MAXIMS A FRENCH PRESS °Y I‘ or A MERE MAN ' MERE MAN ' valent P001116 l" ll"?! >2?’ M” We caiuiot get up by pulling oth- The Peoples Paper 1m é urinal», r-iunaea 1on1 ' I “WWII. a1“ BI’; u ZL",'.‘.’.‘.N‘......-.. Guardian m... c»... CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1934 8 PAGES STIR). S£1'.T'.'.'.‘..T'."I‘..'Z.'I1 u.‘ 37's. ufi ‘i “"‘” [Delegates Given SchoonerEnroute 1T1. NJHNSUN mu 1112mm 1s 111111 1111111 Threatens Resignation After Quarrel With sedy of Labor Per- kins, But Reconsid- ers Action At Re- quest of President Roosevelt. ‘Copyright 1934 by The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Aug. 27—A qjmpiclr luctlcnl victory for Hugh 5, Johnson, leaving him the undis- p-ppd bass at NRA is the outcome 01m unense, personal wrangle 1111b Bvcrctary of Labor Frances Perkins and Donald Rlchbcrg over F113,, i111‘ reorganizing the Blow Enzie curacy» ,1 - happcncd last week. m“; situation that caused 11¢ ROO:.C\1‘TL to return to Wash- 1 1 111101‘ Speaker Henry 1111135 iuncral in Illinois, and [hi 111 .-.<:1lve the quarrel instead 1,1 qmg (lircctly to Hyde Park, as u had 111211111011. ,1, the situation illa-pedl up to- day the following results predom- ' and: mGrncral Johnson will remain as 113;‘ 111i rccavory administrator r lzkcly will head the board 1110:‘ is to take charge cf NRA. R;c21.'*1" will continue for the t1111e b ‘ at least. 11s NRA coun- 1111 understanding that c 1l Johnson is the chief of 1. Later he probably will kcy 110st in the recovery 1, probably that of head of '11 emergency council. kins in the future p:ob- cnnfinc her work more ‘v <1 the activities of her own a. 1 z. l;1 o r1" words, President Roose- 1.;-,, w.:h n profound admira/tlonl 1n‘ bcih Miss Perkins and Rich- - . act not in the least af- j 11o events of the last s \1.1>1~kcd out a. plnn which -. im11> ihcm from stepping on the sczuiiive toes of the impetuous divxuic, dormant for wceks. ‘(Contoured on Page 3) ANNOUNCEMENTS. COMING EVENTS, MEETINGS, ETC "Avmnnn-i-nicfffsuzro lnunrlod ln (i111 mlninn ut 2 cents. pcr uunl nnnly puyuiiln In iulvnncc, "Tnikizs -Malpeque Wednesday. L-88B4-8-28-2i. "T Bradalbane Thursday. New b1‘ "Devil Horse." L-B884-8-28-2i. “Big Masqucradc Dance, St. Mar- gnvfs llnll, September 3rd. Good mll-‘lf. L-8847-8-27-3i. "Sicnmcr "Harland" Excursions. Pllanc 77.1 for card giving sailings. L-B168-8-l-im0. "Vi'c1l11cs<lu_v. August 29th, For- iune Lluncc! Elliott's Jazz Band. 11-8830-8-25-31 U"I‘1_‘- J D Ilcrldin will be in St. mcrs li uuy, Mt. Stewart Fri- ll" L-B87l-8-28-1l. "Borden lino Club loading h0g5. . crlr. Wccincsdny, mfg. \\'. J. i111 id, Sery. L-HBTH "ll-luv". Consolidated School, V’ ll 1-1, 'l‘hursday, August 30th. 11'1'l\c.\i1':l. Proceeds in aid t! $011111 1-1111. L-8857-8-27-3i ‘Cilaucc at Horton's, Murray '07. 'l‘l1ursday night. Snappy music. Admission 26 cents. L-8866-B-28-3i. Q9'}‘1H<>111_R1vc1- Wednesday, Aug. -, ch1ckcn supper and dance- llilllcr scrvcd 5.30. Admission, with illllller, 110C; without, 15c. L-8895-8-U-2i ‘flood business for sale 11cm: wvro.!1cfr1\v11, restaurant and gro- h,‘é,"yh”_""'-' Y1 flood business. Ill ml _ .1111 cnuso for sale. For par- ‘ums “Dilly at Guardian Office. 11-8835-8-35-21 "Prolcct 'ou 1 1 - m hpwhvi r nvtstments, parents ‘WHH _ asked to investigate the ‘m1! protccliou offered at very M“ STAon policies for college stu- ‘l n-q-F ddrcss. J. A. Moore, Branch 1 Pr, Su11 Life, Charlottetown. L-8481-B-13-tf u _“_‘ c0n€l1§1v<11111111s Institute District In“ n; ‘.1111 is taking place in Cen- lw wrlcqnc Hall on Tuesday, Aug- hé Phi ‘Public meeting in even- mcrflznnnciu speakers. Admission " - L-88’1'1-8-28-1i. ‘T . ‘NV-o 1111 <1“. i11- Sun Life protects you fully _ _ money to secure cotton textile strike. Fuml dwislo" Noisy ,Welcome To Historic City (B! J. J. O'Brien, Canadian Prue Staff Writer) QUEBEC, Aug. 21-—With rounds of receptions and visits to many Mwrlo some with familiar 11541133 nelwh delegates to the Jacques Cartier celebrations tonight oom- ploted a clay of gripping mtemst, Arriving this morning 0n the liner memoratlvc ceremonies the vfsitqrg were given a noisily modern wel- come from Canada's oldest city Sirens and whistles blew from the ships in the harbor while a. crowd) on the heights above cheered lust- ily The visitors were greeted by a committee headed by Judge Albert Sevigny and including Mayor J. E. Gregoire, Hon. Athanase David, provincial secretary, and Senator C. P. Bcaublen, representing the all-Canada Jacques Cartier cele- bration committee. Newspapermeu with the party were escorted to the legislature building where a French language congress was held, while the bal- ance of the visitors were taken ar- ound the city during the morning. In the afternoon the delegates gathered in the city hall square wheze an official welcome was ex- tended by lvfayor Gregoire. Blue Shirt Party Banned By Ulster (C. ll-liuvas) (Py Gw-"dlanb Special Wire) BELL ., Aug. 27 -— Northern Ireland infcnds to permit no blue shirt party to take root in its ter- ritory. Sir Dawson Bates, Minister of Interior, today outlawed any such organlz. .1011 in Ulster and added a personal ban on General Eoin O'D11ffy, lender of the blue shirt movement in the Irish Free State. 0'Duffy had indicated his inten- tion to organize a blue shirt sec- tion in Northern Ireland. The movement has grown rapidly in the Free State recently, A similar ban in Ulster already is in force against Eamon De Valera and Sean T. O‘Kclly, president and vice-president of the Free State. Uulster officials, it was under- stood, intend to prevent any IPree State political moves being carried on here. Today's ban followed closely :1 statement by Viscount: Cralgnvon, Premier of Ulster, that n ‘united Ireland is "not only impossible but unthinkable and from the highest imperial interests undesirable." Maine County Has Bumper Crop Twculy thousand 1111111 and women were polsccl mciay for the Aroostook County gold rusl1_11 rush in which potatoes were gold. Nature, nlunrvs :1 capricious mis- tress in the fur-flung acres of North- crn Maine. has bccn good to the 110- talo grmvcr this ycnr. A bumper crop, one that may exceed all rc- cords and reach 50,000,000 bushels, is in the ground. For the ncxt. six \\’("<‘.ks all hands will be busy in Aroosfonk. Already tl1e annual influx of Wliggers" has started. Men and 11101111111 from all parts of New England and so111e from Eastern Cnnadn. come here to pink potatoes at ti‘.- cculs a barrel- and board thcunsclvcs. The day's picking averages from 50 to 150 bar- rcls cach. The first few cnrloads to leave Aroostook this year brought only 8i a bushel. However. n S3 price was not considered beyond 11osslbillty as the market sifunlioii i“. far as sull" ply “'11s concerned was about i110 Champlain from the Gaspe comm IS VISITNR T0 (I |1T Y Notes Improvement In Conditions In 1 Cape Breton Metropolis. V151“!!! the city at the present time _l11 connection with the annual meeting of the Nova. Scotla and, Prince Edward Island Hospital As- sociation meeting is BL; worshjp Mayor S. E. Muggah of Sydney. ms Worship arrived hem from Windsor where he was attending a. meeting of the Union of‘ Municipalities. He is vice-president of this organiza- t1on,_ and is also chairman of the hospital board of Sydney. Among the important matters to come before the Hospital Associa- t1°n l5 One hill/in! to do with legis- lation to facilitate. the work of hos- pitals, states Mayor Muggah. The great problem is the automobile ac- cident cases, as frequently it is im- possible to secure payments from the injured. SDeaklng with respect to condi- tions in Sydney, Mayor Muggah Says, "Under the direction of Sir Newton Moore, the President, and Mr. Kelly, the steel plant is slowly regaining its former position, and about 2.500 men are being employed regularly, and while this has placed the city's unemployment relief on a much more favourable basis than during the darker years of the de- pression, our great problem is the absorption into some kind of useful labor of the large number of unem- ployed who are unable to find labor at the plant or elsewhere. There are no openings for employment, either in Sydney or any of the Capt. Breton towns at the present time, and there will not be until the resi- dent unemployed are put to work. With the return of better times, the City of’ Sydney is holding its own well, and if things keep on as they are going. it is hoped that the city will be out of the red in the course of another year." Mayor Mugga-h. who is registered at the Queen, is thoroughly enjoying his stay in Charlottetown. French Doctor Discovers Cure For L ep rosy (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) {By Wade Werner) (Copyright, 19M, By The Associat- ed Pres!) (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) BERLIN, Aug. 27—Minister of Propaganda Paul Joseph Goebbels tonight geared his vast propaganda machine to the job of stealing Nazi Germany from the approaching winter's hardships '.- With grave, possibly critical eco- nomic difficulties just around the comer. the dynamic minister set himself the hcrculean task of pop- ularizlng self-sacrifice and glorify- ing "going without." A sort of spartan patriotism was the keyword for the big drive pre- faced as it has been by oratorical bar-rages on many Nazi fronts. Fuehrer Adolf Hitler in his ad- dress at Coblenz yesterday urged his people to meet suffering with noble patriotism and German defiance. "The greater the distress," he de- clared, “the greater will beour de- fiance and our determination in spite of everything we will over- come it. Under no conditions will we surrender.” The campaign to harden national endurance in its present stage as- cribes the seriousness of the eco- nomic situation to two cases. They are: 1—The blunders of Hitler's pre- decessors in power. 2—Internati0nal hostility toward the new Germany. ‘This latter cry Hitler himself echoed at. Coblenz. ' "Certain international cliques which believe they can break us down with economic terrorism, boy- botts- etcetera." are responsible, Germany Urged To Cultivate Spirit Of Self-Sacrifice Minister Of Propaganda Goebbels Warns Of Hardships To Be Faced During Coming Winter——Seri- ous Economic Situation As- cribed To International Hostility. Hitler said. Hjalmar Schccht, Minister of Economics. in his address at the opening of the Leipzig Mercantile Fair yesterday also emphasized that ihe populace must be prepared “to face with great soberness" the eco- nomic emergency "which interna- tional policy has forced upon us". Goebbels has sounded similar warnings, but the little minister 0f ‘lmlmganda ls expected in the fut- 11re to attempt to envelop suffer. ing in an aura of romance. stress- ing the sufferings of German's rIrcnt heroes of past centuries and attempting to spread widely rho conviction that hardship patriotic- ally borne is more precious than prosperity Some observers of German eco- nomic development believe it will be at least six months before the economic pinch begins to be felt by the average German. By that time, they suggest, Goeb- bels’ well-oiled propaganda may have made Germans capable of glorifying in hardship at the same time that workers in other coun- tries are reacting impatiently to milder distress. This distress abroad has been ac- centuated in some sections, inci- dentally. by Germany's withdrawal as buyer of such foreign commo- dities as Manchester's yarns, Swe- den's ores, California's dried fruits and walnuts, Airginias tobacco. Brazil's coffee and the like. While Goebbels himself has not dared to suggest that hardships can be endured forever, those who watch his propaganda admit he may work wonders for at least one winter. SAIGON, French lndo-China, Aug. 27.—Ncw hope was held out tonight to the world's "untouchables." suf- ferors from the dread disease of leprosy. A score of years devoted to study of the plague culminated today in snmc 11s last winter when that price prevailed. In (By ham-Id Cameron, Assocllffll Press Staff Writer) (A. P. By Guardian's SPWTYIT wt") WASHINGTON, A118. 27~Tl1e National Labor Relations Board prepared today to intervene in the projected textile strike through which union leaders plan to tio up the entire industry on Sept. 4. With preparations complvicd for a walkout of some 460.000 cotton mill workers, the strike commiticc of the United Textile Workers per- fected arrangements for similar strikes in the silk, rayvll ""4 dyv lng, and woolen and worsted indus- tries. none]; J, German, chairman of tho strike committee. sold it Wl-‘i "highly possible" that the walkout of the silk. rayon and woollen workers-some 300 000 i11 all— with the might be simultaneous 5W lllfif-pciidcncc in old age. It on that point will be made by "l" investigate executive council of the 11nlon on Thursday. Lloyd Garrison. chairman 0f U"! in: B101 I!“ in“ for . _ hrwljvi 111111111111 to - "fbrful plan, ' “"- Mlnflscr. Charlottetown. Consult J. A. Labor Board,“ _ Cotton Textile Strike Dr. George Hippolytc MonteTs an- (A. I’. By Guardian's Special Wire) lnouncemcnt at, Saigon Hospital here PRESQUE ISLE. Mo, Aug. 27,- [that he had succeeded, through in- travenous injections of methylene blue solutions, in converting contag- ious into non-coiltagious cases. The noted colonial health officer snid his method would be tried out i11 all provinces of Cochin China. Through its use in connection with chaumulgra oil, he added, lie hoped to obtain definite cures. The general condition cf lepersl submitted this treatment improved, Dr. Montel said, their ulcerations healed and their leprous lesions fad- ed. A corresponding member of the French Academy of Medicine, spec- ialist on colonial diseases of the skin and one of the world's foremmt au- thorities on leprosy, Dr. Montel last February first reported his intra- venous method fo the Indo-China. Medical Society. Tonight authorities, cheered by the fact that many lepers hereto- fore living in seclusion have presen- ted themselves at the Saigon Hos- pital for Dr. Montoya treatment, planned to establish experimental centres throughout Cochin China. To Intervene the union leaders depend for eventual meetings with employers. disclosed today that the board was planning early action in the textile 1111111111011. In response w w 1111"!’ l! to when the board. would make known its course, Garrison lent word l/o reporters: "Probnbly not until tomorrow." Meanwhile elaborate textile strike preparations were P9119194 a‘ m” strike headquarters here. Gorman said the exact hour o! the will would be disclosed Thursday. 1"" Jlltlldhtil! sources said confidential instructions had been sent to rc-_ glonal leaders to 500D I11 WW7" ‘m: operations at "'19 “b” M w“ id . “Willie the strike call will b6 sounded for Saturday, Swi- l. 115 effect cannot be noted until Sept. 4, The industry 1s opemlns on a five-day week. With mills closed on Saturday, 3nd the following Mon- day, Labor Day, also is n holiday. 1 h 1 ' strike committee m- r Em o“ Hartman}! .-_ By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Aug TL-Agenis cf the Senate's special munitions investigating committee were re- ported iel-lably today to have found adink between Sir Basil Zaharoff. Europels mystery man. and United State war materials manufacturers. Letters from uhe enormously wealthy European, about whom little is known but who sometimes is called a "maker and breaker of Kings" have been found in the fyies of some of the leading mun- itions manufacturers in Anlorlvfl- The subject will be sired, prob- ably soon after the opening 0i hearings here a. week from tomor- row. summonses already have been served on around n. dozen rcPYBS" entatlves of the industry 110 EIW testimony on various lines. senator Pope, Idaho Democrat. only member of the comnnittcc now in the capital, refused to affirm or deny the Zaharoff rcpotls. 11C pdmitted, however, the commit- tee's investigators had: found in- tematlonal connections between some manufacturers in thc coun- pry and large firms of other nat- ions. , . A new angle in the lnvestizfiliw“ was" seen in a. prediction by P011” that the committee probably WW d 101111 ma» the shlmwnt 0‘ “m? hon from the United States I0 Japan. A report. of the department of omnmeme today dliwlmd 101-‘ 29s tons of the wm July "mor- ta-tion of 11.5.1112 tons of wrap 1w" had gone to the Oriental nation- 11, jg generally thought in m‘; United States um at 1cm pm 0 ma}; ggrgp iron is used by 175D") gm- thg manufacture of munitions and other armament!- m law-infers 1mm °°"' Munitions Committee Will LookIntoShipmentOfScrap Iron From U.S. To Japan- i (By H. C. Hunter Copyright i934 manufacturers is expected to be “m” 51,- 15,311 m4 his activities m connection with United States Always wBuy the Best T-All TEA brought out. early in the hearings inasmuch as the subject of mun- itions and amuarnents exports is scheduled early in the sewlon. Sir Basil, a. Greek who became a subject oi’ Great Britain and later was knighted for service to that country. came into prominence several ycam ago in connection with the munitions traflfic. Sir Basil is generally supposed to have some connection with the Maxim Company of Vienna and with Viokers and Armstrong in England. Each is one of the larg- est munitions concerns in its coun- try. French Speaking Doctors Hold Congress QUEBEC, Aug. 27--With dele- gates from France, Belgium, the United States and Canada the an- nual congress of Hench-speaking doctors opened here today. It was presided over jointly by Prof. Emile Sergent of France and Dr. Albert Paquet of Quebec. A welcome W115 extended by Ho“, 13; L. Patenaude, Lieutenant Governor of Quebec and was replied lo by Df- Pflqllet and Prof. Scrfzent. Accompanied 11v I squad 0f BOY QQQULQ the delegates visited Bel- mont cemetery and laid wneaths on the grave of Dr. Arthur Rous- seau of Quebec who W88 "M"! joint president of the comma 1n Paris but who died early m“ year- Prof. Sergenf. delivered a culvfly 01' Dr. Rousseau at his grave. Hon. Dr. Murray Miwmmil- w" tater of Pensions and Publlo 11mm, attended me session-i <11 the doctors. ‘Ill commons n11 11111111 31111111 Hope Expressed For Continuance of The League of Nations Mandate Over Saar Region. press today hailed Adolf Hitler's speech yesterday at Ehrcnbreit- stein with distrust, Many newspapers strengthened their comment by printing beside it the news that Mrs, Sinclair Lewis, journalist, wife of the American novelist, had been "invited" to leave the Reich. Le Jour said: “What is the use of all these words when the frcat- ies signed have become nothing more than scraps of papers." Le Matin: “Hitler showed that he well realizes the pcril which throat- ens him: distrust of lhe Catholics, anxiety of thc political parties, and the memory of the time when ihc ‘Saar was sacrificcd to the interest of the Ruhr." Echo De Paris: “He. has aband- oned hi5 imperious tone. The lesson of Aug. 19 (the Hitler plebiscite) has decidedly had its cffcct." With important French industrial and commercial mic-rests staked on the January plebiscite in the rc- Bion, authoritative quarters tonight expressed doubt that Germany 1111:] Franco could become peaceful neighbors cvcn Though the Saar be returned to the former. Nazi terrorism already reported in the Saar and Hitler's differences with the church, those sources said. have made them skeptical of Nazi promises that Saar inhabitants will be free from political rcprisals or religious restrictions. Virtually certain that the Saar will not vote for union with Franc". this nation nevertheless hoped for continuance of the present League of Nations mandate chiefly because of her economic interests in that region. A hundred million dollars worth of coal mines, another hundred mil- lions of investments. $S0.000.000 an- nually in Trade-those were some of the reasons why Frenchmen looked forward anxiously to the forthcoming plebiscite. On the other hand, France c011- sidcrs Gcrmanyvs interest in re- gaining control of (he Saar is prin- cipally one based on political pride. A French official pointed out t0- dfly. however. that "tho government is doing nothing to influence the plebiscite." save for calling on all Snar-landers in Franco to register for the election. Cuba TVithout Mail Service (A. P. By Guard’ ‘s Spfcial Wire) HAVANA, Aug. Lil-Cuba conun- ued virtually without mail service today as the government fazlcd to make good its fhrcut to brcnk the two works‘ old posial sirikc by c111- ploylng 250 non-union leffcr carri- ers. While striking 11cs111l, tclcgrupli ToCharlottetown A Total Loss (C. P. By Guardian's Spwill WIN) Sl-IELBURNE, N. 8-. Aug. 27- Abandoned as a total loss, the aux- iliary schooner Whiteway remained in the clutches of a reef two miles west or Seal Island tonight. Fish- ermen who have been salvaging coal from the doomed Parrsboro vessel expected her to break up in the next storm. The Whiteway was stripped o1 sails and gear by the crew, who reached shore safely after the schooner came to grief in dense fog last Monday night. was owned by her master, Captain W. E. Wasson. 1 i 1ETFORTS RE RATE CHANGES 1 1 1 Board of Trade Passed Resoluti-on Follow- ing Reduction Of Ferry Charges. A special meeting of the Council o fthe Charlottetown Board of Trade was held yesterday afternoon, Major T. E. MacNutt, President, presiding. Matters relating to the annual imccting of the Associated Boards of Trade on Thursday next were dis- cussed, and the hope was expressed that a large number of the local Board would make it a point to be present. The addresses in the af- ternoon are open to the public, and will be on important, topics, and the President was asked to urge upon the school teachers, the advisability of their attendance. The President stated that he had written 11 letter to the Minister of NPPNETNNTETTT RANT RATE G r e a t e r Revenues Needed To Meet: Higher Costs of Op- eration. Built at Parrsboro in i919 the (AP. By Guardian's 5pc iul Wirci (C. P.-Havas) 458-ton vessel was carrying coal WASHINGTON, Aug, 1:7 H Th (By Guardian's Special Wire) from New York to Charlottetown first class railroads of the Unite PARIS, Aug. Ill-The French when the grounding occurred. She States, pleading threatened insol- vency io many of thcir number. t0- day asked fhe intern-law commcrcq commission 1o 1.11‘ creases that \-.<1ulri 1' try's lrcicln bill hcuvccn five and six percent. On the ground of mounting cost: of operation. the carriers asked that the increase be applied to speclfld commodities and cInssc-s of freighti in varying 111110111111. I1 was estl< mated revcnizcs woud rcsul: tctal< ling a11p10xi111:1t1=‘.y $l"l0,000.000 in 1935. The petition pointed out that if: ls a mattcr of (10111111011 knowledge that the carriers arc 1'11 dire necz! of.‘ additional rcvr-niuw," and that the addiiionnl mcrcas" in chciropera- ting expenses ma! now confronts them intensifies that need. The mrrcascs referred to are‘ $l56.000000 in past pay cuts due for ivsromticin h1- April 1 ncxl. and $l3'7.000,000 estimated added cost for materials. While they did not mention it, fherc is also in mind an item of $60.000.000 for the railroad retirement law which the carrier: are fightingin court. The proposed increases would af- fect every commodity in almost cv- ery section of the country. Even major fall crops which of recent years have been siren a preferred status in rate making are listed for increase. Fire Damages Agriculture. relating to a shipment of 0,000 tons of barley, now en route from Germany to Montreal and oth- er cargoes to follow, in the hope that steps could be taken to so in- crease the growth of barley in this Province that a fraction of so fine a market could be secured for the pro- ducers of this Province. In the dis- cussion which followed, it was stated that, it would not pay our fanners to grow barley for export at present prices. It is a matter which, how- ever, should be carefully looked into. Discussion also took place regarding the advisability of increasing the hog output of this Province to take advantage of the English market. The following resolution was n.- dopted: Resolved, that this Council of the Charlottetown Board of Trade on lwarlng that the rate on automobiles crossing by the Car Ferry has been (Continued on Page 3) 50 Villages Wiped Out By Floods (C. P. by Guardian's Special Win?) CALCUTTA. Aug. 27—Many were missing, thousands homeless and huge damage to property feflfiiff" ed tonight as the overflowing and communications 011111103115 con- tinued to demand lhc dismissal of Secretary of Communications Sun-y rcz, soldiers. strugnlcrl \-.1111l_v 1o dis-, pose of the huge 11'l*s of arcuu1ula-‘ ted correspondciico llti(‘l”lllj.{ 11cm of- fice floors. The strikers also are ricmandi11Z1 three 1110111115‘ back 1111i‘ ill" P181111“ ed is owing them. Ncgoti. . ending flu‘ strike (‘4111111111 .. but there were few cvklcucrn‘; 0i llfltflbh‘ progre. (A. I‘. By Guardian's Special \\'ir¢) The statement linked Davis with Wall Street, and said "hc just can't understand the liberal forces that are at work in rejuvenating Am- "Fmiu from the Gardens” iny of the new dcul-havc com.‘ under a flrr- poicntially conducivc to a schism within their party. ~- foundations arfllnsf» We Z31;..11...g...11. i _ Factor In American Polztzcs Democratic Senators Elmer Thomas Ganges and its tributaries slowly rcccdcd after scvcral days ravages I More than 50 villages were re-1 ported wiped out by the floods. 1'9", suit of iuccsant rains. Fears for the bridge at Hardinge, longest in India, were cxpifiiwd iflnisht as engineers fought to bolster its, swirling, waters. l No official estimate of the numr bcr killed has yet bcen mode- y-Becomei ecutive committee. Unless signs fall, the gathering will be followed by emphasis on its purpose to “fcsch the necessity of rcspcci for The rights of persons" league as wcll as home owners, sav- ings depositors, lifc insurance pol- icy l1olders, bondholders and stoch- ‘unlh- ._‘.‘l.fl1ll- I _. much changi- , . Slaughter House (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) CHICAGO, Aug. 2'l—-Fire us. stroycd the interior of a four< storey beef slaughter-house and wholesale market 011111011 by Arm- our and Company 1'11 the heart 0i packingtown latc today, but was brought under control after causing damage estimated variously from $35,000 to $100,000, ' Officials said the fire might have been caused bv orkmcn using blow torches 11:'cp.'1r:11_: for instah lation of new cquipmcnt. The Weather, Etc‘ , A Nlohws was or M11001. A NAME 111R uuzsew c, to MARRY I\lfi:1(‘f8if~\\i;1.’.~; 11111» M111 "M WASHINGTON. Aug. 2'7 _ A and James Pope of Oklahoma and {V1.1 .1 ‘ 1V1’ udtl1cring arraignmcut of Alfred E. Idaho, already have opened 11D 0n l.,.,,','_',',‘,',§'_'_‘" g; Smith and John W. Davis hv mic the league. t_ IKHTLKPIH m: of the chlcf Roosevelt alclcs in It also had not escaped no ice 1\1I1,:;1‘\1“.nl . :3. Congress promoted the conviction that the commander of the New m“ ‘ H- ~, m; tonight fha‘. Th" American Liberty Jersey Democrats, Frank HEW“ Smm 111m .. . .. 5:.‘ M League. whcthrr l.‘ cuonscs or not, jiolntcdly became first, to declape 11);.111rrl,‘.u_‘ ‘_"_‘W.. __ . I?‘ may bhcomo 11 .' -' 1r in current for a Roosevelt renomlnatlog thn - 1 - » - - ~ -~ - 1- pomlcal mmpfligzrs 1930. He was identified wit. v 1e rORrVAq, Renroscntaiivc Clifton WoodrumSmuh forccs as aflfillllf- Rmflaei A _ “N “ V“ ‘ J d °T v1"!“‘5*‘~ “h” h“ hm“ “Md “g M the ChN-“go conwnuon T1..\1-lnNI.IN1mI.-....1 “Nr.1/1.1E1\7r§." ivvv-“rncnll a possible administration favorltc These development! "m6 "mldfllnq-an iiuuuh-f ‘ Nlidmiiiialldgufgliixfisis!‘ TVcNEPTYdEK mrdotliilzb of the lcniflle ex- g:',f'n,§,'.'-" “m "Mm MINE" l“ M": Tiluh tirlo iliifl 111111 ‘ rlt. 114 In!’ fn.'1|11r‘1'11\\' 111-11~11i11;: 111 S1111 acts H1114 111-11 .1 "J5 fTi1-< |..111.~1'1~. 1\' mnri. _ ul 3 lT l.:1.~11 qugrlcr 1111-1-11 l-‘ruriy, Aug 3i, nnl erlca." Thll-‘i- the 1928 mid 1924 demo‘ “s “you as of pr0p9rty' 2:1‘.11’.I111-1|1|-‘.~..1.- 11.1» 11i:l1‘--1n IYITIHIT"! cratic presidential rtu11inecs--11o\v It hfldnbeflfi DQ111994 gut Pfgvlmlf‘ 1,1. ,- 11...“ 1-1.._1.~1..-,1. 1.1mm, loined with prominent Republicans Ty illfli- YBTIIWI” and 15b" d1)" _ > I _l n l ,‘ for a critical. "non-partisan" scrut- sions were to be embraced in the . wncck‘ 1511:‘ stills ‘our?! - inure Torzucullnc ll :1. 111. (llvirll 2R1 p. 111.; ‘I p. m. daily except Sum h Wm.“ iii i i I‘! TI‘ c.~.':'*>;w‘: vu-rn Offiflrr-trss-A-w-v ._-.-.»-.-—;__q» c-o oQ- a 5a§=i% § I ifna" 3. an "* -3 osm- u.‘ m nu.- <I 3 _._-_-_.. v ‘l A z X. ". trusses. l