‘lfficfnlif Hall L ca” SEE RE VOL T '1'" "AWS FLA ED "As RIVAL ARMIES_ NEAR OPEN BREAK Political Tension In Austria Heightens --- Minor Clashes Are Reported In Lower Austria. Imported Fish Draws Protest ._-__.. (A. P. By Guardian’! Special Wire) GLOUCESTER, Mess" Oct. 28- Word thet a shipment of fish for welfare relief distribution was en- route from Wisconsin to Glouces- ter, second largest fishing port in the United Statel. tonight aroused a storm of ,. ‘est. Mayor George ll. Nowell and Secretary Jeremiah Foster of the Public Welfare Board acknowledg- ed a consignment of ‘ ‘ f was on the way from the western state. Along the yum-front of this city, whole boats normally bring in an annual cargo of 60,000,000 pounds nf fish, fishermen threatened to stage a "Glouceste fish party” similar to the Boston tee party. some welfare recipient: were lkh and arrested when regular , _.__ forseeteontheeountz-yingwg. vim! wiwofl preoccupied Chau- eeiior Kurt Sohuschniggh gcvezn- ment tonight as gtrlfg bQwggn Heimwehr (Fascist homeguarvdg) s: Police am vated political ten- Revorte from Wiener Neustadt in lower Austria said i-leimwehr forces there attacked pOlloe bar. racks yesterday and imprisoned police officials. only to be dislodged army detachments were called out. Recognizing the danger of stir. ring discontent, the government will? W" Plllllllflz in announce ‘membership of the new council, which begins functioning Nov. l, only one or two deye beforehan‘. Prince Ernst Wn Starhembeiu, the Beimwehr chlefteln, and other quoted as saying they would refuse 1584;“ ha,“ dmmmed mpeamny to est the imported fish. ANNOUNCEMENTS COMING EVENTS, MEETINGS, ETC "Show-Elmira Monday. L-1808-i0-21-2i. "Show-March ‘rueeday. - , VL-isoa-io-m-zi. "Chicken Supper and Dance in ions Hall, Monday, October 211th. L-IQOO-iO-Ii-Bl. "Whist and Amusements, Trac- adle Hall, Monday night, October 29th. O. W. L. L-1184-l0-27-2i. "Chicken supper, Albany Vil- lage School, Oct. 30th. Tickets 30 and 30 cents. "Show-St. Peters Wednesday, last three chapters "Devil Horse." L-iMS-XO-TI-ii. "Everyone attend the dance in Wedndbll”; '0 be? eto list, '.' L-1B50J0-29-8l "Reserve Wednesday, October 31st, for the Masquerade Dance in Gra- ham's Road Hall. L-iii36-10-29-li. "Dance Hunter River Tuesday, October 80th in aicl of Hockey Broadcast. Elliott's Orchestra. L-i834-10-29-2i. "Hunter River Club loading hogs and lambs Wednesday forenoon, Oct 31st, until train time. Livestock Marketing Board. 14-1853 "Attention: Big Hallowven dance, Victoria Rink, Wednesday. Oct 31st. Chipmaxrs six piece or- chestral.‘ 14-1856 "Dr. J. D. Reddin will be in Georgetown . Wednesday !nd Thursday, Mt. Stewart Friday. _ . . L-l855 “Hunter River ShiPPlM Club loading hogs, lambs, Wednesday forcnoon, October 31st until train time, Please list. Livestock Market- inii Board. L-1838-10-2il-il. "Falconwocd Hospital sale of‘ Yancy work and aftemon tea at Dauudian National Hotel next Thursday. Reserve date. , 11-1543-10-29-21.‘ "Mount Stewart Women's Insti- tute intend holding a masquerade dance in the Legion Hall on Dev lobar 31st. Proceeds in aid of lib- "YY. L-IBAD "r will be buying mum-y m1 i i7. m, on Tuesday October 30th at 1- R. Brown's, Clifton, also buying l! Remington every dsv (sum Gwrae A. Webster. L-l509-10-26-3i i "Halloween Chicken Hill.‘ Monday, October mu. Blg. ("or nun. 1r weanin- unfavorable Tuesday. L-inos-io-zs-zv-n Ia-IBM-IO-ZO-ll ' Supper i that the members be recruited ex. flli-“Wlv from wituui the ranks of auxiliary military forces. M repeatedly they have threat- ened to take matters into their own. hands if their demands are not granted. Since Stsrhembergts forces num- b" 1°0- mw. serious trouble was cted in the event Schus- ohnigg. who himself controls an Army of about 19,000 catholic storm "WIM- ‘ suppression of the growing hegemony of the Helm. wehr in sffaus of state. BERMIIBATB N.Y. BY AIR (CR. Cable By Guardian‘! Specie! ire) W I-ONDON. Oct. elk-An gements have been made with the air min- ieiIwend-flie eat-chin- muda for the art of a weekly air service between New York and Bermuda as soon as the necessary bqlllpment l8 available, it is stated in the annual report of Airways published tonight. In this new venture the company will cooperate with Pan American Airways o: the United States. The report also says that ex- Dlnskwn of the main route from Singapore to Brisbane, Australia. will be in effect in December. This service, from London to Australia, Imperial will be the longest air line in the. ‘wrld’ ‘mum? 13°09 mu“ |of the marks have been taken. If - A huge increase in mileage flown during the year ended in Mai-ch is reriorted, the total being 2,354,176 ml es. Sentence Is Cow-muted 7'0‘ l. i f e Te rm (C.i‘. By Guardian's Special Wire) BATHURST. N. 13.. OctuRS-‘I could be no gladder of anything?‘ matched from the shadow of the gallows. 0'd farmer of North Tetaqouche, thus expressed himself after hear- ing his death sentence had been commuted yesterday to life im- prisomnent. ‘The prisoner, convicted of fat- ally shilctinv his crusin. Funk Hsgszty, last April, showed little evidence of the strain he had un- dergofie while expecting to b! hanged Tuesday. "I thank you very much. Sheriff, and I arn glad of he result.” he told Sheriff M. Hec- tor Polrlcr when the latter finish- ed reading the official telegraphed uinouncement from Ottawa. A scaffold Outside the jail had been dismantled tonight and hang- man Arthur Ellis hadreturned to Montteal. Hsgarty will leave here thlg week to spend the rest of his rsymm‘ M", n you Wm deny days at Dorchester Penitentiary. Yourself cigarette smoking you can Pl! for three theuemd estate Insur- afi-mn? not make the exchafie. 4.1mm. . Sun I. cuammwu. uub-ro-n-u. "Th; Mt. Albion players will w V" n‘ Anne" at Cher- OU. Ill-h.’ ’ m“ bebeyililivlboglal l (C. P. By Bur-lien‘! Special Wile) Iuuimum Find Bullet Hole And Broken Ribs , n. 5., Oct. 2e- With a hole through one shoulder blade and leverll rib! broken. "I! lhletm of Onion McGowan of was lost in the wood! near hm than years ego. was under mastication have lode!- Iound In ! thicket not far from this town Iriday, the skeleton was removed here yfibterdny. carefully Imus and Alum amen. out. and wee identified by r. Flem- lnghoetmerket mil-Pleeinneneaiested Alumni he live fowl every day of the m‘ MM Saturday. o. r. Green. mine and constable Perry of the Canadian Mounted Police. Neither of the invest of-, llltffll ficers were able to understand how Thomas Hagarty‘ 55 yea“ drank beer at the puln mill he >_2'/,%/// The People's Paper Covers PrinoeEdward, island Like the Dew rt 1"‘ w wzwrawr-"fiwl -' s’! ' Themanwhnreerrieeaweman fowberleoilgenlelb MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN vt-u-Q- M! lbw- PRDEAT or am m SAINUIIHN M Y s t e 1f y Surrounds Drowmn§ of Helen 931T e a r Re- versing‘ Falls. (c. P. B1 ‘nudism’; Speelll m“) SAINT sol-m, N. 3., Oct. 2a.- hthology and river lore will be coin. ibinedintheattemvtwclearup doubt surrounding the circumstances under which Helen M. Oreary, 22, died early ‘Ihundey, i Wil Begin Race Today (A. P. I! Gunilla-n’! iplvlll WIN) LYIINI AIBODROHI Enlllnll. OoL-SS-Adlilltrneiih ontlubreakfwlnechanlnno! tlnae "Irish Sweep" Cel-rhlllfl-Illu- naerloelenlghtwaeddcnll- hi llllllnd-le- Aeewelleeeloraeeegaleetiiiu! htheneming. lndicatieclwelelhflvneth- erufhekearnetfertbeteie- able for a long hop to Deeded. Htxmanrlce and hf: ctr-pilot, lrie W- Boner, were prevented from starting thl! mural!!!’ when, at the l!!! Ialnllle, the defect in the breaking system wee discovered. This became evident Saturday night u the inquest into the death 0! the Kiri, whose body was tairen from the reversing falls 'Ilhursday[ morning, o courthouse. the coup,‘ At midnight. Dr. O. L. Inner-son. the coroner, adjourned the inquest until 8J5 tonight. mam, witnesses‘ had been heard. Saw Girl hi! l These included Thomas Conroy, 30-year-old mill hand, who walked into central police station early Sat- urday and told detectives that he and two other men had been with the Orsery girl and saw her fall to her death from the bridge over the pulp mill canal, on the grounds of the Port Royal Pulp d: Paper 00., Ltd, between 4 and and ii A, M. Thursday. Previously Conroy had told police that he left Helen Oreary Wednes- day night at l1 o'clock. He and the other men he named as having seen the girl fall from the bridge, Frank Richard, 39, and Wil- liam Downing, 47, are held in the county jail as materiel witnesses, at the order of the coroner. The three were employees of the pulp mill, Conroy accounted for the first story ha told police, about leav- ing the girl at l1 o'clock Wednesday night, by saying that his companions were tightened that if the real story came out they would lose their lobe. Against his will, ha said. he had en- tered into an agreement with them not to tell anybody. Hedeclared that it was because of this that he had withheld the facts from police for two dye. _.... .. .. f ,_~. Mystery Marks Saturday night't testimony brought out that the autopsy on the girl's body showed small contusions on the scalp which were not visible from the surface. There were also mall abrasions on the r1118 Ind middle fingers of the right hand and bruises on the left wrist and the right thigh. Special significance was attached to these abrasions and bruises by William M. Ryan, who i! repre- senting Helen Green's family at the inquest. Microscopic sections reports on these can be completed in time, Dr. H. A. McKeen, provin- cial patholoqist. will be asked at resumption of the inquest to give an opinion as to whether the bruis- es and abrasions were made before or after death. Another point, raised by .1. Starr Tait, who is representing the crown is whether the girl's body could have floated out of the pulp mill canal with tidal conditio that‘ existed between 4 a.m. and l0 a.m. Thursday. On the witness stand Saturday night. Conroy stuck firmly to the , siorv he bod given police earlier in the dev. We Richard and the girl said. Downing rild not drink. While Mlllrnlflg, continued the witness. the girl seemed to feel ill. stepped 1m m: the bridge rail. arvosrently lost her balance and plunged into the water beneath. LAIOI LUMBIB SHIPMENT (C. P. by Guardian's Special Win, NEW GLASGOW, N. S. Oct. 28 -Within the next two weeks. 2,- 500,000 feet of Nova Sootie lumber, will be shipped w Greet ‘Britain. in the steamship Ottawa, it was learned um tonight. supplied by the McGrogor Lumber Qnnpany the wood will be loaded at ‘Mul- gnve and Piotou and i: onmeigned to ‘Liverpool, England. 4 In Skeleton pearenee remained a L-im the body could have stayed hidden; the bones were J the subleot, says further that Can- VIII’ "Hide?!" lllKE 0F KENT L! crown. mink. MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1934 swursnnwu ATLANTIC Three u.’ a Fishermen Lose Lives In Storm Tossed Lakes. (A. P. by Guardian’! Special Wire) BOSTON, Oct. 28—A biting wind of high velocity whirled down the Atlantic coast today bringing flur- rles of snow to some sections and sending the mercury on an early blllnse. Storm warnings were hung along‘ A? 10 PAGES lilnrnlni Guard-ill. Iwlllll Charlottetown Guardian 1w. ‘ s: C i] l ll ll A V [Mn Stevens Resigns But Price Spreads Commission Inquiry Willy Be Continued Mr. Stevens Was Asked By The Government To Express Regret For Breech‘ Of Cabinet Ethics And Business Fairness In Publishing inaccuracies Regarding Investigations But After Consideration Preferred To Resign Chairmanship And Membership Of The Cabinet - Investigation Will Continue With Mr. Stevens Still Member Of Commission With Righ To (O. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) OITAWA, Oct. flit-Despite the resignation of l-Ion. H. H. Stevens the coast and hhe weather bureau at Washington said a “distill-hence of great intensity central mouth of St, Lawrence moving northward, will cause strong northwest winds, andgalesiodsyBoewntoH“ l NEXTfiilVERNllR; i: E u ER A l i, Youngest Son 0f Their- Majesties Would Be, Popular Choice For Office. (C. P. by Guardian’: Special Wire). LONDON, Oct. 28-'I'he Sunday, Referee eeid today it had discover- ed there was a. “strong movement to secure His Majesty's percussion] to appoint the nuke of Kent as‘ next Governor-General of Oan- ada." Youngest son of their Mel- eaties,thel)ukeofKen'tisbeing married neirt nuonth to Princess Marina. of Greece. l The Referee said further there was "steady prmsure in influentiail quarters to send the most popular; ‘young marrieds’ in the world to succeed the am of Bessborough." ,1 111a Earl of Bessborough, Can-l Ida's present Governor-General succeeded Lord Wlllingdon in that office. The Referee, in an editorial on ‘ a t v 4N5: thing could be more popu r than the sending of the Duke of Kent and his lovely wife-to-be‘ to the vice-regal lodge in Ottawa. "Iheir youth would a to the spirited youth i‘; the in- ion, and it would be equally popu- lar in the United States where the British Royal Family is regarded with peculiar admiration and af- fection," the Referee says. "Lord Bssboroughks term of of- fice does not expire for another 1e months but it would not be sur- prising if personal consideration: made him ask leave to return-home before his fuli time la up." POPULAR CHOICE OITAWA, Oct 28-40.?)- Should the Duke of Ken-t be nam- ed next Governor General of Can- ada he will be the second member of the royal family to have occup- ied that post. Despatches from; Liondcun indicate the existence in the United Kingdom of a "strong movement to secure His Majesty‘: permission to appoint the Duke of Kent as next Governo- General." The marriage of His Royal Highness to Princess Marina o’ Greece takes place in November. DayPasses Quiet- ly In Germany (A- P. By Guardian’: Special Wire] MUNICH, Germany, Oct. 28- Under the apparent relaxation of Nazi control of the Protestant Church, Sunday passed quietly here with the reading from all Protest- ant puipits of the manifesto of the Berlin Synod declaring independ- ence fmm Reichsbishop Ludwig Muller's Germany Christian Church. There was no display of optim- ism. pastors pointing out in their sermons that while the recent re- lease of Bishop Hans Mciser was warmly welcomed, it must be fol- lowed by hfi reinfitement as bishop. Meilerwelsafdinbeoneflbusi- ness journey" to Berlin. l" 89'1""! ever grew! and strong west and northwest] gales today and tonight norflh Ofl Boston to esstport." Terrific winds whipped Lake Erie late Saturday and early today claiming three lives. Two Detroit drowned when their other fishermen lost his life when a tug was struck by a large wave off Lorain, Ohio.. and latercap- sized, New Ernglandeia got out their great coats and mufflers as they tool: their Sunday sdlimioon strolls. Hail and snow swflpl? AmWVx-‘k County and freezing tempelwtureé were reported at the Canadian border, JAPAN FIRM 0N PULIBY (c, P, by Guardian's Special Wlrv) LONDON, Oct. iii-British and Uflllicd States deXBGQl-Qs t0 the Diw- al conversations procedinsfl 11°" amongst those two WWW “d Japan will confer mum-low. d18- ciwslnil 0116 "Qlkwmll d Phi’ m“ countries oonoemiBS Jails-M elm for naval equality. "Turmversaumrutweuedflw iii-laterally. Th Japan delegation millil- sizedaanow its desire for recognit- iim of the principle oi equality. Admiral Isoroku Yemamow sold he was prepared to eta! l1! 10mm“ a year if still “d”! l” reach M89111‘!!!- Fimtmslpokesman for his country. the Admlml believed the Jflvllfinese proposals for a new navel treaty oonsidtuiled an epoch-malcinl plan 1m- mduig all naval ISSIWl°B~ LIKLI HOPE FOB DISARMA- MENT WASi-HNGTON, w. 28—(A-P.) .-Liiatie hope for arms limitsM-u was fcrmaeen today by the 111N181! policy ‘ tion as it calculated that mums nations were svendlns more for ornaments than tho? @114 m the (gnu year before the Great W . Ifirnfien it is recalled that unres- tricted competition in armamen‘ reached its apex durlns the 69°84“ before the World War. m“??? es appear even more 811 . said the report prepared by two of the association's reearch staff. The recspitulablon made no dir- ect reference io- the 9163mm!" naval treaty discussions now under wary in Inndon, nor of Japan's de- mand for abandonment of iihe arms ratio for itself. Great Britain and the United States. the 5-5-8 Speeds To Aid Of Rudderless Trawler (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wier) NEW YORK, Oct. 28—'I‘he coast- guard cutter Cayuga sped tonight to the assistance of the fishing trawler Exeter, which lost her rud- der and was reported drifting help- lessly 800 miles off New York, due east of Nantucket lightship. The Cayuga went to the rescue after the coastguard cutter Harriet Mine developed motor trouble and headed beck to her base at Prov- incetmvn. Mess. The Ixeter earl-in a crew of 30. inquiry into price spreads, mass buying and unsatisfactory business methods will continue. This much, on the definite statement of Prem- ier R. B. Bennett, emerged tonight from the flood of rumor. specula- tion and recrimination which fol- lowed Mr. Stevens’ dramatic de- parture from the Bennett Govern- ment. Canadian political circles receiv- ed their biggest shock since the Melghen-King deadlock of i926 when Mr. Stevens refusing to re- tract or apologize for certain re- marks announced his resignation as Minister of Trade and Com- merce and head of the Royal Com- mission probing mass buying and price spreads. The shock was not mitigated when Mr. Bennett in a. long letter accepted the resignation. The Prime Minister commended Mr. Stevens’ industry and zeal as a minister but denciniced in severe terms his remarks concerning the investigation in public speeches and particularly in the now famous “Stevens pamphlet." Regrets Action “It is a matter of regret to me.“ Mr. Bennett wrote, “that you have chosen to resign rather than take the course that my colleagues and myself suggested." The suggestion was that Mr. Stevens correct or withdraw certain statements con-- tained in the pamphlet “with an appropriate expression of regret." The political storm had been brewing ever since Aug. 5, when copies of this pamphlet, discussing the evidence at the price spreads inquiry. reached the public and it ‘broke just on the eve of the re- sumption of the probe’, Mr, Stevem had called the commission together for an executive session tomorrow with hearing of evidence to begin Tuesday. Although no longer chairman. m. Stevens will remain on the commission, he stated tonight. In his letter ivu. Bennett said his re- signation as chairman would not prevent his continuing on the com- mission and bringing out whatever‘ evidence he wished. l At the same time Mr. Bennett stated definitely it was the govq emrnenifs intention that the probe should continue until all necessary evidence hsd been brought out and a suitable report formulated for Parliament. ‘ Unanswered Questions left unanswered were the choice of a new chairman for the commission, the Chulge cf a new Minister of Trade and Com- merce and of a new representative of British Columbia in the cabinet. They will likely be settled early in the week. Mr. Bennevs letter and two statements issued by Mr. Stevens on Saturday indicated definite contradictions on two points and an implied contradiction on an- other. Mr. Bennett charged m. Stevens had prejudged the case of certain concerns referred to in evidence before the inquiry. Mr. Stevens de- Call Evidence And Examine Witnesses. Reaction To 2 Resignation Of Stevens (C. l’. By Guardian’! Special Wire) OTTAWA, on. 2a. - Minister d Railways R. J. Manion will return to Ottawa in a day or two and will likely take over the portfolio o! Min-i lster of Trade and Commerce left vacant by the resignation of Hen. H. H. Stevens. Dr. Manion has been in ill health for some time with an infected eye and his physicians or- dered him to take a complete rest, His condition has greatly improved - No Comment To Make PARIS, Oct. Zilr-(C. P. Gable viq Reuters) ~ W. L. Mackenzie King, leader oi the Opposition in the Can- nfed this. claiming the investiga- tion was into a system and no oon- cern or individual was charged with an offence. Mr. Bennett charged an injustice had been done v. certain firms! and individuals which Mr. Stevens also denied. On the circumstance attending the preparation of thememlphlet there was an implied contradiction. Mr. Stevens‘ explanation said it was a. report of a speech delivered before .a Conservative members’ study club and not intended for publication. Mr. Bennett reviewed the background, commented on Mr. Stevens‘ explanation and said he noted the pamphlet referred to “reeders" and not to "hearers" Ceuasofltbpnh ‘The public disclosures on the cabinet dispute consisted of the following: 1. Two statements issued by Mr. Stevens. one dealing with his ros- iznation and the other with news- (Continued on Page s) Inaugura tes Short - wave B ro a d ca sts m (A, P, by Guardian's Special Wire) ROME, Oct. ZB-Senator Gug- lielmo Marconi inaugllffiwd I 5"‘ ‘ies of short-wave broadcasts to North America tonight by slvins an auricular demonstration of his latest invention-the microwave harbor “lighth0use". The device enables a mariner to guide a ship safely through fog into a. port. The noted inventor produced for American listeners the some sill- nela which the pilot of a ivllll! would hear coming from two bea- cons which would indicate to him whether he was on or Off 1115 course. Markadonis On Trihl This Week SYDNEY. N. 8., Oct. 2B-—'I‘ria.l of Nicholas Markadonis, charged with the murder of his sister-ln-law. Mrs. Stephen Markadonls, will open in Supreme Court here this week. The 28-year old mother was shot down in the kitchen of her home at Glace Bay on July 20 while fill- ing a milF-a bottle for her infant. Nlchglgg, 1s, was arrested a few hour; gflei" the shooting and has been held in jail since. From Fijis (A. P. By Guardian‘! Special Wlrel SUVA, Fill Islalfll. Oct. 29- (Mondayb-Winglng into an almost clcudless sky, Sir Charles Kings- fmd-Smii-h took off from Nlselai Beach here at 8.10 a.m. Suva time today (2.10 a.m.. A.s.'i‘. Sunday) on continuing his Dirac-lump hop from Brisbane, Australia, to Oak. land. Calif. The Lady Southern Cross, laden ' with sic galleria of nesoline, roared 1,000 yards down the beach. then rose slowly and a fcw minutes lat- er was lost to sight. (Si: hours after taking off su- Australialiflflyer Hops Off For Honolulu a SAM-mile flight to Honoluluylouely had been delayed W 91'0"!‘ nu rum unis iganunn (C. P. By Gmrdian’: Special Wire) MONCTION. N’. 3., Oct. 28-'I‘he oil tanker Elklicund, Captain Ab- mm, owned by the Irving Oil Com- pany, Ltd, ran aground in the mud bank of the Petitcodiac River just outside Moncinn city limits late this afternoon and is still fast. The vessel came up on the after-f noon tide with a cargo of petrol-l eum products for the company's storage plant here and was about to be moored at the firm’: private wharf when, through some un- known manner, the steel wire haw- ser slipped into the water and the ship was carried streamwards. The hawser became entangled in the propeller with the resultant effect that the craft went aground about 100 yards below the wharf. As to what damage had been caused the tanker no estimate could be made tonight. neither could company 0Y- ficials state whether they exilwifld the vessel to be refloated and clear- ed from the bank at the next high tide, or not. It was the first trip of the ship io the company's new MYISQ ""1 distributing plant here. a message from the plane inter- cepted by the navy station st San Francisco). Sir Charles. knighted for hi! ocean flight from Oakland to Syd- new in 1928, showed the strain of waiting for the takeoff, which pre- winds. Before the second les 0i "W flight began. he remarked "the 10b has got to be done," and then left the camp for a walk unaccompan- ied. The Australian's navigator, cap- tain P. 0- Taylor, was confident resignation of Hon. H. H. Stevens, ‘Minister of Trade and Commerce, from the Bennett Cabinet. » m. King at present ll on- an informal visit w Great Britain and the continent. Will Name Chairman OTTAWA, Oct. QiL-(CPJ-Assiu-s ance was given tonight in official circles that the government would name a. chairman cf the Royal Oom- mission on Mass Buying and Price Spreads in time for tomorrow's meeting. It was explained that the chairman has to be appointed by Or< der-in-Councll. ‘there is much disousaion u in ‘who will succeed Hon. H. H. Stevens Ito the chairmanship. It was claim- ed a final decision had not yet been‘ lmade but that if. would be one of the present commissioners. The ex< pectation was that it would be W. W. Kennedy. Conservative member fzl Winnipeg South Centre. Mir. K801 nedy arrived in Ottawa ted”. TORONIO, Oct. l. — (OPE >- George Beckett tonight his resignation as President of iii Young Canada conservative Oinb, declaring he was unable to hold position and extend his "vi support to Hon. H. H. Btevuns, who resigned as ivflnister of arms anfi Commerce and Chairmen i! thl Price Spreads Committee. '!‘he ru- signation will come before the m; nuei meeting Nov. l. .\,\ii\.E BOYS ylfllb” ARE POOR KAT; ARKAMsnc can. , ALWAYS BE GOLF CADMES .' lto make no comment concerning thq i < Strung southwest and we!) winds; partly cloudy and dell local snowflnrriee. (Canadian Pres!) , .\ll<I'\‘l<10l10I.OGiCAl. orvtcn, ‘lor- untu_ (lei. lW-Minimnm and mul- llilllil iouipcrnturuaz- llnilvsnn .,. .,, .,_.,. R If Akluvlk .,_ 4 90 Venrouvel iii 5S (‘nlgnry ..- l! 49 Edmonton . , 24 lfl Wlnnlpe N 40 Montrc! 8.2 a Quebec -.- .- a Saint John .. M M Iiul n! j" l0 : Charlottetown ._ It FORECAST Maritime Provlncen~5tron| went and west wind!" NR1! and cold; local enowflnrrfee, High tide thin afternoon at l.“ nnd tomorrow mornlnl at 1.15. Sun bola this afternoon It 4.50 and rllon tomorrow morning at 0.84. Last quarter moon Tuelday, Oct h 3 22 l, m . eighteen minute! cloudy Slimmer-bide tide leiar than Charlottetown. CAB IEIBY and cheerful as the plane Wt b€~ Leave Borden 0 46 A. ll. (lath) inn fueled and remarked they nii-‘l l‘ M Charles had covered 690 miles, snld ticipntcd no difficulty in makfnsi, 57, the long overseas journey. tmsve Tormenilne (Extr!) li A. I; _ P. iii. rislly except 5on1 beginning Monday Oct 1Q. adian Parliament. said he preferred- ::;'~.v;r‘_~:'.~.':~&' r-rev; . Q "w-