MAXIMS" OFA ' MERCHANT Don't be forever troubling spirit to vindicate ltaeli or underatood. your to be The P0 iii ....u Sabaorlptiona palm-la uao n, you, Canada and U. S. A. ISM Ffliilllillilii MHLlSS Dr. J. D. MlcGuigan Appeals for Better Post-Graduate Med- ical Edncationi‘ The following splendid address was delivaredby Dr J. D. McGuigan u; nesident of the Prince Edward Island Medical Association: GENTLEMEN: I esteem it a great privilege to ad- dress you today. and first of all I must express how deeply I appre- cfate the honor of having been your President’ for the past year. It gives me great‘ pleasure to greet you, and welcome you, to the an- nual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Medical Society- I wish t0 thank» the-officer! oi the Society and the different committees for their oo-operution and the splendid way in which all performed their duties during the year, especially do we all feel grateful to those who have arranged so well the extra- lnural courses. and also the conlmlt- tee who have been instrumental in securing for our Province in 1928. the holding of the next Annual Con- vention of the Canadian Medical. Association and the electon of our esteemed Dr. S. R. Jenkins as Pre- sident. - , ' On the fifth oi April. a goodly number oi the Doctors met at the Victoria Hotel and very fittingly celebrated the centenary of the great Lister by the holding oi a banquet, at which very interesting papers were read by Dre. S. R. Jenkins and Tldmarsh, dealing with the liie work of Lord Lister, and his contemporary, Louis Pasteur. Let us hope that in succeeding years List- 91-Day may be observed in some such similar way. - flwgalt year has been a very im- portan and beneficial one to many oi the Medical Profession oi this Province. especially from the stand- point oi the general praeticloner, in wing such valuable inst. " *- “mm our Doctors in the larger centres, who have visited us in con- nection with the Extra-Mural Post Graduate work, and ere the pro- gramme oi this meeting is complet- ed we are to be further enriched by the generous contributions of Dr. Graham. Dr. Grant. and Dr. Camp- bell to whom I extend a special wel- come. (Continued on pane slob!) / Announcements, , Coming Events, l ' Meetings‘ Etc All Grbceril. ' lrie-l-a-z wks party, Satur- fililfl-b-illl-sit ii Ieq-Iope River Tea day, Jilly 16th "Fort Augustus Tea Part7 WM‘ 20th. panda)’. July 7279-6-23-161 oqcnngn COFMII-ilillll, M01141!!!’ July 18th., Y. M. C. A. bOYB 08ml) concert. 7853-7-15-3i "Dance at Corran Ban in aid of the hall Wednesday. Julyagsli-wah _llilll, Monday boys camp 7863-7-15-lli "Canoe Cove July 18th., Y. M. C. A. concert. equal" 11¢ chronic Diseases 119 Prince Street. Dr. (Jlm- 9°“ d la . recovery in next three mind“ llllllil-tl Sept s. ooggnoe Cove Hall.‘ Monday July 1am, Y. M. c. A. boy’! ca")? concert. 78531l-16-3i "The Mission Band will 11015 in icacream social at Pleasant Valley School on Moon's‘: eéenlns. - _ ‘ fl .' es w- July 1am If not no "MHML .‘?'rlls paushilcanen Oflflollatlxo wll: hold 0 anti-y . "I" ma, ‘leamlimerahor the 4M6 August 11th. A ’ “gm; so 1loronwlchnol ‘Dia- tfi-m Ploulohaiondog: “gins; ‘ m» bmea serve » . i l ~ a 18Q~106at8l .,.'..".'.“l..‘.."”'i"“'3‘ “llllilllfil '0 it 00 l. James’ ‘Woods Halaghi 00.34011‘ day evening. July 18th“ ii rainy. Wednesday‘ eveaiqg. 88-7418-Il illliER FRENCH lvi- Alillll IRY PARIS, July 15. — Dleudonne Costs, one oi France's most cap- able aviators ls ready to start on a. Paris-New York flight within eight or ten days, says L'Auto, if the French Government approves and supports the plan. With a view to securing approval, Costa is going to see the Minister of (lulnmerce, Bokanowski. In case it is not forth- coming, the paper has the word of Caste that he will start (lll all itll‘ circuit oi’ the globe ln thirty days. hacked by u. well-known financier. lilo woilld try this journey lll twelve stages. The plane with which ho hopes to fly from Paris to New York will be called "Nuugesser and Coll", after the two French airmen who started some weeks ago on a Parle- New York flight and have not been heal-d of since. It is Q Brequsl piano oi‘ 000 horse-power, slmlliar to the machine with which Cnsie made his record Paris to Jask, Persia, flight last fall. ' Drowned at North Bay Canon Cody’s Son (Special to the Guardian) NORTH BAY, July l5. -—Il. Maurice Cody. aged 80, son of Canon ll. J. Cody, oi Toronto formerly Minster of Education in the p. vlnolal government, and Dan Pardlac, aged 20 whose home is in North Bay were drowned yesterday after- noon ln Marten River at a spot about 30 miles from North Bay, below the Newforce highway to the north. It is believed that Fred Roberts aged 10, 191 Bleecker Si.., Toronto escaped the tragedy which occurred. It is said that during a fishing trip Pardlac, the other victim was men. The young men came acting as a guide for the young north a iew days ago with let- ters oi introduction 1o the dc- parlmental officials of the trial branch of the department of northern developments in Tor- onto he was a member of the legal firm oi ltyckhan, Denlson Foster and Cody. -¢+%-—-- [IBNVENTIUN BliNlilllllES I-Ie will not try the northern route but will go by the way or Azores and‘ Halifax, the distance being slightly over 4,000 miles. The lane will be fitted with dollble controls and will carry a wireless sending outfit. Coste has withheld the name of his companion, but lJAuin under- stands it will he M. Favrexlll, an experienced commercial pilot. "—"-—~—<-O-§- Smith Reaches , Honolulu Safely (Canadian Press) HONOLULU. July 1'5.- Aviator Ernest L. Smith alld lllS navigator. Emery B. Bronte, landed at 9.46 a. m. Honolulu time on the Island of Molokai. Both were reported safe. The plane crashed lnto a tree in making the_ landing, word that the Smith plane had landed on one of the Hawaiian Islands came as a com- plete surprise here for the last word of the plane as received at 11.- 00 a. m. Pacific time when the steamer Wilhelmina addressed radio stations here that she received a mes sage from Bronte saying'the plane had landed at sea. The Wilhelmina told landstations she was changing her course and would speed at forc- ed draft toward g itlon given out by Bronte as the point of descent. Smith plane crashed on island. aviators unhurt. The plane came down at Kiwai Tfee. It was out ofgllsoline. ~ Oosgravc Will Act as Minister 0i Justice (Special to the Guardian) DUBLIN, July 15.—Pi'esident Cos- grave announced to the Dali Eireann today that he would act for the time being as Minister oi Jus- tice in place oi the late Kevin Oiiigglxls. He also announced that he proposed to ask Ernest Blythe, Minister of Finance to und- ertake the duties oi vice president. Thomas Johnston, leader "of the Labor party then moved that the outstanding estimates should be passed without discussl He stated that the leaders had agreed on this course at a meeting of the various parties on the ground that the ministers and deputies after the strain oi the last few days could not be expected to give adequate consideration to financial details. The estimates were passed and the House adjourned until Wednesday. A most profitable and enjoyable Convention of the Prince Edward Island Women's Institute came '-'l u happy l-mlclusloll yesterday ailer- noon when Lieutenant Governor allli Mrs. llellriz were the hosts 1': the nlembcrsl at all enjoyable "Al lionle", at lddgewuicr from four- thirty o'clock to six o'clock. Yesterday's proramnlc opened at 9.30 willl Mrs. '1‘. G. Ives ill the chair. - Following the rendition oi the “lslallll l-lylnn" the reportfioi’ the llnnliullilllg committee was submit led. Tile officers elected for the ensuing year are lisfiollows: President-Miss Lulu Yeu,, Nori- ham. Vlco President-Mrs. John Isaac, Cardigan. Secretary Treasurer-hire. llon Ives, Montague. Uollvellors: Agriculture-Mrs. Allison Mc- Millan, Fairvlew: Educatlolr-lilrs. Ernest llossiier, Mnrell; (lllllndizlu industries — Mrs. Allan Wyaml, lilllyllcld; llonlo lficnnonlkws-Mrs. Waller Shaw, Si. Cuihcrines; Immi- grutlou-Mrs. Wm. Mulch, liucky Pllllli; National Events-Mrs. Enl- ulellllo Murchballk, Travellers Rest; Loglsluilolr-Mrs. J. W. Mc- Phee, (lcol-geiown; Child Welfare -Mlos Mona Wilson, Red Oross Nurse, City. Delegates to the Biennial Con- veuiloll to be held at Saskatoon lzl 1929——Mrs. George McDonald, Corli- wall, and Miss Llllu You, Norihaln. A splendid report of Institutes organized since last Convention W08 Ell/ell by Miss Jane MacKell- zlc. Asst. Supervisor of Women's Institutes. and an interesting re- port of the Biennial Convention held at Wolivllle wall given by Mrs. Goo. McDonald, 2nd Yice President of the F. W. I. C. Mrs. Wyalld gave a short address on Dental Clinics for the rural school children of Prince Edward Island. A motion was passed lo the effect that the matter be referred in the executive for consideration. A feature of yesterday's prn- grlllunlo was a most interesting and helpful address on Cooperative Mllrkoilng by Mr. J. J. Llghtlzer. Miss Annie M. Stewart of (lranal Pro. N. S., President of the ll‘. W. l. (l. alld Dr. MilcMurchy, Ottawa. oi the Department of Health, Child Welfare Division, were the out- standing speakers in the afternoon session. ' After votes of thanks had been icudcred tho speakers. the memb- ers enjoyed a pleasant drive through llle Experimental Farm after which they were the guests of I-lis I-lonolir. Governor and Mrs. l-Ieariz. Tho chnlrnlan in the afternoon session was Mr. S. J. Rose. Mc- (l or- "(lama lo sec Flnnigaws ,F‘or- Lune, presented by Little Pond Dra- matic Club ill (leoryeiown on Well- nggdny night, Jilly 20th. Special tlég between acts. Mr. and Mrs. R. Roy I-lowleit in Scotch costume. l __+._ , - "Annual Picnic, "m bionic of the Hampton Circuit‘ will be Ibeld on Tuesday. July lilatullamrp- ton Village. Sup or adults s0 eeuiinchildron 2. Canlly- "ll"- lco-oream, sports and iiflmel- ll [army on 18th., will be helll Oil ‘ l L, l l.l‘. ' hula," 2 B ‘y 0r(o7847-7-I5-3l I e l‘ “dame to the Tea and Festival at ‘Staohope ‘Lane on Wednesday film‘ noon, Joly mo. Pr ee M. Eugene’: Chuoch. Covchead. filo» Dream and Strawberry n.- spaiall oral-scum lll be provided- um Wfitlliflmiflvv “than. . h. Kelvin UN” l-v-lo-al @100 l‘ tceee-Wnteor l its . lllianni_ v g ‘Minna rnoor “mo”! , Xi not fine the followins fine d"- , Monday evenilili. 30181 P! order of committee. 7818-7-14-31- x u k "York Rifle Club. E0119?!‘ "$3; "Warning! Sea Buffalo sili- ‘Lois oi thrills. Wonderful show- Rivor‘ Hall. Monday. 3"" 9"“. I '99"? “lad” 788817-10. vsal-v-ls-sl A ds in aid or‘ APOSTOLIC DEUEGATE“ ON WAY TO CANADA i__.__ (Special to The Guardian) lillllllli wé-W/ ///, ever been committed in this city. So (lovers Prince Edward “Seldom indeed that a moan, has been c The following July charge ‘was de- livered in the Supreme Court yest-i erday by the Chief Justice in the case of The King vs. James Gorm- ley and Edmund Byers, charged with breaking and entering and stealing goods from “The Vogue" millinery shop. The Jury disagreed in their verdict, dividing equally, six for ac- quittal and six for "guilty." Mr. Foreman and gentlemen of the Jury: You have listened with close at- tention for two days to the evidence that has been brought before you in this case; that ls, the case of The mund Byers on a charge of brelk- lng and entering the shop of Ange- lina Doiron and Gertrude Steele, situate in Charlottetown, and for stealing therefrom, six ladies’ cloth coats, five ladies’ dresses, two fur coats and one gold watch the prop- erty of those two ladies, oi the val- ue of $800, or thereabouts. That is the charge: for having broken and entered a shop situate on the south side of Queen Square, a Ladies‘ fur- nishing store kept by those two young women. Whatever uncertain- ty the evidence may afterwards dis- close. there is no question at all that on the morning of Sunday, the 8th day of May last, this store was broken lnto and-that goods of the quantity and description mentioned _in the bill of indictment were stolen. You remember the entrance w door looking out on the public square, by the breaking of the plate glass in ,i.he window, and, through that opening, having access to a night- latch that was capable of be- lng sprung back and the door open- ed. You begin the consideration of the case, then, by finding that absolute fact, of the breaking and entering, and of the stealing. And when you consider the public position in which that store was placed you can judge of the boldness of those rob- bers who committed this crime. You approach the decision oi a. cause where a crime of exceeding bold- ness has been committed. Those who were capable of doing that are capable of trampling upon the law, not only in regard to property in that particular place but oi render- ing property, generally, insecure. And you know that the crime oi breaking and entering a store or dwelling is fraug _‘ with dangers greater than to operty itselL-Time and again experience has shown that robbers caught in the act are capable oi more desperate deeds than they at first contemplated. That act, if it goes unchecked, puts ln peril property and more than property within thlsclty and within this Province. It is seldom, indeed, that a crime so bold, and a crime so mean, has mean, I say-to break into the store oi those two young women, strug- ling to make an honest living, and to carry away a quantity of their goods oi an amount sufficient to cause them at least serious financial embarrassment. It as a brutal thing-to do. The rob s who com- mitted that act marke themselves down, by having commltte it, as of a low order, even among thieves! You saw how the property was brought back-perishable property. used in such a way. that it comes back here with all its value. or near- ly all its value, utterly swept away. A sordid crimel What you are here to do, gentlemen. is to try whether those men in the dpck ore the ones who committed it. NEW YORK. N. Y., July l5.- yArchbishop Andre, Cassalu, new ‘ delegate to Canada. who arrived here from Europe yesterday l oontinujohlajourney to Ottawa i FAVORED WITH FINE WEATHER ._...__ (Special to ‘Ilse Gllardian) PARIS. July IS-Fdl’ lthe first time in three years, the sun was kind enough to temper its rays sui- iiclently to permit the most unbrea- sive oi European military spectacles the natal-lo fourteenth oi July l-d-l view oi the army in - honor of Mexico's day oi Independence. In two preceding years presidential or- der had lnterwened in save the troops from moi-oiling ill the tropic- al hcat, but today vne cool and clear. ‘Those who rose early before the oeremonlwoahdrtlymm after o? oo ock. , ~00! the most col . memo-unu- ifuo. . , . mun-anomalies f The Police Force were engaged. and evidently there was g at activ- ity employed for the pu of dis- King vs. James Gormley and Ed- . effected from tthe front llobrftlg‘? “b? Island Lille the Dew crime s0 bold, and s0 ommitted in this city,” declared Chief Justice Ma-thje- son in reviewing fthe case. Disagree- ment of Jury will mean new trial at next term. ‘w discretion and‘ competence oi the Jury. A Jury takes the law from the Judge, and is bound to ioilow the law which the Judge lays down. In this case there is very little law in- deed for the Court to place before you. The questions are on the facts; and of the facts you are the judges and nothing which may be said by the Court in regard to the true in- terpretatlon of those facts, in regard to the guilt or the innocence oi the accused, will take away from you one iota. of your right and power to determine the truth according to the evidence and upon your oaths. In this case, more than in com- mon cases, each one of you is the judge of the fetcie. It ls true that that the crime that has been com- mitbed is one that contains ele- ments of great danger for the reas- ons that I have stated, and also that it is a crime of the meanest descrip- tion. That does not help you very much in determining whether the parties accused are guilty or not. guilty; and that is really what you are trying. But when you come to consider, on divided evidence, what sort of men those people are who are accused of this crime-what sort oi people are they? Have they a. re- cord, and what is that record?—you will weigh then their character; you will weigh it as an aid in determin- ing what evidence you are to accept and what you are to reject, and de- ' . whether it is likely-probable, ,-_that the accused persons could be capable of such crimes, in the absence oi’ the most direct and convincing testimony. On the Sunday morning when the robbery had been completed, John J. Savldantjwho is the night watch- man .of the Dominion Post Ofilce building, in pursuance of his duty was awake and watchful, looking out through the window 0i the Savings Bank part oi the building and across the street. The Vogue, where this robbery took place was clearly in his view. I think he said it was about 140 feet away; that is an estimate. At any rate the man was close, so that he had a direct view across the front of the building, and he saw a man coming out. He apparently had a parcel. I think he said there was something white trailing that at- tracted his attentl -n, and he told us how this man came along the street, turned at Great George Street cor- ner, and was lost to his view. Now Bavidant was unable to iden- tify the person, but he saw him, and he saw the manner oi man that he was. His testimony was given in such a way that I am sure that so far as it went you gentlemen will find it quite reliable. What does he say of this person? He says that he was of a fair height, that he ap- peared to be slight. that he was a young-man, and that he was fair. I no, he was fair, not dark, and clean shaven. That counts for this much. that you can accept the descriptions as coming from a reliable witness and one who was able to see with sufficient clearness the person to know that those items of descrip- tion would be right. You will keep those in your mind, and fit it on to other oircunutances. you may find that it will be of value; it might be oi great value in enabling you to reach a determination. What did Sovldant do? He went across the street and examined the door, and found the glass broken and the condition which he de- scribed. Then, quite properly, he cal- led up the Police Station, and Offi- cer Trainor came, and‘ he tells ue what he found. Miss Doiron and Miss Steele were sent for and they came and at once missed a very considerable quantity of goods. Now we come to the prisoners, and l‘ eali by Every asked him if he was dark. He said_ ' this c day night. He will leave here at all the lnvea 0.45 p. m. and arrive in the Canad-lable to m 8 0.. . ian capital at 19.30 p. m. Eastern accused uptrl‘ the charge oi ,1. ' . covering who the perpetrators 0i . m e v/ere! and, as a result oi we find here some oi the reasons why‘ they were brought before the Oburts. Officer Trainer says that between 12 and 1 o'clock he law on that. they were y lll-rotted the two i tion was held; they were sent up to the Supreme Court and a bill of In- dictment-thls Jill-oi mdictmentl that we have now before um-was, presented in the Grand Jury, and upon that Indictment they return- ed a true bill. and these prisoners are now here. before 17°11. I01’ Mll- It will be for you to find whether they are guilty or not guilty. In caseswhlfe twoormoreper- 'waye opentothe Jury tolindaver- dict oi guiltyadainat all or of not guntyinregagdtoalLm-toilndom guilty and another not guilty. Thole are options entirely within our dis- oration and pom. And 1 go further lei mo may case that ‘is almost entirely y: the ~ i '.' i‘ .- 'sons are joinfly indicted; it a lll-loosing daylight time on Saturday. committed, the they were Byers in company with two other <>°-*-—~_—-- taken before Stipendlary Mag- young men. He waaabout the streets. urn or JULY CELEBRATION istrilte and n preliminary investiu- He had been driniinr but he W" not incapable. Oi course it does not prove anything that he was wand- ering around the streets at that capability, so that the Police Offi- cor ordered him to so home. which‘ he did not do. We find him, bow- even-lnalioone, idle and disorderly condition about the streets at an url- usuai hour for one who would be regular and honest life; (Continued on page eight) through the receipt Taachereau oi a communication on "l! Wm”- millu? "Wild-V l"! 511°“ \\ \\\\ the CI-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. SATURDAY, JULY 146, 1927 tliliRl cilluls illllY ill villain alumni us. Duke of Connaught LONDON, July 15. — The foundatl atone oi’ the big new Masonic Temple for Lon- don »wao laid by the Duke oi’ Connaught thlg afternoon in the presence of a great Con- gregation of Free MIIOIII, ln- ciuding a deputation from New York. The buldlng will cost £1,000,000 ($4,860,000) and la Intended to serve the dual pur- pose of providing a great cen- tral home for English Free Masonry and of perpetuating the memory of Free Milmtl who foil in the war. The ‘new building will be erected in great Queen Street, the alto of the existing Free Mason's Hall. but ovvlng to the neceaalty of accommodating 10,000 Free Masons, the Duke of Oomlaught performed the ceremony with lmpreulve ritual In Albert Hall. The Duke of York was among the prominent Maaona present. lrwllilil Alli m clllu SHANGHAI, July 15. —Urgent appeals for aid were received in Shanghai today from the southern part of Anwhei province the scene 6, which caused the death of more than a thousand persons. It was only yesterday that the first news oi the overflowing of the lower ranches of the Yangtse River was received in Shanghai and the re- ports were still meagre today. En- ough has been learned however. to indicate that tens of thousand» of persons are homeless and desti lute and vast damage to property has been done. Floods have vied with cartil- quakes in taking a large toll oi life in China through the years, hard- ly a season passing without a oat- astropbe due to the overflowinging of rivers; particularly the Yangtse and Hwang-Ho or Yellow Rivers. Mid-summer is the danger sea- SOII. Last year 100 persons were drowned and $4,000,000 damage done by floods in the Canton dis- trict, while 3,000 persons were drowned ill I-Iupeh Province when the Yangtse dykes gave way. in 1925, llearly 4,000,000 damage done by floods in Canton district, while 3,000 persons were drowned ill J-lupeh Province when the Yangtse dykes gave way. In 1925, nearly 4,000 Chinese lost their lives whell 300 villages were submerged, des- troying crops and threatened ten million persons with famine. The year 1925 also saw one of the worst typhoons ever experien- ced in oriental waters, nearly '3,- 000 persons losing their lives on the Chinese coast near Ilong Kong. An earthquake, followed by a terrible fire brought death lo 5.000 l" Mflmh. ‘I926 when the town of Taliiu. in north west Yunnan, was destroyed. Jones Again Wins Championship (Special to the Guardian) ST. ANDREWS Scotland, July 15 -Bobby Jones today won the Brit- ish open golf championship for the second consecutive year, with the lowest ‘l2 holes score ever set in a tournament. The record breaking figure was 2B5 seven strokes under par for the tricky St. Andrews old course. His total card for the three days of golf follows. 68, 72, ‘I3, ‘l2, 52. FURTHER SEARCH lll BE MADE QUEBEC, July 15. -—Possibillty of another official search being lode in this province for the miss- ing ‘French fliers, Nuagesser and Coll,- is being talked oi here by Premier the matter from Stanley Y. Belch. of New York. secretary of the claims that he has a very substan- tial report oi a man who actually Jaw the White Bird in Labrador and he asks (or tbe cooperation oi the Quebec government in the con- ducting of a search. No reply baa an yet been made by the government, the matter bar- ing been banded over to the De- poruoooi of Laude aali Forum. ll is being inquired into and ailould the report be veritiewin a substantial Lays Stone of Temple of a great flood disaster on July _ Aero Club of America. Mr. Beach "Tmmil- "l" - - - - ~- AUSTRMIAN AVIATURS Til TRY PACIFIC (Canadian Press) SYDNEY, Australia, July 15.- Lieutenants Kingfol-d Smith and G. T. P. Uim who recently lowered the 7500 miles‘ round-Australia record hav left Tahiti for San Francisco for their trans-Pacific flight. Lleut. Keith Anderson, another noted Aus- tralian trans-continental flier ac- companies them and will take part in the first American-Australia hop. The route of the proposed flight will be from San Francisco to Hono- lulu (2,100 miles) Fanning Islands (1,000 miles) Phoenix Group (1,000 miles) Samoa (800 miles) o. total flying cruise of 7.300 miles. The flight will cost approximately $30,- 000. Melbourne, Sydney and Bris- bane newspapers have opened sub- scriptions to defray the cost which is expected to be subsidized by the Commonwealth Government. The machine to be used on the flight will be purchased in the United States. Prominent Irish Republican Died (Special to The Guardlfih) LONDON, July 15.—A Dublin dis- patch to the Exchange Telegraph Company says that Countess Mark- ieviczz long prominent in the Re- public circles, died early this Friday morning. Countess Markicviczz rec- ently underwent two operatlons for appendicitis and her serious condi- tlon on July ll gave rise to reports in Dublin that she had died. At Sir Patrick Dunn’s Hospital, Dublin, however, lt was stated that she was still in a serious condition and that she was doing as well as could. be expected. The Countess who was Constance Georgine Gore Booth. sister of J. A. R. Gore Booth, was married to Count Casimir Dunln de Markle Vlcm of Poland in 1900. Her activities in the Republican cause began in the period before the 1916 rising and for her part in this affair she was sentenced to death. The sentence was commuted to life imprisonment but she was released in 1917. Later she has been affiliated with Eamon de Valera in his Fien- na Fail wing of the republican par- ty and was elected to the Dail Eir- ann on that ticket in the recent elections. ---<g> -__. Scores Section of _ American Press LONDON, July l0. —- Viscount Grey, addressing a political meet- ing lll Cornwall, declared that a section of the United Slates press was attributing to Great Britain the intention of building a mightier navy than the United States and afl- serled that such "distortion" of the truth would make friendly relations between the iwc peoples llnpos- ble. Ho said that ii tho conference broke down he would rather re- luru to the old policy of having no measuring of strength between (he United States (lovcrllment and the British. /f)losE Folks Wilo 3M ‘MONEY ism‘ EvERYTiiiv-lc. ARE Atwms Ki-lose. who -_ HAVFNOTI-libVBUT / Maritime moderate to fresh south- ery with some fog. Much the same temperature. 80-00 ltontrealmloudy . so-ec Quebec, cloudy . . .. . 80-00 Charlottetown, rair . . 76-84 lialifui. cloudy . 74-56 Saint John, cloudy . . 004? ‘Boston, cloudy . 0+4! New York, clear . . . . . . . . . . . 90-71 High tide this afternoon at i821 and. tonight at 1.06. sun sale this e rllaa tomorrow m Iplt qlhrter moon Jul! wan-it la lilblyitiilt the govern- 118M will ooneiilertbe sending oi plane: to search tile region. flat 10.10 a. m. Simmer-aide tel later than (Flier tide eighteen rhino-- lotteiowa. ~ Contentment old thing. iltlmule" MAXIMB or A MERCHANT la the heritage of man who gets used to just any Charlottetown Guardian ‘Imp Cont! Morning Guardian, Founded II‘! NAIIHNS [Ill PAIJIFII] UPEN iuligillil i . ‘Unofficial Conference ‘ For Betterment of Relations Opens To- day in Honolulu. (Special to The Guardian) NEW YORK, N. Y., July 15-Ho- nolulu is fast becoming the unoffic- ial meeting ground of pacific coun- tries, as Geneva is the official dis- cussion centre for nations livillg on the Atlantic. Tomorrow there opens an unofficial international confer- ence in Honolulu between ten Pa- ciflc countries, that bids fair, in the opinion of many observers to rival in importance and in the advance- ment of understanding between east and west any o_i the official and highly diplomatic conferences of recent years. It is held under the auspices of the institute of pacific relations, a voluntary organization of prominent economists, educators, financiers, labor leaders and church men, with groups of members in China, Japan, the IInlted-Statee, great Britain, Canada, Australia, ~ Dutch Indies, the Pacific Islands, New Zeaiand and the Philippines. The purpose of the meetng, acéord- ing to a statement made by the United States group of the institute, is to discuss frankly and fully the points of friction between Orient and Occident. With the hope that an honest attempt to state these differences may lead to a way to reconcile them, Dr. Ray Wilbur, President of Stanford University is chairman of the Institute. Sir‘ Frederick Whyte, first president of the Indian LegLslative assembly, holds the British group. He has pre- pared a monograph- on- "China and Foreign Powers" which will be laid before the Conference as Britain's chief research work for the meet- lng. 0’Higgins Feared Organizations in U. S. (Canadian Press) OTTAWA. July 15. -— Kevin OT-ligglns, "strong man" in the gov- ernment of the Irish Free State who was assassinated last Sunday feared the propaganda financed by funds from persons or organizations ln the United States which would if con- tinued drive many of the young men supporting the Free State from _Ire- land he told Hon. Jas. A. Maclcolin, Canadian Minister of Trade and Commerce during an interview a short time before his death. Mr. Malcolm who has just returned oft- er a tour of the British Isles told of the interview today. The Minister of Trade and Commerce said the assassination had removed “a fine young man who was very British at heart." ----<0>--_ RIOTING IN VIENNA (Canadian Press) VIENNA, July lo-Grave rioting by a frenzied mob proceeded through out the afternon and was continu- ing this evening about the palace of Justice as the result of the acquit- tal of soldiers accused of having kil- led a socialist. BUSINESS SPEEDING or AT SYDNEY HE’ (Canadian Press) SYDNEY, N. 8., July fix-Opera- tions are becoming brisker at the steel plant. Tile rail lnlll is rolling the new C. P. R. order for 10,000 tons of rails and several of the oth- er mills which have been idle for something like five weeks save for an odd shift or two from time to time to fill a small order or so, are resuming operations this week, while the fence mill begins work again next Monday. Condensed Specials RATE-lo. per word. net each insertion in this column. OO-O-OO4 G6?‘F§5.¥i~o or svznv deacripilon, cheaply and expedi- tiously exbcuted. Guardian Con- tral Job (Printer, Phone 132. ‘INQUIRE RE CHRONIC DIS- oaees, 112 Prince Street. Dr. lClltt. Don't dela , recovery in next three moat _ nose-ileum 1 wou wmr aoob euvatoega Prices 60 for 10c; 100 for 36¢: 250 for 556; 500 for $1.00; 1,000 for 81:05. Postpaid. Guardian 0 flee. Guardian lob Primary. t ‘SPECIAL HAMIURG STEAK.- Eoster duality beef. Saundore Nevraom ‘ii 00.. Ihnt and Market. Bldg. ' 4 _ 1‘ ‘I A _..an won. silos-millions unma- ‘ail-Iayflaltlfilvrerlfsbeateait for emu .11» ma erias 00., l8 aior Street. ' ‘lmleeip; _ O 6 I. ~-_ _-.....