MAXIMS OFA. it rise I ' llont blttsnlel. MERE MAN oodtotakeonrblowaans >‘,'%/// ///’ The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward‘ Island Like the Dew w-w-w’ Read by Everybody MERE MAN 07117118 lll ti] Ki ' are conditionede on llfilgaatelf bu" MAXI M6 OFA [IIDIIGIUWII Guardian Two Conle- mnlnl Guardian. Ionndad llll. __ IIUNGA 171?. R. J. MANION New Conservative Leader Outlines- Policy In Speech Strong Opposition-Desirable, Ont- ario Leader Believes-Federal Liberal Party. Polyglot Collect- ion Of Opinion: Speaker Says. (By Norman Campbell, Carladisn Press Staff Writer) LONDONi, 0111-, Oct. lb-Oooperative measures between the Gan- adian National Railways and the Cl-llldllh Pacific F " “decided on in consultation with their employees" as a moans to economy were advocated tonight by lion. R. J. Manion, National Conservative Leader. Ilnificatlon was no solution to Canada's railway problem, Dr, MM. ion said ill an address to a convention of the London Conservative As- sociation that nominated him as Conservative candidate in the London Federal by election Nov. l4. Dr. Manlon will seek the seat vacated by the dctlth of Major F. C. Betta last spring. , Fires Spread Over ‘ IOO-lnile Area (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) FORT FRANCES. Ont. Oct. 14 —Dfti‘.,"[‘l’ 1one of the forest. fire stretched along the On- nnosotrl. border . line to- nzgnt with strong southwest winds fanning the slowly fading embers into fialnes. For more than 100 miles the bus-h country was dot- ted with outbreaks. While Ontario forest‘ ‘rangers battled lo subdue stubborn fires northwest- of Fort Frances which tlilmed 20 llvcs in Ontario and Mllnesota. Manitoba fire fighters were tlmluollcrl to action. Ul czi States rangers battled encroaching hazards at Inter. national Falls. just across the Rlloy River from hem, The ill-cs bore down on Middle-‘ V10. s snlnll town in the south- easlt-m corner oi Manitoba. The fltllllcs burllcd tllrouclt bush just nor-h of the town nud two miles em 510F058 the line in Minnesota fires raged, COMING {VENIS Plan Not Practical The $75,000.000 paving; g5“- mate presented to the Senate Railway Committee (by c, P, R, President Beatty) was not a prac- tical thing today, lie said. Many of the savings in that. estimate already were being made both by mason of operating economies and reduced traffic. The solution to the problem of Canada's deficits on the C. N. R. was increased traffic through greater population and through increased purchasing power of lthose now unemployed or partial- y so Dr. Maniozfs proposal for ‘the present was “that all reasonable economies should be instituted on both roads through their own headquarters as well as through loo-operative measures decided on by the two railways in consults- tion with their employees." Gratitude to Prime Minister MacKenzie King was expressed by the Conservative leader for the Prime bflllistel-‘s suggestion there be no Liberal candidate in Lon- don. a suggestion acceded to by London Liberals. E. O. I-iall, Oo- operative Commonwealth Federat- ion entry, is the only other can- didate at present entered in the byelectlon. While not dslputlng its right. to enter a candidate, Dr. Manion thought the O_C.l". move was an example oi the "nuisance value” of third parties in Canada. There had been charges he was not s eclfic enough in advocating "Dallce r oclobo Corran Ban, Monday, 17th. L-zsl-lo-lz-ls. "Bord to l m. bl , 1 to... °“ M‘ “‘° ‘B923.- "btll-dcn Linc Club loading hugs i111». calves every Tuesday. Hours to 3- L-348-l2-M-2-5-tf. "st. Col b ‘ml 3111140 wail)‘; gtltlllfiken supper L-432-l0-l5-2i. Hiflatlllullilt-le Sale-Trinity Social P‘ 1 Sllluulny. October 15th. 6.30 - M» L-409-10-15-1i. ill ll s- 1v sow TllllfSdily October 20th {ggll-"Hlllllul Clncken supper in Afton - L-4l0-l0-l5-1i. c,;\“lf£1t12_ll;>kbl:. sStewurtTUnilled c en uppcr, llcst uy. 0t but tam. L-374-10-14-2.‘__ ‘Ilialasgllel-géig lDance bin t. “turban ogfimegclo er t . L-430-10-l546. “Ilivlnkora Hall. Dance Monday gm“, ‘M- 17; Bummensfde cstla. L.453_ U: i Bfildru Tuesday evening Oct. hcfllliciton supper. bingo and pew“ Boy Scout Hell. Free tie- for Grand lottery. 1.402. "cilme to bean su poor at the 111:]; o1 Lemuel Wood, l-nluboro. "odor night, Oct, 11 Ilornly. icllolving night, 14-465-10-15-21. ___ , Bu . Bin d o: ofiml-lall on ¥¥l€ldfily ‘ "m mm qAldngdlssiortlh 20o a y,“ e sy e supper *~>11»i”t'ni°‘“ °" “fi-fif-‘nfii firs“ "Young p9 1m, so] s 001cc Sunday Even- gle assist“ ineltzligis. ‘ilrvllvtistgd Mag“ tonight at '1 o'clock in v. ' ' ‘- L-tol. “,f§“',‘f“,11 01 Poultry Producers lciflav “o1 1n Belfast Public Hell. -- lnber 13th it 7.30 P.M, will b, nil l Rlfldlflfl demonstration tcllti l“ ‘ » All lnterfls ed please st- Iducm-lflilails "m “rfgi-‘iiilifi. "Annual "1 and “WWII of Horse- Blackunltllts‘ Protec- be h ld in 170m. Chsrlotketowne, 1 ‘clock. .‘ m1»- ......:. .. use. M reme ies for unemployment and other evils, said Dr. Manion. ‘I'm not the physician in charge of the patient." he added. "When the times comes I'll prescribe remedy. There is no need for ms to supply all the cures for a gov- ernment which hasn't discovered them itself." There was no opposition to Dr. Msnlons nomination. No other name was proposed to the con- vention. Leopold Macaulay. leader of the Conservative opposition in the Ontnrio legislature, told the con- vention London was performing a national duty in making it pos- sible for the Conservative leader to lead the House of Commons op- position. I_'“;T1“ (Continued on page l0, Col B) O-60§§'O-§§-§§' World News In Brief '§Q+O-OQ~ ion of Railwaymen earl depots to return to work. The ap eral secrets lflicnlties had ed at n sen settl with representatives of the management of London, Midland and Scot- tish railways. WASHINGTON government, with ll on a three-fold progr urope’a recent President Roosevelt informed hismp were being completely l -exa.min ent upon a "settlement" cnlrtofiirbw HCAN‘ “ADA.” SATlJRDAY, OCTOBER IYOMINA TED non. on. n. .1. lunxlolv‘ Toronto U. Honors Lady Tweedsmuir TORONTO. Oct. l4-—(CP)— University of Toronto. Alma Mat- er of thousands of Canadians, hon- ored today for the first tint» a first lady of Carads. Varsity. in a colorful ceremony in the big vault-est v l.l'tlOi'l conferred an ho y dc- gree of Doctor of Laws upon Lady Twcedsmulr, wile o! the Gover- nor-General. She was one of 11 distlnguisho‘ Canadians and visitors hcnort-d todny by the Univcrsllyz The others include Hon. J, Ernest La- poilltc, Minister of Justice, and Mallk Sir Filwkhau Noon, High llllll MINISTER lll APPEAL T0 lllls nulls Outlines New Scheme To Protectlnustrial Plants. (By J. F. SANDERSON, Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON. Ont. Oct. l4— (CP Cabin-Leslie Hone-Bel- isha, secretary of state for war, tonight broadcast an appeal to men working in Great Bri- tain's a. ament plants “to exceed anticipation in the months that are to come." At the same time the war minister outlined his new scheme to protect key indust- rial plants for low-flying en- emy planes by trained reser- vists of the Territorial Army, who would drop their tools and man light guns and machine-guns if sky raiders broke through the general de- fence. ‘ EDEN MAKES APPEAL " Anthony Eden, former foreign secretary. in an address to a bus- lncss club at Cardiff. appealed to Britons to submerge differences of class, and political party in a supreme national effort to “build up the national defences." He intimated it was essential, if the democracies were to hold their own in a challenging modern world. that the people show the some enfhusiasln, unity, dctcrnliu- ntiou and spirit of self sacrifice as in the totalitarian states. Mr. i-forc-Belisha referred to the growth of the anti-aircraft division of the tcrrltorlals. In Ap- Comnlissioncr for Illfllfl. in Great Britain and northern Ireland. l. A particular tribute to the nur- was an sing profession in Canada -paid with the conferring of honorary law degree upon Miss Jean Gllnn. superintendent of nurses at the Toronto General Hospital and an ott 1' ‘ tig- ure in Cnuatiiml Nul Lord Tlvcedstntlir his wife. 'I‘lle students gave the tradition- al university yell when President H. J. Cody stepped folwvllrd llftl~l' the opening prtlycl" to introduce the candidates. One by one they accepted their hoods lmd signed the Golden Book of the Univer- city. . Cheers echoed through the hull when Lady Tweedslnuir arose after the convocation to thank tho Ull- iversity "for one of Lilo greatest moments of nly life.“ It. x211.» an honor she never had "droanml of receiving and the degree of Doctor of Laws of your University will be one of my proudest boasts." 'I'ln'ough her. La"; 'I'\\'80(isl’lllli1' said, the Uill\'(‘l';’l_\ .ll:l:i holltred the many amateur historians, non- professiounl writers like ital-self. “an humble laborer in the tangled vineyard of history." . Mr. Lapointc pleaded for toler- ance in Cauzlrllnu life and n main- tenance of Academic libcrlyt to ensure untralultlcllcd cziucallotl, "the torchbeercr of civilization and the means by which civilized values are communicated through- out the world." Sir Flrozkhzln spoke in three languages, Urdu, Persian and English. He slanted ills address in the TO-yctlr-okl Urdu iilliglllllft’. __dcd _i_n_ English. of the union, song: with an announcement that all Oct. ll—-(AP)-—lligh officials of the United Stairs crisis fres am to strengthen and Jlliltlffllllt‘. national tit-fence. recs conference toda; in the light of worl LONDON, Oct. 14—(AP)—ltlli|n control of the strl. “"“°'°‘ °" s""'i"ln“‘iii'i‘°.ii'i'ie°ifi°'.‘tiisi'ti° ‘ pnnbh dtitofftthlo-d- 30:16; rlllgtg0 ratigrofnlleplflfillldllfllieclllct eta tllespfllll- of tra punish civil war. continued in Persian mid conclu- §4§~§O'§§O§OOOQ~O§O§OOQ§§ Q-Q Q-fO-O O Q §§§+§§ l was issued by John Murchbzmk, nee of several hours‘ duration h in mind. worked tonight that defences conditions. lo island of rtcd tonight be one of alks between Great. Britain BUCIIAREST Oct. lk-(APl—Klng Carol today accepted the PHIF- l . A . .. . _. . nation of Ruman a war what was slid to be a move to 1K King‘ llid to nrlmament, appointed ' nernl Nichols] Zluperu III - n ed u modrrnfzatlou of the nation's disp eased with the slowness of re- Wsr Ministry from which General Alexander Argesann reslrnfll. "°'"’°"' lihlil “Flil§.l"il'r'l‘dEIZi'iZl'lf§ iiflin, enl. won ’ " the British sir force on a m man. ioh'| slr its‘?! Ill little Germany at would ent inferiorlt to the that negotls Iona for qualitative l basis as In tional naval q- success. tonight said there These same circles mid, owever, tatlon of air tones on the mane ents might have good ehsnoea of Lgypoy, 9m, 14-(0? [lanai-Members of the British Legion who c h lvakiato lloeth posed ibl-. lwdwlinlil?! [lgpmltim sift”- ‘title vdvisedwtoday b; ‘iii; [ovemlnonp e 't that unnm-vlcnwoaldassbsnanimlrorthflrlnm rll. 1030. gulls, searchIiQhYts and detectors were manned by 5.000 men. A war later the strength was 20.000. Today it is 47.250 and “we hope in another i2 months to double the number attain.“ One of the difficulties has been the nowcssity of building up the ii"llli'\l'llQ!lt capacity of tho count- ry. "I appeal." the tnitlistcr contin- ued. “to nil employers and work- mou engllgcd in construction of factories nud on production tn ex- cccd anticipation in the mouths that are to come." Revival Of Old Principle The new scheme to protect in- dtlstry is based on the old prin- ciple of calling upon the pe-opln to dcfcnd thcmsclltes, Mon botwccn the alzes of 38 and 50 will be trrllncd and organized. Each fac- ‘011’ will have its own (lefensiw force to combat low-flying planes, It 11'1" apply to all kinds of irl- ’? GTVItTnETE-lof‘ wit‘; C Federal Works Dept. Announces New Contracts OTTAWA. Oct. 14 -(CP)—De- prlrtmcnl. of Public Works tonight altnoullccd award of the following contracts: Mltl-itiluesi nllfax. alterations and im- provements to post office building. Brookfielti Construction Colupnny, Halifax. $51,300. ' Bass River. N. 5.: Wharf ex- trusion, R. H. Hnll, Halifax, $7.- 919. Caribou Harbor, N. 5.: Dredging. J. P. Porter and Sons, Ltd. Comcuuvillc, N. 3.: Breakwater, t . LONDON, 0st. 15—(Seturday)—(CP Hnva-U-Tlle National un-' Mm‘ m1’ “L391 today counselled its striking members at, St. Psnoras and Euston Sta ions and Broad Street, and Somerstnlvn freight J. P. Porter and Sons, Montreal, $23000. Mlnto. N. B: Interior fitting for public building, the Office Specialty Mf ., C ., Ltd, Ott , $765. 8 0 awa Daylight Burglary At S’side Police announced last niglht that the safe of the Capitol hoatre. Summerslde was burglarized Wed- nesday afternoon. Although the amount of the cash stolen was not discl ed it 6d . monegl was taken between 2.30 p. m. and p, m. it." was said. ‘Ilhe robbery was discovered early Wednesday night when the cashier went to the wall safe in the oiflcc for change. The cash box, cigar box. and cloth bog ‘which had contain. ed the money, were left in the safe, Police said as yet they had no ,clue of the thief wtho must have and "pielgy of brass‘? entterwtiiée people flout-B ' @ ‘b Krill-foothill liituperatitln In Nazi Press (A. P. lly Guardians Special Wire) VIENNA. Oct. ‘crutlluut oiili . sllln lolligilt l tlllfcr- ellccs \ -l1 lllc it. lllllll ltloilc Cllurch in Ausirlll "plobl. i3 are over for sonlt: time to collie." 'l‘llcy said the DdFl-y constricted Theodore Czlrtlllllll inllllzcr, Awn- blfllltili) of Vlollllll, ll.l(l but-u "lllor- ally executed" by tllu tlilL-till ' t night of All. ‘ll t-ollllniss llcl‘ Joseph lluvrckcl out! by .1 using CJllOfl “public clel-qy that ' over es lll politics. B. o HKIIOQSPYV‘ tore li City lll \ .tl!)l.l‘, ' rlllill"i‘ltil\ oi <. rlotcrs who lit‘ ilzcrs [mince H&>€l‘i£d the ll black \\'ii5 “the mis- olled fruit 0t‘ tially l-llllilillliSlled, encouraged cllulllplons of antl- "ClilllOllC accusations and Vlillllivf- atlonf’) "lllnitzcl" wlll not (lllfl! to strike back HOW." nll authorized spokes- man declared. "We do not expect him to louve- Viclllln. but we do expect him to rrmnhl quiet now thllt the score is scitlotl." 'I‘llis SilCkfllllllll ]ll'i‘(lif'it‘(l a "new reformation" lll Austria \\lllCll he said would lake ‘tilOlkfllltlo from the Culllollc CllUl(‘ll. A Nazi spokcstnau sold Oct. l3 “probably would be ll llislOflCfil day” for (‘rcl-ltlztlty. “Oll that tiny.‘ he sri 1,011. stall-lll olive . lll W11 S. an (By ELMl-llt PETERSON Associated Preys Staff Writer) l-IONG KONG. Oct. I4~IAP)—- A second large-scale landing oi Jollnllrsc liTKlih ml llit‘ afllllll Chllla coast. lust uortllsvcst of this British islnutl outpost in the fut‘ east. flilik‘il.l‘t‘t‘l imminent tonight. while much of Kwnntung Province was cugulfcd ill a macistoln 0i destruction mid death. Japan's "model" army of invas- ion stabbed tlt-cper into the Pro- vince. Hundreds of tholrntlds of civilians were in flight. Jllpmlesc air squadrons delivered the hcav- iest aerial punishment ever soon the KViklllillilg Chinese. Naval guns thundered of! the eastern tip of the Province. Air raid casualties at Waichow alone were estimated at 1.000. Thnt. city, 80 miles east of Canton, was reported in flames . The forer- hr-forc Wtll1‘ll<‘\\' an- nnlvntly was intending to strikc on north fiilfl thtm win-L. skirting Clinton's network of waterways for an assault on the city itself or its communications from tho north. It was reported from Swstow. extreme eastern Kwahtung, that i0 Japanese troop transports, es- A stirring sermon in St. Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna, p urcd at i flkht. above. (luring which Theodore Cardinal lnnitzt-r, lt-ii, roused Catholic youth to demonstrate against Nazis, led to a rirtous attack on the Cardinals pllluct- by resentful "li-lhfiifflfi. prelatc, pictured lierc nftl-r voting on Anschluss inst your, was re- ported injured by flying glass. Tile rioiers Ilattrrt-d in the door of his residenci. and scalt-ll walls with ludllcrs. Books, furniture and sacred ptlintings “Tic thrown down to a bonfire below. -1 15. loss Tht- GZ-ya-ar-old ‘vindicate? indignant Over Riot VATICAN CITY, Oct. l-k-(API -A vigorous editorial ‘of denun- viflmm in LO "vzltorc Romano. Vzl. nu 110W. l0- lirtv ruflcrictl ifolnnn L. lolic lu- (lllfllllllfiil Over tilt- clot ill Vlcutllt last Siltul'tl."l_v' ill which 'l"llt*ry.lor(‘ Cardinal lullltzcr was injllr . l.‘O~.<-.>r\'nttorc Rulllzlno u. cried Ghrlluln nlliltoritics llntl nlltlvtl to . . - dc “brutal nrtrrc-"sitilt t- llullcllltioll of its victlll ' l)? hlnluil; Catholics tilzln. lvcs Mr the vlolcncc which occurred. The hrltf. S!l‘0l‘.\.Zl_V-\\'O!'1lt>(l de- nunciation followed n long chron- icle of vvcllis contrasting what > m" rnllofl “lilo truth ' with tllr- lirlol 0f- ticinl Gt‘l‘lllilll version ns fJlVPn 1Y1 a commuuiqtlo. Avvcnirc Ditalia. unofficial Catholic ncyvsptlper. reported in n Berlin dhlvat-ll that. Papal Nun- cio, CDFillT‘ Orsolllzo. wn-z bclicvcd to have pl-tltcstcd to the Fvfrliln Office F0il<‘i‘l'illlli,' the Vienna violence. Tho (iispzllch said it. believed Mgr. Orsctllgo llzui prcsclllcd n written (lculnnd "for energetic illl‘fl‘~l‘l'i'& ‘n rmpct-t the tittllts of iv!‘ crlllllycllszltion to the- Arch- plSllt)})i‘lC."i_ ten totll ht said: “File even-ts of it luollllls have convin- l lbt ‘t '.\‘ \\'iili tllli’ iltllltiil lollrhclzs BllllED IN NEW} a:llilnll llliiilléfrpllllll Delivered $5.00 L $4.00; Canada and C. it. I000 R Y ORDERS PAR TIAL MOBILIZA TION lllvt cllssfililllltltllll CAPITALS CZECH CRISIS HEAR ENVQYS Rivalry Seen As Check To Hungalflws Dc- mands. “' (By Louis A. Illitzhold. As- sociated Press Foreign Stuff) lilTl).\l’i§S'l‘. Uci. ll-- The Hungarian (lovcrnment tonight ordered mobilization of five army classes total- ling llpprtlxinullcl_v 200,000 men llftel" failure to obtain from Czechoslovakia szltis- faction of Hungary's terri- torial claims. ll was understood the Illi)l)ilil.2lil()ll_ lobe decreed f0l‘illllll_\' by the War Min- ister tomorrow, would bring to 420,000 the number of Hungarian troops under arms in the border crisis in- tensified by the breakdown of direct negotiations be- tween the two nations. Announcement. of the mobilis- ation decision was made after a 3 l-2 hour cabinet meeting to- night. An earlier communique had said “additional military mess- ures" would be necessary because of Hungarian-Czechoslovak ten- SlOIl. Czechs Count On Rivalry PRAGUE, Oct. l4 —lAl‘)— Manly Uzechosluvuks tonight looked upon rivnlry among (‘zcchosiovakizfs land and ow- er-huugry neighbors to c eck llungurinn demands. supposed German opposition 1-x to any junction of Polish and lilillgurlnll lrontlers at the cost of Hungarian annexation of the greater part oi’ east- crll tzlvt-iloslovakill. was per- llnps the principal hope of il1ll‘ll-]ll‘l‘ s s r (l (fzcciltlslovak patriots. Czct-tltlslovaklal hoped ‘also for a modicum uf British and Frt-nl-h support in a possible second four-power conference on whui. would be the fate of the 20-year-old republic. liungllry Strengthens Border Rcillfurccttlullt of troops massed in border regions was ordered as Hungary got reports from Elulsstlr- ics rout. L0 Rcichsluohrer Hitler null Prcluiel" Mussolini scvking support of Hungary's territorial ClfliillS hgzllllst Czocltcslovitklil. The cabinet council tonight-J studied luessages from the two men who went to Mlmich and-to (Conllrlllcti on page l0. Col 6i Beer Running Becomes Major Toronto Problem Gullrtiian‘; Special Wire) t. i-i-Lalc-ltigllt l Toronto has tlc- e ' ‘to such . '- pll-pslill lstlllc busi- 7.. lellcondlAmQ By Nipponese On South China Coast Imminent cvrtctl by lllrco (‘lt*.~tl‘ti\t=.'.s zmtl n f'l‘lllSi‘l‘, weer otlrolltc itumrtl Bins- Bl, or llit‘ Pt-nl liavvl" Dcltn tn lnlld nuolilcr fl-fliil‘ of invasion. A nluxlil fl11‘(‘t";ili"‘llil\‘ was rc- t'l have lllllilPfl at n point. purtwl on illt‘ tioltll l0 null-s uozlilurs! of flout: Konu, if this were lol- lmvcd up by a landing in fort-o the Cnllton-Knu-ioon rnilwny would be cnurzlll. ill the jaws of a vlsc closing in from both yvcst nud east, Thc rllilvvay is a supply lino bolll for the Chinese forces and for Hong Kong. It has been the principlt- artonv for Chinese nlilitary supplies rc- ccivcd at flout; Kong from abroad and tho pflucipnl lino of transpor- tation for H0!!! Kong's food sup- plies from Chinese territory. Warplnuos droncd ovcr Canton. Kwnniuuu capital dumping leni- lr-ts tlcnlnndlng surrender of the mctrnlmlls hv Saturday at tho flllrni of “complete and thorough bombing“ ‘film-o started rl mas: exodus of an estimated 400.000 women and citiitil-cu from the sprawling river- ritv, Authorities souuht tho cs- lflbllollmfllt of non-combatant safety ranges. i‘ llllQlli0li‘.t‘d_ fol-cc. dlltilol-ltles any. prclllbitl. n~scru < a large extcrlt. it also lltls dl \‘i’l"(l the runners luto gang-s and polite four a suct-es- Sitlil of vlolvut (‘lashes in rccvut weeks lllflV Irlttl ‘to ntorc serious ‘warfare. liquor stores and bcor \ tlosc at l0 p. ltl., the Business sinrls. He 1r- tl-loplrue nrtlhrs and tic- lir< - For a dozen quart bottles. ho Its-ks $3 to $3 50 ns vnulpnrctl “Th the Ontario Liquor Control Board price oi $12.70 To ditto lilo iilt‘il\l)l‘l‘S hi‘ l-llC rlvnl mom haw- coll-fouled lhcln- selves with bcstltllg‘ up lllC opposi- llfill null \\‘lill slnllvlllllg wiudtuvs. A hnll-tiovrlll ill‘ st-s harm bcvn madc- on charges 0f assault nud causing malicious dnmtlge. Women have been nmonlz those man- handled. Itlspctztor Charles Smtt oi police district no. 2 ftlillOllllfPfl today‘ he had appointed Scrgt. GPOYQQ Crnwford to head a "racket-bust- inlz" squad. The mvmbrrs. it. utns int imatod. i\'fllL‘t‘l bocousvn-bltxs pro- ficient in boxinlg and wrt-stllltg. FIND BODY OF MN IVG MAN (C. l‘. by (iltlilfdllllls . ST. MICHEL Que, Oct. li-Bodv of Ll Itltyre. fol-mm: New Brunt-nick rcsldclll. was l‘(‘(‘0\‘t‘l\‘ti today front Lake Cltiil‘, 20 tllilcs amt oi’ this BCFTllAW‘ Coilulv vlllrlgc. Mac- Iutvrc ilnti Lvcon mixing since Sept. 20 when he hltd left. alone 1w cnnoc on a hunting trip. Czech-Hungarian Dis- pute Aired In Rome Anti Purl : (A. P. llv Guardian's R0) I, (ll-t. l-l-—Pl'Qmll‘l" Mus. li lonigilt received (‘ount ‘ffzaky, lligh-rllllkill, firlfll 0f tllt- Hungarian ‘it - vigil Office who llilfl ll-‘rll srlli. b)‘ his govvrlllllt-llt in mils- cuss till- IIunguriutl-(‘ltchn- slovuk crisis over Hungary‘! minority claims. The Iiuulzzlr- inn was believed to have brought a request for med- iation by Ituly ill the minor- liics dispute. Special \‘l'irC) PARIS IIIZAIIS DISPUTE PARIS, Oct. l4—F0roign Minister Georges Bonnet talk- ed with both Hungarian and Czechoslovak ministers today and ilvard both sides cont-cru- ing the dispute tl\'t'r Hungary"! territorial demands. Count Khuen llcdervary was instructed by his Government to tell Bonnet why Hungary found it necessary to break off’ negotiations with Czecho- slovakia and to iuforln him Hungary soon would send a. formal r uost to London, Paris, Berl and Home for four-power arbitration. The Czechoslovak minister, Stephen Osusky, mlled at the Foreign Office, a. spokesman said. primarily to dilscuse a plan for financial aid from Great. Britain and France to help the new dismembered Czechoslovakia. Hit|er’s Mediation Believed Sufficient In Border Dispute MUNICH. Oct. l4—-(AP)— Possibility that Hungary and (fzet-htlslovnkizt. would settll‘ their territorial llihllllii‘ aided only by filo nu-llllltitnl oi‘ ltcicllsfuohnw Ilitler was seen tonight fatter ruprosclltmifiyvs of thc two nations had pres- i‘lli(‘(l their (‘use to ihl- Got-man l'llil.lll'l‘llfll‘.. At lllc annu- iilnt- Nlnrsllzll crmllnn lllililt-lln (itlhfillifk "PWSPRDPP (‘flIlPll on (‘zl-chtlsllwllk- ill for quick. concrete cvitlr-nro lilo‘. sht- would follow up i} pledge convoy-ml to llitlt-r tn- tiay that she would fhhlllilf‘ loyal nltilu/icl " rill "rlna|l_v,“ On tlu- lllm I‘ slnvak miuorlifv . circles said (lf‘l'lilill‘i_\' nnusitirr- rd herself so close and friend- ly to Iluugnry null so well linkrd up tntlny uitil (‘zca-hnslo- slovzlkin tllzlt llitlv-rk int-dill- nlrrlt» tlon was rrlzal-dml ii‘; lcnt. i0 Clem * YERFELTION,’ vttud 40E AVWCE You /.’ \QNE (afar-Ilka l . (Ft “i “ Prt-“l l-i- '.\l.!‘.lli‘illll\ tfzlllnllilln TORONTO, 0t" and illZlXllllllill it lililt 1' wr- llswsun _.o ...'l Victoria 411 -l Edmonton n» Hi Rcgllln J0 o4 Wlllllltlhq ~10 lit) Tr roll : o til T0 Otiauh 34 T0 ilrlfilllfCll-l 31? 73 Quebec 5ft 70 slllnl. John so 5R Halifax 54 B8 Charlottetown 5G 66 l-‘Ofiifffiii’? Wariiilno l3 ' .\i ~ ‘t l.\'.c south- “ . u l{"li. . lnmll .lt 320 sud lomorl w mo llnu n‘ 1.25. Sun sets lllla nfwmonn qt 517 and rises iolnorrou- morning n: 6.16 Last quarter lu on Oct. l6. 5.24 a m. ' Sununcrsitie tide PlLLlllCUH min- utes lllicr than Clnlrlolictolvu. TIIE (‘AR FERRY SAILINGS Leave Borden 0.45 a. m. l p. na- Tormentlne ll a. m. 3.05 p. m