..bol¢l .———n————-fl~—~—~' MAXI M6 OFA MERE MAN and passion. Life requires of us vision, patience w cbnriottotown Guardian Two Cents. Llorninr. Guardian, Founded 1M7. q‘w' QQPS ,....J-"*-.~_____ BFMANDS" JCOSB JAPAN RESPEC CHARLOTTETOWN, CANAOAIFRIDAY, OCTOBER 2;, 19135 I THA T“ Read by Everybody - ‘ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew SQUTHVIZSZ" Aflifillm W0%i7T0 REY?" NAZI AIMS Nil lfl IRE Fllll RETURN lll allllllll Prefer To R e m a i n British -— Interests Bound-up With The- Union. (or. Reute§GunrdInn1 pec i Wire WINDHOEK, Southwest Africa, Oct. 2‘l—A wide section of the pop. uiaiion of Southwest Africa, includ- ing both English and Afrikaans, is bcleved determined to resist ally move that might be made to return the territory to Gennany. Canvass of opinion amongst South Africans- indicatcs this section ready to oppose by force any such colonial "deal." it is recalled that spokesmen of lin- Unlon of South Africa govern- ment have repented statements that the future of the territory is in- alicuolrly bound with the Union. . Oswald Pirow, South African De- fence Minister, has declared the Union would fight for Southwest Africa if necessary. Southwest Africa is administered by the Union undcr a Ixaguc of Nations mandate. BOUND-UP WITII UNION Opponents of transfer of the ter- rlto to GQYDIILDY feel that eco- nomically and strategically; South- west Africa is bound up with the Union of South Africa, It is real- ized ihai, ulllikc Czechoslovakia, South Africa. would not have to, face (lcmallzls ironl GcrnlunyJ backed up by force of nl-nls on itsi boluldarics. . But the alltl-Gcrnlrln section is uneasy at the possibility of Germ- any applying pressure ill the form of an economic boycott to persuade fiutll Africa to give up the terri- W. inquiries indicate many South C__ _ _ tL V. ..'. COMINGAiIVENll "Mount Meillck W. I. Pnnlry Bale at Holmalvs, October 29th. 12-759-10-26-29. "Morell Hull Saturday, October 89th “The Adven urcs of Grandpa." Greerlwim Players. L-tlOlI-lO-Zi-ili. "Come-—Chlcken Supper at A. C. MacDonald's, Brendalbulle, Fri- day night, Oct. 28. L-B7fi-10-27-2i. "Come to the Chicken Supper in Fredericton Hall, NOVGIRDEI‘ 2nd, in aid of Fredericton Church. L-890-l0-28-1i. "Meeting Indies’ Auxiliary Can- adian Ircqgionffiiday, October 28th, 7.30 P. M. Social hour afterward. L-8fJ3-10-2B-1i. "Women's Institute Masquerade Dance, Legion Hall, Ml. Stewart. Monday. October 31st. .W9b5‘~erS Orchestra. L-8fl3-10-28-2l. "North Wilisilirc Hall Friday illlzllt. Oct. 29th., weather perlnii- tlllg, C-llal-ict-tetolvn Playboys pre- Beuis “The Haunted Inn." special- tlesy-dnnoe nffcl‘. L-7fl0-l0-26-3i. "Dance, Spling Park SOhOOl every Tuesday and Friday, 8:30 to 12:30. Ladies 15c, gents 25c. Re- freshments. L-809- “Fox MmffF/l-Eh” frozen becfi ‘Tine 4‘-5c: also slnrl: ilorse meal. wound meat. frcsh fl0'.'.cu hrrl-illtz. Lrcsll lnlnb and hot: plucks. Island SIO‘ ., Ltd. “we Co 11-393-10-14-11. "Major Boaters’ col_lccrt in Loni,’ Rlvwr Hall Friday. Oct. 28. lap- lianclng, vocal and instrumental 11111510. Admission 25 and l5. Il-'i!)5-i0-26-2i. "Reserve Saturday afternoon, Oct. 29th., fol" Cnkc Snlc at Moore 3: MacLeodKs, by Clyde Lrdgv- Lwel-lo-za-zl. “Don't miss the Masquerade Bil-nee in Grnlzomls Rood Hall, holiday. Oct. 31st. Prlzcs for best mtunles. If not flnc, Tuesday. 14-736-10-25-28. __.___ "Tonight at 8:00. Canadian Na- tlonlll Hotel. oil Camp Leader: and others interested are invited to hear Mr. Nels-on McEwen. Bec- MRYY Cnnadian Camping 128880904" lfillOIL “Big Halloween.‘ Dance and ElIOW, Canoe Cove Hall Friday "lifht. Oct. 28. featuring George Chappelleh Merry Islanders. with their CBC cast augmented by CFCY artists. 11-805. "Llvesiock- Marketing Board loading hogs. lambs. calves through local shipping clubs week of Oct. 31st. as follows: Monday offer- "sllouLozslis BA l- CK. PLEAS Mlss?‘ l: o TWO drill sergeants from the Grenadier: and two from the Coldstrea m Guards are seen putting 120 women of the British new auxilla Territorial Service through a course of regular army drill at the Dulce of York Barracks, Chelsea, say "please" to his "men." “don Englanm t ls lllllslln ml lllEASN Ruthenian Ex-Prem- News In Briefl HEAVY CASUALTIES SHANGHAI, Oct, 27 ._. Jap- anese re to from the liankow "n" d lenient that war- ier Allegedly COH- 35in? ailriihfleigcfiiliiilliliie illxli spired With Hung- 531E153? Ad???“ “‘ ‘""’" 31°)’. BTORM-rl-‘ASSAGE HRAGUE. ozljvlmro-An- YARMQUW‘ N- 5-. Oci- 2'1 - The motorvcssel Dontinion i-lalsydf arrived in Yarmouth today will a,‘ heavy lis to starboard olu-r bull-i 11m: a storm on her voyage from New ‘York. Captain Ralph Munroe described the voyage as one of lhc worst he had ever made. OIL DEAL WITH ITALY MEXICO CITY. 0a. 21-111.- Mexlean government tonight announced it had contracted to sell “several million dollars" worth of oil to an Italian firm. drew Brody. named Premier oi Ruthellia two weeks ago when that- provlnce was given autonomy within Czechoslovakia. was arrest- ed tonight on a charge of treason. Police said he had been charged by the Central Parliamentary committee of the National Gov- crlurlenl; with secretly negotiating with Hungary for secession of that easternmost province. The arrest came as sources close to the (roechoslovak General Staff said it had been decided to hold the 1936 class o; arm comcflpw In addition the government three months myond yme usual gcciarerl rcprcsentatlivcs had training period or unlll some time use". "met. F" put‘ “H “l” m January. Brugllle Lnlted States and hMilitary leaders were reported to " ave decided to keep seasoned , . troops ready for action in case of l2 ARAB“ 5L5"; istcfiiogigniirloélble along the Hunlar- TggllFAh Pblllestine. Oct, 27 ._. Bmdy- R deputy in the Czecho- hundhtcds dire ai-‘rteiskled klflg-d qlzligs sloval-l Parliament. resigned the tionillg today by British forces Ruthclllan Premiership yesterday. completing their first. drive against Official sources disclosed the resiq- Arab Inslwgelus ill Northern Pales- nhtlon had been demanded by-_tlne. British mobile columns and, other ministers of the Ruthcnian, mountain pickets Ihelnsclves suf- autonornous Slovak and Central [W911 SEVEN 111611 Wfllmdcd. includ- Ozechgslovllk Governments. ‘ 1"“ a“ 031°91'- Bro y was succeeded ill the _ , premiership of Ruthenla by Au- REPORT l'7“(/9Nl‘1lil>" lzltln Viol, h died t i‘ Iilchorod.“ Rfultfhelzllsg careltlgtzi‘, thgt ma“ Nmbllhgctkgzggt the minority question would be m“; [gnlght nu plans hall ilcen isettlcd along "strictly ethnological gonmd for Prime minim“, "1"" Ch o l‘ - - l- Silortly after Brady's hrrest the chfi‘,’§‘c,.'f|',,‘r‘"i,,,ff.’r (“gnlfllscullstg Government disclosed receipt of a nelv- note from Hulvrnry in which the Budapest Government agreed general Europron appeasement. He said he believed such a con- ference was rulllkeiv, but add- to arbitration bv Itolv and Ger- ed: “Nothing is eyond the many of its territorial demands on bounds of possibility ma“, Czechoslovakia. do!!!’ BIBBENTR 0P IN ITALY ROME. Oct. 2'l—Fol‘eign Minister Joachim Von Ribbentrop of Ger- many arrived today to discuss Europe's post-Munich problems with Italian officials. ‘The most lessing issue scheduled for taks tween Von Ribbentlo . Premier Mussolini and goreign mists; iCourlltiClano was ungarys Kerr r a1 c oms on Czechoslovakia. Noted Opera Singer Of Yesteryear Dies NIEW YOTi-‘tK, Oct. 27-031’)- Alma Gluck. opera favorite of yesteryear who retired at the height of a brilliant career to de- vote herself to her husband and children, died today after l long illness. “Big ~ Stick” Policy Is Revived By Washington (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON cited either by the President or by Associated Pres; Staff Writer) navy spokesmen. Both selected instead his assertion that "up- ASHINGTON on. arr-lav)- Th‘: 11mm 5min has indicated building the navy must be acm- to the world that it is tripping lly continued?’ but the thought itself to follow the late efl-leodore behind the two up. ions was Roosevelt's advice about oarrvllill the same. , l, “big stick." 1t is Just three decades since the “a; mgggggg mpg th ev- "white fleet’ was paraded clear pry speech by Government spokes- around the globe by '1‘. Rfs order. men from President Franklin The reason for that display of massed American Sea power was the some that lay behind Presl- dent Franklin Roosevelt's Navy Day and armament policy discus- sions. It was calculated to impress Roosevelt down in the moat signi- ficant celebration of Navy DRY the United States hu known in the i'l years sin it was establish- ncon. fioltle, flzuris, Si. Peters. Morell. Murray River. Melville, M-i. r nulianeous broadcast on hill, arm- till ament policy. and even was reflect- Slewart. Thursday fcrenoon train time. Kensington, Charlotte- ed sharply in his iawn, Hunter River. Bmdalbane. proclamation. nkonnafwrmonllwimbony n-aaa-lo-ze-if declaration m not ked Pr.id t‘ 5i- Dd‘ n’ m“ e es en A on Jolie". 0n Imperial Germany of that day, and on all other pow- Armlstlce Day ers the fact that the United States was prepared to meet any en- dsln-tivc- Council. .It must be difficult for a 'top" sergeant; to vllullslll illillllllfili Japanese Take Bloody Revenge In Han- kow. JIANKOW. Oct. 27-The con- quering J.1-," "so, lincllilllg con- llal cl Hulk shot scores of Clllllbfi‘ s or civilians luck ~ ~. ;. 1o be taken for 111i proposed dissolution ". lcfulzee zone. Twenty and eiviliall-galzbed executed within ullilkirlllcc‘. \\'(,‘i'f\ Chinese sisrllt of d-cllhs of lo. i,x.ll collcess. —-\vho llil(l crowded there rather than flee lllc city with thousands of czhers allczld of the Japanese ‘ion-should go back to iheir This prop sol evidenced 1 desire of the Jupzl ’..- lo act Lil“ Holl- illflucnccd areas OPPOSE PEACE MOVE HONG KONG. Oct. 2’l—A group cf lllCl ul. leftist-inclin- ed Chinese. illslliPbli-(l at the Dos- sibillty of a peace with Japan, to- day cl-enlnnzlcd cozltiliued Chinese r-esislancrl and Chinese cooperation with Soviet Russia. Gcllrml Cllinllg Kfll-SilPk, nlili- tary and civil chicfinill of the Na- tionalist Government. Lin Sen. president of the government. and Dr. Sun Fr. president of the Leg- It was sigllcd by hfddanle Slln YilI-Sll vldcw oi illc founder of ~c Rrpubllc and lllcilicl‘ of Sun F0; Eugene former foreign minister; Madame Lino Chung-Kai, mclnbcl" of the Klifiillllllilllg (GOVQFIIIIICIMI. Party) Central Executive Committee; and Gcoigc Hsu Cllicn, a former min- ister of justice. Insurgents Mass , Troops Near Madrid HENDAYE. fiance, Oct. 2'7- (AP)~Insurgcnt troops were re- ported massed tonight on a front 19 miles south of Madrid. leading to a belief that new and heavier attacks were being prepared in an area marked by bitter fighting within the last few days. Government. dispatches said that all Insurgent attempts to break through Government lines had failed, but that men and artillery were moving to the front to cope EARl STANHUPE succlssnll lll DUFF CllllPER Peer Named To Ad- miralty Post May Merge Dominion And Colonial Of- fices. (By J. ll‘. SANDERSON (Canadian Press Stall Writer) LONDON, Oct. 27 —-(GP Cable) Earl Stalrhope. hard working but little kncwn member of the Cham- berlain Government. today took over the major post of First Lord of the Admiralty in the first of a series of cabinet changes. He will be succeeded as President of the Board of Education by Earl De Le Warr, who is promoted frcm the more or less complimentary cabinet post. of Lord Privy Seal. There were two immediate mac- tlons to the changes. The first was a rumor. discounted ln- au- ihoritative quarters but persistent jllslt the same. that Prime Minister ‘Chamberlain did not intend to fill the vacancy at the Domlnions Of- fice created ivy the death of Lord Stanley. May Fuse Offices Capt. Angus Walters Taken For $10 By BOSTON. Oct. 7i—-(CP)--Aiong lvlth Captain Angus Walters’ oth- er experiences (luring his visit here for the International Fishcrrrlelvs races, it became known today he was ‘taken’ for $10 by a bogus suit salesman. Walters and a member of the Bluenoscls crew. Douglas Pike along with a few members of the Canadian Government vessel Ar- ras, paid $10 deposits oll suits. but they can't find any trace of the salesman now. The glib-talker boarded the Nova Scotla schooner while she was tied up in Gloucester. He went through the whole procedure, taking measurements. discussing styles and colors~an<l taking $10 deposits. And lleve the name of a Boston company. which upon investigation proved to be non-existent. A description of the salesman has been given police. and does Captain Allfills hope the authorit- ies catch up with him. llllivilllls BREN PRBE or ‘l0 PAGES Bogus Suit Salesman, i MAXIMS OPA MERE MAN _____4 We mint Itand for the eternal in the Irlidst of time. Annual Boblcrlptlon Delivered 16.00 B! "flll-P- B- l» H1101 Canada 1nd ll. l. $.00 CH TS Warn ‘O-pae-n Door’ Policy In China Must Continue State Depar tm ent Note Hint: Retaliation Against An y Re- striction On American Interests. (By Alldruc Herding, Associated Press Staff Writer) \\'.\.<iIlN(-"i‘ON, Oct. 27—’l‘llc United States Govern- ment may retaliate economically informed persons said tonight, if Japan neglects to heed a stern State Depart- ment protest against “unwarranted interference" with American rights in China. The Stale Dcparimcnfs note. demandinu that the traditional “open door” of economic opportunity be main- tained in conquered (fhincse territory, was made public here today. It charged Japan with attempting to squeeze United llzlnchuria, and demanded early zlssuranccs “in the inter- cst of relations bctlvccn the United States and Japan.” The implication was that relations between the United States and Japan would he impaired if Tokyo did not make an early and satisfactory reply. cr ~"d,. Canadian Premier Sails For Havana ilint Retaliation The statement hinted at a pos- clblc course of action by the Unit- ed Slates if Japan failed to com- ply. by pointing out the “great and growing disparity" between the treatment Japan gives Ameri- cans ill China and the treatment Slates business out of China as she has been doing ln . Awording to this report Malcolm MacDonald would merge the two posts of dominions and colonies. which formed one office prior to 1926. Since the Statute of West- minster the functions of the dom. lnions office have changed radic- ally with each dominion havilvr direct access to the King and complete self-govemment at honlc The second reaction was to Lord Stanllopes zlppoin-tment -critioism GllN colonel Inglis Company Presi- dent Continues As Witness At Inquiry. OTTAWA. Oct. 2’l—-Ma_lor James Hahn. president of John Inulls Co. kow llCplliflCf.‘ out of the foreign- The (lcnlalld was icleurapllcd io- wirtglaniexpected major offensive. oodoce Roosevelt's "bv. stick" croachrnents on the Monroe Doc- me 1 mull! brine. Orange Pekoe Blend u - o! ‘ . ' must attempt lo kccp hcr plncc in Europe through sgcords with Paly - ‘and Gcrluany, braced on clwc c1- _ lnperniion Willi Great Brl-‘n ll H‘c _ "a: - from the opposition parties to the - . ,._ Gwernnwnt mcmaslng me rum‘ ltlicirligis ‘(Inciiiiiligliiihivuiiiiicsiigli hill‘ 1191‘ 0f 1110101‘ POIWOUOS 11915 lll l3"? ..of the Bren Gilli to his costs under. House of lmrls. The Admiralty the contract. bv which lie is to Slip-l will spend £l?5.000.000 ($625,000,- ' 000) thlsyear and yet the minister responsible ‘will not be present in the Commons to ansiver questions. His place will be taken by his .ln- dcr -scelct:u-_\k, Gcc-ffrcy Shake- rpcare. .000 weapons. "If $13000 expenses us ilYillllfit a $500,000 saving ls unrcasona alc- then I have ncrllnlg more lo say." hol told Mr. Jusicc H_ H. Davis. Royal commissioner illvestieatinc the con- tract while undcl- CITISS-(‘Xilllllllfltlflh of I. F. Hcilmutli, counsel for the Maclean Publishing Company. The expenses in question were charged to the govcrlullclit under the clause of the confrnct which allows lilo company lo treat )re- linlillal-v expenses; up m $20.00 as costs. The contmct calls for pra- duction of the gulls at cost-plus 10 per cent and 8s the Brrlsh govern- menl. under another contract. will take 5.000 gulls from llll‘ company Good Administrator Qbgdwolenbccq. 5l1°¢i?°€l§_1’~1f'j°.§ (Continued on pace 9, Col 5) Transcontinental llir Flights To Be Inaugurated Soon of the $20,000 would be approxi- mately $13,000. “$50 a, Day Plus" According to earlier evidence the Inglis Company submitted a stale- mcn‘. of its prclilninarv expenses in July and a week latcr recalled it Included were travelling cocpcnscs for Alajor Hahn on [rips to Ottawa and London and all allowance at $50 a day. The reason TORONTO, Oct. 2'l—(C‘P)—P. G. Johnson, vice-president of 'I‘rnns- Canada airlines. said in an Ml- clcess hcrc today that lvifihili I00 days transcontinental night mall flights will be inaugurated. The flights will be made from Mont- real to Vancouver with a. stop at Toronto. Daylight schedules from Mont- real to Vancouver were begun in September, Mr. Johnson said, lul- ding: “within 9O or 100 days we shall have night service. "Fhis means a plane will leave Montreal at nine o'clock at night, Toronto at 10.30 and mail can be delivered the statement was recalled, Major Hahn said today. was it should not have includczl all his crvpcllsos on ills second trip i()_L0ll(iOll in April, 1937. Al. that (Continued on page 9, Col 4) Five Injured In Glace Bay Blast to Vancouver at noon the next ‘my? GLACE BAY. N. s. on. 21- ‘ - - »(CP)-—Five persons were recover- Qonservatlve WIIIS illg ‘in clioisplial toniglhti from bufills - rece vc n on CXDOS on m lo OXfOYd By-electlon kitchen of a house here. i; I mThe lexploslorll and tllc lfiief , __ oze t at fo ovvcd sent rs. OXFORD‘ England’ 00L 27 Robert McLcnluln, her illrec (c?) —Qulntin Hogg, Conserva- tive. tonight won the Oxford by- election for the government. He defeated Pr. A. 12185158);- 1H- dependen -progress vc, on y op- ponent. Dr. Llndsay hadLabor and children mid her bl'0ll‘lf‘l'. Michael Curtis, to hospital with blirns which doctors said were painful but not serious. Curtis lvns washing n cluckwith some cleaning fluid. and was ly the Canadian governmenl with M the United States gives Japanese here. Unofficial foreign affairs experts suggested three steps the Ameri- can Government might. make: l. Restrictions on the tradcoi’ Japanese merchants vvilll the -A- lnlPTlPilli illllfiiPl Dcllunciallbn of llll‘ com- . . f , _ 2. l( .1‘. By (hlardlans Special Ti") i mercizll lrcntv of 1911 which pro- <vlclcs fol" equality of business op- |poriunity for Americans in Jnpnn Limited. sold today he felt fully (‘n-I and Jnyjflncs‘. here 3 0n Holiday Tour ICINGSTON, Jamaica, Oct_ 27- (CP CableI-Prime Minister Mao- kcnzie King of, Canada sailed for Havana late today aboard the Liner Rotterdam offer .1 four-day stay in Jamaica. While his plans wesc nntknown officially. if. was believed hewould stay’ in Havana only one (lay and then leave for Miami, Fh. where Plncinu Japan on the Unit» crl Slates‘ (‘POilflilllC blacklist. a pnsilloli now occupied hy Germany because of her alleged discrimin- lon against American goodsJIhis would prevent Japan froln obtain- ing the benefit of tariff con- cessions being made in trade a.- grcelncnls will: other countries. Declaring United States trade had been virlually squeezed out of Manch u ria by Japanese manipulations. the note said: ‘The Government of the Unit- ed States is now apprehensivelest there develop in other areas of China which have been occupied by Japanese nlililarg,‘ forces since the bcginnllg of the present hos- tilities a situation similnr in its adverse effect upon the com- letltive posilion of American business 1o liiat which now ex- on the some loasls Canada's share sis“ m Aiflnchuriafl The note nlde three specificde- mands: , 1. Discontinuance of discrim- inatory exchange control. 2. Discontinuance of monopolies which discriminate against A- merican properties, travel, mall mid telegrams. Ignore Protest TOKYO. Oct. 2'7 —(AP)--'I‘he Japanese ‘Foreign Office sold to- day that the dale of replying to the now tllrec-uceks-old United ‘States warning against closing of the open doors ill China was ill- definite. _ The 3.000-\vor<l protest against “unwarranted interfrrcllce" with American rights in Cllmll. divulg- ed in Wasluu on lorlny but not. pub- llsllod lll Jn lll. (lfikiii all early reply, It prcsclliccl Oct. ti il_\' (ill ambassador Joscllll signature it Cill'l‘li‘_(l. with its disclosure in \\'1i$ll‘ authoritative source: lil . .»_-u snld Sir Robert CYllif-IH‘. British ambassador was scheduled to r0- open conversations lomorrmv with lhc Japanese. SO\‘I'(Y(WS flute to llll‘ uovcrllllicllt said Japan would takc ‘fa fir-ter- mined slallli" ill llPflOfillllOllS \\'lll‘l foreign powers nvcr rlchfs and privileges previously chlflvil l" Cllinn. Tllc sillllls of fl)l‘f‘1;!ll coll- ccssion: and sctilr-luulll: a? Can- Libcral support in a campaign that turned exclusively on the Munich Agreement. Mr. l-Iogg. son of Viscount Hail- sham, Lord President of the Council, polled 15,797 voles to 12.- 363 for his opponent. In the 1935 General Ellection Captain R. C. Bollrne. Conservative whose death created the vacancy. polled 16.- 306 votes to 9,661 for P. Gordon- Waker. Labor, also in a two-man contest. working quite close to the stove. Hent from the fire is bellcvcd to have caused the fluid to explode. l Only minor damage was caused I the house b the flames. vi: -» fon, Shanghai. Hnnknw and [Tlenlsln will bc of particular con- CCITI. France Seeks Agreement With Cermvany And Italy MARSFTIIIE. Oct. 27~((‘P)~- Premier Dillflflifl‘ expressed lmpf‘ today of a French ulldcrslrluding with Germany and Italy but t'lrl. ‘the nation her future sccllriiv lav largely ill dcrcloplnnllt of hcr cnl- onial cm re. Dallldicr, spcrlkiluz before the National Congress of his own Ra- dlcnl-Socinllst Party. said France niinckcd French Cnlnmllnis: ers for the ‘r‘sabolrl_uc“ of the (‘rv- c forts. cfllnlcul‘. He do." ‘ of lhc future of ifrallcc" crd- ed on her overseas tcrritorv 1'1 A dcvclnpnlcni. of which he advocated in llli‘ facc of increased Gcrlnnll and Italian power ill Europe. “\Vlli‘lll(‘l‘ ll is a question of hcl‘ he would entrain for New York on ills way back m Cilllflflfl. He declined toconllncnl on the Cnnarla-Vvcst Irldies trarlc trczliy. "Th is g matter for the Can- adian Parllomerlt.” he said. He told reporters he had on- Joyved "every minute" of his vac- ation trlp to Jamaica and had formed the "most delightful" im- prcssinns of the island. He luncllcd with Governor Sir Arthur Richards previous to his departure and paida farewell visit to the governor before going u- board his ship. Three Airforce Pilots Killed BRADFORD, England. 00f. 2'1 - tCP-Hllvasl -'I‘hree Rqvnl Air Force fliers were killed today when a bcmbiug plane of the 34th Squadron crashed into a~hill at Lune Moor. Yorkshire, The vio- tims were flying officer J. 0. Srvwcblltts. aircraiihsman William Afihbrldsb and ailcmfisman Hor- are Redism (limo some (luvs (‘AN ENfHUSE ovm ls fllcuslzlmzs relations with Gcrnlauy or wllh Italv," ho said. “Franco is con- vinced 11ml . {lfllifiis (‘.111 be rcncllrd which will llfilii? llil‘ mod. useful coulribulilvn in ill" rein- fnrcclllcll’. cf p21 Sllnulirulcvlldl- , zlu- dc;~la"- aflou, S A kl lllc path ‘l’ lzwlll of c lrc .c llll. Rains‘. Grrllulllv llllfl " llilllP1".l l: would he a if l~‘l_\" fl“.‘(‘21\'lCl‘.i. vlitll we Nari .<'.’ll0. TORONTO. 0m 27 ~- (Cpl - Mllllllilllll and lnaxllnllln tcrupcro turcss- Victoria 44 54 FKIIIIOHIOII 44 B2 Regina 3f! ‘I2 Winnllwcg 3'1 7i? Toronto 42 50 Ottawa 40 43 Monti-cal ‘V 55 Regina 33 3 Quebec 44 9° Saint John 4R 5R Halifax 44 m Charlottetown W» 5R FORECAFTS Maritime Provinces f-‘rmll lablc winds partly cloudy scaitcrezl shnlvcrs not mll"ll chain? in icmpcmfure. High fldc this altcrlloozl n‘ 21* nrzl icmcrlcxl" mov 121 Sun sols this a non or 4“ 'nv‘<l rises tomorrow nmrvutfl i1 (‘Ti 1.. First quarter moon Oct, fill, 74'» A Vi Sill-nmclwirlc ildc 1R mlnuics lai- ‘cr than Cllnrlclictnwn. (lire ‘t , THE (‘AR FERRY SAIl-lYG-q Leave Borden 9.45 a. m. i p. m- ‘onm-niine Ii n. In. 3.05 il- l" "L259 so‘ J. lg t,- er B T4_~ -