t I MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN -—-_- uenflnp are honour-slit, u. ‘bgmllllblh "II \\I. The People's Paper >;l'?'/fl’ use" w?“ ..._!"‘"‘--..__________\ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody MAXIM! OFA MERE MAN The wise man knows tile fool hut. the fool does not know the wise man. ?' '. i ‘ hf.l‘l!."‘il'l‘-ii‘-1”“"-~---T- i???" CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 193a 1o PAGES {,;":,';',,1';.";;['_"‘,'1;,P,,",';f,',;'_,'g,-",’,,_ ,,_,,, IAPAWN EAR ORPHAN Opposition L e a d e r Bennett To Follow Mover And Second- er. l ...__.... AWA. Jen. 30 —(CP) -J. y, mncoeur, veteran former mem- pr of the Quebec Legislature and licw federal memiber for Lot- binere. will open the way to a1- Mt unlinllted debate when he liloves tomorrow ill the House of ominous the formal the Governor General in reply to the Speech from the Throne. Trend of the feeling that will militate proceedings during the want session of Parliament will revealed to some extent during this debate. If the session, as many expect. is to be markedby spirited opposition, tllc signs W111 probably he noticeable ill tile speeches made during the next few days. will Second Address it. ilf Warren (Lib. Henri-cw North) is scheduled to second the address after which Conservative leader Bennett, speaking for the official opposition party will open lilo debate drawing response im- mediately from Prime. Minister Mackenzie King. Frequently tile debate on the address goes on for days, ending in amen lllents which, if adopted would mean the adnlinlsriltion was not acceptable to the majority and would necessitate its resignation Wit-ll the largest Government Bonn following in Canadian his- tory, there is little pcsibility o! my wllnt-of-confidence amend- pent nucceeding. ='11ic__io minute time _ limltof (00l1lIllllEd_0_!VI__1JDQ0 LCoi :1) COMING tvfi Inserted ln vv (I ed .'.\iillflillll‘l‘flil‘lllto V ihll column nt 2 cunt; pot llrlrlb" IIIIYIIIDII! in a > "Talkies-Montague Saturday. L-209l-l-li-4i. nn~ "Loading live hogs Tuesday Pehl iii Five Houses. Signed Jus- tin Larkiii. 14-2010-1-24-26-28-31 “Ross Mils. Vernon River, will grind first three days of each L—2200-l-31-2i. . "lluskio vs. Hornets, Milton Rink tonight. Game starts 8 o'clock. Skate aflcr. ‘ L-2262-l-31-1i. "East Royalty rink tonight, East Royalty Royals vs. Central Acuity. Skate after. Ll-aino. "Hockey it New Glasgow to- Iilflht. Hope River Wildcats lluslico Junior Rangers. L-fllaii. "Fast hockey at llfarshfield to- Pilihl. Dunstnffnalze vs. York. Skate after, with music. L-228l. "Biiviiiiz dressed chicken and fowl dailv. Correct zrndilllz. Top Island Cold Storage Com- L-475-l2- -ff. "IIMIWY at Stanley tonight, sea View vs. Dairy Kinda. Wednesday gig-Iii. French River vs. Dairy 85- L-mo. “R. C. N. V. R. vs. M rr mission l5 nnd 10 Union. Moore and Mac Winsloa gel, "iiiv 5 P p-M J. W. Farilmer Secretary. iii led .M m . i-i- emf-c “illllt it? ‘if.’ l?” “Doubleheelde t m k r a “IXIT-mlglllilgholfléiyixiaiiy Bearcats vs cllllrclilli lice 'wi a Bluebirds. slrclinllmlsllgl. “infill eada lairlm g Allin” in ‘I’? m" E U. "id l0 cents. l IIIRIINE SPEECH IIIBATE IIIII IIP EN TIIIIAY address to wcek. V8. u ay ‘Talbot Wings Friday night. Ad- L-fl279~T.-3l-3I. "Cake ule Trinity Young Peo- Q food's “may afternoon, February 5th. L-ZBGI-l-Sl-SI. "mickey at Highflcld mutant. J Mid vs lghiield llniors. Carnival Saturday, Feb- i L-23B0. “Borden rink tonight, Tip Top does-i-te-ao-al. The Annual Meetin of King‘ giiiiitv 1.. o. 1.. wifl mEIet in Mad L-nza-l-ili-at. Cornwall "Cornwall Hall Come and en u“ “Win! lcturee and en- RUBIN’! A mission I) In aid of Y. 14-2207. "Oovehead Rink schedule. Tues- Wed d , c .. "wired men IfIirk. glid- ‘Wiil in il-mo. lbNoou. Jim. 30—A violent weekend gale subsided todeyleav- ing a. trail of destruction and a. mber of deaths throughout, um ited Kingdom. Meenwhfe the trawler Bostorn tan from Fleetwood, missing (or two weeks with a crew of 12, is feared lost. Four bodies and wreckage washed up at Hoy in the Orkney Islands was believed for a. time to give a clue to the Bos- tonians fnte but Fred Parkes, lllnllagillg-dilcctcr of the company owning the craft said the descrip- tion oi‘ the wreckage did not fit the trawler. Parke-i BXDIessE-d grove feel-s for the safety of tile trawler which sailed Jan. 12 from Fleetwood for the west of Scotland fishing grounds. The Posiorilan communicated by radio ll th another trawler Jan. 16 and is unreported since. The Hoy wreckage i". still a mystery. The home fleet ploughed through himly 5°°§_‘?l.".‘9l!i?_ I” LIQPTE-J" NINE IIEAII IN IZIIIIIEIIY FIRE Trapped Under- ground By Blaze In Scottish Mine. ‘KIISYTH. Steriingsllixc, soot- land, Jan. lib-Nine miners were trapped and suffocated in a liery fire today despite heroic N8- cue efforts by volunteers. The bodies were recovered. l The men wcl-c trapped earfy this morning when iirc broke out underground ill the Dumbreck colliery, two miles from Kilsyth. While wlvcs and children prayed at the pitlleatl. rescuers fought for hours to subdue the flames and reach the men. Finally discovered tile bodies huddled in o. group. They were suffocated but not burned. Thomas Martin. a member of tllc subsurface party. managed to escape. Ho snrenrl iiie alarm and iriczl vainly to worn the others. Litter he collapsed from shock. Two of ills brothers and a. ncphcw were among lilo victims. Joseph Campbell rerv-hcd ety but returned to nid his ratios nnd died with them. Martin said later: "I OblPTVCd smoke, went along to investigate and found pit props had clltlgllt fine." Hoses were rim into the shaft ln an effort to quench the flames. The dead were: James. Robert and Joseph Mar- tin, Josepll Calllpbcl‘. Harry Hagen, Fdward O'Neill. Joseph Kelly. Peter Waller" and Peter Bums, all of Kllsyth nnd district. Will (EST Maritime Sessions This Week OTTAWA. Jan. 30-(CP)—-The Rcyal Commission on Donllnlon- Provincial relation; will finish its sitting here tomorrow and leave for Halifax late in the cavalier hear- ing David Sim. Cclnm-ssioncr lExcisc nnd description of . l ' - bTYETIQINMCCNIIOIE-LIS ion will start its Mar- itime sessions at Hsiilii! iieiii saf- corn- Saturday that. numania an estimated $20,000 dlmB-Ifi- all It: of the Dominic who‘: the seventh blmni Empire Service league, open! h!!! VICTORIA. Jon. 80-(0? Kicked up by III unldnetlfied y waves as they huddled. in an ll iomblng plane Vancouver. FLAGSTAFF signer, and hi: the slopes of over m lea of ‘snow to l Arim, Jan. e were find commnnder-ln-chief n Anglo-Japanese "co d gl-slggigipw 18h Covehead school sclicliing Bonk. in the ltlcuce and toga we I LATE NEWS FLASHES J ao- u) BUCIIAREST, Itumaéslpéunzli-n‘ “t. . . 30- CP —Nearl m“ WILLHN’ oTE-n-Eluflrom ale dance s n! ccnventiglmcf the Canadian Legion, r5". ‘eId-uldlodeulrly tod after u bulletin‘ v s lEIE-hiflnted rubber ‘but. Their hllle had crushed near Goose 30—(AP)—Gerai-d r. liiuce In the lien cl-uli rtcd MW“ wmcEilcflEmnclllllcliTzs in the Irceheo c! the cnf __ c; n )_GenercI Iwnue IBANGHAI, Ian taminth-Lnv‘: qua“ M" u nfilct of the malt lerious nature!’ ll Gnu Britain "m" bgyomfmglntfllllll " precept economic and political rehtionnhlpe with the Chinese Nations Government. mi-iraunm. Jill. SIk-(API-Tlil I ‘and m Pan-m‘ InnIThNoENIE Aiiwficl distress calla were followed by to locale llIh I 800d will villi; to Portugal, and also to Gibraltar for the spring cruise. The Imttlwhips Rodney end Nelson were in the van as the fleet left Portland -- on Saturday without mishap despite an 00- milo gale. b l The Bem r dge lifeboat struggled back to its station after h01lrs of battling in raging seen the Isle 0f Wight. She had helped re- float the coastal steamship New Verdun which ran aground off Spithead. The vessel reached Portsmouth with five feet of water in her hold. In Glas ow the gale wrecked the part1 ly completed Canadian pavilion for next summer's Em- pire exhibition. Arrangements were quickly made to have it rc- built. Debris was strewn over the exhibition ground. Other struc- tures there wcre slightly damaged and 43 telephone exchanges in Scotland were cut off. . The gale fatalities numbered at least six. Druggist Fined For Tooth Extraction (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) PORT OF SPAIN. Trinidad. Jan. flu-Convicted of extracting a tooth at his drug store and ac- cepting payment. Robert Sanowar. San Fernando druglrist. was fined $96 tor three months imprison- mcn . Evidence at ‘his trial in magis- trates court here said his "pa- iient," Mrs. Mai-la Gonzales had been to a dentist before coming to Sanowar but the former re- fused to extract the tooth. After it was removed by the druggist. she spent 21 days in hospital rc- celving treatment. l8 IIIIIEII I EXPIIISIIIN they broke through and. Scores Of Other Ital- ian Munition Work- ers Injured. (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) SEGNI. Italy, Jan. lily-Rain- soaked firemen today searched the ruins of one of Italy's reatest powder factories for ad itlonitl victims of the blast which yester- day killed i8 persons and injured more than 200. Racue workers pierced the piled debris after being kept out for 36 hours by the acrid fumes and .ficrce fires. Hours of rain aided in putting out fires started by the blasts in the powder 50110135 of the mulli- ilon: works. Officials said no fur- ther bodies were recovered and no additional deaths among the injured reported. Condition of most of those hurt was not con- sidered critical. The first of three explosions came at 7:35 a. m. Saturday. A second explosion 15 minutes later was followed by a terrific blast at 8:03 which destroyed the tions plant. Residence crashed, injuring householder; in- doors. Premier Mussolini arrived to survey the wreckage. but accepted the advice of guards not to go Carol gave assurance e: old mend: although the coun- uc. g , h air o In addition the K111i dwlllfll 5"" &Yl vs. lllTddletoxlfgvAedu low Tlreyclil. file lilzofgd-ISGOIINNNOIEIIOQ in B. Thcmlaizlllulzh '0'! 131390-229 Iiili i5. ' 1,2205, Humanism enmhasiaed his government had slain“. DP I “Th -__. France and Great Britain from it: list cl old MrvllAfiNEIcIIIEI-‘IIII ‘filixgmlll SHEET Hermon. a. s. n». 30-—(CI'i—-I1rc m» circus I two- - ~ enm- n l! boi- tonight. QIIIIII mesday’ “bruuy n" I“ u“ “u a‘ no", “m” owned by Lin-CAT» of ta: c036 not be detennined. 400 delenteo from will bl geeent ritish We Blake navel filers were Island. 800-0116 miles north of B S nympho aniline; after ' r llllllll "‘-c‘i'ld"‘“'f.°. cleaner-Tin mie- Hll ton 28 hnnda n‘e.er Ter- cct with-all to made by the W. . at least 3,000,000 persons escaped drownin IIIII ATTEIIIPT INNII IIISTANIIE IIIIIIIT REIIIIIIII British Airmen Plan Flight To Singapore Early In Spring. By EDWIN S. JOHNSON Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, Jan. a0 —(CP) - Re- curring reports that projected Bri- tish pails to tackle the world's lon -distancc non-stop flying re. cor might be abandoned have been effectively silenced by the Air Ministry with appointment of the personnel for the test. Eight commissioned and four non-commissioned officers of the Royal Airforce have been nolninat- , ed for o. course of special train- ing under the direct Commander O. R. Gaylord, for- nler hplcler of the long-range re- ‘ cord.‘ I‘lic_ picscnt lion-stop nlarlc‘ oi one miles is llcid by Russian‘ airmen who flclv from Moscow to California last Jilly, Tentative Course In all attempt to regain the title Gaylord has plotted a tenta- tive course from Cranwell Ail"- dronle ill Lincolllsliire across Ger- many. Pvliiiill. and soulrlcm Rus- sia M) Singapore. a distance of ap- proximately 7,300 miles. A second attract... “ti” it W we e le ers to S , Australia. ’ ydney Tile takeoff is expected to be miiilfi Early in April to get the ma- chines intc Sydney. in time w participate in tile 100th anniversary celebrations of_New South Wales. When the flight was first moot- ed late in 1937, the Vickers "W81. lesley"standa.rd-type bomber was named as the likely choice on the strength of its general perform- ance tests. Tile Air Ministry has now made that selection official. Three of these machines iii-eat present being constructed and are being fitted with special equip- ment and extra fuel tanks. Familiar With Craft The officers and airmen-pilots chosen for the experiments are a1- ready practised in flying the Wel- iesley, which is the armament of sevcrul service squadrons. Powered with a single Bristol Pegasus tlvo-specti super-charger Biillille. the Wcilcsicy is capable of o. maximum icvel spccd of ZZBtriiIes all hour. Wltll favorable weather conditions Gaylord hopes to make the Singapore hop within 45 hours, but distance and not. time, he says, will bet the main goal. Following are the men selected for the flight: Pilots —Squad.ron Leared R. Kel- lett and flight Lieutenants H. A. V. Hogan, F. S.. Gardner, A. N. Conibc. Navigators Flight Lleutenants R. T. Clothing. B. K. Burkott and flying officers R. G. Mussom and G. J. D. Thomsom. Air Pilots, qualified ns wireless operators and mcl-ilanics —Flight- Sergeant M. L. Glllll.-~--sCl‘flflflfltS I-I. B. Gray, '1‘. D. Dixon atld V. Gibbs. ‘ Claims Thousands In Desperate Need WASHINGTON, Jan. 30--J0hn L. Lewis declared tonight that thousand; of workers now face desperate need and even star- vation "in spite of the President's promise" to let no willing worker starve. In a letter urging all affiliates of his Collimitlcc for Industrial Organization to notify Congress that “immediate action is needed" provide 3,000,000 work relief jobs for the unemployed, Iiewis added : ‘The ldministralion has taken upon itself this obligation, and the workers to fulfill its prolnis of America expcct it e3. No more work relief jobs are available at presrnt to meet an unemployment situation that is reclining "a very serious emer- gency." he said. “Unless an immediate order is administration to the P A. to open its roll; 0nd put people to work, be dire suffering in the Trio Narrowly Escape Drowning At Sydney .. G dI'ScfIWli'€) (Csknkyalnulvr. g.‘ ‘Jail? 3<T—Thi=i= 31am‘!- d y as they broke throui B i?! of“ Sydney Harbor. One of them. Peter Berthelot. a truckdriver, jumped from his machine just be- fore lt anlr. - Thirtgen year old Rod Andrews skated into an open patch made by a coastal steamship, but was res- ued by lite Df0mnt action of John ‘Smith. member of the steamship “Ailgcclillllirc. 21. of Little Lor- raine. near here. was also rescued from the Icy waters after she broke through the ice while skating companion, "ith her 19 year old Daniel ‘IOIA ion of Wing-_ Honour Memory‘ Of Canadian War Poet WIIJVIEREIJX. France. Jan. 30- (CP Havas)—-Dip1oulats and war veterans of four nations gathered at Wimeoeux Cemetery to honor the memory of Lleut. Mal- oollnl John McOraie, Canadian phy- sician-soldier who achieved lasting lune with his poem, "In Flanders Fields." To mark the 20th anniversary of his death in Wimereux Hospital Jan. 28. 1918. a distingitiished ath- Erirlg assembled around his sTrnple headstone decorated with the Maple leaf. Hon. Philippe Roy, Canadian Minister to Plranoe, presided. Sir Eric Phipps, Brithh Ambassador to France; Bench Pensions Minister J. B.,LasSa.lle and William C. Bul- litt, United States Ambassador. were present. mag-tearing delegations ireprrei cnfcd the Canadian. British and American legions and French vet- crane. FIFTH YEAR or NAZI iliiiE ls ttiirlli P a r a d e s, Speeches And Praise For Chancellor Hitler Mark Event. (A.P. By Guardian's SpecialWiro-i BERLIN, Jan. 30—’l‘ui:liitarlan Germany today celebratcrl tile fifth anniversary of Adolf l-lltlcrs rise to bower With parades. S11E66“- es and praise for tlle Chancellor's solution of five mall)! PYQIYIEITIS since 1933. While Hitler and his aides tum- ed to the future and the still lin- aettied questions of German co_ioil- int aspirations, foreign relations, economic self-sufficiency llnti the place of the church in the internu- tional socialist slate, Nazis throughout the country rcvicwcd the handling of those problems; Unemployment Practically clim- inated by introduction ,0f_cqmp\lJ- sory labor service. conscription oi -\ I i- of military service, a vast prolliiim of’ roadmaking land reclliuifllifln and contraction of public ‘blliflillgs, Versailles Trcaty-ltesirlclioils of the Great War peace treaty broken and Germany transformed into a. first class military Dower. _ Jews-Germany stilnds in a fair way to drive Jews completely out of tile Itciclrs economic sphere as they already have been driven out of social and political life. Politics-Once a country of two dozen political parties, the Reich now has but one. the National So- cialist. All others have been aboished. International Isolation-This was almost complete in 1933 but now Germany has close alliances with Itrlly and Japan nnd enjoys a spec- ial friendship with Yugoslavia, Po- land, Hungary and Rulnallia. FUTURE PROBLEWI S Tile problems of lllc Nazi future ocntre about the demand miles as sources of raw nlatcriills; the manufacture of substitutes for the things Germany cannot pro- duce from within: the improvement of foreign relations. especially wit the democracies. and reaching peaceful relations with the Cutilo ic and Protestant confessional chur- ches. Those who had hoped for an nn- niversarv answer to what Hitler's sion were called off suddenly willi- out explanation. Propagnilda. lViillLslcr Goebbels, uddressing a rally of Hitler youth, pictured present day Germany as a powerful united nation where just- ice reiilns. In another ceremony, Hitler awarded national prizes for accom- plishments in art and science. The day's celebrations ended with a torchiigllt parade of Nazi for- motions Ulster Campaign Enters Final Stage (or. By Guardian's spccial» Wire) BEL-FAB Jan Viscount Craixavonb . 30 —— no-truck-with-Dubliil cambaian. buoyed with 14 acciamn- tion’ entered its final drive for next week‘ general election tonigllt con- fident of e. majority Albeit reduced, in the Northern Ireland Parliament the Unionist (Conservative) party has dominated since the Elneraid Isle was split into north and south 17 years ago. All but one member of the Die- hard Premier's cabinet were rc- turned by ecclamation when nom- ination! for the Stormont House of Commons‘ 52 seats were filed throughout the six northern coun- ties yesterday. lcavlng only Dawson Bates, perennial Home Minister in the world's longest-lived government, to fight it out in three-party contest in the Victoria division of Belfast. Wth a minimum of dtslmlcr to emplnasize the deep political Schism div "inlz Protstant and Catilo.‘ and Imperllllist and Republican. 04 candidates filed nomination papers F? Rh- USIQGNOII. all able bodied men for tlvo years- plans might be were disappointed. . Arrangements for a Rcicilslng scs- i II A RDPIANES ITRIIP ITEATII IIN BARIIEIIINA Insurgents Answer To Air Truce Offer- ed By Government. (By RAIIION BLARDONY) (Associated Press Foreign Staff) BARCELONA, Jan. 30 —(APl _ More. than 300 persons, I59 of‘ thom war orphan children, were killed today in two Insurgent air raids on this Spanish Government capital. Semi-official estimates said ‘I00 others wore wounded while uncon- firmed reports declared another 300 lvcre ililll-ii. in a flooded .bomh- shelter during the city's most de- structive aerial attack of the civil uur. ' The l?!) children (llcd crouching ill till.- bilscmcllt of all old church “here tllcy tool: refuge from an rttlio cut p-ruj cliics score-ti ll dlrcct hit oil lill- c l-li iiolllt- unit plum- illcicri tn . basement roilvcrtiilg ‘ it into .1. t. -lu- of unforgettable i i i swcr to our air truce offer," said an army officer at the sccilc. He re- ferred to the GovcrilmcnUs sug- g uprllllilugc. four lnsurg» CLAIM VIC TORIES 01v" TWO FR ozvrs CHILDREN KILLED, 11v ETRAID’ (Jnited Kingdom Swept By Cale Trail Of Deatll-A-‘nd Destruction Left In Wake 912V eekend Storm. 3,000 Chinese Said Slain In Bitter Fighting Major Battle L36?» For Control Of Vital Railway Link On LungliFront. SHANGHAI, Jan. 30 —(AI’) -Three thousand Chin- ese soldiers tonight were reported slaughtered in smash- , ing Japanese victories 0n ihc two principal warfronts and in guerilla combat west of Shanghai. A decisive battle was developing from a series of } sanguinary skirmishes on the Lunghai Railway front ; where cold and sleet gripped plains rivcr valleys and moun- I tzlinlands. The rilillvzl_l' runs from the llpperKizlngsu Pro- 1 vince COIISI into the hczlrt of China. , A Japanese Army spokesman disclosing operations of I the past i8 hours, said “at least 3,000 Chinese” were killed on the southern side of the Lunghai front and in the Wuhu l and Soochovv areas on the Yangtse River Valley south of I the "lifeline" bzliileizrounds. Several ihilusilnd other CIIIIIOSC scattered and fled bo- forc the Jilpzlllcso thrusts, tile spokesman reported. l ENCOUNTFIIEI) FORCE Tile Japanese said their forca I . , encountered 5.000 Chinese west of ' ‘Mlllglflllallg along the Tienlsin-l in Banaila lPukon ltztiiivay sonle 100 miles f ;gut-slion both sides abstain from i Lunghal 11ml at suckow‘ keystone I I for cnl- i bombing cities behind the lines. Sock Bodies In Ruins Crolvds moving bioorl-sttllneti streets tonight pas- SIOTIKIICI} licilllllltieti destruction till: Ilullirlgcills‘ airbase at Mal- loljca. us ltcd Cross‘ rescue workers tolled to lllci survivors and search- ers hunted for more bodies in the wreckage. 'l‘he month-end bombings rais- ed the total casualties, for Janu- fliil to 1.0o0 killed and more than 2.0M) wounded in raids on Govern- ment. towns behind the civil war battle lilies. Although official government estillllltes plorctl the dead in to- rinys two raids at iliorc lllull 300, it \".'1lS feared tho toll would be creator as many were pinned ben- oath the tlt-bris of buildings liter- iliiy shattered by tile dozens of 440 pOiilill bombs. The projectiles crumbled five- storcy houses, burying their oc- cupuilis. Huge craters were dug in l tile streets. Cutting lvatcr and gas llifllll-S. Nursery Bomber] icly I65 clliltiljell were , when it was struck. oi tllc building col- The pillars lapsed plunging the roof in on the clllltlrcll. Forty were killed when a bomb crashed into a llletlicval church. Resumption of the Insurgent aerial attack, just as hopes were grolviilg" for "all air armistice," siunllcrl tile people of Barcelona. For four clays since Defence Min- istcr Incialccio Prieto suggested a truce on attacks behind tile lilies, Barcelona llnd \vaiicd—in n sem- bllnlrl: of stcllriiy. ‘Filo Illsllrlztiili. planes flow ill from the srll this lllorllillg with (lrllrlzli lion's flllS\\'(‘l‘. ivitrlt viclillls of tho first. raid at 0 ll. lll. lvcro still iii ilcd. Tho first. bomb foil ill-ill‘ tile cathedral, kil- ling several. Al. least l0 houses h ' viclc deslroficd in the part of the c ty. Government ‘DIIXIIPS rose in pur- suit, but. their work done, the Insurgent bombers raced out in iJEil . scarcely no llour inter they were buck. This correspondent was typing .ollt tllc- st-rlly oi tile first raid ‘League Aid For China Rests {With United States Reaction 30 -(UP)—A i P for the seats remaining lo ho con- l w!‘ the t uilcll llinl: bollllr; were IIPLIITI llis- sllig (IU\\'il, ioliolvcll at spiit-sccoild intervals by thunderous explosionl. The bombs of the second raid §0ll1lill1lOSt in the same area as the lrs. The bombs in the first raid fcll about 20 YIIITIS behind my hotel the building rocked to the forcc of their explosions. Turliiy women were carried on siretcllcrs out of the hotel. Its ruli- llli_lS atlri balconies made grotesque patterns in twisted irons. O _ the "Teruei ___ battlefront._l5 GENEVA, Jan. reported British, French and Rus- sian plan to extend QCOPNCIIIIO and financial aid to China in her war with Japan was believed tonight to hang on the official reaction of the United Stnics. Tile three grrat powers still in the League of Nations appeal-rd to have lolt ally ticfilliie decision on r y tile nature nllrl quallity of the pro- posotl help to dipionlniic negoti- lltlons after fllc Iicngue Council closes iis 100th S$=SIOIL A proposed resolution of aid, scheduled for considrratlon by the Council tonlcr ails-moon, was worried broadly. It IoftTiItI-lc doubt that CIIIIZCV‘ llr-prs for extensive nssi I'll livltcllllcll ml lntcr con- i T. PVIMI threat to vote against i" BRYCEWYIB/F- gilcrilia forces harssing Shanghai- Oi led up and shot SOT-illl of Soochow of the Chillese "lifcline“ dcicnccs; two thousand Chinese were killed til Isoutilcast of its junction with the Effects of the "Japanese-Chin- ese trouble" were noticed on the Canadian Pacific Coast, Mr. W. A. Simpson of Vancouver, son of the late William McNeill Simpson of ll-lnmiltoll, P. E. I., and a retired lulnbelmzln and contractor, aefd ill an interview in Charlottetown Saturday. "The Japs frequently insult the Chinese on the streets and police have to be on "watch to prevent trouble between members of the two races," said Mr. Simpson, who has been a Vancouver resi- dent .for 31 years with the excep- ere. Another 1,000 Chinese part of tile Nanking supply lines, were round- l and about 50 miles lvest of Shang- I ilai. Two thousand others were said to have been dispersed. - Shot on Sight I The irreguiars were without unl- lforrrls. a Japanese spokesman said. land "they therefore had lost their ‘status as soldiers and had become isliipers to be shot on sight." o“ the Wuhu Emmi In m“ lion of three years service over- Yiangy t ‘Zoogihmllk 91 seas in the Great War. g a“ a o“ m c5 we“ Business conditions In Van- iof Shanghai. there was a fierce ,clasll between Chinese and the Japanese cilptors of Wuhu. The épOkc-sman said the Chinese lost IlCElVlIy. _On the northern side of the [double-edged Lungllai front in l lower Silantung Province file Jap- salti the situation was but changed. ctlltlcse sources. however. said a column wilicll forced Japanese out of Mengyill was drivin! ilorlllwest couver had showed a decided up- trend during the early pert of last year, Mr. Simpson niid, but receded somewhat during the last few months. Conditions in the United Slates and the China-Jap- an situation were cited as two rclrons for tIiis development. However. conditions generally were irrcaty improved Over those a few years aco. ‘Tiler-e were 7.000 vacant houses ill Vancouver in i933, but last year to outflatlk the invaders at. Taiarl, com) “w, one. w"? constructed 15,9“? 501 “Iirmstbcmnd. the." spear‘ and there was ll a housing licllanwazll on.. ilc Tloilisln-Pukow shm-nma ML Slmmon Sam The prorpccl. of an air and land r. v attack ftlftllei" westward eildullg- “STAIVEEY ‘(BLED cred ilearly 100 protestant lnis- UPPER MUSQUODOYI.‘ N S" flfrlllliceilslls“LITNcnl-‘Flallldimfi $3.? Jeii- 3" —.<°P>—§id“°~” °°°i>$"i Kaifeng, about 1'75 miles from 32' °T P0995 HRTIJDK‘. N. 8., was killed instantly near this ‘Halifax County vfinac. Saturn-fly when struck by a falling tree. Cooper was working in the woods with his father. An inquest was foriplllnnccessarjv" __ Buchow. Approximately 300 Ioreiin mis- sionaries were near the unghai warzone. Appointed Judges Of Juvenile (‘ourts ~ar r- rz-z-rzi MANY A ‘Niall. INFORMED LAoY ilPls l\v.R hello 1’o (Alina FOR if! OTTAWA. Jltll. 30-101" '.I‘wo fllpDOIWEiil-Clll; lo juvenile courts in Prince Eduard Island were an- nounced tonight. Kenn etll hi. Martin was named judge of the juvenile court at Chzlrlottctown, and Judge D. Edgar Shaw the Prince County Court. lvrls appointed judge of the jllvrllilc court at Summersidc. CUNNTNTGIIIAM’ STILL “TOPS" BOSTON. Juli. ac -tA.P)— 4 % // Glenn Cunnillgilillll SI‘I‘\'(‘(I lloiicc a / he is siiil tho pccr of .l\illt‘l'l('llll Q ® j milers Saturday lliglit when he a ' ‘ raced to a. decisive 12-yard victory over Archie Sun Rolnnlli in the Prout Mcet's Knights: of Columbus nll‘e. The former Kansall rallit in ' 8 before an overflow crowd of miles southwest of Barcelona the government arllly pushed steadily northward, harassing Insurgent communication lilies to thwart new ss_apIts_o_ll_castcrn Spa in .V (Canadian Prcssl TORONTO. Jail. Iift-hiinimlm and maximum temperatggesz- Dawson 31B Victoria 30 84 Fkllllonton 10B 4B Regina —- 14B Willnipcg 30B 12B Toronto W 43 Ottawa 10 44 Montreal l6 40 Quebec 8 26 i , Saint John 14 36 ,the measure was alfcrcrl lo on Clmplofletown 1g 3g - agreement to abstain from voting ‘after a brief ptfolic explanation prggpgqpgr ‘that Warsaw disapproved scltlc- imcnt of the question among Mgrjijnlc Prqvinccs; strong southwest winds or moderate gale-e with some rain. followed by strong northwest. whirls and becoming colder b night with snowflurries. High idc this nlorning at 11.19 and tonilzilt at. 10.42. Sun sets this afternoon at 5.05 and rises tomorrow morning .721. New moon Monday. January 31. 0.35 n. m. Sullllncrside iidc eighteen min- ulcs litter than cilnrlotietowil. League powers alone. Some circles hnti reported Grcnt Britain, France nnd Russia llnd decided to ilclp Cilma ctllvr with or without approval oi the League Council if iirc Lllliloll Slatcs would cooperate. lSiaie swrctnry Cordell I-lllll said in Washington he llnd no ‘dispatches oil illc unrlcrsfnllrliili: reached by III!‘ Ivonne's "lag I three." Hull indicated the Unibd ‘Slates would continue its polcv of ‘ pcmlltlillg urns ' Jllpnll illltI (‘llll loin in all ilzirl-clllollt to asist I CIllllB. against Jasmin; TIFF. CAR FERRY 1.1m" linrlien 0J3 n. m. I , Maven ‘Ionncctlne u Q. y," i.“ p. In.‘ F! 1-13“ ‘I " ___ _ 7'“- u’