‘\ 2-. -r"+d'. qw~pgg;,n\-v.~e-~_op-o-4< . lvr MAXIMS 017A MERE MAN who serveth but He is a slave of the greatest slave himself. Charlottetown Guardian Two Cont! Morning Guardian. Founded 1581 wj/ ///' The People's Paper ‘yr-rséw r-wvwwflfl “"~—-»--_--<\ Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edwardilsland Like the Dew _ cnaaeorrcrowu, CANADA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 19.31 14 PAGES MAXIMS OFA MERE IVIAAN Ho is false by nature that has a red head and a black beard. Annual Sutnn-rlnllnn Deltrt-rrll $51.00 I1 llull-IEILL. “.001 Canada uml U a Shim suamiisinu urusrn 11v cnmiiuiu Weekly And D a i ly Newspapers Jointly Protest Press Bill. (By The Canadian Press) EDMONTON, Oct. l-A submis- sion from the Alberta division 0| the Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association and the Alberta daily newspapers charging the Govern- ment sought dictatorship over the press in a bill respecting newspa- prrs was refused by the agricul- iurc committee of the Legislature today. t-._ ,‘ lllith no delegation present, the connvtiticc voted down a motion by l). M, Duggan, (‘onset-votive Lczulcr. to report to the Legislat- ure that the committee met, rc- rvivcd the submission and took no nctlnn on it and append the sub- mission to its ropnrt. A letter from the publishers‘ solicitors ac- companied the submission identi- fying it. .."lt is a_statement of propa- lfillldil." remarked lion. Solon Low, provincial treasurer, in declaring the submission was a statement and not a brief. llon. D. B. Mui'cn, minister oi’ Bkrifll-lilllrc. declared tho submis- sion out Vol‘ order and that the (Continued on page 10, col 1) COMING fVfNli "Zion Choir Concert Thursday evening, October 21st. 11-201. "Rummage Sale St. Peters School Room, Saturday, October ind at 6 P. M. in aid oi‘ Cubs. L-tiii-ll-Zil-lil. "Pantry Sale at S. A. Mac- Donald's Oct. 2nd in aid of Altar Society, L-244-9-28—5—lt "Dance, Webster's Orchestra, Cardigan Hall, Tuesday, Sept. 5th. Lldl-lO-l-‘Ji "Dance in C. M. B, A. Hall. Vernon River on Thursday night, ‘Dct. 5- Orchestra. 11-209-10-2-21. "Masquerade Dance borne Val- liall Wednesday, Oct. - 6th, Wrbstcrls orchestra. Door prize chance to maskcrs. L119-9-30-31 “Bingo and dance Sea. View Hall, Ii/Ionday nieht. Oct, 4. If not line on Wednesday. L-l9il-l0-2-2i. "Final dance at Scmplcs barn. Kcnsington, Monday night, October lth. Mixed dances with Blanchards Orchestra in attendance. Special pr m of $5.00 given to the person hcldini! the lucky ticket. Admission 351 cents. L-l40-10-l-3i. "Ripc tomalocs nro bound to be higher next week. For this week Blllv the old price 40: basket stands. In a short time you may be ~.k.~<l to pay 20c lb. 2 lbs. 35c. Drive u11 and got them. J. J. Gay S: Son, Phone 264. L-lltl-ll-HU-li. "(let your Pullets into laying condition by feeding some Royal Growing Mash and keep hens in production for higher Fall prices by ‘lung our Royal Laying Mash. Big- ger moflis at lcsz; cost also Fish- lllPHi. fccds, etc., P. E. I. Co-opcr- alive. L455-9-l0-l4-18-24-28-104 ""Gilt Edge Flour" is gaining in popularity everyday. Hundreds who never heard of it a month ISO are using it today. Why! Be- some of its gilt edgc qualities. And it's no more expensive than flour of lower grade quality. Try a bag and you'll buy a barrel. Livestock Marketing Board. L-2il. "Today's flour quotation indi- cams 20c per cwt., increase in price. Saturday morning we will unload balance "Gilt Edge Flour" in car at the old price. Better stock up at our ‘mil to man- plus handling charge‘ quotation. ‘.'Jc've done our part. It's your move now. Livestock Marketing Board. L-2I1. “Livestock Marketing B o a r d loading ,hogs, lambs and calves through local shipping clubs week of October 4th as follows: Monday afternoon, Miscouche; Tuesday fort-noon. Kcnsluglon, Charlotte- tnun: afternoon, Baltic, Souris, St. Pliers. Morel‘, Murray River, Mll- vivw. Melville; Wednesday IOTHICOII till train time, Mt. Stewart, Hunter River. Brsdalbsne; afternoon 12-3. Albee]. Lt iC-IO-I-ll filfin . ' Thousands Greet Endeavour On Arrival At Home Port 20,000 Persons At Gosport Pay Tribute To Sturdy Craft And Seamen Who Conquered Stormy Atlantic. (By James B. Heston) (Associated Press Staff Writer) GOBPORT. England. Oct. 1- ‘The yacht Endeavour I bobbed at anchor alongside hcr home dock tonight, safely at the end oi hcr stormy crossing of the Atlantic under sail. Some 20.000 persons turned out. to pay tribute to the sturdy craft and the seamen who brought her home under hcr own power. Bound home in tow oi’ the sicam yacht Viva II, after par- ticipating in races off New Eng- land. she made but 23 miles be- fore a IDS-mile gale broke hcr line Sept. 13 and left hcr to fight. the storm alone. Captain Ned Heard. on deck during the storm, was swept over the side of the yacht by lngh seas but was saved when he caught a loose wire and was pulled hack on deck. Then for six hours the yacht tossed like a chip on the moun- tainous waves. Her wheel was lashed and sea anchor dropped to help her weather the blow. Torrents of water poured over her decks. When daylight broke the next morning the Viva was nowhere in sight. The Endeavoui-‘s radio operator tried in vain to con- tact eid with his weak short wave wireless. Captain Heard decided to head for his home port. So they sailed east, some days averaging six knots, some days less. Snatches of news came to them over their wireless receiving set on their monotonous cruise. "We certainly were glad when the Cheyenne saw us and wc knew we would he reported," the Skipper said. The Endeavour I raced three years ago for the America's Cup and retumed to the United States again this year for the racing season. Accidental Death Verdict lreturned in AFatal Brash CHICAGO, Oct. l.—Verdict of accidental death was returned by Deputy Coroner Sylvester Vyzral today in the death of Mrs. Sadie Lockhart, 47, Sum- merside, P. E. L, who was kill- ' ed yesterday when a oar drlvcn by her sister, Mrs. Helen S. Muttart, 52, also of Summer- sidc, was struck by a truck driv- en by Roy Jackson. 2i, Spring- field, lil., in suburban Harvey. Mrs. Muttart, who is in hos- pital with a fractured pelvis, did not testify. The women were returning from l. visit with Mrs. Muttarfl son, Ken- neth, in Klrksvilic, Mo. GANDHI Ill 0N BIRTHDAY EVE Fears Held For _68 Year Old Indian Nationalist Leader- BOMBAY, India. Oct. 1—Mohall- das K. Gandhi, the frail little brown man who ha; led India's Nationalists in their turbulent course. is lll on the eve of his 68th birthday. Physicians who have examined him fear his life is in danger. Al- though his blood pressure is r»- turning to normal. it W85 581d Gandhi recently has grown weak- cr. A complete rest was ordered two weeks ago. The central provinces inspector- gencral of hospitals tolci attend- ants not to permit him to do any work. Gandhi abandoned active polit- ics in 1034, but; he still is a pow- erful force in India's political life. His life-time policy of peaceful methods gained a new victory this summer when he persuaded Con- gress Party leaders to take office in the provinces under the Gov- ernment of India Act. In recent weeks he has written many hours a day for Harljamhls weekly newspaper. He also has served as adviser on policy to the ADHIURNEI] Aged Senator Serious- ly Ill In Ottawa Hos- pita]. f . (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA. Oct. l—Scrinu.s ill- ness of Senator Hanoe J. Iogan to- day caused postponement of his preliminary hearing on a fraud charge arising from the celebrated reparations case of the Gypsum Queen which brought an lllmonth reformatory sentence to Captain Freeman Hatfield, master of the ship- Whcn a court attendant called the name of the Parrsboro, N. S.. Senator, friend of Hatfield and his counsel in the reparations claim that rcultcd in the govern- ment paying $71,276.72, Roydon Hughes. Logan's counsel. said hi8 client had suffered a stroke on Wednesday and was too ill to ap- or. , Later Hughes said the Senator. had suffered two strokes and was confined t0 hospital. Logan's phy- sician, Dr. E. H. Wood, described his condition as scrious but not. critical. Logan was remanded for one week, but Hughes said it would be several weeks and P05511115’ months before he is well enough to appear. Bail of $5,000 was con- tinned. Transatlantic Flier Sails For Europe NEW YORK, Oct. sailed for Europe today on French Liner Normandie-the first time he has made the tzip by boat since he was a soldier in the Great War. He denied reports that, he in- tended becoming a. British Sub- ject and private pilot for Lmd -Beaverbrook, an English publish- er. Merrill flew to Europe last year Iwith Harry Richman. night club entertainer, as a pgsscrlgcr, and last summer piloted an airplane “to England for the Coronation. Congress Party. Berlin‘ Plans “Lost Horizon" Welcome T0 Aviators BERLIN, Oct. 1—(AP)-—Gennan fliers who battled back from s "lost horizon," a miserable cap- tivity and a revolution in the rough Himalayan hlnderland oi’ Eastern ‘Purkestcn today were winging homeward to a royal wel- come. ~ After a spectacular flight over the Pamlr Plateau their plane was swallowed up in the mount- ainous region Aug. 30. Details a- vailable today revealed motor trouble forced a landing 20 miles from Khotan, eastern Turkesien. Repairs were mode. but just be- fore they were able to take off the i plane was attacked by zoldiere who dllbled the alb- FBD III- ators were seized" chained and taken to the local jail. Afterwards they were taken to the Khotsn citadel where they were kept for several weeks and badly treated. Then s Iebellion developed in Khotsn. The citadel was besieged and stunned. The Insurgent authorities gave the captives 24 hours to "clear out," although their plane had been exmwl t0 weather for four weeks. They were finally able to get the motors running, and reached Kabul, Afghanistan, Sept. 27. They are expected in Berlin Sun- . - iuiaul CASE l—-<A.P)-_ Dlck Merrill, transatlantac aviaior,‘ the‘ i JAPANBZ 0c1<s MEDIA TION ALBwT/i’ “$253 CHARGES ‘pram TLORSHIP”. CHARTERED ACBBUNTANTS I N l 8 ES SIUN . Enjoyable Banquet Closes 2nd Annual Convention 0f Mari- o I I time Orgamzatmn. All sections of the Maritimes were represented at the second Maritime Regional Convention yes- terday of Chartered Accountants, held in the Canadian National Hotel. Presiding at the convention was VIr. George P. Nicholson, presi- dent of the Prince Edward Island Institute of Chartered Account- ants, which was host to the dele- gates at an enjoyable dinner in the hotel last evening. Guests present included Messrs. F. A. Nightingale, Halifax, and Austin H. Carr. president and secretary treasurer respectively of the D0- minion Association of Chartered Accountants; Hon. B. W. IePage. representing the Provincial Gov- ernment, His Worship Mayor Tur- ncr, His Worship Mayor Robinson of Summerside; Mr. D. L. Mathis- son, president oi’ the P. E. I. Bar Society; Hon. Dr. W. J. P. Moc- Millan; Mr. R. H. Bell, president of Charlottetown Board of ‘Iradc. and leading members of the bank- ing fraternity. The speakers were Mayor Tur- ner, President Nightingale, Mr. Carr, Mr. Hudson, Moncton, Gor- don Haymen, Halifax, Mr. Fitz- ranclolph. Fredericton, comptroller of the Province of New Brunswick. W. A. Morel], Amherst. Mr. Crow- ell, Halifax, L. D. Murray, A. W. Hyndmnn, Hon. B. W. LePage, Hon. Dr. MacMillan, and Mnycr Robinson. Warm tribute was paid by the gilest speakers to the importance oI the work of chartered account- 11111.5. At. the morning session there was discussion on educational courses and examinations, on the responsibility of the organization to the strident body, the ethics of the accounting profession, unifor- mity of by-laws in provincial in- (COIIUIIUBG on page 10. Col 2) lliildell Transferred From League Post" m’ i glyingt 3.4.1 111111 1min rf1~1i1isii.ll B ri t i s h Authorities Move to (‘rush Ter- , rorism In Holy Land. ATHENS. Oct. I-(CP-Hav- ail-Three passengers includ- ing Wing Commander l). Ac- lnnd of the Royal Air Force and John Raymond Hender- son, an American, were killed today when the Imperial Air- ways flying boat Courtler over- turned and sank llighting on Phaleron Bay, near here. The third victim was Alexander Eleftarakis, a. Greek. (In New York theatrical cir- clcs a check indicated Hender- ‘son was the representative oi the distinguished Amcricau actress, Katherine Cornell. His home is in Omaha, Neb.) The ship carried five pas- Bflllcrs and l1 crew members when the tragedy occurred. in addition to the dead, four per-v sons were seriously injured and two others less seriously hurt. The pilot suffered a. nervous shock. All three bodies were recov- ered. Thc plane, a modern flying boat similar to the Transatlantic seaplanes Cam- bria and Caledonia, was be- lieved a total loss, although a floating crane will try to raise JERUSALEM. Oct, 1—fAP)——-i .Bl'ii.~lSi’l nulhoriiies swept down onl Arab leaders 1n Palestine today‘ n a coup designed to crush mp1 l-Inly Land's long months oi’ ter-l zorism. l Several hiirh Arab leaders were arrested and held for deportationfl probably to an island in the Rod} 5W1» Tho Arab Higher Committee] accused of being the "brains" be- hind recurrent waves of terrorism,‘ was declared illegal. 1 Whtlo hoops armed with machine guns Ellllffifll the frontiers and rsombcd the cities, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem. spiritual head .of all Arabs in Palestine, apparent-l ll’ P-‘mlled the dragnei. He was believed to be in hiding within,‘ lhc Mosque of Omar, holiest M05. lcm SullCillflIy in the ancient city.‘ it. _ , The Court," w“ on its ‘my ' Authorities seemed dawn-mined.‘ from Alexandria, to 1,011,101, t" Mimi!“ m" Mmlb Am!!! El via Phaleflm’ Brmdisi and Ilusminl, descendant of the Pm- illarsellle. Spectators at Phal- 1m“ Mmmmmmj- However» l-hflY apparcnilv did not want to trans_ gross 1111011 holv ground for roar of stirring up furlhcr Arab resis_ inner. \ Tho lilufli \\'a_.; deprived of his offrc as hcuri of ine Arab Higher Connniticc. which has demanded Arab silprclnaoy- in the Holy Lamp The icrrorism which broke out when Great Britain four months hi!" proposed to partition Palestine, W" fivllfinite Jewish and Arab states. with a third part remainnig under British mandate. reached n, elf lil.\’ Sundnv with the assas- sination oi‘ ihc British Commis- winner for Galilee and his body- erou seaplane port watched ""1 KIN-t ship sink a moment after it touched the surface or the water. Preliminary investigation in- dicated poor visibility was to blame for the accident. Labor lliay Demand Special Session 0f Parliament guard. ___,..__ Tension spread throughout Pal. _LONDoN. Oct. 1—<A Pr-Tnc "Stine. Ono Arab ivas killed. of- Labor Party was believed ready ‘Iicinl; said. when he refused to tonight to demand that Pariia- halt. at :1 sentry"; challenge. Au- ment be convened in fllPCifli ll-horftics foresaw the possibility of sesions to consider Japan's in- more scrinlls trouble and adopted vasion oi’ China. 'all The party's national executive committee met at Bournemouth t0 weigh the parliamentary call which some party leaders thought might be the first step toward not only an Empire but a world boy- cott of Japanese goods. possible precautions. ‘Canadian Killed In Sino-Jap War. OTTAWA, Oct. 1— (CPI -—— ‘I116 - department of external affairs an- nounced to night Dr. W. A. Rid- (icll. Canadian advisory officer at (lcneva since 1925, is being trans- ferred to the post of counsellor at the Canadian legation in Wash- ington. Dr. Rlddcll will be succeeded at Geneva by Hume Wrong, counsel- lor of the Canadian lcgatlon at Washington, where he has served since its inception in‘ i927. It was reported Mr. Wrong 1111i take over his new duties Oct; 26 or 26 prior to Dr. Riddclrs sailing for the United States. The department also announced Hector Allard, third secretary in the department. is being transfer» rod to the lrgallon at. Washington. l-Ic tvili take over his new dutil early this month. Lord Twcedsrnpir Visits tlape Breton (C.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) SYDNEY, N. 5.. Oct. 1 —— Lord Tweedsinuir, Canada's Com-General made his first visit to Cape Breton today and found it "more Scottish than Scotland." his native land. From the time he stepped from his special train almost in the shad- ow of the steel furnaces of thzs in- dustrial centre of eastern Nova Scctia until he had toured the steel mill-s. his day marked a busy round of activities. Gives Himself lip After Killing Two DETROIT, Oat. l—(AP)-~P0l169 said that Drobfltlflmfy Pfltffllmln William Hawthorne. former c01- leglate pole vault gtar. walked into the station today and announced he had killed his wife, Catherine, and John M. Barrett. ' Police rushed to Barri-ifs and found Barrett and Mrs. Haw- lxulle hi: home . ' A special meeting of the exc- cutive committee of labor mmbrrs in parliament was summoned for Sunday to make the final dc- clslon. Sir Archibald Sinclair. Liberal Leader in the House of Commons, in a speech at Wick advocated an economic boycott of Japan by Great Britain, the Uniicd Slates. France. and the Netherlands. Sinclair said such n 12love would compel Japan to ccune to terms with powers seeking an curl tn the Sine-Japanese conflict. . (('.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) TQRONTQ. Oct. l-Mrs. Walter Hoskcl of Foronlo received word u» fl-li-f that hcr son Lonci was killed during Slno-Jap hostilities in China an-l has been buried in San Fran. cisco. .\i.'.i.\' Aiken. legal adviser to Airs, I ‘i llurlyrl. sold she received a lt-lc- ‘ gram from a superintendent oi a steamship lino advising her of hcr sun's (loath and burial. A ken’ did not nauu- the steamship illlf‘. _ "I! ilu- nvws 1s correct." rflKi Aik- 1cn, "I inland lo lake immorllnio m. ‘.1101: lo calm hcaw indemnity. I11 ' ltliis cmmcczioii I intend to get in Butch Sloop Fires | 231:3."liliilvillli‘..2‘.‘Lll°';'lll‘ $251.‘; I 0n Japanese Ship ll" lnlorlncd as to 1110 exact. tuners surrounding Haskcllls’ 'I'l-l’.E HAGUE, Netherlands, Oct.‘ i—(AP)—Two Japanese were I‘(‘-i ported killcdl land two tvoundcd ' 1011" ' 5 (lei-ill. MISSIONARIES SAFE ST. JOHN'S, Nfl(l.. Oci. 1-—M0n- The Jilpalniso ‘F1111 111 1'11 j iurc of Yonmcli Pa» in Shaun Plfilllllv" 11:1 r» 1" MO VE 11v CONFLICT Is Determined On I Settled Policy In War Wig/z China Blame Britain For Leagues Con- demnation Of Bombings. Wide- spread Newspaper Criticism. ‘TOKYO. (lei. l (AP) llvlcrriliu" directly" in ("treat Britain. a Japanese ifllrciun tlilicc >|iflivti~lllllll made clear today that Japan is dt‘li‘l'lllillt'(i in zrccipl no mediation by any third power to end the vonilict 111th China. This reassertion of a previous ziltiturle came simultan- eously with widespread nevvspapci- (‘l'ili(‘i<m nf Gfga) Britain. "We desire to make il cit-air." the spoilt-salon said, “that we do not think mediation is culled tor at the present. stage of affairs. We will llIl~\\t‘l'\'illi.',i_\ and unilinchingly pursue a settled policy. “If any power “nuts in mediate, lct hcr first acquire 8 full appreciation of our aims and ilspirzltio1is." The stutcmenthintcd strongly that Japzln considered British influence at (iencva responsible for League of Na- tions action condemning Japanese bombings. "Tf "The British delegate in Gin.- eva. Viscount (‘ra11l1orno', iii‘ spgkesman QXDiZIIIlPG. "is l‘t"p0'."t'(i lo have said the Sine-Japanese conflict is of serious concern >0 countries besides the two parties, hinting, we silpposc, at the .‘1(‘(‘"o“ sity or tiesirabllity‘ for l'illl\'i' 1 11:11‘ a confcrenro or 11.1\\cr.~ 11 L‘.\l4".i 1n the affairs of illp Purl: l..1- l 1n." 'sil,'lll‘(i.l_‘,i w‘ p‘ I . (- (A S l w- “f slmlwllcll LflNliiilNilltiiliilalis Chinese Hold Lines SHANGHAI. Oct. '1» -—Chu1esc delonclcrs lzilfgicliffn“ £1“? Lilith - ~ul France lr-ulgiit. were practical: m vs)‘ m U‘ ‘i’ “P47 0 Fl . l.'~' llvlflltvl upon terms oi their m4 "l l"?! ‘elf ° 11 “time 111 Lvnauon to ILFLY to attend a cont, Shangha iron. and rounter-at- y,.,-,.,._,._. n; 4,. “w”. powers Wm‘ iazkcd Japanese. 1n some sector.» j a “PW U, “mm: 3mm...) interval-h They told of routing Japanese U... L», gWH, troops I11 the vicinity o1 Klan v11 T W.‘ ' 11.1,“. u _ ~ 1 . . ... z. 1i source‘ north of Shanghai, ycslcidlrv. prowl)“. be dcnvcr‘ unirli Japanese admitted the Klanggxvnu m Goumnnent m, civic ccntrc bulldltips had boon :1! flppruval b’ ¢‘l\‘l\('lll\l0(i bill. . 1d] ihoir‘ lines 111 _, “Ad 1.1.1.1101, Cflbinvimy ins rear were n11!- HIUCUL, \ 1 _ , When .\i»{i(‘.\ (‘it‘.ll'i'(i (luring ‘l.-- ' "‘ Rlllllll- Mug; evening Chinese plain-s round u, . n: oxer Shanghai in a lclunn. . v b n». ‘mm spmh sauce flight. .lap:1:1csl\ mill. l,“ QU_,A.,,IH,,.X._L and craft guns blasted at tho fliers ap- parcntlv without vile-ct. Stool irnl- -. pm-p, in P3715 5mg- mcnLs loll into the lnlcriiaiiru1nl ,, . \\'1:']1Fz m have Settlement . “Mhdrkmn Chinese Mild Japan was wnsIdM . m Humm- cring a furihci- warning to forvigi “.16., to send powers l0 evacua e’ Nai " ‘v cc and Great mold danglr of .11r _ ,.. d... m, who“, Chinese news agencg; said tho vbnunn In warning would be loosed on the l" 1., a trump ground that several Japn11i=~i~ 11rd 11 ;,,~ ,l1-- p.111 open her planes raiding Nalllging recur. » '3 were shot down when the-y fexv. 4* y .3 _ ‘, m t. low to avoid damaging foreurli “n m‘? ' ('0' 03 property. ITiIB Chinese dvlr-gntloii .1: Gr"- kciicihc Llcaguc of Nd‘. ~ \ '_ omnn v0 tr» ..~ . China a victim of Jainn-sl» .111.» t-UUuail dHiAN ltrcsslonw o " . (The Japanese r‘<1rl-1..11 Oil; 4' made it clear that Japan. I11 ever, would not stand 1.11‘ ihzzd party mediation. lJnpanls unify ininisirx" led Japanese war l1:;1. shelled a lice: o! (jl1111<-\,. off lhc South (‘hind vl-a l. . said the slnflng nus .:1 >1»! lit‘- fence». /'l \_4a1.u11~u;! of Taichou chin and T1; A (‘Ulllllllllhq .11 dc cried Yczuucu and ill-d soutlraulnl China's milnarv mission m. Nanknzi; ill i' . _ _ ' ‘.-i_i;or M .Gr.ih, Father Hugh Mc- . . , , _ _ l tmifiy “hm a Japan“? fiihtmg ‘ Ggcttiganpaitdl Father cl-lug Strangi “'5 .“.“‘“‘" ("“"" 5E" _ '“""“"" a 1m ‘flu- tluiflilia" P's“) 17°39 l“ Dutch E531» Ind an “n m5‘ < larrcd 200 wounded (lunar .~Oi(i— 1 - .. ignored ryders of the Dutch slow 11.1.1.1?‘yiiitiiifiaiiiisrqiiivrlciilsihtiiiingliiiiiio i 1"“ mimwilli! Jamflllra" (‘flpilxi-cxwf i , inmfiéln‘ Lip-‘m 1'~11-1:»\Lnm"1n‘ Flores in halt. ,“.': . ‘ .. i ' ' '-_' Tsnnflrlnwu". smith oi ’i‘1c'.1l.~ii1. ‘HM "mulmun i l "“ - . “l-lt‘ safe auordlng in word rcceu. , UAW...“ ,1A The 5100p Shelled fwd “Izod I ed from Monsignor Mctlrath. Prc- '“ ' ' ' , m m“ "m1"? “m” T°"“‘ .M“““ M“ mt Apostolic of iill‘ Lishul distr ct. (Coulinucll on n11" 1'1. C112 in i ,5 mrding to reports rcccircd front} i ',. 4. Bstevls. The incident occurrc __f_rfv , ,___._,,__,__V____,____V_:_ _ off Riouw, on Blntang Island.| ' T‘? n ...... 5...... | gents P an Dr e 0 ‘ * ~ = n§Ur IV l1 °‘l1"~‘~' 1"“ '"* . Mm: 11a‘. .3.‘ ti) ' ' ' ' 1 (,1 ll 44 4'3 Halls cllllflsfifllfl Seat Of ~ Asturian Kingdom a . 1 11 ~ i4 is Foreign Papers l l» - w 3 18y The Associated Press) gus which is said m hold :11» i-c- ~ _ i ' HENDAYE, Franco - Spanish mains of Polayo. ¢~1cl11l1 l~1-11'1-1;v I 1"“ _ ‘ 333m“- oa- 1"‘(CP Havuk‘) Fwlllifil‘. 0N- 1——5Pl"llSh Itlsllf- founder of the Asiurlan longdcnv, : N[(1(‘.1'r\lfr'l10 mm” auihmm“ wmiamwd c°'1 RPM $111005 W“? Poised for an- In the some cave is tho tomb at ‘ 5' i" “(mi “'0 P19! °l 13 "Yell" "ewswper! 9“ other smash at Covadonga, whcrc King Alfonso I. who mod in 7.37 ' i“ 3" ~**“m'°'d their arrival tonight. 43 T101115! national shrines are defended by Insurgent plnflp; "mend nyfly m». lit" the "memvlllmlinl $P°°°m51 the hissed mountain men of As- region today, ixlnlblllg mull‘ A here. l turias in one of the. wildest reg- towns. m?“ W" “““ "Wlm"? “i s“ Copies of the London Sunday‘ 1on5 of s11 Spain. South of Gijon “h”, h, .1.~= ~ 9'30. _ Times. Evening Slilnmrd and‘ Driving a tortuous path toward enLs are driving in lur-nk iillMlLil Until‘: a‘ "39 Daily mirror aiere seized, f Ggjon, (on; p01,", o; ‘he Govern, from n", mum m rpmw, m‘, m. _.~ I -. rmxv morning a1 6. Issues 0! 81X PRES PRI>°YS-~L¢ mom's last. stronghold on the of Oviedo. than» was unto,- nzur- ""‘"'" 3"“"""“* 0"" 4' 5'58 Journal. Le Mntln. Le Pctlt Jour-y IIOTUIWPSIZ coast, two Insurgent bri- nnl. 1c Flsuw. Iilutrluwlseauu; luau-s moved toward the neighbor Wild llwlltllllll-Wcre among those. towns of Covadonga and Congas "NP". - lie Onis. A coastal column, west ‘The remaining papers conlisczi- . of the Sollu river. thrviitriiod a d came from Sullzcrluull. tho; l‘l'lll' xilinck by u 11love down the lng at San Isidro Pass. Netherlands. Norway and SwedenJ uillcy. No sum were given i at Oovsdongs a the Hemoph- lnsurgonts again hmassrd ltiail- Fwvran-i v1.1a eighteen min- l'l(l's lic'vl1rr~ to lin- |1r1rll1\vr.~l,-:~ W" "m 1m" i """l"ii""w“- the (‘orunn road. ulnl to Pin-j rm ' w H m“ southeast nu the in1p0rlni1t V. . “ _ ‘ | |,_ n“ via hiul1u':1_\'. The $ll'<'il!!‘l\ o: ..11. |- , ~:'.".l|1.“111. y , _. > . L Ir IIII ‘I‘ I . In I. M! .1‘ maékbeeigrlicatcrl the Illhllltllillal;:£,|;:|;:tli p. m., u-uu- TormentinQ .6- s (f v.2, ‘ Grind» It. .2‘ -.~.