-MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN "we what you lock in talent. Make up in attention and dilig- Covers Prince Edward ' island Likeihe Dew Read by Everybody li’ 11¢ d MERE MAN shall soon fall into despair. MAXI MS 01A opond upon our moods we w} cuelotletown Guardian ‘Inn “MM”; Guardian, lfoundod i w i lice - Regal Party fmis Arctic Visit BY GUY E. RIIOADES (‘gimdian Press Staff Writer AKLAVTK, N. W. T. Aug. 4- (pelaycdi —(C Pl-Lond Tweeds- muir. Governor-General of Con. eds, and his party took off from 11115 western Arctic Capital by mya] Canadian Air Force air- planes lwrdnesday for Fort Nor. miifi. The Vice-Regal Party will fly QCTOSs thc Great Bear Lake dis- trict e11 route to Edmonton where 1i will incl-t Lady Tweedsmuir and 111111 Alastair Buchan. ‘Their ex- ttllencies son. The Governor-General bade farelvtfl to the townspeople at lh‘s '1' '1 post. on the MacKenzle Rwcr .:a. and the Rt. Rev, A, L, Fleming. Anglican Bishop of the Arctc n1 whose mission hospitol the llflfiv 11nd stayed for two days. COMING fVfNli "M111 closed till R. L. Coles, M00011. August 14th. 11-1341-8-5 -21. "Grand Tea Party at St. Georges Thursday, August 12th. L-1385-a~5-(1. "Dance in Auburn School l illesdzrv night Aug. 10th. 10-11139-843121- . ' _" "Picnic Saint John's Church, Ctapauti, Wednesday, August 1i. L-l230-8Q-9i "Uuucd. Church. Tea Party at liorcll. August 12th. ' L-l312-8-4-6-9-10. "Rcscrvc Wednesday, August 11th for Belfast-Belle River United Church A1111ual Picnic. L-1302-B-4-fl. 1 "Reserve Wednesday, August 11 1 101' Cavendish Tea. L-2lB5-Mu'ftf. "‘Fr1doy. Dance Night Fortune H1111. lifcKenmeyla Skiing Band. 11-1308-8-4-31. . "ice Cream Festival and Dnnte Dotrr school, Tucsdny, August 10m. L-iaic-s-s-zi. 1 “Reserve Wednesday. August 11111 101' Lawn Party and Dance . 1m 11111111 Hail. L-I372-8-6-li. 1 "Rcstrvc Wednesday. August 11111 i111‘ 1.011;; Creek Baptist Picnic. L-1373-8-6-ll. "Dance in Lorne Valley Hall, 1111511111‘. August 10tl1. Wobstei-‘s Dftilcsim. 1_,-13ao.e.5.g|, "Dance. bingo and other amuse- mens 1ilg11fl01d Rink Friday night li-‘llust 6111 in aid of rink. 14-1331-8-1-31. “B11120. ‘Ice Cream and Dance. . Patricks School Friday. August m; ‘ 11111101" auspices of Women! ‘iiiulv- L-uos-a-i-sl. "Don't forget Travellers Dance B0ncl1 (love Inn Friday night. ‘$150111’ welcome. Blnnchards DICMSLTA. L-1336-3-5-21. "Bazaar, Ice Cream Festival and n“? M Bcllevue School. After- ‘0011 and ermine, August 9th. If '-‘-, following nitc. L-l376-8-6-1i. 555M111 and Dance. Ger "W. School. Monday, August 9th. 110i 1111c. following night. L-l375-8-6-li. ‘n'_‘g'<‘-*1\'1cvv Lodge. North Tryon, utF-"i b1101- to spend your va- “m- N0 better meals served. .' 11-1305-8-6-21. u “"—'_" hmbgt. Herbert ice crcam social awn; - music and other enter- “érbeglt. softball Rustico vs. Mt. - lame 6.15. 1.4394, u . __—_ M: 1115911118 to arrange for reno- chwgh "1 Cemetery at United Mon-Ga. Freetown, will be held Y- August 9th at mo P. M. L-l31B-8-fl-li. "_"'_-‘ _ . Marketing Bong-d hippmiizrlrtigs. calgesltlx-ough ' _ u .wes .0 ugugt 111ml‘; follows. ‘Tuesday torenoon Jilin. Charlottetown; after- Bllmy River. Mflivicw. Mel- , 131:6" £31m. st. l Peters, ' By morn ng till in“ "me Hunter River. afternoon "livestock 10nd . Mum: hogs, 1111111011111 0111111110111 Alberta Legislative A c t i o 11 Indicates Credit Curtailment. Bank of Canada Unaffected. . By J. F. Sanderson Canldia-n Prfls staff Writer EDMONTON, Aug 5-40?)- Pmvincial Treasurer Solon Low threw down the gauntlet to the chartered banks of Canada today with s fiat demand to increase purchasing power m Alberta. Defending the bflllk-iitléllfie bill in the provincial legislature, the 37-year-old former school teacher referred to $400,001,000 in Alberta debts and $80,000,000 1n purchasing power in the province. "With less than one-fifth of the financial resources as compared with their total debts." he said. under a system which provides CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1937 CHZIXESEJTREMIER TA i i Qii-ii gyozv - INTER vayljgQN 015.4190 OCK K_I~._‘._S'_ DZBANT ii 11.8. Revenue Laws __.___ WABI-IINGQON, Aug. S-(AHA Congressional tax experts proposed 818111. broad meth today for tightening United States revenue laws and 111-eventing "tax avoid- once". In a report to the Senate and House of Representatives, the joint committee on tax evasion and av- oidance said the overhauling is. necessary “to protect the revcnue,1 and in order that. all may bear their fair share of the tax our- den.” The committee reported after completing lengthy hearings on tax evasion during which personal holding companies established in Canada and the West. Indies by Americans had figured in the evi- 1 deuce. 1 Commltteemen made no estim- J ates of the additional revenue the changes would produce. 01111110 1111101 11s 00110111111011 "it is impossible foi- the people of; l Alberta ever to meet their debts 1 them with financial credit only| at the price. of a debt. This lnd1 similar anomalies must be matte] good so as to provide the pcoplci lwith what they have demanded- $25 a month and a lower 1iving~ cost. "It; is not for the government to tell the banks how it shall be done. They are the experts and that is: their responsibility: But I might add that; if the banks do not know l1ow to do it, the government will undertake to provide the necessary cxviert knowledge for them.‘ The bill wen: through second 111111-010.- with a 1wide variety of features: Gcruln O‘Cnnno1- (Lib. Edmon- tcni said any reputable lawyer would declare the bill to be uncon_ stitutlonul. beyond the power of a province. Attorney-General John Hugill refused to oivc the House his opinion on the constitufional ques- ton, insisting 1115 advice had been. given direct to the government- and should not be made public. Couscrvatwc leader David Dug- gun predicted the bank bill would lend to accession by Alberta. “and if you are ready to say to the rest of Canada we have no further use for Confederation. then you are running true to form in (Continued on page 11, Col l) Three Critically ilurt In Mine Mishap PRINCETON. B. c. Aue- @- (CPl-A Government mines 1n- spcctor sought the cause of machinery break-down today 115 17 miners lily in hospital with in- juries suffered when their hoist cage plummotted 408 feat GOWH I shalt at Copper Mountain Mine yesterday. _ Three of the men are in critical condition. They are: Peter G. Celslikmvski who suf- fered an undctormmed brain in- Jury: Mike Ovetkovioh. with a mine fracture and leg injuries; Harold Hart, whose back was fractutfd- Three others had leg fractures- The 1'! men. brought 12 1111198 from the mine to Princeton lntho box car of a special work train. were taken to hospital in ambul- ances and trucks. lias Narrow Escape In Oar Accident xamvruw. N. s‘. Aug- 5- Two slim strands of barbed win were orcditcd tonight with uvinl Mrs. 1101-1111111 ma. mere 1mm injury after. the ear had boon ill a. collision with o. truck here. The wife of Canada's Minister of Labor crawled uninjured 1mm the automobile as it tattered atoll of a 40-foot embankment. hold there by the barbed wire. aftnr l! m 7 1° 3 Albany pies - so 1111 with W Whit-ry- 14-1300-8-8-11. tr ._ irovincial Exhibitio had been thrown there by the im- BY l. NORMAN SMITH Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON. Aug. 5—(CP1 - The King and Queen have settled down in the quiet seclusion of Balmornl. 1 the crown upon their heads and 1 their country visited. The whole nation knows they're rarned it. and thclwhole nation 1s . itself in a reflective mood and? I ready to settle down. The Cullll-i ,1 try seeks 110w to resume its order- 1y way of life. Yet the retrospect is alive with ‘pride. its last chapters joyful 111 haPPY incident and good olucu. 1 Thi-res a general conviction that if December was tryring May triumphant. August. holidays find the country tired but cheerful The clouds have not cleared from Spain's blood-soaked fields, but. despitethe cnervating wrangling among the 1 great powers Foreign Secretary‘ Eden declares there's less danger oi a great war now than a year ago. W85 Conditions Tm proved At home. it is still dank and dark in the distressed areas but elsewhere the sod is green and many of the National Govern- ment's bulbs have bloomed radi- antly. More people are working. more people arc healthy and more people are being paid more. Prime Minister Chamberlain might say, look at tl1c facts: Near- ly 600,000 more people are work- ing now than a year B80. 430-099 more than in May. The six com- pleted months of this year show a net increase of more than £400,000 (almost $20,000,000; pct‘ week in thc full-time rate of wages of more than 3,200,000 people. Large industries and little shops are do- ing a brlsker business; the hotels. railways and entertainment houses are enjoying the greatest summer season in years. Thus Coronation year gains in stature, embracing a marked im- provement all around in the poo- ple‘s welfare. Meanwhile the King ind Queen have found that the fervor and fanfare of Coronation (Continued on page 11. C01 F’ Freddie Bartholomew Defendant In Suit 1A5 ANGELEB, Aug. 5-—Fred- die Bartholomew. ttrikmg 13-year- Qld English film star, was made defendant in a suit tiled today by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio to prohibit him from working for any other studio. The complaint charges Freddie refused to work since July 15, dc- spite provisions of his contract. Also named defendants are his gum-guardian, Millicent Barthol- omew, and the Union Bank and ‘n-ust Company. guardian of his estate. The complaint says Freddie's salary is $350 a week. but tho studio 1111s been plyinl’ him "Ir-t- uitously" I 81W Weekly bowl- pact with the truck. Move To Tighten’ BUVERNMENT PREPARES FUR NEW UFFENSIVE Insurgents Entrench- ed 0n Madrid Out- skirts in Precariou Position. 1 BY JEAN ROLLIN Copyright i937 by the llavas News Agency MADRID. Aug. 5—-(CP-Hava.s) -Governmcnt fortification crews ‘today dug trenches and reinforced walls in the Carabancitel sector south of Madrid in preparation for a. new government offensive to dislodge Insurgents entrenched in Carabanchel and the Case. dc Campo across the Manzanares river on Madrid's outskirts. The new operations will be ex- tensive in scope, it was pressaged by reorganization of shock troops who will lead an attack to dis- lodge the Insurgents from houses they occupy in Carabanchel. ‘Dynamiteros’ are expected to play a preponderant role in the impending offensive. Suppers are at work undermining the Insur- gent-hefd military hospital at Carabanchel, which consists of 14 pavilions. Surround Hospital \Tl1e Government had the hos- pitol almost completely surround- cd. General Francisco Franco's troops showed signs of uneasiness as their position in the heavily- shelled pavilions became daily more utitcnable. I11 the Guadalajara. sector northeast of the Capital, troops of the 14th Division improved their positions at the expense of re- treating Insurgents. Insurgents abandoned several of fortified positions as Republican batteries laid a barrage that prevented aid from being sent forward. Bursts of rifle-fire interspersed with exploding handgrenades and mortar shells with‘n Insurgent e11- tmnclunents in University City and across the Frenchman's Bridge in the Cnsa de Campo were heard here today‘. Insurgent desorters claimed Franco's troops in this quarter of Madrid's suburbs were ready to revolt. . Santander Faces Crisis BEND AYE. Franco-Spanish Frontier. Aug. fy-(AH-Reporis came today from bot-h sides in the Spanish civil war that Bantander, 111st import-ant Government-held city on the Bay of Biscay coast, faced n. crisis. Government sources said of- ficlals of Bantander were consid- ering evacuation of civilians. The "city of perpetual spring" was re- ported greatly crowd ad with wounded and refugees from the conquered Basque country. Insurgent leaders said deserters t.old them Santander was suffer- ing under the squeezing of land (Continued on page 11. Col ‘ll Ottawa Choir Places Fifth In Festival MACI-llYNLLEfli. Montgomery- titiire, Aug 5—-tCP Cab1€)—Ot- tawa Ladies’ Chior today placed fifth in the ladies choir compel- ition of the National Eisteddfod. the Welsh festivals of music. poetry and literature. Three welsh choirs-from Pen- erth, Carnervon and Abordare respectivc1y—t0ok first, second and third places. The Wentwortn lad- ics choir of Hamilton, Ont., also W115 entered for the competition but withdrew. The Adjudicator, Dr. J. MOPS"! Lloyd, in giving the Ottawa. sin - crs 242 marks out of a poseib 300 said they had the ability to attain beauty in quiet parts of their singing but they were not a; hlp- py when producing louder when. Eight choirs took pert. in the event. The Ottlwn ladies wore grey dresses with red sashes. They were conducted by Wilfred Coul- son and were givm a worm recept- ion by thc audience of 11.007 gathered at Lord Imidonthnfe Welsh estate hero. Negotiations Begin In Textile Strike MONTREAL. jAilg 6--(CP>—- Confidcntial overtures designed to send nearly 10,000 workers back 10,1 the darkened mills of Dominion. Textile Company Limited haw. been opened between Company 01-‘ ficials and Labor Minister W11- liam ‘hremblay. Mew 00111111111 111v 00011110 s1 1111100 12 PAGES 1 1 Disclosures of tl1e latest dcvel-1H0]]€S Compromisei opment 111 the four-day-old strike called by the National Catholic Fledcration of Textile Workers t0 1 demand collective bargaining rights. increased wages or shorter 1101111. and improved working condifons. was made late todav by G. Blah- Gordon. managing director of thc 1 company. - onfiompany officials and non- rlrtkcrs during lhe last two 11111:- flt two of the Company plants. and declared he W115 prepared t'1 k991i U19. mills closed "until Christ- mas." ; ________i__ 1 1 1110011111110, 1110110110111 1111111111110. WASHINGTON, Aug. 5 - ’I“11c United States Senate Foroig11 Re-l lotions Committee recommended 1 today the ratification of a convc11_ tlon with Canada reducing the standard rate of taxaion on 11011-' resident aliens and foreign cor- Pwfltiohs. The reduction would be‘ 011 B. reciprocal basis. . The Pact was ‘ngned hcrc last, Dec. 30 and President Romevcit! sent it to the Senate Jan. 11 b11151 Y¢3J~ I The proposed reduction of the] Amcrimn tax from 10 to fivc pct‘ cent would apply only to indivi- duals and corporations not (‘DQ212- ed in business in the United States. Acting Secretary Mugill of 1110' 'I‘rea.sury wrote the committee that Canadian individuals and corpor- ations 111 business 111 the U111t1=<1 States would be stibjcct to 1101-111111 taxes and surtaxcs on income from American SOUTCGa. Chairman Harrison (D-Miss.) of the Finance Committee, who Tewrted the convention, said it was invited by the 1936 Revenue Act. and added: "It appears that the citizens of the Unit/ed Slates l1avc approxl. mateiy four times the investment in ‘Canada that Canadian citizens 1 have in the United States" and’ therefore tl1e com-er ion is "dis. tinotly to the advrin age of the United States. since both allow a credit for taxes paid to the 011101" country." v Harrison raid the ‘Treasury and 1 tho Canadian Finance Dcpart111cnt1 expect to cooperate so thcrc i: "practically no danger of 311mm once of taxation by nationals of ,' either country.“ f ( 1 New Suhstratospheref Plane ls Testedi DAYTON, 0.. Aug. 5—1AP)—1 Army piiots put the United st111cs' Air Corps‘ new sulxstratosphcm plane through its paces today high lbovc Wright field but rc- sults of the test. were kept secret. Differentiating tl1e huge all- metal monoplane from similar np- pelfing ships is its sealed cabin which seo lcval comfort is maintained while flying at al- titudes ranging to 25,000 fcct. Gruesome Bombay Murder Prohed BOMBAY‘. Aug. 5—lCPRcui,1*rs1 —-Po1ice today invcstigatcri B11111- bay‘s most gruesome murdcr in years. Dinnembercd parts of the body . of l. young Hindu were found in p widely separated arts of the city. p The hold we; sti.l missing. The name "R. Shlvrlm" was tatooecl in English letters on one of the victim's hands. No trace was found of the mur- derer. 1 Ilimmed As Russia 1 Retains Adamant Stand. (By The Associated Press) LONDON. Aug. 5-—Al1o11|cr non- liurst tonight on thc ovc of the unrnittcc-‘s vacation. "QSDHC earlier indications that 111-w compromises had been reach- i-d for reviving supposedly dying hope nf isolating the Spanish civil war. thc irreconcilable: on the “Iluuds oil Spain” committee had matlc no concessions. The Earl of Plymouth. chairman oi‘ the 27~powcr committee, nn- nounced that what had been hcr- alded hopefully as a “mystery" meeting to break the deadlock fnr-rely would be a session to "clarify" the issues and vote ad- journment for a holiday. Lord Plymouth culled the meeting for lumorrmv. T111: new spurt of non-interven- tion tropes was based on reports that llussiil had modified her op- position to the British compromise plan-simultaneous withdrawal of forcig-n troops from Spain and 1 Gordon denounced The Mm?“ intervention bubbli- evidently hadi 1 1 recognition 111' the Spanish lnsur-~ gents 11s beliigt-rcnts. 11111111111. lion-over, spokesmen i11- 1111-1111111 that lhlssia still was in- consistent that the recall of for- ‘ l-igu fighters must 11c effected be- fore belligerent rights could be ronsidt-rctl. Jlorlify Stflflf P111115, Aug. 5'—CP-HBVRSI— The Soviet Umon, as a result of rcprescxitotions made to Ambassa- dor Jacob Suritz by Foreign Min- ivslt-r Yon Dclbos of France to- night rcloxcs its refusal to con- sider granting belligerent rights t0 1.110 Spinish combatants u11tii af- ter 1111 foreigners 11nd Moors have been wi1l1<l1-11\v11 from the civil war, liaviis News Agency was informed. Moscow will be satisfied, it was learned. if it can obtain: 1. Assuranizcs of Italy's and Ger- 111a11v's siticerc intentions to with- draw their nationals. 2. An exact definition of the ]l1ll‘1\>i‘. "substantial progress", as uscd 111 the British compromise plan 111 July l-i in connection with rcp11t1~111lio11. Britain suggcstcd bel- ligcrcucy recognition be granted when >11c11 progress had been at- 1111111111. Wt-il-uiformcti 10111111111 forward to French sources, tomorrow's 1 1 1 11101111111; of t11c non-interventioiw sub-committee i11 London, were co11v1111~cti joint Anglo-French ei- forts 1o salvage the principle of Spanish 11on-i11te1'v1=ntion enforce- ment had succeeded. An alleged plan designed to win belligerent rights for the Spanish was bl‘11(‘\'t"(‘1 defeated by, the new development. This scheme was 1.0 11111110 1111 exception to the London co11111111:cc's rule of unanimity. F‘1'a11ce's desire to nip this man- ocuvrc arose from its determina- tion to prevent the Soviet from being forced out of the European concert of nations. Empire llnity is Augmented By Parley VANCOUVER" Aug. The recent Imperial Conference rcsilltcrl in a keen appreciation of the bafiling questions of foreign policy which confront Great Britain from day to day. Defence Minister Ian MncKcnre said in an address to the Canadian Club here today. “No commiitnt-nis of any kind wcrc made by any government he added. “No fresh departures in re- ward to constitutional status were uncle, b11t the position already es- inblLshcd was consolidated.“ Thc conference had resulted in a greater fceling of unity among thr- various Empire governments and in a greater appreciation of the various problems which each government was encountering. 1 1 Insurgents ovcr the Sovietfis head,‘ 1 1 1 5— (CP)—- ‘ I 1 1 1 By Hull-IKE Annual Subscription Delivered 511.00 .l.. $1.00: (Tuninlu and U. S. 53.00 51221111) UNBROKENY Ready fiouResist JapaneseAdvance In North China Will “Fight To T17 e Death” Claims General "Chiang; -— hpan Dictates Peace Terms. (Ifg/ 'I'Iu' f mm (Iiun Prcss) Chinese lenders today pondered :1 lit-111 slnlcmt-nl 11y General Chiang Kai-Sheh, mili the Central Government. that territory to Japan “oven 1111")‘ 111111 political icaidt-l‘ 0i (1111111 11111 _\i1-111 no more though that n11-;1n.~ lighting in- adequately prepnrcd 21nd to the tit-nth." The statement 1111s published 11s Jillliill 11111141111)‘ inti- mated she might extend the Hi1111.111p11111-.<1- mut- of light- ing as far south as the Yellow 11111-1"; ches stated Japan might press 1'01‘ 11 p011" that would give her zinothel‘ "1 similar to that she set up in .\ 111111 '1'11i1_\u despai- 1'u1 settlement iuppetstate" in North (Ihina iunchoukuo, further north. Foreign consuls in Nunking; seat of thc (Jhincst- (lov- ernmcnt, were advised 11y the Japanese (‘onsui-(iisnciuii that “the continued conc1-11irui ion of (‘hincse troops north 0f the Yellow River nlczins hostilities in that region and therefore the Japanese n1i1itu1'_v sug-"gcsts that foreigners in that area be warned 111'1'01'dinp,'1_v." No Direct Action Chiangs declaration of fighting “to the death“ was made to a group of educationists. ’I‘h(\r1= was nothing to indicate thc Govt-ru- ment was following it 11p inuncrl- iately with warlike moves. Reports for the past weeks of largo n111ss~ 111g of Chinese troops were mo. lv of Japanese origin 111111 1111m- largeiy‘ unconfirmed.‘ In Tokyo Foreign bfiiustt-r Kohl. Hirota said there were l1opcs of 111 compromise with moderate C11i11cse1 elements and that extremists who} wanted war were Elllb11l‘l‘t‘l55lll§: General Chiang. Mcnnsvhzic coin; fcrencc followed conference at Nankingwvhcre warlords discussr: i1 the situation with 0111111111 11nd his’ advisers. _ In London Dr. H. H. Kung. C111- Giaims Comet Will Wipe Out World t‘. l'. (illill‘lllilll'\‘ Special Wire PARTS. Aug. S-Thr- news- paper 1.11 1.1110110 tonight quot- 1'11 n slur gall-r as predicting thc ivorlil will (‘lid Sunday. Aug- l5. ‘The nstroluzisi has discover- ctl, the story 51111011. that the tail 11f 1111' f-‘iitsii-r (‘omt-t. now 130.000.0110 miiv- [r0111 thc- earth and getting 1111~cr cvcry day, will wipe out this plnnct on the dott- indicated. nose Finance Minister. reachcd an' agreement “in principle" fnr n‘ loan of 1120000000 (almost $100.- 000000): He stated the 1on1‘. 1111:» not to be considered a 111011" 101111‘ FOR .\lI'l'l7S ONLY NEW roux. Nmrr- Aimed 14 and that it would be . _ Sin-111; 1J1]: 111111": boy,- and girls. I théongh “n lmommlonm ‘]>1:1\";_rrr11111<1 111 .1 011111111111 tenement c“ e" 111.. 111 111-rm 114s 1 "ivy-hole" , ,, n .. 111111011, 11111 .-1;'1- an nverazq “Om” MAKE mm‘ 0111111 of 1o. 11 1, "11-11 foot, TOKYO. Aug. “dea1" by which the Nanking Gov- ernment would tactlly toicratc 1111 ‘autonomous’ pro-Japanese Gov-, erument in Hopeh-Chahar still 10- | mains as an Ilth-hour possibility for peaceful settlement of the Sine-Japanese crisis. informed Japanee circles dcclnrcti today. 711cm sources added they bc- licved an open (‘Olilslflll lwtwccu tho Japanese Kwnugtung army and Nanking troops could hardly» bc avoided now, but einphasimtl that negotiations on the Japanese dc- mands would continue 1n Nankiug between Gcnernlissitno Cluaut: Kai-Shek of China and Jupnnrn-c Ambassador Shigcru Knwngoc, concurrent with whatever hostil- itle: might develop 111 tho north. following demands for a. (Continued on page 11. Col i1 Autopsy Reveals Girl Was Murdered RENFREW, 0111., Aug. .1 Ethel Heddcruick, 13, whoc crumpled body was found 111 n cow pasture . Tuesday, was dcfuutc._v 1111- 111-11111 0f a sex-murder, 11111111111110» tic- cided today. AL the conclusion o1 1111 11.1101»); Dr. L‘. R. Frankish, 111od1co-1cg111_ cxpcst from the Ontario Attorucyj’ Generals Department .a1d she. had been cruninally assaulted and , beaten tn death. I "Her skull was badly fractured: and there were numerous abrasions 1 on hcr body and she wn. crunua- 1 ally assaulted," Dr. Fmnkisli said, but declined further dounls o1 111.- findings. Inspector E1 C. Gurnt-tt. inal investigation branch , Ontario provincial police. 11r1'iv1‘d,1 last night with Dr Frankish n11d1 will stay here to continue the 111- i vestigation. 1 The young girl started from 1101' home Tuesday morning for wel1's Hill. about a miic to pick cherries. l-lcr bmlv “as found at nightfall by J01111 Combo who stumbled over it in his scorch. (fiDiill 0t the 6_*,F.ridfly)_A i11c11cs 111111 ‘ TIII‘\I|'1I_\ ( WHERE‘ 11111212135 Awiu. t Kulilllrs A ilh 'I'I11> 11111111111111 Press» 'l‘Olt1).\"l‘t.1. 11.111. 5 »- .\f11111:111m 1 11nd mnximuln kmpernturt-s‘ 4.‘ 5-1 5;‘ Ti) 51' T0 5! 117 151.’ {V} [Ti 111i till 1111 '11) 111 1J1‘. PL’ 511111! Join‘. ‘ill 64 11111:1.1x 64 80 (711111111111-111111: ‘ll 78 1\f11r1l1111c Pl'('\\'1ll1' -: hlodernta s1111l11\\1-~' \vi1111~; i111 ' (1~1111~.'.111d 11.11111. 112-1111111111‘ I ~1'."11lrr1'd riiivlu-ls 111111 .-u1111‘ 1111.‘. 4 111;11 111111 11111511‘ 111 111.1 and 1r1111nrv1111 1111111111111111 1041 51111 s1-i~ 'l11sc\"11"1-.: 111 72211111’! $1.111.» 11111111111111‘ 11111111'1 .11 4.51. S11111111c1'.-1d1~ fir!" cigircvn min- 1110s 1.1111 .1;1n Charlottetown. Tlll"? (‘All FICIIIIY Ilonli-n 0.1.". n. 111., l p. m. p. n1. Iminre 'l‘uuu\nllno ll '1 |1. m. 111111 11.110 |I. m, do! ‘ 1-11-1-111 Hominy‘. i.‘ m si-pl. n-Alnndly. 1 11111;‘ only lune uni Iran-l Tormen- Flnrliflg .I|1|_\ 11ml "Urdu-Ii 111 I fl. tlnn n1 ll.l.'1 n. In n---Augusti6 1202i y‘.