I Over 38.000 people in this Province — 8.099 111 the City— Read The THE WEATHER i-‘SIINSTIIIIBTIIIN iMnre practically all completed, with ‘ \‘~" six inch- concrete walls. There are i‘? morning, Oct. 6, 10 a.m. 5585-10-3-31 ', Jision. >- ’ iuh Guardian every day. The Guardian is read 4 practically every WWW‘ while home in Prince Edward Island- Q The People's Covers Prince Edward PEI‘ Read by Everybody island Like the Dew fresh mild. Maritime East-Moderate southerly winds, fair to and l='o"ni"'§'e'e'e¢§§f““”-7 ¥ildollll _ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5. 1932 8 PAGES $',"'i'i“.'iis"e'1'i.°§i'l"§.?5 'i’{"§_"Zf' K123 ‘Racked House , Greets Speakers At Summerside By - Election -C-ampaign Issues Discussed At Rousing- Meet- ing Of Young Conservatives. llliSPlTlll PlllilillESSlllfi All Outside Work Will Be Completed Before Gold Weath- er Starts. Job Will Be Finished Before March 15. ‘Work on the new Prince Edward Island Hospital building, the con- struction of which began five weeks ago, has made rapid progress, as the construction company is en- deavorlng to have all external work completed before cold weather sets in, and is planning to have the roof completed by November 1. The rooms on the ground floor, part of which is below the ground level 50 rooms on this floor. The work on the next floor is now in progress. Window flames l!" being but in and carpenters are busy. It is expeclcd that the top floor wil be on in about eight days. All the steel frame has been er. ected, and about eight per com; o; the conctete work has been com. pleted. All material 15 on the grounds and ready for use. Brick (Continued on Page '7) ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMING EVENTS, MEETINGS, ETC "RATI-Iz-Zc per payable in advance. word strictly s "Protestant Orphanage rummage sale Nash Show Rooms Thursday "Parcels to call for Protestant Orphanage Rummage sale, Phone 151. _ 5585-10-3-31. "Carpet and linoleum, window shade fitting. Hemphill 8: Cudmore. Phone 644. 5635.11 "Zion rummage sale at Murdock Ross’ store, 172 Kent St, Saturday, Oct. 15, at 2.30. 5537.11 "Dance! Fortune Hall, Friday, October 7th. S Orchestra). Zwfmpfiufggsllafsourm ‘ 5599-10-4-31. i "Don't forget the big swine and lam sale, Agricultural Hall, char. Iottetown, October 11th. Sale at, 1 V-m- Oct. 5-21 “Coma to the Concert in Uigg Orange Hall on Friday, October 7th tt 8 P. M» Admission 25c and 15c. 5617-10-5-21. "There is only one social evening, the B. I. S. auction forty fives with lucrative prizes. Model-n and old Filling to capacity the spacious Town Hall at Bummerslde last evening, an enthusiastic gathering, composed chiefly of young men, heard discussed the issues in the coming provincial by-election for the Fifth District of Prince. Rousing addresses were given by Mr. H. M. Downing, the Conserv- ative candidate, Hon. Dr. W. J. Education, Mr. Heath Strong, M. L. A., and Mr. F. J. Amett. The meeting, which was under the auspices of the Young Men's Conservative Association, was cap- Mr. M. Osborne Lcfurgey. The record of the Stewart Gov- ernment in the face of unpreced- ented difficulties was ably defend- ed by the speakers, each cf whom received warm applause. The ovation accorded to Mr. Downing was an outstanding fea- ture or the meeting. speaker, who was in masterly fora-l, was the recipient of a warm vote of thanks at the close of the meet- ing, when hearty cheers were given for the candidate and the National Anthem was sung. IMPIIIITIINT BUNFABIS Plilnpliu Dominions Secretary And De Valera Will Meet In Conference Today — Status Of Free State Likely To Be Decided. -_-__. (Canadian Press Cable) LONDON, Oct. L-President Ea- mon De Valera, of the Irish Free state and J. H. Thomas, Domin- ions Secretary will meet here t0- morrow in conversations which in some quarters were seen as likely to decide the status of the Free State within the British Commonwealth. Officially the meeting between the representatives of the two countries was for the purpose of talking over the resignation yesterday of James McNelll as Governor General of the Free Stats. Unofficial sources, how- ever, said it was likely far more im- portant matters would come up for consideration. Prison Guards Held For Murder JACKSONVILLE, Flmyoltt. 4— The lengthy probe of rloi-lao pru- on conditions ‘reached a climax hm We! u two formor omoeio were ordered for trial for murder of Arthur Maillafert, 21-year-old time dmcing under pef t - _ r cc convict, who died in g “mm “mp sweat box. "LcPage Individual Communion Malllslert. s Westfield, n. .1, Dup, etc, for use in Churches and omes may be obtained from llra Hughes, P. 0. Box 3, Chur- ttetown. Correspondence invited. 5542-9-30-61. "Come to the sport-s in Hunter River Rink Friday night. October wflunter River Tug War Team ‘hilfllses any team in first and Ie°°nd Wlllng district of Queens. 5604-l0-4-2I. "Concert and basket social in “Ismail Hall Thursday, Oct. 1s. in sid of Brae Church. Special mum. l1 PPOBPam and comedy sketches "I'M"! by Charlottetown and Bummersi-“s best musical talent. Reserve this dale and enjoy a "m" °l high class entertainment. youth who described hfmgglg u g former life guard, cams to moi-id; two years ago to hunt alfob and was arrested and convicted of rob. bing a filling station (at Dayton; Beach, He escaped once by leaping from a bridge and swimming the Halifax River and another robbery was attributed to him. He was recaptured and a nine- year sentence was imposed. Other numbgf of opporgunm“ w, emu‘. attempts at escape from the prison m; m; you” mnant camp at Sunbeam finally resulted in his confinement in a sweat box, and“ pflvflggq by mum, o; h“ a small punitive cell, with a chain new leadership. Only one Qppoggg. about his neck. On June 3, he was ion leader, the head cf the largest found strangled to death and pris- group, la recognised by the Ifouse on camp, officials said he chose . 09011 It 1J0. Concert, other; udddsalallllldl MacMillan, Minister of Health and ' ably presided over by the president, .. Hon. Dr. Macmillan, the visiting‘ ' Famous Novelist Laid j To Rest FUNERAL Impressive t. llrloiltev. A. E. U. Smarth; and who performed the funeral scrvic. GENEVA, Oct. 4—Japan will not accept the findings of the Lytton Commission report on Manchuria, International News Service learned from an authoritative Japanese source today. Publication of the report, which flatly condemned Japanese aggres- sion against China, bore out exclu- sive revelations made several weeks ago that it would: contain a stern indictment of the Japanese Man- churia campaign. Although the document drew praise from European statesmen, its attitude merely has stiffened the Japan Will Findings OfLytton Report Although The Document Has Drawn Praise- From European Statesmen, The Determination Of Japan Has Been Stiffened Against Inter- ference In Manchuria MARKED BY IMPRESSIVE Major. the es. (Z) Rt- Hon. R. B. Bennett. Not I Accept determination of Japan not to permit the suggestions of the com- mission to be adopted in Manchurla. Japanese Chorus o! Denunciatlon TOKIO, Oct. 4—Publicatfon of the Lytton report on Manchuria was met with a chorus of denun- ciation in the Japanese press and with a declaration from the gov- ernment that if the League adopts the report Japan will withdraw from the League and oppose its action (Continued on Page 5) (Special to the Guardian) (YITAWA, Oct. 4—WhI1e Parlia- ment Hill anticipates that the ses- sion which is opening tomorrow will h long, it is not expecting that it will be in the slightest degree te- dious. The topics and problems which already stand definitely upon its agenda-Imperial Conference, rail- way legislation. Bank Act revision and redistribution-are regarded as sufficient assurance that at no time will the proceedings sink to apathetic level. There is the added promise of a. bizane touch to the forthcoming debates in the fact that since last session J. S. Woodsworth, M.P., for North Centre Winnipeg. has taken upon himself the status of a. party leader. Whether or not his position u head of the recently organized (Io-operative Commonwealth Fed- oration will make Mr. Wcodsworth more voluble remains to be Been. but. in view of his post record in ‘the House, it is seriously doubted. Already he hu established o. repu- tltloa for missing the minimum Mr. Woodsworth will enjoy no Election Talk iSilenced No Bomgslzell Feared Lengthy Topics Loom As Session Nears —— Gov- ernment Stands Upon The Conference Policy. FRANIIE TII SIGN PAST WITH SIIVIET (Special to the Guardian) PARIS, Oct. 4—1l‘rance and So- viet Russia will seek next week to improve their commercial relation- ship through a. non-assresfilvn but to be signed at Geneva. The s8?"- ment has been in the process of negotiation for more than a year but failure of France's allies-Po- land and Roumanla-to slgfl 51m‘ ilar pacts with Russia, delayed it. Poland recently agreed to a volley of non-aggression with the soviet Government and lRcllmflnil 110W i8 ready to sign. The treaty will stipulate. it ls understood. that France and Russia shall never undelflkil l"! "l W‘ gresslon or declare war against each other. If a third power should be- come the aggressor. IKY/l Win09 and Russia would B8790 I0 "lull-ll" strict neutrality. Each nstkhi. under the agree- Vfinaunnnanl I CEREMONY . mics marked th e funeral recently, at Bellevllle, ofSlr Glbert Parker, Canadian-born novelist. Above are shown some of those in attendance. (1) Rt. Rev. John Lyons, Lord Bishop of On- Rcv. A. Beaucbamp Payne, rector of St. Thomas church, Mr‘ J" T. Cummings, BIREBTUR or i: . N. R . liN llollnlv New Glasgow, Is Hopeful With Re-I gard To Railway Finances. PRESBYTERIAN MAR.SYNOD m SESSIUN More Than 100 Min- isters And Elders In Attendance At New Glasgow, N.S. NEW GLASGOW, Oct. 4.-More than 100 ministers and elders of the Prcslrvlcrizln Church ill Canada 1n the provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prlncc Edward Island are in pttcndance at the 1932 sessions of the Maritime Synod which opened in Westminster Church here this evening at B 0'- clock. Rev. George S. Mitchell, D.D., of Campbcllton, N.B., retired modera- tor of lllc Synod, presided at the opening meeting. Rev. Dr. Hugh Munro, pastor of Westminster Church, extended an official we‘.- come to the visiting delegates on behalf of the three Presbyterian churches in New Glasgow. Outstanding Speakers During their stay in Pictou Coun- ~ty delegates will be the guests of Westminster Church, First Pres- byterian Church, St. Andrew's Kirk Church in New Glasgow and the Presbyterian Church at Stcllarton. Outstanding officials of the church will give addresses on all phases of the church's activities during the three days’ session. Among these will be Dr. Allan S. Reid, of Toronto, Secretary of the Presbyterian Church in Canada. whose address it is expected will deal particularly with the mission funds of the church. Discouraged Man Saved From Death NEW YORK, Oct. li-Cllnging to a precarious perch on a steel cable of the Manhattan Bridge-ZOO feet above thc East River, a policeman today talked an aged and discour- aged man out of the ldr-n of com- lnitling suicide. ' George Kennedy‘, 65, who dc- Mr. J. T. Cummings, New Glas- gow, a director of the Canadian National Railways arrived in the; city yesterday afternoon with Mia, J. W. MacLeod, well-known in the‘ coal business of New Glasgow, on a short holiday trip. Mr. Cummings. states that there is a. hopeful spirit within the railway company at the present time. With reference to the cutting of expenditures on the railway, Mr. Cummings states that economies were effected by curtailments in the service, reduction of large sal- aries, and eliminations in the over- staff. He believed that much credit was due the board of directors. Mr. Cummings and Mr. MacLeod are registered at thc Canadian Na- tional Hotel. Papal Delegate "Says Encyclical Misinterp reted MEXICO CITY, Oct. 4—Mon- signor Leopoldo Ruiz Y Flores, Papal Delegate to Mexico, today issued a statement in reply to one by President Rodriguez in connec- tion with last Friday's Papal 611a cyclical in which Pope Pius pro- tested against "persecution" of the Church in this country. "As Mexican representative of the Holy Father," said the statement, "it is my duty to protest against the declarations of the President upon the Encyclical Acerba. Animi. of which only separate excerpts are known here, excerpts which easily could be misinterpreted. "By virtue of an official resume of the encycllcal which I have re- ceived I state the following: “That the said encyclical against which the President has spoken, instead of openly inciting the Mexi- scrlbed himself as “ilolncless. joh- lcss, sick, worn out and tired of life," had climed almost to the top cf the 100-foot cable when spied by Traffic Policemen George Pork- ins and Joseph Lopiesli. Tile two policemen siarled in pur- suit, Perkins overtaking thevvould- be suicide about six fret from the top and with Lopiestl not far be- hind. Fearful thc man would jump, Perkins engaged him in casual con- versalion. "Have you a. cigarette?" he asked. “No," the man roplled,_"I don't smoke." ' Other casual conversation follow- ed, and then Perkins asked, "are you hungry?" When the mall replied that he hadn't had any food in two days, tile Patrolman holding on i0 the cable with one hand reached into his pocket and extracted all the money he had-BO cents-and handed it towards Kennedy. At the same time he got a firm grip on the mall and convinced him he ought to climb down, that he would be fed and cared for. Island’ Rly. Men Pensionedl (Special to the Guardian) MONCTON, N. 13,, Oct. 4—-'I‘he flrst of the nlonth saw several cm- ployecs of tllc Canadian National Railways in the Marltimes placed on pension, the oldest in pont of service being Peter J, McCarrcn, conductor operating on the Prince Edward Island division. A native of Prince Edward Island, he entered railway service on March 2'1, 1882 as a brakcman at Charlottetown. In May 1887 he transferred to baggage mast/er and Ill July 1890 served as yardmaster, being made Conductor permanently in August 1906. ' When Mr. McCarron that ieom- menced his railway career, the fdllrfinil ier. Deficit Less WELLINGTON. New Zealand, Oct. -i—(Canadian Press Cable)- The deficit for New Zealand for the current year is expected to be less than $5,000,000 Delivering the bud- get speech befor a crowded House of Representatives today Prime Minister Rt. Hon. G. W. Forbes announced there would be no ad- ditional taxation and struck an op- timistlc note in asserting. "New Zealand appears to be over the worst of the fnanclal depression and is about to enter more prosper- ous times." TII IIISBIISS BEIIMIINVS WITHIIRIIWAI British em. Seeking T o D e t e r m i n e Whether a. Confer- ence Gould Be Ar- ranged. LONDON, Oct. 4—(A. P)-—'I‘he Exchange Telegraph Agency to- night said the British Government was seeking to determine‘ whether a conference could be arranged to discuss Germany's withdrawal from the dlsamlanment conference. France, Germany and Italy were beng consulted. TEMPERIINBE TEXTBIIIIIIS FIIR SEIIIIIIIS Board of Education Acts On Recom- mendation 0f Tem- perance Federation A delegation from the Temper- nncc Federation headed by Rev. E. H. Ramsay, D. D., waited upon the Board of Education this week with a vlcw to getting the Board to in- lroduco temperance education in tho schools. Dr. the Hon. W. J. P. MacMil- Ian, Minister of Education, intim- ated that the Board had decided to comply with the Federation's request and that Miss McCorkln- dlc‘s textbook "Temperance and Health" would be placed in cvcry school In the Province. Later the secretary of the Feder- ation , the Rev. J. M. MacLeod. wrote offering to defray half the cost of introducing this textbook. The Government replied thanking them for their offer but intimatlng that the wholc cost would be de- frayed by tho Government. Lyton Report New Zealand Looks Forward To Better Times WorstOfTheFinancialDepression Appears To Be Over, Says Prem- Than $5,000,000. iillliNllEB INTHEHIP Bvallllsiloi Mr. Sydney Brown, Mount Albion, Is In The Hospital As a Result 0i Accident. Mr. Sydney Brown, Mount Albion is in the Prince Edward Island Hos pital suffering from a serious. gun shot wound in the hip, the result of an accident which occurred near Mount Albion about 6.30 last even- ing. Mr. Brown and Gordon Myers, also of Mount Albion, were shooting geese in the vicinity of a lake near their home. Brown was on his knees in front of his companion, 'whcn Myers’ gun was accidentally dis- charged. causing the accident. A doctor was immediately called and the injured man removed to the hospital. At a late hour last night he was reported resting comfort- ably, although the degree of serf- ousness of the wound had not been ascertained. New Plants In Vancouver _ (Special to the Guardian) VANCOUVER, Oct. 4—'I'he num- ber of new firms commencing to manufacture their products ln the greater Vancouver area since the beginning of 1932 is placed at 81 in a bulletin issued by R. H. Arnott, industrial secretary of the Vancou- ver board of trade, under date of Sept. 14. Industrial plant expan- sions for the some period totalled 13. Mr. Arnott lists among the im- portant industrial developments in the Vancouver area the following: new 8.1000000 Shell Oil refinery; $100,000 lumber mill at Ruskin: Anglo-Canadian Rubber Company's $100,000 plant: Imperial Oil Com- pany's $1,000,000 plant expansion. ‘fill: blower amen EYE“: $0M‘; POMS: ORR GET FIRE SSA-F lNFkl 011D _\llij'jil-jlllllli.liliI(‘.\l, (ll-‘I-‘lifil To auto, Out" (let l—.\ilniluuul and max Iulllu I\'|\\['l‘I'i\llII"l‘5Z TOKYO, Oct. 4-—(A. PJ-The cabinet decided today that the Ly- ton Commission's report on Man- churia to the League of Nations did not constitute cause to alter "'5 Manchurian policy. A cardlhfll point of that policy is tho separat- ion of Manchurla from Chm and the maintenance of the independent state of Msnchukuo. which the Ja- panese assistcd in creating. to re- fOcmtiuedmhDI place the old regime, owing slles- to llsnklnl Iluivsou .. . ... Ilfl 42 \'illl\‘(\|l\('f ... .-. . . l can 4S T1 Illllll/llliilll ... .. . . . . .. 4" F‘ Iirlpf‘ .. .. .. . 34 f? Winnipeg . 32 48 'l‘nlnnto Fifi 73 Olin“ :1 5R 78 sloiurenl 00 70 QHPIHW .'il 7H so. John . 50 08 Halifax .. .. 7-" Til (‘hllrlnllolovvn . . . . . . . .. ... fill 7G Mnrllllne \\‘r.~t<l-‘r~>sh south and southeast wlnvill. part1!‘ "Imlily all‘! probably sumo lnrrll fng_ pol- silvly scntleroil llhmvers at night. Maritime llnst~llmlvrnto to fresh southerly winds, fnlr uml mild. First qunrtor nmnn Thursday, Oct. 0, HIT: p, nl. nigh ride this nfu-rnnnn at 2.51 and tomorrow morning at 1.51, Sun sets this afternoon at 5.34 M15 rises tomorrow iimi-nlug n! .04. CAR FERRY BCHIDULI Wpnk vlnvvs-Jlonvvn Borden daily 0.15 n. m. null 1 p. m. Week dark-Leaves Capo Tormen- luc all; n. 5 n! us s- n lnllll_