‘JOI Pnmrluo or "MAXIMS OFA MERCHANT ii "Give a Provincial voice to the merit your merchandise. of Charlottetown Glarlllnh Two Cents Iorninl Guardian, Founded llli’! ;%;<2~/ The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew‘ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA FRIDAY, SEPT. .12, 1924 fun llllllf ll llill] tutu m Mfllllilll Retributive Justice Meted Out to Par- ent, Who Killed Two HIMSEITFT KILLED Victim of Traffic Ac- cident After Leav- ing Scene of Murder (Special to ‘he Guardian) NEW YORK, Sept. 11.——Whllc the police searched the city and dc- partlng ships for (liuseppe Gondol- fo to charge hhn with the inurdcr of his honeymoonlng (laughter and her husband of two weeks, one of the whlmslculltles of chance that sometimes occur outside the story books united Giuseppe, his girl and his hated son in law in the gloomy tiers of the morgue. Presses were turning out pictures of Giuseppe by the thousand for distribution all over the country when a thoughtful morgue attend ant suggested that the body oi a man named Gandolfo who had been struck and killed by a truck might be the luau the police sought. ‘Photons Gandolfo, Gluseppds son was culled to thc morgue, and there he found his father's body lying beside that of Carmello Gulca, 24, the boy for whose murder Glu- seppe was being sought. On a. slab directly above Giuseppe lay tire body of Margaret Gulch. his elgh~ teen year old daughter and Carmel- lo's bride. The police hunt for Giuseppe end- ed almost before it had begun. When Giuseppe walked from tho dingy Mott street apartment, wh-cre he lived with his girl and her hus- band ho covered but two blocks of whatever Journey he had sct' for himself and at tho Bowery and Doyers street was hit by a truck. The driver said that (liuseppe crouched behind an elevated pillar and (lfllilitlflliiilly dived to death be- neath the wheels. Margaret was one of tho flashing eyed beauties of Mott street and her father's jealousy had sent many a hopeful suitor away from the Gandolio tenement flat before Mar- garet uiet Cnrmcllo two years ago. Two weeks ago Carmello and Mar- garet sloped. Turks Need Gash S0 Sultanfs Palace Must G0 On Auction Block (Special to The Guard-tan») IDNIIION, Sept. 1l.—The Turk- ish Government has decided to sell the famous lPulace ol’ the Sultan at Constantinople, it is learned from diplomatic sources. The original idea of tho Turkish Nationalists was to turn tho bulld- lng into a museum, but the impov erlshsd imperialist Government nt Angora is no wdecided to put it on the market. lt will be offcrctl at auction with 2t reserve price of ab- out u million dollars. As to tho lu- ture oi’ the palace, it‘ is said, tin-rs uro at present two plans-wine to convert l-t into a hotel and the oth- er to make it into a sort of indoor , am tisement park. —-———-{0¢-_--___ l Condensed Specials .. RATE-lo. flQr word, not l each insertion in this column. k "WIDOW DE8lRE8 HOUSE keeping position in City. Apply Guardian. 4023-9-ll-M3l. ‘FOR SALE-DOUBLE HOUSE at Gaytown, opposite Mr. Von Clure (‘lays Apply A. Plckartl dz Co. Coal Ofilco.—4030——9-l2».'ll ‘TO LET-HOUSE AND PREMIS- es number 22 Pleasant Street. Garage room in roar. immediate possession glvon. Apply ll. J. Palmer. 4016 0 11 WediltSattf ‘ROOM AND BOARD-J!!! HOV student can be accomodated with room and board in private home one block from Prince of Wales College. Apply at Guardian Oi. flee or write “if” Box 118, Char- lottetown. 8050 9 9 mtf EVERY description cheaply and expell- ltlously executed. Guardian Con- tral Job Printory, Phone 183. 2876-5-tltf. Youthful Slayers T0 Shortly Enter Life Home (Canadian Press) CHICAGO, Sept. 11. -—Witl1 their liberty forfeited for the remainder of their lives Richard Loeb and Nathan F. Leopold, Jr., waited lll Cook County Jail today for com- pletion of penitentiary commitment papers. Saved from (leuth on the gallows by only their immature years the kidnappers and murder- ers of fourteen year old Robert Franks will be rushed to Joliet State Penitentiary immedllately upon-receipt by tho sheriff of docu- mmts tiecssary for their proper delivery at the penal institution» With three numbers replacing their names and tinder rigid lllll- clpl-lne these heretofore carefree and luxurious nineteen years old youthful intellectuals will face the stern llie of manual labor in expi- ution of their crimes. Throughout tho night four auto- lnobllcs carrying Ylllll Blllmll“ cruised slowly about the old crim- inal courts building and adjolmnll enunty jail. Stutioncd at. llllPrl/lllfi along the four blocks of streets bordering tho conncctcd buildings were uniformed llflliCiilllfiil and in front of the cell housing Ilocb and Leopold heavily armed guards rc- llevcd one and another of Krollbfl of four all night. Priest Blames Klan For Attack (special to The Guardillln) ICHPCAGO. Sem- ll="l‘“'ll '"“"- oue of them armed with a klllllfi broke into St. Barnabas parish house ln Beverly llllls and llililtllb N] Fnlllgr Albert llolan early Sun- day, but. were driven off by ‘"9"- Thomzis llurlcy. llflell l" “llmge m St. lillfllililllii ,l'. was disclosed YPS" torday. Father llolau sald he bcllc- vcd he was a victim of a l\u KlllX lKlun attack. lie was severol)’ 5mm‘ ed on one arm and on his bands lll u glru-qgle with the assailant. A local controversy ovcr the bull ding oi a. new church was bellovcll by the priests to have been connec- ted with ihehtlack. ' _ Both assailants escaped before the police arrived. Neither was mas ked, The police were told that Futhcr llurley had reccivctl u numbc-r of threats against his life. some. oi thcm from persons profcssiilg to be members of the Kltlll. ___-.--—{-CD>—-?< Week-Old Child Is Left With Schoolgirl (special to The Guardian) s\'t1).'~l.l;‘.\', Scpt. l0.- -l’ollcc au- thorities ilPfB arc t-‘Wklllf-I ll‘*\'~"-‘ °ll a young woman of bUlWCUll l8 and 20 years. who abandoned a two weeks old infant at thc (l. N. ll- Stutltm ycslt-ttlaif- ll ‘lwflilllllll lll‘ day that thc wonlun was a passen- ger uu thc llulifax ldxpru-‘s Wllltlll arrived hero at noon nnstertluy, and a mcmbcr of thc tmltt crew states that she was on the train at trurO. (in hcr arrival bore she have UIO infant into thc cure of u Jitllltltll Klfl on the pretext of visiting n wholl- Silo lulled to return. 'i‘h"'llll1lll- ""5 placed In Si. Mary's Orphanage. _---—-.-QQ&-~~— — —--— Polide‘ To Shoot; Speeding Cars (Special to the Guartian) lillllilllN, Scpt. 1l.-—-A wurnlni! ltas been issued that the police arc ituthorlzctl to shoot llt motor a .~' truvcllilg at excessive speed which do not stop when culled up-- on in do so. llndcr lh- ltclch lflW u sptrctl lllnll of from 20 to 25 nrllos prr ltour in in force for curs pass- ing ihrtlugh town-u and villages. ll s now proposed to tnllke 15 lllll0l~l gcr hour tile lowest spccd limlit wh'cl| any local ztuthtlrlty can un- forcc. .1 ...» mO>-—~- ~———-— l5 KILLED lll Fllll lllllli (Bpficlll to The Guardian) |ll()N0LUl1U,Sept. 11.-Four 0°" llcemen and 1i Fllilllll" “Mk9” were killed yesterday in n flBlll l" the town of lianepopc, on tho ls- land of Kauai, according to advices received here this afternoon. llo- puty-Sheriff Crowell ls also rellflfl‘ ed to have been severely wounded. Tho fight occurred when the po- llcc attempted to rose-no two Phil- llplnos who contlnud to work when a strike occurred on tho Mcflrltlo plantation at ilanepepe and hnd been kidnapped by the strikers ns they were returning to their homes mont until lest night and again until tonight. yesterday. y Pfllllffil [llN a nut lll s stunts Grand Dhke Cyril Says No Hope of Money Helping (Spedal to the Guardian) PARIS, Scpt. 11.—The Grand iJllke Cyril has issued a protest tigahist the proposed loan by the llrltish Government to the Russian Soviet. lie -exprcsses consternation and surprise that any civilized nu.- tlon is prcpurctl to furnish monev lo "at Government in Russia which, whlio recognized by the greater part of Etirope, is not recognized by thc Russian pcople themselves." As thc lawful hcir to the Russian throne, the (lrand Duke says he considers it his ditty to protest to lllc whole world itguinst thc British fiovcrn~ infant's decision. lie says: if l hud the slightest hope that the proposed loan would go to the i'0t:(1tlst1'l1ctltui of our un- itzlppy ccuntry or thc feeding of our starving people, l would wol- conto it, lrrcspcctivt- of whut form of (iovcrmuctit udiulnlstorod it: but nelthcr I nor any othcr litm- slan tioubts that the mom-y will hp uscd to fortify and prolong the waning power of oppressors of our people. Every pound of tho British loan, the (irand liukc insists. will go in- to thc cuffcrs of thc 'i‘hli‘tl inicr- nutionatlc, to be used for propag undo thioulihout the “lurid, illu (tbjctrt of which is “to bring about. tho downfall of all Chrislittu civill- zatrioil and tho imsiuvotturut of hu- muni-ty through direct poverty." 'l‘ho lcntlcrs of thc Soviet he dc- scribcs as a minority of fanatics and litipostcrs, tlcvoltl of nil honnr uud COIISIJlUIICC und scclrlit; ‘... 7"‘- lsfy only thclr own grccd and lusts. The llusslxitl people, the (irund llukc insists, regard the Soviet only by their tuomcntztry weakness to tlppress and destroy them. lie con- tlnucs: \\'hcn tho day oi’ Russian free-- us an evil power ivhiclt has profit-rd] mum Tutu nun n Plllllll Most Blddd- Thirsty Outlaw in India is Caught Cleverly CABEERDF - . MURDER Stabs Temple Guard- ian Who Refused t_o Reveal Gem Vault. BOMBAY, Scpt. 11. —0vercou- fldehco in ltlmsclf and mispiact-tl coliilticlicc in another has checkk- cd tho curccr of ilahytt Bhula of Kuirn, the most blood-thirsty. tiar- ing and UIIISlVU tmt-lttw the police cf india have had to contend with. The slayct" of‘ innumerable natives and officials is now closely guard- ed in jail whlio thc stale 1s wcuv- ing n lu-twork of evidcttcc which will result in charges of tnurdcr. zirscn, pillage-and altutlst every crime on thc culuidur- 'i‘hc [Kilim- say ills blood curdling crimes have no plrullt-l, evcn in illllliin crimin- tlltigy. lCludlilg thc pvlice successfully twenty _vcurs the outlaw's capture \\":|s only cfftvctcil when an liiforiu- ct‘ zlgrcctl to trap him. And it rc~ tluircd u small army of the l)_ S. l‘. ol‘ Kaira to overpower him laflct" they had him comcrctl alone in a l‘i)()ill. Siucc i004 Daltya has been known to the police, but lt was not ‘until lillh‘ that his crllucs became [so iltrocltitis wnd that his notoriety sprcztd throughout thch Kalrat and into uljuccnt stall-s. Police, sent to capture him, always found he was two or three days ahcnu of them ud his knowledge of the utounluln fastness and the forests was too much for lliS pursucrs. Burns Homes of Fuel dom tlawtts the m-w (lovl-rtititctit. urhr-lhcr it be hlonarchiczti or itc- ptlbllcatn, will ul all events, be at national one, and not one that will dominate tho pcopli» by ft-ar or shod their blood, as the Soviets have donc. __.____¢-o->i—---- JEWElS tun llllM an m NllllflHK Lord and Lady Mount Batten Lose Valu- able Gems. (Speclal to the Guardian) NEW YORK, Sept. 11.-Jewelry valued at $250,000 was stolen from the home of J. S. Cosden, wealthy oil man, and rnco horse owner, at Saint's Point, Long island, on iilnn~ duy nigh-t. it was ilunouttccd today by Gcrltrtl Lulsl, head of the lllvtnlli gut-lug coutpntly, which is in charge of thc search for tho robbers. Some of tho gums belonged to Lord and Lady ltlountbatttvn, who accouipunltul thc Prince of Wales to this country, and who were guests nt the Cosdcu homo. Although a report of the occur- rence was made by mcmbers of lilo (‘tlstlcti household soon after tho I033 of tho jewels was discovered no clue hos bcou found-so far which might connect anybody with tin: theft. Tho loss has caused somewhat. of a sensation among soclcty folk in the vicinity of tho Cosdcn home as woli us In twliter parts of the state. The fact that Lord and Lady Mountbatten are cousins to King (lcrlrgo V., makes the ovcnt all tho more litters-sting. mm Tunney-Grab Bout Postponed a Week CLEVELAND, Slept. 1i.—4Rain again caused a postponement of the ten round no decision contest between Geno Tunney, light heavy- weight champion and Ilarry Greb. world's middleweight title holder. cheduled for tonight. It will be hold next Wednesday night. The fight originally was set for Monday |' (in the night of his last flight. ‘July 3, 1918, he flrcd the homes of lwi-lvt- of his supposotl cits-titles. lbuructl their pluguc huts and hay- ‘slaclcs illiti from a vantal-It: Pollll poured volleys of lead at all who tried to suvc their household =go0ds or cattle- I 'l‘\\'t> nights inter he entered ful- ‘ly tipun his career as a. national loutlaw. With two accomplices he wuylaitl the patcl of a hamlet near Soopur and cut him to pieces with a dhuria. The dying man was tied to a haystack and burnt-ti. Flu- u your the Kalra was uumol- cstctl by the outlaw, but stories of his crimes in other sections were numerous. ln 1010 he returned at the head of a band of tlutlaws anti murdcnul a. rovouuo circle lnailflcl" or. u head coitstzible and n. villulill watchntau. The coldbltltltlotlness of this crime raised him into prom. fnence mong the bnndlts and out- laws, and he became lllllllllllfll’ known us "Dhyabhal Fouztlar." M orders Police Sowar The next crime to attract wide attention was the imtrder of a pollcesowrll‘. Al Kflll Allllllvllll- That was followed by the plund- ering of thc villages of (lzlaiti. llanadrzt, Aldl. Wanoda and a doz- m or more vlllagcs aun lmtnlcts. ills sacking of the licrullj 'l‘c.tn- pie brought a protest that shook the policy department. M. tllf‘ head oi‘ a gang of fifty brlgantls Dahyn ntlatxkctl thc licvtt (tho metidlcxinl. in charge) with a knife- 'l‘he victim ws held on thc ground when he roftlscd to tilvulgo the hid. lug placo of thc templc gcitts. ltlaclt tlntt-Nio roftiscti the oulluw's knife found a fresh resting ltlncc in the body of his vlctlut. Tho priest dlcd. steadfastly gu-trdlng thc secret. When his bod)’ “m” found 1.000 knife wounds were ocuntctl. ..,,._‘_. Feared in All Houleholdl- in the scven years the brlgallll wwllvrcd in blonk and the 'l‘crroi' of tho Kalru bccutltc u lmuseholtl word to bc feared. lint tlcspltc ev- ery trup sct for him ho tnunageti to t-ludo the police and confirmed ills deprcdations. Thcu tho police decided-to resort to new tactics. Thoy found one man with whom thc Terror was on speaking terms and who had his confidence whom lhoy engulfed lo invite the brlgand to hie home F. W. OTlorman. l), S. I’.. Knirll. mlldo the arrangements and led his men oif in another direction. Circling ur ound he arrived June 21 at Alina and camped ther efor tho night and the better part. of the next day. Then when the trap was to bo sprung, on June 29- the police mov- night, but rain calmed a postpone- ed to the infnrmerls house and un- der cover of darkness secreted themselves in a spare room. Fishermen Given Up For Dead Now Safe (Canadian Presl) IlOSTON, Scpt. \li1.—Two New- foundland fishermen who were rus- cucd at sca last Sunday at the hour whcn mctnorlal services were in progress for them at their homc port of Grand Banks, Nfid., were brought ltcre today by the liner llavison from Liverpool. The men, John 'i'cbo and Dennis Drake, were tukcn in charge by the British con- sul and were to leave for their home late today on the steamer lligby front Boston to Si. John's, Nfltl. Drifting in u dory three days in a dense fog thc fishermen kept their meagre supply of food in rc- svrvc and took nothing but a little walcr for sustenance. They re-- frainetl from rowing in order to imsband their strength. On thc third day the fog lifted and they sighted the Portuguese fishing schooner Senhora Du Gui. This schooner was bccalmctl and mcn ovcclook it by rowing. They spent l2 duys on the craft bciorc tho Du- vlsun took them off lust Sunday. Two_Killed Trying T0 "Beat Express (Special to Guardian) llYANNlS, Sept. 11. -—'I‘h0 llvcs of a husband and wife were crush- ed out at Bass River railroad sta- tion when thcy failed lo heed the ivnrning of the station master and tried to rncc their automobile in frontof an express train from Prov. incctown. Mrs, lilldu (7. Borg. of Easion- tlale, who was piloting thc machine was instantly lti-lletl. Ilcr hus- band. Attrde (I. Ilorg, forman for thc Ross lleel (‘ompany at North lllastcu, was badly itijurotl nad died scvcral hours littoral, the Cape (Tod llospltal bore. Both wore about. 50 years old. Old Greek Statues Are Found in Italy (Special to The Guardian) NADLFS, Sept. ll.—’l'wo well preserved Greek wtitfes. believed to ltnve been ‘sculptured in tho fifth ccntury. B. (‘... have been unearthed urur Vlco Equense. Govemmetil zlulhnritios have wanted the find or that ht- will n\t be permitted to sell thc statues to foreign antl- quarlans. wnt HIHEIIJN tmmstns lll Hlllllll In Geneva — Import- ant That They Be There at Present Time (Special to Guardian) GENEVA, Sept, 11, —Thc gov- erntncnts of 13 countries have de- cided that it is more important to have their foreign ministers in Geneva following thc discussions on obligatory arbitration, security and disarmament than to have tilt-m stay ut homo anti conduct the general routine of foreign af- fairs. These thirteen ministers are sit- ting tilodoslly side by side engaged in lhc ltardcst kind of (zommlttet: work lu stifling committee rooms trying to lend o. helping hand in thc effort to put pence in Europe on n solid foundation. There is no excessive personal dignity in Geneva those days, for almost everybody here for tho League scs- slotis is clthcr grout or near great. In addition to the foreign ministers there arc nine ministers who hold other portfolios for the govern- mrnts fo various countries and some thirty or forty staicsumu who have been premiers or foreign lllilllliiitlrli during their careers. The council of the League yes- terday approved the report of its Ficunomlc Committee WillCll made proposals lo servo as the basis of n conference for revision fo the in dustrlal property convention of which the object is tho suppression of unfair commercial competition It also decided to continue the study of the South American pro- posnls regarding gitarantces for foreign buyers gnalnst worthless goods. fYGorman and nine men were in the room of tho house while an equal number were concealed in the shrubbery in the yard. At. the appointed hour the Terror arrived and his capture is described in the l SPANISH-Nihil- ITY lllllllllli lll f filNlllll Duke and Duchess of Alba and Friends Plan Extensive r I I‘ou1 of Dom- lIllOIl. 'l‘()ltON'l‘0, Scpt. 1llvL~The Duke and Duchess of Alba‘. intimates of thc King and tluccn of Spain, with a party of thirteen others, are about to visit Canada, it was learn- cti yesterday. Among the party ac- companying thcm are the Duke and Duchess dc Pcnnrumla the Marquis do Vlantlu and tho lllartltlis dc Co- quilia all of Spain. Tho Duke of Alba is the 17th of that uumu uud IS zllso thc 10th Duke of llerwick in the Ilrltnsh nobility, while tho Mar- qults do Ymndu is the blaster of the "horse to the King of Spain. 'l‘h-e present tour is the (lllilJOnle of u longcherished wish to see the beauties and wonders of (lunada and the llmtcd States, of which thc fluke had heard touch. The party will travel in (Yanada over tilt» (Janudiztu Pacific. Follow- lng strvcrztl weeks stay in New ‘Yflflf, in tho course of which they .110 ltttnnditig the polo itiatches pa.- lmlllzell lll’ thc Prince of Wales, the)’ Will lcllvc thc United States "ll lhc 14th. The ncxt day will be spout at i\"iill.{1il‘tl lculhh “m; “my "l" l-llvll llffltrccll to ‘Toronto, there to slat-nil another day, flu the lllghl of tho 16th they will leave Toronto 11:11‘ Banff. Bfltlililélil Friday, till: Jllhknltl tho following 'I‘uesday morning. the magnificence of Banff the lianff-Lnkc “indcrtucre iligh- \\ay and Lake llottista will be thor fllll-ihly irxlvltlrcd. and they will stop at. llanff Springs llotcl and Cha- icau Luke Louise for u time. motor- llf-i via thc highway to the various bungalow camps between them, Th‘! burly leaves llanff on" the "lmllllls of Tuesday. the 2am, for . Siczmious, and will stay there over. night. Thence tjey leave for Vuu. LJHIIVPI‘ next morning. reaching that if!’ "ll "lo vvvnlng of the 24th. lll-w ‘will so to Victoria, whore u ‘lily will llll sillllll; on the following morning and on Friday, the 26th to Scuttle. 'l‘hcli' subsequent United ‘States tout" includes vlslfg m Sh" grmlclsc"; Lllflflhlll-Zl-‘lfls. the Grand unyon, Chicago. Detroit. Washing- ton, Philadelphia and New York. lllIlN-tllt lll lll] IN BEllll/IAN lllilN Bankers Agree to Sub scribe One-Twen- tieth-N 0t Pop- . ular in U. S. (slnclal to The Guardian) PAtRlS, Sept. llr-tlfrenclt bank- ers have agreed to subscribe to one twentieth part of the proposed $200 000,000 international loan to Ger- many in response to an American suliscstioti, Le Matiu stated today. The tiewspupcr says that Anflfpw J. hlelion, ll, S. Secretary of tho 'l‘rt-astlry. whlio in Paris urged Ill-u. mlor llorrlot and .\l. Itobltioau, gl- vcnor of the Bunk of France, that France should participate in tho loan. Mellon is quoted as saying that tho international loan was not pop- ular in the U. S., and that France's example would bc useful. French participation for tho purpose of lu- flllenvln; llotentlzll v. s, sit-incub- ors has been decided on according- ly. The question of whether the bond-s shall be offered to pu-bllc subscription here has not been dc- ‘tcrmined. U. SiFliers To _ Be At Capital Till Saturday (Canadian Prue) WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.- --With lll three shun-s of the United States army world fliers squadron now at Bolling Field the fliers set- tled down today for another two days lay over in tho national capit- al under tho revised schedule which will keep them hero for participa- tion in the Defence Day test Fri- day. The filers are now scheduled to leave Bolling Field Saturday morning about 8 o'clock rm- p". (Continued on Page 8) ton, "Ohio. where they wl-ll probably remain over Sunday, l tha Relations Betweenl Britain and France Now Closer (Canadian Press) GENEVA, Sept, 11.——ltcprcsenta~ lives of the Little Etttcnto have been informctl that great Britain will not. only stand ready to extend economic penalties against any aggressor states, but will also sub- scribe to a general agreement to afford naval assistance to main-- lain world peace it was stated on good authority here today, This assurance has created favorable lm prcssions among smaller European states and has strengthened tho ldca ulrcatly prevalent in the Lea- sue of Nations quarters that. Eng- land and France are closer than 5°lllB llvflillc- think to a settlement of thc problem of the security whllch the French insist must ac- t-‘fllllilany any acceptance of com- pulsory arbitration. Refused To Issue ‘Warrant For Firp0’s Arrest (Canadian Press) NEARI), N. J», Sept. 11. -—Feder- ‘at Judge Runyon today refused to issue a warrant for the arrest of Illllll Aflllel llllrpo. Application for a warrant was made yesterday by iitilllitlrl. (‘lurks Gllson, counsel for Jersey (‘dty Ittzliglotis and Civic Society, who charged Flrpo with violating the Mann Act by trans- MAXIMS °." f‘ . MERCHANT n-i Tell a story in a day t would otherwise take a year. Annual Subscriptions Delivered llsll By Mull, Clnldl lllll U. lh-“Jl wnnu Plllll m at an Iii tltllllllllll World’s Problem Is to Burn Up Cynicism of Diplomats HARD WAY FOR" NEW FAITH Critics Always Seek to Prove Good Devel- opments Impos- sible. LONDON. Sept. 11.-Ramsay Mac Donald, returning thanks at Dun- dee today for being made a bur- gess, spoke of his work for interna- tional peace. I-le declared that men of all parties must hold n common the promotion of peace. He coa- tinned. "When you put your hand to that work you discover how simple ls the English language and how dif- ficult are the minds and ,ways of men. Peace, what does it moan? Security, what docs it mean? Co- operationgwha-t does it mean? No porting a woman from lletnpscy a year ago. Mirghani Denies (Special tom-Th: Guardian) llfiNllflN. Scpt. nouuccment in, Khartoum Atlantic (‘liy" to New York shortly before his clnuaplonshlp battle with Jack Anti-British Move ll.~Said All Mlrghant has issued a public all l tleuyln; scheme can be produced but the critical minds of men can prove beyond doubt that it cannot work. l tlare say when our ancestors were struggling upward, the philosophers of their day, every time that a new faith was born and a new hope glimmered in the hearts of meu and women who saw ahead. proved it was altogether impossible, that as we were so we are, and so we shall be. "'l‘ho faith that we proclaim is ,thls, the past was parent to the present and the grandparent to the the statements of the Cairo press that he attended a meeting of Sud- anese notables at which a resolu- future. Stagnation, no-never. On- ward, yes, but let us see it .s up- reasonable, that no such tians alleged. This outspoken front the leader (ler the Mirghanl lnfduence. IRISH IllliN BELFAST. Scpt. talnlug order. ---i<0c-——-—- WtTH SOULSO DEAD WHO NEVER. T0 ' H|Msect= HATH sAib "ii-its is THE ONLY PUTTlNG- stance. THAT G-WES ‘m’ Bent. one t-lAf-F- a comes! tlon was passed claiming that the Sudan was an indivislble part ol‘ meeting was held nor were the women folk ititondlng to participate in anti-Bri- tish ticmonstrations as the l-lgyp- announcement of the Mlrghani sect has composed several hundrod_ thousands of Bloslcms and will go far towards ntulntalning the Brit- ish peaceful control of the area un- HAS lllill 11.-A violent clash bctwccil the civic guard and the population of Kilkerrln County Galwtty, resulting from an attempt of the guard to quiet a riot, is re- ported froth Galway town which is now lln the bands of soldiers who are patrolling the place and maln- 'l'ho trouble started when a mobl resisted the civic guard and chased the [)(lii('L'llll‘ll into their barracks. BREATH STHERE A M-A-f-d- ward as well as onward. With that faith in my heart, so long as the opportunity is given me i shall use Egypt" that opportunity to try to lay the .511,-ghuni says the fimtementfi foundations oi peace on this earth. are not only- untrue but. also un- "A 5'19"‘! 9t "llml- a V93‘? k991i observer, came to me after a oer-- lain speech in Geneva and said the assembly was the whole world, re- presented not merely by their statesmen. but by their types of tuind. On the floor, he said, were foreign secretaries, prime ministers and experts, cold, critical and cyni- cal. in the galleries were the hearts and hopes of the people, ra- diant, enthusiastic and hopeful. l-le said: ‘That is ymir problem to burn up the cynicism of the floor with the flames of holy aspiration that rage in the galleries’ ". pron Offered For Peace Essay (Special to The Guardian) "MONTREAL, Sept. 11.-Four prizes for the best. four essays on "how peace between nations can be best preserved," have been offered by the League of Nations Soclty in Canada. for Competition among pupils of“ undergraduates in any recognized educational institute in Canada. The competition is known as the William G, Doyle memorial essay competition. English and French may be used by the entrants, who have till Nov. Ii to send in their papers. Announcements, Coming Events, Meetings, Etc. "Come to the dance in Klnkora hall Friday, Sept. 12th. Ladies with cake, frae.—-4001—-0—-11—m—Zl i "S. S. Hlllsboro will not make trips Sept. 13 and 14th. A motor boat will take her place. ll ‘WANTED-MAN 0R BOY T0 work on farm, good wages. Apply Emmet Croken, lope Traverse. 8994-9-10-M8i. "illustrated Lecture on Core and Prevention of Tuberculosis in St. Paul's Parish Hall on Friday evening September 12th at 8 p. m. Admlslon free. 3982-9401681. "Moving pictures Montague utes later than Charlottetown. Maximum and minimum temper- Elllfflfll Toronto, clear ... . . . .. .50-40 Montreal. rain . . . . . . . ..54——44 Quebec, cloudy . . . . . . . . .66——48 Charlottetown, cloudy ..fl6'——54 lfnllfax, rain . . . . . . “dB-SH St. John. fair .. ..70-—-5.'i Boston, clear ..ti4—48 Now York. clear . . . . ..62-—46 High tldo this morning at 9.36 and tonight at 10.88. Sun sets this evening at 6.18 and risen tomorrow morning at 5.87. Summerslde tide eighteen min- of the ladies Auxiliary of E. i. Proteallnt Orphans f‘ be ‘held in nic comm m1 .’ filo». am. no at no ,7‘ l . . ' .1 Saturday, Fortune Jlondu. flour-l: Tuesday. dldoroll Peters. Thursday. Wedneldey. It. 4009-0114! “WARNING? Gums t0 the mov- ing pictures at Fortune Bridge Hill / Monday. Special program. "The regular nnnthly me/ I aooo-o-iz-t/ A