MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN i-i Rejoice with them that rejoice; for thus you will increase your joy and not defraud your neighbour, m ghnlottstown Guardian Two Uuntl “up” Gnordlnn. Founded ill’! WI/ ///' The People's Paper Covers Prince iitiWfifdiilSlflilil Like the Dew CHARIDTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1936 10 PAGES MAXIMS OFA MERE liiAN Weep with them that ivecp; fol the tears of pity will sweeten your own cup oi life. Anrluul Subscription llcllvereil $4.00 liy Mull (Jlilliuiu and U. S. A. $1.50 lllslllicclllls lllllfilllllll British Troops Suffer n0 Casualties. Mart- ial Law Looms. il-i‘. iiy Guardian's Special Wire) lEiiiifiAilildii, Sept. 24—i(.‘.l'.)— [pity-four Arabs were killed in a ,p_-h with British troops and ranting planes near Jenin todlry. Xiglitfllll haitell the fighting. on.» plane was shot down and the pllut token to a hospital, but ill; liritisli troops suffered no litallties. ' A Lieutenant was injured in an- ltller engagement near ilebrun, the Jewish agency reported. i With Licut. General J. S. Dill or- plllzillg a fnrce of 30.000 men, iii- rilirling reinforcements enroute [mm England. the Jewish 'l‘ele- graphic Agency said it had learned ttllably that martini law will be pipclaiiilfll Sept. 27 unless the ilab gcill-rai strike is ended by thut ilit‘. COMING ‘EVENTS "Show Cuiioe C-tvc Frltluy. L-Uilllti-Li-‘Z-l-lll. "Tnlilliss-Zvit. Stcwnrt Saturday. L-tl63ti- $24-21. itctown i-iospitul Alilillul . Tea October 2t-iili lillil L-ti73Ll-25-2: -ld United Church Plintly ‘ "tiny, September 26th at L-tMllLZ-il-IZ-Llfl. "The concert advvrtiscd for Mt. Albion “iii tonight is postponed llillll Milllilliy night next. L-6745—9-25-1i "HDPP River prcscuis “The ilirxl oi tlic Lliiv" lit Corraiii Blllin Fflflli)‘, SupLiJlllbCi’ 25th, L-GGGZ-Q-ZLi-‘il. "llcnuirilll Society Meeting nt lvltlnuniciit tlrounds, ltioiidny". Sept- tllih.-l?o i’. Ni. By order. L-GVLEO-D-ZTi-iil. "Bulihiuflv Woliiclrs Institute Chicken Sxippvi" nt Guy S:r\v.lrt's i'r.l lhll, on ’I'hursdil;v. Oct. lFl. lo-tiTiLi-il-LIS-Lll "Supcriors dailcc hlilflhillllilhfi iilicl, Slnnhopc, Friday rhiptclilbcl" hill. Charlottetown Orclivstrll iii iiiclidnncc. L-tlllil-Q-ilé-Lll ‘ Special Meeting-- Full lit t curl- lficcilf members Clilll'lolii~t<r.iil Pro- Eii-"ilrc Club rcqucstcd to mtct at 9' HP-tlilliild Arc, 8 o'clock ililr. < \'t‘!l- "ti. important business, L-tlili-li "MPPiiiJg of tlic Ladies Auxili- iil’ lo tlic Canadian Lcuioli l3. lil, 5.1.. will be hold in the lmpioll "ill next I-‘rldliy evening lit 7.1m L-oiiu-il P"i"nrmers in the East River Dls- i it Sliililiiiig Club, who have hogs ‘Filly for market please list. with W Sccictrlry, Hollis Jenkins, Mt. ilerbert, IOOi-t AfMrltlncb Races at Mac- dT-llllfs Track Kcnsingtnn, Moli- Pzy Oct 12th. Four Classes. Good i195 in each class. Address ll» inquires to Myron MacArthiir, "Sinston. L-874i-25-30—2i "Annual Meeting oi Ccntrlll Worms Club will be held in the all Rt. Brcadslhane, Monday eyeli- fi- sclitelnim 2am, at s (Yclcok. l Iiddition to a consideration oi mirkfliiiti problems, ii. discussion “Weds and feeding practices will iiliwe under the leadership of v W. Clay of the Dominion Live- ;~°ik Branch. All farmers invited " ittsiid. L-ti134-2i {Livestock Marketing Board “u?! through local shipping ' ‘ dim“! week oi September h- as follows: Tuesday: lifter- L-6736-25-2i I°°"- Kerisington, Montague. ~iil'illilill1. Souris, Melville. Uigg: idmfiiflyl iorenoon Wlltshirc. ‘iiintcr River, Bmidulbnnc; 12-3; many. Please list. with lflcill secre- 9‘ and assist in. assembling W: but. L-oias-u LAim At Sweden 1.. 0...... Flight Trnns-lfllatitii: flight from New York to Siockholln, in their native Svrcdt-il, is the goal of Kurt Bjorkvlili, pliut, and the smiling Biirillims i-Ilut vnn DiiXCll-FIIIBCKP. lluiuu ill top photo ill the cock- pit. of their plunc. ill lower photo i5 Closing The ijlklnll frGlghL revenues of the Cntizidiull i allways havc been re- (luffd mil-iv ri-zhl lliilliou dollars per allliuui by competition of trucks tiprrziiilig oli tlic highways. and the tiulnllgc. to the iirt imsitiflii of tlic railways is approximately ihiriv ftuu- million dollars l)?!‘ 5'9"- Th".<c figure.» wicre placed bcforc the Maritime Board of ‘Prado at the MGREBREAKS Milli lAl. REPURTEI] Ralph Marimn and Raymond Arfjqlflult‘ simlmersidc, prisoners ln tlic Prince County Jail servins rcntclicrs for breaking and enter- ing. lire llllc-zcd to have escaped from ult- juil about midriizht Wed- nesday. tlruistllblc Wliitc of the Siuilnlclslilc police. “hell "laid"! his rounds about 4 o'clock 'I‘l'lurs- day nlorniris. llrrcsicd hiflvifli" 1°‘ being drlllik. Oil taking him to the jail he found tlic door to the furnace room llliii lrrcii l<ii'<'*‘<i'°P“"' Arscnllult had lilllp ~-!l.\' Ymiriwd o! his own accord utlore tlic blink‘ was riscovercd. Investigation by tlu: .\li‘\ii\i-l‘d Police yesterday lcd to 4'l\.\l'l‘,|'i\' 0i escape ncilig llild tiglillht both tl‘."li. They will appear before Could)’ Magistrate Darby this mornuiiy. Two other jail breaks within rc- cent. weeks have occurred. 01W from the Georgetown Jnil, the oili- cr from the Queens County iii- stltutioii. in the latter case, ulhru occurred last Friday. the culprit. 4mm R-idse. is still at inse- Uf The Maritime Board ‘Qf Trade ,cltis=illg scssioll of its tlillllldl ltli‘U'.— ‘ the piano. which riarmwly escaped damage when the carburetor burst into flames out Roosevelt Field, L. i., during tests before the takeoff. The ship carries a captivity load of ‘I50 g lion of gasoline. Session lug ll:‘l'(‘ yesterday ill an llddixess by S. W. Flill'\VCiitll'-‘i‘. Dircc.or of Burmu of Economics, Cliiindinli 44 ARAQS KILLED 11v PAL l i Nrltioilal Railways. "The rnilivrlys are quite capliblci of adjusting themselves to tlic new i conditions." continued Mr. air» \vr_i;tll~l:l~_ “if there is o. fair field and no favour. No agency, which on the nvcrligc can transport freight nt a cost of less than one cent. per ton per luilc nevd have grcllt fear of a competitive rtgcncy whggc flvcrirm‘ economic cost for transportation D01‘ i011 D01‘ mil‘? 1S llflifly five cents. In the adjust- ment to chrlnpcd conditions how- ever, our ideals regarding railways and their functions will need sub- stnntinl modification." . The railways he said, were regu- lated in tlic public interest both as to rates rind services, and hnd t0 prgvlde for the equalization of rates to markets over wide areas, the dc- velopmcnt. of new ‘terriories, the encouragement of basic industries by freight rates, lower than coin- mercially justifiable, and the maln- teriancc of regular services, even in cases where there was no profit in doing so. The general princliili? in effect was that the railway mil" take the rough with the smooth, and if it; cost millions of dollars to keep a railway open during the winter season, the justification for this was that the loss could be rc- couped from next summers busi- ncss. Frequently also railways were called upon to mnkc special coli- cessions in rates to Rivet i-Pmi-‘IOF- nry distressed conditions such as drought. These special burdens curried by the railways were not. onerous so long as the railways were able to (Oonliimea an IIUQQ p,“ SINU ' JAPANESE TENSIIIN LESS AlllllELkEPllRT Shanghai Nationals, However Call for Additional T r o o p Protection. A By Morris J. Harris Copyright 1930 by the Associated Prom SHANGHAI. Sept. 25.—(F‘riday)—— (CW-Japanese residents of Shang- hai, fearful of more trouble from Chinese partisans, today urged their . government to send additional arm- ed forces to "protect lives and property." The Japanese-Chinese situation in shanghai today was somewhat less acute, but the Japanese by-word in Shanghai was defined by a. Tokyo naval attache: "Action before words." With Japanese blue-jackets bar- ring everyone from the Holigkew section oi the international settle- ment nuthoritics pressed investiga- tion of the shooting of three Jap- anese marines in Shanghai Wed- nesday night-an incident which caused the Japanese to declare mar- tini law over large areas of the Chinese metropolis. One of the marines was wound- ccl fatally. The other two today were said to be recovering. Apprchensive foreigners were or- dered to Stltlld by. ready for em- ergency duty in the event of furth- er incidents. The foreigners were banded together in the reserve force of tlic international settle- ment volunteer defence corps, num- bering 1,500 men. Chinese today protested Japanese patrol of the, Chinese area of Shanghai-but. their protests fell on deaf ertrs. . TOKYO, Sept. 24—(AP) - The Japanese Government today con- sidered insisting that Chiang Kai- Shek, military dictator of China, himself settle the Sine-Japanese in- cidents which caused Japanese martial law over ll large area of Shrirlghlirs international settle- mcnt. Japanese Government tndliy asserted that Japanese- Chincse relations were the most strained since 1932 when the Jap- nncse shelled Shanghai and de- molished Chapel. JEPBXICBG officials Urge Adequate liefense- Policy TORONTO, Sept. 24- CPi-Tht Canadian Corps Association M i1 special nlcctiiig tonight. asked the Dominion Government to declare its policy with reference to Can- adian defence and Empire responsi- bilityf The Association, representing 125 former Canadian units and some 60,000 veterans, urged an "awaken- ing" of the people, by education to lln understanding of "the present serious situation." It went on record supportinl; 8n “adequate defence policy" and uri- dertaking. ris a "nucleus of trained men to cicfend this country from the dangers which threaten our national and Empire existence." Re - elected MR- J. P. BILLION, llicll lllloil llllllllll rolls; M E E _l l ll l Reports Submitted at Auntie} Session of Organization. c Relwrtiiig B. substantial iiicrczisc in membership during tlic past Charlottetown Branch of tlic Czin- adlail Legion rtt tlic aiilzuill meet- 1118 135i? night urged that illciliber- 5111i) drive be continued until "one hundred per cent. of the returned men were enrolled." President Hi1. lion was re-elected and Dr. I-i. D. Johnson was elected honornly pre- sident. Until the full liielnbcrslilil object. 0i the organization was achieved, “we cannot llopc to exert tho ill- flueilce which we need to secure for the Returned Soldier, the rights and privileges to which lie is cil- titiccl.’ ‘tile prcsitlciit sciici. Reviewing the past year, Mr. Hilllon said that committees from and also Provincial Government and City Council ,iil tlic interests of the Legion in employment of itc- lCOniiijlffiOfl L E Gale Sweeps llown 0n Nova Scotia HALIFAX, Sept. 24 -Storm signals ivarnlng seamen and ntlicrs of appmzlcillng hcnvy easterly gzilcs were hoisted aiolig the . of Nova Scotia tonight. High winds were felt in Halifax from l0 o'clock on rind tlic vrlciciiyi \\'LlS lu- creasing toward midnight. For the second time in n wcck fruitgrowcrs of the Aliuilptilis Valley were worried. Willi more than $2,000,000 worth of nlllilPs still on their trees they could only hope the storm would not hit the fruit belt. The tropical hurricane which swept the Atlantic seaboard lzlst wcck caused only minor dlinllige hi the valley, although four l)i‘l'St)llS were drowned iii other parzs of Nova Scolds. Salada Orange Pekoe Blend is Incomparable in flavour ‘ISA 817 year, President John I-iillluii of tlic ' the XXCCIIUVC united on rcprcstilitrl- j tivcs of tlic Dominion GO\'Ol‘li!ll(‘lli. ' ES 171w; FIGHTING lllillcl cills lsillllilllllr rulllllllllcl i PresentsPlanto League. Mussolini l Urged to Hasten Ethiopian Conquest. (By JOSEPH E. SHARKEY) (Associated Press Foreign Staff) l (A. l’. By Guardian's Special Wircl l GENEVA, Sept. 24—France to- ‘night presented s. plan for a ina- gue of Nations disarmament con- ference ivhilc the Lcnguc moved to prcvciit inflammatory speeches froln its rostrum. lfrunce officially notified the League Assembly Steering Com- mittee that it. would propose con- vocation of the gcncral committee as a.’ dlszlrnlnmciit conference. The Committee, meanwhile, outhorlzd. President Saavedra Llrllnlls to halt, any speaker whom lie thinks guilty of utterances liable to affect adversely interna- tional relations Prclnicr HTIlSSOlllH of Ittly, it was rcprirtcd, has been advised by his counsellors to hurry the com- plete conquest of Ethiopia to fortify his Cl"'llilll(ll~l that. Iknpcror Haile Scltls 0's (lclcgolioii 'be excluded from tlic Lclipllt‘, as then tlic Ncgus would have no further claim to a. cnpltul. such us Gore. ‘ The Ncgtis ims said to rvcognize tho dzingci" and to be preparing a 1 lust-ditch stnnd to maintain a. rlinlnl. however tiny. in Ethiopia. llriiiti Selassie lcft tonight for Lon- tliili. Aiusstilini was told, informed source's said, that the League's vote yesterday to recognize the Ethitip ii ticlglition and to rcject tho credentials committee's pro- posal flint tlic World Court be ask- cd to rule on Ethiopia's member- ship, lvus actually zlri Itliliun vic- tory. 1 Some lenders were convinced. it. was reported zlltihoritritivcly, that the World Court. would have ruled against. Itnly, hitlsstililii wus 2l])l)i'lSt‘(l of this fiXlllflllilllirll. ilrgcd to rcluniti in the Ilrnyrilc and lct time solve the qllrlnlnzl. Although Il Ducc still ignored the Lmrigue Assembly meeting an Iwilion was clctttcd as one of the six \li.‘L‘ prcsldcnts. Delegates re- garded this zis l1. manifestation of good-will towlirti Italy and rm ef- fort to salve tlle sting of seating Eilillipia. O1hcr vicr prcsidciicics were won by Cllnndn, rhiillec, Britain Yugo- ill. and Rilssin. s1 Missionary Society Elects Officers ilALiFAX, Sept. 24-‘10. P.)— l-lis owl-go Ross of Fredericton um; elected president. of tlic Wulucl " Missionary Society, East- cru Division, ol the Presbyterian ClHllCll in Cal ~ " at tlic conclusion oi‘ the annual s on hero today. Mrs. Charles D.l\1.\‘ of New Glas- gnvr. N. S. \\'llS i-itirfcd treasurer; Mrs. James Poricoils of Saint John. recording SDCICHIIY liiid Miss Annie Murrayof NOW (llusgolv. corres- pordilig sccrctlliy. The llciv \'lk‘i"]llltslilUlllh are Mrs. W. Clarke Elliott, FvlltvPX, N. 13.. rc- l ill-lug prtxwidrlil; .\h.~. .i. s. McLean. l Blldiieck, NS: .\lr.\ ll. ltUlilriOll.‘ Plllnscialc, NS; null .\ir.~. Donald McLean, Chnrloitetiluil Mention of tlic cclcbrniions in- WALL OF WA TER HAL TS AD VANCE 01v MADRID lDam LEo-gsed On fAdvancingRebels iWest Of Capital Many Believed Drowned. Insurg- ents Also Handed Setback On Maqueda Front. (By The Canadian Press) An zivalanchc of writer loosed from Albcrche dam, the Spanish (lovcrnmcut announced last night. swept to their death mzlny insurer-iii troops cncllmpcd to the west of Mad- rid. The Government sllld it broke the dam as a tlcfcnsive measure as the insure-cut columns neared Madrid. The (lovcrnmcnt nlilitill ill-o 15.1w the insurgents a sharp setback on the dillqilcriu trout stiuthwcst of Madrid. driv- ingdthcm back nearly four miles alone," the Bizldrid-Lerida roa . _The Government also rccrlicrcll thc town of 'l‘lli'i'ij0s,. 1S miles northwest of Tillcdo whcrc (loverunlent troops strug- gled to wipe out those insurgents alive in the besieged Alcazzlr. , ‘ (By ll. E. KNOBLAIIGHI i W “m” lCnqLrriglit. isrlo, The filssoi-intcd A .i'l'(*>sl , i\ MADRID. _ ~A io-rool, ilvall of \\'(‘i'.(‘l‘, rclcnsi-tl fromfT u Albcrche (llilil by G\’)'.'(‘i'llitll'll'. forces, soslrcti dozvli Oil n <‘iil‘<llilil, - of Fascists ndvhiiciilg oll Allclizdl _ and swept. many of thcm to tl~ ‘ll’ deaths, it, ivrls reprint-d 1:13.. {Qyigéhg The flood, suwcpillg down frullll the lifted (lain gates ntur Still‘. Miirtin dc Valdciglr. Li. .li)..'lll. lttli miles west of the czipilal, inillidllt- l New Brunswick Grow- ers Receive $2 a clarrcl. ST‘. JOHN, S"pt. 24—-\\'i‘.h 30,000 ed a Fascia can‘? 1° 1‘ (“Pm 01 10 i’ larlrrcls of cfrtificd sccd’ potatoq fem" ulrcndy booked for shipment The CrCVCHLIllEllL l‘ mrtcd l0 llll‘ mrmmh ._,_ n! 5am, John desperate measure iii an llttr-nlp; tr) fm. m0 Amm, , Bnuls,\\,lck "licl one SCCIlilIZ of drive on illt‘ cuplilil. _ Most of tlic insurgents‘ ltllltnzini-j .. tion was l‘(“,‘i0l".(‘(i ruined. I 'I'h"y said they lJtlICVCtl 111v v the Fll- ists‘ the best price ilirl: they have rc- < illllt‘ of the yvnr in v factor in bol- had been llitllidzitcd and go m, .0 ,1“, ,),.(,._.l,,.‘L stores C’! “Liurgmz guns “ml i""‘°k*~ fzgzlrv of S2 a barrel has been ~- l i l. ._ mules and noises lint. .>cc.. Cit. m0 090mm: up of me Argo,“ stroycd Virtually all (lblC-IX ‘ tween tlic ages of lll drafted to the llllllllli, as the gO\'\‘l'.l"illl’3ll; silli ii (l. Kurt‘? before has New k shipped SFYI potatoes- or ‘_.l‘.)l(‘ p ' South Anlcrico. in tYiltllllf‘ . iltitics. E‘ ' rnl other sliiptnciits of seed ' b t John w.» Argcliwnc with- En-dcntly “ion ' 1 " m“ ill tlic next fcxv xvvclzs There is lll‘g~‘fl('y of Sllij)lllli_ ill ill . ti‘ n. a DH“. . M slnpllv.x.ls_ m attack on 'i‘olctli, tni- giilifllllliil‘ ' , Brazil launched a crnui‘.rr-tiiitiisivti from Santa Cruz tlisll ltrtanlrlr \\'ll.\'ll ‘will; , reported 1o llJiKL‘ .\.\\'t1)‘. lll‘: AIUOJIS‘ bilCk through Qiii: Jllilt) Li) DQQR hiuquctlli 0F oPpERfuNk-YY IUCBELS DRIVEN BACK mas NIT OPEN .' KEEP KNOCKINGJ. QUISAIONDO. SPAIN, Scpi. 2i - ‘i Spanish GUYClTllllVll‘. unri- ihc ilisilrgents ll sliurip .\i“l)llt'l‘. oil fircvs ‘\\ \ .~ the Itiuquctii trrili: .\‘(ill'.ll\\'(.\'. oi Madrid iOdllX. (ll‘.\lll" 111ml bzlck nearly foul‘ illllvs ziloizs: '12" .\.ll(l— rid-Lcritln rolltl. At tlic suliic iillli‘, pressure on 'l‘oli-.ln uz. thr- Govcrnln" .. town of TtTl . i.’- ivi-si. of Toledo uztrr n ll. fighting tluirc. Grlvcrtiluciit lil'l.l‘i'..< ilx-lnlvil vi- . day's lighting briikc tlic lint-l; iii t-lie Fascist advance mi illri hiiipicdzi ‘ front, niicr tlic l been siivctnasfiil c ti; llliil = :\i.\i'i|lilll‘~ iiust-slt-ilii; “iiitltl and .hi\ work lll gnlrs uitii rain and much fog. connection with tlic unveiling of the McGi-egor Cliirll lit made in the historical report pres- ented by ltirs. W. A. Stewart of Charlottetown. The report included n resume of the life plrlimcnts of Dr. Jzliucs McGrcgol‘ who came to Nova. Scotla as a imlmlomry loo mil-s m. plow“ was l tect them. prliillllllaijv (ll'l\\‘. .ti\\lirti Mzidrld VL-OKONTO‘ gov-N gy,__\hnnnum and Tnlpdo‘ ‘land lll.i.\‘.llilllll lt‘illlli‘l‘fliiil'(‘.<I "*"--—- r _ M _- -- ~ Mao is , , _ _ _ _ _ ~25 so Fascist Hostages l - - - - - o.» o _ m»... -~ H - -- - -~'.‘ii o: Face Certain Death -— — -— — --—~‘i r ‘lklrnliii: — — — — -— - ll‘. (iii ‘Oigiivll - -- —- — - ---~l<l m‘. BILBAO, SPAlN, thin 2i no , ~\l~11‘i'i‘=\1 ~ — -— — m Y” Warship to Snliit Jcnu Dc l..ll.'. Sim“ ‘him _' - T‘ — " ' "3 '3“ Franc-cl»-tAPi-~1~‘<iiu" zlluu-ailit’. i‘ il-‘hidx '* " '-' ~ "' "5 ‘l4 sis lioslnucs. liiitlillctl ztbouiil .'.‘ll',r- (‘h1‘l’l‘>li‘ Vlwil '— "' -* A l!" l-‘i alid lil pristills llcrc, ucrc boll-veil ‘Q‘"'""“ ' " " - - n“ " ""3 7' tonight virtually (‘\Illtlt‘lllll(‘fl to ma!‘ "d" ml‘ “P l i‘ 1i i" ‘l l" "ml dcatli with illt‘ filllilrr oi tlic iiilcr- i i“i“°1'="“\' "l"? "- nrltionnl Red Crox uttculpis l" pro- i 5"“ W“ 13W‘ or “ ~ t 33 ‘ and rises llilllOii'i\_\ llliillllliil’ til E».:'rl. Thrce hostage ships were brought 11W nil-iitvi‘ iiiviii! Wvdiivriliiik closer to the aviation flcld mid the Ofl- 7- 333 -'\- 3T- munltlmls plgnt, 51m- gm-gels o; Silillliltlriilt‘ ttilc lilnllnuics ‘may rind accom- i Fascist gunners if thcy cnrly out lliiili (‘PHI Tlf'~"‘~l'il- rill: (in l'i‘.llil\' tlicir threat of a lniiiL sen and air bombardment of this Government- hold city at i. mm. tomorrow. iletnen liiirrien U.l.'i .-\. M. I l‘. llq {Llli i'. it. Lem-es Tnrmentlns ll A. M. 2.55 I. I, 6.46 P. I. Ddh one» Sunday.