Ihnofafllaqlanly. \ 011810000811: Guardian Two Cont: Inning Indian. Founded i501. l Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew _...... ___.-. INS UR GENTS. ch MAXIMS _. _.,, r MAXIMS - ‘MERE MAN °" ‘ ___._ MERE MAN i___1- PTURE GOVT CHABI-QTTETOWN. CANADATSTNTIJEDAY, hi? 9, 193s fitness "tT-Er.:e-..-5e~rIiZ.-E.:~E.-ITI.... (Iazette, Exposes zng’s Duplzczty ardy Offer T-o-T rain British Air Pilots Made To Cover Most Discreditable Episode In Can- ada’s Empirfielations. of the facts behind Mackenzie King Government's ted ofler to “oo-operate" with ta-in in the matter of British air pilots is made following leading editorial Montreal Gazette of Alprll he said. that approaches had been made to the Canadian Government by the Government of Great Brit- ain, ‘not, it is pretentiously urged. in the form of a formal request, because Britain never would make a formal request of this Dominion until she was certain from the Government of this Dominion that that request would meet with an affirmative reply; but. to use the language of the Prime Minister of Canada, in the form of confiden- tial, informal and exploratory con- versations.‘ The Prime Minister had then gone on to say, as quoted by Senator Melghen, ‘that if a. for- mal request is made to this Dom- inion that the British Government be permitted to establish in Can- ada. at the expense of the British taxpayer and for the training of citizens of Britain, a flying school and flying facilities, that request will be met by the Government of Canada with a naked negative in the interest of Canadian autono- my.’ Senator Meighenh Attack in the L“ "Klimt l of the 0t- C inet on uesday the Minister announced that a nite ofler was being made to British Government through Francis Floud placing the faci- eaot the Royal Canadian Air at that Government's dispo- for the training of Royal Air _ roe pilots in thl; country. The lfler was immediately communi- ted to London. The Prime Min- ‘s announcement was accom. ed by an interesting disclaim- The ofler. he said. did not arise mi of Tuesday morning's discus- ion at the Conservative Conven- _on nor out of the Dominion Day ‘abate in the House of Commons. hi im a rather severe test ma: the credulity of the Canad- people. unfavourable Reaction "It is not possible to dissociate l- hurried step from the discus- -. which took place in the Sen- te in the latter part of June. or ~~- the highly unfavorable inl- resdon left upon the ublic by l .King's declaration in he House Commons on Friday last or from e spirited challenge uttered by w- Rt. Hon. Arthur Melglien from \- rostrlun of the Conservative v- ventlon on Tuesday morninttl - atorMleighen recalled the events; 1i‘riday in the House of Com- a4; isclosed then, "This was an accurate and there- fore a fair summary of the position taken by Mr.King. Senator Meigh- en attacked that position in the most vigorous and cutting terlns. and in the spirit which we believe to be the spirit of the vast mnjority of Canadians. “'I'hat it was undoubtedly accept- able to the great body of Conser- vative delegates cannot be ques. of approval. ‘I ask you.’ said Sen- ator Meighen.‘have we come tothe hour in this country when Canada locks the gate on Britain when Britain asked for permission t0 establish at her own expense and train in her own way her own citi- zens for their defence and ours? This question is fit for this con- ventions concern. This subject this convention cannot whore. This subject today arrests .le attention of the Canadian people and must continue to arrest it until the deci- "Wodnesda, at - l ~- Hizhlan .14) DaILI-CFZHIIilg-itlwtf sion of this nation is known and rings throughout the Empire and "Talkies and Dance, Bradalbene goes to the ears of the Government - ay. L-2245-7-8-3l. of llritiilln.'w'l‘hxleiadteenrl1perrlfeiosiz ‘fie *1‘ ‘COIZVDX’! OH B5 B. ' lfialkleo-mlpequelrvallgizgnysgal. ,,__ 1H A ..____. - ' (Continued an page C, Col 5) "oem‘“‘”vnl'°’““ m" ‘ffzifii ‘w’??? '—-— . Contract Let For ., , y _ - 1 -. - - , I “ Jul iitahmu“ Eggs‘: gath- -_ Construction Wood “mm-c ' J Ehdiidlyl t. ____ - islands Harbor "Dance at Bridgetown every °‘..“Z...,,’ “"“‘——' sol" fl““;““Tf."‘ll..l. a O A . ll y -— e - long glidBaptligt ggiiéam Works Department tonight an- ‘ L-2292-7-8-2i. nounced the followlnil comrade had been let: Bear River. Ns-Dredslnzzsaint John Dredging Company of Saint John at about $1 . North West Cove (Tancook) NB. Breakwater extension: R. A. D0118- las of New Glasilow. N-s- Bl- 00°“ "Charity cake sale at Moore 8: oLeodk Saturday, July 9. 14-2192-7-5-31. "Borden Line Club loading hogs $5.8 calves every Tuesday. Hours L-34B-i2-M-2-5-12I. $9,970. ~——_ Rscuminac. N. il-Breakwater "Kelly's Cross Picnic on Church immoven-lents; Diamond Construc- *' d5. Wfidflesdfly. July 13m- tion Company of Fredericton at . 14-2315-7-9-21. about $56399 tr ""'—‘ ’ Islands, P. E. I.-—C0ns uc- “msew” wednesdfly- Jul!’ 13th uxmgl harbor: Dominion Con- Manse 7 9 n struction Corporation of Toronto at about $264,143. Senator Lewis Issues Warning ___- CHICAGO. July lh-fAPh-Bene- tor James Hamilton Lewis warned foreign nations tonIBht that BT01)!“ agents and s ies would be from the Un ted States. bee“ “‘°.‘°&°"‘l€l‘ "s: toivde our precnc w D n aa. nor intrude doctrines "Ill- undermine our democratic institu- tions." the veteran crat said in an address prepared St. Peters Tea ‘Party. unds. p-zz 6- ‘Reserve Monday evening, July th for the ice cream social in‘, - London Hall. L-2349-7-9-2i. ‘In: cream social in Millview ednalrlny July iltll. Pso- L-hll. "Barn Dance at George Mac- \ Ian's, Oovehead Monday, July tn. Kelly and ‘Maclnnis ch- » _ 5.3393- "I'm Women's Institute will s Btrawberry and Ice Cream filiidon, Jul 13th from lrgasa-l-l-n-la. e at Covehead llth. Aid not fine t nlcnt. L-zal 4-7-9-11. "f age at mt Royalty w m‘? o‘, ock. sixty acres of ~"-- L. in lots to suit pur- Lam-l-r-ai. 1 ..____ ' Mflillll M 0f the “he? Growegungssooiatlm m m ' ‘ ma» m m“ member of the Senate's Foreign n Relations Committee. ma. W find Russia on one side and Italy and Germany “ ’ 0H 00° “m” the ulwnws w and m... Wif"lld‘“‘l a a . . ‘By order Prezidengli. Mal- . L-flM-l-D-li. v s-‘nnxflln IAli-Oomo to Kin- l Hi Mondli- Jll ill-ll. 8.15 Hou- mm. A. . MacLean on tho Coronation. Other ~ l- l- in lid of and Girls Oaif and OI-liok . ’ . 144340-7441. a 1513M andogueen . _ b. h,“ my}, gelvletory Japan had over ' .l av, iagnrzlii; i Amid then martial manifesta- l ~ vet arr-cu. amlerl Ho". lenator Lewis envisioned .. ‘p. w - ‘ la "Wlitlnlt in ‘ concession u Mlnchuria to raven Russ a "arm and force beris and r- Jisgn nations united under the a 1 FilCM tumu Minister of Roads Is- sues Statement Af- ter Dismissal MONTREAL, July 8—Ftanc0is J. Loduc, Montreal civil engineer who was expelled as minister of roads from the Quebec cabinet of Hon. Maurice Duplessis, issued a lengthy statement to the press tonight, challenging the Union Nationals cusatlons" and "for once. uct like a. man." Leduc. who promised reporters last night he would “have plenty to say" regarding the Premier's announcement dllc “no long r is minister of roads" recalled names of those who had split with the Premier and said “‘ utsch' suceeds “puisch.” The ismissed minister said in part: "l now am before you, (Duples- sis) asking neither favor nor quar- ter. You have been proceeding by inslnuations long‘ enough. There has been enough ruin in families, broken careers. “I believed) it my duty to ad- minister Dllbllc affairs with all the honesty and efficacy to be found in any well-led organization, even if, to accomplish this and. 1t was necessary to sacrifice a few friends 0f the FIB-PW. more interested in their personal advancement than l“ the Dmgress or the province. even if it was lleccssary~supremc sacrifice-to part from him, "slim. for a long time was my leader," 719000 Chflriled “envy and jealous- ies_ were among fnciors in a cam- paign to bring about his linwnfa" “I did not want estabWshr-d .. the makill: of roads a dictatorship Conlfwfid by two or three contrac- tors who wished to impose their will on the Government rather than lake orders." he said. "I sumeecled so well that I can say today the province is rid the old-lime dictators. There now ‘ are at least 25 contractors in Que- bec Province capable of carrying- out works economically ad- v_a tggeouslyjcr the _Pr (Continued on page 6. Col d) llwululll u uusu m PA .EST|NE Four Arabs Killed by Explosi 0n—- Strike Follows Inci- dent JERUSALEM. July 8 —(AP)—— Arab strikes spread to several parts of Palestine today, compli- cating the problem of the author- ities endeavoring to restore order in the troubled Holy Land. The strikes began ‘after a new incident in a swift series of out- rages-s bomb explosion at Jef- usalems Jaffn Gate in which ifilll‘ Arabs were killed and 36 wounded. Three Jews and a 12-year-old school girl were arrested following the explosion. Arab by-stalltlcls which tore apart a bus filled with alleged the girl threw the bomb, Arab countryfolk. Authorities rc- fused to disclose the girls identity. The blast brought total cas- ualties in nine days to 38 killed and 150 injured. News of today's Jerusalem bombing spread, Arabs went on strikes in numerous towns. includ- ing Acre. Nablus. Tulkarm, Jenirl and Jaffa. Marines from warships patrolled danger spots in tense H fa, where more than 100 were killed and wounded Wednesday. People were forbidden to walk night. Haifa. Jaffa and Tel Aviv on the streets of Jerusalem at also were under a night curfew. Bix hundred marines and sailors were landed from the cruiser Emerald which. with the cruiser Enterprise. dropped anchor at Haifa. They probably will be re- ceived shortly by contingenis from Chg 820004.011 battleship Re- pu so. The border was reported quiet following a clash yesterday be- tween troops and 600 Arabs on the fronfler between Palestine and trans-Jordan. Police r unded up scores of He?‘ ‘mists-members of a Jew- ish ortlnlntion demandin all of Palestine for Jews-in Haifa. Jer- usalem and To! Aviv. They were coma-ad in Joseph. 19-year-old Jew hang- ed June 29 for ambulhing an Arab bus. The excutlon touched off the present serial of disorders. Two British police officers, am- bushed near Jerusalem. said they killed one of their attackers and described film as an Arab. From Haifa. British sent. a force of troops t orelieve a nearby small police detachment imprisoned by rioters. Police searched‘ all vehicles enough tarnished reputations and, DUPLESSISiLikeIy To UlISTS LEIIUC, Premier to “particularize your ac-, csterday that Le~ ‘than 2,000 visitors to the ‘(nett sent his successor and of l pcrsis ‘day party convention. Dominion Tour? In Near Future BI]. RE-EiEi ITS ‘nu pulsars Hon. Dr. Manien Busy Yesterday Steady Pmgress Re‘ In Consultation With Provin- cial Leade1;§__ And Delegates. (C. P. b Guardian's Special Wire) 0'I'I‘A A. Julfy B—One of the first decisions acing Hon. R. J. Munion, elected yesterday as leader of the National Conservative i Party, will be the measures he will adopt to find a seat in the House of Commons. He has at least three courses open him but no de- cision has been announced. Today the new party chieftain was about early, showing little ef- fccz from the svraln of the three- the first opportunity to travel He spent (across the Dominion and visit the mllch time in consultation with lcentres of Conservative political provincial leaders and delegates. organization to permit hi; follow- Ottawa. boiling 111 B- 0901" T000111 ers an oportunity of meeting and heat-wave, was getting back t0 ‘nearing him, and to supervise the normal after the activities of the work of rebuilding the party on convention which brought fits new platform adopted yester- ca a. ay. Every departing train carried un- i Joseph Harris, member for Tor- dicds of delegates returning back onto-Danforth. who tied with Den- to their homes. ton Massey, member for Felonio- Greenwood. for third place in the llooncede Dr. Manion an acclamat- on Mr. Mackenzie King who was among the first to congratulate Dr. Manion and welcome his ending appearance as leader of the op osition. was at his summer home l oday and could not be reached for comment on Mrs. Black's pro- posal Will Tour Dominion Dr. Manlon will probably take Mr. Bennett's Congratulations those who ‘eft the capital today was Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett. retirlns Conservative iventlon are both mentioned for t e Chieftain. who went to suasex, N. (position of national organizer of 13., to take part in a regimental lthe party. ceremony. Before leaving. Mr. Ben- , Hon. Maurice Dupre of Quebec. lflfmel‘ |f0rmer Solicitor-General, who was a message of joint convention chariman with conslatvlntlon on his victory 1n the Mr. McNlcol, also is expected to leadership contest. figure promlnnetly in the new or- Mr. Bennett 1s expected to return gnnlzution, Monday or Tuesday when it is an- TORONTO. July 8 ~(C P)- Nlcol, member for Toronto-Daven- port. who was highly commended Also among for his work in arranging the con- cabinet colleague 011495100 he Wm mm 9V9!‘ 115B dull" Hon. R. J. Manion. new leader of ies to the new leader. the National Conservative party, There is no particular hurry for consented ma“ (,0 mnvcu" for. in mally the invitation sent in error Dr. Manion obtaining a scat Minister Parliament since there will be no to Hon‘ c011“ Qampbeu, session until late fall or possibly 0g works 1n Qngarlo-S Liberal not until next year. Reports have government fm- hgm m attend ted my“ n"! m,“ 5955b" Wm the Conservative convention as a l“ ormb" °7 Novemb" but delegate. Mr. Campbell will have 11"" 0°00"?! “fidel- the invitation framed for the "unveiling." "I phoned Bob. who is an old friend of mine-lWe sat together in the House of Commons-To. congratulate him on his selection," Mr. Campbell said today. "I told him I am going to have my credential framed and invited him formntly to unveil it. He said l open ithcre has Federal Vacancies Federal vacancies exist in Water- loo South and London. created res- pectively by the rieafhs of A. M. Edwards and F‘ .C. Betts. both Con- servatives. Already Dr Manion has been pressed by prominent London i Conservatives to seek nomination _ n med m do so m that city llc would bc dc iZ A formal offer came yestcrriavl Md Mr“ é‘; a tdififve Entdaigéfngx afternoon from Mrs. George Blaclcl “$201 - m ‘m’: ° nwenfifled 1m member for the Yukon and wfel is @- Eifi er ‘z ‘My, ' of Hon. George Black. former cludlns B Plsm ~ 1 thed a Sneaker of the House. Mrs. Black Premier Hepbm“ (‘Spa c , made the offer to the convention ielelllllm 0f °°“l"“"“\“u°“sd 3°: lmmedlaielv after the election yes- terclnv to Dr. Manion dagll 5c: tcrday. to resign her seat and ask ceived today’ 0 00* l Prime Minister Mackenzie King to knowledzemilnh t... your? ITKLCGYTWANTSC Plani Crash~ p A c] PUT INT C EFFECT BILLINGS. Mont, July 8—(APi -A Department of Commerce in- alrlields at Ankina and Wuhu and specter. slightly hurt when a the WflYSlllD-l» Northwest Airlines plane crashed They TCPQTWd 17 Enemy P101105 early today. killilng ‘one plerson. W iineggtrgbiid gonnsiggra rfieunddsarlrilgglemlto gflfiifi“riif,f.pglfi.y“jffaisge“$51 5;; AliglO-Itailafl ACICOYd vgd/‘lxiiggkiif base as results of one i .ti i?! 1C0 i] . . ' ' ' ~ nntiqéalflgiexlneyler ofmSezitlcfnthfi NOt Valid Untll Despite aidséllgalrlgtmnlg'geglgegly_ l . ‘ (i i. th . l ' . . °"°‘“‘ ‘°‘“"‘° ° ‘ m“ Troops Withdrawn um...- bases. headquarters said. . he received medi- scene us soon as inspecting the cal aid and began wreckage. Mrs. N. S. MacKic of Evanston. Ill, died in a hospital shortly af- ter she was thrown from the ship when it went into a stall as it was taking off from the Billinilfi Mr- From Penin. 1a _____ (By The Canadian Press) Llouivou. July 8—-The apparel“ unlikelihood of a start in cumu- ation of foreign trooflfi from $91M" within a week. tors believed they d question of getting the effect shortly lialv recen desire to set the Pact tion without waiting for merit of the Spanish question. Prime Minister Chamberlain vanced by officials or airlines em- ployees. lscuiwd Cift Testimonial 0f Italian Friendship ROME, July B —(AP)—The Italian government decided today to fliVb-ililf/Cfld of sell-Germany one of Roman famous art treas- ures, the Lacellotti copy of the 1n ed Avril 16. is liun troovfl the Iberian peninsula. Even if ift of the copy of the ancient INCORPORATED BEBE leadership race. and John R. ,Mac- l Competent quar- the treaty into fly has made known a into opera- a settle- but e it clear that the tleatifis - d?‘ m not to become valid until a. reasonable number of Ita- have been moved of‘! the conrblex mechanism of the nomintcrvention committee works with smoothness and de- eucuaiion of 156000108. 0|‘ 0150115 W01’. snatch. substantial ecause of Chancellor Hitler's in- irrrorted fighters from Spain can- vereat in it. A communique Mid not begin before mid- ptembcr. it was said. The non-intervention machinery ported at 5th An- nual Session of Co- operative Market- ing Board Total turnover for the year, end- ing May 3i, 1938, was $413,643.63. an increase of more than n03.580- (00 over the previous 12 months, it lwas reported at the fifth annual ;meetlng of the Prince Edward Is- ‘land Co-operative Livestock Mar- iketing Board yesterday. increase lwas noted. too, in the volume ‘hoes, lambs and calves shipped as wel as in the amount paid per ;cwt. to the producer, Overhead ,cost was the lowest in the past [three years. it was announced. am- .ounting to 1.70 per cwt. During the year hog prices ranged from $9.50 ‘per cwt. to $13.10 per cwt. and $14 lavas expected for shipments made this week, Secretary -Manager J. A. Gilles reported Mr. W. J. Reid who presided yes- terday was re-elected president of ‘the organization at a directors‘ Jflefiilllfl which followed the general session. Mr. P. A. Mclsaac. M. L. ‘A'Y Souris was re-elected vice- (president and Mr, J. /i. Gillies. » secretary-manager. Retiring director. Milton Fur- ness. Vernon. was re-elected. Other directors by counties are: Prince. MacGregor, Central Lot l6. Reid. Kinkora; Queen's, Ern- l ""1 l lW. H ‘W J. est Houston. New Glasgow‘. E Easter. North Wiltshire. Furnrss. Vernon; Kings. P. Mclsaac. Scuris. Alex Hamiltonl New Perth. y Speakers at yesterday's meeting ‘included, Premier T, A. Campbell. W R. Shaw, deputy minister of J. W Graham. chief the Maritime Provinces. Stuart Irvine, senior fieldrnun. charfottetown. as well as members of the Marketing Board who took part in discussion of gen- eral business. Frflowing a suggestion by M1. W. R. Shaw provision was made at the meeting for the appointment of a standing committee from the Board agriculture, grader of Morlcton , (Continued on page ll. (:01 3i _._.€__.___ Chinese Report Destruction 0f 17 Enemy Planes (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) HANKOW. July 8—Chinese air headquarters reported a Japanese warship turned over on its side and applarenily went down today when C inese bombers scored dir- ect hits in a raid on enemy naval concentrations in the Yangtse River. Chinese airmen were busy from daybreak to sunset as successive squadrons of heavy bombers and ighter planes attacked Japanese (Japanese naval officers at shanghai said one Chinese bomber was shot down in the attack on i the warships at Anklng. They men- iiicned no damage to their fleet.) , Meanwhile Ja anese military oi- ‘ficlals at Shang ai demanded that ‘the municipal council of the In- l i ~ Chinese r port. bound for Chicago, d putting into effect the Anilkl- , 1 t ed, _ Seven other persons of the ‘ltlfallan friendship treaty before zgwaglgggrlmigmsigé“ to pyéant “a “hm?! 1° ‘wcupmis Wm‘ hurt‘ DUMB-me!" “d-i°“"“5 Jul‘ 29 is recurrence" of anti-Japanese ter- Mrs. MacKiew husband. N- 5- cnusln-il some wmem 5mm“ 0°“ rorism which resulted in death of MacKie. construction engineer. nt leaders. well-informed no o‘, melt nauonwh and Mrs. J dqindale o: ksoutél) sources saidmtélinigat. Ea 1 o‘ Peflh The protest was delivered through 510C811. B- -. i150 We"? A 0" In Rome 0Y- ‘e l" ' ‘ th Ja anese consul general and a hospital. but ctifficiills said their gylglfh Aapaiassédorblglldnshagtgélzlzg waes H‘: second to be lodge‘; by in m‘ 0s W911 n0 Se!‘ 0115- For‘? Ell n "l Ja anese following yester a.v's No cause of the tragedv was nd- (Jiano. held their second conference o“ break of shootings and bomb throwings in the oriental metro- polis as the Chinese-Japanese war entered its second year. Earlier the consul general ex- Bressed to the municipal council is dissatisfaction with the pre- cautionary policing arrangements. More than l5 bombs were thrown in the series of guerrilla ' attacks within the settlement and iwo ‘(gfillilliefifi besides the Japanese, were e . To Make Synthetic Sugar From Wood REGENBBURG, Germany, July 8 —-(AP)-—'l"he cornerstone of a reek sculptor Myron! statue valued at about $250,000 was moved a. step forward today when ""89 D1800 l0 Dmdllcv iynthtl-lc "testimony of the friendship“ s, n. Hagan. Soviet delegate to the wear from wood by e aroma of binding Italy and Germany. committee. unced his govern- hydrowzation was laid here today. ment’; adherence to the latest and Professor Friedrich Berri“!- final revisions of the plan. 1t was new time winner in chemistry recalled that Hagan had given hi; who invented the process, attend- ed the ceremony. -——~ ’rsl’t'fi'lufifslé$sul§u:riglgfiim“g' The new punt u scheduled w OTTAWA. J0 0 —<°'P)—N°- e ;~_------ ' begin operations July 1, 1930 un- tlco of the fol 0W1“ inwrvor- BITM HAD BAD CARI; der Gonna ‘s four-yeur-pian for stions was uiven in e our!“ __._ economic sci-sufficiency. will l!!!" 01 m" C0010‘ Glulw- WOODPORD, England —(CPl - be capable of converting more Mlblllhfld will)’; 88W“ Ellfflli- Failin underneath a steam irac- than 10,000,000 cubic feet of waste BI! Dflllfllmlifll 900100-11! 1M1. tor, - ear-old Bett Fernley em- wood into augu- annually: 030-000. Uhlrlbmtofil; Grands urged wth slight "Twutch- (Hydroliaation is a chemical Qllocllhl XML. 5.000 Ihlm. N. P. ed the tractor and three of the process of decomposition invol "‘~~r-l-tfefnvn trailers pass over mo." in . addition of the elements of. for. I As TR ONLGHOLD Make MARKETING‘ Town "or Nules I l Uccupied By Gen. Valino ’s Troops Capture Climages- Several Weeks Of Intensive Fighting On The Mediterranean Front. ZARAFOZA, §D1lilh July 3——(CP Havas)--The Insur- gents tonlght claimed to have captured Nules, Spanish »Government stronghold on ihe Castellon-Valcncia road, and important point in General Franco's driu- on the “ed- iterranean seaport of Valencia. Nules, only 15 miles northeast of Sagunto via ihe coast road, was occupied by General Garcia Valino’: Galiclan troops shortly after nightfall, ihc Insurgents claimed. insurgent spokesmen charged the defenders dynamited all churches in Nules, n town of 5.300 inhabitants before retreating southward. Gallium 0f Nines» lllSl IOWn before Sagunio, climaxed several weeks of intensive fighting on the Mediterranean front. 2C0 R u ssi an Planes For China General Franco's Moorish shock troops, after a spectacular advance through an open field sprayed with murderous crossfire from Govern- ment machine guns. clearer! the path earlier today. The outskirts of the town were overrun bv General Arandais fast- moving columns, who occupied heights dominating it from both sides of the coast road. while the Moors were preparing a filial power-drive against sandbagged trenches protected by barbed-wire. The Gcvernlnents national de- fence ministry issued a commun- ique in Barcelona that it's forces had abandoned the walled l0wl\ and had taken up new positions to the south on the road to Sazunto. While Arnndals troops were on- gaged in a battle for mastery, of Nules. General Garcia Vallnos con- tingents. moving through lnoun- tain passes in the Sierre de Espa- dans. reached points only eight miles fro-m Segoliae. vital tow-n l5 miles northwest of Sagunio, General Jose Varrlaflg Casiilian columns were reported attacking Government pockets souih of the Teruel-Sagunto road prellminaryto launching an offensive against Sc- gorbe from the southwest. (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) HONG KONG. July B-A fleet of 200 soviet Russian airplanes for China was reported today by a re- liable source to be in the process of (lcllvery for service in the Chin- csc-Japancse war. This source asserted some of the aircraft already had been flown to Hankow. provisional Chinese capital, while others were being assembled and icsicd at points in eastern Turkestan. near the west- ern border of Mongolia. - lull Permanent Com. To Assist Refugees BARCELONA. July 8—The Span- _ _ ish Government army today‘ aban- Juifflfimlggfifgfijfif‘%naif“gflfi d°“°d ‘he W511“ WW“ °f Nines» 28 the United States yvcre understood miles north of Valencia. under the pressure 0i the Insurgent offensive south along the Mediterranean today iu have reached a tentative agreement lvgarciing a permanent international committee to assist refugees from Greater Germany. The Anglo-American plan, it was Said in well-informed quarters at the 32-nation inter-governmental refugees conference 1n session here, would providc:-- l. That the headquarters o.‘ the organization would be in London instead of in ParLs, as first sug- 6 oas . A national defence ministry com- munique announce the Government troops took up new positions south of Nllles on the coastal highway leading to Sagunio, 4 miles away. Nules was evacuated only after three days of hard fighting at Vfllavieja. two miles to the west. where the Government troops hall g95ged_ taken a stand in an effort lo stem g4 That i; fcjnajn {we of claw m9 Tllsllrilfill 0Y1"- afflllstion with existing refugee groups organizer] under auspices of the mag-no of Nations. an Rushes Successful In Council Exams g (C. P. ‘by Guardian! Special Wire) l OTTAWA, July 8—-'I‘he Medical‘ Council of Canada announced to- night 376 candidates. including l7 women. had been successful in council examinations which en- titles them to practice medicine in Canada. The successful candidates. grad uates of universities throughout the Dominion, have sai for the exam- inations during the past several weeks. The examinations tvt-rr he'd at eight centres in Canada. Successful lslanri candidaics and the centre at whldl lhcv tried lhc l tests follow: ; Halifax: G. G, Houston. Char- lottetown; R. G. Lea. Victoria. P. g. C. B. Stewart. Emerald. P. Montreal: J. A. McMillan. Char- lottetown: F‘. R. Jardine. Kensing- Most’ Wcuul- ilafeRs ARE weaves ton. P. E. X. Vancouver: J. Macllean. Won- talwe P» E. 1- .\lh.i15ORlOL0GiCé\IL Torol to. Ju y 8 ---< 1>-. n mum and ‘maximum LGMDCTHHITOZZB 66 D 5 verses 5C u Members British E“'“°"‘"" “° 2% aeigmu 68 mu v - Press Calle would? e i“ w Toronto 69 97 -_-- Ottawa 60 86 OTTAWA. July 8 ~(CPl—Hon. Montreal 64 Dr. R. J. Manlon. newly-elected Q0009‘! 53 a‘ Conservative leader, today - St. John 3g 7B received a cable of congratulations l lfaliffiX 0 7‘ from members of the Press Gal- (lhllrlviililflwll 5 Nlnrilime west and east—Mod- lery of the British House of Com- ‘ crnic to fresh southwest winds: mons. l, i “o” The cable road: "we m the‘ verily Homily and Wlm- ‘g d_ pres; sugary U; me ll-[lgvyugg 0g c031- of: ignicéittcrcd showers or 1m mons w o persona remem er , l‘ -$ ~- your kindness at Ottawa in 1932i Hlifll tldi‘ U115 lfvfnlnll‘ éfiflii-u congratulate you and wish you lmgugfllglftglflgaxqlngliglsgg“ M- 1M7 (fn 193g DE-‘lptlnnionf w“ “con- ! 32d rises tomorrow morning at 4. servutive m n s er o ra ways - . “d can“, when m, {mpg-ml Summersirie ilrle 1B minutes later than Charlottetown. conference was held-mil: “n: (“B “may SAmmGs CLERIC GOOD COOK 7 ‘I m l“ ‘_ m Leave Borden 4. 5 p. m. Tormen- ggggx Englnnd _rcP) -Rev. i . m . and Oswald Gosney, vicar of North flne 5.15 a. m. ll a. m. 3.05 p. m. Weald-and Rural Dean of Ongar. ', and 8.50 p. m. an keen. knows how to cook, He took » Sundays, Leaves Borden .. un- firat prise in a cake-making cnm~ and '1 p. m. petition at his church fete and his Leave! Termenilne 10.15 a. m. wife won four cookery prim. and 8.10 p. in. W" 7‘ - a .@-§l_¢‘_ . . h. ' "‘ ._.-..-v ._..._l.