MAXIMS OF A. MERE MAN ._-__ ' Today wines oncco-lllfl Mo" ye cloned. mum u lauded ll"- then the ll. u: Gulrdlou Two Cents NLUQKY 1s on >:/i///// M’ The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward l Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2s, 1931 /// ’/// ,,,_,,.__.--" “-...,_________\ "rwr" w" i Issues . rep" New National t rganizetl l Lubor Manifesto n. .A diating Premier MucDonaldk Government And t? Declaring That The Administra- tion Is Acting Without Author- Aity From The People.’ nrmmn‘ tut ENDS (trill our Convicts Kill Prison Doctor and ‘Guard, Then Com- ,_mit Suicide Rather -Than Be T a k e n fiillive. __._. (Special to the Guardian) ‘ MAFAUBHE. Mich, Aug. 2':- ur prisoners who were foiled in - attempted break from. Marquette V nth Prison here today after they had shot and killed a prison doctor and a guard and wounded tyotrusties, committed suicide at. hr they had barricaded themselves in the industrial building of the WW The iirisoncrs were, Tony Gliiiiiiil. Toledo. Ohio, sentenced iiiiiio liiwtins of a Birmingham, m. Piitrolman and two convicts "ii immediately identified. mm Kiiards forced the trio into tteindustrial building. after they (hindered the prison hospital, m end killed Dr. A. w. 110m. ‘m “m”! Dflson physician, wounded three others. The ii- lllrricadcd themselves in the‘ ,' " Y and guards tossed 1n gas WM" the gas cleared sway Jlflfds found the three men liiiit themselves. The (om-m lift shot himself later. OUNCEMENTS COMING svisufs, j MEETINGS arcs. “assists; _- u ‘ mptilzflgichifcstival and Dance, ,_ °°1- Widow. 28th. i asoo-a-m-at. fwAégusit-allgiarsaret’: Hail m - 000d music . it ihmcnts. 8308-8-28-11 l?! ‘i (tffeuflncmd (Fii-rdiran Club I ° “Wednesday; Sept. i aaoo-a-za-ai. l -__ ilomonstration 1 WI going on at) Burhoek ‘ Ewllbiidy welcome, 8312-84041. * n W n" Of the season in ' 515ml‘ wfliiisldnstseptem- n Mi fliio first fine night. ~ c-a-te-at. 1 ii . ' ., Wm" It Ornpeud next “m”- Biilrrvy specialties. _. 35°» oasi-e-ae-at. , ~___ algal: gisdashmim Baiiatllew- . clock. Refreshments will‘: ~ sau-a-ae-n. " 9i Convent-ion . . t of Wcmenr l .ui’,‘; “gkloiglxagnsai: : mom" " Pm" welcome. WUI-I-U-il. i... n t... Oonva t‘ _ n m. a - , “L. wiu i... h,“ h "aw" iiii- 1st. no r. u. “hi” Welcome. i (Canadian Press) LONDON. August fil-Organized labor in Great Britain definitely repudiated Premier Ramsay Mac- Donald's new National Government today in a. Joint manifesto by the Trades Union Congress and the Parliamentary Labor Party, charg- ing that "private banking inter- ests" had precipitated England's crisis and change of Government. ‘_‘A new coalition government for which the Labor movement repud- fates all responsibility has been formed," the manifesto said. “it is a government of persons acting without authority from the people "It is determined to attack th: standard of living of the workers to meet the situati r caused by policies pursued by private banking interests in control of which the public has no part. "It seeks to enforce s complete change of na- tional policy, not because the na- tion's resources have suddenly dim- inished. bufbecauee the nation cannot afford to provide for its un- employed. Not because the Budget cannot be balanced, but primarily because financial interests have decided that this country ls set- ting a bad example to other coun- tries in taxing the rich to provide rei- the‘ poor." The policy of the new govem- damentaliy an attempt to reverse the social policies built up largely through the activities of the Labor organization. "If there were a will to do so," it declares, "we could overcome the immediate difficul- ties by mobilizing the country's fur. eign Jnvestmenis of 020.000.000.000 by temporary suspension of the sinking fund, by taxing fixed 1n- terest bearing securities and other unearned income, which benefitted by the fall in prices, and by en~ Iictlns mess us to reduce the bur- den of war debts." Issues Warning Re Sweepstakes (Canadian Press) WINDSOR. Ont., Aug. 27. - Weming has been issued by the Sussex County ‘Trades and Labor Council that the ao-celled Leger sweepstakes of $500,000 has not the approval of the local organiza- tion. The sweep is allegedly run under the Federated ‘rrsdes 1n Cenedc end British Domlnlons. Ap- pclring as officers are the names of Bobert I". 'I‘urner and Martin U. _w_h9__h_e_ve been officers of theme: County body, but have resigned while m investigation of the new sweep is underway. Noted Novelist‘ i Serivouely Ill (smut to the Guardian) Aug. m-eu- mu § i 5 s t G‘ ill ct his homo dreebn cutie in . _ t m‘ u 010440-11. ‘r m L‘: Aégfiegnuandr- #1:.’- i-u- Whit‘? ""- g flngghgjmwh‘ “at I80. tboleloofmmltwureported todoyflfborppcrtuldhiacondi- umng anxiety and that the other mem- ment, the document axerts, 15 run. . RESIGNATIUN 0F BililT 0N Stewart Government Will Take Oath Ofi Office At Noon On SameDay. 0n Saturday morning Prem- ier Lea will tender the resigna- tion of his Government to His Honour Lieut-Governor Dal- ton. t It l5 planned that Stewat Government will be some day- New ‘icunadian F rjeight Plane (Canadian Press) MONTREAL, Que, Aug. 27.--Des- tined to carry freight cargoes‘ in northwestern Canada, a huge all metal Junkers freight plane has been purchased by Canadian l Airways and will be shiplwd to Can- ada within a few months, 1t was an- nounced here today. The new Junk- ers JU 52, a. development of the trans-Atlantic plane Bremen, will be the largest freight plane in Can- ada. Fully loaded 1t weighs four tons and the single B. N. W. 685 horsepower engine allows a-cruislng speed of 99 miles an hour and a range of nearly 1,000 miles, which by special tanks can be increased to 1,863 miles. NEWS, BRIEFS (Special to the Guardian) CIIATIIAM, Aug. 2‘l—'l‘obao- oo cutting hue begun in Kill Collnty- In! Jordon Raleigh bu honest-ed his crop and h placing ft ln the burns. The tobacco is of the bur-icy yor- tety and it h stated he hu been offered from ll to 20 cents o pound for hi: crop. OTTAWA, Ont... Aug. 11.. Thonhgiving nay my be Mclldli. October ll. according to Information lure. leg-Inle- tlou has been penned separat- in: Thonklllvllll m! Aria- ietico Doyl. . \ \ With the exception of Lord Irwin, No. 3, the British states new Coalition Cabinet. (l) Sir Aus ten Chamberlain, Conservative; (2) Lt--Col. Sir Conservative; (3) Lord Irwin, Conservative; (4) Rt. Hon. Philip Snowden, Labor; (5) Liberal; (6) Neville Chamberlain, Conservative; ('1) Sh‘ Herbert Samuel, Liberal; (8) Rt. Hon. J. H. Thomas, Labor. Lady Gwendolyn Jellicoe Is On men pictured above are members of the Samuel Hoar-e, Lord Reading. . cred Amphibian, bearing the reg- EMPHIYMENT S A Ill B Al‘ ii 1 ii sworn in at 12 o'clock on the all ' Road To Health __ (Canadian Press) "i-MBNTREAL, Que, Aug. 2'1.- Rcllevcd that her daughter is well on the road to recovery, Countess Jellicoe and her son, Viscount Bro- vah loft tonight for Toronto where they will Join Earl Jcllicoe. Lady Gwendolyn Jcllicoe is a pil- tient at the Royal- Victoria Hos- pital and she is rapidly regaining her health following an attack of gastritis. She will probably remain in the hospital for c fcw more days. E Understood T h a t United States And Paris Bankers Have Agreed Upon Terms Which Will Prob- ably Total Three Hundred Million Dollars. (Cnnndlan Press) NEW YORK, n. Y-, AuE- fli~The New York Evenln! Post says t0- day, that bankers have agreed up- on terms of a new credit loan to Great Britain, which will probably total $300,000,000 or more. Immed- iate confirmation of the report was unavailable in high banking cir- cles, but one of Wall Street's lead- ing bankers said yesterday that talk of such a. loan was ln the all‘. and it has been confidently ex- pected that such a. credit would be arranged shortly. There was a feel- ing, however, that it might not be arranged until the new British economy programme is inaugur- ated. ‘The loan will be underwritten by o group of private bankers. probably headed by J. P. Mmgan ind Co. and will run for s. com- pcratively short time It is under- stood that negotiations have been (Continued on Page I0) toln Robert G. Mnlin today woe appointed Commodore of the l0unord Line to succeed Coll- tlln B. G. ‘biggie, formerly Master of the Aqultonla, who l: retiring next. month. Capt. Molin Joined the oolnpluy lu~ Jll ' 1 lscene, immediately began a search for one passenger reported missing. lllWEMENTi. Construction Report- ed Very Large Gain, Chiefly Due To Im- portant Works U_n- dertaken For Relief of Unemployed. (Canadian Pres!) OTTAWA. Aug. Thiirmnloymeiii in Canada at the beginning v1 August showed a. further uPWBYd movement, according to statements tabulated by the Dominion B1881“ of Statistics. mom 7,337 firms whme payrolls aggregated 956.238 persons as com- pared with 943,410 on July 1. The Read by Everybody 12 BOARDCABIH Some Members Of New National Cabinet (Canadian Press) GIDUCESTER, Mass, Aug. 21.4- A Pan American Airways plane crashed in the sea off Gloucester 111W $01183’. Twelve persons were saved by the fishing schooner Nova Julia and brought to this port. One person was missing. Nine of those saved were taken to a. hospital, none seriously hurt. ‘The plane was bound from Hali- fax for Boston. One of the pas- sengers was H. Wade Randall of Newton, Mass, who plane at Calais, Maine, U’. S. A. Search For Passenger The wrecked plane, a twin mot- lstratlon number MC4lV, was sight- ed by the fishermen between Bak- |crs Island and Half Way Rock, (near Marblehead. Coast Guard Patrol boats, which sped tn the Int-Id of ambition. MAXIMS OFA . MERE MAN Belf-dluothfcctionll the hand. PAGES Went Into None Dive Members of the rescued party said ihe plane went into a nose dive when the pilot sought to drop below a fog bank. The plane plunged into the see. and the pas- sengers clung to the tip of a wing extended above the water. The pil- ot dived under wster and struggled desperately to free one of the pen. tcons, the survivors said, and erm- bfiflrded thé several dives succeed " in bringing it to the surface. The passengers had barely transferred their grips to the floating pontoon when the wreckage of the plane disappeared beneath the sea. Sighted Just n. Tm... For nearly two hours, the party clung to the pontoon they said, with (Continued on Page 10) ‘ Cyclone Strikes South -Eastern Saskatchewan‘ MOOSEJAW, Sask. Aug. 27-- Arcola. and Estevan districts, in south-eastern Saskatchewan, are reported to have been struck by a cyclone late this afternoon. The roof the the Canadian Pacific Rail- way Express building at Elstevan was said to have been carried sway by the wind and several buildings, including a flour mill, damaged at Arcola. REGINA, Sask., Aug. 27.—Gcneral survey of the cyclone stricken dis- trict of Estevan Arcola in southern Saskatchewan today set the damage at $40,000, the chief item of which is the Canadian Pacific Railways trestle bridge on the Nepthune sub- index number stood at 105.2 com- pared with 103-8 on July i, 1931. and 118s, 121.8. 119s, 110.5, 105.5. 97.5, 95.8, 101-4 0r 2 and 90.0 on Aug. 1e30, 192a, 1o s. 1927, mo. 1925, 1923, 1922 an 1921. respect- lvely. The employers making re- turns therefore reported smaller payrolls than at the beginning of August in the preceding four years. but the index of employment W85 practically the same as in 1926. and was higher than in the five years 1921-1925. construction reported a yer! large gain, chiefly due to import- ant works undertaken for the re- lief of unemployment in Saskatch- ewan. The tendency was also fa.- vorablc in mining, communications. transportation and services. On the other hand. l088lng continued seasonally quiet and there were el- so losses in manufacturing and trade. Greater activity was shown in the prairie provinces. mploy- ment declined in Quebec, Ontario and the Maritime Provinces. while very little general change was in- dicated in British (blumbla. Statements were tabulated from 603 firms in the Maritime Prov- inces employing 73,411 persons compared with 74,93! in the pre- ceding month- Practically no change had been indicated on Aug. 1, 1030, but the index then was much higher than on the date un- der review. Building construction showed gains at the beginning of August, and transportation services end communications were also bus- of employment was downward in manufacturing, notably in fish pre- Wril. highway end railway con- it fer. On the other hand the trend serving, iron and steel and lumber division, '18 feet high, and nearly half a mile long. The bridge, which spans a ravine, was reduced to matchwood by the force of the wind. C. P. R. officials here say it will not be rebuilt, o. line being built around it. Chief damage in the town of Ektevan was suffered by the pre- mises of the Truax ‘Freer Coal Com- pany by stores whose fronts were ripped open and to windows and roofs of residences. The survey shows no loss of life beyond that of R. M. Henderson, Calgary contrac- tor. The two men hit by flying timbers, were not. seriously injured and are recovering in hospital. Is Drowned In St. John River (Canadian Press) 8T. JOHN, N. 13., Aug., 2'l-Mre. William Vanwart, 3i, wife of e prominent resident of Evaudaie, Kings County. was drowned in the 8t. John (River this afternoon while in bathing. The body was remvercd in between twelve and fifteen feet of water more then three hours later by s grappjing party organic- vinciel Police Detachment, were summoned soon after the i8- telity. ed by members of the 8t. John Pro who A valiant attempt on the part of Allen Ferris, an employee of the husband of the victim, failed when he was forced to break the death hold of the womln es the was Io- s ornmlsnt rmusumn rmnrtus Mr. W. A. Found, De- puty Minister of Fisheries, Believes There Is a Great Fu- ture For Fishing In- dustry Here, Partic- ularly For Oyster Farming. Mr. W. A. Found, Ottawa, Depu- ty Minister of Fisheries, ls in the Province at the present timg look- ing into the whole fisheries situ- ation in general. and the progress in the uev lopment of the oyster industry in particular. Although at present fish prices are low and fish are not plentiful, Mr. Found believes that the out- look for the whole industry lg do- cidedly encouraging. Great things are expected from the work of Mr. George R. Earle, Fisheries Promot- er for the Maritime Provinces, m. Found states. The aim of the De- partment was not only to bring about a greater production of fish by having the fishermen adopt to have the fish handled from the time they are caught till they reach the umcr in such a man- ner as will make the product be- frequent article of food than it is now. (Continued on i»... 1o) Girl Arrested For Vagrancy (Clnldlfll Press) Gilles, 16, giving her home ls Glace Bay. N- 5., wu Arraigned in police court today, end fined five dollln and costs or eight due in Jail. when found guilty of vegrnncy. ‘The girl was arrested lest night when she wu found dong with six men sleeping in I box csr at Chernv. AOIOII the river from Quo- methods that will enablelthem to i _ make larger catches of fish of the , lquality needed for market, but also I ' come a much more general and - QUEBEC. Qllt, All]. 37%§th¢ llnoll Iupoerlptlonl Delivered oi. n: m: " Ouudo cud U. I. A. “.50. PLAN E CRASHED INTO SEA OFF GLOUCESTER Passengers Have Thrilling Experience When Air Liner Nose Dives Into Ocean—Was Bound From Halifax For Boston With Thirteen On Boarcl—Pilot Plays l-Ie ro ic Pa rt—On e Pa ssenger Drowns. ntmunus MDVEMENT surrtgssrn Fighting In ‘Portugal Capital Cost Lives ofTwenty, While 120 Persons Were Injured. (Special to the Guardian) LISBON, Aug. 2'I--A revolution- ary, movement which cost the lives of twenty people and 1n which up- ward of 12o persons were injured broke out in Lisbon today, but was quickly suppremed by troops loyal to the administration of Resident. Oscar Carmonn. Lisbon tonight was heavily guarded by troop-B 1n field uni- form and tanks and armored cars rumbled through the streets. More than 300 persons were arrested, including a number of former members of Parliament and for- mer officers of the army. The mil- ltsry commander tonight issued en order to ell citizens to remain in- doors after midnight and warned thatany one found carrying arm: would be shot at sight. SHOE FOUND ‘UNDER TREE QUINCY, Mess, Aug. 27.--When a 65-year old elm tree was up- rooted here a child's shoe was un- earthed. The shoe, of mld-lbtl: century style, apparently had been buried during, or shortly after, the Civil War. The WeatherEtc ‘PORONPO. August. 20-inch northwest winds, fair and cool. High tide this morning It 10.38 1nd tonight at 11.45. ‘ Bun seu this evening Lt 0.44 end rises tomorrow morning ct. 5.10. Lost quarter moon Saturday Sept. s. l-Bl o. m. Bummereide tide eighteen min- utes later than Chnlottefown. ‘ ‘e-"s-"a- n? s. a": a u u u. a.s"sr"::'-|' ..' We“: '-u"'i."n_::':."u i!“ ‘ Wanna-cunts- M CAB FERRY SCHEDULE Week Days-leaves Bordon daily. 0.10 o. m4 11.40; 01d 6.15 p. m. Moves ‘Iiormentine dnily:—1030 o. m: 2.55 p. m. end 7 p. m. Up in Ind including September l! on Sunday luvs Borden 0.15 o. m and are p. m. mm mzoe-u-elflan