-c.-.~..-.« .-. .. -.....,g ._,n ' MA('7l‘ARLANE—At Marshfield on teran Opertors Unite In (Continued from Page 1) aommunication 'are exemplified by the fact that when you first put your finger on the key it took an individual wire to send an individ- ual e. Today in this vast ho_k-up from the Atlantic to the Pacific the main wires which you are using are simultaneously carry- ing twenty-three other messages, in some cases news despaiches fresh from the cable heads linking Eur- ope ancl Asia to Canada, and in others acting as the main arteries of commerce. indeed. so tremend- ous has been telegraphic expulsion that on adjoining wires stretching from east to coast, there are at this minute being carried on pro- grammes of entertainment that will be brought into your homes bythat « latest marvel of electrical transmis- sion, radio. 1 find it particularly ntting on this day, when the nrst railway in Canada made its pioneer run just 100 years ago, that a century later we should celebrate the oentenniill of telegraphic communicaticn which throughout the years has been 30 intimately identified with railway operation. Signed, S. J. HIINGEIRFORD. Exeter: Dr. J. W. Browning. 58° 93. entering service 1856. Charlottetown. Prince Edward Is- land: Daniel williams.88€d 77-°°"" menced service 1873. Halifax: M. M. McLean. we 72- entered service May 1330- 1‘ mlfil“ interest you to hear that at least one teleg‘-rapher in Canada built and owned and operated a private telegraph line for is distance of 4 miles between Mount Uniacke sta- tion and Mount Unlncke 8015 mm” during the mining boom of 1880.. That operator and owner was y0ii1'l humble servant M. M. MCI-v€ili’“-- Halifax. Moncton: G.B- BUWCW Started service Oct. 1882. 3t_ John, N.B.: C.W. McKee. 76 years old. Entered service June 1-5!- 1877. Retired on pensi:n July 18$- 1931. Fredericton. N.B.: EB. Smith. 3“ 74. Entered service 1883. N- tired 1933. Quebec: W. J. Buchanan. 70yeIi‘6 , of age. Commenced service 1876, pensioned 1930. North Sydney- Zi- BIRTHS age 7l.[ N.S.: C. W~ M0!‘ } BIRTH .. .. .. .. .. .. WHEATLEY —— At. the Prince Ede- wnrcl island Hospital, July 21, 193 . to Mr. and Mrs. Milton Wheat-iey.. City. a son. L KENNEDY—At the Prince Edward; Island Hospital. July 21. 1936, to Mi‘ and Mrs. Austin Kennedy. Cross Roads, a son. BECI(—At the P. E. X. Hospital on July 21, 1936. to Mr. and Mrs. Pres- ton Beck. City, a daughter. l l __.__.———-——- ?__ DEATHS , =;— _ NIC}l0L—At You: at, July 11. 1936, to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nichol (nee Minnie Thorne) a daughter. BlNNS—At New Glasgow, July 22. Richard Binns. aged 62 years. Pun- eral notice later. CI.ARK—At Emerald. July 21. 1836. Michael Clark, aged 80 years. Fu- neral from his late residence Thursday morning at 8.30 to St. Malachi's Church. Klnkcra. ' ALClf0ltN—At the P. E. 1. Hos- pital on Tuesday, July 21. 1936, Mrs. Urban Alchorn in her 37th year. Funeral from her late resi- dence at Fairview. Notice later. MCKAY—At Wigmore Road. July 21, 1930, Mrs. George M. McKay. age 56. Funeral Thursday from her late residence, service starting at 2 o'clock. I-IUME-—At Murray River on Tuesday. July 21. 1930. Francis W- McLeod, beloved wife of Samuel Hume aged 76 years. Funeral Thursday 23rd. at 2 p. m. CUI.l.l2N—\1n the chamittetown Hospital, July 20, 1936. Mary Adele cungn, ago 35 years. Funeral ‘from her late residence. 75 Richmond street. Thursday morning at 9.15 -0 st. Dunst.an's Basilica thence tot-he Roman Catholic cemetery- Tuuday, July 31, 1936, me. aueru-um, in her 74th yen Flin- Jcun the Presbyterian Church - on Thursday, July 33. . n; at 2 9. m. Inta-merit Canada Wide Celebration fatt. age 77. Started service with W.U. Cable Co. 1379. Montreal: Joe Beauchamp, age 63 years. Entered service August i4th, 1887. Ottawa, Ont: R. R. St. Jacques. 78 years of age. Entered service at Ottawa March 3rd. 1873. Kingston, Ont: Miss Bertha Nu- gent. 88° 64. Commenced service 1888. . Port Hope. Ont.: Walter J. Helm age 59. Commenced 1392. Oshawa: R. P. Ferguson, age 74 years. Entered service March 1879, Moncton. N.B.; left service on pen- sion May 14. 1932. Toronto: M. J. Duckworth. Com- menced service as messenger at Belleville. Ont, in 1871 with the Dominion Tel. Co.. came to Town. to in 1373 and was appointed oper- ator by Supt. Hugh Neiison who is still alive and hearty at 92, living in Toronto. Worked as operator as- sistant chief, night chief. inspector and finally district plant superin- tendent, having a service of 54 years and was retired in 1925. 79 years of age. Hamilton: John C Bale, age 86. Began service 1866. - Niagara Falls. Ornt.:, Frank W. Prentice, age 68. Entered service 1383. quit Job 1909 to complete wire- less training, Stratford, Ont: A. H, Alexander, age 78. Entered service at Hamilton Oct. 1871. Woodstock. ont.: John Hall. Be- gan as messenger January 1866. re- signed 1920. Age 82. London. 0nt.: A. W. Frazer. age 86. Commenced service 1865 on Great Western Railway. Winnipeg: Mr. W. L. Glrouard, age 73 years. Commenced service with G N.W. 1892. saskat:on: J. F. Middlerniss. En- tered service Tomnto March 1886. Pensioned June 30. 1985. Age 66. Denholm, sask.: W. J. Learmont, use 72 years. Began Dec. 1390 on Q.C. Rly. Edmonton: W. A. Fallow. aged 53. Entered service 1901. Calgary: J.C. Miller. age 73. Com- menced service at Stratford. Ont, with Grand Trunk 1376, Vancouver: Geo. W. Dean, age 82. Two years in the Montreal Tele- graph Co. office in Georgetown. 0nt.. and the opening of the first telegraph office in Cheltenham Vil- lace. The season of \8’13 in Port Huron, Mich.. the marine office of the Western Union. The St. Clair River. an artery of commerce ter- ribly slowed down at the close of the seaszn by the Jay Gould fail- ure and its "Black Friday“ of US. history. But. the legends of the youthful Edison were still extant in this home town of the wizard. The new year of 1874 at stratford on the G.T R. The change of guage from broad to the present standard. Moving eastward was held up at that junction lzng enough to flood acres of siding room with freight cars from all over North America. A year later they were still trying to clear the yard. The health of the agent. wm. Vlfhyte (afterwards Sir Wm. Whyte of the C.P R.) Victoria: F. H. Blashfleld. age 89. Entered service June 1886. retired on pension January 1, 1935. Copied Crimean war News Dr. J. W. Browning-—In 11155 as operator at Markham. ont., f:r the Whitby Georgian Bay Telegraph Co. The greatest news I copied in these days was reports of the Crim- ean War which came by British mast ships to Quebec and then lol- egraphed to our provinces. Many items in these despatchcs contained the name of Florence Nightingale. An 1890 Murder Trial The outstanding feature at Wood- st:ck_ was the trial of Reginald Birchall in the year 1890 for the murder of EC. Benwell in a swamp some six miles east of this place. Benwell was sent here from Eng- land in care of Birchall to learn farrnlng. who received a substantial fee but had failed to secure aplace for his client. and to cover himself be induced Benwell to go with him to Woodstzck. Getting off at East- wood staticn five miles east of Woodstock he then took his victim to a swamp about a mile east of the station and shot him ta death. And but for a cigarette holder with the initials "1".C.B." on it his iden- tity might never have been known. To this day the swamp is known as "Benwell swamp." Although the crown had nothing but circumstantial evidence B. B. Oskeran. outstanding criminal law- yer. assisted by Detective Murray traced Birchall to the swamp and he was hung for the crime, the same year. The London, Eng. Times. to;k a column I day by cable. one day we sent 30 columns of prels to Canadian and American papers us- some of the Western Union wires which ran into our omce for testing purpose. We had a wire in tile court room which ran into the New York sun -gmoe. who 11:)‘. a -- oorrupondent. writing I ,Il't1ie trial went on wlthDa.n _ ‘atria aide. our was a The central Guardian This column la aeaarvad for lawn af local interest but advertising at I III"! snare may be inserted at I cut: a word strictly Dlyabla III Miss Catherine O'Donnell of Avondale is a patient in the City Hospital. EXPEIIIENCED HAIRDRESSER wanted at once. Apply to Helen Curtis Beauty Parlour, Summer- side. L-6320 C. C. HEESCIIEN. druggist. phone 772. will be the only drug- store open Wednesday afternoon and evening. L-6316 CELEBRATE RAILWAY CEN- TENARY — All locomotives and shops in Prince Edward Island div- ision of the Canadian National Railways sounded whistles at noon yesterday as railroadmcn of the province joined with rallmaders in the rest of the Dominion in cele- brating the centenary of the initial operation of Canada's first train on July 21, 1836. SHORT MEMORIAL SERVICE SUNDA\’—It was the intention of the Charlottetown Branch of the Canadian Legion to hold a memor- ial service at the Monument on Sunday morning at the some time as the memorial service at Vimy. but as the service from Vimy is to be broadcast. it has been decided to hold only a very brief service here. which will consist of placing a wreath, sounding of the Last Post. the reading of the lines, “They shall grow not old as we that are left grow old," etc. by the branch Chap- lain, Rev. Dr. Legate, and the sounding of Reveille. This bi-iuf service will commence at 10:45 on Sunday morning. It is requested that the fire bell and church bells be tolled for five minutes com- mencing at 10:40. OFFICERS INSTALLED-At. the regular meeting of St. Lawrence Lodge. No. 8. I.0.0.P‘., Monday ev- enlng, District Deputy Grand Mas- ter, Hazen Phillips of Summerslde, assisted by Fast Grands, J. T. Mar- tin, A. J. l-loule, Charles H, Black and D. F. Bethune, held a joint in- stnllation of officers of Wildey Lodge No. 27 and St. Lawrence Lodge No. 8. Wildey Lodge—Har- old Macliie, Noble Grand: Hugh MacKay, Vice Grand; J. H. Mac- Kenzie, Warden; J. H. Johnston. Conductor; P. L. smallwood, Out- side Guardian: Ivan Watiers. Inside Guardian: D. D. Morrison, R.S.N.G.; Theo. Sentner. L.S.N.G.: Fulton Adams. R-3.V.Cv.: P. J. sentner. L.S.V.Cv.: Well. Dixon, R.S.S.; E, R, Morrison, 1.55.: H. w. Platts. Chaplain; R. F. Acorn, J.P.G. St. Lawrence Lodge —- B. C. Vanlder. stlnc, Noble Grand; A. M, whit1ocg_ Vice Grand; Ralph Gay, Warden; D. F. Bethune. Conductor; L. H. D. Ilowatt. Outside Guardian: P. D. Worth, Inside Guardian; J. T. Mar- tin. R.s.N.G.; A. Maczachem, 1., s. N. G.; R. L. Huestis, R.S.V.G.: Sid. Burhoe, L,S.V.Cv.; 1". Tarbush, Chaplain; W. H. Tid- mflish. J.P.G. After the installation Grfliid H0811. of Summerslde and others. Personals Mr. Ernest Rossiter. Morell, motored to the city yesterday. Mr. Percy Dunsford has returned to Boston after spending a short hfillday at his home in South Mei- V 0. Friends of Mrs. S. E. Wyand re- gret that she is still confined to her home through illness. Mrs. George E. Full and Miss Margaret Full of Boston are vis- iting, Lleut.C3l. and Mrs, G, Elliott Pull. Friends and relatives of Mr. George Ynunker. Loyalist Road. will regret to lonrn that he was taken to the Prince Edward Island Hospital on Saturday for treatment. Mi-s. Ed. Johnston and son Wil- fred of New Glasgow. N. S.. are visiting in the city the guests of Mrs. Lorna Hooper, Felling St. Mr. and Mrs. Frank 0. West. with their two winsome little daughters. Donna and Ora. are vis- itors lo the City. having motored here from their home in Innisfail. Alberta. They are the guests of Mr. West's cousin. Mr. L. W. Saunders and Mrs. sriundl-rs. Fitzroy St. was published here six minutes af- ter its occurrence. Jas. T. Rhind entered service Stewiackc. Nova Scotla. 1880. 46 years connection with telegraph service; seems very short looking back over the years. Had pleasure of two pleasant visits with Dr. Gra- ham Bell of teleph:ne fame. M. K. Keough. Windsor Jct.. age 70 years. Began railway March 1876. retired 1932. I have seen many cliangm in my long service and wonderful changes have taken place since the first message "What won- ders God had wrought." Frank A. Bteck, age 63. Entered service of old I.C.R. Rec. 1800. re- tired on pension Oct. 1933. Nothinc outshnding to relate. Worked first in years as operatzr assistant agent service as train despatcher Truro. umgton, New olaagow and Hall- 13!. ‘mine did not permit all the for- join in on 3:: '1 call. Duri °“-""°°°“".£;‘ eveninl th:‘WiN open for talk Late To I prank mus’ President Luis companys Rs.S.; J. Ivan Maclnnls, 1.5.5.; 5. 5°m1*3iii0n0inous province of CB-i- pects had suffered a 50 per cent re- IS CLAIM Gov’t Claims Success- es in Important Pro- vincial Cities. (By Alexander B. Uhl) (Copyright 1936 by The Auociaiea Pleas) (A.P. By Guardian’: Special Wlre) MADRID. July 21-The Spanish govern-men t. massing armed wlumns of workers and peasants in defence of the capital, claimed success in important provincial cities tonight against rebel forces. Government accounts said an. oelona, important northesstem port. was in the hands of loyal forces Unofficial estimates placed the nurnlber of dead in fighting there at 500, with 3.000 wounded. General Reiquelme, heading a column which marched on Toledo. reported the rebellion there was crushed. The government said the position of rebels in Sevi‘1e and all Andalusia was weakening steadily. Unconfirmed reports stated se. ville itself had surrendered to the loyal troops, but government advices said it had not yet capltulnted, (Dispatches from Vets. in north- ern Spain, asserted t-he rebel troops were reported to have occupied most of the northern part of the country. (Two Leftist deputies reaching 1-lendayc. France. said at least five northern provinces were in hands of the rebels. (A Reuters news agency dispatch from Rabat, Morocco, said it was reported there was a mechanized column of rebels under General Mola was advancing on Madrid and that General Queipo do Llano's in- eurgents still held Seville.) As five civilian battalions were dispatched into the provincse to asist loyal garrlsons, the govern- ment ordered all stores and busi- nesses in Madrid to open tomorrow. The city was comparatively quiet. although there were outbreaks of firing. At Segovia, just north 0‘ Madrid. insurgents were said to have been beaten Rebels at zaragoza. in the northeast. were reported on the point of surrendering. There were reports of increasing (.:rertione among the rebels, de- spite special meauires taken by their officers to prevent Armed mliitia forces dominating positions in passes to head off any advance. BIAROELONA. Spain. July 21 — of the them. took up mountain alonla, him:elf a rebel leader in 1934. announced tonight the govern- refrcshments were served and ad. ment is in full control of the situ- dresses Riven by the D.D.G.M., P. ation in Barcelona. Personals Miss Myrtle B. Mennle of Brook- lyn, N. Y., is visiting her sister. Mrs. L. S. Stevenson, and brother, John W. Mennle, Charlottetown. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Drake and family have arrived by motor from Saskatchewan on a. visit to the formers mother, Mrs. Henry Drake, Cornwall. It is seventeen years since Mr. Drake visited his former home. Rev. A. Francis left yesterday morning on return to Truro, N. 5.. after spending some time in the city. Mr. Thomas Dougari left yester- day mmnlng on return to Los Angeles. Calif, after spending two weeks with his mother, Mrs. Rich- ard Dougan, Prince street. Rev. D. L. Griffith. of Belfast, left yesterday afternoon for Pictou by the I-Iochclaga to attend the meeting of the Maritime Presby- terian Synod, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Gordon have as their guests at Holland Cove, Mrs. P. W. Gordon of Hamilton, Ont., her son. Mr. Peter Gordon, and her daughter. Miss Margaret Gordon.‘ Mrs. W. A. Thompson leaves next week for Berwiok, N. 8., to attend the United Church Camp meeting. Mrs. Thompum is to be hoiess at the cottage owned by the Women's Missionary Society of Maritime Branch of which she is a vice president. The camp meeting is from July am to Augmt 10th. Mrs. Henrietta Rackham de clen- arcs who has been residing in Califomla for thirteen years. ar- rived in Charlottetown last satur- day night. she was accompanied by her little niece, Rae Bascom who is 3 gr nddaughter of Mr. and in Vancouver. MoNevin. lb Villa street. GIANT T0 UNIVIRIITY REBELS ARE. WEAKENING the I Mrs. Frank J. Stanley. formerly of Charlottetown, and who now live Mrs. do oeueru visited relatives and friends in Vancouver, Calgary. Pouoka and Winnipeg on her way east. she is visiting with her sister. Mrs. John Split In Labor Federation soon ..____ (A. P. by Guardian’: special Wire) WASHINGTON, July 21-John !... l.-owls defiantly told the Ameri- oan redoratiou of labor‘: cucu- tive council tonight. that members of his committee for industrial organization would refuse to stand trial for "insurrectioh' and that the committee would "carry on-" Labor men generally interlmied this announcement. made On 5°‘ half of the 13 unions in the com- mittee. as making all but certain is wide split in the Federation. The executive council had ‘in- vited and requested" the 12 unions seeking to organize all the workers in each big lndusuy into one MK union, to appear before it and an- swer charges they were violatinl A. 1". of L. law by disreglrdinfl rights claimed by craft unions in gttempting to organize workers along craft lines, such as cnroeni-~ ers and machinists. The council took this action after peace-makers had blocked I move. favored by a maiority 01' ‘he council members. to suspend the union immediately. Lewis, presi- dent of the United Mine W0i’k¢!'5. contends the council has the right neither to try nor to suspend the unions asscciatcd with him. In a letter addressed to William Green Federation president. Lewis said in part: "The council which. incidentally. has notoriously preludszed the 18- sue. is without authority to dis- member the Federation. The C I. o_ (Committee for Industrial Or- ganization) declines to submit to its jurisdiction." Warmer Weather Over corn Belt (A. 1’. By Guardian's Special Wire) CHICAGO, July 21. -— Warmer weather began a general advance over the United States corn belt to- day and simultaneously the "critical period" set by crop observers as de- termining whether 1938's drought would equal 1934's closed. A continuation of June arldity into the firs tlhree weeks of July. said Secretary of Agriculture Wal- lace early this month, would rank the 1936 dry spell with that of two years ago. Today in Washington, the federal cmp reporting board gave its latest summarlzation of the drought, terming it by mid-July “about as severe as that of 1934 at the same date and much more serious than any previous droughts since the country has settled." Higher prices in the sensitive corn market here followed quickly on re- ports of a general renewal of warm- cents, July closing at 91% cents. Iowa despatches said corn pros- duction during the past two weeks of excessively high tcmpcraturcs. Heat deaths advanced to nearly 4,fl)0 during the day with Oklahoma, still in the "swelter belt," contribut- ing 12 to bring its total to 71. Neb- ras.ka's clltbed to 62. Restoration of Famed Fortress Nearly Finished (By The Canadian Press) SYDNEY. N. 8. July 2l—The pages of North American history will be turned back for more than 200 years, when the new historical museum building on the site of I..ouls‘.)urg Fortress, Cape Psreton Island, Nova Scotia. is ofzictally opened on July 22 next by His Ex- cellency. the Governor General of Canada. (Lord Twoedsmuir). Re- presentative: of the Governments of Great Britain. Frances and the United States are expected to join with lieutenant-governors, senators members of the Dominion parlia- ment and provincial legislatures at the formal dedication ceremoni . which will be presided over by the Hon. '1‘. A. Crerar, Minister of the Interior. Once the proudest fortress in North America, lmiistyurg in the brief span of less than 50 years ex- perienced all the drama and trag- edy nssociated with centuries. Con- structed by the French between 1717 and 1740 at. the capital of the Acadian sett‘ nt on no Royale, as cape Breton was then called. the fortress served as a naval base fa’ l"rance. Its military import- anec was unquestioned, for it guarded the mouth of the at. Lawrence and constituted an ever present equivaient of $10,000,000 and were considered by their de- shners to be impregnable to attack either from land or sea. Captured by a colonial expedition from Mnssechusetts under William Pepperell and Commodore Peter Wlrren in 1746, Iouisburg was re- turned to the in-enoh in 1748 under the provisions of the treaty of Aix-la-Chapete. lo yearn the great fortress During the nut was greatly strencthened, and tno gar- riaon vaawell prepared to meet. the next attack of the Biglhh under Major General Amherst and Ad- miral Boccwwen in June. me. After a siege of nearly two months. dur- Inc which most of the ouwouia Ind batteries were captured. Loulsburg eapitutated for than last time and the combined illR'Y‘ll|lilES TRAFFIC liw urnIl_c_£M£m Grand Jury Expresses Alarm At Increas- ing Number of Ac- cidents — July As- sizes Opened In Georgetown Yester- day. Expressing alarm at Prince Ed- ward island's increasing number of accidents. many of them fatal. “caused by motor vehicles,“ I grand Jury reporting to July as- sizes of King’: County Supreme Court yesterday called for stricter uuaus ent of the traffic laws of the province, "particularly regu- lations with ‘regard to drunken driving, automobile brakes and lights." The grand jury congratulated presiding Justice A. C. Saunders of Bummerslde for his "interest in the welfare of farmers of the province." Their report expressed appreciation of suggestions the judges had made with regard to establishing native Prince Edward Islanders on the land, equipping them with stock and machinery in order that they might be able to make a “proper start in me age- old profession." “In our opinion.'l the report said. “Justice Saunders‘ recommend- ations were worthy of our deepest consideration and would help in permanently establishing our sons in homes of their own and allevi- ate to a great extent the unem- ployment situation here." The grand juryinen stated that after inspection of the county Jail they had found the kitchen well- equipped. The Jail's walls and cell- ings they had found to be in “de- plorable condition, with the plaster broken and in an unsanitary state." The report recommended thorough cleaning of the premises. cleaning of walls and ceilings. steel sheathing finish was sug- gested. The jail sleeping quarters were found to be well-equipped also but repairs and re-painting were need- ed. Bullding of an extra room in the Jailerk quarters was recom- mended. The report sew need for estab- lishment of an enclosure at the rear of the jail to prevent mingling of prisoners with their friends ’“5‘“'3e’"' er and continued fair weather. Corn during exercise periods. At present rose the maximum allowed, four prisoners are allowed to walk in protection from the I-Iendayc police. the open beyond confinement of the jail. The report was submitted by grand jury f- roman E, B. McLaren of Georgetown. The address of Mr. Justice Saunders to the grand Jury pears elsewhere in this issue. Of the only two cases docket one, the King vs. Joseph Bell. an appeal from a conviction under the Excise Act. was stood over until the January assizes and "19 Oihel’. the King vs. Thomas Murphy. an appeal from a convic- tion for assault. will be completed in Charlottetown today. Baseball’s “Big Six” (A. P. By Guardian’: Special wire) I-like Appiing of Chicago White Box shot into first place in the American League batting race yes- terday. and Lou Gehrig slid all the way to third. Appling got. two hits in four trips to the plate to boost his ma.rk to 373, while Geludg went hitless in three times up and dropped to .376. In the National League trio in baseball‘; "bix six” there were no changes. _'I'ho st-ndinaa (three leading hitters in each league): 6 As R H Pct. Alppllng, W. Box 72 215 52104 .878 nacicllff. W. aox '13 318 64120.37’! Gehrig. Yanks 80335110126376 Medwick. Cards 37353 eol3:l.a72 P. waner. Pirates aosao s111i.a5a Jordan. Bees 94339 56116342 merit of the Interior in 1928 nego. tinted‘ the purchaie of private holdings. and since that time has secured control of more than aoo acres in the immediawe vicinity. Conside-raibl restoration work has -been carried out from time to time by the National Parks Service of Canada. Bomb-proof shelters have been vlrtialiy reamed, main streets have been excavated. foun. dations of principal building-.. un. earthed and rebuilt. and outstnd. lnfl EQNIQG dfilflflllkd by appm. priate markers. MID! interesting memorials have been erected to the memory of its heroic dc-7e'nde-rs and conquerors. M11038 the most prominent is a tallgranlte pillar erected in 1&6 Oliiaidb the site of theKlng's bastion of the society of Colonial war; in America. to commemorate the cap. ‘W9 °1 UVUU”-|i‘¢ by the New Eng- land forces under Pewereli and Wlfwn in 1745. other memo;-in include we fieldstone calms. gun belting a bronze tab'et, which RINK "19 life of the King's and tho Dluphim bastions. Brenna Niietl have also been affixed to "19 illhthouse on the north side of 7-4°“i|biIl‘I harbor. commemorating tn. llemic deeds of anguish an hunch batteries during the gn. ncmemc of ms and ma. 7*“ “W miilelim. constructed of native Nova aootia alone, has been dflllned to harmonise with AM IIHWMUIII. follbwibg archihva ural lines of th. mum period of It incorporates modern - uns o comtmotsen, i. nggcoof and will house a large and Incest- ing exhbit of historical relic II- latlng to early Acadia: history. koulabaurg niirytuu is aaceuible Y°|1\_ Y My I good motor N“. a dining at I nib (Coirunued from Page 1) _ sebastianand Navarro province ar- rived at the border and secured permission to enter France. In the south attention was con- centrated on Alzeoiral. held by the rebels, which stood under hourly threat of bombarvhnant by 10 pm- govemnient warships concentrated in the harbor at Tangier. Great Britain meanwhile ordered units of the Mediterranean fleet to steam to various points where British citiaens might be in danger. The cniiser Alnphlon, which left home waters for West Africa to- night. was ordered to Teuariffe. largest of the Canary Islands. The dmtioyer Whitehall arrived at Tangier from Gibraltar. Arriving from the Far East enroute home, the cruiser Exeter was ordered to remain at Gibraltar. The cruisers London and Devonshil-e were or- dered from Malta to Barcelona on the eastern coast and Mallorca in the Balearic Islands. A regiment of Gordon Highland- ers embarked tonight at Alex- andria on the battle cruiser Re- pulse bound for Gibraltar, accord- ing to reports from London. Gib- raltal was crowded with thousands of refugees from the surrounding area. WARSHIPS SHELL CEUTA TANGIER, lntematlonal Zone of Morocco, July 21- (C. P. Haves) —i'<‘our loyal‘ Spanish warships shelled Ceuta. rebel Moroccan stronghold, tonight, but were best- en off by a counterfire from land batteries. Rebel general headquarters at Ceuta were reported to have laid plans for an air attack on the fleet of 10 loyal warships at an- chor in the Spanish section of this port. A preliminary skirmish occurred earlier tonight when two rebel planes bombed the cruiser Jaime I. whi:h put in here after its crew mutinied against their insurgent officers. Notice of the rebels‘ plans for I major air bombardment was con- tained in a message from Ceuta general headquarters advising all neutral vessels to quit. the harbor immediately or run the risk of se- ng hit. The British destroyer Whitehall OCCUPY MOST (Continued from Page 1) otliclal staff, asked and received ‘The city of San Sebastian fell completely into rebel hands. streets of the border city. where United states Ambassador Claude Ci. Bow- ers and some other foreign diplo- mat: were reported in summer i|P- residence. were sprayed with ma- chine gun fire from rebellious army on the planes. The rebel columns, moving in from Pamplona. first engaged po- lies detachments from Irun. 'I‘wenty-five o: the attacking in- aurgents were reported killed. (Other, advices said a number of the defenders fell before the on- slaught of the military marchers). Appnrently informed in advance of the opposing detachments, the insurgents abandoned their advance on the highways and took to trails established by frontier smugglers. Over the paths they advanced on the territory, and suddenly clashed with the police forces, MADRID. July 2l—(AP)—Advlce3 f°°€1V¢d tonight from Barcelona slid the death toll in the revolt in that northeastern city was estimat- ed lliiomcifl-ll)’ at 500. with 3.000 w:undcd. The casualty list included both loyal and rebel assault guards and civil guards. About 50 rebel and loyal fighters were killed in an attack of the Montana. barracks. A majority of the victims were revolters. some churches were set anre in Madrid after reports circulated that shots were tired from them by Pas- EVACUATE BIIJTONB GERLALTAE. July 21- (GP) - The British destroyer Shamrock advised by wil-elers that it had ev- acuated 30 Britons from Malaga in Spain and would land the refugees at Gibraltar late tonight. Heavy fighting was reported at La Linea as new contingents of re- bel troops reached the mainland by Diane from Morocco. Ninety persons were reported kill- ed in sharp clashes along the bor- der which sent the sounds of com- bat floating across to Gibraltar. The military insurgents at La Linea began c:molidatlng their po- sition by piantina nest; of machine guns and digging fortifications in pleparation for an expected attack by v_mh_i1.I- ' fn ?Sibra1ti‘x" f6od suggliea were running low because of crowded condition of the Britlst hcrrltory. There were Io many refugees auth- orities allowed only British subjects and Spaniards em oyed on the island to cross the rontier. Neutral ground between Gibral- tar and M Linea was crowded with women and children and patients who had fled from hospitals in the opauiah town. Home Run Standing (By the Aaloolated Pnaa) Yesterdays homers: J. Martin. Cardinals: Mancuso. Giants: Bar. tefl. Giants; Cuccinelii, Bees; Jen- sen. Pirates; L. waner. Pinks: lo1ki.I‘k.Yankeea; neynrlds, aunt. era; Troaky, Indians; i-ayes, Am. lattes; clehringer, Tigers, one each. The leaders: Gehrig, Yanks, fl; Poxx. Rod Box. 26: Trosky. Indiana 95: Ott. Giants. 18: Dickey, Ytnh. 18; Johnson. Athletics. 15: Odin, Tlllfl. 15: Averill. menu, 16. JULY 25. .l9.'§\ '- Are In Control Of Five Provinces remained in port here to protect ‘ Britons in the mwrnational none.‘ The oil tanker British lindaavoul notified authorities here it had narowly escaped being hit DJ bombs dropped by an airplane into the harbor at Tarlfs. southernmoli point of Spain. The pla.ne.wa.s believed to be. I rebel craft which mistook the tanker for a loyal Spanish chin. The British flotilla leader Kep- pel was reported of! Vigo, Galiciau seaport, and the destroyer sham- rock at Malaga, now in the hands on Witch and Wren were on route to Nrrol and La. Corunnn. Fascist reinforcements were re- ported rushing to the vicinity of Algecirns from La. Linea when fighting during the last four days reportedly took a toll of 90 lives. Machine guns. artillery and sandbag emplacements were being harbor in anticipation of battle. Sailors seized control of the 15,- 452-ton cruiser Jaime Primero from its revolting officers and put into Tangier to join the pio-gov- ornment fleet there. The ship car- ries elght 12 inch guns and other armament. Asturian miners were reported hastening southward from Madrid toward Andalusia to strike at rebel centres there. Twenty-four Loyalists were kill- ed in a battle with roving insurg- ent forces not far from the French frontier early today. Citizens of Irun and Basque province of Guipuzcoa assembled in the upper valley of the Bidassoa. with stacks of arms and red flags. ready to battle for possession of lrun. From the French side of the border the battle preparations in Irun were plainly visible. Automobiles decked with red flags and loaded with armed civil- ians careened down the streets’ leading toward the Bidassoa Val- ley. Cyclists with red bands on their arms and rifles slung on their should'ers pcdalled in the same direction. All the border lookout posts on the banks of the river were empty. indicating that all forces, down to the last man. were being moved up to the an- ticlpated battle line. commemorate 115th Anniversary The 115th anniversary of the First Presbytery of the Presbyterian Church on Prince Edward Island was commemorated yesterday at Central Lot 16. The services were in conjunction with the annual Presbytery of the United Churches on P. E. 1. A pilgrimage to the cg act spot where the first Presbytc was held was conducted after sup- per. and many people availed them- selves of the opportunity of visiting this shrine. Rev. A. 8. Weir was chairman of the Presbytery which was attended by ministers and laymen from all over the Island. In the evening a public meeting was held at which Rev. Dr. J. Keir Fraser gave a his- toric sketch of the history of the early Presbyterian Church on P.E.I. Rev. J. W. A. Nicholson of Bedeque preached an inspiring sermon. The male choir of O'Leary rendered the music. A vote of thanks to the speakers and also to the pastor of Central. Lot is, church and the ladies for the splendid success of the anniver- sary was moved by Rev. W. A. Rose of Cornwall and seconded by Rev. L. G. Davies of summerside. There were large attendances at all ser- vices.—B. V DEATH OF (Continued from Page 1) was elected by acclsrnation for Winnipeg constituency. in 1912 he became Minister of Public work!- He resigned on the eve of the Union Government in 1917. He made a political comeback in 1025, defeating I-Ion. T. C. Norris. one-time Premier of Manitoba. His last appearance in a Federal elec- tion was in 1930 when he re-cap- tured the seat he lost to J. 0. Mc- Diumid in 1920. OTTAWA, July 2l.—Rt. H071. 3-- a. Bennett, Leader of the opposi- tlon in the House of commons, to- night paid this tribute to Hon- Robert Rogers who died today It Guelph. ont.: of the passing of the Hon. Robert Rogers. vince of Quebec but early settled in Manitoba. From the date of hi5 province to his retirement as Min- later of Public Works in the Bard“! Government in 1017. he was in- fluential in the councils of the Con‘ - mind which endeared him to hi! friends made him the victim of the .- attaclu of his political opronm"-,- But all . ognlzed his devotion to; Western Canada. his kind-hearted: human attributes made for hi hosts of friends in CV01‘! life. . "He will long be nmmiitwi of government forces. The destroy“ - moved into position in Algeclras ’ 3. -*1 have learned with deep rc‘srei"’ He was born in the W0‘ ‘ election to the Legislature of that - urvative party. and hlayed I 15789 ' part in the organisation of the Vic- 7 to of 1911. ' {life very qualities of heart and - ns id. in on I18 ve he 31 in