' MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN -____- l; poet-IT» "p," than science. The natural language of devotion symbolism and myth y} ____..._._ ghglottaMIl Guardian Two Cents Morning Goal-dial, Founded Ill! wiiciici is uiilin 0N iiiiilii PEAK No Sign Of Life At Scene Of Crash — Rescue Efforts ‘Ulr derway. . l’. by Guardian's Special Wire) SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Oct. Iii-Nineteen persons crashed to their fle ‘ths when the United Airlines‘ pa‘ atial "Maln- llner" shot into a peak high in thn Ulnia Mountains, alr searcher; said tonight- _ “I dnn't see how anyone could be alive there.” laid Wesley Meyers, Itiifm Wyliliiifllrancher, after a. flight over the wreckage of the craft which carried l5 men and tour women. “We flew as clos; above the wreckage as we dared and could lee not a sign oi_ the l9 people it carried." said Carl Reynolds, Salt Irke City photographer. "The front oi the plane is all smashed in and ihr Willis are sheared off." The ship was located from the air today in the high Uinta Moun. tains he Utah-Wyoming bor- COMING {you "Dulce, Lorne Valley Hall, wed. away. October 20th. Webster's Orchestra. L-7l3-10-1B-2l, "Chicken Supper in New Glas. I00‘ Hail postponed until October iith- ’L-747-10-19-ll. "Bingo and Diincc in c. M. B. A. H"?- Vtiiloll. Wednesday, October 20m. L-745-l0-19-2l. v-__-__- "Rummage sale Christian Church Schoolroom. Saturday, October 33. 3 P. m. L-760. "Come to Chicken Supper, iii-Whirl‘ lliill. October 20th, 0-10 P. M Admission 35c and 25c. L-67l-10-18-2i. "Borden Line Club loadinfl hogs, lambs, calves every Wednesday at Albany. Hours 12-1. Li-2091-l0-M T W ti. “Albany tonight, instead of Fri- Qily night. Card party at tile home oi Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Qum- L-7ti7 ‘fBvvins live rings Albany Thurs- diiiffiisi. Elmeraid 22nd, until noon. B. c. Green. L-20-65-W-t-t-w-t-tf. "Dance in Victoria Rink Wed- nmifll‘ night-Music by Slimmer- Iide Music Makers. L-2063-T-\V-tf. “Dolft miss NOIIh Wilt-shire Play “The Gate to Happiness" in Freetown Hall, Thursday, October 215i L750-10-19-1i 2 "Dance! French River Hall, Oct 0th. If not flne following night. Sale oi candy. Drawing ticket on ‘mi-- L-735-10-l9-ll. P"Q. M. N. G. Rummage Sale. St. cicrs Cathedral School room, Sat- uiiiii)‘. October 28rd, '1 P. M. L-71i-10-l8-1i. RJW- Pfillellb store, Covehead l Mi will be closed wednssdiiy [lid Thursday. (It. 20th and 21st 0P StOCIC taking. L-715-10-18-3i. ..'.'.2;"i"..".; "i" l”? mil-i y C are te- hw“ Rhythm Makers. L-2083-T-W-tf. “Rustic” , .. ‘h ll Wednesday, Oct. ,- chicken supper. bazaar, bingo, Ming and other a useme ‘s. li hilt line mug-way L75B-l0-l9-2i "M14108 live hogs and lambs at fiiligzton till noon Thursday, h! tlti- Nicholson Bros. load- “: Hunter River Friday till noon. wed McEwen d: Campbell. . 14-2141-7-6-13-20-21. l0 I "will! t» Halloween Tea. for “hmiiiietown Hospital in Holy ‘ i-i-til. ocbobci- 20th and 21st. g::é‘°“' 511MB. Pies, Home-made 7- 31080. Aprons, Fish-pond. L-GGT-IO-IG-ti. "A "Mina of the Mil‘: Produc- mdilliiti Vendors Aasoclaiicti to be new " the Agricultural. Hxli. Wed- wcloglf "shine. October 20th at a mmm- DP- Oroteau will address this credniam "Adult Education’ bind o, ‘m hlon Work business matters QM rill-nee will also be consid- muw 0111 (attendance urgently re- probably ‘ HENDAYE. fiance-Spanish Frontier, Oct. Ill-The Spanish - Government's dynamite-throw. i"! Asturlan troops. harassed by aircraft and artillery, stub- bornly resisted today the In- surgent advance toward Gllon, last important Government stronghold on the northern coast of Spain. . The Asturluns hastily dug new lines of fortifications as they were forced to fa'l hack. In- surgent planes bombed Villa- viclosn, their immediate 0b. iwiive. and raided the nut- Asturians Stubbornly Resist Rebel Advance i On - Gijonp skirts of Gilon. Villavicloea ls about 25 ‘miles east of Gljen. Military dispatches said the liliillflent troops advanced be- yond cimllllii. 36 miles east oi Gljon, and began cleanup op- erations in recently occupied "Frill"? in the hope of flnd- ing caches of war materials. lnsursents said their lines continued to hold back the Government otlcnslve against Zaragoza in northeastern Spain.- Fuentee de Ebro, about 15 miles southeast of Zaragoza, was described as in ruins. At POIICE-Ciliéf Shepherds. Island Geese On Last March MANsmEl-D» Mags. Oct. 18 —It. W35 a big parade, all right. and Police chin: Rufus 3mg had to be called to keep the Participants iii line. - Fourteen hundred geese, brought by train from Prince Edward Island, wilddled ‘M01181! the streets to a farm for fattening. The next time the “march. 9P5" 80 0X1 dlipluy they will be all dressed up on Thanksgiving . dinner plates. VISIT vii BE uinrrlclii Duke Of Windsor Is- sues Statement Re Visit To U. S. (AT. By Guardian's Sipecial Wire) mun-on, Oct. Ill-The Duke or Windsor. in s. formal statement distributed in the United Kingdom today by Reuters News Agency, said lis forthcoming visit to the United States is of “purey a pri- vate. unofficial nature." The statement. which Reuters said was obtained from the Duke's London solicitor. A. G. Allen, said i-ne itinerary was arranged by Char- les E. Bedaux, the Duke's friend and wedding host at Monts. I! and Mrs. Bedaux will accompany the Duke andDuchess to the United States "as friends," the statement added. It said: "His Royal Hghness’ visit is oi purely a private and unofficial character, and an itinerary ill in- dustrial areas has been arranged through the iristrumentality of Mr. Charles Bedaux. "The Duke and Duchess are tak- ing a very small staff with them, but (Convnued on page 3, Col 6) French Craft Scour Bay For Freighter (AI. By Guardian's Special Wire) ST. JEAN DE LUZ, France. Oct. lit-French warships today search- ed the Bay of Biscay for the freigh- ter Cells which disappeared after broadcasting an appeal for hep, saying she had been halted by In- surgent vessels. Naval authorites expressed the belief the 2,384 ton vessel had been talfelluw aicnisurscnt wr=-____ PROVIDENCE. R. L. Oct. l8 — (AB-Even as martial law. ‘ en- forced by Rhoda Island's cltzeu- soldiers, armed with machine Bill“. tear gas bombs and rifles. today blocked the openiiiii 9t the ""- rngumsett race track; ‘fall meet- ifli. the racing ns-ociaihon posted a card of entries for a Wiiedilled mflszlgefltlfirlaldllted down the bar- rels of snub-nostd machine guns at the entrances i0 We W"; "zuum dollnr pawtucket rnce pan t! Patrick Hilwrsen- “i” nn “fllioéirf; yr:oee have'been can- oemd “can” of martial‘ low. Entries are being ncceliil-‘ii 1°? V?" Plant Joint giiey Today ction Britain And France Seek Withdrawal Of Volunteers tA.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON, Oct. Ice-Great Britain and France drafted s. plan of joint action today for tomorrows Non- Illterveiition Subcommittee meetng over WillCh Foreign Secretary Edeii himself will preside in an effort to drive through an agreement to withdraw foreign volunteers from Spain's civil war. Eden conferred at length with Prime Mlnlster Chambeiaaln and French Ambassador" Charles Corbin on Franco-Brltsn policy for the meeting. - Surprise was caused 1n London diplomatic circles by ‘the departure of Joachim Von itibceiilrop, the German Ambassador, who new to Germany to see Chancellor Hitler. Whether he will return in time for tmnorrow‘: committee session was not. known but it was ullder- stood Von Ribbentrop sought. Hit- ler s orders on the Nazi stand in re- gard to France's proporaioiial vol- unteer wthurawai plan. - A semi-official usselxion from Rome that. only 40,000 Italian troops were lighting with the Spanish Iii- sllrgcnt armies prescliteu a 118d‘ element of discord into the nego- tiations by which Malice and Great. Britain BIB twins W Keel’ "i" war confined to Blwlii- , Brit sh and Mellon authorities have expressed belief that there are at. .east. 80,000 to 100,00 liuiians sci-- ving under Insurgent Generally bronco and have urged a "LO-Hill withdrawal on that basts us a Elia!- nntm of good faith. 'i.‘hc Spanish Embassy, comment- ing on the R/ome report, stated the Valencia Government had informa- tion there are 110,000 Italians in Spain." Publication of the Italian figures in an organ of the offic a1 Steiani News Agency was believed to show the basis on whichPrcmicr Musso- lini wants to bargain in tomor- rov."‘.'-: discussion of the actual nuln- ber of withdrawals. Informed quarters declared there was "no optimism" in regard to the success of the conference but. felt the fact Rome took the trouble to announce there were only 40,000 It- alians with the Insurgents held out. hope Iiiily would agree to with- draw some oi them. The clash of vicws between Great Brita u and France on tiie one hand and Itay and Germany on the other on the pl-fizcipul points be- fore the committee remained un- modified. Britain ancl France seek: 1. Withdrawal oi a substantial number oi volunteers before con- sideration of belligerent rights for the warring factions; 2. Withdrawals in proportion to the total number now on each sdc Race Track Offersmtgclrd For Today Despite Martial Law IIIOIIOW." L-788-l0-l9-2i. l, and not in equal numbers. arm officials. however, de- cilned to say whether this course would be followed daily in the fiioe of Governor Robert E. Quinn's adamant stand alainst. allowing the meet to open. It was Rhoda Islands Governor who, cilmazing o. controversy with Walter E. O'Hara, Narrngnnsettb managing director, clamped down martial 1am at the track with the declaration n "state oi insur- rection" existed there. Thtir. rifles shouldered. and bayonet; fixed steel-h elm e teld National I ’ men closed the ioagrampatotheparktoallper- sons euoept thou possessing ad- mlttanet cards countersimed b! i! Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Cl-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1931 siiliimlii FIRE ciillis rniiilvis Victims Trapped In Rooms As Flames Quickly Level Grand Central Hotel. (By The Canadian Press) SHERBROOKE. Que. Oct. 18- Burns and injuries claimed the life of one man late today as bod- ies of three others were sought in jagged. smouldering debris that once W85 the 75-year-old Grand Central Hotel, destroyed by fire oi undetennined origin at an estim- ated loss of $100,000 Death of Robert Cooper, 25, of Sheibmflkfi. One oi 12 persons in- jured while fleeing from windows of the four-storey brick building, boosted to four the tentative list of deaths. Police and firemen said there had been no chance of es- iifllie for Stewart Gross, 28, Oswald Chariewood. 31. and Lancelot Ste- wart, 32, all of Hherbrooke. The three ivcrc listed as missing. ' Critically Injured Still in critical condition was Octave Cameron, 31, of Quebec, who suffered from burns and shock. Condition of 10 other men and women was reported serious but not critical. Grosc, restaurant owner who lived at the hotel with Cooper, Charlewood and Reggie Reed, an- other of the injured, apparently sacrificed his life in an cfIort to reach the imprisoned Charlewood. Cooper already had led two per- sons to safety and shouted that he was going back after his roonl- mate. Ho was never seen again lifter dashing through a flaming doorway. ' Flames Spread Rapid] y The flames, originating in the rear section of the building, situ- ated in the heart of the down- town business area, spread so quickly guests and employees who were called immediately the flames were discovered had no time to dress. Most of them fled in night attire, some with their skimpy clothing smouldering. To Claire Lapierre, hotel serving girl, went the credit. for saving oi many lives. She raced through (Continued on pigs 7, col. 0A Will Renew Search For Missing Fliers NEW YORK, Oct. l8—Slr Hu- bert Wiikins, noted Australian ex- plnrer, said today he plans to take off tomorrow on the first lap of a flight to Barrow, Alaska, to renew the quest for s x Russian fliers lost N6rt1l‘P0lé'.' ‘ Sir Hubert said he wou'd take off with his chief pilot, Air Com- modore Herbert Hollick-Kenyon of liviiiiilpfls. on a txst iznt to the nllclwcst tomorrow sf‘ noon, flying the big locklieed elec “s. “lane in which Dick Mei-r ll hopped the At- lantic last. May. Island Bishop _T0 ' t Assist At Ceremony HAMILTCN, Ont. Oct. l8 — (UP)—COIISBCI'AHCII of Rel". Josrph Francis Ryan as Bishop of Hamil- ton tomorrow will be attended by Roman. Catholic Church dignitar- ies from all parts of Canada and the United States. Most Rev. John Thomas Mc- ‘Na-iiy, Archbishop of Halifax and former Bishop of Hamilton. Will officiate at the ceremony which will be held in the Cathedral of Chi-let the King. Those assisting will he Most Rev. John Thomas Kidd. Bishop of London. 0nt., and Most Rev. Joseph A. dsulllvan. BLshop of Charlottetown. Every cup ll their commanding officer it somewhere in tiiemvicinity of the Japanese Advance ls Slowed llovvn (By Lloyd Lehrbns, Associated Prers Foreign Staff Writer) (Tuesday) SHANGHAI, Oct. ill-The ad- vance oi the Japanese army down tile two great railroads linking North China with the soutil has been slowed down, according to authoritative advices today from points along the southern banks oi. the Ye'1ow River, the great stream that divides North Chitin from the rest of the nation. . In the east, the Japanese threat to Tsinan, capital of Shantung Province, was lessened when-the column operating along the Tient» sin-Pukow railroad withdrew 15 miles northward to Plngy-uanh- sien from Yuchengsuiig where their line had threatened the Chin- ese Tuhai River positions 30 miles from Tainan. A portion of the eastern forces was transferred to bolster the Japanese drive that is meeting stiff resistance 150 miles to the west oi the\Peibing to Hankow railroad. Reports from North China. yes- terday said that an armored train had penetrated to Hatitan. 2b miles in advance of the main Jap- 1' anese forces at Shuntelifu and an equal distance from the Chinese base at Changtefu in Honan Prov- ince. This would place the farth- est Japanese advance 250 miles southwest oi Pciplng and only 15 miles from the Hopehahonan pro- vincial border. At Shanghai, a battle was being fought 10 miles northwest; of the city in thesector between Tazang and Liehang, where the Japanese pounded the Chinese defences. In what was described as the severest singe encounter of the two-month old conflict around Shanghai, Chinese authorities said 1,400 Chinese and 3,000 Japanese died fighting for the Chinese sup- ply bases at Tazang. The Chinese Commander, 27-year-old Colonel Chin Chiug-Wu, and his command was retlrted wiped out in a 33- hour battle. Bandits Rob Jewelry Store In Hollywood HOLLYWOOD. Oct. 18—(AP)- The jewelry store of Hal Roach. movie producer. and L. H. Driver. patronized by many film notables. wa; robbed of jewels valued at $150,000 today. Two men entered the 5t0re tl'ils- sed Drive;- nnd two clerks with ad- hesive tape and forced them into o, vault, The robbers were looting the store when a postman entered. At pistol point he was forceddnto the safe, The men fled 1n their automobile which was found aband- oned several miles away. Elected To Federal Seat By Acciamation (By The Canadian Press) NORTH SYDNEY, N. S., Oct. 18 —Mntt.hew Macliean, Sydney Mines magistrate, became the new mem- ber of parliament for the Cape Breton North-Victoria federal con- stituency by acciamation tonight. He was nominated by a Liberal Party convention to contest the Federal by-eiection mad-g necessary by the death oi D. A. Cameron, K.C.,the sitting member, in Mont- real. No other nomination papers were flied by the six o'clock deadline tonight and MacLean was auto- matically elected. ISLAND MAN AWARDED CONTRACT (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) 1 OTTAWA. Oct. Ill-The De- partment oi Public Works tonight announced‘ award of 14 contracts amounting to $295,472. They elude: Charlottetown — Public building IA addition, A. T. MacKll-inon, Char- ‘ lotteto 823.011. a delight-w a in- -- m". Qfififif-‘fifiliififififiiti’ 19 FEXRED DEAD 11v CRASH OF (LMYAIRLINER SIK'000Rl REFERENCE 0N lEtilililllflN P l"e m i e r Aberhart Makes Public Brief Defending B i l 1 s S u b m i t t e d T o Ottawa. (fl-P- By Guardlan’; s cl EDMONTON, Oct. iifnglifii’. the validity and soundness of three "m5 passed by the Alberta Iegls. lnture and referred to the Gover. nor-Genci-al-in-Council for consid- Bfliiifln was made in a, brief sub- milled to the Federal Government by the provincial administration. The brief WflS made public here to- driv by Prclnicr Aberhart. The three bills-dealing with regulation of crcdit-werc dealt with in the 900 word submission that 11150 proposed a court reference on the question of the Federal gov- .emn_ients right. to dsai‘ow' the leg- isiatlon of any province. Deny Federal Power After declaring the three bills were sound legislation and denyng Federal right of disallowance, the bl-lcf declared the inlportant ques- tion of riisallowance should be set- tled by tho courts and that all pro- vinces wou'd be vitally interested in the decison. Should any question be raised as to constitutional validity oi.’ the bill to "ensure the pilblication of ac- curate news and information," the government had no objection to having it i‘(if8i'l'€d to the courts for decision, the brief said. The bill affects newspapers and provides for enforcement of publcation of cor- rective statements on government policy and disclosure of identity of writers and sources of news and information. Tax on Banks The legislation providing for tax- ation of banks and the Alberta Credit Regulation Act. were in a different category and test cases in courts were essential to determine their vnldity. the brief declared. The taxing measure increased from one-tenth to one-half of one per cent the tax on paid up capi- tal and imposed a talx of one per cent on reserves and undivided pro- fits. Previousy it was estimated the two taxes would producev__$g.0_00._0@ (Continued on page '1.‘ Col. 0) Four Killed As Fog Blankets British Isles LONDON. Oct. 1B—(CP-Havas)- Four persons were killed and more than 20 injured in England today in accidents due to a heavy ioz. particularly dense in the London district, which blanketed the Brit- ish Isles. Highway traffic precautions were redoubled as nightfall brought n0 relief. and it was feared the cas- ualty list would pow. The Air Miliistry announced the fog would probably last a day or two 1on8"- Accused Of Injuring British Fascist Chief IilVFJR-POOL. Oct. 18-(0? l-lfl- \'fi.$)—GCOI‘ge Olsen Melander, ac- cused of throwing o stone here on Oct. 9 which inflicted head in- juries on sir Oswald Mosley. was fnacd under- bail by a Police Ma- gistmte today until the British Fascist Loads,- has lecuperated sui- fioiciitly to testify. l I ~--~'r*.v1v..~'rrv w l =~ .- - ~ 8 PAGES "iiW-‘iifllwrs. taxation of banks and‘ - ml" i.» er m. ,.~ w» The cloud before the sun men a. tzily that that great luminary is hiri- den, not destroyed. MAXIMS OFA MERE LIAN Annual Snblcrlptloif Delivered $5.00 By Mall-P. l. 1., 84.00; Canada Bill] L‘. B. $5.00 NE WCLASHES HEIGHTEN TENSIQONINPALES TIIVE Britainfioves To Curb Rising Tide UfA rabferrorism Authorities Take Stern Measures In Effort To Suppress Wide- spread Violence. _ JERUSALEM. 06t- 13 -(i\l’)-- Heavy casualties were inflicted on ll large blind 0t‘ Syrians litti-nlptingr to cross the Palestine frontier today. llflCOlilifillUii reports said, an the government of Briiish-niiilldzitcil Palestine rcizllintc-d for recent outrages. Military slippers, army engineer units_ blew up homes 0f Arabs involved in raiding a derailed train Fridzrv, the reports stated, and at the same time iliilHlCd two houses in , Lydda in punishment tor the burning oi‘ new zlirporti buildings there Saturday. _ Strong guard detachments patrolled mzlny Holy Land districts to prevent further violence. The Government Gazette announced that Sheik Hussam ed Din Jarallan, considered one of the likelicst successors to the Moslem Mufti as president of the Palestine Sup- reme Council, had accepted appointment tn a Commission administering Moslem funds. His acceptance was seen as foreshadowing Arab m. operation with the Commission. sioners are British officials. British authorities, concerned with the rising tide of Arab ter- rorism, hit back today with deg struction of terrorists’ homes and) collective nes on Arab townsf where recent disorders tookpiiice. ‘ ZZ-HOUR "CURFEW" Residents oi Lydda were per-l mitted to leave their homes for only two hours each day to make purchases and take care oi‘ their, cattle. This 22-hour “curicw" was ordered for three days while troops scour the area for wreck—| ers of the airdrome. Curfew was maintained at Jer- usalem, where sporadic killings continued. An Arab was slain early today and a Moslem and an‘ Armenian photographer- seriously wounded. Later another Arab was wounded in a clash in one of the Jerusalem suburbs. A detachment oi the second Black Watch Battalion sped to- ward Daharla, near Hcbron, aiter Arab terrorists raided a police post and forced the policeman in charge to turn over arms and ani- munition. Jaffa. on tho coast, was shaken by new violence when terrorists hurled bombs at the central police headquarters. Authorities warned Jews against leaving Jails. Reports oi clashes from all parts‘ of the country indicated that ten- sion was approaching a. Cillllfiffi following the escape of the Grand a Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin El Husseinl. to Syria from his refuge in the Mosque of Omar. (The Grand Mufti, interviewed by a. Near East correspondent. o! the Paris Soil". warned Great Bri- tain against “involving itself to the death" with the Arab-Mosicm world, and declared the. Arahs will never compromise in their oppos- ition to Jews in Palestine. "Let the English br- on their gilard." lie said. "Tilc policy they arc follow- ing in Paivstinc is aliciintin: iii" sympathies not only of illr- Arabs of Palestine but of all countries oi Arab race and of tlic cnzirc hi0?- lem tvorldf’) . RAILWAY REVENUES INCREAPE MONTREAL, Que. Oct. l8-—T1iC gross revenues oi the ail-incius vc Canadian National Railways system for the week ending October l4. 1937, were $4,013,150 as compared with $3,946,415 for the correspond-l in; period of 1936, an increase of $66,835. WASHINGTON. Oct. 18 —(APl -—-President Roosevelt hiked his e=timate oi tho United States fed- eral deficit for this fiscal year by $217,000,000 today. iorcasting the | Treasury would run $895,245,000 . into thc red by next June 30. _Rcvampirlg the budget issued , last, April. the President whittled ' his estimate of revenues by $256- . 000 000, bringing the f‘gure down to 511650110000. l-le said spending would be 321000.000 greater than anticipated and would total $7.- 345,6i'i5,0(20 exclusive oi $200000.- 000 for debt retirement. The estimated gross deficit of $895,245,000 included the $200000.- 000 in be spent. for paying oft debt. Exclusive of this. the net _doficit was forecast at $695,205,- 000, compared with a forecast oi 84.18.000.000 last April and a net deficit of 52.707.347.000 iii flcal year cndcd Julie 30. Mr. Roosevelt gave no reason for his sharp reduction in the revenue mtimate for this year, but authorities assumed it. was dicnted on the severe stock mar- ket. decline and recent d1l\\'llS\\'ll!g'< in various ‘business indices. The President said llllill\"l‘()i'S factors had arisen sine.- las-t A“l‘ll to illcreluse spending. lllcluii in: expanded outlays for the l'$llll'i“i(l retirement. program. legislation authorizing unemployment refunds under the social security act’ and extension of the pllbiiC works administration for two "n . | ll \_ A Staggering Deficit Forecastl By United States President i i t the . lir‘-' B545 ' first ifcil. ~FllERS_iilllEii The other two commis- s? r. Two Trenton Crash‘ Victims Hail From Maritimes. 'I‘REN'I‘ON, Oct. 18—~Ill fog an mist lliIl-l hung heavily over th Royal Cailaclali Air Force cam): iu-re tiirce lilPTS mot death toda when a diving plane smashed‘ broadside into a second maching pilotcrl by a student officer. The ac- cident occurred at noon. All members of the R. C. A. F. Curtis. iiic clcncl are R. L. Doucettz, ‘J5 your old pupil flier from Shed<1 lac. N. B; Plight. Lieutenant J. A, l\i":ti.lllil> of Trciiiriii and Flightf Sfiillvfllli» P‘. O‘Colinoi' of Otta- wa. Dollc-ct. ullci O'Connor were kill-i czi iiistziiitiy and lliriclnncs died be) fore an ambulance coilld got him to llclicviilc llnr-pitnl, l2 lliiics away, The Department; of National Dc lPllPf‘ zit Oit.'l‘.\'.'i imrlollllccd u cou of inquiry hurl liccn appointed ti} (GP. By Guardian's Special Wlrr§ (Continued on DLILC 3. Col 4) ' _-:;-._—_~~.~:-.-_;—;_—;-..~-.~ -_ _._=- ‘filii HAND 4m Rbtlkb ‘lili; canon isn't Tub HAND ‘film’ Rocks 174E. A (Canadian Pres!) TORONTO. Oct lii-Miniuillm and maximum l0lll])C_l‘i3llll'(‘5 :-» Dawson (l; .11; Vi tolia 4).; ~-; Edmonton I‘; -<] Regina 33 49 Winnipeg m; 3 Toronto 4g 33 Ottawa 35 J4 hirmtieal 4o 5a Qll"b"t‘ m: s4 Saint John 3i a2 . Ha iiux 3G ‘$4 g Charlottetown 34 5t FORECKAST biniztiiiiv East: Southwest and ‘ snutli winch, illcruisliig to fresh 01' ..~.irolii:; cloudy and nillti followed by sonic ruin. lligii tide tiiin lllfifllifl’! at. 10.01 null iOlLlZlli u 10.05. Sun sets lili\ afil-rnimil at 5.10 Ililli ri~!‘.~ llilllili'l'ti\\' lllflrllllig at 0.3. i-‘iiil lllitilll Tilealizll". Oct. l9. 4A’? ll. ill :iliiiliili-r.-iiil~ lith- ciglilocil mill- utcs ltlllT llillll Cliili-iiittl-tiilvn. TIER (‘All FERRY Imlrea llorilen 0.45 a. 1a., l p. m. [mines Tnrnrentinn ll a. m., 2.116 p. In. From sent. 27 to 0st. 80 Leave Borden 4.30 p. 1a., leave Iorabolilll 5.45 I. In