'oer;r.naurrrrjw-rr:fms=rs=r-rr Msxlsis _ '0I'A_ MERE MAN Iarnlll Guardian. Ieaadsd rssr ‘Charlottetown Guardian Two Coats Slashing _ Opposition Insmcerzty Made PremierBennet-t-Kddresses Mont- real Audience. Charges _OppQn. ents With Insult To Voters’ On Intelligence. ' (G-lladian MONTREAL, 00L l. Bennett here tonight, that Liberal Leader Mackenzie King had stated lhat If elected he would repeal Section as of the Criminal Code. “I say, now what l have told questioners elsewhere, we will not, will put the entire forces of the government and state behind the if but maintenance of law and order. ‘Tom b! distrust. unrest. lillillolon and doubt, the Canadian people htained law and order in the faoe of the greatest provocation nilered by men who go about preaching communism. - and llfelililbe to belittle the institu- tlensofyourcosntryJknowweareonthehighwaytor-uin. Wemugt get beyond that. it sounds gcodbut it leads to disaster." - have "Whenlhearappealstopassion i Press, By Guardian's Special Wire) ' Attack was caps-sued by Prime Minister repeal Section CHAMBERLAIN n P P n s ES slllluzlllnl (A. P, By Guardian's Special Wire) LlONDON, Oot- l--Nevi1le Cham- berlain, Chancellor of the Ex- chequer, in opposing stpes toward immediate stabilisation of cur- rencies, -said today he saw a ray of hope in world economic condi- tions. “The shrinkage of international trade, which has been such an un- happy feetln-e of the lest few years, cannot be attributed to any one cause," he said. “Many things have been at work, monetary, economic, 3 H‘ dam,“ ‘M w b‘ m, he considered the manner in shim m; his opponents dismissed the exist- pelitical. financial and even psy- fiholflflllal.‘ “Nevertheless, it does seem to lne the lessons of these difficult times have not been lost upon us. ln spite oi apparent strong differ- ences of opinion, the world today is nearer agreement than it has been at any time since the Great War as to the direction in which wc all ought to set our faces." Addressing the International Parliamentary Commercial Con- ference, Chamberlain said: "In the present tense conditions of affairs in Europe, even the most tentative approach to stabilisation is quite unthinkable." A message from King George to the conferoncc, in which 31 nations are i-presented, said: "At the present time, when there are signs of recovery from econ- omic crisis, this meeting is.of special importance. It emphasises the fact that prosperity could not be found in isolation, but by oo- operation, and that the advantage to each country could only be found in the well-being of all." ANNOUNCEMENTS COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS. ETC "Talkies -- Bradalbsne, Thurs- (il-Y- L-IOM-IO-fl-ki. "Tslkiw-Cauoe Cove Friday. Irlmo-IO-fl-Qi. “Talkies -— Mt. Stewart Satur- “Y- L-IMU-IO-R-Ri. “Come to Chicken Sup, in St. nun I-Iall October 9th. , L-l03t-l0-l-tl. "Coma is the Dance‘ C. M. B. A. Ball. Vernon River. October 2nd in lid C. W.'L. Admission cents. L-I -l.0-1-2i. "Seven Mile Bey, Wednesday. Oct. 2, entertainment and dame, l o'clock. L-l061-l0-l-2i "Borden Line Club loading bogs. limbs. calves, Albany, Wednesday. "Till of War Iihnuir itinlr, Th a’ October Ird. “All teams Wilts m» Plane attend. . . ls-Ifl-IO-i-ll. due-amino ‘ "stuns; . ~ ‘U100 mflllrverpg WWW. Octobn 0th. Dance alter. - saxoss-ro-s-s-n Greadvisw ~01" "o" .. "lfimiltinnidnlfjim Ea‘ 'I been. ha... Mr. " “ expressed satisfaction that when ‘ “ Canadian bonds matured or become callable the people would be glad to refund them at lower interest rates. In any event there had never been and never would be any hint of repudia- tion. Liberal Leader Mackenzie King's references in Vancouver to'his party's plan for mining develop- ment. Ml‘. Bennett said. indicated Mr. King's lack cf knowledge oi what bed transpired in recent mwtha The rovernrnent had ap- Pfilllrleied 81.000000 and sent out In "In? o! young men throughout Canada prospecting Canadian min- eral resouroes and mapping out possibilities for development. . OPENS QUEBEC CAMPAIGN 090111118 his Quebec cam here tonight. Prime Minister Hen- nett bespoke the support of Mon. treal voters for the government which he decihrcd had “given flu; country security and gfibflfly through the. greatest depression or all the ages." . once of a depression to make polit- ical‘ argument was “nothing less than an insult to the people of this country." Acwllns opposition speakers of decrvlns their own colmtry in the com-so of campaign speeches, Mr. Bennett said he was sorry politics led Canadians to "belittle their own Wllfltrymen whose courage and vision have enabled Canada to maintain her place in the worm dull!!! the most critical years of her existence." Platform arguments had been advanced by his Oppfln- ents on trade, "based upon lmtrug statements,“ he said. when fllmllalln posters urged voters to support Liberals and u. store the markets lost by Bennett and Stevens. the Prime Minister said. they must be referring to the market lost in Canada by the Uni- ted States. - ' Under a Liberal government Csn-' ads had lost the United States market. The government of that day had feared to impose retalia- tory tariffs "lest we provoke them." But the Conservative Government had lost no time in raising tariffs against United States goods, ‘and we have no apology to make for it." Liberal "Way" The Liberal government had se- cured on agreement with Hence that Canadian wheat would always enjoy the minimum tariff. "But Prancel ncressed the minimum tar- ii! five times In one year and it reached 81.60 a bushel. That's the Liberal way. "We did it differently with fiance," Mr. Bennett said. "we made an agreement and we told France that if they made it any more difficult for Canada to get wheat into France we would make it equally difllcult for them to get their wins into Canada. They raid that was fair enough. But Liberals say we should not bargain." Empire trade ants negotia- ted in i032 had brought increased prosperity and sssured_markets in it Pill’! the Capital. The Pe New French Ba ttlesh ip Ready For Sea (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) BREST, France, Oct. l. - The Dunkerque, first of four new battle- ships to reinforce Renee's fleet, takes to the sea tomorrow. The Dunkerque“ more powerful than any ship in the nsvlee of Ger- mlfly Ind 1W)’. will be the first capital ship to be completed in F R AN B E [IIIIIEIISIIAR IAANIIEIIIIRES Aerial W a r Games Will Center Around Paris. _ France since the Great War. Ai- TEZIlYlflIIOB-Stitlll tthgnévortlgb llsrgest - su m ne UWIIIIN. 1935. destroyers, Prince will halls baseball: By The Haves News Agency (By Guardian's Special Wire) PARIS, Oct. b-Eirtracrdinary di- ~ plomatlc exchanges over the Italo- Eihiflliian CIISIS IICVSTOpQd hem w. dly l8 tlld French Al!" Ministry an- nounced that war games would be held above Lorraine. Champagne and the Seine tomorrow and 'l‘hurs- ay. Diplomats of fiance, Great Brit- ain and Italy were engaged in the talh. France and Britain were authoritatively reported to be dis- cussing mutual aid in case of Eur- 099m aggression. The extent of reciprocal assistance involved was not revealed by the officials engag- ed in the conversations. 171° "lltdlllcd air manoeuvres were explained as having “the single aim of studying liaison between liihtdefence planes and the gen- mwartime security service station the moat powerful battleships afloat. Tile 33.500-ton warship was built in a drydock instead of on stocks and Navy Minister Fsncois Hietrl will push a- button to open the dry- dockh sates to the sea. 1m trials are scheduled for January, IIRIIIINING AT GEIIIIBETIIIIN LAST EVENING Glenn Jenkins Drown- ed, While .Mooring Patrol Boat In Har- Manoeuvres 0n Wide Scale The games will bring into action the elaborate system of- air attack defences extending from Paris east- b9“!- wsrdmto the german border. "At- ' _ tack g" om rs will take of! from Meta and Nancy toward Pautoise Fin“ ‘MUN’ .4‘ "ff" n“ and Beauvais. to the west and , 5°“ . . , 1“= northwest of Paris. Lookout sta- ' w“ m‘ I ' - tions below will endeavor to spot '1'“ I" u" m" m" 91ml 5°“ the bombers m their flight and to " i" w" "W" "t W" "It ti" give the alarm to air bases so that ‘km “w” i“ u" lgtlékpirrsuit planes can rise to the hqm In m m. and try to prevent a raid on I In rcsnlar - ties he had sailed to Queen's whQsT-f Conferences took place here today '10 let off Peter Goteli. member of among Premier Laval, British Am- hi1 crew. and proceeded to moor bassador Sir George Clark and Ital- his boat just off from where Char- iaréiu Ambassador Vittorio Cerruti. lottetownu new ferry is rising in 0W1!!! these _meetin s Laval the Isl ards of a ames celled the Cabinet into "s... m: p, c “m” J niday afternoon. It was. understood that the Brit- for League Affairs, Anthony Eden, would stop in Paris tomorrow en route from London to Geneva. Meanwhile the ‘French Ambassador to Great Britain, Char- les Corbin. called at the Foreign Of- fice in London under instructions from his government ‘for an impor- tant conference. the aternanchor when III some uni- accountable manner he fell from the boat. He could not swim. Th! b“! we: found 10 feet from the boat. 100 yards from the shore, He is survived by a wife and four children. ' Coroner Dr. A. A. Allen of (hrdi- hn decided that an inquest was unnecessary. mun SIIURTAGE lcllll INBEiIIIII (A. l’. by GEEK-Lilli: Special Wire) BERLIN, Oct. 1-'l‘he shortage Hold Conferences Franco-British exchanges of views on reciprocal aid in case of Europ- canhostilities were understood to be the subject of a talk between Laval and the British Ambassldor. 0f equal importance in the situa- tion was the meeting between the French Premier and Ambassador Csrruti. Officials declined to soy what was discussed, however. , of butter, milk, lard and other 1 H u f f 1 c a n e basic foodstuffs became acute in Germany today as authorities moved to replenish dwindling supplies and enforce regulations against food hoarding. Long lines of shoppers formed et dairies and butchers‘ shops dc- msnding milk, lard and other food. Police were stationed at the stores to see rationing reg lations were enforced. During the last few davs dairzes have been rationing food. selling only a quarter of s pound of butter for each family. Count Wolf Von l-ieildorf, Ber- lin's police commissioner. visited the whoicsale butchers and slaughter-homes to inspect sup- plies, and the Government ar- ranged to import 5.000 hogs week- ly from the Netherlands-A large order for lard also .was placed with Dutch dealers. The last farm census showed 22,500,000 hogs in Germany com- pared with 20,000,000 in June and 25,000,000 a year ago. In an effort to appease the in- creasing fears of a serious short- age, the Government announced tonight arrangements had been made to buy food supplies abroad and that sufficient edible fat was on hand to make a suficicnt quen- Heads Towards G ra n d‘ Ba n k s HALIFAX, Oct. L-Whirling ac- cross the transatlantic shipping lanes without finding any victrns, the death-dealing tropical hurri- cane from the Caribbean tonight was reported heading directly for the Grand Banks, where fishing vessels of half a dozen nations take their harvest from the sea. Transatlantic ships had been forewarned of the storm and in the absence of distress calls. marine officials hers presumed all had kept well out of its path as it moved north northsastward after taking a tol of 5t lives and 05.- 000,000 in crops and property on southern islands. Tra lers and schooner on the Bankr-Canadian, Newfoundland. French, Spanish and Portuguese- also would have ample warning cf s,., “‘ danger, it was thought here, and would put into Jlr. Jenkins lowered‘, - at the Rw andwwae ' g byEvery A, Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Cl-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, ocrosaa 2. 193s BRIIISE LINER IIIIIANGIER tr lnlllllla IIP Heayy Seas Pound ,L s n e r Rotterdam Lodged F a s t 0n Coral Reef. (C. P. thble By Guardian's Special Wire) " KINGSTON, Jamaica, Oct. 1— Battered by more than two days of pounding on a coral reef, the llllili’! liner Rotterdam with 2'26 men still aboard was feared tonight to be ready to fall victim to the first stiff wind that might whip up the Caribbean Sea around tho Morant Cays. With only a senile swell run- nlnr. the my 1m and fall already had opened up holes in the big BRIT.” BOOT/S hllii, 8nd Klnggton “If!” dllnlcr" should roughened seas slam her more heavily against the sharp coral. . Landed The HMO-ton craft,‘ 11p, 1 the Holland-American 11$,‘ “will leaking in four Uflmplftmenis, and Captain J. Van Dulksn has sent ashore every one of his 460 pagg- cllsers and 260 of his crew. They were llBdQd here today, the p355- Migers a cheerful group of holiday- u mo" "hilulkotgd on the wreck I In anything else. The British freighter Arigugml, summoned while loading cargo hm. to miles northeast oi the Olylubrfflliht the refugees in after $116? had been transferred across a mile of moonlit sea from the stricken liner. There was just one inlllry in the whole eight hours oi tmlélfl-e Ibrained ankle suffered by s woman. . P- jtand B1, , When-ans sorted. she rescue ship left two other craft by m; 1139f; ‘Ia The Kifllslon sslvsae ship °" ‘he 1048c. with no success; the (Misha: Midas. called 500 miles from Curacao. WM BXDected to take off all but the Itotterdanrs mesh. anicai eta-ff tonight and reach here with them tomorrow, Meanwhile, the (Continued on Page 0) Tariff Board “Assumes New board today took over the dutitfi of Dominion Tmde and Industry Commission. There was no formal- ity as the members of the board. Chairman George H. Sedsewlck. Milton N. Campbell and Charles Heart, constituted themselves a court yesterday with great powers for the regulation of business in Canada. A number of communications have been received by the commis- sion from industrial groups ream!- ing fixing prices and trade prac- tices, will take up these communi- cations and any further applica- tions made to it. No public meeting or tlis comrnisslonhave yet been planned. J, B. MacGr-egoi‘. - Secretary of the tariff board. is also secretary of the commission F. A. MacGreg- or, Registrar of Combines in the Labor Department, will be trans- ports along the southern coast of my m, mum,” w on”, u“ (Continued on Page 0) DéathliPenaitys "Sought "Fora b" Two In Fatal Tenement Fire CHICAGO, Oct. h-Proseculera confronted with the others‘ story. they would seek With a shrug, officers said, the death penalty for two prison- Vitals declared he had wanted di nsutlo atens-Chiaritostartonlyesmsllblase mtntfiro-fatai to lopsrsona-nx inthsbuildinginwhioirsopersorle d! than: collect 00.000 wen sleeping Sunday night. Press- , ed for money. his according Ambient State's Attornq llarlr- to police was that he consulted his . allnmeyproparedtogcbsforsnephevnatavernkssper, pro- disausnts epicst Joseph Vitals. wswyolr man" fortheiob. ‘Grumman-mammalian - landayaftsrnooa the ‘Nlllilgflflilij, backhand: di carriedilgail:,askg'g;ssglinsinto cmlimsdllahiresfurafifiltissd mutant-minimums: Floral." slllllllilttnautalitmembsrs Newfoundland for safety. bum, “on,” scI/ulmvli/é, l v. igclitln g ...sses|Iyss135et (Ilsa POIIFOYII). Coming (JLU *1‘ UIIKT nautical men returning from he;- side today said she would be m Killed: wss straining to haul her Rotterdam’: IPOI-lndiflfl at 1.80 am. E831‘. Mon- day had been ascribed to no defin. its cause. First fears that she had been struck by the week-end hur- ricane that claimed b4 lives in the Caribbean proveu 51:11:15; m... “ I D ll t I e 8 Sir Samuel l-loere, Foreign Secre- tary, in his letter to the French Ambassador. Charles Corbin. It UHAWA‘ 0cm 1__-me tit,“ declared Britain stood for collective fer-red this week to the commission. Among lssey "lots" lei tile Msritilnss, we css boast of raising tIls first s Iss in America . 9.0%. s. t. tIm "lint" la ma: ‘smug 3:31.: thought. WT-ik titude Toward Stand Sought (C. P. By Guardia Concerning Anglo-French hall authority told the Cana The French Air Ministry be held in eastern France tod Italian newspapers resumed a fleet, described it as “the moat In Addis Ababa the Italian peeled mobilisation Attack Were_1!I_ade On Britain. Great Britain has questioned France regarding its at- titude if an isolated attack were made on Britain, it was learned in London last night. aiives have gone the limit wherein they feel they can rely on British and Imperial opinion being behind them." Conversations involving French, officials took place in Paris yesterday. Tribune, referring to the trengthening incredible aggression." Minister ordered five Italian consulates in Aduwa and l-larar provinces evacuated. Foreigners believed the ex- proclasnatlon would be issued this weekend. MERE MAN_ ' as‘ careful u. maintain purity tll MAXI MS OIA I0 PAGES ar Britain. French If An Isolated n’s Special Wire) discussions, a high White- dian Press‘: “Our represent- British and Italian announced war games would ay and Thursday. hostile tone towards Britain. La of the British Mediterranean (By Thomas '1‘. l“ ‘ l (Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON. Oct. l--A hIBh auth- ority at Whitehall tonight, discuss- communications between tho Britirh and French govemments, told the Canadian Press: “Our re- presentatives have gone the limit wherein they feel they can rely on British and imptfifll opinion being behind them." It was confirmed that Great Britain had questioned the French gbvernment regarding its attltlldli ii an isolated attack were made on Britain. France's attitude was not made known. It was believed it would be determined at a cabinet meeting in Paris Friday. No collective dkcussiop has tak- en‘ place with the United States and Germany concerning their at- titude in the event of an Italo- Ethiopian war, the Canadian Press learned. Authorities were l luctant w discuss what was at present a hypothetical circumstance. Collective Action Remote British diplomatic circles have slight hope that warfare in Ethi- opia will be entirely averted. The prospect of immediate and spectac- uiar success in collective action also is remote, it was reliably learned. However, the government believes the machinery of the League of Nations will prove effective in bringing hostilities ‘to an end. In any event. Britain is resolved nev- er to embark on isolated action. ‘Oificiai circles ieel this country has played its full part and some re- gret was evidenced that some other countries apparently had not acted as decisively. Hope was expressed France would be satisfied with the statement of action against unprovoked acts of aggression. The foreign office and the cabinet believe that public opinion is against detailed commit- ments regarding hypothetical con- ditlons. (By Wade Werner) (Aaoociatqi Press Foreign staff) GENEVA, Oct. 1—The League oi Nations observed the 11th anniver- say today of its protocol for the pacific settlement 0f international disputer-and listened anxiously for the possible outbreak of war in Africa. The protocol outlines various methods by which a dispute be- tween two states may be throttled by League action before it reaches e militant stage. BAPITAI IIIIIAS IIITH ACTIVITY ETIIITIPIAN ‘I (Copyright. I035. By The Haves News Agency) (CIR-Haves By Guardian's Special Wire) ADDIB ABABA, Oct. l — The gravity of the Italo-Ethiopian cris- is was emphasised by s series developments in the Ethiopian cap- ital today. They included: 1. Sixteen Italian submarines were reported deployed in the Red Sea, presumably prepared to in- tercept war munitions cargoes de- stined for this country. i). Important shipments of rifles, cartridges and gas masks were un- dersto ‘ to be on their way here from Japan or the United states, by way of Berbera, British Som- aliland. 3. General Abarre, Kassa. son of Ros Kasss, powerful chiettain in command of Ethiopian trso-ps in Gouda: province, was reported to have taken command of 00.000 picked warriors centred around Salale, north of Addis Ababe. He was said to have begun a forced march to join his father near the lh-itrean frontier. t. More than 1.000 Addis Ababa merchants, natives of the grassy plain region southeast of here, left the city tonight to return to the area of their origin as fear of im- minent sir attack rpread. Nagadras Wadajoali, chief of the defence post at Aduwa, who recent- ly was called here by lilmperor Kalle selassie, returmd to his command tonight with inszructions which were said to be of the highest im- portance, but which were not re- vealed. AIR FORCE STRENGTHENED GIBRALTAR, Oct. 1 — Thirty British flyers were added today to the Royal Air Force detachment stationed here. The flyers arrived on the steamer Kaiser-I-Hlnd, on which Air Marshal Sir Raber‘. Erooke-Popham also we" a paszen- ger. Sir Robert. commander-in- chlef of Britain's air defence forces, conferred with flying offices and then left on the same liner for Malta. (Continued on Page 0) GEORGETOWN, British Guiana, Oct. l-Perslstirlg rumors that General Juan Vincent Gomes, strong-armed dictator of Venezuela for more than Id years. lay on his deathbed at Caracas were strength- ened today by word reaching here that the Veneruelian l tier force at the Mloruca River had been" doubled. liven while pious peasants prayed in the adjacent Boliver state "Comes que Dios guards-God guard Gomez," arms were bainl smuggled into the country from the border-town Morswhanne, British Guiana, by belligerent lieu- tenants of ms 16-year-old Presid- ent who were said to be awaiting only his death to plunge the South American republic into multi-sidsd civil war. From time in time in the last sis weeks official zdenials of the die- tatofa illness have bin pilhlishad Tear Revolt At Death Of Venezuelan Dictator and spoken but the rumors were never quelled. Even within Ven- ezuela where Gomes has ruled for a quarter-century like an absolute monarch, tension is obvious among the peasantry as it prays for the President, according to Moraw- hsnna reports. From an old rocking chair be- neath a giant rubber tree Gomez‘ ruled the country with his mailed fist, virtually owning everything in the lend. Periodically he was forced to move swiftly to crush rebellion. Many believe the rocking-throne too big for any lieutenant to fill. Meanwhile. there are at least four "superman" within the rich and promerous country aspiring for Comes‘ positim after his death --Ministbr of War leper Contrer- as, Rafael Veiesro. Governor of Caracas, Puss Sate, Pnmidsnt of Zulis, State. and Isutsass Coma Annual Subscription Delivered 05.00 by llail Canada and U. S. A- MM Tension Heightens In Italo - Ethiopian Dispute; Selassie Rashes VIL Italian Press fiéimes Hostile At- Plans IABIIRPARTY IN BITTER DEBATE IIVERSANIITITIITS BRIGHTON, England. Oct. 1- The question of sanctions against Premier Mussolini in the event of an Italo-Ethiopian war today led to violent controversy between national leaders in the first ses- sion of the Labor Party conven- tion. A bitter debate was climaxed by George Lansbury's reaffirmation of his offer to quit as the patty leader in the House of Commons. He called his position “intoler- able." Although the vote to be taken tomorrow is expected to show the party overwhelmingly in favor of using sanctions against Italy, if necessary, Lansbury may not be required to quit, despite his ex- pressed pacifist convictions. That was indicated by the rnan- ner ln which’ the convention sud- denly united in a spectacular per- sonal tribute to the Party leader. Lansbury himself hinted that he might continue as leader, de- claring that the subject of the sanctions debate “is not the over- whelming, fundamental ‘question that brings us together. "I want every one to under- stand," said Lansbury, "that it is bitter and difficult for me to stand hero and publicly repudiate this big fundamental policy (for sanctions). I agree it is quite in- tolerable that you should have a man speaking as a leader who dis- agrees fundamentally with issues of this kind. “I have had to speak for the cg party, and I have had to see Sir Samuel I-Ioare for the party, but on each occasion I have tried honestly and straight-forwardly to state the party's position." He said the Labor members of Parliament will decide his fate next week because “this confer- ence obviously is unable to deal with the matter except by some kind of an emergency motion making recommendation to the parliamentary party." Ilansburyb perscnalstandagainst sanctions was born of his be‘ief that "force never can, never has and never will bring permanent peace and goodwill to the world." Sir Stafford Crlpps, left wing Laborlte, assailed the sanctions policy and was attacked for his stand by later speakers. Ernst Blvin accused Cripps of "doing his best to split the party.” John Marchbank, another Labor leader, demanded that “those who dissent should get out" of the party. (no MAN Mao ears Vtifit ills Iinlrc cm Fri-Ir winds Ln west |l.....cn, strong winds and galea off east and southeast coast. unsettled with 0c- cuslonal rain. TORONTO, Oat. l-Mlnimum and maximum temperatures: Dawson .. 3t 50 Aklavik ... ... .. 22 30 Edmonton ... .44 ‘l0 Montreal .. t8 50 Quebec... ...“ 48 Saint John . . ... .. t2 58 Halifax ... ... ... . M 5B Charlottetown ... t0 58 Maritime Bash-Fresh winds in west portion, strong winds and gaies of! east and southeast coast, unsettled with occasional rain. High tide this afternoon at 1.50 and tomorrow morning at 12.58. Sun sets this afternoon at 5.41 and rises tomorrow morning at 5.50. First quarter moon Saturday. Oct. s, 6.30 a. m. Sumnnrside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. CAI IIIBI Pitlidllt of Iara State. ‘ Inn-e. ti; A. ll. (Iain) '£ars' res-niche A. I. In}! LI. and thgaiueassfl -_- s wig.‘ aasq" ‘-.