"QQZMOQIH tunl faith uureaaon, ~"'""".,,,....e...&..“"tt'..i7.'f&i.‘* per ~ . Covers Prince Edward! Island Like the Dew ‘i cnARLorrrETowN, CANADA. TUESDAY DECEMBER 1a, 193s .~.--.- R .-_.._. \_~ s,‘ on. MAXIMS MERE MAIN °' * ._.._.. MERE MAN 41L 10 PAGES Aemmy. lspodttou [lids the flllosoflifa’: blackout clouds. Ann sea-lg! Dell and Ulefl Dy l. =00: (Talnda all I. It III Trfggl/Rzv-Klzvc FEUD R 0c1<s LIBERAL PAR TY TIIJPFREIBH iTlli RESPECT I924 STATUTE British Government Cannot Ignore Pos- sibility Says Pre- mier Chamberlain. IDNDON, Dec. l2 (OP) —Great Iritsin and Franco conveyed con- cern to Germany today over the rfbiiity ah may swallow Memel mother t rust to the east. Prime Minister Chamberlain In- formed the House of Commons that the British and French en- voys 1n Berlin had been instruct- ed to join in "expressing the hone that the German Govemment will use its influence to ensure respect" for the 19M statute of Memel, which nve the former Germs/n ferrite? a measure of ‘ nomy Inder lthuanian control. Britain and France are signa- tories in the 1W4 convention. In- formed observers in London ex- gected them tc protest if Chamel- r Hitler should “permit" the M614? Germans to return to the Rel . . It was considered ploblematical whether such a return would take the form of actual annexatlcn by Germany or ‘elm to- the Dan- Ila pattern of a separate Nazi state controlled through the Nazi party from Berlin. Replying to a question about merdays Meme! Diet elections, which Nazis scored heavily. Mr. Chamberlain said: "There is reason to think that after the Memei elections demands may l“ made up n the Lithuanian Government by majority Dflrties in tne met. which would be incon- sistent with the statute of Memel. ‘The British Government. as a F""W'!ll'\' of the Memel conven- Ion. cannot ignore this possibility. ‘ill new of t-h-e special influence which the German Government is in a position to exert. in tlhese the British Charac d'Affalrs in Berlin had been in- structed to Jctn with the French Ambassador in expressing the hope that the Genman Government will use its influence to ensure respect for the statute." ‘Ilhe current Italian propaganda olmbailvn for French territory led to questioninu of Mr. Chamberlain rezardrintt Britain's attitude. He said only that Britain bod no pact or treat; specifically requlrinlgTh-er to aid asainst- Iltnly- hat Britain would aid France in the event of unprovzkcd aggression. however. has been stated unquali- fiedly by Mr. Chamberlain on sev- ihd .,,.. .11 territory by Italy would vi late the ElIILQQPJLLQgZM“ ' ' ' " igl- =§9glin1ud __9o. hassli- Qflaiig)‘; CQWNCI {VENT} "Borden Line Club luuonlghugs lamps. calves every Tuesday. hours l2 to 3 u-zstll-lz-lvl- -s-u "Brcokfleld Christ-mus Friday. Dec. 23rd. "Reserve Dxelnocr 19th for Mt. Mellck school conceit m Pew-fol Hai]_ h-2UJ-l2'1u'3l. C insert 11-235. PChrlsRmas Concert at North wllisllif-I‘, unurozay nee. 22. L-zoz-lz-la-al. December 21st for "Reserve Chris mos Con- Bradulloane Scuool cert 1n ' "no 1 ti Ladle egcdg. ‘i iiixiilgihlii. 351E513 35Igmh§ e any‘ m“ EL-adl-iz-lalzlf "Th . ti 0i u“ aulueiynzlginiizlz niiriii vTiil be held Bligh?‘ “titwiii Tim“ B” ' m ' °'.° °“;,'.m-12-12-2l. "a be Hrhura- lu lfigufiviilifiiririia {ihtil noon. y» G. 0. T . °'°'“' Tfilfiz-n r w-tr- us” in” Pu’. “correspon- alt-sen" l Pstfwleh‘! "m. ‘_ . 11-370. ‘roomo concert in W!’ It'll ‘jwmneeenllatiasl-Mtiaoiefnésfi items, n-aab-la-la-zl. gas-eat “u, Algal-hi? y; r-m-lé-zs-a. th“ , ' ' dressed. . a °~ firs‘ T“? L-w- i341- ‘eiqo. new low CONCERNxffiR 155% 0 HL-éez-iz-ls-ti. ‘ A #943440 ILA Many Santa Claus.” joy to everyone this season. ‘Ni/lapping, addresslntz and as- signing palcels m lhe Santa Pal department at the Guardian Office began Saturday and continued ill full swing yesterday. Daily, and nightly too. the work will so on making everything 1n readiness for delivery on the z-ith. Each child is given a. toy, a bag of candy and rruirt. So little OJIIDHICC with wlhat some more fortunate children get. but still wnat happiness those slits can bring. Won't you enioy your own Christ- mas much better knowing that in some other home. much less for- tunate in a. financial way because oi unemployment or sickness, little are laugnmg merrily with thlnas Sonata left. Just try it and sec. bcok over the list of needy children below and make your sel- ‘cction. If you are busy send a cash donation to Santa Pals. ca this office and it will be use very carefully in the purchase of dolls. toys. lluit and candy. Last year sob cnlloren were pro- vided for and it is likely as many will be on the list tllls year for conditions are no better among many lIl this City. It takes some time to make ready for delivery such a large number of parcels. You can help "lflteflaliy by send- ing in your contribution tcoay. The earlier you give the more you help with tne work. YESTERDAYE SANTA PALS Miss Hilda Coies. Sliver \.vlngs Jr. Red Cross, Gracie 5, Prince Street 8:11:01. Miss Ada L. M. stead, Hunter River. Mrs. James D Whit/e. A Friend. Miss Pauline But-hoe. Miss Sally Forbes. Miss Edith Forbes, Miss Hazel Malone. Miss Annie Matheson, P, E. I. Hospital Miss Betty Jean Beer. Miss Ann Rcgerson. Mrs. W. B. Rcberfson. In Memory of Miss Shirley Hooper. In Memory oi Miss Rosalie Hooper. Billy Farmer. Miss Mary Faljlnel‘. The Hill Family. Joan ivlarie McGuire. A Fri-end. Mrs. G. A. 59ml‘- M, J. Bell Miss Joan Lcwther. Lewis Irowther. The Pllgrlnl Cabins. Stanhope- 3rd Charlottetown Kirk TrooP- Miss Jeanie Pickard. Bessie F. Howatt, Providence. d. Rliéfig fiElQlm R. Frizzell, Central Be a us. Enilest Robertson. summer-aide. Ernest Robertson. summerside- Miss Marlon R. Frlzseil. Central Bedeque. NEEDY CHILDREN 1-1 is th dvance list of needy cnllfiiin. sillelilTied w 01w 01am- . tih buwishtchelt? ‘ifiliftt- 15L V .\_1L_“1£e*£i°" (Continued ‘on Patio 3- °°1 l) 4 B sdeque . ' itor, - d wday for an soundad Itlly mm" oor oh Born l and. ‘hithhfida the 1313M» I" wo ask of l! “his: notion would n and faculties I Franc . K yd“ ' n giant-lib"; . W aha. * . . on but‘. wltslya colonial 0513512519100‘ ' labor.’ ' » ’qn:elt}ii:wci::danti-French ll- tutlon beau-n Nov. so. t-ha aim“ Children Await Adoption By S anta Pals Christmas App-ro-aching Speedily —Y0ur Donation Will Assure Happiness T (_>_§9me Little Tot. J‘A packet full of dollars, that I'm giving you because No one knows how to spend them half as well as That expresses exactly the feeling of Santa Pals. How else could money be spent whereby a small amount would bring such joy as in aiding Santa put something in the carefully hung stocking of every child in this City? But do you realize, good Santa Pals, that hundreds of needy children remain with nothing yet in sight for them? And Christmas eve is so near. Really it is becoming a serious situation. So rally around and help Santa bring lgascist Press Sounds France For Open Door To Ethiopia inloi ul tthe eh l‘ c] f g 1 1‘ lhlf! i1! l-ti-"dwu i=- “iii-rural . and 549d s. stiliifi ‘tfiuvlo in ' ‘fig. h colony May Iietaiiate - Against Japan .._,._._ LONDON, Dec. 12 -- (or Cabin-Joint economic rapt-isms by Great Britain and the Un- tted states gaimt Japan as a YBBI-llt of To yo’; determination to form an Asiatic bloc were le- largsd as a possibility hero to- lls , It is understood the-idea oi sanctions against Japan has been discussed informally be- tweer: ‘rep; us. . ooun r es , of opera on has. been glrawn upior anything concrete ormuls e , Joseph nennedy. tho United Slates Ambassado , may discuss the [euernixrinclple of reprtsais with Presi cut Roosevelt at Washlxton durlnl his Christ- mas vis t. Navigation T‘ Closes 0n Great Lakes FORT WILLIAM, Ont... Dec. 12- (GPl-Jyavigaticn from mkchcad r.s tcaav was officially 1210595 5°? hi. 1938 season which shipping of- ficials declared to be the busiest 1n mg)?“ gsglear: the northwestern v o ezrdlgoyfilmltake ksuperigrxtfigwwgflfglne’ - r, a 20%]: etiheq rhgreanuual fall trip s- lono the north shore to brtns in lighikeepers. During the nab/gotten season ap- prgiiimtiteile” shflpcfrimmcasbtusliiyelhogt ram terminal elevators here. vir- tually double the amount shipped inst year and heaviest movement in the past decade. Federal Aid For Shediac Fishermen rlnan-Enlcrou. Hoe. l2 -1CP) -'I'he Dominion Government will a shore of $1.605 promised hediac fishermen ‘by the Province to a1 _ d maged b a SIGITEIF slrluehlgh tide riov. 2s, the. s‘ w. Pirle, lnlstcr of Lends tr. “mrxaxrslrs: toasti- J. gglflchaud, Federal Minister es. Mr. Pirie also received assur- anoe from Mr. Michaud that the Dominion would share on an N" basis with the province the coat of replacing smelt gear lost in Kent‘. County during the storm and the cost of re lacln! smelt B9B!‘ 1°55 in Glouces r County durins I storm last January. - ' Fran hr?‘ m‘i&“c'ii"£“§°‘ for Iowa‘ tolls an a share in control of the snwiide adv‘ continued u» ex- qnq _ the ei of genre. on c watt m, m4 . French territ- ortel which p Be eubeee was ‘hum o’ ‘fl-Terrorist. forntivor Iithloftilfl BUNFERENBE or iliNGSliiiREMEN ls Posiilluw Matters Pertaining To Harbor Improve- ments Discussed At Meeting — Mr. J. O. Hyndman Is Guest Speaker. » A conference between longshore- men, shippers and a committee from the local Board of Trade to discuss stevedorln charges in the port. of Charlottetgcwn loomed last night following a meeting 1n the Sporting Club. Guest speaker was Mr. J. 0. Hyndman, chairman of the Harbor Improvement Com- mittee of the Charlottetown Board. of Trade. Mr. Daniel Coughlln presided. Other speakers included Messrs. J. B. Gormley, Lemuel RAJ-sh. J. J. Trainer, and Arthur Gormley. Recently published charts, made VER FAYECQF, MEMEL iWooden Legged Bow ls liead REG-INA. Dec. 12 --(CP)-— Saskatchewan's wooden legged cow is dead. The Bovines ad- venturous career came to an end at Kelliher, when it was fed to silver foxes. Thus was closed the life oi’ a oow that had walked around for nearly a year with a wooden leg fashioned from a popular tree, pint-air 1M and straps below the c. Once a good milker. tihe cow W" Owned by John Clarke. who last winter found it with a hind leg so badly frozen amputation was necessary. The cow wore the wooden leg for nine months and then, when it stopped milking. the Clarke family disposed of it. to a Ilelgh- boring fox ranch. ' Houde Once Again Mayor 0f Montreal MONTREAL, Dec. l2 —(CP)'— showed 42 feet of water over Fitzroy Rock outside the harbor {following a survey oi the harbor Mr. Hyndman t.old the meeting. tides. More water was available for ships coming in here than for ships entering the port of Mont- real. In the 5t. Lawrence River 30 feet was the depth and an agitation was on foot to have it dredged another five feet at an isgmated cost. of 50 million dol- Stlll despite il-le fine harbor Charlottetown had a "black eye" in shipping circles. the speaker continued. It was becoming known among ship owners as a "hell of a place to gem-because oi lack of docking facllities._ ‘ "'l’."I'.ei-|e'c§uue~§ulps Are from‘ ct Every year he had enquiries from operators of large cruise ships, 10, 15 and even 2O thousand tons, desirous of calling here. They had to be advised against it be- cause of condition of docks. Dif- ficulty of the North star, only 3.- 000 tons in coming to dock was mentioned. It was a situation that was an “outraqe" but the people appeared indifferent. Complaints of shippers and shipplnng com- panies oi high handling charges here was another difficulty and was doing something to dry up shipping in this port. Mr. Hydn- man told the meeting. He had no personal axe to grind. was not seeking to enter "olltlm. was not a. shipper and was not ofierlnil criticism He merely wished to place before the men the situation as it had been resented to him. Improved ockinz facilities would come if public opinion be- came strcnr cnolluh. the speaker predicted. Politicians "kept their ear to the ground" and did not act in advance of public opinion. So far as he was concerned. Mr. Hvndman said, he becamelrlterest- ed in transportation as far back as 191i and had joined the Beard of ‘Prado and fought for improved facilities ever since. The terms of Confederation called for "efficient. continuous communication with the mainland winter and summer" and if they. with other terms of union. were fully carried out would make this Province the most pro- sperous in the Dominion. “There should be no unemployment in this Province," the sneaker declar- ed. He advocated a back to the land movement to increase pro- (Con. ued oYTTTJIaTsT3f C41 Z ._____.__.__ Three-year-old Boy Victim In .Sad Fatafity Earl McQuaid. three-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Mc- Quaid of Dunstaifnage, ten roilu fléom Cheriotttaelwwmhzlas kimlied in- aantiy yeate ay w n e rear w‘; ‘ of a truck operated by Bernard Creamer of Bouris, P. E. 1.. passed over his head. The ac- cident occurred in front of the McQuald home. The driver said he noticed tho lad leave his ard and run out a- cross the . No attempt was made the little chop to cross in front the truck. and the driver was almost. certain the was ltotherear of the ma.- cl-ltno, which was mcvln along at 4d te te of . T ‘Inhe ediivermcould Trot understand rww the little lad came to fall un- der the wheel of the truck, equipped with. the dual ' little victim was “‘° trots at M. .... in- diplomat, still was male.‘ M‘ u; who bands no inns in EthTOETa. _ ~ ~ ttheita! Itch us. Coroner, D. I. J. Yam order- est. which will be held a at. 10 o'cloc . I the i em ei- proonoo . (ore- A. Coimo , John irsd Smith. Hm Pa That depth was at dead low sprlnr-Montreol lines, moo and 1934. His other elm- Magnetic Camilllen Houde, sum- moning again all the appeal that made him for years the idol of the electorate, nto the mayoralty of Canada's largest city today in a dramatic reitlurn from two years of political e e, - Riding the swell of a flood tide of votes, the siiver-tongued vet- eran of a dozen political wars surg- ed into power for his fourth term by beating out a "reform" candid- ate and a member of the Provin- cial legislature. His plurality, how- ever, was the lightest in the four elections he has won. Rolling up a lead of 20,612 that started from the very first poll- box opened. the former Mayor ad- mlnisteredsa. crushing defeat to Charles A. Guscon, whose platform was reform, and to youthful Candide Rochefort, Union Nation- alo Member of the Legislature for Montreal St. Mary. Only Gascon managed to make it look anything like a. fight. The final unofficial count of the 1,144 polls scattered through 35 wards gave Houde a total of 83,- 481 against 62,869 for Gascon, mak- ing his political debut, and 4,- 228 for Rcchefort. who lost his de- posit. as he did when J. Adhemar Raynault beat out both him and I-Ioude 1n the last contest in 1936. The dapper Raynault, who beat. out Houde by 3,880 votes in the last election, withdrew from civic politics at. the tn of his first two- year term because he said he want- ed t.o give full attention to his other job as Union Natlonale Member of the he lslature for liAssomption, That eft; the field open to last elections two defeated candidates and a newcomer to the civic arena. It was Honda's sixth time before the Montreal electors. He won in m. didature, besides the 1036 defeat. came in 32 when Fernand Rlnfret, now Secretary of State, ousted him from city hell. ___..___?-____- Pleads Guilty 0f Smuggling Charge NEW YORK. Dec. 12—(A.P) — George Burns, the radio comedian pleaded guilty in federal court to- day to a charge of smuggling. Fed- eral Judge Bondy deferred sentence un ll after the trial of Albert Chap- erau. aso named in two indict- ments with Bums. _ Joseph V. Delaney. assistant. Un- ited States Attorney, who handled 'the case said Burns and Chaperau. were named in an indictment oi’ 8.\£ counts each. charging they brought info the United States and concealed two bracelets Because Burns had shown co-cp- eration with the federal authorities Delaney said, Jud e Bondy permit- tcd his release on is own recognit- anoe pending sentence Negro Charged In “Voodoo” Killing GermanBank Head Will Visit London BEL-IN. Dec. 13 (Whitsun- t. President of th swept back fir): all‘: mgr the snowplow dur. MEETINGTTUF cm izoulcll LAST mun Direct Relief Date To Be Announced Lat- er Council Decides. 911110 “Employment relief would not be recom-menced until fur. ther notice in the press. which will be Riven Jointly by the Mayor and relief committee. His Worship Mayor Foster stated at last nizht/s gilxulsr meeting of the City Coun- It was indicated that next year direct. relief would be sspomtsd from unemployment projects under an szrcement between the Domin- ion and the Provinces. a reversion to the policy m force before i933. No licences would be issued fcr bins? frames except for strictly charitable punposes, it was decided after discussion of a recent letter i in the press by the Attorney Gen-f ‘Ilhe Chief of Police was in- structed to rlctly enforce the by- law flzalnst Dflfkifll cars overnight on the streets. ‘This instruction was given with a view to facilitat- FINANCIAL STATEMENT A statement of revenue and ex- penditure from Jan. 15 to Nov. 30, 1935. was submitted by Coun. Chandler. chairman of the finance commit/tee. The report showed total expendi- tures of $244,691 as against $231.- “Open Warfare”: Stage Reached In Liberal Row Hostilities EruEEH. Blaze of Pub- licity. Hepburn, Denying “Con- spiracy” Charge, Is Reported Ready To Fight Federal Leader In Next Election. ' autumn 5T- THOMAS. Ont-i Dfli- lZ-—iC. P-)—~Prelnier Mitchell Hepburn said tonight his support in a Federal _ ‘ election will be dlreotofi against the party led by Prime Minister Mackenzie King. The Liberal Premier of Ontario aald:— “My position-is this-in a general election I could not oonscientioun ly support a party led by Mackenzie King, whose Government in Q time when action on national issues was badly needed holds the word record in this respect in the history of the Dominion. "The party I am prepared to support, and it la not neceasaril I third party, must be led lay/a man in whom I have confidence and whose policies in my opinion will solve the pressing woblema that con»- frnnt Canada today. Later in referring to the Prime Minister theOntar-lo Premier sails "I would suggest that Mr. Kln| lifi the blinds of his summer ro- treat at Klngsmere, peek out, then go back and hibernate again. I strikes me that that is about all he has been doing in the last foq years and he might as well continue.“ OTTAWA Dec. 12-(C. P.)—0pen warfare between’ Ontario Liberal supporters of Premier Hepburn and Dir minion Liberals as represented by Prime Minister Mao- kenzie King, promised tonight to furnish the most dramatlq 418.24 for the some period last year. The 1938 estunates were $284.- 0i’i.80 as against estimates of $212.- 143/70 for i931 Receipts collecicd to Nov, $0 1938 totalled $215,735.16 ~compaled with $188,498.30 for the corres- Dondint! period last year. Estimated 198B collections were $288,017.50. This year's revenue collections included $48,414 tax arrears. Coun. Chandler stated. This Was encour- atzlnaz. but on the other hand tax collections in the post nwmth have been unsatisfactory, especially real estate and personal property taxes. He a/ppealed for greater cooperation on the part of all concerned. Since the last monthly meeting, $76,000 in Charlottetown bonds in the sinklntz funds had been dis- posed of at the remarkable price of 103.30. The Mayor congratulated the finance chairman on his report, ndo _ dhlsgappgalas to, the (Continued on page 3, Col 8) Purchase More American Wheat WASHINGTON. DOC. 12 — (AP)—F. R. Wilcox. director of the marketing division of the United States Agriculture De- partment, sald today that Bri- tish mlilers awed to take an additional 5. it. bushels of American wheat, undel- the Gov- ernment's export subsidy pro- [IIAITL This would bring the total sales to United Kingdom under the program to about 25,000,000 bushels. Al. the some time, Wilcox cx- presscd the belief the Depart- ment would reach its oal of disposing of 100,000,000 ushels oi‘ United States wheat before July i, 1939. through its subsidy program, Sales were about 69- 0013.000 for the first 5 1-2 months of this fiscal year. he said. Increase Shown In R. A. F. Enrolment LONDON. Dec. 12 -(CD-Havas) The Air Ministry announced to- day that 612 persons enrolled in the Royal Air force last week, an increase of 391 over the same per- lod last year. The number n! enrolments since April 1 totals 2..- phase of the next general election in Canada, expected in the fall of 1939. Hostility between the two loaders, simmering with only’. occasional boiling over for more than a year. erupted in I blaze of publicity today. ~ a ' Transport Minister Howe and Labor Minister Rogers lifted the lid at Port Arthur Saturday night when they charged Mr. Hepburn, in an “unnatural political alliance with Premier Duplessis of Quebec, sought to remove thoj PrlmeMinister and set up a Federal Government more ti‘ their liking. In a prepared statement today the Prime Minlstery acknowledging publicly for the first time the serious dif- ferences between himself and his former colleague in the House of Commons, endorsed the charges made by his two Ministers at Port. Arthur. And lie declared every member, of his Cabinet shared the views of Mr. Howe and Mr. Rogers. . . Mara Heplluurtfl élreinied Rfmligfltd clan-t s“ ‘mm’ ‘“° ‘ “d Robins Seen In was quoted as declaring he woui fight Mr. MacKenzle Kins in the Orchard Is Repofl next election and was prepared to itupport a Iltberal insurgcnce against 1m. The Prime Minister said he would lay the matter before the I-ibersl members of the House of Commons and the Senate immediate after Parliament meets Jan. 12. ' is is- sue must be and will be squarely faced." the Prime Minister said. At the first Government caucus the uestlon would be discussed "in all i implications." Bored Differences Speaking at a Liberal rally after Mr. Howe had been nominated in Port Arthur saturday to run in the general election, Mr. Rogers, in a serlesof charges that Mr, Hepburn was threatening unity in the Dom- inlon. declared that “within the past few weeks it has become 1n- creasinszly antral-en‘. that Mr. Heg- bum has determined to use all t 1-, wers at hi; disposal to bring a- ut retirement ofihe Prime Min- ister ot‘ Canada wutil the evident purpose of setting up a government; at Otawa which would be largely dependent on and controlled by th provlncial governments _1lt Toronto and Quebec." Some 17 months ago Mr. Hepburn startled Liberal ranks when he de- clared gublicly “I am not a Mac- kenzie intz Liberal any nlore," Be- fore and since there have been oc- caslonal outbursts from Mr. Hep- burn against the Prime Minister, notably over the entry into Canada of American organizations during thLQshlLwoLqcnel-al _Mot s st , NEW GLASGOW, N. B. Dec, l2-e (GM-The calendar says its wintel but the weather man has the robin! mixed up. Adam MacKenzie report»- ed today he say a l flock of tho birds iflbehi! orchs --when they $231111? (IGWII Smith kOQpltig NOR shill” Til 4 HE Emits? ‘films. ‘to Flap \% Quota o! the ichsbank. ls sdleduied to o to london soon. and while an, Boerse (stock exonerate) circulars said. will be ed th of seeing foreign Jews with new to tor-king out a scheme a- lonl the lines of that envisioned. he . ‘lyhiacbriefiy, was dwcribed as and four poor Germany as fast moth German rte are ‘d 3.31m yield foregnxpzxchan “to s ts of th ir i . Theme Hy Jeweof ‘"153 figs 1351-30113 p“, 1g___(Ap)_A 940 as compared to 10,681 for titatl mag: m“ 31655.,“ tfilny $15,311,: period in 1987, it was added. (Continued on page B. Col 3) r . - at . - ‘ N __.----.-~~---~.¢-: V, _ ' . $51k“ fie Zrmiiirsy i T w‘ f f ' Bii-f»“-“"“““‘ ‘“"°°'°““°~‘F + ‘ ° "" °°" “I "i °- f Victoria a2 42 1'1 .5 ndfgitfihtrlgfilexlufélgrzgg: Nazis D ra t Ba rter Plan ..,,..,,...._ .. ., ... .... “dilka“"l"t°°‘ » h » » a 1'5 ll I‘ O , S J E ‘ f. ma. t“. .......=§........t. T0 pur ewls ml ration 3m a; ae Park, w are . . » Harri": told iii 13% killed “"“"-" $483M g2 a m ° aural-m. Dec. 12-—(AP)—The would “find some wealthy Jew a- $3M John 3, s, mama, md h“. tw'gtdl'°wn"u°urwa_n.lbef German Government ta végntirgguptn broadbeto lend him‘ suchbfignlshias Hum“. .36 a q m” med to m" m, m 01d apian to get. Jews out. of e1 c n ma Ls necessary “or ens ms mm Qhmqogwtown , 34 > n40“. c“. mymem m, ry by coupling Jewish cam nae on an hodIOiX‘ co-re glonlslts s rt 370° 11m. W“ my with German exports. a is r- fen m es y in some ot er coun» FORECAST m“ “m1” Slgdht “YE-esteem 'y’-wme1ni°TlTl'n-"w' tinued Dr. H mar ac . P e are w ng he con . Mafimm m“ m . Veda,“ "to reimburse this foreign Jew. but w‘ _ nda 0mm“ cm do n °nliéggdéwish with some snow or part rain and a little colder by nlmt. H8211 tide tJhlsof-terrwcn at and tomorrow morning at 3:8 . . Bun sets this afternoon at ma and rises tomorrow mornina at ‘riot quarter memos: 1a. om Y if ‘he can provide additional mar- ke s for German-made products." The plan was disclosed coinci- .11 dentsily with tntlmations of s slight et-up shortly in severity of I. m. Nazi anti-Semitic measures. 1t was Bunlnmlde . 8.1] I. It, l II 3i§n'§§"i'<§i'°.ili&°:”{l°8' 1% t-‘iiliifltliii- a. m. us p. h’ German u - met t a xpec r l ter u: t m‘ Jewgsih return foT- tehe ‘isfiiéii i fiflblm o! Torvueutlno .1,‘