ii llm Thlliti- NO INTI nld mdin is equal in |U%.,f ,1 in Allowance 0n yin"- nuv sol. Iruz/A/y m; *‘ ‘ nvmu; l iRliSl (IIIARGICS and you get easy monthly pirymcirt terms at crush priCus ,‘ f... plant's under command of Ivan Chuknovsky wore remaining at‘ Rudolplrs Island to hunt for plane weckage as soon as conditions are favorable. gppcn i cu. COMING fVfNll "Announcement ure lunerted In ‘hi; rulliln at 2 cents per wold lirlcily payable in lulvaneo. _.._---—-——-—---. "Biryirlg Poultry daily. McGulzan g; Boyle, L-zia-lr-za-ioi. "Buying Poultry every clay. Bovrmalls Store, Hunter River. ‘ L-2l4-1l-27-fir " For Sale choice Filiey. AD- piy Annie Currie Fairvlsw. 14-381-12-1-31 "Baptist Church Guild after- noon res. and Christmas are Fri- day, December 3. L-4li-l2-l-4i. " Don't miss auction and dancel st Green Road School Friday. Dec. 3rd. L-464-12-3-li “Poniry Sale at Fenneli 8t Ci w Saturday. December 4th. lriLDonnld Women's‘ Institute. "Sec the play "Hired Hus- bands" in Marshiield Hall tonight. l 14-506 "Reserve Wednesday Dcc. 22nd (or Cirristmas Concert in Braokley Hall. L455-12-3-1l "Will be buying poultry all day mon- ut Emerald Junction paying lucid-s: market prices. Ale Mur- phy. L-418-l2-2-2i. "l will continue to give 10% dis- mun: for cash until December 24th, i937. Signed John Dcvine. L-437-l2-2-2i. “Tryon Players will present com- dy "Correspondence Courtship" in empton, Riday. Decenrber 3rd. L-ili-IZ-il-ll. °' Cake Bale at Fennell Chand- ler Saturday, Dec. 4th, by Mc- Donnei Women's Institute. ' L-376-12-l-3i “Dance in Caledonia Bchooi. nun;- evening, December 10th. Vlocd Island Orchestra. Admission I0 cents. L45Z-12-3-1i "All accounts due prior to i931 ii not settled immediately will be placed in a solicitors hands for collection. Signed John Stewart, North Granville. I.~484-l2-3-2i. "Flour, bran, shorts and “Hog Concentrate” for sale at co-operutivc prrcs. It will pay you to call upon us. ii you are buying. Livestock blurltctlug Board. L~430~l2-2-3i. “Rcscrve Thursday, Dec. 9th. for entertainment by summerside tal- ‘llll ill Calm Traverse Hall. Pro- ceeds in aid of new kitchen. 1A02-l2-3-2i _. "Livestock shippers attention! Please rcad shipping club adver- tisement in this column and note “l Yilur local club is loading one dill‘ earlier in the week than here- foro. ‘llhis will continue weekly illlvllnlleiy and until further no- ‘N- livestock Marketing Board. L-sooliz-a-ai. "live-we: Marketing mum |°=lllhc livestock through local villus Clubs during the week °l December 6th. u follows: Mon- day afternoon, Montague, Cardi- “ll- Elmira. Sour-is, st. Peters, U188’; Tuesday forsnoon, Kensing- wn, or...‘ ewwn, York, North wmslllle. Hunter l-‘tiver, Brad- ‘Ihne: Tuesday afternoon rz-a °°°¢l< Borden Line. Please list "w: With local Secretary. 14-506-12-341. “Wlommenoing week of December h. the lollowhg Shipping Clubs “l” 1°84! om day earlier in the week “fl has been the custom for the gm few years. Tuesday's loadings erctoiormwill revert to Monday at ‘i’ "m: time; from this week on- ‘illlll- The following Clubs at least, - be affected: Elmira, Bouts, St. tors, Mount Stewart, Morell, Mon- fllllo. Cardigan, York. Murray Riv- l’. Melville, Uigg, Mllivicw, Wilt- Mb . Hunter River, Bradalbene and Pu“! Bilccial crossings of Car M for accommodation of live ‘f: llllnplng will harmonize with u: lTTI-fllcmehil. Livestock $1M 308d. Ipflfl-lfl-Z-Bi. Aimvc Hindu-l $79.95 "an i 5 Ziii $33311 if} Tribute T o L a t e Justice. Hundreds attended funeral sor- vices at Summerside yesterday for (390120 Strong Inman, Judge o1 the Prince County Court. who died Tllésdlly at the age of 67. The Prince Edward Island Bar Association attended in a body while the Provincial Government was represented by PremierThane A- Qflmpbell, KC, Hon. James P. Mflclntyre. Hon. LR. Allen. Mayor B. W. Robinson and Town Coun- cillors also attended. The services were under the aus- pices of the Prince Edward Island Masonic Grand Lodge. sci-vi” in Ttinity United Church was con- ducted by Rev. L. E. G. Davies, assisted by Rev. George R. Harri- son, rector of St. Marys Church. The burial service of the Masons was carried out at the Lower Bed- eque cemetery by Pa,” grand Muster L. M. MacKinnon o! Mon. tague, P.E.l’. Assisting at the grave was Rev. Edwin White oi Tyne Valley, P.E. I. Large numbers of Masonic breth- ren from all parts of the province attended to honor the memory oi’ a. Past Grand Master of the Grand Lodge. Friends from all walks of life and from all parts of the pro- vince and many old neighbors from Judge Inman‘s birthplace. Bedeque. were at the services to nay I last tribute to one they loved and hon- ored. Chief mourners were. three sons. Robert. George and Victor, a bro- ther, Mr. T. J. Inmzm. Bedequemn uncle, Mr. Waiter Doull, and a cousin. Miss Doull, Charlottetown. Honorary pail bearers were, Mr. Justice A. E. Arsenault, Mr. Jus- tice A. C. Saunders, Judge H. L. Palmer. Judge C. G. Duffy, Sen- ntor Peter Sinclair and Senator Creelman MacArthur. Active pail bearers were, Dr. John F‘. MacNeill, Dr. E. T. Tan- ton, T. W. Bentley, M. L. Brad- shaw, FJE. Wright and A.S.Mac- Kay. ARRESTED in BANK IIQBBERY Vancouver Barrister Held On Serious Charge. (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire] vsrrcouvrza, Dec. ‘it-Charles H. Cohan, Jrz, Vancouver barrist- er and son of a prominent Mont- real family, today was arrested by city police on a charflfi 01 blnk robbery. The charge named Cohan. 5°11 of Hon. C. H. Cahan. former Sec- retary 0f State, as the l?!“ Elm‘ man who yesterday hed uP I suburban branch of the ilanadian Bank of Commerce here lllld *- caped with about s60 in cash. The arrest was made a few min- utes after Cohan had been con- victed of passlru; Wllftllle" me‘ ques and had been remanded t0 next Monday for sentenoe- HE hid been under observation by city police since eilljuhls morninB- I11 (Continued on page ll. Col 8) French Foreign Ti‘ Read by Everybody MAXI MS OFA MERE MAN Al every individual no every nation must have some axis of faith on which the movements of llfe may turn. - Covers Prince Edward Island Iiike the Dew cuanwrrarowrv. CANADA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER s, 1931 '12 PAGES "'.i',“'u.'§i’2*,:'-g*";{f ,-;_;;;;=;=_-,,:g~:,, ,, , ,._,, TTERS JAP “VICTOR Y PARADE” ES 11v BRITISH‘ A nexpected path 0f Lower ontague g Man Mr. Lelth (Iowan, 62-year-- d Lower Montague farmer, us found dead lu bed yester- ly mnrnlnr. Wednenduy ho IfIlIeu-cd ll: good health. worked about his fem: an usual and was ‘in Gocrgetown on business. Yesterday morning his wife was shocked to find that he had died during the night. Death was beliovd due to heart ailment. Besides hi! wife he h aur- Vlvfll by I Ion. Irving (Iowan, and three daughte , Beth. Frances and Phyllis. urrrfiiiivrv or PlllHRlES Calls For Removal Of Settlers From Un- economi-c Areas. WINNIPEG. Dec. 2-(CP)—An agricultural and economic survey to define the uneconomic areas Qf the prairies and subsequent re. moval of settlers from those are” to fertile lands elsewhere were urg- ed by Premier John Bracken of Manitoba before the Roweli Com- mission today as one of the major uioblcnu confronting Western Canada. None of the Prairie Provinces was capable of dealing with me situatio r but in the interest of the nation as a whole the situation re- quired early action, he said. The problem was one oi many arising from Canada's early land settlement policy, in which un- suitable and widely scattered areas were settled, Mr, Bracken said, 0178111118 llfl for grain growing purposes the short grass grazing land in southeastern Alberta and southwestern Saskatchewan was the classic example. Smaller un- suitable areas had been settled in IVIIEtIIICOUB but with less drastic re- s . INFORMAL HEARING REGINA, Dec. 2—(CP)-Sessions of the Rowell Commission on Dom- inion-Provincial Relations opening in Regina Dec. 9. will be kept as informal as possible and every ef- fort directed toward having a frank and free discussion of the problems confronting the province within the economic structure of the confederation. Hon. ‘RC. Davis, Saskatchewan Attorney General. said today. With this object in view ar- rangements are being made tohold the session on the floor of the Leg- islative Assenibly Chamber. Com- missioners and representatives of ditIerent organizations submitting briefs will be grouped around a conference table. Safe Arrival OT Vessel Reported BOSTON. Dec. 2 —'(A Pi-A cablegram from her skinner. (Ia-D- tain William F. Plummer, report- ing the safe arrival of the schoon- er Helen Barnet Grlng at Birken- head, 13mg, today ended fears for the safety of the big four-sticker. Laden with about 1,000,000 feet of lumber, the vessel had been 55 days out of Parrsboro, N. 5., about two weeks longer than the voyage was expected to require. The colblegram was received by her local agents. Minister Leaves On Diplomatic Tour rams, Dec. 2-(AP)-—1l‘orci8ll Minister- Yvon nelbos headed l" Warsaw tonight T01‘ u" {mt M ‘ rules of visits to Frances eastern and central Europe"! Fm" 5°‘ signed lo bring them in line with Anglg-Iflfllch EHOTIS f0!’ I Kéllfli-l diplomatic settlement with Ger- many. mfmmed diplomatic sources 681d M. Delbos carried a iolnt Amb- Prencn guarantee to Poland and the Little mwnre-oavyhwlovfllli- Yuma,“ w; . manuals-that Gcrmanywouldnotbe givonofrec hand in central Himm- q-hg, swing about the continent was the third CHIP!" 01 5930"” tions m so up n 11"’ "m" pace ekuctum. On Nov. i9 the British Loni n-esigent of the Council, Viscount Halifax. had an exploratory con- versation with Relchsfuehm- Hit- ' ler- m that private and informal interview. Hitler was und 4 " to have advanced Gemmn claims for oolotiiee and n. free ham! to the south and and as the price for any collective security agreement based on reduction of nnmmenta. M. Delbon and Premier Camille ohautem met Prime Minister Cranmer-lain and fordim secretary men in lamina Mondgv and ‘mu- day cl thh week‘ and. 1R0: hearing Lord Halifax‘! rflllfl. lnnoimoed qntrthvrcanvmofthesltustion unneeded. IJEMIIBRABIES] ASSAIIEB BY? llllYD BEDRBE Warns Of Fascist March Along Med- iterranean In Criti- cal Address. LONDON. Dec. 2 —(CP)—De- ilveritrg a blistering indictment o! the “limp, flaccid hands" oi demo- cratic "quitiem" David Lloyd George told a peace audience to- day that enemies, “growing in strength and audacity and reck- less power," wereonthe march s.- iong the Mediterranean and threatened Britain's communi- cations in time of war. He declared liberty and. demo- cracy throughout the world were at stake and that while 20 years ago, under strong leadership, the democracies had withstocd the supreme, test, today it was one surrender after another. Yielding before the resolute march of the dictators, the War- time Prime Minister charged, democratic “quitters" were blam- ing each other at every retreat and could not seize tme sword for trembling. The result had been ious failure everywhere. He poured scorn on those who, so long as Britain was not attack- ed, were blind to what was going on abroad. What would happen to Egypt, Palestine and the Sudan. he asked, when the present tasks of the aggreswsrs were done! The former Prime Minister's audience at his speech before the Council of Action for Peace and Reconstruction, which he organ- lred in 1935, was somewhat sur- prised by his reference to Premier Stoyadinovich oi’ Yugoslavia as "another dictator." If General Franco winsin spain, Mr. Lloyd George said, ‘you will have four great dictatorial pow- ers-Gennany, Italy, Japan and Spain. Another dictator threw in his lot with them yesterday-the Premier of Yugoflnvia." He apparently was alluding to an official announcement in Rcme that Stoyadinovicir would arrive in the Italian capital Sunday for a three-day visit which some sour- ces thought might culminate in Belgiudes adherence to the anti- communist pact. The pact now binds Gcnnany, Italy and Japan. Mr. Lloyd George attacked the government's foreign policy in language alternately violent and ironic. Provoking frequent laugh- ter and applause. Lad Injured By Shot-gun Blast YARMOUTTI, N. 5.. Dec. 2 - (C Pl-‘Iwo-year-old Walter Saulnier of Wcrmcuth, near here. lwas in Yannouth Hospital tonight with little hope held for his Iitc after a shotgun with which he and his brother, William, three. were playing, exploded, The chllds eyes and face were badly burned and doctors said ii he recovered he would be blind. ‘The boy nnd his brotlrr had been sent upstairs to play while their mother, Mrs. Gerald Sauinisr, nremrrd n birthday pirty for Walter. In scme manner they o'c- inirod the gun from where it was kept. ignomin- Valley Prisoners In Jail Break c (By The Canadian Press) KENTVILLE, N. 5., Dec. Z-Irwc prisoners escaped from the King! County Jail yard today, scaling a lit-foot fence for the second Kent- vills jail break within the lost few months. Town and RoyaiCanndian Moun- ted Police were searching tonight for the two, Robert VanBunkirk. Wolfvilie, N28. and Edward Rice, Aylesford, 11.5., each 20. Urge Market For Canadian Fish YARNIOUTH. N. 8.. Dec. 2—The Yannouth Board of 'l‘rade urged at a " ,, tonight that the Canadian Government secure more favorable trade arrangements with the United States regarding fish and fish products. A resolution paced by the board requested every effort be made to obtain e reduction in the tariff oh fish end rich products exported from this country to the Unified Fire. Destroys ThrecBarnsAt Appin Road A large barn and two smal- ler outbuildings, owned by Mr. Edward Farrow, Appln Road, were destroyed by lire yester- lily nftemoon. A quantity of feed, Including hay and grain. I was burned. everal fann irn- plements were believed includ- ed In the lose. No livestock was lost. Details of the fire were meagre as the ‘district cannot be reached by telephone. Origin of the fire. discovered about 3 o'clock. was not learn- ed. No elflmnle of the loss was available. urn illllll IS muslin Growing Concern 0v- er whereabouts Of_ Mr. John McGuigan. Continued absence of Mr. Jamesl MoGulgan, 73-year-old Charlotte-l town resident, unreported since. Monday was causing growing un- l easincss last night. When his dis-‘ appearance was first reported Po- lice believed he had gone to vlsitl friends in the country. Inquiries by local and Mounted Police, however, have tailed to discover even vague clues as to his where- abouts. _ , ~._~ Mr. McGuigan is married and resides near the C. N. R. station. police said. He left home Monday morning apparently in good health and was believed to have been seen in the city that night, Chief Birtwlstle said. He did not re- turn home, however. nor was ally- ‘tlllrlng further heard concerning m He was described. police said, as 5 feet 8 inches tall, Weighs l65 pounds, iron grey hair and mus- tache. and dressed in working clothes. Acquaintances remember- ed he had mentioned on several Otmslons during the summer that ho planned to visit friends in the country this fall. He had been employed during the summer by the City ‘sanitary department. Monument ls Erected To Early Settlers There has recently been erected in Brudenell Cemetery a monu- ment to the memory of two brothers, James and Donald Dewar, who were born in Perthshirc, Scotland, and came wilh their wives to Montague River in the early years of the nineteenth cen- tury. These two men were the progenitors of nearly all the Dewars on Prince Edward Island and their descendants are scat- tered all over the continent of, North America and as far us, Australia and New Zealand, Many, of them have prospered in busi- ness and contributions were re- ceived from Rhoda Island, Mass- achusetts. New Hampshire, Mon- tuna, Ontario and “The Island." It was a fine gesture on the part of people four and five gen- erations removed from the or- iginal pioneers, "but the heart is Highland, the blood l3 strong" that cements the ties of kinship that binds their memories to the beloved “sea glrt Isle". and the misty mountains and glens of the father-land. The stone is of Vermont marble and contains inscriptions in both high-sh and Gaelic, the language flsed by these men in their daily vac. Coffins Used For , Fuel In Shanghai | SHANGHAI, Dec. z-(APi-Jrirc , fuel shortage has become so acute ln Shanghai Chinese are digging» ANNIHINBEI]: | i l i l innit rrw APPOINTMENTS‘ Viscount Cort, V. C.,. New Chief Of Staff - Change In Line With Reorganized Forces. (By Pat Usslier, Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON, D00. Z—Thc ‘Var Of- ‘ lice tonight announced drastic changes in the Army Council. Three of ihc four military mem- bcrs of he Council have resigned and have been replaced, including the chief of the Imperial Gen- nrnl Staff. The new appointees are: Major-General Viscount Gort. V. (L. succeeding Flld Marshal Slr' Cyril Devi-rail, r-hlef of the Imper- ial General Staff. - l lviliflr-Gcneral Clive Gerard‘ Liddell. succeeding General Slr Harry H. S. Knox, adjutant-gen- I 6P8. Engineer-Vice-Admlral Sir Bar-i old. A. Brown, director-general of] munitFnns producing since 1936.; retains that title and assumes the‘ duties of master-general of ord- l nant-c, surf-ceding LieuL-General} Si? Hugh Ellcs. , The fourth military member is. LieuL-General Sir Reginald Mani Quarter-Master General, who re-' mains. In addtlcn to these changes it was announced Admiral- Brown will bewissisted by L1eut.-General M. G. Taylor who is appointed dep- uty-nrasicr-genoral of ordnance. Colonel Sir Ronald Adam is ap- pointed deputy chief of the 1m- perini Gczreral Staff, a position which has been vacant recently. REASON FOR. CHANGES The changes, it is explained, are designed by the government, and particuiarly by Leslie i-Iore Bel sha, War Secretary for the past six months, to bring new blood to the High Command and to hasten the vast task of reorganizing the army l0 enable it to adapt itself to the latest technique of warfare. 1t tras recalled that the appoint- men: of Admiral Brown last year to the Army Council stirred up mili- tary quarters who felt the munit- ions posrtion should have gone to an army man. Appo ntmcnt of General Liddeil was in line with Mr. Hore-Belisirab expressed intention m give the Territorial Army a more import- and status. The War secretary told Parliament .ast month it was the intention to bring the Territorial _Army up to the level of a regular (Continued on pagt 11, Col 5) . Would Join Pair Together Surgically WASHINGTON, Dec. 2-—(AP_>-_ John Melvin Bonner and Clara Howard, both negro children, will be joined together surgically with- in a few weeks. A Washington surgeon, it was disclosed today, plans the operat- ion to restore the girl's skin which was burns-d badly in a shanty fire in N0l‘ill Carolina n your ago. The surgeon. Dr. Robert E. Mor- an, will (‘Ollilfkt ilrc two bodies by an 18-inch tube of skin extending down‘ one side oi each. They will remain that way. with ihclr blood circulatory systems connected, for flvc weeks. Clara, l3, was so badly burned. a usual skin grafting operation was consiricrcd insnilicicnt. She and J01) ' Fascist MILAN. Doc. Ii—<Priday)—Prem- lcr Mussoiinils ll Popolo (Yllalia today informed Great Britain the Urrted States and France editorially that Italy would not be "intimidat- ed" by economic agreements hostile to Fascism. The editorial was the second sar-- up com,“ m the surrounding , car-tic attack on democracies pub- lished by the ncwspapcr- this wet-k. , ,My lc0 March 7h rough Settlement Zone Despite Protests Incident Occurs As Troops Swing Into Nanking Road —— One Soldier Reported Killed. (Ily The Associated Press) SHANGHAI, Dec. :I—-(I“I‘idil_\')---i\ bomb exploded in Nankinp; Road today as 5,000 Japanese troops marched through Shanghai in a victory parade. The parade scat- tered immediately _ The explosion was about one block from the Wing On department store. Soldiers ran in all directions. One Japanese soldier was reported killed. I ‘ The parade had passed through International Settle- ment side streets along the boundary between the French Concession and the Settlement and entered Nankrng Road without incident. _ _ The ‘victory parade" was held despite protests of llrit- ish zrnd other foreign officials and municipal authorities who held the demonstration provided opportunity for a possible fateful incident. _ Tanks and armored cars escorted the Nipponese through the Settlement while warplanes flew overhead. "TROOP TRANSFER" Ofiicially, the parade was des-l crlbed as a “transfer of troopsl, from Jessfield to Hongkcw" (from i the west of the International Set- , c A N D I D A T E tlement to its eastern part.) LEYFHBRIDGE, Alta. Dec. 2 —~ Early ‘today British troops on guard duty at Jessilcld, on the squad tang‘? l (CP>-—In its appeaito the elector- border of the western defence sec- tor, where the parade entered the foreign area, removed barbed wire barricades under direction of Mo.- jor-General A.P.D. Telfer-smul- lett, commanding British troops here. When "the parade passed outpost, a. British v out and presented arms in accord- i “l9 m Southern Alberta‘ the Unit ' ' lgtess Takes Cudgels Against Democracy . ' ' ‘ictcrv over Soc)‘ nce with military courtesy. i Pa”?! “m a I n a British, Chinese and Sikh police ' Cred“ loday 1:‘ f)“ Lmhbrklfq lined the route of march and pol- lmwmmal b3""‘°fl‘m‘ Dr‘ Poe’ ice patrol cars were stationed at intervals to guard against possible incidents. The parade took 30 min- utes to pass a given point. The Japanese march toward Nanking pressed forward but most f fighting was in the air. One rc- port said Japanese shot down l3 Russian made planes recently add- ed to the Chinese niriorces in an air battle over the capital. HUME AND scrum ASSN. n | s til s s El] Formation of a ironic and school organization in Chnrlottcronwr WiiS discussed at a meeting in the Y. M. C. A. buirling yesterday aircr- noon Speakers unanimously ap- proved of the proposed more. d5‘- signcd to foster co-opcration and ‘mprovcd rclntions between tench- ers and pupils. Mrs. J. A. L-awsotl. Mrs. James Fripps, Mrs. P. A. Cii-eimnn, Ali's. Ernest Bell and Mrs. B. C. Keeping \\'(‘l‘(‘. aimoinwd to meet \\’l.il a. commiitcc. if ortc should hc illlliflllllCfi by City leach- crs, and dis" >3 ilic pmjcc‘. further bvinrc fivlilfil organization was com- ~ picicd. _ _ i l". was nxpccrrl that discuss n of iii: iirnnr rind School Olilflll! ‘tron zvouici be mnclc at ilic annual mulling of ihc City 'I'l‘il('Il.C!‘S Fed- crntzon scheduled ior today- Majnr T. E. Nit-Null, svcrvizngv of t‘ l City School Board, prcsdctl at yostortln3"s meeting. Spcnkcrs in- cluded ivir. H. H. Shaw, superin- tcnriend of education who discussed various aspects of thc proposed or- ggrnization. "P "The United States leaves to the two European democracies the task totalitarian the of confronting the states on the field of arms," editorial said. “Brtaln never dcmonstratcd out- Itc- l cently it has expressed reasons for which the English now have decid- ed. as it once was said, to fight to standing war-like tendencies. i M. Campbell, physician of froniiol i days, defeated A. J. Burnap, Social i’ Credit. ' Dr. Cumplnll. whose candidature was endorsed M’ Libcrals. con- wrvutivcs, some members of Unit- icd Fhrmers of Afherin nnd the People's League of Alberta, polled 3.980 and Mr. Birrnap 3.210. Dr. CampbQlYS majority was 770. The byolection. ncccssitntcd but resignation of Hans Wricht. Sicialw, Credit, nuns the fir-t icFi of Prcmb! ,'icr Alawlrnrifs Social. Creziit ad‘ ministration at the pill." since tho- 1935 election in which the. UniteQ Farmers cf Alberta Govcmmrrrll‘ was ousted. A Social Czwlltcr was drIc-zricd in the Grouarri inclcrlion la l year but a Libcrn‘. was rr-zurrn l lhcrc- in i935. An Fxirnoninn byw ‘ clcrt=nn O"i. '7 nus tron by Liter-a I Lcacicr L. Gray but. Soci. = . . ,4 . °“"‘i‘-‘335*- .“.° _"“,“$”.“‘7 ° -..~.-..-.-d Moat: G i SHOPHJQYS V i sll-ENCE is fur: . Cow-Eel’. ‘(El-L or fut: SCI-tout. or / Ekvtaavcucr. 1/ C METEOROLOGICAL SIER VIC Toronto, Doc. 2 - Minmurn an maximum temperatures: Dawson 20B 16B Victoria 38 48 Edmonton l‘: '.!~i Rcginn l0 22 Winnipeg l8 28 Tnron to Lil! Ll 5 Ottawa in 24 Montreal i6 22 Quebec 1;.’ 24 Saint John l4 40 Halilax 28 36 Charlottetown 2B 36 FORECASTS northeast. and nort niuiicrntr gale and cold: winds; sir-uni; nr ab y some rain or snow". Maritime. Provinces: iurily‘ Mandi nenr Nova scotia roast with prob- oountryside and selling the wood I fog fuel in the city. 'Ibdo.y's price for coffin wood ‘ was three cents a bundle. 'l'oday's article used an cditoriai of The New York Times as a springboard for an assertion that to a threat of economic war the —-i————-——-— oniv reply was "timely and whole- SET DIV-ELECTION DATE lrenrted prcpamtcn of spirit and -——— or ." OTTAWA. Dec. ll—-(CP) - The l It said therc was no question of byelection in Montreal-St. Henri inc three democracies employing will be held Jan. 17, it was an- I military measures against dictator- nonnd but It ships. High tide this murnnig at 11.21 and ton glrt n1. i011: Sun sets this afternoon at HQ an’! rises tomorrow momzm: nt 7.21, Flint quarter moon Friday, Deg l0, at 8.12 p. m. Sunrmcrside tide eighteen Irlifh utcs later than Charlottetown. ‘I'll CAI IIIII Janna Borden u] l- lavn Dill. the Inst Prenchmnir. "The Anglo-American commercial accord is the most mccnt example used to demonstrate the existence of other mcnns besides military measures to zit-feud peace." | Tho newspaper said The Times’ ediiofal constituted "an involun- tary but formidable contribution to our battle for lutarchy." (Eooflvmlv nlf-nlflfdma), ..____________._._-_ ---~ .»-4_-_.__._._._.__.___..__._____