MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN -1——: ?—— Thkwwld is I vale nl Ioni- nukinl. chulonotown Gunralun Two Cute. gouging fluudinn, Founded IIO1. -CHARLO’l‘TEi‘OWAN. CANADA, FRIDAY, AU ”””’-3"~"'" “‘“. Read b Covers Prince Edward: Island Like the Dew GUST is,‘ 1539 Everybody 8 PAGES Man in: deemed. MAXIM6 OFA. MERE MAN fnllen but can be re- Annuni Bubu-I-lptiua Delivered 35.00 by Mill-P. E. l. 34.00: Cuudn and II. II. 85.00. '”§E[gH CEMENTS RELA TIONS WITH HUNGARY A TTENDAN°5Z*°° RECOR “Jubi1ee’ __!,__ . DEFER lcllllll 0N lllllsllllll ll ljllllslllll Mandates Commis- sion Disagrees Over British ' Prop0sal— Left To Council. GENEVA. Aug. 17 —((P) —-The 1/3a.:ue of Nations Mandates Com- mission today withheld approval of Great Britain's plans to make Palestine an indclpendent. Arab- Jev-ish state. ‘lite Commission's report was milsldnred -9, first. round vlcrtory for the World Zionist Congress. now meeting in Geneva. in its fight for a Jl-l\'i.=ll nationali home in the Holy Land . g Reporting to the of Na- tions Council. the , members Mandates ' mmLsslon if : white paper pikit‘ rc\'crs.al of the usual inter- pretation of the British Mandate Four of the seven said flatly that ttwv could not sanction such n f'ilElll"<~ in prllicv involving limiting .le\l'l=li immigration to the Holy Lard. Th" other three. however. de- clared they considered the change in interprs-t.ntion of the Mandate responsibilities was iustified by ttmrlzvs in the Palestine situwtion [tn-1f E€i‘flil°!‘ of this split. the Camis- slon pa"s?(l to the league Colin- til nl-ectinz next. month the decis- ion to approve or dlsappmve of the . '1 The. l’i‘"".("“il‘l'l4\’i’i and ya Portuguese. Tile four ‘Commissioners who “did not. feel able to state that the p.~‘i~v of the white paper was in conformity with ‘the Mandate" ll't“!‘£‘ nnticmals of Switzerland, Bell- gtum. Norway and the Nether- ands. IONDON. Aug. 17 —(CPl Colonial Secretary Ml:—1lcaim Mac- Donald disclosed tonight he would to before the league of Nations Collncil in Geneva next month to seek approval for the British ?.1i‘.‘ll"" ntan which the perman- ent . .nda.tes Commission today f\"li'~‘"(l in approve. G’l\'<‘l‘llf‘f‘i€‘l’ll’. circles gave the im- I>’€.~<lnn that they were not great- \' distill-bed over the Commission's 'niiuro to recommend the plan, al- thnurh it was admitted this was the first time there had been such it divided opinion on any major question. Other quarters noint/ed out that Ilmroval of the policy requires un- animous consent of the League Council and that. iudging by the Was’ the Mandates Commission giggled. this might be difficult to .i-‘\'." British officials said that if the Nail were rejected either one of tin: courses would be open: . Ilrrntlon of the league Mandate lnder which Palestine is governed .' 2. Alteration of the Hritish plan in make it. conform to the ‘League's L'li’—’l”DZ<‘ta.tinn of the Mandate. FIRES UNDER CONTROL NEW GLASGOW. N 8-, Aug. ll --iCP>—Thrce forest fires in “Balaton districts of Pictou Coun- ‘V \W‘l'l‘ under control tonight. af- t" iWW.V showers came to the aid of rangers and volunteer fire fighters Coming Events -9. ‘lie for Notices in this 3 cents per word. "Borden card party Saturday “ht 1.-141 -.B° may M. Bridgetown, Dance Admission 300. L-90-8-17-31. L "Dance at Webster coma, °m“Y night. A188. 21. Orchestra. L-[U7-B-18-31 "D9-"00 0a"dlisa.n' Hall A 131- Prizes ‘ ' ' ebsmm L119‘-8-16-ll in 0. M. B. A. Hall Wedmsdn. Aux. onohasl ra. L-114-8-18-iii "All _“ : __ in arreus of ruiwiew u by . . . .,"°.,,".;'*.;1§; to: collection. "Livestock Marketi . nu Board °‘,g‘1_’W 1102!. lambs and cnivea all local ml alum week mfillzllzolégt Zlat as ollawu: Monlgéy "- Molill. m.'s ' ply Elr.ii"1 ‘WWW Closes The “Golden Jubilee" Pr-ovim-,is1 1"a1,r swims into ch»; home stretch early this morning with the big- Zest. attendance on moorcl for the first three full days. Glorious Aug- ust weather conltinlued to smile on the Province and the eoclitbition. Although this is the final day scheduled for this years exhibition ilbe program is as full as any previous day. Judging is ail com- plete and the final results are to be seen in main building and cat- tle barns. 'I‘hi.s afternoon's horse Paces (prontises to be perhaps the - tstht of the whole show with e free for all trot. leading feature. The full vaudeville with mammoth night con- day. evening trophies and prizes to win':ii.ng horses owners. driven: and grooms will take place in Jront. of the grandst/land. if nothing occurs to interrupt the program Yesterday was the countrvmerfs -ds.y, as the previous one had been citizens day. Yesterday attendance seemed to be predominated by peo- ple from country districts. Wednes- day was the half holiday in Char- lottetown and the city population flocked to the fair in thousands. But regardless of where the crowds came from they poured in as large, or possibly larger num- bers. into the fair grounds than on the previous day. .‘Yesierds.y saw completion of the .‘-“' P57?" confined - to the horse ring wherv: entries were particlllarly heavy this year. In the Purcheron class, results of which were not avallxgble Wednes- day night, Major Milligan won the elramf dhampionship with Chester Hayes of Afebrton owner of reserve champion. Mr. Hayes was owner of both chrampfcm and reserve cham- pion female in the Purcherons. in the draft, horse class for the best team L- M. Poole & Co, Sunken “Sub” Nears End Of Strange Voyage POFUISMOUTH, N. H. Aug. 17 ——tAP) ——- The United States Sub- marine squalus neared the end to- night or! probably the $lAI‘&II t voyage in submarine history bier being twice lifted and towed from the 240-foot, depth to which she sank on May The second successful "blowing and towing" operation, which started at 1:30 A. M. A. D. T. and extended far beyond dark. left the flooded subtmurine within approximately 100 feet of the sur- face. not far from sheltering land. and gave promise that the bodies of the 26 men who died aboard her 87 days ago might be released from the sen within a.not/her two weeks. By that time, ncvlai officials said they hoped to complete the less dangerous but more detailed job of bringing the Squalus to the sur- fncc—p9rhnrx< pumping dry some of the flooded compartments l-—and {facing the craft in the Ports- mouth Nlrvy Yard Dry Dock fo reconditioning as a ship Not until 3:05 P. M did the three topmost. mntnons above the comlnleieiy flooded s-tern break the surface. sending the spray boiling into the air and rrrilingr the surface for ll. radius of 50 yards. British Press IDNDON. Aug. 18 -—-(Priday)—- (0P)—'I'ho Daily Herald (Labor) today called on the government to declare again "in terms beyond dispute or distortion, its determin- ation up stand by Poland. The newspaper said it. was time once more to uuwer Nazi propa- gmdn in view of the ountin. criaia. - Tin Daily Telegnph (Con- servative) acid "the British people have no illusions II to the true is- sue" in the Dumb dimuta. . "Since we have pinced our main hope of IVOMIIII catu _‘ in the deterrent. influence of the peace front policy." the Dlily Ber- Iid sold, "it. in our duty to nsume ourselves that we have left un- done no single thing which could help more clear to the comm people and the government vmnt. the consequence of Nazi ngreuion against Police! will be." in. Dub! ihiumpb (conserva- inluid: - _ ‘fliflmlflhflfiltmfitanltm Record Thursdz-1-y?Jrowds Throng Grounds — Fine Program Schedul_e_d_Today. ’ Show Tonight Gharlottetotwn lock ffrstplaoewith I"ultorn Sanderson of North River in second position. The Flower Show Exhibits in the Main Building this yellr were particularly inter- _t L’. The flower dl_5]‘ffiy to the rl it of the main entrance was f-'0l”Re01ls to say the least. and oer- tainiy added much to the beauty of the building. hi the Lie-u_t.. Governor George D. DeBlo-is special prizes. open to both amateurs and professionals Mrs Gordon MacMilia.n of Corn- wall carried‘ off the honors with the grand chnmrplonship. Mrs. Lloyd Bailum of Pownal was sec- ond with the reserve champion. Mrs. MaeMillan won first for the best display lfrom Gliariottetmvll or within a radius of ten miles. For the best from Queens County which excluded winners in the first class mentioned Mrs, Lloyd Ballum oi’ Pownal won. Mrs Leo Hllb‘e_v. Montague was first prize winner from King's County while Mrs. Frank Deacon. Freetovvvn carried off the honors for Prince Culmty. Ladies Fancy Work: Upstairs. too. there ‘yrs so many interesting displays it was almost. impossible to get even 3 small idea of the magnitude of the exhibit. Fm" example in the ladies work department.-wtllifcll - had up- wards of 700 entries. was shown from not only this Pro. vince but many erlrles appcared from the other two Maritime Pro- vinces. as well‘. as work from On- tario. Manitoba and even as far west as Ox Bow Saskatchewan. . 88-YEAIL OLD LADY WINS Perhaps the most interesting of the exhibits was the work of Mrs. l-lorry Williams, 88-year-old resi- dent of Elletrslie, this province. Mrs Williams showed two out- ste-ndlnz examples of work. especi- ally when one considered they were made by a. woman 88 years of age. she won 3. special first prize for an Italian helmstitched nmncr, work- ed in colors. and second prize for rs table cloth, also Italian hem- stitched. Other elderly ladies exhibitin included 82-year-old Mrs. A. J. Mclxain-2 of North River who won first prize for a bedspread and 83- year-old M.rs Harry Jones of rfazlefibrook who took second place with a quilt. one could go on and on picking out items VVOtI‘l‘l’ly of special mention in this interesting display but space does not. permit, The ex- > hiblt well repaid a visit. however. The Photography Booth Downstairs again the photo- graphy booth. with B greatly en- larrzed display nver former years occupied the whole Paton Pavilion. In previous years 21 small! section along with the art exhibit on the second floor was sufficient, to house the display. Not so this year. In- terest hurls been stfmuia,t.cd in photography locally 8"l’.l the show- ing was much superior to former years some really excellent prints were to be seen. Interesting sub- ject matter and artistic n.r:rlrgc- ment predominated )7 V. Gm‘-rip ton won the prize for the best orint of the show with a summer landscape fratllrillw. Gcverrment Pond, Charlottetown. Other prom- inent winners at the Slow includ- ed. Roland Tavclr. W. W. Tid- View Of Mounting Tension (continued on page '1. Col 5) Takes Grave has been raised to the highest point and frontier clasncs have been serious It would seem that at». any moment A fatal spark, en- ough to set Europe in a. blaze, could be kindled. It has smeared for some time that it is the delib- eraie intention of Germany to kindle that spark “Acqulescencc in Danzig's incor- pom?44m, in the German Reich by force would imply abdication of every principle on which intemat- ional stwbility and confidence U0 founded. “It is not rnerely Dfinllil’. 1'5 is human destiny that is at stake. and ii) is comforting to know that on this occasion the British people have no illusions an to the true issue. "Whatever German propaganda 125 TOPPLE A T FAIR FRENCH PLANES STAGE ‘RAIDS’ llvlll _l§lllllll Over 200 Aircraft Take Part In Man- oeuvres — Results “Very Interesting.” PARIS. AUG. l7—(CiP—HAVAB) --More than 200 French ‘ g blames returned to France tonight. after sta-gins "ralds‘ over Great Britain's industrial centres which tested effectiveness of British air raid defences and gave French fliers an opoprtunity to pun at for- C .. .. ‘Kn tmse . French Air Ministry officials pro- nounced the manoeuvres a success and said they served to advance Ajngio-French cooperation in the a r. Thousands of Britons saw the French bombers fly over Liverpool. Bristol. Birmingham, Manchester, Oxford and London. It was the first flight of French war planes over Engllmd. although Bl'lt.1's«h planes have already staged severli flights over France. isearch For Toronto ifidnap suspect Is Extended To.West REGINA, Aug. l7—Two more Baslmtlchewan centres, Moose Jew and Carmli.chael_ were added to- night to the increasing list; of Western Canadian cities and towns were Arthur Armstrong. 26-year- old suspected abductor of young Connor of Toronto, ls reported to have been seen in the past few weeks Mrs. A. Chester 0! Regina told police today she saw the suspect and ms l2-year-old captive about three weeks ago in Belle Plain and in Moose Jaw. Another Re- xrlna. resident, Mrs. E. French. said she saw the pair at Carmichael axoulid July 22. Both women salt‘. they recognized the two from newspaper pictures. Several other Regina residents told police yesterday they either had fed or sheltered the mun and boy_ One motorist said he chased them from the running board of lfke the appearance of the man who demanded shoes for the boy. Mayors Grapple Morning and afternoon flights were carried out. British anii- air- craft guns ‘shellecl" the French for-I motions as they came over and British and French observers des- cribed thc results after study. as‘ “very interesting". l The “ralds" began shortly after 1, a. m. today (ii p. m. Wednesday, AD T) when squadrons of heavy bomb- ers took off in formation and head- ed toward the English coast. At dawn they reached Liverpool after flying over their other objec- tivcs and "bombed" the lnclustnel cit . 313.‘ had return to the Fre . flying all the time at altitudes of between 13.000 and 20.000 feet. In the forcnoon several squadrons of medium and light bombers swell over the channel. preceded by scouting formations. headed for Brstol. Birmingham, Manchester, Oxford and Liverpool. BOMBERS INTERCEPTED At noon 100 bombers were sight- ed off the southern British one-it flying low in formations of three. Patrols of Royal Air Force fighters sped up to meet. them. Pursued by the Brltisll machines. the French planes succeeded in bomlbms ‘cer- tain points" on the coast before heading westward. After reaching their objectives the first bcmbers flew over London mid-afternoon coming high out of the west to avoid the balloon bar- rage wi-t.h suspended steel cables de- signed to protect the City of Lon- don from low-flying enemy r8-1d€l‘5-‘ Seventeen of them were sigh in’ perfect fomuttlon over the heart of the city. Here they were joined by 60 French pursuit planes which D10-1 tlected their withdrawal operation to . France. By 4.30 p. m. the rnidersl had reached their home bases. Roosefllt Fishes Off Newfoundland Aboard U. S. S. LANG. AUG. 1'!- (AP)—Presidcnlt Roosevelt, steam- ing through fog-ridden waters aboard the naval cruiser Tuscaloosa. arrived at Bay of Islands. New- foundland. lste today. completing a 225-mile run from Sydney. N. S. The President planned to fish .until dark and most of t0m0'IT0W. weather mrrnitating. His aides expressed hope that 8 mail plane carflllfla‘ 0310381 D3 T5 would be able to make the op from Suuuntlum, M.a.:s.. before he imves for home. The plane's flight Vila? onn-celled again today because CR- Torrential Rains Drench Winnipeg . AUG. 17- (GP) — Me-teorcfrcical ofticiulst.odavthurn- bed record pages back to July. i914. before they found precipitation fig- ures to better those established by torrential rains whi drenched Wlnni yeste a rd y. A tntta of 3.2! inches durli-ng thn dav - - hes July 24. 23 years M0 when 5.26 in- ches of rain poured down during a. six-hour storm. Yesterdays deluge came in two motions. one early in of min fell yiest since 30. aenxuthey ins their rich was With Problem Of Unemployment MONTREAL. AUG. l'l——tCP)— George S. Mooney. executive direct- or of the Canadian F‘€(ia1‘a-iion of Mayors and Municpalitics, announ- ced today in a letter that the Fed- eration is now communicating with t, several national organizations seek- , cooperation in the setting- ulp of a. conference to consider wilys and means to increase urban em- ployment. throughout Canada. Mooney’-§ letter said that the t “organizations we are inviting to cooperate with us are the Cansldlan Mranufactumrs Association. The Canadian Chamber of Commerce, The Caxmdlan Oorlstruot-ion Associ- ation, and Repre<enrt.ntive Labor Org . lza i . ~ . an to“ Toronto lwhole fishing industry is dependent “Mayors of Mcntrccll. and Ottawa. who constitute the 1 Executive Committee of the F\:dera- l tion recently presented a proposal to the Dominion Government ihut such a National Conference be held. Hon. J. L. Ilsey. Minister of Nntion- l cl Revenue. said such a conference would meet. with the approval and* support of the Dominion Gn_vern- i ment and sllYF€€v‘.Cd it be inlta/cd . and convened by the Federation l The letter from Mooney said that the Federation. before determining: E definite date for the props:-d con- _ fcrenoe. “is anxious to Found Out! and la.-certain the views of your or-‘ ganizntion." Polls? 6.17. On Subversive Nazi Activities WARSAW. Aug 17 ——(_AP) Of-ficialis indicatvd tdnlfilllt 1‘ sweeping drive would be continued against, espionage and subversive activity atttribll-ted to the Gcrmnn minority in Poland. Rudolf Weisnor. one of the lead- ers of this minority detained last night by Polish police. vvrls rt . ed iodav miter several hours questioning. but with Hi" iifl(""l’- standing he would be "at the dis- vmsal of t.l.~.-_= Polish Attorney Gen- erai's Office.“ The pcrice drive resllltcd in M- rest of more than '10 Germans of Polish citizlenshilp and several Ger- man citizens as well. No charge was placed against Wlesne: who is an 0_lilFq‘K)k‘.‘.'i ex- ponent of Nazi dochrines and head of the "Young German's Party" in Poland. so far. several offices of the Young Germans’ Party and iii" German Workers‘ Party in Poland have been closed. A communique said there was evidence of "an espionage and sub- versive orglaninadrion having its real hecdmmrtcrs in the German part. of Silesia." Foreign observers there tlho prsent drive as rletoliution fifminst. all.»-ed arrests and mistreatment the day and the other during the the Bfternflon. M ‘Pole! in German Silesia. Very Finest Quality "SALAIIA" mny have done to unite tha Ger- man people. Clcrman po'ic_v as it is inspired and directed today has consolidated the Brit.lsh_ nation to ,1-=45 4«deneovh1ch.bumvet ‘ manned.’ ,. his automobile because he did no‘. . ldurlngz recent weeks. NEW lllllllll"s STRESSED Ni IN Fl_SliER|ES N. S. Council Also Ad- vises Temnorary Aid To Meet Subsi- dized Competition. AUG. 17- (GP) — N9t;oL1aLion of favorable trade ugl'cemcllLs with other countries IX-‘S£€35lI1l,' dried fish markets "would be of benefit. to the when; Atlantic Fi5hcry.V" The Nova Scoila, Economic C0lll1Cli reported today. (lire Council l5_B group of b.u51- £1955 3110 Droiesslonlll men which acts in _an advisory capacity to the Pr'ov_lnc-lul Government.) , With the opening of new markets .sh0uid be_c0uDled temporary assis. tance sufficient to remove the ad- V811l§IS€.u enl0yf-‘d at present by the subslciizeci fish exports of competit- °1' COUI1-U165. the Council found. "Tl1c__ payrnell-l of la subsidy on dried fish in any form should be regarded as a temporary ex client rather than as a long-run po c for the industry. It cannot be cons der- ‘ed a sound economic policy for 3.11 .tlle \’H.I'lOLlS competing countries to l sub ldize production but as long as some do those who do not are plac- ed in u dlsndvalltageous position. Of more importance, over 9. long ‘period .is the negotiation of reel ro- .cal trade a ments with coun lee possessing rge actual or potential Hint to reach the Fatherland. official greetings to Hitler in iendcr’s enlistment as a Great Momenlous Talks t The fact. however. that Osaky saw the German Foreign Minister. JOC£\-ill’\ Von Rlbb€n*Li'OT) at Fusl-‘ll Castle yesterday and today. and th_a.t he is the house guest of the Minister of the Interior. Wilhelm Flick, at Leopoldskron Castle. near Saluburu. indicated that prdblems of grca‘. gravity were being dis- cussed. . lnnrkcts for Canadian dried fish. such as Cuba. the Dominion Re ub- tllc. Brazil and Italy. It is to be op- ted. when the present Canada.-West Indies Trcdc Agr ment is us .during the com in: months. that "Canada will grant no more ‘frozen preferences’ but will leave herscf me 1,0 make muturllly beneficial ar- rangements with such countries. The findings were contained in a grcpon. for submission to the salt; Fish Board which was approved un- animously. The report repeated the position reached by the council previously. that prosperity to the to a. large extent on relieving the present depressed state of the dried fish branch. Importance of restricting the bonus paid to dried fish. for which there is a relatively large market... also is stressed. "Little would be gained by ex- tending financial assistance to pick- led prutluctlon for markets which are quickly saturated and here such a. bonus would easily do the fisher- men more harm than good." Heavy Rains Cause Further Damage EDMUNSION, N. 13. AUG. 17- tCtP)~—Addin¢z to an estimated toll of $125,000 in Maduwaslm county heavy rain )'f'S‘(‘l‘fl£1y and txxlav caused furthcri (l."Illl.’1l.!('. cstimzttod at $25,000. Wl\.<llf‘3lt‘1 occurred on the Canad- inn National Railways and 'IVe=m:is- Coillzlifl, Rnllwny lines two miles from li1‘l".". Passengers. mail and ex- press of the Edmunsrtombound train from Riv ore Du Loun, Que. had to ‘be tmnspmrtcd around the wash- cl1t=. i Cillars were flooded. roads were {damaged further and culverts were destroyed. Sent TB Hospital By Realistic Dream ANTIGONISH. N. 5.. Aug. 1'1 ..((‘.P)- A‘l hcrcltm of n rcnlistic drmim. John J. Micnomld. 30. of 1'!-'lilI=y's.Brn'\k. ns-ar herr. will word the next few days in hos- pital. McDonald dreamed the house was falling down early today and turned out of his bedroom window. Other ncrupante of the ‘house who heard the crash invc=t|l7.fiterl and found him hlc-«ding profusely from :1 (lf‘Pp cut in his arm , This prlwtically was admitted by the D:er.st Aus Deutsohlancl. which is considered as speaking for the Govemmenvt. It. said today:—— f "Agreement between ,nnd Huligary has been rendered ‘ secure in every direction. This has DANZIG HOPEFUL DANZIG, Aug 17 --(A.I’)— tau’)-—Lhe Polish commission- er General, Marian Chodackl, returned today from n hurried trip to Warsaw where it was presumed he received new in- itrtructions on negotiations with Arthur Gr:-iser, Inc Dlinzig «icnnte president i l I ‘said uhey had no information up to [ma P. M, «.25 P. M. ADT.) iih (‘.0YI'lI’I1lSSIOn('l"S l’Etl.lI"'l"|. in- he found to the question, “Shall Danzig return in Germany?“ been made evident anew by the latest visit. of Minister Csuky to salzlburg. “Hungary and Germany see completely eye to eye us regards their t.OliC0’DtiOll of cooperating politically." The utmost secrecy prevailed concerning the nature on any agreement reached. Informed political circles felt certain the main points under dis- cusslon wcrc:—— l. Hungary's rcatllncss to per- mit. the German army. in the event of an urn“'i conflict. to oc- cupy the Carpatho-Ukraine. This would give Germany :1 great strz\t.I‘;ic a(.l\‘{Ihiil‘2€ in tvlo direc Lions«Polan«.l and Rumanla 2. The pl'ospcc‘s of relnodelliziil Hungary along Fascist-Nazi lines. The Gcnnan press cnrupnign. which has been growing in inten- sity daily. is seen by observers as followlmz closely the pattern of similar onmilfllirns before the Aus- trian Anschluss and the breaking iup of the Czecho-Slovak republic. i\Tishap Mars BEILFAST, NORIHHEEIRN IRE- LANLD, Aug. L’f—-(0P)—'1‘he runn- , of Great. Britain‘: :1-«west airomt. carrier, the 1!.- timbers and iron bolts from her broken . one of seven aircraft. carriers ordered by its mannamlent vmglnam. Y lust l‘£°.';‘ul"“%v3‘...l .-...*‘°""’......;. l , . wry r , Lady Wood christening wine Mid named into Belfast. tough. I-lllrnd..'eds of doc smooch of spllltterinc lumber, leav- ed to safety as the 768-foot ship workmen y with a cnnlle F‘m'mlda.ble. the Admiralty down the 511 the platform. to broke the bottle of the vessel as the For-‘mid laborers under the keel. warned by the fun her own path above than- Aircraft Carrier At Belfast Launching Of Fragxnmts of the cradle. 11100153 of wood used to support the ships hull, and iron nuts, bolts Ind pieces of steel were flung into the crowds around the sLll,rvl'n.V. Flying fsngllienls klllvd MY’-‘- Innl‘-cl Kirk, Wife of n shll¥7Y‘“'d Gemny Guards Two Rumanian were killed and one was wounded :rv Hungarian troops. an omcign ootings he Rumanian Village of here this ufternotm employee. , , '1‘-he rweligions dedlcntltrn after ilhe wnrslili) l“’“°l watt.-r. , The vessel pro-bahly will be dry- ‘docked for lm,-poction l?(‘|l0I‘(‘ L c lm.-ig of competing her is resumed. Officials began It fl1‘lf|.ll"d inspec- tion of the shipyard for an ex- was lli'ld led the ' . nlnnatlon of the premature launch- in . I gflollovwing the hurried naming lcerefnony, Sir Kinvsiey declared in a speech t.‘:at. Great. Britain would “never yield to the forces of aggression . " “We can go iorwa:d in complete confidence in our own strerlcth." ha wk .¢l:g7eementl Of Co-operation In Even_f_Of War Semi-official Statement F ollows Hungarian Minister’s Visit To Chancellor Hitler. (By Louis P. Lochner, Associated Press Staff Writer) BERLIN, Aug. l7—Fuehrer Hitler Stefan Csaky, Hungarian Foreign Minister, at his Ober- suizburg mountain retreat today and semi-official sources hinted that an agreement was being reached f:aI'y’s cooperation in case of war. Meanwhile, a lull in overt developments in the Ger- man-Poirsh dispute over Danzig was used by press to frontpagc reports of alleged acts of terrorism against Germans in Poland and of attempts by refugees received Counil for Hun- the Nazi _ Count Csnky. accompanied by Doem Sztojny, Hungar- ian Minister to Berlin, spent several hours with the Ger- man Chancellor. Ostenslbly Csaky’s visit was to convey connection with the observ- ance yesierday of the 25th anniversary of the German * War soldier. Milli llllllllllll I8 REPORTED Killed By Hungarian Troops Near Salonta. BUCHARET. Aug. 17 —(AP)-- frontier guards took place near Snlonto tlnlfumled quaners at Budapest All-h0“iZh floihifltl 00"” be 35- It was the second Rlllrlanian certuinca of discussions that I-Iunlzarian Frontier clssli this may have occurred between im0Y1l»h- Chodacki and Greiser, the Poi- t M the beginning of August. Zliungarilm and Rumzlrlian Pmmier dicating the talks would be oglasgqef n‘:)Vr‘J1eT§1h°l)n"f;l-‘£9: continued, gave rise to some pom. Hlmgarmn g.m“.aS W(,..,__ r9_ feeling of optimism mfied wo,unded_ In the Free City there were ' ‘xi-feflslons of confidence that l, A peaceful solution might yet .14 lF YOU'RE IN (i(NER Look out FOR ill: Bass 'I‘ORON'I‘O. Alli‘ l7-—l(‘I‘l - Mlm‘mum 5;.-i n\n\‘l.lll‘,1lll tem-pori1- tUI'$ 3 D .lw.\.on 44 6 1 Vah-rouvcr ~53 71 F/.l monton 04 70 R;-gum 5 l 88 W1 n n ipeg 57 79 Toronto 53 73 Ottawa 55 79 Montreal 62 73 Quebec 61 76 Saint. John 57 7 1 lirliifax M "7 Ollarlottettown —- 78 ‘Maritime But: Mndcrnte south- amt. to south winds: '."“\lv cloud! with some fog and probably scat- tered showers. High title this afternoon at i2.43 and tonight at. l‘Z 5'3. sun sets this owning nt 7 M !ill’l rises tomorrow morning at 5 .05. First qllnitec mom Alli’, 21. 521 P . min- t (“'11 . ‘sunlmexslao nan r~‘r_v utos infer than CllilTi. -ms cur. rlaluuz smnmos Leaves agree; 7 A. M.. 9.45 A. M. IP. M.. 4. 0 P. M. Leaves Tormentine 8.15 A. M. ii A. M.. 3.06 P. M.. 6.20 P. M. SUNDAY SAILINGS Leaves Borden 9 A. M.. '1 P. M. Leaves Tormentine 10.15 A. M. £10 P. M. r t t i