MAXIMS 0F A MERE MAN mm; by menace Il-ltla hnldl. inst all obstacles and ruule- >‘%I’ ///' The People’s Paper Covers Prince Edwardllsland Like the Dew MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN We are glvcn our lifc that we may learn to lay it down. i::lll‘.‘°'%".'i-§i5-‘~"'F'~'»-3l1'l °ii‘-'i' CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. THURSDAY, AUGUST s, 1931 1o PAGES A""illi-Tiiiirli"liiidrnnmfil .. o... YAQNESE i oi Postman Gonoluile Two - day Meeting MONCTON, N. B., Aug. 4—Busi- um sessions of the Federated As- goclallOfl of letter Carriers oi’ the mrmme district were concluded today and an official reported the twoqjgy meeting entirely success- l. “Attended by John J. Reaves, rational secretary treasurer, the meeting was presided over by E. K113111101‘, Halifax. vice-president 0f district Nn. 4. They were wel- mmed to the city by deputy mayor mil M BFOWH. After bitsiliess wiis concluded may, the delcgates drove to the mks, at Hopewell Cape and eu- pyed a picnic dinner there. All upected w lcave the city for their IQJpBCI-We homes tonight or imnor , morning. "Sturgeon Cardliig Mills now in operation. L-1273-8-3-3i. "Dance St. Chai'les Hall. Thurs- diy. August 5th. L-l3l0-8-4-2i. “Dance Braokley Beach Lodge. Friday August 6th. L-l262-8-3-5. ‘--.uill closed till August 14th. ii. l... Coles, hiiltoli. L-l34l-8-5-2l. "Head of Hillsboro is postponed lintil n liitcr dale. L-l335-b-5-ll. "Buying live hogs Albany Thurs- lliy 5th. Emerald 6th until noon. 0. C. Green. L-20-65-W-t-t-w-t-tf. "Picnic Saint John's Church,’ tiapaud, Wednesday, August ll. . L-l230-8-2-9l “Reserve Wednesday, August 5th for Mount Stewart Legion Tea Party. Watch advertisements. L-l270-8-3-2l.. “Friday. Dance Night Fortune lliill. McKearncys Swing Band. L-iSOB-B-d-tli. “Dance in ITlElIlDWD. Rink to- night. Adm ssion 10c and 20c. L-1333-8-5-1i. "Dance in C. M. B. A. Hall, Ver- iioii River on Fr day, August 6th. 000d music. L-l22ll-8-2-5. "Reserve August 11th for St. Andrews Church Supper, Cardigan. L-l348-8-5-7. "Reserve Monday, August 9th for lance in Fairvlcw School. Admission 55c. Lunch free. L-lZlIM-B-fi-li. "Inman Reunion at A. D. lnman, llliiiliion. August etn. u not fine liii. L-iiac-s-a-t. "Ice Cream Festival and Dance Dover School, Tuesday, August llih. L-l346-8-5-2i. "Come to Icc Cream and Dance l!!!‘ London School Friday, August bi. aid of school. L-lKll-B-4-2i. "Icc cream and dance Harts- iille School Thursday, August 5. ll not fine following evening. L-l3lB-8-4-2l. "Dance. bingo and other amuse- ments Highfield Rink Friday night liitiist om in aid of rink. L-l33l-B-4-3i. “"3380. Ice Cream and Dance, .Patrlck‘s School Friday, August 5th undcr auspices of Women‘s llliiic- L-1298-8-4-3i. "Dnnt forget Travelfers Danco at Beach Govc lnn Friday night. QvcrybOdY welcome. Blanchard! ‘lllitsiiii. L-iaso-a-s-ai. B"Disirict Convention, Eldon, Mt. Wilchannan and Orwell Cove. omens Institutes. Belfast Hall, laésiliiv. Aulrlnt 10th. Alternoon n‘ 53901118 8 P. M. Everybody “iliiis- L-l340-8-5-7. "DWI loliel Marshficld and mmlniiiiue United Church kmlhb evening in Stanley a field. Come and bring a friend and Qnjoy a good supper. if libi- flne. following evening. 1.4356. old "mo flddlers d . l . ursdny, ckggstalml» Elli-WES to reach Dan- mn-Aulfi. Mount Stewart not later vermefliiot 'lth. Watch for further mm merit... Aimplces Canadian ' lTlO-U-Ii-il. l l ew Comet Into Bilejiac; l!” _ VieWCCiCnCAugliAst t0 YALISTS CLAlM, RECA iii. iii Finsler‘s comet. shown above, right, as it appears through a. 24-inch telescope. will be visible to stargazers in United States during the first weeks of August, near the Pole Star and the Big Dipper. Appearing as a slightly hazy star, fainter than those of the nearby D ppcr, the comct will be visible to the naked eye. and will reach its maximum brightness on Aug. 9. Opera glasses or low-power YFGFVODGS will be required to see the vii)’ tall. pointing away from the siln. "line comet, discoverer! July 4 by a Swiss astronomer, will take the course outlined in tho skeich above. _left. Zlberhart Moves To License Banks Drastic Measur-e-Ts Coupled With Bill To ‘Close Courts To Non- licensed Bankers.“ EDMONTON. Aug. 4--The Al- berta Sales Tax will be rcmovcd Sept. i, Provincial Treasurer Soi- on Low announced in the Provin- cial Legislature today when in- ti-oduciiig a. bill to license and regulate chartered banks operating in the province. The Banking Bill followed an- other government proposal to block all appeals in Alberta‘ courts on the constitutionality of provincial laws. It was sponsored by Attor- ncy-General John Hugill and would apply to all Alberta stat- utcs. The Banking Bill was greeted with loud desk-pounding by Social Credit members, and was consid- ered the most drastic and far- reachlng in the two-year life of the Aberhart administration. It was considered likely to lead to wide repercussions because the Federal Government will bcdrawn into its scope through its control of the Bank of Canada which has a branch in Calgary. A third bill also sponsored by the provincial treasurer, was dc- signed to close the courts of Al- berta to all bankers who refused to take out licenses in the prov- ince. It stipulated that any un- licensed banker should not "be ca- pable of bringing, maintaining or defending any action in any court of civil jurisdiction in the prov- ince which has for its object the enforcement of any claim either in law or equity." il..;i.....ilinl..i 0n Election Date TORONTO, Aug. 4-—Date of Oil- tario’; next general election was the subject of as much speculation a" ever tonight. Back iii Toronto after having conferred with his own Elgin con- stliilcncy Liberal followers last night. Premier Hepburn was ox- pccied to announce the date fol- lowing a lillC-flily cabinet nicot- iiig. But tho Pfllllllfl‘ said nothing. As reporters lllct him when he conic from ilie FilblllCl» scssloil. at- tended by nearly every minister, lvlr. Hcphilrii hurried along, refus- ing to say whether an election date had boon discussed. Both Liberal and Conservative political circles had expected an announcement and thc majority of liuessevr trained Tuesday. 06L» 5 95 the day. The Hepburn (‘rovernnient was elected lo pOWPl‘ in a. general vlccilon Juiie l9. lllIl-i. _____ I7 Injured When Hoist Car Plunges GOO Feet In B.C. Mine (C. P. by Guardian‘: Special WIN) PRINCETON, a. 0.. Aim- 4- Beventeen injured men. bmken and bruised when a hoist case plunged an estimated 600 feet to the bottom of n. shaft at COPPH‘ Mountain Mine, were brouslli» llll° ~ Princeton tonight on a. work train The men, some with hacks broken and others with factiired legs, were taken on wooden stretch- er; from a box oar in which they were brought in, 12 miles from the mine. First-aid workers here and tin- hatted min: rescue crew members from the workings carried the iii- jured men from the train and Pull them aboard trucks and ambulan- oes which took them to Princeton Hospital. Names or the injured or omiii lrov of their hurts were not. loomed incial E , immediately. . ‘ One ambulance was brought from nearby Blakcburn, where 45 men were killed in a Coal-mine bill-ii- sevcn years ago. to carry the most. seriously injured. The men were injured when a I hoist cage in which they were be- I ing taken to the outside after their shift eridod plunged to the bottom l of its shaft. The men had boarded the cage at No. 1 level, 600 feet l from the bottom of the shaft. A. S. Baillie, vice-president and lgeneral manager of the Granby lConsolidatcd lvilniniz and Smelt- lln; company, operators of the mine, said hc imdentood a cry- stallized bolt caused the accident. The mine, with a capacity pro- duction of 3.000 tons daily, had been reopened last. Julie l after lying idle for seven years. _ ligion. art. literature - said northward lay paradise. The llllll-slllllli.‘ l PRilGRAM Fllll ~ REliIHltHllill New Anti - Semitism Drive In German Education Revealed In Teachers’ Hand- book. ls Commander Q; l BERLIN, Aug. il-JAPI-Open- ing of the fall school term» for millions of children trought to view today an apparent new anti- semitism drive in German edil- _ cation. § It is centered in a ncwly pub- . iishezi teachers’ handbook of antl- , semltism to which is attached, semi-official status through a foreword by Germany's No. one aritl-semiie, Julius Streicher. The manual, entitled “The Jew- ish Questicri in Tleachlng," was written by a. Nurriberg school coilnsellor. Fritz Fink. Pink's thesis is that realization of the importance of race super- loriiy and the menace to Germany of Jewish influence in politics, re- and morals must come to the pilpil gradually through appropriate emphasis on "the Jewish angle" wherever it oc- cilrs. Thus, he suggests, it is possible to tell children about ancient Egypt: what it suffered through the Jews; how the Jews iheii conquered Palestine. “slaughtering L , .. d at f 1 i t LIrlil-Gaii i liilllllk . l-.-i-i-l.;'_i 2253,55 aanlandranviyflxg]? “grorrrlngrl; appointed to (‘Ullllllrllilfl of ‘tvlltil Jill)- . .. anese army ill Clina. \l i ll‘ flowed with muk and honey‘ declaration of war on China by Even the smallest children. he advises, can be told of the Jewish cons-piracy in Persia where a. "blood bath" was “organized un- der tlie leadership ofthebeautiful Esther to kill thousands of King Ahazuerusfi loyal subjects." Children studying ancient Home, Fink declares. should understand that it was Jews, after their dis- persion. who penetrated all quart- ers o! the Roman Empire and eventually caused its downfall. Medieval and modern history. he tells teachers should be taught with special emphasis of the “des- perate struggles" of the Spanish, Polish and Gel-man peoples against Jcw‘sh domination. It should be pointed out. he adds. that "wherever revolution upsets the established order from the great French revolution on down to the present day," Jews arc found. In teaching children the lives of great men, Fink points out, stress should be laid on those who had the courage "to tel‘. the truth about the Jews." Flinn-General Opens Hospital In Arctic AKLAVIK. N. W. T., Aug. 3- Lord Tweedsmuir, Governor-Gen- eral of Canada, visiting this west- ern Arctic capital, opened the new All Saints‘ Hopital here today and in his dedication addres quoted the words of a northern explorer: "Paradise lies in the North.” It was John Davis, explorer, who Japan. the general occupies nli im- portant position in the Sine-Japan- ese crisis. . {IASE S ll l V E l] l] RAMATICALLY (By The Associated Press) CHICAGO, Aux. ii-Swlft solut- ion of the weird "kidnapping" of 30-month-old Doiinld Horst precl- pltatcd a struggle for his custody today. 0n one side \\'l"l'0 John Rog-nu and Lydia Nclsoli. who Zlllllll"l'il snatching the iviilc-cycrl young. .- fiom the arms of Mrs. Otto Horst last night. but contended he \\"IS their child, born out of wctllrirl»: On the (iilifT was Mrs. llillnl. who told ngiszuiil State's Allori P}: Wilbert Crmvley‘ shv ivns lint tili- real mother of the lad but 1.1? rrl possession of him shortly nftnrliis birth. The dramatic denoucmcnl ("lmC after officials brought ihc two women face to facc iii the prow- cutoi-‘s office. "I am going to ask the Regulus to let us keep Donald". Mrs. Horst sobbcd. “We lovc the boy as much as any parents could." But the unwed Rogails insisted that they be allowed to kccp llic baby. ' J Governor-General said: "I with Davis and 1 might add the 595i’ Wefltllel‘ 97115155 111 the "milk" Miss Nelson lulggurl tllc dark- Lmd Tweedslmul!‘ and three haired tykc to her brcnst and companions will fly in Royal Can- cried; adian Air Force planes to Herschel i-ym you; real mnmri,“ mind wedne-“dliy- H6 Wm 3180 Donald stood bewildered. 'l‘cnrs vblt the reindeer camp at Rich- ard's Island, returning to Aklnvik to spend the night before starting the long southward flight to Ed- monton Thursday. welled in his eyes. Then he em- braced her. Crowley ushered Horst. part owner of a sound equipment com- pany, Mrs. Horst and the Rclliins into his office. Donald. he told them. would bc placed in an or- phanage pending a ilcclsinn ou his custody in the civil coilris. Both women wept and fondled the youngster lxiforc lie ivns lcil away. Regan and Horst promised ~Braoken Silent Ila y Election llumor to hire attorneys for the legal ———- fight. ahead. None Wlh hold by WINNIPEG, Aug 4—(OP)—Mue- Polk-A solini is the only one who doesn't have an election, remarked Hon. John Bracken. premier of Man- itoba, today when queried con- oerning pfltlstent rumors here of a Manitoba, election next fall. He had nothing further to say in r0- gurd to the query. Stewart and Jack Clark, hcld on assault charges since the death of Robert Bristol, Amherst. N. S- iicrc several weeks all". liiillil’ “T?” W‘ leased on ball of $4.000 cacti after being charged with manslaughter. BOMB AD VANCING CHINESE ARM Qtuuniuni Mai PTURQTMOF, _LR UNE TE llllllllloln 0N CENTRAL llllilllollllllll Insurgent Losses Re- ' ported H e a v y In Fight For Strategic Town. ‘ (By Jean Rnllili (Jopyrlght 1937 By The News iagcncy) LIADRID, All: 4—(CP— Havasb- Z-Tupporied by "Dynamite-res" and a livuvy urilllerv barrage. General Jose lvliiijnis militiamen recaptured llie sfrntcgic town of Brilliete. Gov- \'l'llllll‘lll} soilrccs Sllld loiiigilt, as .i iii-iv ildviliice sllvung through llie tvnr-lorii sectoixlsi miles west of bclczigilercd Madrid.» While Cr(‘ll(‘l‘al Staff headquar- tors did not confirm the report, Brunctc, the bitterly-contested "Ver- dim" of Spairfs civil war. Was YB- lKiricrl n5 in the Governments hands after heavy fighting. once more presenting a challenge to (lcnvrnl Francisco Francds efforts in cud lilo siege of Madrid with n slllflSllillp nffcilslvo in this sec- tor. ' The vilptllrc W715 reported short- ly altcr Gcncriil Jose Mlaja, com- inandcr of Government troops in Central Spain, stated the Insur- <~ is 10st 20.000 men-killed or j\.cililiill~(l—iii their desperate bat_ lllc to regain lost ground during tlirrli \\‘(‘t‘l€$ of fighting on the front west of Madrid. 1n addition, ‘he said 2.000 Insurgents were cap- ; lurcd. OFFENSIVE LOOMS Reconiiaisaiiixv flilrlrtas made by tzovcrnnlenial planes today over the Insurgent positions near the Manznnarcs River presaged im- pending largo-scale operations in the Sector south of the capital. Minin declared the conflict am- ply demonstrated for the first time the offensive power of GOV- ctiinicllt Spain and forcstfllicd Iri- iContinlied on page 9. Col 4) Double Tragedy In Toronto Home TORONTO. Aug. 4- Patrick Trant returned to his home from work late today to find his 24- year-olil wife Mary, hanging dead in n ilooryvay with two knotted baby's ilnpkiiis ziroillid her neck, iiild their lfi-moiitlis-old boy Tor- l‘i'illl‘l‘. drowned in n bathtub. Po- llCC tonight declared it a case of iiillrtici‘ imd suicide. ’i'l.lllt. said when he llOlh-l‘ ' . his slnillu- Jlllfl (‘ll(‘(‘l‘flll mid the child win. pniyllll; oil the floor Tile baby‘. boily was in the kitchen ivlicn lit‘ arrived iiolllo at illglii and Mrs. 'l‘railt‘s wav silspendcci from n iilnllig room doorway, The husband summoned neigh- bors and p0ll(‘f‘ were called. They found nothing to explain» the double tragedy. Neighbors reported Hi0)" llll(l been speaking to Mrs. Trilllt iii ll a. in. and found her iippnrclltly quite happy and nor- mal. ' i AP) “Queen Elizabeth l l l l l BALMORAL, Scotland, Aug. 4- returned with King George to the high- lands of her youth today for her first birthday anniversary as Qilccn and the traditional royal liolidny at. Bnlmoral castle. Scoisincn tilrned out by thous- ands to welcome the Royal Coilplc on the Queen's 37th birthday. The kilt-clad King. the Queen and Princesses Elizabeth and Mar- garet received official greetings from Aberdeen ailthoritics and TRURO N 5 Aug 4__wmmm then motored the 50 miles to Bal- moral. Retainers mci the Royal car at llie castle gates and towed it in- side according to ancient. custom. Hives , ‘loll lind (irtiovi-il all ‘ tloiials. lClas/i Ijaending fBetween Main fArmies In South Japanese Augment Naval Units In War Area —--Tighten Con- trol Of Peiping - Tientsi ii Area’ l a (Iiy The (‘nnrul/rln I'm-saw) l Dcspatchcs from Nllnkiili"; “i‘(lllk'.\(lll} hlillfll the (‘on ; iral ClllflCSO‘(l()\'0l'l’lnl0l'll was holding" llllpiiflillll emergen- lcy conferences liimcd zit rout-hing" ll fll‘('l.\liill ill regard to i the Japanese seizure of iluihnriiy in llitllflll Province in | North China. Unofficial information 0n ihi- ciiiifi-ri-ilccs. liiicndcd by ‘Gencralissimo Chillllg litii-Shck llnrl other government and military authorities. differed. Sumo ZICCIIlIIIlS szlid the ‘government would silo for pi-zlcc; tiihiirs ihili ii strong . stand would be niiidc zlgiiinsi Jnpzln. _ l The zone of combat hciwccn the fun nations shifted ti l ihc south. Jilpiini-si- columns [icni-irziicii suilihivliro through l-lopch Proillici- zllid llt‘ill't.‘(l lhi- niuiii Chino-so Army. Chinese soilrci-s slilied Chizing‘ Kill-Shela hlld 50.000 troops in southwestern llopch while Jilpziifs highLv-trziin- cil and well-armed troops in North (‘hinil lvi-ri- estimated ill 25,000. Japan concentrated a fir-cl. of‘, nine warships at Sivnlou". soutiicril , _ ‘ Chinese port. leading to Clniicsc _ Cases 0n Increase fears the city might bc bombard- ' 1:1 ed. Japanese warpliiilr-s bniillaorl Central GOl.‘f’l'lllll(‘lll troops £l(l— Ylinclilg through llilpvli Pl'(t‘.'lliill'. inflicting numerous vasilaltlcs. Bolster Naval Strength .(-p ,__J1 puralys \VI.\‘Nll‘l-‘.(l, Alli.‘ 4-- oi Ltifiilil ‘.- .\l.illll..0Dli lili‘..l‘,‘ - _\lfllll'liilil lhpn SHANGHAI, Aug. .3» Ullillrstlliyi ~Dmiger of Slim-Japanese lioslili- , ties spreading to South Clliiin lil- (‘lHlF-(‘Cl today following cont-outru- L101] nl additional Jnpiliii-sl- iizlviil. _ ,, ili‘.ll..~ u! Siviiloiv, southern (.‘|illi(-.s4~_l'“h'""' M“ ‘f’ pur iillil wlile-sciilc lxiliiblilg ilpl-r-I """“I" PM” ailuiis cilrrlcd oill. by Jll]l1l!ll'\’(' uvl- . I aiors iv iiging 50lllll\\’lil' . ‘ in lit. ' twp“... vii i-l v-ll .l‘ The Klvaiiiliiig ill'lll_\‘ high ruin- 1:11:37?‘ mand at 'l‘lentsln Bllllllllllflflll i-arh “°“"‘l“a today that its bombing plzilli- ‘hi "W'- blasicd to a. standstill tile Cclllrdl ‘i? "W? l! Government tr 0 o p s lKlYllllClT" through Hopcli Province from Kili- gall. capital of Siliyunii Pl'0\lllt'i‘. Bombs struck iilnny llllli'lll'y i trains and found lllllll(‘l'Oll.$ victims P. aluoiig Gciierillisslmi) Cliiiini; liiii- _ n lwultll officer, Silt-it's crack troops, illi- JilllllllPfiPil ‘n kiwi) i-llildrol announced. tvcil. llviu‘ 935i‘ Ulokyo (lSDFiLCllPS Fillll tlii- .l.'lp-, m ~,i._. 115,; ‘w. arose planes took lo tlic ilii‘ iollolv- ing reports that strong Cliliicsc lur- ces were closing in oii iiic Kwilii- tum; army laud forces isolated in the PCIDlIIQ-TlCllISlH zmic. Spurred by the widening scope of conflict, View. one ‘tllosi: 1 the Japanese Cabinet iii special so "ion s c d d plni x f ll rli. - mcTitary pagpsopriatldn (gt a-illiilotmé- 000 $118,900,000» for i n-nnif.“ surmount flier The total of Japanese warships at Swatow, important. port of Kivantung Province in South China was raised to nine when two wiir- v ships dropped nilchor there cnriyl today. the Central iChilicsci News Agency reported. Nationals (lrrlt-rril Out Dllmci iJlipniicsl-i Ni‘\\':~ AllPllily said tlic Jllliilllfkl‘ Ifhllhlll Jli (‘nil- Jrlpzlllli-i" lili- to leave iilul .~f>lll]lf‘|'ll lI\l'-- ‘ tropolls lllllllfiillfllfil)‘ for lliiilgKtilitz Ficm TlPIllSlIl. Dome. f|ll()l.(‘fl Jup- alicsii officials as l'i‘]lOl‘lllilZ nilllli- plying nnti-Jnpnlicsr zlglilitlrlil ; ilil-lrilgliout China. lviili lil‘\\'b{lllll(‘l”;;, i radio stations. lll('f\ll'(‘,\' lillcl schools , joining the ciinlpiilgii. l Nlltilt-rolls ilvls ni n"; in-ioli \\'l‘l'i‘ (‘ll'll‘"(*fl. including ...~... lilllfln (ll it Jllltllldll ‘FUHUN H). ,\ .‘ Queen Elizabeth Observes 37th Birthday Quietly iContElued" on page 9V._Col. 5i them the first real rest. nlllCf‘ their accession. Even the Queen's birth- day was spent travelling. On the Balmoral luncheon iilblc were birthday gifts for tllc Qtlcem-a diamond and emerald bracelet. from the Klluz, and ntlivr [m4 “" 4 _ presents from their two dnuizlilers. 3 “V” "“‘I“I'_ " v Qfilffll Mary and _oilil\r llll‘l'lll)t'l'.\ ‘yOIHUTFU‘;"“‘I0l_;‘v’fl“i: M o Fllitlfzsnoflglixipafrxirldlli‘ (30\‘(‘l’ll|'lll.'lll I Sm‘ *1‘ l!“ “m” buildings in London in the Qii-'eil's N“ WmUHIM" ,"?""""‘" honor and salutes wcrvi fired in ““" ‘ ‘ Hyde Park and from the tmvrr of London. nl 721i and n‘. 450. I‘lll 1'.\ If FERRY v||ll|1'll Mesagcs of coilizralilintion from II-uuw u r. ll-llll»: i n. In ' m. villa-n Iitllvllfilll‘ all parts of the world poured iiiin ..., .....l 6.30 |I. m. illilly the quiet castle which Qllccli Vic- Thc Royal Couple hoped their six-week holiday would brzng Xhibftion-"August i6t0 ixiria many roars ago made tho ' v: viii-viii. PT-iinliiliiiv. , ' _ F-llllfl .l_\ an _\' Ffl\l‘l ‘ummpr hand“ rchldcncc of um In IIPII nl 3 n m, nml lhihl‘! Tormen- "lflfllnfl Wlwfflilll- (luv l" ll,l n. m. a-frttlt 2O v i’ .- - wnnaiiialw