd part 1 Stock Markets First Set-back bardment concenttating on the [ , Saarbruecken sector. JSUICG War Began Artillery Active _,_g l Tile communique said:— "Artillery activity on various (Canadian Press) Traders took to selling on North American commodity and saock ex. changes yesterday and prices mm- bled on every mart. The New York stock market. suf- fered 1L5 worst setback since the “A: boom got underway nearly points of the front, particularly in the region south of Saarbnueckcn. “An enemy submarine has been attacked with success by our na- tional forces " It obviously meant action by heavy French batteries in the Wamdt forest which form the . . l1ll\‘3P Weeks ago and recentl bu - In Berlin. German officials my 1551,55 d_,: ed y W blwkbolle Of French l1~'»ll11e'l’l’ Slip‘ watched closely proposals :0 ‘mp ‘mm 51 1037- port for the entire Saanoruecken r 1“d“5m515' 3°!“-'* “d W59 me?" sector on the western front. sis retreated on the Toronto stock exchange while Western oils show- 0d_a little more resistance, weak- enlnz only slightly. Declines frnrn fractions to more Phall W0 Dolnts were recorded in ll's'hl. tradlmz on the Montreal stock market. Conspicuous losers were_ National Steel Car, Dominion Bridge and Consolidated smelters. Wheat prices slumped as much as '2 1-2 cents a bushel on the Chicago Grain lvlalket but then rallied about one cent_ Liquidation credited to overseas interests and hedgers depressed An earlier communique merely said: "There is nothing to report." The general staff has consistently announced almost daily successes during the first two weeks of oration on the 100-mile -rmthern flank. (A German communique describ- ed the western front as quiet, ex- cept that a French plane was shot down ) German Reinforcement: From East Military dispatches said heavy wheat fixtures more th t on wanna. ......*e.:a.°.°..*;. razor: :::t.:::.°.°*;‘:;‘.*: ":::..*°“;.l2; White House . n . 1‘ Additional l;‘rne'nch and British 700115 mvved to th arm of th Mhsinot line, entelrirlae the Meginog fortifications zfmm tunnels for be- . l thellneandoutofraneeot 'I'h.g number of survivors could (Officials would not say whether 0 f H 5 arm! not ho fit’?/.‘l'l'l'll"‘l"(‘l until other ves- this meant complete or modified 7x'vla"§$ was no 'im4:-atlrm cg gm, Fe‘s TIHVP l9"l°l'l€d W9 1'“““b‘’-’ ff! '§°V°mm°m' f°“ the m‘“°" number of German divisims arriv- thev picked up. 95‘ km from poluui The “um one survivor said those members swim o the crew who could not supported thernselves with p'eoes of rescued. "‘She immedlatelv began to list to port." he said. "and within five minutes l'~e Captain "ave orders to abandon her. and after her bows had submerged and her stern had cocked up into the a.ir she actually foundered within 15 to 30 minutes after ‘oelnlg hit. some boats on the starboand side were got out but those on the port side could not be used as she heeled over too survivors were post- t f th L15 S O c tears were mixed ed and iov and in the crowds arolmxi the bulletins. I Polish troops fratemlzed with the lrrhere were Jgyfuljgluuorns and mere French. British and other foreign. envoys to Poland have cro=sed the border as well as the French and British military missions and are were relatives who turned away in l tears and disappointment. Struck Without Wnrninl survivors said the Courageous struck without warning al- on their way to the Rumanlan CED‘ though me submarine was quickly ital. The Rumanian-Polish border is the scene of confusion with a steady stream of fleeing refugees and Pol- ish troops. All through Sunday and Felwhed 0'19 today they were c'imbi.ng Coman- ti's hilly streets in the rain. Polish Troops Cross Frontier Polish troops, especially air force men_ and equipment including 2'10 Polish Army planes, crowed the ifrontler. The Poles were being in- ltemed by Romanian military au- thorities. The Cernauti Chief of yolice es- timated at least 100.000 Polish re- fugees crossed the border in auto- mobiles, on bicycles, horses and on foot. and the stream of humanity ‘still came winding across the bridge through the Rumanian countryside and then up Cemautis 0013519" stone streets. l When the Russian tanks appeared villages. they were welcomed by inhabitants of the countryside who had the mistaken !belief the war was over. seriously wounded Polish airmen filled the military hovpital here. Concentration camps for fleelnfi Polish troops aprons up overnlsllt A constant stream of Romanian troops marched toward the front- ier. The uncertainty of the future weighed heavily on the nation. in some Polish ____________ STEAMEB. nulmr:n'"'° " 1=‘R.ANCl.SCO.t Bel) lB——(AP) ——Th§ marine exchanile Skid 90¢“ the steamship Redwood was defi- troyed by fire off Eureka and the spotted after the attack. There was a moderate sea and. it was still daylight The Captain's secretary said he of the destroyers ef- swimminz 40 m"'~‘ltes. "EVOYY ter 4. The task of each government to bring about a new order and establish quiet. impossible realization and their treaties with Poland have become pointless. ‘I. France and Britain once ain are faced with the question why they want to wage war against Germany. It was said officially there was a possibility the Poles migl be allowed to hold a small strip of territory as B. buffer between Ger- German sources disclosed plans were beinnz made to absorb Poles in west Polandinto the Reich in- dustry which badly needs laborers. The Polish campaign was said to be considered by the army corm- msnd as won so units of the air force were sent to the west last the ti Frank Knox. terdny. the day before sider the Administration 1871 revamping the Neutraliy ments to beliijrerents. between Germany, Russia and tular heads of the Republican Party. Alf. M. Landon and Colonel He obtained their readily-given consent to attend the meeting yes- Congress convenes in special session to con- Law, which now embangoes arms 5h1p.l reporters that "rlft" had developed in the ranks of administration sup- porters on the question as a result of the reccnt signs of friendliness pan. The Administration's cash and Carry plan, under which United $copeBroadened for JE- body behaved with calm and men cracked jokes." he said. "There was no panic or disorder " A communiovw Mnlwht reviewing their air atrol n‘ the S835 88-ld “many su have been found and attacked. some ‘link and others severely damaged ‘with little opposition from the German airforce." Plane Sinks U-Bolt arines" The communique also gave an eyewitness account by a Soul}! African flier tellim how 'he sight- ed a submarine‘ two miles away. approached under cover of 8 Cloud and sank the craft with bombs. The scene of the battle was not disclosed. He said he opened fire at a man on the conning tower. His first bomm hit the water 15 to N yards ahead of the maxim as it mmdly evlhrv<*rr1°Vl. and the explosions blew her back to the surface, the said. His account con- tinued:-— "The nearest bomb of my sec- ond sallvo was a direct hit on the submarirle‘s portside and there was a colossal explosion and her whole stem llftcd out of the water. she divided into the sea at an ansle of 30 deil'l'€9S-" It was recalled that the British warship slink by a Ger- man submarine in the last war was if M. s. Aboukir. she was de- strowed in September. 1914. Two other warships. the Hogue and Cres.-ly. went to pick up survivors and they also were sunk. The total crew of about 20 had been picked ill) in life boats by the lumber 5"‘? Ill: Redwood, of 3'19 ngtgximmlz ""°“‘°"‘ “ll. "alfa“it'?a"a‘é’a“ uaoe¥"’e.aa left here yesterday for Eureka. Calll. _______,___ seamen wan VET REJECTED -lonomo. . ll%—Mal°r 1’- Ciecll-Smlth lea er of the Mac- Kenzle-Papineau Battalion whic. (ought with Government forces in the Spanish civil war. said today he had been reiected by a medical examiner because he was short- l ted “Q mink they were referring to my eyesight." said the one-time Tbronto new5-l>fil¥?l‘m°~ll- Illnllflkilllvllll. loss of life in these incidents was about 60 officers and 1.400 men. SYDNEY SEAMAN RESCUED SYDNEY, N. s.. Sept. la-(O'P)- The family of Redmond MacDona‘d. 2i-year-old Sydney seaman aboard the Brltih freighter Kafiristan. re- ceived word today he had been res- cued alter the torpedoing of the ship on the North Atlantic Sunday. His father, Capt. Btcphen Mac- Donald. recelved a wireless saylnlz he was among those taken aboard nilrht Military activities in Poland were relatively minor awaited the across the marshes and mountains of eastern Poland. while Russians No news was Elven stantiai Polish sources said th lan foo said earlier only remaining sub- forces. But military i ’“’”W at in the Carpath- W‘ thllls the right wing of the iurther into southern army pushed the oil fields. taking Drohobycz on me Tysmienica Riv portant. oil centre l the rescue ship American Farmenl Young MacDonald joined the Kaflristan here called for bunker eocl. {Vi/ornen Dig Defences For in August: when she 1 Younk xx-nrnon |'ll'l"lllll:iln‘illr~‘ in ill‘ a M‘ m we mm‘ of ‘M after Mayor Jase St.'\rz_\'ns lm lssurc an pun . . These _w~,“ng man nnrl \\'0l"l]l‘ll, rushiorl to the nutsklru to (ill trench the onslaught of ti“ Cerman arm 83. ‘n defence. . which they hoped would stem about the battle north of Lodz where Ger- mans were squeezing the to or. the most im- of the region Germans coming be States markets would he opened to all beiligerents who my carlh and furnish ships forthc ':\“n»-portation of their purchases. (gs "not so P0l>u1&l"' among Roosrrolt support- ers as it was two weeks ago. he said. This was due. he added, to the possibility that war goods and lather supplies might be shipped i'rnm the United States to Go l'n.=firved that Germany could not act supplies here btcause of Great Britain's naval power in the At- lantic ()_c‘e-an. FllOilldf‘l’ll’lf: .<ll0\'f.‘lS. able estim tea in P '15 . ed the Gfizrman ear hawinmxgco 5. Germany and Russia alone hmd fit mo" than 7° d‘ °l' are interested in the reccrnstruc- WASHINGTON, Sept. la —(A.P) mm” “°‘g""’°”‘°°" °l 1000-000 tion of this area. for in every re- —In an unusual step which recal— Mmmw ewe“! M spect the fomler Polish state was led‘ his recent plea for “national the bane} that ‘ 7° the natural sphere of influence of unity" on problems arising from rand after bl °°"mt‘7 1 17°‘ Germany and Russia. the second Great War. President be inucod b‘;n'§a°‘$%“""°dv °°’“1'-1 6. The contention of France and Roosevelt today broadefled llhe gm“- Cvveat Britain that they must corne comi White House conference on A‘ sud, I to the aid of Poland has proven an nellltrality legislation to include "'°° "‘ Heaviest German relnforpaunents were said to be moving into pan. tlons around saarbruccken the rich 1i_ndustr;i1a.l 1‘ any whose ‘defence: orm t e to 19; en ,e¢1,_,, of the nortleiyern Hulk?” 1 To the southeast the Fnemh 19. ported Germans were showing in- creasing activity, their natcmis op- wratlne along the Blles River test- ing positions in the narrow man “.1 Rmgla ban, this me. While preparations for the ses- pen 5 great, deg} on me amgude slon went ‘on, Senator Borah (Rep-' g]t?aeMBll1elsu5 Zmnifihhy.” 11% the Poles assume" W*“°l- Wfimsllle 10° of the Ad- stream called the Mandel River Gerrnsny Needs Laborers ministration plan of revision told msmmha, said that Gemin rnldlmz parties. seeking to 10¢”. the most advanced French tions. crept along the um; of litklnlz advrmtare of cover in nu’ woods, . thickest on the slopes that fall s- ' way toward the Mandel. The French ‘I5-millimetre g-uxu gm reported to have laid heavy re an the woods in an effort to make the area too dangerous for German manoeuvres These dispatches said the French ' by way of Russia and Ja-1‘ ls scone rnlllnod from W.1r.<:nv. “Cid lllllll<‘l'.‘v'. coupled with yng-1- tions the French have taken dlur. 1116! the last two weeks apparently trained fire superiority. at leggy go’,- the moment. ' r ECCLES. England—(CP)-— Bar. “A : Hitherto. it has generally been imam pow1e5_ aged two drowned in {six inches nf water in a washhouse ‘tub here. The child was found by Ill" l'l'rlY(‘nt% with her face immersed n__t_h(- _water. 7 Warsaw _ Th» photo was tnkcn sllnrlli city in enlist in its dr=:<pcrate \