Maxlns l . 1 ,__ or A i 7 °““ hQ%,»”/Q//»»f”” ` ‘ - MAXIMS MERE MAN tl og, r,`/W/f /f IE A __ Y The Pggp|g5 Paper jf///f "-v¢;_jf-__“: Read Ehud §°f> ;;r;..i...t.i._ ......,.......... .. U... Covers Prince Edward flsland Like the Dew 4, __ . T.. _ ¢: Li au “W ~~ ---1- - . --__..,_ _ _ _ ._ T 001'# Y 1 M 1: ==°-- f -,=- --f~-- _ _ ~'~'°°‘°'1.'.."“"“"'t....'° _ """' ° M F M W CHARLOTTETOWN' CANADA’ SATURDAY' SEPTEMBER 11; 1937 12 PAGES .;‘;"ala:i1zr;zfP‘;r;:i.x"2;:;::.;‘.':.°.?.. . ....... iw SIA H1 Ts A T REPRISA ACAINSTYTALY 5315413 20,000 BREAMERY ANI] tlllll STURAGE PlllNl BURNED .M Property _ Owned By Mr. John E. Cousins -Loss Partly Cov- ered By Insurance. 'ms creamery and cold storage giant of Join E. Cousins. Park Oorner were levelled by fire yes may aftemoon. Loss wa.: esti- thewprovince. hafdwbeenwnoteii, mated at approximately $20,000 prtly covered hy insurance. Pcmes, which spread with great npidity ‘n the dry wooden build- mg were believed to have orig- inated in c generator lured to sup- ply electric current. Volunteer fire fighters quickly gathered but, de- spite c large supply of water in imill pond about 20 yards from the buminii building, were unable lo check the spread of the flames. J n- The croamery. where the ge tntot was situated, was formerly lclleese factory and was con- I wrled into a butter plant about levm years ago. Much of the dieen making gquipment remain- ad in the building. The adjoining widstorage plant was built three nan ago. ‘ 'lhe direction of the wind sent iiie flames away from a sawmill H Hg ` §f"§ K'1§!'=§=°=S gorge-ri E:-:§:-:;.§:--i :Hg LOSS BY FIRE AT PARK CORNER Soviet Delegate D' Ob kH‘ “temper ut rea :ts Fox Industry In Alberta EDMONTON, Sept, 10_Al.. though hampered by lack of special equipment and .staff of research experts necessary for rapld results, a test-tube cam- paign against the mysterious germ responsible for distemper ravages of the fox industry Was being pressed today under direction of Dr. P. R. Talbot, provincial government veter- inarian. Considerable abatement of the plague which in some cases decimated animal stock on fox farms in the neighborhood of Edmonton and in the south of H- H. Wallace, provincial same commissioner with the Depart. ment of Agriculture, reported. Under a. recent reg-o.1.o,1.1on published in the Alberta Gag.. ette any outbreak of the dig. ease on ranches in the pmv_ Uwe muat be reported prompt- ly to the Department of Ag-fl. culture. In thLs way deport. ment experts will be provided with accurate information. Research work at the Uni. VBYSHY has been aimed at isolation of the miknown germ responsible for a. form of dis_ temper peculiar to Alberta and ffllllld t0 be highly 00nLagl0u5_ Lull In A Fighting round Shanghai PuNf_cnlsH W i n g '- Commander Account. SCARBOROUGH, Yorkshire, Sept. 10-(CP Havns)-T ra ge d y marred the first leg of the King's Cup air race today. bringing death to wing-commander Percy C. 5h0l'I`0i1. M. C.. 4-4, distinguished Canadian officer of the Royal Air Force and wing-commander E. C. Hilton, his pilot, when a. :quail sent their plane crashing at a turn. More than 1,000 sons, in P01' - _-;_ cluding a. Royal Air Force ob- server, saw the plane caught by a F sudden gust in the northerly gala that was blowing_ This po.nt. which marked a tum. had proven P9l`CY O. Sherren Killed-Eye-wit-It ness Gives Graphic lst/un MAN __ vlcllll or iiififiiiii uw surf AiiF"'f"@f Affae'/fs lJ.WlElECTS. arns gmnst ini w'ui|i| , -nm | ay Med terranean Co fe e ce To TOKYO, Sept. ll-tsatiudnyi - lntehsified Italo-Japanese diplomatic negotiations assum- ed additional significance today as Premier Fumhnaro Konoye admitied his government. ex- pected the Sinn-Japanese con- flict to continue beyond the end of the year. Apparent efforts to strength- m the bonds between Tokyo and Rome coincided with at Jalianese move which promised to add to the strain already ex- isting between this capital and Moscow. Observers saw the dispatch of n. 300-ton armed patrol boat in- to the waters near the Tumcn River, under orders to protect Japanese fishing boats from Soviet seizure, as potential dy- namite. Concert-ed efforts to weld the country in preparation for war, both "spiritually" and ma- terially, were given funhcr point meanwhile by War Min- ister llajime Sugiy:Lma`s tacit admission his armies faced un- In i dangerous to other racers. Epidemic Increases. (By The Canadian Press) SHANGHAI, Sept-. 10--A lull in hting that earlier today seemed '°° ‘““"” "°‘“` mi” “J” °““°d ga.. me deadliest in on tn, rom- to 'rm' Comms' H15 dwelling eeks that war has raged at hom was also on the windward W anghai's door left no apparent Sh ue of me ure' change tonight in Chinese or Jr-ID' _ anesc positions. Fierce fighting on thc borders ol I t tl l S ttl t nd °°\\°l°l' 7° "8" ;“°..l“.:;:;s:.i. .ri 1;".i"..';.. n city roared into a crescendo after nightfall. Artillery, naval and aer- vALr:Nc1A.` Sent. 1o-rcP-i-1av- ial gulls thundered but ceasedlate night. at `__"' Harried foreign residents. men- ed by disease within their :irons .cir- Isl-The defence ministry tonight M . ‘ d im erlled by warfare er received o rc-port from Cartagena mug u_£m_ Could hom. me distant ihlt Government coastal batteries “ld “milpa opened fire on two ig' lmldentifled submarines off the 5lill'ilSh Mediterranean coast and St lkiieved they had sunk one. Th* mtefnfze received here said 32"* We attenuating to cheek "P0rled sinking. mblc of artillery and naval guns the north where the Japanese ruggled to secure their foothold. Cholera Spreads A horitles disclosed that chol ut . - era, to which hunger-ridden Chi- nese are especially susceptible. ned within the past week. They i giiid at least mo Chinese refu8€¢5 To Be Increased itliin the international arcashave en segregated with cholera with new cases discovered each day. Chinese threats to intensify their (CP-by Guardians Special wird) bombardmenls of Japanese war LONDON- $f‘Dl~. 10-Passenger VP ssels pressed in the dangerfrom nies for sieamship line: operated _still another side. ililm l-he United Kingdom and Heavy Jnpnnese losses in four gtlfl-h America io Australia and days' fighting around Jukong wharf ew Zealand will be increased ap- were attested by the appearance "°""““‘*"l' 10 ner sont ost. 1. of three big hospital ships off “An official _announcement at- Woosung. bum the The to “increas . ed and m-Qhliig 0P€ratlng costs." on P ~» `. ;_~-> ~----.. _ "mm T -T tl Beyond Woosung. in the newly ptured walled city of Paoshan. ic Japanese charged their adver- ries plnntcd cholera germs be- re fleeing. Eifzhty cases broke [ sri OMING fV£Nll f" out among Jnpzmese soldiers in . three days. with 20 deaths, Japa- cse claimed. Neutral observers n c°'DHr1.'c~\Veb.»rei"s_ Orchestra - W ere skeptical of any deliberate ["¢iBan llnll, Tuesday, September planting of germs. “""’"”‘- 1.-44s-9-io-zi. "Pant R ,Ms ry Sale at Moore 6: Mac- W ', S"LUl`di1.\’ by Kingston- Shell llospiial Ship Chinese shore batteries shoivered mms In-mfllie. L-259-9-8-11. sh:-lls near the Jnpnncsc hospital \.Re_Sm_ F* ship America. Maru. wounding \g~,`° em' 215'" f°f 5UPP€r Japanese stretcher-bcnrers and "W Fest Royalty. forcing the ship to sau for Japan L-490-0-11-Mi only partly loaded with injured ' T tr Hn;Th7” W1 be 8. dance and oops. Chinese. disputing the Japanese 0 1" seilvibw Hall, Tuesday charge that the attack was un- Ui!flll1g_ se,pt_ urban T- 14. L-496-9-11-2|. justified. declared activities aboard “Y CE in Millview Hall. Mon- piciously as though the hospital “V s°°“"“’°’ 13"” ”’°°°""‘ "‘ “blues being _ved 1°” ere.- °' Vernon ci-eau. Union. ~ L-445-9-10-2l. On ""* bqlmfgrwe satllfdly. September Pantry sale at Rogers “N bv oomwu: ivnsnon L-428-9-ll-11. no *T* lqnavmnum M90*-U18 of the “UBL Rural Telephone Com- wmu held at Long Creek ip °“‘i°v.Bentember mn or the America Maru appeared sus- Heavy Selling Plunging Down In New York Japanese troop and munitions landing. Other hospital ships. they said. apparently have been similarly used. If the practice continues, the Chinese warned, they would "feel 'free to take appropriate steps.” Shrapnel sprayed into the In- ternational Settlemont, causing a number of civilian casualties and the riverfront Bund was ordered cleared. Crowded areas surround- ing the thoroughfare were desert- ed during the height of the even- ing artillery duel while bursting hirzh explosives rocked the city. Shells rained on the Wlinngpoo river, shanghaiis outlet to the sen, narrowly n~lissingFrench and Brit- ish warships lying in tho stream _ofl'*tl1e International Settlement. llllllll Plllll AT llllMlll0N Carl Burke To Com- pete For Covcted Air Trophy. HAMILTON, Ont., Sellt. 10- (CP)-Fourteen ace pilots, \\'ii:ncis of regional eliminations, coxnpeteri today in the first stages of a com- petition for the 'Webster Trophy. highest award in Canudfzm civil aviation. The pilots will compete tclny and tomorrow in pi'oficiciicy and pllotage te~.ts nt Hami‘ton Airpori, and checked by officers of the Royal Cnnnclimi Ali* Fovcc The cup is being defciiclcd by G, R. McGregor of Kingston Fljsini; Club, victor in 1935 und 1936. Youthful Curl Burke of C‘.~.z\r- lottetown, P. E. I.. arrived for the competition yesterday after a flight from the lvlariinies iutir- ruptcd by n forced landing. Daphne P.itcr.~;nn, who piurrcl second in 1932, has entered ng.ii.;, She is thc only woman pilot ever to try for the prized award, clon- ated seven years ago by Dr. J. Clarence Webster and Mrs_ `.Vcb- ster. The competit’on was under supervision of Col. D. G. J.y, in- spector of civil aviation for Can- adn s§..i§ riser; (By The Associated Press) NEW YORK, Bept. 10-In the ~n. \\\ry. Chu' M“°D°““u' 5”' second widest break since 1933, the .L-392-9-U-I1. 133°" “"9"” Uopelmu scot- °“'41"iAiner and Kenneth Dui! k market sold off in volume stoc today, carrying leaders down Situ S6 a share, in a few cases much =l1ll|ntviollnlstin cape, '1~mv¢m,' more, and many to new lows for - laptg . “mmm g\5l;erén&3t.1l;cat I oclock. a x.-4ea.o-ii-ai. on *-- ,,,f_‘°°ilnn wui be held at the fol- low' "‘°°°°= Nuney. - o'n»m-y .»i,__ 'mv-L Ham. sept. iam, a p_M_I Aibetewart, Sept. wth, 8 "ML Sept. _zoth at me The nieetnzs wiu be the M.ni.oter of A51-1¢.' Burke. the mr Field- L-414-e-n-is-ze. _ year or longer. Nonplussed brokers. studying the situation after the close, attribut- ed the widespread slump toacom- bination of factors. the most im- portant involving ienrs of unear- by business recession. “Thlnness" of the market was a potent element in the decline. thé spread between bid and asked prices at times running to several °"'*'*“‘”hg Foxmen of dollars a share. At0tAlof950lll\ll,l10fAblei!l recent history, was traded during the day. Of these, 823 flnLshed lower, 85 were unchanged and only 42 registered gains. A total of 452 issues reached new lows for 173 or longer. Industrial stocks suffered most. The average for 30 Industrials sank $4.70 lo $83.30. also a new low since 1936. Rail and utility shares were less affected. LONDON, Sept. 10-(AP) -The stock market clofrd irregular to- day, with trniisnllantlcs somewhat easier. The gilicdge group was steady while Clvrinan bonds were fractionally lower. There was con- siderable weekend profit-taking and a lessening of public support otquototiouslnmnltlinel. __ Hurled I-‘rom Cockpil dxpectedly stiff opposition along the several China fronts. . Conclude Plans For A11 Inter- Mrs. Harold J. Hynes national Patrol Fleet T oday. Of Mon e l e c t e d Diocesan President. Mrs. Harold J. Hynes of Monta- ;,-:le \vus re-elected president of the , tlioetsuli Catholic Womens League ut the coucluiiug session oi' tile ltiii annual convention of the or. l;o.nl'/.ation at Sourm yesterday af- iemoon. Other off cers elected included: .\l1's. E. G. Gillis, Kensington, 2nd lice prcsicicnt; Mrs. Adrian Mein- nls, Sourls, 3rd vice president; Miss Ida Dawson, Summersldc, executive .»ec1'eiar_y; Miss Florence Kelly, Montague, corresponding secretary, rc-elected; Miss Margaret Dougan, Cluulottetowli, treasurer, re-elected. Opening session of the conven- tion \\'u.s held Wednesday evening. l<‘ollo\\'uig opeling exercises on 'i`liu.rszioy lilo lreasui‘er`s report was read. $7,000 had been raised during thc year. An upthrust hurled Sherren, a Miss l~‘loi~t-nee Boland of Toron- native of Prince Edward Island_ to,nul,1onul president, congratulated from the cockpit, He hurried 200 _tile League on its spleudicl finan- feef; crashed through railings on |ciu_ stuuciing. Miss Boland also l,0p'gf Sgarbomugh (juggle H111 ,spoke briefly tolling dclegales of the and landed on Mm-me Drive at ;uLil;oual convcnticul rn ldilngstokri. `l;s success was argey ue. s e the foot of a. cliff 300 feet below. _ l_____ to me Cmrgy and ml, of Hilton's body wa* found, headless A I fl' ,_ _ l in the cockpit :if the wrecked | `\‘°P_b1°l_‘,?,D lf) Bf,m_1_]' C, .1 “_ OBJECTS OF PATROL machine' ioiif'llhl\"1\‘i`llliic flilicfiirer lgllid) ei: T] 1 1 0, L f H -, ‘ , 7 _ _ - ‘ , _ , " V* " _ ' ` ‘. '_ ' _ 10 gon? 'ii )_]l;(' S 0 le li* ` A 4 (E W Pmcwal' ny ng B P" i’1"f'”"“ P“'*‘“`i“1 “p1”"C“m°“ of tevrmtiozinl patrol of the Merliicr- ‘ » isirleul s al.te1id.ince ta ue - . g Re ‘ Hi' .losrzw E. slmlrlmi' Associated l'rc.s'.s I"or¢'i_1/n S111/T GENEVA. Sept. lt)---The .\lediiel‘l'unezin Conference ln Nyon, warned by Russia that failure of the gathering to halt submarine “pil‘:u'_\"' might lend to 8 clash hctwccn lluly und Rilssia, reached :ln zlgreement in principle tonight for an inicrnzliionul \v:|l‘ship pzifrol. Italy, whom Rllssiu :accused of sinking Soviet merchantmen, herself will have the chance to put down nny possible out- law lorliedoings in the .\lcfliier1'anean under the :\gl'ccn1ent. She will he asked to uolicc with her worships a zone in the sfeo. while other nnvies patrol other zones to sink “pirate” submarines on ..~1'l`<>.\.', Sf lit. 10-- 'AP)~-Bos- the two-day race around the ' f \\f_L.im~1iioei-s r c gi - - ° _ - ktl lli L she stil had pleasant "Hl1l2f‘<` liii>f\i‘<‘ -‘f\~'i .\f-'~ffI`\'iH§' YW °0\1it~'\:~<~|-_ a Bostmi rooler, ‘ ent to Union ‘mst week to vlfil are might lead to nn Italo-Rilsrion 1 \\' ‘clnsh. _ I his lvi-other Cl-<‘.AYE, Franco-spanish Frontier, Sept.. 10-Internal troub- les like those which forced the surrentler of Santander last month ivere rcporied in Insurgent dis- patches touiglit to be hast/ening the fall of Gijcn. last Goverment- helcl si~:\poi'l, on the Bay of Bis- cny const. Cwwd of dmnonstmtom W-me ‘ In tlu- lit-v‘u1'locd silence iii-it fol- :uirl to lime lnamliccl in Gi_|ou .~ii'ei~t.~. rl1\:nnum.t'_. rv t nurl ` UVCS find U10" UCW 0\'<`i' “Hain 1° "A frermcut was renrlied on srv- son hue (may “ner A brief m` der'l1i'i;‘<2ln gilt iii mc. ‘ll5i'1`ib“i'<` u`“"~*3“md" Of i’m“l'"m' eral bpoiuts. Another inoiiiiiiii will' ness' surviving are two mm' C' "Todd Gorinnnv belongs to no "fum “Sing thf l'>f‘°l)l¢` of Giifm 3° be held iomo11'o\\’." | F~»C°1°d°“|=»-'lnd C°°i1.M°l1if°°11 y _ . ` almnrlon i~esi-stance. The soviet rirleg..:<~',~ uiuiiuisr, Iiis\11'_se1ii~= d@L‘1a1'<‘d they had rout slioitiy after vrou iieilios, rokcli Government, re»istnlloc in French Foreign .\llnistei~ cle(-loci lo ic high Europa mountain sector, the presidency, opened the eoiiibr- eypoint in the defences of Gijon, 1 flcr 15 hours fighting. lContlnued on page ll. Col ill p_,“-_.,,,, _Ml _ ;:.._- __'-_ :-“H _~ Y - i \~iCtUr,_\ 53 Remains Centred In Ontario mu1d:- of uiiy delegates as io what by t'lux1"'r 'T";.\ liste fixes _.ri fl lilf nation he nieuiil. ulivu he slioliiccl; mmi .inji_:.~fftl bv To-`iv linrllcng "Everyone knows the imnic of the 3 sincr- been <"'.1rctl of su piclon_ state which is pursuing this policy- I the name is on e\'ei'yonr~'s lips, even ‘ " " " ‘ '“"`“""i"i if it muy noi. be pronouiircfi in thzs ? hall." I' Litvluoff clc<'l.ai'<\\'ii'i'espo1iclciit: - _ “ki” . _,_ , %»¢__é_,,m _‘,___7-` v\'i_»_-¢.... .v =(':\|\udiun Press) "l`ORO.\"`U Supl, 10- .\'Iifiill'll l1.u n~r\".iu‘1m t<‘ill;>eraYuros:-- lilriinorz 2 on 48 42 l`. »r<»i‘if-'i 58 O: in'.\*.\ 50 .\lullI "l‘.'1i (X) Qllvbvr' 62 Snzul John .30 $6 BC 'rl lnfantile Paralysis Ep|de|n|c;;7€i.s....a..»». .2 if it 70 64 'T31 J A Manitoba total in los. ouiei- rc- ___ no 5: .:.:ir»1‘»~';»u11 ’ 7 CALGARY. Sept. 10 - Pwneer p tdemic today remained centred in Saskateliemn 96. Quouro and no _ . 'Ontario where more than 1,200 Maritimes more than 75. "‘“”("'qT publisher and believed to be one of the oldest Masons in Canada _ _ | . - V, _ _ h . b ,_ 1 U _ _ _ .. _, Stephen E. Wait. 84. died at his' (cqllzrgdyguggin !1fi§$;aI$l;`24i)c2 distgse nlif?gnrimtTorinpsi]lliec‘iir°sa;]l;€ay'ir‘i Q ggi; ui?;;p,f‘rL(l~,!;,i.dn§;)\l_l,a,ii:`_';,, ` _\l. ri, :iw 1*.-\‘..:;.c-1 Fair. foh ' Y ' - ` " , "_ " "`. '».'.t~i iw ii i i inc soulhoasl h°B“;°mhl"° gggsnlggh P E I h 000 borrowed under the Home lm- _ June. New cases reported sent 0g|¢¢»r_ _mid ,mi-, gg ,,,_.,._; _md _ ~_ ~ _ »_ __ “ ec ' ' " ° pmvement Plan up to Aug. 23 'thc Canadian total over the 1,500 been i~<-ported so my um “-,ok ,_. '~‘f“ll~\ 1'"-I l‘l`f‘\‘- Wil imn "Iii-:I deaths were recorded yestcr- Sgrxiiqgaillilriiodwliriist hhhikdmilm H” i iiljmm "EMI 4?* “"`w()‘)]‘ at 2'” ` ` i .l twin ~i .'-. lx.r‘i'ui:i»! RL 208, h’ l l and , . _ . ogngg? 1:2222? statement today by Finance Min- clay, leaving the country-wide total pcm- ,ww casps “...,, ,.,W,,,,[, 1,, l"-L_ i -_‘Q pap" work at M°n.|sbu,.¥_ Om" ister Dunning. at 58. Of these. 44 have occurred | wr-_elf-rn 0,,¢,,,|0_ l "-""_ ""' ““~ This Ls divided nmol the prov- in Ontario, eight in western Can N(-W }3m,,_q“-g¢k~_< _q~|,.,,,1. N.. f“"" _"“"“"“" i\~r~ull`! at 624) ani ni-'\i'niilu ut. 33'! and for 25 years was publisher of ‘il ' , . _ ,_ the Kem tvillo Advance. m°°5 95 f°"‘°w53 P‘1“"° E‘l“`“"‘ “d“- "“"`° in N°"“ sum” 'md mnined closed ns llml proriiicf- ,ul V-I;-,`-q;:" mmm 'Wwhw Stl* f ._ . . . , P oom| to gal in 1900, he T-Bland $36,000. Nova Scotia. $94.- three clsewlierr-_ Greater Toronto _ . . . , ng “ry 000 New Brunswick $83,000 Que lends the civic centres with 24 mugm' to “www mmm “Trad Si1uillicr.\;