. MAXIMS " or A MERE MAN \ iii mind before the bod]. m niahhge prefer penon before money, virtue before beauty, m; Charlottetown Guardian ‘Iwn Cente Iernln‘ Guardian, Ionnded 1M1 COMlNG-{VENll "Announcement ure- nm-rled In thin eolnm at 2 cente per word nrlotly peynblp in advance. "Concert Cross Roads School, Dec. 22. L249-ll-29-1l "Buying Poultry daily. McGuigan 5; Boyle. L-l43-11-26—l01. "Dance in Whim Road Hall Fri- doy, Decembe 8rd. L-197-ll-2'7~2l. "Cornwall W. M. S. Cake Sale, Rogers Hardware, Saturday, Dec- ember 4th. L-l94-11-27-12-2-3. "Ohristian Church afternoon tea and bazaar, Tuesday, Novem- ber S0. L-i70-11-26-3i. "Buying Poultry every Bowmms Stole, Hunter River. - L-214-ll-27-8i. "Dance in Lorne Valley Hall, Tuesday Nov. 80. Charlie Cham- berlain's Orchestra. L-254-1i-29-2i. day. "See Belle River Y. P. U. play, Whim Road, Wednesday. Dec. 1st. It 8. L-22l-1l-27-2i. "Borden tine Club loading hogs, lambs. calves every Wednesday at Albany. Hours 12-3. IFIOBI-lO-M T W tf. "Dance at Mt. Stewart Legion Hall Wednesday, Dec. 1st. Charlie Chamberlain's orchestra. 14-251-11-29-31. 4 “Buying dressed pouitry daily. Paying highest market prices. W. T. Ling, Wheatley River. - - ' L-2l5-1l-27-2i. "Buying all kinds dressed poul- Fisheries lss TOKYO, Nov. 2S-(AP)—Fl\iction between Japan and Russia eppqq. ed today in two forms. “The foreign office announced a s "ong pmtcs’ to Moscow 3min; on alleged scrie: of offences agafllg: the Japanese Consulate at Vladi. vosiok. The newspaper Asahi re_ Ported the soviet Govemment was blocking renewal oi the Russm Japanese fisheries agreement, 1on8 n rore spot in relations of the two powers. The foreign office asserted So. viet physicians refused to attend the Japanese Consul and Vice- I Was Native Of This Province EDMONTON. Nov. 28—(OP)— Mr. Christinrl MacDonald, 82, mother oi the wife of Hon. W. A. Fhllow, Alberta Minister at public Works. died here Saturday. A na- live ‘of Victoria. Cross. P. E. 1. Mrs, MacDonald moved to Alberta in 1918. Cgllsulwzitnilladivostok when euf. CHARIJUFTETOWN. CANADA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1937 JAPAN TO ICNORE ANGLO - u. ue Heighiens Russo - Japanese Friction -__-__ ferin8 from fever and that Soviet authorities refused to stamp the passport of a Vice-Consul who was to have gone from Japan u) n- niece one of the sick men. The Asahi sad the Moscow Gov- ernment evaded conclusion of a new fisheries agreement by pre- venting terms which Japan can not accept. (Japan considers he: Siberian fishing rights of great importance, and Japanese leaders have threat- ened "independent action" to con- scrvethemifMoscowwillnotze- _n_cw cxistingogreemenie.) Assassination Attempt Fails Three Shots Fired At Egyptian Premier CAIRO, Nov. 28-(CP Havasl- Twenty persons were in hospitals tonight. four of them gravely in- iured as a. result of rioting which broke out following an attempt to aeeesginete Premier Mustapha Na- hes Pasha by a. member of the Green Shirt Nationalist group, Iz- ledin Abdel IGAadcr-grandson of the famous Arab rebel leader Ab- dcl Khader. a try daily. Top prices. Dillon a . Spiilett, Queen street. l . " ‘ L-aas-n-ze-n. I "Cake sale in Rochford Square School Saturday, December 4, under auspices St. Joseph's So- delity. L-267. "See the play "Hired Husbands" presented by Marshflcld-Dunstafi- nage players in Covehead Hall, What ‘ls Wrong With The florid‘! Rousing Sermon By Rev. Dr. Legate On Present Day Need. A band of youths armed with clubs and revolvers attacked the home of the Opposition Leader. Mohamed Mahmud. Police dispersed them by firing in the air, aftera clash. and restored order as mid- night drew on. Afmfld Pill-role appeared in the streets in large numbers to prevent further disturbances. Izzedin Abdel-Khader, who fired Mpnday 30th at 8 P. M. . L-2l8-11-27~2i. "Feeder bran, shorts and “Hog Concentrate" for sale at cooper- ative prices. It will pay you to call upon us if you are buying. Livestock Marketing Board. L-235. "Unloading Albion .1ut coal it Milton, Saturday and Monday. Also have e supply of. Springhlll on hand. Best coal at right prices. B. C. Webster, Milton. i IL-224-l1-27-3i. "We will be buying dressed fowl and chicken on a graded bnsiscach Wednesday until further notice b:- tlnning December first. C. E. Pratt 6r Son. 11-151-11-29-12-6-13-20-27. "Seven-Mile Bay card parties, Tuesday evening Nov. 30 at Seven Mile Bay; Thursday evening Dec. 2 at home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Sherry, Fernwood. Saturday even- infl at home of Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Mclnnis, Borden. L-264. "l-iveltoclr Marketing Board loading livestock at Railway Stock pens Charlottetown Tuesday, Nov. 80th.. until 8 o'clock, It will DRY. I011 to bring your hogs and hovel them sold cooperatively. We in- vlte all hog producers to join our °°°l>erators. L-265. “Tuesday Nov. 23rd ivns a heavy day at the stock pen". Char- lottetown and we hope tomorrow Will be still busier. If every body will bring their hogs we will be Wfy billy and we want to be as 511B? ls we can be. Livestock Mar- keting Board. 1-265. “If conditions warrant we in- ‘and to ship all hogs loaded at . Hunter River and Milli? this week to Montreal. 15° Your hogs at once with your 10ml secretary so that car space Bill be provided. Our shipments to Montreal lave turned out most setiefectuy. ldveltnck Marketing Board. L-zas "hit week we sold more hogs ‘In we did in ny one week since W ly five years . en we are e on o In d in poslti t handle twice as many. The service l" with! is the drawing card. we HM your help to do better. You Iced o! help to get even the Irina m: In getting. Let's work Mother and he]: each other. Uvestot Marketing Board. L466. VITIIAN LAWYII DIES umnu MUSQUODOBOIT. N. l. Nov. fi-(Wl-Jeniee A.Sed89- Wick. one of Nove scene's oldest llwerecndemunbcroioneof "Ill province's outstanding famil- Preaching to a large congregation in St. James Church yesterday morning. Rev. Dr. R. Moorhead Imgate declared in no uncertain terms what he considered was at the bottom of al the troubles that are bcsetting the world today-the neglect to make the holness oi God the crucial test of every event that happens in our own lives and in the life of the world in general. Taking as his text Leviticus l9, 1, “And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, speak unto all the congre- gation of the children of ‘ Israel, and say unto them, ye shall be holy, for I, the Lord your God, am holy." Dr. Legato said: The conditions existent in the world today, national and interna- tional. social and domestic, are thrusting themselves so insistently upon the Chr stian conscience that any attempt to evade them or avoid them is nothing short of living in a. fool's paradise. Religion and the churcn have never in any period of their history bccn so outrlghtly and sharply challenged at the bar of ihe world's opinion as they are to- day. And never have Christian people been so deeply exercised as to how our faith may best rise to the occasion, how wc may be true to our high commission, how we may justify the church in the eyes of e world that waits to be per- suaded of her ability to meet all human ncecl. To many of us these are times of great perplexity. 0f spiritual strain and even of dark foreboding, and we feel that we need special help and encouralle- ment to brace our spirits and t0 fit us to stand fast in the evil day. Our unaided reason lands us no- where as we observe with disnay the tragic tliiflgs_t_lifltfflljfl__hval7pfl' four shots at Nahas Pasha as the latter drove past him in an auto- mdbile, is the ilZ-yearold grandson of Abdel Khader who led risings of Algerian Arabs against the French in 1832 and 1835. He was finally defeated by a French army in . ' The youth was seized by the Premier's personal bodyguard af- ter he had fired four shots, three of them wild, at Nahas Pashafs car as it sped through i-lelipolis, a. sub- urb of Cairo. - _ One of the shots struck the auto- mobile two inches below the win- dow behind which the Premier was sitting. “Dude” Cowboys Face Death Sentence LA CRUCES. N. M.. NOV. 28- All their bravado gone, two "dude" cowboys who attempted an armed train holdup were ordered held inoommunicado in Bona Ana county jail here today. They will be arraigned “some- time this week,” District Attorney Martin Threet said, on charges of murder and train robbery-either of which is punishable by oeeth in New Mexico. W. L. Smith, El Paso yardman, was fatally wounded in n tight with the two as they attempted to leave the train after the robbery last Thursday. Harry Dwyer, 27, of Digby County, N S., was downcast and silent as the two were led away to their celfs, but Henry Lorenz, 22, mustered a wry smile. "This ‘wild west’ isn't. what it's (Continued on page ‘l. Col. 4) Royal Comm .WINNIPEG. gown r on Provincial Relations prepared i0- night w embark on its quest for a formula to solve the financial tangle now facing the Dominion and Provincial Governments. Chairman Newton W. fiowell. bnfqxioi Chief Jilstice, tomorrow sperm. the momentous inquiri- first of e nation-wide series of 51mm, which may ultimately leld to government revision of the Bri- flgh North American Act. As the climax to accumulated. pgitation for redistribution of jllr- l Lsdictions and mung rowers. the (we-man commi-sion will stud! Nov, 2B—(OP)—ThI , n . . ‘gxlgflflg guve. mental relationships to determine ii changes are neces- , ‘my to cope with IIIOf-‘lfim PW‘ in. died rim today. He was v1. . oleme. ‘ Probe In Winnipeg Today ‘ ‘uptobeinthe cowboy magazines," he seid. , ission Opens Attuney-Gennel W. J. Major will , ‘ and dieoun the section Laurent of Quebec City will mist in this dieounien. Dr. A. it. Upnm, economist of the Univenity of Minnesota, will out present the section on Federal Monetary Policy with special et- imttm given to its effect on West- sm Canada u an exporting area. Members d’ the oomminion es- rembled hm Satin-day. Ohainnan Rowell, eomniiui Dr. Joseph siroigciQucbeoexidPzci. lLA. Mickey of Dalhousic University arrived from Ottawrand met Prof. H. I‘. Angus of Vancouver end J. S. IJEBMRE new BllltKAIlE on SPANISH BDAST Women And Children Victims As Rebel Planes Bomb Ma- drid Suburb. HENDAYE, French - Spanish Border, Nov. ZB-The Insurgent Spanish regime today proclaimed a blockade of all Spanish Govern- ment ports, including those on the Island of Minorca. A communique issued at Sala- manca, where the Insurgent general staff was completing pans for its next offensive, declared an end to the neutrality of the ports which the London No Jniorvention Com- ' mttee has attempted to maintain. “All vessels whoch attempt to en- ter Government ports will be at- tached," t-helcommunique said. Spanish Government sources de- clared this merely put the finishing touches on what. they termed a. “paper blockade.” They said Gen- eral Franco did not have sufficient sea. strength to make the blockade effective. COLMENAR VIEJO, Spain, Nov. bib-At least 50 persons-all women and children but one-were killed today in an Insurgent air raid on this vllage 20 miles north of down- town Madrid. Thirty-five bodies lay in the shed of a graveyard on a little hill above the village at dusk after an after- noon of death and destruction. Fifteen bodies were yet to be brought up from the village and the debris of more than 125 houses was being explored for other victims. There were 120 persons in hospitals while many wounded were taken to their battered homes. Eleven of those lying in the graveyard shed were infants. Swathed in biood-stained sheets, they had been placed in their dead mothers‘ arms. With one mcih5r were her slx-months-old twins. None of the infants was over a few months old. Eight older chil- dren, ranging up to five years of age, were grouped separately. All the other dead were women except one man lying just inside the door. NULLINBTUN CiillRT BREWl ARE REIINITED Captain Of Ill-Fated Court told a. dramatic story of how their disabled ship grounded ANGL O-FRENCH DISCQSSIONS (WJPEN TOD/l Loses Livestock In Fire After Buying Trip Here WEBSTER, Me, Nov. 2! -- Fate worked ironically against the Davis family of Webster. Melvin Davis returned from a Prince Edward Island cntile- buylng trlp to find hie moth- er’: barn in flames. Sixty head of beef cattle perished and the fire destroyed nine pigs and 150 lone of hay also. Total value was $10,000. 1n the Canadian province, Davis purchased l0 additional head, to be delivered next week. To quell the biluc, fire en- gines raced here from Lcwlston and Sabaitus, but pumpers found difficulty in getting wat- er from Sabattiu River, which is at a level 25 feet below a highway bridge. Firemen were able to lave n. horse and six head’ of cattle. i Freighter Tells Dra- ma ti c Story Of Wreck. ‘ with Prime Minister Chamberlain iiERMiil inn FAR EASTERN. 'A gl -U.S.R t f M d F 311p%okyoflggjzignzrboiilsarrile<f A i i French Premier And Foreign Minister T0 MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Intelligence. devotion. enthusiasm are the qualities by which we nuke good. Annual kinhlrrlpflbn Delivered 85.00 B) Hull-J’. l!- l., 4W1 Cllldl nlld IJ. ll 85.00 P 0115513 Ft Seize Comma-i’ Of Communications In Shanghai Area To Flee Nanking. TOKYO, Nov. 29—-(:\l0llilil_\‘)—A Japanese Foreign (Jillce spokes- Exchange v i e w s man declared today Japan takes the position ihllt "we do not have to With British Lead- i ers. (A. I‘. by Guardian's Special Wire) ' LONDON, Nov. Zii-Foreign lilin- l‘ isicr Eden left a. sick bod today~ for a last minute consultation on the foreign policy conversations which start tomorrow with Prem- ier Camille Chautcmps and For- eign liiinisirr Yvon ‘Delbos of France. The scope of the conference, in- _ spired by Lord lialifax’s recent ex- plorations ni‘ German icrrilorial and political claims, suddenly was widened to include the Japanese threat to Angno-Frcnch interests in the Far East. The two Premiers, meeting for the first ilme since they assumed office, were expected mainly to deal with four topics: l. Means of making Japan re- spoct China's concessions to for- eign nationals in conquered Shang- hai's international areas; 2. Reichschancclior Hitler's cen- tral European and colonial am- bitions; 3. The Mediterranean situation in view of Italian troop trations in Libya. and Maliorca; 4. Negotiations for a new trade COHCCD‘ KINGSTON. Jamaica, Nov. 28— (CPCabZQ-Captain and crew of‘ the British Freighter Noilington; Court that pounded on rocks off Tortuga Island were together a-i gain tonight in Kingston. l Captain JFord and 18 members] of the fieighters crew who re- b mained on board Nollingion Court i wrresmwlivns asainst an“ m, m-msh Frflghm- mam-es 1 seizure of the Sliunghai customs. took off 1B other crew ‘members i last Thursday arrived Saturday e- board the tug Kiilerig. The Captain o! the Nollingtoz: Oil; ‘facturcrs will be asked to offers for purchase and manu- facture of potilioes into starch and flour for the surplus commodity corporation to distribute to relief Practically the cntre group were victims of one 220-pound bomb that ripped through six feet of stone and earth covering a small refuge in the Central Plaza to kill 32 per- SOIL-l. Orfy one person left that refuge alive. Eight Insurgent airplanes swept over Colmenar Viejo about noon. All along the highway from Col- menar tonight people were fleeing, their possemions piled on mule~ buck. There was not a single building 1n the central part of town that was not blown apart or damaged today or in a raid "of July 22. when about 40 persons were killed and 1000 wounded. Seek Outlet For Surplus Tuber Crop WASHINGTON. Nov. 28-11%?) agricultural Adjustment Administration announced yester- day a program designed to en- courage manufacture of part of this year's bumper crop of potatoes -The into starch and flour. Aimed at increasing returns to United states growers the program is divided into two parts. Under the first agencies. Under the second, manufactur- ers will be paid 40 cents per 165- pound barrel, or 24 cents a hund- red, for potatoes they turn into starch and flour for distribution in regular markets channels. Canadian Barley, Oats Win Honors 2a —('AP)—- Canada. retained the world champ- idnliip for oats today with the victory of Alex Stewart of Alisa Craig, Ont., at the international CHICAGO, Nov. grain end hay show "here. Stewart won with Alaska Dec number 151, a variety developed by the Ontario agricultural ollegc. The sample weighed 4'7 I , to the bushel. The victory was Canada's second of the day. John Weiner of Miami, Mbn, showing a Oanede ‘Thorpe variety in the two-rowed clan. won the barley title liter a close tussle between his nmplee and those of two United States ferm- SIS. W. Defoe 0i’ Winnipeg. part, manu- submit rocks off the island shortly after the Chagrcs took the 18 members of the crew off and brought them to Kingston last Friday. The skeleton crew fought for two days to keep the freighter a- float before it became apparent she was doomed. The Captain tried to signal the Chagres, standing off at the time to avoid the treacher- ous rocks. The ship began to break up but the tide storied to ebb and the 16 crew members and her captain were able to wade over the reefs to shore. l2 miles away. Three slightly injured by falls on the! journey. The captain and crew went without food and good drinking water for some time on the unin- habited section oi the island, until the Killer-lg sighted them Friday. They were taken aboard the tug and brought here yesterday. “It's a miracle that we were saved,” commented the captain. “The crew are the finest body of men in the world." Plan To Publish Life Story Of Windsor LONDON, Nov. 2B—(APJ—Lord Strabolgipas director of the pub- lishing firm of Rich and Cowan. announced tonight his nrm ex- pected to publish an authorized life story of the Duke of Windsor by Compton MacKenzie, Scottish novelist and historian. He said MacKeizie was negoti- ating with the Duke and his legal representatives. Lord Strabolgi ad- ded: “We think we are doing a public service by publlshin this book throughout the Empire and the world which will give the complete story without any embarrassment to anyone at ell." Mountain “Hurls” Earth Into River (AI. By Glllrlllln’! Special Wire) LOB ANGELIS, Nov. 28—Ali was quiet today on Iiiyslan Park's "moving mountain," a 850 foot high - bluff that pitched an avalanche of l,000,000 tons of earth across Riv- erside drive and into the 10a An- gels: river bed last Friday night. Geofoglsts expressed belief the earthquake fault within the hill would become active again end per- haps cause another upheaval. With "the tilde man covering Riverside! Drive, there was little or no imme- ."~»- danger to life or mwmv. particulars of the bill Mt. Mio- six PTDVLHOGQ agre Minister MzwKcnzie Kingis unem-' ployment insurance proposal three demanding grtalcr dc the next move will Goveznmcnt here. | Sonia announcement will probabq prime Mmisiu 5.1m ruch ly come from the Prime Minister after Tuesday's if not before then. Yesterday Premier D_v5a:t of New the Brunswick made public a letter in mendmcni. which he King his legislature would have) p] the final word on the proposal but‘ he indicated the legislature would‘ _ mquire full details before maxinqflmmpmymfll" for greater detail and added his province wu not disposed Io cur-l pact between Great Britain and the United States. It was generally considered Shanghai wns the most immediate t and central Europe the mnsl seri- ous of these problems. I France, Great Britain and the‘. Unilcci States have already made; Japanese An official announcement said the ministers would diszuss the sit- uation at their first meeting Mon- day. It ivas bclicved aimon certain the conference would review Hit- lens demands in relation t0 France's pacts with Czecho- slovakla and Russia. "/ Informed observers insisted Hit- ler had asked Lord Halifax for British recognition that Germany has "special interests" in central Europe. r Great Britain" is without com- mitmcnts in central Europe; but informed circles believed Chau- temps and Dcibos wanted to know whether Britain felt obliged to support France in central Europe. Britain Saturday ordered her! Ambassador to Tokyo to inform Japan that Britain insisted on be- ing consulted before any changes were made in the Chinese mari- time customs. Sotne quarters suggested recent Japanese moves‘ to trike over the government of conquered Shang- hai might lcarl Great Britrm again to try to bring the United Slates into a joint British-French- American program. Scots Pay Tribute To Ramsay lliacllonald of (C. P. by CZFTJHKIIYS Special Wlrel lo LDSSIEMOUTH, Nov. 2B—-A.1l ill day neighboring Scots walked past the spot in windsivcpt Spynie churchyard where the ashes of a1 James Ramsay MacDonald, only m Labor Prime Minister of Great, “" Britain. were mid to first Satur- in day bv his sons Malcolm and a p‘; =mir are badly tangled," the spokesman said. foreign rights and interests. Certainly we do not have to consult Britain and the United States regarding projected actions." Yangtze river port 40 miles east of Nunking, the small Bri ish and American colony took refuge on the British gun4. aiu had made representations at! Tokyo against fcrencc with the integrity of the] Chinese maritime said they customs service smoothly under Japanese without causing other powers. taken to place collection hitherto rich receipts in Japanese hands stituied the first part of a pro- gram for Japanese control. molested the and Danish Cnblc cOfilplllllCs opt-r- ating in the International 5/1120- mcnt nor attempted to pyirv roll- i _ sors in the cable offices. one bomb struck propcriv of lim- British Asiatic ' pany and another rlalnagcrl n Bria- isli hulk near the Aphis. designed to smash all overruns of escape from Nnnkbt; and ‘Iuhu. Yangtze port 55 miles -v\'hici1 Japanese lnnci forces con- tinued their slcnrly til-Julieta Aniiwei-join borders. consult Great Britain and the Cnitrd States‘ regarding our projected actions in Shanghai." (The United States made fonnal representations to the Japanese , Government, stating American concern over anything affecting the inn, icgrity of Chinese maritime customs. (Great Britain made similar roprcsentaiions uilcr Japanese mad‘ known their intention to control the Shanghai customs.» “Shanghai presents a problem wherein legal and strategic phnsfl “Chinese authority’ underliefl By JAMES A. MILLS Associated Press Foreign Staff ( SHANGHAI, Nov. 29-(M0nday) -Sharighnl was cut ofl, from telegraphic communication Willi the rest of China fo- day as Japanese oillcials, having seized control of the (‘hi1 nese telegraph and radio channels linking ihe city with the interior, ordered service suspended. Shortly before this occurred, incoming messages ported a score 0f Britons and Americans were endanger-e j and hundreds of Chinese killed or wounded as Japanese airforces struck at vital points around China's evacuated, capital, Nanking- ~ When 114 bombs were dropped on Chinkiang, imporianfl l boat Aphis, lying in the river. No foreigners were hurt. Representations Made Japanese diplomats admitted he United States and Great Brit- TRANSFER nri BLERGY ll ANNUUNBED Right Rev Maurice McDonald of Trucadie has been appointed 111s- icr oi the Roman Catholic P - -. ' at Vernon River, slicer-rill‘. Rev. P. D. McGuigan whose flCdlll Japanese lnter- l customs but‘ hoped the Shanghai would function control disputes with‘ thus far of the Shanghai customs COU- They said measures ,I-m°r' they declaredi m? Que-l‘ took place recently. Other trails- mm of pilyment o! cmmls for‘ fcrs nnnoullrcci our ilm \\'l‘i‘rl—.'lld eign debts out of customs receipts, include. “ccordmg t‘) the Perms °f ‘he Rev. Kenneth bfvlllivrsvui f-"nm loans, would be studied and rights 5L A1,,,-g,,,-fl-_, p, Tm A.“ n,“ or foreign DDWPTS FOIPKICITWL George bio-Donald from 1.0x. i1 l0 St. ltiurgurcfs; Rev. Eugene Mur- ray from Summer-side to Int ll; Rev. John Kelly from Tignish l0 SUIIlIIIClZJKlCI and Rcr. Jcusc-pli Trninor Wllil was nsistunt IlZLSi-Hl‘ at Vernon Rive-r during the illnr»; i of Father bIcGuignn, to Tignish Not Mole-sled A: Yet Thus fa: the Japanese have not British, American In the bombing of Chiuplunnu, Pcirolcnm (‘mu- Thc air raids apparently 4W0 tau LNE As CHERPLY A?» ONE w (time \‘.‘> No Almwonv s y,» i i . I \\'f‘l‘(‘ I :0u'in\'c.<t i the capital. lownrd both of i The main battleground scorned I be the region whz-rc throc prov- ccs-Klcngsu, Clieklnzig and In Nanking Chincsc lthoriiics Wflfllffil the few rc- aininz foroigncrs thnt the city 'ul",n'\l\' would be a battleground a. few days and they had only 5.1071. time in escape. military UITAWA, NOV. All mirmortoLocios-i." srznvfcp, Toronto, Nov. ‘.13 —- Nllilillllllll and p » 0 l i maximum temperatures: rovmces n nsurance Plan D-wsq- we Victoria 38 46 Edmonton 2 i6 nut-i i Regina, __ 2 28-(CP)—-Wihh, Kenzic King proposed, in his lci- ymmtlwll AB s‘: "1116 W Pflmelixir to the nine Premiers dated °“’"v° _' ,Nov. 5. to bring down at next ses- gggrriq, andjsion of parliament. nemior Aber- Qncbw‘ :6 ‘u, ' $311.‘ hart 0i Albcria was tihc first to SnmJnhn 2p, 4; 0e with the make such n wquest. Ham,“ 36 40 Cabinet Council, i told Mr. MacKenzie I Ii decision. ‘ibis was the third mum for would be given to parliament. Th» first essential, he said, was i0 got iagrecment. from the provinces on his government was in favor of , Replying to Mr. Abel-hart the details Charlottetown 34 3B Maritime East; Sirrng wmris {H1O galvs southeast shifting in sun h- wcst cloudy‘ wllh Offihiillifil rnin probably some fog. lllcli thin this morning at 815 and tonight at 7.50. Sun scts this afternoon at 4.21 nlul rises tomorrow morning nl. 7.16. New moon Tucsdny, Dec. 2, at 6.11 p. m. mow; Bummerslde tide eighteen min- l utes later than Charlottetown. nrcrsmry constitutional a- Earllcr this weck Premier Du- csiis of Quebec, while declaring‘ 111511111108. iieultonenq. t: ~< ~ Jd-r :2?! I i 1 i i i b . i i i