mr i 4 _ l X, r ’\‘» ,i l »- 1 ` 1 i i {,‘€¢o ,~ . .»"‘ v: .- and PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE - ~ ' ._ .wi 1. ». ~ »». .-1,-‘.i ‘ _'vi Y-if l 1 V-This column ll reserved for lows of' local interest but advtn-2:32; gg 0 horny nature any be gg I cunts a word strictly payable in advance. -PBAUIICE Tennis _ Balls, 250 each at_Brace’s. . L-B545-7-18-21. '-KODAKS ` at reduced prices. Films finished. Taylor Drug Co., KGDBIDBWB- 7-13-tf. ‘ -CONSERVATIVE C0lVl.MI’1'l'EE ROOMS located in G. R. Mao.. Qua-rrle’s Building, Summer Bt., Sumrnerside. ' L-8462-7-I7-Bi -FOX WATERING and feeding pans. the right style and kind, at Brace’5. L-8545-7-18-ZL -IMIPROVED -- Mr. Jerry Doli- cette, who became ill on Monday ev- ening is now a little improved.-S. -ICE CREAM FESTIVAL on ,Kensington School Grounds Satur- day evening, July 20th. Bill Game at 6,30. Musical Program on grounds. Proceeds for activities of School Improvement Society. ' L-8436-'1-1"l-21. -FOR. RENT-August first, sev- an» room house, '12 Fitzroy Street, hot water heating, modem conven- iences. P. L. Bowness. ' L-8558-7-4-9-11-16. -SPEND YQUR WEEKENDS at Harbour View Cabins. Cool, sanitary and comfortable. Phone 251-2, Summerside, for reserva- tions. L-84.91-7-18-41 --ENGAGEMENT. - Mr. Fred Lord of Tryon announces the an- gagement of his daughter, Edith to Mr. Herbert Wardell of Edmonton, Alta. The mariage to take place August 31st in Edmonton. L-8482-'i-18-li. -nasmanaa srrolta Pao! PERTY FOR. SALE at Miscouche. Lgrge store and warehouses, steam heat and- electric lights, excellent location. May be purchased at a baigaln. For particulars, apply to Stewart & Lewis, Solocitors, Sum- merside. L-8414-7-16-i8-21. -MOTOKED FR/OIM HOLLY- WOOD - Mrs. Harold H. Sillickcr and her two children, Mary and John, motored from Hollywood. Calif., to spend the summer with Island relatives. They are the guests of their grandmother, Mrs. John Billicker and uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. James E. Sullivan, Wilmot Valle?-B. -RETURNED HOME-Dr. J. G. -'f\»‘mbs, who has been in Lomdon, England, arrived on Saturday night and joined his wife and little son David, who have been staying with her parents, Et. A. W. Leai/i and Mrs. Lcard of Summerside during her husband's absence.-S. -Mrs. Ronald D. McDonald, her daughter Mrs. Anne O‘Malley, and two interesting grand-children, Mary and Ronnie O‘Malle;, return- sd last week to their respective .homes in Boston, Mass, after spending- a vcry pleasant vacation with their numerous relatives and friends on the Island. 'I'hls was Mrs. O’Malley’s second visit to the Island and she was greatly impres- sed with .its beautiful scenery at this season of the year. » --MISCELLANEOUS SIl0WER-- A very large number of the girl 'friends oi’ Miss Irene Gaudet met at the home of Mrs. Leo Wood to ,tender her a miscellaneous shower in honour of her approaching marri- age. The living rooms were taste- ‘fully decorated for the occasion. The dainty gifts were opened by Miss Mary MacNeiil and Miss Mar- garet Wedge. Miss Gaudet replied in a few well-chosen words to the ‘kind wishes expressed, A very dainty lunch was served. Assisting the hos- tess were Miss Cordelia Arsenault. Misa clara MacNeiil and Miss Mar- fgal-et Wedge. Music amd games whiled away the happy hours until it was time to return home.-S. --REBUILDING DELAYED-It is fair# "ri: ~“f."~e..‘°.; ng o ummers e g ‘fgslioolhhasbréot eyet commenced. The ay as n caused through the --failure of the School Board and In- surance Company to agree on a act- -ftlernent. The amount involved is $25,000.00 and iiris expected ~ vo to go to srbl ation.. This will require some weeks and there is xi? iitlésle lgnpa that the school will ' ‘ FSH ' Y September. In the meantime that part of the building I which was not burned, but which is` etposed to the elements is not im- proving by this treatment. 'rhg ¢lz,. izens sincerely hope that an amie- " able settlement will be arrived nt in l the very near future.--S, ‘J -Mr. and Mrs. lklward Stevens of Moncton spent the weak-end in Summerside, guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Goss. Mrs. Stephen Mamem 'olf°Alma, Lot 3, was also allvisitcr over the week-end.-B. - P. L. BOWIIESS » JUNBBAI. Dml_C'l0l|. and inmatmim ,_ Prince County Hospital * -i .. Ambulance indharge ii ~ lummcnide mid Bodega ' fi _ Phono ll-I. ,, ,_ \-. ¢~ , 1 1 1555 ‘_ 5;, T” ht; ....~ ' .W ,‘_,_ *__ t ~. . A , -ICE CREAM SOCIAL at Kel- aunts, the Misses Hunt of Summer side.-8. T%lv?l»NED HOME - MI. End _ . . ettona.ndMis_sIlene M. 1,-lei., .ii oi si. ion., N. B., wi... Buffalo Crew Win ave been spending a pleasant holl- day an the Island, retumed home Eig°ht,oa|»-ed Race this week. Last week they were guessi:iois.t_gie Granville House, Bum- mer e ‘ ' (C.P. By Gum-diau's Special Wire) HALIFAX, Jllly I7 - Sm00tll' Jo'h":‘Ell7"rCFoR' ST' 'low' ”"M"‘~ stroking oarsmen from Buffalo’s _,hm 'K l°““°s'§’“_,‘§ 25”” M* west side athletic club earned on husbyfg wg; l_eéen‘;l“ P13 gg’ the honors in today‘s rodeo week a 1 ' y ‘weve e regatta, winning an international DDO ntment of Asistant Manager _ .- eight oared race and qualify.rig for of the Provincial Bank in that city. salurda .S “nal of the lom._0&..ed Mrs. Cameron spent the week-end event wllthouowxswam ‘ with Mrs. Alexander Cameron of ~ "mm Starting easily on the Noi-th`West S ersiders' Arm 1 1-2 mile course. the North _ American champion eight with VISITING IN SUMMERSIDE- ,nn Irvin Tmebel as coxswain Mr. and Mrs. Kinch, arents of y g . cmd Kmch of the gmmnersme kept pace stead.ly in fourth place Polloo FM.oo_ arrived from Boston until nearly a mile had been cov- on Tuesday on a visit to the Island. ered' than pulled up graduauy f'° Tl-,oy were oooompanled by then, cross the line first on a sensational daughter, Mrs. MacKinnon and spurt that 5°” them the "Ce by llmo mn, Jomo_,_ Thou. nelce' Miss close to two length over a picked 5,155, Moms” also oooompmlod Halifax crew. mom W-llllo ln summomlde they Rowing an eight-oared shell in ' re pats' f M _Rh _ _ _ competition for the first time, the 8 su 0 rs C H°watt_S plucky Halifax lads got a b'g hand _glyllyrniln _ ML c_ c_ Baker' from the more experienced visitors Libs,-ol Cmdldolo lol. Assemblyman when they flashed across in sec- for the 'fourth District of Prince ‘md Place' Cqunty was nomlnoled by Heath A Dartmouth crew, also new to Bowl-less, Kemln¢l;ol,_ sooo,-,ded by the eight, finished third ahead of Alexander Moopm-long, wwe, a crew from Lachirie, Quebec. B*3d9°iU°» U-Hd S\1DD01‘ted by Anon Manhattan Universitys eight c9.n1¢l-011,, Margatt Tho” norms trailed all through' the race and were inadvertediy left out of the fimshed 135°- Ndmlng/udns whloll ,opened ln Bufalo's time of 8.19 minutes was aet down as a Maritime record for yesterdays Guardian.-S. _l.__l_. the event, new to the eastern pro- -Miss Fraser of Boston is visiting .\'inC€S- friends on the Island.-S E. Fries, Charles Fries, Don Fa- ber, Jim Hogan, E. Swanson, W. -Mr, Gilbert Gaudet gf wood. Goeckel. H. Carroll and Joi-in Fiore stock was a visitor to Summerside made up the winning crew. As soon BIRTHS 1178 ~ A Broo line Hosp al, . Mass., June 24th, 1935, eg Mr, and won their heat easily in 9.19 1-5 Mrs. Ralph W_stee1e (nee Tlsy minutes, finishing more than ihi'-ee I-Iowatt Summerside) a son, Robert lengths ahead of the jubilee crew Daniel.-S. of Halifax. Trailing far behind was the North West Arm crew. Manhattan University four had G » ' withdrawn _shortly before the race asglgng Way because ther stroke, vie wiiders, I wood nursing an infected thumb. W ers went out with the Manhat- n ontreal tan eightolater but obviously was _M not at his best. (C, 11, By Gum-dllmio gpeelgl wlnl The Buffalo and Jubilee crews MONTREAL, ,july 17__M0ng- iWl1l 80 info the four-oared final reap; gasollno wal- developed lnlo Saturday against St. Mary's of Hal- 5 wlde open "oooh mon for hlm_ ifax and the North Stars of Dart- gelf' fl-gy today as sovoml lmle_ mouth. first and second in the other pendent service stations began heat' ' _gelllng gooolloo oo the ouswmelss Powerful _Henry Pelham, who bl,-l_ A, a result gasoline was re_ stroked Jublee four to the inter- portewsold ln some places as low 'national championship in 1931. _ Hard pressed fm, buslness roll nearly two lengths ahead of the lowlng the “mon of dlsmbutors ln North Stars. The time was 8.54 1-5. roduolng the price of nm 2 me The North West Arm four finish- BT no lll d ed third in this heat, far ahead ° se ng un er trade nam" t° of a Lachine re who were row 17 C W ~ ,mo,°‘;’;§o§,,§‘;g°’§;, 32%; ;';'o“§§§ ing without ii coxswain for the “oe wlth cu pm_chases_ At the first time and found it tough go- ing. ¥Z2l§..?&`,° ..‘.§‘.2....‘i‘;‘.l°’*..°.“.”‘°...i wg 1;f,§,;1g;>g,f,,H»;;fg;,m;;;,; stan' giving away “va "‘u°n° °f taking the i-4 mile tandem the 1-4' gasoline with each purcha” °’ m mile ladies' warcanoe eventand the zllrtghrlggbqglvesiredwigyriet :fiona are 1-2 mile with four in a canoe, wllh each Sale of a non ‘L15 HW; The navy provided keen compet- "_25_ 5° ° 5 itlon in five-oared whalers. Sca- ~» -im ii- »-1 sm. cs: 5;:“..:::-.;.5'“;il.”;";;“: » for the record low price of 15 cents from l.l_ M_ C_ S_ bhamolam éec_ families at the prospect of sharlng` 0'Ieary hall was packed to the ,doors on 'Tuesday evening for the Joint political meeting. Bo large was the, audience that amplifiers were fixed up and the large audience out- side heard equally as well or better than those in the hall. Mr. A. J, Matheson of 0’l..eary presided and all the speakers were accorded an attentive hearing. Mr. Henry Peters. Conservative candidate, apologized at the open- ing of themeeting for not being able to remain and address the audience on account of the tragic death of a near relative, Mr. Dumas Richard of Duvar, who was killed instantly that 11101111118 in an accident at Ka.ne‘s Bridge. The main topic at the meeting WHS the Subsidy question. Mi-. Mat- thews in his rebuttal answered very C°“VinCil\Ely the statements of Mr. C9-mlibeu and proved conclusively that the Conservative Government :Ot what they went after in the way of subsidi<\ and do not treat the matter as closed but will continue to go after more until they receive their full share. The speakers were Messrs, G_ M, Matthews, Aeneas Gallant, Sanford Phillips, Christopher Metherall and Thane A. Campbell, K.C.-S. The meeting at Victoria West on Tuesday was strongly Conservative and Hon. G. Shelton Sharp and his colleagues Mr. Russel R. Rogers received a great reception. _ There was some local criticism on the question of distribution of road work, which Mr. Sharp ex- plained away quite eas"ly to the discomfort of his opponents. Mr. Sharp made a great impres- sion on the audience as he unfold- ed the story of the four years of Conservative govemment. speaking chiefly on the government grants to assist unemployment which have proved so effectual in tiding over the difficult times of the past win~ ter. Mr. Rogers received a very en- Meeting At Victoria West Was Strongly Conservative thusiastio welcome from the people of Victoria West. 1 Mr. Dennis, the veteran Liberal of West Prince is evidently not gaining confidence in his party ai the campaign progresses as he told the audience if there was a change 0! sovernment, "it might he for the better but he was not sure." Mr. Barbour confined his re- marks to the Mounted Police, Fal- conwood and bridge criticisms. There was nothing of a construc- tive nature in either of the I_.'beral addresses. Mr. William Smith made a most impartial chalnmzm and thanked the audience for the very attentive hearing they had accorded the candidates.-S (A. P. By Guardiaifs Special Wire) TACOMA, Wash., July 17- Plump, blond Margaret Waley, who preferred life behind bars to freedom without `_ her kidkiapper husband, was sentenced today to 20 years imprisonment for her part in the George Weyerhaeuser kidna in. PD S Federal Judge E. E. Cushman pronounced sentence. He presided at the trial terminated Saturday in her conviction on “Lindbergh law” violation and kidnapping conspiracy charges. The 19-year-old wife of .Harmon M. Waley will serve her time at the federal detention farm at Milan. Mich. Waley vowed his wife was as 15 cents a. gallon, including tax pulled the st’ Marys crew in mst' innocent when he pleaded guilty' to like charges in the $200,000 ab- duction of the nine-year-old lum- ber heir. He is sewing 45 years at McNeill Island federal prison near here, 2: itil.‘22.¥.‘i.l.lii..§“¥.§.i5‘°.€i2.t: Mrs. Waley ls Sentenced To s-mf-.-=?-Tw ...“.“_“‘2..,E;‘.."Zi“°.,.*§.':.‘.‘i’.f.‘;“'.s,‘l;“’1 Twenty Yearslmprisonment With no show of emotion. the young woman stood silently before Judge Cushman. She did not open her mouth when asked if she had anything to say. Throughout the trial, she main- iained that the fugitive William Dalnard-more commonly known by his alias, William Mahan-was the “brains” oi' the plot. She said he planned the kidnapping of the boy, held eight days and released June 1 for $200,000 ransom. The defence contention was that Mrs. Waley was forced into the plot because her Mormon religion requires complete subjugation of a wife to her husband. Mrs, Waley was responsible for the capture of herself and her husband a week after their vic- tim‘s release. She was caught pass- ing a $5 ransom bill in a Salt Lake City five-and-ten cent store. Fail To Find Trace Of Fortune while Lee Blob, s, New York attor- ney, is keeping in touch with the family of Abraham Starr, wh-i had already attained notoriety in con- nection with the fortune through a letter sent a son in Saint John. . by . l N. B., congratulating him on_nn in- l(;_ p_ By Guudlm-o spoolal wl,-el lheritance of $100,000,001 which the MONTREAL, July 1'!-Excite. |son had heard had been left the ment rules among five Jewish f\1mi)Y~ but dealers claimed competitors, Wmwut dlspllyihll Prices on their Dumps, were selling gasoline at B/gatever the customer wished to Grade One gasoline was retailing between 25 and 21 cents a. gallon, including tax, with a correspond- 1,118 Spread in the price of grads fW°» 59111118 under brand names. A number of independent garage; have failed to meet the action of several large companies in raising UW P1406 01 grades one and two, three and two cents respectively. In Ottawa (C. P. By Gnu-dia.n’s Special Wire) 0'I'I‘AWA, July 17-Advance guards of “On-to-Ottawa" march- ers continued to drift into Ottwaa during -the day. for the most part they were stragglers, those who had evoded the Quebec ban on organized mBNh¢I`S 011 hilhways or railways. One contigent of 30 from Petawawa relief camp, near Parnbi-sire, Ont., arrived via freight train. Ottawa headquarters for the marchers and relief camp strikers at 'oini-aiiiiiih Labor 'reinpis red iso wwbt, strike leaders stated. They VN waiting quietly for the arrival of marchers from other points. Mood was collected by visiting farms and individual merchants in ond. In the second heat, for cffi- "' 51°'°0)'°°° f°"t““° they believe ous, the No 2 Naval Barracks New their long-lost uncle in Africa left headed the .five from H. M. C. 5. mem 5"" bemmmg 5 mum' aguenay across the line. The final ;Him°“”‘"f, thebusglmh hAf"°“" will be one of Saturdays evenfs. amnd ° 5' Ju B' M," °WeV°r' was tinged with impat.ence and , o 1 Q anxiety as family lawyers tried with little success to get in touch with I azls Contlnue executors of the reported estate or ° ' ' to find when and where the uncle, Antl ' Seniltlc Harry Klzoack, formerly of Blalo- C _ . stock, Poland, died. gn N. L. Rappa-port, Montreal lawyer, atnpal cabled again today to Polish Con- --- suiate officials in Capetown, South (A. P. By GuardI.an'a Special Wire) Africa, and the South African Jul 17. -- Nazis today Trade Commissioner also cabled his BERLIN, y _ ,`, oontiriued their anti-Semitic cam- superizirsin Capetown. Advance Guard P8189. d¢SDite warnings from niah- "I have littietogo on," Rappaport er-ups, and pushed their steriliza- said as he described the difficulties tion program. delilite Catholic pw- lying in his way. He represents the tests. while the controlled press families or Abi-sham, Moms, sem, cried out bitterly aBBi¥lSt '->~tf°C"~Y" Sol and Abe Starr. A sister of the reports abroad. five men. Pearl Levi, is represented 'rhoush order has been Metab- by another iittmiev. an but lished along the Kuiiiurstendamm, _s,bmh,m_ B pool- found,-y wo,-lm- Bei-lin's white WHY. Bhd YUCUFFGUCS living in a New York tenement, are of Mondays anti-Jewish riots seem- l-ogldemg 0; Mo,-ll;¢;1_ ed unlikely, Julius Btreicher and Although luppaporg has so my fellow Jew-balters had other meth- men “noble lo llml any lmo of the Od! to €mPl°Y~ death of Harry Kozla/ck, uncle of Anarticle i;ithe"Nationai Bozial- all-lo sto,-1-3 belloved lo novo left istische Parti: Korraspondenzi,” the ,hem the gal-"llc", ,lm-,_ the repo,-l. Nui rl-rtv's =»'nd1°l°° °°1‘l'1°°- 11°* en heirs continued to rejoice it manded that Jews, on pain of death ll-lol, good lorllmo if necessary. be fvfbidden W1 The romantic mi-y or the huge '1~ RUM °P“1'“"‘°“f'l W A"Y°“5~ fortune and the good luck of the 2. News Aww d°m°S'-1° h°)P» had working shim first started 3- Ml»°l\¢ 5Y¥lm U5 PhY5i°|“‘°~ °" about six weeks ago in a Montreal WWF* AWIN U °U¢n‘°- Synagogue. when a Rabbi over- heard somebody reading aloud from a newspaper of the search for a British Fleet In Sham Battle (C. P.-Havas) (By Guan-dian’s Special Wire) PORTSMOUTH, England, July 17-A sea fight of the future was vividly portrayed today as the combined British fleet fought a sham battle before the watchful eyes of King George, Admiral of the Fleet, off Bpithead. ' , A direct hit by the anti-aircraft battery 'of the super-battleship Rodney brought down one of the radio-controlled “Queen Bee" Ro- bot planes, ihe secret of whose operation is one of the British navy's most jealously-guarded mys- teries. Another “crashed” shortly after taking off. The heavy and light cruisers in turn showed their marksrnauship when they made 56 direct hits out of 330 rounds fired at the obsolete battleship Vindicative, now a radio-controlled target vessel. Practice firing of the battleship'a 15-inch guns at towed targets was described as excellent. Supporters of the theory planes can cope with battleships gained consolation from the fact the "Queen Bee" actually weathered a hail of shells to pass over the Rod- ney before it received the destruct- ive shell. Every type of modern wa.rcrn,ft, and nm- ottawa. nrmei? eontribu- Arthur Jenkins 1% potatoes and peg; izitoorgaoouaia; _ I §Z".i...i’°.‘J.. .2...L‘... ...... . Dlesln Vancouver ‘Mt m°'°h“‘“- 'l’¢“» °°'"°° Noam svomrr .s. .ri rr.- “N W* 1“°‘¢°“¢°)? WH* PW- 'nie auth or artiiiii- §m\Eiii: gcciir- Blillld from Strikers funds. ml lélovmotouvol. fogéorgoy' lbwolx; 1 _ ` UESWWNT P155 author, "I-Ie :as a _ _ on _ 'fkfif by oaaraairi speeiu win) tg, v'f°if'§:4“;.§'Lpl§t "LA PM. B°11Vil. J'-lil’ 17'-'Dl'~ l.ieaithyIor some time. Besides his Dhlvlflallmaml. 00. President uf mmf, he ii survived by two iinitii- loiivh _during most of the Chaco en, Ralph of Charlottetown and vm' died today of a heart attack Teddy of North Sydney, and one at Ill at Gochaliamha. sister lla. James lfcxinncu of Starrolcsky family intheritors of a fortune of $10,000,000. asuall r ated the tale to He c y ape Sol Starr. Then the search for the fortune began. Sol remembered his family had been named Btarrolesky before his mother and father came to Canada from Poland. But na trace has been found of a man of the family name dying and the huge fortune. Nor has my trace been found of any such sum left un- claimed. Rappaport has vers working to town. South 107 in all, took part in the manoeuvres, attacking and boating off attacks. The submarines launched attacks on the big cap- ital ships and destroyers rushed to drive them off. Radio-controlled planes swooped and wheeled over- head, while the anti-aircraft bat- teries -barked in defence of the surface craft. For, hours the sailor-king stood on the bridge of the royal yacht Victoria and Albert watching his fight-ing ships go through their paces. Al the display ended he or- ther law- ni Capo- Warshav eyiuesnaqlimdmwlhun. maimm- <1: , Ilkt flied the traditional signal "open l a ,1- ...,,,,.,.,~.%. . .,.,;. ii '~ \ ;1_fwr~~'». ~ ,` - ..~fyl» -.--.»».-V ~f~=»-it ~.~~»~- iv . - ~ i -_ " "‘."““""""5“\”‘- - . .i .1 ` I - . - ~ .,. .1 ,l ‘ I i.' c" -I '- _ _ ,wlinl-.ire .- . _ ~ ' __, J' ' .,., . l _ MMT -1-HE -GUARDIAN \'G’Leafy mlhhie Dance Hall X‘.i'£.i..°°“°. ni" .i‘.`.'§f‘°.i“€1’y“i`i§l’i..‘°'“" ” 1”* "°" '*“ '=° -¢ 2° Sv-1-is BURDEII - ~- -M-~~»- Largely Attended -cousaavsnva comixrrau ““m“&'f;Lm“° ll* '11 ` ‘ “Bm “gi” ill treatment) calouses,’ fam axred A rfect fl hangin , i » -i ' m UM: 0 ................._ ,...,..,..,_,, g=;;°"°__,_,;,_,;=-_'15, ;=,~;,3gh;;;;lm;»;l Mr. Matthews Refutes Statements illll», ill" lsonm ,.35 - VBR I On U _mums IN sumnnsmb fvrmtlml, wllzlnx feels* u Mr 'Thane' on ` mu uit aeuriit oi aiiiieei-i. Mir. R. H. Hogan, of Manhattan an lm l:l,?n’;° l£1°“ “Hy” ~ ' , amz, New von: is the gli t si his ___,__é,__ _ Q ° T“”"” ”""" ' ~ es _ Subsldy u€StlO1`l. ol.Yhn>I/IN oncnasraa 1.-assi-'1-11-ii. I ELLIQTTS ORCHESTRA ADMISSION 35 CENTS ¢.¢.¢-¢+¢+¢-o-o-+0-0-0-00+-0-+04-0-04 Death Of George William Russell (A. P. By Gusrdlan's Special WIN) BOURNEMOUTH, England, Juli' 1'1--George William Russell, Irish journalist, writer and painter known to poetry lovers by the cry- ptic pen name "AE," died tonight. He was 68 years old. . Born at Lurgan, County Armagh, Ireland, in 1867, Russel was educa- cated at Rathmines school, Dublin. He entered an accounta.nt’s office but soon grew interested in_ agri- cultural Cooperative Associations and in 1897 joined the Irish Agricul- tural Organization Society. Thenoefcrth journalism, litera- ture, painting and agricultural or- ganization divided his attention. He edited the Irish Homestead, Farm Journal, from 1904 to 1923. becoming editor of the Irish Statesman in 'that year. Critics have called the latter review the most skillfully edited in all Ireland. His published works. beBinninK with "Homeward: Songs by the Way” in 1894, extend over the en- suing ears to his volume of poems. “House of the Titans, and other poems,” appearing in November, 1934. _ His pennams, puzzling to readers. is explained by Darbell Flggls, an- other lrlsh writer, in his book on Russell, thus: “Wanting at one time a new pell- name, he subscribed himself as Aeon, the printer deciphered the first dlththong and set ia. query for the rest, whereupon the writer, in his prcofsheets, stroked out the quenv and stood by the diththong." Althiugh primarily noted as a poet, he was an energetic jack of many trades-a painter, business- man, organizer, editor and co- founder of the famous Abbey Theatre in Dublin. Paradoxically he was a lyrical ad- vocate of the virtues of idieness and I caused amusement when he de- scribed I..ongfeliow's line, “Let us be up and doing," in the American bai-d's “Psalm of Life," as "one of the m:st terrible lines in all poetry." "Congress ought to cali in all copies of I_ongfellow's poem and ex- tract that terrible line," he said. “It should then pass a statute in favor or idleness. He made a lecture in Canada aT>`cu‘i! eight years ago. In 1932 he told American audien- ces the United States depression was caused by a too literal fcllowlng of I.ongfel1ow's advice. Already ailing when he returned from the United States a few months ago, he suffered it setback in London during the first heat waves of summer. At that time he told a friend, “I feel cramped in London. I need the sea and moun- tains and wide views of the sky.” Russell was in thLs late twenties when in 1894 he published his first bogk of noems, "Homeward: Songs bv the Wav." 'The Yeats "Celtic Twilight" cult had just acheived world prominence and Russell, with his spiritual mysticism, was im- mediately taken to the hearts of poetry lovers. His last book. "House of the Ti- tans. and other poems," appeared in 1934. U. S. Debt Now .29 Billions (MP. By Gua.rdlan’l Special Wire) WASHINGTON, July l'l-The United States federal debt has crossed $20,000.000,000 to a new peak. The trcasury’s daily statement showed today that on Monday the figure was $29,177,7B6,3l8, following the receipt of funds from the re- cent offering of $500,000,000 in treasury notes. The debt is now approximately $2,000,000.000 above what is was a year ago. _ I U The United Kingdom national debt as of March, 1934. was listed as £'l,4l0,000,000, about $34,500,000.- ooo, and his since ‘been nightly reduced. as in the previous fiscal year. ' TOURISTS TRAVEL FAST BRANTFORD. Ont.. July 17-Two Indianapolis motorists sped through here so fast today that Traffic Of- ficer C. Parmenter was unable to catch a glimpse of their license numbers. He caught up with them, however, at a filling station, where the tourists were placed under arrest. They admitted trivclling at 90 mues an hour. but were mleased “fir nostiniz bail of $75. the barrel" hoisted at the _vardarm of the yacht. signifying that as e reward for their good work the >- ~__._.....__._ _ ._' ‘ ____' Lui _.mir » ~_-- - -.-_-- .-. .__ __ ._._. . . . .,. ._._. ._.. . ._. . . . __ ._-._.__..__. __._____.._--_ _.-._ _ _ $75000 IS RECEIVED ON ACCOUNT UNDER THE WHITE AWARD 'Another $75,000 Payment Due This Year _ A cheque for $75,000 has been received from Ottawa by the MacMillan Government as payment on account under the award of the White Commission, This represents ONE-HALF of the amount which the Province will receive this year under the award, which resulted in the placing of $3,000,000 to our credit at Ottawa, through representations made in co-operation with' the other Maritime Provinces by the MacMillan Government. The annual subsidy payment for all time, from this capital fund, will be $150,000-the largest subsidy increase since Confederation. , Coupled with the increases received under the Mathieson and Stewart Governments of $100,000 and $125.- 000 respectively, this represents A CAPITAL AMOUNT CF $7,500,000, OR AN ANNUAL SUBSIDY INCRI°]AS_E 0F $3,750,000, obtained by Conservatives after Laurier, in 1907, had “bolted the door” against further claims settle- ment. » A MILLION ADDITIONAL REVENUE But the White Commission award by no means repre- sents all that the MacMillan Government achieved in the matter obtaining Dominion revenue. Here are additional amounts, obtained during their term of office from tb' Bennett Government : Direct relief (City) Direct relief (Provincial) . .. . . . . . _ . . . Unemployment Projects . . . . . _ . . . . . . . . Salvage: Falconwood and P, W. College Old Age Pension . . . . . Experimental Roads Concrete Road at Borden . .. .. . . . Trans-Canada. Highway ... . . . . . . . . . Rustico Highivay 125,000 ' I $ 945,077 These amounts are the concrete result of “Tori picnic trips” to Ottawa which Liberal _apologists coiitdigixl because of the few hundred dollars paid in transpor a and hotel accommodation i In addition, the Government obtained from_ the Carne- gie Foundation over $100,000 for demonstration li_braYY purposes for the benefit of every r_ural community in the Province. Also $88,000 for establishment of a chair of Economics and Sociology at Prince of Wales College- _ The late Libgrai Governmegt“obtz§;;;lrel;1€§`;g1;En;2 » ' - ‘ an 'on i lilgeolilililnyrof tSoub§l0x?PI‘l;IiIieea1'se Saunders, “DECLINED T0 C0-OPERATE” with the Conservative Premiers ot' Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, and with the Maritime Board of Trade. ' 5 35,000 39,215 218,562 27,72s 16s.s95 14,000 48,705 267,971 ~ They obtained NOTHING in the way of unemployment relief from the Mackenzie King Government. _ F They obtained NOTHING from the Carnegie oun-_ dation. , “We areinot concerned with the past ’, says Mr- W- M- Lea. Why should they be '_' Their past is as barren of achievement as their platform is of hope. .4 ' ine cm-rick mu ares started nmnir I fi his 1 te . Soldiers Return l 2,, ,,1,’,,,,,...,.., ...... i....i.i..lr: ¢ of ti-oops and poliw, armed wt AsR:otsRenewed ,saline s......,».,sfe sillllinelowi '-"" i 312232352351 tiiermidst , ' k fight, the soldiers sent ii. is. P. sy Guardians special wire) °f the '°° BnI.rAsT, Northam Ireland, few SWS “W0 th’ “"- July 17-Rioting attended by shoot- ing broke out again tiofiay grinfging _ I C _ back the soldiers re ease rom - ' duty yesterday uégen dth; Orange Aerla rulser ` Day trouble seem en e _ 1 ' i Major General E. S. Girwood, the l Alvalts Tests Ulster military commander took charge of the troops. One of his I i 1”. first orders was to dispatch them in (A. P. By Guardians Spec al W l search of a machine gun heard SEA'I’I‘LE.July 17-A giant 061135 firing in Donegal Street. battle cruiser, desribed by its bull There were no fatalities in i/0day'8 ers as the larlZl‘5f' 13i'\d,P19“e ever ., .,l il-f ;l if 15 li li., ,. is disarders, in which the fighting was done with rifles, fists, machine guns and stones. The first trouble occurred at a cemetery where one of the six vic- tims oi’ the Catholic-Protestant fighting was being buried. The two factions stoned nach other until a volley from troops and soldiers' guns, fired ever their heads, dis- persed them. Returning from the funeral, 6,000 men carrying the Union Jack. were fired upon by snipers from the Car- rick Hill. Nationalist sectizn. At Donegal street, at the other end of Carrick Hill there was heavier fire. Police knelt in the 5'.-_:nts and poured fire into the snipers' nest. Passengers lay on the floor of street cars as police, raiding in a small tank. fired a machine gun into the air to disperse gatherings. There were two miner squabbies while the funeral procession was enroute to the cemetery. Downtown a Nationalist _ieered at the coffin, which led to hand to hand fighting between funeral marchers and by- standers. A single shot fired from, assembled in the United States. awaited tests here today before being submitted to the Army Corw- , No details of armament equi?- ment were given by wmvenv °f* ficials, but five heavy machine gun cockpits. enclosed in transparent glass like plastlccll were visible as the 15.5011 ship sat on a ramD in front of the hanger- France Wil l Increase Navy (C. P.-Havas) (By Guardlan'a Special Wire) SAINT NAZAIRE. July 17- France must-and will-i\1¢'f@M° its navy, Francois Pietri, Frenrh naval minister, declared here tc- \ day at the launching of the cruiser Marseillaise. “For the moment," the navel minister said. “my one aim is to increase our naval strength and I will have the frankncss in rewat that statement again." Ulymma I I s ce tram' For picnics or any outdoor event, OLYMPIA ICE .T- CREAM can be delivered to ` " ` \ any part of the Island by Truck. Get ln touch with us if you want something good. ` ULYMPIA ICE CREAM 00- SUMMERSIDE- » ' .|. ir. d/lunar, Mmqei ` "fi,-‘; ii... , f " ;..; I' ‘wth \ °<1~“ ‘ ' blueiackets were to have an extra ration of rum tonight. ‘ "" ' “ ---~~f -- B - - - . - _______~_ ,_ __ _______ __ __ _ _ _‘ ' 5/ A v . . . SUMMERSIDE GUARDIAN . i . » ‘ ll' ~' ii ' i . -an ¥‘-- r i ....an .~¢ ur: is l ll i . i Y _. l.