OIL MERE MAN miti- mgr" " "M w: Gnnlmnzvioucanu "up" M‘! ‘""'~<~-w--\ \ ,.,,_..__-=" _.._. __ _ é , MCHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JULY 1's, loss Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edwartillsland Like the Dew I14 PAGES For sorrow, most unwarrm MAXIMQ 011A MERE MAN ingntitudn 1a the Annual subscription Dally-and “.00 By Mall—l’. E. l. “.00; Clnlda Ind II. I. “.00 W, _.._ _. ._._ Tremend ous Reception fFor PRIVY lillllNllll I] I S M I S S ES lllTll. lPPElli Decision of Canadian Supreme Court Up- held in Bank Tax Bill LONDON. July 14—-(CP)-—'I‘he lastof three Alberta appeals against judgments of the Supreme Court of Canada on legislation of the So- cial Credit Government of Prc- mier Aberhart was dismissed txway by the Judicial committee of the Privy Council. The Ermplres highest, court tuls upheld the decision or the calla-1- ian Supreme Court in declaring outside the powers of the Alberiu Legislature a bill to tax chartered banks with branches in the pro- vlnoe, A week ago the judicial commit,- tee discontinued the henrinrg of ap- peals on the Alberta Press ill, dc- signed to exercise u degree oi con- trol over newspapers of the pro,- vince, and on a mcasllre to regulate audit. The action left intact thc judgments of (he Supreme Court at Ottawa, which 1 dcclarczi the a . CQMING fVfNll "Wednesdays is Dance Nlllhl at The Highlan . L-1257-(i-ll-t: "Talkies Bouris, Monday L~2932-7-13-3l "Talkies Montague, Saturday ‘Harder Baxter ill Blove Ship. "Roll-l Bay Tea Wednesday, July lit-h. Don't forget the date. , 14-2882-7-15-31. "foe Cream Festival and Dance. D0 hSoh lFrid .July 15th- nag m ayL.~2'179-'l-12-2i. social in boy piper, 2081-7-14-21. "Coma i0 ice cream Rose Valley and hear July 15th. 1v- "The Annual Meeting of Morcll Hall will beheld in lvlurell I-lall. Tuesday, July 19th. L-3012-'l—15-21. "Ice Cream Festival and Dance, Binnott Road School Jilly 18tll. 4 14-3013-7-15-21. ____._. ‘Soft Ball Game, WcsL Royalty vs. Mt. Herbert at. Cross Ronda Social Friday rllie. L-uooc-"l-ls-li. "See "Adventures of GrulldPV- Greenwich Players. lll Bridgetown i-lnil Wednesday, July l8. 1.41033 "Ice cream social, dance and bingo at Southport school Tuesday. July 10 Proceeds in Elli of scllool. 41026-7-15-31 "Fortune Dance Friday, July 15th. Clifford Peters’ Swing Or- txirstra. Rollicking rhythm for 25 cents. 9.30 till 1. L-2920 r-l3-3i "Hurrah (or a good time Dance and Icr Cream Elncra‘cl School, Friday, July 15th. Good mlll _ L-2921-7-13-31 "Cake Sale at S. A. McDonald's‘ Sl/Jre Saturday. Jilly 15th by an- tral Royalty Women's Illsiltulc. _ L-IlUUlZ-T-U-Zl. "Reerve W July 27th for St. John's ll .2. l Church, Tccl alltl Euzaac, Lcllast Ii not fine, following (lay. L-30i1l7-l5-20l “Sec “Dust-of the Earth lll Si. Columbrs llali (.11 .vlrll;!d.\'- July iBtn. Dance after pill. L. “Lambs, For next wt ' ' We TQTllllYC‘ abclli 2‘ . 70 pounds or ovcr. eilng Board. "Come to big Dance, Ml. Blow- rt Friday‘. July 15th. Good music. ansfer leaves Bury. | L-3000-7-l5-1i. "Come to Victoria Hall Friday July ls and see "The Rose of , presented by Keil- gngton players. Good specialties eluding the Quinta. L-2880-7-12-2.l "Hear CharlnRet/own Male orus and Val-let Concert in flgll, Tuesday, July 19th- Aid ew Church L-2995-7-15-1fl. "an Ocou Road: School, wnlsht 11001-0121 social s30. Concert l». ~.l~el.e.i “llidfl?” “"- 11 , d ' L-aooz-r-ls-ll. eat "m. of ul liberal Aunggtllonu otmfct Queen‘; 03min?“ .0. ‘it.“£“"l“i’ $51.“ m delegate! m mug-aid from . M mmmadd. Conven- . ' Il-m-lll-Zi. "livestock Marketing Board load hogs, lambs and calves a 110th‘ Jump oi “Pblfrslllifil glam ' Ei- fllln. d... Ulgg. 'Mlll- - v fore- Ylvw. lotmown, . Kcnsin ton. yflt 11f- lhllo, lmbuflndaibene: OI‘. Lord Tweedsmulr To Remain In Britain Until Mill-September (C. P. by Guardian's Special W111) OTTAWA, July l4-I..ord Tweed!- nluir, Governor-General, now v15. itlne Great Britain, who was to have returned to Canada in A - ust. wlll delay his departure un il mid-September. Prime Minister w. (IiJ. Mackenzie King announced t0- av. His Excellencys tour of Western Canada. planned for this fall, will be postponed until next spring. Mr. King said. Lord Tweedsmuir sailed from Quebec July i. Jap Bombers Kill 150, injure 500 In Raids (By Tho Associated Prue) CANTON, China, July ifs-J - liesc aerial bombs killed pro ly 150 persons and injured 500 others ln this South China city today. the third successive day in which Jap- anese warplanes have attacked. Eighty-three dead were counted between the East Bund and Honam Island alone as rescue squads pulled mangled bodies of men. women and children from wrecked houses. Gruesome scenes resemb- led those of last month's bombings in which hundreds were killed. Thirty-seven Japanese air raid- ers appeared shortly after day- break. directing their attack to- ward the Pearl River bridge and Ill" old bower plant. Near the bridge, on the East Bund, one bomb struck the centre of a crolvdcd vegetable market. and 34 shattered corpses were counted there. The only living thin mp- peared to be a pet monkey, c gin- ed to a tree. Crossing the bridge to Honanl. one saw 49 bodies laid out on the sidewalk. In Canton Hospital. where Dr. Sun Yet-Sen studied medicine in his youth. surgeons were covered to the elbows with blood. some victims were lifted to the operat- lnv. table. only to be pronounced dead before a surgeon could pick up his scalpel. The Associated Press corrapon- dent had to tie a handkerchief across hls face to keep out sicken- ing 51119115 of bombed areas. Prom the rlllns of one house there was a cry. then sudden silence. indicating one more dead. Along the East Bund dismember- ed bodies were scattered among the fruits and vegetables of the wgeck- ed stands. A hand lay in the mid. die of the road. There also were arms and lezs. , SHANGHAI. July 14-—lAP) — A terrific all-day bombardment from airplanes and warships had failed tonight to silence Chinese guns of the Linn H111 forts dominating both the enirr l: lo Lake Poyanv and the Yzlngise River below Kin iang. Chinese said they were complet- ing strong secondary field defences in the region. Japanese said their rain of shells and bombs blew up Chinese obser- Yhllcll mats and badly damaged llllauy artillery positions on the hill- src. "I'll"; were unable to push on up the Llngtse River to Kiukiang, 185 miles down stream from Hankow. (he Chinese provisional capital, or launch an expedition across e Pdyang to thc Chinese air base at Nanchang. 100 miles south. without storming and capturing the gun- sluddcd crest. In their aerial operations Japa- nese said they sank a ZOO-ton Chi- nese gunboat in the lake. Numer- ous nearby villages were bombed nlld the nirficlcls at I-Iankow and "w"? we“ raided. Chinese official announcements T so .. lJJ were killed and 1M wound- ed in the third successive daily l‘fll(‘l ml Carlton, South China me- trcpolls. Thirty-foul- bodies were counted lll a crowded vegetable mar-ht on thc East Bund wheres bomb ex- loded in the midst of the attack _v 3'7 planes directed against the Plearé River bridge and old power p an . lllw llllclll Aryan Origin ‘Align? °r‘ll'i§d'”il-S~F§§i"' M") "of Aryan a TECH O1‘ crnment. Publication of it without altering European character." "Conception of races should be essentially its professors’ report said. “This does not mean. the introduction into Italy of Ger- man racial theories as they now exist or the assertion that Italians and Scandinavians are the same thing. The authoritative Fascist news- aper, I1 Gironale D'Italia, edited by Virginia Gayda, however, went further than the ssvants in link- ing Italy's 48,000,000 people with the “Nordic" concept prominent in Nazi racial theory. “Tile term ‘Nordic’ racially has no geographical significance but serves simply to indicate that human type which the dnmortal Linnaeus called ‘Home Europeans," the paper said. (Carl Von Linnc, whose name may be Latinized as Linnaeus, was laéihlllth. century Swedish natural- “Physically this human rac-e cor- responds to the ideals of classic beauty sung by our greatest. poets and depicted by great Latin and Italian artists." the paper ron- tinued. "Psychologically this typo corresponds to the heroic ideal man. Thus directed, t-he Italian race of the Fascist era will become more ‘oWe-nlzed, solid, siI-cnt and powerful.“ 111011511 exaliaiion of Latin civil- ization heretofore has held thc prime place in all Italian culture. the new doctrine was silcnt on that point. reserving its praise for Aryanism. This departure (was viewed hr pofitlcal circles as marking a llll stronger orientation of Fascist [Ol- lcy toward Germany. ROME, July 14—(A.P.lAThc 10 points in the Fascist doctrine of race announced today are as fol- lows:—- 1. Human races exist. ___2._ Great‘ raccs__and_sm;lll__ races (Continued on page 3. Col z» 20 Lives Lost In Plane (trash (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) ROME, July i4—Twent_v persons perished today in the greatest dis- aster oi Italys civil aviation when the Cagiiari-Rome airliner "I Volo" fell into the Tyrrhenian Sea '10 miles off the Sardinian coast. The accident occurred While the big tri-motored plane was flying the regular route to Rome from Cagliari, on thc southern tip of the Island of Sardinia. Among the victims were slx women. including two sisters and a niece of Genera‘. Giuscp e Valle. under secretary‘ of avlai on. Thf others were 10 men passengers and four crewmen. All t ose on board were believed to be Italians. The pane was piloted by C0111- manrl-er Braccilll. who was rankrd as one of the best pilots oi Ala Littoria lines, operators of the air- wa . The craft was last heard from two hours after taking off. At that time radio contact was normal. L The belief was expressed in air crashed in ames. Increased RivalrymApfJorefll Between Germany And Britain .._____ Their Treat of Alliance dates 149N100); July lt-Orut Bri- tain plans important moves in 11081 Portugal and the Balkans. At either end oi the Europflh 0W‘ tinent there are evidences of an increase in Anglo-Gannon rivalry. Germany is using her Austrian conquest as a base to Atrlloe mrther down the Danube towards wheat fields of Hungary and the 011 wells of Romania. In th of war she would need b001- ‘£311.’; r imnrllun IOpOIn o! 201100.000 (I80 Winslow“ m" a g], armaments in Britain. Portugal. 1n U16 mam! a" "WU" occupies I- Oa of Good HOP! 51-min to the hr trolls. dbl-mun Ahawfilfalllflblllfi: to authorise ploacom bculcdby mm no. mm hat and Aul- blct a oou e of culturies. Since Ibbnlary a British milltsrv miss- ion has been in Portugal negotiat- in s new agreement. occasionally sift through that Britain herself is base mm lack confirms ion. The ormatton available in with the in: and that the attention critics. - On rib; other hand the Germans ritory. are und n to moves in umated, is not spared to antee either a . Th osBfl m...“ is mum-d oldest my. nnclllllll ENUllEIATED Professors’ Find Ital- ian Race to be of Italian ‘ people were declared today t‘? be .. y a group of Fascist univers ty profes- sors at conclusion of studies under- taken under auspices of the Gov- the racial doc- trlne gave Italy's 41,000 Jews cause for d ulet with its assertions that Jews “ p not belong to the Italian race" and could not be ills-ed with "purely 1n Italy Italian. and in an Italian-Nordic direction," the , l however, circles that the plane must have leasing a the Portu uece but the on British offldal circles is that negotiations Portuguese are proceed- thsy are reooivins of the highest auth- from position they have es- tablished in Spanish insurgent fer- euwod to be en- W the British The British govél-nmszlt, it i; al- or’; cr it w to China, thon- tin moi llounll The World In Four llays a The flying quintet headed by Howard Hughes ended u illstclry- nurkhs adventure 10mm af- Floyd Bennett all-port, New York. which they left on July 10 for their rvnnd-thc-world flight. They halved Lind- bergllrs time 1n making the trans-Atlantic crossing to Paris. ls (By Guy I. Rhonda, Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON, July 11--The impres- sion that the res nation of War Secretary Leslie ore-Bellaha is imminent gained strength tonight after LieuL-Colonel A. P. l-lenesge, lConservative, made an effort in the House of Commons to reopen the inquiry into alleged army breach of Parliament's privileges. Colonel Heneagc said new infor- mation, available since the House Privileges Committee made its re- port. was inconsistent with that on which the report was based. The privileges committee decided June 30 that a military court com- mitted a breach Parliament's l11SLOT1C privileges by summoning Duncan Sandys. a son-in-law of Winston Churchill, to tell where he obtained secret data on Great Bri- tain's anti-aircraft defences. Mr. Sandys is a Territorial Army officer and a Conservative member of Parliament. Col. Heneage asked the Speaker. Captain Edward A. HtzRoy, what could be done with respect to his new information. asked and‘ was granted leave to defer his decision until Monday as he could recall no precedent for the situation. , Mr. Churchill joined Colonel ll-lcneagc in today's move, saying he also had decided the committee ‘based its report on a mlsleadin mrescntation of facts, which mean censure was ‘aid upon innocent ,nlclnbers of the military court, lcitcd for a breach of privileges in lsummoning Mr. Sandys. Mr. ,Churchill himself is a member of (the privileges committee. Neither Mr. Churchill nor Col- onel I-lelieagc hinted at what new information they had. It was un~ known whether they were referring \ l to the same facts. The ex lanation offered in in- formed crcles was that the sum- mons to Mr. Sandys did not some from the military court, but from an official higher up. Another ex- planation was that Mr. Sandys agreed to attend military court be- fore the matter was brought into the House, which would tend to tension as far as Mr. f-lore-Belisha is concerned. Tllc War Secretary appeared to- day before the sr‘"'t committee which is invvtiwat‘ ~ the liabilit- ies oi members of Par lament und- er the Official Secrets Art. Mr. Sandy's charged that he had been threatened under the act because of the secret information he had obtained about anti-aircraft de- fences. The matter first became public after Mr. Sandys had written a letter to the War Secretary giving notice of ll quest-ion he proposed to ask lll the House of Commons. The content of the letter indicat- ,crl lle was in possession o’ facts about Britain's anti-aircraft de- fen"es which were regarded as a closely-guarded military secret. (Sons 0f Temperance Elect Officers (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) TORONTO, July 14-8. D. Jarvis of Hamilton, ont... was elected pa- triarch of the national division of the sons of Temperance of North America. Miss Mary suffra, Rhoda Island, mods was elected to‘ George R. McLeod. mum. pull-on; n. n. Nicholson, Halifax. scribe; B. M mvenaon Philadelphia, treasurer. Rev. n. ilr. my Charlottetown. chaplain; Miss orcnoe or. Philadelphia, conductor; M155 Ml!- Mbflwfilfl Phi‘ gcret cry, ‘ ‘is. sentinel. The 0 tion will hold 11A 00th annual lesion next July h lilllyclublk I i The Speaks; Every cup ct delight Resignation Of Hourleilgelislldl Befieved Imminent DlSTlNGlllSHEll FREE lllsuls llllllvgnnlv Program Here Con- cludes With Ban- quet at C. N. Hotel Everythin was in readiness lust night for t e arrival of eminent Free Masons of Great Britain who with brethern from the United States and Canada are scheduled to reaiih this Province early today. Die-v itors,_who_reo ti»? attended llllstorlcftseremonl ak. and Annapolis, celebrating tho biwn- tennial of the founding of the first Masonic Lodge on Canadian soil. will take part in ll bilsy oils-day program here, anangcd by the Grand Lodge of this Province. Scheduled to arrive by special train at Borden at 8:30 this lnorn- ing the visitors will be met by motor cars and taken to Sunlmer- side where ihev will rcmniu for luncheon. While in Prince County they will taken to sec thc oyster culture station at ltilscollcllc and the Experimental Fox Farm at Bummcrside as well as other lxllnts of interest. In thc afternoon they will come to Cilarlotteiolvll whore an emergency communicnfion of Grand Lodge will be held. Tile ses- sion will take place at 4 o'clock in ince of Wales College Hall. Herc the visitors will be officially wcl- comed. In the evening at 7:30 the day's proceedings will conclude with a banquet at the Clillndlnn National Hotel. At 7 o'clock ladies who are accompanying visiting Masons will be entertained by wives 0f Prince Edvrard Island Masons at a. dinner at Beach Grove Inn. The party will cnfrdlll Saturday (Continued on page lll. Co: 5» (Lllilfill (llrder 5 New Liners (C. l". by Guardian's Special \\'ll' SOUTHAMPTON. July il-S Edward Beatty, chairman ar ‘ prvl- dent of the Canadian Pa llll- llnlt- way Company. Ltd. nllnnlllllvrl nll his arrival here toddv that l! v"(*i"rl conditions rrmalll favorrlliil‘ file C P. R. will order five llrd Iuxurv liners from British slllpvnrd» dur- ing the next three _voar~ w‘ 1' c»! of 211.000.1100 <$55.K\fl0ll0- Sir Edward. who arrive-i on (lll? liner Empress of Iiritalll fol-_ l1 10- dav visit, said he hopes \\'l1l.(' horr- to“ lace a contract for two vessels of 5.000 tons and 23 knots for the Canadian-Australian service. "I think next year we shall. pro- viding world conditions remain fav- orable. place orders for two new large luxury liners for our Pacific service to re lace the Empress of Russia and e Elnpress of Asia, which were built in 1013." said Sir ' in 1040 we shall probably bull a sister ship to the mnprass of Britain which proved to be no suitable and so successful on thc Atlantic. The new Elnprass would be quite as big and probably rather faster than the present Empress of Wkr- - ll‘ ‘TIA ,'°' l t E llElltlN ound-World llllQ a i nlret Are Fliers INSPEUTIUN UFAcclaimed After Mlllllll TUDllY Phenomenal Trip l l umlsualsBElol-rorl1432411111.. F115? Made In Three Ch a r l ottetown —' Four Units Will Be, On Parade Arrangements have been made for ceremonial inspection at Vic- lol-lll Park today of our units of the Prince Edward Island Militia at present under canvas in Char- loitctowll for annual training. Ill- spoctin officer will be Brigadier H. E, Boa , D.S.O., Halifax, district (llliccr colllmanding Military Dis- trict No. 6. Tillcc distinguished British offi- cers were expected to be resent at the inspection but las minute changes lll their plans were an- nounced early this morning by local military authorities. Davies, General Sir Francis J. K.C.B., K.C.M.G., K.C., V.O, V11 ; Brigadier-General Sir Norma A. Orr Ewing, Bart. D.S.O., A.D.C.. V.L.; and Lt. Col. Lord Farnham, 0.5.0. arrive in (he Province curly l/Odnv with visiting Masons but their program at Summerside whcrc they visit first will not per- llllt them to arrive in Charlottetown in time for inspection schedulml for 2 o'clock, it was said. Units on parade will be the Prince Edlvard Island Light Horse, No. 6 District Signals, R.C.C.S.. the Brine; EdmrLl-iemllJhiBndL (Continued on page 8, Col 1) Canada To Build Planes For ll.A.F. LONDON, July 14-10}? Cable)- All Alr Ministry official said to- night that as little time as pos- sible will be lost, behte the actual ivork starts on buildin airplanes in Canada for the Roy‘! BEFORE- It ls understood that sites for the factories have not yet been chosen. The official said. however, that unless some unforeseen hitch devclc-gls, necessary preliminaries will be disposed oi quickly. The same source was wary about nlcntlonlng any figures in connec- tion lvlth the amount the govern. nlent would spend for planes man- ufactured in Canada, but he said 1120000000 ($100,000,000) would be "on tho high side." The first step t0 be taken will be the dispatch to Canada of the air mission announced ll. re House of Commons yesterday Violence Checked l n P a I esti n e (A P. by (iuardlanb Special Wire) Janus/sum, July lll-Palestine cntercci an uneasy, unofficial "armistice" tonight. checking 10 days of bloodshed between Jews and Arabs except for isolated out- breaks. Liclllcnnll-nts of more than 17,000 Blltlbll soldiers, marines and sail- urs. fcliliilltod by supernumerary collstablls, throw imposing guards around llle most. troubled spots. Alllb strikes continued in the northl-rll area, however, and vio- lcncl- was renewed at Haifa. After fill Arab worker was wounded near ,illc lllw courts. a. Jewish bus was (ill-on on while descending Mount Cflllllfh. A lsh physician, a passenger lll lllc bus, was wounded. Police llfl'l‘rl(3(l an Aral), suspected of hav- lllg ilrcu on thc bus, and also the dlxvcr, who returned thc fire. TOKYO. July 14~——Wltl'1'\ng Jap- a decided today against holding Lhc i940 Olympic Games in Tokyo. Confronted by hostile world opinion, threatened boycotts and continuance of the conflict with China, the Government withdrew its support of the Games in a sud- den action announced bv Mar uls Koichl Kido. Minister '01 Pu llc Welfare. Formal cancellati_ rests with the City of Tokyo, LO which the games were awarded by the In- ternational Olympic Committee. but its reaction was summed up by Mayor Itts Kobayashi, who said: "When the Government decides as s. matter of national policy to call off the ames, I have no choice but to soc e." The Government itself has a formal stop to take-op roval by the cabinet of Marquis ido's action. It is scheduled to meet. to- IIIOTTOW. Only once in the previous history of the modern Olym lc Games. revived in 1896. has ere been a cancellation. That was in 1916 when plans to hold the games in Berlin (In Newmarket, England, Henri De Baillet Labour, president of the International Olympic Committee. said he would call a meeting shortly to decide on a new alto fol- the 12th. Olympic Games.) ‘The Government also announ- oed cancellation of plans for the Tokyo international exposition of Japan Decides Holding 1940 Olympics Hughes’ First Again”. hours and l7 minutes. toric time made by the late from the same field in 1933. Many i.ll the excited throng ex- pected Katharine Hepburn, the act- ress, with whom Hughes has been linked romantically, would bu at. the field. If she was, no one saw her, bull lt was reported that he would visit,‘ her somewhere ln New York later in the day. perhaps cl her 49th street homo. New York planned one its spectacular adulatory ticker-tape and shredded telephone book re- ceptions for the filers tomorrow, when they are scheduled to parade from the Battery up Broadway— gt as Colonel Charles A. Lind- gh did ll years ago after his solo Trans-Atlantic flight. Hughes‘ first words as he left the plane, wearing the same bat- tered brown hat, baggy gray’ slack-l and soiled white shirt ill which he which ho left. New York at B120 p. m. AlD/T Sunday, wcrc: "Never again!" He had been asked whether be would attempt such a flight again. Hughes’ big. twin-motored mono- plalle tvas greeted by a. tumultuous roar as it twice circled tile field at 3:34 pm. ADT losing altitude, and then toxied. to thc splashing new record, Although he had flown 7'72 miles less than Wiley Post, he had set a mark amazing for its speed. and one acclaimed by airmen through- out. the world. v Despite elaborate police precau- tions, with more than 1,100 officers folrmin a oordon around thc field. ,f.he ml ling throng surged through and revented Hu hes from getting wlthn 100 feet o the Wiley PQ-ri Memorial, on which he lied been expected to lay a wreath Police officials had to place the u'rcath there later, _ First lvclconlod by Mayor Florr-ilo H. Laguardill and Grover Whalcn. graesldent of thc New York's World ir, 1939, Hughes‘ four tired com- panlons~Llelli_ Harry P. Connor. navigator; Lleui. '1‘1ltlmas Tllllrlou". navigator; Lulld, illgllt engineer, Stocldart. Edward M“! Rlcllarrl a, olice escort and a prlrndo 0' of- fic a1 cars for hinnhzltzllll. 'I'hc,\' went first to thc homo of Grover Whalell in Washington Nicws, in Greenwich Village. Brfol-c leaving tlll- livid Llcut. Thurlow rubbed his bearded chin in WOIIGCl‘ as llc wnwhcd thc great crowd prcssint! forward v ' hat a reception!‘ llv ext-laun- _hadn‘t (‘ll'0‘lll‘fll"(l ofnrxvllllllfi (Continued on page I1. Col fil Against 1940, which ‘was to llnvc nlurkcd what orthodox Jllllflllcfic FfllllRrflhfll‘ F . the 2.600111 alllllrel-sllly" follndntloll lll tllc Elnpirr Marquis Kido lzavc no rmsol. w. the Olympic zlrillnl Among prime (actors illfluenclnk the decision. however, were sccll the followirlgz~ _ 1. The war vrlill Cliillfl. now in its second year. may contlnuc until 40. 2. The financial drain of the war and thc fooling that all materials. particularly stool and concrcto no- cessary for Olympic pl nt construc- lilon, are too vailla 1e now for‘ 1 sports use. l ‘ 3. The effect on the troops of holdln the gnlnes if thc conflict with hina continued and the army's oppoistion. _ Many persons bcllcvrrl all influx .01‘ thousands of foreigners would exgoae (he Japanese to internation- al m considered thc antithesis of (orthodox Japanese nationalism pro- moted by thc- military. Today's action came so sudden- ly the organizing committee was caught unawarcs. There was disbelief at first. but llater Count Mlchlmasa sovoshlma. lmember of (he International Olym- pic Committee, said the cancell- ation was "inevitable tinder pres- ent circumstances.‘ and expressed hope Japan might be granted the games in 194a. "Apparently it is impossible oven 1o bid for the 19M games.’ he said. Days, 19 Hours, 17 Minutes. Words: “Never Hy DEVON In‘. FlfrifVf/S lissrlcintcd Press Ariafiorl Editor FLOYD BFNNPYPI‘ AIRPOITI‘, N. Y., July IL-How- ard Hughes. mulii-millionllire sportsman, and his four adventurous (‘Ulllplllllllllfi cut (he rollnd-the-world record in half today. flying n ILHZI-nlile circuit in three days, 19 Stubble-bearded and groggy with exhaustion, the five airmen climbed from their great silver ship to face a wild- ly cheering throng estimated h_\" ficld officials at 25,000 persons. Their faces were grimy and lined with fatigue. But they had clipped almost four days from the his- Wilcy Post in his solo dash Post flew over virtually the same route in seven days, 18 hours and 49 minutes. He averaged 83 miles per hour on elapsed time, while Hughes and his companions stepped it up to approximately 161. Insurgent Advance ‘l nreatens To lrap Militiamen HENDAYE, July M ——A It?!‘ insurgent. advance down the o0- uel highway pant Bari-ion m; dangered strong government (tiions slams“ Mora. D0 b. ay, an eatenad l0 w i; ands of militiamen holding thnt spearhead of resistance. After a nightfof fighting, m; insurgéenttrsl replllwrted “the had passe e V B86 jllflltltilgfil lpf the one a g way supply road 1m n Mora do Rublelos. _ Sarrion was captured last night, insurgents reported. It. is 23 milel southeast of Teruel. Mora is to the north und Albentosa a. short disb- ance south of Sarricn. Although the smashing ent attack in the Teruel sec surprised government defenders of the highway, they quickly re- formed their lines. Advlws from insurgent cral ‘Franco's headquarters ad- vance of about eight miles was made only by fighting hand-to- hand for most of the distance. On the other two fronts of fiance's triple-headed drive a- fIt-llnsl. Valencia. however, the gov- ernment held its positions and ss- sumcd the offensive. Gen- radlo CI1§1l1€§[‘]‘—-l(‘li, thc field \\‘ltll~ You CAN'T (tr FAR or Wuhan. on OfHER.PEOPLE$ :2- ‘lhe (Tnnadian Press) iOltONTO. July 14 -- Minimum irmd maximum temperatures: Dayvsor. Victoria Edmonton Rollins Wllllllpcg Toronto Ottawa Montreal Quebec Saint John Halifax Charlottetown Forcrasls: Mnrltlnlo Provinces: Fresh south- el-lv winds: unsettled with thunder- sllnwcrs and consider-ab . High tide tonight at 12,10 nd tomorrow afternoon at 1.18. Sun sets this evcninR at 7.44 lifl rises tmnorrrvw mornini! a1 4.28. Bummer-side tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. THE CAR FERRY SAILTNGS E sssssosssre: asssasssssss Jone Borden n. ll. 9.45 a. m. 1 p. m . and 4. p. m. Tormen- tlm. 8.15 n. m. l1 s. m. 3.05 p. In. and 650 p. m. Sundays, Leaves lotion 0.00 Ll. and 7 p. m. Leave: lvl cntine l0.“ I. I. and M0 p. m.