OF .A MERCHANT ii air-i m g g Guardian. Founded 1M1. gmsltmtown Guardian Two Cents. E3 who scrim. as it were. helm imam-l {i- \\T. :’_:/ /'/ ///' I The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward ,.. ‘until/re... RllTTTET Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2o. ‘ w“: \\\\\\ ' Read by Everybody 1930 HewABTudget ‘Was Sanctio lenIL MAXIMS orn' MERCHANT A good conscience l: l. continued 12' PAGES F0111: Steamers Call For Help On The _H_igh Seas Heavy Gales Along Coast Of Brit- tany Playing Havoc With Ship- ping-One Steamer Sinking. l (Canadian Press) PARIS, Sept. iii-The steamship msccnia, which sailed from London (may, ulreiessed that she was in distress and in need of assistance i; a gale of! the coast of Brittany. The Cunard cabin liner gave her po- sition at 68.30 north latitude and 5.15 west longitude, which is ten miles northwest of Uahant Light, Her S. O. B. was picked up by sev- eral stations in France and said that her rudder and steering gear were out o! commission. Terrific gales were reported off the coast of Brit- tany. ‘I ANOTHER. SHE IN DISTRESS "Jtie British steamship Temple Mead, 2.620 tons, which is in the same weather zone as the Tuscania, also sent out a. distress call. Her ivtreles said she was in distress at l! P0111’. between the Lizard at the southwestern tip of England and Usherit ‘Ilia Temple Mead asked as- sistance. ' OTHER VESBILS m TROUBLE --.-____ Left Complete Instructions For I Funeral (Special to the Guardian) SAN DIEGO, fi-lifq Scp. l0.- Iluth Alexnnde , who was killed today in a plane ernah loft in her own handwriting complete instructions for her funeral. “I Want. to be dressed in comfort- able, pretty ‘Jstclothingf’ she wrote. "I wont to be placed on my side in a comfortable sleep- ing position, my body will lie there a long time and I want to be comfortable. l wnnt to be placed where there are trees and sunshine and grass. l wish no long funeral sermon. In my scrap book there is a. poem marked with ink and if my wish is ob- served I will be put away on]! by my eloseot friends. A uong shall be sung, this poem feud and that il nil.” Several other vmsels also sent out cells for help. southwesterly gales "mills to the northwest were Elmilina the entire seaboard of Brittany from Cherbourg down to ionent Wireless stations were con- llflllilli’ receiving appeak of distress from ships floundering in heavy tees between Cape Fdnlsterrg and the Lizard. Besides the tanker and u" Telllliiie Mead, the Greek steam- er Stravodis and Dohodaka. asked hiyll- The m some we Le Thur Bilon sailed from Saint Nazaire to the asstance of the Dohodaka, re. WM Sinking in latitude 4-1 north Ind longtitiide 6 west. ANNOUNCEMENTS. COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS ETCS. seljlligrll Rifle Club, Prize shoot, -- 8,. SCI“. 27th. 7087-9-l9-2l krvshmf? Bale Fennel] As Chand- chriflsflturdav the 20th, Ladies‘ Aid ~11" Church. voso-o-ia-ai. 1:5’- Clift. 171 Queen St. Char- ETAMOWH. Chronic Maladies prevent- ‘_ and cured at home. whore they "Pm-Me 54l6-7-l5-3m "Cilrdlgfln Hall Tuesday Sc n - . pt- lmbcr .3rd, 8 P. M. Whist-Bingo- ce- Proceeds for Hall Improve- 7063-9-l8-30-2l. ‘l ‘can’ The 3'5“ Play "The Road ‘Han with specialties at North River ‘n -M°ndsv. Sept. 22nd. If not fine m‘ Tuesday. 7085-9-l9-3i T90R18 to the Ice Cream Social and 5:04.: in Orwell Cove Hull, Monday. Jltcmber 22nd. 70B1-9-19-2l. . m ‘Club loading car lambs at Mur- “Y River. September 2am forenoon. f" "Shed given preference. Hogs Ltemoqn, 7070-9-l9-2l. ‘fcflme and hear Mr. if. D. Mne- tllen of Charlottetown lecture on his slelvels, in Morel! Hail, Monday, ‘Member 22nd at 8.80 P. M. Aus- PMS Marie Women's Institute. 7092-9-20-li. "Sunday School Superintendent-l. PlQl-Sc read and take action. New T°mllerance Lessons begin October for Six weeks only. Ute this “mills Ollportunity to ' ' ‘on cmperancs lines. See your own “May School paper: or Northern ‘lemma. run-ii. ‘ "Dr. .1. c. hwlon u» about Diet- itian and Osteopath will Iponk in t“ Olledoulon i-uii. Richmond PW". 1mm. lvlttomhcr ma. on glib Philosophy of Health", at e an. "fully. septambe am on "The “his of Ihd." Thane lectures are" Million A Year This is a new and previously on. ifllblllhtll lwftrllt of Charles M. Schwnb, chairman of Bethlehem Steel Corporation, whose billion-dol- lar merger with Youngstown Sheet and Tube is bein| held in nboyance by legal notion instituted by Cyrus S. Eaton, Cleveland multi-milllon- nire financier and native of Nova Scotia. Schwub ltnrted no a Itsel- workcr at l. dollar a day. but‘ for some yenn hi: ninry has caceoded n million pgf nnnum. Ont. Pretests (Canadian Prom) TORJONPO, Sept. 19—’!‘he province of Ontario hu protested any steps being taken by the Dominion Government at the coming Imper- ini Conference in lnndon to doll with the provincial treaty under con- federation until ‘the matter has been submitted to the provinces. and ample time given for proper consid- eration of the auhioot. Premier Per- Illlm of (mtnrlo has written Prom- .-._._.. "Notice-Mr. Livinutono when Oondy Binineu on queen Street was dutroynd by mo. in flilmlltl busi- noll and will open his Iw plane of business, 114 Sim Avenue. on Satur- dtl’. 20th. you for put ‘M aooi-o-ao-zt interim. Into-hint -scnt Sir Thomas Lipton with "a big- BATE run RWY. ilNEiiTil BE STANilllllllZEl] Gauge of Murray Har- bour Branch Will Be Widened Probably Sunday, Oct. 5. date for the standardization of the Murray Harbour Branch oi’ the Can- adian National Railways. Forty- seven miles of narrow gauge track are to be standardized. Eight miles of standard gauge track have been already laid on the ten miles of con- necting line between Lake Verde and Plsqiiid. The steel now in use will be employed. The work o! widening the gauge will begin on Sunday morning and will be completed in one day in order that there need be no halt. in transportation service. The Hillsboro Bridge will be closed to traffic for twenty-four hours. All the box cars hitherto used on the narrow gauge line must be des- troyed before the date of standard- isation. There are about 250 such cars, thirty-two oi which have al- ready been burned on the reclaimed land in the railway yards. The Vice. president of the railway has decid- ed against. the sale of these cars as being unprofitable, as it would be necessary to send out a crane to re_ move the cars from the rails. [UVING 0UP EUR WURTITS BEST SPURT (Special to the Guardian) NEW YORK, Scp. ll-éMayor Jam- as J. Walker favors n plan to pre- ger loving cup than he would have received had he won the yacht. raczs." ' The suggestion made to the New York » Times by Will Rogers, cowboy phil- osopher, envisaged donations of a dollar to a. fund for buying Sll‘ Thom- as a cup to show how much the L‘. S. admired his sportsmanship. Murder Is Result OfDrunkenBrawl (Canadian Press) SYDNEY. N. 8., Sop. ll-Sergennt John Macintosh and mzmbers oi the local detachment of Nova Scotia leit in haste by motor for Bay Bt. Law- rence thin nftemoosi, celled by an urgent but meagre telegram stating that murder had bem committed there during the night and the stab- bed body of the victim discovered to- ; day. Constable Angus D. MacDonald. ' who sent the nppetl for Isllllhtc-l sold that the slayer has fled the scene and was still at 11119- 36 WI»! dsuibed as 28 years old and oi fair complexion but the manage did not give his name. Drunken Brawl Telephone lines extend only as far as Benton Cove, fifty miles from the aoeno of the killing. but reports fil- tering in over these said that the murder was the Nllllt of a drunken trawl in which two men engaged last night. Tho named of slayer and slain wen unknown to there along the telephoto endtelegraph lines. tcnonnctttotnotdfoet. hflnmlcpt-lt-laakotohewm Oct. 6 has been set as a tentative ' wilifollow tholtepaofonterio and protect vigorously any attempt oni l the port of the Dominion Govern-l moot or the coming Imperial Cow; ferencs to deal with the provincial; Dominicans would he effected. AftegMajestic to attend the Imperial Con- ijoaty and: the connlliliitilb M, [mango oinoctw of the Ocngqifemoe in London. New I Canadian Record hutc Elsie Storroiw. Ton-min r juniper, who leaped from In nit-i- tude of 6,700 feet, bettering her 5.- 000-foot yump and established a new Canadian record for a Canadian wom . . ._i nu ln that branch of aeronautics. The try could not be accepted as official, however, owing to the fact that no baropaph was taken up with the plane. SENATE PASSES, Blll. WITHOUT? DIVISION‘ i (Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Ont, Sept. Senate today gave third reading and passed the Government bill t0 Bmthd the provisions of the Customs Acti relating to dumping. There was no division nor was the measure) amended. i l I C. N. R. President § Will Pay Official i Visit To Ch ’Town i i ii. (Special to the Guardian) i MONTREAL, Sept. 19—Sir H. W.‘ Thornton, chairman and President: of the Canadian National Railways, will leave Montreal early next week on an inspection trip which will. take him over the lines oi the sys- ' tam in the Atlantic region. Sir Hen- i KingAnd Queen Talc e Pa rt In Se rvari ts ’ Ball (special to the Guardian) IDNDON, Sep. lit-While I lgmpest roared around the tur- rets of Balmoral Castle, Scot- land inst evening, its blllrwm was the scene of a brilliant 58m" ering assembled at the King and Queen's periodical bull for the servants of their Scottish estate. Doeside. Tartan kilts for the men and tartan decorations for the women were the order of the ov- cnlng. Hie Majesty wore liilts and so did the Prince o! Wales, who flew from Le Toquet, where he was playing golf. to Ipndon. and caught a night train from there to the castle. The duke of Glouc- ester and Prince George also were in kills. The lllllg did not dance but generally watched his guest: and talked with them. The queen danced several times, sometimes partnered with hei- game keep- ers and other men servants. There were no modern dances. only wnltzes, quadrillo and reels. ry will visit Halifax. Charlottetown, Morcton and St, John on the follow- ng dates Halifax, September 33rd; Charlottetown. September 24th; Moncton, September 25th. and St. John. September 26th. Canadian Govt. Employee Suicid- ed In London OTTAWA, Ont... Sept. 19.—Edward Ewing hoeland. of the Canadian Government service in London, Eng. committed suicide there, according to a cable received lzcrc yesterday. De- tails of the trugedy are not known in Ottawa. E. E. Freeland was regarded as a highly efficient member o! the De- partment of Trade and Commerce, outside stafl. Born at Brandon, Man, in 1887, he resided for many years in Toronto. I-le served in the Dominion Geodetic survey and liter leaving the government service for o brief career in tho insurance ficld return- ed io Ottawa. to join the Trade and Commerce Department staff. His widow, whom he leaves in Lon- don. is a former Toronto girl. New Zealand Premier Sees Satisfactory Trade Agreement With Canada UITAWA. Sept. 19.— l)! Ill intimation that l. cno-ddad trade agreement with Canada would not be acceptable in his country. Premier 0. W. Forbes, of New Zen- lmd. today expressed conlidenoe that an arrangement rntlsfactory to born innClub, wiiicbw-ukcnoom oyPro- niiar B. B. Bennett sud BL Hon. W. L Mackenzie ling, lndc d the Op- position, Premier Iorbu loft tonizot for Montreal, from when“ M will proceed to New York. Ho soils from New York tomorrow night on tho DETAIiS or IJISA_§TER Have Been Revealed By Examination of Diary Found On D e a d Explorer's Body. (Associated Press) STOCKHOLM, Sept. ilk-Details of the disaster that overtook Salomon August Andree's pioneer polar bal- loon expedition 33 years n80. have been revealed by examination of the diary found on the dead explorers _ body in White Island by‘ Dr. Gun- ner Horns party. Came Down Ou lce The balloon. it is now definitely established, came clown on the ice July 14, 1897, three days after And- ree set out from Danes Island, Spits- bergen. The explorers landed on the ice in latitude s3 north, longitude 30 east. The diary, however, leaves ob- scure the cause of the landing. The position given is almost due north of ‘White Island. it is on a line between the Island and the North Pole, goal of the heroic pioneers of aerial polar exploration. It is less than half way between the two points, being nearer (he Island. The distance from the Pole is roughly 500 miles and White Island, roughly 200 miles. The cx- plorers therefore covered a 200 mile trek back to the camp where they died. Balloon Caught Afire Fire broke out on the balloon, the d1"? reveals, at seven p. m. on the day previous (July l8). ‘This was immediately crtlnxuishbd. Appar- ently it caused little serious damage, for the last entry in the diary re- ferring to the bailoonb voyage says "The balloon again rose but both valves were then opened in prepar- |ation for a landing." Previous en- I tries show that wet weather, ice and ‘hear frost had weighted down the |bis ans bag, and that the gondola |had been dragged along the ice many times during the latter part1 of the flight from Spitsbergen. The: bumping against the rough surface, 10f the ice completely exhausted the? 1 explorers. ‘Attorney General i 1 i i i I Q l Gets Nomination i In Second Prince (Special to the. Guardian) SUMMIESDE, Sept. 19-34:. A. J. Mathason, president of the west Prince Liberal Association, presided at the Liberal convention held at‘ Eilerslie today at which Hon. Thane) A. Campbell, Attorney General and a former partner of cx-Premier Saunders, received the nomination to contest the second district of Prince in the Liberal interest in the by- election made vacant by the resigna- tion of eI-Plomter Saunders. The nomination wan moved by w. Percy Adams, Mount Pleasant, and second- ed by Mr. ‘Thomas L Murphy, Pne- la-ud. . lmmodiaicly after the nomination the meeting was addressed by Mr. Campbell, Premier no, Hon. Dr. J. l". McNeil! and the local represent- ative, Mr. W. H. Dennis. Mr. Vernon Mathew of Query, wu ucretnry of the meeting. Mr. Campbell, who had been sworn in u o IDCIIII of the Incentive Council when appointed Attorney General, wu in tho anomalous peni- tioo o! being n Gomnment mem- ber without having a cent in tho Legislature. Hts nomination at to- day's convention gives him the op- mum vi’ Ida: before the bioet- It R THE ANUREE REV. EDMUND H. OLIVER. D. D Met With Solid Conservative _-_.._.. $100, 000,00 Changed Hands After‘ Races NEWPORT, 11.1., Sept. l9.-- “As near as we can tell,“ suid one of the officials most closely identified with the recent Shamrock-Enterprise race, “a- bout $70,000,000 had been wag- ered on the North Atlantic sca- board and in London on this race. l! one adds to the $70,- 000,000 which this conservative and informed authority estim- ated had been bet in the East. the smaller sums which were wagered in the remainder of the country: in the British Ein- pirc and elsewhere, it is safe to say that close to 3100301000 and perhaps more changed hands." 57 Ila-ll Canada and U. Annual Snbnrriptiona Delivered $5.05. S. L. 84-66. ned Yesterday Tariff P-roposalsi Carried _I_n House Support of 121 Members Present In House Of Commons—U. F. A-Progressive Group ‘Did Not Record Their Votes. i ‘ (Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Ont“ Sep. 19.—By g (majority of 34 votes the Govemmeizt? wday carried its tarifi propcsal: through their first stage. The motion. (o! Hon. R. B. Bennett, Prime Mi..- iister, "That the House resolve itself‘ iinto committee oi’ ways and means," met with the solid support of the l2l. Conservative members present in the House oi’ Commons. Agairut it voted {all the Liberals present as well u a. [proportion of the United Farmers and ‘Progressive members and the mam- .bers of the Labor group. The two 1n- ‘dependent members, A. w. Neill od Comox. Alberni, and Henri Bourassn, Labelle also voted against the mot- ‘ion, DiVlSZOIl on the main motion iollowed immediately after defeat of ‘the Literal amendment by a major- |lty of 40. Just prior to this the Uri- iited Farmer-Labor amendment to the! ‘amendment had been buried uiidezi lthe avalanche Of negative votes. fr‘ itiie case of the Liberal phenomenal iiiio vote stood for 11s sgaliast 7e! _.__...___ New Moderator i i I Pflflfilllll of St. Andrews College! jcf the United Church at Seskatooni .wlio has been elected to succeed Rani |W, T. Gunn. D. D., as Moderator of ithe United Church in Canada. Dr. Oliver was elected at the opening of the General Council session:- In Lou- don, Ont. v $100,000 Fire g At Ottawa i (Canadian Press v UITAWA, Ont, Se; ILR-Pirc, which bmke out this afternoon in‘ a block of retail stores in the busin- i can section of m. Capital. caused: 4100.000 loss before belnp brought} under control, NOTICE A telegram from the Deputy Min- iltor o! fisheries, received the 18th instant. advices that the oyster mau- lntiona are being amended so u to delay the opening of the fishing sea- we this year until October 1st. K ._ s. r. GALLANT. Supflaor of Fisheries. lfllllfitll-W lTl-ie sub amendment Wu negativea ‘by a vote of 193 to 23, a. majority o_ (Continued on page 3) 1 Union Jack Goocl Enough For Them (Special to the Guardian) lvliNNTPEG, Mal‘... 58p. 19.—'1'h Dominion do-s not need a. flog its own, army and navy veterans Canada decided yesterday at that. annual convention here. Unanimous‘ decision of the resolution: couzrnit- iee that the Union. Jack was g enoingh for them, was accepted b?‘ delegates without discussion. The question o: a flag Wm sub- mitted t: the committee foilonrixrg a remark by the Dominion Presid- ent, Col. W. C. H. Wood o! Quebec in his opening addres stressing the inszstence of the matter. Col. W tald he wan entirely in accord with the opanion of the committee The Weather. etd‘ Moor A Bu: NAN FA\.T.S DOWN on , HiS out“: ‘dim-ET; A seem‘ MAN Rl8Es 4o fair OCCASTON f "5 T0“.-. N-ducxlafl west to south nest. udnds, fair and moderately warm, Maximum “"1... ,.. .. ., 5g Minimum .. .. . .. be‘ Kllhtidcthismorningataodand whine u cs1. Bin-ioctsthhovmixigatdoa and‘ rism factor-row morning at, 5,45, N" mwn Wade? sen. n. 11a n, in. Summerside tide eighteen minu ‘Q5’ l-Pfllfimown. "