MAXIMS OI-‘A MERE MAN can happen today. whatever can happen at anytime f cbnlottetown Guardian Two Cent! llornlnl Guardian, Founded 1887 %I/ ///' The People's Paper ----~*" Covers Prince Edward . Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody CHARIDTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1936 rlfi; $112; “£21m CAPTURE OF 101.1500 Government issues Plea To Republic Plan To Make Madrid lmlzregnable Fort- ress Against Rebel Attack. My. By Guardionfs Special Wire) MADRID, Sept. 28 (Monday)—tA. PJ-lt was officially reported today the insurgents had taken the city of Toledo and relieved the fascists besieged in the old Aicazar fortress for nearly 10 weeks. (Gen. Francisco Franco. Com- mander of the Fascist forces, had declared tn a. communique issued §u|1dfly night at Burgos tiiat tlic insurgents had captured Toledo and liberated the Alcazar dCfOndDfa. (The latest dispatches direct from n; tCoritirluecl on Page 3) commomrviims L-675U-26-2i. Morell Wednesday- L-6750-20-2i. "ililkics- "The Zion Guild Concert is 1105i.- Dedicatels Battle Standards polled lnltll October 15th. L-ti7tl9-1i. "Special dailoo MacMillali j liotei tonight, IlOVtJILlCS. b45815 "Seven Mile Bay Tilesdiiy Sept- ember “9111, usuul diiilcc Wellington ofCllUtlitl. L-6812-9-28-2i "Hal-lien, Friday Oct. ‘Jud card pa: ' the home of Mr. and units McAleei". L-QB11-9-28-2i "Grand Bazaar Hope River Wed- nesday Sept. 30th. Supper 6 P. .\i. bingo, stile of goods etc. L-6814-9-28-3i "Gecrgelowil players prcsiilt ihtlr pkg; Kelly's Cross llal‘, lus- dill‘ Sept. 29th, vcry bust spec "i.- Stczal cvcniilg L-titidT-9~..3 12s -2i ' Aldcn hlozvc KPUSl luloil, Ever- ett Huslani. Ellie llti, A. ‘ WNUOCR. liliiiter River. bilyilllz live hog»- Tiltsday i\>l'L‘l‘l001l Scpienlbri" 2011i. Signed A. E. wedlock, L-(Yiltl-ZS-Zi. "Scotchfort l\l;‘lllOi‘i.'ll Alcrilnl.’ lit Monumcilt .\lc ay, Sept. 28th, 4.30 P Society ,' Grounds. M. B)‘ L-GTZO-D-ZS-lii. P.l-~D0li\'t‘l‘9d from the uilgllty g c, six Lililcllbiirg scatncn l I . picccs oil n. rocky for the mammoth demonstration. Threats hurled at Russia by Adolf Hitler and the startling report that secret war orders had been issued to millions cf Ccrmuns gave grim significance. io this ceremony performed by Der Fuehrer at the annual Nazi congress in Nuremberg. The German dictator is Harrowing Experience. LUNENBURU, N.S., Sept. 27-10 sea ill a ;l 1131116 today. but their , thc tilrcc-inasicd SCIIOOIICX‘ Vlll: g0 Qurcn had been pounded to shore of St. Mary's Bay. The village Queen went aground “Loading live hogs, lambs and calves at Kcllsingloii Thursday llloriliilg Oct. 1st; Nicholson Bflhavl lutllili: at Hlilltfl‘ River sziiiie tlalc.' 5w I-ITY-‘rtfil tilid Cainp‘".l l L-oela-u-zs-zil ,. "York Little Theatre Players are 011 the road with the 1936 show. Paving at Uigg. Thursday, October and Kclisiiiltton, Nlnilday, Oct. \\':itch for posters lil your (flaili- "you". L-osoo-ll. "Eastem King's Livestock Ship- lf-K club will hold a meeting in little Pond school house Wednes- ‘lli’ evening September 30th at 8 “Yllwk General agricultural ‘ubifcts will be discussed, especi- llli‘ livestock breeding and market- llli- All farmers invited to attend. L-6809-9-28-2i "Care should be exercised in ndilng lambs when being ship- W w the miirkct. Never lift by ~W0ol. Lamb carcasses other- "Il-‘G by choice quality are practic- ally ruined by this inhumane "ltihod of handling. Livestock "titties 308N1- Lesio “"308 Prices have been weaken- ! during the past three weeks. It n, honed the bottom has been nlflled. Individual marketing of Elli. unfinished hogs only tends to oflflta prices still further snip m Y well finished hogs of choice m“ Welshi-s and sell oo-opcrs- ‘Sm’ ll You want maximum returns Id. Livestock Marketing Balm-i 14-6810 ileur St, .\Iiiry's Cope ill a driving storm late ’I‘liursdiiy lllghi’ While T9" turning to Liilleiiburg lroln B08101! where she had taken a cargo of lumber. ‘ llli‘il a rd. one of them mod b3. illness, were forced to leave tllc ship immediately because it tllreaitclictl lililiute iii the storm. They fixed ti lilrbclt zirountl the cook, 30-year- uld Plllilz- Croft, joined themselves to break up tiny together by lines, and jumped over- Torrential Rains l slioivii as he dedicated battle standards of storm trooper units massed i l Crew Escape As, Vessel Is Lostl Six sit-i; After board. The ship struck a. shoal hundreds | of feet off shore and the men were l forced to bultlc llcavy, pounding. sens which threatened to slum tllclii , against a cliff face they llllli to j climb before rcaclliilg stifciy. Coicl and lost, they ivcildcred in; circles until daybreak in scorch of‘ some settlement. Finally they found l the homc of ii mail ilanied Fruuttcii and stayed tllcrc ull Friday recov- ering from the effects of their ex- periences. Saturday, they left for Luilenbcurg after The six nieii, all from Luncnburg County, were: Cnptalil Andy Publi- covcr, 21, William Publlcovcr, 18. mate. Purvis Croft cook, 30. Ciirnlnn Hardy, Lemuel Adams, Harold Oxner seamen. IDNDON-(CP)—"Hfty swan is an age whentmen sometimes losc confidence in themselves," said Coroner Philip Barlow, lit ah in- quest on a mail of that age who sulcldcd, dumping through o. win- dow. Cause Heavy Damage In , Texas DALLAS. Tcx., Sept. 27—Tw0 thousand psrsoils were homeless at Waco, 00 miles south of here, this afl/ernooil when l\ Brazos rlvcr levee save wny under the crush of fioodwul/ers and inundated the en- tire eastern part oi the city. Tile levee broke a mile above town and sent. a. torrent of flood- water into a residential section. City Manager W. C. Terrence of Waco said he believed all person! had been removed or warned to lciive the endangered area before the water hit. ‘There refugee sta- tions ivrie set up with Naiioila‘. guard field kitchens to care for the “ melesst Waco is a city of 60,000 just be- low the junction of the Brazos and Basque rivers. Tile streams were still rising this afternoon and vast damage was feared if they should continue upward. Many families were rescued by boats. The Brazos river reached its highest stage near Waco since 1913 at 38.23, 1i. feet over flood stage. Raine in the watershed since early yesterday, amounted to eight inches. ' Elsewhere in the stoic four per- sons were dead and strrims were turned into destructive torrents as the result of _j.orrential rains yes- . leader: ‘servers predicted the Government. 3 Chamber of D:putier. reporting the i shipwreck in Meteghail. , terday and todg Wins Support In Initial Move To ilevalue Franc Committee Approves Blum Program. Will Ban Transfer 0i _ Gold. ‘BY CHARLES FOLTZ Copyright 1936 by the Associated Press PARIS. Sept. 2'1 - (AP) — The French Government, today sent w parliament its program for devalu-l irig the franc, banning the transfer-l of god and readjusting salary levels. I Premier Blum won first appravall for the program when the Chamber of Deputies Finance Committee in- dicated its gndorzemerit of the pool- dcrous text covering devaluation measures with what officials called “few minor changes." The committee voted 20 to 12 in favor of the otirrenoy realignment. Seven Communists did not vote. All Socialist and Riixiical Socialists vot- ed "yes"! Centrtsis and Rightists "no." Sources close to the Government‘ said the cabinet hoped to obtain final approval of the text. by both Houses of Parliament by Wednes- day. The Premier himseff explained to Socialirt deputies. who pledged com- plete support, details ‘of the accord with Great Britain and the United States to refrain from currency manipulation against the franc. Asked whether the new franc would be exchangeable for god, Blum said such would be possible "as soon as the stabilization period ended." Vincent Auriol. Minister of Fin- ance, to'd the Flllfl-HCQ Committee that customs and duties on certain commodities would be lowered by decree in an effort to prevent price increases The nation was repcrtxl quiet throughout the day, with political prodaimiug the Govem- merit majority 1n parliament sill. is safe. Wiih Communists expected to sup-l port the currency lcallgiiment, 0b- wciild have all easy majority in the F o re st Fires Menace Oregon, (A. l‘. By Guardian's Special Wirb) MARSHFIELD. Scpt. 27—-At least five persons ivcre reported dead and several others were in- jured today as fires sweeping Oregon and Northern California forests forced evacuation of a town of 1,500, threatened to cause abandonment of another of 2,730, and menaced numerous other communities. The coastal town of Brandon, 0re., 3B miles from here, was rc- porled practically destroyed and its residents, their escape by land cut off by flames, fled to safety in boats. Mayor lid Capos of Ba-ndon predicted the death list would reach 20 ' with. tnciuandii of acres of timber consumed, in addition to the damage to settlements and logg- ing camps, danmge mounted rapidly, but there were no authori- tative estimates. PEAKED BURIAL ALIVE LLANDAFT‘, Walov-(CP) - Be- cause he feared burial alive. Albert C. Macintosh directed his body be not buried until indisputable signs of decomposition set in. Monetary Situation AtA Glance By the Associated Press PARIS -- Chamber of Deputies Finance Committee approves Gov- errunentls program for dcvaluiilg franc. prohibiting gold export and readjusting salaries, which will bc considered ln parliament Monday. Unofficial reports says Britain and the United Slates ilegotiatiiig long- i time agreement for ‘adjustment of . dollar and pound to complement Anglo-Franco - American stabilia- tion accord. Berna - Governing body nounces Swiss franc Will he valuated about 30 per cent. . MOSCOW-Soviet Siate Bank asserted United States Treasury statement that. Russia attemptecll to weaken stsrliilg through sale of £1,000,000 in sterling Saturday was “an absurd invention." The Soviet bank asserted the sterling was sold, _. under instructions to obtain m? best price, to replenish its dollars account with a New York bitllk through which a regular payment to a Stockholm film was arranged. WASHINGTON - Government financial sources predict treasury may revise gold export rcgulanozis to pennlt. freer gold movement be- l tween France, Brifciiil and United States. ROME-Italian stock and money markets to be closed Monday, T1105. day and Wednesday, wrh import. ant financial decisions expected, Political sources say devalimtlon not likely. . LONDON - Financial observers 59° DOssibIlity of ivorld currency conference as outgrowth of French devaluation program and tri-power accord. with definite values to be fixed for currencies of many m. tlons. AMSTERDAML Dutch Govern- ment plans announcement of do. valuation measures tomorrow. BERLIN-Finance lvllnistry of. ficlal says mark will not be devalued, an- de- .____________ Beer And Wine Sale 0n Trains; Board a To Take ilfiice Thursday Revision 0f Relief Grants To Be Made At End 0f Month. till‘. By Guardian's Special Wirel OTTAWA, Sept. 27~tC PJ-Tho new Board 0f Directors of the Can- aciiail National Railways, under the Chairmanship of S. J. Huhgerford. . take over the management of the system on Thursday. Oiie c1 the Board's first dcclsiigzs likely will be regarding the compensation members of the retiring board of trustees will receive. Hon. C. D. llolvc, Minister Transport, stated tiltlay the tlccisioli-ivould rest with the new directors. The retiring chairman of the Board of Trustees, fromer Judge C. P. Fullerton was engaged for seven you .. iuld took over Jail.1,1984. His zissocilltcs were J. Edouard Labellc and F. K. Morrow. Tilt cud of the prcscilt. month will bring up the question of the amount, of grants in aid for relief proposed the Provinces will receive froiii the Dominion for the cirmiiig quarter. The amounts are subject to revision every quarter. Ill April they were 1111i; 15 per cent and in July 1O per rent on the ground the Dominion public ivorks was helping the enl- piuylileiit situation. The grants probably will tic up for considera- tion when the Cabinet meets Tues- do). 'f‘lic Cabinet will also have before it the vacancies in the Quebec judi- ciary. Hon. Eriiset Lapolnte, Minis- Miilistcr, was out. of the city over the week-end but will be back to- morroiv. Y Appointment of Hon. N. W. Rowell as chief Justice of Ontario will also necessitate naming a chief counsel for the Dominion when the constitutionality of the reform legislation is argued before the Privy Council iii London, likely in November. Mr. Rowcli was chief counsel when the cases were before the Supreme Coiurt of Canada. lion. C. A. Dunning, Minister 0i l Finance returned today fiom a visit I s A o c a t e d l to his constituency in Prince Ecl- WINNIPEG. Scpt. ‘.26 'CPl -~ Amendment of the British Ivirtll l America Act to permit sale ofi beer and ivlilc on traiizs operating _ across interprovilzcial bflllllflfll'lf‘.\‘ is on object of the Canadian Hotels I Association. At the closing session of tllc As- l SDClfltl011‘S'i&lli1llZlI convention her:- las‘. night. delegates iliged illliforlll liqllor laws throughout Canada and suggcsted infringement of provincial rights by pcrniltiillg sale of beer and wine on railways be overcome by constitutional amendments. Lloyd A. Mtinley of Vailrotlvcl‘ was elected president. Other officers included: Howard A. Fox, Niagara Falls. Ont, first vice-president; F. H. Fmppvr. Mon- treal, second vire-prcsideilt; Jack’ W. Connell, Toronto, managing di- rector. , Directors for 1936-37: Miss Mar- guerite de Gussene, Harrison Hot Springs, BC: W. C. Kchoe and Charles ‘Pmullwclser, Calgary; George Grant, Rfgina; A, G, gm». tnther, Montreal: H. Ci. Brown. Charlottetown; J. Van Wywk, Ot- . tawa, and T. R. Ches-ter, Winnipeg. CHURCH OBJECTED LEWIS, Hebrides — tCPb-Fear- ing children may fall to the tempta- tion of ‘cinema-going, so hurtful to the youth of today". the Free church Presbytery has protcstcdj against school children being tak- ivzird lsliind. _ » Killed Instantly In Mine Rock Fall STERLING, NS.. 301311. 27»tCP) 5 ~-Buricd under toils of copper ore in an uililcrgrouiid rock full. Victor fan Cosky ZG-yral-old “lilllilpcg driller. \\‘.1.\' killed lllsihllf)’ Satur- day iil a. mule owned by Brliilsh Afctals‘ Corporation. Tile Wmniprg miner was stand- ing on the minus shoot when a platt- form loaded with nllllings gave way ii." '._v above lilill. Crushed and suffmatrd. he was dead ivllcil fel- low workers 1'0lli"ll(‘(l him. Stabilization BY JOSEPH SHARKEY Annotated Press Foreign Staff GENEVA. Sept. 27-rAP) -—-The League of Natimls. izlfomml ob- servers believed t0d.iv. is ready to concentrate on lurking an inter- national moiletanv stabilizxtlon agreement. Urgency of relaxili: the resu-ic- tlone upon imports by various m- tions, oiticitifls raid ltere, will be sfr$8d M next week's sessions of the Assembly by the league econo- tlon of cimvneits of the Witlitl. '1 mic committee. Lrgue financial experts raved the lief that this ivas a ))“.(“.l'. laclm lWJ)‘ for currency stabilization. it‘ in the tieveicpliicnt of international 0n idles “educational travel" time. lwaa said hero, by repeated warn- exchange of goods and eervima the Trifles make up the ilfllipillflbs or MAXI MS OFA MERE STAN IIIASBT)’ of mortal life. Annual Siilntrrlptilm DI-llrcrcd $1.00 By Mull lfunlidu and U. b‘. A. $4.50 l 5 YeaFoZd Child lln l lilew Railway? Trflppe‘? 3g urnzng ta e Fire Started By Child Playing With Matches In Straw-piled I Outbuilding. Bereaved Parents l l l Ramsay. , Are Mr. And Mrs. Clarence i Eleanor, =i _vcurs and it." Eleanor and 2i younger Mrs. (‘lzircilce Ramsay, (‘oniitivg terdziy afternoon in u fire ivliirii with matches in her father‘.- burn. brother zigcd months old child of Ur. and ivzis burned to dcziih yes- shc started while playing 1h 1'09. and two older brothers iigcd six and seven ivcrl- plilving in the lnm ' ‘ . r about three (ft-luck. Iilciiniii‘ illld secured matches and set lire to ihtfstrziiv, which quickly blazed up. Realizing what she had clone the ‘ child hid in the hay at the bar-l; or the barn. Her brothers ran ill to lcll their Il10lil-"l' who Wll-S alone in tho house, tlloothcrs halving gone to church. Mrs. Ramsay rail out With i1 dip. i per of water thinking lt was bu: a slight blaze, only to find the barn in flames and the roof afire. MOTHER'S Fli.»\f\"i‘i(‘ Ei-‘FOIVFS She tried in vain to rtacil hoi- child through the partition in llle other side of the b. Allllnuqli she could reach the girl with ‘ her hands shc c! l- not pull hcl‘ ‘ through. Her efforts ivcrc retarded by the other‘: lrcll who wollid ‘.10: tried sister . Finabflv il1‘i{.'lll)01'S came and two men entered the burning barn ll) recover the llillC oilc but coilld not to frautlczlliv thon- Slit. At last llll hop.- wa» rlbzilldrlnvci and efforts were convv saving lKljllCCllb bull: The lit-ll liousr- at u"_—_: 0Z1 ill. rial‘ of the lContiililctl on Page 3i 7 drowned When Gar Plunges Into Pond lA-l’. By (iuiirdiuifs >p HALEYVILLE an, sop ' l win-l eighth escaped today ivllcil Z111 i1 z mobile, out of control, rulb-d b ivnrd duwil a lizll liil.o 1i illill pt» near hcrc. ' effort t0 rescue ills cillilpii. trudged to a iarni house iilu u livviiy to glvc 11t‘\\‘.\ of illc tzacvtijr The clcod: John Sprtidlltlg. ~10, uwllci- ti; 1i." automobile: Slim Vvillnit Ll‘l‘_ ill. diivcr of llic cur; Auvir ' 1A1". H. sirtlk‘ of Wiliilic; .\il.\.\ .\1. Blziskstock, 1R; Al.» \'\';1 Blackstock, 16; Annie Luiului Blunt;- stock. 13. Nolan (Jlco l‘i\s.\_v_ 1!). Thurston Smith, :2, l‘.\t'lll\4‘Ll. iii- was riding iii the balk scat of l‘ automobile iii ivliirll his Ctllllpil . ions were rctilrlling to tlicir rural hcnles from a fair. League‘ To Seek Monetary Agreement stay at; ll silfc yilstallcc as I111)‘ too‘ sce for dense smoke from bilrlltizuj tcr of Justice and acting Prime l Straw and lm" P..\~Sc\'cii persons (ivoulicd mill nil The clghlll paacligcr, aflcr n \'-.i.ll gllew Waterford i Goal Strike Ends P , 1 NEW WATERFORD, N.S.. Sept. l27—lQPi—Procluction at the Do- liilinion Coal Conlpailys two New lwntcrlord collierlcs. kept icllc by o. l S".1'lk(‘ for about a week, will be re- sumed toiliolroiv with both mines working at oapiicity, rcsidclit sup- lblilllfidlfitlll’. Harry Hines said to- l iliqllt. l No. 12 ookileijv hoisted coal Sat- l llrday for the first time since Sept. 1B. The pic's 1.100 employees ivalk- cd out in sylilpfillly n'ir.h Loilgvvall workers seeking a "duffulu" rate‘ increase. and 900 mbiers at No. 16 colliew ]0ll‘.C‘d them Sept. 21. l l l l l XFFENDS RALLY ST. CATHARINES, ONT.. Sent. 27--—‘CP'»_In e. drizzliilg rain, 3.000 nlenlbvrs of the Holy Name Society . ntl-ndell a rally of societies in the 5:. Catharines deanery. Arcllllasltol) J. C. MbGuigan gave the bcnctllrtleii after the menlii.rs_ Wiiuf Makes Ail one llousi: LooK NEW: Bu‘! N01’ so with on one (ill-flu! Sfaritim-r Inst: Strong southerly to ivesterly winds: einutiy with oc- casional rain: prr-luihly soml‘ T012 .‘liilI]t‘\\ii.\i cooler at iiiliiit. ‘ ']‘(yll()f\"l‘tl Sign. ‘J7 - iCPl - I ltilntnlunl and .\l‘.lXll1lll!ll tellllvera- l lures: lllntvinl: -. ~~ -—— —— — —— 4" 5'3 Altlzliuk ~ —- -— —— —— — — 3“ 33 lPltlilluYt-n _ - - ~ — H 1v ‘Regina —--——-—-45im 5t] reneivcd their vows. ‘ lillgs that economic co-onri-tl.t.v.il El- (lll-'“"~‘ T “ _ — _ "‘ '“ m’ .' {worn ngfilolig wily (sec ial fl‘ cli‘ - bimlllfill “ “ — _ ‘_ " ’“ H 5“ l were to be averted, QllYlW" - — " - — — - _ 4“ l" l Adjustment. of ll‘ l ‘l' c1‘ 50ml -7‘l‘“ _ “ ~ “ _ ‘l3 a‘; Ilevcls is divcliimi lull n the llflill-"W m‘ -— "' "“ "' 43 54 iLt-aguels finallcia‘. Obsfi‘ l» \\.ll'll- Fli=irlutlclir~vli~ ~-~ ~~— — 44 53 ed; and should 1).. supplrliicxlcfi. by Tilgll "ti" till‘ 11101731"? T" ~46 and tonight. iii . Sim z-"ts tlli- t'\'f“llll?‘,‘ at Ti s tonlnn-rnv inerilillc a.’ - f..i~i quarter nloon \\'n<lr".-"=<’.a\'. ; '7, R28 em Sunliil~i'.:'!<- title 1R nilixxilc. ‘hail Cllzlrlcttztcnvn Tiir. f‘\ii ritnnr Imaiel Borden v.16 A. .'tl. I I‘. 3L, a Ill i‘. Si. Lriivri Tnrmentlne ll A. 3|. 2.55 P. ‘IL, 0.46 P. Al. Dally Qlcept Sunday. “lowering of trnxli- i.)'ll'l'l(‘l‘~ and the abolition of (‘lll‘i‘\"l1(‘_\' l-eslldezioixs.‘ Rmumptioii of lllt-rrilaiivulal l"ll<l- K ing was flflVflllCfd here a‘ one of ti‘? ‘most desirable lvsllifi of stain (i lat- Leaguc comliiittcc here ~,lr.ite.\=- d l-c- v r1 f. t; - s. i .‘ c t . l» 9t