OFA. MERE MAN n-n-ii ‘afihe fsoe of Ifililllluw- dian Two Colts '°"'°°'"' m“ rounded m1 “n”; Guardian- iu animate and inanimate from giants to Wllnles be- >ZZfi/ The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20. 1937 Trev" &>v ,...,....-.-» '--~..,________‘ Read by Everybody W O WERS DEADL OCKED ON SPAIV Ii EASIER British Troops Take Curb Terrorism. A_ p, by Guardian's Special Wire) JERUSALEM, Oct. Ill-A ter- rific bomb explosion in.the Shimon nmdik oriental Jewish quarter iopight shattered the ‘brief lull in fpleltlllt! disodrers. No casualties were reported but flood spattered on the street was u,“ by police as indication that iiie bomber had been wounded ma iled. Premature explosion apparently uved many lives. Another outbreak occurred when y fiisilladc nf shots was fired ~31, a ievrlsli bus travelling from Haifa io Jerusalem. Stern military punishment for trouble-makers restored a, mgflflufg .=_-_—_—.—_———-——i__ iContinued or: page 11, col, 5) "Talkies - Montague, Saturday. last chapter serial. Le-IBtI-M-ZO-zl. "Bingo and Dance in C. M. B. A. Hail, Vernon, Wednesday, October ‘Mil. L-745-l0-19-2i. "Buying live hogs Albany Thin-s. day 21st, Emerald 22nd, until noon. G. C. Green. L-ZO-flb-W-t-t-w-t-tf. "Dance ‘in Victoria Rink Wed- nesday Iii§Prt-—MU5IG by ' Summer- ilde Music Makers. L-2063-T-W-tf. "Farr-Lou's Fight Pictures, loos Theatre this week. 14-786-10-20-21. “Punt forget Sccial, Pleasant gave Hail, Wednesday, October "will YOTBIW _Wiltshire play, Freetown Hall tonlsht. If not. fine, Mil‘ night. L-776-10-20-li. "Ciro Party Kelly's Cross Hall. "ilrriday. October 21st. L-7B2-10-20-2i. l! Come to the dance in John- tions River School, Wednesday, October 20th. L-773-l0-20-li. |"Borden Line Club loading hogs, ambs, calves every Wednesday at “billy- Houra 12-3. L-ZOBI-IO-M T W Lt. "Reserve lltli for chicken Supper and Dance In Kelli/s Cross nair. L-7B2-10-20-1i. "Mii-iquerade Dance in Niillview Hall. Monday. October 25th in aid oi Women's Institute. Prize given. 14-772-10-20-11. ' ‘lion Rummage Bale at Rankin McLoines Store, Grafton Street, Saturday, 23rd at 2 o'clock. 14-777-10-20-11. "Prince in Victoria Rink Wed- "rrr-ay ilizht-mualc by Charlotte- “ml Rhythm Makers. L-2063-T-W-ti. “H. Frizzelfs store, Covehead f“ Thursday. cut. sou. and 21st vr stock taking. L-715-l0-18-3i. “about miss Professor Wigmozeh u, 1 “P? and Slides tonight at B £°¢i< 1n Cornwall Hall. Admission cent; Mid 10 cent-s. ‘ L-IBT-IO. “XMMI couriers requested to at- anili I meeting in the Oddfellows ' y. Charlottetown, October 23 at °°l°°l=- 1|-'I09-l0-20-3i. “Rirsiiab Hall Wednesday Oct ma} "limo runner, bazaar, bingo, ‘m "is and other amusements. 1i fine Thursday. LWB-IO-ID-lli "(Mme to Halloween Tea for giniarlottetown Hospital in Holy h"; Hall. October 20th and 2m. minim Salads. Plea, Home-made Y» 31080. Aprons, Fish-pond. L-BOT-IO-ll-ll. “The r. vie. n of r. r: 1. will 5°“ its annual rally in Bummer- “ Pfflbyterian Church, Thurs- “7- gal-lib‘: iAifit at 11 a. 2a., 2.80 ' ' you!“ Penpu u‘ “iii/rd id attend. b724-10-l8-2i. “A "Willie of the Milk Produc- gsdiillld vendors Association to be mm" "is Arrieuiiurai mu, Wed- modf Whine. October 2on1 at a m ~ Di‘. Oroteau will address this 0Q}?! on "Adult Eduoctlontlnnd o, h“ Union Wort business matters m‘, “vgui L180 be oaynaid- ' dance urgen re- “M nm-io-io-ai Active Measures To unuuoiwrun " ‘Thursday, November ‘ licad will be closed Wednesday“ YORK. Oct. 10-The King and Queen were formally re- ceived at the railway station here today by civic officials on the occasion oi the first visit of a reigning monarch since 1640. First occupant of the Throne tc visit York since Charles I. the King was presented with the city's sword by Lord Mayor Morris “in humble testinwny of our obedience." . The Princess Royal and her husband, the Earl of Hare- wood, greeted ‘rheir Malesties here and, after tea with the lbord Mayor Their Majesties drove to Harewood House where they had dinner. Among York Plays Host To‘ First Reigning. King Since I640 (C. P- by Guardian's Special Wire) other guests was the Arch- bishop of York, Earlier the King and Queen opened their three-day tog; of Yorkshire with a visit to Hull where they carried out a busy program despite fog and cold weather. Crowds lined the streets to cheer the royal party. At the same time the King's brothers, the Dukes of Glou- cester and Kent, and their wives made public appearan- ces in other parts of the coun- try. In the west the Duke and Duchess 0f Gloucester began a visit to the Duchy oi’ Corn- wall and at Swansea the Duke of Kent became Chancellor of the University of Wales. ENBIRBIE ciiv NEAR jilllh Asturian Cause Said D o 0 m e d W i t h Threatened Capture 0f Villaviciosa. (BY The Associated Press) SALAMANCA. Spain. Oct. 19— -(CP Havasl-The Insurgent radio station there announced ‘ tonight that Insurgent troop] have m- cupied Vlllaviciosa, 15 miles from Gijon and the last. important military position on the road to the isolated Asturiun stronghdd on the Bay of Blscay. After entering the coastal city, the Insurgents drive down the road to Gijori, the communique said. HENDAYE, Franco-Spanish Frontier. Oct. lib-Spanish Insurg- ent officers declared tonight Vil- laviclosa. was doomed to capture by a pincer-like movement cutting that strategic city in northwest Spain ofl’ from the sea in the drive on Gijon, port objective oi their Asturian campaign. Advance guards reached the mouth of the river Vlllaviciosa to the north, while troops encircled the city of 20,000 population, about 12 miles from Gijon. Forced to Retreat A government communique said superior Insurgent aerial and mechanized forces caused Asturiim (Continued on page 11. Col. 5) Eminent British . Scientist Succumbs (c. r. by Guardian's Special Wire) CAMBRIDGE, Oct. 19-—L0rd Rutherford, one of the world's leading physicists and director of Cambridge University's famous Cavendish laboratory for the past 18 years, died today, aged 66. Lord Rutherford was Macdonald pro- 405591- 0f phyJc-s at McGill Uni- versity, Montreal, from 189B to 1007. The eminent scientist, winner of the Nobel prize for chemistry failed to rally from an abdominal operation. He was a past president of the British Association for the ad- vancement‘ of clence and of the usurious ecntinued the r ~ liew Execution Disclosed In Soviet Russia DEATH or iiEli KNiliiIN ciiv, tANi§MANt l Mr. John M. MacFar- lane, 63, Pas so d Away In The City Hospital Last Eve- ning. Mr. John M. MacFarlane, 63- year-old Charlottetown resident died in the City Hospital last eve- nliig after a short illness. Unwell for a short time he became ser- iously tll early yesterday morning and was removed to hospital where he ‘lied about 0 o'clock last night. Mr. MacFarlane was born in Charlottetown and was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles MacFarlane, formerly of Glasgow, Scotland. A highly respected resi-. dent of this City where he lived practically all his life Mr. Mac- Farlane was perhaps best known for his association with various MOSCOW. Oct. 19 -Dis- closure of the execution of 2i anti-Soviet terrorists today raised to 462 the known death - toll in five months for sabotage and espionage. A Khabarovak newspap said the 24 were executed in the Far East for espionage on be- half of Japan, railroad sabot- age and plotting against the lives of Soviet leaders. It charged they were Trot- skylatl and rightists who oper- ated on railroads in the far cast under direct orders of the Japanese intelligence service. The executions took place at Svcbodny, the newspaper re- ported, where 43 men and one woman convicted or espionage and sabotage plots were shot May 9- Slnce the May deaths, 290 persons have been reported shot in the Far East alone in railroad wrecking cases. Total executions for all ol- fences were believed to have reached at least 1,000 since Joseph Stalin declared in March that “the enemy must be extermlnated mercilessly." Rowe To Continue Conservative Leader TORONTO, Oct. 10—-Tho Even- ing Telegram said today it had learned definitely that.‘ Hon. Earl Rowe, Ontario Conservative Lead- er, would retain that. position. Mr. Rowe was defeated as candidate in Simcoe Centre in the Oct. 6 gen- eral election. Several of the 23 successful Conservatives have offered their seats to Mr. Rowe. the Telegram said. The one to be accepted has not been decided. Announcement of Mr. Rowe's decision to continue as party lead- er would be made next. week when he consults his followers, the news- Pflilcr said. Premier Hepburn offered follow- ing the election not to oppose Mr. Rowe if one of the Conservative seats was opened for him. Paul Muni Begins “Reai Vacation” NEW YORK, Oct. 19-1“ the self styled role of Vagabond, Paul Muni arrived from California. today for his first "real vacation” in 30 years Royal Society. (By The Associated Press) ROME, Oct. iii-The Italian cabinet; imposed new taxes today to meet the cost oi develolilnime African possessions and Dlrilfllifli‘ ing in the international arms race. It also souflm w "ma? £22133 1 b o er capital into ‘Itg vmg‘ ,n,;;,,:,.1.:e ‘ d anteeing I! ' atheists V8025; not be EXPWPTI‘ sled in the event of war- Another importer" "m" “f the issuance of an 0N1" w "it n,“ a pmgi, Militia in first m_ ricn. brinsiilfi Tefildem u“ “n” l e w the new lesion?‘ 5° :5 ‘:0 In‘. "everyone a chance 0 ... . F‘??? tit-RSI‘ reilenue intended in be raised by the new “x” w“: react 011101511! mmuwd’ bu‘ ‘u of acting. Duce imposes New Taxes For Colonial And Arms g Purposes thorltative sources estimated 6.- 000,000,000 lira (approximatelv $315,600,000) would be 11811190 within a year. Chief among the new taxes was an extraordinary assessment of 10 per cent on capital oi stock com- panies which the government 8s- aerted had for the moat part n10- fited through devaluation of the lira and bad not been subiectJ-O such heavy taxes as others. Th1! levy will be imposed only this WM’- Other new levies included in- creased taxes on production, busi- ness transactions. sales and iezfll paper. The daily sojourn tax on tourists also will be increased. In- creases this group were 639W" ed to yield about 1.°‘to,000,000 lira (approximately $52,000.000) annu- till Bands which went back more than years he joined the 82nd Rlegi-i mental Band and was later trans- ' fer-red to the Band of the 4th In- fantry Regiment. When the 105th Battalion was formed here during the Great War Mr. MacFarlane was made unit's bandmaster and served overseas in that capacity. -Mr. MacFarlarie was a valued member of the Canadian Legion Band formed in Charlottetown after the close of the war and re- mairied with the organization until it disbanded this year. lncuded in the historic func- tions held in this City at which Mr. MacFarlaue participated as a bandsman “we the celebrations in connection with the golden jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1887, the diamond jubilee for the Good Queen in i807, the memorial ser- vice when the Empire mourned her death in 1901, the celebration at the crowning cf King Edward VII, the solemn death march when Edward paszed on, the cele- bration at the crowning of his successor. the late King George V, and at his silver Jubilee 1935 and at the memorial service at the time of his death in 1936. Mr. MacFarlane is survived by his wife and five sons and two daughters, al‘ of Charlottetown. They are, Mrs. C. E. Burke, and Mary, Thomas. Lamont, Vernon, Archibald, and Victor MacFar- lane. A brother, Ernest MacFar- lane of Everett, Mass, also sup. vives. ‘ named Eagle Which Attacked Decoy Ducks GANAQQUE. 011R. Oct. Iii-Mike Brennan today told the story of a 30 pound eagle with an eight foot. wing spread that attacked his de-' coy ducks at Big Bay. He has a dead eagle to prove his story. The eagle, says Brennan, swoop- ecl down on his wooded decoys and grabbed one. He fired at it and the eage dropped in the water. But for an hour and a half it fought Bren- nan and William Dorey who was in the boat with him. The bird bit a . piece six inches long out of one our. Eventually Brennan got the eagle by the neck, dragged it into the boat and brought it to Gananoque where it died Monday night. Consecrated Bishop Of Hamilton See HAMILTON. Ont‘... Oct. 19—Iri the Basilica of Christ the King, today was consecrated a Bishop of the Roman Catholic Church and became the sixsh Bishop of Ham- ilton dioe-ese. He was consecrated by Archbishop John Thomas Me- Nally of Haitian, his predecessor in Hamilton See. Brilliant vestmente of many vis- iting clergy, including two arch- bishops. lent color to the proces- sion from the Bishop's residence to the Cathedral Church and i0 the body of the church besides secular priests were black-clad Jesuits. Csrmclites in brown. Do- minicans in white and other ord- ers. Victoria By-election a. Date Announced OVITAWA, Oct. l9 —(CP)~A byeleotion in Victoria to fill the vacancy. created by the Fleet-h i" Hon. S. P‘. Tolmie. Conservative member of the House of commons, b ~fifty years. In 1884 as a lad of ten “be” "$15"! ‘or 24 days‘ “Unions and in the membership oi Most. Rev. Joseph Francis Ryan . the age-old ceremony within. In, $50,000 Ransom Payment Spurs Kidnap liunt - l (AI. my Guardian's Special Wire) CHICAGO, Oct. iii-A imminent wide hunt was pressed tonight for kidnappers who collected $50,000 ransom but failed to release aged Charles S. Ross. Spurred by the knowledge the family had been double-crossed, United States Federal agents and State's Attorney's detectives hurled their full force into the search for the snatch gang. A trap similar to that set in the Lindbergh case was baited across the country. The government sent a compete list of the serial num- bers of 5,250 bills given the abduc- tors to Department of Justice Bur- eaus. police stat ons, newspapers, banks and business houses from coast to coast in the hope the moh- sters would be caught when they sought to cash in on their crime. Some investigators held the be- lief the Ross case would prove a parallel to the Lindbergh tragedy with the ransom collected after the victim had died. Chief of detectives John Sullivan inclined to that theory. He pointed out. the retired manufacturer had iisiiuiiiii l0 MEET iN iiiiiiil iiiiii-iilii-liilii Fishermen’s Union Of Prince Edward Is- land To Hold Ses- sions In Charlotte- town Today. Delegates were gathering 185i night. for the third annual (vou- vention of the Fishermenfls Union of Prince Edward Island today- Sessions. to be held in the Board Room of the City Building. We" scheduled for this moi-nine and afternoon. Registration of dele- gates will begin at 10.30 and the president, James B. McDonald oi West St. Peter's will present a r9- view of* the year's activitieswhen the convention gets underway i" 11 o'clock. y In addition to deiegflws Wm 37° expected to bring report-s decline with activities of local unions and to discuss problems facing fisher- men it was expected last night that speakers would include Pre- mler Campbell, Hon. B. W. Le- Page. president of the Executive Council and chairman of the Fish- ermen's Loan Board; Mr. W. R Shaw, deputy minister of agricul- turc; Rev. J. A, Murphy. D-Dl- rector of St. Dunstans University; Mr. J. A. Gillies. secretary of the Livestock Marketing Board; and probably Hon. Dr. W. J. P. Mac- Mlllan. Union officials last night sold there had been a considerable l1!- creasc in the number of local the parent. organization. Co-OPET- ation will be one oi tlie things stressed at the convention. 1i W" understood. A central office of the Provin- cial Union would be Ollenfid m Charlottetown shortly. it W85 11"" nounced last night. Urges Democracies To Unite For Peace BOSTON. Oct. 19 —(CP)-—A call for a joint effort by Britain and America tc ensure world peace was sounded tonight by Rev. Dr. G. A. Clerks, native of Port Hope, Ont., in an address before the women's Auxiliary of the Can- adian Club of Boston. He spoke on British and Ameri- can relations and was introduced by Mrs. W. Arnold wry, formerly Alice P. Stockton, native of Sus- sex, N. 13., who presided. Potato Price Jump Heartens Growers CARIBOU. Me” Oct’. l9 -(CP) -A neat top price oi'$l a barrel encouraged potato growers and shippers in Aroostook county to- day. Heavy city demands, shippers de- clared, has jumped the price sl- most overnight from 55 and 60 will be held Nov. 20. non siiiiiF llliEN RAllY NEAR CHIS! Heavy Selling Sends Markets Tob0ggan- ing Amid Scenes Like ’29. (By The Canadian Press) NEW YORK, Oct. lit-Amid confusion and bewilderment rem- iniscent of the wild days of 1929. stock markcts on both sides of the Atlantic crumpled today in a sell- ing storm, tiien came back strong- ly at the finish. Setting a dizzying pace, prices of leading issues fell $10 and more on Wall Street under a downpour of sales at the opening However, a sense of equilibrium hour there was a general rally in which many stocks wiped out all initial losses and some finished higher for the day. The Canadian markets followed New York's lead. The London 1nd Paris markets, winding up business earlier because pf the time difference, ended trading on a low note. Rebound Sets In After the selling storm blew it- self out the Toronto market wit- nessed a rebound that erased “i5 per cent of the early losses. Net losses for the day, as mirrored by market indiccs. were 2.32 for in- dustrials, 1.17 for golds and 5.26 for miscellaneous mines. It. was the same at Montreal. with cautious buying at the fin- ish bringing a better ‘tone. In the morning 26 issues plummeted to new lows for the year or longer. The price-wrecking wave swept commodities, bonds and other 1n- vestmcnis down the hill but here again late strength was fairly general. It was the heaviest selling storm experienced in Wall Street since the Roosevelt Government began “policing" United States exchang- es in 1034. 'I‘hc_flnishing rally found traders exhausted. Recover at Close Chrysler, selling down almost $10 in the first hour, closed at $61, only $1.25 ofi from yesterday. Un- itcd States Steel, off $7 at one time, closed 62 cents above Mon- day at $6.12. Allied Chemical and Dye, which fell $11, was of‘! $2 at the close. American Telephone finished with o, $2 loss at $147 a share after being down $7. Gen- eral Motors, down $7 at mid- (Continued on pagg 1_1, col, s) No Commitments Said Made .By U. S. HYDE PARK. N. Y., Oct. l9 - Presidout Roosevelt asserted in a formal statement tonight the Unit- ed States would enter the confer- ence of signatories to the Nine- Powei" Treaty on the Sine-Japanese i conflict without any commitments on the part of the government tc other governments." The statement, issued after a long conference between the Pres- ident and Norman H. Davis, head of the American delegation to the conference to be held at Brussels Oct. 30, was generally accepted as a reply to a statement by Senator Johnson (R-Calif) hinting that the United States and Great Brit- 12 PAGES into A tunnel la not a terminus but a thoroughfare and we soon emerge MAXIMS or A MERE MA. the sunlight again. ISH Ext} OSION . $152.4 TTERS LULLlgllY PA LESTINE Bitter 173?... Ho...» si T u A T I 0N Session LONDON, Oct. 19—(AP) Secretary Eden warned the ation was “very grave.” a bitter, three-hour meeting withdrawal of foreign volun rejecting discussion of the Spain). nnuicnnrznr RIGHTS The Italian move, supported by Germany and Portugal, threw the whole question back on the argu- ment that the granting cf bellig- erent rights to both sides warring in Spain pccede volunteer arith- drawals. Eden, presiding over the cub- committee session, tried tcsmocth out. the difficulties and finally asked the Italian, German and Portugese representatives to re- consider their position overnight. if an agreement still ivas Russia adopted a, conciliatory nt- Government does not any difficulties." He asserted in Spain spending to the actual number u each. from both sides." i of all non-Spanish elements lak- lng part in military operations. Informed sources said clltlfe rc- sponsibiliiy for the breakdown of negotiations would rest. will. Iinlv and Germany unless tomorrows meeting produced a solutions If it fails they said. Britain and Franco apparently would inc». i1 decision on whether to carry out the threat that. they would "I0- cover their liberty cf action." CRUISER LAUNCHED DEVONPORT, England, Oct, ill-n- H. M. S. Gloucester, a. 9,1300 Duches of Gloucester. anti-aircraft guns and ain had agreed in advance on a ylqzram of action. In i Sl-IERBROOKE. Que. Oct. 19- ‘The name of a Toronto saiesman was added tonight to the list of "missing" in ruins of Grand Central Hotel, destroyed by fire early yesterday with a. defin- ite loss oi four lives. Police were asked to aid in the search for a Toronto man named Atkins or l-laskar who registered at the hotel and was called by the night clerk, Arthur Geoffrey, when the fire alarm sounded. The elderly clerk said he was not sure oi’ the nuuie or the man who was not among those guests reported safe. while police sought to establish definitely the list oi dead, fire- men recovered the body of Stew- art Grose, 26-year-old restauran- eenu to the $1 level. arteur, who led two persona to ut- three a rplanes. i Fear Death Toll May Increase Sherbrooke trapped in his search for Charla wood, whose body with Lancelot Stewart is buried in ih debris. ring he purchased Mathurin only last Saturday. Th injuries suffered when he fe Ho called another meeting for tomorrow afternoon and declared not - sighted, Great Britain will linvcto _ consider her own course of action. l Poisibiml’ 0f 51106655. "§Il1\€cn%°"1:’g“ll1c nation‘. grc . aster. create for these other governments the Soviet Union y,,0,,nc,,,_3 in a proportion corre- (ltaly on Saturday offered t0 make a conditional “tckon" witli- {A lllllllllfl‘ of the bereaved relatives drawal of part of the Italian voi- unteers in Spain—but insisted thfii istnu tn claim their ricrui" withdrawals be in "equal nunfivrs i ’ 7d ton ' _ cruiser was Inuuchcri today by the / The cniisers armament includes 12 six-inch guns, eight four-inch eight 2i- inch torpedo tubes. She will carry it that. of Burned beyond recognition, the body of Grcse was identified by a from Roland Cooper, 25, died in hospital from while attempting to escape with a dozen other guests from the uppfl‘ floors of the {mar-storey building. Annual Subscription lleIlu-rerl $5.00 By llall—l'. E. l., $8.00; (‘uiniiin umi l‘. S. $5.00 ___.% Fails To Reach Agreement Stalemate Heightened By Surprise Italian Demand—Resume Meeting Today. "European cilorts to isolate the Spanish yvar remained deadlocked tonight and Foreign ltiilti-(jcrmun front the situ- .'l‘he Nine-Power Non-Intervention Committee failed in to solve the problem of the iecrs from the Spanish conflict The stalemate was heightened by ti surprise Italian demand for the return of the whole non-intervention neg- otiations t0 the basis of a British plain of last July, thus new Ang lo- French live-point plan for removing the volunteers. , (The Anglo-French program proposes immediate with- drawal of volunteers, granting oi‘ belligerent rights after came after noon and in the lasizitn international commission had reported foreign soldiers had been and were being withdrawn and establishment of a system of control for supervising non-intervention in q jsiéiiiii nu or ,Aiii iliiiSTER i ‘I9 Persons Killed In (Trash 0f (‘rack U. S. Airliner. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Oct. iii-Tho bodies of l9 persons kill- ifll ill lllf‘ ma ii of a luxurious air in tlic- Uinizi Aiouniains znht out of llic rocky wil- we re bl‘ 'rie1ix.t'~‘lt l tk r tltude toward the current propo- ‘ ‘mink’ m élvglfmltonaQeyo a c“ b] 5315‘ . ' Croimri row ‘t '" l1 d H" ambassadon Iva“ “"93” Moi." IICIICIIQFOULS tfglll; gonqueaii’ declared m“ if the Bmbm’ i lug (ii-cl) .sl‘.'.\\', stcrrp, sllilltcrv French ami other govemmmlts ‘ riliiycn will. ziiirl tilt‘ mcuacc of entertained 5'3""? belief m "he i landslides. in rm the scene of Bob Johnson. public relations mgent for United Air Lilies, an- romorni of the bndics would welcome‘ immediate evacuu- ‘ham; tion of o, considerable number of non-Spaniards from both armie. , "I llilVt‘ been informed that. all '5 , of the bodies have been taken down from the scone of the wreck. 1._Tliey will be plnccri lll charge’ of ,lliO coroner at Flvauston tor idoli- iiii 13ml nlirl other rtinynilgonipnis, ‘nireziciv hove assembled at Evan- Mczilurlliie, three \'(‘.\llL'.-'lilfil‘l.'<. sought qwzirate in- lllp (‘.'i".='r‘ Ambassador Maisky added that the rut-h, his government "Ilsrfvu biciilimm; '_ __ "" “ "_‘"" lne the question of lilrrfll __i‘" rights after the filial evacuation A ARE uP iH m: NR Vii-lo Niven arr oer (u: Qbcuno _. so / Nf/(iué maximum temperatures; BIETEOROLIOGICAL SERVICE, Toronto, Oct. 10 ~ Minimum and Dawson 32 3g Victoria. 48 52 Edmonton Ilii 54 H I F‘ ' Regina 1M 44 I Winnipeg IiH 42 Toronto 52 64 lO/Iitalvit X .50 62 outr- '2 ety and then ran back into the QuebLna 26 2% burning bulldlngdn search of his Sam, John 48 companion, Ossie Chariewood. Kama,‘ 44 56 the old The body of Grose was found be- ¢|,;,,.10,;,,.,,.,.,n 44 54 heath a pile of timbers near a FHRECASTS stairway where apparently he W85 Maritime Pita-titres: Fresh to - strung south uuci southwest winds" uitsctticd and mild with occasions e raiu and probably some fog. High i. do this morning at 10,52 nlifl toiuizlit. at 10.42, Sun sets this afternoon at 5.09 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.23. e Lust quarter moon Tilesriny’, Oct. ririr. rzui run iir u “Leaves liurrlr-n 0.45 u. iu., From Rent. I1 to W ring was scarred but. Mntliuriu 25- 3-29 R» l“- rewgnmed the stoma Silnunr-rlniic title eighteen min- The your“, vycunh Robert ulrs luler liiun (liitiriiiiiriiitlvii. I p. m. Lean-u Tnrmentine ll n. nn, 2.5.‘! n. m. Oct. I0 Learn Borden 4.30 p. l., [can Torncltlnl I45 p. n. _ i‘. p- - - »i->.»-':.~= "V." ‘a-Jr 7- "" "' ,_~.~..