j MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN much Ill-I'd" waiting ll. ‘a; the molt of ul. Oovers Prince Edwardllsland Like the Dew ;;f7 . cnurlatmown Giulia! Two (lulu flowing Guardian. Ioundcd IIII. ened today with reports that Nazis.” Nazi dissension that spread have instigated the ploti- rnrcmumn Perish As. Home Burns. ww- KINGSTON, Ont., Nov_ 14- ‘nannei by flames winch roared through their home at the village 0i Cmaraqui, 10 miles from here, foul- snlnll children oi Mr. and MIS- Wiililnu Taylor, died late today. Cause of the fire was not immed- lately learned. Mrs. Taylor was in the village buying groceries at the time of the outbreak When she returned home, flames were shoot- ing through the roof of the house and there was no Slim of tlhe children. two boys and two girls. The oldest 01 the children was about seven. Neighbors started a bucket bri- gade. obtalni water from a nearby cistern. forts to quench the flames oved futile. The stone wulis of e two-storey build- ing kvpt much of tile smoke in the interior and it is believed the cluldrelf were over-come as they nwmplcd to reach safety. Neighbors were driven book by the lwat of smouldering enlbers its tllcy attempted to locate the bid?!“ of the young victims. The mmilfl‘ Was placed under medical utcnllcn. pk Coming Events ~9- llatc for Notices in this column _ _3 cults peI_WOI'd.'___ "Talkies-Murray River Friday. L-fnJJ-ll-lu-lil. “lhuice in Iona Hall, Thursday. NOH-iuber 16th. L-Glli-ll-lb-li. v"DllllC€ at Kozy Korner, Vernon, W "fill-TY. November 15th. Web- ll-scq-ll-li-zl. Mr n urlhcstra. B"Borm Lodge will exemplify our 1"" Uoareo for Mncllcan Trophy Tililnfllty nlght. 11-622-11-15-11. "Y. P. U. wild goose supper Cherry Valley Hall, Thursday, Nov. 15- L-ti34. _"Chcl_'ly Valley Y. P. U. Chicken -|>l><'r m Hall Thursday evening, Ncwnlbcr 16th. L-5€'3-ll-15-2i- “Wylie Lodge cial meeting m“ Deffrfie. it. mempll- flcolion Blue Degree Thursday “Wilt L-629. K" rlicken supper and dance in ellys Cross Hall, Wednesday. - 15. 1f not fine, following m- L-546-1l-13-3i. "Benn supper and program genre's Hall, East Royalty Thurs- ciY. NOV. 16th, Aid JUTLIOI‘ R011 055- L-633-11-15-2i. "Cattle-We require l quantity wws and bulls for bologna Phone or write f0 ri es. 1s. 111ml Cold srorfilco.’ p c b969-9-30-tf ‘orfjpfserve Saturday, November 1s. nmpegmraiatljnlitlvvnmuairssghflgtan Maritime Electric e912 M? “ a L-til7-l1-16-Ii. "Iiestcrn King's Stripping Club gfimblifill mm; cattle, calves and rglshcen or shipment to Mont- " on Monday. Nov. 20th. Please l Dissension After Reports Of High Nazi A rrests Outside Observers Believe Anti- Nazi Elements Active In Reich. ' (By Charles Nichols, Canadian Press Staff Writer) The pall of rumors that rose over the wreckage of the bomb-blasted beerhal] shrine of Nazldom at Munich thick. Blomberg had been arrested in the Reich with other “high The reports of the former German War Minister's arrest emanated from the territory of a neutral nation ad- jacent io the Reich-like many others in the last few days which have been denied strenuously in Berlin. But on the theory that where there is smoke there mllSt b0 fire. neutral observers were there might be some substance to the rumors of internal Munich becrhall collapsed fr b b - 1 ' 11 minutes after Adolf Hitlermllzf? tlfglbuieltllijntlon Nov. 8’ The“? "m0" Suggested any one of these groups may Seen Field Marshal Werner Von inclined i0 believe outside Germany after the GI. Anti-Nazi elements in the 21111121 Reicilhlgszvehxg ~ W?!“ Swilbathizera 0f exiled Kaser Wllhelms line, 3. Autonomy-seeking ln4Bavaria. - Wmlerly lflyal Nazis dis- Rruntled by t}; with Comm-unis‘: 9 Yillaiipmchement A hint that Hitler followers ttfmsfilves do not lake seriously 1e charges that British agents ifirpetrated the plot admittedly aimed at Hitler was seen in the fact that hundreds of Germans have been rounded up in the hum I01‘ the conspirators and two part3 0f the internal machine found in the Wreckflfle NWrWdly were of Ghfmmt maim- n: so. w n t 11 Munich blast clnfillcgtcrd) gllklfi g2): gifts and flowers within the 1m- The dfll! after the explosion a stone was thrown at a picture of’ the Euehrer in a Berlin photo- mophers window. A military b“. racks near the Swiss frontier was seen to burst into flames by D01‘- dcr watchers. Wu Blwnbenz was the leader of the Conservative om“, clement 011E 0f sympathy With the extrem- ist Nazi elements. It was he who discouraged Hitler in ills early P111115 to expand the Reich. The former War Minster was ousted from his post n month be_ fore Hitler's troops goose-stepped into Austria, ostensibly because he married a woman whose family bucks-round was not up to the Ger. man ill-luv standards. With him went Colonel-General crncr Von Fritsch, army c411“- of staff. killed while leading a pa- trol against the Polish capital Sept. 22. and Hitler mssurncd the gnny corlrllmand. lore were many h f difficult to stretch thei‘; to the point where they could picture Von Fritsch leading a pa- trol. an office generally given to a minor officer. Reports that members of the exiled Kaiser Wllhelms family are under guard at least are o1; in- sstent as denials from the Reich capital One report-denied in Ber- lln-said former Crown Prince Wilhelm had been beheaded. An- other suid he had been asked by the Nazi authorities to remain in his hcnie because his appearance ln public might excite BTU-mon- urchlst demonstrations l; & hometown. International At A [ifiliilifl LONDON-Admlrnliy reports loll of destroyer, sinking of three Bri- tanker; plans to build cargo ships in Canada reported under discus- sion. BERLIN-Hitler turns down Ne- PARIS-Frcnch general staff notes increased patrol activity near Saarbruecken. iilar—25 Years Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) NOV. l6, i914-German drive to Calais failed when allies forced retirement of Kaiser's armies across the Yser River in Belgium. British held Ypres against attack ol’ Prusian Guards. Germans pre- pared defence line across Belgium “at Mo: with hell Secretary. Ll-Ql-ll-lii-li. 101‘ winter separatists l tish merchnntmen and Norwegian therlands-Bclglum mediation offer. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1939 DESTROYS i Tramping o! marching boots drowns out clatter of wooden shoes In windmill-dotted Holland, when Queen Wilhelmina visits bomb- pruof "public shelter" in Amy"- dam, above, as her nation pre- paA-cs to defend itself against in. vaslon. Urges Wartime Empire Conference To State Objectives OTTAWA. Nov. 14-Canada should demand n conference of the nations of the British Em ire to be held in London, if pos bly by next New Year's Day, to “state our war aims and to take all measures to attain them." said a joint statclncnt issued tonight by H011. W. D. Herrid-zc. head of the New Democracy Movement and Col. C, E. Reynolds, Plesident of the Canadian Corps Association. Returning yesterday after a month's absence studying the war situation in Britain, Mr. Herridqe and Ccl. Reynolds said the Em- pire conference should have power to re-mnke the Eznpire upon mod- ern lines o! high efficiency. The conference after it has pro- vided for security in pence should create a supreme council of the Enlpirc to direct mobilization of man-power and material resour- ces and dctcz-nline the basic strategy of the war. "Today in Europe is the there ‘calm before the storm.“ the state- ment declares. "Hitler is preparing ruthlessly to Dl"(“(""illC the war. He VBIIIETEEEEIEI-ill Injures Ankle MONTREAL. Nov. ilk-Canada's most famous war padre, Ven Arch- deacon Frederick Geo e Scott, C. M. G., D, S. 0.. is res in)! 00m- fortulbly at the Western Division of the Montreal General Hospital this morning. with his right ankle set in temporary splints, as a re- sult of a fall at Quebec on Sat- urday when he was proceed-ins! t0 the Cross of Sacrifice. for the Re- membrance Day service. Archdeacon scolt. as senior chap- lain of the First Division of Can- adian troops in the last. war. W88 always going into dangerous areas wthere his comrades were, in case they needed his services. On one occasion a shell e loded near and he receive injuries to the arms and legs. Another time he was so far up in the front line of Germans who had been surrounded came and sur- rendered to him. At Cambrai he received a. wound in the right foot, which he described in a cabin to Canada. as "a. real good Bllghty" and it. was a bone ln this foot which snwpped when he slipped on Saturday. He was to have preached at st. Paul's Cathedral. Tomato, on Sun- da , given a broadcast that ove- ning and attended a public func- tion there todoy. HLs only regret at the h nu is that heiwas un- able to his boys" n their co he had hoped. I Britain Considers Plan ‘ For Building Cargo Vessels In . Nov. LONDON tain announced the loss of a de- stroyer and three merchant vea- sels today while Sir John Gilrnmlr. shipping minister, told the House of Commons there has been dia- of o an to build cargo boats in Can a. ve been placed in Canada, he said, but. “in the last war ships were built on the St. Lawrence and that may be done again." The shipyards of Britain would be running at capacity, he added. The destroyer-her name was withheld-sank after striking a German mine. One man was kill- ed. six were missing and 15 were injured. Lt was the first destroyer lost during the war which the navy started with 9'1 modem destroyers. 62 over age and 43 under con- struction. They are the how's chief weapon against the U-boat. both in hunting slrbmersibles and acting as convoy vessels for the merchant ships. Two men were killed in an explo- sion which sank the Liverpool cargo vessel Mutra. 8,003 tons and six were missing in the destruction of the trawler Cresswell, 2'15 tons, by a submarine. Rescue vessels reported a. third merchant craft sank a mile or so from where the destroyer went down. Twerity- three members of the crew of a torpcdoed Norwe ian tanker whose name was not gven were icked up after 30 hours a- drift n an open boat, but a second boat with 11 others was missing. The survivors charged their ship was sunk without warning. (From Oslo came a ruport that the tanker was the l1,000- ton Kjoede, torpedoed Sunda as she neared British waters w th Ameri- can petroleum.) The British merchant mip Bird- hana which sunk yesterday off Singapore was announced tonight by the admiralty to have wandered into a British minefield inadvert- ently. During the shipping debate the government announced lt had or- dered one fifth of all the shipping BUB. 5311115 the British government wi-PPCBPEIICB 0f U18 Canada under construction in Grout Britain but deciinedto give tonnage figures. Sir John Gilmour snnounccd 3M0 shllil hflvo been convo ed to and from Britain and t at ell: men luul been ion. One the muons for the ahortago °l lmfM-Ildl’. he laid. was tho need or lvertin; "g, consul"- able number of ships" to haul wheat from Canada before the St. Lawrence river freezes. D- kifkii/Ood. labor, in raising the uestion of Canada. being‘; lven or- ers to build Sshlpg wer- "can. I has no practical experience of bwl-ldlns the particular kind of "er i“ll*‘°d"‘°i“.i“"' r o n en e tn t been laced in Canada billtders u E Drofmsal “had been discus- Ellen Wilkinson, Labor, 5am She had heard of an order for 30 ships b91118 placed in the dominion. Struck Mine The destroyer was believed to have struck the mine Sunday or Monday. More than T0 of her ere-w were known to have been picked up and landed by tugs and drriters. British destroyers normally have complements of between 98 and a- bout 200 officers and men, l THEE liWmPWi to take the des~ trigger in tow. but it sank stem The admiralty previously had axi- nounced the sinking of German submarines of the aircraft carrier Courageous with a loss of .515 men and the battleshi Royal Oak with 810 men; the = of the sub- marine Oxley. with 53 men lost. following an accident declared not due to enemy action; arfii tnendys. sma aux lary Northern Rover, "presumed" lost, The commander of the submarine which sank the Cresswell picked up 10 of the 12-man crew from a ralt and seven ‘hours later ut them a. boad another trawler, e PhyllLsja, As“ he did so he instructed them: ell Churchill (the first lord of the Admiralty) that German u-bom men are not the heartless murdgrers your are led to believe." AiiliiiAYS NF callslllll ATTENTIUN OTTAWA Nov. l4—(CP) —-'I‘he broad airway stretching over Can- aria from coast. to coast with ten- tacles reaching out north and south to serve other communities and connect with international arteries of traffic requires constant Iaurvey and construction work. The l‘ mlinlon Transport Department tonight, gave a description of the 1939 program now nearing oom- pietion. Most notable advance of recent months, the announcement pointed out. has been the extension of the regular Trans-Canada air lines ser- vice (‘ElSllVdfd from Montreal to the lifxritime Provinces. Planes fly a. regular daytime service for alr- mail now between Montreal and Monet/on, N. 13., and passenger, mall and express service "will possible in December," either in the dark or in daytime as airmail requirements suggest, it was an- nounced. Engineers and electricians are busy installing lights on ail-ports of the Marlzme division. and rad-lo range stations to guide planes in L‘.e dark or in fog or snow have been placed in operation at Meg- antic, Que. and at Blikiville and Mnncbon. N. B. To give connections to other Maritime cities, improvements have been. made at municipal uriports at Saint. John and Halifax. with a radio range station under con- struction at Halifax. A new airport and radio range station are being built at Char- lottetown and the airport at New Glasgow. N. 5., is b81118 immov- ed. Surv s for new airflelds have been m e at Summer-side, P, E. I. and Amherst, N. S. The other portions oi’ the T. C. A. network require constant repair and improvement. A new runway has been built at St. Hubert Alr- port, Montreal. and existing run- way: have been strengthened t0 meet the WPRl‘ and tear of heavier and faster machines. Rev. G. C. Webster T0 Speak At Sydney S- NON. 14 —-(CP) - BYDNEY. N. . Pastor of Zion Presbyterian Church, G. Carlyle Web- $ariot etown t’ me r. . speaker a sydne PresgEtEcPrian Church Sun- day. i was announced here tonight. Record Entry At King’s Go. Fox Show _____ A record entry of 226 foxes mark- ed the opening yexoeivlay oi the an- nual Kings County Fox stratlon, held in the Community rink at MonteBlle- In spite of the cold weather the opening was well attended by intel- csted ioxmen and others. Judge-i for the day were Mr. W. F. Burke, P. E. 1., Fox Fieldman, and Mr. L. 12 PAGES MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Thvllth we nut live 1b the pus- ~ ill d5!- let u: not. live for It. Annual IIIDIQIIQUII Dollvllod l! lull-P. I. I. IUD ll-OO I (hands and ll. B. limi- IL- TOWN Hundreds- Dead B H’ T U W N GUIDES ELECT NEW SLATE Mrs. M. W. Rowe Re- Elected District Commissioner A t Annual Meeting, Mrs. W. M. Rowe was re-elected District Commissioner and Presi- dent of the Charlottetown Girl Guide Association at the annual meeting held yesterday afternoon at the Government House. Other officers elected were: Vice President, Mrs. J. A. Lawson (re- circted); Sec-Trees. Mrs, Helen Thompson (re-elected ) Executive, Mrs. Noel DeBlois; Mrs. F. B. Conrad: Mrs. J. P. Hilllcn; Mrs. Harold Plckard: Mrs. Gordon Avnrd; Mrs. W. A. Ready; Mrs. M. G. McNeely; Mrs, Ed. Nicholson; Mrs. Rankine McLaine; Mrs. Harry Hill; Mrs. H.M Simp- son; Mrs. J. A. MacDonald; Mrs. John Inch and Miss Mary Irving. Mrs. W. M. Rowe presided alt the meeting which was largely at- tended. Afternoon tea. was served, at the conclusion of the business period. Tea was poured by Mrs. Helen Thompson and Mrs J. A. Lawson while ladies serving were: Mrs. J. P. Hlllion; Mrs. F. B. Conrad: Mrs. W- A. Ready and of Laguainillas, built on sti caibo and one of t destroyed last night by a sons were reported dead or missing. dead ranged as high as 800. lives, was before any attempt cou for help. The stilt village, through which was shipped the oil sent to Great Britain from Venezuelzfs field, burn- ed like tinder, and trapped hundreds in the houses. Within four hours nothing was left of the town bli floating debris and smouldering piles. Gut Terminal Venezuelan firm On Stilts Reduced To Ruins —British Sup_p_ly_ Source. CARACAS, Venezuela, The flames were assumed t the oil film on the lake in whic stand. The fire roared through some which bad been built out. over the water as home oil workers of the great lake Maracaibo field. he major oil terminal As Blaze Wipes Nov. 14—(AP)—The oil town its on the edge of Lake Niall-z»- s in Venezuela, was fire in which more than 500 per- Some estimates of the o have spread quickly over h hundreds of oil derrick: 2,000 wooden shacks s of the The town of 2,500 population, believed to be all na- gflllrs.’ {Ihfifld gickard, along with e. o owng angers: Pat Arsen- A Rue‘. mud mm, _ _ - . . int: 355.000 — ault. Sylvia ‘Block, Nora Downe, bouvars ($110950) was qumdy Annabelle Lawson: Jean ‘Fmsythe: Felice Arsenault: Jean Bevan; Nan Bray; Vlney Watts: Cynthia Ken- dall; Eileen Higgins; June Lem-d and Phyllis Murray. ' Instead of tho usual custom o! hovingm special speaker. who was not always familiar with Guide work, the Association arranged to (Continued on page 11. Col 4) By - election In Prince 0n January 8th orrawa, Nov. 14-(0?) - A by-electlon will be held Ja/n. 8 in the Federal riding o! Prince in Prince Edward Island, Prime Minister "' ckenzie King announced tonight. The vacancy was created by death of A. E. MacLcnn who had held tho seat for the Liberal party since 1921. This brings to five the num- ber of by-clcctions for which dates have bcc-n fixed. Four W. Hancock. This year it was decided to hold the Show in the rink because of the limited space in other quarters. The foxes are bein illdBefl in '1 tent, adjacent to t e rink, which has been loaned to the b the Federal Ex rlmental Depi- ‘Ilhis tent is loan for demonstra- tion purposes. Clac-"ses judged yesterday were the Dark Silvers. Mecllmu Silvers and the Light Medium silvers. There ulas a small entry with a good aver- age entry in the other classes re- ported. Quite a number of top foxes were in evidence at yesterday's JuGBTYlG and the winners 1n the first grolp included foxes owned by Mr. Georg/e the Pale Silver and Dctra Silver foxes. The entry i-n these is I80 with a record of 51 Pale female pups entered. ._.________. i , classes Ibrtxa Three Arrested For Influencing Halifax Jurors AX, u. s, Nov. 14 -(CP)-- ‘three Halifax men were arrested today 0n wanants chB-fflml the!" with compiring to influence jurors at the current criminal term of the Supreme court here. The information sworn out by chic; city detective Thomas Ken- nedy alleges threata or bribes or means" to influence other Those charged are Oillaughlin, former grocer and Wal- ter Yetman, phOtO 8 their arrest they were rought be- appearance before him ey were not asked to Police sa-id all 48 suddenl subpoena ‘They d not reveal the case lead The occasion will mark the 13th an- of the filfiifwlfi? mascot hum. the three conspired "by corrupt the 4B members of the panel between Oct. 25 and Georgla W. Tingley. automobile dealer; omas After m” magma” J‘ L" Bammu and ed Dishes tumbled from shelves trfled on bu] of ‘L000 ““§‘§m°m"‘°,,‘,’_ Pictures fell from walls, but no urorg had been as wltnwes. 01‘ of which grew the allega- vacanclcs are to be filled Dec. l8 in Saskatoon, Kent, Ont, and in": Montreal ridings. Si. James and Jacques-Caritler. It has Lcen expected Finance l film...“ llalston, who has no scat in thc House of Commons. would be a candidate in one of the forthcoming lay-elections. The Minister said tonight, how- ever. that he had as yet made no plans. Hon. Charles Dunning. for- mer Finance Minister, who re- ‘signcd the 'po Iinllo Inst July because of ill health. and who was succeeded curly in Septem- bcr by ('01. Ralston, represents Queens, Prince Edward Island. Ills resignation left that prov- ince without Cabinet repro- cntatlon. The Minister will require n seat in the House of Commons in time hr the opening Parliament which is expected Jan. ll, and it is now believed possible he will run in Prince where, if elected, he would rmnd out the distribution of Cabinet representation among the Provinces. The Prince By-Election will probably be the last before Parliament opens. Other vac- ancies exist in Klndersley, Snsk., Drumnnd - Arthabaska and Bonaventure, in Quebec. all because of resignations. Earth Tremors Felt In States PHILADIIPHIA, NOV. 14—(AP) i of the start of the fire. said the fire started after a ware- house explosion, but another stated the explosion of a. kerosene lamp in a. bar had touched off the conflu- gation. flames over the oily water seen in the report that a. rescue launch, which had sighted the blale and rushed to the stricken town, sank with all aboard, presumably burned by the wave of flames. sent to co-ordlnate relief work and ' investigate the fire. nurses were rushed to the town by airplane and automobile. cult and tonight only had been recovered. Authorities be- lieved many hundreds ‘ were under the smouldering, float- ing ruins. low the seaport of Maracaibo, Lake Maracaibo, and is one of the‘ almost wiped out by the high-shooting flames id be made to fight the fire or send much of by President Eleanor Lopez the Venezue an Government There were conflicting versions One report to the government An indication oi’ the rush of’ the was Three cabinet ministers were Doctors and Relief work was extremely diffi- lO0 bodied of bodies Lagunillas is about 90 mile: be- on l May Seek British Aid Negotiations 0N, NM. 14 LORD Soviet Ruslla may rcquelt Brit- ish aid to obtain n more cliiaiory attitude by the Scand- inavian powers toward Moscow's on Finland, British diplomatic circles bald tonight. source: bald Moscow may inform London that n Brit- move in Scandinavian countries would be an essential condition to in- dennnd: These ish diblonmtio creased brads between Union and Great Britain. trade tiatlonc have ‘been dragging out for the last few weeks, with Russia delaying its reply to n memorandum from the Board of ‘dent, Oliver Stanley. Anglo-Soviet Trade s l outlining the products interested in and requesting a similar list from Moscow. major oil terminals 1n Venezuela, world's third largest petroleum pro- ducer and one of Great Britain's cheif sources of supply. The lake itself is about 00 miles across. Three major producers, Royal Dutch Shell, Standard of New Jer- sey and Gulf Oil Corporation. have terminals there. At Lagunilias the oll piped from the inland and from wells drilled in the bed of the lake, is loaded on smnll tankers which in tum haul the black gold across the shallow bat at Maracaibo to the larger occan-gomg tankers in the harbor. Hitler Turns Down Latest Peace Offer BERl-TN. NOV. 14 _(AP\ -Adolf Hitler today turned down the medi- ation offer of tihe sovereigns of Bel- gium and the Netherlands. His views were made known through his foreign minister. Joa- chim Von Ribbentrop, who told the envoys of the two countries that the reply would be a. polite "no." Von Ribbentrop gave this notifi- cation to Viscount Jacques D‘Avlg- non, Belgian ambassador, an H. M. Van Haersma de With, Netherlands minister in advance of formal de- livery of the rqply in Brussels and L The Hague. Thou h expressing appreciation of the mo ives of Queen Wihelmina. and King Leopold in proffering their good offices for pence. Von Rlbbentrop was said to have held that the replies from Great Brit- ain and France Nov. 7 made peace -An cnrtllqilukc of considerable intensify, apparently centring in southern New Jersey, shook a four- statc area tonight. Windows rattled. Building sway- scplous damage was reported. The Franklin Institute in Phila- delphia said its seismograph show- ed the tremors began at 10:45 P. M. AsT and lasted for approxi- im ible now. The French and British replies, delivered Sunday. put any move for peace up to Germany.) Whether a much-discussed Ger- man offensive might begin now on the western front remained Hitler's secret. Businessmen returning from t-he Rhineiand reported. however, that the bustling activity of the past few weeks had given way to quiet dlg ug in. as though any 0i’- —(UP)— CUT!- the the floviet nego- Briinln is scnsleuz films ‘doom BE (o PRWWE oveovfonlfv n \.ATcH HEY Y O Dawson Vancouver Edmonton Regina Winnipeg Toronto Ottaw; Montreal i.‘ Sun sets this alto and rises tmnormw 6.56. First quarter moon 1.21 P THE CAR FERRY -__.__ leaves Tormentine 3.05 P. M. SATURDAY!» Leaves Borden 4.45 fenslve pans had been postponed mately l0 seconds. until next spring. Leaves Tormeutino High tide this afternoon at 1. and tomorrow morumg at 1.04. lfu A TORONTO, Nov. 14—(CP)—Mini- mum and maximum telnperaturcs: Zero I 44 50 23 40 22 5U 2'7 til 21 35 10 26 14 28 51 moon nt 4.23 morning at November ll. . M. Summer-side tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. SAILINGS leaves Borden 9.45 AJVL. 1.00 PM. ll.00 A. M, ONLY RM moo ‘p. u. m... _... ...-__-_- u-pqs-ss-n-sma-gqi,‘ \ ‘ u ml.» Anmunmn ..