MAXIMS 017A MERE MAN _--1_ queelvu- oflworgoanbennbettea-thm >“ /’ ///' The People's Paper Covers Prince Edwardllsland Like the Dew Read by Everybody MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Homels the basis of national morality. loam“! "ma" ‘I’. w’? w“, cousin. Former Mayor 0f Halifax Succumbs HALIFAX. AuB. o—(CP)- Geofgg E, Ritchie, former mayor g1 Halifax whose appearance at a big league baseball game 1n New york in formal morning attire grounded sartorial critics. died at m; home here today after a pngthy illness. He was 09. coiuuo rvruu "Dance at Sea View Hall this mesday evening. 14-1467-8-10-11. "Grand Tea Party at 5t. Georges Thursday, August 12th. L-1385-8-0-4l. "United. Church. Tea Party at iiorell, August 12th. L-1312-8-4-6-9-10. "Dance at Leith Burt's, Stan- liope, Tuesday night 9 P. M. L-l443-8-9-2i. "Picnic Saint John's Church, crapaud, Wednesday, August 11., L-l230-8-2-9l "Fresh Country Buttermilk at l‘he Milk Bar, Peter Crichton, City. L-1463-8-10-1i. "Long Creek Picnic Wednesday, ltigust 11th. If not fine Thursday. L-1474-8-10-li. "Reserve Wednesday, August 11th for Bay Fortune Church Lawn Parts at Abel's Cape. L-l405-8-9-2 . 3i SEANGd-IAA. Aug. 9—(AP)—A shooting affray on the outskirts o! Shanghai 1n which an officer and a seaman of the Japanese Navy were killed and a Chinese gendarme wounded tonight shifted the spot- light to the month-old Chinese- Japanese conflict of this largest city of China. The clash occurred at an entrance to the I-Iungjao military airdrome. Just west of Shanghai. Chinese said the Japanese officer fired first when his motorcar was denied entry and wounded a, chin- Boo luard. The Japanese version wlw, that Chinese fired on the Jap- anese without provocation. The officer's body remained in possession of the Chinese "peace preservation” troops guarding the alrdrome, Japanese officers said, while the seamanks body was re- lXJrl/ed still lying in the field where he was shot. ' Japanese naval authorities charg- ed the Chinese with failure to keep "Dr. J. D. Reddln. Bouris. will no‘. be in his Offices from August l0lh to lath. ’ L-liia-a-io-li. "ice cream. dance, bowling, linncttks Road School. Thursday tug. 12. Good mule. L-1453-8-9-2i. "Ice Cream and Dance. Spring- lon, rfuesday, August 10th. If not lne. Wednesday. L-1464-8-10-1l. "Borden Line Club loading hogs, lambs, cnlvcs every Wednesday at Albany. Hours 12-3. L-2091-10-M T W ti. "Dance in Victoria Rink Wed- nesday light-music by Charlotte- loivn Rhythm Makers. L-2063-T-W-tf. "Enjoy yourself at ice cream fes- tval and dance Corran Bann Thursday, August 12th. l 1,-1465-8-l0-2l. Hunter Transfer "l-lavmakers Dance, River, Tuesday night. leaves Sunnyside 8.30. L-1439-B-7-3i. "The o'd time flddlera and danc- inil contest is postponed until e. future date at Mt. Stewart. L-14B2-B-10-2l. "Picnic Saint John's Church, Orapaud. Wednesday, August ll. ii not fine first fine day follow- ‘rut L-1230-8-2-9l. ‘Fiddlers’ and dancers contest in lot 65 hall, Alig. 12th. Good prizes- Admission 25 cents. Send entries l0 A. L. l-lerrell, New Wilishire. L-1438-8-7-5i. "Reserve Wednesday, August 11th h Belfast, Belle River United church Annual Tea at Plnllette Bridge. If not fine, next day.‘ L-l466-8-l0-2l. "Ice cream social and dance at Iouthport School, Tuesday, Aug. ~Blnso and other attractions. Blllllllllort Women's Institute. 14-1429-8-7-31. x“l.oading live hogs and lambs at “Yl-llllslon till noon ‘Thursday, lusust 12th. Nicholson Bros. load- at hunter River Friday till noon. ‘liar-ell McEwen a Campbell. b2l41-7-6-l3-20-21. 'm"1'iw P. a. I. Aynh’re Breeders hub will hold their Annual Meet- M! in the Agricultural Hall, Char- “lgwwn on Thursday, August 12th P- M. . R. Brown, Secretary. 11-“75-8-10-31. “Lime to mm Day at New m °"- Thur-day. Aug. 12th. Tea all iv ladies long lum- not. “will! Church. Speakers, Ilton, I“ will“. Dr. Jack and Mr. . McLean n-ltia-a-a-zl. "Reserve Tuesday August 10th lgugunm on ohms Church mmd-i. Hunter River ll in l0, lee mum’ m“ dflnkll if not fine “L, Wm h‘ '°"°"1.‘l'ol'l‘3“ll° Trev a Dromlfie to deliver the two bodies, thus heightening the tension. Word of the shooting spread something like panic along the northern and western fringes of shanghai. cfilleclally where the Japanese settlement in Hongkew ap- llEAVY niullti at LIGHTNING NEAR uoucuu ADAMSVILLE, N. B., Aug. 9 -- Flames destroyed three houses, two barns and a store in this Kent County vi lage 31 miles from Mono- ton before the fire could be con- trolled tonight. The outbreak occurred when liglltlllng struck a barn owned by J. B. Gallant. Hts house and store al- so were rared. The spreading flames then consumed a. residence and burn owned by M llet Arsenault as well as Edgar Gallants house. All men in the village of 500 inhabitants turned out to battle the fire and save the community from destruction. Their efforts were ald- ed by the Moncton Fire Depart- ment and danger of further dam- age was averted. Volunteer workers, however, con- tlllued to fight a woods fire set by flying embers. About 100 men re- mailled on duty as fire ate through the dry trees. The electrical storm caused dam- age at other points in Kent County. A house and barn owned by Joseph J. Vatour at St. Louis were de- stroyed after lghtning struck the barn. Charles Lawson ,at Calls Mills, lost a barn and several out- buildings, Total damage from lightning was estimated at $35,000. At Emmerson. near here. light- ning kllled a dog in the yard of James Bryant's home. (AP. By Guardian's Speolll WIN) HENDAYE, finned-Spanish Fron- tier, Aug. C-Covemment labor bat.- talions were dispatched to the Ter- uel front in northeast 591i" ">- night to throw earthworks and for- tifications across the Bath of the Insurgents’ steadily lefiilllenl"! salient. The whole town of Canete. Whlcll straddles the Cuenca-Teruel hish- way’ ‘ppm-may w“ m be trans‘; formed into a fortress for a stunt in defence of the vital llfivifllmelild communicationn between Mild" and Valencia rm the east WA"- Canete is about 40 miles an"? direct line southwest of <1“; southernmost tlP 0f the Tnaurgen finger-llke salient. 1t a on I Mel" inci p“ Loyalists Fortify Effort To Halt Rebel Drive CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1937 CEQILIANY EXPELS BRITISH DANE 1T 0 CALL T Spotlight ‘In Sino - Japanese Conflict Shifts Shooting AffI-‘E? In Shanghai Heightens Tension In Month- old Conflict. preaches the Chinese gdnllnistered communities of Chapel and Kiang- wan, o. district which suffered heavily in thefihanghai war of 1932 and has seen Sine-Japanese friction on many later occasions. The Chinese ran up barricades and put out heavy patrols of gen- darmes along the main roads of the district, fearing an incursion. from the huge barracks nearby of Japan's permament naval defence force, to which both victims be- longed. The Shanghai killings over- shadowed momentarily larger- scale developments in conquered northern l-Iopeh, where the Jap- anese were tightening their grip on Peipfng, Tientsin and the sur- rounding country, and the con- tinued discussions in Nanking of the possibility of averting formal war between Japan and China. Chinese dispatches declared the Japanese army was preparing for a drive northwest from Peiping to carry the Japanese flag through the mountain passes to the broad Chahar and Suiyuan tableands on Mongoliap southern fringe. Five thousand Japanese troops were said to be moving to attack Chinese forces at Nankow Pass. 30 miles northeast of Peiping on the Peiping-Sufyuan Railway, which the Chinese say Japan wants in seize. The main body of this Japan- ese expedition was reported mov- ing from the Pelping area, but at least 1.000 men were marching toward Nankow from Kupelkow, a pass through the great wall from Jehol. part of Manchoukuo, into Hopeh. Quinta Suffering From Slight Colds OALLANDEZZ, Ont., Aug. 9- (CP)—No anxiety is felt for the four Dionne quintuplets who have contracted alight colds "from out- side sources," Dr. A. R. Dafoe, their physician, emphasized lo- night. Emilie, ill last week with a. sore throat, is well now and is consid- ered immune from the slight in- disposition which affects the other fotlr famous sisters-Yvonne. An- nette, Cecile and Marie. They wzll not be on exhibition to the touring public for two or three days, Dr. Dafoe said. ' "Emilie is now quite well,’ the Doctor said, “but there's no point in bringing one of them out alone to lock at the crowd. Besides the others would be lonesome." The children are allowed the run of the p‘ay yard as usualbut under the close direction of the nurse in charge, who guards against their getting tired. Emilie is not separated from her sisters and no change has been made in their diet. Canete 4 In highway east of Cuenca and south- west of Teruel. Insurgent field headquarters on the Teruel front said their obser- vation planes sighted a 0011mm 0! government troops and a long line of sandbas-lflgfnc trugks moving 11D from Ouenca. M10 - The same sources said they had intercepted o. government broadcast ordering "all able-bodied men in Ouenm province" to FY0096“ W Canete to build a lacework of bar- ricades in its streets and to en- circle it with trenches. The mint advanced Insurgent vanguard apeal-lng southward be- tween Madrid and Valencia was be- low Albarracln tonight but still far from Canete. FETVDERS FORTA VING R0 t v l ET FiiEil PLANS FLIGHT to urw YllllK Demonstrate Feasi- bility Of Air Service Via North Pole. MOSCOW. Aug 10-—(CP Haves) -—Carrying four passengers and cargo which will bring the total weight of his plane to 35 tons, Sigmund Levaneffsky, famous sov- iet flier, will take off today from a. nearby airport for a. flight to New York via the North Pole, provided the weather is favorable. Levaneffs-ky expects to send his giant four-motored craft, of an entirely new type of construction, down the runways at about six P. M. (1 P. M. ADT). He lilting to stop at Fairbanks, Alaska, to refuel, and then aim for Chicago, whence he hoped to finish the hop to New York. The route selected by Levaneffsky is longer, but considered safer, than that chosen by other Soviet aviators who have helped blaze the trail for commercial air service by way of the north pole between the sov- iet union and the United States. Levaneifsky had hoped to take off two days ago but was prevent- ed by heavy ralnfalls. Ievaneffsky. with V. Levchenko, in August-September, 1938, after a daring and difficult trip over the Arctic regions. 'I'h.e flight was hailed by soviet officials as another'trall blazed in the struggle for establishment of long distance flying on a ‘pr-no- tlcal basis. . The flier intends to fly to Fair- banks, Alaska, across the Pole, then head down ac-Ioss Canada to New York. There was a possibility, how- ever, that he would make Chicago his destination, depending upon conditions he meets. Levaneffky was forced back from a similar trip two years ago with a broken feed line. He \\'lll attempt to show the possbility of regular airline passenger service between the Soviet Union and North Amer- ca. Levaneffsky must leave soon or the comparatively favorable season for such flights will have ended. Irate tonlrht he awalbd reports from the Soviet floatlnmpolar camp which lvlrelessed earlier in the day that snow. fog and low visibil- ity were current. l.0.0.F. Convention Opens At Fredericton (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) FREDERICTON, N. 13., Aug. 8- Oddfellows of the Maritime Prov- inces and Newfoundland came to a gaily attired Fredericton today for the 80th anniversary conven- tion of the Grand Lodge. At a meeting of Rebekah dele- gates tonight several candidates received the degree. Miss Ida Mac- Donald, Thorburn, N. 8.. was in the chair. The Rebekah Assemb‘y and Grand Encampment meetings will open tomorrow, with the Grand Lodge sessions starting Wednes- day. More than 500 delegates had registered tonight. . Among veteran Oddfellows here are D. J. Whidden, Woifville, N. 8., a past grand master who has been in the order more than 00 years and Dr. G. W. Whitman, Windsor. N. B. Child Is Reunited With Foster Parents CHICAGO, Aug 0-(AP)-—Wide- eyed with bewilderment little Don- ald Horst was taken from an orphanage today and re-unitad with the Foster parents from Whose home he was spirited away six days loo by his roll moth"- ' The sl-month-old child was re- stored to Martha Horst, the woman he calls "mummy," in the court room of county Judge Edmund K. Jareokl who earlier granted tho l-lwlto his temporary custody pending adoption proceedings. Will Again Attempt to . made a California-Moscow flight \ Yesterday's lieat Wave Sets New Season's High The heat wave over Prince- Ed- , ward Island reached a new high i yesterday. Warren Burns, meteoro- logical official, last night reportetll the mercury by; climbed to 88 de- greee. At eight p. m. the reading was "l4 jdegrees with the barometer rising again after a slight drop indicnt llg continuance of high temperatures today. Only 1.13 inches of rainfall has been recorded at the Elxperi- mental Station here since July 1. lllNBilNlS llARllETlN I hllllKllllklllkE Britain Tests City's Vulnerability to At- tack From Skies In Defence Manoeuv-t res. LONDON. Aug. 9—(AP)—~Grrat Britain tested Londons vulner- , ability to attack from the sklesto- > night with the greatest air defence. manoeuvres in her history. To the inexperienced eye, the mpck warfare was just a realistic pageant, a play battle of flarrs. flashbulbs and cameras. But to Londoners who experi- enced the harrowing night air raids of German gothas and zep- pelirls during the Great ival". i110 thunder of 400 planes dramatized the recent warning to parliament that their city ops the choicest target in the world.’ _ Nineteen squadrons of tiny ‘ fighting craft, 222 p‘alles llke fly’ lng torpedoes, roared across the night skies to drive off 1'12 bomb- ers that flew in from the west in fighting formation. _ V Although London-xvii]: its vast docks, oil depots. and the Eufwld munit'ons works-is the nerve centre of England's defences, most of the targets tonight were in out- lying districts. All of southeast limgland-near- est to continental Europe-WES the object o’ the attacking planes. The “invaded" area was bound by a line from Boston. on the east coast, to Worchesier inland and thence south to 605W"- The area covered most of the dense'y settled southeastem count- ies of England and included, be- sids London. such vital coastal points as the mouth of the Thames River and the great put . of Southampton. The chief obleci of W‘ manoeuvres was to lest the sv-“lfm of voluntary observers and io give new pilots in the expanded Rqvnl Air Force combat experience llll- der realistic conditions. Chief Scout Makes Plea For Peace VQGELENZANG, NPlllPI" lands, Aug 9—iAP)—Lord Baden Powell, chief scout, pleaded K01‘ world peace andsmdwlll today is he bode farewell to 28.000 boy scouts at the close of the fifth world Jamboree. “B91113 or us will never meet again. I am in my 81st year-near the end of my life," the founder of the scout movement said. "You will grow up a-nd be faced with the conflicts of nations. some will talk of war. You will know a better way, discussing amicably and reaching a settlement peaccfullyf’ The Jamboree was attended by i7 Canadian boys. REPLACEB COMMAND OHATHAM, N. B. »—lCPl-— Robbed by the sea when his four- muled schooner Avon Queen sank last March. Captain R. '. Men-an has purchased the arkenilne Reine Marie Stewart at a sh‘P graveyard at Thomaslon. Me. she is the last square tlalzer on the Mains coast and will be le- fitled at Yarmouth, N. 8.. before entering the eoastwlae freight , made as to when the work was ex- 1 peeled to begin nor was the ques- ‘ cussed. ‘the Lord's Wharf property to the “- l ADWAY llEBlSfill MADE AT SESSIUN u CITY lIllllNlIll Will Involve Placing of One Mile of Pave- ln e ll t ill Victoria Park. Tenders will be called for the paving of Victoria Park roadway, the City Council in regular session tlecillctl last light. Pavement will be laid ill accordance iviih specifi- ezlilons prepared b_v City Engineer H. A Alesservey. Tile project will involve the placing of slightly more than one nllle of perlllnuellt work. it was understood. No mention was tloll of financing the project dis- A by-law to amend a by-law for the management and regulation of Victoria Pal-k received a first and second reading at the nleetiug. Sec- tion 12 of the existing by'-law will he repealed and a section substitu- ted. Tllc new provision slates no one sllnll operate a motor vehicle upon the roads or lanes of Victoria Park nveept upon the main drive- way from the Armotiries around the breastwnrk to Brighton Road and on the main cross road leading from Fol-t Edward nortliwnrdy to Brluhtou Road. OFDOSlllOIl to permitting cars to operate on the main driveway around tile Park at all ll0\ll‘S ill the day was voiced by Colin, Hellnossey. The I-"nrk nus practically the only plat-e where lnally mothers could l illli" their children for outdoor re- lcreniiou ‘ll the afternoon. the stwakt-i" said, and he urged that the roadway from Fort Edward to Brighton Road be closed to motor lTlllClfll at least during certain hours of the tiny. Provision was made at the meet- ing for placing concrete sidewalk on ihe west side of North River Road. from Brighton Road to Mt:- Gill Avenue and on the west side of Park Terrace froln Brighton Road tn York Laue. Tile work will be done by clay labor iillder sup- ervision of the C t_v Eltgillecr. Pro- vision for tho work was contained in the permanent work program drawn up at tllc beginning of the season. providing for Resoiutions the illnl-lllu of ilavvnleut between the sidewalk and tile curb on a section of Great George and Queen streets iverc withdrawn by the mover and secontler aitcl" dlSCUSblOn. Coun. hfeLcocl, chairman of the finance committee, and Couns. Foster and Hellllessey‘ all v0 ced opposition to the proposal on the ground that the Colllicll hlld already expended ill excess of what was provided for in the permanent work program for the year. The Clt_v Recorder vlas author- ized to draw up a lease granting Charlottetown Yacht Club. Coun- i'lllOl'.‘- pointed out the desirability for ihe city to rcttliil authority to enllcul ille lease m ille event 0f the property" being required for any general harbor improvement scllvlllc. Ccllllnllllicat oils from residents lilltl ilroperiy olvllers on Bishop and Edward streets requesting the Council to proceed immediately with the pacing of pavement on the streets named were filed. to be considered ulhen the next paving pronranl is being prepared. C n. G. W. McLeod. chairman (Continued on page 9, Col '1) CHURCHILL, Man. Aug. 9- tcPl-On an August day. 1782. a French Fleet under the famous, Admiral Pcrousc, appeared before, Fort Prince of Wales built on the i shore of Hudson Bay to dcfendl thc mouth of the Churchill River and the grim fortress surrendered without a shot being fired. Today, 155 years later, the next- war craft appeared before the old fortress. It was His Majesty's Sloop Scarborough. Bite steamed slowly under lla nneient guns and landed in the modern harbor of Churchill within the shadow of ille lowering while grain elevator. ‘The ships lll the harbor dipped trade. a1 Exhibitionm Aug their flags as the 5l00p went by. _....__,. 1O PAGES Churchill Welcomes Visit Of First Warship Since I782 ust 1 Annual Sulncrlptlon lJsiIvrn-ll 56.00 B1 Iail-IJJLL, $4.0m Cunlnlu and ll. B. 85.00 WS WRITER CorrespbhdentlOf “Times” Ordered To Quit Country RetaliatoryActionTaken By Nazis For Expulsion Of Germ a n News- Writers From England. LONDON, Aug. 9~---((‘l’) (lermnlvv tnrlny" ordered the Berlin correspondent of the London ‘limes to lettvc ihe country within two weeks and zl spolit-slllztn fur the world- fnmous newspaper stated that the correspondent would not be replnced-“at the dictation of the Nazis". The Nazi Reich protested against (lrellt Britain's ex- pulsion of three German coriespilnrlellis lllltl their tit-lion zlizainst Norman l‘:l)l)illl, Berlin ('l)l'i't'.<|)lJll(li‘llt for the Times since 1925, was in retaliation for ll'l1ll expulsion. Through the Iiriiish Foreign Ulllte the 'l‘illles was in- formed that. the German (loverllnlcni ivzlllit-ll at Times cor- respondent in Ilerlin "who will pay less iltlelltion to work considered here as tvivialities and more llllUllllUfl to what is important.” . A Times spokesman said: “We are not going to send a man to Berlin at the dictation of the Nazis. Unless the Germans suffer an attack of sense within the next few day's and keep Ebbuit we will leave the Berlin post vac- ant." It is believed Dr. E. Woerirlann, German charge daifaires in the absence on holidays of Ambassa- dor Von Ribbentrop, disclosed the German reprlsal when he visited Lord Halifax, acting foreign sec- ._. ___ . ..._.__= Judge Arsenault To Be Speaker At retary, to protest the expulsion of ' l ' the German correspondents. | G a t’ An authoritative source indicated l the German action would not al- , ST , ,1,“ w n 9___ fer the refusal of the Hollie Office, y (C3,; Iffiiififlda‘ 'A>,_';,,“1An:8‘i1_on‘ an“°un°ed_ last’ fwflfli‘ ‘o6 “may l the lllfUJ Alaliilllle Provuices, labor pflmns o “we Cub" ‘ (Quebec null NPW Elltlflilil SLIIMS correspondents. two of whom fll- H“ Um “P, “Hm, w my m‘, 10m ready have left England. ‘ xmmfi‘, ‘Agndgli (Ilmhoynm Com l The govemment offered no ex- , planation. The Evening Standarth f‘ W. _, A , i met “we new, the‘ "3§‘..:l“$$if;§‘é;f:“;€§3 “Em m‘ the 55ml" “am .1 y f, lo fli‘il"l‘ w llloior our tonlorrou l‘ the m“? ha“? been gm L‘ 1° f evening - convention 1h heli espionage it is better that tit): under n‘ _ \ 0f La Sock,‘ public ‘should be wm so ma“ "m? Nilllflllille L somption. Mr. Jus- the present atmosphere of uneasy ‘ m‘, A T‘ Lflfiflmu Monmom u speculation should exist. ‘ ‘ n“, ,,,.(,_\_,(t__n,4 In tile absence of speculiuion, m!” F mw,__.\. w“ 0pm Wmob m“ Ewmng Siimd?“ snidlhuwild‘: jrow lllOl'l‘lllL" ivlill celebration ol PFbllClkYI 15 lielng lfivmcitgg,‘ 35;“ lpfllllllltill hluh lllilsg by Archbish- o all aarm ng c ara . — ,op L. J. A. Aieinnson. lvloncton. fiver: tlt ldld notialuesllm‘ ‘he WSW Rt. Rev. l’. A. (Jllilssoll. Bishop of ice o tle expusons. Cllrlihnnl. wl.1 di~l.\er zht- sermon. Germany's protest followed a A h m, me CW0 mug“ weekend conference between mcnl- em - » _-_— . ' '- beffl 0f the German Emba“? “an (Continued on page 9, Col. 6) and the Ambasrador at Rcnfrew, Scotland. MAKE HAY ‘tlllltc (its y Sun shines AND you 1* Werner vVorlflCrome, correspon: won't Hove to bouaow AN uhBRELtA when u RAlNS! (Continued on page 9. Col. B) Retired Banker Dies At Halifax HALIFAX, Aug 9—(CPl—- Doug- ald Macgilvray, outstanding in till.- business and financial life of tho Maritime; and Nevvfoulltlland until his retirement, first n5 superintend- ant of the Canadian Batik of Commerce and inter as EPlli-‘Ffll manager of the Eastern Trust Conlpally, died hcre today. He was 75 years old. - Born on a farm near Coiling- wood. Ont, the son of pioneering parent/s who had come from Scol- lalld to make a home for them- selves in Canada, he elllorerl the ‘chillies? “T‘S.oi?ll"“;ll“ “B112? Zl w-'ru<>l=»<tlc>el<*i\i» ysiliwififi l6. Hi5 rise was rapid and certain. '- ‘\"“_“'Un‘_'_', xflflzdnull“ ‘H Hi. eapiczty for inking pains and (“MN ‘mg,’ V.’ his sound judgement won the rou- 50 U; ngriiilon of his silperiors. 48 70 t i at: 7o Winnipeg till 8O ‘lurtnlltl till 31 Ottawa "l ml hlollirrill Til 34 Quebec 153 33 5' ' t‘ Julill ill 3"» H l2 G3 3“ L llultfoivn 68 98 The Louis Drcvfils, freighter here \l1 lztue Provinces: Llgh‘. t4 lllotillurc southwest ivliltls: pilrtl! cloud)‘ tutti ivarill Vvllll nluvll fCI sclil tcred thunder- loadlng wheat dpped its French Trl-Color. The RMB. Nascople, re-igreovilsionlng here for its long i -'l;‘l<l“_(llll'fll'flllly cru nto ihe northern Al-i-zle. l‘ " '~‘~ . . - ll ti i l‘ tll.s afternoon at 1.11 as: the ands-ans Bay Compmlys and ‘lfllmflllfflw morning at L36- o er boats jouled in the welcome. Sun N“ 1m; Hum“: M 7M and Tile Scarborough was bathed in rhob ,‘nmnrro“. mvynlng m, 45¢; sunshine as she came ollt of Hud- F“, (manor moon Ffldm; Au‘; son Bay into the harbor. Her m M8 I, m. Commander. captain Baxter. was ' Sumlnrsitle tide eitzlitccn min- Umeled b? 7°" Commlmd" W R- lites Inter lllnll Charlottetown. Meadows and later the captains rm» can ll‘ of the other ships paid Cflllftffly ""',‘,','_'"|_,‘,', vlaita. The Sloop will remain at n. nod t-Yrwpf "4 1'1)’. slilYllllI -Il||_\ Churchill about a week. The Nasmpie is expected to sail for the north Friday, l‘! in P-‘ept. fl-“nmlny, Tllusilnf lIIYlI \.lllifllil," ""11 lv-nH-I liar-lei» n! i n. m, iiml lrmen Iklrnu-n- lino ut ILIJ n. m. 6to 20a. c ;£>_‘-T'l\Qt/r 15$» l