MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN MAXI M6 OFA MERE MAN lslwtlwé ‘in: ivfifoilfli 3‘%/ //// ““"°“""" The P°°P|9$ P5P" W’ Everybody C (lovers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew " ° I pbnlottotown Guardian 'l‘ ‘I0 Cents. Iollllnl. Guardian, "' 18M. cnARLorrerowN, ICANADIA, sArlJlmXv, WCCTOBEZIIKH 1, first; 121 llAGESl Annual Subscription Delivered $0.011 B1 Moll-P. n. l. $4.00; Cnnudu llntl c. l. seeo ‘PEBQE +¢+0++¢+o4++ MA“, nscammmonemeos . P075}! 11111 11111111111 "=11 111111111 11111111011111 I Noon Tod ay Said Deadline — Prague Accepts M u n 1 c h Partition Plan. PRAGUE. Sept. 30-(AP)-'l‘he Czechoslovak Government, alter bowing under protest to the Mun- ich partition accord. received a new Polish note tonight calling for immediate l ._ Poland's territorial demands. Poland has asked the Czecho- slovak Government to evacuate all Czechoslovak territory inhabited by Poles. (In Warsaw. the Polish Govern- ment was understood to have set noon tomorrow 17 A. M. AST) as P\ a deadline for answering its de- mands. Polish authorities have not disclosed just what the de- mands were but the region gen- erally mentioncd is Teschen Siles- 111.111 area. of 772 square miles where, most of the Polish minority (of approximately 100,000) re- sides.) Extra police and soldiers wercl drafted to curb demonstrations a- gainst the Munich accord aft r . . General Jan Symvy. swycapnfd Commissioner for FITS: Britialn hin Cwlllllgfil. 1:15 soldier premier, announced the °°£$§F._§1EI£“"°“ ‘ma’ s s 0w“ w y - Sir Gerald Campbell, newly appointed High 1111 11l11ygl1= eve >o++o+44 a Seeks Territory QQ~O+§44++O4§¢ f eturn i Government's decision to surender ‘rludetenlsnd to Germany in face of "a superior fol-cc which has compelled Us to accept." No Clashes Occur ‘W's are ready to give our blood —do11't give _in" "we want the whole 1'epubllc—\re want to fight" the demonstrators shouted. Police used peaceful persuasion to quiet them. 'l‘l1cre were no clashes. The Munich agreement was pub- lishd here for the first time to- night. The nation was reported to avg ceivejLiLeaInlly as a whole. 1111111 c111 1111s 111111111111: While on patrol duty early this morning City Police Officers 11o- ticed three young nlen prowling around in the rain in the vicinity of King null Queen Streets. On fur her scrutiny 1t was noticed that one of the 11ml had a sus- picious bulge under his coat. De- tnining the men the officers found (Continued on page 13, Col a) CQHINCI {Vfllll TnLkiog nnd Dance Bmdnlbane it Warden 11-1845-10-1-31. two blocks of butter. Two of the men were taken into custody but ‘O hmu_Malpequi_vllgigx_lleg?lalié'i_ the other suspect made Food his __i escape. our-awe‘ C" _ Police inter discovered that I. paud LTii;‘l‘§,“.‘i%Y1.31_ railroad ear had been broken into and upon investigation it was iound thnt the goods had been tampered with and that the but- ter in possession of one of the arrested men was some of the brand contained in the car. A good description was obtained nl the third pnrty and police last. night were still on the lookout for "Phllathea rummage sole. Bap- tlslecllool mu, Saturday, on. a. I QCIOCK. LIQSB-ll-BO-Zi "Rummage le, St. James Hall, "under. 0c r 1st, 1 P. M. - v L~1929-9-'.l0-l0-l_ _....,.1_._ "Borden Line Club loading hogs mbs. calves every Tuesday. Hours m‘ ' P || Q0 ,4 ll‘ to 8. L-filii-lll-M-Z-ii-ti. ,MT5"‘;§‘,:::L;“"°°' "‘ ° °" " "Reserve Thursday, October 13th for Clllckcn SUDDPII‘ _ 1i Miltolrla Hall. ‘ ‘ __ L‘ "“'°'""" i"‘“" Commerce Chamber hlcken supper and Dance, st. Tenses Hall. October 5th. Wcb- Elects Offlcers “M's Orchestra. L-198'l—l0-1-3l. -i "De __ M . I I SEICNIORY CLUB. Que. Ilmcklgfi? wcdnesdxlifilctgrfinhcrng‘ . Stpt. J0 -|l(.P)-.l. Stnnlcy Mc_ 193g [_;_1‘9(,,_;__10_1_4_6: Lenll of Foronto was elected president today of the C2111- udinn Chnmber of Commerce, succeeding George McDonald of Montreal. Robert P. Jellett oi Montreal was chosen chairman of the exo- cutive committee, taking theplaol 000' held during the lost year bl’ Henry ‘ti. Morlznn of Montreal. Other officers included vice- prcsidents George Graham. Kent- "Kcxlslngton talkie-s Tuesdayu L-IllYXi-IO-l Si. I I l e Christian Hill afternoon L. ll 1141mm Church a“ ldolodg, "Parcels for Protestant Or- Enlite runlmoge sale will be called for, Phone 151. ville, N. .; R. . cLean, 5-2010-10-1-31- sum Jolm. 1v. n: c. n. n. Long- ———— u. on 1 ttetown. mrmwmil’ WW1 every Tuesday- wolflalionolarchnnclllors; Col G. aeYlnfl P1081105! rrwrkct prices W- m. r1111, cnnl-lnltetown: . x. n WWI". R4166 V8110 Warren, Halifax; K. O. McLaugh- L-190ll-9-90-l0-4. 00s p!“ ____—_ 3411i "lnesdayijdanc: till. vlillriagg mind Sennelders. If not fine next hlshi. ‘ L-lm-lo-l-ai. “(Ion-cert and dance, refresh- mtnt-"Ljood talent, good music. Frill-ll Mail Couriers Association. "fifth Wlltahire Hall, I p. m., Oct. "b. Admission m. 11-1953-9-80-21. "308 growers please note we do not lln, Edmundston, N. B. PARIS, Sept. tie-Premier Dalaxlier, strengthened by l. “time . nlent ¢1'1§.‘lligii"”§“§§,§§§},§¥,,,l§'c5?§d rush oil public support. as he Blind Boers, sh mm“ n m" returned today from the four- "Tslnisation gnu ate;- con emned power conference at Mlmkh. unflt for human consumption, summoned parliament for an llwh unfortunate losses must be extraordinary session Tuesday on to the shipper. Live to ratify his part in the dis- Wck Marketing Board, memberment. of Czechoslovakia 21-1965-19-1-31- for the sllke ofigengif-sl passe. "L" —-'-'-' _ A demonstrat on e111 us- hm W33}; Iggrrolgetlneagoertrll] r1535,‘ iasm greeted the Premier upolfl 10m] shlpping clubs as ‘allows. his srrivagfiat Le Iitoursettvgor “WWW afternoon Baltic. Bourts. “dd n a" p' m l er l lht Si, peter‘ More" ‘Murray my“: hour and 35 minute flll flail: .':..:.1:‘ ...'l1r1l2ir*i.1::.= "lllitiétlfkr wm-o - Kcnsinton, Charlotieloirn, 1111111“; cabinet 1o deliver a report on his llll"lOl‘. ‘Tile milrlisiers. who had been report: 11s the in- zlzirl. radillbflne‘ afternoon 12-3. sharply divided over y. Please list stock lth 1 1 "firs. 1.-1oiivu-1o-i’-°1'1..i b that the bulge was occasioned by ' [View Accord With Disfavor (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) MOSCOW, Sept. 30—"France has lost. her greatness." This statement, broadcast by the Comintcrn Radio Station today about Russia's ally, sum- marized the disfavor with which Soviet. circles viewed the four-power accord reach- ed ln Munich. In official quarters the news of- the Munich settlement plainly was unwelcome. It. did not come as a. sur- prise, though, sine-e Moscow newspapers had been predict- ing that Prime Minister Chamberlain would "stretch a bargain with Hitler" if it was humanly possible. Moscow, probably the calm- est capital in Europe during the blackest days of the Czechoslovak crisis, outwardly was calm today amid world- wide excitement over the Mun- ich agreement. IS BUNFIIJENT BRISISlASSEIJ WASHINGTON. Sept. 30—(AP) -Prcsider1t Roosevelt. by or‘- rlmglug to leave the capital to- morrow for a rest at his Hyde Park home, attested tonight his confidence that the European crisis is at an end. But, silll carefully watching the European situation, he conferred again to- day with State Secretary Hull, and then met his cabinet H1111 told reporters the accord reached in Munich had brought with it s. sense of relief. but thnt now the statesmen of Ilurope should work together for o. lasting peace. "It is to be hoped," he said, "that in any event the forces which stand for the principles overnlng eaceful and orderly nternatlona relations and .eir proper application should not re- lax, redouble their efforts to maintain these principles of order under law; resting on a sound i economic foundpgon. France Hails Daladier, Parliament _Is Summoned tcmatbnsl crisis. united to. approve his action unanimous- Parliament then was called for Tuesday. Political sources said the Chamber of Deputies . and the Senate probably would meet only for s single day t0 receive the ministerial declar- ation on the crisis. The cabinet will meet Tuesday morning. The Government ordered re- coll to reserve troops who had been mobilized during the Cnchoslovek crisis. Officials slid the recall would take place progressively "at a rate foreseen for the security of the national defence." More than 1.000.000 reserves had been call- ed to the colon. Popular Official 0n Way To New Post Ualnpoeii allu tile-n" tlnllgnier, od in New York recently. Sir Gerald was formerly British Conant-General in New York ‘war the mosses welcoming ll Dllec J iall, was the only witness heard to- i M Joan, as tneyurriv- lull lllllS l PS 1 I i 1112111111111 1111113111111 en Areas By Germ- any, Under Munich Pact, Underway. BERLIN, Oct, 1 -—(Saturday)— tAPi-Jfile first contingent of German troops crossed the Czechoslovak frontier near Aigen, Upper Austria, early today start- ing Adolf Hitler's occupation of territory granted him by the four-power Munich accord. The grey-clad German infantry- rnen marched over the border shortly after 1 A. M. (8 I‘. M. AST Friday) little more than an hour alter the midnight deadline lilt- ler had set for his occupation.- An infant battalion, its exact strength und sclosed. advanced a- long several roads from Aigen to take possession of posts immediat- ely behind the Czechoslovak frontier in southwestern Czecho- slovak . It was explained this movement. was regarded as merelv :1 11:113- guard, reconnoltering the terrain and preparing for the main army of occupation to march in Inter today taking over the first of follr Sudcten districts granted Hitler by the Munich Part. The main body of troops, some 30,000 men assembled along the border of Greman Austria, vrns expected to follow 1:? the vor- gnnrd. shortly. altar. .A..M. tone A. M. AST). ‘ l1 sslllll is- P E lnllilll R O 1i E, Sept. 30 —-(AP)-A jublla nt Rome hailed Premier Benito hlussolini tcniuht. as o. peace-nickel‘ for his share in the Mullleh ncccrd. 1n their joy at having escaped oulroarcd even their habitually thunderous demonstrations. ~ Returning from Munich exactly 0110 your after his visit to Berlin which served to strengthen the Rome-Berlin axis, Mussolini was greeted as a cillef of government who hnd helped save Europe from carnage. Called again mid ngnln to the hfllfillllly’ of tho P11111220 Vcnezin by the cheering crowds. I1 Duce fillnlly‘ raised his hands for silence and cried: “You hove lived through mom- ornblc ilollrs. We hove wnrkrcl at bfunich for peace according to justice. It this not the Italian ideal?" The crowd with one voice: "Yes! Yes!" Greeted On Arrival responded as i Keyed For En try BERLIN. Sept. 30 —(AP)-—The comnlaluler-in-cilicf of the Ger- man Army tonight keyed Chan- cellor Hitler's soldiers for entry into Sudeten territory by hailing them as heralds of “German ord- er and discipline.“ The area around Aigen brlstlcd xvith military preparations for the advance into the first zone along the mountains on the southwest frontier of Czechoslovakia, north of Psssau and Lina Though midnight tonight t7 l’. M. AST Friday) was the hour set in themfollr-pgwer Munich accord (Continued on 3221,1011 4) Netcoff Sentenced To Hang Middle 0f December SAINT JOHN. N. B. Sept. 30- fCPi-A jury 111 the Saint Jollu Circuit Court today found John Nctcoif. 43, guilty of the murder of his former housekeeper, Bes- Killr: Vittorio Elnnnuelc mode a special trip to Florence from his summer pnlnce m $1111 Rossore to congratulate blllmolini us he was enroutc to Rome. The King was whiting on the station platform when the trrlin arrived 11ml shook hands with the Chief of the Gov ‘nmrni. Lord Perth. Ilri s11 Ambassador, with the envoys of Germany, France 11nd the United States, were among the iliplomllts who greeted Mussolini hi. the station. Mussolini reflected the spirit of Joy that had supplanted the gloom of a few days ngo. Latent animosilies seemed for- gotten il1 the spirit of the mom- cnt. This indicated when Il W85 Duce, noticing l1 group of English residents with Britislgoflags under hl_s_bn leonyLygil/ed ‘they crowd (Continued on page l3. Col 5) Describes Seizure By Patrol Boat BATHURST, N. 8., Sept. 30- tCPl-Cnptaln Wcildell Bonner. of the R. C M. P. patrol boot Acad- rllr- as the preliminary hearing oi Robert Long. Rlrhibucto, start- ed before Magistrate G. Harry Willett. Long pleaded innocence. Tile ease will continue tomorrow. Captain Bonner described seiz- ure of the motor vessel Jack L. In- galls. anchored about a hall mile ofi White Point. Victoria County, N. 5., Aug. 24. Aboard were Joseph Bcbinetall of Ste. Anne de Kent N. 13., the mantel" Engineer James Bellman, Yarmoulh. and seamen William ‘Puff and cook Krank Bonnell. both of Newfoundland. The four men are being held A: material witnesses. The seized vessel is 61 feet long, 12 fret wide, has three engines with a total of 375 horsepower and a storage capacli of some 700 sle Curtis. Miss Curtis, 21, died of head wounds inflicted by nlcnlls of 1v llillfllllCl‘ July 17. Neteotf “H15 sentenced by Mr. Justice J.H.A. L. Fairwcuther to be hanged on Wednesday; Dec. . Mr. Justice Fnlrweuthcr 11ml in- structed the jurors that. there were three possible verdlohs. guilty of murder. guilty of nlllnslnllghlel" or not guilty. Culpable homicide. which would otherwise be lnllrcler. might be reduced to mzlnslnuehtel‘ if there were provocation sufficient to dc- prlve ‘n11 ordinary person" oithe power of self-control, or if the ne- cused had committed the act without. intent to kill or to cause grievous bodily harm which might result in dellth The trial judge sold in ihiscnse there was no evidence of pro- vocation so he would rlllr- nut. consideration oi that. question by llle jllryull was for the jury lo decide whether Nctcoff could have struck "those terrible blows" that he rained on the Curtis girl's skull without intention of injur- ing or killing her. Storm Moving Along Atlantic S a all o a rd WASHINGTON. Sept. Bil-AA?) —'I‘he United States Weather Bur- eau said tonight that the centre of a northeast storm moving up the Atlantic seaboard was 100 miles east of Cape Cod at mid-evening. headed in the direction oi Nova Scotls. A 10 P. M‘. AST announcement by the Bureau said: "Northeast storm warnings con- tinued east coast of Mnlno 10 P. M. to be lowered 8 A. M. Saturday All other warnings down 10 P. M, Disturbance apparently central about 100 miles east of Cape Cod, moving northeastward with slowly increasing intensity and centre will pa“ over or south of Nova Bcotla late tonight or Saturday gallons of motor uel, said Captain} mowing." Occupation Of Sudet-y lygg 111531111 11111 ELBHRMBERL ill New Anglo-German Peace Pact Signed At Munich,- Trism 'r Convicted, - ((‘.l‘_ Horas, lly (lnarlliolft Special W 'el LONDON, Sept. 3r>—Q11¢@11 Mary. suffcrmu from l1 silulll attack of lnlyllgiils, will he confined t0 her room for several ilnlkn‘. 1Y- WRS Fm‘ Il0llllC0tl 101111111. 1t 11121:: stressed the Queen Mozilel-‘s illness is not serious. _ --.Queul1 Milly is suffering from m1 1111.11": of luryllgltis." the state- mc11| sold, "mill \\‘lll be unable 1o llllilll llil‘ (‘l\l_L1l';Ci11t‘lll. at the West Hcrtiorrlsilirc ilospizlll in Heme] Hempntcarl tomorrow. “I11 ttllltifqllCllCt‘, ihc Duchess of K0111 \\';ll 111v lin- iollilcloiion stone for the clliirlrellr: word 11nd opcn the extension of the 1111 es‘ home on bfllllllf cl Her Msjc ‘The Queen Mother. Jilll. 20, 19136, is 71. widolvcd British Actress (‘onfirllls illzlrriagc snlcnlonvéeljllli. one. sl-pl. Btl-ICP». (‘lvrl :1 rllrnl l(‘lL‘)lll0l1G n .\_1‘f'lll'l(‘Il line ((11:11. led hark to lzlilill 111 ‘ i1 - .1» 1 "We 111111 1101111 keeping 1| o orc- nt" 1 <l ill" lil-_\'f‘fll'~filll “mere rlllll . e11 slur, “hut apparently :1 111i c \\'i1.\ liliule solllelvilllre." A11 ' illt‘ wcrlcllllg near .\‘l‘11l1't‘£tl tho t'1.']llf.‘ flew to New York and lit‘l'll‘.ll(lil. 0011111111 hcrc ycsielwloy and owing 111m retreat at the Mc- Martlll “enbinf ‘ Anti-hi ilitaristic pliant Homecoming Queen Mary m éVastCrowds on??? Chamhterloili —-—Basis For Four-Power T \.’011- aggression Pact Believed Iiorggcd. (By Witt Hancock) (Associated Press Foreign-Staff) LONDON, Sept- 3O—-(AP)--P1'in1e Mlnlrtcr Chamberlain today brought book from hiilalileil what he declared was “peeled with homilr. . .. peace ‘for our "time" To cheering crowds and an‘ approviatr, 97.nov- ereign he reported two accomplishments: A 11-1- umph of his appeasement policy in the four-power Munich Conference which avertw! Will" ovu- Czechoslovakia and an Anglo-German (ifliiliiFflllOll against war- Summed up. his words in ‘two slaceclios --- at Heston Airdrome upon his return and lalcl- from a window of No- 1O Downing Street-and 1'11 r111 ex- traordinary interview earlier at Munich, bore fresh hope of a permanent European settlement. Speech Highlights Al. Munich: “I have always had in mind thnt if we could find peace on the Czechoslovak question a 11111 mieht. he opcn to appeasement in Europe" At. Heston Airdromc: “Settlement. of the (‘xi-eh prob- lem . . . is in my vieyv only a prelude to a lnrcer settlement. in which all Europe may find peace." Al No. 10 Downing Street: “This is the second lime in history that there has come hack from (lei-many in flown» inn Street peace with honor (a reference to l)i.\1.11~li'>‘ fam- ous statement of 1878.) I heliev it is peace for 0111' time.” Acknowledges beers With his gray head uncovered in the lilie ilfirrnonn rllin, the fifl-year-old Prime Minister ‘raved. for rheerlllu thousands at Heston Airdrolne lo see. the (lflljllllltjlli which he and Reichsfllcllrcr Hitler hall sinned l‘7ll'lll"l‘ in the d». at Munich. It was an agreement in which the two stzlteslntln :1:- cepled the new four-poorer Munich accord for selllenlent of the Czechoslovak-German crisis and the Alllrlrrflerliiilll Naval Treaty of I936 as “symbolic of the desires cf our two INJOPlES never to go to war with one illlolhcr oooin.“ Then Mr. Chamberlain stepped to i1 microphone 11.1111 slowly. fervently’ said he believed that the M11111. i1 (-111- ference “is only' the prelude to a larger seillenl-lnl.“ Anglo-German Accorrf" He thanked the petiplc for “on lflllllk‘ll.\t' 111;1:1‘ . r ml letters during all these anxious illlltW," 111111 111- 1 .11 briefly the Anglo-German accord. “This morning! hlld another folk uiih 1J1: » 11 1 11.111- (‘ellor Herr Hitler 11nd here is" the 11111101" 11h‘ w. hm nzlme 11s well as mine. Solut- of you. l1c1'h11p.~_ ; i:.1= o. l‘l't'ill‘(l what it contains. hllt l would just llite 111 111-111! 3i -n you." 1 llc reild from the (ltl(‘lll1'lt‘lli and il1"l1 >lli‘il :1 l." alllnnlnhile. lo llllekinllhilni Pzllnce. The Allfllll-(ifflllilll dcclariltioll 11:1,. ~i~11r1i 111 .~ 1.1.»- hour earnest talk between the Sfitdllillij!) i1r<~l<~~ 1i" 1 11:11::- lhcrlain zlnll lhc Nazi chieflilin :11 iliiil-l": ' h 1-1'~i- Qdence. The llllk followed h) only a few houlx 11111111 111» his- toric accord nmonu them 11ml Prclniel" llillzlzller 111' i‘. 111m- Proposal Rejected k 'l'(7R()N'l‘<l_ Sept 30- (CPI- Lienerlll Council of the Unllell Church of Canada today rejected a committee ])l'0[)OS1’\l coiling for liiseourogcnlcnt of all military displays 21nd parades in the wor- ship and program of cllurellcs. ‘The promsnl evoked n1llcl1 debnir. “This is like wnvi11l' n red rag in the inn- of 1111l11_v _\'.111111: (Jun- adinlls who have Joined the militia," will Rev. A. M. Sillliultl oiVl111cnllvcl' 1'11 discussing the suggested boll. 11c llgrecd with sovcrnl other speakers thc pro- 110ml should be deleted from the TORONTO. Sept. iltl-Minimll m 11nd maximum tcmoeraturest- | Dawson (l8 04 I -~~ b25311... ‘ii l P ‘town ARE N» new =1 1v Vntnflons From Wllznipeg 34 64 f ‘ Toglnto 3 f SCHOQL 0F , 0i w - . Monlrl-nl on so , E$FCNENCE ,/ Quebec 36 54 , " Saint John 40 54 . - » ‘ -- ‘ Halifax 46 f-l ‘ / ' \ Charlottetown 46 54 / FORECAST - V Maritime East: Strong winds or gnles with rain at first followed by decreasing westerly winds and argued the proposal would work hardship in garrison towns where soldiers were prnellrally" under orders to attend church in uni- . form . committee report. Such a sug- Cloflfillil. , gcsiion. he said. mean‘. wtlclilllg ¢ High tide the afternoon at 4.18 the breach between the church and tomorrow morning at 3:05. , and youth Slln sets this evening at 5.421 “Are we going to kee sclzlil-rs ‘lllfl rises tomorrow morning at i in uniform out of churr: '9" Asked f1 58. j Rev. H. '1‘. s. Ciornnll of Saint First quarter moon Oct. l. 7.45; John. N. i3. other commissioners a. ln. , Sllmmerside tide eighteen min- llll‘.< later than Charlottetown. Tllll (‘AR FERRY RAILINGS Imlvo Borden 9.45 s. m. 1 p. m. Tun entlno ll a. 1n. 8.05 p. In 1 .