l MAXIMS ~ or A MERE MAN nu and softly. u lawyer: go to heaven. 0 d! Two Cont! §';',‘,’,',‘I,'§"%ZL¢E fiancee rm BRITISH AMBASSADOR 1s 55x10 USL Operatives Tell Of_ Activities In Liquor Cases Body Of Investigator Who Sue-- cumbed Here Sent C. O. D. To Montreal —- “Can’t Say” What Total Expenses Were. Fifteen cases involving offenses XnQ1'1]in_ 11-, _ ngalnst the Prohibition Act were quest oil‘ posteliiogtglin ‘figs! rt’: (‘Q9 heard before Magistrate G. J. witness‘ knowledge and he didn't ‘fireeriv yesterday. Thirteen were hear the Coroner say what was adjourned for argument by coun- the muse o; “a”, ~French w“ iel after the Crown submitted evi- in bed the day before he died He dance and defendants in two cases was ill. He had a very had d)“ h W"? fl““‘l~ 0m lllefldfid guilty and and could not get his breath H818 was fhzrd $300 and (‘Ofits or five witncss geld, Wench had ‘been mouths and the defendant in the drinking liquor but the witnew did other case was found guilty and not know Wm,“ he got n Eh“, fl11Pii_$-i00 and (‘Ostsorfour months had no liquor in their rooms. They liijiul in llf'll of payment. Mnjcr- had been here only a few davl; liy of the cases were brought on and were only making contacts ‘imitate-ii;- Al- They had not visited any bootleg i ore ivson . ' ._ from a Montreal detective agency gitfbhshments together’ he belie‘ who have been operating in the Province ‘since May. Other cases were the result of searches made by R.C MP. The body of operative French, who was found (lead in bod in a Charlottetown hotel less than n week after he arrived in the Pro- liii" "Y! Mill’ 18th was sent to a Montreal undertaking parlor 0,0, D- flbcrntive Robert said yester- Tial‘ under cross examination bv Mr. .I. J. Johnston. KC. who ivith French had been picked up in Montreal and did not belong to any agency. He had been working for the Quebec Liquor Commission and WllPll the government chang- ed had lost. his job. The witness hadn't known him previous but a short time. He. himself. was the senior operative. Robert said. All their expense money had been furnished them by the ngen- Widths’; employed them Robert sh . 1e money was always sent clrgfini.‘ R. Bell acted as defense to thcm in bills. The letters con- Ho film gem Pr?“ h w mining the money’ were not regis- moam élhm he RC hive at tercd. He eonldnt say. the wit- munn-N-vmmrtnb] gbffiyfbfl .o be ncss siiid in reply to s. question, “and ~m d b .V- .~ was found what the total expenses had been. é: J1 ‘Riff illinrihc >."lf'Xl I-Ic stilt his statements to his of- ‘ flce. it- cost this country to have you COMING {VfNll _ moncy you an? left or how much motley you reccivcd or how much "Talkies Montague Saturday, L18l4-8—25-3l “Show Elmira Monday. Lliil4-B-25-Ili ______ "Dimcc! Fortune Hall Friday iiiihi. lvlcKt-arncy‘; 55ml, 14-1807-8-25-31 "Dance St James Hail. Bum- "riifid- Ffidfll’ evening, Aug 27th,. lance Orchestra. L-180tl-B-25-3i " Reserved Labor Day for Chicken jamboreelng around?" Mr. John- son asked. Robert: "I can't say." Evidence was submitted by the two operatives. Robert and Law- son. of liquor bought in different establishments. In most cases they mnrlc two or bought drinks of rum or beer and purchased “tcddies" which they took ivitli them and which were produced in court. On only “no occasion was liquor purchased at the vendor's store bought for pri- vate use. That was on an occa- sion when Iintvson was not feeling three visits and , inittcd through l l well. The other purchases were for i ippfihflilii other amusements at the purpose of petting cases the [Audio mo“ Han- operatives testiflcd. L‘1854'3'27'1l Robert testified on cross exam- ll iii‘ Come to the dunce nt James "Kuuvuii. Monday lllRllt it mile W! of Springton School. L-1844-8-27-ll Lianne!‘ in C. M. B. A. Hall. River on Monday. August -a.n Ot-lli\'(‘l)' Wcbsicis Orchestra encizince. 1,1534.“ .. I gairrphone W. A. Ross or Rob- wof“ out for livestock trucking Tm ° l-iilll! Station Tuesday af- n. Aug. a1. Ll862-8-27-2l "We hiive R limited quantity cl l inotion flint he hnd been supplied ivith a list containing the names of about. one hundred establish- ments in the Province to investi- gate. Information hnd been laid in nhnut 60 cases. The list had been turned in with other pnpcrs and he was unable to supply it. he told dcfcnse counsel on cross ex- aliliiiflficil. Sixteen eases remain on the docket before presiding Magistrate (l. J. Tweedy. K. C. Ilssrinq of evidence will be resumed when court meets this morning. Tgélllllgilrlkgx" ‘hand lllillt can be ~. i z. ncriri - _ I Hm“ u ‘ hwaleu for fin sh LlB63-8-27-1i ' its... m,.,—~,,,,,,,,, Ema,” Convention Opens i"? Present "Aunt Sophia Speaks" Sh"? Ply concert including sing- ; zvjllitlrs. Tenn Macintosh and isomhred MacDonald in Brack- Hall Friday, August 27th. L-1787-B-26-2l ll _*_—”' CHTY Mme-s. Kilmuir, will 16k hflss for farmers ervlng this s Mrféllls for farmers desiring m W Ce from inrm to load ng mnflbffl’ Tuesday nftemoon at n ‘t K01 cost. Please telephone lmuir. L1B62-8-27-2l "hi ti‘ brethren of True Brothers “ma? B A- l". and A. M. are PM M10 meet. with the Wor- , at a H11: garden. Mon- - - e purpose of gléifitxthe funeral of our late m J. MecNevin. Manford (C.I'. 13y Guardian's Special Wire) WOLFVILLE. N. S., Aug. 26 -- More than 200 delegates tonight had registered for the 97th annual conference of the United Baptist Convention of the Maritime Provin- ces which opened today. Dr. H. T. Dcwolfe formerly of the theologi- cal faculty of Acadia University, Wolfvllie, gave the initial address at today's session. His general theme, which embraces a series of lectures to be given by him. W85 "Along the Way with Paul." Regret at. Dr. DeWolfes resig- nation from the faculty of theology was expressed by several of the day's spelkerl. Prayer at today's meeting was given by Rev. W. Ide- L-isin. son of at. Andrew's. N. 11s.. gndAwafi . “-~ f llow d Secretary . - 0 - ‘livestock Marketing Board lgndbereal-t ot the committee 011 dull 71°C! lambs an - . d calves, lo- Jlalgpi"! clubs during week of In K54 ‘follows: Tuggdgy 1cm. "noon “aPBWI- Charlottetown; cm‘ Mbnézgelillmira, Souris. 5t. y . ‘y gélfdenlgsamoon 12 a v n you mum“ wlgfillg. secretary HOOI-I-M-li l... arrangements. Rev. Mr. Acklnnid is from St. Stephen, N. B. Rev. F. H. Eaton. Wolfvllle, pre- sented the report if the Board of Governors of Acadia Univeraily- F9 reported registrations for the oom- lng year would approximate those for the peak year i920. Other speakers included President Rey. B. S. Poole. Saint John. N- B- and Rev. D. H Maltland, McAdllm , - following statement tonight ‘ gest the possibility of indiscrimin- >%//’ The People ///' ’s Paper Covers Prince Edward iIsland Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1931 Read byEverybody l l0 PAGES MAXIMS or A MERE MAN l-‘aithfulness and sincerity are the highest things. Alllllllll Huhlrrlpllnn llolhl-n-li $5.00 B] HaU-IHEJ“ l-l-Utli Cunmln lllll U. Ii. I500 -i—-—--J.-__-___.__ llo Strike Pehthiig‘ Negotiations _____._. (A-l‘. By Guardian's Special Wire) CHICAGO, Aug. 26 — Presidents ‘of five United States railroad oper- i aiinglabor unions announced today I their organizations would take no action regarding a. threatened na- tion-vvide strike pending peace moves by the National Mediation Board. 1n a joint statement, the union leaders, representing 350,000 em-' ‘ ployees. said: "The National Mediation Board; has taken Jurisdiction of the dis-‘ pute and has advised it will be; prepared to begin mediation pro- ceedings in Chicago Saturday, Augs 28. Pending the outcome of the mediation, further action by the or- , ganlzatlorrs tbrotherhoods) will be held 1n abeyance." JTHREATENS’ MREPRISAtSi ‘Notice Served 0n Gen. Franco To Cease At- tacks On Mediter- ranean Shipping‘. (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON. Aug. 26--Grcnt. Brit.- ain served notice on Insurgent General Franco tonight. her pa- tience over attacks on Mediterran- ean shipping ha", reached the i breaking point. The Foreign Office was prepar- ing fcr a showdown at a meeting tomorrow cf the chairman's sub- committee of the non-intervention powers. l Great Britain. informed sources) predicted. will endorse a WflfllillE I by Turkey today that Turkish wnr- I rhips will sink submarines that, enter Twrkish waters in further‘ attacks on Spanish and o-thcri nipping off the Dardcincllcs. Russia was expected to adopt the some taiid. Moiseyevitch Kag- an, her neutrnlityr regmsenletlve. IlEClHNG the siiikings ivere "ban- dliry and piracy on the part 0f Franco and his Italians.‘ A British note to Franco. trans- ‘ Anibirzsador Sir; Ilcniy G. Chilton, at Hcndnymj France, threatened reprisals. A, bluntly worded proicst warned: i "If there is any repetition of t.he'e tat-thefts the British Govcrn- i ment mrst reserve to ihcmselvemi the right to take $ll"ll action as the occasion demands." The danger to Britain's mari- time interests in the Mediterriim‘ can. her life-line to India and the Far East. we brought to focus again by the 15th rrcent attack on ‘ ll. British mcrchnnlman. : The mzvitcr of the Greek tnukcr ‘ Romford, Sflllill! tinder the British . flag. rcporlcd to harbor niithnr- it-ies at P1111611» Greece. hi": ship was attacked inst nigh: about 20 miles off Hnrcclofra. l-Ie radio-rd that an unidentified airplane dropped five bfmtbs with- in 30 yards of the Rcmford but did no damage. Earlier this week the British freighter" Noemijulia wus nttzicked. 'I‘ho Fbrcign Office issued the re- garding its policy toward protec- tion of British shipping in the Mediterranean: In view of an erroneous state- ment which has been given wide publicity in the prc s. it is desired this position should be clenry understood. On Aug. l9 a message was i'e- oelved from the Spanish insurgent authorities containing certain sug- gestions in regard to measures to be taken by British merchant ships trading at Spanlrh Govem- merit, port= with a view to making clear their identity as British ves- sels. As this mes-sane seemed to sug- aie attacks on shipping during the hours of darknes". His Majesty's Government took up the matter at once with Spanish authorities in order to make it 619M‘ UIM- in their view, such attacks would be gross violations of the rules of in- (emotional law and that, if any damage were inflicted on British shipping, His Majesty’, Govern- merit, would be bound ti take the most. serious notice of the mat- ter- Pending reply, they (the govem- men) though it desiruiiie a: a pic- cautloimry menu c to notify the position to British shinning infer- cats, and at their request the chamber of Shipping sent a cir- cular on Aug. 21 to British ship- ovmers concerned advising that BRITISH iniii iillVT. TAKES GRAVE VIEW 0F iiiijiiii Foreign Office Ob- taining Further In- formation Before Taking Action. SHANGHAI, Aug. 2'l—(Fri- dayP-(CP Haven-Sir l-Iughe Knafchbullhugessen. British Ambassador to China. critical- ly wounded in the spine yes- terday by a Japanese machine gun bullet, passed a. restful night in hospital and showed slight improvement this morn- lng. Physicians said the improve- ment stimulated hopes they may be able to announce within the next l2 hours thll he is out of danger. if‘. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON, Aug. 26—'l‘he Govern- ment. shocked by the ivoundlng of tin; British Ambassador to (thins by Jflphnese bullets, tonight prem- ised "appropriate action with the Japanese Government." The Foreign Office received fre- qimm reports on the condition of Sir Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen, Ill; l\lajesty's envoy plenlpotentlary, and Anthony Eden, the Foreign Secretory. considered what the "appropriate action" might be. The King wns advised of the incident. Sir llugho was hit by a machine gun bullet fired from an glrplang which dived. The Ambassador was travelling from Nanking toward Shanghai. The cor was flying a Union Jack. It ;ome quarters it was believed the Foreign Office would delay action until it. could be establish- ed definitely whether the Japanese planes dived low enough for the pilots to recognize the British flag. The Foielan Office issued a com- muiiique :tating: _ “His Majesty's Government. have received the news of the shooting of His Majesty's Ambassador to China with the dccpcu concern. “According to their information, the Ambassador's car. flying the Union Jrck. was fired on with a. inuciiine gun and bombed about. 2:30 p. m. today by two Japanese airplanes. "The Ambassador wa= very ser- iously wounded and now is in hos- pital in Shanghai. Th9 British mil- itary fliliiChC and the financial adviser. who were in the same car, are stated to be iuihurt. "His Majesty": Govemmcnt are obtaining certain information ‘ which they require As soon as this i information has been received. they will be in a. position to take ap- propriate action with the Japan- ese Government." The fact the envoy wa= hurt in . what appeared to a Foreign Office spoke man as "the wanton bomb- lug of a civilian automobile when n state of war has not even been declared" seemed to authoritative sources to call for severe reproach. The wounding of the Ambassador also was regarded in the gravest possible liiiht because the Japan- ese are fighting in a territory with which they officially are at peace- Tlie Foreign Office communique charging Japanese re ponsibility for the attack. followed a state- ment by Chinese Ambassador Quo Tnl Chi wanting that "today it is the turn of China" to benr the (Continued on page 6. Col 8) Paralysis Death Toll Reaches 19 (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) , TORONTO, Aug. 26—Scourge of adclesence. infantile paralysis had claimed i9 lives throughout On- lnrlo tonight as health. hospital, and civic officials joined in c0m-_ batting the disease. . At Toronto two deaths and I0, new 08588 were reported. London considered the transfer of l8 pa- ticnts from Victoria. Hospital, where the fight. against the epi- demic is centred, to St. Joseph's Hopital to make mom for a new section for paralysis treatment. About 30 of the 41 known cases in London were city residents. Dr. T. B. McGhie, Ontario dep- uty minister of health, announced there would be no provincial ccn- sorship on the dtscnie and that a series of educational bulletins would be issued advising the pub- 11c of pertinent facts regarding the epidemic. One person died in Toronto last night. from the parlysi: and im- otilier early today to bring the tro- mat Surrender 0f i Catalonia ls Possibility (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) l HENDAYE, Pkanco-Speni h Frontier, Aug. filo-The Spanish‘ Government, struggling desperate- ly to hold its two remaining frag- ments of northwest Spain. faced an even Emver danger tonight. in the possibility of a Catnlonlan sur~ ‘ render i0 the insurgents. With the fall of Santander, all of northwest Spain flies the iii- surgcnt flag except the area west of the Bay of Bisray port. where its defenders fled and where u government force still be ieges in- snirgent-hcld Oviedo. An envoy of autonomous Cat- alonia. a report from Biarritz said, negotiated with Insurgent. General Franco's representatives for cap- itulation if the northeast prov- ince's autonomy is guaranteed. loss of Cctaloiiiu ivciiid be an almo=t insurpernble blow to the Government. Barcelona, the pro- vincial capitol. is a. vital port and centre of munitions lllfllllllZ1Ci-lll'l‘l'S. Under General Sebastian Pom‘. Cotalonias armies recently have beenreorganlzcd as one of the strongest units in the govern- ment's defences. General Franco lost no time in starting his clean-up of the rem- nant of government. wrritory in northwest Spain. His Navnrcse troop: spread toward Asturias, driving on Ban Vincente tit», la Barquera, one or the few jams re- maining in government hands in Bantander Province. Hardly a shot was fired. the ad- vancing insurgents meeting vir- tually no resistance. This was taken as an indication the As- turlens and other g'0\'(‘l'lllllf‘l1i» troops, whose largest remaining city is the part of Gijon. are ready to abandon the fight. (By Edward J. Neil, .’\.§Oclfl|!.‘fl Pres-z Foreign Stuff) SANTANDER. Spain lBy Courier to Bilbao). Aug. Zip-Sweating under a blazing Anon-st sun. the insurgents occupied srintrinder to- day with a hysterical population Joining in the milit ' Officers and Fri ,2: naires drove through the shortly after nine u. ill. 'l‘ii i. formed the population that lll(‘lI‘ offer to surrender “if you don't kill our Women and children“ had been accepted-and the occupation was on. A blue haze bathed the city as, the main insurgent forces started its prcce=sion from just beyond Murledas, overlooking the bay and the finest: natural harbor. A group of "last-ditch" Basque and Santander defenders, trapped like some 50.000 others in the ter- ritory cut off in the drive ivhlch I started just 13 days ago, held up l the proceedings briefly. Resistance ended however when what officers they had left told ‘ them the civil war for them nuns over-and actual ocfiiiynlloii of the . seaport began shortly before noon. First in the Pl'flf‘.!‘»lfi'l come l motorcycles with mounicd mnclihie guns, little bunches of red. blue and white flowers were stuck jauntlly in the muzzles. Then came 25 tanks. trucks jammed wiih soldiers. generals and staff officers in (‘firs and fin- ally almost 20.000 fllflTClllfi’! swld- iers --s t e e i- helmets-d ; ivcni ing. cheering and singing. It was estimated some 85.000 l personsr—residents of Srntnndcr ‘ and refugees-lined the Vin Rus- sia. and Paulo Inglesias. the main street route of the conquerors. Scourge Spreads To Thoroughbreds tal number of deaths in the cur- qildemto 1a ‘Ikmnto to Ibo. (By The Canadian Press) WfiNNlPEG. Aug. 26—-'l‘he horse disease scourge. raging unchecked over Manitoba. has hit the $100- 000 stock of thoroughbreds in the v R. James Bpeers Corporation slab- ; les. flve miles southeast of Winni- P98- Three animals are dead. two near death. 1'7 under treatment.‘ and 50 other showed tempcrnturesi indicating they might be developq lng the sleeping sickness disease, The dead horses were farm work animals. Mr. Spears said. MONCTON. N. B., Aug. 26~A num fatally injured last evening when struck by the Maritime Ex- plm neu- Oollege Bridge was iden- tified today as Abner White, of Amherst, N. 8-, and formerly of 1 Sackville, N. B. Identification was made by a brother who came here I from Amherst. l Railwaymen said White stieppcil into the path of the lOCOITIUU’ despite its warning whistle and mu i IIQILN helfld. ‘ much in the great symphony of the ' the spcnkcr said. iiiiiifiiiiis SWEPTBY BRUSH WfIRES Volunteers F i g h t Flames In Monta- gue, Mt. Stewart A n d Martinvale Districts. Hundreds of volunteer fire lighters labored in three sec-I lions of the Province early today in control brush firesi which were rapidly assum- ing serious proportions asi high winds fanned flames lni tinder dry brush and stand- ing timber. Areas swept by lire were Union Road near ltlontague. Anderson Road and Seotchfort in the Mt. Stewart district, and Mar- tinvale. seven miles north east of Cardigan. No dwell- in): houses had been burned early today but severalwere in immediate danger and were being saved from de- struction only by strenuous efforts. Buildings In Danger Buildings in dancer at Montague included: J. D. Melieodfls. Joseph McGregorZs, and Gcorge McDon- ald's along the Montague Road; Aubrey Shiiws. Brudcnell. 'I‘lie area burned included fine timber. scrub, and cut over areas. Properties on which large areas were burned included those owned by William McDonaldJohn Camp- bell and Thomas 'Mellish. Brude- ncll. The fire “.5 burning early (Continued on page 6, Col 7) lNSPllllNG ADDRESS iii, BlSHilP BlllNf Nr-iihcr nge. influence nor abil- ity play any part in determining the imporiatice of a person in (‘rods izrcnt universal scheme, Rt. Rcv. A. W.‘ F. Blunt, D D., Lord Bishop of Bradford cicclnred last iiiuiit in the course of an inspiring sirmon at St Peter's Cathedral. "We may noi be able to sound uiiiv ‘st.- but. let. us sound our note," The creator of the universe was not only a God of love and truth but a God of beauty as well for he mndi- so much of it. The world clutlcrs sn loudly that the sounds of the music God is trying to play is lost to many. The expression Y WOUNDEO 'Autom¢;t2_—z:le Fired t QnCByJap Planes lNea r Shanghai Sir Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen ' Struck Down By Machine Gun I Bullets—Condition Is Critical. If)’ MORRIS .I. HARRIS Assncinfcr! !'rr-. Forcig/n SIN/T SHANGHAI. Aug. 27 (Friihrv) lf('(‘li|('\.~ aerial hul- iets that struck down the llritish Ambussziilirr tn (‘hlna thrust Japan into a diplomatic incident. pith (lfflill Britain today. _ i Sir Hughe hlontgomt-ijv Knntchbull-lluuesst-n, the Bri- tish ambassador, lay in u Shanghai hospital, s rinusly wounded by machine gun bullets from u Japanese war- plane. Almost at the moment he was shot, the Japanese navy indicated it might extend its blockade of will!) miles of Chi- nese coast south of Shanghai, hitherto confined. to Chi- nese shipping. i0 include iissunijiliirn of the right foiulzipa- nese officers t0 board and search the shipsnt ulhernations. llEATllllF iiw. ME.lllN Former Secreianv Ob Treasury Succumbs 'l‘o Pneumonia. Japanese airbombers added to the mounting toll 0i foreign pi-ogii-rli‘ bf.‘ jdnmuge in the Shanghai urea a 90-minute bombardment of u l valuable United States-owned dairy i farm near this city. i The British envoy was wounded IThursday while motoring from Nanking to Shanghai on a mis- sion oi’ peace. Two automobiles. each displaying a large Union Jock, carried the imvty. nvliirl: included LleuL-Col. w. A. invoi- Fraser, military attache, and E‘. L. ) Hall Patch, financial adviser to the g a . ._ mlslllgs miles from Shanghai. two d“ Th" A“""'l“tf"l Tn“) lJapunese planes swooped dnvsn. Sm‘ {Axilwol b“ l" Al“? 2 iflving s0 low that members of the l“ ‘wwvmry 0 ’ ‘ treasury tinder British party could easily sec their Japanese emblems former ambassa- Tbe first plane SDl'i<l_\'l‘(i the "".l‘.\' ‘ d.” with IIlllClllllp gun bullets. at lea-t. {n21 i two 01' which struck the ziiiibiis- £1‘??? o ‘sador as he stopped hi,- cnr fillii ‘ v ' stepped out, iu ll.f‘I‘l'i..i and i The second plani- dropped a "mgl" H. ;bomb. a concussion from \\'i‘il(ll f‘ "l ymr‘ ‘i knocked Col. Invat-Frnscr llil~ “""' m“ Ammm‘ conscious Otherwise he and lhll- "ll" "f m" “N "f 5"“ ‘arm's; Patch were uninjured. Col. l.0'.‘:1f-- "' " ‘i _ , . qlll"l. ivliitc~hnir< Fraser quickly recovered. The ambassador was rushed to spar:- - n, ,.. .o the llfllllQ the country hospital. inthr- Slinuz- Willi“ liai InternationalSettlement.ivherc . hi“! ‘V, M” “"°”_‘:_t“° stirizeons found one bullet ‘ind Jim" m“ ‘ illum“ “w” broken his back ,bu: lind no.‘ i’ h" m“ l‘ i“ m "Inna" l"! harmed the spinal cord. This bul- l h“ f‘ ,""~" "f “it ‘ ‘ let. entered undcr thr- rieht arm-f o“ W" _ "mm “T” "‘" ‘M i linsc of his v t fortune-mire 0t’ pit and came out on the left side near the waist. Sir Hughes condition war. ile- clared hiclily critical. Eiirly today he was reported to have rnlilcri slon. Doctors said it would be 2i hours before they could estimate the British officials no doubt the attacking i were Japanese. Vice Arlmirol l oshi Hasegawa, eommandlnq nest; naval forces nt : ordered an invflsfirznlimi of shooting and called on AdmiriiYSir Charles J. C. Little. cmnmniiilrr- of the British China squndroivtn ‘ell him of this action. Fnirl there (Continued on page ti. Col 8) "(lo-i is trying to play" was correct, the speaker said. because it depend- (‘ll on mun nnd not all were sound- iir: their note. There comes to all,i lioucvcr. times when God's word is made flesh within us and such mo- mriits should be treasured for they are indications of immortality. The scripture lessons were read h,» His Honour Lleut.-Governor (icorge D. Delilols. Rev Canon l3. M. Mnlone incumbent at 5t. Peter's Cathedral and Rev. A. H. Hart- Davls. rector at. Port Hill, assisted at. the service. Bishop Blunt was t-he author of the address early last. December that. brought the British constitu- tional crisis into the open. Biographical Sketch St. Mblo, the birth-place of Jac- ques Cartier, the discoverer of Can- nda, was also that of Alfred Blunt- vvho this autumn makes his first trans-Canada tour. arranged in July 1936 by The Canadian Church Union. He was born in 1M9. the son of Captain F. T. Blunt. who died the following year as Chit’! Civil Commissioner of the 5%.)’- clicl'cs. His eldest brother is Si!‘ E. A. H. Blunt. K.C.I.E., 0.8.11. who irccntly retired from the post of Financial Secretary to the United Provinces (Indim_ He. was educated at Marlborough. \\‘llt‘l'l' he was House and Senior Scholar. and at Exetcr College. Ox- ford. to which he won an open scholarship. He obtained his BA. in 190i. with 1st class Classical ‘Woricrabons and lst class Literac- Wilkins To Renew Polar l (By Th9 Aluoclated Press) l FAIRBANKS. Alaska. Aug. 2r.- Slr George Hubert Wilkins. Aus- tralian explorer. reiucllr-d his bi flying bout today for n third and ,decper thrust into the Arctic in iqucst of six missing Soviet trous- Polar fliers. ambassadors chances of recovery. . somewhat after a blood transfii-j Search? lllf‘ world's izren llir» bctiefiiciii» lions and tire ope err-g i‘fll'l 1119i» lion of his en- mil- tcrprr-cs rciiili/‘ri around the Perih- fr" a a Nodioaaci. ‘(HE LAMP u- KNOWLEDGE is Not (HE ‘full. tlqtif or A PARKED Aura t ; :1 Uni? Tho (‘nnarllan >rfblll TORUNTT). Aug. 2G and lllfl\illllllll tf'lll))r\"lll\ll'(“~' (Contiimcrl on page 6. Col 6) —f y: ' . i Nliriimum The explorer said he had con- _ g; eluded that Sigismund Levanefl- Hhnnmqn m’, M ::.Y..s":.£.:“.;:::."z:i:;*hi: m as ‘ ‘ Oil: ' the Pole. between latitudes 8o undli n, g S: ".i.i:.:::i.'rr::.‘?r amt...- a imcn wh vanished Aug 1"!‘ lni 31mm?“ m P‘ M tr to 4 ‘l fll lit‘ ' Qmw‘ m‘ i“ g; 8'9"’; °g 1 in‘ "fit Slllllt Joltn 5c. 14 loscow‘ u ar nln .. ‘vac-go ch11‘? Hun,“ 5R 7B "Misti; "$4.141: "Pi-Jr. e , . - . . - ispot" virtually unknown tn min. . M u“ F“, ‘A fliailtikiinto ‘that. NPR. Militia: -soulhitcgwuiiilllsl rizfsitlltffllatizrtflg llnlfl; he hanssontgrthlll: fnllrpiiimllii “firm: mm “lflflrrrd shmlrrs‘ 5 5 . . .' 55"" ~ lliirli i'fl(\ tilt» afternoon at 2.25 i ‘Ymillns lmildwl o" Tm” gm“ and lt‘ll‘.l!! m‘ niuriziiia nt 20G. ‘ ' ' _ " rises (u: \\' llll"l‘ nv at. 5.15. i fimgm“? hop "yer i'll°alr"lc‘;"""'ll“ linst u -'" moor. Sattlffllll’. ‘ tilde “ganglia: tlittnngfiv: hills; M“ B" ' “ P” lb k t ' m b 1 .‘ Suinincisiilc iltic cicliicen min- | m 0 s “s” M Cmlllornlm‘ iitcs intui- than Clinrlottctovvn. . N. W. T.. for a rcfucllinc i The great "blind spot" nerci" ‘has been explored and has been > seen only by the few adventurous flllb (.'\ll FFJIIIY liordcn p. m. 0J5 n. m.. l . In. Leon-a 'l"nlnellllna l . m. and 0.50 p. m. dnl Tlunianlores, Aflcr o period of} men who have made distance i- m»; -lul,y n m. Ilr-Moinrlny, " ' Y " " ' '" I" flights over the great Polar re- ' _ _ " "“-" """' (xnflnued on page a. 0°‘ 1) K810‘ nélnlxir-ll-gl. II IPl)l‘l Tormon \ . \ \ A. A‘ \. i I .__,... .-.a s