LONDON, text, in part. of Prime Minister Chamibenlairrs liognse of Commons today fo1lows:— Sept. which has inevitably had a decisive effect on the war on the eastern front. On the morning of Sept. 1’! Russian troops crossed the Polish frcyntier at points along its whole length uzd advanced into Poland. I cannot. say that the action of the Soviet Government expected. For some time past sov- Soviet Govemmenlt were pnopari the ground for intervention. . . It is still too early to pronounce any final verdict on the move or consequences of ion. For the unhappy victims of this cynical attack the result has been a tragedy of rharact/er. The world has watched the vain striiggle of the Polish notion ag- ainst 0Ve!'Wh0lH|il'|«x odds, with pro- found pity and sympathy, admires illrir valor which even now re- illses to admit defeat. and France have been unable avert the defeat of the armies of article have assured her that Braised they have not forgotten their ob- lllzations to her. nor weakened in their determination to carry on ‘ (oou*“unT.:a'..iri;;gr§fcsi ‘sf I _._______._. Poland. they Coming Events Rate for-‘Notices in this "Talkies-Orapsud “'I‘alkies—Canoe COVEL Thursday. . C It no1m's$I"s.I’{ O! h Ha11.cwu§iii‘es?i‘s'‘y’, ' 00 M sh?iiv(i”' it v n...?.‘&‘:§ '° Pie-Sb! a COM .-—:_‘ «on-r'y“‘ 5i‘n“’.“ 3"” ck mics: ‘ Olxcmmcon too at Mu. ltrbep. cum. mm ui-can 2-. men. Aulpiccs of . antlat ' Guild. L-'16. B MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN ilui heart of in la‘ is found not lnbth: 1:;l:'wBlr::0l'Isd ‘iii flesh! in u crud.yu -fllhteouc pride. a’ cold’ >‘/.// The Peop e’s Paper ,........—-c-' Covers Prince Edward '-qgr-"\\)=*’ Read by Everybody clsland Like the Dew -'.""""V'vv~v<~ . The true function of industry was to distribute the riches of the -world for the bmelll. of all and the ox- ploltailon of none. MAXIMS OVA MERE MAN Chnrloloncwn (liurdlnn ‘hm can; Honing our-din. Founded Isa-i. CHARL()T'I‘E'l‘0WN,VCANADA, Tl-IURSDAY,WSEPTEMBER 21,1939 _CZECH—SLOVAKS io PAGES Gives Ringing Assurance To Ravaged Poland “N 0 Sacrifice Pr—om Which We Will Shrink,” Says Prime Minister. LONDON. Sept. 20—(CPl—Prime Minister Chamber- lain assured the nation today that Great Britain’s war effort would be “the utmost of which it is capable” and declared “cur advance must be orderly but the pace of the advance will steadily quicken.” The G°V°mm¢nt» he told the House of Commons in . which his third war report, would “not rush into adventures that offer little prospect of success,” but he said there was no operation, no sacrifice, that would be avoided if the Gov- ernment, its advisers and allies, “are convinced that it will make an appropriate contribution to victory.” “The whole of the British Commonwealth of Nations and Empire IS indeed at this moment intensively engaged in mobilizing strength stronger and more powerful than at the outset of any past uzir,’ he said. in the aggregate are CZECHO-SLOVAK REVO-LT Meanwhile, on the internal German front, the Minis- try of Information said it had received authoritative re- ports that a revolutionary movement started last Sunday In Bohernia and Moravia, former Czecho-Slovak territory .\l'Il1CIl became a German protectorate following the break- up of the little republic last March. The ministry said it was reported that despite “ruth- less” repressive measures by the Nazis the fight against superior forces was continuing. Rush’: Invasion Sept. 20—(AP) —The statement in the 1'! an event occurred “F85 Un- N8 the Russian act- suade i-he giimmest Pledge To Poland If Britain —- 0.. column cent: per word. Thursday. L~3'l-9-20-2i. -3'7-9-30-31. Milton A. Y. P.,A. urday. L-60-9-21-11. in St. Andr€w‘l member 27th. L-42-9-21-ll. Moving Pictures. Vernon Hal September fit Aid of library. L-M-9-21-zi. '.'é“.‘.§i". v Ohlrl ttoto Band. 0 L-63‘fl'PI'hu-tf. returnedimlb not 8%“ ‘in the Hanoi. fluécli. squgda. even- \ “ 1.-0':-9'-21-ii. nd ROMZE. Sept. 20 Italian go solinis own newspap speech escort of naval Th Press t D§‘”,;':,°'gy38‘_'d§E_ Nat‘: captured was no any adod been definitely moorland , since ITALIAN PRESS V0 sis PLEA iuinn iet have mobilized and con- - - g$n (:]l1‘letth{?InV1lIqeriI’l!§nndi!‘0;l(ihl'§1(I3‘.E Praises H 1 ii 1 C 1' ,S pggngsmsléavaendapgielfggsds irriefélifinioza Speech And Sug-V 2‘.‘.‘i. Wis , A““‘°“*‘° bore the interpretation that the P01and-’ ——(CP)—- The ress tonight sought to psi- reat Britain and l"rauce to accept a peace based on the es- tablishment of an "authentic Po- land" lying between the territory seized by Germany and Russia. The campaign was led by Vir- ginio Gayda, who often speaks for Premier Mussolini. Writin Giornale D’It.a.lia, Gay is urged Great Britain and France not to ush the war in the west now that he fighting in the east has neared its end 11 Popolo D‘Il.alla. Premier Mus- in the er. in a brief cntlllcd “The Right Road," Adolf Hitler's Danzig of yesterday and saJd:— "A war in the west is now use- less. This truth _l.h..n consciences of nations. Destiny liavlng_sp9k should illuminaw __it_y£uld be useless (Continual On pgno B. 001 2) crack Liner Bremen In British (Port LONDON. Sept. 21 ('I'hursdaY)— (0P)- The that according] ent today an '3 crack liner ed a. British och Press Association said to reports preval- not denied. Ger- Rremen had under the “ For voslela . Association said: e some days various stories have cir- culaled captured and was on England. flrmation was this that the Bi-anon had been her way to no official forthcoming in Lon- momlng. the story of the t domed." Iut Saturday the German Am- bassador to ‘Music. Doubt Friedrich Bchulenberg‘ éaumakd um} ' officers and oh 1 u - members of R II M A N I A AILAMPS SHUT PIIIISH BIIRIJER German Inspired Up- rising Foil-ed By Early Arrival Of Russian Troops. 3)’ Lloyd Lohrbas Associated Press Staff writer OERNAUTI. Rumania, Sept. 20 .... (AP)— Rumania clamped her Po- lish frontier shut today amid rum- ors of the arrest of German plotters 1“ WAS COUNIY and execution of P0- lish leaders across the border. All-ho h officials here would not us e report it was learned on hlizh authority that Rumanian pol- ice arrested a group of German res. idents of Bukowina pro. vlnoe charged with plotting a rising If Gfffmfin LFOOIDS in Polan reached the Rumanlan frontier, NAZI PLANS FOILED This source said me Germans planned under the direction of Ber- ‘ in quarters -to start the armed in- surrection ancl gain the Nazi gmo 5. Arrival of Russ an forces at t e border instead of German them. the source said. Blukawlna. a rt of the old Aus- tria. was awa ed Rumania after the last war. Police were understood to have ordered the German minority head- quarters here closed. Rumanian command Russian troop a Polish soldiers and placing them in internment camps. The ‘report said “some polish leaders’ were executed. Many of the victims were learned to be Ukrain- ians who held responsible positions in the Warsaw government. The were shot “as traitors." it was sal . Information in military circles de- clared Russla had sent. 110 divisions of troops into Poland. (Best avail- able information indicates Russian divisions number somewhere be- tween 10,000 and 15.000 men. Polish officials said they received information that General Kozlowskl now leading the Polish defence Lwow, may be chosen by the Rus- sians and Germans to negotiate peace with their government and to head a new Polish buffer stale re- ported to have been agreed upon. 60,000 POLISH REFUGEES Before closing the frontier at Zaleszczykl, Rumanian authorities declared more than 80.000 Polish military and civilian refugees had arrived here since Sunday. 0anada’s Domestic OTTAWA, Sept. 20—(OPl—Can- ada’s domestic exports to the Un- itod States during August rose to $6l.204.l-12 from $39,801,895 in the corresponding month last ear. the Dominion Bureau of Stat. stics ne- ported today. Exports during the first eight months of 1939 also were markedly I‘lIiZIl-M", tctnl'ing fl'l084,64J5«i5 compared with $183.- 0l'i4.038 in the same period last I year. some of the Imcdllies elCD0l'tf"1 to states during August under trade agreement with figures August. 1939. in bi-aclcets: news- nrlni caper S" ""7165: wood nuln 32.083190 ($2’“?4R0.'vl: fine nickel M i856,'T33 ($111973) : softwood nlanks and boards and square tim- ptixvcipal com- the United the for her $1."')9,933 ($1.08’l.9'l0l : cattle N 9-'70 'l°’t' piiln wood 3! 'Ain.44R in ms 740); s I1 i n gle R 3323.178 ($757,190; avbsstm and asbestos sand and waste 9-R'A9,m'l r3417.- stm: whiskv $5lll,8£l (umfioiilz in-iiflrial crude abrasives sccaim (s1Fi'l.991l: fresh lobsters 8138.311 ($l4-8,735): logs $1-88351 ($1Ml410l: soda and cnmnounrls siaoson (Sl’T.'iRR5l‘ rwr §l’7"..L‘-‘.5 (nil): aimnvo mom:-n: undressed furs MMMIB ($'m%(~’E!I\: tolcvranh and telephone unis: €120,879 ($l83.'l77): cats $130 232 mil). .Labiir congress ‘concludes Meet MONTREAL. Sept. 20-—(OP) - The all-Canadian confreas of labor closed its ninth annual convention tonight, after re-electing lilo mnior the execu vs board. A, R. Mosher of Ottawa was N- appointed resident with Charles Beottie of route as vice- idem and Nammpnngmefwd Of 35 - re . ugllleie 2,(0(‘ilIIV€'II‘)0ll1l'd el;a<§:dunc3§'ie- . A or o - mu 0! Gwlrillonely Guay. London. Second Rumored/is Guns Rumb.le__At Sea l Excitement Mounts On Denmark Coast As Sounds Continue For Seven Hours. (By Milo M. Thompson, Associated Press Staff Writer) COPENHAGEN, Sept. 20—(AP)—The possibility that a second battle of Jutland was taking place off Denmark today excited the eastern coast of the Jutland Peninsula, 1 Sounds which hearers as. heard from Skagen, at the northern tip of the peninsula. to points northeast of Aalhorg, 50 miles to the south. The sounds were particularly loud on the northern shore of the Islands of Laesoe, off the Jutland east coast. At Berlin. the German command said it knew nothing of any sea battle. The Swedish naval attache at Berlin suggested the that Swedish ships were holding target prac- bad ‘°“”"d Jam“ possibility tice. but at Stockholm the Admiral of the western Swedish ‘ ‘ ~ ‘ . ey re su giiiipiillfllvrzi that in we at ch h iixports To ll.pS. lip- uaval division said there we today. The fighting, if such, hours, ending at 5 p. m. l..aesoeIs— The mu“ cm” of °“°- had been given by Japan to Great ‘ iris-.:.£:.‘i:.°.°”...‘» ..:.“.i:.i:.:.?.: mum“ W “°°"‘““ ‘“ r“ 32%‘ T“ '"°" “‘“°" “ad "°°“ I ' _ liiri that be qerens mus. w - _ View me 3”‘ mm which the T"° ‘°W"‘°’5 °‘ ‘m A““’°"‘ draw their forces from China» isolated clashes between Cz sounds seemed indistin-ctly a thin line a e was unable to tell if they were fighting ships. The fact that the shots were heard alone the whole of a '10- mile stretch of coast indicated that to 001119» He SEICII newspaper ventured seaward in the 0 if it was a battle it was a major 200 shots were given or exchang_eg_. Jutland IAPS CAMPAIGN? Take HAS BRITAIN &.'Against FRANCE, AIM TOKYO, Sevpt. 20—Foreign ob- servers saw in developments today evidence that a Japanese cam- paign was under way to lessen the holdings and influence of Great Britain and France in Chins. while they are preoccupied by war with Germany. Indications of this trend was seen in a resolution adopted. by the Japan Bar Association declar- lna that the presence in China of troops and warships of the Eur- opean bclllgerenfs was illegal. Anollier trend was the attention paid by Japanese newspapers to relations with the United states. Some observers interpreted this as ‘ an attempt to win support for the r.avy‘s budgetary estimates wh h are forthcoming soon. Newspapers quoted counsellor of the Japanese Rm- bassy in Washington, Yakichlro Suma. as saying that "feeling of the American navy is unusually id were those of gunfire were and Moravia, provinces of Cz mation announced tonight. the formeri dom lost when Adolf Hitler weapons they could lay their WASHINGTON, sept. zoqiapap "°b°“'°“ S““d“Y nese Ambassador Kensuke Hori- nouchl revealed today the Japa- nesc have begun informal talks ‘with Great Britain and France in an effort to get them to withdraw tholr troops from china. The Ambassador said in a. press conference that “friendly advice re no exercises by his ships _adopted ruthless measures continued more than seven sabotage to bridges, railway, Great Britain and France are the only beillgerents having for‘- oes there. "This request. is part of our pol- icy to avoid involvvzment in the war," he said. direction of the sounds, us ministry said- fast motorboat. After more an two hours search they retiu-ned,.to report they heard the firing con- tinue but failed to reach Fl point ~ of observation, Listeners agreed that at least began to gather momentum with riots at Pnrdublce, Pri-bram. Pilscn, Tabor. Pisck and Brunn. It spread to wmtem Slovakia on Tuesday where Slovak garrisons an Ruzemberok, Silima and Tren- (By Taylor lien?) (Associated Press Sta! Writer) PARIS. Sept. 20 —(AP)—Fra:ich and German aviation clashed to- day in a. series of battles for mastery of the air over the Beig- fricd and Mtiginot lines. One Ger- man ship. a Messerschimidt fighter. was reported shot down within French lines by French pursuit planes. Gs-rman aircraft were reported to have opened an attack on the northern flank of the western front as a result of a new German air base established at Aachen (Alx La Chapellel far north of the fight- in! front. The French 'Goveu-nmemit declar- ed the war will be carried an un- til Nazi Germany is crushed by _a “definite victory." The French high command was aiithoritatively understood to have taken measures to meet any pos- sible repetition of Geimatnys 1914 d'i'ivc tin-ouch Belgium. While German heavy guns pounded French positions on the western front with increas ly steady rhythm, far to the north Germans were reported concentrat- ing troops at Aachen (Aix Ghapellel which lies at the June- lure of he German. Netherlands and Belgian frontiers The Governmnn-t‘s declaration on Nazilsm. issued after the first French Cmlbinot meerting since war was declared. was made in the face of the collapse of 1":-anon’; Ally Po- land. under the ioint pressure of ‘German and soviet Russia.'snn- a. It was wnsidened an uiower to Adolph Hitler’: Danzlg s ch of h was i relied fxslzarday. whic Paris as a bid to Fruice and Britain to give up Poland as lost and make peace. The evening communi ue on to- day's action on the western front. said: "'I‘h4.-iv wal enemy artillery action on varlo prints of the front, hunch is. Osman pursuit aviation engaged in several oom- bats. An ensmy plane was shot down within our lines." mud Leslie day on war against Germany. . '3 Go id of Mormon. N. 13 OM _ ([)"‘]"a5€a‘ll1 of Montreal. I afterwards. Daladler met French Believe Nazis May Try Tactics Of ’I4 Germans Said-Concentrating Troops Far To North -- French Shoot Down German Pursuit P1ane__Il1 Clash. chin ievolbed. Fifteen thousand troops were clisaxmecl 3! the Ger- mans, the statement 5 d. The fl£lr'l‘lll5PCl'Y clesclrébed bgzeialg women rague se rig ar studded with nails and rushing 4'. German authorities. It described the fight as "re- lentless and grim with no quarter given by either side." Apparently the Germans have not stamped out the revolutionary movement yet because the minis- try said “the fight against larger jlsiiver ‘Fox i Pefls Up In London LONDON. SGPL 20 “la: forces and ruthless tyranny con- Cable)—fi)f 6.089B1;e1l!é’$:‘p'::"fis tinues with courage and determin- th Hu son's Y at sllsrer fox auctllm ended V°"'°"' Czecho-Slovakia and Austria, day 4.092 were soil "1093 Ed‘ victims of German aggression in average 12 1-2 P“ cent over the l)"'-‘'''‘’“5 5‘:I‘’ ‘m “ stcrllni: basis. Willi “'0 T 5°“:'l_'"_ marked in sllvcf! mi‘ uuarier silvI"“' ‘"'\I~s. Tho 1:11:11‘- orny of purchases were for - erlca and England. the past. have been regarded as likely breeding places for sabotage, ievolt and intemal disruption in me Reich. The German Government must patrol these territories with strong forces of troops and civilian guards. To thhi now is added Poland which immobilizcs hundreds of thousands of Gcrmany's available vanced on an Reich proclaimed a protectorate, public last March. Czechs and Slovaks 4 Annual lobacrlpuon Dallvand $6.00 ' 8: Ma1l--P. I. 1. [L001 Canada Ind U. I. $.00. N REVQLT Up Arms Nazis To Win Freedom‘ Organized U.[Z-)P1I':ing In Pro- gress Since Sunday—Spreads As Men And Women Unite To Restore 20-yegfild Republic. (By J. F. Sanderson, Canadian Press Staff Writer) ' LONDON, Sept. 20-—(CP against German domination has broken out Cable)—0rganized revolt.‘ in Bohemia. echo-Slovakia over which the the Ministry of Infor- Fighiing against superior forces to regain the free- smashed their 20-year-old re- seized whatever hands upon and started open after a serious of labor demonstrations. The German army of occupation and stormtroopers to suppress the revolutionary movement, arresting thousands and executing hundreds, the statement said. But great damage was done through fire stations, roads, factories and machinery. Firearms were used on both sides. slumbering for months under the heel of German rule began in 8. small way with echs and stormiroopers. ilic Illirplane Rumored Down In ll. B. Wilderness munsion, N. B. ed, it was learned at Royal Canad- ian Mounied Police headquarter! here today. A woodsman reported he had seen ii plane fall in the Green river dis- mci: at, an unstabed date. Police, 8539 companied by the woodsman, set out for the scene last night. mu must travel by canoe and foot mtg reach the spa and no further w was expected until at least tomor- rt that a. plane might have own in Kent county. ll!‘ ston district. film has been under investizution By R. O. M. P. Officials said they h nil other report concerning any lane which might been the one in sin! since Sep . 14. w. A re fl'lBJ.'lDOW13X‘. In Poland this need of constant preparedness and armed vigilance will be accelerated, not diminished. it is believed here. by Riissla':: occupation of the eastern portion of the country. civic Tax Adjustment Board Named military and diplinatic aides. Advices reaching here said fihe German troops had been shifted to the western from. from Poland. Freiich military sources intimated concern over the reported con- 1 centratlon at Aachen since Koblenz I is the logical concentration point I for troops moving from nort east Germany to the western front. I ‘ Aachen Is about 85 miles north Iof the present fiizhtlm zone nnd 35 miles east of Koblenz Aachen is off the direct rail line along which ltrcops ordinarily would be shifted from the eastern front to tho west Latest advices from ‘Holland said i Allilllll IN PIILISH HANDS I3 mu siiii Determined To Hold . ‘L ' ,f.hcdsNirizis Mimi the NAet.l;‘ef- Out Till Bitter Mayor FORM pgs,dé& at 3 Sm] < n i'0n er no um“ 30 en 1 I I Of e I "N ‘EN?’ "° Bi°."”‘°"“ ;‘{}”‘ "in- End ’ Defenders I $.i‘§icn wt... iicl? i....4’,'.li" “"‘”‘.x'.‘i"’ tve. oons w ose pos ons were in pose o apm Ii ml Rn ‘ shifted each night. Declare‘ ]u:hfl']:£‘?l'f’lt Board, naming a lady at- tendant for the librarv. rt-st. rooms and Maiiket Bullrlln" ourchaslnrl 07 lirc-hose and discussiniz lllflhs “*7 I Military observers regardccl as ‘significant. too. the fact that from ‘Koblenz ‘he main railroad lines ___.__. (By ROBERT PARKER) (Associated Press Staff Writer) _ run behind the Sicgflled line BUl)APF.ST._S€'i)i- 30 "‘(AP);’§ I who remodelling of inn City Clerks ‘while from Aachen there is no story of rumbing irlllls. the ‘£0 ‘office. main line south to the flizlitinz rots of i3 davs of siege. End ‘ Councillor Chandlr-r fifll‘l(Yl1l'lCf‘<l ‘“to hold out to " enemy radio that the Council had nblainccl per- mission by Order-In-Council from the Pmviwwial Government to es- tablish a board for the adjii.-itment of tax smears as fmind bv the ex- ternal aiirillors. Some (MS(‘\lSSIOl'l took 171309 T9" of ii ho- lzone. Railroads from Aachen run ;lntc Holland and Belgium. , Reports have been teaching Paris .for some davs that the Germans ,had cleared this area of inhabit- vants as far back as Kobleuz, de- spite the fact that under present. deturrninatlmi bitter end to defeat our blarod out of fihe W9-T33“ ‘°ll§',‘;"...... are rumbling hMiv‘ll.V nnd nrnbalblv soon t.he"re Will M 3 big offensive against us." will 3 operations It is in no apparent llilarv communique read at 3-15 warding Ihf! nmvxinllnc danger of immediate attack. "‘_ M, (4:15 P. M. ADT » liceman to t4‘ml>0l'{Il’l1.V fill the A curtain of artillefy fire on the "bet the Gei-mans not nurse my position Vfiraled tr -~o present by from. shielded Nazi in- illusiom as to the constantly m‘0W- Constable Btnrey. Th!’ mnlfifir W3! carried over to the nit-xt meelinll for i'u'lher cnnsldcrntlon. A rather heated ~*~un‘orit en- Flll‘d over the r.‘art.lcular brand of fire hose to be purchased but in tho end the councillors mm Im- RmI'\l1SIV agreed on the selection a m with western fmtry tools in the area east of 1m: S'll(‘CP.\'4"S of our Warsaw arrnv. Sa ecxon. Wo will put an end to German D0- Tho French llld they lost one minatinn. Nobody doubts b‘1at.WaA'- advanced position yesterday to saw will come out N this blood?’ German surprise attack. The Gt~r- sirmzszic vlclmlous." the announce- n-isns apparently were chiefly in- mi-nt continued. amend in Marin: prisoners in Despite the fact that Marshal order to uestion them. vkiwam smirlilv—Ryd1. has been in A Fr omm-tor-attack led by [Rumanln several clays‘ the Wm‘- tanlm was fqaorted to have had paw nnnouncwr said: ‘smlalv-Ryflil little difficulty in retaking the post Ila -now on the front. and 1378' I. few hour: later. .<‘f‘l+:‘ glluiiirted oipémsoldiers. bed There was every indication the I P 0 s M0 WM ‘ml genmm wan manning for an of. four times durirw the adftfrugai felnslve thrust. They methodically and lr-Mndlarv bombs sctnl; e (H 1,", 0“; W ‘woman .|ong the lCl'F‘\'<l Hospital on fire. - e rm 0 xi-mile front out of gain-bruecken. fold German batteries were not only a e ‘me following resolutions names of the move-s and second- era of each were r~s=-d- p---Iv-A that the under-narned be nnoolntrd as chairman and members of ~ "lv'~ Tm: AdIllIl- merit Board with all authority and powers in accnrdancr with the game of reforcrwes as set forth by order-In-Council of the Provincial Government. A'nnl.lra to Warsaw butchers to inhabittin " of the battered city. (continued on page 8. Col 7) this Rein’. — I t liita heariouarl to 2- Wm “'§,,,°",,':‘°,,,“°.;§§1 Igiilveo aliliotrwr-nyts of horse el'frlsf‘flI.. vgiis mu, mmt°,,' xndgng ‘broadcast. Wounded horses the an- Chairman Hon. Harold L Pal- soms dull: oh the Maginot line ‘“"““°"m°m 83”‘ Wm be bmchfiri ‘huh "9, cm” to the nvnuer m 0:1 for the "near starvinlf million I ' " ’ /file GLADDESY WORDS OF Touaor AND PEN ARE '\NCLO$ED l=\N0 TORONIO. Sept. 20 —(CPl -< Mlmimum and maximum tvmrfiirflr Lures: Dawson N - Vancoiiver 44 55 Edmonton 35 “'3 Rog-inn 38 32 Winnipeg 3'2 75 Toronto 53 73 Ottawa 43 "11 Montreal 53 53 Quebec 46 53 Saint. John 49 50 Halifax 47 53 Cliarlotleliown 53 39 Mnrillme East: Modenh W fresh winds: partly cloudy; pbflbly light scattered Ihowen. Blah Lido this aflnmoon at 3.32 and wmor-row mornlrw at 5.24. sun sets this cveninu at 6.01 and rlsm tomorrow morning‘ at 5.45. Bummozolde tide big teen min- utes later than Charlottetown. THE CAR FERRY SAILINGS Leaves Baden 9.45 AM., 1.00 P.M.. .M. Leaves Tormeritine 11.00 A. M. 3.05 P. M.. no P. M. kw: < _v;_._<NJ M . .. -CI_«'-L