Charlottetown Guardian Two Cents Inrnlug Guardian. Founded ill’! Covers Prince Edwardilsland Lfke~the Dew “ti”. Read by Everybody MAXIMS t 01A. MERE MAN ehauns of Nat-e. the ma]- Man. the infinite loveliness “were not hidden from lie P001‘. Cl-‘ARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, MAY 2,1938 Annual Subscription Delivered I100 l1 Mail-J’. ‘E. L. $4.001 Canada and U. S. U)‘ 21 TTENTIOIV FOCUSED 01v R OMETBERLTN ALK§ JAPANESE ADMI T GAINS ARE smifilnu courmus r01 11111111 i|NE Fighting Centres 'At Walled City Of Tan- cheng On Shantung Front. SHANGHAI. May 1 -- (AP) - A Jnpanue military spokesman ad- mitted tonight that the Nipponese war machine made "but meagre gains" in the past 24 hours of struggle with a vast Chinese Army In ihe southern Shantung front. He said heavy attacks continued against rancheng. important wall- ed city of southeastern Shantung Province, about 20 miles north oi “d5 ihe east-west Lunghai Railway, backbone of the Chinese ircnt and key to the Chinese in- ierlor. '1‘he town was reported to have glllllfll hands twice Saturday in hours of hitter combat which hack and forth across the e fields along the Shantung- provincial border, cl northwest of hanghai. "The Japanese captured Tancheng their formidable southward push wipe out the early April defeat ,- Tolerhchwang. The Chinese _ it back but held on only for lvfow hours, it was reported. z . * norm smart-zero romrs To aid n lend offensive which scenic reports indicated was reveloping into a stalemate. Jpn; i Parades, (or. n o dian’ s Wir muesli chum? 1.5%“ °) Sunday in a torrent. oi ore. ry and scarlet barlnered parades. but. with a. imgem ‘Mhy Day violence.“ r From to Moscow poles of political irritant-workers and their lewders ebrated in gvurld capitals. thoumh in various orms. . One man was killed in Poland and a number injured. There were some injuries in clashes in - slcvvskla. lvlinor scuffling broke out Fascist-Maillot clash. Canada and the United States celebrated Saturday with thous- relrrively little m} in uriee were We par n8 and disorder. Some slight. souf lo 'I‘omn recorded in a ’s Queen Park. In Jersey City police refused to let Norman Thomas. a former So- cialist candidate for the United States Presidency. speak in Journal Square. Thomas told authorities he was “deported" from New Jersey by being forcibly placed on a New York-bound ferry. Events in various world centres: BERLIN - Germany's Ma Day celebrations of Hitler-dlrec ec- complishrnents provided a demon- strative preude to the Fuehrers visit wibh Mussolini. 1n a Lustger- ten speech Hitler declared scoiiers at Nazism were swinging to i paint of view the worl overlncap- ital-labor relations. MOSCOW-Rod Russia proudly paraded her military might before Pusedflq ts marchers held aloft Speeches Jla rk May Day Minimum Of V-i-olcnce In Demon- strations HeiiyVorld Over. Joseph Stalin in min-svzept. Rod uare to the echo of march feet. rumbling trucks and waves o. droning airplanes. PRAHA — War-created Czecho- slovakia resounded to renewed clem- oring of her citizens for autonomy on pledge oi Czechoslovaks to the last drop of blood" to retain liberty on the other. WARSAW—PoLand reported the first fatality of the day in street fixhtiriz at Kielce. More than 100 we arélestsd throughout the coun- es. IDNDON—Polloe kept down the e of Fascists and bor in the bggest May Day ce‘.e- brations oi London's history. Two hundred thoussnc; listeners cheered sneakers at a l-lyde Park labor rally; thousands of Fusclst British union members marched briskly Dost their leader. Sir Oswald Mos- ley. on the other side of the city. PARIS — Labor marched solemnly in the rain in Paris, in snow in some sections of the na- tion. in orderly contrast to stormy coebratlons of post years; Premier Daladier worked on drafts of crees for financial reconstruction of France. BRU$EIB — Twenty thousand clenched fists lectered posters de- no Fascism. anti-Semi- tism and demanding armammts for Government meee naval airmen traoeiio points of the Lumzhni orridor and the Yangste River to the south. and the roil- provisional inese Ceipitolnwith Canton, the Ilfh China gateway I03‘ Chinese r mopliw. Navel authorities said the air- en inflicted heavy damage on i1 lines. slmiily trains. airdromss troop concentrations. CHINESE RE-INFORCED Chinese r rted enthusiastically ommo {you l "Borden Line Club loading hogs mbs. calves every Tuesday. Hours 2 t0 3. L-BGB-IR-M-‘ll-ii-tf. "Note change oi date. "A Dream f Queen Esther-s," Baptist school . May loin-nth. - L-Il). "Seven Mile Bay Hall Tuesday, ay 3, lay by Mlscoucha _ Dram- tic Ciu , dance after. Miscouche cheetra. L-fiei-i-iii-zi. Rancher-Have you ""Mr. Fox "led Ncvascoi-Pishblox? If m‘- ug est you write us for iull ar- cu today. Canada Pac ers. . 11-578-4-27-61. "'I‘he quarterly meeti of the - ‘ ‘ Nurses Aesocist on will held at the Prince Edward Is- ,d Hospital on Tuesday. Ms ' at d p. m. I..-749-i-30-2. "Carpenter's Union Meetin Home Monday Ms. in. P. M. on Carpenters nicn Non-Union attend. L-730-4-30-2i. "The Margot: Dramatic Society ll present their 3 ‘act lay ‘Mamrnafs Lil‘ Wild Rose’ in ra- aros Road Hall on Monday even- . May Rid. L-732-4-30-2i. "All foxmen are requested lo at- a. meeting in New Glasgow all. ma‘ 2nd. B o'clock. Secretary , III II‘ For Club. L-705-4-30-5-2. ent. Box Social and Traverse Hall Wed- Proceeds in aid of 30c and 10c. L-740-4-30-5-2-i. " to Cavendish y. r». u. ncert in Cavendish Hall. 3rd. ear '1‘ Cochrane and ioca tel- ex ni. Admission 10 and 30 cents. Lt-fl-fi-li ' "Hear Mildred Crosby. 59993 0n Co-cpustion". Bonshaw l-Iall. esda. . may 8rd: also pmsranune. dmies 10c and 15o. Aueoicee. omens Instlmie. b-‘iiii-b-fl-li. K. ee UB1 DRQt Uh ' its Amt‘ Producer-emetic! 17:1- “ gzuléural Hell. t while-E.’ ' ' li-e-s-a-al. "For lenehers. fresh stock of . exits. Purina, silver Tip. “ab. also broken sodas. muffets. ded wheat. perial Biscuits kinds fox meats. we stock h , feeds. . ' 2.37m’ muggy m“ hits-sun. “We have some wonderful fdh of NEW .”AEliRE IS Ontario Premier Lays - Charges A gainst 12. C. P. by Guardian's Special Wiroi TCRONTO, May l—-As a result of relief troub‘es in Lakeview. l4 mi .1 west of Toronto. and a sub- seqrcut march by relief recipients to 'l‘orantc to see Premier lVLtchell Hepburn, charges ranging from theft to unlewfui assembly. have been laid against eight men and fcrr women. on instructions from the Premier. George William Kellett. s mem- ber of the delegation which visit- ed the Premier Friday. appeared in court here Saturday charged with theft and was remanded in cus- tody until ‘luesdav. Mr. Hepburn Kellett oi theft when he met the delegation in his office. He charged Keliett had appropriated $310.65 whi‘e he was an employee of the Provincial Department of Agriculture. The Premier also ordered that charge-s of unlawful assembly be laid against Edward Lace. Bailey and William Finch. other delegation members. These charges arose from a disturbance Tues sy when Lskeview's relief officer. R. S. Moore. was detained in his auto- mobile ior severel hours by a group oi dissatisfied relief recip enis. Saturda the Premier announced that rddiicnal charges oi assault in connection with the same affair had been laid against the three men and four women, Mrs. Elmer Mrs. Fred Bailey. Mrs. L. Duigle and Mrs. S. Cooper. Was Native Of This Province MONTREAL. Mely i-(om- Stenely B. Opie. 49, son oi Rev. Richard Opie. former Methodist Minister oi Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick. died suddenly tonight from a heart attack while attending st. Giles United Clmrch. Born in the Island Province. Mir. Cole was educated there and at Mt. Allison cmmnerciakhgollege. l-le had been eniploycdby Canadian Pacific Roilww for the pest 30 years. surviving are B1 lugiuiui Augustinian: To Rs egoueu iuflvni Trappist Monastery TRACADIE, u. l». may 1 — The first Aus.........ll1 es acllshmant 1n U one liAhl-Enih ‘ilupplst. MOn- will lie ie-opened May name cl’ at. Augusimes‘ ls lomlu-l cpenulg may be held inter. Abandoned. since i019 when the lssl; or me Trappist»; departed a century alter the rounding of the OOIILIIIUIHIY. me monastery property would be YCScOTEU t0 1.5 lorme; ex- cellent condition. ltev. Aihanasius "rape. 0. S. A.. superlor of the 01- der who compieteu we purchase o. the property new. January, an- nounced. _ _ i-‘rless and brothers will live 111 the Porter's lodge at the gale cf the property and take up inlmedl- ately the work of repairing the main building. _ Tue Augmtlmans are a Roman Catholic preaching omcr and will rzlve ltLiSSlOIlS in Nova Scone as well es conduct retreats ior priests and laity. The brointis are trodes- men who will maintain the 1111-111, run the milLs and operate the mon- @1028?’ establishment. Their habit 1s ac . Ontario Government ‘To Present Views TORONTO. May 1—The Ontario Government will prcscu. its vleus on the question of Dominion-Pro- vincial Relations before the lwwcli Commission this week. Premier Mitchell F. Hepburn to- morrow sfrernoo n will sound me keynote of the provincial submis- sion when he presents an introduc- tory statement. 1t is expected he wil. take the full afternoon t0 out- line the Government’..- geileral std- sstery here F I S H E R MEN SEEK FURTUNE IN LUBSTERS Fishing Gro unds When Season Opens This Morning. Life for lobsters around the shores oi Prince Edward Island be- comes a good deal more hazardous today‘ when the two-month season gn t e tasty crustaceans opens at a. m. As soon as the zero hour arrives the boats. most oi them 20 to 30 feet in length. loaded to the wat- ers edge with rope and carrying a crew oi two. are away in a race the "grounds". "lines". to traps are attached, are in the water, the boats return to the shore. Traps are then loaded and once more the small craft head to sea. Ii weather conditions remain fav- orable, and there is sufficient bait, most of the traps. each baited with a choice morse —-io the lobster-of herring, will be in the water. Tues- day the first of the fishermen's harvest from the sea will be gath- ered. But the continual dwindling quan- tity of lobsters caught each year is beginning to cause alarm in the ranks of fishermen. who lest year reaped $524,847 from a catch o 58,238 pounds of these denizens of the deep. Dates Back 60 Years Packing oi lobsters in this pro - E § a (I ince on s. commercial basis dates back only about 00 years though the pioneers caught. them for home consumption long before that. Quantities caught hen are almost unbelievable to present dsy fisher- men. There is. in this province, a man wLc can remember when with an- other assistant. he brought ashore 85.000 lobsters in one season. Then the fish were sold by count instead of by weight oday. ‘Phat was in 1886 when the iotel catch over the eastern where they ounds. Fifty years later. ‘he total catch had shrunk to 32.- 000000 pounds. In 1936 only 28,000,000 unds were taken over the whole area. And the quantity brought ashore continues to dwindle {eesrly despite greater and ever- res r efforts of fishermen to bols er flheir catch to keep themselves out of the "red". Island Catch Dwindles Also The Prince Edward Island catch shows the same dwindling as has been experienced over the wider area. In 1934 it was 76.582 pounds; 63.876 in 1935; 59.286 in i936 and 58,238 in 1337. It hes been pointed out, taking ihures over a long per- iod, that the catch oi lobsters ap- pears to g0 in cycles, lean years being followed by years of increas- ing catches up i0 s. certain point when the downswir" begins again. However. the peak oi each cycle never reaches a point equal to that of the preceding one. Outlook for the present season in this province is not too bright. Prices are expected to be some- what lower compared wit last year. But fishermen are invariably optimistic and in the small fish- ing communities around the shores ille season will start. with the some gusto, which has marked it for many ears. tudc on the matters before the Commission. The detail of the provincial sub- musion Will be presented the lest oi the week by Attorney-General Gordon Conant. D. W. L ernmsnt counsel. and Chester Wal- ie . provincial comptroller and debut treasurcr. Some ministers and qput ministers will also ap- pear to uss the work oi their various dehartlnents. Ellsworth Plans Antarctic Flights - u: He. de ters. Cloud vilighN. 3.. is a Die ROME. Mas 1—fAP)—Illnetem persons. including the Alzanian Minister to Rouse and a women identified as en American. died Sam in the crash cf a Rune- bound airliner, it wae an- n . The wcumrs name was given ea Helen Linekein. 80. Her residence not blown. ‘me Aluanian Min- they wedneeda of ling iogfher Count- gwitneesed attendant eel-mfg?‘ ctims also P‘- included four lielunan. a Greek. Xlbanian Wedding In Crash Of Airliner Guests i "Runhing the lines" is the event of the fishing year. both to old salt and to the greenest “cork" new to boats and the ways oi the seas. Rebels Surround Government Force I-IENDA . France. May i-The Central Ins t. army. d storms whic halted virtually sl mihlary act in dro in 506 . V0 theast of Teruel may to Join northern column and isolate a rain which tumed rlvulete ‘forced BOHIQHQI to tube up positions in the hills. Whitney To Join Prison “Faculty” Guardian‘ B ll Witt) N. Y: hzrydl-Rich- ecome (k. P. ard Whitney "Roi" to l , ‘risen. The former Presiden o New York Stock Exchange. now convict No. 04.885. was en- noimced turday by Warden - loll-a asanew memberof the dean's "faculty". "He will be- g chins as soon as the direc- ef schools decides what subject he is to teach." Lewes laid. Hundreds In Rush To lienlein Balls For Czech Plebiscite (OJ. Iiavae B gauardian’; $11700 GOBLONZ, Clio odovakia, May 1—Konrsd llenlein, lender of he pro-Nazi German party in a May address loda call- ed rum Creohoslo fiv- ernment to hold an lmme to plebiscite to settle the question of the (icrman minorities in the country. “Let the Czechoslovak peo le live in conflict with e Lllai-‘Ilfirlglé s of hatred‘, o1; Ham?“ Sam D0800 and just oe, re C chosl ' llflllelnesi-ciziel. woohviltx Fess n1 self for a more reasona le gov- ernment than that which at Drfiacnt presides at Praha. “MEA GRE” Powersw-Ponders Rum; puns Next Move In REBEPTIUN r011 Central Europe * Czechoslovakia-field D g s t As Outcome Of Mzgsjlinifm .Th - - . tzgfgzfiislagists As H1tler Meeting Awaited. (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) i Stringent Precaut- LONDON M 1 I A - ay —t is doif Hitler's move l the Ions Are Taken‘ European game. Little Czechoslovakia, the repubiicnborn in the Great War, is the danger spot. There May Day was celebrated today under a gov- t ernment ban of political demonstrations in an effort to fall“ 1M0 he 1111mm P011" Mi prevent racial and party clashes at a time when Konrad 31,’?Zi,.§‘;.,.§§““§§3§,.°".,°,§‘§"°’§§ Heniein, leader of the countryje minority of 3,500,000 Ger- R/OME. May l —(AP)—Unoi- ffcial estimates tonight said be- tween 6000 and 7,000 s have May 3. mans, is demanding a change 1n foreign policy and auton- ‘|>A”_iiil'l;EliEii\“\i’ DENIIUNBEI] Minor Disturbances In Canadian May Day Demonstrations. (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) Denunciaticn sf Quebec's "pad- lock law" and the policy pursued by democratic nations of non-in- tervention in the Spanish civil war — 1th h d th . aigst Caeriigdgg hariadlei a blast as of speakers to weekend May degisonsirctions in the Dominion. erican Federation oi Labor in 1886 fell this year on Sunday, and rival labor clashed, were disorders reported, Four Arrested An attempt by 26 men to stage a demonstration 8110091113 district was Mth the arrest of four of the demonstrators. The group protest- 9T1 iisulnst Nazism. Fascism and premises where Ccmmunistic doo- trln... are expounded, parade through city streets. Police wlce broke u minor melees. Marchers and t. Michael's College rival political factions a short iim later attacked each other. e injuries in the skirmishes. Wiflnllleg demonstrators, 5,000 strong, marched to Market, Squnrg Sunday to protest QllebBcS anti- Commumstic law and the "semen attended a mass meetin held under the auspices of the Elerman CcFnsulate. rom 1.500 to 2,000 . aded Saturday night igeggrxisoygggs, Among the women and children and babies in Qanlllgefi Thirty Chinese carrying a banner “defend China" were among 2.000 persons who paraded in Calgary, Order Inquest into of relief matters—forrned the c lei to ics Y May 1. 5nd. anniversary of a general strike called by the Am. parades Led rallies in most centres were staged Saturday. Only in Montreal. where four men were arrested, and Toronto, where university students factions twice in Montreal's broken up the Padlock Law which empowers the Quebec Government to close Six-thousands persons-May Day parade officials had expected 25,- Ooii-attended a demonstration in Queen's Park, Toronto. after a. students clashed in the perk and '1“! Blrls and a student suffered mine? demonstrators were Death Of Cadet Italy starting welémfinef; “Emile “fimff: omy for his followers. noieilsuuehrer will be in Itoly and But the prime action this week is focused not in Praha “s: ‘ups: but in Rom- ' ' M) Premier Mussolini there holds the balance of power, with one hand clasping Hitler's in the Rome-Berlin line-up iation of Hitler's stay in those eit- es. Vi l termed Ger . . . . . “an” M“ m‘ H“ and the other ciasplng Prime Minister Chamberlain's un- to alert man Fuehrer prepared _ for Brenner Pas and s. six-day der the Anglo-Italian accord. visit with the Italian Duce. All allibmdbllés efiilfinl! 0f‘ leavinfl T0 STRENGTHEN ACCORD? Rome were by soldiers Hitler is going io RmneTuesdsy renew and. sogiémikgifliltalg Will Risk Life in Survey From Mountain Peak who scmtiruized the occupants‘ i- dentification papers. Policegusrds were doubled along the railway line from Brermerr Peri to Rune. which Hitler's special min will traverse. ‘ROME. May 1 -(OPl-ie/vas)- Prcparetions to give RAIQEIIB- fuehrer Hitler a reception atleest as triurrlphcl cl that received by Premier Mussolini in Berlin lasi- Septlenlber were rushed to com- pletion today. The ellor will sir-rive after nightfall Tuesday and special at- tention was being paid to lighting nicai experts de- hemselves i0 these, wonkers ' put the final touches on the gen- ral decoration of the city in which military displays will vie with those oi on artistic nature for become a menace. That is his first move. The other concerns what Hitler may be willing to do about Czecho- slovekia. THREE DEGREE STES fiance and Great Britain. whose Prime lvflnisilers and Foreign Min- isters Friday concluded a two-day conference. have mapped three- degree steps in an effort to achieve s peaceful solution of the Czecho- slovak minority problem. ‘These are: 1. Political-Approuhes to Ber- OALIBRIDGE, Mass, May l-Fcr two hours work at tho peak om l3.250-fccr. mountain Brad! Washburn. Jr.. you -a Harvard geogrsp er and c wvuflnl to spend the next t: slopm o! alq Mount Si. AJDBS. Hitler's attention. flowers and flags already l/p- li.r1 and Praha to seek modification taking ranges with suryeyix a s1- 1n window; Dggolflflon has of German demands on Czecho- strumenns, end photogra n given an extraordinary oom- slcvvakia and Czechoslovak socept- surrounding terrain wi a pletencss all along the ifhree-rnile once of as many as possible; con- oramic camera which requires route to be followed 11y the official sisienlt with national honor and three EXPOSURE l0 91100111900! . 360 degrees oi horizon. The remainder of months, Wnshburn said. will spent in reaching the peak, a ' ind ndence. 2. conomic — Preferential trade agreements with Czechoslovakia. if diplomacy should fail. to free that parade. The processions will farm at the ncrw Ostis. Railway Station. spec- ially built for Hitler's visit The F h 11d hi. rt wil ' t netio of eco omic dependence on edufllly 8S important i0 i!!! us... us“ use. ma... “ mo. w» M1. Paul's Gale 3. Mil tary - The two dernocra- Clgglflilx-li-zmghllggngdg-neuly ‘ cies have let Europe know they are putting more faith in the power of their reormament through co- ordination of their land, air and naval forces. EUROPEAN APPEASEMENT Beyond the steps to preserve peace in Czechoslovakia lies the greater objective of European ap- peascment. The automobiles will follow the Avpntine and Palatine l-lills to the Tnumphal Way and pass through the Arch of Constantine i0 e Coliseum Square. thence following the Empire Road to the Piszza Venezia, mounting to the Quirinal Pclace in which. as chief of state, Hitler will be the guest of King Vi"i.m' Emmanuel. Hitler will witnem army rgnncftuvres. iarial eirercLsest slrlld The measure asm ossem es a Cencce e. NW1.“ and moi-amt undertaking concerning Czecho- Hrgulnr war ammunition willbe Bmwkifl ma? d°b°m'““° whem“ used M, gum, Mal-mam" when 1°; the two western powers will make 34) fninutfg mfanh-y two)» sup. a fresh start in the search for a wgisugmcvne o» sssssuevi. an m ' Wm “ma! a fortified eral Staffs of Britain and France, under the knife-edged ridge oflfiai. Lucanln, 17.190 feet above sen lev which Washburn and a com anion. Robert Bates. 0f Phil elphia, scaled lest. summer, the first hum- ans to reach its top. “Our biggest trouble," Washbmfl said, "will be getting enough eleq. weather to ferry our ies by plane from Valdez to camp, and in getting beck to Va)- dez after we scale the mountain." l-ic explained- this expeditm was being made to continue w already done in mapping the moun- tain range along the southern coast. of Alaska. of success in the 0f cur Governmmt in placing an 1 ffgbgglzfmgn RIl/lgfdslgltlartlalées to lolyéli- "°""°“' started 111111 M3311, 1936. gflifrelma- ~ ~ r resu . - ler rem tar the n an. One thousand Nazi sympalhizers VIOEQHCG Queiied were scheduled to be resumed this Hi’. Succussrur cm week. Concerned over the strong front shown in the Anglo-French con- ference. l-litier was credit/ed in some reports here with intent to seek an outright military alliance with Italy. MAY DAY DEMONSTRATIONS May Day demonstrations offer- ed forums for widespread enuncia- tion oi many political creeds throughout the world. The Communist international. against which Germany. lisly and In Jamaica Strike KINGSTON, Jamaica, May _ l-< (CP Cable)-—Violenco flared briefly in Jamaica's Westmorland district Saturdav as thousands o! workers employed on sugar estates there struck for higher wages and remov- al of a pay clerk to whom they 0b- jected. One cane field was burned and the rcsidenoe of an estate manager rushed by strikers before -pollce brought from Savsrmn-la-Msr and 1s usury. 400mm 4c wow 4x Lune \.ON'C\E.R v, ' Kingston beat bdflk the attack. TIM KINGSTON out‘ MW 1_(m,) my clerk w" gglngygd mm m. Japan are aligned in a Pact to .4354“, p“ D_ 5mm, o; q-omnm estate under the protection of srm- gmbat ‘Qmfimmmni ‘tcallled 1': mini-veal- cadet at the Royal Mii- "d °ili°=r=r °°°°w m9? “W m“ Y “m” m, med suddenly The workers. nearly all employees 18819501 Ge - h m L a o‘ Baturdely night while seufflirlg with 5‘ ""5 Brim“ W“ 1nd“ 5 "1’ “ "w" w e” ° " ‘w’ 9 some ‘fiends i“ a mom m “m, company and Tate and mo“ e. Nations Council willdmeet {Meg . Roderick Dommofl M the college‘ nmnded g1 a 53y “Mud o; m, Switzerland“ demon’ ed rim om i068- Wlelaldmrtin “mmmhlfl ilhflynowget, fromo igsonslo lnpose ague state 1n “me an, Tomorrow it -——_--— P60115165 on Wifefiwl‘ nltifmfi- _ Wm be taken to 1.0mm“, for mm TEN pE-Rggyg Kulgn In London. with his prcstigc a.» -—-——-——-—-—-nv Th” Guam“ Pr,‘ q"; sewn“ ma.“ coroner Dr c _.¢-_ a peace-sucker bolstered by the ~ w. Bennett stores today 9.7m. Mnxroo orrr, May I—(AP)— Mylo-mm “Ids wd defence Tom“. my L-Mlnimugn RM Smith had died 0f s hemorrhagu oi T"! WBIQ reporiod killed B-imrement signed durintz tho W91“ maximum ic-mpcraturcsz- the brain and that l... inquest would and 3 red between Athxco and gmberleirnrmn be held. Oaceloh .abotrtl00uflosaouth- ' W o‘ " Dawson 2c —~ Ths following steterrlent w“ y. Wflt 0i’ Mexico City. (Corltiirued on page ‘l. O01. 4) Victoria. 46 . Ind by the staff “Jump,- (w) Edmonton 4e M3080 P My m-a-dc I eenthirdlo a: 7 . . _ I n Nor esdefs were flowing rririendly l3‘ “mm” 31 7 scuffleinonecrfthermussln Ottawa 42 Gentleman Oaxiztstnrlmmam p I U wt?‘ ‘a: 5 , 1L" ”M,_M°"“- T»; Brgeuéjcgi assengers s n r e p 0 rted 331m, M, .. orderly from the College fol Halifax 40 5 and egienmerlioal office;- wers sum- Charlottetown s4 n 0000. O $1111.11 HI‘. HIPS. , — _ “Wfiflltl? treated by the medligei order-low Gobi!) ’_‘-’s...-.s”;'3$ m’ twig; ee. in Canada $5.?“ iii. 2% "wit" m“ me" mmfi" died before the medical office} ar for a motorboat with 1 Persons ve of those aboard were patients mfihwm wind‘; .Oorcner C. w. m. was aboard winch left. iuulee or at bound for the 110,911,.“ n s. with s few scatter showers and filled at co and the case placed Antilcny. a tic-mile mp. more than Anthony and were accompanied s. “ill-Mm or sudhtly Msher Mm- h his lie-nets." _ a e00 and has not been re- Nurse Curran of the hcqiitel‘: pemwm '"*°°~ 5°“ A" i" l" - High tide on. afternoon at 121s Kins George To . "° “""’?..l'l“‘§f.'. o. sell“; .3§"b 30H: iitrtfitimil: “"3 who? ‘M?- .. . 05 gnfl ' v ilfl l GTGII ll! . Open Exhibition “sass... .... w... St. nurse.“ i 521 —-- snugly, die of a hospital erected 1y believed 11 encountered difficulty r. M. ' LONDON. May I-(OP llavav- by Grenfell . today with crossing Hare Bay. still filled with Summcrslde tide l8 minutes later Th‘ Kind’ Ind . who rm instruction to search coves of ice. and had anchored until ashift mm Qhgrlottgiown wmdwrio l! w ‘frog Fiahotnleelue. aémthe mouth ofhligre h the “M cleared a ma“ to, ‘ u u lmdon 1m tomorrow for oxeszow. to have will‘; sheltter willie 1* "° "Yemmmi “d "l MW‘ m‘ c“ mm“ where the King will open the Em- awaiting a chance to cross the 1Y1 N“! Sflfflh If“! "It B08?- WM M! ..l.eaves Borden 9.45 a. m. 1 p. In reported officially as missing. bay. Leaves Tormeniine ll o.m.2-55 pm (11. r. by Guardian's Special wiser‘, ' “"“'~ Its-ran II ll I r viawlluraulifln-iio" "w -w—,~. ._s._...__..-s... __- Nvt-"fl U‘ y“ ~. ‘s. l for‘).