MAXIMS or A MERE MAN He qucrs himself in the itnoment o i017. arluttetnwu Guardian Two Cantu. "wing Guardian, Founded littil. _,__,-—»--»- SEEK Eiiiiiiiii SNtlll-Filii Terrific Along Yangtse. SHANGHAI, Aug. 08- (AP) ~. Japanese air, river and land forces launi-Iicii a terrilfie attack all along the Xangtae River front today In it Illtilf‘ considered by foreign ‘mil- _ta|"y observers the beginning of un offensive to capture llankow be- fivri- the first snrnv-fall. The Japanese, slowed up for 59v. rral months, pit-hell up momentum ‘PP flflillllli: raged on the oi’ Poyang Lake and on both of the Yangtsc. ' l the lilanchoukuu-Soviet Russo border quiet, the Japanese were believed |}l"'“ "n5: a full dress offensive with which they hope to niairh finally into llzmkoiv, (fhin- cw provisional capital. and deliver It l“ iii blow hcfirrc tir cud oi‘ the avoiding a bitter winter cam- paign. Friselrtn observers viewed the of- fi-izsivc as the bliYlPi-l vet staged by ilir Jtinancsc. FXJQNllIlQ in man- lilll nit icii '4. and equipment c: ‘nirutrrl for the l\' caninaiiin, 300 ta ti:. . rih, which was ted by Yellow River floods in maps toniaht, shoivc " . J ianc=e pushing up -1 rioi-‘h bank. (iii the .".’lli'l1 ha" ivcrr- zrtemptinz to disloiire Chin- ese defenders along four routes. DESOLATE SCENE lily an Associated Press Corres- pnncicnti YLIANCHIU. Sliansi Proilncc fllv Courier to I'lt\lil~IO\\'l, Aug, '10“- '.‘\l"i———JflP0l\'S “scorcl ‘Ll earth" (“Iv has reduced to ash-cs 40 wal- c"l towns and mcrc than H00 vil- ic" < in shattered Shansi P£O\'ll‘.(‘.0. l"'.‘.‘.tl!f behind scenes of (loath I l desolation. This l found out on a lust com- pii ed l,200-ini‘.i- jnurnri" by foot and horseback llll‘i‘\l".‘.l the mount- ainous western ha. . li“ai in four "f‘\'i"-(‘t‘.‘s'——-H0[i(‘ll, Shansi, Honan lli‘l Slicnsi. For two months I travelled tli uzh the heart oi’ China, oitcn ianese battle lines". d Japan's interpretation of the policy to mean ning every Chinese town or tinge that supported the eitcrilla ..ies which wage increasing war- fare against the Japanese. Previous reports oi had been viewed skciiticallv, but ivhat I saw and ])l10t0"l'fl} icd or l’liiil‘ll from reputable \\‘lill‘.<$(‘5 led to the inescapable conclusion Jap- anese destruction of Chinese homes in Shaiisi exceeds in magnitude and "scorched earth" bu: v thoroughness iiiivthiiii: that has fVPillTCil in any other war urca of China Throughout eastern and central Shansi I passed ,once-prosperous \\'" led cities now reduced to only ("lltll'i'f‘(l shells. I saw (iozcns of vrllavcs in which not a since house \\'=i.~ standing. no person was ilvihil Hui not cvcn does i‘f‘lll.'llll€(l. PJlllUllS stood rusting in surround- llYlllilflldS while ilie crops ran \\'f t . Alter visiting cvcry south Sliansi county. thc Chinese Goueriiivent Relief Commissioner" told inc 850.- 000 homes had been burned in this alla. leaving upward of 2.000000 prisons lioine‘e.~.~". llc said he be- lcvcil 70.000 Chinese had been ex- ecuted by the Japanese, but the vstlmnte seemed too high to me. Raid Gets Mounties More Than Liquor HALIFAX, Aug. ZG-Jfllicit li uor W415 HOE all that Royal Cana fan ilixioruntcd Police obtained in a raid i‘ l‘. Today. after enduring a. scratch- lna epidemic since a raid" last Tiiilrsdav. the Red Coats had their headquarters and barracks fumi- gatcd. A ear in which seized liquor hart been trnnsporated was also gassed, The Mounties liquor squad had mofludgr; their seizure in a lice-ridden comma {vans "Wednesday is Dance Night in The Highlands. L-l251-0-1l-tf "Cake sale in aid Basilica Al- tar Society at Holmaiva Saturday afternoon. L-68i-8-25-3l. ! "Borden Line Club loading hog: ambs. calves every Tuesday. Hours l3 to 3. L-S AB-IQ-M-fl-B-ti- .. gaps in the arm? l; twice a CDIIIIKIQIO: who con. a BEFllRE FIRST With Result Of Land, Sea And Air Forces Combine In Offensive ‘ ,thcn they went after. His Wor- k the Japanese ., destruction l f vic- lfQuite Satisfied Visit To Ottawa Charlottetown-Assured Of Air- port Mayor Foster States - $35,000 Grai This Year. on development this year in place "We got everything we went af- ter," His Worship Mayor E. A. of the $25,000 they had expected, i Foster. Mayor of Charlottetown A despatch from Ottawa early " said lust. night following his re- this week, in which Hon. C. D. turn from Ottawa. “Chariotte- Howe, minister of transport is town is assured of an‘ airport, but purported to have intinr/"l the definite details will be placed be- Federal Government had agreed foi"e the City Council at a spec- to provide Charlottetown with some assistance to build an air- rt after the City purchased the and and laid out: the airfield, was in error somewhere. Mayor Foster believed. The Transport Minister had Suggested, according ial meeting Monday night," His Worship continued. ' With Coun. R. C. Chandler, chairman of the finance commit- tee and Mr. K. M. Martin, K. C., City Recorder. Mayor Foster had been to Ottawa to interview Fed- to the dispatch, assistance to " cral Authorities in connection Charlottetown would be on the with the proposed civic airport same general basis as assistance tior Charlottetown. Assurance had given other municipalities for nir- bcen given. councillors were told ports, the Federal Government at a recent meeting when pur- supplying 30 per cent of the total chase of a site was discussed, the cost. The whole thing was incor- rect, the Mayor said, but declined to discuss details of the agree- ment with Federal Authorities | until he laid the project before l the council. , Coun. R. C. Chandler accom-l panled Mayor Foster on his re- l turn last night. Mr. K. M. Miir- l tin. who had been to Boston, I Mass, after the Ottawa confer- t erice arrived in the City earlier in the evening via Canadian Airways from Moncton. Meanwhile Niziyor :Fosier and Coun. Chandler" had ‘ been completing details of the, airport project. l l i .. l . A Island Born Twins ggiljglgflftjlfijytiv FINAL SESSICll ‘CF CCNVENTICN Mrs. Leslie Ramsay, Indian River, Elect- Federal Government would under- take development of the port if the city provided the site. $25,000 was said to be allowed for devel- opment this year with the nos- siliiiity of approximately $500,000 bring spent over a five year per- iod. It was to ascertain definitely the Federal assistance to be given ‘and complete details of the pro- l -,jcet that the Mayor and party l iwcve at the Dominion Capital. In tone iiov they really got. more ship said last. night. as they were l linformed $35,000 would be spent ‘NEW GLASGOW. N. 8., Aug. 0—((‘l’)--Neil and Donald Mac- Kinnon Prince Edward Island- born twins who will celebrate their 92nd birthday i-n November iiere togetflcr today in their an- nual reunion. Usually Donald crossed North- umlierland Strait to visit Neil in his home‘ at Forest Hills, P. E. I.. liut. because Donald was lll th year, his brother came here. Both were born at Dundaa. P. E. l.. but only Nell remained there. Donald took up the roving life rend finally settled in Plctnu County 60 years ago where he worked on the railway. cesan League. Mrs. Leslie Ramsay, Indian River was elected president of" tlii‘ Diocesan Catholic Women's. League at the closing session of the ltith. animal convention of the Organ- ization yesterday. lifrs, E. G. Gil- its, Kcnslngton, is 1st vice-pi Th’ pa" a" heneved l” b’ dent Mrs Adrian Mcinnis Souris. : the oldest twins in the Dominion. zndhlicbpresldent and M“ R J_ l McDonald. Charlottetown, 3rd. vice-president. Mrs. Katherine l Creamer. Charlottetown is record- i, 1 ' ing secretari", Mrs, Parnell Mc- Mahon. Suinmerside. correspond- ing secretary. and Miss Florence Kelly. Montague. trcasurei". Election of officers took place at. the closing session of the three- day convention hcid at St. Dun- stanls University. Mrs, H. J. Hyncs. retiring president. presided at business meetings. Yesterday at 8 a. m. the Rev. J. A. Murphy, D. D.. Rector cf‘ Si. Dunstanls University celebrated mass in the University Chapel for the deceased members of the C. Burning Schooner SFITUATE, Mass, Aug. 26- Thi- Eastern Steamship liner New York tonight rescued a crew of three from the blazing schooner yacht, Liria. of Glou- center. Radio reports from the New York to coast guard headquart- ers at Boston indicated there . were no fatalities or lnjurlel. The liner, bound from Boston to New York, advleed she would ut the crew ashore at the ‘ave Cod canal. l . . L. At 9:30 business sessions resum- ed with the reading of district PTConliVnuKi on page Col 6) ' New German Guns Include Successor To "Big Bertha" rlDQQIl building for five yearn. Perhaps overshadowing all else in significance were four formid- able new guns which military ex- (A. l’. by Guerdienb Bpeoial Win) BERLIN, Aug. 26—11breign mil- imryobservers believe Germany has demonstrated that her lrml! stands in the front ranks of I per-ts said were the largest they rearmlng Europe. ever knew to be moved in motor Today they settled down to dig- transport. est what they cow in the Way 0f Since the guns were dismantled new technical equipment when for movement in five trucks for Chancellor Hitler paraded a frac- each gun and since the observers of the tremendous store 0f knew o! no precedent-save for tion military equipment yesterday be- fore Hungary's visitlntZ R989!"- Admiral Nicholas Horihy- The experts pointed to a new the mysterious. “Big Bertha" o! the Great War-the new weapon bu! them guessinil- To practiced military eyes tne typg o: gun as the biggest sur- weapon-popularly styled Ger- prise. Also cited were evidences many‘; "Anti-Maginot Line" gun ma; Germany is continuing t0 -appeared to be of between nine push with greatest rapidity de- and 11-inch calibre with a barrel tanke lad other of about 40 feet long. The only velopments of mechanization- The show. in which more this" 10,000 men with their equlpmflil took two hours tn D886 m9 1"‘ viewing stand, further indicated, the observers said, that. Gennan strategists have Neil Wfkl"? overtime to illl the equipment comparable bigger guns they had seen had been mounted on rail- way cars oi" on battleships. The significance lay chiefly in the fact that the Germans had succeeded in making such a gun for nwtor transport. gaining I great. advantage in mobility over The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ed President 0t‘ Dio-t liww_""" QHPIAIALOTTETOWN, CANADArSATUkhAY, AUGUST, "¢1f‘19n. fTENsE" EUR OPE A WA ITS SIM - H141 u-a-i-u-‘t Everybody N I ANDlonilon Paper Urges HUNCARMN TIES ciniiiiii H i tle r Gains Free Hand To Deal With l Problem In Czecho- slovakia. BY LOUIS P. LOCHNER. Associated Press Foreign Writer BERLIN, Aug. 20 ——(AP)-— A five-minute liandclasp between ltcichsfuchrer I-Iltiei" and Admiral Nicholas l-lorthy, ltegent of i-lungary", today ended five days of intimate ssoeiation oi the two heads of tate-—five days of hist- ory-making for middle and southeastern Europe. The Regent and his entourage (‘lllfillllvil for Karinhall, the est- ate of Field Marshal Goerlng. ‘Their itinerary called i a journey tonight to Nuremberg before the return to Budapest. The Regents visit, acuordingto all circumstantial evidence a- vailable, had ' six positive re- suits:- i. Gcrmutiy and Hungary now support each other in insistence ;upon autonomy for German and Hungarian minorities in Czech- slovakla. ‘ ‘ 2. Czechoslovakia is to be isolated further by conclusion of non-aggression pacts between Hungary" and Yugoslavia. and be- tween Hungary and Romania. 3. Hungary will endeavor" es- pecially to conic to amicable terms Wltll Yugoslavia, friend of Ger- many aiid Italy‘. 4. Economic relations between Germany and Hungary will e extended and intensified with the ultimate purpose of welding a strong economic bloc of Danubian states of which Germany has been a powerful member since the annexation of Austria. 5. Hungary to all extents and purposes is an adjunct of the Berlin-Rome axis. G. Germany. having given as- surances on the invinlability of the Gernian-I-litngarian frontier lar assurances to Italy rland, now considers- ds of the coricspoiid- once service, Dienst and Deutsch- lill“i(l~——"(.i(3i‘l’lliilly'S southern boi\nd- ary is now one of the safest in the world." This iealizniion, plus Germany's conviction that. hcr western forti- fications arc sufficiently advanc- cd lo afford iiill protection. had an immediate effect. on German relations. with Czechoslovakian. Acwfflilli! to reports from Praha, neither affirmed nor den- ied in Berlin. Germany has served _ .\ notice she will not stand formui-h i uteri‘ delay iii the dispute over the ailtonoiny‘ demands of Czecho- slovaiziziis 3500.000 Sudetcn Gcr- , mun minoi"ft_v. i ___ lFcileral Marketing !$Cllt‘.lll8 Approved By llLY. State Farmers ITHACA, N, Y.. Auiz. "ac-tarn- Nciv York stare farmers by the slender mauiu of two votes put the sainp of approval today on a prriii.;.~i.l ivdcrril markclitig agree- ginrm ntnicd at bringing higher" prices to potato gioivers. Co ‘ewe of agizcuiturc officials .'lllllfilliiL..<l that 780 farmers voted -.n favoi" of the proposa‘ and 390 voted acuinst it. ‘Fivri thirds ap- proval by those voting is necessary to make the agreement, become ef- fecilvc. Farmers in l4 other potato pro- dueini: states also voted. The agreement calls for the re- striction of cull potatoes in ship- ments. labelled for interstate com- merce by the application of a grad- ing SYSlGlll. Quebec Town Bans Shorts For Men Wlrel 26 ffCP. Bv Guardian's Special HAMILTON, Ont, Aug. Burbidgc, Quebec, can do what it likes about banning shorts for men but. Burbiilge of Hamilton will still iveai" them. Magistrate H. A. Burbldge. faced ivith the news the village of Bur- biclge had ruled out abbreviated pants said it was "too bad." ""I‘hat. town was named after my iathcr and now they're gone and banned shorts," he commented. "It's a beautiful country but. they shouldn't ban short-s. They're too comfortable." Struck On Head With Pitched Ball, Dies IAJ’. By Guardian's Special Wire) OSWFIGO. N. Y.. Aug. 2o - Gcorge McCarthy. l9, of Oswcgo. died earl today from n brain in- jury reeclvul yesterday \\'llf‘fl he ices struck in the hmd by a pitch- ed ball in an Qsweiio >ll\.\'8l'0ililli leagge contest. A high sc ool team- ma was pitching at the time of which Hitler bu railway gum. the accident, is. PRtlTESlS IAP ATTACK, 0N AIRLINER H u l l “fins Tokyo American l’ u b l i c; Plain Speaking By Chancellor At Lanark , LONDON. Aug. ‘ll-tsaiurdayl- t (QR UHHVUS)—‘_'PIOH:Q make it lllifllfl. the Daily Herald iLabori Visited Sir John Simon in an edit- oi.ai today. The newspaper urged the Chancellor of the Exchequer" J0 do more than merely repeat the [classic phrase that Great Britain's tp0llCy with respect to the Czech _robieni must be decided "in the 1311i of circumstances." l SPGBkW-B dlfecill’ to the Cabinet Minister, the neivspaper saint- A small request, Sir John Simon. about this great speech vou are making at Lanark tonight, ..- s. =make it plain. Whatever you my, ,pleasi= make it. plain. , “Give us something more livhlch to bite than that. phrase- Aroused Over De- struction 0f Craft. i (A. P. by Guardian's Sllceiai Wire) WASHINGTON, Aug. 26—Cor- dell Hull, Secretary of State, warn- ed Japan iiidiiy" that United Slates public opinion ivas aroused over ‘ the (iL‘.~Il'il(‘i.i0ll of a Chinese-Am- Onl erican Cflllllllt‘l'L‘iiil alrlinei" b} Jap- l anese war" planes. the siatemaifs ‘Godsend-shat p0i~ He so the ‘Pokyo Government t giustt be decided ‘in the light of ; an i'lll|'ll1:l'i!‘ gm '. l aiiatns". the T m5 BREE-i‘ macliiiie-gtiiiiiiii" of the liner <- . .. - . . , i . . , =' ' Of course it must so must E‘\"" which ti. lhllfllll: to thi- tyaw 1):‘- lerything. But that is no reason why lthe Government should not specify lthe most likely circumstances and isay what it. would do in them. ‘it does not do that, then ihc dan- gerous unccrtaznrv drags on. "And the mcrc faci llln‘ i" i: making" this .\l“l' ‘>1 MW" Government feels that declaratiors liilm no. on... pzirtnieni illdlCfllCd cost l4 Chin- ese lives. Hull's protest was based priui- , arily on the fact that an Ameri- ran, Hugh L. Wood oi Windiield. Kits, was the pilot of the (lcstroy- -r- craft, and that the company which operated it was financed partly by an United Stairs Coin-l i .ll‘f‘ previous certainty and that illi? illl"t‘l‘[8.ll‘.l}' L puny, Pan-American Airways. ‘i5 dRHCBTOH-fif’ i In a note presented to Tokyo by", i Joseph C, Ciiseiv, the Ainericanl [ W I Jimhasaii-‘iw the Secretary said tie Ame‘ an Government. desired l“Tou h "i0 exp its fllljtllillli‘ thygctiivni g 3 to the Upillflllillg in this way ofl other non-coinbataiii occupants of ‘unarmed civilian planes engaged Are Blamed in c ' l13051053...il°.ii‘ll‘t“i‘é..i?él $.53“; ~ onvict Deaths ~< " ~ l regularly .\Cl1i‘(llll.(.‘tl ai: route. (a. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) PHILADELPHIA, Aug, 26-C0r- ‘the lives of ziincricau as well nsl l t l 26——A United against the ma-l DiILIVEltS PRU]. TOKYO, Aug. States protest i2 PAGES MERE M N.“ lt. la a fine thing to be pulntvil out in the crowd, and to be spoken of, “lhilt is he." Annual subscription Delivered $0.00 H: sinii-r. in. l. moo, (‘nuullil and c. l. MM _ _____ ,.~________v , __ ’S SPEECH JAPANESE L4 UNCH iyg; DRIVE 01v r1ANi€6w 1. Expected To "Clarify Position 0n Czech Issue “Take-it-or-leave-it Offer fvifade To Sudeten Germans By Praha Government. -_- (lly J. l’. \‘underson_ Czinadiiiii Press Staff Writer) l.()Nl)().\. Aug". Zlli-Sii" John Simon, Chancellor" of" the Exchequer, will make a speech lll Lanzirli. Sciitlunil to- morrow which may have been ilraftcd with the (‘.\‘I)I'\"~S purpose of influencing a mun iitltl miles a\va_v--(_‘h:incellor llitler in Berlin. It is believed here llitlei" more than any man holds" the peace of Europe in his hand. livei") effort has been made l0 persuade him to change his" tactics" Zllllllll i‘i‘llll'lll lliir- ope. Sir John may attempt again to influence him, not by ileclaiuition 0f a new British policy, hut ifv elaiiiicalioii of the British altitude toward the (Meeiiosloiak situation. ll was not expected Sir John's speech u ould he epoch- inziking". But it lakes on an added importance because of the time factor. it will be delivered while the ilritish Gov- ernment is openly alarmed oveivcventsjn Praha. F Xlililiilfillfiil “H-lro iui- (‘on i- illa tory Reports 'i'lie London Govoriiineii; "clear- ly welcomed reports "om Praha ‘ today of a new approach to a sct- the Suueten German iii-inept of minority problem hi" the C_‘L€Cl.l Government. it showed a spirit of conciliation so necessary to an 0 cvciituul solution. But alarm ovigr "he C.'.t‘l‘il situ- the same FAR iii iiiblll int" \ - of cone-fl. ,'lll aiiil good E will .. iieiniiiistriiteii o_\ the Siidci- l, cii tii-rinans. Tension roiitinucsl llCL‘L\\l‘l‘ nobody knlows no“ . 1 ____._. ‘ L "ii_\" iroup wi i'(‘t‘('l\'f‘ * , ' - ‘llzllfilli itflerl \\“l\l(“ll ‘ (leis Pralia Still?! dill}? l‘ ZiXQS (ioveriiiiirzii lf‘t( ( cc ar . , _ scntcil the maximum of nllllll i)!‘ .0“ res-rim“- clusion" Of S h o w Slated For Oct. 31 llamper Mediation Efforts oner Charles H. Hersch tonight ~ _ - ,. . g . ,~ . , “bird M" 5“Willi?iii“ li$l-l¥‘l-\""~¥il‘ . “S ..i."-"""'"."l">.i::;."...:r£; To biov. 4. - - . _" fv “ ‘t; _, a t - 111K o" “fie he“ wlhich blfilbttedl the Chinesc-uuiiiiil airliner tun d; laguuix“ 1mm as ‘he Gprmm, _>__ nv-es o‘... our unllly com c‘? n a a3‘) 9" lll“ sown Chill“ coil“ “‘" press continues its violent attacks llltillifl of 1e i: rectors of’ prlson month“ an‘? Smd <lP1l\"-‘i'f<l l" ‘h? JRPCIWSP GOVPTTI- on‘ the Car-ch Government-so ‘or I-“o lire-tin <, and i‘ Bilb- leastdone “higher "l7 “'35 m‘ men? ionirht. long will Viscount Riinciniairs ' .V°l\’9 - Am Joe h C (‘rcw task as mediator at Praha be ex- He withheld the names of the co,“.,..-_ ,,,,,§,f, in a 11am! u-Pnwh- (hiya-ms _ lguards he doscmped its .“t“"r°rl§i" hour coiiieiiiiicc will‘. Kciisuke The British GOVPFIlllICllLs aiixi-, assigned to punish difficult pris- Hm-inmwhv “is mm C,- Of for. r-ly i)\'t‘l‘ (‘vech iiroiilctti-s‘ Willi“ Duets}. and of the officrial. but 0m, “Hairs (-,,_.,.“. “M ,,,,,!,,,.$,,,,_., irnnli £11311‘ pyiillflllililfllfjtgl. mlltuwlisl ' " ' ‘ - i ft t em." i . . . rca r/cv icv i-ani ~ " t " smd “Sm go m! ier i phi] . to ha‘? held. mm H“ allack “m to no on indcfiiiitclv bccziusvtliey , Tilt‘ lV-‘M Cl"? l“ l“? a late" Jflfiiis i'r""\'li'll- "issuiaiices . . " . - -. ~K1 _ ‘ ‘ ~‘ _ ‘" ‘ i-hn-titulc the "tcatcst ihicet to delphia County prisons _ on ‘o; ._..,D..(-, m, m, m.“ and m,» NW m“? M 17m)“ I . l dlllp’ f“ Slum; 15- bv “°'l."“T‘ ‘ili'i'i‘-' "i Y-"iilldls lll "d" C‘lli'i""<" 1i is vated . iiliovitativcli:there l bulldmg ‘vhmle “lmdows lwlc l-“Vdllfic \"~il'- l will be no ‘Runriiniiii plan to cnd 1.910594 “ml “l°“l‘l_ll"“°(l o“ m l‘ l 1A‘. least ll’ llvibi-‘iii- "ll Cliliivev-l the llllllf>l'll\' dispute. lie is there. n“? of hi?“ Ymlitilllrs” w“ d5“ WPEP bviicvcd to have pi-rishcdl as nirr“ tor: his part is to izci tlic ‘ scribed by i118 Emmi?!‘ a5 one when the land plane. machine-l parties toe-ether to ..~mooth out. the mo“ 59V?“ Piiilifhiilml“ me gunned bv five Japanese war- "W" “lll'll“'iilt“l‘5- l is Judge “mob of totigh guards inetcd out _ phmcx m“); in a “mgnvfly _ v l.u_" “VHO? Offer , Ffitll‘ of 2i men Diacrvl in th" miles south cf Canton. The plan. ‘ __Pr$"'“l'\; All?‘ ~5>"‘"'»‘\l“ “ill ‘JP $130!}- l isolation cells during the final was mvnpd i” H“. China Nmonfl. ichtlibiisltivlifiiizlp ‘tf-‘igili-ilii “ . "d \\’i ‘ days of a hunger strike protesting "(ifflln “Wlvl-p mp ‘HFWW monotony of prison dict "literally baked to death“ there. Heixsch as- serted. Their nalzcil bodies were found Monday morning. H i ‘iI.l‘i‘ti'-..§.‘I“‘-1.§.li‘i5; Treated’ Bi! "w" “‘° "“""‘ “‘ l“ m” "ll lWitch-doctor Denies Remembering Slaying (Continued on pan: i1. Col 2i where investigators estimated the. temperature was forced up ti! _ more than 150 degrees, were ill ‘ from shock and fever. Five are in i the prison hospital. ‘ Dr, Martin P Cranc. coroner's _ __, _ physlciati, rcportcit the dent-is CONvORIl C“ A, _, 2,; were cruised iii‘ "iWflt Simki‘ ‘if lll" HAP» iiu<ii\_i.-l.iviiil and powerfully asphvtic tvpe.“ built Basivr Panicll told a superior (iouri Jury iirri- tixluv that. lie did He cxpiainiwl this meant till‘ thi-r h.‘ sleu his men's respiratory and circulatory svstetns. taxed to the limit iii an effort" to kCPll their boilics at 1i i _ , normal tciiil>"i"i'iii"c were ov'""- "i ‘-\li"~i “mild 5 come finally and no loirzci'_ c. utd Tm‘, l‘ i “l” ib U“ “m, - utilize oxvuen. This. he said. ii"- on ch,‘ d h“, F,“ l9 fl-‘ilhyxlilllon girl w i. c brrast with an ice-p i as she pluv- '“ —-‘ ed \\'illl Puritan's wife iirai" a lio - an at their lllid if!" l n: .1 _Pf\l‘il(ll i'(‘p\ltll1\'f‘\'l _a statement. Federal Cabinet Ministers Attend Acadia Centennial tContiriucil on pace i1. Co‘. 'li WOLFVIUJI-‘fli? 5-. Ans. 26- tCPi-Two federal cabinet min- isierlst. griaevliélatfli Ogmffigglt“ tag‘; iny Jntines .\. Mills, Associated Klimt ‘e Umverfliv-s cvmenma] Press Iiorcign Staff) celebrations. l 4 l JAFFA, Pfllfifilllll‘, Aug, iii-firi- tisli troops and police operated to l prevent the spread oi violence to- night. aftcv n bomb explosion in a. CTOWKlPCl vegetable market took Labor Minister Norman M. L. Rogers, class of ‘l9. and National Revenue Minister J. L. Ilsley. , class of '13. addressed meetings of tlfiilllmtfi “lid 5md°m5 of m” int least. 20 lives and wounded T4 $10119? All?‘ bféilg l "Xmlilfd .All lhc casualties iverc Arabs. eary rccep ons y cass ma es R 1. _. ,_ . . t and faculty on their arrival in em Sal“ "lmlodlllnlfllwluzsllzf? ‘m? Woiiville early this morning. Approximately 1.000 persons ar- rived in Wolfville to wear the blue and garnet insignia marking them "old boys." and the entire , town has been making special ef- i l t bmnblng. Two banks Wcre attack- ed. with wild rioting a result. Shops were fired, Jews stops-d and shot. Arabs called a strike throughout the Holy Land ii ‘syintiathv with the victims and iii protest to the Government of the Bri‘isli-man- dated territory. All business in this seaport ci‘._v l was suspended and an indefinite las Arabs sought l forts to accomodatc them. The Minister of Labor was chief speaker at the morning session in convocation Hall. His fellow l cabinet minister entertained class mates at a luncheon. The special convocation pro- _f__ . ‘X gram tomorrow will inc uric , m‘ f“ ‘ml’°"“‘§ 4 _ x _ . granting of honorary ilcgrces .to i Ami’ silo?“ “"“‘_‘l “d “l” _m various ilistinguishcd ])i‘l'Sf\llS.'l'l'tl‘ , -l"i"i-*-“li‘"i "lid H-“iiii- ‘will “m” strongholds. Snipers iniiiivay bo- tween Jaffa and Jerusalem har- ried auto traffic tnkiitc pot shots convocation address will be de- i llvered by President G. B. Cutten I of Colgate University. . Iinteiiiiiiii to suniori the demands ‘Fatal Market’ Arabs On Violent Rampageptélidftttél i . the suiirieii German lllllltifllgl. t o Tin, (Lnvrlillfdll connritttiii six has woiki-il out whet was descrihcil ‘as maximum (‘t)ll('i.“- sions in the nutnnoiiiy-sirrkiiii: niinoi"iiy. ’l‘hi-_\ wire lihmittcd toiluvme- forc it i"i)llll“'ilC‘.‘ between \'i,-- count lliiiirinian. unofficial Brit- isli mediator, and ii eoinniittiiir of the Nani-led Surleien Lievinuu party. ilieri‘ ("iosuii- of uhut the \\'t‘!'\- lice tiiiltlll ' FELLOW WHO \E, STABLE usunwi it ‘Mir >llll no piibu." uls- CLlliikn-siftili spi-riffiriiliv but ii foiiniiiiiii- ie-l Has House & $iiitetvii (ii-viii. lL was added lilill j by lit) ilil‘llll.\ _\li'l(lt‘(l viiliri-ly life triudi-teii (ti-intuit dI."ii.iiiils-- “in ttlrlvl’ words. U/aa-liosloiavia iii- sisis on '1'i\i‘i‘llilli' .i~.-li, i! n.1- suul ui iiir foreign ufticr", (‘onci-ril l‘1\|ll't'.\\\'ll - I‘i"uh.i ivus (ll>llll'l)\'Ll at the snuio tune hi" reports that. Ger- many had indieateil ubrtiad an on behalf of the 3,500,000 minor- lCoiitiiiurd on page ll. Col ~lt “Blast; Sends llillll itlllgflfi .."i‘ ' - Daivsoii 5° 5'3 \,'\{‘ iitl I34 at passing autos and stoning i» 44 R0 them, 4i till Troops were rushed tc all dan- {vi gci" spots. 3 ’ _'“ Extiloeling shortly aficr il.\\\‘ii. , H; ,‘.,, the bomb threw the vvgetiililc 3, market into an indcscrlhiabli- ceii- m fusion, » g0 7g An ugly Arab ("Jtiwtl fared po- lice rushing to the .~<'t‘lli‘. Scckiiiu. revenge, the throng a".ickcd ll i‘ i"‘.".i_v‘s Bank. the . rain-Patios Bank sci fire to shops and at . _, ed Jcivisli llt‘(l(‘.~ll'li\l‘.5 liiltfijviiig t1" F1“ ~ 1- ' Tc‘. .~\\iv for refuge. t.» Police fired into the crowd an‘ . rcsiorcil some order aficr title "' l lli-‘fl .. -- ~ \,ll'll'|. Iiliph tile this moi. ' ‘urn!’ 'u at. 3,15. ~ ll\"~"Y\ 2-‘ pt i, 128 - ‘,9. ir'it\|'c.". latcl‘ nation became even ll‘ re ,, _, cniiio 1W)“ r ' " " ' ink,“ 1,. h... 3 TIIF. (‘Ht vrairv <\ll.lNf‘-S Ten Jews were I I after the attack» i youth: titty, i ‘ i‘ kilii-il lll ‘he iv Leave lion-don ‘l a. m. 0J5 a. m, l p. m. and 1 l."- p. m. Tormen- llllv M13 a. ni. li n. m. 3.0% IL l"- aud 0.50 p, in. Snnilavs. l."f\\'t‘< m. and ‘l p. m. Leaves Tormentine and 8J0 p. m. l. ' liorilcn 9.00 a. raised io l.l(l0———lll(‘lll lino ilead-"he lloly Land's casus. ‘ms s?!“ Jiilv 5 10.15 a. m- ..-........~f,..,.. , . . t