MAXIMS 14 PAGES 0,. A MAXIMS MERE MAN °’ ‘ _____ MERE MAN “My oimt. to shillings Ind >1}? j / " ’°""" " 3m °' m” The P9°P|9'$ PEPE!’ , east":icv.;s"z..l~.ll.th* 7 Covers Prince Edward‘. Island Like the Dew .°::'.'.l.'.“'s".":...‘.'.'::"l::.f.":.'.;'::" cnnanorrsrowu, CANADA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 193s um By MI|I—P.E.L, $1.00; Clnltlu 1nd [LS $6.00 llluiiill IN SPECTACULAR llii BATTLE Military Observers Note Increased Re- sistence On Part Of Defenders. (By James A. Mills) Agoclatcd Pres; Foreixn Staff) “ANKOW, China. Fob. 18-—Ciiina “gens to be turning the tide. mil- ltuy observers declared tonicht. in m, ma; eerrmslizn In Central Chino on which may dewend the outcome of her resistance against J n. film's forces. especially her ulr , seem at last to have fnum the stride, these sources said. Not only have the Chinese required their shattered morale, they lic- eiu-cd. but they also have resorted aggressive tactics instead of ni- Isys flghfin! 0n the; defer-five. While General Gillan: Kru-Slielcs regular troops have scored a nu-n- ber of notable successes vlurin: the week, foreim observers rcnori- ttl s new movie's volunteer corps and roving guerrilla units have he- TVAZIF CHINESE p tUrge Steps To DEATH, ITAVITB SEEN i TURNING TIDE Ward" Against ARE WRiillliilT ' Bacterial Wilt Said Serious Tuber 25 Malady-Trade Board To Press? For Action To Keep Province‘ “isdsbefilifirlhlklblf! Free From Infection. i f Th}? Agriculture Committee _of the Charlottetown Board 0 Trade will confer immediately with the Provincial Department ‘of Agriculture in an endeavour to prevent spread to this Province of bacterial wilt, one of the most serious of potato diseases, the Board decided at a special general meeting last night. llransiviek and Maine potato come rfonnldnble arm of (lliinws defences. y ulbcmFfiftfiflli Legion" which ill-l eludes many American. Russian and‘ other IOYCIIZH volunteer pilots. has; become an important. factor in till}? “m... over this temporary, cool-f H of China the Chinese agrfolcc looted its most spectacular triumph, of the war. shootlnn down five nidinlz Japanese planes in flames on the outskirts of the ciiv. Fast, Soviet-made illaiies. 501W believed f own by Americans. power dived to smash the Japanese for- mations. The raiders totalled 302 l like number of Chinese planes m to meet them. Chinese army headquarters rc-z some 3M0 out of 101W‘ Jsmnnccc troops which iififi rrcss-"cd in til" mrih icari: of the Ilwai Rilcl in Anhlvei Province had been flilliifiii-l tied and the rest had retreated to‘ ikle south shore. i Steady Chinese advances _s".outh ofl tfleTicntsin-Pilkow railroad. on the eastern side of the it") _mrlc wide UlliEhfii corridor. “Here said to have tinted to within i0 miles of Foul!- pu and to have inflicted heavy Javanese casualties. [QMTNG fvfNii ' Illwrffli lu .'a\lllltlllill'l‘lllt'lliN nr» per wold this column at 2 cent strictly oaynl dqiflvfli Viiiiécayia sRilik Statur- l’. ‘e rum-y ti. cc p05 v11;- ~ ' ' L-ZiUZG-Z-lé-ifi-lil-lll. "Skate Victoria Rink tonight. L-8Z3-1-15-22-2ii-Silt-ti. "Borden Line Club loading h0g5 limbs. valves every Tuesday. Hours i2 to 3. L-3l8-i2-M-2-5-tf. "Hockey at New Glasgow to- nixht, no . M 1* Leafs. Playoff. “Us v8 Legiiti-mlil-li. “Wtéoivers vs. Maplelbenfs, Mil- n nk to i it, a off nullif- Bklie after.“ In p T L-i72. "Hockey irJBea View tonight. 3911118 Valley Arrows vs. 'Ma 1c is, game starts at 7.30. L-l 3. "Buyinri dressed chicken and fowl dollv. Correct grading. TOD prices. 151 - c - m- m 0°“ ritfiéii-ari-"ii. ."Unloadlnz_ciir I-‘lour and fcci #40 Q81‘ of coal. Rock bottom price Vi‘ 6881i. P. J. Noy 8c Co. L-lbl-Ii "Hospital Oak Sal Dell lo 5°11"! made Brzfld. altos caiilii g-zuiilzlaonyiale Moore 6a Mclalcods’. 6t riiuik ciiiiiirliilgtlri-liiifz-iaii-il. "Applications from Orange 10d: f ‘ o...%3. ¥£.“.'.i.."f.¥::_l§‘é8i$§. ‘Will. - Aha J»- ‘5 March ist. 1-193-2-19-11 gated: nuik ‘lhlesday. 2min..- tslfn e Red Wi . Y k ‘l “N? ird game ngsoysplaytbrff 0r W. R. Dennis Trophy. L-16 an‘ u ti w. li...‘....§“i2.‘°'»..‘.“.“‘i<...%§. milling: iiwcciiadiiaiigmi ‘iifl”fiad' “l "by ' “e L-ilii. "oimwtt. Entertalnme t and wave Credit Union iiy Rev. m t, in o. M. B. A. our‘: afiifiifiifi‘. ‘~‘r‘33§i”i¥v' RB‘ w“ °- W- h ' L-iii-alra-n n rihoiwnitrsmi’ I 5 Q apt! “he” véiflufixliiintéfysltzallgervs ‘l’? t? Mimi". admission 15' 103m. .__E_. can 1 0f No. i Cobbiti-ngleeed t3 our order, , ‘Qtwlerllv have w be ioatigd uirgie years. Mr. S. G. Peppin, chief seed inspect f coil that no truce oi’ bacterial wilt had been found here, said. lllolwever several dealers desired to imp recent y dcv-i d h‘ l d ' . tklkbnrfltlm ditsélgiqeo isiiglinpvi: ‘tangle; iitlxizgtiirfiéiut u ould have to go into areas c Chief Inspector had gong to dealer; 3nd up“ gmm w hum“ seed 8.218911. lt. was learned, however, that. one dealer was con- a_nd the most sidering lialiriliqg_n_shlpm¢qt,____ iulllsll liiii lllllulus churns Concessions In Relig- ious Field Said Part Of AIIStPO-GGYMHII “Bargain.” (fly Louis P. Lochnerl (Assoriatcil Press Foreign stuff) LERLIN. l-‘cb. 18—-NliI'.i5. who last night iriuinphuiiilv looircd forward to comp etc. ililliicziiutc Nozliica- tion o. Ailblflil. hurl to curb their" optllnism somewhat tonight when secrecy was lliicri from some cou- ccsslms ItUiCliSillCliPfi‘ Hitler had to make. Thc concessions were in the realms o: l'(.‘iil-!i0li. “Walton- SCiiiliillllti"-—il‘0llti outlook-and ac- quiescence to Austrian Chancellor Kurt Voii Schilschnipzg’; refusal to allow u plebiscite in Austria at. this time. _ Gel-mans. both Catholic and Protestant. as well as Austrians were beneficiaries. A source closc to the German Chancellery said Hitler woud de- clare uh nmnesliv Sunday in his speech to the Rclchslarz for political offenders acainsl- the Third Reich which would frcc uri~=oncrs of both rcliuions pursuasions. Political Not Rtliclmls This source. hitherto always re- ble. (iivlilizr-rl thlll the Euchre" would stntc. definitely Sunday that N(l.’.i"‘ll is DOTii-iBKIF-"lwi? “litmus -mo\"c:neh . NOW. ii. 1.‘: CXDBOiQG. thl Ill- pendimz trials of Catholic M19508 and’ nltm; ovllflmllale quashed almost r . c . . “ltriilcuccaigesizions took some 0f the ed14- offgprjo-Nglzlwflr. fi-hlll‘ (Continued on Pfi86__:13~,_°°!- 4) rJ Entom bed . Men . Are Rescued From HAZLEION. Pa. Feib. i8 ——(AP) -.severi cool mimrs who silent g black may", "praying and wattlnl were rescued today from a flood- blocked tunnel 500 feet lltflillgé Hound. ‘Al: ‘c1233? W“ ° __ n - dqiie were trlPDfli Yeiifld“? at the hellish Valley 0on1 00"‘: Y3 winery in nearby Jesfnelm ville, water broke through k1? an abandoned. unmade‘! flocdin! the WM "-4!- h other miners {wt-re washed throul on exit to as. 8 Y- . Hearing the onrushmzd the miners who were say how, cred to safety in B- ud m“ huh m an underarm darkness. huddled there in the! ma“; they waited 18 hours d!’ crews. water drsinad-e m“! Prayer." lnted t0d " l‘. waited.’ 3 d. b m- isirdetiiadrfit‘ ‘ii. °b°irti Io-WfQ-H-ll. round and dug mm mmugdetiris-etrown I _ filed Pfllllllves from this Province would command a iigh premium within a few years in tuber growing areas illoiigfhc Atlantic seaboard if bacterial wilt, second only in_ seriousness to the dreaded black wart, could be kept out 0f_thc Province, fit. Col. G. E. said in introducing the question. Already certain New with the disease which spreads from infected seed. Land trio's alrforce. strenizthenrd by; contaminated becomes unfit for tuber growing for many ‘ the necessity for immediate action, Full, president of the Board, growing areas were infected for this province had announ- the president orl. shipments of Chippawas, certain farms to obtain stock. HOW TO HANDLE SITUATION “truncation was made that. iheWJov-ernmetil. would have no power to soon inwr-provniciui .r"sde. when it was suggested thc provuice be made o. restricted arcs] eiilillili‘ to what was done WilCli this was made a. tuberculosis irci: uteri.‘ ui". Clark pointed out, however, that. government. YEBUJiLLIOIiS .orbid transport. of tubers flaring black‘ wart CLiSCZI-Sf: and 11c believed similar reuulanolls should be available i0 prevent importation of tubers from urfected arena. int/error" oi.‘ potatoes infected with bacterial wit became u gummy mass with a thin shell on the out- side. Lt. Col‘. Frill said. He had seen tubers xvitlipthc disease while in New Brunsxvluk last fall. The question would be brought to the attention of formers in ali- riual convention here ncxl. week, in addition to pressing upon the pro- vincial Department of Alzrienlrrirc the Board decided. Other Matters Discussed A lilunbcr of other matters wcrc discussed at lust, night's meeting cf the Board. ‘at which two new mem- bers. E. L. Miles and Bred Moore, were admit d. A letter was read from the Min- ister of Notional Defense, Ottawa, lJCqiiCSLUlfl "the sympathetic cori- siocratlon of emp oyers in making it. possibe for members of the Non-permanent Active Militia to train without. feeling ihul, their po- sitions or employment may be od- verscly affoctcd by such illllflvllc action." Major T. E. Mc-Nult spoke in support of the lcttci" and sug- imsted first. coastal defense guns should be mounted to lnotcct Char- lottetown harbor. Or perhaps bet- ter still. the speaker said. would bc coastal defense Runs nlountcd on motor lorries, if such were avail- able. The Board approved answers to n questionnaire froln the Canadian Chamber of Commerce on Domin- iou-Provuiciai relations. 4 plPDflTPd bV B. CfllillTiitlf-Bt’. illififl‘ (‘ilaiflllflilfiihp of Dr. J. A. Clark. ' Action was deferred in connection with recommendations as to which way the proposed second‘ paved road to Borden should Kaila lixilew . . C- of TQBItSQQCmEQ on, _ _ __> ._ (Continued on page l3, Col S) Flooded Mine in sh lati of en gowdve? shove the mouth of‘ the mine. Not for from the ‘rook hole" they found the mud- cover- ed body 40-year-old Paul Kurltn. Two of the rescued, Michael Olen. and Paul Molnar went in a hospitfl for observation. 'l‘l"le others-Joseph Ffdishin. Stafrsnko. John Iiavnrsski. Andrew Hsvriilo. and Davis were sent home utter reoeivi first old. Havrllla, to to "l0 110019 "id rest." laughed above the excited babble of the M3016! throng. "Nix on the rest.” e ra‘d. “I've gotadste fora. ...’ The two men washed Along the ey by the flood waters through an exit to safety-Bern- srd MoAiornoy and assistant sup- erintendent Oeorge D. Cciiuttier- guided rescue crews throughou. m. nidht. . that. goal. he told reptvrtedrl Potato Disease! BY TURNABU Known Dead And Scores Injured In Louisiana Oil Town. ter tornado dancing a. path of death and destruction through the little northwest Louisiana oil town of essa. left in its ruin-sudden wake today 2s dead and scores of splintered homes on business houses. As volunteer and relief workers plodded through the mud a. search of the wreckage along the main street of this village of 2.000 population. s. survey showed three persons still missing and 41 oth- ers injured. Torrential rains fell in west Tennessee and eastern Arkansas. Creeks wore out of banks in some sections and the rising White and Black Rivers in Arkansas threat- ened ovcrfiolvs. Pathetic Spectacle But it was Rndessa which today presented a. peculiarly pathetic spectacle of desolation. Tile heavy rain made the entire section a foot-deep mud puddle. Wreckage was strewn along o. path 200 yards wide and o. mile and a half long. Armed National Guardsmen moved about. to keep back sight- secrs. A detachment of'_ state po- lice aided them. cilcf workers were busy on all si es. The force of the tornado was terrific. huge boiler, its sides almost an inch thick, was bent. and twisted. v Describes Havoc Efidic Hill, 20. an oil worker who saw the destruction from a hotel window". said “Roder-sa look- ed like the p'zicc they tell h; the bad folks go when they (he; every- thing was splintered and twisted and knocked clown and crazy look- If hg-tllliibiillg throuqh the darkness. 11c said, he found a body of o. man “H ilPflfi was cut off. (‘lean as a \\" " Hill said. "I couldn't find i. "wo babies were (hi2 from the wreckage 01a house. Timber had. fallcli oh them. They flied." slllisiTlllln IN ltE GRIP Heavy Ice-Pine In St. J0lin’s H a r b o r, Nfld. ST. JOHN'S. Nild. 18-—-T\\‘_0 steamsilim." acre held in St. Johns harbor bv close-packed driftinil 1C8 tonight. \vliilc of. Cline St. Frau- cis. 30 liiilcs to the north. another hurl been abandoned by her crew. The passenger" llii0i‘ Fort Am- herst. with Uovcmol" and Indy Wal ‘vn aboard hound fol" .1 Wes‘. In " cruise, and the pfl-Ffifllélcf- coining freilzhtci" Gcialdnlc Marya iuiicil with nulplvooci for" Englall and with Commissioner of Natural Resources R. B. htlvbunk as a pas- scnizci". remnilicci in harbor" until l-lle inc-pack loosened. _ Off Cone St. Francis. tile IOu-toli wooden steamer H. A. ‘ivnlkcr stay- ccl imprisoned in tho crushlnit Duck. Two of her crew walked across the ice to Cape St. Francis. Whiii! “l0 tluco others found their way over the ice to Pouch Cove. The Newfoundland czovernment slcamcr Kvle stayed wllthln slRht of the Walker lost niizht. but was unable to force her wav thrduizh the pack to the assistance of the wooden vessel. The Walker still floated iOIIiIZTIt. but seamen used to the w; oping-ii; ice predicted that event/us v s e ‘o-Uiifd BGTPIIRYTBK pieces by pressure of the oe. .__.____ Balanced Price A cram FOE Improvement I n Potato . Export Trade Sought (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) MONCTON, Feb. iii . B., Representatives of Maritime potato growers and shippers met here today to consider benefits that might remit from a ‘proposed trade treaty now un er consideration at Ottawa. Improvement in potato export trade to the West Indies and Cubs ls sought. The delegates decided to name a committee of three to prepare a brief for submission o Ottawa. Agriculture Minis- ter Taylor of’ New Brunswick sold tonight that the commit- tee wo be named "immed- iately." . Aflfitlilitllfh M‘ " Dennis and J. W. Boulter represented Prince Edward Island at the meeting. JURY FINDS ivlnlllcl NUT slllllliclnllv Recommends Further Inquiry In Connec- tion With Death Of Mrs. Dingweil. Mrs. Sadie Dingweli, aged scmi- invnild, wife of William Dingwell. nf Dlngwclifis Mill, i2 miles from Sourie, came to her death by suf- focation ond shock due to burns. s coroner's Jill-y decided yesterday after hearing evidence of eight witneses. The verdict recommended that "owing to tho unsatisfactory evi- dence on the port of two of the witnesses and apparent indiffer- ence on the mart of occupants of the house after the body was found we would recommend fur"- thcl" investigation." Mr. J. Frank Stems of Souris was jury foreman. Mr. Daniel Mc- Eacherir was coroner. Mrs. Dingweli was found cienii in bed at her home Tuesday morn- iiuz. evidence disclosed. A heated brick pui; in the bed for warmth during the cold night was alleged i0 have set. fire to the bed cloth- ing which were found partly burn- ed in the morning. Witnesses yesterday included: Doctor A. W. Ross and Dr". A. A. McDonald. who performed the autopsy. William Dingwcli, hus- band of the deceased. Murgnrct Devcau, adopted daughter ot tho Dingwell home, Harding Diligwcli, a son. George Liltz and Neil Ross neighbors and Corporal Heath of the Souris Mounted Police detach- ment". who conducted investigation of the tragedy. Bandits Murder R.A.F. Commander JERUSALEM. Feb l8 -i('P- HDVflSi-——POiiC9 taillight sought eight bandits who shot; and killed Squadron Moder" R. E. Aldrrson. of the Royal Air Force while he was riding xvith two womcn in rr taxi near Athlit. wounded seriously when hit in ‘he’ back and icz hy billleis. Tho Jvxv- ns shot in the liq. :01", al=o :1 ironi- lillkllii! nilthor- vil- rorism along the l‘l\T'l'O.".(i Jerusalem and Tulkiircgl. tties imposed curfew on all lagcs alone the line. Police (loos cmnlrtvrd to pick un the trail of terrorist: in the imi- wav zone led police to an Arab plantation where arms and cx- plosives were cached. Owners of the plantation were arrested. French Destroyer v'"""niiaieleerrorrsrrsis" PERPIGNAN, Rance, Fieb_ i8- (APl-Spanfsh warplanes iii-tempted to bomb the Destroyer La. System Said Need (A. P. hv Guardian's Qpecinl Wirei WASHINGTON. Feb. iB—Pl'e$i- dent Roosevelt said today the first necessity of the present economic situation in the United states was a. limited increase in prices, ach- ieved without inflation and with- out a material advance in the cost of living. All the pollciu of hiesd sdmlnis- | toward , It ll press conference. delwt! i0 8 clarification of his price views and 1 plans for endin the recession” trstion now are direct which some had “recently criticised as contradictory and ‘neonsistent. Not all prices must. g0 up. how- ever, he emphasized: Some. in fact. should come down. The xen- eni objective. he said, was a ha - _ when nriceil reach such a balance. the President asserted, are employ- ment. and general business acti- vlw ct a beat. Hench Oordeilien- t-wioe today off Ccrbere, but failed to hit’. her. The ship. it was lazirned, was aMocked ih» first time by Gov- llqiilt mills of! apparently mistook the destroyer for one of Insiugcnl. ships which shelled the coast off northeast Spain earlier in the day. (A dispatch from Munchies said a stray shell fell nee: tfle French passenger steamship B1 Mmsour vlfieri she was close to Spanish ' wnitorial waters during n. bc/ttle between Government phnee and the Insurgent Cruisers Canaries and Bites/lee, A French torpedo boat. ecorted the l! Nliencour to port.) » The second flout came wtnile the destroyer wu in French tor- ritorial waters. returning to her hose at Port Vendres. The attack- ing planes flow M n high altitude and ehetrldentfty we not. diet!!!- mined. One woman. hfiss Newman w“; , WANT RUAR i] i RESPECTEI] Chamberlain A n d E d e n’ Emphasize Britain. LONDON. Fen. 1l&—Prl.lne Mulla- ter" Cilarnbcrlulu Wlliiliii. declared n. was tile izufcriimciitls duty to "make britaul so strolls: nobody will dare attack her" and ensure that. when Britain talks her vcie» is listened w." The Plilllic rvfihlszer and Ebro Secretary laden outlined w constituencies (JYUQL Britain's .slc iosemh lJOIiCV. Spenkiiu; fit iilrnrinoham. . Clnunberiulli tieuhozi the govern- ment's duties a4; follows: To seize every Ci)l)fli‘till"lit_i' wlltli llrirsehts llscll r lilciusllrcs iieslonerl ii (‘fiiiiii-Cl. fUlllZ. n. socakllldul. hcriulvorilr. $11111‘. warned that "wr- cannot in this country (‘Llillilfithhb our-solves fmm evcills PiHWVilCI“ ill Europe and the uoltci." “Situated as the world is; today," the FilfPiilll Secretary added. "We cxiunot but bc acutely conscious Lilac events in the world. wherever" D8- to remove all and i0 nlakc they lake place. nun‘ one day spread in their conscqucr a‘); mull ill Blit- nhey affect us here in Ln airi." "First of all." lvir. Chamberlain mid his audience, "Britain's pOllay is “to maintain peace" ‘ , I u served. We shoumi no‘. be content merely i0 sit sill. and hope for peace. but we ‘it'd 1‘. Olii‘ ciuiv to take cvcry Op- nolillllil" \\'hlf'il bICSiWlLS ills in nlmkc aclllc and l70diiiVC stem to remove lvhul. would in: llic Cfllk-C of tili0tilt‘i' will". "The écemld point. is Lo make Britain so wrong iloixluy \\'lii (lure attack hm" and ensure ihua when iifllillll laiks ilel" ".'0ir‘c i; iiriQiiCd o. "I our 21nd to any ihrii. we nrc mai ljmlidirful pronto“; \'.1Lii our I't3.ll'iiilliL' and (‘i cry dad‘ we are construct-int! weapons which are lllilkllll! lis stroillzfr and stronger". "Already we can say that as a result of this new Stl‘0iiZil1 Britain is listener! lo iii the coilnclls of Europe when! silo \'.‘.'1Sii'L until a few years nizo." On Goodwill Flijglit To But-nos Aires BUENOS AIRES. Feb. l8 ~»- lAPl-J-‘ivc sll\"el"y-\\"iiigcd United Slates Army Lonibci-s roared across tho snow-capped peaks of tlic Arlrlcs (Edd) to pay n good will call on this Argentine capital at. the end oil a. record-breaking 5,200 miic lllgilt inn Miami, Flu. They were Iollowcd by tirc sixth of tire original squadron of four- motorcd “flying fortresses." It was dcloywil by propeller trouble for a few hour.» at luniu. Peru, the only stopping "place ciii-ouic from the United States. ’I‘ile bmnbrrs cal"- riul 4-8 inch besides the flight. CLIN- Iii. mzrilricl". Liana-Colonel Robert i Olds. i ~-—~_--— .1 . iCiliinairy Fame . Is Widespread flfalCOli. FcbHlil-Wllcn u lun- fcssnornll cook llvilir: lil0i'C than 1.2M miles :\'.\‘;i\" writes lor a bJuk of their u»; ii. would seem that the cl \ ionic m Slnlcufx. llcllslwll "; r-ilrcilriilll: far. 1<i0ur veal. uwo slihcoc hllDeriul Order Unulliitulo of the Bnptre published i1 co lectiuh of home re- cipes in n, booklet called “The Mix- iniz Bowl. ' Today ihcv received the follow- inr: letter: "Dear sir: I would like to have two o. them liiixiliz Bowl books if so please s-nri it. by C.O.D. Yours truly. Wont: Roy, Radio Cafe, Iiridtzclvrltcl". N. S GEORGETOWN. British Gllilllifl Feb. ill-Thin and gaunt, “uliam Astor Chandler of New York. a mcmbcr of the ill-fated Wnlcicck expedition that. went. inio the British Guiana hinterlands lost. December in search for Paul Ref- ern, was brouilht back to George- towi; today and rushed to hos- pita. "I am still hazy about the facts," W. M. Green, Georgetown rep- resentative of the eXDoditlon. Said after Chandler was admitted to s nursing home. Only statement by the member of the expedition was that "we had a terrible time." “Chandlcr is not. in condition to sneak al. length. and the doc- tor has ordered comlfcte rest. 1;; him for a couple cf days," Green decfered. "Hi: conjiinn not serial-s. but naiurn‘ 0 he has had s bad shock. BRITISH gilflti. CENTRAL EUR OPE HITLER PLAN ‘Francefiearful Of Developments In Austrian Coup Powerful Centra-l-European Group l i Need Of Strong _ l pointed i0 handle trade matters J In Process Of F orlnation-Dip- lomats In London Active. (By The Canadian Press) One week after the momentous conference in Bavaria . between the Chancellors of Germany and Ailstria, and on (on n, Gummy, Sum“, wire, f the eve of Chancellor Hitler's Reichstag speech Sunday, definite results of that conference began to reveal them- selves todziy. " 'i‘here were these developments: VIENNA-A communique said all agreed upon meas- ures had been disclosed either by word or deed. Austrian Front Party as individuals. Austl iii. “hi? Alazis were informed they could cater" the Fatherland Dr. Hans Fischboeck ivas ap- Ilciwccn Germany and 'l‘hc Glfffliilfl minister. Franz Yon Piipcli. said the accord was the first step iowaril “a commonwealth 0f BERLIN-Germany promised to slop her" Nazis from interfering in Altsiriali rioiriesiic all: .. Reliable sources srilrl Ausixl gained inr- nortarlr. concessions ‘lzi exchange fill‘ cooperation with Germany. ’I‘ilrsv were. said to ilavc included FPiiEiOTIS lzilartlntccs so sweeping Hitler had iiflrqqfl m redefine Nazism as solely a political zlnci not 9. religious movement. LONDON-Prime Minister Challi- hcriailr called a Cabinet Council on foreign affair-l; for Saturday to consider whole European situation. Diplomatic sources sold France lugcrl Britain to JDill hcr in a Lists of the two dclilocrrtcics against ‘Gfilmflllys strides through Austria. iolvarrl a Nazlfied central Euro 1e. British siatoslileii conferred with the Italian Ambassador but it was itself to , ‘e...;i....... "new... Unable To Relate Tale Of Hardship iuuierstood little was HCCOIIIDiiSIIPd and that further meetings would be ii- id next. week. PARIS -— Govcrnllicht source.»- coliflrmccl France hoped forajoint. cieclrcrzltioll. 'I‘he National Defence Council lmnniniowflx" zipprovcd a new SZIZQUOLLOOO armament plan and decided to accelerate tile out- put of nruliitiolis and armaments. BIRMINGHAM — Ml". Cir-umber- laill in all address declared the Goverlllneliifs duly was first to iii triili peace by "i-lCtiVé‘ and 1 ' vc stems" t0 remove causes of war. and their make Britain "so strong nobody will dare attack her" and endure that when Britain talks her voice is listened in." ROME-Virginia Guyda, author"- itoiivc Fascist commentator, wrolc that (icmocratic nations Minted I sly to fight. Gel-runny to prevent azlfiintion of Austria. MORE T0 FOLDO W ‘.‘ VIENNA, Feb. l8-(AP)—l<'r:illz Voll Papcll, reliving German min- ister to Austria who eugihccrerl the tar-reaching Austin-German accord. said today it was but the first step toward u "comnimrvvonltli of nations in middle I-Ivlrupl“ under Gcrmnrlyfls leudcrship. He declared other" similar" agree- liielit with lhc ‘succcz-olr carved out. of the old Auc- iile our‘. ullgrilxaii Elnpirc n’. of the Great War. Von Rripcli riisclix-rrl tnni part of the "'""cc economic and IIilJer would gllnll i§ independence in Reichstnr: speech Sunday. In general. said. Hillerfl. cea- . ' ill Gcrnnmy ‘ in Austria, iarzt. i'\lll‘i‘i. cchlre: will hc lliielwiczr with Von Papcll the T1l‘.‘-i.‘i:lif‘l1lt‘ll.' lilridc lav present. was anyone who actually was at the now-historic conference last. Saturday between Hitler and the Austrian Chan-cllor, Kurt. Von Schuschnlgiz. It. was that cohlcreiil-c which brought to a licad the long years of tension bctlvcon Germany mul Austria. placed ardent followers of‘ Iiitler in kcy posts in the Austrian (Continued on page 13. Col n5)? i__-___ “As far as I can understand, Dr. Fox (Dr. l-‘redcrlck Fox. Ontario- born scientist and another mem- of the Wsidcck expedition) died in January from a chill. They had been having terrible weather for about two weeks before the relief boat. arrived. "me party went on then." Green said he believed. "but at whet point. Chandler fumed back was not clear." Dr. Foxwrns reported to have ciicd and been buried Jan. 5 on Devil's i-folc Island. in the Cuyuni River dlstrlct. where the. eroecll- tion scekinz Paul Rerifern was ooned when the porters and c wmen deserted with the boats. (Rtfiibffi is the United Shtes aviator who has been mlssink since he took of! on a flirzht. amiss South America more than iii-years strong effort to safeguard inter-i were cxrxrr-tcd to follow, es~. ic will be urzmtcd Ails/ i0 lake posltlvg. nations" in middle Europe" under Germany's leadership. ,ulclul iu lslull PARENT lliclllr ulllls Will Work 'l‘ov\"ards pCityr-Wide Organi- “zhiion, Tilceting De- cidcs. A rnectiln: nus ii€ili _\\1\i.(‘rdfll: afternoon bl‘ l'epl\"=el;ta!1\"=~s 0' Chnrlnfictovm narcn cuiive cf the Clay; siitute and the Pril urc A CfillllliiPrf‘ frum cuch scirool the l st Friday o! . oil progress mcflc arrnzvr- sari Tc.n.o:\"rv1"r-~ A w. cl‘ ~- nre" taiiv of o. d‘ tile ():"‘_'1".":o TYpfiYi'l‘.""‘ iviiidi were lrlzcveci to limo comincllc‘crl the mo". be rrvrlrrcd r ri":i"<vi.:"~, ,t EVEN no: CHRotuc ltltltlill _ “Dino {Q Avow .‘ .l\.-..J i till: Ecol/inf. “l l ‘ » TORONTO. Fch- 1-‘1 um and maximum tempera‘ Dawson 3G5 Victoria 3'3 “- Edmonton ~13 3 Rcylna Z 4o Wlnni og J‘... or Toronii’: as go Ottawa 2O v9 Montreal 16 Z3 Quebec l“ Z4 Saint John 14 2G Halifax 8 22 Charlottetown 4D i6 FORECAST Maritime East and West". Fresh shifting winds: cloudy and mod- elrately co‘d; some snow or part c s ct. Hill tide i-hi: alicrnooii at 1.50 and tomorrow moming at 2.30. Sun acts this afternoon at 532 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.55. 14st. quarter moon Tuesday. Feb. 22, 12.24 n. m. Bummersldc tide iii minutes later than Charlottetown. rill: can rlnnr Jan-en Borden I.“ u. m., l p. In IAIVQI Tor-mention l! s. m. 2.56 p. n. --..._.,_ t . l i