MAXIMS OIL. MERE MAN u-_-__- Mothers‘ darlings make but milk- sop heroel. cilnrlettntowl Guardian’ Two Cont: morning- Guardian. Founded fill‘! CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1938 In" Q“ ,,,_..---"" ‘"---~.,_____\ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Everybody 8 PAGES MAXIMS 0F J MERE MAN —»x: 0ft a. mouth of honey covers a ilcnrt of gall. ' Annual subscription Delivered $6.00 By blnll—l'.lfl.l.. $4.00: Cllllilu and U.5. $5.00 JAPANESE DRIVE 01v SUCHOW STALEMA T515 lvEjy FRENCH - BHAUTEMPS PRUMIISEI] p, SIIPPBRT New Government De- clares Itself Popu- iar Front Adminis- tration. PARIS, Jan. 21- (CP Haws)- Prlimier Camille Chautemps’ new cabinet, after meeting President Albert Lebrun, tonight declared itsl-Il’ s Popular Front administra- tion which will "faithfully how" to the main lines oi’ policy laid down by the two previous left coalition regimes. Tile cabinet, made up almost exclusively of‘ members or chnu. temps’ own Radical-Socialist Par- ' ty, has been promised Centrist as well as Socialist support. It will make its initial appearance before the Chlllltfl o! Deputies tomor- row. Meeting in a body for the first time since Tuesday night, when they were handed their portfolios, the ministers issued a statement containing five salient points: 1. The government will leave untouched those social reforms 1c- gislated during tllc last 19 nlontlls. and will pursue, insofar as cir- cumstances permit, the social pro- gram mapped out by the Popular Front. " 2. Next Tuesday the government will issue a plan for a code de- iiflied to make pence between "capital and labor. 3. The government is, like its predecessor. onmsed to all forms of monetary control and intends to pursue t-hc financial recovery ef- forts which Georges Bonnet began as finance minister in the last cabinet. 4. foreign policy will remain un- changed. fi. The government attaches par- ticular importance to reinforce- ment of national defence through coordination of the three armed branches under Vice-Premier Ed- ouard Dalucliefs guidance. CQMiNG ‘EVENT! "Warning — Talkies Montague Saturday. ‘ L-Qfio-l-lil-Zil. "Salvation Rummage Sale, Fri- day, Jan. 21st at 1 p. m. L10i6-1-20-21 "Pownal Rink, January 21st. Alexandra vs Pownal. gaturday skating only. L-l035-1-21-ii. "Hockey at l-llghficld tonight, Eightfold Granltes vs. Braoslcy All Stars. League game. L-l055. “Huskies vs. Maple Lcafs, Mll- ion rink tonight. Skate llftcr. L-l0tll. “Seavlew Rink, Stanley Dairy King.- vs. Seaview Maple Lents to- Iiilllit. Game starts at 7.45. Hours skate afterward. L-loffl. "Buying dressed chicken and folvl daily llntl March. Correct trading. Geo. Lelghtizer Co. L-Ilill-iZ-Zl-tf "lockey tonight at New Glas- WW. Junior Rangers vs. Junior Mania Leafs. a L-1062. "Buying dressed chicken and fowl daily. correct grading, top lirlces. Island Cold Storage Conl- tiny. L-slii-li-Bo-tf. _"Skate with music, Wiitshlro rink tonight. Good ice. admission l0 cents. 1.4060. "York Rink Saturday, January 12nd. Skate and Moccasin Dance. ice and extra violin music re- tired by w. a. Godfrey. n not fine. Tuesday. L-ooo-l-ai-ll. "Car screened coal mloading Friday 21st and Saturday 22nd to shed. Special cash price of! car. 9mm a Son, Bedford Station. 14-1002-1-20-21. u-txu-i "Get our new prices on Milk-fed A and B Chickens for the balance of the Season. Easy grading, prompt ietuins. The Royal Packing Com- lllfli- L-BQB-l-ll-Bi. "Flash! One oar fox meat dis- tributed to m: Club members at a resl saving in price. Another car “mite to take care of overflow "fliers and those arriving deity. Bu? your fox meat co-operatlvely and save money. Uveetock Mar- iwtiri: mud. n-loee. iluartetileases Search in College iiuins Searcher Injured In Quest For Addition- al Bodies In Debris. By L. V. HUNTER. Canadian Press Staff Writer 8T. HYACINTHE, Que, Jan. 20 —~Four solitary volunteers, led by a. fatigued fireman who had not scorch for bodlcs remaining in the debris of the Sacred Heart College disaster. The quartet gave up the three- day task of raking the ruins after one of them, 30-year-old Wilfrid Plantc, was struck by a brick tum- tiling from one of the jagged walls left standing after fire and explo- sion shattercd most of the four- storey building early Tuesday morning with an estimated loss of 46 lives. Plants, working alone in one wing of thc wrecked structure. was struck on the head and knocked unconscious. He was picked up and lnlsllcd to St. Charles Hospital where lie 15 of the injured surviv- ors. Sevcn stitches closed a gap in his skull, believed fractured. But before Plunte wins injured he and his three fellow volunteers. Fireman Romeo Brodcur, Lucien Pelletlcr and Leon Blanchard, had dug out cremated remains of three more bodies. The remains, carried away to the morgue in little cardboard boxes, brought to 20 the number definitely known dead. It was in search oi 20 others, counted lost. that the four men took over the task abandoned ear- lier by a score of firemen on or- ders from Chief Adjutor Bourg- eois who said thc ‘IO-foot walls were liable to topple in the first wind. , There was no request for volun- teers. Bmdeur chose to return to his task because he wanted "to help these poor families. The long- erl work _th_e_mor_e bodlegivcgl (Continued on page ‘i, col. 2) PARLIAMENT iiPENiNii Til BE Piillllllliilill Horse, Foot And Ar- tillery Will Partici- pate In Usual Pag- eantry On Jan. 27. g (By The Canadian Presfi) OTTAWA. Jhll. '20—~Wll8ll PM‘ uni pagenntry with which this ceremony is surrounded will be enacted. Horse, foot and artillery will be present, not in large mm" bet-s. but “sufficient to contribute a touch of the picturesque w ti“? ’ affair. Jrhrcc officers and 18 other ranks of the 4th Princes Louise's Drag- oon Guards will comprise the cav- airy escort to the Governor Gen- eral and Lady Tweedsmuir; and orders issued today Yequire them toreport at Government House It 2 p.nl. on Jail. 2'7. Their duty is t0 accompany the Governor-General from Rldeall Hall to the Parlia- ment Buildings and back. A ill-gun salute is customarily fired when the Governor-General arrives in Parliament Btlillflh m" n“; purpose abattcry of the Royal Canadian Artillery W111 b9 PM“ north o! the east block. The sal- ute is repeated when he leaves ‘he buildings. I The Governor-Generals Foot- guards will detail three officers and 100 other ranks, with ban: and regimental color. as l! Kiwi“ of honor. This detachment W m drawn up in front ‘i’ ti“ °°“' tral entrance “and will, according to the orders, "receive His Excel- lency with g royal salute. When the Governor-General en- ters the buildings. he bwomw ti" principal figure of a stately PW’ ecsslon headed by his 110mm" aldes-de-camp. The column mloveg “with measured tread and siovvvzn along the hall of fame. and s“ the rear corridor to the cham cw or the Speaker of tho Sena - "on, more, g, few minutes alter. ills Excellency is escorted to tiw Senate Chamber itself where "it ceremony of "the 0p€nin8 ‘Mm’ my “m, piece. undressed for three days, conceded- tcnlporary defeat tonight in their’ POLICY iQperat-ifons On ¢A BIIYET Declares‘ Privy Council Finding “Most amazing” Commissioner Chairman Rowell Surprised At Bennett Reform Bill ‘ Being Declared Ultra Vires. (B! Cilrl Rflirike, Canadian Press long as Canada did not advise His Staff Writer) ‘OTTAWA, Jan. 20-1-1011. N. w. Rowell, chairman of the Royal Commission on D0minlon-Provln- clal relations, today described as "most amazing decision" the Privy Council judgment of last January which ruled out the Bennett re- form bill on wages and hours. That bill, to implement an in- tcrnatlonal labor convcntmn to which Canada was a. party, was held by the Privy Council to be ultra vires of the Dominion Gav- crnment since it concerned mat- ters not within the jurisdiction’ of the Dominion. This limitation of section 132 of the British North America Act, which covers treaty-making pow- ers, only to matters normrrly within the jurisdiction of the Do- minion, had thrown the whole sli- uatlon into confusion, Prof. Nor- man MacKcnzfe contended. He ap- peared before the comnlfssion for the League of Nations society in Canada. ' "One result of the decision is this," commented Mr. Rowell. "As i qucntly discussed s ction of Lord Majesty but 11c was advised by the executive in London, the Par- liament ill Canada had filll power to legislate in respect of treaties, but when, by Canada acquiring her improved status, she attained the m l Liberal Senators Are A p p oi n t e d (C.l’. By Guardian's Special Wirct OTTAWA, Jan. 20~Two of the six Senate vacancies “crc. filled today with the appoint- mcnt of Norman Lambert, Pres- ident of the National Liberal Federation. and Duncan Mar- shall, former Ontario Minister oi’ Agriculture. Prim e Minister ltlnckcnzie King annonutd the appoint- ments following today's czlh"rlct council, but gave iln indication as to when the ollll-r vacancies would be filled. 'l'l:cre worn lln judicial appoinlvncnts. Calvllll-t wi'i moot next Tuesday. The two appointment. today Wilt-d the Ontario v. !'I\f‘if‘S right to advise His Majesty M. cording to the decision of right to legislate. "With lilo greatest rcrcct to the Privy Council, to mc it is a lnost amazing decision." M!‘- Rc-wwell commented on a fre- Atkins judgment where he stated: “It is unnecessary to dwcl‘. upon the distinction between legislative DOW" given to the D'mlnlcn to perfcnrl obligations imposed upon Canada as part of the Empire by an imperial executive responsible io and controlled by the Imperial Parliament. and the legjglpflvg power of the Dominion to perform obligntlonscrcatecl by thc Do- utlve rcspons‘ ‘ to (Continued on page '7, Col. 5) liament opens next Thursday. "-5" . English By-Elections Liven Political Scene ‘By PAT USSBER Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, Jan. 20—(CP)-Four approaching by-electlons served to liven the domestic political scene in Great Britain as parliament prepares to resume its session Fer. Two of the vacant seats, Furn- worth and Pontypridd, were held by Labor. The member for each died. Death of former Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald op- ened one of the three Scottish universities seats. Elevation to the peerage of Sir John Ganzoni member for Ipswich, caused the fourth vacancy. Keen interest attaches to the Ipswich contest. regarded in poll- tlcal quarters as a “test" by-eiec- tion. Sir John has held the seat for the Conservatives since 1924. l-fis majority in 1935 was 7.250. The government is not worrying unduly about Ipswich but Labor is making a determined effort to capture it. Henry Urmswm Wil- llnk, K.C., London barrister, is the government nominee. Labor's can- didate in a straight fight is R. R Btoes. head of a prominent Ips- wich englncerlng firm. Plliliill VDICES llPPiiilllllN Til NEW CARFERRY (CI. By Guardian's Special Wire) PICTOU, N. S.. Jan. 20--Pro- test against the proposed estab- lishment of a car fen-y between Wood Islands, P. E. 1.. and Caribou. on the Pictou County side of Northlunberlaud Strait, was voiced today by the Pictou Municipal CounolL A resolution passed by 1M ootllcl! attacked the proposed ferry u "unnecessary and un- justifiable and involving a wholesale and reckless expen- diture of public money destined only to work a grave injustice to the farmers of Nova Seotia." In its preamble. the resolu- tion said transportation by wat- er between Prince Edward Is- land and the Nova Beetle-New Brllnlwick mainland bad been maintained by a car ferry be- tween Cspe Tormeutlne, N. 3.. and Bortlm, P. B. L. and by steamship between Ploton and Charlottetown. The former was ted at an ennui deficit of 8100.000 and the PlettII-Chlvhttrtown steamship was granted an an- nual subsidy of 880.000. Now. It said. the ‘steamship service would be abandoned In! anoth- er car ferry substituted. "in-‘ voicing the expenditure of large sums to cieste harbors where noneulst, hospital in about l0 d"ys.. 17th ilperatioli 0 n A c, r o h a t Excites iliedioos (C. P. by (ilardiufl Special Wire) QUEBEC, Jilll. {Hi-Physicians at St. Sacrament Hospital here can hardly wait for the reccvery of Arthur Cordlllgleyr from his 17th. operation to "find ollt all abcut hlmn The latest piece of surgical w:rk on the 35-year-old Scotsman who said he is an acrcbrlt and his “working name” is Jack Rcdclolid was pcrfcnned yesterday by Dr. Florian Trempe after Cordlnglsy collapsed on a street. Dr. Trenlpe and other surgeons, at the hospital think the native‘ of Glarwzv. on his Way from Hali- fax to TOfOlliO when he became ill is "an interesting case" and they are eager lo find out a-bout the l9 stitches decoratina his abdomen. At Halifax maentkv, Oordingley collapsed twice after theatrical performances during which he ate glass chips, razor b'ades. electric light blubs and carpet incks. His parents he told physicians there. live in Toronto. "We cilrilft learn much about him yesterday when he was brought in because he was suffer- ing too much from intestinal iruubki but he must have a story to tell," said Dr. Trcmpe. “All we round out wa= that he had been married on in Hcl"'fax in November." 0i?!‘ operation show- ed his insides were innglcd up and criss-crosscd scars on his stomach showed that l6 other operations had been ncrformed. "Ccrriinglcy rildlft even know what was wrong with him but he didn't care much and submitted to the operation without any kind of protest or comment." continued the surgeon. “Of course he's used to them." The doctors said tllmlgh the name “Jack Redcloild" M Wns not tatooed acres Cordinclcyts stcm- sch. "his operation scars made a de-ign that's just as good and very interesting to us." Cordingley will be ready to leave the I Privy Council she thcrfby lost the ‘ caused by the flczlil-s of‘ Sc m- Ynra Iinrntin l! ' i‘ 70 ii"'l .Y"'Yi"\‘ 1 SOEIIV]. Two r [cumin , lI|il“,|‘""i iluorlciwc." “vi "hp (‘f|[‘l\ ‘ __ijl_“ili"iilvr‘- and Thcrtn. (Coniiillzcd ml prgc 7 (“L 1i wl lllllll at liliIAl illillil Pliirnlilliicizs Mr. Malcolm Morley Arrives To Adjudi- cate At Today’s Festival. Arriving lronl Iinlifax uhcrc lic adjudicated in tllc Novn Scctin regional (lrnmn festival. Mr. {mil- colm Morley, London, England. hart a welcome smile for newspaper rc- prcscniniiixcs rlnri Drnnm Lrayxuc executives at the Canadian Nafonal l-lotcl last night, where llc was in- cct oi rirnlnn in general and todc ‘. fest val in particular. Prominent in thc Old Country as an actor, playwright, producer and critic, Mr. lllol"lc_v‘s youthful ap- pearance bcllcs his long experience QL‘iZ\i'CfVl_i_Y_-f“i}’§__$‘ _in ihcni ' l MR. MALCOLM lilORLEY work. It is the second tilnc tllllt he has adjudicated thc Dominion drama festival, his first trip to Canada. for that purpose be lig in 1835. "I'm the only adjudicator a ho has had the tclncrity to conic back," he said gcxlin! y, “After foul years, it ought to be safe!" His object, he expinillcd, is not on)’ to select the winners ill illc rc- gional contests in (‘.\‘Cl'_\' province. but to give constl-uctivn criticism and encouragement. i-lc has con- sented, at the close of thc festival in the Strand Theatre ton gilt. to give his opinion also as to thc bcst individual performances. mule and f !‘__Vlhit1l’l_ll'll’_(illif§ wit‘. Sill)- Always Delicious (Continued on page 3. Col z) "SALAIIN TEA. IO! trawl iilszilii iillEEN SINCE, cltorlrii N0 Women Present i As Boy King Weds t Childhood s w e ct - i, heart. l canto, Jan. 20 ~(AP)—Klnl; kFi\l'Olll>{'S clllrlhood sweetheart < ilililwll (ill Mil-ll’ will‘? UK’ _1'7'§“"1' i, nitl l'l|iL‘i‘ lllllflC ilCl‘ his bliiii‘ "mi Eyvpbs sccotid quot-n since Colo- modcrn, 16- of a commoner. l . ‘(iii Zlllflctlr. ,..,‘... i. 1-, llon- ~a lvccl- ivl‘. "ii n:.l'~' !ll"‘il Milk lit!"- ill‘. illCfiglllVl tour in . - . i ~- ip. (‘fly \\il€‘l'r\ iilfll‘ ucd- , ,1 m; u».- (‘tii“,\i' incl \villl pllticrlrfi ‘ 11*. in‘ ii nacmntry‘. ‘ iii: ‘.i llliyoiivli. . i‘0l‘Sf‘llF.'il llfli- "lfNl nlwnilt. firiiisz rifles into thc "drums tlirobbcd; _ - flil!'.‘li'l“‘(i for the D001‘: W111i‘ . ilnwccl nml there was dancing in ‘ ill" strcrils. i Flocilvilis stabbed ' crnr-stirl thc skins , fcsloens rif licliis , (‘Pill nri thc Nllc. i No \'.‘fi"l‘li'“l actually were prcrcnt at. thc lfl luinuie ceremony but Qllccn Mother Nazli, the King's four yoilnncr sisters and iiin Wilt! and her nlothcr watched through thc srianirnuiig lzrilllvork and saw l-‘nrnliir. in tho lilnck nlid Fold of n firlrl lliiiiTilili. cvtelvl his right ilnfld "l'iti't"§ tniller. ‘fmissef Ziilficar l for thc symbollczll hand- clasp. Tito tu-n nrosscri unrlszht thumbs iizvicl" a silk cloth and the bride's ialiicr Fnlrl “I bciroth in Your Mai- cslr mv rlnllrtlilcl" Fnridn.“ 'I'ho King thrice intoncri: “I ac- ncpt hcr lvclrntllnl to myself from tllcc. and trike llcr llnrlcl- my rare and ilififl_lil,\'.=i"ii iowclffcrjlclrlfl l llcrloiilil and criss- rlccorntcd river (Continued on page '7, Col. 3) N.P..~l’.E.I. Ilclegates Gather F r Meeting (GP. By (lunl-dians Special Wire) lfltlilhrlltlClON, N. 13., Jan. 20- Ncw Bl‘llllS\‘.‘lL'i~2 and Prince Edward island llclcgzlms w ll gnillcr llerc tolliorrnll for lilo biennial conven- lion Vol King's ilnuglllers and Sons. ‘The convention villi open Saturday morning aitcr all executive meeting tomorrow crclllilg. cnt, hills. L. V. Lillgles, Srllrlt Jc nrrivcll tonight. l-lrs. it. S. Logan, President oi ihc Do- minion bl-ailcll of the Iliterllaiiollal Order, is clue tomorrow from lllbn- il‘(‘ili. About 40 delegates from Woodstock, Srfllt Jollll, and Frcd- crictznl, as ivcll as some from illc Island provision, arc expected to nt- lcllll. Mrs. Domes Hubert of Wolf Is- land, lllngdalcnc Islands, suffering from nclltc appendicitis. and rush- ‘ ed to Charlottetown by a Canad- inn Airunvs plane yesterday, would be operated on this morning. llos- piinl nltcndmils said lnlc last night. A call from the Islands to thc Cnlindinil Airways for a plane to take Mrs. Hubert, a stretcher case. to hospital here was received about l p.nl. As thc plane usually used on the Magdalene service, equip- ped with two-way radio communi- cation. hnd icft for Moncton, N.B.. the regular mainland plane, not equipped with radio and taken oil thc TOiliC ycstcrday for minor re- pairs, was rilshcd into service Pilot l-i. S. Jonas and Garnet God- frey", mechanic. took off from Up- ton Airport about 3.15 pm. with a cargo of mail. Aiicr landing the mail atGrind- stone in the Magdalene Islands. thc plane lcft for Wolf Island a- bout l3 nllll-s away to pick up thc patient. The plane landed here at 6.25 pill. with the aid of flares llili nu ambulance ldllbcrt in hospital. l, Wcniilcr conditions were good Central Front Slowed By Cold lAnd Sle-et-Ground Planes ——-"Chinese Successes Reported In Counter Attacking On Wuhu. (lfy The Associated Press) SllriNfilrlAl. Jun. 2l-—(l“l'i(ili_\')~ (‘hint-so llliiiiill‘_\‘ cirv cles reported lndlly thc Japanese drivc on strategic Sucilovw ill the hitter A Snow had been sllllcmzlicd China front. horde river cold of the Central Snow and sleet hindered rlpcrzlilons 0n the southern ‘ 0f Shzlnlllng‘ Province as vvcil as in the Yang-isle lliloy, 2_5(t nliles to the south, \i'i'll.'l‘0 Chinese nerve counter-attacking the city of Wllhll with some success. N One Japanese column slowly fought its ivay northward o.» miles from Nunklng to MliliIWZlllg. while another, mov- liil: south to meet it, was forced i0 halt zit Tbmlzhsicn. 'l‘he i two iil‘lliit‘S \l'i'l‘0 1T0 luilcs il]lIli'l with ii rcorvrllnizcd Chi- I rriilk prrilnlsnrl to inltr‘ I I bullock-s , ‘illfi thc Japanese AQYTZKK l than flvc (illusion.- x.m r1" 60.000 lllCll. llc Japan (lug ill at dlcllall- sicll \\'t‘l'C T0 nliics north of Suth- cw. along the 'l‘icntsln-Pukow' barred their wily to Llliclicng, the imme- Cll lncsv ,_ , i dlate Japanese objective. river Cairo nndi ,PAliElll*FlilllNi LHERE rluii, uioullllls, l rushed Mrs ‘ Llllchcng was generally expected to be the scene of a decisive bat- ' tic fur control of the Clilml agricultural region. Tile norill-nlovllli: Japanese col- umn, after capturing Miugkwang, reported it was advancing against , tile lisiaoclllho—thc Little Chicken i river. That advance placed the Japani-sc still '25 mllcs southeast of Lllihivalkvrun, on tile Hwal Rlveiqi which they tivlce previously have reported captured. Show and sleet blanketed the Yangtze valley. Blizzards ground- ed tile Japanese airforcc. Sixty lnilcs southwest of con- quered Nanking. the Chinese re- ported their attack on Wlihu was continuing although slowed up by tllc frigid weather. Terrorist Society Claimed At Shanghai lXlllCt‘ said they es- tablished definitely the existence of a. Chinese terrorist society and arrested 119 P01230115, including 15 women. The society was said m have been organized to combat Japanese efforts to domlnptg Shanghai through frlenciir Chi. hose. ' “Paul lvnMCNiliit. United Stntcs (Continued on pllgp 7, COL 5) Wig-i B.il.A. Amendment Text Sent To Premiers. (C. l’. by (iilllrdiiufs Spl ial \\'irc) O'l'l‘AV\'.»\.. Juli. 20—'l‘i.xl oi the proposed anltlldnlolit to lilc Brit- isll Nortll America. rte! necessary lo clear the way for rllactmcnt and administration of n national uil- cntriovnlclit ill urancc _ lucnsulc. was. t . y sent to PlTlllififs of illc Yrovlnc... for iilfii‘ study and >- g-rovnl. Prllilc Mlllx<lcl~ Macke King stntrcl ionic t It was intimated that n copy of thc rlncurlnlclli vvrilid b" i=1 :10 1‘. ' '. Iitzhtiiy. '11:» 311.11.. 7. ll- ltcr has already illlhlntcd the amendment was simple in its icrms. The purpo<c i. to ilYiiK-ill‘ from flio Provinces in iilt‘ Do- m‘nicn the couslitllii-ira‘. author- liy to cmct lltsilrrluc-c lcd-‘Jniin of fills tips. With iilf‘ ."‘lli'illllC"d intention oi cllaciina thc ilisilrriicc nlca. irc at tile forthcolnlnc session of Par- liament the Primr- Miu‘. tcr \vr'\‘c lilo prnvindrll premiers N ~v. 5 ask- ing for their approx-w‘. Al‘. but Alberta. Qncltcc n"! Nun Bruir- wink agreed. Alberta aslzcd in" l‘=‘ iii: of thc proposed mcastirc. fir» Brunswick ropiicd that its lczfsliliire \V“llli‘l mnkc thc decision and Quebec said provlncla‘. autom"m_v further lnfonnailnn. Eight Year Old Boy Drowns in Dizrhv. NS. (CP. Bv Guardian's Special Wire) CONIWAUVTIJLE. N. S, Jim. 20- lloriv of B vcnr old HilbPfi Thlhault was taken from the ice-covered weir-rs of Commiuvillc Brook. Dilzhv County, tndnv. llc broki- iilTOll"ll thr- icc while slminr! across thc hmok inst night. Coroner Arnold l dud"?! m!‘ mghi» ii w" midi "id i Crimean imparwcllcd a jury that rc- Hno difficulty was experienced de-l spite the absence of radio. turned a verdict of accidental drowning. avoulrl , bc maintained ihcrc. All asked for ‘ Chinese forms farther soutll . Central , w-s-w-w- -...- ' lit-so zlrlny estimated at iltllJllltl IllUll brine-on thcm. e ':= Will Represent Growers MR. J. Vi’. BOYLTER livluuzlgcr of the l’. E. I. Potato Growers Association, vvllo ha» lu-cn appointed by the Pl‘(l\'ill('i.;i (Env- crnmcnt to represent lsiallli [‘~|l~ tato interests at thc aillllllll nll-lit- ing of the (‘nilndian Ilnrtil-ulturrll Council zlt (lttzzwa next WPPk. Ila leaves for Ottawa nll hlnntilly. MERCURY DROPS l‘.\' Nlll). GRAND FALLS, Nflit. Jmz. 29 -- (CP Cnblc>-—An unusually mild winter was‘ interriiptcrl gall (ll-opplllir. and ctcr fcli to l0 dcgrccs bctna at Bishop Falls. near ilrl-c the first scrcrc frost of thc was zl. f So Loilc. \_ As audition \ can CHANCE new. MlND 3m". i DOESN'T itlino \_... TORONTO. Jan and mixllnilln iiill]i"l.»l h.‘ Victor in t4 IC<liiwi~ _~~ .3 ' ill‘. ltl; ll 1GB H‘. Alli iii linlinv l6 Charioilrtntvn ii Maritime Fast: hicdr-rn‘ arr-st and southwest win- cloiiriv and somewhat mi" ahlv follnwcd lav sonic llwli l-lllzh tirlo this rfltcrvciui and tomorrow moi-n , . Sim sci: this nfii i‘ and rise: tomorrow mm inst nirirtcr nirvm Si“ lei‘ 23rd. 409 a m Summcr.="‘c iirin clclVr/"i ruin- llics latcr than ('ll'i"‘rt'i"ir'i‘."l‘., ‘IITF. (‘an Ficunv Janus Borden 9.06 n. m., l p. m. Inna ‘Iorinentlna I.i L in. 1.56 p. l.