. uuiexation of the Sudeten regions comma {Vino ~ Friday. Sept. 21!. MAXIMS OFA Never do a. wrong thing a friend or to keep one. MERE MAN to make hsriottotown Guardian Two (Inntl. ornini. Guardian, Founded lillll. Covers Prince Edward‘ Island Like the Dew H CHARLOTTETOWN, CANAIJA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 193s iz moss MERE MAN l count myself in nothing else stl happy as in a soul remembering ill) good fr ends MAX I M6 0F A Anlludl Sulnrrlpiiun Hrllu-n-il 5.1.0?! lly Mail-l’. E. l. H.001 (‘alliulu niul L. b. $5.00 ‘ioop;roongo Pgigoi Czech-German Clashes Jeopardiz iiisioi |s_ HEICHTENEI] oi uoinoi Hungarian And Polish Envoys Discuss Par- tition Plan W i t h Hitler. - 13y Louis P. Locliner) ocluted Press Foreign Staff) ERLlN. Sept. Zil-Evcry duy of lciay hi solvmy: the Sudeien Ger- man-Czcehoslovak c s raises Chancellor Hitler's e of settle. nwlit. a Foreign Office spokesman docltircd today, "Our IPuehrer is constn-ntly rais- ing ihc ante." he said as the con- troilrd German press raised a new Ilamor for thc- outright partit on of Czechoslovakia rather than mere '5. bordering Germany. More fuel to the European fires I was added by official German news agency reports of a mounting series of border clashes bctwcrn Sudctcn Germans and Czechoslovak troop detachments. While reports from the turbulent frontier poured in like clockwork. llller in his Bavarian retreat re- Bd the envoys of Hungary and oiand for conferences on the hoslovalr crisis. UNTENABLE CONDITION army chief of ltail. Marshal ‘zies-fi-svlicr. niinc \\'llll l-‘ii-iziioi- LViil linictli and Minister Kolomtin Von ' Hitler and _ Minister ‘ Von Ribbeiitro "rcmirdiiur thc uritcn- lblc condition in Czechoslovakia" An official announcement said Eig___l-lurignri_nn__lender told “the The Hungarian (Continued on nast- i0. Col 5) ‘fhlkies Borden Wuinestiay" night. L-l471-9-20-2l. "Talkies-Crapaud Thursday. Li- lfiiW-ll-Zl ~21". ___i___ "TflltlLl0S——C&l’108 Cgwlslfifitluy. 07-9-2l-2i. "Dance in French Rlvcr Hall Friday, Sept. 23. L-1475-ll-20-2l. "Dance Peakes Road ‘School. L-ISH-fll-Zi. "Dance at Victoria Rink every Wednesday nighL. "Dance in Pownni Garage Hall. gffoo Q-GOO-QO-OO-OFOH ii Persons Killed, Cver 100 injured In Train Collision (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) NILAND, Calif" Sept. 20- Raiiroad officials blamed a bnikesmans mistake tonight for a collision of two Southem Pacific passenger trains that killed 11 persons and injured more than 100 others early to- day. C. F. Donnatln. Southern Pacific ouperintendent. said the wreck was caused by the sudden. unexplainable decision oi’ Erie Leonard Jacobson, vet- eran brakcmun, to throw n. switch as the Argonaiit. New Orlcans-to-Ims Angeles’ flier sped-toward a siting where the Chicago-bound Californian tourist train from Les Angclcs. was waiting. The Argonaut engineer saw thc block signal arm rise, a rr-d light flash. Brakes screech- ed. but the big locomotive veered sharply and plunged into the tourist train. llonnatin said Jacobson was dazed and hysterical from the cffc-ct of a decision he could nnt explain. FABESRRTDIAL FDR MURDER Q u e b e c W 0 m a n Charged With Pois- oning Husband. ST. JOSEPH DE BEAUCE. Que... Sept. 20-<CP>—Mrs. Achillc Gron- dlii. 40-year-old farmer's wife of the neighboring village of Ste. Methode. went. on lrinl today 0n a murder charge. accused of hav- ini: poisoned Villemond Brochu. her first husband, who died little more than n. _ve:ir ago and 40 days bcfnrc shc married again. Grondln, the second husband and for several months previously the Brochuls. hired man. also i-htirgcd with o part in the alleged 1ioisnniiig. and will be li"icd on a inurticr vcxint on completion oi his wife's case. "flilll Thc 1.1; , dark haired woman's trial tipcncil soon after Judge No- cl Dcllenu of Quebec mounted the bench iii this Chnudicre Valley town's tiny courthouse to start the fall lcrm of Bcauce County crim- iunl assizcs. » ‘ Jury picking required little more than an hour and after a noon ad- ijnurumcnt. crown prosecutor Noel Dorion of Quebec. outlined the ev- itlcticv against the accused. The 1iackcd room was dead quiet Friday "(it'd O K Pro by ‘ll u- . . ' “ - " ' " ‘ .~ - and ihrriuoh llpPil windows several PAM‘ L"14(’°'9"0'3", [JYISDIHFS could be seen craulng ble- -.O..d P , _ D _ _ Km.“ ilill(i thdliaricti wlucaws of t e 9N5“ ‘Han ali‘ih€1i:‘g1nyangiptvx“;s courthouses adjoining jail wing 23m ’ L'_15o3_9_31_2i_ and wahhing the court scene eag- erly as the bespectacled crown Al"cukr. Sale an Md U; F. _ Brpstfilixiiooflz explained the case to loS0i'. -oiu_~.~ Sotolilhwc gttilcill'..,ltggoif_i4gd_ nh-Llofq: 11> main 1mints he said. were ____,__ whclhci" the farmer-taxi driver "Dame twig... Oddquno... “My (lied as the result of a criminal Orrli L-l5l3-23- Moui iigue. Nelson's Admission 35c. ll. "Concert, by Katlilpi-n lIui-nby flllli(.|t‘.‘1i‘$'il'll in lVi-nlpxuui Hall Thursday evening Oct. 13th. at 8115- 1.4524. "Dr. Lii Coursiere. rii-nist. \\'lil b9 in Murray River, E.})ti"llli)[‘l' 21st until the 23rd inclusi-ri; L~l484-9-2l-li. "Come to the Ddiicc in Huiitcr vor Hall . Be tember 22nd. Old c rind m ern dances. Local Orchestra. L-l487-9-2l-2i. "Loading Livc Hogs. Kcnslngmn Tlillrsilfly, September 22nd till iifl‘ u. lchqlson Bros. Hunter River Fri- day till noon. lviclixviii & Campbell. L-1447-9-20-2i. “Dance and CBfllS. Otidrfellows Hall. Montague. Friday 23rd. Clllds 8-10. dancing 10-1. Nelson's Dimmers. Adlmision 35c. L-lfili-fll-Ii. ‘"131: dance in Hall at iibnerald. Blot. ial pipe music violin. Voc Helen Doucette. "eh served. A mission 26 cents. 11-1465-9-21-11. "All agricultural meeting will h! held h the school house at MM Hurt. Friday evening. Sep- Whher 24rd. at ii o'clock. Hog Dm- ‘mcilofl. modern feeding methods ‘:5 W-Oberstive marketing will Jitncunsed. J. A. Gillies. sec- Nhrr Livestock Mairketino‘ Boordl odious the meeting. All humi- ilwitod to iiuciiu. 1.4527. "Annual meeting Mount Stew- fl Edwina ciiib will be held iii- hi’ upstairs room. Legion Bulld- “lil- Thursday evening. September find .l. A. Gillies. Secretary Mur- "alllfl Board will attend. Aftrr Business meeting co-operative 1 r: act nr otherwise, and whether or not his widow win". criminally re- sponsible for his death. Potatoes Damaged By Wet Weather FREDERICTON. Sept. 2o — tc Pl —Pl‘(ltl'iil'.i(‘(‘l wet weather Jhrotighnut New Brunswick has Cl\ll‘[‘(i i-tiiisiticviililc damage to grain and jioliilocs. less damage to other crops and greatly d0- layeti farming. C. F. Bailey. sup- erintendent of the local Dominion Experimental station, said to- night. It is estimated the apple crop will be 40 to 50 per cent. smaller than that of i937 but the size. color and quality are better. Eowboy Fro In (A, P. by Guardian's Special Wire! NEW YORK. Sept. 20—A 22l- year-old former Texas cowboy rode the waves in lower New York harbor today as sole and slightly dazed owner of u. 63-f00l- W611i which n stranger gave him~and wondered when the dream would rnti. t on’ . 2 any Mo, William J. (Tex) Imigfcrd didn't have enough money to buy a boat ride to the Statute of Liberty. lie was brow- sing alomz the BTWHY“ "at?" ‘ “re he hntl just tied up " out-hoard motor- liiimpy trip down ~. Rrsluii. h m ‘came the stinnger-Johii an inventor and fiuiicisco udvertlslnd struck up a conversa- "mrkeunti. hog pl-rdueiien and "IOU , . &9'"\ methods \ l) ill HTWH- inv" _' paint-ll». ilmc-of-tlay talk. "not CZECHS ACCEPT" PLAN FilR unit o1 Anglo-French Efforts To Preserve Peace Of Europe Acceler- ated. PARIS. Sept. 21—-(Wednesday)—- (APl-Qificials of the French For- eign Ministry disclosed today’ that FRIDGE and Great Britain have rc- fused to accept Czechoslovakilfs plan for arbitration of her Sudet- enland dispute with Germany and have demanded allot yes or no an- swer. Sources close to the Foreign Ministry saidvthe new demand was a virtual ultimatum. warning that li Czechoslovakia refused to ac- cept. the French-British proposals to cede the Sudelcn areas to G61‘- many it would bc impossible to guarantee the future existence of the country. The ministers of the two powers were instructed "to present. the new demand to Prague at once and to demand an immediate re- ply tonight. (A source close to the Foreign Ministry in Prague said that up to 1 A. M. t8 P.M. EDT Tuesday) neither the French nor the British Minister had mode nny overtures since dcspalch oi thc Czechoslo- vak Government's note.) (Later a Reuters news agency dispatch to London from Prague said. however, that. President Ed- uard Bent-s i-ez-clvcd the British Minister. Basil Cochrane Newton imd the French lvlinister Victor LeopoldmcicALn Croix at 2 5 A.M i1; PARIS. Sept. 20—(CPl—lla.v- as News Agency in a dispatch from London said "high polit- lcal circles“ there expressed belief that if Prague did not capitulatc totally to Chancellor Hitler's demands before the end oi’ this week, Germany would man-h into Czechoslovakia. The dispatch said "authorita- tive reports“ receivcd in London indicated Hitler had l3 amiy divisions poised on the (‘zceh- oslovak frontier. when they urged him to accept the London pcacc terms as they stand.) 1A meeting of the Czechoslovak inner cabinet was summoned im- mediately after the envoys met. To<;.".ii."...‘ea—5..~'....¢i"io." coirs)“ British snip l Aground Off (C.l‘_ By Guardian's Special Wire) HALIFAX, Sept. 20—'I‘he British sloop Dundee grounded todoyncar the entrance of EiIZS Buy. Anticosti Island. p111 iv-Js not iii a dangerous iositlon "as loiia as ll doesn't. low," commander R. I. Agnew, of- i.ccr counnuutiiiig 1-11.. Majesty's Canadian dockyard here. announced tonight, The l,l00-ton sloop had strand- ed this morning in a dense fog. he sai Thi- powerful Halifax wrecking lug Foundaton Franklin sailed lin- mcdiately upon receipt of a Iii/fiss- e the Dundee had grounded but e was not expected to reach Ellis Buy before late tomorrow night at the earliest. Dcnsc fog along the coast and in Northum criond Strait probably would slow her U1'0El'l’$5- As fur as was known in Halifax the sloop had not asked for assist- once. T0 Yachtsman "Waterfront Windfall” lng to the Wlnetto, anchored neniby. "Gee. what a beauty! The guy who owns that. must be lucky." “If you think so, you are." the stranger said. "She's yours." Nairn explained his spur-of-thc- moment generosity today. "I'd owned the Winetta about four years. and it was taking up too much of my time-—t-unc 1 should have been giving my inventions," he said. "I wanted someone to have the bcaLwbo. would m some fun out of it. Langfotd mowed such en- thusiasm. and so—" And so ihe one-time Texas puncher. still n little winch-drunk from his waterfront windfall. was mapping plmis today to sail the Wlnctta. valued at'$8.000. around the world. Only one thing stands in his '.:i: do you so. t-lutflehtfltuiti way. He has the boot. but no money. llnticosti is. "- Four New Brunswick. Youths Drowned In Automobile Plunge tG-P. By Guardian's Special Wire) BAKER LAKE. N. B.. 8ept._ 20-;- Drownng of four residents oi this New Brunswick village near the Maine boundary threw the little community into mourning today. The bodies were still at. an under- takers at Fort Kent, six miles from here this afternoon. Dr_ F. J. Fauchei", county medical examiner in the Maine district, held an ‘inquiry and found the deaths were due to drowning. ‘There were no Witnesses of the tragedy. Investigation revealed that the cur 000k a. wrong turn, struck a house corner. caroined acres a field and tumbled over e 75-foot embankment. into the Fish River. a tributary of the St_. John. Watches of the victims stopped at 2.10 ta.in.), showing the time they bccamc trapped ln the death car in 25 feet 0f WDtCI‘. A wrecking car _towccl out the wrecked automobile at 5.30 a. m. Lights 0f the sub- merged cai- continued to burn un- der water, showing its location and aidm the recovery work. _ v Res dents said it was raining hard when the accident. 0<1¢l\_1‘l‘@d~ People sleeping 1n the house hit by the car wcre aroused and later fol- lowed the trail of its passage 0V9!‘ the field to the river bank. - FORT KENT. Me. Sept. 20- (AP)—BOdlCs of four Baker Lake. N. B.. young men drowned when an automobile fell into Fish River- ' here carly today. were recovered before nightfall. The youths, Benoit Caron. 34; Germain Long, 18; Claude Belon- gcr, 22. and William Iiong. 21. were trapped in lhc automobile when it missed a road in the rain. The quartet. was returning to Baker Lake after taking several Fort Kent, girls home from a party in the Canadian village. about l5 milcs from Edmundston. N. B. , TRADFlIlLKS WELL ADVANCED N0 announcement Fol- lows Cabinet Coun- cil Meeting. Sept. 2Q -—(CP)— OTTAWA. from Washing- Proposals brought ton by the Canadian _mission which has been carrying on negotiations since inst April for revision the Canada-United States Trade Agreement. were considered today by cabinet coun- cil but no details were announced. Following the regular weekly meeting. resources minister Crerar acting in place of Prime Minister MacKcnzic King who is ill. said the Canadian 11CgQtlii110iiS“\V€l‘B were "pretty well advanced. but he would not. make any forecast as to when the new agreement would be signed. - It is tindcrslood negotiations for an Anglo-American agreement, which have bren curried on simul- lzineously with those between Canada and United States. haven definite connection with the Can- adian agreement and may delay its conclusion. Mi". Crernr said Premier Pai- i-ullo of British Columbia would be in Ottawa next Monday and would probably go before they gov- ernment as n whole for n discus- sinn of several provincial problems He expected one subject to be dsicusscd would be the proposed Unitctl States hichwnfv to Alaska thvmuzh firiihh Columbia. Dates for four byelccticns will probably be tired next week Ml‘. Ororar said. They are in London, Waterloo south. Montrcal-Laurlcr and Brandon. $20,000 Damage By Fire At Sydney SYDNEY. N. 5.. Sept. 20-(CP) -—Approximately $20,000 damage was cnuscti by an early-mornnig fire which broke out in a two- storcy corrugatediron and frame building housing Eddie MacDon- ald's agency oi Nash Motors. Jack MacKenna owned the building. A passerby. Ambrose Kehoe, discovered the flames which firemen brought under control after a stubborn two- battle. About 22 new and used auto- mobiles were in the building at the time of the fire.. Japanese Advance To City Of Macheng SHANGHAI. Sept. 20 —(A P)- A mobile Japanese column, well in the vanguard of the main cam- paign against f-lnnkow. tonight was reported threatening the city of Macheng, 55 miles northcnstof the provisional Chinese capital. Despite fierce Chinese op- position and rutumn ruins, this force was amid to have advanced tn the base of the Tupcih Moun- tains in eastern Hupeh Province where it prepared for assault on Macheng. Cutout oints o1 no non SCVIELRUSSIA Official Silence Shrouds Course Of Action By llloscow In Crisis. MOSCOW, Sept. Zl-twetliics- dayr-Wlule soviet Russia has maintained an official silent-c re- garding hci" course. Czechoslovak circles here are confident the 50v- iet Union will not fail '..'u- little republic in case of cmcijzeneyc The Czechoslovak klinistcr. Zdenek Firlinger. told the Assoc- iated Press early today there was not the slirzlilest doubt that 1.10:.- cow would live up to its treaty of mutual assistance with Czecho- slovakia. This provides that Hus- sia will aid Czcchoslovakaa in the event of MlifférlsiDfi on condition that France goes to the rcpuhlicls (l. _Ali."hougli the Government was silent, the Soviet DPPSS denounced the Anglo-French plan to dis- membei" Czcchoslovtikia as a iu-\v step toward war contribution to mace. Since Great Britain and France along with other powcrs created the post-war republic. the view was held in Soviet circles that it would hardly be expcrlcd of Sov- iet Russia alone to defend their creation now ' Calm Prevails Moscow received calmly reports that the Czechoslovak Government was inclined towards acceptance of the Anglo-French plan to cede its Sudetcn territory to Germany to avoid war. (At Geneva Russia was reported to have offered help to Czecho- slovakia if she chose to ficht Ger- many. but Ruinanin was said to have thrown n monkey w"i"ench into the idea by refusint: pet-mis- sion for transportation of Russian trcom through her territory. Ru- manin is the key to such a plan as she stands bctwccu Czrcho- slovakia and the Soviet Union». Instead 0f stiffening Czecho- slovakia against Nazi Germany. the Soviet view “'11s that fiance had advised Prague “to commit stilcidc." The Soviet press condcmiicti the Anglo-French proposal for Czecho- slovakia ns "pcrfidlious and hypo-- critical." Other problems besides the Czechoslovak crisis owupicti Sov- iet officials and the press. From Tashkent. tlic llf‘1\\"~1l'rl\l(‘l' Pravda Vost-oka reported the trial and conviction oi a number of inem- bers of an allczcd Trotskyis‘. wrecking organization for putting railway locomotives cut of com- mission. lo death, one received n sciitcncc of 20 years imllflfiilllliblll and a fourth a term of 10 vrvirs. Hurricane Diverts From Florida Course JACKSONVILLE. Flu. Sept. 20 -—lAP)—-A severe tropical hurri- ctinc which gave concern to resid- ents of Florida's cost coast lust night turned on a wide li0l'lll\'l'i\l‘(l arc today and apparently" headed out to sea. _ As thousands of relieved south Floridians took ciiiivii bairriezitles which they had nailed lovi itious of houses and stores. the V/Olltllel‘ bureau here ordered ncrt-healt storm wnrtiings ilispliiyeri along the coast from Cape Hatteras l0 Wilmington, N. D, The bureau warned vessels in the nth of the storm to tnkcpre- caut ons. and utlvisetl small craft from Charleston to the Virginia Ca es to remain in port. e bureau said the north- ward arc would continue during the next 36 hours, indicating the centre would puss east of Cape Hatteras late tonight nr tomorrow morning. It was moving at a rate 10f about 17 miles an hour, an un- usually rnpid pace. Amherst Lawyer Appointed Judge OTTAWA. Sept. 20 --lCPl-—J. s. Smiley, K. C.. Amherst. N 8.. was today appointed to the up- reme Court of Nova Scotia. it was learned following the regular weekly cabinet council. Hc suc- ceeds to the vacancy created by fro‘); the death of Mr. Justice Hugh as. THREE DEAD IN MINE TRAGEDY FERVIE. B. (‘a Sept. M- lCPI-‘lwo men were known dead, a third was believed kil- led. and three otiicls were trap- ped tonight an the result of a “l'ilmp" in the number one cast mine of the Crow's Nest Pius Coal Company about live miles from horo- dislruised as a 'I'\\'o defendants were scutcutrcti‘ l8 ENtNlER llll e Peace‘, ;"_._.____._______7 -~::. ".- \ Seek Modification Cf Certified Seed Potato Regulations EAST FLORENCEVILLE. N. 13.‘. Sept. 20-At a meeting of the As- sociated Potato Growers and Ship- pers of New Brunswick today a resolution was missed requesting that J. E. J. Patterson, M. P. for Carleton-Victoria, go to Ottawa itnmcdlzitcly‘ and ask the depart- > i l mcnt of agriculture either lo motlify- certified seed regulations or to pay farmers a bOlllLS for heavy losses stiffc-red from rejec- tion of potato craps. Speakers flfiClflfCfi the rzeulzitious e ton strict and coiicicinucd fields if one hill ct tictntocs :'ill§\\’"'(i bacterial will. iiZCCh not... is Called To Decide Fate l'lt.»\(ll‘_li_. Sept. 21—i\‘i‘cdncsila_v) —llu- llritlsli and French nilii utcrs “filly Willi)‘ dt'il\'L‘i'l‘t.l_il demure-lie t0 Ire ident llcnes urging most. 50f]- "IIS "i\(‘t't‘[)till‘ll’i? of their govern- Iuvhtr- plans for tilsmi-mlierment of (nceliosltivakia. The British Minister, Basil Coch- rane Newton and thc French Min- ‘Kter, hctor Leopold do la (jroix, railed upon the President shortly lltlfile 2 a. ill. asking an immediate eonierent-i- after the (‘zvehoslovak (rtlVi ni-nt yesicrdtiy had refused to an» er tiirei-tly yes n.- m. to French and British proposals to ("flit- Sudcten districts to (it-rin- any. 'l'lii- President granted thi- mm. fcrriu-t- and it lasted until 3.30 a.ui. The Pi" ident summoned Premier ftliiaii l-lodza who called a incetng 0f thc_inner council of the (xibinet, Tim iliscussions were continuing at 4.45 a. m. (12.45 _a. m. ADT) and there was no indication when the session might curl. lubvvallltf known the French and lilSii Mnisiei" impressed upon the Kienl that llic liiattcr they had to (iiscuss WiLs urgent and that tic- spite tiny-long sessions of the min- isters they should be called from ttlieii- beds for iinmcrlititc consulta- on Tltc new pressure on. Prague Ulllilt‘ as iicitspapei" reports told of new frcniici" violations at lvclss- wtusei" near Frictvrilciau where 20 ticrsous were declared to have come across the German border and rccklcs-lv fircti ~10 shots menacing citizens" in Czechoslovak territory, and at Gualdcrsdorf in the Znaim (iistrict where ciglit shots were lir- etl» from a ditch on German ter- in either incident. Ill QllflPiClKS ViOFt’ crnmcnt it was said one of the chirf objecli is lo ilie French- British 1iropo 11>. to save European pciicc at Germany's price was the almost. hopeless proscct of forcing them ,thi"ough parliament. The Government explained that any iictioii taken by the ministers would have to hc appmvcd by par- liament and that that body its now comtiluted would not sanction any to the Gov- (‘tmcludc Sessions MONCTONiIN. n. Sept. 2o .- iCPJ—l\ two-day coinciilion of three Maritime Tuberculosis A‘. socintlons cuclcd hcre this tiller- Spcakcrs today included Dr. J. E. Illllz anti l)r. V. D Schaffnci". both of the Novzi Scntiii sriiiatorium. the latter remi- iug n 1iu1ici" l)l'C])lll'(‘(i by Di", A, F. Miller. superintendent of the some institution: Dr. C. J. W. Beckwith. Sydney and Mrs. Fred- gmllt Gates. of West Roycility, P. rltory. No castialties were reportedi FIDULTIES Secondllieeting Qt‘ Chamberlain And Hitler Thursday [Czech Reply T0 Proposed Wriit- ion Plan Regarded “Qualified Refusal.” -.-.-—- (liy .l. l". Suntlcix-iiin, (‘unudiziu Press Stall LONDON. Sept. Zil-(C. l’. plan to settle the (‘zeehosltivuk-(it-rmun Wviit-i‘) (';|1.]Q)_'l‘lii_- .\i‘.ul.i-l"‘l‘eilvl. evi-"i- h) r-etlinj: portions of the Sndcieulzintl to the Reich hill in‘ tli-cih-cti lielwcen Prime Nlinislei" (‘h:inihei"lain zinil t ll.i!'lt't'iii)!‘ llit lei" zit (itideshcrg, (icrmuny. on 'l‘hui".~=.lu_v. Announcement tonight the British will make his second trip to cmifm- with .\iini.-:ic| .'I Prime Hitler euruc short time uficr the (‘zeehtisltivtik (i(l\'i.‘l'lilll0lii liud ivjue: a communique which was interpreted here as a (uiziiilictl refusal i0 accept the peace plan. Meanwhile a certain amount of doubt decision taken by the Czech C. meeting". The Czech note to ihc British and menls had not arrived in London late tonight. The corn- muniquc in Prague declared: "The attitude adopted makes possible further diplomatic negotiations in conciliation which the (Yzechoslovztk (lnvernment has ai- wrtyxs shown.” Discuss Problem It was expected Mr. Chamber- lain would fly to Godesbcrg Tllllllsllfl)‘. with tomorrow devoted to CilACHSSlOll of the Czech note by the "inner cabinet." Discussions in the Rhine (‘ltv will start at 3 p. ill. ill a. ill. ADTv permitting the Prime Minister" to leave London in the morning. Mr. Cliamlxerlainlx coming trip, not so (iiuinatic as last. week's \\'ill‘ll in the first airplane flight of his life. he ivciii to Berehl/es- gadeii l0 mccl Chancellor Hillel". was announccci in a brief coin- inuniquv from l0 Down-int: Street after an tiliuost. day-loin: meeting with the key ministers. Sir John Simon. Chancellor of the Exche- quer. Viscount Halifax. I-‘oreigu Scerctziijv. and Sir Samuel Home. Home Secielary‘. i _Earliei" the Prime l\finistci' dc- t-hii-etl the _ request by Clement v Atllcc. parliamentary Labor lcatiei". that Parliament be simiintmed‘. immediately 1 Mi". Chnmberltiiii said: "To tall‘ Parliament together now. and 1-9-1 quire me to take part in ciehutcs. while t-hcse llPilfliiilii"llS arc stilf 1n Pl'<)i_.{l‘(‘S5 would make my tnskt 'lll‘ll)(;.~"ll)li‘." } Plans Statement But. in his written reply he 11.1.31. ed that Parliament would be rc- cnllcd "as $0011 as matters have proceeded fai" cnoueh to cnabl-n inc to mail-ti a 31111 gymunpnpv‘ Fflflifllllflli‘. normally’ mcctis Nov, ‘Oiilfllfll London lioci lc:luze_ cf the "future diplomaticl ixcqoliaiimis" hinted at in the? Prague conuniiniquc, . Ii “His reported. however. :h.it l iilf‘ C/irii (lnvcrnnyn: 101,1; q...‘ no lznovv- I tcritorial tiipmcmbcrmcul of the W’-*II4“Y‘- ill" FPDHDYICI- mu. ll‘ rqp\1b]1¢_ (llll no‘. l)<‘l'll\ll cesnoi: of lcrrit Last night the Government dc- to R IWPHIH power. Another ic- “YPTCU 11$ W111i’ w the Anglo- lwlkvvas The Czechs would sug- Frenvli plan and an informed i205! the udtole dispute be refi-rrcd i source (i‘..~Cl'li)(‘(l it as an "fiCCCpi- to the world court of l11_=11(-(\ 31 once in priuclplc“ with iniporlnx lllr Flaunt‘. ' reservations. Mi". Cliziiulmrlaliii. <li‘(i.\ll)ll lol- T B WW?‘ L thwmixl :1 "toihmv 111m’ .~l‘"$l(lll 0f I c i ii iniin Council 1i I.il z". ' ' Assocldhons i rcpi"c.<rii1ai.ivcs of Ffellrcii (‘trifle lllllflll: and iil(‘ Mcmici iiilci"lr.i‘iii>i".- nl Svtlllihl Party. which \'.\ll‘.il‘il i- oci the Aiiuln-Fieiicli '..1u.-...._.<...1. to Hitler's tiivc-at of augivssiim.“ The National Council 01 141x;- invited the French delegates to ascertain what pressure thev we... lucplireri to put on the Frenchl Cv()\'t‘l‘li1lii3l1i. to l'i'10(lli\' the French‘ “stirnender " - .. ’I'liert\ was anuncoiifirnuii vt-pur‘. i a French delegate denim-pd 11ml French Confederation of Labor wpvtld benprlepuiledao call a gru- (Continued on pouc- 10. Col 6i "i..."...;i"..; Might UDINE. Italy, Sept. 20-03?!»- Premicr Mussolini today declared his Blackshirt legions have built a "warrior Italy" and emphasized Fiiscismfls preparedness for war. In n speech l.hnl runde no men- iltiii of the Czechoslovak crisis Mussolini exalted “lltc armed pow- er and spiritual poorer" oi Italy that had "liquidated all the old diplomatic tendencies of dripplcd jicncc.“ Ii Duccfls speech seemed intend- cil more for his Fascist followers than for the WO"l(i nt large. "The \\‘Ol'lll will have nccti of knowing this m-w Fascist Italv l.~". n yrlirrior Italy. n ill'lli Italv." lic shouted into a llli‘l'i')lll‘l(\ll(‘ at this northeastern Tirilinn City in the region whcrc 20 ycnrs ago Italian troops fought. Austrians. y Ho ripped into Fascism‘; foreign i rihilTubti-litla ry O f F a s c i s t _\.___ . ._ Party critics with the suuccstlon that "it, would bc well to, lcur up useless papers." aparcnth" refer- rimz t0 press criticism abroad. "One of thP8fRVOStillllP§=PB from which the contemporary w-orlril suffers is the threat of lyinsr. cs-l 1iccially" when Italy is the subject." he said. If the Ilnlinns were calm wiillc other peoples underwent cxhalta- tiou. depression or terror, he said their "atlinirnbli- conduct" was the rc>ult of l6 years of Fascism which had uuitic "the Italian soul a biiPli of it"lllll'.‘i't‘(i metal" . Ills [l(iilli‘ $1)l‘.'f‘ll iotiuv scemmi. n natural one. tiellveretl from lhci some lmlcmiy where i6 _venrs ago on Sept. 20. i922 he outlined l-‘ns- icismts aims before the march on l Home exists on the ahinel at today's emergency French (lovem- ihc spirit of Policy Racket Trial NFAV YORK. 5011i. 21) - ~(AP)—- The rc-trial of Zfaiiiiiiiiiigv District} Lcadcr Jiilll0b J. flint-s, on cou- spirticy-lotlery" charge». lll con- necitoii with tlic SBtLllUtLOOO-ti- your Dutch Schultz. jiolit-y" racket, was tmnsicrit-ti today Lo the Court oi ui-iiual Sessions. Supicirio Critirt Jwtil-e Ferdin- and i. wlui (l('lliiil'i.'(i 21 mis- trial lll l. e stitlifs ("use after tour iilllOllV by more than l llii- trans- lmlrict At- ytin- .i1i.r. illi- IIOf-Pti by iiis inst iuzi i" st-tbaci: in storm. of rucket-liiiul.i.::. crises, mi-uie it Cifill‘ hc vvvlii-ri “to rc- trial to be hcld before another jutlgc than Pll(.'i)l'ii> l)lll'll!;1 iiia trial. he ]ll'(li(‘.\il‘(l 1.ii1;\i11\. “yin; he fltjSCflilPil as ‘ilntlqef’ l.\‘ .lustiei- P(‘('ill'll iigztiil t ilie Di:- 'l Atttu"iit-,\"> iliii.' li!l’l "cs- l it ccssive fairncs " iouaril Hines. Justice Pet-ma ilct-liiicti a mis- iriul over Dewey. llll‘ll'l()ll o! ifiOillilOll_\' coiieciiiiiir. limo in anotlicr prunil jury.’ case. ion..<.*J.§“iiit-....via FREDERICTON. S1111. '21) - (CPl——Ilfil‘rl'()\‘('lilCl‘l[ \\'ti5 reported. toiiiuht iii lht- roiiiiitioii (ii Moon Rvv .l. A. It ' (ll-Oil, Arch- bishop of Ficti . llt- 1iasscd ll \'l'l>‘.' '1' fii‘\ illlll “it'd ziiueli .\ll‘t'llll1l‘l' this. n tcmoon, his 1ili_v.~i<-i:in said. ________ \ / itoluz klitu \, MONEY “'40 Quvxu’? m: CAREFUL $13001 “RES/ 'ipii.co.\vl"o. s1»: u»-.. .511. _ Aiiiiiiiiuiii and ni;i.\;i:iiuiii tempera- iiirc: : U" ' Lit: ~12 '11 ll .~i UU Fiuiih l‘i'\lll ._, jg Henna ,1 91, Miilliipeg 311 .1," Toronto 44 57 Ottawa 53 5g biuiilrt-al 1N tit QIIOIXt 3g u. Slillil John 53 64 }illili<l\ .31. 74 ClHlfiUlltlJH‘. cl 8t, FOREXXAtfiTS Nltiritiiiic t-a.-l' iiioueriitn lo frcsl‘. rouilicriy" in v .;.»y1_t- 1. "_ 3 viewing at lilillli u. _ uitii sJlllt‘ foe. ltillowcc. by show"- ers. High titii- lillm momma at ‘L53 anti tonight a1 901, Sun sets this ennui; 't 6,01 and rise:- Iniiinrrtiii imo m: at 545. .\i-\v llltt-il‘. S1~p1 ‘Jilrii 41H l‘ M Siiiiiiiirix-iiii l 1011i)...“ . 1mm- than (‘ii.ivli\':.-'v. 1~,_ THE (‘AR ldclllllt‘ .\'.~lll IYGS Lcavi llnrden 9.45 a. m. i p. In. and 4.45 p. m. Tnrmcntlne 11 a. m. 3.05 p. m. and 6.50 p. in. '"I"'" vnnncngfy t.