OFA MERE MAN ni-ip near-who lovol. believes. Love uh faith. and faith film. .___ 1- misrlottotown uurdlu Two Cont; musing Guardian. Founded 1M1 "Announcement an Inverted in this volum at 2 conic ller word nrlrlly- payable In niivunoe. "Talkies-wfliuris ‘Thursday. L-IGIZ-ll-IO-li. "Tallies-Montague Saturday - "Black Legion". L-l812-11-10-3i. "Bg Dance Ln Victoria Rink on Wednesday. Summerside Orchestra. "Buying live hogs Albany Thurs- day lltii, Emern. d 12th, until noon. G. C. Green. L-20-6b-W-t-t-w-t-tf. "Wcstview Dodge Tryon c105- [pg Armistice Day. Hot duck din- ner 5 to 6 p. m. Make reservations. "Come to the dance in Graham's Road Hall Wednesday night, No- vember 10. - L-1634. "Tryon United Church Chicken Supper and Bazaar November 11th. 11-1475-11-10-11. "Haymakers big dance, Brad- llbane Wednesday, Nov. 10th. '.-' L-l526-11-B-3l. "Dance at Irishtown Thursday night November 11th. _ L-1588-11-l0-1i. "Armistice Dance in Earriscliflc School November 11th. L-1589-11-10-r. "Borden Line Club loading hogs, lambs. calves every Wednesday at Albany. Hours 12-9. L-ZOBI-IO-M T W tt "Chicken Supper at Hebcr Weeks. Fredericton. Wednesday, November 10th in aide of Pleasant Valley Church. L-15C9-11-9-2i. "Hear two One-Act Plays and Concert "n Milview Hall Friday, November 12th by Miilview Y. P. U. ' "Ii-lfm-“ii-D-fll. "Marshfield Dun-staffnage Uni- ted Church W. M. S. Pantry Bale B. A. McDonald Store. Saturday, November 13th. 14-1594-11-10-12. "Reserve Thursday, November 18th for Masquerade Dance, Pleas- tn’. Grove Hall. Prizes. If not fine Friday. L-l582-11-10-li. "Monthly Meeting Ladies Aid P. E. I. Hospital at Cundall Home, Wednesday, 3.30 P. M. Country col- izclors invited. L-1540-1l-9-2i. "Old time flddler's and dancing Nliioii. Oddfelfows Hull, Montague, Tuesday, November 16th. 1n aid of Kings County Hospital, L-1514-11-8-6l. "Unloading car screened coal ll Uiilg Station Thursday and Friday of this weck. W. D. Ross. Kinross. 1,1531 "Don't forget chicken slipper Thursday night, Nov. llth at Community Hall Wez-t Covehead. rickets 25 cents and 35 cents. L-l823-i1-l0-1i. ‘fllear the ‘school-children in their Red Cross concert in York l-lall Tuesday, Nov- 10, assisted by local talent. Admission 20 and 10. ' L-1628-11-10-2i. “Don't miss sering Bracifley P“? Present their play “Aunt “Phil sPonks" and Variety Con- cert in Wheatley River Hull, Friday, Zvrznnzszz Eoumo {VENli E Urges Uniformity In Judging At Fairs (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) AMHERST. N. 8., Nov. 9—The Maritime Winter Fair would undergo a great expansion within a short. period, C. F. Bailey. presi- dent of the Maritime Stock Breeders Association, declared to- day at a banquet for officials of the association, special guests and newspapermen. Plans for expansion were al- ready underway, the speaker de- clared, and when the program hud been completed, the fair would be surpassed by the Royal Fair in Toronto. . Uniformity in judging at dif- ferent fairs was discussed by J. W. Boulter, Charlottetown, manager of the Prince Edward Island Ex- hibition, who stated an animal might take first place in Char- lottetown and be at the bottom of a fair in another part of Can- ada. He urged a school or oon- ference for judges at. exhibitions. Till] UPTIMISIIS IN ’|9 SPEAKER Ii: 1S MEEIINS Dr. H. L. Stewart Speaks Before Cap- acity Audience At St. Paul’s Hall. rationality of’ mankind. of what the world ‘can collectively be taught‘ and trnnsate into pran- tlce." Dr. H. L. Stewart, Professor of Philosophy at Dalhousie Uni- versity declared lest -night. The internationally known speaker was addressing a meeting in St. Pam's Parish Hall, Charlottetown, under the auspices of the Royal Edward Chapter, Imperial Order Daugh- ters of the Empire. He spoke on. "19 Years after Armistice.“ Mrs. J. A. Mathieson, Regent of the Chapter presided and a capacity audience was in attendance. A hearty vote of thanks to the speaker was moved by His Honour Lieutenant Governor George D. IfiBlois and seconded by Dr. G. D. Steel, Principal of Prince of Wales College. Women's organizations such as the I. O. D. E. the speaker said. were nble to form public opinion. first in the famfy and then in the community. They were the means through which public opinion might be leavened- and a resistance built to monstrous, enervating follies of which the present age hiid seen sd many. Dealing with the League of Na- tions Dr. Stewart declared that it was not failure of the underlying principles. but long neglect of those principles which had made it at present an impotent factor i2: world affairs. In 1910 the pow- ers agrced they would interfere collectively to prevent war and this year in the case of Spain na- tions were pledging themselves not to interfere. / One mistake had been made in November 12th. L-l597-1 1-10-12. Exrcomc to the Bean Supper and R tertninment on Armistice night at oilu Bay Hail. Rollo Bay Orch- Bill. (November 11th.) L-l6l3-11-l0-ll. "Mail Couriers of West Prince "e {eqiiested to attend a meeting l“ oLeflry on Saturday, November 13th at 8 P. M. BlflliQd F. A. Watton, President. J. H. Dawson, Secretary. L-l. 05-11-10-111. "UhlOiIdlhI CdIlOlfl OI "Gill, Edte Flour" Bran. Shorts and Mlddliliils at Bouris Thursday and "idly of this week. Off car price while the supply lasts. Rollo Bay Burma Cliib. p-iosa. “flog markets were slightly ‘ ollger in Montreal on Monday M Tue-idly. and we believe next a"! will bring stronger quota- htlnl- Late wires Tuesday night hmlio In expected advance of ° to four shilling: in the Eng- lnarkets. It looks as if hold- l hills for next week's markets Plight be u good decision. Live- ltock Mei-mine Board. 1.4633. ""Clilt Edge Flour" is milled m the finest of hard wheat and “muted u. be of the highest “"1"?- by the manufacturers. Co- operative buying enables lie to sail l‘ ‘i tho regular price of cheaper m5“ Got your supply at. Bouris “'1 “mm Ind Friday of this week. or at Charlottetown any time Livestock rumor; Board. b1633- the League, that of trying to bring together r-Il the countries of the world. Such a hope was to ignore the great national con- trasts and the speaker mentioned Germany, Italy and Japan, on the one side and Great Britain, France, United States on the “If we are going‘to__have (Continued on page 11, Col. 4) Rumanian Cabinet To Resign Today BUCHAREBT, Nov. 0—Roliable sources stated tonight Premier George Tatarescu and his cabinet will resign tomorrow.» King-Carol was expected to call on Ion Mihal- ache. .eader of the National Peas- ant Party, to form a new govem- mant. ‘rho reported resignation was sold to be duo to a party desire to retire voluntarily from office so as to ef- fect a party reorganization, in line with the Premier's recently reveal- ed declsion to‘ retire from Public life. ‘ Regardless of the party that take! ave;- me government. Pollilfll circles believed Rumanian foreign pollcyjvlll Fm!!!‘ _"".°1“‘"3F‘l-_._ "On hand for dist-rlbllilm It close-to-cost prico "91"? E486 Flour" equal to the best on the market, Bran. Shorts and Midd- llngs. Get your supply fro") m" lot. Indications are that Brio" will goon advance. Livestock Mu- “We over estimated in 1m his ........ yj-ZiV/ , r -i The People's Paper ' Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1937 fKlNii SEEKS PRBVINSIAI. SUBPERATIUN Plans Introducing Na- tional System 0f Unemployment Iii- suran-ce. OTTAWA, Nov. 9 -—(CP)—-A national system of unemployment insurance to be initiated at the next session of parliament was Minister MaoKenzie King to prem- iers of the nine provinces made public today. Agreement of the provinces on an amendment to the British North America Act would be necessary to empower the Federal legislation and the letter asked the provincial governments to submit. their views. Should the necessary agreement King said, the Govemmentprcprs- resolution of both Houses of Par- liament addressed to the Parlia- ment at Westminster. He foresaw no difficulty in obtaining the a- mendment if the provinces were in agreement. The Prime Minister hoped also that the constitutional amend- ment could be obtained in time to present the unemployment» measure at. the same session. He would not say what particular un-_ gmployment ' insurance schema. was contemplated or whether ii- would be contributory. The letter referred to a recom- mendation from the National Iun- I ployment Commission and added » that the Government shared "the I opinion thatm. national employ- ' merit service within federal juris- diction is a necessary complement of any plan of national employ- ment insurance." Following is a copy of the letter addressed to the premiers Nov- 51 ‘My Dear Premier: i "My colleagues and I are con- 1 vinced that a national system of unemployment insurance would contribute materially to lndiviclusl security and industrial stability throughout Canada and would as- sist in mitigating the distress in- cident to any recurrence of win-- spread unemployment. “A strong recommendation w l respect to national control of e - ployment offices, based upon a fr‘; investigation of the unemployme situation throughout the Domini" has been submitted to the c: ernment by the National Einr‘ t merit Commission. we share t opinion that a national em I merit service within federal jiii'=- diction is a neccssflfl! comvlemwt of any plan of national unemploy- t ment insurance. i "We believe it is most de 9 n- .1 sirable (Continued on page ll, Col. 3) Five Jews Slain By Arab Terrorists JERUSALEM. Nov. 9 -(CP Haven-The Jewish population 0' the Holy Land was deeply stirred tonight by the murder of five Jewish Laborers killed today b“ Arab bandits near the K-lfyli-Bn!" vim quarries near here. Six Arabs were inthe attackins party, authorities said. They shot their victims at close tame, im- mediately killing three. Two labor- are who survived the first volley were put to death with biiyoriets. British police sent out a p'arie to hunt for the Arabs, who escap- ed shortly after the shooting, fol- lowing a clue given them by Jew- ish workers who heard the volley and indicated the trail taken by the assassins. The plane picked up the trail of the fugitives and fired on the party. wounding several in a burst o! machine gun fire. Jackie Coogan To Wed Betty Grabie IDS ANGIILIB, Nov. 9 —-(AP) -Jaokic Coogan, who built o fortune on his characterization of a waif 1'1 your: ago in Charlie Chaplin's picture, "The Rid," filed notice may of intention to wed Betty Grable, movie starlet. Jackie Government to enact the necessary ' be forthcoming, Mr. MiicKcrizle, proposed in a letter sent by Prime ; and i i i ed to seek the constitutional a- ' mendment by the customary Joint . out - A llldfi.—wollldbemlfrlodml!u Nations was not the Citizens. landers. parade: (P.E.I-) ance, C .A.M.C. taph. Home. Legion Band. OTTAWA, Nov. 9—(OP)-Under present conditions the League of "an effective means of defence against aggres- PROGRAMME SACRIFICE __ REMEMBRANCE _ PEACE Ceremony at the Cenotaph, Queen Square, Charlottetown, under the auspices of the Char- lottetown Branch of the Canadian Legion, British Empire Service League. In the distinguished presence of His Honor Lieutenant-Governor of Prince Edward Island; who will fake the salute in front 0f the Provincial Building after the ceremony. Thursday, the Eleventh of November From 10.45 o’clock a. m., stroke of the eleventh hour ther Fire Bell will toll at intervals ofgtwenty seconds. ' v Parade will leave the Legion Home at 10.40 arriving at the Cenotaph at 10.48. ORDER 0F CEREMONY 0 CANADA PLACING 0F’ WREATHS LAST POST TWO MINUTES SILENCE REV. DR. R. MOORHEAD LEGATE, Hon. Chaplain HYMN—0 GOD OUR HELP IN AGES PAST GOD SAVE THE KING Wreaths will be placed by His Honor, the Lieutenant Governor, the Premier of Prince Edward Island, His Worship the Mayor, the President of the Lcgion_ the President of the Ladies Auxiliary, Officer Commanding R.C.-N. V.R., Officer Commanding R. C. M. P., followed in order by Militia Units, Organizations and All returned men, nursing sisters and others who served Overseas are invited to be on parade. Guards of Honor will be composed of the following Units: R.C.N.V.R., and P.E.I. High- Detachments from the following Units will Royal Canadian Mounted Police, First Medium Brigade, R.C.A., No. 6 Com- posite Company, R.C.C.S., No. The Boy Scouts will form up at the Cenotaph. MEDALS AND BERETS WILL BE WORN. Space will be reserved for Societies and Citizens who are placing wreaths on the Ceno. - The route of March: Grafton, Queen, Kent, Prince, and Grafton to Cenotaph. The return route of march: Grafton, Queen, Richmond, Prince, Kent, The singing will be led by the Charlottetown _ Male Chorus, accompanied by the Canadian All returned men are requested to be at the Legion Home at. 10.15 a.ni. They Served Till Death! Why Not We? , ‘fig/W’ QP“ ,___.¢~" "-~.,____v_____‘\ until the first 26 Field Ambul- Queen, to [legion a “Peace Action Week" gathering hero tonight. "A strongly armed United Kingdom is, in my opin- ion a much surer guarantee of sion," Revenue Minister Ilsley told peace," he added. ‘ Orange Pekoe Blend 1fIiAfli llivilnil iunuzzuii in slmmum Force of 6,000 Faces Annihilation At Nantao Border- i iiig On French Con- i cession. (By Lloyd lehrbas, Associated Press Foreign Staff) SIIANIIAI, Nov. lti-lwednes- - iiayj-The last remnants of Chin- ese forces in Shanghai, now al- ,most entirely in Japanese possess- ion, resolved today to resist until death in their isolated sector. The Chinese, estimated at about 6.000 men in the Nantm native district bordering the French con- cession, virtually were trapped in- side a. bayonet-pointed crescent of Japanese. It appeared certain they must be illlalllllllcd if they made a last stand. There was no avenue of ‘escape except across the Whang- |poo River or into the French lure: where they would be dis- ‘iinncd and interned. Fcverishly Dig-in The Chinese soldiers. helped by coolies worked feverishly by lamp- light digging trenches and raising sandbag barriers. French officers, however, said they were doomed if they defied the Japanese over- whelming strength. ‘The withdrawal of Shanghai's defenders under cover of darkness last night toward their "winter line" protecting Nanking, China's capital, was not a vital blow to the nations defences, General Chiang Kai-Shek declared. He said it would shift the war scene to the great delta lands of the lake region west of shanghai where China has several strong lines reaching about 50 miles to Changsha, Kashing and Soochow. Qulrs CONFERENCE (Foreign Commissar Maxim Litvinoff suddenly left the Brus- sels Conference seeking a. basis for peace between China and Japan. It was believed hi; depar- ture was in protest against what the Soviet construe as a move to eliminate her from. a wmmlttee to consulate in the Chinese-Jap- anese dispute. Russia, however, left representatinon at the conference ‘which remained adjourned with- out an answer to its second invi- tation to Japan to participate.) Japanese troops pressing in pur- sult of the Chinese retreating from Shanghai rounded the corn- or o_f the French concession and passed the Siccawei Cathedral along Slccawel Creek, the dividing line between Nantao \ and the Xlrrench area in western shangh- a. i __C_l_i_in_ese dyna‘rnl_tc_d_and burned (Continued on page 11. Col. 4) Island Native Is Awarded Medal BOSTON. Nov. 9 —lCP)—-Mrs. Iver Tingleoff, native of Hamilton, P. E. I , and widow of a car- penter who served throughout Admiral Richard E. Byrd's second expedition to Little America, was one of six to receive the Congres- slonal Modal from Governor Charles F’. Hurley of Massa- chusetts today. ' Mrs. Tingleofi’; husband who built Byrd's homo in the Antarctic, specially-constructed to withstand temperatures of 100 degrees below zero. died when the expedition put into New Zeaiand homeward bound. She formerly was Bertha Sin. clair and her father, John Sin. clair lives in Hamilton. In 13mm. casts from the Antarctic Tingleoff twice talked with his son. Iver. Jr. and sent messages to his father- iii-law in the Canadian Island Province. Iver Jr.. spends every summer at his grandfather's home. Freighter Aakre Is R e f 1 o a t e d (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) SAINT JOHN. N. 3,, Now 9__ Aflround off Grand Malian 1s- land since Oct. 29. the Norwegian motorship Aakre was floated at high tide this afternoon powerful New York crippled freighter. in tow. was be- iiinea to be heading wwiira Cain ‘UIQQE§~C - tugs. The l4 PAGES by two question Annual Subu I PAMSA Y MA c0 ONALD 015s UNEXPEC TEDL iesmvutlnvrsl zuesvaisuz lDEbi77J':S7?IAUD VVos zd;£5uie 12. South America Cn Vacation Trip Former Prime KIT standing Labor Leader Succumbs To Heart Atta_cli Aboard Liner. LONDON, Nov. 9—- (CP)—-J rose from poverty in Scotland to Iii-clinic lliYiCU Prime Minister of Great Britain, died cruise ship bound for South t America where lie had hoped to seek rest and recuperate his health. Dr. Alastair MacKinnon, Mr. MacDonallPs son-in- law, received news by wire- less of the death of the Un- ited Kingdom's only Labor Prime Minister. He died aboard the liner Reina Dcl Paciiico at 8:45 p.m., appar- ently of a heart attack. The body will be taken oil‘ the ship at. Bermuda, where it is due Nov. I5, and re- turned to England. The 71-year-old f o r m c r Prime Minister with his daughter Sheila sailed last Thursday for South America i “the most elusive of‘ all forms of happiness-rest.” He had planned to visit Peru and Chile and “to return when I have bad enough of it. The day after he departed Earl Baldwin, his successor as Prime Nltnistcr, paid tribute to Mr. Mac- Donald in a public address, say- ing: “I never feel that Mr. Mac- Donald has had credit given him by the country due for services he rendered it in 1931 and in the years immediately succeeding." Headed National Government It was in 1031 that Mr. Mac- Donald formed the National Gov- ernment and in doing so broke with many of his old associatcsin the Labor Party. Tonight two of those associates hastened to express their sorrow. Former Home Minister John R. Clynes, who was a member of Mr. MacDonald's first Government and was intimately associated with him in his early Labor Party days, said “although after 1931 I had very acutc differenceg with Mr. Mac- Donald, 1 am intensely sorry to hear of his death. "As, regards our acquaintance up to the break of 1931, I have the most peasant memories of his greatnessand his work. He was not only a great orator but a. great or- ganizer." The veteran Labor leader, George Lansbury, said PI am dreadfully sorry. He was one of the pioneers of the Labor movement, and though we separated in 1931, all of us will remember what he did in the days when the movement was struggling." PRIME MINISTER- INFORMED Prime Minster Chamberlain rc- ceived news of his death shortly eit- t.er addressing the Lord Mayor's banquet in historic Guildhall, tnc occasion at which a year ago Mi: MacDonald suffered a sudden co.- lapse. One of Mr. MacDonald's last comments oi‘ a political character was the assertion iic could not bc- lieve "lliis war tulle," a statemcn‘ that bore out iis yiars of ai-dcni‘ paclficism. He b ltcrly opposed both the South African and Great. Wars. , surrendering his leadership of Ln-i bor in the House Coirin ~ l ‘ (Continued on page 11,, Col 1) __ i MERE MAN Love without return" is like a IQIb-l‘. ll. L. ".00; (‘innudu and U. S. $5.00 ....t.t.“ MAXIMS OFA. without an answer. rl|lllflll Urlirrnd [£1.00 .. .._...______.; ‘ I! if‘ nister And Out- _ Riimsiiy .\liicl)0n:iid_ “I10 suddenly tnniuhi ziiioiird a n search of whyat he called 1r In Peaceful Settlement WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 —-(AP) --'I‘he United Stains Government indicated today that it stands rcady to offer guidance, if neces- sary, to preserve‘ peace on the troubled Island of l-lispanlola. Georges Leger, foreign minister of Haiti. which shares the island in tiic West. liidirs with the Do- minican Republic, came to Wash- ington declaring that between 3,- 000 and 5.000 of his countrymen had been killed in Dominican ter- ritory since Oct. 5. "We insist,“ lie told reporters, "on full reparations for the vic- tims, anci on punishment of those responsible." ~——~._ - ~ i’ ——' ‘w’; "_.—~—:r~:—.; ~::—-—_ __.1 - if is Murmur Doiiilfriii. ti‘ ‘fill’. NAN viii trails A DOUBLE \.\\‘E like ‘TWINE As rivcii run Qaeeaae l THURSDAY y, being REMEMBRANCE DAY and a PUBLIC HOLIDAY TORONTO. Nov. 9~Miiiimun and maximum temperatures: Dawson - 4 Victoria 44 . Edmonton 26 __- Regina 36 ,.; Winnipeg 36 .,‘.' 4 < Toronto 41 -',i\, Olifllvil as iii , Montreal as .15. Qlichcc 112 t? a. ‘ Saint. John 4B f, i l-lalliax 43 a’ » i Charlottetown 40 ‘j. I - - FORECAST I. Maritime Ea t: Prosh tn strong “f i southvzcst. to northwest winds; oolidy niicl bvconling somewhat scattered . -. the next issue of THE GUARDIAN will be FRIDAY. NOV. 12 ii. cooler; prnbiibly light 3 showers. High tiiic this rillcriioon at 3A0 and tmiinri-olv iiini-iiilig at 2.30. Siiii si-ls liii; citcrnlmn nt 4.37 at j i i i and I'il'.\ itIi1l4ll‘l'i\\V moriiiiig 051. First qiiai-ivr iiimiii. ‘liilirllny, E Nov. 1i, 4.33 a. iii. i Slilnlnllrsitiq tiiic eightecli min- 1 utes later than Charlottetown. TEE CAR [EBB] u Bordon n.