MAXIMS or A MERE MAN ._-i—- mqlnpeionillt ThQIIOINOIIWQN-lllllulflmbffi ‘K-‘llfklean Guardian Two Con ‘lgfllfls- Ioulded llli“ ‘ >%//’ /// ' The People's Paper CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JUNE 12,1933 ET FOR WOR Boyd lANU Ill CENTRAL PART 0F CUBA yers Make, Ii 0 l1 S‘ Journey Under Fav- orable Weather Conditions. ‘(Associated Pres-s) HAVANA, June 11—Tl'lB spanlsh pviators. Captain Mariano Barber- “ md Lieutenant Joaquin Collar. yllo left Seville, Spain, early Sat- wlloy, landed in Camasllfly PTO"- (m, in the central part of Cuba, iue today. Barberan and Collar, who left the Tablsda airport, Seville, Spain. Saturday-morning at 4.45 (11.45 9m. Friday, E. S. T..) were in the ‘l; a9 hours and 50 minutes, aver- qlog therefore about 115 miles an liolir. ' CAMAGUEY. Cuba, June 11- successfuily completing their 4.500- mils Spain-to-Cuba non-stop flight, Captain Mariano Barberan ml Lieutenant Joaquin Collar, lpunish army flyers, landed at this Jsland city this B-ltBIXlOi-lll 8‘- ’.~ p.m., E. B. T. Because of unfavorable weather munitions to the west the two av- um announced they would at - lull, spud the night here beiore ping on to Havana, which city illry had hoped te reach before their aeroplane Cuatro Vientos de- wended on its trans-ocean flight. Tlmtl BM HIP?! 'l‘ired but hGPDY after their 1on8 lir Journey, which they said was made under the most favorable weather auspices. the two flyers were born oif to tho Camaguey Colonic. Espsnols centre by throngs oi shouting Spaniards resident here (Continued on P086 3) ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS. ETC ‘Delicious ice cold spruce beer -'» licQuaids store, Elm Avenue. Nit be thirsty. 9959-6-6-2 wks. inserted in per word ‘isnnonneemenrs are column II 5 cents Mill! payable in advance. ' "Hamilton Cheese Factory re- vllene Thursday, June 15th and Sat- irdiy oi that week. 1083-8-12-21 "lieserve Wednesday, July 19th "Kelly's Cross Tea Party. 1048-6-l0-8i. lzPgrklliry sale by ladies of Chris- urcb Saturday June 1%, Prune) and Chandler's’ store. 1005-5-8-31 "Come to the Women's Mission- ‘ :7 Concert at Rowe's Hall, Brack- l Point, Wednesday, June twenty- uill 1084-8-12-11 "Come to the Ice Cream Social in ltl View Hall, Wednesday even- Hllllle 14th. If riot fine, follow- ilrning. 10fl-6-l0-2i. "The Conan Bonn Dramatic flllb will present the 4-act comedy A7919 Valley Farm." in Corran Hall Wednesday, June 14. 1073-5-10-3l In“ Stanley Bridge Dairy Co. mwdiscontirlue taking creem on m “Y. Juno 13th and will receive °ll Wednesday, June 14th. 1082-6-12-21 I ‘gimme and see fascinating ‘m "Y Brown" presented by the Dramatic Olub in New Glas- "'" Mellow. June mo. so- On 25 and l5 cents. 1088-6-10-3! u ‘i Mllgcrvo Wednesday evening. b“! ‘at at 8.30 p. m., for the open- h’ E l new and only Legion Hall i, I. at Mt. Stewart. Promin- mlfhlfl llresent with splendid p“ lllogrnm. Legion and Pipe in attendance. Parade of re- mlll at 7.30 p. m. Dance af- 10644-1041 graces Spanish? flArmy Off F0 \ . i ‘_. Complete 4,500 Mile Hop; r, Plfliti A Mattem Again Has Trouble I (Associated Preli MOSCOW, Juno ll-Jlmtfl Mattel-n, the American round- thc-world fiyer, arrived at Khabsrovsk, Eastern Siberia, to- day at 8.20 mm. Moscow time (7.20 pun. Saturday, E. S. T. The great lapse of time re- ported between Matiernh pas- sage over Ruklllovo and his ar- rival at Khabarovsk indicates ho must have descended some- where between these two points. The distance is only 725 miles, while the lapsed time was 18 honre and five minutes. NPTIMISM F E LT IN IJPPER CANADA Mr. C. L. MacKay Re- turned From Con- ventions in Toronto and Windsor. "There is a. great feeling of op- timism amen! "the mlmllffliltllfeli oi Upper Canada. Some factories are running even at night," reports Mr. C. L. MacKny of Bruce Stewart and Co, president oi the Maritime Division of the Canadian Manu- facturers Association, who returned Saturday evening from the annual meeting of the Canadian Manufac- turers Association at Toronto and the Ali-Canada Convention of the Churches of Christ. The sessions of the Manufactur- ers Association were held on June 6 and 7 at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto. Mr. MacKay presented the report on behalf of the Maritime Division of the Association. At noon on June 6 the Association gave a luncheon at which the speakers were Lt.-Gov. Bruce, On- tario, Premier G. S. Henry of Ontario. Premier Brownlee of A1- berta. and Mayor Stewart oi’ Tor- ont.o On Wednesday evening the annual dinner was held at which Sir Thomas White was the speaker. The latter in the course of his address re- marked that there was never an increase oi trade on a lowerlnli market, as there always was will: prices were on the upgrade. (Continued on Pike 8) "Flat ltivelyTelkies Thursday-- 1080-6-12-31 Murray Harbor South. Talkies Friday. 1080-6-l2-lli "Talkies Murray River Saturday. 1080-0-12-31 "Come one and all to the Elll0t Hall Institute Social Tuesday. IOBB-B-ll-li "Crspaud Halli July 1st. Don't miss "That's One on Bill." by Crapaud players. 1093474741 "Hear Mt. Herbert plow" li- Klngston Wednesday, June 14. 1007-6-12-31 "Reserve Wednesday, July 5th, [or ma party, St. James’ Church. Georgetown... 108141-1341 "Ebenezer young people will pre- sent tllelr concert in Brookileld Hall June 18th. Admission 25c and 15¢, 1085-6-12-2i "'l'lle Georgetown Dramatic Club will present the three act comedy- drama “Tile Eyes of Love." in Car- digan Hail Wednesday, Juno 14. 1081-6-12-21 r an». nett field. ‘ Flyers Pom‘ - All - FRINGE IJESTINATIO l “(v- l" Canadian And Two Read by Everybod Covers Prince Edwardilsland LikeflheDew i‘ i} Ai slcllvlul itilNtillliii Candidates For the Ministry Ordained At Close Of United Church Conference. (Canadian Press) Companions Take off On 2,471 Mile Jaunt. (Canadian Press) NEW YORK, June lb-Cuptilin J. Erroll Boyd wday pulled the throttle of the veteran monoplanc Columbia and roared away at 3.25 l1. m. E. S. T, on n. projected mn- stop flight to Port-au-Princc, Haiti. The Toronto aviator, who parti- cips/ted in one of thrce trons-At- lantio flights of the Columbia, was accompanied on his latest project by two Americans, Robert G. Lyons and H. P. Davis. For the Igrcater part of the flight of'2.471 miles. he planned to fly pver the Atlantic skirting along the United States coastline, about 50 mllts off shore. Tnkes an Readily SACKVILLE, N. B., June 11- Rcylelving conditions before and after the Great Wnr, Dr. G. J. Trueman, President of Mount Al- lison University, told the Maritime Conference of the United Church in Canada fills afternoon that tllele had been a "great slump" in carrying out tile lugh purposes by which the nations were actuated at the close of the war. The confer- ence concluded this evening with an address by Dr. Peter Bryce, of ‘foronto. Personal example and the gospel oi’ courage, strength, love, purity and goodness were needed to right present conditions, declared Dr. Truemrln. Economic stress was only one of many problems facing the world. Rev. Dr. J. A. Ramsay, Moncton, President of the Conference, pre- sided at the ulornlrlg session, as- sisted by Rev. Dr. Clarence Mac- Kinnon. principal of Pine Hill Di- viniiy Hall, Halifax, who led in No difficulty was experienced by Boyd in getting the heavily load-l ed ‘plane away from Floyd Ben- (Continued on Page s) Diillif-lillllli cull FACES nunlluuul Doukhobor L e a d e r Will Be Produced in Court Today. WINNIPEG, June 11 — (or!) - Leader oi Canada's 16,000 Doukho- bors, Peter Verigln will be produc- ed in court here tomorrow by im- migration authorities who arrested him Friday on a warrant issued by the Deputy Minister oi Immigration and were holding him tonight for deportation. Pending outcome of an alopcnl by Veriglrlls lawyer to Hon. Wesley A. Gordon, Minister of Immigration, Mr. Justice R. A. Robson issued a summons to Conlmlssioner of Im- migration C. E. S. Smith to appear tomorrow and show reason wily a writ oi Habcas Corpus should not be issued for the Doukhobor chief- tain. Verlgin's deportation had been believed imminent since last March when a judgment ‘of the Supreme Court of Canada was interpreted as meaning the leader was still liable to be deported in spite of the decision of Mr. Justice Hum- phrey Mellish, of the Nova Scotla Supreme Court, declaring ills frec-. dom from deportation was incident‘ to a pardon granted him in Janu- any. Italian Planes, l/Vill Carry Mail OTTAWA, June ll-(CLPJ-Let- ters for air mail to be carried by the Italian Squadron from Shediac, N. B., and Ht. Hubert Airfield. Montreal, to Chicago, will be ac- cepted, it is announced by the Post Office Department, The planes are expected to reach shcdiac on June 25, and St. Huber tthe same day. 0n tile rcium flight to Itnly file planes will land at Shcdfnc only, and mail addressed to Europe p111 be accepted there. prayer. Rev. George Morris, Sack- ville. read the scripture and Rev. W. N. Mnlthclvs, of Truro, was the preacher. At the close of the session 11 candidates for the ministry were ordained as follows: R. H. H. Barker, Fredericton; R. W. Braille, Cileswr, N. 8.; J. A. Fraser, 'I‘rcnioll, N. 8.; Arlllur Or. pan, Fowey, Eng; J. G. Russell, Stcllarton, N. 5.: H. P. Tupper, Kingston. N. S; R. L. Wagner, Shclburne, N. 5.; W. G. O. Zwickcr, Mallone. N. 8.; w. B. MucPllail, York Point, P. E. I., and W. T. Mercer. Sunnyside, Nfld. Jury, Of Twelve ‘To Decide Fate (By J. F. Sanderson) (Canadian Press Staff Writer) PEIPERBOROUGH. Ont., June 11 -—iC.P.)—'I‘w'elve men sat around a table 1n an anteroom of St. Paul's Presbyterian Church yesterday and today, deciding the fate of Prof. Thomas Eakvin, deposed Principal oi Knox college, ‘Toronto. Their re- port to the Presbyterian General Assembly tomorrow afternoon will decide whether the tall, grey-haired divinejlviih over 40 years of church service, will be reinstated lo the principolship from which he was demoted last year. AOONFOEOREONABOEA Ten Die In Plane Crash Huge Passenger Plane Nose Dives 600 Feet Into Plowed Field. CHICAGO, J1me il-(APJ-Curl Vickely 36, pilot of an amphibian aeropfanc, Harry Jacobs, 33, his co- pilot. and eight passengers. visitors at the Vi'orld‘s Fair were killed to- day when the huge plane crashed in a high wind and burned near suburban Glc-llview’. 'l‘llc crush occurred in view oi hundreds of motorists jamming the highways on holiday outings. Bert Clavey, Glenview, and Mack Brewer. Wilmette. who witnessed it, said. apparently the pilot made des- perate efforts to land the ship. It came down at not a very alarming B0819. fifty said, but was enveloped by flames immediately. The engines were buried in the ground. Witnesses said a. wing suddenly crumpled and the ship nose dived 600 feet into a freshly plowed field. The flaming wreckage was half buried in the ground. Bodies oi the passengers all were burned beyond recognition. Duncan Hodges. Manager 0i the Camp at the Fair ground from which the sight-seeing plane took 0A7, said tilere was no list of the passengers. Three of them, he said, were wom- en. No list was kept, he said, be. cause of the short duraion of the sight-seeing flights. As a resultpfiicers said it might be several duys before the identity of all passengers was established. From cards found in the pockets of’ one victim. he was believed to be William Fay of Chicago. Mounties A re Injured In Car Accident (Canadian Press) MONCTON, N, 3,, Jung 11_ _. Dogulas Dunning, a. member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police seaplane staff at Shediac, was in the Moncton City Hospital tonight. suffering severe injuries sustained in a. motor car accident five miles from Shedlac yesterday. His condi- tion was reported as favorable. Constable H. R. Stephens, suffer- ed a fractured collar bone. Serge- and Hart and Alrcraftshlan Donald- son escaped with slight cuis. An automobile with the four men swerved from the highway at a dangerous curve and crashed into a bridge. pStamp Sees Signs Of Busifiss Improvement Sir Josiah Stump Scesl Increased Activity In Canada and U. S. QUEBEC, June 11.—-"Thero are tangible signs of business and econo- mic improvement ln Canada and tile United States," Sir Josiah Stamp, Director of the Bank of England, President of the Iondon Midland and Scottlshltnillvlly and one of Britain's lending economists. said here Saturday, when he sailed for England aboard the Liner Em- press oi Britain after a short V15"- io Canada and the UnitcdSARAC-i- “Factories are showing increased activity and cur. loadings have def- initely improved. The rcccnt ad- vnucx: ill stock market prices, how- ever, llas not met the icst of reason- able opilmisln, but shows a icudcuci! of the public to speculation rsiher illull sound investment. 'l'llis is to be deplored. Willlo thcl-c is ground for hope tilut we nvc on i114‘ lvuy to Victim Of Own Experiment am maucrsco,.aune 1l—(A. P-l-A victim of his own experi- ments in the use of X-rays. Col. Eugene G. Northington, 53, of the United States army was dead to- day of infection from X-ray bllrns. Ho died Saturday at a hospital where he had been n patient for nine months. while surgeons oper- ated 164 times in an cffort in save his life. Canadian Dollar Advances NEW YORK, June ll-Tllo Crin- adian dollar appears i0 lli‘ advanc- ing at the raie of nbout a cent per week. Saturday fllc lJonliuiolYs (‘(‘0liflllilC recovery, opiiulisili nillSt he declared. currency closed at 90H cents. vllllfll| be kw, with,“ reasonable bQun(L5"’~ io its high for the your established taker of Point PiCdunh. lie us. Tllilfldly- cillll GUILTY or culsllla Biilllil HARM Acquitted On Charge - of liianslaugllter But Guilty of Caus- ing. Actual Bodily Injury. SUMIMERSIDE, P. l, »liii‘.(‘. l1 JFlle jury sitting on lilo Cuhiil case returned a verdict o!" not lgtllllty’ of manslaughter but brought iu a verdict of causing actual body- ily injury. The jury retired at 4.30. Saturday afternoon and returned‘ at 6.05 p. m. Saturday morning was‘ occupied with the address of Mr. Thane A. Campbell, K. C., for the Defence Mr. Norman W. Lowiller for the, Prosecution addressed the jury’ when the Court returned after re- cess at 2.30 p. m. His Lordship Chief Justice Matilieson addressed the Jury at four o'clock. In his opening remarks he said that both Counsel for the Defense and for the Prosc- cution had presented the facts so thoroughly in two very able ad- dresses that all was needed was to give the Jury the law which deals with this case. His Lordship minted out that the prisoner had admitted that i r (Continued on Page '1) NAZI STURM f» employed. More shipping lies rust- ing in port than was sunk during lhe Great War. Scarcely a. nation- al budget balances. has vied with government in high and higher tariffs. More than 4i) countries have exchange restric- tions limiting purchases. r-f their nationals trade has fallen more since 1929 than it has ever fallen below. MERE MAN Dlsnyanun wishes his win» weuldlosethesesissoftoua, MAXIMS 07L a-i-i- 8 PAGES Prev Mil"! llhlvrlouoo Delivered n! Mull Canada Ind U. S. A. MM] 13 CONFERENCE 66 NATIONS REPRESENTED AT P_A_RLEY Restrained Optimism ails King George 7'Wi11 Formally Open Greatest Prosperity Conference In History (By George llnnllllcioll, (fzlnullizlu Press Staff Writer) IDNUON, _| line lz-(Lun fllllflll ~ilvcr and gold illicropllorle illc liirlg lonull"l'llvv' zlfll-l‘: oou frlrlunl- Prcss ("rllllvl "l§i‘i'f)rc a _v inaugurates ille greatest prosperity clulfcrcucc in history. Wire- 'l'.'lill.'l1)llOi'i¢ records, And slzlurling before Ills Maj The Task Thirty million workers m1- un- Government abroad. International The task of the conference is by TUUPERS CAUSE N EA R R I l] T Leader ofhSwiss Dele- monetaly and economic policies to set the wheels of trade revolving ngoln. It will consider currencies, prices, establishment of a new in- ternotlonal gold standard, removal of exchange restrictions, general lowering of tariffs. Over the nature of the main problem to be solved lhem is little difference of opinion among the various delegations. The. gation Lodges Protest With the Bavarian Govt. (Associated PILESS) MUNICH, Germany. June li-- Mcnzlcing storm troopers prevent- cd Cardinal Faulhaber from hold- ing solemn high mass today in connection with the Catholic Jour- neymens convention here after severe clashes last night between Nazi's and Catholics. As a result of the disturbances, the Government today put a pre- mature end to the meetings which were supposed to continue and ter- mlnate today. The railway stations of Munich were packed with thousands of persons today, including many dele- gates hulking a hurried exit from the city. It was reliably reported lhllt lending members of the con- gress were assaulted by storm ‘troopers who tore badges off the delegates and beat them up, even using truncheons. Herr ‘Theo Baldi, leader of the Swiss delegation, lllld his badge ripped off, then was taken to the police station and released later. Ho lodged a protest with this Ba- i i (Corltinued on Page '1) Entertuirzzs Then Found ' Dead Gunner W. J. Pic-km, of tile Royal Canadian Artillery ('J\'(7il.\(‘(l hllnself from. the table us llc (‘lllCFHlllCd a few friends at supper i/illigili. The guests, with Mrs. Pickett and llCi‘ [our young children, finished illc meal without hzm. lllou. puz- zlccl by his failure to l‘i".lliil, illcy began to scnrcll for Picknt. . He was finally lfiilllfl when on of the visitors blllfihfirl iu (hr. dork- ness against a mall's l)l‘il_\' hanging by n vopc from ouc u: llle high ‘barred windows of olri fort Cam- bridge, where Plckl-l‘ -l .|\ enro- dead. difficulties will come when Neville Chamberlain, Chancellor of of Commons next ‘Tuesday what the Government intends to do e- bout the $75.950,000 war debt pay- merit dlue the United states Thulsday‘. but there was no official word a- bout the method of dealing with DDIXIlOII here has agreed that the United Kingdom would negotiate some arrangement satisfactory to both countries and would avoid default. sentence of five words, "the coll- venilgn must bc general.” France served notice to the world today that the treaty must deal with nuval ques- HALIFAX. June ll — 1GP.) — lions as well ns with tilc army and lhc air, because France cousidcrsJlu-llll- -- ihe various arms inicrdclwnrlcrli. now under consideration Geneva Conference embody the results 9f ihc London and Washington llovlll treaties in the (Continued on Page 3) British, Attitude On War Debts Awaited ' 11—(A.P.)— IONDON, June he Exchequer, will tell the House 0T1 This was made known Saturday, he payment. For wveks lllPYlllQd Must Consider Naval Questions GENEVA, J1me 11—(AP.)-—Ill B. projected Disarmament lThe British Dlsavmumerlt plan l by the I pPOPOSPCl lo I the general convention.) The Anmrican nnd Japanese dole-I gates interpret ille IProurh declar- ation which was filed wiiil ihcl conference ioclflll. to mcou that ilic lhTPP-pOWPI‘ ‘London aglcelllclli l .1 V which limits cruisers, destroyers lilVl i 1,, .. submarines. ulut iv‘ revised u‘. Gru- F ilt- I (\\',1 brfol-c llll_\‘ grncmi iiilils cord can be signed. lfiss waves will carry his words to the fllrilllzrlllost recesses of the vfiflll. Special wires will truusnlil il for speevly rcprolluviion b_\' csiy in the. (fullferullce llzlll will he representatives of fr} uniinus, some. cheerfully llllliuliuic, some llcsiiaiiug, some plainly skeptical. Jivonoulic Conference la‘ l.) rescue a rlislresscd world from the gftiiliisl industrial slump it llus ever known- For the trl<i< of illc \\'orld Week EndDeath Toll In Quebec AIONUZEAL, June ll—(C.P.) ~Of blight Quebec residents who met silclclen death over the week end. five lost. their lives in drowning accidents. A-t Ecu- rcuils on the Si. Lawrence Riv- er, three yOLillg men dronrned when waves from a Dil-Sslng steamer washed them beyond their depth. A youth was drown- 0d at historic Wolfe's Cove at Quebec and a young boy lost his life swimming in ille Rich- viieu River at St. John's, Que. Alfred Lalondc. 53, was struck clown and instantly killed by an automobile as he ran out o!" zhe mouth oi a lane directly in the pnih of the car. A REFORMER ls A MAN was SuFFERlio Meal: FROM HANQOVERS ‘THAN Mos? . PEoPLa! Fresh snufllrvrsi and west wind: partly cloudy with scattered show ers. .\ilI'l'lfl)llI-lJ.(i(-ii‘.\l) (ll-lulu; Tm- nnm, .|u .1» ll - Hindu-nu ml.) QM“). ' l»: - M d2 7t N! i‘)! (‘-4 ill‘ m" u: U3 l\v 7i (lifn .. l"! ll -'|l ll W) m Kl o‘ Jul-n . 7i l i"'l' I . 7*! i'l-'i“' ffl‘ will . . u. .. 3.1 m‘ rlililir is!‘ uw- 1-1- u: l»- ill (n); l» in!‘ \\.'.lI =l .-' ». v.1: i ‘no ll l'r l. rowllum ll I uw- 'i|‘l\' u ill §l"ll"‘i||l q: i‘. . >~i u.) ~ u‘. .l~~ -'ll.l_\' ii)lilii‘i"l \\.' 1 "2 u. lug-l“ a -