4.- Premier Be v nnett A (Urgesi Supp \ art) ‘ ' ,~!1<i\fq1_.¢.;§pzuw Empire A ,MAxiMs‘ s . o, A ~ ~ Maxims MERE MAN °’ * ' _ a MERE MAN i ‘ >;~//// "- It tales ism at mum, ahgnnh. enthe almond ‘Thine , . _ A “m,” m” “u m, uie ' , _ , 4 mire tat it la a diamond sun. Covers Prince-Edward Island Like the Dew '3'-""*"*9*"-"'*"---' '°"'*'='- 3'3- chAiuurTt m = ' E - , ETOWN: CANADA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER s, was 1s PAGES :;":.':..'.:r.'::'."":.':. %.'“.'."z‘ .3." Fuszigel FIGHTING ETHIOPIANS STITBBBOREY iRelates .History Of “Anne Of Green i Gables” (C-P- B! Guardian's Special Wire) 10802110. Oct. k-Nearly three decades m a young lady in the old kitchen o1 a Prince Edward Ia- land farm home had the vision of s red-headed girl with “e" at the end of her name and the result was the beloved book “Anne of Green Gables.’ Inaisting she did not create Anne but the heroine just "popped into my mind with her red hair and "e" at the end of her name." Mrs. Ewan MacDonald, better known as “L. M. Montgomery.” author of 18 or ll books. disclosed to the Eng- lirh Speaking Union here last night the genesis of the book. “I wrote "Anne of Green Gables" . in the kitchen . chapter by b ,‘ of the old farm house in stormy winter when we could not go out much and later typed it on my little old machine which wouldn't print the ‘m’! at ‘all and had a crooked 'y'-" said Mrs. MacDonald. After three Publishers returned the mllllllfiflpli she finally stored it sway in an old box. When the manuscript dropped out while she was houseeleaning "1 sat down and read it and Ilhope you won't think l smconceited when I tell you I found itiinteresting,‘ Mrs. Motion- ald related. Eventually it found its way to a fourth publisher and in- ternational recognition. MANCHOUKUO MIDGET MERRY MURDBN, Manchoukum-qis c! uiis new empire‘: happiest citi- zens is rrnidget, 48 years old, 20 inches high and weighing 30 pounds. He gets free rides on rail- "froads and hotels make a charge for him. ANNOUNCEMENTS COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS. ETC "Borden Line Club annual meeting Albany School Monday, Oct. 7. All producers invited to attend. L-1l07-l0-3-3i "Rummage Bale St. Peter's Cath- edral school tonight 'I P. M. ' L-ll38-I0-5-li. "We are now buying live fowl. S. R. Pendleton, K ‘ gton. . L-IHZ-IO-S-Si. "Past Mistresses club Cake Sale at I-iolmans Saturday, 2 to 5. L-illl-lo-S-Ii. "Buying lambs at St. chsrles Station on October 10th paving highest market prices. Also at Dun- das October 22nd. C. E. Pratt do Son. 14-1154-10-‘5-21. "Cairo Sale this ‘afternoon at Moore a McLeod. Auspices Busi- ness Girls Unit (l. W. L. \ L-llfifl-IO-fi-li. "Dance Lorne Valley Hall, Fri- day, October llth. - Admission 20c. 000d music. L-Il20-I0-5-il-2i. "Chicken Supper St. Tuesday, October 8th. . L-ll57-l0-5-2l. "Don't miss "Too Many Bosses" by Cori-an Bsnn Players at ‘Prac- adie Hall, Monday. October 7th. L-il58-l0-5-2i. Charles. "Buying live hogs at Albany and Emerald Friday forenoon, October th. Bail grade. G. C. Green. L-ilfl-IO-d-Si. "Chipping Club loading hogs Ind lambs at Moreii Tuesday af- ternoon and Wednesday morning of neat week. ‘Iracadie-Bediord lending at Bedford, loading Wed- nesday forenoon imtii train time. Please list with local secretaries. L-llfl "lfunter River 811199111! Club will hold a meeting at Whdstiey‘ mm Ball on ‘rbursday evening. oetober 10th. Livestock, Marketing and other lilrioiiltural subjects will be diacubed. All farmers urged to attend. Club will load hogs at Hunter nmr Wednesday. October 0th. Please list stock with local ancestry . L-llfl SBURES KING ANli llBEllAl PULIBIES Abiy Defends Conser- vative Administra- tion At Lively Meet- ‘ ing In Halifax. (Canadian Press) (By Guardian's Special Win) HALIFAX, Oct. ei-A pledge that his party “will not rest" until all Canada's unemployed of today are ‘flourth News Beotirapeech of the ay. Csuadsaofarhaddoneaawell as “any country in the world" in caring for its Jobless. the Prime Minister declared. Employment was higher than in 1920 and his fluv- ernment proposed finding work for more if given a fresh mandate. . lie spoke here after arriving from Saint John, NJL, with stops along the way at Dighy, ltliddleton and Brldgewater, N3. Middleton, he addressed impromptu crowds at the railway stations. At the Empire '1‘ r a d e Agreements through support for his party. 0 the main to s defence of ‘the Con- servative Government's record. Al- keniiieb King's stand on Japanue agreements and, for the Provinces fishermen, promised a search for wider markets, both internally and in the foreign field. Sporadic attempts at heckling were quelled swiftly by the Prim-s Minister. With icy sarcasm, he urged his audience to let one man "earn his pay." ‘fuming in a mo- ment to blunt invective, he told an- other he was "ignorant." He appealed for votes ‘not for himself, but for Canada. "For my- self," he affirmed, "I want nothing more now than eternal salvation." Ho decried the “passion and preju- dice" which had motivated attacks against him because he wanted to pay Canada back something of what it had given him. Tomorrow. Mr. Bennett will ad- dress an afternoon meeting at New Glasgow, going on from there ‘to Charlottetown. The slur-l of bagpipes ushered Prime Minister Bennett to a Hali- fax platform tonight as he carried his election campaign into this sca- side city. It was his fourth address of the day after speeches at Digby, Middleton and Bridgewater, N. B. He was preceded before the audi- At Digby and ~: "' Bridgawater, he urged support for - His address here memories is ' so, he attacked Liberal leader Mac- ' trade, again defended theflttawa Rsstieo Gives ROYflI Welcome To Conservatives Messrs. McLure And Myers Tend- ered . Enthusiastic Ovation At Rustico Last Night. Liberal Mis- statements Scored Unmercifully '5“ Seething denunciation of cam- DI-lsn ‘ taternenta by Liberal op- mhmts was made by Mr. W. Ches- ter S. McLure last night inaddress- mi! l‘ lflrge and enthusiastic aud- ience in h‘; native district of Bus- erice by Fisheries Minister Emst, who declared no government since Confederation had done as much for Nova Scotia as the Bennett Government. Subventicns and higher duties had increased coal sales w Ontario by 2,000,000 tons last year. The Empire Trade Agreements had helped the steel “t?é_iintifiii'eii‘arf5ilf’ is?‘ PREMIER mum iliniiqiuuni Prlinslinialorkllennettwiil tewwn llcblitc Blas- Aalocistimi. as has been falsely laged. True. the Inhibition grounds‘ tico. The large hall was filled and. both Mr. McLure and hm colleague Mr. John H. Myers were in magni- ficent form. The order maintained throughout was excellent. though at times it was diillcult for the speakers to proceed by reason of the loud and prolonged applause. It was a signal demonstration of the popularity of the Conservative candidates. and of the satisfaction of the electors in the record of Messrs. McLure 5nd Myers during (he past five years in Parliament. Mr. Bismark C presided capably. MR. MCLURE Mr. McLure, the first speaker, cited some of the bareisced mis- statements made at Liberal meet- lugs as reported in the press. One in particular had reference to the unemployment relief project in Charlottetown, for the . . ' of clay from the lilxhtbltlon grounds to fill in low-lying railway property. (s A grant of over $20.00‘) had been obtained for this purpose from the Dominion Government, which paid was wholly a federal undertakinr. ft was given on the underatandin" that the money would be expended solely on labour. and this was strictly adhered to. ‘ copper of this windy." llfid Mr. . "went" to the Jbehbitirln wars improved. But a few years or saooo for the clay. ‘fhis clay was given freely ffl the WW8! to Saks g Here Tonight the full cost became the wfllezt v ago they were offered some 07.000‘ NiliSiliATEil Aciini av BRITAIN, cum "Baldwin Places Whole Hope In Collective Security Under League Covenant. BoimNEMouTir, Eng. Oct. 4_ Prime Minister Baldwin pleaded tonight with Benito Mussolini to stay his hand from any action which will make the.task of the league of Nations harder "even at this hour." Addressing a great Conservative party mass meeting. Mr. Baldwin pledged the Empire to strive in every way possible through the me- dium of the League to end the Italo-Ethiopian war as soon as possible. But. he made it plain, Great Britain has no intention of bzcom- ing the lone policeman of Egrope. "I with l0 make it clear," the Prime Minister told the assemblage 0f 8,000, "that the British govern- _-rililispliinylsjrnpaa.arunarr l which it was applied under the federal grant. and the money went directly into the pockets of the lsbonng classes. - “Our opponents think they can slur my reputation by saying I ob- tained that grant for the Exhibi- tion Association. Thcze gentlemen either know the facts, or thev do not. I believe they know. If we were on the street we would call the man making an assertion of that kind a single word. which on a public platform ‘s regarded as unoarlinmentarv, All I have to say is that the stotement is a falsehood." (Applause). The charge that he had done nothing for Queens County was al- so answered bv M“. McLure. who. after citing his own record and that of Mr. Myers, compared it to the Andrew Fraser Mitchell fiasco which cost this Province several thousand dollars and gave it such unfavorable publicity in the Old Country among British err-soldiers who had been defrauded under the JJEEAE» * ment has not and never had any intention of taking an lsolatccl sc- tion in this dispute." Instead. he said, Great Britain places her whole hope in the pro- gram of collective security under the Covenant of the League. _ “We cannot afford, either na- tionally or as an Elfipirt). to re- fuse to play our part in the con- tinent in which the hand of God has placed us.’ Mr. Baldwin said the British people must keep in their minds the main objective of the League and its members: that any action to be taken must h: taken with the approval and collaboration of all member nations. "There are various—-I'm not go- ing to specify them-important na- tions outside the League and the task of preserving peace is the mist difficult. but if the task is aban- doned now, all chance will be gone of what may still be possible; to get the nations of the world in- side the League." he continued. Had all the world joined the League and had there been “the will to restrain war. the League could have prevented war." , Rearmamsnt cf Germany altered the whole perspective oi’ Ill: con- tinent but Great Britain. he as- serted, does not c0n'ider Germany a potential enemy. The Prime Minister “rcjoiced" in the Labor party's recent decis- ion to support sanctions. if they are voted by the Dengue, and inzdc it clear Britain intends to try to preserve Europzan peace at all costs. Great Britain had no intention of withdrawing from European af- fairs. "Isolatlon is a bubble of a dis- ordered imagination," pe said. we are pledged by our signature to the covenant of the League. We have signed the Kellowg Peru's Pact; "It is not only. in mv viz-w. nur vital interests which dictate our policy, but it is the fulfillnimt n? our solemn international piedgcs." Indicating Great Britain may need more armaments. Mr. Bll'll— win asserted there should be no doubt about the nation's ability to fulfill those obligations. As for Italy, he said: “There has never been and I hope there will never be national enmity between my country and Italy." at the Cemeteries. Canadian Legion Memorial llay All Returned Men are requested to meet at Legion Headquarters, Grafton Street, ‘lottetown, Sunday, October 0, at 1.45 plm. The usual Memorial Services will be held Please 'Wear Medals. Char- ,bi"n11glit llmvn near 6N0 AKSUM-AD vii/fizz 01w" (EUNTI-Tfi ITRIAMTADVXNCE Highly Mechani zed Fascist Forces Rout Tribesmen; Heeiyy aRepclrteid Ethiopian Forces Retreat Orderly From Aduwa. 2,000 KILLED ITALIAN AIRMEN LAY ' BARRAGE FOR ADVANCE. (By Christian Ozanne, Havas , Staff Correspondent) ADDIS ABABA, Oct, 5- (Saturdafl-(C. P.-Hiivas)— intense fighting was report- ed raging ln the Aksurn- Aduwa. front early today with a single Ethiopian divi- sion contesting every foot of the way against Italy’s com- bined infantry, heavy artil- lery, tank and air forces. The Ethiopians were un- dcr command of General Woeldc Gabriel, a subordin- ate of Ras Seyum, chieftain of Emperor Hailefielassieh army in Tigre Province south of the Eritrean border. General Gabriel's troops, it was reported, faced the Blackshirt advance without assistance from the main portion of Ras Seyum’s army, which was exhausted after its stubborn defence of Aduwa earlier in the day. Italian planes laid down continuous barrages in the vzin of the invading army, the dispatches said. Ethiop- izin military strategists were depending principally on their infantry, ,while Italy was counting heavily on its air strength, Three Grfensives Three major Italian offensives moved relentlessly forward tonight as Ethiopia's fighters hurled them- solves into thc teeth of the We" clsion-liuilt Mussolini war machine. Almost equidistant from each of thcse fronts lay this capital city, believed to be the ultimate object- ive of the Italian drive. With officials admitting that Aduwa. bombed by Italian planes icduy for the third time, probably would fall by tomorrow, Ethiopia icund comfort in only two cf the many rmnrts which reached here. 'I‘li:r firs‘. was a dispatch from the extreme north which said an Italian bombing plane had been Aduwa. The second ivas a report that 12,000 Ethiopians had advanced into Er- itrea to the vtest of Aduwa. Military experts here Vlsflflllwd the Italian offensive as follows: Fierce Resistance 1. To the far north. 1n extreme- ly mountainous terrain on about a ill-mile front between Aduwa and Aksum. tanks, planes and infantry drove into Tigre Province despite iicrce resistance by Ethiopian $60115 under Ras Seyam. 2. To the northeast, in the re- Ion around Mount Mussa All and ll the plain of Hissu where the .st Italian invasion occurred on sdnesday, the Pbsoist forces to- giit advanced almost without re- rnce. In this region Asfavu Insnn Tafari, Ethiopia's Crown Jncc, was imcommand. but ac- srding to present mobilization ‘plans his army will not be ready for action until Oct, i2. .3. To the southeast, near the ‘tTéiifitEz-iisrlfii eirgizioi‘ France Will Back Britain Copyright, 1935‘ By The Havas News Agency (By Guardian's Special Wire) PARIS, Oct. 4_.——-IIIf0l'ITl€d quar- ters said here that France, in a. note to be delivered in LDIld0ILt°m§hN~ gave assurance she would support Great Britain with land. sea and air forces should any Bil-lick b9 made on Britain in the course oi preparations to enforce isnctions. assuming sanctions are voted by the League of Nations in the Ethiopian crisis. The note stipulated that Britain undertake to give similar aid f0 France in an analogoussituation. It was in reply to a British note which asked the French attitude on this point. It was explained the undertakifll! would only be valid if sanctions al- ready haid been considered in Pfe- uminary talks between the two pow- ers. Meanwhile the cabinet at lib meeting today voted unanimous op- proval of Premier LavaPs full sup- port of the League Covenant. The Cabinet also unanimously approved the reply to the British note. An appeal to the French people to forget domestic political quarrels‘ and unite solidly behind the gov- ernment in the international cris‘; was issued by Laval as he prepared tonight to leave for Geneva and the League Council's session tomorrow. Daring Daylight Bank Robbery (CI. By Guardian's Special Wire» MONTREAL. Oct. 4 — Between $3,000 and $4,000 was stolen from a north end branch of the Banque Provinciale du Canada in a daring daylight holdup by two bandits to- day. They fled in a waiting auto- mobile aftcr the coup. Within two minutes. of a call by the manager after the bandits made their getaway police cars were on the scene. Descriptions of the ban- dits wcre obtained. (C. P. By Gilardlan’: Special Wire) Moderate to fresh south to west winds; partly cloudy and becoming somewhat cooler: probably light scattered showers- - TORONTO, Oct. 4—Minimum and maximum temperatures: Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 44 54 Aklavik 34 40 Edmonton 38 ‘l2 Regina 22 52 Winnipeg i8 fill Toronto 38 51 Ottawa . 3B 50 Montreal . 40 52 Quebec .'. . . . . 38 50 Saint, John 50 62 Halifax .. 54 58 Charlottetown . . . . . . . . . . 57 70 Maritime West : Moderate to fresh southwest and west winds: fair with a little lower temperature. Maritime East: Moderate to fresh south to west winds; partly cloudy and becoming somewhat cooler; probably light scattered showers. High tide this afternoon at 4.10 and tomorrow morning at 2.42. Sun sets this afternoon at 6.88 and rises tomorrow morning at 4.03. Record & Forecost Of ‘Ii/entire Adigratw-Falls Into Hands OfFascists. AWAIT NEWS R 0 ME BLACK-SHIRTS A w A 1 T F A L 1. OF ADUWA. (By John Evans, Associated Press Foreign Staff) ROME, Oct. 4 - Italy’s Fascist legions drove stead- ily forward in Ethiopia to- day, captured one town and expected to take Aduwa. to- morrow, while Benito Musso- lini manoeuvred at home to keep war from spreading in Europe. Ethiopian warriors are making strong resistance at Aduwa, where an Italian army was crushed in 1896, an official spokesman said. In front of the stronghold tribesmen have entrenched themselves and are main- taining rifle and machine- gun fire. (Havas said unconfirmed reports reached Asmara to the effect Aduwa had fallen already). Adigrat, 25 miles east of Aduwii, has fallen into Blackshirt hands, the spokes- man said, and a number of villages were occupied peacefully. No mention was made of casualties in the en- gagements. Await News Black Shirts all over Rome im- patiently awaited news of the fall of Aduwa. They were called to their various headquarters tonight to make preparations for a celebra- tion of victory, but fthe expected word did not come. The rnscists then gave a demonstration of friendship to France before the Palace occupied by the French Ambassador, several th (Continued on Page I5) A towiiio is A MAN who Meats iilS ENEMY " ill-lose 1'0 Pilons" Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. mm rnaarr Loni-e Borden [.48 A, I. (Extra) i w. n. First quarter mobn Saturday, 00L b, 5.39 s.m. ' -' ifl"‘\‘.‘.‘!‘ixv‘ Lesa-e Torlnentilia (Infra) ll A. I. ass P. I. Dally except lsnday. - “n41 < ll PREMIER BENNETT l" Tilt FllRllNl TllNNNIT BINlPLNI.’ i