Vain-is; Guardian. “Ioaiided ass-i. llilnrlotwtown Guardian ‘Iwo Con“. i 4 l Finance Bill w‘ llPasses House Of Commons S." ewden Casts His Vote Government, Which Puts Sup- plementary Budget Into Effect. 1149"" . Ind warm. I,‘--Lcwer lit. ARMED BllNllliS lillli BANK AND ‘IIIJNAILMAYUR NE fiat Away With $30,- i 000 From Indiana B a n k , Including’ Cashier. (Canadian Prcfl) RAB-WORD CITY, Ind, 00%., 2 g-{FOIR armed bandits robbed the Citizens State Bank here today of 130,000. kidnapped Elmer Lucas. the mic‘ * ‘ ler and Mayor of Hartford City. and escaped. _ A posse of citizens“ and officers llred approximately a dozen shots’ Ias tho bandits left the bank and Ihey believed they wounded at least ‘one of the men. -~ The posse immediately began an intensive search and officers of our sounding cities were notified. l ' A I-IORDEN, Durham, Eng, 0oz, 2. ‘(APJ-Premier Ramsay MacDon- old appearing personally before his constituents of Sesham Harbor, lost his fight tonight to secure their llillrovsl of his formation of the National Government. iflie WeatlierEtc A REALLY GREAT MAN i5 , our lulio can MAKE ilflisas believe g. Ali's Queer ! METEOROLOGICAL OFFICE. Tnr~ to,‘0nt., Oct. 2- AND MAXIIIILI TEM- IIIIIFI rnnarvnas ‘ lwson .. 32 40 . ancouver _ M dmontou ii" Inf! 43 "u; 44 shstoon i"? sglns i" ianlpeg iii orcato 7" ttsws ii" hrsatrss 71’ 'i"l"n' :48 s o I x ii" __ ottstown .. ... 04 IOIICAGI! ‘ r‘ Ottawa and Upper 8t. Lawrence Val- fiys: hlorlerats southwest winds: fnlr Lawrence Valley: Mod- te weotsrly winds: fair; not much ' heal! in tern rsturs. - Ball and orth Shore: Strong iwihwssterly ‘winds: clearing and éltaritliae Provinces: Fresh westerly ‘rs: fsir: not much change in tem- b tare. - _ nu.- rinn ‘Bigntlde this afternoon at 8.10 and row morning st I. sq sets this afternoon at M0 and - Iltltomnrrow morning st It's“ quarter moon nadsy, Oct. 4. m. mgmorniule tide eighteen minutes _ than Charlottetown. -.-..... days-ll»: iiurdols mill! d I 40 J III. daily: 1M0 an. ' / \ (Associated Press) LONDON. Oct. Z-Rt. Hon. Philip Snowden hobbled up to the rostrum in trié House of Comm this af- ternoon, poured his sarcasm upon the Labor opposition. ignored the booes and hlsses from the Labor benches and cast his vote with the Government majority to pass the finance bill which puts the supple- mentary budget into eifeos. It was probably his political swan song, for there is a general agree- ment now that there will be an elec- tion before the end of the month with Premier Ramsay MacDonald heading a National Government tic- ket against-thc Labor opposition, which probably will be supported by a certain number of Liberals. Mr. MacDonald left town tonight and went up to Seaham Harbor to speak for the first time since the in- Continued on page l0 .,W.A.BHISES ISIIIIBESSFIII BIINFERENBE (Canadian Press) 8'1‘. JOl-DI, N. B. Oct... 1—Dcmin- ion Board of the Women's Auxiliary of the Missionary Society of the Church of England in Canada came to a close here this afternoon after four days ef crowded sessions. 'It was a. notable convention in the history of the organization, ap- proving as it did an enlarged scope of work. After debating the wisdom or‘ holding meetings annually, nu- thority was given the executive to decide at its spring meeting wheth- er ln view of economic conditions an annual convention will be held in 1932. The budget for 1932 was adopted and provides for an additional $1,- 800 in grants to overseas field, as another missionary has taken up duties in Japan and some addition- proved. Special funds were voted to various causes. The basis of co- Contiriued on page 10 JNEMPIIIYEI] Sllll RIBTINB a1 maintenance charges were apw ’ The People's eper CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER s, 1931 PREPARATIIINS Hill visn or sov. ggiiiii Programme, As Offi- cially Announced, Will Be Carried Out. Great interest and expectancy has been amused by the announcement of the visit of His Excellency. Earl Bessborough, Governor-General of Canada, who will see this Province for the first time on his arrival here Monday morning. Plans for His Ex- cellency’s receptio are well under way. He will be accompanied here by his secretary, A. F. Lascelles, and Lieut. F. N. Fuller, R.N., aide-de- camp, and will have s. guard of honor drawn from the Prince Ed- ward Island Highlanders. The following programme, which has already appeared in the press, is repeated for convenience: Monday, Oct. 5th. > 10 a. m., arrive Charlottetown, Re- l0.30 a. m.. presentation of ad- dresses by Provincial Government Continued on page l0 sv- llilAlillliAN uixiapinioi Resignation of Ontar- io Governor Expect- ed. In Near Future. MONTREAL, Que, Oct- 2—(By the Canadian Presso-The resigna- tion of Hon. W- D. Ross, Lieuten- ant-Governor of Ontario, and the appointment of P. D. Rom. widely- known Ottawa newspaper pro- prietor, to his post, is forecast in a special despatch from Ottawa to "La Patric." ‘The article says: "The rumor is in parliamentary circles that Hon- W. D. Ross, Lieutenant-Governor or‘ the Province of Ontario, will shortly ask to be relieved of his ,dutlcs for personal reasons. It is also said that P. D. Ross, owner of the Ottawa Journal, and former President of the Ottawa Conserv- ative Association, will be chosen as his succcsso . lVIr Ross is very popu- lar throughout the province and his selection is believed very probable." TEXAN UNION MEN STRIKE (Canadian Press) GALVESTON, Tex.. Oct. 2-- Steamshlp operators turned to non- union labor to load vessels today as the result of the walkout of 3,- ceptlon at depot by Heat-Governor. RllMliREl] AS, Covers Prince Edward _ Island Like the Dew Aviatrix Visits America J WILL ATTEMPT TO B i Mrs. Keith Miller, English avi airlx, recently arrived in Los Angel- es with Mary Adams, New York ac tress and also an experienced flier. The two women expect to hop off s REAK ‘AIR FJCORI) non, in a mystery ship, capable oi v doing 250 miles an hour, in an atte mpt to smash the present transcon- tinental air record. Mrs. Keith Mill er (LEFT) is seen with Miss Adams is they arrived in Los Angeles. MINER KILLED BY. CAVE-IN AT lilAiJlE BAY (Canadian Press) GLADE BAY, N. S., Oct, 2- Ernest Payne is dead and Reuben Wadman is seriously injured as a result of an accident at the Ling- an Head this afternoon. Buried be- neath sliding coal and rock. the two miners were trapped for more than an hour. Sixteen men workfidl strenuously with picks and shovels? to free the victims and rushed them to Glace Bay General Hospital. Payne died shortly before four o'clock. Wadman‘s condition is crit- ical. '_ The two went to Lingan this mom 1X18 to mine coal. They were ivork- lng in one of the holes in the cliff there and were unaware of the danger. Without warning a heavy slide occurred throwing ions of rock? 8nd coal into the hole and cover- ing the men, Nearby ililners be-| gan to clear away the fallen rockl and in, the meantime a telephone] call was sent to New Waterford for! medical assistance. s?‘ Alli-GENERAL is RllYAllY wiiciimin Monctonians Give Lord Bessborough Enthusiastic Recep- tion. (Canadian Press) MONCTON, N.B., Oct. 2.-—Monc- ton today extended aii enthusiastic welcome to Canada's new Governor- Gencral. the Earl oi’ Bcssborough, who paid his first official visit to the city in the course of a. tour of New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. His Excellency arrived in the Vice-Regal train at ten o'clock and was greeted by Mayor C. H. Blakeriy, and members of the City Council. As the Governor-General stepped from the train L/Assump- tion Band played the first bars of the National Anthem while the crowd stood with bored heads. The reception which had bren ‘lng in galley; new galley range; |prepared for {His Excellency was a Pfl , - . me who was “ealest n“ 5"‘ ' quiet one, embracing the welcome at 000 union l-ngsho crawls at Hous- ton, Corpus Christi, Texas City and Galveston over a cut in wages. When union men refused to do the work. the Bull Steamship Lines put non-union men q the job at Corpus Christi to load the steamer Edith. It was also planned to use non-union stevedores to handle the cargo for the Point Fennln. a gulf Pacific vessel. Squads of police guarded 'the docks in all the ports affected. N SiillllAND John McGovern, La- bor Member of Par- liament In Jail. _ (Associated Press) GLASGOW. Oct., a-Glssgow was torn last night and this mornin! by wild unemployment disorders during which demonstrators used hammers, hatchets and anything they could lay their hands on to fight mounted police attempting to prevent looting of IMPI- The dil- turbsnces, stsrtlng st 8.80 last night when mounted men chat-Bed a group of demonstrators outside the hi!!! court in Jail square, raged for nlofe wnmrrno. Man, Oct. z-Mike than five hours. Adsniohuk. Minitonas. Man, shot An undetermined number of per- and killed his fmir-yesr-cld son .. SAD DEATH (Canadian Press) ' Q sons wss injured, many of them re- Walter today in mistake for a pra- quiring hospital treatment. Groups lrie chicken. Adamchuk. afraid the oi demonstrators, their heads bleed- lives of two sons would be endanger- ing 1mm police clubs. were brought ed while he hunted s. ‘chicken near into m, police station Quiet was his farm, sent Wslteasnd his older hi...“ Qgrly this morning, but brother hams. But the chicken ‘ oeople remained in the joined in the hunt, unknown to his lint lid said the shock of their father, and Walter was killed tbs cold nor must have been he the new York apartment of Ruth liillfiitkd. \ it»... so. polled patrols keot them non. face, was rescued first. Although the men continued to work fever, ishly, they little expected to find Wadman under the heavy Toad, He was saved from instant death, how- QWI‘. b? s large rock which became lodged between the sides of the pit and bore the crushing weight o: tons of coal and rock above it. LAST SWIM PROVES FA TAU NORTH SYDNEY. N» 8., Oct. 2- (B! the Canadian Piessl-A verdict of death due to heart failure while bat-bins was returned by a Coron- H"! Jill’! who investigated the death 0i Peter Campbell, local tall- or. whose sod? was found this af- ternoon Instill en the harbor near his honn. Warm weather had induced hi‘. Campbell to take a swim before dinner- A short time after he loft horns his body was found by two boys- Doctors folmd little water in _,... u .>I7'Wl¢‘~g1fl [the station, an inspection of Great War veterans wlio were‘ lined up to greet their famous comrade, a visit to the soldier's memorial in Victoria Park, where lie also in- spected the Cadets and Boy Scouts ‘and an informal reception after- wards. Many citizens took advan- tage of the opportunity to be pre- sented to His Excellency. A drive about the city and a vis- it to the two hospitals completed the arrangements. An added foa- ture was a. visit to Bend View Park to witness the arrival of the tidal bore. But it was s. disappointing one, as the Vice-Regal party a:- rived five minutes after the wave had made its ascent of the river. Senator Resigns (Ufllldilll Pft) THINTYII, N. J., Oct. Za-Seli- ste President Joseph G. Wolber to- d“ announced the resignation of i“!!! Roy T. Yates 0f Psssaic ‘County. who was recently shot in Jayne orsnnier. »'~"" ‘w. ReadbyEverybody Car The car" ferry steamer “Prince Edward Island" arrived here yes- terday afternoon about 3.30 from Quebec, and docked at Bruce Stewart and Company's wharf, where she will remain for a period of five or six weeks undergoing extensive repairs, At Quebec tho steamer received plates, also repairs to the car deck and new toilets and shower bath-S. in the crews’ quarters. 5 The contract for repair work’ by Bruce Stewart and Company is; an important undertaking. It in-f; eludes repairs and thorough overJ hauling of the circulation pump. thg sanitary and fresh water pump. the generating engines, blowing en-g glnes. steering engines; extensive‘ repairs to the boilers which will: include two new furnaces; new cold storage room; new terazzo floor- new passengers‘ toilets. and con- siderable repilrs to the main en- gines. The ship's sides and tanks will also be scaled and painted. ‘The bringlm.‘ of'the car furry to Charlottetown at this time will! be a great boon to the city and Province at large. It will provide much needed work and will put ad- ditional money in circulation among local workmen. Much credit is clue to the enter- prise of Bruce Stewart and Com- pany and also to the Federal Con- servative members of Pmliament who were assisted materially in securing this large contract for a local firm. Announcement that the car fer- for repairs was made in the Guar- dian in August last. More exten- sive repairs are to be made here. however, than was reported at that time. Boston Union V Men Strike, l (Canadian Press) BOSTON, Mass, Oct. 2--—Elght‘ hundred longshoremen employed‘ on the Boston waterfront quit work today, pending the outcome oi.’ a conference between contracting stevedores and steamship compan- ies representatives on a wigc question. Work on l3 steamers wasi halted by the longshorcmeiis‘ action. ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS ETCS. "Forest Hill Tuesday. Show and Dance. Orchestra. 9142-10-3-21. "Rummage sale, St. Peters Ca- thedral School Room this, Saturday evening. 9146 "Come to St. Columba on Oct. 'lth to the big Chicken Supper and Bingo. 9li5-l0-2-4i. "liiastern Kings Club loading lambs only at Elmira and Baltic. Tuesday afternoon. October 6th. and Bonris Wednesday mornins- 9120-10-2-21 "See the Comedy "A P001‘ Mil‘- ried Man" in the oranlilv H8"- W001i Islands West, on Tuesday- 030561‘ can at 0.30 P. M., presented by "Rev of Hope" Institute. 9143-1044-31- "The Prodical Son Service will be held in the Kingston BsPiJli Church, Sunday evenlnR. OMAN!‘ m1 gt 730, ill3l-l0-3-li. "Come to Halloween Dance in MacDonald Consolidated School on Wednesday, October 7th. If not nne following evening. Admission 25c. In 14 PAGES Ferry S‘ Arrives Here For Extensive R Repairs Will Include Installation Of Two New Furnaces And Will Occupy Five Or Six Weeks. Work Will Give Additional Em- ployment To Local Men Through The Con- tracting Firm Of Bruce S tewart 6' Company. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN _ The Church. whether noncon- formlst or otherwise, is the bulwark of the State. .\Ill|l|il| Sulnu-rlplliuin I]F||\l'l“I "00 lly .\luil Clllnulil and l‘. s. must?" -1~——~—i-_n_._i_ ___________ teamer epairs ry would come to Charlottetownl aid of Mount Herbert Hockey Club- sias-io-s-si. llIllRlll FIGURE} iltmmed Pissri AWAY under water repairs, including new S 1' Thglnas Lipton Great Irish Sports- man Dead In Lon- don. By I’. II. Myring. Associated Press Staff Writer LONDON, Oct, 2. (A.P.)--Sir Thomas Lipton. fine old set dog and one of the world's great mer- chant prlnces, died today at the age of Bl. The cause of his death was a-heart attack which followed a severe chill he caught while mot- oring several days ago. For the last year his health had been a cause of recurrent anxiety. Sir Thomas died peacefully in his sleep. Several old friends were- at the bedside. but no near rel-' atives as he is the last of his fam- ily. He died without attaining the great objective of his life, on which he had spent huge sums from a fortune made primarily from tear- the winning of the Amerlcrfis cup. Instead he won the epltaph- "the ivorlds bestloscr" and the affec- tionate admiration of minions our valclilng trophy actually \\'Ol‘iil $500 both sides or the Atlantic’ He novel" sucrcorltd. but the ut- His fifth and last attempt tollfllllplfi brought Illlll iulrrzizilioilnl wrest "that elusive 01d mug" 0S hi‘! 'fam rid eventually n gold ‘u good- always called the trophy symhol-‘klvmecfip mmwenuwy (O mm it“, (-93, izing yachting supremacy, was as a triktn from ilir- Ullllfltl SIGNS. made m September h“ year vibe“ to "the gamcst loser." the Shamrock V was beaten by the.‘ m 1851 “W mm mm)“ yam. Emerimse o“ Rhoda 15mm‘ lAnlcrica. an unkunivn contender. Sh‘ Trmmas had pmned great crossed the Allurrlc lillflll‘ her 01m hopes 9n his greenmuned "c" andjisflll, took lici" plmv (lll the start h" ‘meat w“ a m“ m hm‘- H“ mg lino Willi u fwlrl 01 iii zllusirlfllll {Qimdt Imwever- a 5mm mmsme of “ihorouulilrrii." <1 LII!‘ aristocracy consolation in a loving cup ulliichimld {Lflnundvd (rvlir-i“ 51101151111111 1n “v3.5 presented to him by lildlllllTfSlc-‘rvnt 31.1mm m, hugging to 110,5,“ i" m’? United states as a’ tributel/iho vicioijv nml llic Cllll in a race to his sportsmanship, and in hisfilmund m‘. N‘, of Wmnh six years P199919" hi“ m m“ Bmish m-"Mllater tho (‘lip b-Dcnmc an ‘interim- SIR ’I‘IIO.ll.-\S LIPTON Yacht squadr°n~ Alional trophy. Why Sir Thomas. who prObubWi mldvrtd great" Sflwlm i‘) Bi“? LONDON. 0.1. SW51‘! Thoma: isli yachting than any other manQLnnon‘ the “mm famous U.“ mc._._ hi"! I0 "a" ‘mm h" ‘m5 m yearslchant. and international race yacht 01d berm“? being ‘qectcd m Bm“-‘n"§'o\\'nr~i', died all his Iiondon rvfiidvllvf‘ premier yacht club, puzzled count-inns nmmuun, less people. Britain's social history Apart from PYOVWFS U" flnswer- dlchnirman of lIlC l Lipton was a tradesman, pron mold 10,4510" bus, K bony,“ h“; 05 hi5 T159 1mm a mne'yea"old U’ nnmcnfii" Thomas Llpiciifls $0M‘? "ml bOY “mm? W‘, shmmgs 53x was rarely hoard lll giubllr‘, on this DF-flce ‘Veda-i’ in Giasimw "3 a mm‘ side- oi llic Alllllllll‘ n‘. any rate. melcial magnate who has spread so ‘m. as u“, worm m 1mm, “.115 his 810K811 "drink Lliiimfs A95" ‘in aware. h!‘ nciroi- rl:.~~,..i\'rcl ilic 0V" the Wofld- slightest rllsirxsilicii lo vzigagi- ill The i11iT9'9X¢1\15i\'° TOY“! YMM politics. His \\'()l'}{ lny in loolziiig squadron had no desire to enfflll u tradesmen among its membership. Both the publicity that Liptons ever growing business brought him and the temperament of the great merchant himself counted against him. Moreover. in the latter years of Queen Victoria's reign he wls a member of what was known as "the Prince of Wales seV-that is to say, a close friend of the man who shortly was to become Klnll Edward viii. Some obieviers did not like the idea of the King sall- ing with "Tommy" Lipton cm his yacht. The last illness of tho famous yltchsman caused cancellation oi phns to visit America. His pas- sage already had been booked. after tho giclil DUHIIPSS which he had founded upou lilo Xmnllrsl b" ginnings lll a liillo Glasgow store at tho age of 26. and his play was almost entirely confined in the pas- tlme of yachting. "Term" Llpton—tlic Lille Sir‘ Thom as llf‘\'i‘l‘ socmod to sll qlillv easily on him-ivas born in (llasgow, of Irish parentage. and a1 nine years of ago was nu errand-boy earning half-n-rrown a wcck. Al l5. fin- known to his parents, ho started for tho United Siriips. llo contrived there to save $500. Returning to Glasgow ho slaricd a store of his own In the yonrs niic-r thcrc grcw from this the great organization which bears his namc. and which, at "l6 time Ilc rclirrd from business, pos- , sesscd and issued capital of near- Yschtsman and tea merchant, slr|ly three millions sterling. without Thomas Johnstone Lipton S9911! reckoning debenture siock. Talking more than 30 years of his life lndcncc of his early Glasgow days Bu‘ 110,000,000 of his vast fortune on I Thomas saidz-"I simply worked 25 hobby to win back for Great Brit- lin flue America's cup. g k thilaflonpage3 ,. i». l l l