MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN si-i- i J Atruo man hates no man. F-j ___,______ , _ _ __________ Ohm-lotto own Guardian Two Clan Hernia; unrdln-n. Founded 1887. \\i. The Peo wninuvn llSl PRECEDE ‘ iilncinni _ t a l y Increasingly u, ' Anxious For Anglo- : Italian Pact to Be- come Operative BY PAT USSHER Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON. July 12 ‘ICP Cable) Despite evidence of Italy's in- easlng anxiety to hasten the ate on which the Anglo-Italian ‘eaty becomes operative, it was arned tonight by the Canadian ress that the British Govern- ent has no new proposals to ccelcrate iwtification. Authoritative British quarters nld that unless there should be tuation. such as might be ef- cted by an armistice. ratification , f the friendship pact must rc-, nln dependent unon withdrawal - Italian troops from Spain. An armistice which gave any omise of leading tn a satisfact- ' rrzttlement. would be welcom- o hv Great Britain. Otherwise it. ‘ felt the most hopeful method‘ r speeding up operation rd the catv terms lies in swift carrying it of the non-intervention com- litee plan for evacuation of for- rn soldiers. No decision has been reached t by the government as to en Sir Robert Hodczson. British mmerciul agent to Insurgent aln. will return to Rureos. Sir ohcrt brought General Franco's test. note on the laomblnc of itlsh shin- Prime tn Toivlon. (Continued on page 7. Col 8) QMlNG fVfNll radical change in the Spanish l 1941 By - elections To Be Delayed Until Autumn (C. P. b Guardian's S in] i 01'“ A. July 1?- yJ-eiecvlliclril if; tihc vacant federal rldings of n on and Waterloo South wm not be cal'cd until autumn Prime Minister Mackenzie King said fol- lowing today's cabinet council I dont llliflk people would want bY-elleclions during July 0r Aug. ‘ust, Mr. Mackenzie King 55m 59ml? 11901118 560m to think we are 80mg to have a. general election this lull," he added jokingly’ Aland in that event there would be no need for by-electlons." Pressed to say whether there was mil’ bll-“is l0? ft-‘POFB of a fall election the Prime Minister replied he had already made his attitude apparent, recalling his statement some months ago that he saw no occasion for an elect-Son until the Government had run its full term and that if desirable the present Parliament could stand" until early Questioned on the posibillty of Hon. R. J. Manlon. newly elected Conservative leader. being given an acclaination in one of the va- cant ridings. Mr. Mackenzie King said that would be a matter for flit; constituency concerned to de- c c When he Was chosen Liberal leader in 1909 Mr. Mackenzie King was given an acclamatlon in Prince. P. E. I.. but on that occasion. he said today, he had no advice from the Conservative leader or any member of the Government. that he would be unopposed by that party. lluplcssis Denies Press Rumors Cf Cabinet Shakeup (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) ~w dnesdav i5 Dance Night at e Highlands. L-i257-6-1l-t: ‘Borden-talkies Wednesday ev- j g. L-z-flc-i-ii-al r "Mt. Sbewaru-talkies Thursday: mg. L-zano-i-ii-ai I Talkies sourls, Monday. I L-2932-7-13-8i ' nlkies Crapaud Thursday. L-2933-7-l3~2i Talkies Canoe Cove, Friday. L2933-7-13-2l Talkies Montague, Saturday ncr Baxter 1n Slove Ship. ‘Reserve July 14th for Ice Cream Cornwall. L-2307-7-9-l3. ‘A meeting of the shareholders York Hall will be held Friday t, July 15th. at 8 o'clock. L-2894-7-42-2l. Dance in French Riva-r Hall lght. 1f not fine Thursday. D2936 ‘Ice Cream and Dance in Iona l Wednesday. July 13th . L-2767-7-l2-2l. ‘Ice Cream Festival and Dance. ugh School Thursday. July 14 L-2779-7-l2-2J ‘Ice Cream Festival and dance an Ban, July 18th. L-29ll-7-i3-l6 Final barn dance at Roland ier's, New Willsliire on Thurs- , July 14th. L_2775-7-l2-3i. Come to the Ice Cream Social I rcderlcton Hall Wcdnesday cv- g July 13th. L-2755-7-l2-2l. Buying live tings m Albany rsdny, 14th. Emerald Friday. - until noon. G. C. Grrcn. Application icrgeut seed in- tion should be mailed to Pox Charlottetown, before July 15. L2E33-'I-l2-Ill ortune Dance Friday. July Clifford Pcstrs’ Swim! Or- trn. Rollicking rhythm for 25 0.80 till l. 11-29291-13-31 Omc t0 big Dance at. limiter . Wednesday. July lIl. the gsters. Transfer Lenvms Roxy o'clock. 11-2909-7-13-11 ovcr. Frldav evening, July Ice Cream Festival and Dance I unches served. L-2927-7-l3-2i me to Women's Institute in Morell Hall. Friday nliht. 5th. Webster's Orchestra. L-2922-7-l3 2i E- I. Hospital Aid monthly i! ludav at 8.30. nurses heme. e-presidents are r quested at; rrah for a good time Dance c Cream Emerald School. - July 1am. Good music. b2921-7-l3-8l lmd 8.11.811. Cam , Marsh- Julv 20m to 30m. p Register ith Mrs. D. N. Bell. l5 Roch- Street. ‘L-ff74-7-12-2i. ~- Cream and Dance at C. M. . Hall, Vernon River, Thurs- Julv 14th. Auspices of the . L. Webster's Orchestra 11-2904 -1s-ii. lnrr of um of East l‘ No must be set- ‘a ulv It. u not will be - to court .02 collection. By . Ajfolfcvln, Secretary. ‘L-flfl-‘l-II-Sl. I QUEBEC, July 12—-Polltical rum- ors that took root following dis- missal of Roads Minister Francois J. Leduc from the Quebec cabinet were met with denial today by Premier Maurice Duplessis who sel- dom takes newspaper political gos- sip seriously. For nearly o. week reports that gained wide circulation in the rov- ince have been predicting a s ake~ up in the Union Natlonale Cab- inet, a provincial election for Aug. i7. a hook-up between Ontaro and Quebec that would mean sim- ultaneous elections in the respec- tive provinces. The latter report gained maturity following a con- ference between Mr. Duplessis and Premier Mitchell F. Hepburn who flew to Quebec last week end for a conference "on matters of com- mon interest to the two provinces." . All the rumors, the Premier told a. crowded ress conference, were false. One e described as "silly." There was no question of immed- iate change in his cabinet, Mr. Duplessis added. Failure to re- swear-in four ministers following the technical rcsignation of the cabinet alter Leducs dismissal, the Premier" explained. had been due only to absence of the ministers. With exception of Sir Thomas Chapels. still vacationing. all were re-sworn today. The Premier explained the only constitutional means of expelling Leduc from the cabinet after he had ignored request for his resig- nation was for the entire cabinet to tender resignations to Lieuten- ant-Governor E. L. Patcnaude. Thal latter accepted the resignation of the Duplessis Government and im- mcdiately’ invited the Premier to present a new slate of cablnct min- fstcrs. Premier Dunlessis technical- ly formed a new government, ex- cludinr: Mr. Lcduc. Majority of the ministers were sworn to office again immediately. The Premier declined to tell re- porters his rcasons for dismissing Lcduc from the cabinet except. for a terse comment that "we found stifficicut abuses to dismiss him." Asked if further cabinet changes were contemplated‘. the Premier -,<lcclarcd “there is no question of a change in the cabinet just now." l He would not sav whether" the cabinet situation would be discuss- ed at the cabinet muting for tomorrow. Crops In West Make Favorable Progress (IR-OPS l ottfirapwixiwdtgy 12zéC§)—Or0pai n e a re ovn rogresae favormbl last week under t. o sti- muhi; o warm weather. it was slid today in the seventh of a series of weekly telegraphic crop rBPOPW WV" cring the Prairie Provinces and is- sued by m; Dominion Bureau of Statistics. Lu part o2 South-Central Manl- tobo and Northern SllSltlW-hfiwlll- some local ruins alleviated the drought situation. wheat is well headed over the southern Pull-loll of these provinces. Traces of stem rust were re - ed in Saskatchewan and olrlil heavy infections were found 0H non-resistant. varieties in Mlmllflbl- Grasshoppers are active ln Mu" - robs and Saskatchewan with con- siderable defoliation occurrinl! lil lccai crews. Only sight hall darn e wu ex- perienced in Alberta an Bullwi- chewan, but some serious damage was reported at two Willi-i l" 5°“ l‘ western Manitoba. 0n the whole crops are runcwhat later than 1M1 year. Peed groin crops nrcvifrfumll- m and ash-awn m cl u! fr" to good yin . l l niiilii uw CHARLOTTETOWN, Covers Prince Edward‘ Island Like the Dew Famous Evangelist Married “CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JULY is, 193s IMMINENT JERUSALEM, July 12——(AP)-E Martial law was believed imminent‘ llmlllht in the Haifa area of Pales- tine, where Bl'li.l5li marines earlier fought a battle with an armedl guerrilla band. wn 1c another battalion of Brit- ish troops was landed to aid iu quelling Jewish-Arab disorders, marines from the British battle cruiser Repulse rushed to aid the detachment battling a barricaded band near Haifa. The new clash came after a Jew- ish bus was overturned and bomb- ed. with ‘injuries to one passenger. Sydney Moody, acting govern- ment chzel‘ secretory, was in Haifa, conferring with northern distric; Governor Morris Bailey and Com-l mander R. J. H. Godfrey o.‘ the Repulsc on rdtisability of proclaim- ing martial law. , uch a proclamation was expect-l ed. at least in the northern dls-, trict, where Haifa has been the. main trouble point in disorders‘ which resulted in 320 casualties since July 5. The casualties 1nclud-‘ ed 47 Arab and 224 Jews killed. 146 Arabs and 87 Jews wounded. and five British soldiers wounded. In addition 15 Arab members of organ- ized units have been killed and scores wounded. A fire raged at the Imperial Chemical Industries building at Haifa, Increasedlguards were post- cd about the city, some of them from the Essex battalion sent from Egypt. Two Arabs. sentenced to death by o, military court. were hanged at Acre, ll.Z. Govt. llefends » Stand At Geneva WELLINGTBN, July l2-—(CP- Haiasl-The New Zealand Govern- . inent today defended before the House of Commons its stand at Geneva in opposition to the United Kingdom's stand for withdrawal of League of Nations restrictions on recognition of Italy's Ethiopian conquest. J. Gordon Coates, leader of the opposition National Party, launch- ed the attack by voicing regret that W, J. Jordon. New Zcaland delegate to the League Council in Mai‘. had failed. to support Lon- don's proposal. The Government must agreeJ/Ir. Coates contended. that Prime Min- ister Chamberlain's policy had been successful. and he deplored New Zealandis inability to reach “a basis of agreement with other parts of the Empire" ou the Ethicpian dispute. Finance Minister Walter Nash "rjallcd that the plr-‘ltion taken by Mr. Jordon showed his govern- m:ut's aousrcilcc to tlic principles Gipsy Smith, 78 celebrated Mary Alice Shaw, 26. musician recently by the evangelist‘: Mystic Conn. mony cf the Versailles Treaty and had not done ziuything to jeopardize Empire unity. He did not question lVLi‘. Chamberlain's goodwill. he continued, "but surely there was room for a. difference of opinion if the cw ‘Le-bland Government fell. that another policy was more like- ly to bring peace." illlllTfTiiCPS Hllll ADVANCE 0F lllSllRfiElllS (By The Associated Press) HENDAYE. France, July 12-- Spanlsh Government. troops were reported tonight to bc holding their own in the wild Espndau mountains north of Valencia after , sttvpplitg an Insurgent push toward key highway cities. Insument advances in three days of bitter fighting had carried troop. of General Garcia Valinoto within sight of Sagunto. junction of the Castellon-Vitlencla and Ter- uelflviczlitcrrancau highways l-l miles north of Valencia. Government troops of General Jose Mmja had their backs to the rocks in their defence of the northern base of the triangle, the Ecpadan Hills some l6 miles north of t-he highway junction. Despite previous admissions o! retreat, Government forces report- ed they were holding the highest peak in the range and surrounding strategic positions. King's Recovery Almost Complete LONDON, July 12 —(CPIlavasl —Tho King tonight was well ad- vanced toward. complete recovery from the attack of gastric influ- enza which has kept him in bed since Sunday. His Males ‘a r condition im- proved thro out the day and lingering furs that his illness might prevent his visiting Paris next week were banished. Nevertheless. the Kin ‘a physic- ions. lord Dawson of enn and sir John Weir, announced the royal patients would remain in bed "for th present time." It was un erstood the d wanted the King to have a thorough rest to prepare him for his impending state visit. Ac- companied by Queen Elizabeth. the King la due in the Hench capital July 19. ‘(By Guy Rhoades. Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON, July 12—For the first. time in ltistory the army, navy. air in manocuv 19S unite this month effectiveness of designed to lest cost coast defences. Thc manoeuvres, the largest scale since conducted on the Grcat War, will scc participation of 30 warships, ‘J00 aircraft, 1O coast defence batteries and other units lmtwecn the Forth and ‘Thames. . In the Tyne area military‘ and .iioval authorities expect lhc civil . population to cooperate with nu 11-11‘ ralzi precaution test. possibly ac- lctimpanicrl by a blackout aigainst l zicriril attack. . The coast will be ntinxkctl July 20-23 by the blue force consisting ‘of ships and aircraft of thr- hom" ilccl under command of Admiral .S.r Charles Forbes, flying his flag in the battzeship Nelson. Two other battleships, the Rodney. and Re- vcugc will be in the attacking force with the aircraft carrier Courag- eous with ils planes, four cruisers. 14 destroyers and five submarines. The defence will be undertaken by the red forces of cruisers. de- stroyers. coast defence artillery and 145 aircraft. Fewer vessels tvlll be ln the defending force than with the attackers, but two cruisers will represent a larger number and four destroyers will form the skeleton of a renter force. ne fortresses will the East Riding heavy brigade o territorial artillery and the be manned East Riding fortress Royal Emslnccrs. Harwick defences will be manned by the Tyne heavy brigade. terri- torial artillery, and 'I‘yne electrical engineers. another terrltonial unit. No anti-aircraft defences will be manned. The air force plums taking part will be drawn from the coastal command and fighter command of the Royal Air Force, consisting of eight general reconnalsance. one torpedo bomber and four hter squadrons. Three other sou no will be flying boats. General reconnaisancc pedo bomber units will be under the dmrge of Afr Marshal sir Frederick Bawhill, commander-in- chief of the coastal command, and the f tors tinder air Vice-Marshal I. L. age. air officer command- No. ii (fighter) group. nuisance units wil fl over the North out w spot blue ervlm croft, submarines and aircraft in and tor- oo-opontlon with the red naval force. scptuagcnarian and theology student, were married 50-year-old Fourteen friends of the couple witnessed Army, Navy, ForceManoeuvres On Large Scale i 30 Warships, mircraft To Test Effectiveness Of English Coast_l_)_efences. l . use l l l l l l. evangelist, and Albany Smith, of the cere- IOU, Ab» unit will be The torpedo bomber t blue naval d in attacks agains ‘,ves.sels and flghlcr plancs to inter- forcc and civilian population Willi rcpt. and repel blue forcv ung east cons’. for‘r ' telephone and in public the manoeuvre.- iunv t normal service tcmptirariiy. .. attack- Thc post off.cc. tclcgi has . f this country. v. u: !l"'i To See Northern Mining Areas liuurb llllllllES llllWar “Mhiistry .FllllRTH its or Fllllllll NEW YORK, July 12—tAP)— Howard Hughes‘ New York flight headquarters was advis- cd tonight his globe-girdllng plane passed over Novosi irsk. Siberia, at 8:42 p.m. ADT, 400 miles beyond Omsk, where it took off two hours five minutes previously. OMS-K, Siberia, July lfr-twed-i nc..cayi-Howard Hughes and his four ‘round the world flight com- panions roared into the Siberian dawn today at 4:37 a. m. (7:37 p. . m. ADT) Tuesday) on the fourth leg of their globc-girdllng flight. ‘Phe United States fliers headedl their silver monoplane east across the Soviet steppes toward Yakutsk. , 2,177 miles away. They were still a day ahead of. the 1933 flight schedule of the late ‘ Wiley Post who circled the world} in seven days. l8 hours and 49 mln- ‘ UlPS. First major city on the million- airc pilot's itinerary was Novo- l sibirsk. approximately 200 miles’, cast of Omsk. WlJlClI he planned t/o l fly over without halting and thenl pass Krasnoyarsk and Kansk be- fore reaching Yakutsk. This fourth leg was expected to take about ll hours. Early dawn was just breaking ovcr mid-Asia when the flying lab- oratory "New York World's Fair 1939" got away. Hughes spent about 4 1-2 hours in Omsk. drinking tea himself after satisfying his plane's thirst for gasoline. Remote Yakutsk, on the Lena River which meptles into the Arc- tic Ocean. is the last Soviet stop Hughes has scheduled on his dash around the world. Fxom there he plans to fly over the mountain ranges of far east- ern Siberia and then 5.511355 the Berlu‘: Sea to Fairbanks. A‘aska, a hop of 2.456 miles. As at other stops mechanics im- mediately commenced refuelin his plane when Hughes ended his ilhird leg frrui Moscow to Omsk. If wn‘. still daylight in this an- cicnl, northern city. centre of car- »,a\:iu routes and important station on the trans-Siberian railway, when the millionaire sportsman pilot and his four companions set their twin-motored plane down at 9 p. m. Moscow time t3 p. m. ADT.) Oliisk. GCOG miles from Ncw York ls approximately the nalf-ivay point of the scheduled 14,709-mile CONT-bf‘. The lane's wheels touched the Omsk iclrl but 42 hours and 40 minutes after the takeoff from New York in a flight to better the 1933 record of Post, who circled the globe in seven days. 18 hours and 49 minutes. Compared with Post's time of 86 hours and 17 minutes from New iYork ‘.0 Novosibersk-slizhtly more liliflll two hours flying time beyond IOmsk-Ifughcs‘ gleaming cruiser zwas ncarlv a day ahead. ‘The American flier covered the 1.3tl0-mile distance from Moscow in seven hours, 35 minutes. H" left lhp Soviet Russian ca ital at 1:15 p. m. (7:25 a. m. A .1 nficr rt stop of but two hours an 12 minutes for refuellfng. ‘1 11;? previous hops were covered n i . and 35 minutes, New lYnrk to Paris: and seven hours. 49 minutes. for the l.675-mlle leg rfrom Paris to Moscow. Hughes mace a beautiful get~ away in his dcparture from Mos- .co\v. He ivorrlcd some of the spec- ,lator< at first by taxiing to the end :r 2 lship around in dusty circles. l But surlrlcnlv the trim. plane shot ahead and lighfv as a feather. lPolicc Arrest l Self -confcsscd ‘ rcgation day, July l. of the runwnv and WRllZlhl! his bright took off Worship is an end in itself. MAXIMS OFA. MERE MAN Annual lllblrri Expert Coming To Canada UPFAWA. July lu-tcm-An‘ expert from the British war flilfllSi-l 1'5’ W111 Pffibflbly come to Canada’ soon_w survey the possibility‘ of ar-l Fll-"Klllk for training of air forccl illlots and offimrs 1n a Canadlanl Owned and Cfilllfflllfld school. Prime Minister luackeiizic King said w. day. He had no (iefiinu: infolnuu. lion as to when this official would amve but believed it. would be very soon. The British government had been “Vffliv pleased" Mr. Mllhkefillt‘ King said, by the commuuu- non for- worded a week ago iiiuiczring tho aitd Resources rlecl rod Dommisi‘. Ml llli“ l‘ _ v ininion Cupila attitude taken by government the wvvard eslabltalimciu ol ' llylng schools here and iizid alrcady Mrs Vi taken notice of what had been niiill n the House of Commons till ])l‘t)- 1 (In the House of Comiiiiiis llic Prime Minister had cicclartizl the léovfilnfliclit was agauist i-shhlish- ment of military‘ org-urination, B1 Mill-P. 1i. minis’ VISIT Til MARlllMES ‘nus Hon. T. A. Crerar l-lozhcaga an was met by Premier T. A. Camp- bell and other members o! the Pro- vinciul in inspet the National Park. ptton Delivered QILW 1. H.001 (‘nnullu and U. I. Ill-Oi! 1R SAYS Leaves Today After Short Visit to Island National Park "I have thoroughly enjoyed my visit in the kfaiitimes" Hon. T. A. Crcrar. Fcocral Iifinisie" vvl Mines night vc of lll: rrnixru 1o he Do- Accolnpanicd by and thou‘ dauzhter 1 ilic Federal Minister from Pictou on .he S. S. noon yesterday. He Crcrar Gmcriimciil and taker. to Canada not undcr control of the Commenting last night to a nevrs- Cllnadllln Dlrllilllltilll. but w "Jul-cl papcmian on the new Prince liki- ZlKree to the ifflllllnu of Biuish w-ard Island Park. Hon. Mr. Crerar pilots in schools conducted in and declared enthusiastically, "I; has uolltlifllefl bi’ U"? DOmllllOIlJ the finest stretch of sea bathing Commenting ou this phase of the ‘near-h f have ever seen." It woul govelnlnelllh 901W)’ fill/Cl‘ Hlllllvll h.- u iir)‘ lltlf’ recreation centre meal“ lpduygand r°191"~'““'5 mllde‘ whei‘. (levclopmcnt had proceeded L? l". ulfnf‘ we Collselwalw" Cm?“ a lliflc ILu-ilirr. thc Minister be- ‘Kcinntluli 1.35‘. ‘leek; Mmkmlzlel licvecl l-Ils visit to the Province has’: ‘£16 elFQ {'35 focnllllflced m vu. l0 litspcct the Park and look WOlJlI be 1c n- 0 t ‘Ztlmmlle ovcr po-sibilities for further de- 5mm; lakehn agreement \\l.1 the ‘Tqnpmc...’ ‘ ' Worl: inis. summer would start "Things can be so easily miscon- trucd. the Prime Minister observ- ed, "and there 1s a section so rcody to believe we are making commit- menls in advance on matters per- "llllllls to War and rcarmameiil. Nothing can over-ride our (lctcr-l mination that parliament along» will decide such maiers." 1 While it had been and would be l-he DOIlcy of the government w co-l operatewith British munitions mis- l sions visiting the Dominion it wast fclt that any orders placed licre- should be matters eirirelvi for fhc= Purchasers and manufacturers dcalrnc with each other directly. l l lFrcemasons ' Unveil Tablet‘ (C. I‘. h_v Guardian's Special Wire ANNAPOLIS ROYAL. N S, Jul l2—-Frcemasons gathered in his- torlc Fort Anne Park near this, Annapolis Vallcv town lOdav to‘ unveil a tablet marking aspiring-n.» ment of the first Masonic Lodge in Canada two centuries ago. 0T1 frrouud occupied by the‘ French in the early part‘ of the 17th Cfilllllly when Annapolis Hov- al was known as Port Royal Sir Francis J. Davies, deputy Lgrgnd master of the United Grand Lodge of England, unveiled the tablet. It was here that Major Erasmus James Philippa. first provincial grand masterfounded the first Mn- . sonic Indge in Canada in 177111. Mayor A. Kelsall, past master of Annapolis Lodge welcomed 1,1..- more than 100 delegates and other members of fiic craft to the his- toric town. He reminded them 1i was licre the French. in i604, os- tablished the first European scttlc- ment lu North America um]. of the Gulf of Nlcxico, Earlier in the dav t-hv iucuibcrs visited Nova Scotia Freemasons’ Home at Windsor. Provincial grand master N. T. Avard of Amherst .pi'cdictcd tlic establishment of sim- illlll‘ 110111“ throughout Canada in the next. few years. Dllrlllf! the third day o! ti... b1- centenary celebration. the Masons hcard an address from Lord Farr‘.- ham of Ireland. provincial grand master of Mcnth. as thcv stopped for a luncheon in the Vnilcv town. i -. t~.r.r.;;;.;“§?... . Jap Advance ED‘I\’1l.)lLv"I‘Oiv', July ill-NT‘ l).. D. ltcrcrtson, oi '1 niwl, our oi ' ' ‘ the heroes of the Mc lover‘ m no! SHANGHAI. Jul.‘ lli~iWtdii<s- lragedv iii Nova SW3 u two _vrur..l ltlily)~lApi—clllllt‘bl‘ rcportcd to- ago. headed iicith loduv from lCd-‘ (lay that JlllJllllCSf‘ lmd been slop- lTLlllOli to sec iiurtlu-rii lllllllli;‘ -— pen scvcu miles (iouiistrc-aui from areas. _ _ _ _ ‘ ' Killkiiilll-l. Y-iiilgse liner porl i155 ‘mind,’ he said with a gnu. 1m (A. I‘. by Guardians Special Wire) miles _bc.ow Hankmv. and were at. gmllgdtw sele thle mifilcsl from the nafihgglfAdfllélga-slfrwrgul "toggling 1o binng up rciuioice- groun eve on Y. 1111f i". soiiicoitl- - . C 0 0 55.11112 s, else see the shafts. I'm fro-ll! l" Slut!‘ lwtlnl. announced tonfnlit- ll. Expecting a icsuiuptlon of the stay right. where thcrcs lo: _ol air man giving the name of ‘Frank Klllvc louurd Hanko\\',.Chiiia‘s pio- imd the sky doesnt cove if ,Olson, 32. arrested at Ritzvillep] "Slollal capital. however, Clllllegc f Dr. gobcrtzon cawielto Lwniongon l Lfiiilish" y-cl-stcrdaykhag civnfessed‘ the < iligoiliglhcucd their defences in Klu- » mm 1c 6R5 Oil B wlllli‘ lllJ. 9- map-s aying o C ares Vfat son. l. complaining his brctlicr-iii-lavv. 1111p m Tnmmm Dem g-1_ 193g 'I‘licv put into effect their A. Chester of Winnipeg. The two let immediately by air ior the north Thc officer said the man bczng held ln the Winthrop Hote ‘A’ 115 "scorched earth" pOIlCV and beg-i ll systematic destruction of \\'fll ll l on the neiv golf course. tvhl'c res- toration work would be carried ori at Dalvav Housc Roatls within the park area ivould be sub-graded \v;ih the P’)\<.il)lllti‘ that they would be hard surfaced later. "The whole Province is a park. however," Mr. Crcrar commented. "That ‘is one of its great attracy lions" He had no doubt out that the National Park ivould be of value in stimulating tourist traffic to this Province. After his arrival ivestcrday Mr. CTCHII‘ was taken first to the Cav- endish arca whcrc he visited Green Gables. made famous by L M. Montgomery's Ann of Green Gab- les. The party then motored to the eastern cnd of the Park where Dal- vav House renovation and other restoration work was inspected. Toduv Ivfr. Crerar will leave for Sackvillc where he wi‘l inspect New Brunswickls National Park at Fort Bcauscjour before (akin: tho ofic'ock train curoutc to Ottawa. While in Charlottetown the Fed- cral Nlinistcr and his partv were guests at the Canadian National Hotel Cf System ls Critical Educational YVOLVVILLE. N.S.. July I'd-AC?) -’1‘oday‘s educational system failed ‘ to prepare the youth to meet sztu- ‘alloiis 0i the present. W. K. Tibert to. l-‘redcizctou. Ncw Bruustvickks -(lll'CCL0l' o. VOCAIIOHHl education . lclzl the Nova Scott-u fctierution of lHtlilllfi and School Associations to- lilll i1. l "Hundreds of our bovs U115 very hour nrc on the streets and lanes oi ilicsc l1l‘0\lll(‘(‘5 (limiting hither ‘and you. llilllllld u» lace tho re- sponsibiktics \\'llil'l\ 211W‘ theirs to- duv, And ll is our fault. " lo set. up the scheme of thing. did not make ll. and thi‘ , p. l)l(‘l1l fuccs us lll the educatloi i field toflnv duuuiiflliig all tlic pou- lcr and lorct- ac can brintl t0 bear ‘on it.‘ .\l.' 'i‘iht~i't savl. Hr tut lo tut You wont llsvfi 40 Dlsullc llottceuen to visit as much territory as pos- hem “qme downs o; ms Mo“. “.89 rout properties. Because of "m. i- 111,‘... - ,1 m. ,., _‘ i; r ‘r Mid sible in three days, They \\'lll prob- being checked ' l larv necessity" they blew up two 101m... s. 1;; 1o ' ' "NY 3° l" l“ l?" "5 Gm“ 3°?" Cole said Olson's storv involved l SlPPl lmntoons owned bv the Sllllld- . Sun .--=.~‘ this c\'t.'..‘.‘ .11 T l5 and Lake, returning here Friday to several other persons‘ bu"; added “l, 11rd Oil Couipauy. Thcv OCfllplflfl 11mg qmnnrro“: men-mini m 4.2a, meet Mrs. Robertson and go to m‘. not check m kveral demand British property, where tllCyli10il11i-‘ s/\lmn‘(\rsid(v 15.1,, 0mm"... min. Jas r for a holiday. with known’ facts in ‘he kldha ‘_ l cd guns and cut loopholes in warc- l m“ 13-... U...“ Ch‘\|*](\‘tn{(7\\‘n_ o weeks ngo Dr, Robertson pm case p houses and wharf buildings. ‘ Motvnx-nlqgipn] OfH-Q Tmonln visited the scene of the Moose Riv- “gm m“ reason" Cole Sam Most civilians had fled. ‘Juh. ]§._¢(j_p_)_}\,l[1“jmum an er drama. his first. time back there Ho] O L‘ be. u w‘. d f th - Japanese aviation inflicted wlde- mflK-n...m temmmtmes. since he and Alfred Scarldlng were d‘ P ‘Aglq a‘, 0m “r 9}”, spread damage yesterday, 135...“... ' 4g 5Q rescued from the cave-in of the a“ '5 Ml"? Nlhwlhmll‘ ("mmlal Eighteen bombers carried out n vied...“ 5o on abandoned ld mine after being Th!‘ Pam” “ l" "kl “eve” raid of Wuchang. acmss the river “.50.”... 40 71 buried for 0 days. Herman Mngill Perm“ mellllflllfd hi’ C0" hall from i-innkow. and killed or Rh"... so '75 (“Pd berm-e fegcnefs could much m‘. produced alibis covering the period w-Oundcd 200 Cmnesa Winn, I m a‘ spot where the three had been '07 m!‘ kltlflulllbluil. One man who United States missionary fnstltu- To"... O 55 ac trapped, was detained for investigation was mo... Wm. endangflrpd by some of 0mm“ o0 m ——-——————-—-*— "W15" all" 50ml? QllP-‘lllmllllli- the 100 bombs dropped. \f..¢.-,.'.1 a4 1a Cole said Olson would be held Juplmcsc reports said all thfrlimmyw} s‘; on - "for several hours perhaps all raiders returned safely but ran m- . s. John s2 m night." while investigation 0f the to heavv anti-aircraft fire. ihq-lnénfa.‘ 5'1 on case was conducted. asid Chinese mllltarv cstabllsh-lphmqfflqnwn so d Mrs. Maltson, reached by a tele- ments and troop concentrations Marmme pmylngps__]floderflfg m llepres a n tative made in the case. phone, said her family had had no notification an arrest Lad been She said her husband was “out suffered severe damage, station area of Canton, in rm estimated 200 injured. In another raid on the Wongshal South China, 52 Chinese were killed and locally fresh easterly winds: mostly cloudv with showers in mil-HY 515' tricts, rm: can ream! s/tmmos TRURQ 143,, July 12_(cp)_ in the country" and would not. b" Juno; Tali, or Charlottetown was home for two hours. He could not -———-~-——~-~—~ 45 elected district representative of the be reached by telephone. she said. NAQTY READlNG M!" "0"!" l- m- 9' " m‘ Floral Telegraph Delivery Assocla- Neither the state patrol nor Ta- ————-~ l p- m - llld 4- 5 Pl "l- T°"""" tion at a meeting today. Other coma police mo been in touch PERTH. A"-“"‘"“ “(Cm w i, tine sis s m. 11 n- m- 3-05 v- m- offioers were disttic-r chairman. R. with her. she added, Censors seemed to be blind to l and 6-50 fl- "\- A. Snowball. Chstham, N.B.. sec- Asked about the newest break chea magazines "full of filth and | Sundays. Lclvu Borden 9-99 l-m- retary-treasurer, Miss Helen Rig- on the lengthy can. she sold: "I nest ness" flooding Australia. said and ‘I p. m. lay, Ohatham. Auditor. Mlsa A a don't want n r~—---~—~ P“! 1*," inguinal» A, Schroeder. The Mln- Luvu Tormentinc 10.15 s. In Peacock, Moncwn, NJB. meter of C‘ stoms ordered s report . and 8.10 p. m.