MAXIMS OI k MERE MAN no W"! uertiou ful. o! hope upon lumen and happinelu is wonder- —>- p ‘(ilgrluthtown Guardian ‘two Cont; lining Gunrtlhu, Ioundofl 1nd] Clash Over Belligerency Recognition ..____ LONDON. Oct. 29—(CP llnvas) -3oviet Russia stood alone to- night in flrm refusal to approve belllgerency recognition for the spanlsh combatants prior to full repatriation oi’ foreign volunteers from the forces oi both parqeg in the civil war. A non-' terveution sub-commit- tee session which adjourned at 3,50 p.m. until next Tuesday suc- eeeded only tn sceentuating the deadlock ‘ ‘ the Russian and ltalo-Gerlnan viewpoints. soviet Ambassador Malsky refrained from vofing'on the belligerency ques- tion, which he laid his Govern- ment considered outside the non- intervention realm. German Ambassador Von Rib- bentrop accused Russia oi trying to sabotage non-intervention. l-ie made it clear that the Fascist powers would accept no project: for withdrawing volunteers unless there was unanimity among the interested nations. Whatever action the sub-com- mittee takes ‘Tuesday, n. {n11 meeting of the ll-Doiver commit- tee will take place Wednesday, when Lord Plymouth plans to as]; lpproval oi the British plan as veil as committee authorization to reproach the Spanish Government and the Insurgents in regard to the plan proposals, CQWNQ fVfNll 'h:"‘\::i*:':fl¢:ull.: are‘ llnu-rit-d in - t- ~ [violin ill¥ible in nilltanncerer "om "l-iunterRlver Starch Factory is "infill! Wtatoes daily by truck or w‘ load- L-i0li5-l0-27-4i. "One Act Play and Variety con- out. Flat River Hail, Tuesday, Nov- ember 2nd. L-l197-l0-30~1l-l. “Trinity Sewinlz Committee Cake 551° Sal-WM)’. October 30th. Prowse Bros. L-l199-10-29--'.li. "slipper. Dance. Wcdnrsclay, November 3rd. Murray River Publ.c Hall. 25 cents. L-Ll77-l0-2il-3i. "Dance in Victoria Rink Wed- nfidal’ night-Music by Summer- Bide Music Makers. L-2063-T-W-ti. “Murray Harbor Starch Factory ls receiving potatoes daily. F. W. Ifilflvhour. Manager. L-l085-10-27-4i "Masquerade Dance St. Teresa's "all; - --.. November otn. Web- stcrs Orchestra. L-l246-10-30-l1-8. "Dance Covehead Road School. Wednesday, November 3rd. Admis- sion 25 cents. L-l252-10-30—1i. "Postponed Rummage Sole, Christian Church Schoolroom. Sat- llldlly. October 30th. 3 P. M. L—I100-l0-27-30., “Roast Chicken, Bread, Rolls, Moore 8s McLeod. Saturday, mtober 30th. Mt. Herbert Ladies’ Aid. L-1106v-10-27-2U-3i. "Masquerade Dance Lorne Valley i-lall Wednesday, November 3rd. Webster's orchestra. Prizes. L-QBZ-lfi-Ti-SO-ll-l. “Halloween Dance Emerald Hall Friday Nov. 5 auspices oi Women's Institute. nunlfflttrdl" Ilurlch. L-lfllo-lo-ilo-zi. "Charlottetown Male Chorus lll a variety program Eldon Hall “will! next at B p. m. Auspiccs Pipette W. M. B. L-1377-l0-30-2l. _"0fllcia.l Receiver for Farmers creditors’ Arrangement Act w ll be F‘ I-ennox Hotel. Bouris, on Novem- oer 3rd and 4th. Wm. D. Wight. lIr-Iiliil-IO-iil-Si. "Annual Meeting of the Milk Pmducers and Vendors Association "ldov. November 2nd at ll o'clock In Agricultural l-iall. All members lvaral to attend. ' L-1255-l0-30-3f. "The Annual Meeting of the Wiltsliirc Rural Telephone Com- NIW. will be held in the Hall. Wed- nesday, November 3rd at 8 P. M. » L-IZTO-IO-SO-Il. "Cline to Pownll Hall Monday Nov. 1st at 8 p. m. and see Marsh- ilcZd-Dunstuffnage Y. P. S. pre- IOM their ploy "Hired Husbands". Admission 2t and l5. ‘ L-ITM-IO-BO-Iii. "The Borden Players will present their three Act Comedy Drama "Eyes of lave" in Malpeque Hall Thiestiny, November 2nd. Auspices oi Mflllnque Women's Institute. Pm- ceode in aid of Banatorium. Ir-Ifltfl-IO-Iio-ll-l-fl. t5! The Anocfated Press) NEWARK. N. J.. Oct. zo _ An American Airlines transport, with damaged landing gear, eiroiod Newark airport for 1 1-2 hours t0- dai! while 13 passengers, one o1 them a Canadian, wondered whe- ther thcy would land safely or be broken to pieces. _ Tllmllkh all those 90 minutes, while airport attendants. police, firemen and ambulance crews waited anxiously on the ground, Pilot B. C. (Dinty) Moore, o: chi. @1180. and his eo-pilot. Kenneth Freighter Aakre A g r o u n d 0 ff Grand Manan (By The Canadian Pres!) SAINT JOHN, N. 8., Oct. 29 --'l‘he Norwegian lnotorsbip frlfghier Aakre remained hep- less tonight on Temple Lodge. southeast oi Grand Malian Island. The tug Foremost 43 from Saint John was standing by the stranded freighter, u- ground since early this morn- ing. With the Aakre apparently stuck too fast to be aided by the single tug. no attempt was made to freo hel- at high tide tonight. lt was probable a second tug would be sent to the scene, and in the mean- time orders were awaited. from the Lambert and Holt 4 ‘e in ‘New lurk, which chartered- the motorship. The crew of 32, commanded by Captain A. Oyail, and two passengers remained aboard. They were in no danger. The Ailakre, 2.336 tons, lelt Saint John lust night for Buc- nos Alres with n full cargo of more than 80.000 crates oi’ New Brunswick seed potatoes. She strayed from her course in dense fog, grounding a half mile from shore. lllv vinlliicl IN Piuslill Severe Measures Tak- ell To Cope With Terrorism. (c. l’. b, Guardian’! special Wire) JERUSALEM, 0st. 29—For the first time since 1917 five of Jesu- salems seven gateways were clos- ed today as British authorities took severe measures to cope with the tide of terrorism sweeping the Holy Land. A detachment of British soldiers mounted guard at the Damascus Gate and a new police post of 20 men was installed in the old quar- ter of the city following fresh outbreaks mtween Jews and Arabs. Arab bands were reported to have made several attcmpm to out the oil pipeline crossing the Transjordan Desert and skirmish- es took place between armed tor- rorlsts and police ‘in northern Palestine. - British authorities announced the seizure oi a large quantity oi arms and munitions in a housfl serving as a terrorist hide-out. Police arrested l2 DEF-ion! fill-l‘ pccted oi participation in recent acts of violence. For University (c. r. by Gum-aim‘- special WIN) EDINBURGH. Oct. lit-lord Tweedsmuir, Governor-General oi.’ cnnldm and tho Marquess cf Lo- thlfll were nominated bod-HY Bl I meeting oi the General Council oi Edinburgh University ior the chsncellorshlp oi the unlversii! vgcgitgd by the death 01311‘ JllIlS Barr e. . Election was boil-PW"! ‘mm Nov. 2o as the question W" 1""!- od of n. possible misunderstanding in rogurtl to Lord TWNd-llillilflb position. ' Dr. Alexander Miles. I mtmll" oi the University Court. N541 I “bleimm wmoh no salt! had been "cdw by g member of Lord Makes One-wheel With Passenger Laden Plane The People's Landing Con. 0i Marshfield. Mo, tried desperately to lower a jammed landing wheel. It was no use, and so as every- one held his breath Moore, a vet- eran of l2 years oi flying, brought the ship down in p, perfect one. Wheel 181161118. rolled across the field for 600 Yards without damage 49° Diane. crew or passengers. and mmeml’ Shlllgked his shoulders. Myra Yake. Toronton, and her brother lro Yake of Chicago, both zllitldd the passengers were not ex- G . llllcli lllilcls IN v llllmil Til tillllliliiti Not a Signatory T0 Nine-Power Treaty ls Reason Given. BERLIN, Oct. 29 —(AP)—-Ger- many today declined the invitation oi Belgium to take part in the con- ference of signatories of the Nine- Pouler Treaty scheduled to open at Brussels Nov. 3. A note to the Brussels Govern- ment explalned that Germany. not being a signatory nor a later adherent to the treaty. “secs itself unable to participate in deliber- ation". over application of the agreement." Russia. Accepts Germany and Soviet Russia. al- so a non-signatory, were invited to join the powers which in 1922 signed the treaty guaranteeing .. the territorial integrity of China ‘r in seeking “amicable means“ oi ending the Chinese-Japanese war. (Rama's acceptance was an- nounced in Moscow). . The German reply expressed “full appreciation oi the endeavor tobring a speedy end to the lamentable conflict in East. Asia. by application oi friendly means.” Will Cooperate It concluded with an expre sfon of willingness to cooperate in mediation when conditions for such action were ripe. "The German Government." it said. “would like at all times to azslst in a move for peaceful settlement of the con- flict provided it is certain that in- dispensable pro-conditions there- for have been fulfilled." Germany is bound to Japan by an anti-Communist Treaty sglzed inst November. (Japan rejected the invitaton i0 the Brussels conference. but Italy, which assured Japan of sympathetic understanding oi her purposes in China, has accepted). Warning Shots Fired At German Airliner (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) H ill N D A Y E, Franco - Spanish Frontier. Oct. il-French anti- aircl-ait batteries fired six warn- ing shots today at. a German air- liner Wlli"i officers said flew over a forbidden zone on the Franco- Spanish frontier near Hendaye. It was the second time in little more than two weeks that French border batteries have warned Deutsch Iluithamais Stuttgart- Lisbcn airliners to stay sway from the forbidden none. Lord Tweedsmuir Nominated Chancellorship ‘rweedsmulr’: family in which the Governor-General said that when he allowed his name to be put forward he was not informed thcrq was any other nomination. Dr. Miles said Lord Tweedsmuir seemed to suggest the matter of nomination still was before the Qiuncilb Special Committee who would decide which of the two names they would put forward to the council. - . He suggested tilt Council take no nctiomwhlch might elnbarras 10rd 4.. dslnulr in view oi his "distinguished Canadian position." The nominotors agreed, where- upon the wsiponeolczlt decision wnl tulle: . \ I to give expression to its willingness-- per iillmusllils llsl guilt Alumni Society Holds Enjoyable Dinner- Prominent Speak- ers Address Gath- ering. The hall mark of Dalhousie's sons and daughters was their sense of value" and their “intel- lectual curiosity," Dr. Carleton Stanley, president of Dalhousie University declared in an address at s. Prince Edward Island Alumni Society dinner at the Canadian National Hotel last night. They were "laudable qualities" that were "growing extremely rare in the world today" the University‘ head said. Speakers at the dinner, the first held by the recently organized Al- umni in this province. included His Honour Lieutenant Governor George D. DeBlois, Island repre- sentative on the Dalhousie Board of Governors, and honorary presi- dent of the Alumni Society; His Worship Mayor P. W. Turner,_Dr. Carleton Stanley, Dr. l). C. Har- vey, provincial archivist for Nova Scotia, Dean Vincent C. MacDon- ald, head oi the Dalhousie Law Faculty. Mr. C. ‘N. Blssett, Char- lottetown. president of the Prince Edward Island Alumni Society,Dr. G. D. Steel, principal of Prince of Wales College, and Rev. J.A. Mur- phy, D.D., rector of St. Dunstalfs Campbell presided. His Honour Lieutenant Governor DeBlols. the first speaker, extend- ed personal greetings and those of the Government to those present. For almost 100 years Dalhousle had sought to built up and mould the minds of her students so they would be good citizens and good Canadians, he said. The Univer- sity had endeavoured to equip them mentally arid physically and send Them into the world well fortified not only to make a liv- ing for themselves and their iam- iiies but also prepared to make a contribution to their country and to mankind. One had but to look over this continent, to the leaders in all. walks oi life, to see prooi oi the splendid work of Dalhousle. A permanent Alumni organizat- ion was a splendid thing, the speaker said and believed it was vital to the progress of the Uni- rcontlrlued on page l3, Col t) Becomes President 0f Sask. University SASKATOON, Oct. 28—(CP)-— James Sutherland Thomson, M.A., D.D., late of the Faculty of Pine Hill College, Halifax, became the second president of the University of Saskatchewan at a brilliant special convocation here today. He succeeded Dr. Walter C. Murray. founder and first presi- dent of the University, to whose distinguished services special trib- utes were paid. The ceremony, for which Sask- atoons largest church was illled, drew leaders oi church and state. leaders in education here andlirom other seats oi learning, and n large representation from the pub- lic. Insurgent Attack Is Beaten Back HENDAYE. Oct. 29—A Spanish Government communique announ- ced today that an insurgent sur- prise attack on the Guadalajara front northeast of Madrid had been beaten and the insurxenis suffered heavy losses. General Franco's insurgent troops were driven back into their own trenches, the eon-muslin"! said, leaving a great number of dead and wounded. Deapoiehes from Zaragosa said hostilities were disrupted along the Aragon front because of a week of torrential rains. Senator Logan’ s londition Unchanged ,_._.__ (C. P- by Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA, Oct. ZF-Hospltal authorities tonight reported Sen- ator Hance J. hogan had a "fairly good" day and his condition was unchanged. The Parr-bore, N. 5.. Senator is suffering from a kidney ailment and effects of two strokes. ..,,/)‘vf!pw- m! r--—~""” "“"------\ RE-llNlilN 0F University. Premtol~"~._'l'hane A.‘ \i\ v ‘h j Read by Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30,1937 . T115513 BRITISH SOLDIERS KILLED A RU§§IAAI sjfio W401. 5&5 ‘WCMOWNFEREWMGE “Lost Battalion” Given Until Today To Surrender (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) SHANGHAI. Oct. 30-—(Sot- urday)—'l‘hc Japanese navy today gave China's "lost bat- talion" in Chapel until tomor- row to surrender and warned British and United States de- fence units and residents of nearby sections in the Inter- “ l Settlement to take precautions. Unless the Chinese gave up the“ warehouse stronghold just across Soochow Creek from thg International Settle- ment, the Japuuese said they would blast them out. Rear Admiral Tadao Honda, Japanese naval attache, offic- ially declared Japanese pa- tience was ‘ousted with the “more or less heroic stand‘! oi the “do-or-dle" unit oi the clack 88th division. He warned all residents liv- in: iuthc International Settle- lnnnt near the sector and the defence units in close prox- imity to take precautions to avert p0§ible casualties and damage. llui RAGES RE Pigllllu Mounted Police Patrol Streets At Trenton, N. S. a TRaNToN. N. s.. Oct. 204cm —R.oyal Canadian Mounted Police and ‘Trenton officers patrolled the streets of this Plctou County steel town tonight to prevent further outbreaks of violence that arose from a feud between a white and negro family over possession of a house. The trouble started last Mon- day when Charles Reddick, a negro, purchased a house occupied by Mike Sinclair, a white, for his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Borden. The Sin- clairs refused to move out even when the Burdens moved in. The dispute was cllmaxed ivcd- nesday when a crowd oi approxi- mately 500 raided the house and destroyed furniture owned by the Bordens as well as breaking win- dows in two other houses owned by Reddick. The only sequel came when An- drew Clarke, a negro from New Glasgow. near here, was fined $5 or 10 days in jail for assaulting Mrs. Edwin Anderson, whose pro- perty adjoins the Sinclair-Borden residence. The Bordens fled‘ to New Glas- gow but returned later today to the disputed house. The Slnclalrs have not moved out. Toscanini Throws Baton In Disgust LONDON, Oct. 28— (AP) - Ar- turo Toscanini, world-famous or- chestra conductor, threw down his baton and angrily walked out on a rehearsal of a British Broad- lcasting Company orchestra. The Italian maestro, declaring he would not go through with a concert scheduled ior next week. exploded when he could not obtain desired execution of a passage in the third movement of Beethov- en's Ninth Symphony. Among witnesses oi’ the display of Toscaniniis temperament were the Austrian Minister, Bar on George Frankenstein, former Queen Victoria Eugenie oi Spain, and prominent British musicians and composers. Trio To Receive Bravery Awards (By The Associated Press) PITTSBURGH. Oct. 29-min: M. Luton of Halifax and two On- tarlo youths will receive bronze medals from the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission for acts of brav- ery at Peggy's Cove, N.S.. July l2, 1938. The 10-year-old Halifax glrtwith his P. Damshuw. lti. of Ottawa. and Peter A. Hertllberg, iii, of To- ronto, attempted to save Margaret Metzler. 40. and helped save Thomas ill. Brown from drowning. GANGHTER CAPTURE!) CLEVELAND, Oct. Ito-Cleveland police announced they captured llrnnk Bird. nationally hunted gangster, and his wife, here tonight. Everybody cnlucl Milli WITH TRAPPED m I N it: R Eli Seven Men Trapped 65. Feet Underground In French‘ Mine 14 PAGES MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Wltneol in the truth must go on whatever the economic conse- quenoes. Annual Subscription Delivered 05.00 By Mull-P. l. 1.. “.00; Canada nnd ll. l. $5.00 TSHANGHAI ‘i ‘Several-“Others Are Wounded By Japanese Shells INDIGNATION ANIFEST LONDON, Oct. Zil-Thc greatest illllilzllatltm Wils manifest ln official circles today over the killing oi‘ tllrl-l- lloi ill Pieter lhile- men in Shanghai-the latest ml n lellgtllrllilll; list of llriflsll l-lls- ualtles attributed to Japanese gunfire. The fact the killings occurred so soon after a British Sl‘I'lli‘\ was machine-gunned to death Sunday at u British til-fence. post in Shanghai increased the indignation it'll. informed persons said. although formal comment was withhold pl-lltllllg an (liflclal rc- port on the incident. (lave-in. ANZLN. I'll-once. Oct. 29—(CP)— Hope for the lives oi seven men trapped 65 feet underground here in a coal mine cave-in reminiscent l of Canaries Moose River sagal hinged tonight on a slender all-I conduit which remained intact ‘ | for 24 hours despite pressure of tons oi earth and rock. Rescue workers, emulating the Draegermen crews who on April 23, 1936, saved Di". D. E. Robert- son of Toronto and timekeeper By JAMES A. JIILLS Associated Press Iibrcign Stu/l‘ SHANGHAI, Oct. 29-—Three British soldiers were kill- ed and three seriously wounded ttmiglrt as Japanese hom- liardments west of Shanghai brought licllllly peril in Brit- ons and other foreigners. ‘ British military headquarters said the privates, mem- bers of the Royal Ulster Rifles. were hit during a two-hour shelling by Japanese artillery of the liungjao area west of Shanghai to which Chinese forces hlld retreated from the old front north 0f the city. . i l l l killhlgat-Jeast two of the nine- Alfred Scaddlng 11 days after- they were caught with Herma. R. MaGili. Toronto lawyer, in a N .. Scntin. gold mine. planned to lower food, water and flashlights through - the narrow tube. i l Voices Heard Residents of Anzin, crowded at the surface around the mouth of the duct, through which they could hear the indistinguishable voices of the men trflDDed below, were kept in touch with develop- ments~ln another mine disaster at Denain, five miles away. In the Renard shafts at Denaln a spark from a mlnefspick caused a coal gas explosion yesterday, men working nearby. Helmeted workers wearing gas masks brought two bodies to the surface today". and a third was feared still buried under the debris. Of the slX others, four were seriously in- jured, tiwo of them probably fatal- In the Vicoigne mines at Anzin, seven men laboring on a. gallery scaffolding were hurled into a 65- fcot pit when the earth gave way. Unlike lhe tragedy at Moose River. where it was necessary to bore a hole through to the trapped men and lower a two-inch tube. it was believed possible in the present case to send sustenance to tile miners through the air duct. ready at hand. Rescue wonkers were unable, however. to converse with the victims below, whose voices came to the surface in a confused jum- ble which rcvealed only some were still alive. Wilt-flier efforts would be made to pass a telephone line down the tube, as was done at Moose River, was not immediately revealed, Manufacture 'Leather From Fish Skins THOMASTON, Me, Oct. 29- Rodney E. Feyler, Maine's Com- missioner ot sea and shore fish- eries, today studied a process de- veloped by German scientists for the manufacture of leather from fish skins. He said hundreds of pounds of skins were thrown away in Maine annually that might be converted to a practical use through the new process. REMOVED AS COMMISSAR 0F AGRICULTURE (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) MOSCOW, Oct. 29—Mlkhall A. Chernoff was removed as Com- mlssar oi Agriculture of the Soviet Union today by the Central Ex- ecutive Committee. was named his successor. R. I. Eikhe Admiral Kiyoshi Hasegawa. district southwest of Shangh Shell Hits Dugout Riflemen William James and Mallon Howard were killed and Rlfleman Jack McGuire, Robert Delaney and Jack Campbell wounded when a shell scored a direct hit. on a British dugout at the Junction of Kcswick and Brennan, roofi- at the northwest. corner oi the International Settle- ment- About 25 men were ill the position. Rifleman Joseph O'Toole was kiied while having an off-duly glass of beer in the Honeylnnd Bar, opposite the entrance to Jesiield Park. A shell landed in the street and hurtled into the bar. A Chinese barmaid was wounded. Last Sunday Rlfleman R. McGowan was killed by e. plane's machine gun bullets Seven Chinese non-combatants were killed or wounded by the Other Japanese projectiles ex- p'oded in the French Concession. killing two Chlncw and wounding seven. Telcphoned Protest Major-General A. P. D. Telier- Smollctt, commanding British troops at Shanghai, telephoned protests to both Chinese and Jap- anese authorities and called per- sonally on Admiral Hascgaula. Before the soldiers’ deaths Gen- eral Telfer-Snlollett had a long controversy with Japanese ilaVill officers when two armed Japanese naval launches attempted to strain up Soochow Creek along the In- ternational Settlement border. The British officer in command denied the Japanese right to oper- ate on the creek and finally per- suaded tlle launches to withdraw. The Japanese said they wanted to fight fires in Chapel, but. foreign- ers believed they intended to blast at China's "lost battalion." still, holding ollt against tllc cncirchllgt Japanese in a warcllnuc just l across the Soochow crock. l An American Methodist hllsriflli was set afire by a raid of 20 Jap- ‘. anese planes 20 miles southwest of‘ Shanghai. . Reliable Chinese said hundrcdn d Chirime civilians were killed or wounded in air raids on sung- klang, Soochow and other cities. In North China the Japanese admitted their drive into Shansi Province from the ca=t had been stalled by stubborn Chinese re- sistance at Pirigting, 65 mllqs cast of Taiyuaniu, provincial capital- Proposed Jap Peace Terms Are Unacceptable To China (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) PARIS, Oct. 29—A high Chinese authority said tonight. that accept- ance of peace terms outlined yester- day by a Japanese spokesman would "be a betrayal of the Chinese people and the beginning of complete dis- rnenlberrnent of Claims." The Chinese spokesman saidtboth malari- - - --v ‘I’ tion of China's five northern prov- inces by Japan and creation of an intcmational zone about Shanghai ~were cut of the question from the Chinese point. of view. ’ He said the idea of Japan's oc- cupying tile llorthem provinces - Hupeh, Cllahar, Bhanlli, Siuyuan and Shantung be" been Japan's dream for years and constituted a of expansion on the Asiatic main- land. The proposal to create a neutral none about Shanghai, maintained by international police, would be a violation oi the administrative in- tegrity of China, the spokcsman so . He il§€fltd the suggestion that "H's oi the principal powers ahcuid begin peace negoti- ations at Tolwo and Nanking wa- merely an attempt to split up the Nine-Power conference at Brussels before it started. (Japan will not which thee‘ attend the Brussels opuls Nov. 3). The Chinese view, the spokesman, porley major objective in Japan's program well as for her own indepe ldtllk . same shells that hit the Britons; according to is that China is . fighting for sanctity of treaties as indignant British authorities protested vigorously to commanding Japanese naval 4orces at Shanghai. Only last Sunday zlllntht-i- member of the Ulster Rifles was killed b_ The shells that killed the British soldiers apparently came from Japanese batteries in Chapel trying in hit Chinese positions in Bungjao, residential and country-club v fire from a Japanese plane. zli. To Refund Last 0f Tax Free Bonds OTTAWA. Oct. ilEl-To refund the last of the tax free bonds is- sued during the war Finance Min- lstor Cimrlcs Dunning announced tonight Slib$0l‘l])1l0ll5 would be O1)L'll('<‘l Wednesday on ,1 new $l00,~ 000.000 loan. The nlalurlty oi 5121799300, 5 l-il per cent Victory bond; is redeemable Dec. l, and the balance of over 322000.000 will be llict from revenue. The maturity represents the last of lilo tux-free bonds floated dur- ing the Will. A portion of this jiarticlllzlr i>slle was converted ear- lier this your into louver-interest- bearillg securities. The new lnall will be issued l.rl ‘three llixllilrltics consisting of 1 I-Z-YQIH‘ tilio-per-ccnt bonds mat- uring Jllilt,‘ l, i930, jiriccd at 99.125 i0 yuclci upproxinlaiclyl 1.59 per cent; seven-year bonds at 2 1-2 per cent priced at 98.60 to yield approximately ‘$.74 p"l‘ cent. and 14-year bonds at 3 1-4 percent priced at ll?) to yield npprnximat/l- ly 3.34 ])f‘l' rvnf. Fkirlllal offering will be made through the Bank of Canada and subscriptions rllay be rliode through any brailcll ill Canada of any chartered brink and zllrollgh roc- ognized bonrl dealers. The 5 T-B-ps-r-vclit Vi-wory bonds now bcillg l‘l‘fli‘f‘.'llt"i'l, with final coupon attncFlr-(l. will be accepted at par up in the amount. required to pay on the lie-u; bonds. 1-2:: MANY Ftiiiifs CAN earn oven- Lootco W no: LADY iS ecaurlruug TORONTO, Oct. 29 -Minimun and maximum temperatures; Saint John 52 56 Halli ax g4 5c Charlottetown 5g g4 Ilkirocasts: Millltlillt‘ East and West: Mod: crate to fresh wrst. and southwest Wlllll-‘Z portly einurlv and mild; Dmbnbly scattered showers. 1 High tide this morning at 1,31 and tonight at 80F Sun sets this nlwmrjon a; 45g allci rises tomolronl morning at 6.36. Ncw moon Tuesday. Nov. I, 11.15 p.m. Sllmlncrsitlv tide eighteen min. llll-s lnlPr than Cllallotietowll, v m... ’.'.T.’.‘..il."i.i.'""‘"‘ . III“?! Tormnllilno il ..T"...'.',"&.m l; =1 From Melt ' | t _ Ilorllrn mo‘ 'm..nlr-n):: rllmhil}: ‘-n-n .2 n.