-~~-- ._._,.. .____._. ,._..._...... ___..._'_ ._.__...____ ' , - . MAXIMS -—-"—-——' 4 or A MAXIMS MERE MAN °‘ * MERE MAN Aimcdium is about the only p". son who can deal in futures with any benefit to himself. nu} Inning Guardian, Iounded "u, Ohnrlottetowu Guardian Two cents, E Covers Prince Edward Island. Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER Q7931 mpirTeTPEays Tribute To Hono N“ ‘W \\\\ ‘Q31 Read by Everybody FIER CE FI GH TIN G’ IN MAN CH URIA» Many Killed And Woundedln Sino- Japaneie Battle Stiff Fighting Along Manchurian F r0ntier—More Than 1,000 Kill- ed And Wounded — Chinese Army Numbers 250,000. '(B‘y James P. Howe, Asociated husband gets to his work down town on time. When a woman cleans house, her 12 PAGES ' Annual lsuhu-rlpllonl Delivered 5.5.00. I11 lluil Cunlllllr Ind U. B. A. $4.50. s01. EMN A ND IMPRESSI VE i 1 Absent This Yr. nEmummu£ BAY AT Sill] Citizens Fittingly Ob-f serve Sacred Mem- ories of our Glorious Dead. (Special to The Guardian) Remembrance Day was ilttingly observed in Summerslde yesterday as a public holiday. The stores, banks and other places of business were closed. An impressive service was held at the monument ln Do- minion Square which was attended all classes oi citizens from the] I own and surrounding districts. The Sumlnerside branch oi the Canadian Legion had arranged for a parade of the various organizations and school children to precede the service at the ni-nument. At 0.50 a. m. the i Press Stafl Correspondent) (Copyright, 1931, by the Associated t rcBs) 1 TOKYO, Nov. lL-Empcror Hlro- ‘hito ordered o fresh brigade of mix- jed troops "and four navll destroyers , to Manchuria today after Tokyo had received information of a battle : between Japanese and Chinese i troops on a new front. The Emper- [or dispatched the troops at the re- quest of General I-lanzo Kunaya, chief oi the general stall’, who com- municated with him at Kumamoio, ‘where he is attending army man- loeuvres. Admiral Baron Kiyotane, ‘Minister oi Marine, who was a‘ lmomber o.‘ the Emperofls party at] ‘the war games, returned to Tokyo, ‘because oi the increasing gravity of cthe conflict in Manchurla. Dispatches received here told ci an encounter between Japanese in- fantry and a party 0i wanderinB, Chinese cavalry near Kuchenstlll yesterday in which 300 Chinese and three Japanese were killed. Nine Japanese werewounded. This is a lIlS MAJESTY Did not attend the sen/ices at cAn;Pnnls members oi the lesion. err-service ‘new sector, 40o miles distant from; men. boy scouts. fire department. I the Nonni bridgehead. hitherto the town and provincial police and the ‘ centre n; npemtmng, Mlsccuche band assembled at the q-ne w,“ 0mm announced that APmWPY~ The? mRTChi-‘d llll Slimmer Ythese new casualties bring Japan's? street to the high school, where they _ +0“; dead to 139, Wm, 30g wnnnd- were Joined by the pupils. The con- i 1 vent children fell in at the oon- Cnnunued on pflgg 10 vent and a. contingent of nurses Joined the parade at the hospital. The procession then proceeded down I Water street, thcncc to Summer} street and public square. Headed by In I 8 I N G provincial and town police, the par- 1 c A A c i ade marched with Master Clarence Hallett, second patrol leader or the E0116 Killed And a Sec- ond Near Death As Summe ‘ boy scoutscarrying the Union Jack, belonging to Capt. L. A. Result of Crash On Valley Moore's family, which had been used for funeral services for fallen sol- diers on the battlefields o! France. Patrol leader Hallett was supported - Annapolis Road. KENTVILLE, N- 3., Nov- ll-(By thc Canadian Press)——When the automobile driven by his brother crashed into a telephone pole early Car- this morning. Robert Greenwood ‘ma’ and at Warehmise- GW- H- ' climbed out oi the wreckage to aid mombsasqn‘ Bgazdhwfil‘ in bringing assistance to a com- "Come to the Dance in sum- i eenion who was apparently the mfifleid B1111. November 13th. Re- . most seriously hurt oi the car's four ‘mhmem’ '°"°d' 1°°°B“n'u'31~ i occupants. Three hours later Green- s-Dmce m hnune m,“ m", Fm i wood was dead in Wolfville Mem- _ '1 Continued on page 10 ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMING EVENTS, MEETINGS, are; vwanteu white potatoes. Whitehall yesterday, Another Fatal Hunting Accident FREDERICTON, N. B., Nov. 11- (By the Canadian Pressl-Cecil Lawson of Devon was fatally wounded as he and his cousin, Ar. thur Sallbers, were hunting near Mount Hope, about tweleve miles from Fredericton. circumstances oi the fatality were uncertain tonight. as Sanders was suffering so severe- ly from shock that he could give little information. Lawson, who was about nineteen years old, was struck near the spine, and died later this afternoon. Gas Fumes Kill Two Roomers TORONTO, Ont, Nov. ll-(By The Canadian Press-Gas» fumes took the lives of a man and a wom- nn in a rooming house here. The ‘bodies were found about noon to- 1 day when the odor of escaping gas day night November 18th. Come and g orial Hospital; Harvey Woodraife, l WM deivcied by iiw lendlfldv- Mrs- voioy sood music. 9986-11-10-81- ‘ who was bleeding profusely from a‘ “PM,” bums clothing [or lacernted throat after the accid-, Waiem Missions leave same at ‘mt- “d ‘m’ "hm" medical “f”: Assembly l-lall, this Thursday af- was believed to be more urgently, "mwll- 10030-11 needed, is xpected to recover. The car, driven by William Continued on page l0 Two Die In Car Accident (Canadian Press) REVELSTOKE. 3.0., Nov. 1l.— When his car plunged down a 50- foot embankment one mile south oi’ here, William Fraser, veteran Arrow Lakes steamer Captain, met instant death yesterday. Mrs. R. Kirk. 0i Arrowhead, was injured and her ten-months-old baby killed. Anoth- er passenger, Miss ‘Trotter, also oi Arrowhead, escaped with scratches. "C. W. L. members please be at Assembly Hall this afternoon to as- sist ln packing clothes for western Mission- 10030-11 "Miss Minnie Owen will take orders for Christmas Cakes, Mince Meat, Pastry and Parker House lls. Phone 539-Y. 0980-11-10-31. "Grand Concert, Cornwall Hall, Nov. 12. l'.i’ stormy, first fine night. Admission 20o. and Ito. sale oi "lid!- OOBO-II-D-ii "Kelly's Cross. Hot Chicken Eup- {ler served Wednesday. November 0th from 0 o'clock to 10. Bingo and other attractions. A real big time. rickets 25c and 06c. 1000o-l1-l1-7l. "Cranberry Corners" in Hampton Hall, Saturday. November ilth at a o‘clock sharp. If not fine, aomc Monday. I‘. eeds in aid of wows: Shed. Specialties between "See . . . _ 10011-11-11-31. Conny A. Brown. Tile \\,\'Jlil.‘.l'l is PJFS. Gertrude Mb,- Gillivery, 42, of Toronto. The man is believed to be John Allen. The couple had been dead for some time and it is believed they were asphyxi ated during the night. According to the landiadys story, the man came to the house last Saturday and rented a room. He told her he would return Monday with his luggage, but did not arrive until yesterday, she said. No one iznln. when Mrs. McGilllvery en- tered the building. Saint John‘ A Judge Dead SAINT JOHN. B., Nov. ll-C. daughter, Mrs. James D. MacLean. P.)-—Ill for some months following with whom he resided. and two] }P_E_ |slANiSERVICE1AT WAR MONUMENT Aalllln lflffflii Majority of Prizes At Yesterday’s Judg- ing, Amherst Win- ter Fair, Goes To Is- land Entries. (Canadian Press) AMHERST, N. 8., Nov. lL-In judging oi county herds at the Mar- itime Winter Fair today, Colchester lcd in Guernseys, with Annapolis~ second and Pictou tilil-d. Queeusj Prince Edward Island, took first in; both Ayrshlres and Jerseys. with Kings, N. B., second in Ayrshlres,‘ Pictou -third, and Westmoreland fourth. Kings, N. B., won in Holsteins, Queens, P. E. I., second; Prince, P. E. 1., third; Colchester, fourth; Pic- tou, fifth. Wcstmoreland made a clean sweep in the beef classes. In club competition for bacon hogs Pictou led, with Ulgg, Montague, Winsloe, Pugwash, Millview and Hunter River following. In intercounty competition, Col- chester led. Prince Edward Island breeders took the majority of awards in general swine competition. wulsElmEn IN Fglull In Preference to Am- erican Ports As a Shipping Centre For Cattle And Horses To Europe. (Canadian Press) QUEBEC, Que, Nov. 1l.—TllC possibility that Canadian ports will be used in iutune in preference to American ports as a shlpplng centre for cattle and horse shipments to Europe, was foreseen here today by William R. Rowe, a. leading Ameri- can cattle exporter, who was in Quebec supervising the loading of tlvcnLv-eight sunlple head of Amer- A Tile solemn and imprcssi ieenih anniversary of the heroic dead whose War, was participated in by turned soldiers and citizens. I i the l rifice which the war entailed, i memory on every breast. Azure skies, a clear, cl-i quiem service a hopefuiness Paradillg from their headquart-___ ers along Queen, Richmond, Prince and Grafton Streets, vet-i Major L. T. Lowther, president‘ of the Charlottetown Branch of i the Canadian Legion, and headed’ by the Legion Band, arrived at the! Monument at 10-40. Added solemn- ity was given to the occasion by the playing of the Dead March in Saul as the parade slowly proceed- Post And Reveille, Canada’s Heroic Dead. _...___ ve service at the War 1\ionu- nlcnt yesterday morning in commemoration of the ihir- the Armistice and in memory of lives were given, to the cause of British Justice and freedom in the Great a willing sacrifice a very large number of rc- Lollg before the appointed hour, _cl'o\vds 1155011111101] at monument. Scarlet poppies, classic symbol of the suc- fiared lls tokens of poignant Sp morning, gave to the rc- beautifuiiy in keeping‘ with ‘HS deeply religious nature and significance. ed from Prince Street corner to place ill front of tllc Monument. (‘T5115 0f the W81‘. 1118151181105 by The turnout oi‘ returned men, \\'<‘.1l'-! ing wnr medals and poppies, was exceptionally large and impressive. their procedure being in perfect harmony with the solemn service which followed. At the Monument were assembled Continued Tm page 10 .Renunn hDay In On Parliament tarlly silent today in mute recalling of that dramatic interlude on Nov- ll, i918, when at eleven o'clock in daring battle fronts and brought! peace to a war-weary world. From, the Atlantic to the Pacific and} rose tribute to the 60.000 Canadians who died, and honor to those who served. Once again the poppy, emblem of lean mules consigned to the Italian government ior army purposes. chiefly in connection with artillery.‘ The animals are being sent across‘ on the freighter Hanover, which ves- sel is also carrying a capacity cargo burg. When asked why he had chosen this port as the shipping point, Mr. Rowe said that he found that even with the longer rail haul to a Clm- adian port, ttansportatlon costs were reduced considerably, resulting from a much lower cost of Canadian feed. The exporter, who is also crossing to Europe in charge oi the shipment, expressed the opinion that the movement of these anmlals through Canadian parts would increase in the future, meaning that a trade which had previously gone entirely through United States harbors, will {or 226,000 bushels oi grain rol- Ham- . the grave-strewn battlefields of France, “ ssomed throughout the brance Copflul Brilliant And Striking Service‘ Hill As Nati0n’s War gDead Are Honored. OTTAWA, 0nt., Nov, lifiBy the-land and lllingicd with tile laurel Canadian PressJ-For the thirt-‘xvrcatlis that reverent hands piled eenth time Canada stood mcmen- about the Cenotaphs that have been who’ ,l"aised in memory oi’ those served. Inspiring Addresses, Followed By Solemn Two Min- T“ utes’ Silence And By The Sounding Of The Last Recall Poignant Memories Of I i A i ____ Iicncral Sir Arthur I furl-lo Makes Rous- 1 lug Speech On Dis- armament. n MONTREAL, Que, Nov. ll-(By ‘the Canadian Prowl-Armistice Day. 1931, thirteen years after the > war “which was to end war" found little r-rzll progress towards the goal -0i pcucc. General Sir Arthur Cllr- ‘frie, commuucler-ln-chief o‘! the Canadian corps in France, declar- ed in a speech 0n disarmament here tonight. Tile llopc that had sustained the combatants dllring the dark days of the war, that their suiferlrlg would ensure that their Continued on page 3 Five- Year-Old i KilleclBy Car ST. STEPHEN, N. B., NlNIfT- (C. PJ-i-Barnard R. Brown, five ,ycar old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ches- 'ter Brown, of Milltown, Maine, was killed instantly thLs afternoon on the street in front of his home Herc lll i118 Nflliflllfll C8P11H1. in when struck by a car driven by J. the morning, the magic ordel‘,_tlle slmduw of the stutcly Peace 1.1331183], L? - "cease fire" flashed across the thun-i Tower that tops the Parliament Building. wns the centre of Can- ada's memorial gesture. A throng oi people estimated to number nearly from the far flung outposts of clv- 50,000 with the Governor General. Beach ilization in the Canadian Arctic and the Earl of Bccshorough, the pre- nil of Lincoln. the populous towns and cities. 8-; porary Cenotaph erected in front of the main entrance and united in perlllps the most impre=sive ob- servance of Armistice Day that had Continued on page l0 Seven Cars Derailed: (Canadian lh-ess) MONCTON, N. B., Nov. 11 — Through the derailment of seven ears on the north bound C. N. Rni fast freight the Canadian Na- tional main line, near Rogersville, was blocked early this afternoon un- til midnight. Both the west and cast bound Ocean Limited trains were tied up at the scene for over three hours during which time a trans- fer of passengers mall and express was completed. now be deflected to the ports oi Quebec and Montreal during sum- mer months and 5t. John, N. B., in the winter season. The Hanover sailed from here this afternoon. police court here for 50 years and magistrate for five years, died at his home today. He was born in St. John on December ll, 1852. B son oi the late Annie Barieli- vi Nlctau Falls, N. B., and William Kerr Henderson, oi Annamli-‘l, N-s- His wile died a few years ago, A Outside of damage to the rolling stock the roadbed was n01; badly cut up. The cause oi the accident has not been determined. --_-___._. (Sllwlll to the Guardian) DETROIT, Mich, Nov. ll- A Detroit paper says the auto- mobile industry will produce lllwflllllielv 8m.000,00o Worth of new oars In the next 00 days Ilid that thereafter produc- mm Proceed at an even fart Moe. Operations during the next eight months the pa- il 591°" 01' llilrfllyfils. Judge George brothers, James A. and William. A. Henderson, 79, clerk oi, the cityboth o: ‘jbronto, survive. P" l!!! Will be It levels rang- inr flaw-rd from 2s percent above those of th g q, I month‘ I pa: wo i0TRABE0l cislillls Three Planes Scan Turbulent (‘arib- beau In Vain Search F o r Boatload of Mell. BOGOTA, Colonlbiu, Nov. il-—(A~ PJ-Three aeroplanes sunuucd the turbulent Caribbean today ill scorch or a boatload of (TKISLBWALYF reported on Monday by the Pa“: 0f B mall plane. Two of them were pas- senger planes nu rvrilil" will“ and a third was u rcscul‘ ship sent out from Barranquilla. The Ccl- ombian gunbon‘. llwvrivii Mild by but the planes rcpurtml u.» trace of the Castaways. (Canadian l‘rl'.~~‘i -'...~- .- ..__-~:~"*-~"! NEWCYORK, .\'. \'.. .\'0\'- 11 Arrangements lull-l- lvccn made for the sale of .1 .\'.~\v York ‘Stock Exphnngp nlmiu-rsllip at $180,000, an alhamrc "i 95-090 mm the last iranwiivll- Lfilcoin, Maine. Death 'was termed accidental, with an in- ,qucst unnecessary. In the car with Bailey were the kcwner, Fred RsMoffatt, and John and Miss Elizabeth Alward, dominant figure, stood about a tcm- . SCARBOROUGH, Yorkshire, Eng" Nov. ll-(Canadlan Press Cablel-Sir Meredith Whitta- ker, newspaper owner, died here today at the age of 90. Sir Meredith at one time owned half the newspapers in this county. He was prominent in the development oi Scarbor- ough 8s a. fashionable waierllg place. children and their children's children would Diplomafs Wife v T0 VISIT AMERICA Mrs. Antoinette Grand], wife oi the Italian foreign minister, who will accompany hcr husband on his prnposrd official visit to Washing- ton. ins Mlnsll ;lclPlurll Alsrrucls King Decides At Last Moment Not To At- t e n d - Q u e e n Watches Ceremony At Cenotaph From Home Office Win- dow. A (Special i0 the Guardian) DONDON, Nov. ll—-'I'he King de- cided at [he last moment today noi to attend the Armistice Day cere- mony at the Cenotaph. The Queen drove almost unnoticed from Buckingham Palace to the Home Office and watched the ceremony at the Cenotaph from a. window. A cold wind was blowing, although the sun was shining brightly. It was while standing bareheaded at the ceremony in i928 that the King Continued on page 10 Record & Forecast of the Weather .\ll>I'1‘II()l‘.(il.1HilFAl. OFFICE, Tor- i-Ilill, (lnL, Nov. 11- BIINIDII M AND‘ NIAXIDIUM TERI- PICILVIYRES Aikzlrii: Vancouver l-lillnouiou linuff I . i , licclna ‘ “Wuuipvg Tnrnlvfvl I Uiinlvfl hloulrrwll i Qllvilm‘ v Snip? SYNOPSIS PYFBIIHIFY‘ is lllgll from Hu- Si. Lnw- rr-vu-n Valley amlihwnrvl nlonif tho M- luniic roast and over ilw i1f"‘i<.l' Mountain Silllcs anal relatively low across northern (‘nnnlln with ll Illililliw ifnllrrll extending from linulinilll in Hu- snuillwonl flutes. Th!‘ Wclliil"? ilii“ hoop fulr nnll cnnl tnllny in ucnril’ "11 hurts of lhc Tlmulvliou. FOREF\QTS Olin-m [flu] "fjltf “l. IMWFFIIN‘ Vnl- Invym-Mmlnfllfn Pfillnrii‘ v~|uvl<f pnrllv cloudy and mml; followed by showers nl ullzht ilflll m: l-‘rhlrlr. Lower Rt. LIIWYIWIvn \'gqlloy—\fnlll\r- nil‘ in fresh westerly winds: fair null moi. “M-ltlmn Provlm-u - \fodr~rnir u-lmis: fillr aml rather cool. lllzh illlo "lls afternoon llt 12.45 and tonight at 11.54. You CAN'T ALWAYs MEASURE A Goon 11ml: BY {no Sun sols (his uficruoun ut 4.3!) nut rim-s toulurrlvrv morning u! 0.7m. i-‘irsl quaru-r llltmll lhnulup‘, Nov. l0. (‘All FIZRIII SCHEDULE Work duys-Imurcs Borden daily i115 n.|u_ null 11.40 mm. Louvre Tvvrfllfllillifi daily: 10.36 Lill- auli 2.5.1 mu. red Dead g