Charlottetown Guardian Two (has; flaming Guardian, Iouldod Ill‘! GHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1937 P97 Covers Prince Edward - Island like the Dew ‘n. 12 PAGES MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN Knowledge fa a treasure, but practice is the key to it. .. lptlon Uellu-reil $5 Annual Sulurr .00 By [all , L. 04.00; Canada and U. S. $5.00 -—P. Ii OFEORMANY W ASSUME R our OF MEDIA 101?? huiiiii is iiiiviiiii il iiiisiiiw Championships To Be Awarded Today. Judging of classes and herds was completed yesterday at. the Provincial Fox Show, Exhibition grounds. It was a big day's work that Judge Callbeck undertook and accomplished, but he was aid- gd by an almost perfect day, the weather being clear and bright. It was an absolutely ideal fox day from any-angle, judging or ranch work, with just enough tang in the nir to make it invigorating and benltiiful. An almost capacity crowd viewed the judging, particularly during the afternoon. Over a. hundred ears were parked on the grounds llld visitors from all parts of the province, cast and wast. could he comment continued very favorable on the quality, color and fur ex- cellence oi the various classes. The rompetitors of this year- aro surely to be congratulated for this, and those who have been to see the animals have certainly gained considerable technical knowledge or the industry from that oppor- luiiiiy. competition for the Canada Pickers Trophy which is to be awarded to the exhibitor making the highest number of points in classes other than the lierds—was very keen and exciting. Yester- day morning we reported that Hil- lard Muttart, Summerside, was in illfl load. with Stewart a: Lewis, illlmrllergirle...iri__second place, .112. lookellly third and W. n. McAr- thur fourth. Yesterday afternoon Stewart and Lewis started to run B“? Wlih things and made such“ irgraiid stand finish by a quick nlllrls up or points that they were what l5 lfIiOWn in running horse lldrlflnce as "ofl by themselves." Figures will have to be rechecked W Kim-ermine who is tohnve the honor of being second. but last ‘iflllll! it seemed to rest as a tie between Hillard Mutiart and W.B. iVicArLhur. Mr. McArthur made elf-‘lltllt souls Yesterday after- noon. All three breeders hao cllssy’ showings and richly dc- Bvfvcd the honors that have come to iliem. Jllllfllns got away to an early start in the morning with the PALE SILVER. YEARLING FE- MALES on the table. This was a moo class of bright snappy silvers. Stewart 8r Lewis had an edge on the others, winning first, Ira Cnrr second, It. G. Muttart third and Dilly fourth. PALE SILVER MALE PUPS. This W85 another real good close, in fact it took Judge Callback con- siderable time to decide who should rrceive first. second or third. Roy Woodside, who had glllvh sensational success last year, ihg__w_ixi_ner Stewart 6r Lewis (Continued on page ll, Col. 3) COMING ‘EVfNTl n "hlllnunuemum ure inserted Int “ll! oolum at 2 mints per word ‘WU IIIIIQ in some». 1:. . - _ "qiflylnakers" big dance, Web- ster's corner. Friday, Nov. 5. L-l396-il-3-8i. "Reserve Saturday, November ml lol" United Church Bean Supper ill Victoria Hnll. L-itll-ll-c-li. "Rummage Sale Baptist School {Gum Saturday, November 6th at 'l "mili- L-l404-lI-5-2i. "chicken Supper and Dance in lfills Hall, Monday, November 8th. L-li4i-ll-5-3l. "Chicken supper in Lot so Hall on Manda,“ November 8th. Ad- imllifln 20C and 85c. L-isaa-il-a-ii-si. "Wo-he-lo Club cake sale at libero and McLeod’: Saturday liev. 0 beginning at u l. m. ' ~ L-IQZO-ll-l-l-Ii. "Presbyterian Chicken Supp" and Bazaar. legion Hall. Mt- 9W"- art Wednesday, November 10th. ‘rickets Mr: and 80c. L-IBGG-IO-Ii-Ii. “The annual meeting of the “Alu- Auxiliary of the Klnlll County Ilolpltai. Mount/Blue. Will bl? held in the Hospital Honda . NOV- znaier am it no e. u. A! llllelé- 5 ll are cordiall invited to a - lend. y L-i409-1l-1-2i. picked out among the spectators. , classes 1 to 6-—that is to say those , Ohio National Silver Fox Com- » Britain Tests . LONDON. Nov. 4—Great Britain's Home Defence Command ordered fl- lllidllliht "black-out" tonight of 200 square miles of London's qygg- ern_ approaches for two mock air T3105 b? RDYN All‘ Force bombers. Ilondon itself was not affected but the area on both sides of the Thames and Medway rivers, South- end, Graveseud, Chatham, Fave:- siiam and Sheerness were , sed to the two hours of raids. Batteries of. anti-aircraft, guns were manned by the Territorial Arrnylygile the capital s. realistic Chinese furious TENSIUNIN EllRllPE EASES Non-Interven- tion Committee Ac- cepts British Plan. (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wire). LONDON, Nov. 4 Tension among the great powers over the Spanish civil war relaxed measur- ably tonight as Great Britain axi- iiounced the government was ne- gotiating a commercial agreement wiih the Insurgent regime. ' A full meeting of the 2'1 nation Spanish Non-Intervention Commit- tee quickly approved British pro- posals for getting foreign troops out of Spain and authorized the Enrl oi Plymouth, the chairmen, to apprglach the Spanish government and surgents to obtain their con- sent. ' Au increasingly friendlier feeling in Britsh quarters toward Insur- glint General Franco was evident with British and French authorities talking less about strong action i0 force, withdrawal oi the foreign volunteers fighting on both sides. Prime Minister Chamberlain told the House of Commons Great Brit- ain was negotiating commercial re- lations with General Franco but os- scried that did not involve de facto diplomatic recognition oi the In- surgeiits. Reliable sources said the commer- cinl agreement would be_ on the lines of the existing arrangement Willi Italy in her unrecognized Em- pire‘ of Ethiopia. The agreement was not likely to be completed. however, they said, until General Franco provided the ~Forcign Office with the result of the “searching inquiry" he prom- ised info the sinking of the British sleamship Jean Weems off the Cat- alnii coast last week. The agreement was said to mean that Britain and the Insurielli-l would have recogniZBf-l 11881195 Bi each others captain. Mr. Chamberlain, who 111110010060 the areas of Insurgent 5PM" when’ British are interested in rich min- eral deposits. said France was fully informed of the negotiations. l Winter Fair ‘Opens In Amherst Today Guardian's Special Wire) , N. S, Nov. 4—Offic- ritime Winter Fair y as hundreds OIlVSTSeU on (C.I'. BY AMHERST ihls oi the Ma were kept busy toda of head of livestockdc the exh bition groun S. of he Fair will Formal Optllillil imam when Premier Angus Macdonaid of Nova Scotla delivers an addrefifi- Other guests will be Promfordhéré- Dysart of New Brunswick a-In “m6; mier Thanle 0810917911 ° c Igflalflbll of the Federal De- partmcnt oi Akfliillllri-"e wngimm Pl-incilml slwllllel “IN”, ,1 M- at the Maritime Stock Br? 0 gocations annual bamllle - Rebels Advance On Aragon Front ial Wi l . P. b Guardian's S?" 7' (Arluunlivc, Nov. e-wuurv dil- Pfliches from the insurgent quarters at Selamanca inn! reported the retreat of! SW53‘; merit troops from segfznmswm on the Aragon front n S in. prrah exact location of llllzllmf advances WIS ll°i 31's!” bu“ m" lier refill?“ w“ i” ° p” mountain WI! "l t teal for: tbeillfilenieg sector oi the south- ern Aragorssoffznsive; Wfiwolllllltgld for the offensive in eastern Spain and continual prea- gufe 9n government lines was O!- pected. Home Defense With Air Raids On London taste of air defence precautions which the Speech irom the Throne last week promised would be in- tensified. The raids were suspected to show how far air defence plans of towns on the Kent County side of Iron- don have progressed. Admiral Sir Edward Evans. com- mander-in-chief of the Nore. naval divison guarding the sea approach to London, directed the defence, cooperating with the Essex and Kent County Councils and the Port oi London authority. Launch Afliack Seek To Dislod ge Jap Foothold On Soochow Creek (By The Associated Press) SHANGHAI, Nov. 5—(Friday)— The precarious Japanese foothold on the south bank of Soochow Creek became almost untenable today under the fury of a heavily reinforced Chinese attack. After a day and night of bitter fighting the Japanese claimed to have established l, IMO-yard long position on the south hank of the creek which snakes through the International settlement to the west. A survey of the front line last night showed the Japanese were holding a sector near “tubi- con Village where they had driven a. narrow wedge into the Chinese position about three miles west of Shanghai. v Foreign naval observers reported heavy concentrations of Japanese warships in the Whangpoo River with" 42" imen-‘ot-war ‘between Shanghai and Woosung and some 40 more near the south of the river. ' They expressed belief the Jap- anese intended to make a landing in force in the Pootung industrial area, just across the Whangpoo from Shanghai's Bund. During yesterday thousands of fresh Chinese troops, well-equipped and disciplined, moved up to the battlefront stretching northwest from Shanghai. The youthful Chl- nese struck again and again at the point of the Japancsr; ud- vance. The Japanese were attempting to use the foothold l0 protect n. major crossing of the creek which forms a natural obstacle in front 0f the right flank of the Chinese "winter defence line.“ A Chinese spokesman said Chi- nese artillery destroyed two of the three military bridges built. across the creek by Japanese engineers. Foreign observers expressed be- lief the first Japanese objective south oi the creek was Hungjao airdrome, three miles southwest of Rubicon village. Both Chinese and Japanese of- ficials announced negotiations ior establishment of the northern part of the native city o! Nantao as a haven for refugees were nearing a successful conclusion. In North Chins. along the Perp- ing to Hankow railroad Chinese asserted the Japanese were forced back across the Ching River into southern Hopeh Province where o. battle was under way. (Japanese reports from Peifling said the at- tack wsg repulsed). Pay Final Tribute To Beloved Canon (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) CANTERBURY, Nov. 4—Amid impressive scenes the remains of Canon “Dick" Sheppard were laid tn rest today in the graveyard of Canterbury Cathedral afici- ser- vices at Irondon and here., Lines of people filed past the bier of the noted pacifist and preacher until three a. m. in the crypt of St. Martinh-In-The- Fields, the London Church which bnfamo famous durinl his vicar- p. Mounted police were needed to hold back the crowd ‘ "' St. Paul's. Dean W. R. Mathews of St. Paul's conducted the service before a. congregation which in- eluded a representative of the (King and many distinkulabed persons. Island Girl Is Among Graduates (CAP. By Guardiagl Special Wxilrel . MHERBT, N. . Nov. —- ss Barbara Louise on’... of Charlotte- town was one of six graduate nur- as receiving diplomas from I-iigh- lolgld Vigtgospltal Judge orle roon m e PIN"!- tatlou. - a i. Hiiil iuiiiii ciiiiiii Piiiipuii Province Loses Out- standing Citizen In Person Of Late Hon.‘ Geo. E. Hughes. Prince Edward Island has lost an outstanding citizen in the per- son oi the Hon. George Edward Hughes, who passed away yester- day morning at his home in Char- lottetown after a lengthy illness. l-Ie was in his 85th your. Dean of the pharmacy profes- sion‘ in the Province, Mr. Hughes achieved notable success not only as a business irian, but in the spheres of civic and provincial poi- itlcs. He was also actively assoc- iated for many years with such organizations as the Provincial Exhibition Association, the Board of Trade, and the Tourist Assoc- iation. ' About eight years ago Mr. Hugh- cs was iorced by ill health to re- tire from business. He suffered from arthritis, which resulted ev- entually in the loss of his eyesight. but despite physical disability his mental faculties remained clear. Born in Charlottetown on April s. i853, Mr. Hughes was the son of the late Frederick W. Hughes. who for fifty years had been as- sistant clerk of the Legislature and was for ll. time manager of the Examiner newspaper when his brother-in-law, I-Ion. Edwardwhe- inn was editor and proprietor. Mr. Hughes, senior, who was also clerk of the Land Commission and of the County Court. married Mar- garet, whose father, Charles Binns was the first Attorney General of the Province. A sister of Frederlckcyh-jlughes, Mary Ann Hughes. was rnarriedto Edward Whelan. She passed away few years ago at an advanced age. The late Hon. George E. Hughes was a nephew by marriage of Mr. Whelan. and he was called George after l-lon. George Coles, Mr. Whol- en's colleague, and Edward after Mr. Whelan himself. Mr. Hughes attended a private school conducted by Robert Blake Irving. on Pownal St., father of the late Col. J. D. Irving, and also the Prince of Wales College and Normal School, of which Dr. Iii- glcs was Principal. Later he was a student. for two years at St. Dunsialrs College, of which Father Angus MacDonald was rector, Frank Dean, C. D. Rankin, John Richards, Hon. A. B. Warburton and _Dr. George Warburton being fellow classmates. At the age of fifteen Mr. Hughes began the study of medicine witn- thc late Dr. F. D. Beer on Wey- mouth Street. In I872 he opened a drugstore with Samuel W. Dodd. the establishment being kriowiras (Continued onpage 3. C01 6) Toronto Newspapers Increase Prices TORONTO, Nov. 4—A third sub- stantial increase in the price oi newsprint, higher wages, increased costs of distribution, printing equip- ment and general newspaper pro- duction. are amoll! tile Yell-Sims ad‘ vnnced by several local newspapers f0: an increased subscription YEW announced us effect ve wdfly- Thl. chief factor appeared to be the price of newsprint, which has been raised twice before this year- arid which will be increased by 35-50 a ton for the first six months o! 1030, and $7.50 a ton for the last six months of next YEBY- . ___________. REDUCED LUMBER CUT (By The Canadian PM!!!) FREDERICTON - New B11105’ wlekis lumber cut this fall and winter will be about 350.000 feet, according to tentative f re- casts. This would be a reduction of 25 to 35 per cent from last sea- son. Owing to higher stumplill and shipping rates a 20 per cent reduction in United Kinfldfllll l'°' ‘projected trans-Afantic quiremenis is anticipated. Captain Wilcockson . Cited For Trophy (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON, Nov. lf-Captain A. S. Wilcoclcson, who commando tho Caledonia on its six flights be- tween England and North Am- erica this year in tests for thei flying ‘ boat, has been recommended for the Johnston memorial trophy. The trophy is awarded annually by the Guild of Air Pilots for the i finest feat of air navigation. It is, a memorial to Squadron-loader‘, E. L Johnston, navigator of tlio airship R-l0l which crashed in France in'1930. . Captain Wiicockson has been with Imperial Airways since its formation in 1924 and has more than 10,000 hours on his log-book, representing more than 1,000,000 air miles. iii PLANNING. EARLY APPEAL Til Eiifilllii» General. Election Un- likely Till Late In 1940, Declares Pre- mier King. UITAWA, Nov. li-Canada. ls not likely to have a general election until. late in 1940 unless some uii- foreseen contingency arises, Prime Minister Mackenzie King stated ro- day. He desired to set at rest ru- mors which lie so. d had circulated recently that an early appeal to the people was to be expected. Comments on election rumors came from the Prime iviiiiister ivneii he was being questioned by newspaper men tonight foLowillg Cabinet Council, last. session of, the week. -- ‘~ . ‘He said also he had received no communications from the Albert-u. government on Tuesday's reference of Alberta. acts to tne Buprcliic Court, and that tlic matter ol ap- pointing a. Dominion counsel Oil the references was be ng handled by the Justice Department. "Any person wishing to speculate on the next general election," the Prime Minister said, "WOlIid be more likely to guess right if shldiite was selected well on w 1941- H8 recalled that writs for the lasi. gen era‘. election were returnable Nov. 9, 1935, and Parliament has a statut- tory term of five years. “Whether we continue i0 ilie end of the legal. term, as was done by the last government. or have fi-u earlier dissolution," the Prime Mili- LSW!‘ continued. "Will depend “P” what will happen during the ' terim. _ - Questioned on rumored cabinet reorganization the Prime Minister e contemplated. ight hop- ared no said no changes Will‘ He could not. say what m pen in the future but dcci changes were planned now. Mr. Mackenzie King said. in fill- swer to another question, that fiic health of Justice Thibaudeau Riii- fret. of the Slllllelile cmma causing some uneasiness an u l: question whether he could con uu as a. member of the ROYlli Cmmml" mm on Dominion-provincial af- fairs was under cons deratioii. Decis ed . On Millar Will ~i—Ciinnccs of OTTAWA. Ne“ one or more large Toronto famil- lei becoming wealthy rested fir‘); night witlé rive t iéigxszgavl o r o ~ SUTQIIeQmEOUIBuITISIEIVQG iis decision today on the validity of clausedi) of the will of Charles Miller un er which the residue of his estatoeé estimated at more than $500.0 would go to the mother who Ell“; birth to the largest "will" ° children in TOYOYIW l" m" 1° years following his death- _________. SUCCUMBS T0 BURNS N. B, al teddy ended the agony of Clayton MacDonald. aged two, o. few hours after he fell into a. tub of hoiiins wafer-Ili- hig homo in nearby Sunny Brae. He was a son of Mr. and Mrs- Alexander C. Macgoy 1d MONCTON. Death in hospll Canadcfs Favourite Tea "SAl-Allll’ TEA I01 - for the remodelling work, SHOWBG FIRE ciusis DAMAGE AT BDURLHDIISE Cause Of Blaze Un‘ known — Workman‘ Trapped On Roof. Fire yesterday caused unesiim- ated damage to the attic and roof of the Court House building, im- der renovation, while last night Leo Darrach. carpenter employed no ill-effects from being trapped on the flat roo! of the building for half an hour as clouds o! smoke rolled around him and fire crack- led at his feet. The fire was believed to have been caused by an explosion 0i as- phalt in a boiler in tile attic from which the heated material was being carried to the roof. mcn said the torch used asahcat- or had been removed about hail an hour before the flames broke out and there was no fire about the boiler. There seemed to be an explosion, they said, followed by fire nnd smoke which filled tnc place. - Mr. A. T. McKinnon, contractor, stated the boiler which contained about 40 gallons of heated asphalt was of regulation type for the work and the material was "supposed" to be non-inflammable. He was present five minutes before the |explosion and was on his way t0 Feniicll dz Chandler's to obtain ‘more kerosene oil for the heater Ewhcir informed that a fire had i broken out. E “It's h mystery to us just yet ijust what did happen," Mr. C. H. lBecr, provincial fire marshal, snld ,lust night. An Investigation was {being conducted. ‘The material the workmen were nesting was "not highly inflammable." he said. j An estimate - of the amount oi iilziniage would not be available for ,- ‘several days yet, until an apprais- ,al was made by representatives oi the ill-r; insurance companies, Mr. 1L. B. McMillan, deputy minister 0i public works said. There was $70.- 000 insurance on the building and $10,000 on the contents, the deputy I minister announced. Work on the rcoi, Mr. Machin- non states, was almost completed when the explosion occurred. Reconstruction of the building. he estimates, will be delayed about a lnonlh as a. result of the tire. At the outbreak oi the flames‘ workmen in the attic shouted a warning to Darrach working on ‘ 'the roof and made a hurried exit. , ‘ Dzirrach, however, was forced back i i by smoke and flames. When fire- ‘ men arrived an extension ladder i was raised to rescue him from his iperilous position but it failed to i reach the eve of the high three- storey building and another was sent for. Meanwhile Chief Angus Mclsacn- (Continued onpage 3, Col '1) 100 Casualties In Attempted Revolt (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) ASUNCION. Paraguay, Nov. 4- Figiitiiig at Conception, 135 miles north of here, resulted in more than 100 casualties, it was offi- cially ailileurlccd lodiiy. Loyal troops yesterday defeated a rebolious regiment there after iiriiiy members attempted a mil- iiary uprising in a move to estab- lish a dictatorship. The official reports said the rebels fled toward the Brazilian border, abandoning arm; and munitions. Loyal detachments were in pursuit. Tiger Skin Adorns Office Of Mayor (A. P. by Guardian‘: Special Wire) NEW YORK’ No“ 4_A dflapl- conference can do, he has indi-i vmorm 46 52 dawd tiger skin adorned the floor sated, is to establish contact be- Edmmuon ,4 1 o! Mgyor Flm-elliyl-I, Laguardias tween them and leave them ml Regmu 1,6 '4’, cine....iodsy.-.1i..mi¢..wss_.miisinr.. seiils..._llie...lseils .l>r=iwes.ll...fl_lf=lil:j whmim '3. {q To one tattered ear was pinned selves. " k fuforonlo the following note from first de- ———---—-- ‘vmmrvq, 26 3a giétjylelpolice commissioner Harold Rescued From Gr“) l‘ Quebec g4 34 "Wmllldrll l" lm-dllllfll lll Of Giant Octopus l it‘??? $1M 3% l: I937." i ‘ ‘ ( ' 3a The tiger is Tammanys trad- itional cmblem. Windsor Says Plans For Visit Unchanged PARIS. Nov. 4—A l night he and the i been informed or ‘Urilicri States labor criticism handling the details of their Am oricari‘ tour, but that their plums monster were unchanged. Work- l spokwman for the Duke of Windsor said to- Duchess had with another tentacle nnd pinned in her left arm lo her side. circles of Charla; E. Bcdoux, close friend Hitler ‘May Act As “Umpire” In Eastern Conflict Nazi Chancella-éaid Impressed With Possibilities. Nine - Power Parley Strikes Snags. By LOUIS P. LOCHIVER Associated Press Furrigri Sin/F BERLIN, Nov. 4-—A ii'usi\v0i'iiiy source (‘insc- io the Reich Chancellery reported tonight that Chancellor Hit- ler expected to become the umpire in the CIIlIlCSD-JEIDZIIICSG , conflict. v Unofficial feelers put out lo the (lei-man (iovernment L)’. Iiolh Japanese and Chinese. iii- sziid, hiivi- convinced Hitler lhzii mediation by hini umiiii he not (ml) welcome but crowned with success. , He asserted that informal IIITCTS conveyed partly l through 05km‘ Trauimnnn, German Amli: ndor l0 China. ind partly through Japanese reached Hitler early lnsl. night. The Chancellor then commissioned Joni-him Von Rib- henirop, German Ambassador‘ in (lrelit ilriiziin, to hurry i0 conclude an Itilii:rn-Gei'm:in-.i:-pzincsi- Pair-t. zigziinst the Communist Iniernziiionzil, ii W218.“ iiilii. and return almost immediately to pave the wiry for mediation. i (The German Embassy in Rome , isaid an Itaiian-German-Jnpaiiese‘ j pact against Communism would Di‘ l signed Saturday in ilic lialinii i icapital. Von Ribbenti-op left Ber lin for Rome Thursday.) ' T The source close to the Chancel- l‘ lery added in substance: " ': “i: . u Hitler, it was understood, would I accept lthe rolc of umpire only if he had definite assurances from ‘ iboth sides in the Fur Eastern conflict that his rulings would beI f» accepted. i ltcliel Plan e s Quit; Scene At Approach Of Cruiser. i For-going assurances along that rline from the Japanese were filld i to be in his hands already. B:‘.R(]Fll..i').\l:\. N ' .... He expected from the Chinese a ' ninrksmni ' U" 11nd Eli: similar readiness. .l"i iCh froi ' chi‘... ym-m. Germany regards herself as a from iwn liisiiriqiliii phiios \i'l'llCl'l neutral mediator as German gon- erals trained Chinese troops fiilfl.‘ " in part, are still active in China - while at the same limo Gerniuiiy illwlllllliul in siiil. lior off ill!‘ Span- ‘ ni hero, nc- ‘ -l. l iii-couiii. of lllG “Ls tied to Japan by close bonds of , 643 lOll fr1pnd5hip_ i lliiinro. l5 It was stated Hitler was so im- "Pkmm when ilic bombers. pressed with the possibilities of; Germanys role as a meclintoriiizii. ‘d ‘ship m the “Flio Insurgent l he had decided for the momoni ‘.0 l , b. b put the question of colonies for A > U. mt!“ mtzfif uh Germany in the background. l _, U...” m, 50S BRUSSELS, . Nov. 4~Tile Niiio- Power Conference seeking peace 2n the Far East run into difficulllrs today. In private conversations and later in priviltc session, deli-guru.» sought some way of opening h0g1», fictions with Japan who is not i'c-‘ presented here. l They approved appointment of ni ‘ sub-committee which will make a friendly offer of its services as inc- . ' diators in the Chinese-Japanese conflict and will draft a rvply in fr, previous Japanese llfllu in whichl Tokyo declined to attend the (‘Oil-l ference. - Ililt the Committee (lid not. rout-hi the stage of ilfltllillly‘ iiriiiiiiiiioiii: the sub-committee. Nobody show- ed ally anxiety to cCYVC on it. The conference suspended its deliberations wli lc tlie delegates were received by ilic King oi tin- Belginns. '11. V105 intended they - would resume tonight but resump- i tioli subsequently mas ciiiicc led illld iii-_- sessions ndjoilnicd uiiiil toninr- - rc.v ~ 7 i i i. . : f). l‘. which had 1 llni-rvlriiin last liiizili, (‘Ofllllllliid ~ 9hr Marni-ii o under the one (hi: his Wests Does N"? hiiow win 4i: with ‘ ilhir Lives Foreign Minister Eden. it is ox- pcctsd, will fly to London unner- row t0 coiidllt Pl'llll(‘ hfiiiislor Chamberlain. Today Eiion lield his second conference with rcprcseil- tatives of Canada, New Zchlhird. Australia, Union of South Africa and India. Italian objections to action by the conference ivere, it. is under- siood, lcpzated in the private ses- sion- The point taken by Count Aldrovandi-Morescotti, Italian de- legate, was that the dispute lay between Japan and China. All the ,. __ TORONTO, Nov. and maximum temperatures: f-Mlnimum i Clli\i".<iil<‘i0\\'ii FORT BRAGG. Calif, Nov. 4» FORECAST‘ A story of several terrifying iiiin- utes iii the clutches of a giiiiii cctupus wit, told todny by Mrs. H. C. Graves. Tho animal grnhhrd her while she was gaiheriiiu nlinl- ones here yesterday. frosli snulliivcst winds: fair ilficriliiiiig a little milder. ill‘.(l tzviiiilil n1 11.40. Nor. ll. 4.33 n. m. Sl‘lllllll‘i‘.~lflf‘ iidv eighteen Struggling frantically and coll- , ulils later ilinii Chnrliitlcloivii. ing for help, she was rescued by her companions, who bent the to death with their iron abalone bars. - TIFF} (‘All Flllilii Lemur llalrllell 0J5 n. m" hfai-iiiiiic Provinces: Moderate to and.‘ lLgli iidc this afternoon hi 1222 Sim .»i-ls Kills afioriioon at 4.48 Scizing Mrs Graver‘ ankle, the‘ mid risvs toiiiiirriiiv morning at huge squid encircled her wiiisi, 0,45. First quarter iiirioil Thur-day, mlu- I p. II- Lrm u Tormeutlna ll a. In, 2.50 p. Q