' t .'- T = § _1 H-,Ti ;f--=- in collusion and when the election HEAR ` The iientrai Guardian g,3_c;y;§,»,gg 5-_gg,_;-_g,;f=;;1;;;," l” ing th* on October 14 Liberals - elf=:al”’i:::el‘l. but nd.’ert'i:'ing“': wnmd and whether or not the Re' . 1 o sewn man any so \..,,|,,,| _i construction Party was genuine f I eerita a word mule g - U i . 1 ' . U . e 1 , S I E Ur oanbis is L \ B E R A L "1hey’reddsliilv§i`ng tin their shoes l E ‘ b ""-'- . _ now,” ii e .S vena. ` ' ' 1 -“"»»~ “sf “‘° “°°”“..1=f‘i‘°“ srsiixs ‘ 0 een . er expresse at e ou t e view Reggnstruguon L saoaali-si P R 0 P A G A canadian people today were tninlr- - ing “deeply and searchingly" of ' P05105 UOUBT-At the Pol- the various problems confronting ' ice Court yesterday moi-n1ng_ g thu,-,_ ~ mm charred with belnz drunk and Dgnqunges L i b e i. al "1 differ sharply with both Mr. saP’fEMBER 11' 193° ' l _ 'ri-is cHARl.o1~ra'rowN cuanplnbr ~ 'PAGE 'rrmaa It T3- ` _ 'i ' ii "“ 'W E ' ié '*"’==-__ ' T1 'H' _W = I ' UM Uwlileble had three dollars bail King and Mr, Benn tt. There is ostreatod. L¢8d€l'S F01' Spréad- dennite clesvsge iebetween wanlvasosr. sar'ralmmit‘i'th 66 ° 99 Without going in for personalities, F _C'r,.Y. C. H. G. S. i P, M, s. p. ri. as-oranan yasrm. ing Gl`055 Lies- he proposed to discuss the policies &¢|'|¢¢t¢\¢“ ammonia, 1 - - DAY-St. Dunstan’s University re- ”"'*“' . of these two men. - ' l` °D°nod for the 1935-36 term yes- (C. P. By Guardiarfe special Wire) "We have political democracy in NU 0'* A “@°n‘Wml N`“'”°\‘ 1 . Wdny- Although figures were not HAL1'I"AX, Sept. 10.-The great canada in its nominal sense," he 1 I » , D . , r _ ' available college authorities ptated 'benefits of modem science and in- oontinued. “We have economic At anus 1 can ayhghl SUVIl'lg _ ' that the enrollment yesterday vention are going to a handful of ‘|,\it,°ei-soy," 1-ie would, pg he went me Lafe MTS. AttdCkS DOCfrine$ lnexccss of that of the oporiinggg; men who control capital ‘Ind along, discuss the dangers oi econ- “' -ss - --- -_-___... -_~.__ _L__,_ _____ _ I last year. mighty little to the workers." Hon. _ `° 'r' _ Y--*`-`” "““ `*’ H 1-I Stevens, Reconstruction Party “mc auwcmcy also Then he entrained for Wash 0 e . . , ° ' . I Glllafl of Rll888ll nnitoasmrrr /rr welcome development or scionc in L D h R ~ inston. leavins Kms as acting sov- l Bel sm scuooas-'rho olntrhi *“d“‘“`Y- W* “hm W” ’°°°1"°°“* "1 dilgotiiofegrl .lu King Ong S eat ernoves °"‘°’ “nm °'°°“°" ‘°”““““°‘ 1" l City_Schooia Monday was as 101. benefits, in Heaven’s name, lit ul; charged in this city’ to form B . November gave the office to Allen lows. Pi-moe street, 592; w 0 K _ spread them out to the peope a _ M 77! d P Also he formed a law partnership l “my citirens will hesr with re- By mum nom ,_ mimbei. oi 4a’l: Queen square, eos; §',°¢m?§.f; mac." hc demanded- ¥“;gp;f,r,1§fi‘y,§vf;f§.r§p'E;5§mii’;t_ reat lr in New Orleans end Purchased e ei of the sudden death of Mrs neonie Evwnnmi F W Johnston Square, 591. 'Intel 2323 Lmyeni A Halifax audience heard the mud ‘mm an over canada.. M1. home on Audubon boulevard in `rf. ,_' -' " moonsttironedmslre h '°’ -' F°“ ,‘3.‘ii:,?'.‘;".?.°¥.’l&'-’l'.1.=i'-1‘-'y°-‘1- 2:31” l‘.".§‘.‘*‘.,§’.,§‘,‘;°°.*.*.§l°‘2,,';§,.5&‘“‘;‘.; ii.” dm in °“°‘“‘°°‘ "°° - do 13? =-531 »»5»51°d °“t ¥“,?.¥ ‘“.“ “’? ““‘“‘ ".‘:.§“‘°° ‘”°’° 616 ouzszana en ator 313.2 °s‘i.¥'..‘.’?.‘.f5l”“ *"5 ’“‘°°“°° gn, _ a. . ' ‘s vers ve o respons e govern- _ ' tsmoon at inlrerrnan, where she was “ni inn niinnngn mn. seven ni,in_ M!i_tNG.i1cnMaN'r _ArmoUNca|>- nnldeunngqynlegiisbyynaighaiiimatézn 3: mm.. no did not Hmm Wim residing 1°' f-he 5.“’“°‘°'- ir cipal books had been distributed all - "1 Nm. H- Hooper Home thembom No govemmeni had about the Labor g.,,,e,,,me,,i in _ _ pin; (!3;l1_1B;1e-v;"r1;§’ “;fm13`;mg:5°E oltielé every pllice he had ever itrava :~i‘i1e"°<;UUI‘;f;1;'»l1;1¢Ai;1,§:g;l;i€niiw¢;§{itheii°l=~- 2.11.23.-‘°X..’f.s°l£ei.3;§_ °i}"‘.-.,..’.`Zi his son, Rev. Francis Stevens said gage and ioan companies wniiid the choice in the election lay be- not provide the money ai ini., tween "Mr. Bennett who forgets his mms the Government Shoiiid -°r°m‘5°3 as fast' as he makes them' create a housing construction cor- Mr. King who is iihe prime sitter- mo f C d to do _the por n or ana a Tomorrow the Reconstruction business' t io in i _ Mr. Stevens urlied E r€C€n Party Lead" Wm speak 1” sydney' speech of the Prime Minister. A d l“'°""°t""ins"|’P‘;'“"c d why did the Prime Minister not inwwizassgegrmnaggnfgrgign 8;! extend provisions of the farmens' H. Stevens, Reconstruction party ccigfecgtiasxlgt mfxgggthfgwggd Eng leader, in a _mass-meeting here to- bin? Aim in discussing i.ccnn_ ' structionthO,,,.B, Whefe 11° “‘1d”“°° “ L““°""“’3 stitutlon oi' the debt why did not Mr, Bennett include railway fin- ir '.1 He was opposed to amal- dal' W11'h°“t P“b11° °“3“'3em°“t* 3-:ill?i1a.\.on of 'the railways; said Mr. Stevens. There was a move on foot to form a National Govern- ment with the object of railway rwnnlcamation. It would create a great railway monopoly. To this he was opposed. I Prov. ~Exllibition Prize List (Continlicm CLASS 5 SADDLE HORSES Sec. 1-Road Hack: 1 H. L. Pal- mer, orytown, 2 Mrs, Senator Den- nis, Halifax, N.S,, 2 Col. Fred I. Andrew. Royalty. Sec. 2-Lady’s Saddle Horse: 1 Mira. Senator Dennis, Halifax, N. S.. 2 Raoul R/eymond, Southport, 3 Mrs. Ora Dogherty, Halifax, N_S. Sec. 3--Gentleman's Saddle Horse: I Raoul Reymond, 2 C. M. Bissett, Ch‘town, 3 Raoul Raymond. KAZAN, Russia, Sept. in -- The akeielon of a. huge reptile believed by Russian scientists to predate man’s appearance nu the earth was found today 1" the bed of the Ulem River near here. A few years ago a. similar skeleton was found in this river. 450 miles snnihrast of Moscow. LINDSAY, Ont., Sept. 10- (C-|’-)-A grand jury today re- turned a true bill charging Mrs. Ann Wallace, wife of in dis- abled war veteran. with murder of bet five children. The woman will probably np- pear for trial Wednesday be- WASHINGTON. Bept. 10-(A.P.) Out of the endeavor to measure political effects oi the death of Senator Huey P. Long came the view from Republicans today that the sharpest tliprn to plague the Democratic administration of President Roosevelt was gone. It was expressed in the quiet of their offices by persona who refus- cd to be quoted. They put the same thought again in different words and said they hated to see this "democratic dissolving influ- ence" removed. Democrats talked less about his death, other than to voice expres- sions of deep regret. Politics did not appear in their statements, but there was general agreement that the outstanding threat of a third party movement had disap- peared from the path of the presi- dential campaign of 1936- Postmaster General Farley said he never had thought there would be a substantial third party move- ment. Farley added a prediction that President Roosevelt would be renominated and re-elected with- out difiiculty, regardless of who might be 'the Republican candidate. Long had threatened to fight . the renominatlon of Mr. Roosevelt and said he would lead a third pai-ty into the field if the Presi- dent were the Democratic candi- date and a Conservative were .named by the Republicans. (The following sketch is by the Associated Press.) Sketch af Long’s Career i Rising from_cottorl patch to na- tional prominence as United States lsenator and dictatorial boss of Louisiana, Huey Pierce Long at- tained thc highest degree of state control ever recorded under Amer- ica's democratic form of govern- ment, ` He was a psychological phenom- .enon to virtually all experts. He conceived and did things which none but he thought possible and which none of the "old llne" poli- ticians ever tried. His followers called him "genius," "friend of the poor" and “champion of the peoples rights." An army of enemies, whom he re- pulsed a-gain and again at the polls or in the courts. dubbed him “dema- gogue, "madman," “destroyer of constitutional government" and worse terms running the gamut from "election thief" to "political racketcer." He called himself “Kingfish” It was a term appliedoi-lginally in sar- castic vein to an opponent. Long once assumed it ,iocularly for him- self, found ii. ready publicity re- sponse and thereafter clung to lt. From the time he shook from his heels the dust of a Hillside cot- ton farm in Louisiana's Winn par- ish as a tobacco-chewing youngster of 16 to become a travelling sales- man, until a subservient legislature in 1934 and 1935 paswd laws which transferred control of the state's every activity to the political ma.- chine which he dominated, Long was it law unto himself. In the national field he lweiliched a campaign to restrict big incomes and "spread the wealth" by mak- ing every person in the United States free of debt and giving each individual $5,000. This followed Lou- isiana. state enactment. of a debt moratorium law. Long was born August 30, 1893, on it 320-acrc farm which became part of thc town of Winnfield. La., when the coming of a railroad transformed the fields into city lots. He was the seventh child in a. family of nine. He attended Shreveport high school, but did not finish the course. His college work was con- fined to three months in the law department of thc University of Oklahoma and about seven months of intensive cl-amming in the law school of Tulane University.. Then hc passed a special examination for admission to the bar and was admitted to practice in May, 1915. Alibi Witness Becomes Wife When he was 19 years old, he was arrested at Shreveport, accus- ed of being involved in a shooting scrape. An alibi cleared him, Miss Rose McConnell testifying that he had escorted her to a theatre that evening and producing the seat stubs as proof. The next year they were married. They became the parents of two sons and a daught- er. ' Long began his political career early. At 25 he was elected to the state board of railroad commission- ers. .He ran unsuccessfully for gov- ernor when he was 30 and attain- crl that office four years later. Defeating an attempt to impeach him, he consolidated his political power and won the 1930 federal scnntorial primary and election from the vc‘eran Joseph E. Rans- l932. when.he took his seat in Washington. That same year he helped his close political ally, John Overton, win Louislana‘s other sen- atorial post from Edwin S. Brous- sard. Thereafter he shuttled between the national and stale capitals, de- fending his state organization against attacks and reinforcing it until his personal power virtually was absolute, while in Washington he kept himself in the spotlight by bitter attacks upon the national administration. Although I.ong‘s opponents dub- bed his pet measures "claptrap" or worse and sought to discredit him by pltiiess exposure of personal scandal, he went blithely on his way. He had undisputed talents as a shrewd lawyer, always rewarded his adherents and waged incessant warfare against his foes, but chief- ly he relied upon a rare persuas- iveness as a speaker. He knew just when to say “ain‘t," when to quote scripture and when to speak log- ically ahd clearly.` That talent was displayed early. In _high school he dabbled in track athletics as a mile runner and he always played baseball at any op- portunity, but chiefly he was a de- bater and his forensics won him a scholarship at Louisiana State Un- iversity. Lack of money for living expenses and books forced him to forego that opportunity and he turned his ready tongue to selling “on the road.” After winning admission to the bar, he hung out it shingle in 'Winnfield and launched himself into politics. In 1918 he was elected' state railroad commissioner for l the north Louisiana district, chang- ed his residence from Wlnnfield to Shreveport and began his long fight with the Standard Oil wm- pany. Pipe Lines Ruin Long‘s Oil Stock He related in his autobiography that as a Winnfleld attorney he had acquired stock ln several in- dependent oil companies, either as fees for legal work or by purchase from clients. In Shreveport he built a $40,000 home and was “in a fair way to becoming a. million- aire" when the big companies. controlling the pipe lines, refused to take oil from independent wells. "My shares became worth less than 40 cenfs over night" he said. Long manipulated a finding fav- orable to ihe independents through the public service commission and later the legislature declared the pipe lines public carriers. When elected governor in 1928, Long went after his political foes, clearing them out of various state offices and arousing bitter enmit- ies, In March. 1929, when he call- ed a special session of the legis- lature to enact a tax of 5 cents ii barrel on crude oil, the storm broke. The house of representatives pre- sented articles of impeachment containing 19 charges. Aniorlg them were accusations that he had at- tempted to bribe legislators, used the appolntive power to influence the judiciary and flauiitcd the wri- slitutional limitations oil the gov- ernorship, that lic had told a body- guard to kill an opposition legis- lator and that llc had participated ill a scmldalous “studio party" in New Orleans. . Senate Minority Saves llim Long defcntcd the impeachment proceedings in thc senate. A tivo- thirds votc was necessary to con- vict, ancl he got 15 senators, one more than one-third, to sign a statement that they would not vote for impeachment because the articles wcrc fnultily drawn. All 15 were rc‘wnrdi‘d by political pre- ferment. Long rail for the United Sioics senatorship in 1930, won a closely contested democratic primary and was elected in November without formal opposition. In the same el- ection bond issues of 368,000.000 for roads and of $5,003,000 for Louisianirs 33-story capitol were approved. Ordinarily Long would have taken his seat in the federal sen- atc on March 4, 1931, but he had fallen ollt with the lieutenant gov- ernor, Dr. Paul Cyr, and decided to hold on to the governorshlp un- til he could be assured that no pol- itical foe would succeed him. Dr. Cyr finally went before a notary and wok the oath of governor, 111- ing an ouster suit against Long. The latter, declaring that Cyr by his action had vacated the office of lieutenant governor, caused A. O. King, president pro tchlpnrr of the state senate, to assume that post, then went into court and personally argued a victory against the oueter suit. His next move was to engineer 0, K. Allen through the guberna- torial primary of January. 1932. the whole Long slate for state of- rn ' r$,‘_1.;;;‘ _eil ’ ' Kingfish Heard in Senate members listen and learn meant nothing to the red-haired Huey. He declaimed his “share-the- wealth" project and denounced his party's leader. Senator Joseph T, Robinson of Arkansas, for “com- P1‘°m1Sing" with the republicans. In one of his early speeches he be- came so personal in his comment upon fellow senators that he was . forced .to stop, , In February, 1932, Long was back in New Orleans, had himself nam- ed democratic natlonal commit- teeman and supervised selection of a delegation to the party`s na- tional convention in Chicago. Be- fore that body met he came out in favor of the Roosevelt candidacy for the presidential nomination and when his delegatioll’s creden- tials were challenged won a. maj- ority vote in theconvention, hail- ed as 'the first test of Roosevelt strength. After the convention he cam- paigned 'in Arkansas for Mrs. Hat- tie Caraway, who won the demo- cratic senatorial nomination. Then he canvassed Louisiana for Over- ton and thence took his sound trucks and literature distributing automobiles to the Dakotas in ad- vocacy of R.oosevclt’s election to the presidency. Down ln Louisiana Governor Long's expenditures of $'l9,000.000 in the year 1931 reacted into a state treasury crisis and in 1932 an ex- tcnslve program of fresh taxation was put through. It started a re- volt which climaxed in January, 1935, when the Square Deal As- sociation, organized by anti-Long people, assembled in Baton Rouge to demand that Governor Allen summon the legislature in* special remedial session. Senator Long htu'rled there. Many of the square dealers were armed and the mil- itia and state police were called out. One citizen was wounded and extensive bloodshed narrowly was averted. Coincidentally Long opened a personally conducted. court inquiry into an alleged plot which he said his enemies had formed to kill him. The hearing was conducted inside a ring of machine guns and bayonets and Long claimed after it that he had proved his contcli- tion. Urge Boycott ‘ V A g a 1° n s tl German Goods (C.I'. by Guardian‘s Special Wire) l1\iJN'mEAL, sept, lo._~c_l>_>- A resolution calling for the boy- cott of German goods and declar- ing opposition In llir pal~il0ii>Hi‘0r\ of United States aihlrtrs in thc Olympic Game; al Brrllll rlrxt year, was unaliimollsly .adopted here today by thc ’l9lll llllililfll cnllvrll- tion of the Inlcrnniiollzll Typo- grnplllczll Ullinzl. The collvcntinil also zllll,hol‘l7..°d its officers fo petition Coligrcss for thc cllnlrtmolll of lcgisintiilll in operate all Ullllricl Sinics raclio lirondcastillg as ll tzovcrllliicnt rrl- tcl'pl'lse. rrslricillig commercial 2d\'crtlsillg to not more than i\\'n llmlrs por day. It turllcd down fug- gcstiolis nlne‘iidlllrll.- bc inode to | the United Slaics ccrlstilutioll rlil- * pn\\'fl'lng cflililrcss to rcfzillnlc \":irl:~ ing hours, wants, pensions and pit- vabc enterprise. The following is part of Lllc rcs- olution :lllilcd against llic Nazi regime: “The Hiller Go\'l's~l1lllclit is plirsllillg it l'lii1il_~_~s campaign nf pcrscclltion ilgalllbl Ralliail Cath- olic arld Prot:.-ztzrfc organlzatiolls who would not submit to the l'\ilc of Nazi church rliciatorshlp. The Jews colilinllc to bc lloullcicd and abused, crllclly tortured and intim- idated and hourly face the throat of being anniliilated physically, morally and economically, "The Nazi dictatorship has invok cd the rigid censorship of the press, radio and all means of pub- lic informalion. and so presents the German people from hearing our protest. "Tile boycott against German goods and services by the organiz- ed workers of the world has proven to be the most effective weapon in weakeningthe Nazi rcgim: _ . . 'the boycott is the only weapon wr" know which can stem the disaster facing the world of the Hitler menace _ _ _" The motion was adopted without discussion. ARRANGING TITLE SERIES (C. P. By Guardiarra Special Wire) AMHERBT, N. B., Sr-pt. 10,-Guy Hagenman, manager of the Amhnui Red_Wings, Nova Scotia women: softball champions, stated today he was arranging a Maritime cham- _A ' etitute for T oi* lllleh. ,toes and speshetti. apple butter flfe Hr. Julien K. Mcltay dell, Finding that his foes planned flees and a maiority of his nom- pionship series with Moncton Roy- , 1 - ~.,..-,...»..- ,J ‘gt a@l.@yda|ih|\» i ll mpg. ,,tosocuiretne¢ovornor|bip.n»-,inusaorihoirgsietun_winnine,,ud,aswaisin»wioketu.oie¢¢.