MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN _______ o nev p‘ lnlfillfin n” of duty, gives courage, fir“ m, judgment. raw- °""‘“"" ""11 “r23 pa!" Guufllun, Hounds gull" i fl- hurt any one, never d with duty; nay, al- sirenfilhem u‘ m” "mm" THgyEsE i i f‘ l’ ///~ The People's Paper 01w" $557 rim?‘ g Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1937 §RITISH_ HOUSE CONCL 0015s HISTORIC_ §Ess101v forest Fires ‘Rage h, New Brunswick ‘yRmERJCTON, N. B. July 30 AQPJ-FONSC fires licked at New lck forest areas and also 01d bums tonight in four gm and eastern counties. All small with the exception of’ m, pout Brook fire near the alouoester-Northumberland bor- w in Northumberland. This tire m wvmd about 200 acres o! old burn and was being fought by ‘mw of 100 men. Seven fires in all engaged the iilenilon of the Forestry Depart- pent. G. L. Mil‘er. chicf’ forester "puffed toilight. F‘our were re- rpd in Nortliumberlnnd county, prludinr lllf‘ Trout Brook fire. New fires included one on the putll branch of ithe Kedgewlck git-gr in Resilgouchc County, iriother fn Kent County six miles lest cf Kelli function on the west- mi sidi- of the railway and the other at Little River. Gloucester county» EOMING {VlINli "Rusilco Tea Party Wednesday, iugust 4th. L-ll0l-7-29-1li. "Pantry Sale at S. A. MacDon- uls, today by Hunt-er RivcnW. M. g L-1l9B-7-3l-li. |i "Reserve Wednesday afternoon luziist 4 for tca at Brookfleld in iii cf hall. L-l065-7-27-3i. "lone picnic Tuesday. August ltd. Dance in the evening. L-l21fl-7-3L3l. "Don't forget Marshficld-Dun, daibage United Church tea, Aug. llll. L-l2l0-7-3l-2i. "licscrvc Thursday, August ‘l2 lit ilarshficlrl Presbyterian Church 1t! and festival. L-l2l8. "The Basilica Altar Society pally sale at. Prolvsc Bros. Sat- iriay afternoon and evening, July list. L-1070-7-24-4i. "Reserve August. 3rd for ice mm festival at North Milton near Baptist Church, L-1l8l-7-3-li. L-l203-7-3l-2l. Ice Cream, Grand View Hall. Tile day, Augu=i 3rd., in lid O! SChOOI. Good musk; L-1l95-7-31-3l. "Dance and Wmllmflkcrs“ dance. Hunter River on Tuesday. August 3. lransfer leaves Sunnyslde 8.30 “Wk- L-l209-7-3l-3l. ."Dance. Oddfellolvs Hall, Mon- K5116. Wednesday August 4. Mc_ "melts six piece Orchestra. L-ll93-7-3l-3i. “W- M. s. Rally at w t c _ m Thl1P-‘-<11‘l' Aug 5 ocegao oavrld Li]. Auxiliaries concerned please ‘Mike 1. 118-7-31-11. "Reserve Wednesday, August "l Tlyon Presbyterian Picnic on ‘°“"<l=- sllflbcr 35c and 25c. L-ll72-7-31Jl-3. "Solenoid comedy by lac-irlcc figligic Guild Players,‘ Saint Ter- {30 Gill. Tuesday. August. 3rd, m; 00d specialties. Dance after ' L-1133-7-30-2i. ~04 wmfve Wednesday, August 4, 21mm!" social, 8t. Martin's “me - South Shore. All arc wel- ‘ 11-1128-7-29-51. (ellzgglfltjogoslgalgcnariixrll lcde cream in ‘ '~ ~ ii . on ay, August M Good tlmcEverybody welcome. 11-1167-7-31-21. ll , pi ‘ mierett. Hashim. Emerald. Alden 1085M Kcnsltigion, buying ‘we mswefilndly August 2nd. Lemuel M‘ . Hunter River buying Y» lrllaa-v-al-ll. u 1*- mmgdig the ball Same. ice 5mm on France in Fort Augustus he w‘ h lday. August 5th. If not a held following Monday, L-1lG8-7-3l-8-3-2i. n i‘ 5" "Pimki " i“ n Ridge and “A m’ the Oil Fields" at Comm mh-“livgsnday. Augu-i 2nd. Good ,0 the N“ Refwhment: . Dance r nnls Orchestra, ii is BLAZE TRANS-CANADA Al ii-ig u TE Transport M i n i s - ter H 0 w e Among Party In “Daylight- to-Dusk” F l i g ht From Montreal T0 Vancouver. SEA ISLAND AIRPORT. Van. couver, July 30—A big twin-motor- ed planc of the Federal Depart- ment of Transport today traced a daum-io-dllsk airline across the great part of the Dominion com- pleling u flight of nearly 3,000 air miles from Montreal in 1'1 hours, If minutes. Making a survey flight for the proposed Trans-Canada. Air Line route. the plane carrying Transport Minister Howe and air officials landed at. this airport at 11.29 p.m. ADT tonight. winning its race with the sun. It. left St Hubert Field, Montreal at 6.18 a. m. ADT. "Glad to be here," Mr. Howe said as he stepped from the airliner as ;t scttierl before the airport station. It. “as his only comment upon the hiswry-lllakillg flight. ‘rlrcd after their sky-journey of nlorc than l7 hours. other members of the party and crew had nothing to say immediately of thepchleve- mclli. Following Mr. Howe out of the transport. were Commander C. P. Edwards of Ottawa, J. H. Sym- illgion, director of Transcanada. Air Lines, Squadron Leader J. H. Tud- hope, chicf pilot, and John Hunter, co-pilot... The big Lockheed monqplanc wheeled over the airport. and nosed n against the \\‘lll(.l as it. ended the last lap of ihc flight from Leth- brldgi ilcross the Rocky Mountains. liecplrlg close to a tentative schedule, the plane landed three hours aftcr taking off from Leth- brltlge. Pcople ill mountain ClilBS along the air-route saw the silver machine as i!’ P843595 Win16. B. Cw n; 9.21 p. m. ADT and at Trail and Grand Forks about an nour later. As h. lausscd through the Kootenay section of ihc mountains it W118 flying through a. patchwork 0! clouds. Hpfivy clouds hulig low in the skim over Vancouver as the PM"? slzppcd down on the airPorl» 5W9“ nlflt-s from the heart of the citY~ Navy To Control Fleet Air Arm LONDON, July 30—-(CP Cable)—— A 19-year-old controversy wasend- ed today with Prime Minister Chanlbvrlairrs announcement in the House of Commons that in future the Fleet Air arm will be uudcr solc control of the Navy. Evcr SlllCf‘ amalgamation of the Royal Nuvul Air Service and the Royal Flying Corps in 1918 to form a third dcfcilce service, the Rcyrll Air Force. naval experts have fought to return to the Navy ab- solute authority over aircraft used in conjunction with the fleet. The Prime Minister emphasized the movc did not. reflect on i111’. pl-cscnt condition of the Fleet Air arm. It was made, he said, be- cause the Government fclt it. would be the most. satisfactory arrange- ment for the future. FORT NORMAN, N. W. T.. Jilly 29_iDelo.yodt-(C P)-Lord Tweodsmuir and his vice-nasal Party sat. most of today simm- bound aboard the hcatless Steam- ship Distributor while high winds and rain squalls howled outside and the vessel heaved and bumPQd against barges. H's Excellency spent the morn- ing and mcst. of the aitemwfl working but he dressed himself in oilskins later and unveiled onthe ship's work boat to a coal out- cropplmz about a mile up the rive? where tllc seam has been burning oontinucus‘y since Alexander MM- Kenzle first decided in i789 i-hfl the great airenm led to the Arr! 0- 1B)’ The Canadian Press) LONDON. July 30—1ia1y, Ger- many and Russia today voiccd opposition to Great, Britain's plan for rebuilding the system of non- interveniion in the Spanish civil war before the directing Sill)- committee of’ the 27-nations Non- Intervention Committee. Despite hours of wrangling. Sov- iet Ambassador Ivan M. Malsky smiled broadly when the meeting adjourned and said: “We didn't again next week to try." Foreign Secretary Edens plan, under discussion by the Commit- tee today as the House of Com- mons also debated the Spanish question before adjollrning for the summer, provides for: 1. Ree-establishment of neutral patrols on the Spanish border to report movement of foreign arms and men to Spain. 2. Removal of foreign volunteers from Spain. 3. Extension of limited belliger- ent rights to both Spanish factions after withdrawal of volunteers has made “satisfactory progress." Gcrmahy and Italy hold that belligerent rights-the privilege of stopping foreign ships outside Spanish waters and seizing con- iraband-should be granted nssoun as removal of volunteers is begun. Russia argued that volunteers must be withdrawn first. German Ambassador Joachim Von Ribbentrop told the sub-commit- tee: "We Germans have known for a longtime that but for Rusaia there would be no Spanish civil war today. “I believe it must be realized once and for all that all non-in- tervention measures of this Com- mittce affecting Spanish territory Spanish parties will lll the future be conditional upon the granting of belligerent rights by the states represented in the Committee." Von Rilfocntrop. opening his statement on Germany's position. charged the Soviet with attempt.- Trans-ocean Plane Lands At Botwood BUPWOOD, Nfld., July 3J- fOP Cabiei-Jmperial Airways giant flying boat Cambria rcsvcd here tonight after a. 171-2 hour passage from Foynes, Ireland, onc of a series of test flights ovcr the Atlantic preparatory to establish- ment of u lcgular passenger and mail service by imperial and Pan- American Airways in conjunction. It. was the second British flying boat to complete the cast-to-wcst trip from Foynes this summvr- Th9 Cambrias sister ship, Caledonia. made the first. successful trip. From Botwood the ships go b0 Montreal and New York. Vice-Regal Party Stormbo-und Aboard Steamer Distributor have suffered ill cffccls followlnK ye g to rd ay's mountain-climbing venture during which the Gover- nor-General, Lleut. S. G. nlvrrs- Smith and Rev. George A- MM‘ Donald of Knox Church Edmon- ton wore endangered by 19°50 shale. Only Lieilt. S. G. Rivers- smlth noticed any discomfort. He complained the muscles of his chest were stiff and sore. The sternwhmler Distributor ion; tonight for Good Hopi‘. a few miles south of the Arctic clrclc. Pasgengqfg spent a considerable part of the day Writing letters so they could catch the mail airplane expected alongside the Distributor sometime tomorrow. reach an agreement but we meet or demanding collaboration of the. Germany, Russia At Logger/leads Qver Eicn Plan Non-interventi0nPr0posalEvokes" Mutual Recriminations From Nazi And Soviet Spokesmen. ing to sabotage non-intervention by refusing to consider the grant of belllgcrcncy rights until all for_ eight volunteers had been evacu- ated. Faced with this virtual ultim- atum. he declared, Germany re- served full liberty of action as re- gards the entire Spanish situation. The German Ambassador des- cribed Insurgent General Francisco Franco as “Spain's liberator" and warned the Non-Intervention Com- mittee might be in for "another surprise" if it. continued to regard . him as suspect. "What did we wish io propose to him?” the German envoy rhet- orically asked after declaring that too little account had been taken of Franco's true position. llehelsAilege Disease Plot HENDAYE. Franco - Spanish Frontier, July 30——iAP)—Twu Frenchmen were condemned to death today for what Insur- gent Spanish officials charged was a Macabre plot lo infest their territory with typhoid and sleeping sickness epidemics. The)’ said the whulc world would be called lo witness the truth of their allegations flint Louis Chabrat and Jean linu- jennoc were tools of an inter- national ring that. involved Englishmen, Frenchmen and some Spaniards in high gov- ernment office. For that reason lhc Insur- gents said they would stay r-x- ecution of scnicncc and givi- information on the supposed plan to the League of Nations and all world capitals. French officials declared the charges were "ridiculous" pro- ' paganda. Hllillm ii "Wc want to schd commissions into his ports to control supplies ,"We want to send commissions to ‘rcnlly think that proud Spaniard. for his fighting troops". he said. comb out all foreign volunteers from his sovereignty. Do you fighting for the welfare of his pcoplc. would tolerate this when he is not being granted even the primitive right of recognition as a belligerent authority and power? Do not let us make this mistake. The Committee may easily get another surprise if it continues to deceive hself in this matter." Ribbentrop expressed Germany's SWEPT SHIP Commander 0f “City of Baltimore” Hints Sabotage In Sudden Explosion And Fire. BALTIMORE. Jilly conviction that. Franco wouldnever Cm“ hem {he death 1m m the consent. to the control provisions of the British compromise formula unless he was given bclligerency status. “There is still divergent opinion City of Baltimore stczlzlishii) fire to not, morg than four, a. chcck of survivors and passenger.» 11nd crew lists established today. Of tho 93 pcrscns aboard tho about the nmmem “hen benign‘ Bali-inlorc-Norfoll; boat ivllcu the ency rights should be Vnn Rlbbcntrop added. to the thcy should bc foreign cflcctivcs "On the other hand. onc Govcrn- grant“! ' fire broke out in the hold an hour refining after she sailed, 89 lvcrc Imlmacrma“ V!“ m“ alive. Two arc dead and two mom accorded before n", missing’ six are wnhdrawn- injured. llflllg scrioilslv. rcscucd SUTVlYOlKS WON‘ rcscuc Shipping officials, thc mm‘ "my" “amd-v Smdel’ Russmr work completed ccntrcrl thcir at- has ivrcckcd the British plan bv tenth)“ on me muses of U“, ma“ rcjcciing one of its three funda- mental principles." superstructure of ihc which flared through the wooden over-night In submitting its proposals. Lon- 11mm don had recommended that: bellig- Almost. at once. Cnpi. Cllnrlcs 30-—fAPl—- _ Quick action by a flotilla of rcscilc i lnirnsiliiiil firm/tin IS JREIIiIETED Spanish Question T0 t Fore — Labor Lead- er Would Have Special Session On Bclligerent Rights. (By Tile Canadian Press) LONDON, July 30—-A mommlt- nus sex-Jon of Parliament which saw abdication 0f a. King, fhcbril- luulf spvvlnrli‘ of his brother's coronation and Great Britain lak- llnr: the loud to keep the Spanish iivllr isolated was adjourned today ifm- thr- summer. l Parliament, which was opened last fall by the uncrnwned King jllllwarrl VIII and sat during the tense days former Prime Illinisfcr Baldwin handled the delicate ah- llicntion crisis when Edward gave livay tn King Grnrge VI. closed for ithe summer with lhc Spanish war illc k<-_vl1nll\ of debate. It will rc- 1l‘€5(‘l1'llll(‘ Oct. Z1. In llll‘ place of Baldwin, now (he l-Iarl llaldlvin. ivns Primr- Minister Nl-villi- (‘lmlnbl-rinin, former chan- ccllnr of thr- cxcllrqucr, whn mov- (‘ll info historic number l0 Down- ing Street after Baldwin went lo the Ilollsi- of Lords following his rvsigllniiitli lllvv ‘ZR. . STAND BY SCHEME (ll-cut Britain will hold out for ‘lhcr schcuic for non-intervention i‘ Spain dcspiic opposition of iOlllPF powers, Forcigli Sccretary -1 Eiicu told the House of Commons ljtlst. lllcfnre arijoilrllmchi. Attacked by Clcmcnt R. Attica. ‘lmbrl- Lender. and David Lloyd ‘ George lvartinlc prime minister, l Edcll (lid not ivnvel‘. ‘ "As fur as the present plan is concerned." he said. “we do not. propose in ngrcc- t0 any major illocliflcailori." Dcmands for changes camc from Clcrnlauv. Italv and Russia. Gr":- zlviu Ambassador Joachim Von ltlblvrllil-np dcclarcd to tlic Non- luicrvciition Committee thc Brit- ‘Continued on page ll, Col ll) Loyalist Vessel ercncv recognition be extended af- (')_ Brooks, a reform, of the ciiyl tcr the evacuation movement had of Bfllunqflff‘ said that 1m- "amrm. (Continued on page 3. Col 6) inc" spread of flip, fire suggesctcd sabotage to him. Ht- said hc luld no reason for the suspicions clcccpt; the speed of the fire in its spread. Om- part of‘ a two-phase inquiry began during the day. \\'l'l(‘ll of- PARIS. July new Franco-Canadian Tr a d e Treaty \v:ll be signed at the For- cign iVLliLstry ionlorrow. it was of- ficially announced today. Yvon Delbos, French foreign Minister, and Hon. Philippe Roy. Canadian Minister to France, will ilftlx their signatures to the aglce- mellt reached alter eight months of negotiations. The accord provides for the ul- ult of the fire wcfl" 'I'hcv were J. R. Prllikoff. n mis- mssenlzer whosc ficials of tho Chesapeake Bay l’ llif‘ clrllilgcclqttljiftsshllp‘;(gfficr-gioixw sill). \\'ll i I'll broke out Thursday nicht. Tire 30_‘oP)__-rhc Federal Government will open its inouirv tomorrow morning. Roth vccll known rlcnd as a res- irlcvlliWvi. serlrrrvr, and a retired merchant of Aiken. S. 0.: and Clic-rlr-c “'l‘.[‘.'ll~ tnrl. of Crisficld. lVfD. a nlcmianx" of the crew. Dnctor= horn sn‘d lll"\Y d"owrlcd who“ “ici- leaped from the bllffllflr! boat. , Still misaln" ""0 H’. Palm‘, a address is not jusiillent of quotas and minimum known: and C. Y‘ “avm an 01L French tariffs for a number of Canadian products in return for expanded facilities for French ex- ports to Canada. Moderator To Visit Dry Western Areas "TORONTO. July 30—(OP)—RL Sunday with a Rev. Peter Bryce, Moderator of the United Church of Canada, will visit the dry areas of western Canada and carry to the people there an assurance of the Church‘: concern in their problems and its desire to aid whemver possible. Dr. Bryce was invited by the leaders of tbc Church in Saskufw chewan andtho Board of Harm Missions has appointed luv. Dr. George Dorey to accompany the Moderator. Tile Moderator will ar- rive in Brandon on Aug. 7, in Moose Jaw and Regina on Aug. 15, and will return here Aug. l8. tractor. It perched 8T. Veterans Mass For War Anniversary BERLIN, Jilly 3U-tAPl—GCf'- man Great War Vctcrnlis prc- parcd tonight i0 observe Lllc 23rd anniversary of the wars olubrcuk "mobilization for peace." It was expected l0‘.lUU veterans would gather .11 the Olympic Stadium {or thc obser- vance. .. Germany and Russia wcut t0 war Aug. l. 1914. GRASSHOPPER STOPS TRACTOR STAFFORD. Kass Jilly 30- (Alfi-Grasshoppers do strange things in Kulsas. Unassatsticd, one stopped Robert Hornbrakcrs flu-m on a spark plug and shorted i-hc ignition. i Nlhllis‘, France, July 30- The Spanish Government rn-igilrcl- Auduiz-Mcndl, lmic more than u charred hulk i uficr the guns of two uniden- uificd sumnarines set her nfiriv, brought. hcr dead into thr port of Le Gruu du Boil tonight. Only ll mcnlbers of her crew of 34 were known to have survived. ’l'llr-re was no trace of fill others, includ rig six who fir-d lhc ilurlllng ship in a. small boat. Fishermen, who put out to thr- disalllcrl craft. aflcr she was attacked a short dlllancc off the French coast. exting- uished tlic blue and brought ashore two bodies. 12 PAGES MAXI MS OFA M ERE MAN Our primary duly is not to brac- our wills to goodness but to fa~t i our attention upon divine luvc that it may do its own work upun us and within us. Aunuul Slllbnvriplinn Drlhrfffl 5am) u, uull-l'.lc.l._ sum. (‘unlulin uml 1;, a, 55,00 RESISTANCE A T STIENSTSIN FAL TERS lHeavy Fighting lAIQngCWideFront lln North Qizina Refugees Stream From "fientsin As Japanese Subject City To Second Bombardment—-Nippon Forces Claim Silccesscs. ‘i. ’l‘li<ll\"l‘5ll\', Jill)‘ Ylil (AP) Tlli- .l;f;1.:i\f~\' Mill) today subjected 'l‘ienisin to ll sci-null flu) of lli'1l\_\ shelling" und all‘ bombardment 2 ' it clzlnlpcd its (lilllllililllitll luiivc l.','l'llll- ly on ihc whole ruhiun hctuccn llic >011 and lllV Yuupling [liver wcsf 0f Pciplng". Thousands 0f homeless (‘liincsi- siruunlf-ll nut of the nzliivc sections of 'l‘icntsin tonight, xvi-king" ('.~('ll])L‘ from the terror of the [first two days‘. Again Japanese shells and air bombs fired buildings in the Chinese sections of the city. (‘hinust- said corpses still lay in the streets, but there was no csiinlulc of cilsuzllfics. Yesterday, in the first day of bomhilvrlmclil, (hincsc oili- ccrs said thousands of llflfhCilmllillillll ("hinissc were killed or wounded. . From many points along the iuisilnp lfltt-nlilc front be- tween the coast and Pcipiilgh western environs clinic Jup- anese claims of success for their arms. (liner zlccounts fended to show that Chinese resistance hurl l)t'L‘ll smashed over a mile area. H I .\l l‘. NXTIONALIZES l .\ll-.lll('l.\‘li THWART COYNTER-ATTACK Tile Japanese declared today's Tiemsln bombardment. was neces- sary to wipe out centres of Clii-; ncsc lllilitary preparntioll and f0 turn back a Chinese countcr-at- ‘ tack. ‘ ili- iCPl-Jfasw .0 19...! . 1'1 doc-luvs will Iii. J.»::.1'\r_v 10 givq huillci. the Japanese News; Agril- ‘W1 1'1‘ l and p001 c_\'. reported u Jaimllcsc colulnll f» ‘lv<__Aul-‘< under Major-General M. KZlAYFlbL ‘"9 “°~_3'31-gb\ - . . .:; ‘ngc captured Changsinticn, imporizllli V’ station on the Peiping-Hnrlkow Railway on the west bunk of illc Yungiing River. . HlLllEfbO Japanese £lI.‘il\'li_\' has bot-n couflncd to thc cast of tho Yungtlng. Other sources decluz-t-rl the Japanese had brought . and artillery into play 11 illifll Ciiillcsc dug lll ill the hills wins: of Peiping. 4a: Avraiaa oval: s Faer- l5 ‘fllE bRu Qatar's Foiitfuul‘. V _z_.:. .1 Take Strategic Positions At the other end of the front Japanese captured a strong Clu- . 11c>c position at Taku. at lll(‘< fll0libll of the mu Rivcl". This, tut-v l said, permitted resumption ofslup- ping operations at Tangku. (ll-c!) watcr port for Tichtsin. Organized Chinese rtslsiancc at Tlcnlsin seemed to bc at an cud. Tile boldly-conceived Chillcsc a1- iack on the Japanese COIlCPSSlUAI and military positions C1\l'lyThup5_ day appeared to have collapscdull- der the vicious two-days bombard- ment. Two brigades of Chlncsri I . regulars vivcrc reported in rapid ' Hwfq retreat, willie tllc nillitarizcd pcl- . . ’ ,.., ' lvlllf) if). Jr itce who joined in illc attacks yx-s- “m. ma‘, HAM,“ ,_ crday wcle giving up their aims. Wlmnnml, At headquarters ilt-rc of Japan's North China expedition rccloublcri precautions against ClllllCSf‘ 11t- tacks ivcrc ordcrcd. 'I'h<~y were dur- in part to reports ClllilUSC rczillar army reinfnrcculents acre mumlq along the lficnfslll-Pukou" Railway and also toward Pcipillg from Paotingfu. Thcsc reports were not (hf confirmed. ' ¢»'i'~‘i.g\;g\ Muliluur l-‘His: “SECOND STEPS“ M‘, ww_,g\_ l, l‘ . TOKYO. July arm-var» .- The n, .'."_,,m‘,"":.fl Government today laid bciorr- “ ' ' ‘ ' =-_-_w_.-...._¢_.__.__..:_-;c llllll llili " "Wyn". at 435 :1‘ 400. Partition Plan GENEVA. July 30-(CP)-—Wil- liam G. A. Ormsby-Gorc. British Colonial Secretary, and the Holy Land's Arab Committee l0dll_\‘]lf0- scut tu a special session of the League of Nations‘ Mandate Com- mission arguments for and against Great Britain's plan tn partition Palestine. The commission. which will con- tinue its secret session tomorrow. heard the Cabinet members rcc- ommend as thc best possible soili- tinn findings of a British Royal Commission which proposed parli- tloning the Holy Land into aJr-ur- ish, Arab and British-controlled "buffer" state. ‘ The Arab committee entered an "energetic protest against. the spirit. of pnrtiality" allegedly shown in the Commission's report. The ArabComm ittee Before League iContlnued on page 3. Col. 5| m... 1,,n,,,,...fi._,. . . -- . -._ Sun scts this rvcnlllg at. 72$ and risi: ‘r‘iillll"'fi\l' mrirlllll! hi protested B * . Sllllllllfl‘ - t liPOll I‘ d- ‘ 111w.- l:.'vi' l o li‘l(\\l'l'l Hill \\’|..\llll;R . lllAl Ill IIULLS memorandum l‘f‘fllM.‘(l lo i'\lll(‘i‘ll(“ I{l'~"'l‘l‘l5l_7'_ the Jews’ ownership rights; m Ful- ' l‘ “LL cstirle "just. because their nlzrcs- “"1~1' " m‘ tors lived there 2.000 yours vino." “m” l '- ‘Tm’ llfilhl l ‘H7150. The Committee held (lrcnt Brit- ain's obligations to establish n Jewish national homo and prntcr-t Arab rights were incompatible. Gulf niztl tvnzlis Cl’\llIU\I-'ISlS sllri-lzi play in illc rl, morn- illl; m‘ l. ii- cvc- ilillij lwlirs. Lo! lllt‘ grass grow and lnkc a nap ill the shade of fl spreading tree. I JERUSALEM. Jilly Zlfl ~ fCPl .' l One man was wounded and a pint i ‘RRMDSL the lifc of the Emir Ah- fdullah of Trallsjordllliu of Puts“- [tine was reported discovered iii-l ‘night as agitation continued lflllli‘ i Holy Land in connection with mp1 British partition proposal. Meanwhile police ll(‘l'f‘ l)i\lll,!‘il ‘~' all political meetings or rlemon- " striations unless special permission had been obtained flvc days in advance. 1'! n» ~r|li. ll-\lmulny .~=||n|.|.|_\ nllly Inna‘ '. ‘l. m :|n<| Ivziilw Ton-im- _|ilIl' :11 m", o. m. a: L_-_ll94-'l-3l-2i. hrftvincial EXhibiti0n---August 16 to 2O None of the party appeared t0 1 ..-_.-.._a.. . n“... .._____.__.__l _. .__ . _¢_ _ -~ 1,1»