R R NA 11.12 m“ in connection with lion. ‘I- ’ Manly-re’; 110W illlliflll “Elihu” ' d..- m- $00,000 cl’ N" “m” , h m; we,‘ brought out at the pill‘ m“ muting at Forest mil-bill . ,4 by Mr. McIntyre. The maker < n, Mr. J. B. MacDonald, Conserv- i, ‘m. “ndidste, who, after hBI-rllll \ ygpotlthll oi tho Public .Worhl k [hitters excuses and alibla rose to 1|. iect in rebuttal and ddivered libelous-vine stetwlwt W "W" ; [he audience, however 0175"“ 6 l‘ avplflll Vi“! ‘IIEBIQMII ‘,7 W" ,1 The Journals oi the House for "-7 mg! (stated Mr. McDonald)’ 511°" ' i... lion. Mr. McIntyre in tabllng u “ma; u; Question 1t, re Road whines, llon. Mr- hiointyre 7°‘ ; [grad m details to “Avimulla 5-" ‘ mung for tho “Altlltnfill K" Ill i the Journals, however. one finds ‘i’ mt, like the elusive Ilsa, it isn't r__ If “R. O. ~ ' w, McIntyre had n ‘iL- 1° l‘!- there. 1t has apparently been N- moved to the “Liberal Hospital." Surgeons remove the human}? pendia because oi ita rotten con- tent and its dancer oi certain death to the body. Nothilll m0" natural than that the particularl- li there were any. oi that road machine Appendix, would be re- moved by expert political ear-smu- ln the preliminary cross firing between Mr. McIntyre and tho 0p- poaltion during the Mlllllu" l5‘ lion o! 1928, Mr. McIntyre declar- ed there was no oorraaptllllltll" °l' papers, that the machines were 0t‘- dered by telephone and therefore therewaanothlutiflllillllfl" table. After further discussion he agreed, ii there were any papers. to table them. Later, as the Jour- nals show, an “erhlbifiwastabled- this removed “Appendix I," the B I I 120.40 MA CHINE 0:20am DAT FOREST gist i strange Disappearance Of Information Claimed To, . Have Bean Tabled By Hon. Mr. McIntyre Re Famous, $90, 000 Telephone ‘Order. Mr. J. B. McDonald Exposes é Distribution Of Rake-Off From Public Accounts. DIVIDING THE PLUM It was Mr. Mclntyrfs contention at that time continued Mr. Mc- Donald) that the Irving iirm or St. John was the only ilrm from which these machines could be pur- chased. According to the Public Accounts of 1928, page 113, howev- er, the following firms appear. K. 0- Irving, Ltd, (St. John) Road Machines 847,104.42 Wm. Stairs. Son s. Mor- row, (Bullion), Road Machines ......... . . 25,811.51 Sawyer Massey Ltd", ‘ Road Machines . . . . .. 7,501.80 Ludger Gravel s; Flls, , (Parts) ..~.......... 298.76 It would look as 1i the plum was divided into three parts to live each a share of the rake-oil’, i7 to whereabouts of which are not I myltery- ' ' P. one, 25 to another, and seven to p”, Apologists iSidestep Vital Issues {At ‘ Breaidatlbane Meeting sign-ml." g Liberal Honourables In First Queens Talk Of Every- thing But What They-Purpose Doing If Elected. Jhey Brazenly Assert Fulfillment Of Election Pled- ges And Are Scored Time And Again By The Con- servative Candidates, Messrs. McKenzie And Wig-l mo T8. i ' .7 in audience which literally pack- g-edthe Breadslbane hall to the door 7,‘, and which overiiowed at the wind- ffovs, heard the issues in the coming ' lltciicn dismissed lust night by the '_ Clildldslts 101' Ffirsfllfiusgm, M3511 ' Wlliuore and MacKensig were in ~, lllltndld iorm. They, received an ; llcciient nearing and kbpt their ; Wlltllil. Hon. Peter Sinclair and ’ a!“ Stewart. strictly on the defen- vs. ins met“!!! was orderly and was ‘- “WMY Dresided over by Mr. Mal- wlln Stewart, " D— uni-j - .--.~---- A Hon. Peter Sinclair, the iirst speaker, struck his first snag when he launched into a eulogy o! the Government's road work and was promptly brought to book by the ' audience. Voice: "What a:e the roads like in Miiivaie?’ . Mr. Sinclair: "They are passable." Voioe= “They are passable. that ls all. (Alllllausa). Mr. Sinclair: "Inside the next tour years they will be ilxed up by the Liberal government. Voice: .“What .abc_ut .Glaagow Hill?" Mr. Sinclair: "Glasgow Hill does not happen to be in our district. (Laughter). l-le complained because the Con- servative candidates would not be- lieve that the road machinery vouchers and correspondence had been tabled. The Government had called for the lowest tender, hut as it was accepted over the telephone. they could not table it." If there was any grait in buying the machinery’, he Brill!!! "l!" WI! Continued on page l0 ‘. Gréat Enthusia sm I. And F eW Liberals. I At Mount Herbert l. Strong Conservative Meeting In First Queen's I Last Night" Tenders Enthusiastic Ovation To Hon. J.; D. Stewart And Messrs. McDonald - And Hon. B. W. LePage Again Heck- " led, Booed And Jeered. "Murine to sped! his lvn district liven athle- whose remarks were not calculated‘ namavmaeuawu more s. Augustine McDonald tenacity the Illdltflst-Wvlllllll- lhnrnqiionuttwsmngmdlfvlwwdwhowmmutmuduflllhlllflmlm-IQPIIO gm “up”; u; u“ tiring, as the audience iaulhtd at» Hon-Lmstewartdonssrv wgflg‘, ion, as did the Conservative dand- ‘liliountflevbomatajointpdlit-bytheflomddidtswaxtwerslll-‘PP°"'°4‘°b'°“"h°7°m‘°‘“' “mtetlnrw remunerati- spun ~1 m- mamas u: mural rr- M" "41"" “"- - ‘~m any...” m" .qmnqm.mmm Filer: Lippi-urn; m. whlc: s.eemed to be brewing while leader, received a tremendous ovat- Ffmlwdtuucmtmmnimannumirsommm “Mmflsvldtewliwa-hvizesttblmmoalr. I \ n)"; icaseaasanaJ.A'.amDellail-sad»_ ,3- ' \ :~ i/‘y/ The People's Paper the third, to each aeeordllll W ml talent, pull and political deaervlllg. Mr. McDonald's revelations creat- ed a great sensation, and loft Mr- Mclntyre speechless. llevlews Situation m. MacDonald who opened the meeting said that at the time when the tourists are here in the greatest numbers, the roads are the poorest. The roads are doneln the Spring and not touched during the rest oi the Summer. In 1823 when the Conservatives came to power, the roads were in such bad condition, rocks and grav- el in the middle of the roads and work started in such s. manner that had to be completed. That is the reason we had in borrow money. They had started projects which the funds oi’ the Province were unable to stand. Mr. MacDonald gave amusing in- stances oi the "rigid economy" o! the 10GB Government. The iirst thing they did was to provide each Minister with one or two cars to tour the country. Then they order- ‘ ed $100,000 worth of machinery without the assurance that it would be paid (or. Instead oi the sane Continued on page 10 LEADER |s_ CiiNFillENT M , July 31—Camilllen Houde, leader oi the Qlltbec Con- gervauvp Opposition, when iniorm- "edthst general elections in this province would be held August 24, said "We are ready." We were un- der the impression that the elect- ions would tske place on August 31, but as they have been advanc- ed a. week it means we (The Con- servative psrty) will be in power a week earlier." FISHING RIGHTS OPEN COURT WAR mmFORD, Ore, July R29. (U!) —Battle to the finish between mil- lionaire San Franciscans and “bait fishermen‘ ‘of Southern Oregon was predicted here when the San Fran- ciscans went to court to have the upper Rogue river declared their private property. Whatever the circuit courts de- cision, it was ireeiy predicted. ap- peals will be taken and the iight may become a protracted and ex- pensive legal battle. The "bait fishermen" were not involved in the’ suit oi Herbert Illleishhacker and others to have the river declared their property, but they watched the case closely, prepared to take part. Seekers aitor gold went up the river bed during unprecedented low water; hunting ior deposits oi min- oral in rock its-sures in the river bed. The Californians had purchas- ed property onboth sides oi the Rogue, a Jamed steelhesd fishing stream. and had posted trespass not- ices. ‘Ihey secured a temporary in- junction claiming that the river was not navigable and that their prop- erty extended to the center oi the stream from both sides.‘ The mat- ter was to be iurther thrashed out in an application for a permanent injunction, ‘Southern Oregon's "bait dsber- inen" take their iishln‘ seriously. Day laborers, mechanics. business and proiessional men, they have re- peatedly subscribed war iunds o! thousands oi dollars to get legis- lation barring commercial ilsher- msn from the mu length oi the Rogue. It was believed they would also start a battle ii the Caliicrnians try to keep them ofl the choice riiilea and casting pools oi the upper riv- er. _‘ , ai-ii-n- M. W. Wood, who delivered cou- vlnclng d elective speeches. lir.’ w. Wood, wisowasilrst called upon, referred to the Oca- .- pcutiuuad cabal! in \ i .-r~»<c..::fi Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward" ‘Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1931 BE PLAIIEIJ llllllgllvls Mr. Woodswortli De- clares It Would Pro- vide a Revelation “of Political Morals In the Dark Ages of 1930.” (Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Ont, July tlL-When the House oi Commons opened this afternoon the galleries were again quickly filled in anticipation oi the Becuharnois debate. Colonel Chari- es A. Lindbergh and Ivlrs. Lindbergh were in the distinguished visitors gallery with Colonel Haniord Mac- Nider, U. S. Minister and Mrs.‘ Mac- Nider. The “eloquent defence" by Rt. Hon. Mackenzie King in his TS ' REPURT Sllillllll nois Corporation. gainat the former Government was pie stsndin sandwiched into the report oi the seats and select committee on Beauharnois, the doors, Rt. Hon. Mackenzie King, Leader which hung upon the words or the bets, 0f the 011110851011. lust 1118M deiend- speakers, and an atmosphere charg ed the recor doi his administration. ed‘ with tension due tn the gravity Mr. King headed ‘the Government o.‘ the revelations contained in the which, on Friday, March 8th, 1929, report formed the background oi the or a Royal Commission to go fully passed the crder-ln-councll approv- debate. When the eleven o'clock ad-i ing oi the plans oi the Beauhar- Journment hour was reached, the House agreed unanlmously t0 pro- Seldorn has the House oi Com- ceed with the sitting until Mr. MAXIMS ' or} MERE MAN Nelgbbors q. folks t... become rocd friends with you alter you or they move away. others turn an attentive House r Annual Iapaerlptloaa Delivered ll-fl- i fly llll Olllldlllll val-LOCI‘ Dramatic Scenes During The Beauharnois Debate. Hon. Mackenzie King Attempts‘ To Defend The Re-n‘ cord Of His Administration, But Declares That s A/s The Result Of The Revelations. The Liberal I Party “Is In The Valley Of Humiliation." OTTAWA- Jlllli 31-—Prot=stins mons witnessed a more striking King had completed. that “inuendo and lnsinuation" a- scene. Orammed galleries with peo- He concluded shortly alter mid- g behind the rows oi night and J. S. Woodsworth, Labor ed away irorn member ior Winnipeg North Cent- e moved adjournment oi the de- WANTS ROYAL COIVIIVIISSION OTTAWA, July ill-Appointment into the whole matter of campaign iund contributions, not only in the Continued on page 8 speech last night, J. s. Woodsworth, (Labor, Winnipeg North Centre‘- stated. "revealed his own persona’ integrity rather than his politics. sagscity." Mr. King had urged that rib-leader could have knowledge oi campaign iunds and be able to de- cide questlons on thzir merits. "May I say that these moral standards are rather high but unreal," Mr. Woodsworth declared. Should the Beeuhamois report be placed in the archives, one hundred years irom now it would provide a rev- elation" oi political morals in the dark age sci 1980." What characters for a play, Mr. Woodsworth remarked. Three Sen- ators, a then Prime Minister, two public oflicials oi the Government, cflicials oi s. financing sud de- velopment Company and “lobby- lsts"---ell these were the players; and in the background was " a chor- us oi political partiss.’ On the stage was an advisory member oi an ad- vlsow commission, a chairman oi another public body, a senator, a confidante oi a prime minister and interested in a "fake company." Really, Mr. Woodsworth said, "the thought transcends the bounds cf poetic license or legitimate fiction." The result showed modern business men engaged in "ruthless compet- ition, recognizing no moral stand- ards. rival concerns competing with one another and then Joining hands" R» O. Sweezey, an eminent linen- cier was in the enterprise but con- sidered "bribery distssteiul but nec- essary.’ Mr. Woodsworth referred in the enquiry committee as composed o! an "accuse and rival political parties.’ Such a committee could not Very well carry out a proper invest- igation. There was the tendency or doctrine to protect friends. When the customs committee oi the house was conducting its enquiry. he had suggested a royal commission. No evidence or suggestion was made oi any campaign iunds having been Plid to members oi’ the independ- ent IPOHPG by the Beauhsrnols in- terests. ANNOUNCEMENTS. comma EVENTS, MEETINGS ETCS. "Show and Dance, St. Peters Monday. Orchestra. 7770-7-30-81. __.___ "Hunter River Club loading livestock, ‘llhuraday, Aug s. 7813-8-1-21 "".....~=:, '2‘ v22:- un ver, ugus . Everett l-Laslsm, Emerald and Alden Mouse, Remington buying some date. ' 7788-7-31-31. dgmxnishflroiggcelwlll be 1:111 Sim- , ugus P. M. Un ted Church. Charlottetown. Rev. Revu- kiido Holler will preach. Everybody Veldbilll. 7806-7-1-tts3l. "The Women's Institute Conven- tion will be held in Irederlcton Hall, Monday. August 8rd. hadies meeting at 8 P. 1d- mhlic meetingnagasaill. "Dance at Stanhope Beach Inn, Monday, August 8rd. Dancing ll to 1 o'clock. Admission 50 cents. Tick- ateatldeoseailcheodbandms- ars Hardware. 7787-84-21. "Rlhlllyilfl oi 8t. Peters North 10th will be placed in the court for NRC!‘ onllecfliI-BI silt-dammit Ratriotk l” Rc“pudi ation Of King's 5 Cent Speech” Form.- lng, during the campaign, Tory provincial government. week. I might be prepared to go ‘sh 111110,?” ed of?” ' Lea Government Organ ’s Deliber- ate Attempt To Mislead Its Read- ers Exposed By Hansard Report, Which Patriot Has Never Dared TdPublish Except In Garbled THE PATRIOT, JULY 2.9, I931. “The Opposition speakers have been repeatedly declar- King said that he would not give a five cent piece to any “Mr. King never made such a statement He said he believed money voted for unemployment relief should be distributed by a non-partisan commission, the very thing Mr. Bennett advocated in the House of Commons last MR. MACKENZIE KING. APRIL 3, 1930 (From the official Hansard report of his speech in Parliament) MR. MACKENZIE KING: “May I conclude what I have to say? So far as giving money from this federal treasury to provincial governments is concerned, in rela- tion to this question of unemployment as it exists today, meeting one or two of the western provinces that have Progressive premiers at. the head of their governments- SOME HON. MEMBERS: “Oh!” MR. MACKENZIE KING: -"But I would not give o single cent to any Tory Government. MR. BENNETT: “Shame!” MR. STEVENS, “Shame!” MR. MACKENZIE KING: “Do my hon‘ friends say MR. BENNETT: “Yes, shame!” MR. MACKENZIE KING: “What is there to be asham- MR. STEVENS: “You ought to be ashamed of that.” MR. MACKENZIE KING: “My hon. friend is getting very indignant. Something evidently has got under his skin. l “We M"“'°°“°Y “llmllmfli "l" May I repeat what I have said? With respect to giving moneys out of the federal treasury to any Tory govern- ment in this country for these alleged unemployment pur- poses. with these governments situated as that Hon. W. L. Mackenzie a certain length possibly in they are today, lA Glowing Misstatement — JNDBERGHS Nilllllll (Canadian Press)‘ OFITAWA. July lib-Canadian are tic fliers who are dining tonight with Colonel Charles Lindbergh and his wiie at the residence oi the United States Minister here art frankly alarmed about Lindbergh’! plan to ily to the mouth of thd Macken River via the most nor- therly route. They claim such i flight never should be attempted by a single aeroplane unaccompanied and that the safer route would bd the southerly one. _ Two Canadian aviators, Flight Captain Maudesley and Flight Cap- lain Harding have been over thl territory several times and will eng- deavor to persuade Lindbergh td change plans and go by the less dangerous route. The Lindbergh arrived in 0t- tawa this afternoon on the first leg oi their hazardous flight to Toklc vln. the subarctic region. The Unit- ed States Transatlantic flier rnadd s perfect landing on the Ottawa River. WAR AGAINST lilNliilERl (Canadian Press) NE YORK, July 3i.—In relent] war against the gangster bab shooters oi Little Italy, Police Ccm4 the sidewalks oi New York would 8o under shot gun rule at six o'- clock tcnight. From six o'clock to- night until further notice, Mulroon. I would not give them a five-cent piece." "Dansk Gudstyeneats vil bilve aiholdt Sunday d. 9, Aug. kl l. Eiter- midday l den United Church i Char- lottetown Rev. Ravnkilde Moiler som Toler. Alle er Hyertelig velkorn- men medkuve bodes medbrlngas. lws-l-l-tts-Sl. "Fortune Bridge Tea Party, ‘rues- day, August 4th. Come and enjoy yourself. Salads, meats, etc, at tables. Big dance in the New Hall in the evening. Music by the Mc- Phee Bros. Ii not a fine day come August 5th. Ilbrtune Hall Company. 7801-8-1-21. "The Excelsior Players Wilmot Valley will present the three-act ssrvative platform o2 me which School District are hereby notified vlav ‘We My Alvis" l“ "w W" yummdwmmmuwmthatautsxssinamanonAugust H111 Gwltflw wn Tuesday evening, Aug. 4th. Good specialties between acts. Admission 35c and m. Cur- tain rises at S30. 3802-84-2. (Canadian Press) CHICAGO. 111.. July arr-"scu- isce Al" Capone was granted leave to withdraw his Plea 0i Iullty to indictments for violation oi the ill- 60mg tax laws in an unexpected morning court; session today, Fed- eral Judge James H. Wilkerson set the case for trial Sept 8, and ey said, detectives would patrol the whole city in automobiles armed with high power shotguns, "we Wm meet force with force and guns with B11115." he said in revealing the new order. The WeatherEtc ‘IOROITID. Alilllll L-North- announczd he would rcsci-vc (Iccis- wqgm-ly winds, m1- gnd slightly ion until that date on the Blllll- cooler. ster's motion to withdraw his guilty Temperatures plea on the indictment for con-spit Maximum ............. ...... 70 in; QQRIILSE the Prohibition Law. Minimum ...... ill cmcsoo. July ll-Wlml broke the all time bottom price record for iature delivery dealings today sinking to below I0 cents a bushel. The wevlolll p. High tide this afternoon at 12.15 and tomorrow morning at 1.24. Sun sets this evening at 1.25 and rises tomorrow morning at 4.48. Last quarter moon Thursday. August 6th 12.28 D- In. low was 50 l-t cents. July corn held ilnu around ll cents. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. f‘: