Qplills. .4 The Non-Intervention sub-com- MAXIMS ~OFA MERE MAN -__--m ‘m; i» ncbly loved. . w; gust live nobly to love nobly '15!" \&‘>>' f M -"'*vvv~w<-~\ \ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew- Read by Everybody MAXIMS or A MERE MAN ' .3. ii. 4 People demand new rciracllons ti the constant. light. w" i CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. SATURDAY, JULY u, 1937 12 PAGES g;~;,1,,g;=;;,§¥;;,g;-g;;;gm; Z qatrsrzs _§_ TRIKE BRIHIN “f5 PRO-Bit‘ Pow-Eros ggyfugflyg an... All... REPCRTS FRilMr iiitsifcitat arts rum or lllESliiilNAlliE Britain Again Seeks To Break Deadlock Existing In Spanish Non-intervention. 3v PAFI. LOUIS BRET cup_.~.|;iu, i037, By The Haves News Axofioy LONDON, July 23—iCl'Ilavn5) Jnfurmctl sources said tonight the deadlock over non-Intervention in the Spanish civil war was peheduled w he thrown into the diplomatic zircna for final settle- mmt Iiinuthty n the form of at conclselv-ivtu-tlt-d questionnaire on! '11,] points of the British com-, promise proposal. i While (ii-cat Britain has taken l up initiative in drafting questions, it was expected the non- l ltiterveutnn powers would as- uuae responsibility for the docu-j penis slit-mission to the various( uillee probably would be called! into session Monday to pass upon ilirhtest British effort to end the bipasse left tuisolved at last Tues- hy’; meeting. It had orignally been believed lord Plymouth might dsirlbiiirc ihlqllfifidflllllililfi in his capacity urhairmait of the main Nzn- lniervention Committee and welt Jor the sub-committee's approval. Diplomatic sources reported thel Covrriimrniis filial decision has‘ not yet been made. Diplomatic circles predicted the! Wills Wflllld be asked whetherl lirylavor or oppose various siig- i pilots in thc British compro- mlseionntra including: i" ' ' "rrr ~- lvotitinw-d on page 11, Col 5) COMING fVfNll i "Shoyv and baiice, Bradalbane modu- L-l025-7-23-3i. "Iona PlTllIC, Tuesday, August "l L- 1024-1-23 ~21. "Dance! hlonday night, in Geo. n11“ srm. soul-u. L-1078. "Sec Montague players in "There aes the Bride", Cardigan Hall, July llt- L-1058-7-24-2i. "Palmer Road Pcnlc Wednes- l’. August 18th. Greatest Picnic the season. L-1il7-7-9-13-20-25-30 "Sounst ten party August 2nd. iernoon and evening. Dancing iothcr amusements. If tinlitvor- B Tuesday 3rd. L-1022-7-24-2i. Altar Society m!" at Prowsc Bros. sat- ailt-riiooii and evening, July 11-1070-7-24-41. ‘The Basilica my lily l. ‘Bratlalbane and Rose ll'l‘ll l“.tii.<' We "l Rtrt- Valley Valley dncsd ay. August Grounds. L-1040-7-24-li. Scarleloivn Hall Tuesday, July hear lion. A. E. McLean lec- on Coronation. Home made cream by Women's Institute. L-1060-7-24-2i. Patrons Kenslngton Club who l to have transportation sup- i Please phone Hairy White- i» My Imitlon or John R. ‘DP. lxr-tisington. b.1077, RHtcpayw-rs in arrears in Cardi- qsthool District are hereby it'd that outstanding accounts _' ‘bu’ ll be placed in court Qlloction. D. Bcrimgeour, Soc- Y~ L-l0M-7-2t-2i. T"? prices are holding steady ""18 1n Montreal and Toronto. tel. thrmich your local Ship- Cllltb and iiclp put Maritime a Y1 line. Livestock Marketing ‘ 11-1077. ____. “"1"!!! hogs, lamb: “uwfly stock pens. Chariot“. ccvery ‘nicsdoy until 3p. m. °‘°l’°,"l4l'@1y find get the of efficient salesmanship. Wk Marketing Boer-d, 11-1077. 8nd Olly“ , -___ [and hOtZ-s sold for fihiilf plot year, W“ litlmniical vsluez, um. w“ M lh~ti>rovlous year. due to m‘, m“ l°° mBny were sold Yo“ (Zoe marketing chan- yoar bvllichange the situation lvesi itsmmm" “ii-Operative- °¢ Marketing Board, lr-IWI. less money in comparis- lllillll _F_i|ii|iT$ i i 01v NET? Partial lllctory in Court Bill Claimed WASHING/ION, 33-11;; Roosevelt administration contended today its defeated Court Reorgan- ization Bill was a partial success in that it induced the Supreme Court to interpret the constitution more liberally. VA spokesman for the President himself told newspapermen that since the bill was proposed, the Court. feeling the influence of the ensuing controversy. had reversed ltelf on vital points. In addition, while the Unligd States Congress talked of adjourn- ment in mid-August. or earlier, he i renewed the administration's plea. for enactme“ of wage and hon;- legislation, a farm program and a ' housing bill before the end o; the session. If Congress should adjourn without disposing of these measur- es, he made it clear the President i; reserving a decision on calling a national legislature into special ftoosirpn 1n October to attend to e . _____€____%_ Wlii commit: Survey Of Maritimes To Be Made By Air Officials. -__.__. (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL, July ZS-Jrrans- Canada Alr Lines’ coast-to-coivt Canadian flying service will not be established until a suitable weather forecasting system has been set up, Philip G. Johnson, vice-president in charge of operations, said to- day. After an initial survey flight of 2,550 miles from ‘Vancouver to Montreal. Johnson said such a qystcm was cf “paramount" neces- sity. "Thls service." he declared. "must be made available before regular sdicduled air service can commence." The vice-president conferred to- day with PmsiNnt S. J. Hunger- ford and other directors of the new company. A statement later said they dlscrsscd existing landing facilities, plans for new facilities and general plans for the initia- tion of a training program for pilots, co-pllota and ground per- sonnet. Training will be undertaken as soon as arrangements can be made. the announcement said, with the tinting program probably centred at Winnipeg. The vice-president said he plan- ned to continue his survey flights to other sections of Canada. in- cluding the Maritimes. The At- lantic provinces are not to be in- eluded in the service at its out- sct—thc original stretch will ‘be between Montreal and Vancouver ——but the Maritime: will be brought in later. Want llo More Favors From Men (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) ATLANTIC CITY, N. J-. July 23 -—The national federation of busi- ness and professional women re- rolvad today tiffenounce ani/‘spoo- ial favors accorded women by maculine - controlled government. and fight for strict equality of the sexes under law. By acclamation they voted to campaign for an amendment to the federal constitution which would bind Congress and the gov- erning bodies of every state, county and municipality to pass no laws 0r ordinances applying solely to women. The federation‘; board of direc- tors likewise opposed special luvs for women "since we believe sound legislation should be based on the nature of the work and not on the sex of the worker." Youth Found iioad llesr Wolfvlllc, ll. S. won't/run. n. s. only 93- (CH-Inquest into the death of Clyde Orowell. Wolfvllle youth who was found dead beside a rot"! near here last night. was odiourn- ed today until further evidence was available. According to evidence of witnes- ses at the inquest, Crowell spill!“ ently had been drinking when last ICED. o ' NURTH CHINA, Chinese Army Divis-j ion Withdrawn, But Nanking D e n ies Japanese Report Re Agreement. TOKYO. July Zk-(Saturday) -—-(CP-Havas)—A War Office communique outlining agree- ments reached with North China local authorities, coupled with reports that .Tokyo would send a special emissary to ne- gotiate a complete new settle- ment with Nanking, were tak- en here today as evidence of substantial improvement in Sine-Japanese relations. (By ‘The Associated Press) PEIPING, July ‘xi-Chinese and Japanese hatreds in North China, at boiling point for 16 days, ap- peared tonight to have cooled en- ough to make war in the near future unlikely. Reported withdrawal of the Chi- ncree 37th Division from the Palp- ing area changed the complexion of s. situation WliiCil has been close to war since soldiers of that unit and Japanese first clashed 10 miles west of Pelping the night of July 7. tAlthough Japanese Army ofllc- ers announced withdrawal of the 87th southward has been complet- ed. I-Iavas said it was reported the stubborn, anti-Japanese troops of the division had refused to quit the Marco Polo bridge and the “sacred soil" of Wanpinghsieu un- til Japanese forces fell back to Fengtal.) Is Peace Factor The withdrawal agreement met Japan's most urgent. condition for restoration of peace and marked beginning of Chinese fulfillment. of the four-year series of locaL-mlll- tary agreements by which the Japanese Army has steadily streng- thened its power in North China. The Japanese assert this agree- ment tvas made between their High Command and GcncralSung Chen-Yuan, head of the semi- autonomous North Chino. regime. They said he accepted its terms orally Sunday at 'I‘ientsln, then confirmed them in writing Monday at Peiping. The Japanese vcrslon said it provided for: lpElimination of persons “im- peding" Sine-Japanese relations. 2. Complete suppression of Com- munlsts. 3. Btricter control of anti-Japa- nese organizations and anti-Japa- nese education. t. Evacuation of the 37th divis- ion of General Sungfls 29th Army, which the Japanese said was hos- tile to them. (Japanese reports said the Cen- tml Chinese Government had ac- cepted General Snngs pact. At Nanklng, however. officials said the Nlmklng Government had not even seen the pact and could not have approved ltl. Experienced observers bclicvcd the North Clilna situation still held the seeds of grave trouble. Thev “lei Jgparrsmllitary strength there had been more than doubledJvhile there was no assurance of success in future negotiations seeking set- tlement of deep-rooted Chinese- Japanese clashes of interest. A Japanese Army spokesman declared: "We have no intention of shortening our lines". There were no indications that Japan in- tends removing about 0,000 rein- forcements. 50 olrploneo ind 6°"- sidorable war materials brought lnfp Hopeh Province since July 7. Bank Bandits lint $10,000 In Holdup otsrvmawp. July i8 -— (AP)- Four men held up five clerks and m; m- seven customers at a Cen- trfl National Bank branch today and mums with a sum estimated a; “p900 by bank officials. nomur usrs GANG 84.500 1571'. R. L. Jul 23- (Allii-Wglvskbantlits, armedy with revolvers and a stirred-off shot-gun held up two workmen and several clerks in the office of the Paw- tucket Manufacturing Company mday‘ goo); $4,500 from a‘safe and “wed 1n o, green sedblk Born Baby Slain ORANGEVILLE. 0nt.. a 43—Tho bodies of Mrs. July Annie llesuk, former Toronto domes- tic, and her two-day-old baby were found in their farmhouse in Mulmer Township, about, 30 miles northeast of here, by provincial police late today. Ephraim Lesuk. about 32, foreign-born husband of the dead woman, was held by p0. t lioe for questioning and was l l l brought to jail here after pe- Ilce responded to neighbors‘ l calls to investigate "trouble" at l the Lesuk farm. t William Ireland told police that Lesuk came to his home t shortly after noon and asked In broken English that police and o doctor be called on the tele- phone to the farm. [ Provincial Constable If. P. llammer found the bodies of Mrs. Lesuk and the baby, born Tlloofloy. lying on the floor. UUAliFCATIiSES , LITTLE DAMAGE} Business Carried On As Usual In Fair- banks.» FAIRBANKS, Alaska... July 28- Alaskatis displayed jauniy indiffer- ence today to the greatest earth- quake disturbance ever recorded in the territory. For nine hours yesterday many shocks, four of them severe. oc- curred over the interior from Fairbanks. 300 miles south, to Anchorage. Utility companies, banks and business houses carried on busi- ness as usual. ‘Only the liquor store failed to operate. The earth shock toppled bottles off shelves and broke them. Telephone lines broken during the first shocks were hastily re- paired. Total damage was esti- mated at a maximum of $5.000, mostly to the liquor store stock. An unconfirmed report said sev- cral houses were demolished and one person injured ivhcn a giant earth slide swept across 2.000 feet of the Richardson highway. Highway Accident Claims Two Lives .i&__ ______;___. ' remodels 550W AT junta-oi mvoiictflitt .1 PA S S Ell BY fBlillliiliilllii Law Relaxing String- f ent Marriage Act Is i Adopted After Long Struggle. LONDON, July 23—-(CP)—I1egls- lative action on one of the great social reforms of the century was completed by Parliament today when the House oi’ Commons gave third reading to the Matrimonial Causes Bill. . Tumbling “walls of Jericho“ that had stood for 80 years, the act. now requiring only Royal asscn’. the law in the light of . the greatest happiness for all in . marriage rather than in rigid ad- T herence to the conception of mar- riage as a lifelong monogamous union. It widens the grounds for div- orce to include desertion, crueltyi and insanity, sets up a three-year i period following marriage during! which no petition for divorce shall be entertained, broadens the grounds for annulment of mar- rlage to protect innocent pct-sons from the consequences of wrong:- doing by the other party prior to marriage, and makes it the busi- ness of the courts to look to the prospects of reconciliation of div- orce case principals and to the welfare of any children \\‘i\OS(‘ in- terests might stiffer. The bill strikes at the conniv- ance. condonatlon and collusion so widespread under the old law~thc "hotel bill" subterfuge so vigor- ously denounced by the Archbishop of Canterbury when the measure was before the House of Lords-fl and removes from law what has l come to be known as "legal black- l mall" by giving the respondent in divorce cases the right to apply for a decree nisl to be made absolute. Hitherto sometimes the petition- er has refused to make such ap- plication, leaving the respondent neither married nor able to marry again. The new law will become effec- tive Jan. 1, 193R. 1t will apply to England and Wales only. Scot- land and Northern Ireland have their own marriage laws. The final phase of the long struggle to get the mcastire through parliament ivas anti-cli- mactic in its quietness. Hy a show of hands, the Commons adopted 2i] ‘ l l i MONTREAL. July 23 — (CPl-A head-on collision tbetwcen two automobiles on a highway turn near Laprairie,Que., about_10milcs southwest of Montreal, brought death today to two men and ser- totis injury to three others. William Parker Dickson, 42, manager" of the Tcxton Chemical Company of Montreal and native 0f Greciihill, N.S., died soon after being rushed to hospital here, while Alex Fraser Cameron, 33, office manager of the Howard Smith Paper Company plant at" Bcatihnrnois, Qtic., died almost Iii- stantly. In hospital licrc tonight under observation were Capt. J. B. Weir, 32, and William Bcveridge, 27.bo'.h of Montreal. B. R. Bingham of St. Johns, Que, suffered severe burns. Advances Plan 0f Reconstruction LONDON, July 23-». four-year- ald plan calling for almost com- plete reconstruction of Great Bri- tain at o. cost of 01.000.000.000 Q4,980,000,000) has been advanced by Major Ernest Matthews, secre- tary to the Institute of Registered Architects. Matthews, who has enlisted the support of scientists, architectural experts and members of parlia- amcndments made by the House of Lords and the measure, which started its legislative journey diir- ing the reign of King Fldivard VIII was enacted. lillIClIiill"S Estate ' uoestooaogater, l(;.l_‘. By Guardian's spot-ta. h-rr) BOLAJGNA, Italy, July ‘um-Seven year old Ecitra Mareuti. bee-amt- one of the world's wealthiest. chit-l dren today by virtue o1 iicr illlll-l ers will naming her sole rcsiuuaiyI tcgatee t0 his cslutc, COll§Cl'Vilil\'U-. ly estimated at $25,000,001». Marconrs widow will enjoy the usufruct of one-fourth oi the cs- tate until their daughter becomes o1’ age. The three children by his first wife, Denla, Juglo and Clola, rece.ve the minimum amountsstip- . ulated by Italian law. I Body of the man who gave they world wireless telegraphy was} placed today in the famhy vault. I Three hundred thousand rest-i dents of this industrial city, his; birthplace, paid their last respvcls,‘ as the cortege moved to the 14th, Century Monastery where iiiiul, rim were held. The body had or—' rived earlier today from Route, where the inventor died ‘Tuesday. Injuries To Local merit, estimates the plan would absorb almost all the country's unemployed. Some of the projects under the proposed scheme: Steel and concrete tunnels be- tween Scotlsnd and Ireland, by way of Port Patrick and Donag- hadee, between England and the continent, by way of the Goodwin Bands, Hampshire. and the Isle of Wight, and across the mouth of the ‘Thames and the Firth of Funh. Concrete arterial roads through- Youth ilot Seriousi (By The Canadian Press) SAINT JOHN. N. l1.. July 23 —lhrry Lapthorne, (llurlctte- town, P. E. 1-. nu discharged from hospital here today fol- lowing a highway accident yes- terday when the car he was driving was aide-swiped by an- other near Petitcodlac. Lap- thomda our went into the out the country. Rejuvenation of the canal sys- tem for economical transport In which good is not essential, ’ ditch. Escaping with ntlnor lnjuriemhe was driven to hoe- pital In! was able to leave to- ‘ . _'_ l RA-[Tfiyg Franco ’s Forces .;..."a;.;;.. Four Mil p, rAre Harled Back ____.__. POTTSVILLJS, Pa, July g;- tAPr-Rescue workers, digging icverishly with pick and shovel, matched four miners trapped by a’ ..ill of coal this afternoon and ilitsscti blankets through a hole to inc int-n and reported they were lilliltlfi. Tons of coal and rook blocked tlic miners in a ‘TOO-foot shalt they had (illg in the side of a bank at Llcivcliyii, 31-1! tnilcs from Potts- villc. 'l‘lic root caved in. Fellow illlllt‘l'5 rushed to clear a wuy and alter a short time es- tablished conununlcatlotis with the men through a hole in the ground. The trapped miners nere Arthur Artz, 26; Al Acttlcy, 40; Albert; wise, 24., and Ralph Neidlinger,‘ 45. Tuo others, Joseph Segar and Licnrge Pelfford, were working tiutsitlc the makeshift mine. Sega!‘ ivettt itisldc to visit the four and saw tlicin shut off by the collapse; of the roo. 1-1e sounded the alarm’ The cave-in was somewhat similar to that which cost the life of Herman MaGlll of Toronto in the old Moose River gold mine at Moose River. N. S. llllltililii t s, IN l0RONl0c Joseph T. Clark, Edi- tor Of Star, Suc- cumbs 'l‘0 Heart At- tack. i(‘.l'. By (iuardiaxfs Special Wire) ‘TORONTO, July 23—Joscph T. Clark. chief‘ editorial writer of the ‘Toronto Daily Star for tiearly 40 . years. died early today at ilLi stim- ‘ Iflcl‘ home at Go Home Bay, Mus- lzoka district. Ho was 70 years old and active until a week ago when he suffered a severe heart attack. Mr. Clark rose to the edtorshlp of the Daily’ Star during a news- paper rurcct" that started when he was lfi. Fresh from public school he was apprenticed to the println8 trade in llesherton, Ont, where he was born and raised. He moved to Tot onlo a few years later. For 50 yctirs he wrote editorials for ’I"orotito publications and for thc Pickering News, a “Wkly PB- pcr which lie and his brfli-llfl!‘ James bought in 1888. In the little Pickering composing room Mr. Cla a set h:s editorials in type by luuitl. When he moved to Toronto lic ivrolc iiith pencil and never lcttrncd to use a typewriter. i In 1891 he went to W. F. Mac- lCllll, owner of the Toronto World. and asked for a job as reporter. Iii- stcatl. he was put to work writin§ editorials. He joined the Star in, 1890 and. except for three Will's spent. with the Saturday Night». T0- roiito weekly PllbilUilLlOll, his work was all for the Star. A life-long Liberal. Mr. Clark was not a violent itarti-san in P011- tlt-s. Hs friends said only during: the (‘ircat War ditl lic write bitter-j ly. From the hionient the German- nrmy invaded Belgium, he was] whoclieavtcdly‘ in ‘the struggle on. the sltlc of the allies. i llo is stirvivcd by three sorts,’ Gregory, Joseph and Arthur. The funeral will hc licltl Saturday M‘ ternoon with burial at Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Rebel Cruiser Fires 0n Refugee Ship (By The Associated Pres!) BORDEAUX. France, July 23- The British Steamship Macgregfll‘. which reported it had drawn the fire of a Spanish Insurgent war- ship. arrived off Bordeaux tonight with 1.500 refugees from Santan- nyury In Cave - inl dcr. Mcmbcrs of the staff said the vessel was flrcd upon by the cruis- er Almirantc Cervera. soon after leaving the North Spanish port nut proceeded safely. Thanksgiving Day Monday Cot. ii OTTAWA, July Zii-Thanksgiv- lng Day thLs year will be Monday. Oct. l1. A proclamation published to- night in the Catiada Gazette set that date “as a day of general thanksgiving m Almighty God for the bountiful crop and other bless- ings with u'lilcli Canada lins been favored this year." Lest year Thanksgiving Day was observed Oct. 13. West Of Madrid 12 Enemy Plait-cs- Reported Des- troyed In Government Offensive —— Rebel Guns Bombard Capital. (If l’ .II-.'.li N (ffirpyriglrl, I937, Iiy Th MADRID, July Government forces had cut a of the former least l2 enemy war plant-s. A defence commtuiiquc st divisions participating in the lost half their men. ‘Six Insurgent planes were A others were reported burned covered another enemy hasc 0n the Loyalist squadrons were credited the railwznv stations at Cfl|Zllilll,V()l'0 Although at least 12 personsi were killed under the lotig-riiiigcl bombardment, Matlrllcnos regarded the day's fortunes of war a5 bal- ancing heavily in their favor. Government troops opened the day with a slashing drive against Navalagamclla. some l9 miles. west-northwest of Madrid. They forced the Instirgcnts to retreat in disorder and soon were entrencht d in buildings on the village's out- skirts. The successful dcubIe-barreled effect. While carving out another slice of In- surgent territory to add to the Government. salient, it forced Franco's commanders i0 send re- inforcements to their lcft flank. thereby iveakeniiig their strength in the Bruncte-Villantit-va dc la Canada sector. , Rebels Claim Success y in‘ drive had a‘ (Insurgent sources claimed Navalcsrnero today that Franco's troops were in almost complete. possession of Bruncte. l5 mles west of Madrid, alter righting] their way into its outskirts). , t Madrid was given another biiicr taste of the war under the thuu- t demus barrage sent into the city by Insurgent guns. Three men met sudden death in the Rite Arcnal when a hich-potvered shell scored a direct hit on their automobile. Inyalists Capture flue-sea HFINDAYE, FRANCO-SPANISH‘ BORDER, July ZII-MPM-Spanlsh _ Instirgents tonight declared their forces, seizing the offensive in the great battle for Madrid, iverc re- tlticltig the Government's new salient on that front and had penetrated into the important town of Brunclc. From the Aragon front, hou- cvcr, came reports of an Instirgcut setback. These said Governmcnt' forces captured Httcsca ‘Tlicreivas no confirmation, and soon after the reports began to circulate the Instirgent authovitlcs" closed the frontier. This step has been taken before when intporiant develop- ments were impending. Huesca, l5 miles west of cclona, has Ion: been the jective of Catalan forces with the Madrid-Vzfencin gimc. Bar- ob- allied Ils- MADRID, Jilly 23 JAPI --'l‘l‘c 100.000 youngsters of hfadrltl are going back to school this faii war or no. Said Jesus I-Icrtiantltv. of education: "Ten thousand new schools a‘.- rcady are functioning in lovnlirr- ritory. 'I‘hcrc are more than I00.- 000 children in Madrid, belonquig to families who refused to l‘\'.’1‘il- ate. and these will have selunwv..- Pvcn if it is necessary‘ in npr-n. them under the fire of cut-my hnt- ; tcrics." minister Toronto Selected Air Line Terminal TORONTO, July 23--tCPi_- Tomnto will be an eastern ter- , minal for the ‘Trans-Canada Air] Lines. Controller Prod Conboy, chairman of the Clvc A‘rpnl't Committee. said today. l "There are two starting paints in the east." controller Conboy said. "One is at Montreal and the , other at Toronto. Big Transports! will leave Toronto and g0 direct to the west. Toronto pnsscnyzers will not have to change plmies." The Controller said there also would be a direct connecting scr- vlce between Toronto, Otiaivaatid Montreal,.but that it would not be part of the Trans-Catiada ser- vice. 23 . (UP-Hams) bombardment of hiadrid was tiilset Government Capif moroy bases by Government raiders, it was said. l the total 'l‘tlltui\'i(>. .Iii._\' ‘.1 and lllltinllllllll tt-utpt" vl.'l0l‘1l1 ftt-gina Edmouitvii \Viii " Halifax. (‘liairlttitct-vt I tiiiF1('.-\.~ l' iwllFlillllt‘ h.» anti West yllllti :0‘ ",. -~ lilllir, n...- , . I ,il..~ ill'll'iili". ..' i001 .1; ll Sui: w Ls tin. (wt-t. . ‘i i7 and rl c.» it‘Illf\l‘l'(l\\' innvi. a‘ 477, 1.1:! ll'ill'if‘i' Ill-it'll I . . Jiilv ROLL/N) c Ilarus Neil-s .i_!/t'rl('_|/) (‘tintiuucti insurgent tonight. by reports c in the siege lines west zil. and had destroyed at ho] alt-ti some of the itisuruent hzttilt- west oi Matiriti illlfi Avila and Six vcrnnient pilots dis- Aiberehe ‘river. with having attacked peza and hlcrida. destroyed at the when (lo Ti Report Canadians Spending M o rc group out» or. t l.i'.-' clicqttt- lIl l than iii i930 eitu o.’ Stat haul»: (it-bi: liliTililU mm; . , 000 in ilu- just. six months- of . year, The l‘ " nuts attithtntco t0 grcntct" iii l .1" and liiulit-npri. .\l. l ililiti. in tlu- :1! (111212. whom ‘H. illlilliilm‘ “'11s Ill "l of Mi per cent liij-lier. }i.t t-remerl mo‘ per lt-rr. per t-i-iii illlii f: . . I if-o Saree. ‘ 4o Leno on Youo. OWN FEET ‘ii-inn (m: OTHER FEM-owe! utrr ivs-Ttt/(Tiitu _ lllAlTH nutty SUYWBIFRHQ)! are l:i.'y (lays m got plenty of H-q, in the tropics cvt i)" , tin: iulzes tiiiic ' out iltllll work iui‘ il-ip. Mid- (ih_\' sit-sins sup- ply rest lost at tiigiit if hed- yiiunv. tit-c lint. Bcwairc of slut-ping undt-r fans or in tirnft.‘ IL Ill. | II. Ifl. ‘Tormeuiine ll m. dull! . Imillrl a. m.. p. m. anti Gfitl p. except Sunday.