MAXIMS or A MERE MAN All that 'mankind has done, "mught, gained or been. ia lying as in mule preservation in the lilies of bndkl- ' » shalt -W /// '/// r-|`:,a~"' 5*’ & ' Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew lurrrlvni ill/l Z? The Peoples Paper ...M -~...... _Read byEverybody \ MAXIMS or A MERE MAN Despotlc governments stunt men. niakc them thin-hiooficd and low- liroweii, all liar-kin-nd and no lure- lieail. I i., "H W ‘~@-"- " »\,y._;>.'_ ‘l"v'f,%-.. f. By? .~ . fa ‘ J. »i .3 if .». ,. _ .,_ t \ all ~ *LJ "wif ”~".`. 1 :/- ',i s- sf- fiid l ff~i.l.». l . v H . . ,. -v. ~‘.` ,_ \`5 e: (luardinn Two Conti f|'§,‘,fff',f;°°°¢T..'L.r.iian, rounded im T 5 ' .L 1* A _ . _..._ _ ..._ _._ ._______,_, ../., .-'4' .\,,- _-Vi CHAR1.01"rE'rowN, CAN-ADA. MONDAY, JULY 5, 1931 8 PAGES ll al il-1' Fl ~'|.ofi~ fiiiiiiiln uml L ii .!.'.uri _ .- ‘-F. _ ___ V ____ *MY* W_ y u . _ . ‘- - Tv- -~_d.A_......,. ..L. ‘H0 WD 0 W N SPANISH , CRISIS M NENT i G, W in _*ll* ill _ ill ii-| W il 1 W M W M 1 ScoUR SOUTH SEAS I-“oat MISSING A VIA TRIXlP<>W<-=fS Prepare concludes Lengthy Military Service KEN’I`VII..LE. N.S., July 4-(CP) ,Col J, H. MacDonald. V.D., C.B. g_ i-.included 26 years military _.pri-ice \vith a sermon to troops at Al.iiice in Earns- cli!Te srliiint \i'»~.1ii..~Eay, July 'lth. if not fini- first line night follow- J-8 L-2304-7-3-2i. "Coiiccrt aiul dance Web.»tcr’s Corircr llnll, Iiloiiclny, July 5th iiziiicr ails|i;r~.s C. W, L. Kelly‘s bus li-.”.vcs Nobniin 8.30. L-2l65-'7-2-5. "Old iiisliioiieil Tea Party in iris July oth. Sports. amuseinents. re. li<~.~linieiits. Come and enjoy a good lime. If not flnc, flrst fine day fol- loviiir. L.-1478-a-ic-22-26-'l-n. "Come to the strawberry social ln Buribury School Wednesday, -lllli’ 7. Games and other attrac- tioiis. If not fine will be held fol- l“"‘-llg lllsht. Proceed; in aid of Clifton Church. I..-32-7-5-31. "Crime to Eldon July 7th. Why? \‘.'oii.-en's Institute Strawberry Fes- il'-al--Afternoon Tea-Pantry Table. \\_'lzri>e? Ori Dr. Johnson's lawn. 'iiiiier Afternoon and evening in aid >l llosnitals. L.-2324-'I-3-sl. "Reserve July 'ith for the Cove- :ic.i-tl Tea held on the Community l.'.i_ll grounds (near Marshall‘s .\I..l=i. Dancing and other amuse- ~i..~.iis, Meals served from 4.30 P. M. L-16.ll-6-18-19-'l-5. ‘ The Annual Mceilng of the P ii, I. Swine Growers Association iviil be held in the Board Rooms. Till' Hall. Charlottetown, on Friday, Juli# 9th nt 10.30 A. M. A11 swine tlrowcrs nre invited to rittend. L-s-'I-3-c-s.. "Notice of Closing-We the liderslgned merchants agree to -:lose our stores each Monday and Friilny evening nt 6 p. m.; also rash Wednesday at 12 noon com- lnencing Monday. July 5. These 7‘°5ln!s to bo _effective until fur- ther notice. Signed: N. A. Out- nllfie, G. A. Stewart, MacKay do Todd. L. 5. Beaman. V. L. Mc- Quald. W. H. Ford, G. C. Green, J. F. Morris, Wm. Smith, E. Rob- tm- L-as-1-3-ai. "Where are you going to spend Y0ur holidays? At Westview Lodge "Wh Tryon. L-is-1-s-iii. -_-_ °'Notlce. Persons wishing in- lpectlon of Brown Top Fields must \PDly to undersigned before July, l0. 1987. Dominion Seed Branch. 5°* 313. Charlottetown. I..-12-'l-3-iii. "Annual meeting Kensington Shipping club will be held in xing °°°l'Kc Hall Wednesday evening, my 'ith at I o’clock. All members cordially invited to attend. Bgd. -lehn R. sharp, seety. mo-'I-3-21. "The -Womens Christian Tem- 9¢Nnoe Union are holding an open Ilr meeting Monday. July sth at 3.30 on the lawn at Bldmont ihome is Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Johnson), c°1'l»h River Road. Refreshments. “fm and ,loin this worthy cause. 0 need new members and we (By The Associated Press) FOYNES. England. July 4-The Imperial Airways giant flying boat Caledonia today completed the nrst. leg of a trans-Atlantic survey night by making the 351-mile hop from Southampton to this airbase at the mouth of the River Shan- non. The Caledonia is scheduled to start tomorrow on the actual trans-Atlantic crossing. to Bot- wood. Newfoundland. where a big Pan-American clipper was prepnr- ing for a similar eastbound survey fight to Foynes. The Caledonia's Southampto-i- Foynes night was to have been made Saturday but was postponed owing to bad weather. First of the airplanes of four nations to start route survey flights with the goal of selling passenger tickets over the counter by next spring. The great-winged Caledonia is commanded by Cap- tain A, S. Wilcockson. \Vill Fly Eastward Within a fewsdays after the Caledonia wings to Newfoundland. an American Sikorsky boat com- manded by Pan American Air- ways Captain Harold E. Gray will make the trip in the opposite dir- ectlon. Germany and France have en- tci'ed the Transatlantic picture t0o. the former with an announcement that survey nights with.pontonn- equipped seaplanes between the Azores and Port Washlngt.on,Long URANGEMEN PARADE T0 UNITED BHURCH Members of the Loyal Orange Association of Charlottetown ac- companied by visiting brethem paraded to Trinity United Church yessterday morning. Members of the L. O. B. A. attended the ser- vice in a body. The sermon was preached by Rev. Hugh Miller, pastor of the church who welcomed the lodge members. In the course of his el- oquent sermon Rev. Mr. Miller told the Orangemen that their or- der was founded on worthy pr;n- clples worthy of emulation and practice, the principles o.` equality and right. They did not claim.fnr themselves what they were not willing to concede _to others. “One is our Master nrirl all are brethern." The parade, hcndcd by _the pipe band. was marshalled by Mr. Rob- ert Spencer. The prooesslon formed up at Boyne Lodge rooms on Rich- mond Street and marched by way of Richmond, Queen. Grafton and Prince Streets to Trinity Church. The return march was by way 0! Prince. Kent, Queen and Rich- mond Streets. To Beg_i_rt Today British Airliner Caledonia To Inaugurate East-to-West Cross- ing With American Clipper Pioneering Qgposite Route. Island. would be resumed this month. German seaplanes flew the route last. summer. ‘ Air France Transatlantlque will dispatch a six-engined boat, the Lieutenant de Volsseau Paris, to Port Washington by way of Lisbon and the Azores some time this summer. When the Atlantic is spanned bv air, the nnal link in a worid-gir- dling airway will have been forged and man will negotiate lclsurelylri ‘less than three weeks a roule l which Ferdinand Magellan accom- Iplished in three years 418 years l ago. l The Atlantic survey flights will jclimax five years of preparation. :In that time the Paclflc has been . bridged. Hong Kong is 'only eight days from San Francisco. Witt..- winged transport airplanes shuttle from Asla's Pacino scaboard tothe capitals of Europe. New Zealand and Australia shortly will become way stations for the around-the- world traveller. More than 35 successful flights across the North Atlantic in heav- ier-lhan-air machines have been made. Lindbergh‘s is the most famous. Forty-three have lost their lives attempting lt. Mondays pioneering trip on a corlriercial basis will be in flying boats weighing some 40,000 pounds. ,amply powered. and fitted with every safety appliance and navi- gating instrument known to agro- nautical science. The survey nights between Norht America and Europe-which presently will be extended to the Azores-Bermuda route to provide .a southerly course in the winter 'time if necessary-will be inndc with flying boats, but wheeledl/ind planes probably will be used eventually for passenger convey- ance. More easily streamlined. the land plane with retractable gear is speedier than-the blg-hulled.wlng- ed boats. Moreover. aeronautical engineers within a few years hope to bring stratosphere flying to practical reality, and the lighter land plane lends itself more read- ily to high-altitude work. The procedure in establishing Trans-Pacific service probably will be followed on the Atlantic. Fvir several months after the survey nights are over, only mail will be carried. Regular passenger service by next spring is indicated, liow-' ever. CLIPPER AT BOTWOOD BOTWOD, Nfld.. July 4 -_ The most dlfficut leg of Pan Ameri- can's proposed Transatlantic dir service lay before the giant fly ng (Continued on page 7, Col 4) Wll WHL KNOWN HERE PORT WJE. Ont., July 4-(CP), -Mrs. Laurin Douglas Jackson, 43, wife of Stanley Jackson, Inter- national'League hockey refcreey died at her home here Saturday. 1 Hier parents, residents of Trentonp N. S., one daughter, Laurie Anne, Jackson, and her husband survive. As Mosleyites (A. P. by Gu.ardl.ln‘s Special Wire) LONDON, July 4-Communist aympathizers fvixht police in the streets today ln a vain effort to rout 7.000 Blackshlrt followers of Blr Oswald Mosley who marched from Kentish Town to Trafalgar Square. Nineteen demonstrators were arrested. A number were cut and bruised in the filhting. Women yanked at hair, and the men en- gaged in fist fighting. 'I'he crowd shouted “rats” and hissed and booed the marchers. Someone threw an apple at Bir onward. It smnsned easiest "W loud-.speaker of his m0t0r CHU The Fascist leader wore black shirt black tie and ami fllnnel “Nd them now. I L-I. ....it,'in iis.. or me uniform sm- Street - fighting In London Stage Parade ned by Parliament, and rode atop his car. He addressed ‘his followers through loud-speakers attached to the machine. The parnders first had planned to march through the east end Jewish district but this was bon- ned. Thousands of mounted and foot police were on guard along the line of march. Mosley's voice almo~t was in- audlblo because of the booting. Youths shout/ed "One, two, three. four, five, we want Mosley. dead or alive." Said the Blackshirt Leader; "We go to Trafalgar Square. not with a handful; we go with a host. We- have faced the Rec terror in the streets-the Red allen terror 1 Tm... - Arla..fielillriirlciiiril1...... ....... ninlifslciils lF°f Early Setsion Accidentally Shotl 0 f C O III I1] 1 T Tj QQ Survey Flights UFVETERANS _,_ at TREVIVE HUPES. _ _ _ ____ . l‘°,,';,_’;,lA§,j'={,“,§i;",§'j,;;;,;“'S‘,§;;;;{. Britain Will Toicratc .\lo Viola- Blli PRUBlEMlc..c°i.2i2ur..‘12f‘llT SET-lllcllllls, .ion of r....~i....~i-.i i....».....v v - .- - - . 1 5 Of Spain Or Free Access To olvei which he was caiiyiug cx ploded, shooting him through the MaJ0r 'I' R' Bowler! hegllllth had taken the revolver to General 0 Secretary, §§§g§°§§§cf,‘;f,§l§,°e‘,‘;§_S°jf,{,.§§‘,,§‘§§;§, In Widespread Hunt Of Canadian Legion Lak” Wlllmm- brlimfl 01° N011” For Amelia Earhart Wes.. Arm from Haliiiix, b Daiiitl rr.c.\< retiiriied to the rfliore of tlic 1 ke some time later and ioliiid, mlth’s body. The firenrni iippzir-. Zeleniolllo Tieme rixfat Problem ,°f , ently had been accidently dis-1 on FlrSt Vlslt Here. Scrrick, a resident of tlie district., _ attempgh to find adequate S m iargcd. l D Y H_ Us ex sex'vlce.c1 en “'95 eng” n me Bll»EnTfl0Hl Smith was a member of the. ' El K of ilic Canadian Leglo M ' J eral ecietarv of the Canadian oung Men‘s Christian Association j as also prominent in local rowing U. 1110!’ . Y R- B~l fvf.i“ ‘J (Continued on page 7, Col 5) Basque Resistance Crumbles As Rebels Near Santande f,\.P. By Guardfan'l Special Wire) VAL_\flASl‘IZJ.°., Spain, July 4--At lenst 15,000 government soldiers have surrendered in Northern Spain within the last. three weeks, Insur- gent off ccrs declared today as their men pushed toward the city of Ban- tender. Already inside Santander prov- lncc. the Insurgents found only small bodies of government troops who sniiizlit only to slow the ad- vnnrc. Tlicy fled as the Insurgents pi'vs.=¢‘d oil. The whole clinrncter oi' the civil \\'_ir iii Nnrllierii Spain has chaiuzefi .ince Illlbim fell Juno li), The onco- prcuil l3:isr|iie fighters, beaten on iii:-ir owii ni- ;un~ii't, lliv pu.. bility devel.. npr-rl ioiii,;lix oi .i A-i.'.l.=iiiiito in tho li‘l..Ii l"i'.-if :s't.1ic elt<"iiiii of July l. Lolo iriiiiqlit. th.: .sfniirlliig was; 5! 3'! Phniiiia Fiiil igmrrnmentl Fipf- Gael ioppcusltiqni Labor 1 ,Iiiili‘p~'-mlent ‘¥ Inclepeiiclerxt-Labor 1| 'ln rrillivi Totril 135 F<)z'.- .if-is wore, that of the missq ing seats President de Valera/s Pi< onlin. Fail would inko 10; William T. Cosrrr:t'.'c'.<. F‘;;ir» Grit-l ll and Lraboi two, 'I‘liir. would pioiliice it g<\vei'iin‘.on\ sti'c:;i1t.li of tif), ‘nviiifliiiig the speak- er. acniiist Gi) in all other partied 23 ann, observers held. would pince 5 -. ~_- .-----.--.-- -1... fcontiiiiied on paw 7. Col 6) :.». _ --..- ._-_ =, inc Brsi’ oietol/lar . is l\\_\~lA\rs Mailkltv T’RAC<\ce . v ` /` / ° _M ' ' .1 \ ,,. 1 ` '/ ff/ ./ /' . I5/< , / vi / 6._(") .y \§ \“’ \ ’. .. /1,' L / -' f/.f/' 1( .i ii rulilin Press) 'I`OR<1.\`l"1ee.'=1- I < .- .-6. llvs iliio lofs or ‘ ..._ -r lo -. , . 4 if 1. I , _ ‘Q <4 .J .`_. i '. I+! ' ._ ll s .'."i`.' ,l .c .» 1; . . ~i ,T lf- § . I . ..~~ ' , ,I }»` ~ . ."7 » _U ,-.‘ i.. .jg