i MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN yourseiftoGod. no what you should and confide G Ill I‘ 0e i smegma time; .11.: R Usso - JAPANESE TENSION i i 721/ ///- The People’s Paper Covers Prince Edward] Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1931 in i II/ ’/// ii i "I131". '__w____.-¢ ‘-~.,,__________‘ Read b ii inn-i Everybody MAXI MS OFA MERE MAY i... God made goodness with a smile on her face. FEAR COLLAPSE OF SPANISH CONTROL S YS TEM RENEW TRI PARTY PACT "hill: Filitf. n e w o n e t a r y Agreement (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) PARIS, July i-Notes from the British and United States Govern- mans agreeing to continue the truce-power monetary agreement of last October were handed today to Finance Minister Georges Bon- net. Officials declared this renewal of the pact was “highly gratify- ing" to France, faced with a. fin- ancial crisis which compelled her to abandon‘ temporarily the gold basis for the franc. They said the accord would give France a chance to work out her economic difficulties with assur- anoe that the currency would be pofeguarded internationally. Meanwhile the new "floating franc," frced- from restrictions on its gold content and pemiitted to find its own level, worked down to the lowest point in more’ than i0 years. At the close of open mar- ket trading it was quoted at 26.06 to the United States dollar and 128.93 to the pound sterling. COMING ‘EVENB "Talkies-Moniaguc Saturday- 14-2158-6-30-31. "Dance Brackley Beach‘ Lodge, Tuesday, July 6. L-2302-7-2-3. "Hope River Tea, Wednesday.3 My 1th. L-i804-6-22-14-li "Reserve Wednesday, August l1 for Cavendish Tea. L-2l85-6-30-F M W tf. "Murray Harbour! Murray Har- bour l l The big show C. F. C. Y! Melodiers Saturday night. 25c—l5_c. 'L-216"l-7-2-2i. ."Don't miss, the one act ploy‘ and concert by Bracklcy Point tal- l ent at York tonight. Admission 25 and 15c. L-22B4-7-2-li. "C Squadron Mounted Parade at i Armouries, Montague, Friday, July] 2nd. 7 RM. O. W. Campbell, Majon, L-2lil4-8-30-7-2. i "Fortune Half! Weekly Dance Friday. July 2nd. McKearneys 5 Piece Swing Band. L-2115-8-29-30-7-2. "Concert and dance Webster's Corner Hall, Monday, July 5th under auspices C. W. L. Kelly's bus leaves Nobana. 8.30. L-liido-‘I-fl-o. “Eimwood presents their two one act play in North River Hall. Friday. July 2nd. Dance after in aid of Hall. L-zzgz, .-_-___. "lflmb prices are gradually- "eelfenlna as the supply increases. Dent hold your markets e, lambs, ~79 1116. urn-too long. ‘one your. Bhlnping Club Secretary. nazos. ' “H prices are stronger. We: watch he markets closely and got :20 last possible in gains. You WWII" Ill you're Mo. live Stock Marketing - 5. " to is to notify ratepayers of School District No. 83, ‘Tryon West,- that say taxes not paid within ten‘ days 1 be handed into a Lawyer (or collection. Secretary; MJlowatt, By order of trustees. L-flllii-B-SO-Si. "All taxes in arrears of Wheatley River School District must be paid before July 31st, i037 or they will ii’ “$23.? t“"il°‘si"..ii°.‘i°°l "fl- . L21! , 0 Trustees. 14-2970-‘1-2-21. "Don't listen to live stock quo- tations and market reports fur- nkhed by buyers who want to lnoko a few dollars out of handling your stock. ship oo-operatively; Ind you are taking no changes.‘ liivcltook Marketing Board. bu” "Remington Shipping Club has locund cervical of flurry White- head, Clinton, to. vido a live- stock bucking letv for farmer-t who whh to have» hogs and lambs wnveyed from farm to ‘Reming- ton on-loeding days. Arrangements can be made at any time tele- phone to Mr. Whitehead, No. 7-8, New lnndon Exchange, or John Sharpe, Shipping Club Beer-ohm Remington. Reasonable cm Bin b0 arranged with m. - ‘wad when be calls. L-fit-‘l-f-it Canada - United States Friendship Rep [edged i President Roosevelt Sends Greetings To Dominion, Observing 70th Anniversary —- Lord Tweedsmuir Replies". (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA, July L-President Rioosevelt sent birthday greetings to Canada tonight and his good wLshes were reciprocated to the people of the United States by Lord Tweedsmuir, the Govemor- Lbneral. - "Individually and collectively, we pledge you the continuation of warm friendship," the President. declared in a broadcast from Hyde Park, New York. From the British cruiser York in Quebec harbor, Lord Tweedsmulr thanked Mr. Roosevelt for his greetings and to Canadians addres- sed this message: "Liet us remem- ber today that her (Canadab) des- tiny is not to be a mere territor- ial expression and not to be mere- ly nine vigorous provinces. but to be a single and indivisable na- tion." The broadcast, which was car- ried over national networks in Canada and the United States, was arranged by the Canadian Broad- casting Corporatioh. - President Roorevelt spoke follows: I On behalf of the Government and people of the United States it gives me sincere gratification to extend a word of greeting to our Canadian friends and to con- gratulate them on the 70th anni- versary of Canadian confederation. Through the years that have 85 elapsed since that memorable July ‘ 1st, 1867. we. of the United-Stetho- have watched with the keenest‘ and mcst sympathetic interest the isplendid progress of the Canadian nation, which in ever-increasing meaturc commands our respect and inspires our affection. Individually and collectively, we pledge you the continuation of our warm friend- ship. I do not know .of any greater gift in the power of nations or of individuals to bestow. Boston-Montreal Air Service Opens BOSTON, J-uly 1—Les1le I. Wil- liamson, President of the Canad- ian club in Button, and '1‘. E. Pringle, New England Manager of the Canaidan National Railways, were passengers today on the air- plane which inaugurated a new air service betwcei here and Montreal. Providing direct connections with another plane for Ottawa at Montreal, the new service will en- able passengers to fly from Bos- ton to the Canadian capital in three hours and flVminutes. Submarine iirounds 0ft cape Ganso iLS. WASHINGTON, July 1—-<AP>— ‘The United Stains navy said todey ‘the new 1,300-ton Submarine Permit grounded early today It Give c o, N. s.,'bui backed off im- med tely. A tcntative survey tn- dlcatg tbs damage wls cull and that would be able to proceed to New Lon n, Oonn., her base. under her own or. The Pei-nut was enroute from a good will tour of Canadian pom to New London. v. s‘ \,_ ,the past ‘l0 years. The 0n this occasion. the Canadian people will pause to contemplate the changes-spiritually and cul- turally, as well as materially-of field is broad, butin whatever direction you may look you will find just cause for pride. We rejoice with you in your past and your present, and in the promise which the future holds. EN VIABLE RECORD Ours is an enviable record of friendship and amity as witnessed by an unfortified boundary of more than 5,000 miles as the out- ward and visible token of mutual confidence and goodwill. friendship between our two peo- plcs is secure from every hazard of destruction or misunderstand- ing because it is based upon a com- mon aspiration to maintain, to de- fend and to perpetuate the demo- cratic form of constitutional rep- resentative government. In that spirit I salute our neighbor of the north. I congratulate the Canadian people on the successful achieve- ment of the free institutions through three score and 10 years of Confederation. A d as one who ha: spent so many apDy moments on Canadian, soil, send you my affectionate greetln . Lord Tweedrmuir lows: On behalf of the kseople of Can- ‘ado Lmcat warmly reciprocate tho greeting of the President of tho United States. Canada is an old country; as a territorial units she is older than the United States, older even then New England or Virginia. But the ‘United States bxame a federa d people nearly a century before us, and thereby set us an exam a. We welcome with gratitude no affection the good wishes of he President net merely as a pied e of felowship be- tween neighbors d old friends but a: the congra ulzxtions of the pioneers w l blazed the trail for us to follow. , We are neighbors and friends and we are also colleagues. We i-c poke as fol- both North American peoples th the making ,of a new civilfzati l in our hands. t-Ws have both hind ur, a. livi European tradition which inus .09 the basis, ‘ of that civilization. And we are both com- ing to realise that we! have certain rcsponsibiIitiesPtpWJIthe world at large, whic may still be difficult to define, but which it is probable will have qmuch in Marching in the some direction to- wards the ramegoal, I hope and believe that more and more we shall come to pool our ideas about the problems of the road. I should like to vner to the people of Canada one reflection which I think is appropriate to this day of national reme nbrance. Seventy years no the hers of Confederation accomplished a great work. They gave Canada. union. They could not give her unity. Unitycogies only by the process of time, by the slow assimilation of different points ofjiew and dif- ferent traditions. _y Canada must have not merely-a formal confed- eration, but a sincere identity of purporc, and a true homoegncity of spuit. Let us remember today that her destiny is not to p mere territorial expression [mod not to be mercy nine pry-mess, but to be a single and ipdvisable nation. .‘ _ y’ Jr”. .. LATE sews FmsHEs 8'1‘. THOMAS, Ont, July 1—(C.P.)--’l.‘wo persons were killed when an automobile bcarin a a Wabash looonmave I t lilo three miles welt of ‘hlbotvillo today. 0n Michigan lite license collided shoot head-on with Canadian National-Wabash railway crossing the man's body was found a driver's permit with the name Ian-y Keeling, 56, Detroit. The womln was believed to be Mrs. Keeling rant; srnvu. N. 1., July I--(A-P-)--PVIII omens were HIM We today vvhp their eutomob lie was demolished by n Pmnlylvonia railroad train do orocdng the Littl Sliver station The first victim ideatlm ‘d: Du G. A. 0:11.125 lhrvwobury dentist. some hours after the accldmtowomanagodabout NJfivc-ycnroldboynndngirbono, were flill Unidentified. . DARTMDUTII. If McNeil was found l. I I-(OIJ-lody bt 11:11,: tbs Dartmouth of loven-yecr-old Jacqui Mario's Ill’ on Halifax harbor after he had been mining from his home several howl. There were no known witnesses tolbe t ossnvnvo. N. Y. m, r-dAr-t-Anlhm damn. mm and Watson Edwards were executed .1 linen In the Shlg ihg electric chair to- night for the tavern holdup murder d hue Sbaln fn Brooklyn hut Nov. l _-.—-u-—n new roux, rm; l—(C.P.l—lritl|l and Ubllod 8M0 American inppoailedirectl wfflinolglnbtbeflrlttn flying o one flight. Monday, Pan boot. natm survey This ' COMMON. ' hey I .1’ Mrmivrorftgomery worked AND STRIKERS SIGN TR-UBE Congress Speak- ers Assail Roosevelt, | l i i INLAND siui P . .. vi ..... Jibserves 70th illominion Day Prince Edward Islanders celebrat- i ed Dominion Day under weather conditions and a badly damaged automobile in a ditch a fcxv miles east of Sllllllilfffhlili) from iviiich five persons ideal (‘hCiI llUtl \\'l Lli For Failure To Take a gnciciiriiélstulis blvutises 011i: ‘the only Stand In Strike H‘ .- i“- °‘ Y "" o oise racing, base-hull, saifibiill, tennis, golf, swimming, yur-liiing, . iimiioTiiiiicii iioiicvmiv iiicuiioin Halo-German 0 pp 0- sition T0 Naval Con- trol Plan Jeopardiz- es Non - interven- lion. 10 PAGES l boxing and picnics were iiuijoi" nt- iii. P, by Guardian's Special Wire) tractions. Approximately 2,500 EAST CHICAGO‘ Imp, JuJy 1._ Charlottetown school children be- Ncnl-ly 12,509 mm WQfkQfS jubi]- gran their sununcr vacations }'(‘:»l(*l‘-, antly hailed a “strike armistice" ‘m’ 515 _“'@11*°lh°1'5 B- filw ‘i555 “KO-i with Inland Steel tonight while Officials in charge 0f Qlll-llimf speaks“ m we Unmd states Qom attractions Wednesday loolie d . ' =' ' bui Eros. assumed the Governments rioubtfuly at an ovuciist sky Sunni, m the 36_day_o1d strike ‘ Sol broke the dullness curly yester- (By Pat Ilssher, Canadian Press LONDON. July l—-Piissiliilli_v' of j a brook-down ‘Noii-Inicvvciiiion Committee ‘seen in informed circles here to- geveral years before coming to New Mlorcestat, Mass, and the sisters. deadlock and called on President? Roosevelt for a. position declarat-l The seven-state strike, fought‘ out on the isue of signed labor contracts between John L. Lewis’ Committee for Industrial Organ- ization and four independent steel companies, has cost l3 lives and more than $30,000,000 loss in wages and production stoppage. Representative Dltter, Republi- can, of Pennsylvania. said in the House at Washington that the i country had a right to expect a forthright riatcment from the President. “Have we come to such a) point that the President dare not declare for law and order?" Dltter asked. C. I. O. leaders "victory rally" to iriuce paw. at". East announced a celebrate the Chicago Lo- morrow. Inland spokesmen held a differ- ent viewpoint. Vice President Clarence B. Randall declared: "We signed nothing. We made no agreement with anybody. The C. I. O. simply accepted, through Governor Townsend (of Indiana). the provisions of our labor policy which we submitted to the Gov- ernor last Saturday“ and which “rehtaicd the labor policy we im- nounccd to our employees May 25." The three other members of the strike-staged "Little Steel" group. meanwhile. gave no sign of follow- ing Inland Steel's lead with a “third party" agreement. Was Native 0f This Province’ l LEXINGLON. MASS June 30- figastewell Thornto Montgom- ery, 51-year-old nati ‘of Port Hill, Sumnicrside l’. E. I. died in Wal- thain Hospital ye crday following a heart attack die had been assoc- iated with t, - Beechnut Packing Company h for 18 years before his death. _ lfl 8. Bummersidc department store for t England more than 2) years ago. Relatives surviving him include hi, wife, formerly Pearle Coughlan 0f Malpcquc. PJE. I., a son Allen Montgomery of Icxington.‘ two brothers 9J1d'5€t'6l'l sisters. The brthers are lare Montgomery, Port Hill, P. E, L. J. C. Montgomery, Port Hill. Mrs. William Wale. Port Gertrude Montgomery. Worcester. He will be buried at Lincoln Cem- ' eiry Friday. PRINCE AIBERT, Sash, Jone 30 tentiary were silent tonight on an attack made by two convicts on a guard after a disturbance in one of the cell blocks. An inquiry is under way. n Orange Pekoe Blend "SAMBA" TEA rest camp where they liiivc adians first came io December. At first they for-gees ii‘- ; to roroivc as Battalion formed of English United States Volunteers. Now 300 of the 031151113115 3113.111 their own battalion while others still are in‘ pnign. units composed mostly of Ameri- cans. shoulder to shoulder with English Hm Mm George Hlckeyl worms“; and American baitahons, it parti- Mrs. George Crozier, Worcester and cipntcd in the Feb. 21 revere fight- ing on the Jaramn Front ivhrr: _ it had its baptism of fire as 1mm... g a number of other-s wounded and a few taken prisoner —Officials of Prince Kbert pcni- by the III-rumble- G. Blladeau. Montreal, who re- ceived a watch for saving the life of a. wounded comrade lylnil 1" day. The Island light flatness racing ,, ,, circuit opened at Sumimersidc and 1°“ "o and this reign of wnor‘ the day's festivities were brought- 1-0 a close with a boxing cairl at Souris. Many with automobiles went on picnics or to summer cottage-t 191' he day while special compot tions wok place on golf courses and ten- nis courts. A number oi ynchlsnicn wok advantage of the weather conditions and sailctltllell‘ craft to Pictou, N. 5., for the an- nual Northumbcriand Straits Yacht Racing Association Regatta Monday and Tuesday. excellent Hundreds ihrohged» to LOYHI‘ Vill- ley where the annual gatliei-inil 0f the clans of Prince Edward Island took place under tlic auspices 0f the Caledoninn Club. for business yesterday- cifimlii nniiimni iii m RE§LBAMP MADRID. July 1 (CP Cnblo)— Canadian volunteers ‘of the In- ternational Mixed Bflflild? in the Spanish Government. forces iodzil‘ celebrated Dominion Day in the been recuperating from a long sinctcli in the civil war trenches along the Jarama Front. The Canadians have formed their own battlion of 300 men under the name of the Mackenzie- Paimau Battalion-commemorat- ing the leader of the adian rebellion. 1837 Clin- More than 500 strong. the Can'- Sgiain last and During their rest period the Canadians took adrantaili’ 0f m“ _ respite to organize their force into liitioii proposing "reconsideration" hree companies. The company commanding of- ficers are Cecil Smith. formerly city editor of the Dailv Clarion. Toronto; Alexander _ monton err-servicemen. and Wil- liam l-lilliweil. Edmonton. n Cau- adian Lieutenant iri the v War. A battalion commander is t0 be appointed later. Robert Kerr of Vancouver is political liaison of- Miila l‘, Ed - Great M . jiéi-pert MacArthur, Arlington, fiw- v P, . I., Mrs. Raleigh Bruce, East The bblmnft" “1l"“"‘1-‘F_l;‘*“ti ‘l. 531mm R E_ In Mrs’ Hm“, y"; distinguished record. ig m! Its death list numbers 1'7 Whik‘ have been Among the Battalions heroes are o-man’: land. ‘night unless Germany and Italy adopt u. more conciliatory attitude. lf the ‘FiTim-o-Ilrilirili nffcr tn close the gap in the naval patrol around the Spanish coast, caused when Italy and Germany left the patrol. is rejected at tcrvcntion nub-committee, Great Britain and France are expected to reserve their attitude towards the whole policy of non-interven- lion. lt is fi-lt hero the granting of belligerent rights to both sides in the Spanish civil war, with aband- onment. of the naval patrol, would benefit insurgent General Fran- cisco Franco; vihile maintenance of the land patrol would prevent _ . ~< f tourists hotels aid reaching the Valencia Govern- swm’ dispute “We over chums ajnlzlllarghegfigttgihlfshmcnis thrniigh- munt from France. gguyictgrly in the Inland Steel out the province officially Owned . . em . Not Acceptable A German proposal-that belli- gcrcnt rights be granted is expect- l l 0d i0 be made tomorrow but it was l believed Great Britain and France ‘ uuiuld not accept. It was poinierl out at London- ;for the benefit of Germany and iIirily-thnt a breakdown of the , control system would permit pass- i age oi war material to Spain from iFFilllCC. counter-balancing any ad- wantage the insurgents now may ihavc in receiving armaments. i Prime Minister Chamberlain in- dicated in the House of Commons lioday the Government was not lconicniplating any drastic change ‘in its Spanish policy. l The Prime Minister was asked iin the House by Wedgwood Benn, Labor. whether, if any important change occurred, it would be an- nounced and debated in the House of Commons. "That seems to be a very hypo- tlieticul question.” the Prime Min- istcr replied, “we must see what the circumstances are." vi Viscount Cranborne, parliamen- tary secretary for the Foreign Of- ' fice, announced France had agreed iufuzces women, i-hildi-cn and men of non-military age from Santander, objective of the insurgents northern cam- SITUATION SERIOUS PARIS, July 1~(A.P.)-A reso- of the whole Anglo-French policy toward isolating the Spanish war if Germany and Italy persists in rejecting the Anglo-French Naval Control Plan was adopted unani- mously tonight by the Chamber of Dcpuiics Foreign Affairs Commit- tee. This action was taken after Foreign Minister Yvon Delbos ex- plained the tangled situation bo- i fore the committee. He declared itlic situation ivns "very serious" but not yet “ti-ngic". In the chamirr lobbies it. was said "reconsideration" would mean studying the advisability of tib- _l1lld0il‘il'lg ihc yioliry- of flOll-illi"|‘- vcniion hitherto sponsored chief- ly by Britain and France. Free State Election Takes Place Quietly BY SEAN OTJATHAIN Canadian has: Correspondent DUBLIN. July 1—(CP Cablel— The Irish Free State voted today on a new parliament and a now constitution. The election was marked with country-wide peace and no untoward incidents report- ed from anywhere. Volume of voters became unex- pectedly: heavy in the early even- ing before the polls closed at 9 pm. Counting of the ballots will begin tomorrow morning. Eamon Dc Valera, Resident of - the Council since 1933. voted early at Blackrock and his prin- cipal opponent and predecenso. as held of the government, W. F. tomorrow's i infloriant moi-ling of the Non-ln- ‘ t Dublin. Annual Buhlerlgillnn Delivered $5.00 B] Alnll—1'.Z.L. $4.00; Cunndu and U. H. 85.00 HEIGH TENED lTr0ubfe_ Brews iOver Disputed "Amur Islands iRussia Floats Huge Defence-Loan And Re-inforces Naval Unit A At Sennufu Island. l ! IVIOS('O\\' ltussiii fiiiiil\ four-Iii]lion-militi- A (win 000,. J (iiiil) defence loan; Soviet Fiiftliiil (‘iimnii- .~.- i l'(‘i('i'i\ J31). \iuIi:i~-;iifm' iinese protest on Amui" Rl\'('i‘(‘l1i*7hI Jzipi Chi‘ says flusso-Jiipzmesc Hiilllliltiil i- "\i~i"_\ siriiiiii-d“, intimates "VISIT serious" consequences in:i_\ (‘!l‘~'IIi‘ if Smut iriiiiii» iii-o not evacuated from disputed Jimm- TOKYO- Japanese czihinri tiiiiiw. -l:ind pi-iici-ful settle- ' ment is impossible unlil Sm iei troop.- zirc u iihdriiu n from disputed Amui‘ Islands, declares ci-miiinoii :ii"mie.~ iiifllzip- River i-‘iiiiids. an and Mzinchoukuo are rend)" im- :i_n_v ('flll'i‘;_'('il('\'_ pi-ogg zisserts Soviet Far Einstein _‘.i'ni_v of Jiiiiilliiii men living ZlS- semblcd. Emperor hzis Navy Miiiisiei" ri-purl mi latest de- velopmenl. HSlNK[NG-~—Jfl|)llh0h‘l‘ high Cilillllllillif informed five iziddiiional Soviet gunboziis zirriveil iii Senniifu Island, where Russo-Japanese clash occurred Wednesday, and island still occupied by ltussiiins despite Japan's demands for evacuation. - ISSUE WARNING ‘ - TOKYO, July 2—rF‘ridny)—-4Al>i ---'I‘he Manchoukuo Government. was reported in a dispatch from llsinking today to have served Ii peremptory warning on Russia in keep to the main navigation routi- on the Amiir River or risk “dras- tic measures". The warning said: “If your country's gunlinais dc- viate from the main navigation route of the Amur River in the "Bishborhood of Sennufu, Bolshoi and Shatzukoukuo Islands and Qp_ crate on the wriierivay bclonging' to Miinchoukuo, we shall be coni- pellcd to resort- to drastic mens- ures of self-defence", Canada’s Militia Under Canvas 0'l"i‘.i.\\'.\. llominlrm Hill’ sci-s ‘the largest number of ( illhliltiljl troops umirr July 1 (CP) f'illl\'il\' siniv- the uar, sumrncr camps now in-ing iii full suing in must iii‘ fhl- )lil!i:iry Dixlrivtfi. ’i‘li"sc uiii continue until the end nf August, and in some (‘d505, “ell into scptemlu-r. 1t is cxgici-t- nou-pcriiniiiciit active militia. , , , will flllH‘ undergone their sea.- FQRCE ALGIHTENTED i son's cilhlp training by the end of ‘ tho summer. The 1st. (‘hast Brigade of heavy iirlilloi-y are iriiiniig at the Siiiidivicli rind Ogilvic batteries- thi- forts in lizilifrix harbor while TOKYO, July l—(AP)—R.Op0i'is v that five additional Soviet gnn- i boats had arrived at disputrd sen- , nufu Island in the Amur Rivcrio- i TIlBht appeared to be the only re- ply to Jamar“ dam d "ht ._ the 17th aiiii llllh Infantry 51a wnhdrnw troop-fraud gal-gill]; im- pni-iimiwii-I ni Alder- S . . . .. from that troubled border zont-lie- i twccnyManchoukuo and Siberia, Earlier the Japanese cabinet tonk the stand that peaceful settlement of yesterday's clash on the Amur. about 76 miles southeast of Bing- ovestchensk, was impossible ivniil Russia withdrew its forces. Japanese reports also iiiilinn-iiq Soviet troops remained in 00c patron of Scnmifu and iir-nriv Bolshoi Island, disputed sandy)“; in the winding Amiir ivhich f0"!il.< the northeastern border lactwr-en Soviet Siberia and .'\'f.ll1\"ll0ili\’li<l. Jfillflnls protectorate, l"‘1'0m Hsinking. capital of Man- choiikuo and scat of the Jnimiiesc Army Command on the continent. came word the Amur situation was (‘llllfiillg grave concern fOllflwliitr Y°5l@1‘d¥il"s clash at Senmifu lii that engagement between sii-sini Bunboats and Japrm-bfanclioiilriio artillery and infantry. one [Zllllllfipt was sunk, one benched and a third compelled to flee. Official anxiety WHF heightened by what Tokyo considered lift-w. cow's failure to reply to prntvsts delivered by the Japanese Ambus- sndor to Russia against."invasiong" of Mimchoukuois territory, ivhirli Japan considers herself hound to Drotoct under a mutual iisdstnncri protocol. The 16th infantry Brigade has apprnximiiiely- 1.000 men under (-.'iii\'.'|s at Sui-sex. N. l}. h ri-ving ‘ most reported comr- to nii Jarrciiien! or. points" in fispllit’. <.*~~-:—:.—.- NoT All. Co-wonuiws co-ovsuafc FLOAT HUGE LOAN MOSCOW. Jilly 2—(Fridnv\_ (APM-Thc Soviet Govcriimriitiiii- iioimced early today it would with- ‘dvaw its armed forces from the (Canadian Press) 'I‘ORON'I‘O. Jilly l-Minimum and maximum temperatures:- disputcd Amiir River lslandsmcerii- Dawson 44 64 of a Russo-Japanese clash, if Victoria 5:! 64 l Jnuan IUZNPS to do likewise. I Edmonton 52 B0 The announcement, made in 1i 1 Rr-ginii 63 90 ‘Foreign Office communique, do- \Vllmip0g 54 80 clarcd Soviet Russia claims idon- i TOlUlllO 47 ‘If tiflcation for the Russian losses in f Ottniia 52 66 the fight which created a situation I Mont-real 56 63 described last night by the Japa- YQiiviir-r 56 62 nese Ambassador as "very sirriin- S11 ii! John 52 6R f 9d"- lii".i:i\' M 65 i Russia had suddenly floated n Ciioi-iomctervn 6'1 '78 defence loan of 4,000.000.000 ruifo: (about 8800000000 at the official FORECAST rate) to be used for "consolidation l of national defense". Official". wrr- him-Lyme Err-i: bicdrrnic south dicted quick over-subscription. and siiuiiiu, . winds; mostly Th1‘ JRPRTIP-‘fi RIP-Ill‘. Mnrrflril cloudy with icattercri showers am.‘ Shigemiisii. had intimated “vcrv some fog; not much cliniige if‘. serious" consequences might come temperature. if the Soviet Union rciertori Jau- an's demand for evacuation of the disputed Islands in the Amiir. m! the border of Russian Siberia owl lficii iiiii- this afternoon at 4.54 i.- €\(‘llill‘.l a‘. 7f .."ii'.v ninriiing at 4.17. Japanese-dominated hizmclimiknn. 1 .,\,-,~, nwilli ‘vfllliiflilill’, July 7. “""“'" ' ‘ ' A ll l.'i p. m Slllillbfllvill" ixii‘ (‘irlvlcoii min- Cosgriivc, cost his hnlllot nt Rotll- i “w,- puii- Hlilll Ciiorioiii-niivr1. THE ("All FBIGICY Lean-o Iiordrn 0.4a n. on. l D. n. and 0J5 p. min-men Trirlnenilna II c. 111-. 2.5.! p. m. and 6H0 p; In. uoeot SIIIIflIY famiiam. both points being near The election took place generally in line weather. (‘d more lhzlii 40,000 flit-n of the ' ‘