MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN The ideal We is not soft. oaulotueown Ilullhn I've not-urn: our-Ila. Feudal 3.0!“ RE-OPENED Statement Made By Minister Of Labor Hon. Norman Rog- as. ((‘.l’. By Guardian‘: Special Wire) CJTTAWA, July l7-—Rellcf camps for transient unemployed will not be re-opened next winter if the gnvemments plflentt intentions are carried out, Labor Minister Norman Rogers declared today In a joint interview in which he was associ- alcd with A. B. Purvls, chairman of the National Commission on employment and relief, the minis- ttcr declared that ii.‘ there was a necessity for further care of single unemployed he would prefer to fol- Zow the English system of training camps. Mr. Purvis stated that a ro-regis- triition of unemployed on relief vsill be finned in August. and com. plated as quickly as possible so that the commission may obtain a true picture of their empl‘oyab.il- fly and the geographic distribution of the various classes of workers. Only those on relief rolls will be included in the registration but Mr . Purvls sfatod iniereits of those who by erercise of their initiative, and by sacrifice, have been able to avoid applying for relief, will be kf‘pl very much in the minds of the commissioners. It is the hope that by eo-oper- ation with local advisory commis- sions to bc set up shortly. the com- mnslon will ultimanfely dbtaln also an accurate survey or those unem- ployed whose names have not ap- peared on relief rolls. Set up by authority of a statute enacted at the last session of par- liament, the commission of seven mrmbcrs has been actively engag- ed the pat: six weeks in three main branches of sctivity—ot-gsnlsntlorl. nmingcments for re-reg'straI.ion of those on relief, and preliminary ex- amlnation of re-employment wen- ues. Creation of local advisory bodies will be carried out as soon as the national advisory committee is or- ganized. which wi‘l be in a matter of weeks. Mr, Purvis said. These local commibtees will be set up in as many oommunltles as the need indicates, Once they are function- ing the lame: question of seeking co-operation o’ employer; will be, entered upon. Provincial governments will each appoint a. registration officer who win come to a meeting in Ottawa where the quesitionntiire will be pmpared and detain; of tho regis- tration completed. Once the plans have been com leted the provincial * ";"_.;‘T W - ,_:: (Continued on Page 10) mo {Vents com ' 1‘alkies—-Eim.2 Ti Monday. L-8226-7-18-21. ’ ‘Show—St. Peter's Tuesday. L-6226-‘I-18-zl. "Cake Sale 8. A. McDonald's Saturday, July 18th. L-8132-7-16-Iii. “Reserve July 22nd for Belfast United Church Tea at Pinette. 1,6204-7-is-at. “Festival and Dance at llbeneller School Tuesday, July 21st. If not nno, Wednesday. L-6202-'1-lB-21 "Kensington Club will laid live stock on Tuesday afternoon, July 21st. J. R. Bharpegsecretary. la-01“. "I-lope River Ice Cream Festival Saturday, July lath. Supper 6.30. Sale of cakes, bingo, etc. L—o066-7-15-4i. "Dance and Ice Oream, Kilmuir llluk. Tuesday mt. Best music- Wwd Island sci-enaders. 1:-me-1-is-at. “Jubilee women’: Institute foe gem festival on lawn of Mrs.-ll. ~v«u$§‘“"‘°‘*. u‘“.'.”““..l.'. :t'§‘°““..".l . . e. loliowlnl Riki from 90 Median live at lamina- '°ll Thursday in g. Jul 23rd. Wlwlloa am. 1 in: as unler ‘T-‘"1’ was date. it. e. ucllwen and cum Oacwbell. I- 10"!-Avestot usrloeting Hoard “(line host of main mud» ll . July It. and at north Wllhlun wueruaan fcnnoon. the “loci. untu to We . rinse notify ‘°°Il new-tones. ‘(flitting Board l-?.‘é‘i"£i "°"'.o.i.“""‘:..u'.§‘.‘.'- °r’..'X§' day attnggu, " "ea Kong. Mt. Mewurt. nu mulfcirtlhoon. Albany. Please mu In“ secretary and Will Nlil BE l I HIE RICHARD UENER _ Sailing from Montreu nugnuy till the Alsunia was Lieut.-General Sir Richard E. W. Turner, V. 0., K. C. B.. K C. M. G.. D. S. 0.. chairman of the Vimy Pilgrimage committee and former commander :6 the Second Canadian Division. 1- Richard was photo;-rs ind aboard ship. P 130 candidates In Field In Manitoba ——.-... WINNIPIPG. July 1'l——(GP)-With one acclamation accorded a govern- ment standard bearer. 130 candl- dates were in the acid tonight for the 52 seats at stake July 27 in the Manitoba provincial election. 5. S. Gaston, Liberal-Progressive member of the last legislature, was elected by acclamation in Folrnord constituency when official nomina- tions were held today. For the other seats. the Lllb:-rsil-Progressives. un- der Premier John Bracken, nomin- ated 4'! candidates; Conservatives 3!; Cc-zperative Commonwealth Federation, 19; Social Credit zoand others '1. Fifty-five members -the Manitoba legislature. Elections have been deferred in The Pu and Run- ert's Land and the scclstmation in Fairicrd left 52 seats to be decided July 2'1. . Premier Bracken. head of the government since 1M2, is the sit- ling member for The Pas and his Provincial Treasurer. Hon. 3:. A. Moi‘-‘herscn, is the sitting member for Rupert’: Land. voting in these 0 nstituencies is scheduled for Aug. 21. Twenty-one constituencies will see straight flilllis between two oendldatm and in 11 others there will be three-cornered contests. flour candidates are seeking elec- tion in four other single-member crmstltuencleo. In the straight fights. 15 are be- tween Liberal-Pmgreuive and Con- servative candidates; four are be- tween Liberal-Proirressive and soc- ial Credit nominees and one each between a Lilbersl-Pragmssive and C.C.F. nominee and a Liberal- Progresslve and an Independent candidate. WINNIPEG. Jill! l'T-(OP)—Four women were nominated for the Manitoba Legislature today when cfiiclal nominations were received in preparation for voting July 2'1. Them were no women members of the last legislature. Two of the women up running as candidates of the Manitoba So- cial Crc "*. League. They are Mrs. Asta od n in Gimli oonstltuenc and Miss Salome I-Ieldorson in S . George. - Mrs. Mary Dyml. was nominated by the Liberal-Progressive: in the 10-member ccnslituetcy of Winni- peg where Miss Beatrice Briaden. Co-operative C0m!'fl0Tlw:I-1”’! Fed- oration. is also s. candidate. Father Adalbert Killed In Ethiopia (0. 1'. By Guardian’: Ipeolal Wire) ¢7I'1‘AwA, July l'l—d?eV. 1"Blll¢l' Adelbert, formerly of Ottawa and a missionary in nthlopla was killed when the mission ate?-1011 ll WW’ era was plunged. Wold 01 "*9 tragedy was received here today W the oapuchin moautery by way of the Dorm-tnieni of Internal _M- mm and the lritlsb Ohms dbl- faires at Addie Ababa. Bi-other Denali. another Canad- ian and also a member of W cnpucmh order barely escaped death in the same raid which took place III! II lost. He was left for dead by the Bl.hiopia.n raiders but nu since been nuued and is now safe at Dubbo. nefare his ordlneilon Father Ad- slbtrt Ill knelt Albert lllondln. He was born in uontieal in 1090 but went mint of his life in Ot- tawa. A brother and sister live in Ottawa. and another brother and sister live in New York. He went to the million field in Ethiopia: in I927 and has not been in Canada since. per ’.’o""l.."""" “‘i"" . - " ""-- .......u.. ‘ ersceardl Island Like the Dew _ Everybody I‘-Ito-at-unotvott Maxim V OIL MERE MAN ‘u’,"'i'.'..l"o""" Dell nod INN us‘ U.'I. A. “U RRATIJLATES RAIHIAYS Centenary of First Railway Operated In Canada Will Be Celebrated Today. 0’_I'I‘AWA. July 17 —- Canadian‘ Rauways must keep step with me- , chanicsl developments like trucks,’ buses and airplanes c "become Bl Rflldually lessening influence in a! field which for many years was’ (C.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) . K pecuiiarl their own," Tra Millie?-oryflowe warned them The Transport Minister joined with Premier Mackenzie King in congratulating the railways Canada in completing 100 yes“ 01 Operations. Their messages were directed to celebrations in Montreal tomorrow marking the centenary of the llrst railway in Canada which Operated between Laprali-is and at. Johns. Que. "011 the occasion of the 100th I-lmlvvmry or the establishment in Osnada of transportation by 3-ail," Y-319 prime ministers magsagg yegdl "I desire to eutena hesrtleat con- gratulations to the officials of the Canadian National Railways with. in whose system is included the original line over which the am train in Canada made its journey and my cordial greetings to all who I“? Ollll-sod in providing for the community cafe and efficient rail- way service. During the century which has elapsed since the first train operated between Laprairie and st. John's the steam railway has played an essential and all- important part both in the forms. tlon and in the development of our Dominion. “1 lhollld like to avail myself of the centenary occasion to convey to the Canadian National and to the railways of Canada as a whole my best wishes for continued cp- polliunities of national service and for their prosperity in the years -that lie ahead." Mr. Howe said there had been admittedly over-expansion of rail- way construction. "Hut," continued Mr. Howe. “growing out oi the railway indus- try are other important consider- ations. both local and national. Without the railway to give effect to the con/cderation of our widely distributed provinces, the Dominion could not have made progress as a nation, our trade and commerce could not have expanded as they have, nor could the great Canadian prairies have been settled and de- vo‘oped as they have been. Not- withstanding the great and contin- "° uing cost of the railways to Can- ada, the plain truth is that the country owes a great debt to the railways." It is not until comparatively re- cent years the supremacy of the railways was chaleuged. The first threat came from extension of electric lines in litter-urban rervlce but it was no: serious. The second and serious threat was development of highways. trucks und busses “In the field of transport, as in most other calilnilsi it W111 be. in tin long run. a case oi the survival of the fittest. and most. efficient. and in the present period of evolu- tion and ad_itt.~;tnicnt it wlu be nec- cssary for the railways to have re- gard to prescnt trends and to an- tlcipate the future unless they are satin led to become a gradually lessening influence in a field which for many years was peculiarly their own. It must be accepted that the automobile, the motor coach. and the motor trucks, are here to std)’ until they in turn may be super- seded by newer developments. Roosevelt Yacht Off cape Sable (A. I’, By Guardian's Slloehl Wire) GNP]! SABLII. N. 3., July 17- Sklpper Pranlflln D. Roosevelt and his three sms anchored their yacht lewanna off cape sable tonight after 30 hours continuous Ielllnl fog 126 miles across the widest put of the Day of Fundy. They came on a. crescent oouru from Best Harbor. 110.. through fair but cold weather. using the yachts motors for but I short time althouch the wind was “sht- Ahead of the President Ind hil sea- in: mm tomorrow lay the ncrt waul course sloul the NOV! acotlan west cout- Thg mast, guard cutter Pbnchart- rain joined the schooner Liberty. escorting the presidential yacht. On the course were two fiahlnl vessels out of Gloucester and the President had a good view of them hauling in heavy haddofl MN- The only mishap was the duck- ing a sailor received when he went overboard while hoisting a launch nn the destroyer Hopkins, in the of '__________.__—._.i ARTHUR GREISER The long Imoilldcflnl DIM-‘I’ crisis flared up I-ll!-"V ll "'”"“' flrglsor president of the Free titan’: senate announced never- ignoo of its ties with LII!‘-|0 OT Nltiolu and. H fuse] to mknowledfl the jurisdiction of Sean Lester 0' the Irish Free State. High Com- miulcner for the League. Poland threatened to invade Dlnllg if I Nazi coup Wu attempt“!- FliEDERlcTllN, MANMISSING FRiiM__i|liME search was being made yew"- day for Mr. William Ford, missing from his boarding house at Fred- erlcton since early yesterday morn- ing. Fifty-five years of use and unmarried the missing man has been under doctor's care for heart trouble for some time and some- times appeared to suffer a lapse of memory when he had an at- tack. It is thought that he absent mindedly wandered away early yesterday morning from the resid- ence of Mr. Robert Hill. Frederic- ton, where he was boarding. He was missed at seven o'clock and was believed to have left not lonz before that. Forty man, directed by three of the local Mounted Police. were searching yesterday and will continue again today. Anyone 896- ing the missing man. who was dressed in a brown suit and hat, are requested to notify the R.,O.M.P. or Mr. Hill at Frederic- n. Nazis Tune - up For Olympics (A. 1'. By Guardian's fllieciol Wire) Barnum, July 17. —— In order to prepare them for the ordeal of the Olympics Berlin’: working popula- tion today began "a week of leuIh- ter" at the sullzestion of the labor front. “The coming elsht days will be days of jcllity and chearfulnass." said the arm uncement. “Prior to the strain of the Olympic weeks. Berliners should take stock of them- selves, then with merry heart and friendly expression of their faces receive their Olympic guests. None should miss this chance." WITNESSES GIVE EVIIJENSE AT SCOTLAND YARR Would-be A sea ssin Undergoes Mental [ Examination. ‘ (By Bur-detie '1'. Johns) (Aucoiated Pun siaffwrlfcrl (A.!'. By Guardian’: Special Wire) IDNDOB, Ju'y l’l—Kln3 Edward's Igrstoiul subjects poured by the doz- ens upon busy Scotland Yard today "c all the fateful utory of Consti- tution Hill while physicians exam- ined s. seeming would—be assassin in 5 prison hospital mental ward. The "Yard" said its offices were "flooded" by caters in response to an appeal for clear versions of what hapened hard by Wellington Arch yesterday. stenographers took scores of pea- es of depositions for sifting evi- dence in the case against George Andrew McMahon, 34 year old crip- pled Irishman whom his neighbors, called "rather a crank." A charge of carrying a revolver with intant to “endanger life" still stood against McMahon, although he was reported authoritatively to have declared today his loaded re- volver was not knocked from his hand as the King rode by, but in- rttead that he threw it delib- erately in the street near His Ma- jesty. He had no intention, he insisted again, of shooting the sovereign. The King went about his custom- ary duties today, after perusing scores of messages of congratula- tions on his escape where were heaped on his desk at York I-louse. “His Majesty is in excellent spir- its. perfectly cairn. . .1 e never seen him less nervous," said a Do- minions official who talked with him at Buckingham Palace today. “He sat there and laughed and talked and displayed keen interest‘, in questions he wished to discuss with me. . .tekc it from me, he is very well and very busy. with no time to worry arbor)‘. such happen- ings as that on Constitution Hill." late this afternoon, after a day of official business, the King drove from Buckingh:.m Palace to York House. Waiting crowds cheered lustily and His Majesty acknowledged the acclamation with nods. Guards were not increased either at Buckingham or at. Jamce's Pa]- ece or at any other royal property frequented by the King today, and the King’: plans for unveiling the (Continued on Page 10) Halifax Will Be Headquarters (0. P. By Gun-dlan's Special Wire) MONTREAL, July l7—I-Ialifax will be the Canadian winter head'- quarters of the Mont1-eal-Austra1ia- New Zoaland Steamship Line dur- mg the coming winter season, it was announced here today. The Canadian Constructor, clear- ing from here July 80, will be the last of the line's ships to make the ietum voyage to Montreal_ After that. the ships will go to Halifax. Up until late summer, the line will be running an extra ship be- tween Montreal and the Antlpcdes to take care of heavy cargoes an- ticipated in view of a rise in prices of Australian dried fruits coming into effect Sept. 1. The Scroll Of Valor By W, W. KITIBAY Canadian Frees Ital! Writer Bil {filled to the north-wast of those marshes where the northern shou'der of Vimy Ridge descends into souchel River is that inooneplcuo mound known during the war He Hill 70. In all likelihood the CM- ediull Mlsrims now on their way in the battlefield! and comet- eries of liurene will be unable to distinguish this low ride from the aunourulins country. Ind not until they tmnlle it and are told rcrneth of its story will they redliul at here in Allluat. i017. the mnedien Conn foulht one of the most brilliant actions of the war. Hill '10 stones high in Canad- ian annals. It was the first German official reports have it till: for the number of troops employed it was one of the most costly engagement! the enemy had ever fought. In the fight-in for the hill and in H0- soqupn actions in its vicinity six (huulians won the Victoria area. They were Major 0- If. teal-month. and (lump on’- prcsidentlal escort (ario) Battalion; Pie. N. O1-tourke. 7th (British Colum- bia) Battalion; Pte. Brown. ioth (Alberta) Betta‘.- jm; co. .3. Major R. Hanna. 29th (British Columbia) Battalion; Pie, Flellp Konawal, 47th (Wutem Ontario) Battalion and Ielgt. Fred Hclixon. 20th (Cen- tnl Ontario) Battalion. In no cases were the exacting requirements for the award more amply fulfilled. Whether one envisions Iaearmonth ntandnlg, like Ajax defying the lightning. at the parapet of his trench, estehing enemy bombs and throwing them back into the ad- vancing Germans. the will}; If-Nunl of liquid fire payed around him, or stout-hearted Robson. a veteran of the south Afrifllll III‘. laying about him like some paladin of old, the qrlrit of Sacrifice and the prompting: of courageous hearts were nt. 0’R0urie laboring without also under intense fire I0 0880 the sufferings of his comrades. Brown weaving through ""3 barn“ with messages of high- If port/lntr—all form a Dlcl-ill‘? which, with its bsmrrounrl the horrors of war. is relieved by the nfhility and the braver)’ of those heroes whose thoughts trans- cended mer, thought of sell. an VISIT VIMY Ilimging criminals is part of her duty, she declares, no Mrs. Flor- once Thcmpaon. above. Davleis (‘,0|u1Nuy_ Ky., sheriff, will spring the trap for Rclney Befhea. 23. Ill!!!" at an aged woman. Bathen is sen- tenced to die July 31 at Owens- boro. Mn. Thompson. mother of four children. was named sheriff when her husband died in April. KINRWILL R (I D R E Discusses With Brig.- Gen. Ross Plans For Unveiling War Memorial. (By Roger Greene, Associated Press Staff Writer) (A. I‘. By guardian. Special Wire) IDNDON, July l"l—A backwash of vivid memory turned the eyes of King Edward toward the blood- soaked heights of Vlrny Ridge to- night. Unperturbed by yesterday's epis- ode of the man with the loaded revolver the Sovereign conferred at Buckingham Palace with Brig. Gen. Alex Ros. of Yorkton, Sask., President of the Canadian Legion. They discussed preparations for the unveiling af the $1,000,000 Canadian war memorial a week from Sunday. The King, who served himsclf during the Great War, will join with President Lebrun of France and Prime Minister Mackenzie King of Canada, speaking from Ottawa, in dedicating the towering monument. There he will visit again the trenches where thousands of Can- adians fell in the desperate con- fiict that flames around Vimy Ridge and turned the villages of the Douni Plains into rows upon rows of cliarnel houses. An overseas contingent of 8,000 Canadians, ex—servlce men with their wives, will be billeted in the old battle towns about the ridge, waiting to participate in the ceremony. From Vimy Ridge, after visiting the Canadian trenches, which have been newly opened and concreterl to ensure their permanecy, the King will proceed to the French Riviera for a. summer holiday at the Villa Yliirizon of the actress, Maxine Elliott, at Golfe Juan. The King is expected to remain there for several weeks. It will be his first trip abroad since his accession to the throne .' against him was sub judlce. Newspapers Liable On Contempt of 0 o o rt charges (C. P. by Gnu-dian'e Special Wire) LONDON, July i'l—A legal auth- ority said tonight there was no doubt whatever that English news- papers dascriblng yesterday's epi- sode as "an attempt to assassinate the King" were liable for convict- ion on contempt of court charges. He explained that the legal argu- ment was that this was a pre- judicial statement injurious to the accused person while the charge An old provision in English law sets forth that every maxi ls innc- . cent until he is proved guilty. This , has lost none of its vulitlity, even 1 though the person of the sovereign ‘ is involved, it was explained. l (CENTURY RF RY. PROGRESS Unique Celebration Of Memorable Event In Can'ada’s History. l MONTREAL, Que, July 17_1,.;c. emotive engineers, dressed in cos- iunics of the period. will re-enact in vivid fashion scenes cf a century ago during the celebration this week—cnd of the moth anniversary of the Champlain and St. Lawrence Canada's first steam railroad. oper- ating between La Prairie and St. John's. Que. For this memorable occasion. there will arrive in Mont- real 3. direct descendant of an en- rzineering family whose four gener. ctions were actively associated with Ciinadrrs early eifsrts in railroading in the person of E.J.W. Pangborn, new a. resident of Cotton, Califor- ma. Mr. Pangborjs i engine driv- er of the Sou‘ zcific Railroad is the great-, ’ udson of Ziba Pangbom. engineer on the “Accom- modation”. Canada's first steamboat in 1809, and grandson of George Washington Pangiborn, first perm- anent engine driver on the Cham- plain and St. Lawrence Railroad. Zlha Pangibor-n too assembled the locomotive Dorchester when it ar- rived at Montreal from England and accompanied it cn its first trip over the pioneer line in 1836. Mr. I-"a.ng~bom will ride on the foot plate of the reconstructed engine during Saturday and Sunday to represent the Pangbcrn family during the celebrations at st. John's and La- B-sane. other vetenan engineers of a somewhat later period whw faith- fully served the cause of railroad- ing and terminating their service with the Canadian National Sys- tem. will also acconrpany the his- toric puade. As a. contrast to the days of a century ago, the centenary special train, leaving Bonaventure Station on Saturday at 1 p.m. for St. John's will be drawn by one cf the Can- adian National new streamlined cri- szincs and a full—sized model of the , “D0rchester." Canada's first steam‘ locomotive conveyed on a flat car. will be a feature of the train. An- other centcnp,r_v special train will leave Bonaventure station on Sun— t day at 9.05 a.m. for Inn‘-‘ralrlc where a celebration will also take place. Attack Czech Foreign Policy BERLIN, July 1'7—Gcrmnn\'. lili- easy over indications of clti-.. r m- operatlon between Russia, C7.l5L‘lill~ slovaklc. and Rumnnin. lnunrhmi an open attack today on the im- six months ago, and if he flies, he will be the first British King in history to cross the English Chan- nci by plane. His Majesty‘: visit will be strict- ly private and he will travel incog- nito. A small party of friends will follow him by plane, Alberta Foxos 0 y I n g I n Hundreds (C. P. By Guardian‘: Special Wire) OAIDARY, July I1‘-Albcrta l'|I|'i(‘ll foxes are dying in hundreds, victims of n strange disease which elgn policy of the Cmetzh govern- ment as a danger l0 Europt~‘.~ peace. The Reich. through its Foreign‘ Office mouthpiece, the Doutsche Diplomatische Poiiiisclie Korres- pondence, attacked particularly Czech financial support of Ru- manlan armament and the rt‘p0ri- ed building of a strategic railway to connect Soviet Russia and Czechoslovakia. (In Buclizri-est, a source close to the government said construction of the railway. through the nu. maninn province of Bcssorabls. will begin at once. Diplomats said the project was part of Foreign Minister Nicholas Titulescu‘s comp. ter—offr-nslve against the spread of German influence in the Balkans. It will be financed by a loan frm-n Caechoslovakia and is expected to be completed within a year.) The Foreign office organ im- cuscd Czechoslovakia of injecting a new complication in the European situation at the very mcme .. the Austm-German agreement, ing tension. so far dciics diagnosis, according to reports to the Alberta Silver Fox Breeders Association. silver fox rnnrhlng is a major Alberta industry with annual returns aver- aging more than 8500.000. Some advices from Prime way through the tip of ta. P. By Guardian’: Special wm-. ' prom- ised definitely to relax long sland- de- scribed the strategic railway itself “5 *3 myth. and said what actually was being built was a motor high- eastern REVlilT Ill BARTAGENA Isiivon President Takes Up Residence In N a - tional Palace - (‘ensorshlp Prevails. (A. P_ By Guardian's Spocial Wire) GIBRALTAR, July lil—(Saiul'- (TEl)'>—Pt‘!'SlS'.f‘ll‘. rumors. ti revolt had brolzcn out in Cnrlngetiu, on the southeast coast of Spain, cir- culated early today at La Linea. Spanish city just north of here. only official communxcutions were being permitted to Madrid com La Lll1C‘ll and Gibraltar. Ln Linea and the towns near it were quiet. Strict Censorship l8—tSaturday)—- V Sirict censorship \v.:s being ap- plio dearly Lofiny on l’.‘l¢‘i)l‘iDl'iB calls to and from Madrid. Officials said licavy precaution! against (lisordor were being taken tlirougliout the country_ but that tranquility prcvnllcd. President Manuel Allllll} urgent- ly left the presidential home all 10.30 p.m. last night and took up residence at the national palace. . . . MADRID, July The foregoing dispatch, received in London by telephone, was ended by the Associated Press‘ corres- pondent at Madrid with the re- mark, "thls is all I 5 mellowed is! tell you." (A.P. By Guardian’, Special Wis-on LONDON, my iB—lSaturday)- Reuters news agency said today tcicpltone communications betwee Spain and the west of the vvorl had been cut off. The agency stated the cause wall believed to be “serious Dolitiotl reasons." An official of the Br'iti.sl'i Tele- phone Ccmpany stated: “We have been notified no call: will be accepted in Spain tonight." 0 C 0 service was not immediately mm clear. Disorders, including many strike have shaken the country since th Leftist government was elected i February. Unofficial estima puwe the number of dead in fiv months of troubles atbetween 200 and 300, with perhaps 1.000 wound- ed. The assassination of Jose colv Soleio, monarchist leader, crea new tension early this week I-lunu drcds of Fascists were rounded ufl Thursday, and arms and ammunit- ions were seized. There were rumors of milita moves and a possilfie gcvemmen crisis. The reason for suspension of one new fitrx-at: 1'lR‘(lNQ (0 (Ross was with \.ll.'.l-\TL‘-.il'.!\lC. Buds so -{HEY cm WORK AT «tour 3 -;=-$1, (Canadian Press) Maritime Provinces: west to northwest winch; mos. fair; not much change in temper- Elliffl. 'i‘0RDN'I‘0. July 1'1-Minion and maximum teu&R|C\Ives:— Dawson 0 ‘H Aklavlk I ‘M Edmonuv I N Regina U 92 Winnipeg '10 08 Tomato 04 8| Ottawa 58 16 lunfuol B6 16 Quebec 52 1: Guns Jam 54 '10 Halifax 57 70 Charlottetown to in Sign tide this evening at 9.43 Ind morning at 11.22. Bun sets this ovming at 1.42 and rises tomorrow morning at 4.31. flummeruide tide eighteen min- utes later than Oharlottctcwn. run can unnu- lau-ea llnrden IJ5 A. I. I I‘. In .I0 I’. ll. In-u 'l"orlm-nllne u A. I. Me P- lil.. no r. M. Dolly on-out lull".-H Commencing Monday, Jul! 135- " continuing until loud". ‘H -m.. an additional only II°"'::.“,': will be made on an-eon. 'II n‘'. and Councils)’. Y"?! “L. luv. Harden PIP! II ‘I200 A. I- . Ozechoslcv-olua and into Romania. (‘-30 Tdruelflno HII‘ N 3'” 5' H on return.