MAXIMS OIA fierce-u Guardian Iwo Cotton a) MERE MAN ,4 f 01ft. Intervenes n Lancashire ."'7 ouardlau, Iluldol 1U’! Strike 50,000 Now Idle. And Further Walkouts Threatened — Min. Of Labor Interviews Employers And Employees. i lllHt0ME ,HAM|ER litgiits overnment And Board 0f Trade Will Entertain Visiting Members 0f Canadian Gham ber 0f Commerce. Forty delegates of the Canadian ~ inber of Commerce with their who are on the annual pre ventioii tour, arrive here this .111; at 8 o'clock on the B. B. Northland. it i! o'clock they will be met by reception j committee from the a» lcitetown Board of Trade, who - wort them to the Provincial ulldiiig and the Confederation mber. Alter s. brief inspection ~ the Experimental Farm, ,the del- etes will be taken for s. drive to ~ b them to sue some of the ~ beauties of the Province. At dclock the delegates will be the l- poi the Provincial Govern ~ t at a banquet in the Csnad a National Hotel. The steame vcsport at 3 p. m. Prominent among the visitors be the president of the Canad- i- Chamber of Commerce, Col. W. llwfircscr. Windsor, ont., the Clark, W01; MrJJ. A. Le. Rue, Quebec If: Mr. Geo. Hogg, Toronto; Mr. "WY Mr. W. M0011. ‘ 3- Thum, Montreal. The S. s. New Northlsnd with » delegates sailed Saturday from "m1- "111118 at Gaspe enrouie- ‘ - 0" 10mins port here today - ‘steamer will proceed‘ to st. ""0 telling at st. Pierre 1_ l Mlquclcn enroute. Sydney and ax will be the points for the ‘ 5500s. At the latter city the mlielllls of the- Canadian \‘ bvr of Commerce will be held 8cm. l3 u) l5. . (Canadian Press) 0:: PAUL. Minn., Sept. 5- Dlllfll of Santa Monica, M» "llturcd the United “'10s professional golf cham- Wlwywdcy by defeating m bllllsh in a final l0 hole MIR-akin: rush flllll‘ and NOUNCEME COMING Evsilfiss’, MEETINGS, ETC u “i and “We Firest mu, 0021-04-8. -__ cvPOh-t miss good dun“. Bllflsc tonight, Mxnte in "Peaks/s Help. Mo - “Member 5th. 050010-833‘; “We: to th i “m. septic Concert at Wheat- Wme flrstetiinxlge; If not '1 IMV-U-S-Ql. ‘kqlltken Slipper , -. _ and Deuce lmincross H“- Mlmdly. Boot- a ° o'clock. Admission ass. ssos-o-a-ai. r,"ll|1 ‘M hi hwllzlld car of Albion nut ,0“ a)’ and Wednesday r cash only. B. C. Web- 0070-9-04! "lllcn c‘, ..f,"°'Y, Monday and nfmmllm” - Hunter River. I mm, °- Good floor. na- e ' sssi-o-a-zi. ai-mml M I . 11s the Trick i W. I ‘ °°' °" filthy. sspt. nth, »_ all‘: sac. Admlnlon West bull-ll “emetic Clilb "Inbyrytllgg: (Canadian Pleas) LONDON, Sept. L-Tlse govem- ment intervened today in the Lan- csshire cotton weavers strike, which already has resulted in approxim- ately 100,000 operatives walking out and threatens to involve at least that many more. After numerous business ' ‘ hld declared the ‘ ‘is might well mean the death of the industry i.f it lasted any length of time, Sir Henry Betterton, Minister of Ls.- bor, communicated with both em- ployers and employees. The con- tents of letters sent by the Labor Minister to the two parties to the conflict were not divulged, but it was understood he suggested meth- . ods of bringing them together for negotiations. .VON PliPEN’S PRUBRAMME l) ll l I I N E ii G e r m amancellor Would Turn Vast S u m s 0f M o n e y I Into Nation’s Art ’ eries. (Canadian Press) i BERLIN, Sept. 5-Chancellor Von Papen's economic programme. which would turn vests sums of money back into the nations art- eries of trade and attack the dis- ease of unemployment, became the lsw of the land today when Pres- ident Paul Von Hindenburg signed a series of enabling emergency de- crees. There are four sections in the Von Papen plan. Measures for relief of busi- ness, industry and agriculture. 2. Social Measures.‘ 8. Credit measures. 4. Miscellaneous measures. An official statement pointed out that the central purpose was to lessen unemployment and especial- ly to relieve business undertakings small in size. NEII PRESIDENT F II R M E XI B II (Cbnadlan PHI) MEXICO CITY, aept. b-Gcncrel Abelsrdo L. Rodriguez apowcrful military figure for many years we! elected and inaugurated President 0f Mexico today shortly after Con- gross had accepted the rcsisnstioh of Pascual Ortiz Rubic on account of "ill health." To. Rome (Special lo the Guardian) MONCTON, n. a. Sept. 44w!- br. a. awn-cit Cahlll, Chancellor of the Archdiocese of acrim- IM l native of Mbncton arrived hero Sunday afternoon an the Ocean Limited of the Canadian National ceed direct (o New York where he will m. Archbishop .1. ucoulnn. Ricuiau Catholic Archbishop 0* Saskatchewan, and a native cf >IZ/,/// The People's aper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew —_— CANADA. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1932 CHARLOTTETOWN, Rsilwayr. m. Cahlll will ism nrc- ' I Ten Egg-ts Cost $1.75 In Russia (Special to the Guardian) MOSCOW. Sept. l-The see- ond Inonlle in the price of foods this year was decreed by the Government when ration stores boosted the cert of neat, eggl, cheese and sour cream. Eggs jumped from one ruble for llltoihrcerublcs and: half; the beet vlrlcty of cheese from Ill rubles and a half to 1i rubles per kilogram, and the secondary grade from 2.00 rubles to six rubles: sour cream from three rubles to four and a half rubles a kilogram, and meat from 1.45 rubles to 2.12 rubles per kilogram. (The rublc is nominally valued at 50 cents ""1 I illfllflm is equal to 2.2 Wlllldlr. Since molt of the products involved have not been avail- able for some flme in Russian "W". fllfelgllerl were chiefly 05390105 I)! l-be rlsel. because these foods usually u; flggkgd ln the two stores operated u. clusively for them. Moreover, foreigners recently had their ll-tlolls out in hall, Read by Everybody The mus for the times is the de- pendable man, the one who can be relied upon. ' MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN 10 PAGES Annual Subscriptions knllvered “.00 By Mail Canldr. and U. l. A. “J0 With Nearly CHICAGO,_ Sept. A-(By The Canadian Pressl-Sawlng their way through a floor intcthc offices of Koch and Company, s. gang of st least eight uacksmen escaped to- day with loot estimated by police between $250,000 and 81,000,000. The gang kept ten persons, includ- ing twc children, prisoners in the building for fourteen hours while they smashed safety deposit boxes rented to patrons of the firm. Bold Robbery Police said the robbery was the largest in Chicago since the $1,200,- 000 robbery of the Werner Brothers warehouse in 1923 and that evid- ently it was engineered by a. super gang of safe blowers. The gehg cut through the floor of an up- stairs flat and used acetylene torches and electric drills to pene- "mistrial MARITIME cniuusici (Canadian Press) WOLFVII-I-E. N. 5., Sept. 4——“Be- cause it has behind it the spirit of Christ which is free, the cross is an offence against formalism in religion, against social injustice, against nationalism, declared Rev. C. E. Rockinghsm of Pennfield, N. 3., in the Baptist Maritime con- vention sermon here today. Ha re- viewed the conditions of Jewish life |in the time of Jesus, which made "Christ and Him crucified an offense against the people of his day." Yes- terday Rev. John McNeill president of the Baptist World Alliance gave the last of his series of address- es on reality in religion. speaking on the parables of the lost sheep.’ the lost con. the lost son. Men were‘ often lost through laek o1 thought and care. “We ‘think of the loss to the soul. but Jesus thought of the loss in the heart of God", he said. Rev. H. E. Stillwell, reporting for the foreign mission board, fold cf mission work in Bolivia and In- dia. The board had 92 missionaries in India and 1,231 lndlsn christ-‘an colleagues. An increase in bcPIJBml had occurred there during the year where membership was over 34.000 Of 20,000 Sunday school pupils 2'13 had been baptised during the year.‘ Estimate 77P. ‘C. . Wheat Harvested (Special io the Guardian) WINNIPEG. BGPt. lt-Sevcnty- seven per cent of wheat and 03 per cent of barley in the three west- ern provinces arc 110W lwrvQW-d according m the report 1mm! to- day by J. M. Mickfli B9116"! l8- ricultural lsent of the Clnldiln Pacific Railway western liner. This in spite of the halt in harvesting operations due to heavy rains in Manitoba and Saskatchewan and in south and west central Alberta. Threshing was resumed law last week, but was also held up by re- ecnt rains. In Manitoba newly 40 per cent of the wheat is threshed. Scattered areas report signs of sprouting in stocked min with consequent drop in grade. Excep- tionally high grade, however, is shown in outurns up to the pres- cut. ( i l _ (Canadian Prise) HOLLYWOOD, Califmfllpt. I —Psul Bern, motion" picture executive, who recently married Jean Barlow, movie actress, fiihoeldlvirdlslandonatriptll ‘Home. Archbishop McGuigan is malt-ho youneut Ai-aihishcp of the Ro-I , i! M ' ‘ shot himself 0o death It hi heme today. Irving Thalberg, trate at least fifteen inches of steel to get lnio the vaults of the oom- plny. an old established real es- tats and safety lock box firm. All Wore Gloves All the safe blowers wore gloves to eliminate finger prints and all but two of the crowd was masked. Posing as government men look- Is Painfully Injured At S u m m erside Thrown from the wagon in which he was driving when struck by a passing motor car last evening, Mr. Philip B. Ar- scnault, Summerside, lles in the Prince County Hospital with a broken collar bone and seine painful cuts and bruises. His condition, i'- "rgh serious, Is not regarded . . Ztlcsl. The. cclinlan occurred about 8 p. m. on Water Street, Sinn- merside, opposite Mrs. Samp- son Grsdy's store. Mr. Arsen- aulffs/ wagon was completely de- molished in the crash, which was occasioned when a car driven by Mr- Chsrles Cahill, Summerside, collided with the team. The cur was practically uri- dsmaged. The car driver was arrested by the Summerside fhmumu siiimhsmi (Canadian Press) TRURO, N. 8.. Sept. 4—Police. volunteer searchers and boy 800"“ continued to scour the woods and country roads surrcundlng Truro today-for some trace of Gladys De- baie, Springhill domestic who dis- appeared from her employers homo hers a week ago. Whether the s!!! met with foul play or left of he! own volition is still as arrest ll mystery as ever. Last Sunday she came to the door of the home where she worked McIntosh! baby inside the P01111- "fm going down the road a min- ute," she called. And, that was the last time anyone was certain l0 fled, are that she was seen, some- times alone, sometimes with a mm. at various points about ‘fruro thll afternoon and night. Yesterday Ice Ourmier, who came to Spflflshlll from Drurnhellcr, Alta, about a year ago. and who had oomo l0 "mire Saturday to see the girl. was H3101. cmtvnarm, ohia, sect- 5 —Al Wilson, Hollywood. Col"- sf-Iut aviator, died today of I fractured skull suffered i!!! picture producer reported 0e l Saturday lu an accident of tho lfinllelh-ka .».---..z. Ering-Break Nets RobbersA Fortune Eight Cracks-nqzn Get Away -¢ Second Largest Robbery In History Qf_ Chicago. . three large boxes filled with fools. and placed Mr. and Mrs. George‘ have seen her. Reports. all unverl-l sentenced to two months for var of which 042,000,000 is presently cut- Million In Loot ing for I“Dr. Spencer Brown," an escaped convict from Leavenworth, two of the men confronted Geo. Laschetske, a street car conductor. yesterday afternoon as he returned in his flat in the building. They conducted him up the rear stairs to the place where his wlfe and mother, were. Inside, the men drew revolvers and herded the women into a bedroom. One oi.’ the rob- bers then went downstairs and called to four or five men in a park- ed automobile. The men carried in As other occupants of flats above the office entered the building, they were held prisoner. Laschetske said at least six men besides the two detailed as guards were seen during the robbery. The men cut a hole about three feet square in the floor and lowered themselves to the RIII ERANIJE IIVERFIIIIIS ITS BANKS Death And Devasta- tion Follows In Wake Of Flood- Many Drowned. (Canadian lPsoss) LAREDO, Tex., Sept. 4 _ The great flood of the Rio Grande roll- ed on toward the Gulf oi Mexico today leaving a trail of death and devastation the extent of which was only partly known. The crest was somewhere between Laredo and Brownsville, near the mouth of the stream. 0n the lower stretches of the river extensive precautions were taken to minimize further loss of life and damage to propofty- F0111‘ men who were plunged into the surging flood when two spans of the Missouri Pacific Railroad bridge between the United States and. Mexico were carried away were rescued from a precarious refuge 011 top of the vault. They then used torches to cut through the steel vault. From a list of the safety, deposit boxes contained in the office, police said, the men determined the boxs containing‘ valuables and knocked them open with hammers. The guards upstairs permitted the women to prepare food for the prisoners and laughed and played with the children. KABIIIIII IIAY PA R A II E SIIIICBESSFIII Members Of L" P. U., T-ruckmen a n d Firemen Made Im- pressive Showing Yesterday M o r n- ing. Yesterday, Labour Day. saw one of the finest parades witnessed in the city for considerable time. Mem- hers of the Labourers Protective Union, the city truckmcn, and the firemen took part. Despite the threat of showers the procession which was at 11 o'clock was of im- pressive length and citizens throng- ed the streets through which the pa- rade passed. The Canadian Legion Band headed the procession fol- lowed by the members of the L. P. U., the pipe band, the truck- men with their horses and trucks. the firemen with all their equip- meant. On leaving the Union Hall the parade proceed-ed to Queen Street, up Queen to Kent, up Kent to Prince, down Prince to Water, thence to the Union Hall. Confirmed mnomio. sept. s _ (By The Canadian Pram-From an author- itative source confirmation was re- ‘ceived today of the report publish- ‘ed in the Montreal Gazette that a ‘petition for a receivership for Abit- ibi Power and Paper Company will be made in the Toronto courts dur~ in! the next few days. This action. said the Montreal report, follows ‘upon receipt of instructions from ‘the bondholders protective commit- "tee to the Montreal ‘Trust Company, trustees. (in accordance with the terms of the trust deed securing the issue of 000,000,000 gold bonds. standing. The action originated, according to the report. with more than 25 per cent of the bondholders under National City company sponsorship. who organized a protective enm- inittee and gave the necessary in- Ithe fifteen or twenty persons on driftwood after 16 hours. Others o! the bridge at the time of the col- lapse were unaczounted for. LAIREDO, Tex, ept. s-several men were believed to have drown- ed ln the flooded Rio Grsnde hero late yesterday whn two spans o! th International Railroad. bridge collapse. Fifteen men standing on the structure were plunged into the raging torrent. Later four 01 them were seen clinging to lamp pasts on s. submerged footbridge. p80 Fatalities Over Week - End In The States (Canadian Press) NEW YORK, Sept. 5.—-'I‘he two and a half day summer-end vaca- tion In celebration otLsbor Day in the United States ended tonight with a death roster of more than eighty names. Automobile acci- dents and drownings combined to make the annual tribute to labor. Nearly three score persons were killed in auto collisions and dozens were injured. Predicts More W0 r k F o r Trainmen (Special to the Guardian) FORT WILLIAM. Sept. 6—All rallwsymen on seniority’ lists in Western Canada probably will be working within a. short time due to the heavy movement of grain that is in sight, Senator James Murdock, vice-president of the 1n- ternational Brotherhood of Rail- road Trainmen declared on his ar- rival here. Canada Minister ' City —' Politi (Canadian Press) CALGARYfsept. 5-—Several hun- dred Calgarians gathered tonight to honor Canada's Prime Minister, Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett, in one of the greatest public receptions ever held in Calgary. Regardless of pol- itics, men who knew the i Prem- ier when he was a budding young lawyer ln Calgary years ago, mingled with people from all walks of life in tendering a warm hearted welcome to Mr. Bennett. Mayor Andy Davison greeted the citizens oi Calgary and in a brief reply, Mr. Bennett acknowledged the great honor Calgary was be- stowing on a native son. J. H. Woods, Vice President and Editor as chairman of the huge gathering. amihiiuin twiiaaiii siii;nii Capt. Mollison Recipi- ent Of Many Tribut- es At Quebec Be- fore Departure For England. QUEBEC, Sept. 4-~(By the Can- adian Press)—Capt. James A. Mol- lison, first flyer to make s. west- ward crossing of the Atlantic solo, was on his way home today on board the Canadian Pacific liner Empress of Britain. The famous flyer who was per- susded to abandon his plans for a Prime Minister on behalf of the: of the Calgary Daily Herald, acted - ’s Prime Honored By Calgarians Rt. Hon. R. BIT ennett Tendered Warm Welcome To His Native cs Forgotten In Great Reception. NINEMURE PUSITIUNS iauupnii Further Steps In Re- ' Organization Among; Officers Oi ’ G.N.R. Made Public (Canadian Pres) MONTREAL, Que. Sept 5-4011‘ ther steps ln rte-organization among officers of the Canadian Nations.‘ Railways were made public here tor day. Nine positions in the firisnu and accounting departments havi been abolished and eight officer. with long service record ‘have beei retired. The changes became ef» fective_ as of Sept. 1. Milli Ni (Canadian Press) ROTTERDAM, Sept. 5—Dutch marines put to sea today to meet the trans-Atlantic liner Rotterdan to deal with what the Captain re ported as a mutiny Just lnsidi Dutch territorial waters. Asnwerlni the Rotterdams request for thirty marines, the authorities sent ou’. the service men in steam pilo‘. boat, and expectkl the group to meet the liner, homcward bound from North America. The Holland American line asked for the mar- ines when the Captain reported that part of the crew had refused return flight to the British Isles and to return by boat, was the re- cipient of an appropriate tribute; from flying clubs shortly after the‘ vessel started down the St. Law-I rence River. Planes piloted by B.‘ A. LeBoeuf, chief instructor of the Montreal Light Aeroplane Club and D. Hsins, representing the Canad- ian Flying Club Association, circled over the Empress several times and‘ a floral horse shoe was dropped on the deck. Canadian maple leaves were prominent in the floral piece. In s. final interview Captain Mol- lison again stated that he and his wlfe, Amy Johnson, herself s. fam- The senator said there was a con- siderable spirit of optimism and enthusiasm in the west. He had travelled to the Pacific Coast and back and crops looked splendid, he? said. Depression Over Says Massey (Special to the Guardian) TORONTO, Sept. 6—Introduclng the Massey’ Harris Co's exhibits of machine at the C. N. E. Denbon Massey predicted that "we have already started to crawl up the steep bank of reconstruction and readjustment." he declared. "A spirit of optimism and a faith in our God will do more to help us than anything else." Toronto Has a 1,350 Lawyers (Special to The Guardian) TORONTO, Sept. d-‘lustice Ew- ing of Alberta told the Canadian Bar Association at Calgary yester- day that there is a lawyer for ev- ery 1,000 people in Canada. In Tc- l-Qulluh "‘ ~J ous aviator, expected to come to Canada within a few months. Distilleries Wi I I Close to stoke the fires. Protection we: sought for those willing to work. The Weather, Etc A L01’ 0F, Millionaires‘ liar ibcwu ‘f0 f-laik LAbf Polo PoNY "(user ems (Associated Press) ELGIN. Scotland. Sep. 4- ev- enty eight distilierles in the corn- bine known as ilhe Scottish Pot Malt Distllleries are to close down and will make no ivhlskey in the 1932-1933 season. Heavy taxes, ov- the dstillers ever experienced, a several thousand men. BOSTON. Mesa, Sept. 5—-Al Fraser oi‘ Philadelphia, was burned lo death today in a pile up of seven light stock raring a ‘nmobllcs in the seventh mile of a 50-mile race at the Read- ville track. kuucahcroasa-uulmiimlhlitnsl __per_scns.in the ciut er production and under-consump- tion have caused the worst slump spokcsma nicr the group said yes-l terday. 'I‘h¢ shutdown will affect actly three times as many lawyers. The population of Toronto accord- ing to this year's directory is 716,- 798 and there are 1,350 lawyers, which means one lawyer for every v"*\-~.. and tomorrow morning at 6.12.‘ Sun acts this evening at 0.27 and rises toiunrrniv morning at 5.30, First qiiiirtor moon Wednesday. Sop. ‘I. 8.00 A. .\i. Snmmcrslili- iIlIo eighteen minutes liitcr ihiin (‘liarlnllri- ‘u. BIITPROIIULOGIFAI. OFFICE Tm’- (min, Sept. 5—.\lllllllillll'lp and Maxi- mum lPlllpr-rfllll c5: ‘ \ High title this nflornnmi at 5.5‘! Dan-sou F»: l-liluiouloi 8 Vnvii-niiver ‘ll linnfl‘ . 71 Winnipeg . . . 'l‘nrnliln ... ... ... ... ... 7 Uitiilvn . ' T Mmilronl —- 7A ‘f0 ‘I 1i FORECAST! ilnrliime Provinces: Fresh aonlh iii southwest winila partly rlnnlly and lllflllPflllfily u-nrm with locnl showers flllll prohiilily some 10¢. (‘AR FERRY SCHEDULE Week days-Maren Bordon daily 0.10 a. m. and ‘l p. m. and 0,15 p, m. Week days-Larch Cape Tcrmeuc s» mason-Ann ale I»