NOVEMBER 1. 193s 3 Big Sale Days AT cisioiis stones us. EXTRA SPECIAL VALUES ON SALE FRIDAY. SATURDAY & MONDAY LOOK FOR‘ SPECIAL SALE SHEET DELIVERED AT YOUR DOOR as CNADIAN STORES u "JY/ii-r-z- I! Par/s in 5:50P ' FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1ST, 1935, Miltons Old Spain are again sponsoring one of their interesting CONTESTS. .4. ‘\ teaifij >,;_ s», 2%: on display in i ,»a\bv%~. -. L-24l5-11-1-2i With every 25c purchase you will receive a COUPON for a free CHANCE on one of the MANY HANDSOME PRIZES Drawing to take place Dec. 24, 1935. Ask for your Coupons, the window. Duce Girds Italy To MeetLeague Sanctions. POLICE ON GUARD DEMONSTRATION BY STUDENTS IS CURBED. (Continued from Page l) ivi-ri zz-rx‘ "- foreignersi" During the afternoon there was a similar demonstration in front of a British-owned drug store. There was no damege, but the proprietor closed the store. Pol- ice promised to prevent further trouble. Dozens of police and Car- sbinieri in their claw-hammer coats an cocked hats patrolled the vicln ty of the British lbn- bassy, scene of a forenocn demon- stration. Reserves were held in readiness for emergency and of- ficers were stationed at strategic points to signal the approach of demonstrators. “implacable Resistance" Il Duce pledged “implacable re- sistance" to sanctions. At the same time he pushed his war in Eth- iopia, sent another shlpload of troops to Africa and ordered a flight reduction in food prices. effective tomorrow. To the students Mussolini shout- ed. "In the face cf economic siege for which the entire civilized world should have a sense of sup- reme shame: in the face of an ex- periment which is being made to- day for the first time against the Italian people, let it be said that we shall present the most implac- able resistance in the finnest of our decisions." WARSAW, Oct. 31-(0. P. Hav- asl-A violent argument between five Italians over the merits of the Italo-Ethlopian war today re- sulted in the death oi three of the disputanis. The five were reported to have met in a more or less friendly argument over local issues. But their animosities were aroused when the subject changed to the war end in the fight that ensued only two were left alive. BIRTHS éanmrrnans - at Angus-me 00W. Oct. 25, i035, to Hr. and Mrs. Lorne Camithers s. son. MaeNEil-L-At Pownal, Oct. 1085, to Mr. and iifrs. John R. Mac- Noili, a son-Arnold Kelsie Outh- bezt. ~ DEATHS Hospital on Wednesday. October 30, 1' Capt. Dan Pbugere, age is, ‘I lflagpeonville, N. S. Funeral notn. MIGNBVIN—AI Deflebie on Thurs- day, Oct. ll, i985, Catherine Mac- Key. beloved wife of John C. Mc- Nevin. aged Ii. years. Funeral Set- urdey, Nov. 2, at 2 pm. to Argyle Shel! Cemetery. ' - m N. D. MacLean IIIAIHII Too Late To Claaifv fiBT-Ysina-"nfiiioon 5. ll! an lees. Writs "M." o enl- ma: iambic-ion. \ Is New High Commissioner THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN I HE CENTRAL GUARDIAN Erinitp llnitzb Churn) Thin column is reserved for of local interest but edvertis a newly nature may be Ilse I oentl e word etrietly payable adv/aloe. SUNDAY SERVlCE5—New Glas- gow 10.00 a.m., Fredericton 3.00 pm, Bradalbane 7.30 pin. Wm. G. Quigley. minister. L-24l2 HALLOWYIEN TEA AT KIRK- A very successful Halloween tea under the auspices of the Ladies Aid of St. James Church was held in the Church Hall last evening. The artistic decorations were in keeping with the season. Tea tables and fortune and guessing booths were well attended. Music supplied by the Kirk Orchestra did much to enliven the evening. PRE-NUPTIAL SHOWER — A generous shower was tendered Miss Mildred Harrington, who is soon to become the bride of Mr. simmer. Hainmel, at the beautiful home of Mr. and Mrs- Bert Dwyer, Char- lottetown. The brlde-to-be was led to the chair, where a carriage of useful and beautiful gifts was wheeled in by little Miss Craig and Master Buddle Dwyer, who were prettily dressed as bride and groom. The gifts were then opened and numerous witty verses were read. which caused much laughter and amusement. The evening was quick- ly passed by with music, songs and dancing. A pleasing feature of the evening Wm a step dance ny Mr. Peter Craig. which was heartily en- joyed by all. At the conclusion of the evening, all left for their homes wishing the prospective bride and groom many years of succec: and happiness. news If - ll in DRIVES OVER. BREASTWORK -Drlving through the fog at a high rate of speed a motorist did not see the turn at the end of Brighton Road last night and crashed over the end of the ‘ureastwork unto the sand. The drop is slight, only about a foot, so that the car was not dam- aged to any extent. The tide was out at the time- The City Police who were not far away when the accident happened, hastened to the scene and placed the driver under arrest. It is understood that he will appear in court on a charge of driv- ing while under the influence of liquor. The same man was ‘recently fined $75.00 for driving after his li- _ ccnse had been cancelled. Neither the driver nor the passenger, who ‘accompanied him, was injured in last night's accident. The car did not overturn. . HON. VINCENT MASSEY OTTAWA, Oct. 81—Hon. Vin- cent Massey who was Canadian High Commissioner in London for a brief period in 1930, has again been appointed to that post. Prime Minister King announced today. Mr. Manny's appointment will date from Nov. 8, the Gov- ernment having accepted the resignation of lion. G- Howard Ferguson. present High Commis- sioner, effective on that date. The Prime Minister had already intimated that he would send Mr. Massey in the London office. Mr. Ferguson forwarded his mill- riailon few days ago but, flier an cxc ange of communlcal‘ with Mr. King, agreed to remain at his poet until it would be con- venlont for the Government to relieve him. War Briefs (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) DURBAN, Union of South Af- rice, Oct. 3l-—(A.P.)—G¢II- Eric Vcrgin, until recently an adviser to Emperor llaile Selassie, said to- Itelian soldiers In Africa III "dying by the hundreds.” “TIN, flyla] qbeforengiie wer basin. e ea . can P ' lee you the Italians will‘ not rewh Addls Ababe next your. nor "w next year. nor ever. ABBIB ABABA, Oct. iil-(AP) -Emperor Haile Selassie today 11" oeived the only Italian prisoner s0 far brought to Addls Abe-be. 93' year-old Clemente Serge of Plume. and after a friendly chat. ordeml the loo Greek garage keeper w provide rgo with a 10h. I005- clothing and a place to live. LONDON. Oct. Si-(AJ-l-bonl that the the theatre ofwar. which he con- tended autcmsticelly would ital hostilities In Africa. At a Ireegue of Nations union meetilll. All I“ '“’ '°“ “'1. Chill?!‘ .2." etron onolll ‘ “also: of communications and glppllfl,lsltlllltlollllilfltll' vocsie Individual eoiim. PARIS, Oct. Ii-(C- P. Havel)- te the pliant have benefited from a tariff eoele considerably below the general rate. wl! be Film! la the general classification be- lilliue tmeesen TRIBESMEN REPlliSEii m iiiicis Bloody Battle On Southeast Front. EUTILE EFFORT (Continued 1mm Page l) assailed the Italian redoubt at ‘Wal- wal, word received here stated. The Fnsclst army brought tanks and field artillery into‘ play in its déive on the tribesmen, it was learn- e . Reports of the reverses suffered in the southeast cast a pail of gloom over this Capital tonight. Jiilitary observers were of the opinion Eth- iopian tacticians had been iorced to give way to the impatience of fhelr long-idle warriors, who on the 29th day of the war were unable to en- dure the seeming lethargy oi their leaders any longer. The government revealed 15.000 Italian troops had begun their first important offensive in the Mount Mussa Ali region near where the first Fascist advance of the war oc- curred. A dispatch from that sector ADDIS ABABA, Oct. 3l—(A-P.) Ethiopian military circles dis- cussed today unofficial and wholly unsubstantiated reports of a fierce and bloody battle yester- day near Makale. These reports said Ethiopians attacked in the darkness, anni- hilating severe.‘ thousand Italians and that the Ethiopians suffered 3.000 casualties. The reports said daybreak dis- closed the battlefield strewn with MABSHFIILD BAPTIST CHURCH service Sunday, Nov. 8. at 8.30 pm. Dr. Vincent of Cher- lottetown will preach his farewell sermon at this service. 11-2416 UNITED CHURCH SERVICES. Nov. 3rd, ll a.m., Murray Harbor; 3 pm., Little Sands; '1 p.ni., Mur- ray River WMB. Thankoffering. Speaker; Rev. John Stirling. L-2ii3 PEESBYTERY MEETING — The Presbytery of Prince Edward Island will meet in regular quarterly sea- sion at 11 a. m. on hiesday, Nov. 5th in St. James Church Hall, Char- lottetown. L-2423 Y's MEN'S CLUB MEET-W. E. Massey presided at the regular weekly meeting of the Y's Men's Club held last night. R. L. Mc- Clure and J. A. Haslam were guests. Reports on the telephone bridge and bowling were given by W; E. Massey and Ernest Bell. A Halloween dance in the Oddfel- lows’ Hall under the auspices of the Club last night was largely at- tended. Music was furnished by Elliott's orchestra. Til UBSERVE UENTENARY 0F MARK TWAIN Island Of Bermuda Plans Big Celebra- tion To Mark Birth Of Beloved Delin- eator. (GP. By Guardian's Special Wire) HAMILTON, Bermuda, Oct. 31- Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn and other boyhood characters that Mark Twain crested will live again here tomorrow as Bermuda observes the 100th anniversary of the birth of the beloved delineator of American life. Schoolboys and schoolgirls, de- scendants o1 a generation of Ber- muda youngsters who idolized Mark Twain, will dramatize scenes from his works. They will sing the songs that Mark Twain liked best, and they will hear school officials tell of his life and his writings. Their observance wl'l be dedicat- ed particularly to the many happy months Samuel Clements spent on this British Isle between 1877 and 1910, and to the strong bonds of affection that grew between the writer and Bermuda's children. They still recall that it was here that he formed his famous aquar- ium club, with its children members called “Angel-iish." I And Bermuda's oldsters stil re- call that lt was here that the shrewd Twain picked out the next United States president in 1910. He was touring a golf course with Woodrow Wilson. then governor of New Jersey, when he suddenly stop- ped to remark: "Woodrow, some day you'll be president." ‘that was two years before Wilson was even nom- mated. It was Clemens‘ last visit to the Island. with regret, Bermuda learn- _ed oi his death just a few months later. He had not lived long enough to see his prediction come true. But before he died, he and the man he know would be President had done much to keep for Bermuda the freshness and unspoiled beauty so alluring to the, visitors from crowded. noisy cities who have helped make it rich. Wilson drew up a petition. and Clemens was one of the influential group signing it. begging the government to forever bar automobiles from Bermuda. And to this day, the only horseless car- riages here are a few trucks owned by the government. _ Clemens wanted even more. It w“ hi3 hope that the Island would always be free oi "the triple scourge of railways, teIQTaphs and news- papers." But even he couldn't stop progress; and today Bermuda has all three scourges, in some meas- ure. His interest in the Island made him loved by old and young. That's why tomorrow the sdultsaxwtll R5 "al treatment. Damage FRIDAY. Novnunnn let 1.00 r. LL-Choir Practice-Hearts mu. a 8.00 P. lib-Young People's Soc- iety — Social Hall. IIIJAKERUBKS SilllTiIERN ALBERTA Little Damage Repor- ted, However, From Series 0f Shocks-- (C. P. By Guardian’; peolal Wire) OAIEARY, Oct. 3l.--8tlli_ clem- bering out from under blizzard- banked snowdrlfis. southern Alberta was visited today by a series of earthquake i-ihocks that Jnfused and excited the populace but did no harm. Buildings in Calgary were rock- ed. Furniture shifted about and windows rattled. There were two or three tremors just before noon. The first came at 1:6 P. M., E.S.'I‘. Several seconds spaced each shock. In residential districts pictures and wall minors swinging back and forth. In down- was sent shooting out of drinking fountains. Lethbridge, Medicine the shocks too. felt their machines quiver. district. was unofficially reported at 35 degrees below zero. Medic- ine I-iat and Swift Current reg- istered minus four. Consul, at l6 degrees below zero. was the cold- October low when the mercury reached 21 degrees above zero. The previous record was created Oct. 1B. 1905 when the thermo- meter registered 22.9 degrees. roe scanners onranro ronorrro, Oct. ill-Fog which blanketed most of Ontario yester- day, demoralizing traffic and ship- ping and taking one life in its misty course. will continue for at least another day, weatherman predicted. The haze was heaviest in lake areas with a tendency to clear-up 1n some inland points. As the fog caused by warm air from the south passing over cool land and water in the province. maintained its spell, investigation started into the death Wednesday night of Mrs. Frances Smith of St- Catherines. She was found on the bumper of a car driven slow- ly through the mist by Miss Vera White and died in hospital. Vessels came in from Lake On- tarlo to Hamilton Harbor but were unable to dock due to poor Four men injured near Sudbury when two autos crashed head-on while travelling through dense fog on a northern road were recuper- atlng in their homes after hospit- was con- siderable to eight cars forced into ditches in the northern nickle bell? urea. ‘ the youngsters will be Joining in. A big celebration dinner is planned. and government and society not- ables will sit around the board and recall their own youth for a 1100A- ing moment as they lift a mast to the man who dipped his pen in boy- corpses, on which vultures fed. said a de hme mads had fallen on an Italian sup- ply column under cover of darkness and had slain 15 Fascistwguards. Twenty-five camels were reported captured. A battle between the huge Eth- iopian army commanded by Crown Prince Asfavu Wesson Taiari and the Fascist invaders was expected soon. The Crown Prince 5s en- trenched around Dessye, about half way between Addls Ababa and Mussa All. Towns Tflkqn ADIGR-AT. Ethiopia, Oct. 31. — '1‘rained native troops beating e trail for the main advance of the Italian column upied another village today , and seized wells to supply the blackshlrts with water- The village was Mai Uecc, several kilometres beyond lildags I-famus. Italian officers immediately dubbed it “Mae West." . Sharp action was reported earlier from the southwest border of Erit- rea, where Italians crossed the Seytit River and drove bad: Ethiopians messed at Nlaghin. After. dispersing the enemy, the blooming re- sed the stream alnid took up the defensive on their e.. ' . . 'i‘he' native troops of the northern forces have deployed tactically as far es i-lausien, halfway to strategic Makele, and have taken the natural fortress of Amba Sion. 30 miles from Mflshn-iw head's glamor and spread it on paper for the world. Legislation To Be Tested In Court S i l Wire) . uardi ‘ P“ i Oct. TIN-Submission of legislation to the supreme Cm" ° Canada, as announced earlier this week by Prime Minister Kins. will be much wider in c0099 m!“ Pr” viously expected. it was learned to- day. In addition to the measure.» fes- pecting working hours and ‘V689: "mo; from draft mnventions o the International Labor Office. i-hfl reference will also include emPlQF mam and social insurance, leflllll- tion adopted to carry out tlw I9- oominendations of th! R-Ollfll Wm’ mission on Price Si)!!!“ "15 Mm Buying and the Marketing Act. m,“ lfl-nut Lapointe, Minister oi Justice stated tcnilht the Mitten" will as "certain questions which have been raised "slim"! i-Pil V51‘ idity" of the following act!- The miploymmt end Social In- surance Act. the Dominion Trade Wireless Aid In S a vi n g Mon ’s Sight (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire. WINNIPEG, Oct. 31—Wireless came to the aid of medical science today in efforts to save the eye- sight of an injured man 400 miles north oi Winnipeg. far up in northern Manitoba's mining fields. Realizing a delicate operation necessary to remove a steel splin- ter from the eye of Jack Bough, master mechanic at Jowsey island on God's Lake, was beyond his skill, the resident general prac- tliloneer appealed to Winnipeg for d. Land and air transportation now is at a standstill until after freeze- up. and for a time the case looked hopeieu to Dr. A. E. McGregor. Then the radio was enlisted. Dr. Norman L. Alvin was brought to a microphone in Win- nipeg. Por 35 minutes he outlined to Dr. McGregor the steps to take to perform successfully the delic- ete operation. The unusual med- icai consultation was carried on perfectly over the 400 miles of space. Whether the operation was suoceseflil has not yet been learn- ed. Dr. McGregor late today was and Industry Act. the Natural P"- ducts Marketing Act (1034) and amendments. an Act to amend the Criminal Code, Section Nine. the Minimum Wages Act, the idmitation v of Hours of Work Act and the Weekly Day of Rest in Industrial Uncut-allow Mi- l operations to place Hough under an anaes- thetic, make sn incision into the eye in a manner described by Dr. Alvin and then attempt to with- dmw the splinter with an electro- magn-t ordinarily used in mining were starred town Calgary office buildings. water Hat and other parts of Southern Alberta felt Linotype operators working in the Lethbridge Herold visibility. Many ships did not risk passage of the beach canal. Traf- Tofiforefrontzln The fic was resumed on the lower De- BYltlSh EIOCLIOII. troit River after a tie-up of 40 _____ vessels at Amherstburg under ord- 3y Geo," “Emblem, ers of the United States coast Candi.“ Pr”. Sh“ yvlln" 81m"!- (By Guardian's Special Wire) "£2.l’.°.‘».§’.:tlff“2 for $ 1.01 $00 Jontecl Bail: Salts 2/1"‘ ,8], ' siaifiiiu .51.“? . . I??? 2/” .76 50c Jar "36?’ SKIN CREAMS c0ld,vII'lllhiI'l[,|-iqllI- I CI ' mnfifi-ufsiiiii" a1’... 2 for .51 30% irdl‘ Jonlteel (flream. Vanishing, 10 or liquc ying Cleansing . . . . . . . .. 2/" e51 30c bot. Almond Bloom ivromvi srnnms MANITOBA 250%,,“ Iwm, Hmw_v_ 2 M51 . t. uric Lemon ' wmmrna, Oct. 31—(C.P.)__ ° ° . The storm that buffetted the m Com“ B"“°']”"°" 2f0"36 west and Saskatchewan early this 50c Bot. RIKER'S week came into Manitoba in full force today. blanketlng the orov- F ince with snow. B Cold, however, still gripped the country while in southern Alberta HM“ '°‘£I'- WW“! a series of earthquake shocks ' "' ' Joggled the foothills area. Mlni- 2 y... _5] mum temperatures readings show- 100 b t ‘m5’ ed many minus signs. Blairmore. 3 < 0- ‘ ' Alta. in the Crow's Nest Pass. Bay Rum-m. 2041-01 SOobot. Bay Rum. . . 21.. ,5] 31.00 bot. “366" . fl 0 . est Saskatchewan point. ‘L00 bin‘ 365 0M Manitoba generally was well ab- gggmh Luau" 21o,- A over zero with b'ustcry conditions lfl‘m.bb.t:ll.léésl‘l ' prevailing. Eau de Cologne 2 I" Temperatures in Vancouver _ _ dropped to an all-time record '9“ b°i~ 1"!" I-"llm- 21050 $1.00 bot. Paradis Lotion . . . . . . . . 2f"'$1.01 Ross §A|><v flu-sl- 501: Box e GARDENIA Stationery FACE is 15c Note Size POWDER l Friendship 2 y... .51 ' WRITING 50c box Jonteel Cold ' Cram FM’ Powder 2 for .51 Linen Finish i ‘rec: ca". z’}‘.i"°°i’6 l ‘.’.°.:"’"T 2 f" W" s... ' l t... ,;‘,,,,,,,:_'_' z f... $1.01 logizggzssééa . 2/026 f “1§’3o‘.’°§.'.’.‘i2'.‘?°.' 2/.» $1.01 so... u..l..i...... 21-4 1 75c b0; H365" Body 2f“ $1.100 boxIWritmg i "°'"'" ~~~~~~~~~ ~- ' K?5°'F'.».;l."§f‘f'. 2/1» $1.01: §’.“€.’.‘.“.‘..B.‘?‘?l 2/.» $1.01 ., REXALL ONE CENT SALE AT YOUR REXALL DRUG STORE 5(1)? box Cascade “biting , upnr, Linc-n Finish 86 sliccis ' 2/1"‘ 051 . 35c box Wri ng l’ Kid Finish ‘m Bo.‘ ..... .. srmousar . with JASMINE 1gb." PERFUME 0r Playing Cards 2 n» $1.51 Zégiiigtliiittllif’??? 1.. .76 0.35. i??? °""°“°°2 10,51 210v .51 ‘d . . . 50c box Diplomatgfgaper and Envelopes, Linen 50c box Mar i P . and Envclfizeg, ‘iii: 2/9" e5]. $1.00 bottle Puretest _ Norwegian '_ Cod Liver Oil‘ Plain or Jilin! flavored. The oil svlei-Inl for the Dionne Quinluplcls ~ 2 t $1.01 on. 50c 'ar Roxull Circa ..'i"ii:i:.°'iz'.tz';l§ 2”” '51 505d "Wrangell". 2 for '26 31383.2‘. tl...'..'.;lo;.".". 2 ’°' '51 ment . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 f” ~36 25c White Linimcnt. . 2 for .26 25c box Laxoii c B - ' mide of Quinin¢:v'i‘ailll£ts2 f“ e26 25c box Grippe Pills. . 2 for .26 50o b . R. 'll Ccugoli Syrufifijiiuf. ~51 50c bot. Recall Bronchial Syrup For Chest Cold! 2 1w .51 50c bot. Vapurc, In- liulant for Colds...“ 210.51 - T . 25o b R. Co c.0113‘... .°.‘.“.". . . . .1‘? Z /°"-26f 50c Asthma Powder. . 60o bot. Nose and zfonsl 5 l I . ' _ l’:.:::§:...'%£:1:"'" 21.51 “s?” “r 21-51 . 10c pk. i.c Clair c3353 31,00 T... ehfifld" ' .- mFiniih Efiilvcloiiesé 2/0". l l Antiseptic. . . . . 2 f0? $ c . u Engelopeainli. zfflhll 5o¢_16 01- 501- ' gisgciica _ Rem" d’ ‘_ Plums Cards Milk of Magnesia‘ 2 for .51 Mint Flavored - 75a DECK OLD COLONY Playing Cards 2 I“ '51 Z f" ~76 “°:.‘;’.f-li".‘.':°‘.i§:*r2/»r 51* §75eB'd TbiCo r - ' .~ Asslolrtgg Clolrfrs. 2 f" 752:?‘ gm‘ d1}??? zfor .76 $1.00EnglishChina2 50c f“ ‘arm “ma; . u andSaucer f°"$lool catfirhJ u a“ 2/0, 5c mmgramuud 2 _ r ey...... s I. usPejncilrzjid . . . . . f" e06 25c tin Carbolic Salve. 2/” 026i 1 ‘u . . . Iioiiutain Pa: ‘F; -, , 2 f" e 1 6 2 f0? .26 15c bot. Muqlugs. . .. 2/.» , 16 - Drug riches-Mom’ 25c tin Zinc Ointment 2 for PARTIAL LIST ONLY -- THE USUAL BIG SALE led IN ‘TFRTSTIIA u 1 01 | 0 N HE|G_H_TEN$ International Affairs LONDON, Oct. 3p.- Government leaders place international affairs well to the front as their electoral offensive rolls forward, speeded by airplanes and travelling sound trucks. Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin today denounced the policy of “splendid isolation," in a speech to the International Peace society. He answered opposition charges by DYOIIIAEADS. “I give you my xvord there will not be great armaments here." 59119811118 to Italy for cooperation with the League of Nations’ 1339;“ to restore peace in Africa, the Prime Minister declared: “The dispute be- tween the League and Italy is real, but it is no more real than me friendship between Great Britain and Italy." Baldwin Opposed In his own constituency of new. 19y. Mr. Baldwin now has an 01).. P0118“. Sir Edward Murray, who carries the standard of the United British Partynand the slogan "Bald- wm mu“ 3°" 1711-! Party advocates 311811 ‘V8865. high tariffs and Im. peg‘?! preference. e Cons ti Warwick mefivamviemirifignuimmml? Dealing to the Labor Party not to run a candidate against Anthony m“ artful"! that. "in view of his "lliizllllilflvent work at Geneva. he s u no be 1 election." creed to fight an AIIXIOus to reach as many voters Is possible in the last two weeks of n“ 901119518". Conservative head- quarters announced today airplanes will be used to carry speakers from one end of the country to the other. Many owners have placed the Dishes at the disposal of the party. Turin: country ‘hunks equipped with soul ioud- ‘ speakers and moving picture ap- paratus are already touring the country. Posters are appearing by the thousands in every city and town. One of the most popular displays a support the National Government. The Labor Party is specializing in anti-war posters—-one of a baby in a. gas mask and another of a skele- ton draped in black. Neville Chamberlain, Chancellor of the Exchequer, joins the Prime Minister in denying that Britain is launching a new armaments race. British policy, he declared, is one of “prudent realism." “Don't you believe them when they say we have neglected our flrmy and 113W." counters former Premier David Lloyd George. "As if nothing had been done! We are spending more than they are spend- ing in France or Japan or in Italy pefore this war." At Aberdeen Home Secretary Sir John Simon hinted Britain's uaval forces in the Mediterranean are all that discourage Italy from armed resistance to economic sanctions, applied by members of the League of Nations. With 550 candidates in the field, approximately the same number as the government, the Labor Party is concentrating on the 235 seals 1t lost in the landslide of 193i. in most constituencies it is a straight two- party fight. Tile total "umber of candidates now approximates 1.300 of whom 615 will form the next House of Commons. COMMISSION _._.i9§¥3‘~'"i°*' ,‘,'_°'?',"*"° 1* abolished and British financial sup- port were withdrawn. "Let us take it for granted the Commission has made mistakes," the News continued. “Let us oven view these mistakes from the stami- point exaggerated by prejudice -—- and we must still admit it boils down to commission or chaos. "Abolish Commission Government and the ilvholc economic structure must. collapse." The Evening Telegram captioned “the only alternative." observed there were few who did not, look forward to the time when her house in order, her debt burden diminish- ed to the point where it pressed no longer with crushing effect upon the people, her industries in better working ordcr and a system evolved ensuring efficiency and stability in public administration, Newfound- land would once more be entrusted with the manageme ‘ of her own affairs; but, having sought opinion representing every class of the com- munity, it was convinced that. for the present Newfoundland would be in a hopeless and helpless condition under any other form of administra- tion than the commission cavem- ent. '.'Aboltsh the Commission Govern- ment and what would the -.ountry‘s position be?" asked the telegram. “Is there the slightest reason to be- lieve that aid forthcoming from the Mother Country would be contin- ued, particularly with the demand for restitution of responsible gov- typlcai British workman witn mm outstretched. inviting the voter t0 ernment conveyed with whet is ll. F. Biflildllflli, tho Air-trillion airman, who has iakvn nil‘ from Darwin. Australia, on a flight to jfinglzlnfl, r1,- l:n,..s to heat llie ree- ord for ii solo flight mi this at- trmpt, or llli(‘i‘ from England to Australia. lh- ;- fiviul.’ in the P1155 Moth machini- in \\‘l\l('li C. .1. Mel- roso flow from ilngianil and back last your. McGeer Trails C. CF. Candidate (C. i’. By Guardian's Special Wire) VANCOUVER. Oct. ilk-Although the result of the fodzrnl clcctinn in Vancouver-Burrard xvill not be definitely announced uniil Nov. '6, unofficial complete l‘£‘Llli'l‘iS tonmht indicated Arnold Webster, C.C.l-‘. candidate. becomes the elected member by four votes over Mayfll‘ G. G. McGcen Liberal. Pbur missing absentee ballots from Garrett, B. C.. have been reported by the deputy returning officer there showing three marked for Webster and one for McGeer. This would increase the two-vote margin held by Webster with the absentee poll to be checked of- ficially by Returning Officer R. G. Phipps. including tho four missing bal- lots, the vote stands: Webster, 10,226; McGeer 10224 nothing loss than an ungracinu: slap in the face?" “Looking forward with all level- headed citizens to the time when Newfoundland will resume her place in the commonwealth family," the Telegram acids: "The day is not yet." “w: .- "'31:. ' m=:.=r~"~‘i~r