MAXIMC OIL. MERE MAN m and leff. each slice v0 gen and" ' {In Oolil. qmlottetcwn ‘hardin- Imm; Guardian, Ioriudol fl! Christ laid down great prlncl lea k, lpply them to its own problems The Pe ‘low Succession luly Legislation ftlrarply Oriticlscd Should Have M a d e Agreement W 1 t h Provinces F i r s t, Hanson Says. AWA, May 28—(CP)—Can- ma, new succession duty le lation mmto g barrage of o on in up House of Commons ay Wm! conservative House leader Hanson Wribing it as "nothing short of H-gplifll levy," llr. it-insoiis main criticism was tlii this tax should not be tm uangsitlc the existing prov cial ruwcssion duties and should not m; been initialed without an ut- mpt at ggroolllfilll. with the prov- as, “w; a mllry $20.000.000 (estimat- ltllllllllhll return fromvthe tax) ev- min trtirtime the rrunister (Fin- um Mlfllslfl‘ Ilsley) could very nil leave this field to the provin- ea unless some accommodation ltlild be reached with them," Mr. ilanson said. _ Other Cotiservatives strongly op- pmed the iiciv tax. D. Kin Haaen (Con. Saint John-Albert) escrlbed llas "the most objectionable tax the minister has seen fit to impose and said “it leaves penile with a sense of injustice." JJllli Blackmore. leader of the m.- dcinocraey group. associated himself triili Mr. Hanson in op- pfsine the measure but it was sup- pcrted by W C. Macdoriald (Lib. Halifax», W. Ross MacDonald (Lib. Hartford . and G. H. Castleden (C. H‘. Yorkttni) _ Part of the legislation required to [ill effect to the war budget. tax- iiinn proposals, the bill was given strand rentlnisz on motion of the finance hllntstei- and referred to committee o.’ the whole Home lust More the dinner adjournment, ,_ Member Makes Protest Other fetilnres oi the sitting to- fir‘ included a protest from Maj. Alla Cockeram iCon. York West) that a letter vnitien him by De- fence lilinlstcr Ralston, about I beech he lifai. Cockeram) mace tiihis otm riding, was an ultimatum thlil he resign his commission or l'l._l'llll from public expression of union. i701. ltalston rcplied that. he had nltten a personal letter to Maj c..-- i (Coniittucd on p _e l0, Co] 1) Torch 0f Victory Reaches Saskatoon slsxsioou. may h8-fCP)— Cicadas ltronrc torch of victory, ffilsrlcd to draw attention to the 1011000000 Victory Loan cam- W" Martini: Monday. arrived to- glhfwm Edmonton for ceremon- GT9. The torch. flown here aboard l lackliecd-lludson bomber piloted Esqdn, Ldr. D. E. Galloway of h? Rtllal Canadian Air Force, ls‘ vllig borne across Canada from lilflrhi. It will be flown across Atfantlc and presented to m: Minister‘ Churchill as an In of cunudas support of the drive. Coming Events >0; '10 for‘ Notices n. lhls column 3 cents per- war-d, m___ s. I "sh°“'—Ma1neque Thursday. L-558-5-2B-2i. u“ Riklslflljftsifffhaki/ialiarefifilfy-smait on _ Ill‘ ‘MR l bu; W" Dlay at New G1 29. 1541-5-27-21 3V "SAW-Canoe Cove lfi-iday. L-55ll-5-2ti-2i. Pence in Luke Verde School Egfiili- Mar 2am, Wcbsters Orch- - L-580-5-28-2i. nd Old Time Dancing -5ei-s-' - . m t0 buy bologna cattle P! 0r write for price. Signed m“ W“ Storage Co.. ma. L-Ifl-i-Il-tf. "I hon at Albany every d u "Iteration. Friday at M nil 11:30 am. A. F: E. 3 E in F g in < ca c 5" Q “w! Orchestra ngwllntcd Iégcadl u! bar" i n1 Pliny. G. C. Green. liner- "See M it l ...“°=ihf'i.ils. 23;‘.§i1;.2‘..“ii‘i§.' ml institute for war p s. sis-a. L-b lake old tires as t, pgy- Willar Service new q-L Wlnsloe. L-BW-B-ZQ-li. m meeting Canadian "Ty. City Building, 30- Initiation. L-62l—ll-29-2l. River Dramatic Flilflllvfcnt their play in 5p _ n, ,~Th11rndav. my ma 5 6188s musical infer- U617. x n <1 “we u imports... Auxill li, 7 1n l t . club ‘lwllllllston s A. . lfldarfw s ‘Mu ‘m n. “Wl players in "Aunt made. demolished and another damaged. communique said. ll.A.F. Officers Arrive in Oanatla- (By The Canadian Press) A new group of lloyal Air Force officers and men, close- mouthed about their program in Canada, have nrrlvnrl in the Dominion. They wll take up posts In Canada, some acting as in- structors taking advanced t: ain- lng courses at ILAJ». stations and others to study under- the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. Newsmcn wPre nnf. allowed to interview the men. Says Germans Ooultl bomb ll. S. centers LONDON, May 20—('l‘l\urs- dayP-(CH-The authoritative ublleatlon "Aviation" will say n its issue tomorrow that whenever the Germans want to btcrrnb New York they can do The article. by Peter Mase- fleld, says the (lermans are using four types of long-range bombers which could attack the eastern seaboard nf the United States and Panama from buses in Norway. France, Portugal and West Africa. "If they (the Germans) de- cide to bomb airplane factories on Long Island, at Baltimore or Hartford, they have bomb- ers capable of perfonning the task and getting hack to Eur- ope again." the article add||_ “The Canal Zone ls not outside the range of certain of their airplanes." May be some Hood survivors LONDON. May 28~tCP)-Ship- ping circles said tonight there was a. strong possibility that a number of men from the exploded battle cruiser Hood had been saved, de- spite first beiief that the entire rsonnel of more than 1,300 was 0st when the German battleship Bismarck sank the Hood Saturday. J. B‘. Tilburn of Leeds received s cablegrarn tonight from his son Robert, a Hood seaman. saying he was safe in Iceland. T1115 first definite news of a Hood survivor arrived only six hours after '1‘il- aim had received formal word om the Admiralty that Robert wag presumed lost. Large ll. S. Liner Goes to Navy WABIIINGNN. May 28_(AP)— The liner America. largest passen- ger vessel ever built in the United States, is being acquired by ti"! Maritime Commission for clcllvury to the navy. the commission an- nounced today. ,, The commission said “a numbcr of merchant vessels were beinl ac- for navy auxiliaries, but named only the America. The America. first vessel contract- ed for the commission's long-range construction program. was built by the Newport News Vii.. Shipbuilding and Drydock Company, for rlic United States lines. She was deliv- from service July 3. 194°- Of 20.482 gross tonnage. the Am- erica has a speed of 22 knots under normal ses omiditlons. QKITISH BOMB sHltPs .surizznal iuziizr 1azi41v2is' z2a2r1r2<>iaau> tar 1?/ill) — (By Douglas Amaron, Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDONv M“? 35-“7? Clblcl-A Sergeant Pilot who led yester- day's Royal Air Force raid on the German occupied airport at. Lannlon, Nlllmilldii W" 0'19"‘! W35! b! the Air Ministry news lervlce as call- ing the venture one of the best of the many operational flights he has The Alr Ministry said seven German aircraft were known to have been destroyed on the ground, while others were damaged, a hangar Th!!! morning. the Air Ministry announced, a coastal plane scored direct bomb hits on an enemy supply ship of about 5,000 ions ln a convoy off Brest, "The ship was left listing heavily," a brief In other actions last night the 1i. A. F. bombed the German indus- trial city of Cologne and the Nazi-occupied French coast. Shore watch- ers saw flashes rising on the far side of the channel almost continuously from shortly after midnight untll almost dawn. Only damage to R. A. F. planes was caused by their own bombs. A blast blew out the observers wlnduw ln the sergeant pilot's plane and the craft. had a "rather draughty" flight home. Hepburn to command Oppose tax on Ontario bonds TORONTO. May 28—(CP)—-Pi'e- infer Mitchell Hepburn of Ontario tonight sent a telegram to Prime Minister Mackenzie King declar- ing that "the Government of Oti- tario lakes the stand that your attempt to impose a tax on inter- est; on Ontario bonds under Sec- tion 9b of the Income War Tax Act is without legal authority and it will be resisted by every lawful moans available to the Province of Ontario." The Premier's memage was in reply to a communication from the Prime Minister yesterday. in which Prime Minister Mackenzie King declared that. Federal tax- ation of interest paid to non-resi- dent honors of Canadian secur- ities other than Dominion bonds “should not involve any threats to ' the credit of Ontario or any other province." ~ The recent Federal budget in- creased from five to 15 per cent the tax on interest received by nail-residents holding Canadian securities apart. from Federal bonds. and exempting those secur- ities on which it is contracted to (Continued on page l0, Col 4) Pleads guilty To manslaughter BOSTON. Mav 28 — (APl-A calmly and clearly pronounced pica of uiity to manslaughter D_V Mrs. Ru.h Steadman brought to an abrupt end today her sensation- al trial for the slaying of her married sweetheart. Robert Emery, 26. whose ring she wore as she rose in the prisoner's cage. Mrs Stzenclman was taken im- medlalely to the women's reforma- tory at sherborn to begin a l5- yeur term. half of which must be served before she is eligible for parole. spectators who crowded the courtroom hopeful of hearing the ople’s Paper Oelay opening /’/ ’/// Covers Prince Edward I m? , ____,___'l"~f__________ Island Like the Dew Wiiiwrrarovviv. SCANADAYHTHURSDAY, MAY 29, ll1§4i_ Former Islander On 0. S. defense Mediation board MR. CYRUS CITING Chart-god with grave responsibili- ties in connection with the United States war preparedness nrosramme, is a native Prince Edward Islander. Roosevelt's National Qefuise Mediation Board._ V Mr. Chino was born in Kings County. about six miles froiri Souris. He is a frequent summer visitor to the Province and retains his meni- barsliip in the Montague Fishing Club. l-Ic chino here last year by car. and travelled all over the isl- and. His wife belongs Cal“? Breton. _ , Mr. Chintz is vice President 0f the u. s. Rubber company. W"? headquarters in New York Clty- "-5 executive ability has_ lontl be"? recognized in the United States‘, and his presence on the Nation‘) Defense Mediation Board ls evi- tlcnce of the hiqh ifltilrd 1H whim he 15 lwld at \VilSlllIli'.'.l0l’1. Loading llahips Of Ferry service UHPXDCCl-Eftlivl-fllfll‘ti > _ loading ixunps at. the terniiniils of w.;_.<t Islands. P.E.l.. and Cnilbvv- NS. has criuscd a further delay in cs ivztli the Nil". Cyrus Chiiig. who is a member; v of President Axis convoy Seeks shelter a In French port France T0 Be Permitt- ed T0 Have Air Force, Is Revealed. (By Taylor lloiiry .'\_$\t)Ql11[Qd Press Staff \\i’riter) VICHY, Hay 28—-(.»\P)— Vichy authorities claimed to- (lay that a Brftisli lirmihitrg squadron lirul struck fut‘ the Read by Everybody (By Eric Bigio, Associa ced Germans and weary Bri spokesmen said, with thc Brit first time at French 'l‘unisiu. raiding the port of Sfzix and firing ti ship in the harbor, and l almost simultaneously zin mi- iiounccincut came that the .\.\:i> would “pci-niit" Franco to ro- ‘ build a continental air forccj “for rlcfeuce of the French lim- .~ pire." l (It (lcvclopcrl litter in dis. patches from Sfax flint the Bri- , fish bombs ivcrc directed ag- ainst an Italian convoy ivliicli sought shelter in Sfax. \Vlicther tlie French ship struck was in the convoy 0r was hit li_v acci- tlCllt was not clctcruiitictl.) (Although London said noth- ing about an attack on Sfax, the Royal Air Fifi-cc announc- ed in Cairo that it scored scv- eral direct hits on two mer- chantmcn of 8.000 to 10.000 ions each off the North African coast and that. both were seen emitting volumes of smoke. (The admiralty also announc- ed British submarine.- had slink a French tanker in an Italian convoy and counted as destroy ed an axis transport of 18,000 tons, carrying probably 3.000 men to Libya.) - The Vichy authorities also claimed French ziircttift lirul engaged those rif the Royal .~\ir Force‘ in a fight nvt-rnSvri:t. near AlOPPO. and that a Bri- tish liouflicr lizul been shot flown anti the crew of three killed. lContinued on page 10. Col 7) putting the car iffy "_Pl'n'f‘r“Yljgveflfi on her schfrluled CXORHL“? _ day the craft lcft ‘Char on? own- early in the aftariiosn and a a two and ciin-liaf liolzi i"uti_aii v- ed at Wood Islands ixltete s..e was m9; by gngineers of_ the Federal Department of Public Works. The pnulnrers went from the city by ca; and attempted to out. the auto- mobile 0n the fclrv fir" the "'1 . t t l . nll-Ihxvltifzrr, when this was trlcd ii ‘ was found that loading ramp on lower itself on the Prince Nova. There WT R (Cont drop of iuued on page 10. Q01 l) Ohurchill, King Lapointc will Harvard business school secretary tell of the last. tragic weekend she -_ spent with Emery, heard only the single word-“guilty"_ | The plea was made after Ed-i, ward Sullivan. assistant district attorney, and defence counscl Eti- ward F. Flynn announced an agreement which left the defend- ant no longer in the shadow of the electric chair, charged with first degree murder. l\.F.L. calls on Unions to refrain From striking WASHINGTON. May ZS-(AH- Under threat of disciplinary action. the American Federation of Labor‘ tonight called upon all oi its affil- iated unions to refrain iroin strik- ing against defence industries until. government agencies have had o.p-- portunity m adjust the disnincl| peacefully . In a statement. issued here. the federations executive council called attention to President Roosevelts fireside a peal of last night. that labor utllfazc the overnmenth con- clllatlon and in laticn machinery to avoid stoppage oi defence pro- ction. du"We must do this." the council said. "We can do this. lind we. pledge our faith as Americans tot the President that we will do it" | Earlier. an official of an A. P. L.. machinist union told a Senate com-l, mltiee that he would accept me s" Ml‘ l l "dictate of . Roosevelt should the President demand that strlkirm shipyard machinists return to their iobs in the San Francisco Ray area. . rriugemcnts . Prime Minister Speak Sunday orraivh. May 2a —(OP)-»Ab have‘ been 0071101395 whereby Prime Mitiister Qllllfdlllll» MacKenzig K118 and Justice Minister Laramie P“ will participate in a ii0-lfllfluf-e progtam t0 be broadcast next Sun- day at ll PM. ADT over English nnd French networks of the Cn- nadiun Broadcasting Corporation. Campaign headquartezs for the $600f00000 victory loan 194i. opening next Monday. said the broadcast will begin with an ad- dress by Mr. King. soaking on be- half of the people of Canada i0 the people of Britain and to Mr. Churchill. I-Ie wlll emphasize in his talk that the Canadian people are solidly behind Britain in her heroic struggle for Dunocrflcil- Mr. Churchill will reply, in both English and French, on behalf of the British people. Mr. Lapointe also will spfllk l" both languages. ‘ Search for Prinz Eugen continues l LONDON. May 28-~<CP)~A Bri- tish squadron of 50 to 100 war- ships, which hunted down and sank the battleship Bismarck Tuesday, searched a wide area of the Atlantic today for the 10.000- ton German cruiser Prinz Eugen which accompanied the Bismarck for a time but fled before her fatal engagement. - No details of the hunt were divulged bv the Admiralty. (Berlin dispatches said the sink- ing of the 35.000-ton Bismarck is a "closed incident" as far as Gor- many is concerned. (Nazis declined even to say de- finitely whether Admiral Gucnther i Luetjens and Commander Lindc- z mann had found death in the sinking ship. and they informed correspondents that nothing fur- ther would be said on that point at present.) The Prinz Eugen was with the Bismarck during tho engagement Saturday morning with the 42.100- ton battle cruiser Hood which was y sunk by what the Admiralty call- , ed an "unlucky hit" from the Bis- rnarckh guns. f In the intervening limiting down i of the Bismarck the Prinz Eugen slipped from view. {caving the German battleship to her fate. Loss Of British Sub Announced IDNDON. May 28-(0?) —— Th0 loss of the submarine Usk announced by the admiralty t0- night. (Janeh fighting ships, authorita- tive naval reference work. docs not list an Usk. so. prestimably, site was a new vessel.) L0§5U CANADA M r LD u n mo» be: Baking Bticd was-g ground. On a l0-mile long. two-mi . tween Malemi airdrome and Canea, the British and Anzac and night forces battled day pumped air-ferried troops i stream. The Germans were believed to have had at the start .‘ of the Crete campaign 10 days ago a force of about 1,200 troop-carrying Junkers 52's, planes which might. be called . i aerial troop trucks capable of making 1-10 miles an hour. However. long-range Br number of Blenheim bombers rigged up as fighters, al- ready have taken a heavy to iiculzirly the troop carriers. The Germans have squandered material in the Cretc invasion and the island is littered with shot down by the R. A. F., officers say. CAIRO, May 28—(CP)—Z\ ._~_,______.__._._ _m .___ ._. 12 PAGES CAIRO, May 29-(Thursday)—(AP)—Fighting on the bloody battleground of Crete between constantly-reinfor- czime today a grim. stand-up, slugging match, British He only does not live in vain who employs his wealth, his thought, his speech to advance the good of oth- ers. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN ted Press Staff Writer) fish and Anzac soldiers be- ish troops forced to give new le deep strip of coastline be- against the Nazis, who nfo Malemi in a constant iiish fighters, including a ll l l of German aircraft, par- wrecked planes =' [any German prisoners captured iii Crete appeared to have been drugged, a ivoutidcd British offi- _ cur said on lllS arrival licrc from The officer said all of them are now being analysed by British added, may contain the sccrct of r fiermzius arc clinging to the sma the lizittlc of Crctc. carried two white tablets which authorities. The tablets, he the dogged manner in which tho ll section of the islziurl they have l uapturutl. tic-spite tlicir heavy losses. The officer‘ also CUlllHlClllCd of tlie prisotiers, saying whole bu IS hull liven falcon. lfetv of them knew wlicrc t flown to tjri-tc, llL‘ dcclnrctl. LONDON. May 28 -(AP)— The British and Greek alles in Crete- fOCllllg exhaustion under air attacks of growing scvcrlty—were forced back btl ind Canea under the shock of fresh reinforcements of air- borne German troops today, the ninth (lay of the battle for that is land, " ‘Fliis third successive reverse a.- bout the Cretan capital in three (lays was thus announced by the British middle east comomandz- "Although continuing to fight with the greatest determination. our troops were obliged to make a further withdrawal to a more [fl- tiorable position in the rear. Se- icre fighting continues." The British and Greek for- ces - and an authoritative source declared thatnever had fighting men stood more gal- lanily under unccuslng bomb- ing hour upon hour and day upon dny-ivcre said here to be In "precarious position" not only about (‘alien but in the vi- clnity of Suda Bay. the islands main British base, s The l0=s of Canea itself was not so "rave, it was added. but a cross- tfltr by the Nrizis of the narrow rwninsula nearby would put them in a p0s'tion to dominate the bay (Continued on page 10. Col 6i To fix price t Of gasoline?" . OTTAWA. May 28—(CP)—The Ottavza Evening Citizen said to night that G. R. Cottrclle of Tor- onto, oil controller in the Depart- ment of Munitions and Supply. had stated in an interview that "I am going to fix the price of gaso- line-wholesale prices and retail prices-An order to protect the pub- .. The story quoted MT. COELTQUE B5 saying that "there will be only two rades of gas for motor car use." The Citizen said:- . "Asked whether this would oper- late to a reduction of the present iprice. the controller would not sav tthat it would but added. ‘You can ‘ state that. but for the control, the ‘price today would be up. "Regarding criticism of his re- strictive regulations as adverse to independent. dealers. Mr. Cottreile said: ‘I would welcome an investi- gation bv someone not in the busi- noss-some disinterested tribunal. " ‘There arc over 66.000 gasllllflv stations in the country nOW and. with the exception of certain areas where a special permit may be is- ,sucd, ‘that is going to be enough Fa’ . I t t l I. The Citizen story further quot- rd the oil cont-roller as saying that "in view of the difficulty of get- l ting oil it may be that many hotels. apartment buildings and business hack to coal. Particularly the case in British flnlimhfu - ls suggested bilildingg rising oil may have to go is" this on tlic extreme youth 0f many tclivs between the ages of I6 and hey were going when they were flfurks Say Nazi Losses Very Heavy ANKARA, Turkey. Mny 28- fAP)—'I7.l8 Turkish radio said today German lossts in the bartle of crcfc have been so heavy that. should the, island fall. the Nazis probably would be unable to follcw up with an effective attack on Cyprus, British island off the coast Sfvria. Ameiiiliiient to Divorce law . OTTAWA. May 28 -- (OP)- Amendment to the Canadian divorce law to prevent “a great hardship" sometimes caused wo- men by having to travel long dis- tances for divorce hearings was sought in bill supported in the Senate today by senator A. B Co p (Lib. New Brunswick.) ie bill. which was referred to the private bll‘s committee after second reading. has the purpose of vesting jurisdiction in divorce courts of the provinces to try ac- tions for divorce at the suit of a married woman deserted by and living apart from her husband. ft requires that the jurisdiction shall be vested only when the woman is residing in the province It the date of the start of the action. Third reading was given by the Senate to bills arising from the budget dealing with excess profits taxation. excise act amendments and tariff changes. The UPDcr House will meet ag- aln Monday night. Three Canadians Oit ll. M. S. liood OTTAWA. May 28—(CP)—-'I‘hroe cfflcens of the Royal Canadian Navy action with H, M. S. Hood. sunk off Greenland May 24. the Rxlval Cari- iidian Navv said late today in a casualty list. A footnote to the list said no other Canadians have been report- cd to date as serving on the Hood. next of kin: Midshipman. R. C. N.. Cmdi‘ C Victoria. is Llewellyn I..t.-C Rd., Uplands. Jones, Franc Midshipman. R. C. N b. Jones. R. C. A. M. , ‘Norman. Chrlsto her . Mld.. R. C. N.. 0a . Cyri ‘ i852 Fern St... Vic la. The list. gave no official number- 445 PM. the mldshipmen and relation- fiip of the next of kin wu not. llnt- ids for j the American fleet. to replace t "T!" t0 rellvrt to him the presence of German or Italian slvps in the are missing and believed killed in’ Following is the official list, with Beard. Thomas Norman Kemp. Beard. n. c. u. ucis Carboro as." Lloyd, 0i A. C. c-0 District ‘ kfecgcal Officer. M. D. ’l. Saint John.‘ Blrdviuod. ‘ l Norman. _ ._____._.._ ‘___q Annual Illblflllbllfll Delivered, “.00 B! lull: P l. L. Ol-00i Cnnadu and U a their rxuiusrltlll Aluguc ALLIES m carpi SFAX HARBOR ’ Grim 1711-21.. Forf “B Island Continues AsNazifildvance Enemy reckless in men and materials thrown into fray; German soldiers may be drugged 016.00 Repeal of ll. S. Neutrality act ls not planned Roosevelt Silent (in Plan To Deliver War Goods T0 Brit- ain. B)’ J. F. Sanderson Canadian Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON, May 28 -~~'CPi-- President. Roosevelt said today no has no lnzention at the present time of seeking congressional rc- peal of the Neutralitv Act to per- mit United Slates merchant sntps to enter British ports with car- goes of wzir supplies. At a press conference, following his fireside chat last night in ivhich he said "all additional measures necessary to deliver the goods" to Britain will be taken, the 91-951- dent indicated clearly ft was not; part. of his plan to use American merchant ships. ' The President declared. however, that tl_:e United States fleet in the Atlantic. which is used to patrol wafers hundreds of miles offshore, is being strengthened and becoming m0re effective all the time But bQVOIId that Mr, Roosevelt ‘declined to g0 in explanation of hLs Plan to assure delivery of war sup- plies to Bfillhlll. When reporters asked for details of his plan, he i replied that Hitler, too, would 11kg t0 know. I-Ie made the 511mg reply when asked what tonnage Britain has to carry the goods and if any new instructions nail been given N19 ,.___ (Continued on page 10. Co] 5) fOrushcd in Elevator shaft HALLFAX. Mnv 28—-tCP)-—Jos_ 9F111 Howe SPlttall. 05. of nearby Sllryfield, was killed today ivhen crushed in an elevator shaft in the Federal Building here. spittal, Chief engineer or the building, was repairing elevator shaft doors from the top of a cage. Stanley Misener, elevator 0pm. ator, thinking the repairs com_ pleted, started the cage up the shaft. He told police his first warn- ing of the accident was a sharp thud on the cage roof followed by a groan. ‘till: Arfea DmueR SPEAKER WHO SAYS HE l8 NOT AN ORATOR NEEDNT TELL us - ITS sect- EV\DENT- -_.-_ ca. Sag. TORONTO, May '28—lCPl—Min- imum and maximum temperaitires: Dawson '29 56 Victoria 43 5° Edmonton 4i 47 Regina $1 §5 Winnipeg $1 =17 "Iloroitto 57 Ottawa 513 '75 Montreal it" 73 Qutbec 47 75 Saint John 44 0° Halifax 39 59 Charlottetown 34 60 FORECAST Gulf, Bay Chaleur and North Shore: Moderate to fresh winds; cloudy and cool with occasional rain. Maritime West and East: M000!’- atc winds; cloudy with accosionisl showers and some log. synopsis: ‘The weazher has been cool and showery in the Western Provinces, and Northern Ontario, and warm with scattered bliunder- storms in Southern Ontario High tide this afternoon at 12.20 and tomorrow morning at 1'5. Sun sets this evening at 7,36 and rises tomorrow morning at 41B. First quarter moon June 2. 0.56 pm. Summerside tide l8 minutes lat- er than Charlottetown CAR FERRY QAILINGS Leaves Borden 9.35 AM. 1.00 RM Leaves P. M. rhv. IIVI Tflflllflgfl-Q 11.00 A- M-