MAXIMS , or a‘ MERCHANT ' Mgr] who is physically strong can resist many temptations to which his weaker brother succumbs. noordlan Inlntled IIII. gasrllixtttrvrwn Gudrdinn ‘Inn Gentl- ‘t7. I The People's Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Tllansoflgfimg Seen CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. 4‘- —— HEAVLDECLINE The Silver F0; Exhibitors Assn. Annual Fox Show For 1930 T0 Be Held From Oct. 27 to Nov. 1st. 111-’ elusive. Directors Appointed For Ensuing Year In Board Of Trade Rooms. r -__ RTNNIIEB CHINESE IN smdn Btflil (Canadian Press) MNNTPEKV, Man. May ll-Axes anti barchsii bats were wielded ln Winnipeg: Chinatown last last night as two oriental nations clashed in riotous rJrrrt warfare. ‘Three Chin- a: \\'?l'r~ r0 seriously injured they v-rrr trlkru to hospital, while numer- ous other: were being attended at their homes. seven orientals are un- ller arrest. ' Riotms broke out with two score _____._..._ Csnnniled 0n Page 3 ANNOUNCEMENTS. COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS. i ETC. "Rum-wow sale in st. llall Saturday at 7 p. m, _ 3750-5-l4-2i James "Club loading hogs and calves at Murray i..\cr May 20th, afternoon. 3772-5-15-21. "Rrserir Monday, May 20th. for Plat’ iiv Wirmcns Institute in Marsh- ileld Hail. 3777.545 "‘N0l.i‘t l Will not be responsible °Y 0112-‘ hlih contracted in my name ""1955 "H101" signed by mo. James H. 33:1‘. Pound 3746-5-13-31. '_‘Thr anrual meeting of tho Prince lid-rant li-lllllfl Hospital Ladies‘ Aid “iii b0 he'd Wednesday, 21st, at a p. in Si, Paul's Parish Hall. All la- “ ‘WIM- 3770-5-15-21 "Cillirecatunzal meeting will be m“ Hi H ghlieltl Presbyterian ‘ “Em M01‘ ilth. at 8 p, m. 3T5T-5-1l-2l "a; th -- - m), 4" Play Yimmic Yohnsons n “gt l-klon Hall, Saturday. May M fiesentcd by Murray i °' mm: People. 3771-5-15-21. “vicar to si. Andrew's nan Fri- W Piling. May 16th and sea St. m: Dramatic Club in "Kathleen m‘ ‘rnecn . You'll enjoy it. Good ' ll" 3740-5-14-21. "Come and '1‘ u,’ w“ an __ Bee Aunt Jerushy on ym P i by Brackley Dramatic mh ~Aiil '.\'lorcll Hall._1"riday, May - dnusslon 35 cents. 3740-5-l4-3i. ll rhnicgztlpons T." now “m: ex- nmm llflr Then Comes Kitty" ‘m. r 10x office. Some good seats 3704-11. "Y- "T: Pow 1 pm m” LA na will present their 2r" in Pa“, n Qld-Faahioned Moth- " n“ null-ll Hall. Wednesday, 14th. music“ o lowing evening. Ad- r 5 nnnd 20 cents. 3686-5-0-l3-l4-3i c! No a whcllt in bags will‘ l r: TFkLREI-‘lrrl at Union Siding by‘ l~--. t, "l"! Shippilltl’ Club wlthin,a i. h] w ‘Large percentage already m“ you v/ont to get in on this 0'11’ order at once v/‘th J. Meeting The first annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Fox Breeders Association was held yesterday after- noon ln the Board of Trade Rooms. with the Vice-president, Major Rob- ertson preaiding. The main business of the meeting consisted of the pres- entation of the annual report and of the financial statement by the presi- dent and the secretary respectively, the reading and adoption of the Act of Incorporation passed at the last session of the Provincial Legislature, the reading first in its entirety and later clause by clause the constitu- tion ind by-laws. andgthe appoint. ment of directors, The lay-laws were adopted as sub- mitted with the exception of part oi’ a sub-section dealing with the nom- lnatlon of directors. Eighteen directors were appointed, five from Kings County. seven frorp Queens County and six from Prince. From Kings were appointed Messrs. W. L. Jordan, R. W. Stewart, A. P‘. Campbell, W. L. Poole. Samuel John- T 1i IN fitoasra THURSDAY. MAY 15. 1930 hi0! MAXIMS OIA MERCHANT lilting ll like the dinner-hour; the more fashionable you are the it occurs. l0 PAGE; _ R PRICE Annual shlllffljlllfllll Uliilvreii 15.00. i! lllll Cianuda ml l‘. S. A. $1.50. —1 e 0Q Most Shocking Traigeoly Nil SETTLEMENT REABHEI] RE ARABRIEHTS Negotiations Between British Government And Palestine Arab Delegation at Stand- still. (Special to the Guardian) LONDON, May 14~—Ths settlement of questions concerning Arab rights in Palestine appeared distant today. with negotiations between the Brit- ish Government and the Palestine Arab delegation ended at least for the present. . An official communique from the British Colonial Office announced termination of the conversation yes- terday, when the Government found it impossible to accept sweeping con- stitutional changes the delegation had proposed. The changes. the communique said, were wholly un- acceptable since they would have rendered it impossible for His Maj- esty's Government to carry out their obligations under the mandate which Britain holds in Palestine. “The Arab delegation lhad sought changes particularly in the British attitude toward Jewish immigration into Palestine and had asked a con- stitutional mandate for the territory. The delegation visited London as an aftermath to the Jewish bias. sures in Palestine last year. THE NURTHERN ston. from Queen-i. Major Robertson. {w- Hls farm. the site of an Indian en- campment, presumably of the Algon- quin lllht,’ Alex Wallace. Simeon. 0nt.. ox-M. P. for Norfolk, has for years turned up Indian relics while working the fields. The latest dis- covery was a skeleton of a six-foot brave, judged by some to have been buried about 1,000 years ago. The photographs here show (l) Gordon Wallace, 6-year-old son, who madl- the discovery; (Z) grave of ant-lent . Discovers! 1,000 ti»... 01d skeleton ""1" savage, showing members of Norfolk Historical Society preparing to ro- movc the skeleton to the local mus- eum, and (3) Alex. Wallace. who as a. Progressive. represented the county in the Dominion llousc from 1021 I until 192s. ..»-l man Had no Events an Hour After Crime. (Canadian Press) CANGO, N. 5.. May 14~Their bod- Horrib-le Act .Of»’l Knowledge of l l [year old Goldie Drake ans found‘ iin the woods on the Gcizcrs “moan-i ltain road, and her mother is now iii, Col. D. A. McKinnon. John Roper, F. I G. Kennedy. G. W. Harding, '1‘. 3.; Rogers. Walter Shaw; from Prlncdj Messrs. C. C. Baker. W. C. Clark, Capt. John Road, c. s. Rogers. a.‘ Wflloblnson, E. H. Monklcy’. I The financial report showed re- ceipts of $7,275.71, with $2.000 on the "*- credit side of the ledger. _ ($006M 10 the Guardian) Called upon by the presiding offlc- , SHANGHAI- Chim- MQY 14411" er, Mr. Gavin Harding. who has serv-, lmflm“ Gmwrllmel" l" NB-"kmg ed on mgny commute” dunngm,‘ announced today that the so-called past year, snug m“ they had: northern armies of Marshal Yen waited upon different orgaulzatlonsfishlaflr G°Y°FIY°P 0f Silaflsir hid and received the support expectcd.'b°°11 defeat“! at Pllfihfllv- The 8n- The Government assured the supply nouncement said 10,000 prisoners of cratcs for which it has paid, re. were captured by the Government taining ownership while assuring the i troops. six field funs and 7,000 rifles association of their availability for,’ We"! BBQ-Jrlptured. The fishi- mid m broken “uh an He’ wiekled WI the County Jail on a charge of mur-r a mother gone suddenly lluaneq def ‘ three of the seven children of George; ' I , , . | Two men arc under arrest in New| Mum“ were km“ m“ momm‘ m Glasgow charged with the death of: isolated fishing village of Dover, flvei’ m Aw“ mms {ram tcznsho’ Angnqzest Ewgfj lngavld Anderson. of Berlin. N. H. 22mg ‘Zdd in‘! ‘first! ‘l’ 'de_'|‘is under sentence of death at Syd-é n :13; gcnlgn Wu“; ‘be “ken w] ney for the killing of Blots Rzhbcrg. ‘ ' . land the Indian, Paul, ls cxpinting in ‘he NW‘ 5mm‘ “mam” 1°’ m‘ h-“(Dorchester Penitentiary for m; kill- ' Ziillezaxtailgartmou-th a thout a charge mg at Beam m“ of Percy Piper‘ l, ' l The dead children are Teresa Elizabeth, the baby, born on Easter thir cottage home in the quie: and‘ John Dryden at Glcugarry simiong , Elaborate Plans Being 'Made For Reception R I O0 Momnaan. vMaY 14-—’!‘h= rorrfplrie story of the approach of the R'——1'.‘0 in Canadian short-s, her passage ovn- land to Montreal. and her attachment to tho mooring mast zit St. Hubert airport, as vvril as the reception “term-mics, will be. simultaneous- ly broadcast by twenty cities in Canada. Elaborate arrangements are being made for carrying the story of the airshlp's arrival to thr- neivspapcrs oi‘ the world. Numerous telegraph wires will be laid to the airport and a. build- ing will be sct aside for thecon- vrniencc of the newspapcrmen and the telegraph operators. Saves Money For Province FREDERICTON. N. H, May 14- ' ,Ti*.c government; oi 1h: province of sllndlyi Gemld- Wed n17"- lnd Al‘ u Nczv Brunswick has negotiated re-llzwo POUNDS DA‘ b9"- flW Yen's "ld- w“ 5W5 5nd i incwal for one year of Treasury bills, - Floode Catch Up. HALIFAX. May ‘l4~UnusuallyI large catches of lobsters in the Mari- r time Provinces, combined with in- ‘croased equipment and efficiency fort ldelivery of the catch to the Boston“ market, has resulted in glutting thatl market, Nova Scotla lobster dealers! Jeported yesterday. : I The catch is without precedent,‘ ions veteran dealer stated. The, quantities have been so great that] a number of cannera in Prince Ed-’ ‘ward Island and pm of the northl shore of Nova Sootia have told the fishermen to take a holiday until‘ the canners catch up with the over- usupply on hand: While the cannsrlas in the Mari- tlmes have been glutted. a veritable fleet of craft. from the relatively big Government collection boats to the wells for live lobsters, have been: rushing the crustaceans to the Boa-l ton market, with the result that the price has sagged sharply. Boston had been paying 20 cents a pound for’ second grade. When one o! the col-I lection boats arrived there on Mon- day, the price dropped to 15 cents, and 7 1-2 cents a pound, with pros-l rlects of still further decline. i It is estimated that there arc now: 1400 crates of lobsters en route from] New Brunswick alone, by rail and, by ship, to the Boston market, while: the little smacks from the Western’ Nova Scotia counties, Shelburnel Yarmouth and Digby, are sailingl merrily, with heavy loads, to the Hub. A steamer from Halifax last Saturday for Boston had among her cargo 500 crates of lobsters. Besides all this, the liners on the regular .Ynrmouth-Bost0n service arc carry- ,| ing substantial shipments of lobsters. lBOATS TAKE 1600 T0 1____._________,.,.....__a .. closed the fiscal year with a fur, future use. Fox Breeders Association had been approached after it had expressed willingness to make cash grants. $2.000 was asked for. and $1,000 re- 0250. The the foxmen. After the completion of Continued 0n Pam 3 Toronto Bonds Co At A Premium (Special to the Gum-diam TORONTO. Ont, May lt-Five percent city serial bonds to the amount of $18,300,000 went at I premium when the tenders were opened by Mayor Wemp today- Th?" were four bids oi’ 00.178; 00.183: 100.2140 and 100.170. It was the most successful sale since 1027. ‘The bonds went to tho National City Company, Dillon. Read. Harris. Forbes. Guarantee Co. of New York. Bankers C0,, of New Yorki Dominion Securities Corp and the Canadian l ceived. The City Council granted. i Exhibition Association» placed their plant at the disposal of‘ Tho Canadian National i left wings of the rebel lines collapsed and the Government aviators open- ed a. vigorous aerial raid over Chen- chow, which was bombarded. GIANT MERGER (Canadian Press) TORONTO, May l4--'I‘he Toronto Star says today: Combining assets of more than $68,000,000 owning or con- trolling vast timber limits in East- ern Csnsda estimated at more than 3.600 square miles in extent, contain- ing -at least twenty million cords pulpwood. three outstanding com- panies operatlng in the newsprint industry, the st. Lawrence Paper Mills Company. Limited, Lake St. John Power and Paper Company, Limited. and the Brompton Pulp and Paper Company, Limited, are being consolidated under one central man- agement. New holding company will be formed under the name of "st. Lawrence Corporation Limited. Con- solldatlon will be effected by an‘ exchange of shares. Heading this gi- gantic clltcrprisc, it ls understood; will bc limes‘. Roasiter, President of. the St. Lawrence Paper Mills Lim-I ited. as President of th: new com-' pony. Tlv board of directors i1 no‘. Bank of Commerce. whose tender was 100.2140. “ licsd. er T. A. Rodd. i-rit ouarty fssg, 11-001 The percentage to be paid by the Mia‘ Pricaright, s7go.5.14_'3j_ city on the bonds sold will be 4.05.36. known bu‘. f-l. A. Timnvns will ...._.__ .. __.. _. i t C_t".:_fl;.... girl had left for school shortly be- fore, and the eldest son, Andy, aged twclve, had gone to anelghbars house w borrow a. bottle of milk. The husband and father. a fisher- man, was at sea. attending to his lobster traps. It was Andy who dis- covered at its height the tragedy that ended the brief lives of his baby sisters. and two small brothers. FOUND CHILDREN DEAD turning to his horns with the milk, unaware of the stnfm 0f idol- enoe that had swept the cottage in his absence. he found two children already dead an} his mother attack- ing the third. Grappling with her at once, he wrested the axe from her hands and rushed out to give the alarm. He was too late. the third child died this aftemoon. Neighbors who hurriedly made their way to the Munroe cottage to givs what aid was possible, found the mother sitt- int on a. bed. in tears. She had. the said, no knowledge of the events of the previous hour. She had been in bad health for sometime, and had recently complained to her husband about her head. SEVEN DEATHS BY VIOLENCETTZ 2.‘. S. Today-E. trngrdju. brought the num- fl, Otil" cf f‘. 1 Ccofia 1270 i) . ,..._._., ...:- t.-.“ (zrhrf; ifor 04740000, maturing in London; PIC-mu M” lkwm, m, 1W IN ENliiilNil (Special to the Guardianl DONDON, May 14~For the first time in so years. unemployment lig- ures in Britain soared above 1,700.- 000 today, when the Ministry of Ln- bour announced that 1.712.000 pcr- sons were out of work. Since the beginning of this year- there has been an increase of 233,000 in the number of registered unem- ployed. Most of the increase is duf" to trade depression. which is lmw more severe in all branches of Brit- ish industry than at any time since the post war crisis of 1021. this month at an intmrest cost to the province at 3.7.3 percent. thus affect- ing a saving to tho provlnm in int- crest of $55091 for the year and making a total saving of annual in- tcrest charges by opportunity fund- ‘lnr'l;-.erres of more than $100,000. al- ready this year. CLEVELAND, May 14-De- cause of the new Canadian tar- iff, certain finished steel pro- ducts manufactured in this coun- try have experienced an appre- ciable slump in shipments to the Dominion and some ships that were rapt-daily’ engaged in this trade have been temporarily laid up. Prorogation inita date has yet been fixed for pro- rogatlon cf Parliament. the gcncral expectation now is that tnc end of’ this month will see til: members on. their way home. Last night Prime Mlnistxr llhcl-lenz": Ki“: cncl Hen. r be‘: c.’ dsirhs by vfiietirr- in Nova Pt. B. Dnnctt. Ctnservative lrsd‘. c. ""1 another canfciew‘: v" ‘a n .‘ ‘"tf:‘. At Ottawa By The Last Week Of‘ May Generally Expected OTTAWA. May lt-While no def- Commons. The ordcr rI-‘ipcr is 110W practically clrnr and verj.‘ little leg- lslnllm rrmnil‘...' to be inlrndu-red. cfvl]_’;“'|ll"llll_", \‘~‘l‘ll"ll the budget de- Lnic \“llCl‘ilTP'w tomorrow cvcning or ufinblv on Ti1ur.-"-rl.1v. the l ll l’: if? dulv will lI50lilll0115 and 111"?" n. later season starting off with the Continued on Page 3 Conditions In The Maritimes -- so (Canadian Press! ' MONTREAL, May 1+~O0nditiona in the Maritime Provinces though now relatively quiet lregltiaflctnry and show chances of improvement, Canadian Chamber of Commerce and Editor of the Calgary Herald. in an interview here today. Mr. Woods has just returned from a president- ial visit to Boards of ‘nude and Chambers of Commerce in the East. “Before the Duncan report was made. the Msritlmes were not in accord with the other provinces," he continued. "New. however, their st- titude toward the balance of the Dominion is most cordial and they seem more prosperous. “The Dunning Budget was natur- sliy received with favor in the Marltimes in view of its favorable reference inthe steel and cool indus- tries, However, I did not remain in any one. place long enough to study the attitude of the people towards (iii-m stated J. H. Woods. President of the ‘ its p~‘I‘1"-l ar7~~e*." H". W"~ds sold. Arte. - l l‘: Th! '.-. American Buyers d With Mar. Crustaceans Catches In N.S. And N .B. Unpre- cedented-Fishermen Told To Take Holiday Until Cfllllltfli‘; iinuisltns is vliitil READY BASH Treasury Has No As- surance of binding‘ Fiscal Year With 2r Surplus. lll l‘.—— Ill] (Special lo till’ fiuarrl‘ ‘WASHINGTON. Mo)‘ smamsl’ °f smacks equipped mm United States is uuhout rear‘) Flill and the Treasury has been fo borrow 0100.000 000 in . notes to meet its immediate n~ Even with this DOITUTWKT m the Treasury has no assurnnc" of’ ending the fiscal year “uh a sur- plus, for $56,000,000 of ll mu“. 12-! paid out on M0)‘ lfi ti‘ CV01‘ WP‘ will obligations. A lax-qr dffzczl l= u. \, - when the. Government 010": bank book at the cn'l of ill" ent fiscal your. Jun" lfr. To . . Treasury has a rlcfzcft of 5.53"‘ 299 as compared with cl vlcflt to: the corresponding period ins: _\‘c'.1:' of $166,109,203. Owing to the large Junc lax :0- ceipls the. Govcrnmclz: lust - ,.. 0f $185,000,000. The Weather, etc file NAN Wilo Wnclls Hi9 p000. is snoop Qultfl or Silva? TORONTO. hlay l~ hi: Fair and rather co’! lollvwl; easterly winds and rain h;- Tlfiflfll. High tide tonight at. 11.55 and "~- morrow morning at i513. Sun sets this ovenln: n1 rises tomorrow morning at 4Z1 Last quarter moon Tuesdn-g M". 20th, 11.58 a. m. Sun-lrnelsidn lldo eighteen l‘.‘.li""“‘i later than CharloWmu-r. 7"‘ ‘fllT Weston-l Editor will sail for Poland on Pfiday to attend tho 12th l ru- gress of the Federated Chami"? of (“mmcrce of the Empire 011-1 1.1".- -"~. the. the Imperial Press Conference." i. ‘I w-‘wi -_-