.‘ hm. prompt. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Trials an to the soul what m to the tree which fix its dgeper ln the soiL ?— mgloiieiown Gulrdiul Two Cont: Iuulnl Guardian, Founded ill’! -___ . RANDJURY BENUUNBES iiABK lEiilllN (iuerilla Band Ment- ally Incapable 0f Wresting Control From Established Authority. ((335 By Guardian's Spcclall Wire) DETROIT. Sept l-While 12 iilacltlcd members of the Black p.510“ tvere being led into circuit wart today for trial on murder gfgtflfli. n grand jllry denounced the ilwodvd order us a politically nlxtlolls gucrilln band mentally be of wrcsiing control from y» <lled authority. "T130 Black Lezion was a klnn nth vengeance," the report of the Oullilllld County (Pontiac) grand llry sazd, “organized to accomplish is octets by force and vio‘cnc1‘, if 59ft" ty. It was a bl:\ck klan." The regiort, signed by Judge G. ii. ital-trick, hauled B6 melt as i," belollged to the night rid- 1.1g unionization, nlally cf tllcln lnwzulnt state, county and city oillrials. Judge Hartrick said the organiza- tion in Oakland County quickly be- "elimeshed in the labyrinth u polilzcs." Politics spelled “its death jlrst as sltainly n5 the murder 0f Cililfcs l Pcoe May 12. 1936, solllldcd :14- dcaill knsll o." the Black Legion '_‘..\1f‘l,\'li(‘ County tDetroin," the: t: t ' {B . in of jurors to try 10 of the l. lncn charged with Prolds ieaill went forward today in lhel uurt of Judge Joseph Moynihzln‘ ire :ll~r a‘i the pxospectivc jur- os hall sworn that they wcrc not. ntmcers or former members of the llllck Legion. " Two of the 12 men who are charged with abducting Poole and littering him to death on a descri- eiirv-load “to licep him from hiking‘ about the back-cloaked band's tcrrorisiic activities, waived ijury trial. l intory plane storms roots Plans East- West Atlantic Solo Flight (A. P, By Guardian's special Wire) ABINGDON, England, Sept. 1. — Mrs. Beryl Markham, English soci- ety woman, tonight awaited favor- able weather for her projected solo flight across the Atlantic. She had planned to take ofl to- day, but reports of unfavorable weather caused postponement. Her plane, at the Royal Air Pbrce airdzomc here, is named the “Mes- senger,” and is a low-wing, singled motored ship. Mrr. Markham, 33, is the mother of a sevcn-ycar-old boy. If her flight is successful she will be the first woman to fly the Atlantic alone from cast to west. Anlelia Earhart. the United States nvlatrix, completed a. west- cast crossing llulllsllilul lllllcl llllcl N lll ii N iBy Paul Chateau. Copyright’ 1936 b!’ thr- llnvrls News Agency) BEHOB-IA, Spain, Sept. l-(OP- Havast-Spanisil rebel forlcs late today launched a furious offensive on Lovalist-held Irun. Aerial dog- figillting over no man's land, retal- bombardrmenis. l thunderous artillery barrage follow- ed by an infantry attack and tanks. ilflllflliWi cars nnd_ machine guns going into action featured the drive l-s fr.» L/‘filst militia fought back desperately. lll lll-"klllg good their threat to “rcdllcc Irun to ashes" the insurg- ents used every weapon at their command to capture Irun and open the gai-rivay to strategic San Seb- astian. The Loyalists also nlaking good their threat. chained rebel hostages in the streets of the besieged city and left them helpless before the rain of bombs and artillery shells. Casualties were uncsiimaied. but there were indications that se- ltetlnn of the jury would require itvorfll days, and that the trial.‘ mall: require three weeks or more} lmmctialtely; after the grand jury, lmlt was issued. Governor Frank. hinge: "d announced ill musing that it, wou'd recommend that. all: tire employees shown to be lnem-i minim cd on Pat's 9) tomato was "C." l Ban ut lledllcsdlvr, ‘.1. River L-GSH I i l i Hope "Sale of icc ereunl, dance. etc. Bow: lhlvl‘. Sept. 2. L-llfiH "Yen's Theatre this wcck. Sea rtnnl. L-Géiil-ii-lil-fii. lval at. Highfield Rink “ \‘-.l_\'. Srpi. 2nd. Bingo and 111-. L-65l3 "Kelli. s Czos Bingo Pnriy Wed- ilrfiiilll‘ 2nd. lee Cream. Social even- ")! L-66fl2-9-l-2l. "ltanecl Fortune Ftliielnber 4th. ft . lrinll Friday. Sid Elliott's Orch- L-(NES-U-l-iil. "Lawn Party and Dance near Altm liull, We<lI1l-..ci'.l_v, September 2*" L-ciau-a-l-zl. "(Klrpclltcl-s Union will meet at Vlion llczozns 'l‘lulrr.(l“y_ Aug‘ 3.1L‘ L-6551 _ __. Aumllyiltg live hogs and. lambs. ,,,_""“ ‘Thursday. am. Emerald l until noon, G. C. Green. L-51l3-0-twt-ti. lh"C0Wboy Entertainer, two hours cow featuring Alberta Jack and nfliibov sum Crawford Tuesday i-Eht. Rusiico Thursday. Admission 0t and 20c. L-6-i88-9-i-2i. “"100 Cream and Dance at Aub- m School by the Trustees on slbtcmbcr 2nd. Lunch served. dies with coke free. Admission °- flood music. L-llloi-a-l-al. ‘I bmzhe Ladies Aid or the Hazel- a“ Church will hold s Chicken Jollltltr at the home of Layton m‘ Wlwvnsl, on Wednesday, Sept. ‘ 11-6537-9-9-21. "kc Cream and Dance at Aub- mwfkhml by the Trustees on d} ‘"591’ 9nd. Lunch served. Pc with cake free. Admission lmhfilftfg music. L. 0. Kelly's Bus um l obonn Tea Rooms at 8.15 ' ' 14-5194-9-1-31 "All Agricultural mcetin . g will be llfpllbtn the School House head of m, “h”? “PM evening. Septemb- u w rah! oclock. L. W. Roper and sum By of the Dominion Live mm“ much will address the syn,‘ 1;? 1'. Olny will discuss Live '~ (‘d and Feeding Practices. it ivas known that some were killed and many wounded in the prepar- atory air raids on Irun early in the dzlv. six prflvcrful shells scored direct hits in Irun. one of them Partly wrecking a warehouse being used as an ammunition dump. Around little Fort Fagogain far- iher down the highwaly insurgent tanks swung tllio action against- ih'c entrenched Ipftists. A spectacular "dog-fight" devel- cpctl over no man's land. with a plane from the Bllrgos rebel head- quarters and a government mach- ine exchanging burrts of machine gun fir: for l) minutes and B-t 054th attack eluding the. others aim. Both planes finally abandoned combat and left the field. It was the sectud (led-fight in the 590W? since Wednesday. Three Lose Lives In Auto Accident 4C1‘. By Guurrdinn’; Special Will!) BUFNA PARK. catll . Sept. 1- Three pTTSOIlS were dead today- two burned so severely immediate identification was impossible-Jol- lowlng a collision of two automo- btles here last night. H Duncan Smith. 47 your 01d Pflsllilcup, manufacturer and son of J. Willard Smith, of Saint John, N, 17. was ki“ed instantly and two men believed to have been Mexi- cans were burned to death in a fire which cilowcd tile collision. word of Smith's death was lwffi from his wife. in serious condition from a heart. ailment at her Pasa- dena llolnc. _ Smith was returning home from Balboa whrc lle had been buildinB n. large summer‘; home when the accident 0000f"! Details wcrc immediately avni‘ab‘c. Smith. whose father was a pioneer lumber and shlllltillil "1"" l“ 5mm‘ John, served with the Canadian army during the Great Wm’ not sisters livc in eastern Clint)“- John MoSweency, brother of Mr!- would fly to Pasadena iodny- Prcmior King hlsht». after two meetings keunio King to unemployment nliof ms. 511 farmers invited to attend. 1-4542-9-2-11. than!!!‘ M155 551a smith is an Oxtordonian and well-known writer. TWO 09h" Smith. wired from Montreal where he has brokerage offices that hc iluplcsais To Moot Q" i- QUEBEC. Sept. I — Pmlnier Maurice Duplemis announced io- of his Union Nationals cabinet, he would l soon meet Prime Minister Mar- l discuss Quebec?» The Promisi- did not give any ,live date for the conference nor did he . discuss the business attended to al- Instixfl CHARIJOTTETOWN. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1936 llulclllllll a llllllols ls lollclsl U. S. Unemployed Be- ing Absorbed By It.-- dustry, President Declares. (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) WASHINGTON, Sept. 1—A gross deficit of $2,906,096,300 for this fis- cal year was forecast today by President Roosevelt in a revised budget summary raising previous revenue estimates. Deducting from the prospective deficit $580,000,000 allotted for statutory debt retirement during the year, the President estimated a net deficit of $i,5l6,996,300. He forecast the gross gross pub- lic debt at the end of the year, June 30, would be 834.188.543.494, or a. net increase of $410,000,000 during the year. "The unemployed are continu- ing to be rlbsorbcd in industry," Mr. Roosevelt wrote today, "and I believe that there will be a further substantial increase of such em- ployment during the coming months." i Four Brothers Die In Mine (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) JEFFERSON CITY. M0., Sept. l —The deaths of four brothers in a gas-filled ccal mine near Fulton. Missouri's second mining disaster in two weeks. brought a. move to- night to prohibit the rue-opening without state inspection of ab- andoned collleries. Arnold Griffith, state mining in- spcctor. who directed recovery of the bodies of three of the brothers said he would recommend the en- i actmcnt of more stringent reg- uiations. The Fulton mine was one of a number of old shafts hastily re- opened last winter to meet a dras- tic coal shortage. It had not been in operation this summer. Louis Mctz, .32, the owner. and his father-in-law. T. J. Wolfe, 53 went down into the mine last night with a gasoline engine to pump water so operations could be re- sumed. The mine has no air shaft and both were prostrated almost instantly by carbon monoxide gas from the engine. Metz's three brothers, Freddie, 21; Ernest. 24, and Harry, 19 dc- sccnded the 30-foot shaft. one by one, in a rescue attempt. Each was at the bottom of the ladder only a few minutes before he was over- ccme by the fumes and fell into seven feet of water on the mine floor Wolfe in critical condition, was rescued by a miller, Jesse Pierson. l Metz was dead when he was ‘ brought to the surface. Efforts to recover the bodies of the three brothers were delayed until today when firemen. equipped with oxy- grn masks, went down into the mine. Planes Search For Missing Fliers FORT RELIANCE, N.W.T.. Sop. 1-—-fCP)-—Four arluy airplanes and n. commercial machine. roaring in widening circles over the vast Norlhlaxid. extended illc search to- day for Flight Lieutenant Sheldon Coleman and Aircraiismlln J. Forty of the Royal Canadian. Air Force. Forty formerly was stationcn at Digby. N. B. Airmen of the far-flung north refuse to abandon hope for the misisng pali- although 16 days have gone by without any trace of the pontoon-equipped ail-plane in which they took of! from Hunger Lake, 100 miles south of the Arctic circle. on a Ito-mile flight to Fort Reliance Aug. i7. Somewhere in the north-possibly in the dread. wooden 'l‘helon coun- try, possibly in the wind-swept. 'lakc-dotted barren lands - the aliasing airplane is down. Whether the fliers are alive and well, injured or dead. no one knows. death Toll liovl 28 flQOI-IUM, Westphalia, Germany, scpt. l—-lAP)—T'|1c death toll in the explosion in the United Presi- dent mine grew today to 2B. One more body was found entombed in {the debris and two of the injured died. Hope) oi reselling alive one miner, the last known to be in the wreck- led workings. was abandoned. Ten "i" mm injured were not cxlaecied t0 Chancellor Hitler contributed 20.- i000 marks olbout $8100» for N110! iol the victims‘ xamillsv People's Paper -u-—-""’ Covers Prince Edward: Island Like the Dew Visitors. Two business sessions were-held by the Canadian Good Roads As- sociation, which opened its 22nd, annual convention in Charlotte- town yesterday morning. Visiting public works officials, motor traf- fic officers and highway engineers were welcomed to the Province by His Honour Lieutenant Governor DaBlois, Premier T. A. Campbell, Hon. J. P. McIntyre and to the City of Charlottetown by His Wor- ship Mayor P. W. Turner. Greetings to the delegates from other plovinces in the Dominion were brought by Premier A. A. Dysart of New Brunswick; Vice President of the Association, Hon. A. S. Macmillan, Nova SCOUXYS Minister of Highway; Hon. T. B. McQuesten, ‘Minister of Highways for Ontario; Hell. Charles M. Dunn, Minister of Highways for Saskatchewan; Mr. Arthur Dixon. Deputy Minister of Public Works for British Columbia; and M'r. A. Paradis. Chief engineer for the Province of Queen. Justice A. E. Arsenault. spoke on behalf of the Prince Edward Island Travel Bureau. Hon. G. Shelton Sharp. Tyne Valley. P. E. I.. President of ihc Association presided at the opening session. Last night a musical DITOETBT" and entertainment for the dele- gates was provided by the local entsrtainment committee and was followed by a dance. All sessions of the convention are being held in the Canadian National Hotel. At the first busingss session pap- ers on "location" by Mr. A. A. Snlitll. Chief Etir-ineer Department of Highways, Ontario; and “high- wuy grade separation" by Mr. G. A. Stone, of the Board of Railway Commissioners. were rend to the convention. In the absence of Mr. Smith the papsr on location was dent engineer. Ontario. Hon. J. P. McIntyre. P. E. I. .Minister of Pub- lic Works presided. At tile afternoon session papers on Soil Stabilization, Highway Grade Separation and Winter Willow 0f Rev. John Neil flies (C. I‘. by Guardian's Special Wire) TORONTO. SC-pt. l-Widow 01' minster-Ccntttall United Church for 36 years previous to his death in 1929, Mrs. Louise B. Neil died to- day zit her homc here after a brief illness. Well known ill Toronto. Mrs. Neil was an active worker ill the church. She was born in Picinu, N. 5.. daughter of’ Rev. J. Bnyne. Sill‘- vivilll: is one brother. J. A. Baync of Moncton. N. B. The funeral will be held Friday and interment will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Mrs. Nell spent the greater part of her life in Toronto. moving titer: as a young woman. Her brother. who resldrs in Moncton. is the last. $lll'\‘.\'lll‘,1' member of the family. The youngest daughter of Dr. James Bayne of Pietou. Lily Bayne married Mr. Brown, an official in the. post office at Charlottetown. She moved to Toronto following his death and later married Dr. Nell Quinta Receive Expensive Toys (By A. E. l-‘ulford, Canadian Press stat! Writer) CALLANDER. Ont.. Sept. 1—-(CP) -—F'iftccn hundred dollars in toys has been tossed into the laps of the Dionne quintuplets in the two weeks they have been appearing be- fore Hollywood film cameras in their latest starring picture Reun- ion. That sounds i-xtrllvluulni. but the movie makers figure it's cheap and they can prove it with facts and figures. It costs plenty every time the quinis’ interest wanders and by actual counts it wanders twice each minute unless there arc toys around in capture it. The expensive playthings are mostly teddy bears. lions, cats and dogs of the woolly variety that quintuplets like to lake to bed with them at night. For quintuplets, of course, they must be of the purest wool and look as much like the animals they represent as the best toy men can make rend by Mr. C. A. Robbins, resi- . Riev. John Neil. minister of West- ‘ Upening Sessions R E P El AEIBR‘ or Good Roadsliilllth u, Convention HeldM A it | l1 ‘Canadian And U. s. Highway Engineers Discuss Problems ) - ‘Cordial Welcome Extended g ' "ms- lMaintennnce of Roads by United ‘States and Canadian public works ,officinls were heard. iilun. A. S. Maclvililian, Nova Scotia of highways acted as presiding of- ificer at tllc afternoon meeting. The speakers were Mr. C. A. Hogclltogler, Senior Highway En- gineer of the United States Bur- ID. 0.; Mr. Harold W. Griffin. Ell- ,glneer of Sui-w and Plans of the State of New Jetvey, Trenton; and ,Mr. A. Grutton, district engineer ifor the Province of Quebec. Mr. ‘Grntton deliveled a paper by Mr. . C. A. Robbins, resident Engineer of the Department. of Highways for the Province of Ontario. Welcomed By Lt-Govcrnor “I welcome you and I greet you this morning, not as strangers. but as fellow Canadians, members of one great Canadian family bound together with that strong tie of national spillit which had its birth here in Charlottetown ‘The Cradle of Confederation’, His Honor Gov- ernor DcBlois said at the opening session. "I also heartily welcome our distinguished gurts from the great Republic to the south of us," His Honour continued. "A great historian once declared that of all inventions those which abridge distance have done the most for civilization and surely this is especially true when the work of transportation can be done by travelling on a smooth well-built road. Progress v and Transportation “Now I have no intention of entering upon the question or his- tory of road building for I have to confess that my knowledge of road making is very limited and, un- doubtcdli", more visionary than scientific but I do wish to em- phasize the tremendous import- ance of a conventio this kind (Continued on Page 8) ;Woman’s Body lFound In Gully !(A,P. By Guardian's Special Wire) LA JOLLA. Caiif.. Sept. l—Tl'lc brutally beaten and apparently lravlshcd body of Ruth Muir. 35. lcollege gradual.‘ and daughter of ,a prominent San Antonio, Texas. ‘banker, was found ioclay ln a gully l near the ocean front. Early ionichi. police announced ‘they were detaining; E Carl Eek- ',d0hl, 41. for q1l(‘$li0i1iili1. Police lsaid Eekdohl was packing his be- llonging when taken illto trustody lit a hotcl. , One of Miss Aiuirs hands clut- lcilfli some black illlirs. giving authorities their 1il'.\‘- potential cllle to the ml: , 'l‘llc gully D010 .\'- evidellce 0i n 'lcl'l'ii'il-. struggle. 810ml stains dot- ited the ground llnd ll newspaper ilylng on a nearby bench. 'l‘llc grass was trnnlplcd. bliss Muir's glasses and broken comb lny by the bench. Neighbors said n mysterious lllnll had been seen in the neighborhood yesterday Others reported a ycf- low roadster had been secu driv- ing to and fro in front of tllc Mllir home shortly before the woman disappeared . The cases of fivc other women similarly killed in San Diego in the last six years remained un- solved. The cycle of mysterious killings began in 1931 wilcn Virginia Brooks, 10. disappeared and her mutfatcd body was found a month later on lonely Camp Kcarny Mesa. - Shortly thereafter pretty Louise‘ Teuber, l1, was beaten. stripped of clothing and hanged to a tree in u. park. A middle-aged race track halit- tue. Mrs. W. D. Bibbens. was found strangled in her downtown apartment. Hamel Bradshaw, a 22 year old brunette beauty. was found in picturesque Balboa Pnrk. she had been stabbed 1'1 lilacs. A boy ac- quaintance was tried for min-tier and acquitted. Pretty Celia Cola. l0. iiailfllll"? 0f a Mcxlrahl cus‘onls bu‘ ‘. W08 criminally attacked iilili slrzlugfcd to death in August. i934: her body was found in the back yard of bar home. Read by Everybody minister ‘ ‘can of Public Roads, Washington, . The first condition of happiness is not to have wllut we usual. but to illlllt what we should have. MAXIMSE .. OFA. MERE MAN 10 PAGES Aluluul Subscription Dellvnred 54.00 uy uiul Cl-lllulill and v. s. A. um Mexico Ships Arms To Spain f.\. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) IHEXICO CITY, Sept. l—-Thl‘ Presidcnt- of the hicxlcun Congrtas tonight (iefl-lldcd the recent slllp- ln-"nt of munitions from Mexico tu illc biadrid government. Anti-aircraft and Ma- 1aigglilfi}uiliiiifl..of rflofloliirlrililliiltflliiii chlne (“In Batteries Wiia announced by President Laz- ])1‘ive R e b c] 2m; the session today. faro GLHCUVLLIS iii his speech open- ilvpiltl‘ falls Piilflilll“ Erro, pres- nldi-llt of the (Tonglvms, defended i .llle arms >llip:lle..t~'. saying “t0 A. I‘. By (iunrdiams sllvviill W5"; ‘sell lntlt4>ri:i1.-. of Will‘ and lend wIADRLI), 5pm,, 1_ __ Dcfmcos nlnral ~01" cw ll maternal» ald to n i against rebel air raids on U“. ca}, friendly {L1H ‘tllllii n; 1f‘f..'1'.llllill(‘i_)' l ital were elaborated today after u ,(fili‘l.\.llllif‘(i i.~ pl-rlccijl consonant. l new dawn attack was driven Q11 by Willi inuu-llxllull. lllllcal hlfllili- ‘antl-zlircrraft fire. , ,ards. To (it. o: would be l The bombing squadron dropped vqlllvillvni lo u 2g inlpllttit’ \f‘Xl7Ef).\'l\’CS into lviadricl streets Inr bcliigcrcllcc in a ‘l i lhl'1'°"i\1lil‘1el's 0i zln ilollr, the mlll- tiotl ilvlt lll i'\'l "' liniql’ _of war announced. before lo lllv I\'('ll!lllli'tl‘..> oi v antl-alrvlnnit and lnllcllltle gun bzlt- p ‘oplcf’ 8lAiiiililBPE lliiiii ' ed by scrcalnillg sifOllfl and oss of poueriltl search- illsi. thc niszlli sky. fright- llgilis‘ a: llolllulsll ls BASE i bFilR REBELS i Appeal issued By Bri- l lain For Participa- ‘ lion ln Non-litter- vcntion (ommiitce. IA. I’. By (ill. 1.0. ‘ ‘ vs <pecilli ll iri- r ‘:5 , speed. 4‘i)])-4\:“(l iticrlnally" and P: pntc lll the gm. nlitlec rirerllctl to l Spanish civll war. New npproaclhs were nnlriu the evc of :1 c DlilPL mevzlltg :0- lnvlrlxitv to rll; . developnacllts in Hpalll. Ncitlley Foreign Secretary l‘ l nor Prinlo Minister Baldwin 1 ll attend. Eden i» culilned to his with a ‘lnpcratllre and . , '0 l to partici- 'liil'lll (Util- wttl‘. ml l my‘: deall Oil oiled residents lnmv oi 1i - l . . llm i . . ,. ,. . . nlxvlulod from‘ 81W Wurnkwl my i1 .l.iS no. lllillllPd from lll: sulla _\‘ slillliill.“ and i)l1.\t'illi‘l\l;:_ _ , _ Th1, g\.j\.,,l.lllllcllb announced ym nations halo _IOlll‘Z‘\'l the 0m. was mimvd‘ ‘ i'£:lllil1l'li(‘<‘ which _.'l'l‘ to convene this lleorgulllzzltloli of the (faliinl-t ii) glvo representation vto addition-pl ivactlcul". ‘oi the Popular Front pOili- lcal _eoa.lloll was reported under eozlsldel'at.irlll. lite _nc\v members. ti, “'35 5pm,,‘ would include a (fomnlunist. n Soc- . ABFIENT < -,- , _ Mlcilac‘. H all fi-year-old lg mplfmintlaLuv 0f m“ Cm“ Stllllllriyr- " I u as lll ‘the .. ‘a n ; ~ .- , ' ‘ , , “ ‘ Prim“ sétyffm Ilfizlioranéiolgtlillulf) Charlotte ~, l-io-plirli last lllLlhi ' ' ' ‘ ' “ 1 01mm" with set zlljurirs l‘(‘(If‘l\'f‘.(i when : 1y headed the public works and fine . ancc ministries. (An uncensored dispatch from Maimd- TPlfiYCd bl‘ C011l'if‘l‘ to Hen- dilyl‘. Frzmce_ estimated crusupliipg 05 m" first. ilve weeks of Spain's civll ‘#3111’ at. from 75.000 to 100 000 dead and about. 300.00 wounded.) liiy II. E. Knnillilllgh) (Cfiltrrlslli. 191i i1)‘ The Associated Press) crXT0L€D(()‘.[S1ll£1ill, Sept. l--Gov_ uncn center." of ti ‘t f TO-cdo tonight, prlpare: ‘iofltjgnlfi , by the force .~f_ tila collision nllleaae flllnotts fortress oi‘ lné Ai- ' flqwflTlo lic-anvil in Charlotte- l cazar if thc L700 besirlzetl robe-iv; P??? m Cm“ "KIM-L "7 111-“ i"- lnen. women and Cilii[1l'(‘l1—-\\'iti’:lI1‘units mum m! b? Mam"! m“ “s Crmnbung “.3115 do not smTen llfut. The other occupants of tile ll car driven by his Dlfiiilfll‘ Mr. ‘Thomas llorgan of Cilallcttetolvn vzas lll collision with one driven by Jlltlge DufLv rlL-o of Charlotte- town. Mt‘. Tlvznlns Eiflflfilil was drrritlg ills father. lilntllel‘ brother llcnll- Eftm attending church at Covellead when tile. accident occurred Russell's .Ff1l',';('. on the si-ftllilfll)!‘ Ituad. Tile injured man was picked ' the road whrre he had been throyvn due ‘wlsthescrtped ivltll a shaking up. ‘vw-mm a “wok some 20 tons or‘ el er car overturned. ii. was dynmmu, Wm have been paced and l understood, but both were badly wired for simultaneous firing, load-I (mmaflrd' (‘T5 $1110. When the mines are com- i, picied the rcbe's will be given their l 135i» Olllmllllnill’ to surrender. ._ l tfllé"..iili“o."Zi1“l3i..'ifl§°§mi‘f.?fl L299 Fllfflslers ment officials will call upon the] lwfiifiilvd men to lay down their fifths mid march out of the fort. If the rebels refuse, a button will ljillfillfscil mid the historic build- (A. l‘. B): (iuartlialfs Special “firel GLACIER PARK. 1\‘[0llt., Sept, 1. 'l‘llc worst. fol-est fire in seven ~__i_m_ y whipped across the continen- la. (llvidc. cut a dull-k path of des- truction across. a popular summer rcwcvt and crackled through valu- able tilnlmr lands while L200 for- cstcrs battled in vain to cileck its " tonight. ' Youth flay Takes Form 0f Anti-Nazi , _ _ . i Wvfllélils-(tjlsvolilil ta lgtlgelgr [park lilotcl u B m 0 ll t “ fire —- Qtllllbiliiiéfi. fianEr-s ‘ilrmltllagé iblzl/cs which have burned for more l _ ', than a \\"il(‘k-—l'0ill‘[‘fi_ down the val- , {lolly leiclillll: a tourist camp of 9p . (‘Uihiln and zlcslrpyipg a fangpl- m“ I (Cont lued on Page 9) i i i.\. I‘. by (luardialfs Special Wire) MOSCOW. Sept. l--Tlle Soviet. m" Gnvelnnlcnl turned celebration of s“i‘°nm“mlmlt E- T. 54'i‘.\'i‘1l Mid mwrnntion,“ 3.0mm‘ mm“, mm a nlore than 0.000 llvrcse n! timljpf var-t anti-Nam and tbeudo-milit- 1mm“ “w” mm‘ ‘mnlpd “'~""'- llli tile fire had leaped iilr -, i but .dlll'_v and \v.-..~ varlnr lll‘ I ulel-ll l illlllbfl‘ lands along the i'.’l.'-‘ti'l'li bur- < v5. arv (i'll1-')l'.*il':|ii(¥tl today. Thousands of school children and _vollng Clunlllllniste". lll military fnrmaiictl, marched nlio Red Square for the exercises wearing the uniforlns of various nuxilialy zrltitwrs. carried banners healing 11$ Sl‘l']l as "Fnsldslll is f for \\'l\l' nunillsi the Sov- ll'i. tllliol." null ‘We will answer" all invzlldialktr.‘ \\'l1i‘ blmv for r blow," l One float depicted a gigantic. lrcd hand r-luiellilll: a monstrous. . writhing serpent across whnsp hem .\vas festoottcd n" string of swas- iikns. u. ‘Tragic Ileath 0f l-year-old Girl if‘. l‘. By (iu.lrlli;nl\ special Wire) DIUBY, N14, Sept. l - lleotll ctlC-rtl sewn-x will Aiiii Sialliollfis , svllml! sci ol-l Hilf‘ \\. . llll ulltrlnlivllilt- and . up from l and _ fir!‘ the problclns oi’ both sides in the Hi1) prions of . and F list groups. Chrolnele reported Portugal is the al~rl military base i relies. "Evt-lj Litr- rlnipatcll said, "knlllvs ll . .. arms and mercenaries wlltllml‘ in pour ovlir the Portu- w-uw fronzirr. "l‘llc central inlprcsslon is thufl Port 1's prnl so tn ac ere to the 1S pure 1 l-ZXPYLSIOX DPLMANDED l PARIS. l-Prcsencc in. Sept . ln.lrl.ll storm oi‘ Freizell pl" t-lollalisi (lelllalzd for her PKDUISlOIK. Sill‘ l3 technically in France. as a lllcnlbcr of i1 lhl‘f‘(‘-lll‘(‘.<flll rom- ‘ltlilil-c nf the Iitarlrid iZfl‘.‘t‘l'lli11€!l’lC Ito colts-till. "Flvnell political friends." but. intornicrl sources said ‘she was zn reality an envoy with- 'cllt. ixirtfollo foraging for Socialist r allies to ilPy cause. g In some quarters it was said she lwould undertake to expose “the ‘origin and goal" of tile Fblscist in- surrection in Spain. "La Pasionnria" is a tall and ro- bust. woman with a round face, gleaming eyes and greying hair. Born in i805 in Gallaria which is in Vizcaya Province of Spain. she. received her only education from the local priest and village school. i A reader of Lenin and Marx, she lfirst. joined the Socialist party and in i020 was one of the founded lcf the Spanish Conlmllnis’ party. l l No FUTuRE '_ ‘(cans CAN MAKE m‘ ‘ 0P FOR ‘(HE Lost’ ones»! l _/ , Moderate t0 FJesh southwest lllll partly cloudy and cool. ‘ west irillds; 'l‘f)RON'l‘O. Sept l-Minimum .\\lll ll . m cross the ‘ 7 h 7“- "“"_M 1111i." ~ ‘-1l_\ lliYll‘ lill‘ 'i'l4ll‘- . l Vllit‘ suilnnllliu c flilii (iWd before a w h e | fif(‘i<‘l‘ rnillri assist llcr, llcr boll)" , 1117i Ii)‘ crushed h) 111i‘ lllr. 1 villlv: >ill(i tonight i-Ldgur i °°'"P'°l"' i" Wm l I: "inal:;.."l:::;.. filfviliillil the glrl Wilt) tl]1))i\l'Pllii_\/(il(i ——--- not. know it ivzls cppriluelllng and OTTAWA, Sept. l~fCPl - Fair I stepped into its path. and warm weather ill the prairie - . 4 provinces during the past. week has enabled farlncrs in nil but the northern sections to complete their i harvesting operations. the Dclnin- , lion bureau of statistics announced l Judge Serves Thrcc flay “Sentence” iioday in tile. inst of its series of l5 | weekly crop reports. i Wheat continues in show nood- .qllalit_v the rrpul savs. Coarse , . ' ' "T . _ iizrltins are nellcrllllv llcilt ill yield “I1,T'.;j,I_"§-"n3;gd'g" it bltigilldwirncll) ialthougll prcsp . .. for lzlie cats ‘" ' "l" ' “ t" ' .A. aiuslnlunln, who next wcck is ih'h* *‘~"i'-"l‘.l‘.l.<-. m’ N“ 111mm“ L‘ m r ‘m heroine presiding judge of crim- ‘in Zlllti mu xilnuln temperatures: ; l ) vson 50 68 | Akl a v ik 46 56 l Vancouver 50 6B Edmon {on i2 Q l Saint. John b4 60 Halifax 56 5* 1 cliarloucuown 58 6B Maritime Provinces: Moderate to fresh southwest and west winds: partly c'oudy and cool. High tide this morning at l0 50 and tonight at 11.34. Sun sets this evening Rt 6-35 . and rises tomorrow momins i" 5.24. Lust quarter moon Monday? 5°93 '7. 11.14 p. m Pastures are pom- and feed silp- _ lplics low hlli stock on stubble fields . '11“ ,"“‘"L' L‘ scrvmg i‘ "'°1\m\'"."~ Sunlmcr-side ildf‘ (‘Killian mm‘ m» now doing i.lll'i\' well. Heavy “ll-"fflwsfil lhfw-"PY Prim“ ‘ml- ules later 111;") °l"‘"l‘,’,‘,‘§‘fw"' ;rains are neerlerl over the whole i ‘WW- T"|'- CM‘ F ‘ Arm m {firm H‘ M“ plowing and gbaig: tom nmsmm ‘hmugh w“ nan-- nor-uni lull A. u. I I‘. I» lrestcrc soil lnnisillrl‘ supplies. l ‘ No frost. injury has yet. been re- l ported and i1i1l‘\i‘~i‘lli! is .. ivellrld- ‘vauced hail can c 1ft‘ no further lliamaue. illftvlllilllls mint to ill- rrensctl gra ssilngiiler infestation ucxt ‘s-vvlscn. Potninm roots and lznrden i‘l')l1‘~ are p001‘ throughout the three iprovmces. understanding of the situation." nights "A judge should know soul's-thing i “",,,,,,,. -r lof the environment and the daily l routine in n prison. The eomplcicl picture is ll0f‘(‘.\’~'I\l'_\' for an runplc l The jlzdc." differs from the FY15’ otters in one mutter; he gees home " l.’ M‘ menilno It A. ll- 5-55 P‘ "M". ‘-\p|\|Il Pillltllfl)’: “TmmeEu-l iy izull. and ‘ "Imw" fienlrmllrr r-mli m I 0mm‘ "In vmlnyn. Tue-flown Furry will EMIVO nml J lllrrllen Pier lll 7:00 \ \\. uml lens (‘fluf Turlueniine I'll! at 3:15 A. M. OI return- mel zom-