. H t’ Max" ins I 01A MERE MAN injun- - rlty non: lnbtllltvm! Mel" you: lum- \ Iornlnl Gllldlln, cuummn G Ifllllrhd lil’! Two Cont: Interesting Talk On Dairying BY Mr. W.L. Brenton Dairy Superintendent Deals With MB- W. L. BRENTON in ISBN FIRE EXTINIEIIISHE Old Military Prison Endangered By- Blaze. woods under control. urned down, watcr gap to the woods- Fanned by a brisk wind, them under control. The wind kept the blaze housing three prisoners, part of a century, might catch. The prison, operated now by the Department oi National Defence, was established on Melville Island, northwest arm, early in the last century.‘ It was used at first to house seamen the wars with France and the United States. The present prison proper was built when the original struc- in Halifax Harbors captured by the British in ture ieil into ruin. Veterans MayNot Pawn Medals (O. P- By Guardian's Special Wire) iii-Indigent veterans who pawn their wnr med- als may expect to find that source oi revenue closed to them soon in HALIFAX, April Nova scotia. Under a bill introduced in the legislature today by Premier An- gus L. Mncdonald, it will be illegal for pawnbrckers to accept war de- corations as collateral for loans. The adian Legion. -_-_ ANNOUNCEMENTS COMING EVEN T S, MEETINGS. ETC "Unloading cor Albion Nut coal M Milton Thursday and Friday. L-MIZ-Q-II-Zl “lbstsr Balm-All kinds or arti- licisl flowers and reasonable novel- ties now on display. Jun Crockett, Ill Bilisboro Is-oiid-div-fli. 0&1- April 1am L-HOQ-l-l l-Bi. Marketing Board during week of April afternoon. Montague, Cardigan. Bonner Club: B. C. Webster. 50¢ 3' Arrangement, Inaroial Hotel, Mon o, Iltb, iltb. J. D. 15th as follows: Monday (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire), HALIFAX, April l0—Dangei' t0 Melville Island's old military pris- on was peat tonight with a. fire in one of the prison buildings ex- tinguished and one in the nearby Sparks from the prisons furn- ace room had caused both fires ,, this afternoon, Ignited by the fly- dng sparks, a wooden warehouse sending blazing Iidragments leaping across the short the flames were moving toward a group oi homes when firemen and bucket brigade workers brought Different Phases Of The In- dustry At Quarterly. Meeting Of The Board Of Trade. The following informative ed- drcss on "Dairying in Prince Bd- wo-rd Island" was delivered by Mr. ' ,W. L. Brenton, Dairy Superinten- , dent, at the quarterly meeting of ' the Charlottetown Board oi Trade last night. The Island is specially adaptedto Dairying and the Dairy Business is the most important industry in our Province. In 1904 the output oi Butter and Cheese showed a considerable de- crease, laigely owing to inclement weather and two dry summers in succesion, causing the drying out of the pastures. The trend oi the Dairy Business throughout Canada was from Cheese to Butter, the total make of cheue decreasing ab- rut 18,000,000 pounds. But, figuring his out in pounds butter-fat, we ilnd the increase in will! number >ounds butter manufactuiecl cifset he lose in cheese and the Indus- try as a whole showed a. slight gain. The prices for Butter and ' Cheese were better than in 1933 andwhilenotashighns nnyofus would wish, compares favorably with my other country for the year. The Storage Stocks of both utter and cheese were alarmingly high thzoughotit the year, but dur- ing the early months of this year, the stocks have gradually decreas- ed. Rumor has it, ajconsideirable amount found its way across the line to our big neighbor, whose buttcr prices have rapidly l4- vaneed. during the lest few monthe. The reason for the change over from Cheese to Butter inithe other Provinces as well as our own, was that for the past few years, butter- mnldng has been considered more profitable than cheese-making. Now this has brought. about the danger of Canadian Butricr prices being placed on the export market basis, which if this had taben place in the summer and fall months, the Federal Dairy Com-_ misioner claims would have lower- ed the price received by iive cents per pound. U‘ Move To Bonus Export Cheese Realizing this condition of change. a movement is on foot. sponsored by the National Dairy Council of Canada and the Can- away irom the island's main building, though for a time it was feared the stone structure, standing for the better (Continued on Page 9) Island Minister To Calgary (C. P.1d; Guardian's Special Wire) SYDNEY, N. 5., April iii-Rev. E. Melville Aitken. pastor oi St. legislation was brought down at the request of the Can- Andrewts Church here, announced tonight he had decided to accept the unanimous call oxtcnded him by Central United Church, Cal- gary. He said he would not take his new charge until early in Septem- ber. A native of Charlottetown, he studied at Prince of Wales College and proceeded to Dalhousie Uni- versity, Haliiax, where he received his B. A. degree and in i923 gradu- ated from Pine Hill Divinity Col- legc. His first charge was at Cav- ‘ endish, P. E. 1., and he had been with that presbytery up until he came to Sydney in i031 to succeed Rav- Andrew D. Reid, now preach- ing in Winnipeg. N.» sud. ThingAs Prime Minister (C. P. By Guardian's Special Win) OTTAWA, April ilk-The House oi Commons accepted s we action from the Senate todly and admit- ted there is no such official in prime minisicr, legal- ly. When the House polled the bill in set up an economic coun- cil it provided that the "Prime minister" should be chairman. The Senate amended the bill to moire it the "first minister" and today the House adopted the amendment. Nowhere in the statutes of Can- ada is there a reference to a prime minister although in one or l-wo places a "first minister” is men- tioned. ao- Geotg! Perlsy. acting lender of the government. 0M6 one instance‘ of the 0119mm” "prune minister‘ being used of- ficieliy. - It was o proclamation issued for the Confederation jubilee in i921 when ltt- Hon. Meckenzi Ring was so described. No low o floor of the Crown would mote such a mistake, said Bbu. . 227/1“ y A y \ The People's Paper) Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew ETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY. APRIL 11“, 1935 BHNFERENBE irrational Momentous P a r l e y Will Be Held In The Beautiful Palace 0f Prince Borromeo. By lhmbleton," Canadian Press Stuff Writer (By Guardian's Special Wire) ‘STREA, Itflill- April l0.—In the 1651.1 century palace of Prince Bor- romeo on Isola Bella Premier Ben- ito Mussolini tomorrow opens the tri-partite conference between Bri- tain, France and Italy. Oi all the multitudinous confer- ences since Versailles, none ls fraught with greater consequence, and none have met in a more in- tense atmosphere oi realism. Italian infantry. in field uniforms and armed with rifles paraded to- day by the shores oi Lake Maggiore. Planes roared in the skies above. Uniformed sea scouts bearing mus- kets swung down the streets in pro- mise oi Italian forces to be. Police, secret and uniformed. blackshirts dashed swiftly about on swift motorcycles, newspaper corres- pondents innumerable and curious crowds from everywhere swarmed the streets of little Stress. And at Isola Bella, away in the lake secure- ly protected from prying eyes, Mus- solini hid his secrets from the world. The realism will be the watch- word of Mussolinrs program for the conference, Italy sees a rearmed Germany rumbling uneasily beyond the 'I‘yroll, threatening to stride the Danube. she wants a common front presented by Britain, France and Italy in the interests oi peace. Mussolin‘ would like to see Austria, Hungary and Bulgaria given author- ity to increase the military forces allowed them under the peace treat- ies. Re wants a more definite guar- TliREE PiiiiER O (By Andrue Bordiug) (Gvwflsht 1935? By The Associated ecu) - (By Guardian's Special Wire) BTBdlSA, April 10—Decid.ed dif- ferences of opinion among the Brit- ish, French and Italian delegations as to the best way oi ensuring Euro- pean peace loomed tonight on the eve oi their conference ‘here, rc- Bfldcd as perhaps the most im- portant since the war. While the three powers are agreed “P0X! accepting Germany's rearin- ament and. upon the necessity of getting the Reich into some sys- tem of non-aggression and secur- iiil’. they were unofficially said at odds as to the methods to be iol- lowed. Great Britain and Italy, the best informed quarters said, are at 0p- posite extremes. with the Hench somewhere in between them but probably closer to Britain. Premier Benito Jvlussolini, host for the conference, spent the rif- ternoon and evening isolated on Isola Bella island, auuICNIlCC head- quarters. going over his plan of ac- tion for tomorrow with Fulvio Suvlch, his under-secretary for foreign affairs. Premier Pierre-Etienne Finndin and Foreign Ministcr Pierre Laval arrived at 10.85 p. m. and were welcomed at the station by Prem- ier Mussolini and Suvich, who shook them wannly by the hand. Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, and Sir John Simon, Foreign Sec- retary. heading the British delega- 30“. were to arrive tomorrow mom- g. The three delegations, unofficial infonnstion indicated, approach the Stress psrley thus: Great Britain—A ground for dis- antee oi Austrian indepen-'_ ALIS. ‘ in the course of which (Continued on Page 5T Minister Hears Delegation (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) GITAWA, April iii-Claims the port or Saint John for more= business today were laid before Hon. R. J. lidbnion, Minister of Railways, and Hon. R. B, Hanson. Minister of Trade and Commerce. by a delegation headed by Premier L. P. D, Tilley oi New Brunswick. 'I‘he meeting was out short by the opening of the House of Commons and will be continued tomorrow. 'The delegation claimed the Can- adian National Hairy-vs P" dis- criminating against Saint John in routing freight fzr exnori. Several of the railway officials were pre- sent at today's conference which was hold in camera. e Tempers Flare In Ont. Legislature A (C. P. By Guardian's pccinl Win) TORONTO, April l0-Tempers flared in the Ontario Legislature late today as opposition leader George S. Henry charged Premier Mitchell Hepburn "deliberately de- eelved" him last night as to when the bill terminating Quebec power contracts would be discussed in committee. Into the quiet of a chamber where legislators waded- wearily through a series of bills in pre- paration for another lengthy night session. Mr. Henry arose just be- fore dinner adjournment and charged he wrote a note to the Premier last night asking- what bills would bc discussed in the all- night session but Mr. Hepburn did not say the power bill would be disc ’ in committee. The charge brought an angry denial from the Premier and pre- cipitated a series oi heaicd ex- changes betwee him and the op- position lesder. culminating in Mr. Hcpbun-rs announcement the mu which passed committee early to- day would come up for third read- ing tomoyrow. Earlier in the day Mr._ Henry had asked who instructed the clerk to insert in Monday's votes and proceedings that the blll received second reading and would move up "tomorrow" for committee discus- sion. The former premier declared Monday's session did nm end until the House adjourned at four o'clock this morning and House records were incvrrect. Mr. l-Iep- burn was not in the House st the time and be postponed further discussion imtil later. 1n the meantime stumbled through second readings with little objections token to any until the lovomment bill provid- im for assumption of costs of pro- vincial highways cams up. After opposition from Mr. Henry and lnopold lhoAulsy (Cone, York loath) it received second reading. osnnrvstiws. bumm- talked out tbs nu liability from motor cor drivers for grutuitimu the House Home plan may be reached for bringing Germany into an agree- ment for collective security and back into the Icague of Nations. Italy-An opportunity to reach an accord the three powers, perhaps an lance, with which to face Germany in case Adolf Hit- ler refuses to enter the pop-rd collective agreement. France-A chance for reconciling the Italian position, which she pre- fers, with the British, from which 511B is not inclined to move far. An authoritative spokesman said tonight the British argument would lsz as follows: "Stress should prepare the way for a larger conference in which ‘Among Delegate Great Britain di-I-t-aly At Opposite ExtremesOnEve Of Most Import- ant Conferenc_e__S_ince The War. were!“ 1500mm: to Stresa without - a definite plan but for a visit of exploration." An equally authoritative source stated the Italian position thus: "The bigger commitment Great Britain makes on the continent, the less commitment she actually makes. That is: the more she is willing to commit herself now to a three- power accord, the less dangerous 1'4 W111 5e because it will call a ha“ ‘m GeTmB-"Y- We believe Italy, France and England will accept Gfllmllllyb rearmament up to this point. What we want now is an ao- cord not as to these armaments but as to their use. 1n other words, we want an accord whereby the three notions will act in ease Ger- many takes some further step." A British spokesman tonight 1n. dicated Britain's desire to remove one possible future peril for the continent's peace, saying the sta- tus of the Memel statute-lapped off from Germany after the war and now held by Lithuania-would undoubtedly form one topi- or conversation tomorrow and. Friday. The discussion. it was indicated, will concern what pressuri- the three powers can bring to benr on Lithuania to prevent conflict be- tween the Reich and the Baltic nation. It will be “strictly business” at tomorrow evening's session of the conference. ' ENROUTE T0 STRESA IOINDON, April l0 — (A.P.) -- Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald and Foreign Secretary Sir John Simon were en route to Stresa to. night with proposals for an m. @1151“? European security system, leaving the parliament and the pub- lic largely in the dark as to tlm details oi those proposals. While Stanley Baldwin, Lord President of the Council, in an ad- dress Monday plainly hinted that liitain mast-baseman an active. port in efforts to stabilize the con- tinent, there was no official state- ment of the cabinet’s policy to parliament. The British public, moreover, was confused by various conflicting re- ports emanating from unofficial sources as to what the Prime Min- ister and the Foreign Sectyataryywlll place before the French and Ital- ians. ' The Cabinet, however, is said to be without hope of clarifying the Germany may participate and en-situation until after the tri-power ier a collective system. MacDonald conference. (By Stephen J. M" enough, Asso- ciated Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON, April l0-—An- other short wheat crop for the United States was indicated today in the first Department of Agri- culture forecast. A winter wheat production of 435,499,000 bushels was predicted as compared with 405,034,000 bush- els produced last year and a five- year average of 0l8,180.000 bushels. ‘This, plus the 190,000,000 bush- eis spring wheat crop which See- retary Henry Wallace at his press conference estimated would result from the recent lifting of the 10 per cent acreage cut, would result in a total crop oi about 825199.000 bushels, only slightly above the total domestic consumption oi 625.- 000,000 bushels. - There were possibilities that this Short Wheat Crop For United States Is Forecast- estimate might be high. The weather bureau reported that dur- ing the past week dry conditions and new dust storms continued in the most severely affected drought area of the western great plains and the crop reporting boards mentioned the dry siege. Condition of pastures through- out the country was reported at 88.7 per cent of normal, e. low point ior this early in the season. To complicate the difficulties, a shortage of feed with livestock on short rations was reported in prac- tically all states. Officials were concerned over the crop production situation, realizing that any large curtail- ment of production through ad- verse weather would create a ser- lous situation because of the low ebb in farm stocks oi feeds. May Be Next GovernorGeneral (c. r. Olbb a, Gunrdinn’: Special Win LONDON, April i0 — Lord ‘Irenchsrd, commander of the Met- ropolitan Police Fierce. will be in- vited to stressed Sir Issac Ioascs as the next Governor General of Australia, it was reported here to- day. An official of the Ailotrnllrm High 000i’! declared that "nothing definite" had been done on the matter. points (Lib. Quebec last). Ba wuuiimdwbohsd passengers before it received sec- ondroadiol- ' I loam-i...» an!‘ n. "i. Vancouver Has $845,000 Deficit (C. P. By Guardian's special Wire) VANCOUVER. April 1M“ es- tlmatcd cash deficit of $845,000 on operations for the current year is shown in Vancouver's 1035 civic budget presented in the council to- day. The budget discussion will open Thursday. The tax rate would be the same 011100 here; as in 190440.88 mills net. Provi- sion is made for payment of inter- est on the banded indebtedness at existing rates. You Will Enjoy It Two Years Will Be v Spent 0n Western Wheatlands. (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA, April l0--Reclam- ation oi millions o! acres of West- ern Canada's finest wheat lands which have become devastated by years oi drought was started in the House of Commons today. While members of all sides indicated ap- proval, Minister oi Agriculture Robert Weir introduced a, bill to provide machinery and money to rebuild the dried-out areas of the prairies. Sandwiched between doleful ac- counts oi soil drifting over fence posts, streams drying up, cattle and horses thirsting to death and millions of acres as barzen as a kitchen floor. came a. not». of on- timlsm frcm a Western pioneer. Col. Harry Mullins (Cons. Marquette), who went, west in the days of the buffalo, predicted the seven years oi famine were ended. "Honestly," said the old-time rancher, “fzom the years I have lived out there I believe this is g0- lng to be a wet year." He predicted two wheat crops in one season. the end oi drought and desolation. The Weir bill will provide M50.- ooo this year and $1,000,000 for the next four. to be used in reclaim- ing the dried-out short-FMS mun“ try, A committee Wil-l be eSt-flblii-hed to advise the Federal Minister of Agriculture who will work in co- operation with provincial e861“!- Bankers and loan companies will be represented on the wfrunlitifle because there are two obiects in mind-reclaiming the land and ro- newing the confidence oi the 119°" pie, freeing them from financial worries. The bill was received sympath- BiiNSillTEli (C. P. Cable By Guardian's Special Wire) IDNDON, April iii-The House of Commons was assured this a!- ternoon that no step had been in the arms situation or regarding the world disarmament conference, without consulting the Dominion governments and "on no occasion have there been dissents from our policy in any Dominion." J. H. Thomas, Secretary for the Dominions, also told a. questioner there had been constant consulta- tion with all the Dominions on all the aspects of the world disarma- ment conference; So far as he was aware however no Dominion had made any official pion-uneement on the subject of France's proposal for an international aerial “police force," advanced some time ago and still the subject of discussi m. Coering Marries Opera Star (C. lK-I-Iavns (By Guardian's Special Wire) BERLIN, April 10. — With 150 planes of the new German air force flying overhead in military forma- tion, and 35,000 troops lining the "SAI-Aliii’ ‘I BA ......L' . w-CA. ... streets, Reich Minister of Alr l-ier- mann Wilheim Goering today mar- ried in civil and church ceremonies Fraulein Emmy Scmnemann, star oi the Prussian State Opera. The wedding, reminiscent of the former imperial weddings of the Hohenzolierns, was the first of a high official under the present re- gime and- oceesioned one of the greatest displays oi military force seen in Germany since the war. Thirty-five thousand uniformed men, comprising special black-shir- ted guards, Reichswehr detachments, storm troopers. Hitler youth and embers of the Air League, paraded through the streets before lining up to form a. human hedge along the Wilhelmstrasse and Untcr Den Lin- den. Mayor Sahrn of Berlin officiated at the civil function which was fol- lowed by a. solemn religious cere- mony, a“ " " by a throng that packed every nook and cranny of the Protestant Cathedral and tn- eluded all the leaders oi the Nazi government. The religious ceremony was performed by Reich Bishop Ludwig Mueller with Chanecllor Hitler in the capacity of best-man to chief side‘. "This wedding." said the Reich- bishop, "is a. true example oi the Nazi community spirit. True to the traditions of your forefathers you came to the house of God to pledge fidelity to each other. (the love of "the entire nation, from Dar Puehrer_ who is with us, to the humblest ct- Gonneny celebrates wim You)‘ taken by the British Government I’ inn, accompanies you this day. Nssi In found MAXI us l _ 0' L MERE. MAN jinn- losingfutunonsuyamshul himself 1o PAGES pinions Differ iilll RECLAIM Quebec Is Now s ll R I E ll - li ll T Definitely Under A R _t_ A e3 MarketingScheme 551-09009“ a Ym‘ F" Five Eastern Provinces Now United Under Potato Price Peg- ging Schedules (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) FRED ERICTON, N. 1a., April id-‘IB R 0 N F M A N , . The Province of Quebec has defin- schedule and regulations of the Board, it was stated here today by G. C. Cunningham, New Brunswick member of the Board, who has re- turned from.a trip to Ontario and Qluebec in the course of which he V Montreal. All oi the five eastern provinces of the Dominion are definitely link- ed up in the scheme for regulation of potato marketing. The provinces of New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island Nova Scotla and Ontario were the first to join, and the ap- plication oi the Quebec Governmcni was presented recently and has been accepted. The Quebec agency of the Board will be located in dontreal. Officials of the Quebec agency con- ferred yesterday with the dealers of the Montreal district, who are giv- ing friendly co-operation. Discussing the efforts being made by the Board to curtail the potato “bootlegging“ activities of tmckers in Ontario, Mr. Cunningham said that many of the growers in Ontario had been acting against their own interests. New regulations have been drawn up by the Potato Mar- ketlng Board which, it is hoped, will bring about control of the truckers. Only Two Hotels Made Profits (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) OPFAWAAprlIIO-Jrhe Chateau Laurier Hotel in Ottawa and the Nova Scotian in Halifax were the only two units of the Canadian National Railways hotel system to show s. profit on operating rev- enues last year, Hon. C. P. Ful- lerton, chaimnan of, the board of trusfces told the House Railiways Committee. the Chateairs proiit was $152,000 and they, of the Nova Sootian $9,500. ‘Iio date, said Mr. Fullerton, $8,- 544,000 had been spent 0n the un- finished C. N. R. Hotcl at Van- couver. It was estimated $2,700,- 000 more would be required to com- leic that establishment, including the furnishings. Approval For Farm Loan Bill (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) UITAWA, April l0-—Parliament- ary approval of the Canadian Farm loan Board bill before the Easter recess is practically assured. it was learned today. Amended considerably by the Senate, the measure probably will be given final reading in the Up- per Houae tomorrow or Thursday. It will be passed back to the House of Commons for concur- rence in the amendments, Even if members in the Commons are not prepared to concur readily in the changes. the attitude is tc expedite the passing oi the bill. The measure increases the fund‘ available for loans on farm lands from $70,000,000 t0 $00.000.000 as Saskatchewan. Ontario and Prince Edward Island will be included with the other six provinces. Chief amendment by the Senate banking and commerce committee is the reduction of the maximum amount of loans to individual farmers from $7,500 ic $5.000. Another change is to safeguard future loans of the board against provincial legislation giving priority to other obligations on the mortgaged farm loans. Ne Issue Of Currency (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) OVITAWA, April l0—-The second u morative issue of Canadian currency to mark the King's Silver Jubilee-a. new Bank of Canada $25 note, first oi that denomin- ation in Canadian currency-will be ready for distribution early in the first week of May, bank offi- cials announccd today. - Canada's first silver dollar, is- sued in honor of the some event, is coming oif the stamping mach- ines at the Royal Canadian Mint at the rote of about 40 to the minute, and will be also in the hands of all banks by the first of- May. The Bank of Canada souvenir noic continues the neat. and color- ful designs of the paper money al- ready issued by the institution- Annual lubsbrlpflm n, nun ltely come under the pegged price‘ Eastern Canada Potato Marketing‘ sited Ottawa, Toronto, Guelph filllilc u N I I N u E s DQIIVIOG "-00 Canada Ill U- l. A, “~00 f? Bat-elation; EARINB Crown Failed to Prove i Crime of Conspir- l acy, Says Defence i Counsel. (C.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) MCNTREAL, April The Crown had failed not only to implicate the accused in criminal acts but even to prove the crime of conspir- acy had bcen committed, Lucien Gendron. K. C.. defence council, claimed today in legal argument at the preliminary hearing of eight alleged members oi a $5,000,000 liq- uor conspiracy. Mr. Gendron represented the four Broniman brothers, Samuel, Allan. Abraham, Harry, Barney Aaron and David Costley, all of Montreal, F‘. S. Balir, of Montreal, and Wil- liam Yule. of Halifax, are the oth- er two accused whose preliminary hearing continued before Judge Jules Desmarois. ‘The keystone of this alleged plot is nothing more or less than a per- fectly legal set, or group of acts- the transactions carried on by F‘. S. Blair at St. John's, Newfound- land," contended IVLr. Gcndron in speaking of the conspiracy charge. “Mr. Blair sold certain quantities of liquor. There was no law pre- venting him from doing so; hLs actions were entirely legal and flbflveboflrd: this instructions, cop- l (Continued on Page S) L in e r Aground (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) SOUTHAMPTON. England, April 11—(-Thursd.ay)-With the big Cun- ard-White Star liner Aquitaine, test aground in the mud off Brambles B93111, only 2'7 0f nearly 300 p55- Mlsers chose to remain aboard. this mooning while a. second attempt was being made to free her. The big liner has been stuck Since Yesterday afternoon, lashed by a 70. mile an hour gale and with eight W85 straining at her ha/wsers dur- ing fnntless attempt-i to free her. Weather Etc". Sour. time items; ARE $0 cacviaat “ ‘its can? Tau. who ‘(we mamas to t (Fnnncllirn Press) Moderate to fresh northeast lo north winds: fair; not much change in temperature. .\l HT l-IU I i O LOU lCAli Uli‘ l-' ll ‘E. Ti.» r. ‘Hllii, April iii-Minimum lihli musi- Illillii iompvrzililro Dawson ... ., . ii 2b‘ Aklnvik . . 113B ii Eilllikliilflll . . . 4! lh-glnu ... . ~10 Winnipeg Tmonio Oltiiwn . Alonireal Quebec .. . . Saint John llnlifux (‘hnrluitoimt FORECAST Maritime Prnvinecaw-Modorntc lo fresh northwest to north winds; fiilr; not rum-b change in temperature. High tldn this iuurnlng at 0.05 sml this afternoon at ii 20. SILIFIEIP this evening at 0.30 niul rises tumor-row morning ut l’: 22. First quarter moon Wednesday, April l0_ 1'.‘ 4'.’ p. m. Summcrsiil" ililr eighteen minutes inter lhlin Chnrlivtiotnvrn. ‘Legs Borden 0.15 A if. (lixtrn) i , . Leave Tormootino (Ixtn) l1 A. M. 3.56 P. l. dell! accept loudly .-...a¢9.v~‘[i7i‘1¥e~"$* "i- 11:1)!