-ed a provincial convention be call- Maxims o1 A Magi-z MAN >%/’ The People's Paper (lovers Prince‘ Edward Island Like the Dew m, cousin. Iealled saw gbfalrlatkhwl fibula! lie 0on0! MARKAllllNlS SENTENBEI! T0 ll A N S jGlaoe Bay YouthUn- moved asDeath Sen- tence Is Passed Will Seek Appeal. (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) SYDNEY, N. 8., Nov. IO-Nioh- olas Markadonis aat alone in the death call of ‘the 03170 Brawn county jail tonight While Us law- yq; an appeal in an at- tempt to save him from the gal- lows. convicted of murdering his brother's wife. MII- 9190 35,111‘!- sdcnis, the 20-year-old youth, son of a Glace Bay didnotflinchastbedes-thssn- fence we! Passed. His Counsel, D. A. Cameron, K. ' 6., and L. D. Currie, K. 0., an- nounced an appeal would be taken immediately-to the full bench d the Supreme Court of Nova Sootia, but they did not indicate upon what grounds the defence would leek a new trial. The victim, wife of Stephen Marksman; of Glau Bay, was shot down in the kitchen of her 1/ .. —-—— Tenseness Increasing In Europe/ As 'Observers Fear New Outbreak’ Resulting From Saar Plebiscite Churches Fight Nazi Drive to Win Vote in Basin, home the afternoon of July 20 while filling a milk bottls for her baby. Henry Endorsed As Leader Of Conservatives‘ will gu German, French 0r League BARBRUCKEN, Saar Basin, Nov. 12-Wi1i the plebiscite. to be held in. the Saar valley next January be thesccne fcranewwatinlur- (0.1% By Guardian's Special Wire) °P¢- TORONTO, Nov. 141-11011. George Wm the election which B. Henry, former premier, today also endow-Elna house leader for e Conseflfli m. opposition art-tho. um romance session by Con- servative members in caucus hare today. The members recommend- schedulcd to dfcidedqxhether at’: diam!- taken Wm‘. . War. reinrns lfigGer-iil? any. turns to France or remains under the mandate of the Llztgllf: of Nations. ever be held? ._ I.“ , r- obsewvers fear mail. Germany's quarrel with Hence over the rich iron and coal miner of the Saar will precipitate open hostilities between the two nations and dralw into conflict England and other European nations. From this city of 125,000 popula- tion, an observer vast-oil the wing ‘ nesa t c rams. H! N221, Communist, Socialist- and Catholic residents mark time bieathlessly until the voting clay, January 13th. ed immediately after the session to consider party leadership ‘and policy, The members recommended that all (lonservative candidates at the June 10 provincial election be summoned into conference with Mr. Illenry and his legislature follow- ers before the session nee. The ferenos would be for the Purpose of considering party ques- tions and advice to members. Mr. Henry declared this would be ac- wmplished at the earliest and most Idventaaoom owvrtuni ANNOUNCEMENTS COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS. ‘ ETC "Announcements are Inserted column at I eolia per Iirlcllv parable In advance. "Masquerade Dance in Iona Hall, November 1am. L-2327-l1-18-8Ll Hitler Wants Saar Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler has sworn that the Saar must. return to Germany, and bis words have been thundering and ominous to the factions which his Nazis have "liquidated" and crushed across the border in Germany. ‘I'm Versailles Treaty in 1919 gave France use of the Saar coal beds a3 recompense for the French coal mines destroyed by the invad- ing Germans, but it carried with ill word I Within its boarders Saar Baaln, of fictions. Outside, rich iron ml! coal territory bo- Germany are almost at war over LEFT, the "Neues Londes Greicht" Itwecn France and Germany, is tur- the bulent aver the forthcoming lllcb- upper LEFT. anti-Nani propaganda ions‘ commission iscltc to decide whether the Burning distributed. Upper RIGHT, plebiscite in was. Iformaition amertedly dealing with "Charlottetown Teacher's Study Map skim-coy, November 11m at P. W. College, "Hope River Baccal- November one evening only. WP!!!’ after 4 . N. Li-ZISB-li-lo-BL ' ‘Come to the Weighing Party at Prank Jardinak, Bradalbane, Friday,’ still Germans. They spoke November 16th. L-B866-11-15-ll. "Zion Church Guild will hold a L-saez-ii-is-ii. ' l Pantry and Candy Sale at Hoimanb ‘ ‘M. on Saturday, November 17th. 1|-%l-1l-15-I- “Danse Willows Hall ilriday. bv. 1e Lunches served. Proceeds aid z. Ilaatsville Rocha Club. mm-n-is-zi. "Ohms flail-Reserve Satur- hr. November mil for Institute Supper and Basalt. Irflfl-ll-lil-lb-H. Reserve Tuesday, November 20th Omoert and loslal a Barring- Hall in aid of Hockey non. L-uoi-u-is- "LpnaalBaIu-inaid of er. lhm Madam!- at. nu, . Nmlwer and Dad. Bat gm mill-l nbfse-m-as. for Wu it stipulations. These were that in 1035, Saarlanders would determine their allegiance by ballot. and ll‘ Germany won out, the latter could buy back the mines. A year 8B0. Germany's return to power in the Saar was virtually clinched. For the Saarlanders, oven after 14 years of seperation, warp C language, wore its native costumes and shaved their heads. smoker‘, light cigars and drank their beer out of huge stelns just as their brethren did across the temporary, border. ' Then the Heals swept into power and bezan to o0 all the opposition groups a Swastika. mould. As Hitl s juggernaut steem-roilered Germany, reduces ai control under its lnslilh com- missioner. Geoffrey Knox. IaarIarCbI-‘ohn d 800,000 incidents are devout nee. and my looked with horror and ‘flees- at the religion ma. . valley. Above scenes the balloting ls expected to be the Catholics. who are looking to the Vatican for direction. Commissioner Knox a few months ago informed the league 0f Nations that the Nazis were in- timida/ting the Saarlanders. The police chief of the disputed region narrowly-escaped ’ “ . In- Nazi intimidation was stolen and scores of anti-Nazis were beaten. Asks Protection Declaring the Saar police, num- bering 1,000 were inadequate to patrol the Saar during the voting Knox requested the Iieaguc to fur- niah additional police. Premier Mussolini of Italy offered to fur- nish 2,000 Gemini-speaking Ital- ians to assist during the balloting 1n I'm-nee the crisis also has‘ brought action. Announcing to the French Chember of Deputies that Germany has a gigantic army and plans to seize the Saar thromh a putsch. General Henri Petein de- for military expenditures. French garrlsons in Lorraine and near the Saar Basin have been pxaparcd for instant duty. Gun: have been unlimbeaed, and troops now parade on the heights over- looking the Saar. nnoe obtained the sanction of Engand for these troop movements on the promise to use them only on request of the League Gannon papers. spurred on by the Nani Foreign Office. have ex- ploded in wrath over the lbench action. They have flayed the move, predicting it will main another Ruhr occupation with Franco ag- ain losing the icspm of the world. RIVAL UNIBNS ENll CAMPAIGN Nova Scotia Miners A w a i t Count of Vote. (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) GLACIZ BAY, N. 5., Nov. ia-Two weeks of bitter campaign‘ for membership by United Mine Work- ers and Amalgamated Mine Workers whirled toward a clue tonight as ths last cards were banded in to company offices for a count designed toendrivalryintissNovaScotia ooalfields. Under a new amendment to the duseforonlycnsunicnandthe count to begin tomorrow morning _ union each shall recognise in future. amendment was passed at the last session of the Legislature polillle solution of the o‘ ' i&.wtmfla Osman labor camps. 0b- immfil‘ bbeisaedfcragnipuiacihltowz: 00. L-lfl-il-ll-tf- no" ‘m, Maud’ ‘Mun, _ . . m a"“‘“‘".... ,-,i",,~,,",,,:'=g,,"gg o “do... o. 1m- ’ cbqg " w_~.. Kali M!!! which was . - t’ Austria. lie our unit ir ma“. _ Qfl h hi" fllflflflllfi lull 11*“ ta the Sear. the factions oppos- ing uflolaowith llexi Ger-raw Imtaats. wboo formerly i Joined to combat the Hui element situation in the llllllatiive Anunbiy. which set Nov. is as the date for a Qowdowl. phuw, palace where the France and coal, king ln the Saar basin. Lower League of Nat- will meet for ~~-_.__....- \ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADAfTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1934 nunmss nu FUR ECBNOMIB s E c u]; | TY Pres. Roosevelt H a s Program to Help the Individual and Thereby Stimulate Economic Recovery. Read by Everybody 10 PAGES llornlng Gull-dial. II‘ Charlottetown Guardian Two Cad. hunted m British Naval Plans Tamed Down By U. S. (A.P. By Guardian's Spechl Win) LONDON, Nov. 14—R£liahle re- Great Britain tried without success to induce the United States‘ representatives at a tri-power naval conversations here to abandon their opposition to compromise proposals put for- ward by the British delegation. A lengthy surprise conference at which tho British delegates fur- ther explained their plan—which would, it is understood, grant Ja- pan naval equality in name but not in fact-failed to shake the Thain (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) (By W. B. Bagsdale) (Associated Press Staff Writer) (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 - The broad outlines of a plan designed. to make life more secure for the: individual and thereby stimulatei recovery were sketched today by President Roosevelt and turned cv- er to a group o! experts for fash~' inning into blue print form. The immediate objectives of the programme the President has de-f cided upon were:—- I Unemployment insurance of a cooperative federal-state form; the funds to be held and invested by the federal government; the bene- fits to be administered by the states. Encctment of state laws to carry out such a. programme. An effort to bring the persons now on relief rolls back into pro- ductive employment and thereby =put them under the insurance sys- fem. From a. long range standpoint, he proposed: A uniform system eurity for the aged A method, perhaps through in- suranee, for providing against the economic loss due to sickness. Mr. Roosevelt declared that his to provide se- (Continued on P130 8) 20,000 Engaged In Heavy. In (By Paul Sanders, Associated Press Foreign Staff) BUENOS AIRES, Nov. li-An estimated 20,000 men today were en- gaged in heavy fight’ in the lngavl and Picuiba sectors of the Charo Boreal where activity was cuncentru‘ ’ as a result of Bolivia's latest offensive. l “M” m “ddnwnal “Emmy The Bolivian forces, aided by cavalry, were battering ahead in their drive to push Paraguay back from and supply centres. Already, reports regained 1,600 square miles of ground lost during Paraguays August drive. Today's fighting had as its o - iect control of two imimftflflfi Chaco strongholds but also repre- sented efforts by eaoh side to con- solidate its position before the heavy downpours cf the rainy sea- son, already due, begin. 'I‘herains will turn those low grounds of the northwest Chdoo into lakes and impassable .- will prove disastrous to either side caught with its communication and supply armaments disorgan- ised. GENEVA, mv. 14~Tlie Spanish delegation today issued a spirited note defending its proposal Mon- day to invite the United States and Brazil to participate in the League of Nations’ efforts to conciiiate the Ohcco beliigerents. The note, which made pointed reference to the "privacy" of the League proceedings. was made public as delegates were arriving to resume their secret sessions and draft a report, including recom- mendations for the ‘tiemcnt of the dispute, to be submitted to the special assembl of the league which convenes Nov. 20. The Spanish M000!!! 7°!‘ P61’- ticipation of the United States and Chdco Area Bolivians Follow-flip Offensive In Recapturing Territory From Paraguayan Forces. ighting important Bolivian communications reaching this capital said. they have BISAPPEARANSE I S A S l) l V E I] (AI. By Guardian's Special WlNi NASHVILLE, 'I‘enn., Nov. 1i—A baby tooth lifted the veil today from the strange disappearance 0f six year old Dorothy Ann Distel- hurt nearly two months ago and revealed her as the victim of an abductor and murderer. A child's body, so badly decom- posed from lyiflfi 111 0 W°411°h grave on Nashville's outskirts that recognition of physical character- istics was impossible, was positive- 1y identified by a physician and I dentist from aamall filling in the OTTAWA, Nov. 1i-——'I‘he physical growth of Dominion Stores Limited and examples of low wages paid by Metropolitan Stores Limited and the United nve cents to a1 Stores of Canada, Limited, were stressed today when the Mass Buying Com- mission continued its investigation cf chain stores. Dominion Stores Limited. the first of the food chains to be re- viewed, started in 1919 with two stores and at the end of 1033 had 505, 107 in Montreal alone and 0'1 in Toronto. The original invested capital was $20,000 but this increas- ed. year by year. until 1933 when it stood at S4.f9’1,i52. Sales jumped from $10.348,233 in 1924 to $25200,- 149 in 1931, sagging to $10,758,387 in 1933. Seventy-one percent of the shares of Dominion Stores is owned in the United States and three men, Mor- icy Smith. President; John B. Jam- eson. a director and W. S. Kies, chairman of the board, have con- trol of voting power through prox- ies. Auditors said it was apparent that Canada Packers. Limited was the largest shareholder of Domin- Americans’ insistence on continu- ance of the basic principles of the Washington and London naval treaties. ' The British representatives had asked for the meeting today and in its course, it was learned, they asked many questions trying to get the United States delegates to of- fer substitute compromise propos- als. All of these the Americans evaded. M E I S N ER IS SUMMITIED N]; SUPREME BUURT F 0 r m e r Cincinnati LONDON, Nov. 14.—Dnvid Niels- ner, former Cincinnati bookmaker, was committed today to stand trial on s. charge of having taken part in the kidnapping last August of John S. Labatt, lame and wealthy London brewer. of Metropolitan employees were on a part-time basis, earning a mere pittance weekly, less than $4.50 and unable to take another job because they were on call at all hours. Evidence was produced to show the United Chain, operating 14 more than two hours in his first public recital of his story of the kid- napping. The brewer pointed an ac- cusing finger at Meisner ns he stood in the prisoners dock and declared he was one of the kidnappers. Meisner shook his head vigorously and mumbled, but he declined to speak at the end of the hearing when Magistrate Hawkshaw asked him if he had anything to say. Describes Capture wozking 62 1-2 hours. Taking the organization as a whole, 15 full- time men were paid $7.34 each a week and 100 women, $0.10. Scat- tered examples were given of wo- men working for $6.28 a week and part-time help getting 90 cents over a week. A girl in Joliette, Que. tlve years with the company, was paid 84.50 weekly. The United Stores paid salcagirla in its Ottawa store higher wages than in Quebec stores. Tbs average for 1a salesgirls in Ottawa for one week was $10.77 and in Qeubec City, $623. (The Quebec minimum wage law at that time did not extend to girls working in stores but the On- tario Aot did. The Quebec Act war extended last May). Many examples of low wages paid by the Metropolitan 01 anizatlon were disclosed to the Commission. when it was shown that 7b percent of Metropolitan employees were on a part-time basis, Hon. H. H. Btev- ens said this worked a hardship on retailers who paid their stafls full time "and does a great injustice to the employees." He said this might be an attempt to evade minimum wage laws, Labatt told the court three men of whom Meisner was one had seized him on a lonely Lambton County road as he was driving from his summer home near Sarnia to a meeting in London, Aug. 14. He cap- tured him at pistol-point, he said, stuck court plaster over his eyes in an inefficient attempt to render him temporarily sightless and took him to a cottage on Lake Muskoka. In his long recital of events from the time he was captured to the morning, almost 60 hours later, when he was released in Toronto Labatt described his treatment at the hands of a guard he declared was Meisner and a. conversation between Meisner Probe Continued By Commission Inquiry Into MEI-‘Eilonaising Prac- tices Of United Stores And l! - l Other Organizations. Bookmaker w i1 1 "= 5,1,; g, ;,,;~;~=-=~»,»1,,;=-=- w- Stand Trial 0n “Bo these are the Canadian labor com" hemp and ca?" mmnf: napping Charge. Zliliflloaldloviif §$ci’.'°f.°§§‘“o‘a..§i; "Md ‘°‘°P’*°“° "m! m’ "We" West-Centre when details of Wakes gghnzrhaogem nlgespmmwe’ "5 i 1a b M t nu Sto - “‘ - , w- P- BY Guardians Svww Wire) fiflolosoh. Xorgllgn in rsriollfirl? “W” “dime! "w swim Magistrate C. W. Hawkshaw corn- m 1 9b“; d in O - he" “t 117 5-m- (7-3-97 P-Pl- mitted Meisner for trial airtismnext §mr§s;§¢,§§)_ ,,,,§",,,;';2,., II-B-‘Ii. Wednesday)’: amour-fur" -' Middlesex or Lsmbton County as- Eighteen 5319mm m m; Quebec the "ell? 5181181" sins after hearing Labatt spend guy 5mm avenged $633 a week_ Siren blasts were ded at in- Store's“; SlilRM uni PHILIPPINE I S l A N ll S Crops ll-a-‘i-nagedl Havoc Wrought In Three Provinces - Manila in Path of Gale. - l (A. P. Bv Guardian's Special Win!‘ MANILA, Nov. 1o-(’I‘bursda;¢l' --A typhoon tore destructivfliv across the Philippines today and swirled on toward anxiety-ridden Manila. Three provinces were isolated quickly as the furious storm hll would be more destructive than the typhoon oi’ Oct. m. which killed 8'1 persons and destroyed the homes of 21,000 others in Man-a iia and nearby provinces. "Typhoon is likely to be dangers our.” said a warning signal raised tervnls in the downtown section of Manila to warn the populace of the onccmi _, storm. Thc wind wag increasing in velocity. About 150 miles away, the shin Duet wirelessed a warning that the wind was of hurricane force, or in‘ excess of '15 miles an hour, B5 wmlmred with the 57-mile gala in the previous destructive storm. - It was the third violent stonrl to hit the Philippines within s month. Nose. capital of Camarines Bur Province. which suffered a loss of several lives Oct. 00 in an- other typhoon, was lashed again as the storm moved nortbwesterly in the general direction of Manila. The government wireless sl Legaspi, fourth largest city in the islands, was wrecked by the temp. olt. Just after it reported a steam- er had broken from its moorings, damaged three wharves and swepil onward. :Unemploynsent' Insurance Pa rt’ l and two others in which one man Out of a total of 861 full-time suggested he should be slain. Metropolitan employees, iii were paid between $6 and $10 weekly. Scattered instances were given of a married man employed as a dish- washer at $6 a week and his meals. A married man at Niagara Fells, Ont. was paid $11 a week. Attended Prisoner i-le said Meisner fed him, shaved him and once permitted him to re- 50f Program’ (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire)! WASHINGTON, Nov. iii-Pres- today definitely named pioyment inauranol as a part cf his social security fdent Roosevelt move the court plaster from his eyes and bathe them before covering them again with adhesive tape. Labatt, the only witness called by J. C. M. German cf Toronto, special Crown prosecutor, told the court the kidnappers failed to bandage his left eye completely when they captured Stores were not touched today but will be reviewed tomorrow. W. E. Kay, Toronto, auditor, told of the growth of the organization from its founding in 1910 by Robert Jackson Wages paid by the Dominion and W. J. Pentlaxid. progrmme for the session of the United States 0011a gross of the onomic security late today at the White House the forthcoming Inn talk to the advisory council " i conference on eo- President said insurance will him so that he was able to trace most of the route over which they travelled to the Muskokn hideaway (Cmtinued Ill PIA. l) b! in the prbgrasmae." and to see the room in which he was kept chained to an iron cot. second upper molar. ‘The body was found late ves- terday by two negro workmen in I secluded section. There was a m8 gag in the mouth and the left sidc‘ cf the skull was crushed as by a hammer. 31-5111, made by Salvador Msdari- III. chairman of the political com-, mitten c: the assembly and dis- armament expert. was modified by the Chaoo committee to a lvwvzu‘ tion au the committee chairman to seek the two nations‘ cooperation "at the most appropri- ate time." Immediately that it was deter- mined the kindergarten student, who disappeared Sept. 19 while on her way home from school, had been kidnapped and murdered, the U. S. Department of Justice and state law agencies ioined in an in- tsnsive search for the slayer and for a motive. Fragrant a. v. aadgfiavoury ecord & Forecast Of The Weather A l THREE DEAD IN ALBERTA FIRE (C. P, by Guardian's Special Wire) EDMONTON. Nlov. iii-Three children are dead, and their par- ents and a fourth child are in hos- pital haeasa resultof a fire which destroyed their farm shack near Alaihe today. Q Twoofthecbildrendied while a doctor was rufliing than over ‘i0 miles of road to Iitnonton, and the third diedQoniQht in hospital. The dead: Gerald Brouietts, two; Doreen Broulsote, four; Don- ald Broulette, five. Injured: Dennis Brouleffil. lev- en weeks; J. '1'. Biculette, 83; Mia. .1. 'r. srouieeto. “The parents and the fourth child an ewectod to recover, The fire was attributed to an ex- plosion of distillate, a tractor fuel fluid more inflammable tlmn gaso- line. which Mr. Bmulette had filklod on a sluggish fire in the and tomorrow morning at 5M. (Canadian Press) Moderate to fresh northwest lo aouthwefl wilds; fair and cool. IWETEOROIDGICAL OFFICE, Maritime Westz-Pair and cool. High tide this aftuucou ‘at M! Ssmeetstfiisaotermonatd: Imam!» Eafsu (ma ~ sum: 9 andrises Cl. IIIII ‘Leave Bordon I.‘ A. I. (l Pjl. have Tcrnelflwl (Ixtra) l! worst 4W . I~ wjfl-f- .. -._ *3" ' r "rm "wall"