. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN u mission and upon this u“ ‘ and philosophy "upon, science, agree. A h-ylottetovvu Gulrdlun Two Cont: STRATEGIC Hlll MADRID, pineal romplete possession ol’ Hill ,\'o. 6G0, captured in their advance yesterday, by repulsing Govern- merit troops who tried to retake it in s bloody battle tonight. Close-quarter fighting was des- perate during the day, when Gov- grnment infantry twice driven hy withering machine gun rnd rifle fire back down its slopes. The (iuvcrnment said insurgent reinforcements from Vlllafrunca prl Cllslllli) finally forced the Gov- ‘ irnmeni troops to abandon their BITOHs‘ to capture the strategic hill. The ii:.i is east of Vlllanueva De in Canada, which lies about 15 miles vcrst of Madrid. The town was taken in the Government drive two weeks ago, The insurgents before daybreak rdianeeri u-estward in an effort to rapture Villanueva De La Canada liltl cut through a Government sal- lerll to ricmoraiize defenders of Gotertzrnent-hekl Bruncte a few miles south. The Government re- ported £75 forces not only defend- rd Viliaitueva do la Canada, but ilso were able to launch several plultcrut Zduks‘. MADRID. July 21 (AP) Government troops plunged into a new rlrzre against Villafraircs Del Castillo tonight, attempting to widen the litittleneck of their we:- lern salirnt thrust into the In. tlirgent hues besicging Madrid, ‘Ihougli Insurgent bflttgflps P0111001 Qlliiorna on the west and Bruneie at the salient‘s southern llll, Geiitial Jose Miaja launched rile vallatk to break almogt a git: stalemate in the battle REBIIL LOSSES rrnavv Government officers said the In- lreents had lost. 10,000 melt, dead l" “Ylilllldcd, in the fighting west . rrir. “Wiiivllt Gains of a half-mile "in ilr-ar Brunete Sunday and n ‘l mffllmklllg Vlllaneuva dc "W lv-stvrday were said by ivrriliiiciit officials to be "n- iiiiicirnt compared with the In. "gent losses of men and war sun. “S. llmost a week's fighting left the vcmmcnt still in command (tf it oi Th.- tcrritory won i0 clays roreriiirtciit officials estimated Ill-‘lllizcnts had thrown war plies costing 100,000,000 pesetus out $a.000,000) into the des- Rle attack. Miajas head- rtcrs was even mol"e pleased by fart (icncral Francisco Franco been forced to throw his In- reirt war machine against Mad- ratlier than some less-strong- lefeildcd objective such as San- Ier on the north coast. m‘ Illfillfllvnt failure to take neie, the Government 35l- ‘nlvllflClllg Insurgent commun. inil lilies to Madrid, was seen Government officers as possi- "wklila a turning point in civil war's military operations. sumo rvruil T1llklcs-Ge..e‘etown, Saturday. 14-929-7-21-21. Talkies-Soars, Monday. L-929-7-2l-2l. 3°0f8ctown i Georgetown l C. Y. Melodters tonight. lro-iU-7-22-1I. players present s of Love" in Grand River Priday, July 33. L-1003. -__. “rltlayl Dance night Fortune WKPPYMYs Swing Band. L-930-7-21-3l. . iii ndlan River ice-cream festival, i and dance tonight t'I'hurs_ "l "-30- L-IOOS. .___._ illylfll live hogs Albany Thur-g. Jmi. Emerald 33rd, until noon. ‘Green. L-zo-cs-w-t-t-w-t-tr. Pgchcream and dance, Harts- ., °°ll Friday. July as. 1r P! Monday following. L-999-7-22-2i. RNWALI. United Church Pos- (rlmrie. New Dominion-ser- lll n. m. Kingston-S -' ’ 2 P- "hr-Service 8 p. m,, vice 7 hung“ Guardian, Founded 168'! TENS] ON IN ii lNSjj-IETGENT? GA BllTlTTlY BATTLE WA G E IT F IT R July Zl-fnsurgents swarmed lo the pcak's top and twice were >" fi/ ///' The People’s Paper CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY JULY 22, 1937 i [F012 II/ ’/// Covers Prince Edwardl i Again President EAMON DE VALERA (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) DUBLIN, July Ill-Eamon De Valera today was elected by a 80- vote majority in the Dal! (Taf- Iiflmvhi) to a third term as Pre- sident of the Irish Free State while r his supporters cheered for l. l "united and free Ireland." l Before packed galleries, drawn by ja last-minute rumor of an oppos- ‘ition effort to overthrow De Val- era, unsucee sfuliy sought to align the Labor bloc with his party. The Dali voted 82 to 52 to re- turn De Valera to office, however. Frank Fahy, a member of De Val- era's Fianna Tall Party, was nam- ed Speaker of the Dali and Pat- rick Sogam, Labor. was elected de- puty speaker. The new Dali in which the Fianna Fail won 69 seats, a num- bcr equal to those held by all other parties combined, adjourned until Oct. 6. nPlane Plunges Into ‘Group Killing Three COPENHAGEN, Denmark. July 2l-—(APi-A Danish man and wife riding a motorcycle were killed to- day whcnia German military air- plnne crashed into a group of Ger- man soldiers manoeuvring near Flensburg in northwestern Ger- many. The pilot was killed and l9 soldiers injured. Flaming gaso- line drenched the Danish motor- cyclists, who dicd of burns. German Submarine Mystery Cleared LONDON. July 21—<CPHavas) -~Mystcry of the German sub- marine rumored to have been brought {o the surface by depth charges dumped overboard from the British destroyer" Wolfllflllnd was cfeared today by an official statement from the Admiralty- The British Spearfish W85 brought to the surface by depth charges used as signals, the Ad- miralty statement said, and the German submarine U144 had mer- ely been sighted awash 0n l routine passage up the EnGIISh channel. Britain Seeks (C. P. by Guardian's pceisl WIN) IDNDON, Jilly Il-Dlplomntic bargaining initiated by yeuterdlyl stslematecl non-intervention lub- committee session WM WNW"! m full swing here tonight after the Italian and French amblrsldflfl had called at. the foreign 0m“ for separate colrgerencu with for- eign secre en- The more?’ burdened with the task of finding an accepllb" Wm‘ promise formula. advised the Howie of Commons that. the British Gov- ernment had warned the committ v no "undue delay" was llermlfi-"ble- The successive visits Pflld T" m’ foreign secretary by fimluiud" Cilarle: Corbin of France and It- alfan Ambassador Dino Grand! centred attention here. Difllflfllil" opposition leader Cosgravo‘ Non - Intervention RETURNS HUME ERTTM ETIRTTPE BY C. R. BLACKBURN Caliadhn Press Staff Writer ON BOARD C.P.S. MONTCALM. July 21—(CP)—O position Leader R. B. Bennett tal ed two hours with newspaper men today but left them completely in the dark as to his future relationship with the conservative Party. He gave however, what was taken as an Party had not been reached. “I will talk about anything," the former Prime Min- ister said. greeting a party of re- porters who boarded the Mont- calm at Father Point. “Bilt." he added, "I will not ta‘k about my- self nor about my_ health." Month In Germany After a long discussion by Mr. Bennett of conditions in Europe. particularly in Gemiany where he spent a. month at a health resort, he was again asked if he could give some indication of the dec- ision he would announce to his colleagues in the Conservative rty. “Perhaps? the former Prime Minister said."‘you are asking me for something I haven't got." All attempts fa‘led to elicit from him any discussion of the po‘ltlcal situation in Canada. I-le said he did not know if a date had been fixed for a meeting with his followers in the-House of Commons. Returning from a two month visit to England and Germany, ac- companied by his sister, Mrs. W. D. I-Ierridge. Mr. Bennett will dis- embark in Montreal tomorrow and reach Ottawa at noon. Health Causes Concern Before sailing for England early in May Mr. Bennett intimated he would consult specialists while a- broad to ascertain if his physical condition was such that he might. without risking a breakdown. con- tinue as leader of his party. He is 69 years o‘d and has been con- cerned about his health sinre a collapse which occurred early in i034 and brought on a long illness. Today Mr. Bennett was ob- viously pleased to be returning (Continued on page '7. Col 6) l Impressive Funcrall For Famed Inventor. t (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) l ROME. July Zl-Guglieimo Mar- coni lay in state tonight in the ancient church of St. Mary of the Angels after an impressive funeral procession through the streets of Rome. Premier lvlhissolini, dressed in the uniform of a corporal of the Fas- cist militia. joined the proce sion as it neared the end of its solemn jcPsney from the Royal Academy. Fascist; paid their traditional farewell to a dead comrade before the carved oaken casket was borne into the church Mr the funeral service. As the procession trailed in the beautiful Piazza Esendra, Achllle Stance, secretary of the Fascist Party, stepped forward and cried: "Guglielmo Marconi." "Presenter" came the answering shout from thowands massed be- fore the church. This was the Fas- cist form for expressing that while Marconi was dead he still was with them. To U nravel Deadlock observers viewed the conference as a forerunner of strenuous efforts to unravel the ‘deadlock on the order in which the various phases of the British compromise proposal are to be dpcmud by the chalnnans shin-committee. some political circles suggested in advance of these separate con- ferences that London might even- tugfly hgreo to discuss the pin-n in the chronological order demanded yesterday by 95nd‘- lliden, according to one version of his meeting with Grandi, ad- vised bondori might be willing to admit the Italian thesis if Rome would admit evacun Lori of foreign volunteers must be elven itriofli-Y over any recognition of the com- intlmation that his decfision as to} continuing at the head of his‘ practically l oil-u) meswafi Read b 1.1m Like the Dew iii NEZl-R Everybody in ITZTTJRID IrSpark As Probable ,Sause 0f Disaster t l r WASHINGTON, July 21- ] (APT-The Bureau of Air corn- merce sald today that fire, caused by an electrostatic z spark which ignited a mixture free hydrogen and air, "Probably" caused the dc- struction of the dirigible Hin- 1 denbur; nt Lakehurst last I May 6. Thirty-six persons were . killed n the disaster. “The cause of -the accident was the ignition of a mixture of free hydrogen and air," the Bureau's report said, “Based upon the evidence, I. leak at, or in the vicinity of cells four and five caused a. combustible mixture of hydrogen and air to form in the upper stern part of the ship in consder- able quantity; the first ap- pearance of an open flame was on the top of the ship and a relatively short distance for- ward of the upper vertical fin. The theory that a. brush dis- charge ignited such mixture appears most probable." The report declared that suspicions of sabotage were unsuppo ted by any evidence. ,BRITAITT WANTS [RETENTITTN 0E l l LONDON, July ill-The British Government hoped to sec o trade treaty negotiated with the United States but. primarily it must find a sound basis which would not con- flict with the broader tenets of Empire policy. Viscount Halifax, Lord President of the Council, :30- clared in the Hou c of Lords to- day. Replylitlg to an appeal by the Marques; of Lothian that the Gov- erilmcllt work for reduction of in- ternational trade barriers, Vis- colult Halifax said the Govern- ment was not disposed to enter any international action towards trade improvement through conference until it was assured of success. Moreover, he added. before tak- ing any action on the question of raw materials, the Government would wait for the result of the inquiry Premier Van Zeeland of Belgium had undertaken upon the joint request of Great Britain and France. Defer Action In Partition Scheme LONDON. July 22 -- (Thursday) —(AP> _ The House of Commons agreed early today to a compromise which would defer 0X("_‘ll'.lfill of the Government's plan i0 partition Palestine. After a long and bitter debate, with the Labor Party firing broad- sidcs at the proposal made by a British Royal Conrmisioll, the Parliamentarians lcft decision for the future. They adopted an amendment to the Government's Bill providing that the Commission's report be submitted to the League of Na- tions "wlth a view to enabling His Majesty's Government, after ade- quate inquiry, to present to Parlia- ment a definite scheme taking into full socount all the recommenda- tions of the Commission." HEADS ASSOCIATION EDMONTON, July 21 - (GP)- Edrlie Shore, rugged Boston Bruins defence player in the National Hockey League, was elected presi- dent of the newly organized Al- berta Belgian Breeders Assoca- Find EIectrostatTclWHEAT m PRAIRIES lllwlllllilNfi UITAWA, July 21 -ICP) Canada's Prairie Provinces which in 1928 produced 544590.000 bushels oi wheat may this ycnr produce less than 200,000,000 bushels. Soirlc estimates range as low as 150.000- 000. And the reason is drought. For seven successive years vns’. areas of western Canada, with south Saskatchewan as the centre, have suffered; and in that Pro- vince particularly a broad strip of territory just north of the United States boundary has ‘reverted to desert. Throughout the west more than 1,000,000 people are directly affected, and indications are that this year close to 400,000 persons would need help in the "drought relief." What this means in monetary loss to the Canadian West was in- dicated today by Agriculture Min- ister J. G. Gardiner. He cited fig- ures he had given some time ago in the House of Commons winch showed that while the three good years from 1926 to 1028 inclusive yielded the Prairie wheat growers $1,180,000,000 the next three from 1929 to 1031 produced revenue of only $350,000.000——or a dead loss at. that time of $800,000. BOSS CONTINUES This loss has never been recover- ed. Year after year, since those days in 1928 when the Prairie crop topped the half-billioii bushel mark, the yield has been dwind- ling. In 1931 it hit a low of 301,- 181,000 bushels; but in the follolv- lng year there was, a rally to 42G,- 941000. The recovery was not maintained. The year 1933 saw another" sharp drop to 263000.000. And since then the decline has been steady. Last year production totalled only 212,000,000 bilshels. Variations had occurred in the general drought picture from year to year, said Mr. Gardiner. "The dry area. last year embrac- ed Calgary and a portion of south Alberta," he declared: "This year Calgary is ‘out’ and that section around Leth-bridge will have n. fair crop. Bilt. while there has been some constriction in Alberta, there has been an expansion in Sas- '7) (Continued on page 7, Col Barkley Chosen ll. S. Senate Leader WASHINGTON, July 21 -(AP) -Pledges of cooperation to close the breach in tho Democratic Party came today from Senator Alben Barkley oi Kentucky, the new Democratic United StflllIS Senate Leader, and Senator Pat. Harrison of Mississippi, unsuccis- ful candidate fol" the leadership, Senate Derocrats elected Bark- ley by a vote of 38-37 to succeed the late Senator Joseph T. Robin- son of Arkansas as their leader. In general, supporters of Presi- dent Rooscvelts proposal to rc- organize the Supreme Court voted for Barkley and opponents of tire Court Legislation for l-lariisnti. Both candidates were committed for the President's Bill, however. Sydney Steel Plant Receives flail Order SYDNEY, July 21 — (CP) -Thc Sydney Steel Plant w llld stnrt rolling a. l5,000-ton rai order for the South African Government August 2. it was announced to- clay. The order would keep the rail mill in continuous operation until September and give employ- ment io a "large number" of mcn, i.ion. bstants‘ lniuzemlv! wit“ Oirdrfltfiekoe Blend’ "SAI-AIIH’ TIA _lt was said. way of 1 Mystery Plane Sighted 0ver, The Atlantic CHAN-LAM, Mass. July 2l— ,1 (AP)—'I‘he Radio Marine Cor- poration Station tonight reported ‘receipt oia message from the British Steamship Ranee saying an unidentified airplane. bound east flew over the ship at 10:04 p.nl. IADT); ' The Rance gave her positicn as 47:10 north, 44.10 west, which the rntlio station estimated was about 500 miles east of Cape Race, Nfld. l l l HALIFAX. Jilly 2l——iCPi-East Coast Radio Signal Service here said toilight they had intercepted _no messages from any steamship in the North Atlantic shipping lane , regarding an unidentified airplane reported to have been seen sight- ed 50 m’les east of Cape Race by the British Freighter Rancq. No planes had taken off any Maritime airport on a flight that would put them in that posltionw according to information‘ avail- able hcre. r ST. JOHNS Nfid, Jllly 21— lGPCableL-No airplane had tak- en off from Newfoundland air- ports on a flight that would put it in the posifion 500 miles east of Cape Race where an unidentified ' craft was reported sighted by the British steamship Rance. accord- ing to information available here , tonight. it.‘ B. Srop Affected By Potato Slug 8 PAGES NOR TH CHINA CRISIS MAXI MS OFA MERE AIAN There is no constant theory of the atonement: the fact only is eon- stant. Annual Subscription‘ Dcllfvrefl moo u; inn-rum, 1.1.00. Cunndn and u. s. capo EA 315's CIrinesTTmops TVit/zdrawn From Zone Of Trouble Nanking Government Awaits Action By Japanese In Keep- ing Their Part Of Agreement. TIENTSIN, July 2i -(Al’) (‘hint-so troop uilhdrziw- als from the Wanpinghsien Tmlile zone nest oi" Pt-ipinuto- night cased Sine-Japanese tension in North (‘hinzn Two weeks after conflict Tiroke out ~in the art-a. almost all soldiers of the Chinese 20th Army were t-vzleliutcd lin- der an agreement calling also for withdrawal of Japanese troops. ' (I-Iavas News Agency said it “as reptirtetl from Nan- king that Chinese authorities had presented the Japanese military with an ultimatum to wilhdrzru‘ their troops by noon tomorrow from positions they seized following the Lukouchiao incident which prccipitzllcd the crisis. (Havas also said it was reported 4,000 troops, allegedly under orders of the Nanking (Central) (iovernment had been rushed to Lukouchiao and the 29th Army garrison at Lukouchiao and Wanpingshicn refused to withdraw). Secret World Flight Planned ls Report --— l ~-~—— v --_——._—_= Japs to Keep Bargain? Chinese said late tonight the; next 24 hours may tell whether. the Japanese will fulfill their part of the bargain or attempt to oc- cupy the demilitarized zone. They declared such occupation would give the Japanese control of the northern terminal of the strategic Pelping-Hankmv rallronrl. The Sino-Japarlese understand- ing provided for withdrawal of Japanese troops after Chinese rel;- EDMONTON. July 21 _ ifiCPl-_ here speculate possibifity of a seer rountl-tlie-rvoritl airplane illgh being tiiarle, in the ill-til" future with “m” m the W?“ 11ml hem ‘m’ n. re-fuciinu stop at, Pldtnontor] placed by officers flltlllfibed with whom n c,,,,,5,.nn,,,nt or more ma‘ malntenanw ‘J’ m“! order" loco gallons oi liicli test gmsolinfi Japanese maintained watch dur- ing the ‘my “'5 the Chinese “bl lfiiancisco and 45 gallons of sped d1?" depflrwd- lcial oil from Gernrnny. lilREDERlCTON, N. 13., Jilly 21 -The possibility of an increased infestation of the potato slug in the potato belt of Carleton Oounty this season is indicated as a result of an examination of the potato fields there by R. P. Gorham and C. W. B. Maxwell of the Dominion Entomological Service, with head- quarters here, The two entomolo- gists returned at the end of last week from one oi’ their weekly field inspections and while stating that it is difficult to make a com- pnrison with former infestations, Mr. Gorham said that the pest is causing more damage to the pota- to piailis this year than in former seasons. The great bulk of the damage caused to potatoes by this slug is to the tubers theme-elves between the time of the dying down of the potato tops and digging. Premature dyim: of the tops, due to blight or other affliction, hasthe effect of driving the slug earlier into the ground where it feeds upon the tubers. Tile infestation is not Beliefs-l. l-‘lorencevillc. Water-ville and Wood- stock "peeing the sections most af- flicted at the present ltime. Instantly ltidiTil-In Gar Accident, FREDERICTON, N.B,, July 21- tCP) Miss Heradah Nctvsome, high school teacher at Chester, NB. was instantly killed this af- ternoon when a blowout caused a car to swerve, strike a pole and overturn, The driver. Miss Sarah McCartney, also from Chester, was injured and taken to hospital here. The accident occurred at Tay- inouth, 19 miles from Fredericton, while the two women were en- routc home after spending a holi- day in the Gaspe Pensinsula. N° firing “'35 PPM“ 1mm ‘he Identity of the flier who is bed Japanese front lines except one “pm, Diflnnhu; outburst from a machine gun near mum “m, wanplngshlenl which wen‘ unnn‘ about tlic t-rztl of Juiv was n swered- learned. Persistent rumors in fly injz eirelcs here ilave indicated sue wade Talks Blocked a flight is pcritlinu. IDNDON, July 2l—iCP-Havns) —F0reign Secretary Eden confirm- ed to Ambasudor Shigcru Yosh- ONLY A lira can LAY Down on 4pc doe AND QET AWAY Will-l if 4 k) lda late today a statement he, made in the House oi Commons ,.‘ that Great Britain could not open trade talks with Japan until tlie situation in North China was cleared up. Ambassador Yoshida ‘was report- ed as having told Eden any for-I eign intervention to settle the North Chitin conflict was consid- l crcd inadmissible by Tokyo. { (During Monday's foreign affairs ‘ debate in the House of Commons l Eden offered facilities of the Brii- I ish Government for mediation if , desired by Japan or China.) It was understood the Far East- j ern crisis was considered by the’ Cabinet this morning, but the meeting ended without any other conclusion than the policy axi- vanced by Eden in the Commons to the eifcctifl no prftjssiéréc, Otlzvg “ m‘ H,“ WT“) than that w ch cou cxer c , _ , . " ‘ V. ,, _‘ through regular diplomatic chan- nlgdollbkziglxllyl'ln ilcjgllpclf\l,glf\kxllf‘_nlum nels, was to be used. l Dawson‘ “ 53' 6‘ Victoria 5i 7 Assassination Thwarted Edm “mm 5,; U: . r TOKYO. July 22—-(Thursduy)-— (APP-The newspaper Hochi re- q-Orordo’ 6,, a ported today from Tientsiil that 0,,_.,.\,.n 5v a an alleged attempt to assassinate 310mm,“; m 3 Japanese AIHDZLSSRGOPSITIKPXTI Ka- Q“, PM; 6r, M wagoe and the Mayor of Tl(‘l‘lt<ill win, John 5,, T‘ had been frilstratcd hf.‘ Japanese “a; “X 5; 7| P01151119! Police» Cllarltittctolvir 6o 84 The newspaper said officers ar- Adoption Of Cost Prussian Headsman Job MAGDKBURG. Gemiany, July 21 —(AP)-Natlon-wide introduction of the guillotine for decapitating culprits condemned to death has cost septuagenarian August Groc- bier, Prussian headman, his job. It also settled the vexing prob- lem of his successor. In adopting the guillotine for Prussia, the Nazi Regime follow- ed a practice in vogue for many decades in Bavaria. Wurtcmberg. Baden, Hesscn. Saxony, Thuringla, Oldenburg. Hamburg. Lubcck, Hanover and the Rhine Province. Secrecy today veiled the date when the mechanical axe was substituted for the marl-wielded one in Prussia. It is certain, how- ever, that it happened only after the celebrated womensples, Benita Von Falkenhsyn and Rennie Von a world-girl...“ n $rlil'tlllll‘tl take-of arrived from Noll" York and Sari "oft rested the Chinese Colonel Bal ]-()|{|j('_\§T Shou-Tang when he visited Ka- wasocs hotel- They charred hzm stir-mine l':<i\ilut.. with planning t0 kill the Alnlins- flfiflsll smtiittu-L ',\' sador. warm lligli title Tllln lll4‘l’l..l'._ {III __ 77d and tonight hi, l0 Sun sets this t'\‘Cli.ll$,' at 1i’. 7.311 and ... l'l.\’l‘.~. IFVTTTOTTOW" lil- Puil inooii Fri , n. m. Sllnlincrsidtl iirlv iii Ifllvl‘ than Cliarloitczouil. nor \Vl5ATHl:R HEALTH R [ill-ES I lllll; Guillotine To, Natnner, were executed Feb. 18. 1935, by Groebler. The execution machine is a ~ somewhat modemizcd edition of Begun‘; the guillotine which did its bloody he (m, Mm“ work during the French Revoliz- nmfmmls may “Em- bc your favor- The executioner and his two os- m, dish” bu‘ slstants wear evening dress. with 1hr}, smdyom top hat and white gloves. ‘ body tempera- One man sufficed for all Prussia. gums spyfoéjrgf, That man is August Grocbier, who conducts a flourishing laundry , business in Magdcburg. his na- ' tlve city, where his fathers and . forefathers are slated to have serv- iIll-Z. Aflsnaék‘ and a-tall, cool drinlemnke the hoot more en- durable. Add Hi as executioners. 31'5"‘ Vt-‘BT-‘ifl- , The change-over to the glill- blmw-‘Uurdhk lotine automatically solved the m" H“ "‘,1‘",,',‘_ l ,,,_ Lmrrir lionlr-n 1M5 y». III, Lorne: n. m., .55 p. m. rrnrl om p. except Sunday n. "rnrrrre-rtirrr- rl m. rinlly question of his successor: there nml will be none. ruin 1.103