MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN sons for taking courage. There are always a. thousand res. ghnrlotfetown Guardian Two Cent: Inning Guard! , Founded 18B‘! BRITAIN] FRANCE SEEK T0 i i U-S- 515.441.4519 comma {virus "Hope River July 7th. "st. Columbia's Tea Party on July .. L-1724-6-22-23-274-28-29-30. Ica. Wednesday. L-li304-6-22-14-1i "Dance in Belfast Hall Tuesday 39th in aid of hall. L-2050 -6—28-1l. "Dance Vernon Hail, Monday, ~ lune 28th. McKearneys Jazz Band. L-l988-6-26-2i. "Don't miss the entertainment at Bonshaw tonight, June 23th. L-2031-6-28-li. "“Haymakers” Dance Hunge; River Wednesday, June 30th, L-2048-6-28-3i. "Dance Iorne Valley Hall even- ing of Caledonia Club Gathering. Webster's Orchestra. L-2002-6-2a-21_ "Rummage sale Trinity soeln] i-f ll, ‘Tuesday. July 29, at 6.30 vclock. L-2046-6-28-2i. “Seven Mile Bay Friday, July Ind. play by Borden Dramatic Club. Dance after. L-2045-6-28-3i. ---__ Ice Cream Social in South Granville School Monday. June 28. If not fine Tuesday. L-20l9-6—26-2i. "Come to the "All taxes due Orwell School must be paid on or before July IOth. By order ‘of Trustees. L-1988-6-26-2i. "Bonshaw presents Elmwoods 2 one-act pays and the usual good specialties i.n Bonshaw Hall tonight. L-2031-6-28-1l. "Borden Line Club loading hogs, lambs, calves every Wednesday at Albany. Hours 12-3. L-6912-10-M T W Li ..____.__ "Hazel Grove Dramatic Club will present "Up the Hill to Paradise" in Cape Traverse Hall Monday, June lilth. L-l990-6-2G-2i. l "Come to the ice cream festival, ‘ dance and ball game nt Plsqttid‘ West School July '1, 1937, in aid: Women's Institute. 14-2034-6-28-11.‘ “Concert. Dance and Ice Cream Social C. M. B. A. Hall, Vernon River, auspices C. W. L. Monday’, July 5th. L-1872-G-28-7-3. "Borden Line shipping Club annual meeting Monday. June 28., in School at Albany, 7.30 p. m. All :hippers invited. L-l984-6-25-8i. ‘ i “Women's Institute Festival and" Dance, Valleyfleld Hall. Thursdayl July lst. Good music. Admission l5 cents. L-2033-6-28-1i. "Remember St. Marks Anglican ,- Tea and Festival at Rustico Julyl, lst. Tea served 5 to 9.30 p. n1. If] not fine following day. - L-2043-6-Z8-30-2l. ____. _ , "Special meeting of the LadlesH Aid of the Prince Edward Island litispiial will be held Tuesday’, June 29th at the Cutulall Home 3.30. 11-2030-6-28-21. "The Annual Field Day of the Gumsey Breeders Association will be held at Wellington Wednesday, June 30th at 12.30 o'clock. L-2027-6-28-2i. "Reserve Wednesday. June 30th for Winsloe North Tea. Carters Field. Supper served (o'clock. If not fine, following afternoon. Music. sports. n-t-tat-s-za-an. "Buying live hogs and lambs at Kensington till noon Thursday, July 1. Nicholson Bros. buyln: nt. Hunter River till noon Friday. July 3. McEwen and Campbell. L-ZOSZ-G-ZG-li. "All Taxes in arrears of Glenroy School District must be paid be- fore August l. 1931. or they will be handed to a lawyer for collect on. A. W. Coffin, Secretary of Trustees. Glenroy School District. 11-1947-8-28-30. “Liveshack meeting announced for French River hall Monday hlzht June 28th will not be held until ‘Iluesdey night the 20th until ume hour. Please note change in date. You are cordially invited to ‘Gommemorate Flight ii iii PREMIER KING yttrium at GERMAN VISIT Dominion Prime Min- ister Arrives In Ber- lin For Talks With Hitler. BY GEORGE HAIVBLETON Canadian Press Stall‘ Writer BERLIN, June 27-(0? Cable)- Prime Minister Mackenzie King's first day in Germany on his pres- cnt visit today brought him into close touch with the Hitler Youth Movement. The Canadian Prime Minister visited» some of the old places he knew when he first came to Ber- lin in 1900 as a. student of social problems. ' Then. guided by officials of the office of Von Ribbentrop. German i Ambassador to Great Britain, the‘ Prime Minister visited a. youth hostel at a Hitler youth campl where girls gave a rendering of German songs. Subsequentlyy he motored to a stadium for a gym- nastic display. Tomorrow Mackenzie King will visit a. labor camp and take tca with Chancellor Hitler's personal deputy in the Nazi Party. Rudolf Hess. Afterwards he dines with the Anglo-German Friendship So- ciciy. The Prime Minister's interview with Hitler probably will take place on Tuesday following the (lhanccl- lor's return from his Bavarian mountain retreat where he spent the weekend. Nazi stvasiikas and Union Jacks hung over the platform early to- day as the Prime Minister left a Paris train at the Fhiedricbstrasse Station for his personal visit to Germany's lenders. A line of police kept back over- curious travellers waiting on the platform for their own trains. Representatives of the German Governmcnf and the British Em- bassy wcrc at hand to greet the Prime Minister. Press photograph- ers busily snapped MackcnzleKing who turned to the ivritcr and said: "You sec I carry my colors" and lntigltcd as he extended his left arm. over which hung a Scottish travelling rug. It was in Mackenzie tartan. The Prime Minister left Paris last night. While here he will talk with Chancellor Hitler. For- eign Minister Von Ncttrath. Air Minister Goerlng and other lead- ers of Nazi Germany in continu- ation of his program of personal discussions in the hope of thereby promoting international under- standing. 0f Alcock And Brown OTTAWA. June 27- --tCP)—The Ottawa Flying Club Saturday staged u "dawn to dusk" flight in commemoration of the eastward crossing of the Atlant‘c ocean from Newfoundland to Ireland 18 years ago. years ago by Alcock and Brown. The club had a. plane in the air wntitittotisly from dawn until sunset. The flight was unbroken throughout the day as other club ntembcrs took part with other ships, relieving each other at given intervals. As one plane started down for refuelling, an- other woulil leave the ground; CHICAGO. June 27- (A P)— Robert Irwin. 29-year-old gculptor, was arrested here today by New attend —Li v e s toc k Marketing Board. L-IOM-ti-IG-tii. French-Canadians Gather In iluebec (‘-7- l! Guardian's Special Wire) KOEPANQ. Tlmor, Dutch East b418, June ns-(Mondayi-Amelll h"! . on a leisurely round thv Wfld flight, hopped off from this Wt maum Island at too a. m. w- (830 p. m. Sunday ADT) for n Dlrwlfl. on Australia's north- ‘Pll cont. She faced a 50o mile York police officers who said he admitted the triple "Gedeon slay- lngs" in New York lest Easter Sunday. Irv/in appeared at the office of sheriff John Tomm" about noon (CST) after surrendering Sat- urday w a Chicago newspaper. fle had been the object of a nation-wide search since the bodies of pretty Veronica (Ronnie) Byrnes, a roomer, were found in the Gedeonh New York apart- ment Easter morning. Irwin had been in love with Irwin Arrested In Chicago Admits To Triple Slayings Gedeon. 20; her mother and Frank . CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. MONDAY, JUNE 2833 iii nun-i lNova Scotia Political A Campaign Draws To Close ltrty Leaders Prepare For F inal Appeal To Elect- —61| Candidates Nominated _F0r 30 Seats In Legislature. orate Tonight HALIFAX. June 27—Sixty one candidates for the 30 seats in the Nova. Scotia Legislature tonight put the finishing touches to their °P§flnizaiion as voting loomed only a day away. Ntajority of the candidates, 30 Liberal. 30 Conservative and a lone Labor representative, finished their campaign speeches Saturday. The leaders, Premier Angus L. Macdonald and oppo=itlon leader G. S. Harrington, each are to give one more address, the former at Springhlll, and the latter zit Truro. Both were confident 0f victory. Premier Macdonald has forecast return of even more Liberals than the 22 who sat in the last Legis- lature. Opposition leader Harring- ton declared information reaching him assured election of at least 20 Conservatives. A total of 319,000 voters are eligible to cast ballots Tuesday. largest number in the Provinceiw history. Both the Premier than Lilli u sgtwonn Successful “Experi- mental” F I i g‘ h t From New York To Newfoundland. BOTWOOD. Nfld., June 2'l— (OPCable)—Pan-American's Air- ways‘ huge flying boat Clipper III rested at a. mooring here to- night after a "pfiriect“ 6x1931- mental (light, from New York. 1Y1- terrttpted only by a. landing at Shedtac, N. B.. Canadian base in a proposed transatlantic passeng- er and mail service. The huge ship will return to New York tomorrow. “The weather and flying c011- ditions were perfect all the WW except for a little rain off the Massachusetts and Maine coasts,’ Captain Grey. in command of the flight, said. "We pushed out l0 sea and avoided most of that. Over Newfoundland it was exceptionally Clea, and we had a visibility of 80 miles at times. The Clippers crew of 13 were interested in the number of rivers and lakes, many of them filled with logs, that they passed over in Newfoundland. They were sur- prised nt the ail-degree temper- ature that greeted them when they ltmded. The some ship with a crew 9f eight will make the trans-Atlantic flight scheduled for July 5. Little Princesses Join Girl Guides (CIR-Haves, By Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON, June 27-Prlncess El- izabeth and her sister, Princess Margaret Rose were enrolled in the Girl Guide movement Saturday. Princess Elizabeth became a Guide while Margaret Rose was listed as a. "Brownie." Both children were given uniforms and will be members of a. special "Westminster group" composed oi’ playmates of the Princesses. he had a fixation that Mrs. Gedeon turned Ethel away from his attentions. shortly after Irwin was placed in custody Lieut. Martin B, Owens of the New York police homicide squad telephoned to his head- quarters, saying: 1 have Robert Irwin. He has ad- mitted the three murders. He said he killed the mother first. then the girl and then the roomer. "We an leaving by plane. He is being fingerprinted and photo- graphed and u soon as that is finished we will leave." Lieut. Marlin told his superiors he ob- tained custody of Irwin at the I '19:!" Q“: Covers Prince Edward. Island Like the Dew i ‘uni-in i-mnn-t-x; ls cu tutu Unusual Proceeding | Follows Impromptu; Speeches By British? Representatives At Rally. . Ell BY VETS ition leader are running in the constituencies that elected them in 1933. Premier Macdon Id will return to Halifax after his pring- hill address and remain in his rid- ing of Halifax South election dayu Opposition leader Harrington will continue on to Sydney from 'I‘ruro and receive the returns in Cape Breton south. Opponents of both the rt 1 ylcnders are lawyers. Both ylgltng i men. and both enter politics for the (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) f first time in Tuesday's election. R. 1A. Donahue, of Halifax, will op- CASSEL- Gmmanlb Jul"? 27~AT Ipose Premier Macdonald While 8. rally of 150,000 German war vct- iGcorge Mom Om sydmuh Contests erans today two British speakers made impas ioned pleas for under- iCapeBrc-ton South against Col. , . standing between Great Britain ‘ Harrington. Conservatives and Liberals alike and Gfmmny- Under the influence of their ap- i are led by barristers. Premier Mac- , tdonald graduated in law from p931’ the 9W" m!‘ RRihfllnEZ-fi (‘IM- l DfIlIIOIISIP, University, where‘ he ed with cheers for Kl"? Gimme VI llatcr became a profcsor on the “an unusmll Proceeding l" G"- ‘ Jammy o; 18W‘ C01’ Hamngmn many where, since the consolida-y iprnctism law m Sydngy for some tion ‘of Nazi power, public demon- strations regularly close w lvears. He also is a graduate of |nalhousl cheers for Chancellor ‘Hitler only. w: No foreigners were r-cheduled to speak at the rally. at which the principal oration was by Heinrich Himmler. leader of the SS. or Hit- ler's guard troops. However. after the Officially approved program was finished Colonel George A. Crossfieid, representing the British |Legion, and Captain Roy i personal adjutant of the Duke of . Connaught, were introduced. i Colonel Crossfield emphasized , __________. Versailles Pact 18-year Ago - - - i And Today (lly Robert B. Parker, Jr.) (Associated Press Slnfl Writer) PARIS, June 27—The Treaty of Versailles. 18 years old tomorrow, has been largely destroyed by Adolf Hitler's axe. Separation of 1,803,879 square miles of territory in Europe, Africa, Asia. find iiie Pacific islands and itbou‘. 17,000,000 persons from Ger- i tnsny today constituted almost the only tangible evidence the pact was still in effect. Eighteen years of steady German hacking have left only the territor- ial and colonel clauses intact. In Europe there remain 27,252 square miles of former German territory, peopled by nearly 6,500,000 persons who would have been Ger- man." but for the war, under sov- ereignty to other powers. In Europe France has Alsace- Lorraine. Belgium has Eupen and Malmcdy Czechoslovakia nas part of Uppcr Silesia. Lithuania. has Memel. Poland has her corridor to‘ the sea. Denmark has northern Schlcswig. The Free City of Danzig nominally is under the League of: Nations, although practically it is under Nazi control. In Africa Tanganyika, Southwest Africa. Cameroon and Togoland are ruled by the British Empire and France. New Guinea, Western Sa- mon, Nnttru Island and the Solomon Islands nre British Empire man- dates. Japan has a firm hold on the Marshal land Caroline Islands in the equatorial Pacific. Gcrmanys concewons of Kao- chctv. on the coast of China. has reverted to Chinese sovereignty with Japanese economic interests dominant. All the treaty lintitations upon Germany within her own frontiers are gone. l-‘teichsiucitrer Hitler swept away the last Jan: 30 when he abolished the right of the form-m er allies to inspect books of the (aermart stake iztiluays and the Rechsbank. Hitler reconstituted the German Air Force; then a ronscript army, and finally itegotiated a naval trcaty with Great Britain Permut- ing the Reich a naval tonnage equal to one-third of Britain's. Germany remilitarized the Rhine- land and tints regained full milztary sovereignty. between the two comrades of fictions "your the Briti "h Legion German front fighters.“ ' British veterans, he said, agree with German veterans that “every youth must be taught above all to love his own coimtry and to de- fend it with his life—bttt also that this is no reason for lmtiitg other cotuitrles." Captain Fyers announced he brought by special command of the aged Duke of Connaught a decor- ation for the flag of the Duke's old German regimenu-Thn Zcllhrn Hus ars. When the decoration was affixed to the regimental stand- ard the veterans shouted their ap- proval. KING REVIEWS VETERANS LONDON, June ill-Eighty thous- and British veterans of the Great War, 600 of them women and most of them grey-haired, marched past the King and Queen today in the, largest parade ever held in Hyde Park. King George in a brief speech rc- , minded the veterans, Great Brit: n and Europe that "war is a great, calnm ty for victors and vanquished alike.“ l "If we can cottviitu- the world ni" this fact, then I feel we ran winder t no greater service to the humun race.“ the King declared. It required nearly two hours for? the march past, although the vet- erans moved 2O abreast. 1t was more l a gathering of old friends than n, military spectacle. The marchers, wore lounge suits, some carried um- 1 brclias, all wore tncdnls. a The King, in morning c oilics. raised his tOp lint as ouch division mlliwscd. The Queen was dressed Tn while. The Duke and Duchess of Gloucester accompanied them. Two hundred blind veterans marching with linked arms drew the biggest cheer of the day. Officers of veterans‘ tirgaitlzatioits indicated this might be the last. great. mass muster in England of those who fought in the (ii-eat War. SOVIET AVIATOR RESCUE!) FROM NORTH POLE ICE F1105 QEBRITISH SHIP KING stunt 1th y)". g that regardless of any differences (Qlwhpu have the deepest respect for the ‘mo: Read by Everybody Were “Adriftl A fte r F i r e l On Freighter; tBy The Associated Press) NI-IW YORK, June 27 —- Anoihrr thrilling rescuent sea was written into maritime records today asthc steamship Prcsidt-ntPicrce resumed its course for Nctv York after sav- ing the ~10 crew members of the fircswcpt British freighter Sand- gate Castle. Forced from their ship approxi- mately 050 miles southeast of New York. the British sailors tossed about in Iifclmnts for more than right hours until the President Pierce reached flit-m near mid- night. 'l‘ltt-ir ship tvrus n fire-blnckenetl I tlt-rclitl. when the Prcsitlcnt Pierce arrived in resptnts'c to a radioed zippcnl for :1 d. Flames which swept through the T,.'lii~i-ion Snndgate (‘asilc were soon out of control. Alter a. futile fight against the fire the crew was ordered into boats and the freight- vvtv: abandoned. The Prcsidettt Pierce reported as it picked up the ship's bouts that nmlgaie (‘asile had burned itself out and was floating low in the Atlantic swells. a menace i0 nmiilzzriinn. » STILL AGROUNI) llAhlrlAX. June ?7--tCP) -— The British freighter Kyno was still ashore at. Cape Normnti. near the eastern entrance to the Straits of Belle Isle, East Coast Radio Signal Service reported tonight. She was believed to be axvaiting aid from The K,\l1il, a 2.549 inn vessel 12 PAGES u: MAXI MS 017A MERE MAN .\'o man is big enough io be the ~,il,5t-rt_ oi’ his our: exlslt-Iivt‘. __._._.. ._ v: Anlllltll‘Sulnlrrlplilnt llvliii-rvtl s o0 By stint-taut, stoo, ltmut] tu v. s. $5.1m BRIDGE NA VAL GAP lAwaitRCepIJ/From Rome And Berlin ToAssame Patrol New Anxiety Arises Out Of Sink- ing Of Spatiish ivlerclizitiiisliip By “Foreign” Submarine. LONDON. June 2T (AP) mats tonight faced the task of Patrol of Spanish waiters und frictions involved frome They zigreed that how fur this" can be pends largely on the replies of lie Anglo-French prtmoszil ih [Trill-h ‘uud French diplo- w during the luivrnuiioitzz. prevenliitu" the manifold xploding. atecomplisihed do». rlin and Rome to the ui (ireztt liriiuiti uutl France use their own nuvztl vessels to close the tutp in the patrol left by the wiihdrznvuls of Ilill_\' uud iit-rntllny, This reply is expected 'l'ttt-.<d.'|_\ ui u met-tine" oi the sub- committee of the LIT-nation "ilunds oil Spain" ikmnuittcc. 'l'uesdu_\"s decision can either "split the uziilous wide apart zigziin" or create more friendly relations. said o. French official spokesman in Paris. ANXIETY INTENSIFIEI) Anxiety was ititonsiflt-rl by "to Spanish Governmctits charm: that British Prinitive 1t submarine Saiurdmv satik tho Cabc Palo. f ‘t. »- 1; if) vessels. Valeglgifla Dsultliorlltlltiysclitrid "aha, not mention the submarine‘; 12n- tionality, but they have in. the Insurgents have no Sllblllfl of their oun. The 6.4324011 fr ter was sunk 2B miles from . cante, Spain. with the loss of five men. ‘ There was tuteasitiess in forttloit Fakir’s Hideaway EXPPIIHIWUNS TO .\'()R'I'II\\'IC.\"I‘ .»\Il\‘.\.\'( l‘, l.\'- _ _ l'ft0\"|‘ii£li It Altlil l) over the possibility Valencia micht stnll‘ ‘I'll I \' t; 1H‘ "iimlliii P- "rcnrisnl" Eiflillllr’. some .\\' rrtt German or Italian ship. SDPPch Eases Tritsion grounded late Saturday night dur- a dense fog. She was not be- iicvctl to be in anyimtnctliatedan- i Explosion Kills One, Injures Two COPPER CLIFF, Ont., June 2'1 —tCP>—Jaok Moss. 41. assistant tieparintcnt manager of the RH- scarch Dcparimcttt of the Ontario Refining Company, Copper Cliff, was k.ilcd and two other research employees, sieve Saranchuck and Ewart Hodgius, injured in aLn ex- piosion lll the Research building at the plant today. Moss died shortly after ad- mittance to the Copper Cliff hos- pital with both legs shattered and other serious injuries. Saran- cluic-k lost one foot. and it is be- lieved an antputation may be zicccssztry on the other foot. Hod- gins tras knocked unconscious by the force of the explosion but was nliotved to g0 home after receiving first aid ircaitnent. ' The explosion occurred when ilu- men were working on a new lWtliYflxv‘ for casting wire burs. \vilit‘l‘ is lx-lievcd to have come in contact with the molten metal mid Moss and Saranchttck are thought to have been handling the molds when they exploded. BerwielcYouth is Instantly Killed BERAVICK. N. S., June 2'l—iCP) —Robcrt Ramcy, l8, was killed to- day when an automobile allegedly drtvctt bv ’I‘he0dore Parker, of Ber- " 'k \ll'llt'k llilll as he wheeled a along the road near ltere. A r-ortmvt-‘s jury summoned by CUl'0il(‘l' Dr. L. E. Cogswell brought in n verdict of accid ntal death._ __ PORT OF‘ SPAIN, ‘Trinidad. Some treaty clauses were never PILOT A. I. put into effect. ALEXIEFF’. .. Article 227 called for a trial of veteran of the former Kaiser Wilhelm by five Amie airways, judges appointed by the Grelt ' 1 was rescued from Britain, France. the United Sta-res. ' the polar ice Italy and Japan. The Netherlamls, where h" ha‘; where the err-Emperor took refuge. 1mg“, when refused to extradite hm. me] was “mm The league of Nations, created to mm m, w“, ' one of the avi- V ators who trans- ' ported four Russ- ian scientists w the North Pole in the treatrs preamble, still lives, but Germany has not been a. mem- ber for several years. Order Smarter an‘; .353‘, Autos For Moscow MM" ON NON-STOP FLIGHT (AP. B; Guardian’: Special Win-l NEW YORK, June 27 — Capt. Frank Hawks left North Beach Air- port at 6.20 a. m. today on what was pfanned w be n. non-slop fliglii in 1.0a Angelou, ClIII._1Ill\\l'i-§, fly- MOSCOW. June 27 — Smarter automobiles now have been ordered for Mosco to brighten up the streets. The order banning all old cars by July 15 has been supple- mented with further instructions to the automobile factories to apply various colored paints to moiorcars. ‘Ronnie's’ older sis'er. Mrs. Ethel WM "Ilia the ‘nmor Sea. Kudner, and New York police Md sheriff's office "from the newl- pnpur people!’ ing a low-wing ntufltiplilllt‘, sod the fferetofore all cars have been point- ed BBQ, flight was a "common-oi nip." June 27—fCP Goblet-The British iwnrship Essex tonight sped under jforccd draught toward lit." Island 10f Tobago. so-odd nuln= from ‘Trinidad. as tirtzcnt SC? calls wirr-lesscd from the warrnu told of a gctieral strike of all labor on [the Island planned for tomorrow. and fears of repetition f bloody riots which have a ompanied strikes in Trinidad last Iwcck. Two platoons of maignws from the seven which have tztmrded Trinidads oilflelds since Turr . lwcre dispatched 0n the ' Z-‘sscx to 'monut guard atstrategic points on Tritildntls Islfllid ward. i Rusmen and conductorn mTl-lti- ldad Joint-d the general stilke Sat- l urdoy, tieiug up shopping district; Warship Speeds To Tobago As Trinidad Strikes Spread - ‘lature yesterday‘, giving the Gov- ftiformed sources said mime Minister Chamberlain's spew in the House of Commons Fr - ', making conciliatory‘ l'€I(‘l'€'llCt'\ to Germany, had eased tension. They coupled this with Germany's "re- straint" over her charges that the Spanish Gnvertimeni. attempted twice to torpedo the (it-rnmii cruiser Leipzig, winch led to (id'- man and Italian withdrawal from the four-power patrol. Opposition to the proposal {or a, two-power patrol has been ox- pressed in both Berlin and Rome, but diplomats hoped for n pom- is covered with dust, through \- rt coast grass. at (l‘l'.\‘fl and as The plain gravel which s promise. the "ed I cottld see Britain and Frntice are Exppgipd scatter Ki clouds raised by to offer to take Gama“ and 1m]- the rank; and the advanced ian observers aboard their patrol TTmll-‘l ~"\"°<‘l>l11! Y1K‘ P1911’!- Hcre and thw-c were buns and lunrliine-Etztir. u position oov- ering the ' Overhead two a rcrw." ships, while the Fascist nations in turn are expected to itisist that Paris and London recognize Sprin- ish Instirgent General Francisco Franco by extending to him bei- Iigerent rights. Finding Range "ikvo guns mvirv in the left 7 fired. On a distant Iiill two i ':;- 4 Honor Memory 0f Inventor SCOTOIITOWN, ll, Jilin- (Continued on page ll. Col 6) . _ :; r402 Solos new, A MAN Pumas A .,-. ..i WU -—tCPJ=--'l‘he itientory’ oi Bcitpt- » min Tibbttts, New Brunswick lll- ventor of tlic Compound hfurtne Engine, was honored Stiiurduy GOOD’ with the unveiling o: u lllOllll— - mcnt at his grave in fins Q": s k R0 ' County community on tin- ore g‘ \_ /'\ of Grand Lake. For years mtl_v_v an oak i:'~ w requested lJ_v ‘libbdie, lmd 1m. yd the resting place of the man \\' \ revolutionized marine engincc: . The Cottutcss oi Asltburizlnn. assisted by Mrs. A. E. Ainiltcuson and G. Alvah Good. all of Fillil- ericton. llll\'l‘ll(‘(l a plazn gran w boulder. lynrzng a bronze pltqtte. lion. Mu: \_\‘ Mttcluircn l..»=|‘-~it- ant-Co/znn- of Ne“ lir.lt..\vi.k, outfitted 'l‘tbb:tt.s lilo and ex- plained the principle of in; engine. | TORONTO. J1me QY-Jiftnimtirn and nxavztittint wmperattzrcs--» l lmtvsott i8 GI Virlutza 54 ‘ll l-Lltnomou 5G 8i llrgutit - 85 l Wtiitnpt-g 56 83 i 'l‘orun't> 04 '75 from poinisoutsidctowns. Thconlv Oil" l 53 i“ violence reported was an abortive illnlifrvnl I! attempt bv the mowrmcu to stop ~Q"“l"“' “z ‘a non-strikers from operating buses. 5mm John 55 71 Marines from the battleships Aiax Hum“ 54 B‘ and Fixetensfntlntied at the Island lmln"l"l‘l'lo“t}nur( \ T 54 7‘ . , _ ‘ . '. s 2:60 Tuesda) dlsporspd m? m“ Q Afztrititne luminccs: Moderate ' ,wind.~; partly clottdy with some City employees striking for the second time since last Saturday. returned to work today without. further tiiolencc. Emergency legislation passed by‘ the Executive Council of the logis- - local fol: and ‘.1 few scattered show- ’ ers. l High fldc llll.\ afternoon at 1.0] and wmoiruvw morning at 2.16. Sun sets this evening at 7.50 and rises inntorrow morning at 4.16. ,l_..at quarter moon ‘Ihursdayr July 1. 8.03 n. m. Summerside title eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. run can IIIIUII Lem-en Borden 0.40 o. 1m. l D. nml 5J5 n. m. Lune-n Tnnmnlino n. 1a.. '.'.Il.\ p. m. nml I50 p. m. llnl rxrrpl nnmlny. ernor wide powersio deal with the strikers and agitators, today re- ,sttlted in complete peace in Trini- dad. Govemor Fletcher's first or- . der under the new regulations pro- Ivides for summary treatment of agitators.