Maiiiust -' ; , ‘ ‘I o’: . naaa MAN‘ Zuni-nu t ., dial, Pounded Ill! ,' l""h,,',§;".'.' Gus-din ‘two 00ft! rrest “t Connection With Vatican Bombing ‘Strained Relations-Between Spain And The Vatican Are Cited As Cause For Bomb. Explo- sion —- Spfniard Arrested. Andros Berding Associated ' press Staff Correspondent.) VATICAN UYPY, M1110 gomsn Catholic world. A Spaniard, Demetrlo Solamon, rho arrived in Rome from his own wintry only a few hours before [he bohrbing occurred, was arrest- [d and charged with planting the uplosive. Police sald Solomon stood in he centre of St. Peter's square and watched the explosion. which uused s panic among holy year pilgrims and injured four persons, md then ran away with aFascist officer in pursuit. ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS, ETC "Announcement: are Ill column at il cents Melly payable 1n advancfl. ‘Plteserve Saturday, July lst, for .. at St. Margaret's. 1324-6-26-2! "Reserve Wednesday, July 5th bl- Tea Plrty at Bonshaw starting IZHO-S-ZQ-Bi. it 4 6610C! P. M. "ice Cream Social-Rose Valley illll, Wednesday, June 28th. 1316-6-26-21. "Date of Jersey Field Day» at Iorth Wiltshire changed to ‘Thurs- tty, July 13th. 1270-0-24-41. "Seven Mile Bay Hall play and lince Thursday night, June 29th; 1883-6-26-41‘ “York Festival Wednesday, June 18th. See Rodd and others in five llllle race. 1337-6-27-11. "Greenvale W. I. invite you to their lce Cream Festival, Wednes- liy, June 28th. 1336-6-27-11. "See play "The Arrival oFKitty" blfount Albion Hall, this ‘Tuesday liming. ' 1338-5-27-11. "lce Cream and Dance in Upper Belle River School, Friday night, lune 30th. Admission 15 cents. ~ l34i1-B-27-li. ‘_ ‘Come to the W. M. S. Icebream tlval at Hartsville, on June 28th. = not fine, following night. _. 1314-6-27-21. "the Col-ran Ban Dramatic Club their play "Apple Valley " in Hope River Hall, Friday, Rllit 30th. 1§44-6-27-4i. "Dancel Fortune Hall, Friday, has 30th. Modern and‘ old time hating. Souris Orchestra. Admiss- m_ yrs/nod relations between‘ Spain ma the Vatican were blamed to- , by authorities tor yesterday's “mp explosion in the portioo of pi. Peter's. Mother Church of the Inserted 1n per word Solomon escaped his pursusr but made the mistake of throwing his passport in a fountain near the Piazza. police related. which the officer recovered. 'I'he passport carried a photograph of the bear- er and after a seamh o! hotels, Solamon was arrested early today. Authorities expressed the belief his action was inspired by the Pope's encyclioal of June 3 and the Latae Seterltiae excommunleations of members of the Spanish Gov- ernment. Iiis action followed the invoking of the revolutionary reli- gious laws in Spain natlonallzlng church and turning all religious orders ‘nto civil societies. The Spanish Embassy and the Vatican were notified immediately of sola-rrlons arrest. It was not divulged whether the prisoner made any statement. Under tenns oi the Lateran Treaty, he will be tried in Italy. NIUBN INTEREST IN Mlililll [IB- RARY SUHUUE 25 Registrations A]- ready Received For Summer Course at P. W. College. (Canadian Press) MONTREAL, June nil-Registra- tion for the Prince Edward Island Library Institute-the sun-mel- ses- 1 sion of the McGill Library School- to be held in the New Prince of Wales College at Charlottetown, has exceeded expectation, standing at present at about 25, it was announ- ced todoy. The course, which is given under the auspices of the Prince Edward Island Department of Education, of which the Hon. W. J. P. MacMillan, M.D., is Minister. will open July i, and continue for four weeks. One of the features of the course will be the illustrated lectures by Dr. G. Lomcr, McGill University Librarian, and Col. Wilfred Bovey, head of the Department of extra- mural relations at M06111, who are leaving for Charlottetown tomor- row. " The object of these evening lectures will be to encourage read- ing and special reading lists have been prepared. l c LfZ/j/i’ The People’s Paper Covers Prince has‘... Island Like theDew " 'il_"-""" '~~_.__ ' $9 ---~-<---< \ Everybody MERE MAN lfawouun be n dreamer we knawdnesnsgoluyeuflly. MAXIMS OIL CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1933 ConfeTence Enters “Third Week With Renewed Hopes For Success HlR MEASURE orurllmlsm Sir Newton J. Moore, Statesman, Soldier And Industrialist Is On Visit to the Pro- .’ vince. "mere is reason for a oertaini measure oi optimism. as there has been a general improvement in business conditions in this country, and throughout the world," stated Sir Newtown J. Moore, statesman, soldier and industrialist, and Pres- ident oi the Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation, in an interview with a Guardian representative last evening. "Undoubtedly, as lifr. Bennett expressed it a few days ago, until the exchange situation is more or lees stabilized, it is difficult |to tell what will happen." Sir Newton, who was at one time Premier of Western Australia. Gen- eral Officer Commanding the Aus- tralian Imperial Force in the Unit- ed Kingdom, and who has been for the last twelve years chairman of the Standing Orders Committee oi the British House of Commons, is on his first visit to Prince Edward Island. While here he will take the opportunity of seeing representa- tives of his company, and will be (Ooo-ltinued on Page 3) Mrs Roosevelt A r_r i v e s A t Welchpool 1V.B. - (Canadian Press) WELCHPOOL, N. 3., June 26- Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. wife oi the President of the United States, Roosevelt summer home on Campo- bello Island. Mrs. Roosevelt and party came from Lubec, Me., by car ferry. She will supervise final arrangements for the arrival here Thursday of the President and his party. '.Vominated'To Fill RotqryDirectorate (Canadian Press) BOSTON, June 26—-John J. Allen, Mayor of Ottawa, was nominated by the Canadian-Newfoundland delegation to Rotary International today as a candidate to fill one oi the five vacancies on the Rotary directorate. As Allen was the un-' animous choice oi the delegation his election to the one place on the board to which Canada is entitled was virtually assured. Former P. E. I. -- -(A.P.)—The 100 aviators loll ,s P A N ls ll lllrlgjolllll Attempted F l i g h t. arrived here today to "visit the . hard Rust, Prussian Minister Education and Culture, in a state- ment tonight denying Government Departure Of Air Armada Set For Today ORBEIELLO, Italy, June 26 w- paring for the take-off of 86 Italian seeplanes on a flight by stages to the Century of Pip- gress Exposition in Chicago yia Eastern Canada retired early tonight. with weather indica- tions promising the possibility of departure in the morning. It was officially asserted the Armada. would leave barring lmfavorable change. ES UE F r0 m‘ Havana to Mexico City Ends in Disaster . (Associated ifrcss) MEXICO CITY, Jlmc 26—The Federal Minister of Interior an- nounced tonight that the bodies of Captain Mariano Barberan and Lieutenant Joaquin Collar, Spanish trans-Atlantic flyers missing six days 0n an attempted flight from Havana, and the wreckage of their plane had been found _rn a. lagoon in the State of Tabasco. The Minister's information came from R. Values ‘Cerda. chief of im- migration at Puerto Mexico, who said: “Aeroplane Cuatro Nlentos found wrecked in the Lagoon Arli- cran or Mschona, State of Tabasco. Pilots dead." I Will Conduct ' Pro b e In to Banking Firm WASHINGTON, June 26.-— (A.P.) —-Amid an atmosphere of expect- ancy, Senate investigates today completed months of secret prepar- ation for the opening tomorrow of the public inquiry into operations of Kuhn, Loch and Company with the prospect oi evidence involving a new list of prominent persons. As the climax to their months oi quiet digging into operations of the banking house approached, invest- igators gave no intimation of what they expect to disclose to the pub- ilc. Denies Formation Of State Church BERLIN’, June 26—(A.P.)-"-Bern- planned a. state o! that the vurnlcl or NUT oulllv llrlltl NED Andrew Dunn Freed From Charge of Breaking And En- tering, in Supreme Court Trial. A verdict of not guilty of the charge o! breaking and entering was brought in by a. Jury in the case lot The King vs. Andrew Dunn in the Supreme Court yesterday. Mr. ‘Justice Arsenault was on the (Bench. The accusedlwas charged lrlolll 555i; SILVER STABILIZATION India Ready to Co-op- erate in Fixing Price of Silver-Indebt- edness Debated. By Georg; Hambleton. Canadian Press Staff Writer. I with breaking and entering the drug store of Mr. E. A. Foster or. lvfarrh 3. Witnesses for the Crown were Edward Weeks, E. A. Foster. Sergt. DcmlnicDoyle. The accused was the only witness for the de~ fense. Weeks who has already con- fessed to lhe Charge has been act-v- lng a sentence of two years at Dor- chester Penitentiary, and was bTWSht over to glye evidence. He stated Dunn whom he met at 12 o'clock on the‘night in question. amimllxanlcd him on the break at tho drug store. i Dunn denied any lmowledge ct‘ the break, and stated that he was (Continued on Page 3) JURY FINDS NEN- NUUU GUILTY UE M U R DE R Eighteen Year Old Youth Takes Ver- dict Calmly - Com- panion to Be Tried Today. (Canadian Press) ANIl-IERST, N. 5.. June 26-M- vah Henwood stood convicted to- night of the murder of Mrs. Mabel Smith. A Supreme Court jury de- liberated less than an hour before returning late today with o. verdict finding the l8 year old Amherst youth guilty of killing the aged woman in her home last February. The young prisoner took the ver- dict calmly. But his mother and the wife whom he married two weeks after the murder were intears as Foreman C. Whitney Murray an- nounced the jury's finding. The verdict carries with it a mandatory death sentence, which will be imposed by Mr; Justice Hugh Ross at the conclusion of the court term. Before then, the court will have concluded the case of Trueman Smith, charged jointly with Henwood in connection with the crime. The two boys were arr-sted on ‘ their endless course. ill 35 cents. _ 1347-6-27-31. Arrives To Resident Dead church, added that the individual- ity or the right of self-rule _oi the "Come and see "Nora Wake Up" lforell Hall on June 28th. Dance lid Refreshments afterwards. Pro- Ms in aid of new Legion Hall. . 1318-8-26-31. "Plfly "Cabbages or Dollars," by i. Stewart Presbyterian Church R people in Hartsville Hall esday evening, June 27. 1321-6-28-21 "Five mile run at York festival .-'- esday, 28th. Prominent run- entered. Race begins at 0.80 at ht's Bridge. 1320-6-28-21 "See "The Black Terror" in Lot hall on Wednesday, June aatn, Woe ‘Traverse players. Admis- ' l 25 and 15 cents. Two hours’ ' ‘in: after play. 1aaa-o-2s-al ‘ / "its Cream Festival at Rustico "day. June 28th. Clam Chow- ltrved. Meals 25c and 15c. Pro- ‘ in aid of Convent. . ‘ ll77-lfld-2i-st-2i. "Fiddlers and Dancing Contest, Catholic Women's League, etown Hall, Wednesday, July Send entries to Mrs. D. P. Mc- _°ll- Admission 25c—Dance, etc. 1253-8-23-27-29-30-41. "How would y‘ou like to invest mime)‘. lo that you would re- 7 Ycflrs’ income in one year? humus m: about u. a. a. ‘ . Manager, Sun Life. ' P26644341 Discuss Case (Canadian Press) OTTAWA, June 2d.—lvi.r. Justice Willis Van Devanter, of the United States Supreme Court, has arrived in Ottawa to Join with Hon. Lyman P. Duff, Chief Justice of the Su- preme Court oi Canada. 1n consider- ationo_f the evidence concerning the destruction by a. Unite a s coastguard yessel on March iii, 1929, of the Canadian schooner "I‘m Alone," and the death oi a member of her crew. "Come to the dance in Flat River Hall Friday, June 30. 1350-11 "See Corran Ban at Hope River Friday. June 30th. 1866-6-37-41 "Play and dance at Hope River flidly, June 30th. 1856-8-27-fl "Dance Thursday night at River View platform, Stanley. Good mu- sic, new management. 1853-6-27-21 "The Ladies Aid are having an afternoon tea. booths of various kinds and Baby Show at the open- ing of new‘ hospital July 4. 1354-11 "Clyde River play. "The ‘Arrival Kitty," advertised for Mt. Al- bion, postponed untll further no- tire on account of sickness. 1357-li (Canadian Press) church w;uld not be touched. (Continued on Page '1) VANCOUVER, June 26. -- John Simpson Gordon, 67, Superintendent of Vancouver City schools, is dead here following an illness of several months. Mr. Gordon was born in Prince Edward Island and came here in 189B as pastor of Mount Pleasant Presbyterian Church, a position he ANGLO - SOVIETR TRADE RELATIONS ARE DISCUSSED “I cnucr and teaching profession. Dominion Gov.’ Will Extend W'e l c o m e OPITAWiA». Juno 20--(C.P.)--'I‘lre Dominion Government will be re- presented at the informal welcome to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. at Campobello Island, N. 13.. the last oi’ this week. by Hon. Murray Maui-area, Minister of Pensions and National Health, it was on- nounced today. Dr. MacLaren is the New Brunswick representative in the Cabinet. He will be associ- ated in the welcoming ceremony with Hon. L. P. D. Tllley, Premier of New Brunswick, for the resumption of trade cently broken off between Great | Britain and Soviet Russia were be- gun today.) Negotiations For The Resumption Of T rode, Broken Since The “Moscow 'l‘ria1” Are Begun. l (Associated Press) LONDON, June flat-Negotiations re- Maxim Lltvlnoff, Russian For- eign Commlssar, called on Sir John Simon. Secretary for Foreign Af- fairs, and they discussed the sub- jsct for several hours. A British partial embargo on Russian 8006s was imposed after the trial in Moscow last April oi a group of British engineers charged with espionage and sabotage and the sentencing to prison terms of two of them. Russia countered with a full embargo on British goods and drastic restrictions on British shipping. , "We made clear to one another the position of our respective gov- emmcnis and the present obstacles to renewal of Anglo-Soviet trading nezotiationc." M. Liivinoifsald af- ter leaving the meeting. A Foreign Office amrouncrment said "it was arranged to have an- other meeting in the next few days for the continuation of these con- versatimisf‘, Russian circles in London said IDNDON, Juno 23-410. P. Cablew - The World Economic COHISFEIZP": altered its third week l day with .1 l _ gromisc oi some order" if. a 01181.1( ‘ f world. Iilost concrete of today's (le- i vclopmenth were that India, one n" the World's lnrgtwsst holders of silu" is ready to tu-oncraic in stabilizing, its price. LLELCF another crisis sees signs oi light. Committees multiply in wearisomc monotony, groups and blocs show nrcreascd activity and threats of 1 l zlnce is stabilized currency bloc {he ‘Wheat conference ; U 10 PAGES FRANCE SEEKING i ro llucll POUND g T0 FRENCH mm: l Effort Made To Form ' AStabilized Curren- ' cy Bloc With U. S. Excluded. "'_' I l (By Melvin K. Whiieleatheri (Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON. June 26 —— (A. P.) -— hringlrlg tremendous . .ure on Great Blztaln to hltcil lie Plrlllrl sterling 1L: till: Frarll". ‘t was lcarnecl on high authority "night. in an efiort to form a; with tire‘ cited States excluded. The French were laboring to pre- vent Ilvlland and Swltverlartd from leaving the gold standard as an in-‘l ternatlonal ring of exchange bear“ operators were blamed in g0‘d bloc‘ Conference splits and brcnkulls run | flilirief5 f0!‘ todfll/F heavy 18-11 1X1’ Sullle contin- , eutal delegates cnlnc expecting i nothing and frankly will not be dis- appointed ii nothing happens. Yet ierence moves steadily forward. The main theme today was na- tional indeutedness—not inter-gov- ernmental war rlebls but rather gov- ernment or other loans floated abroad. Neville Chamberlain, Chancellor of the Exchequer, strongly pressed the point that before international lending, could, be‘ fully rcsugqqdcqn- iidence in the internal stability oi Europe must be restored. This fol- lowed a speech wherein Senator (Continued on Page 3) Special Stamp To Commemorate C ra in Fair (Canadian Press) OTTAWA, June 2o—~Canada will print a special stamp to comme- morate thc World Grain Fair at Regina this summer. It will be an over-print of the 20-cr-nt stamp is- sued in 1927. as a part of the “his- toric issue" of" the Confederation Jubilee. It will depict a western grain field and tractor" and will bear a caption “World Grain Ex- hibition, Regina, 1933." It has not been decided by the Post Office Department when the stamp will be placed on the market. R. Officer Relieved Of His Command (Canadian Press) CANSO, N. 8., J1me 26-43. T. M. Cotton cnlnmandcr of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Cutter Scatarle. was fined $10 and reliev- cd of his command todsv follow- irlg an official enquiry into a shoot- ing incident at Canso a week ago. ‘The investigaimn resulted from a complaint laid by J. A. liicPhee, of New Glasgow, who said Cotton hall fired a. bullet into his car as he slowed down in anslver to g. corn- mar-ld in stop. L o bs te r Shipments Increase ST. JOHN, June 26. -- Shipments of litre Mnritinle lobsters to Boston fish markets from Saint John by boat. this year are to date more than a third better than last year, A. C. Currie, local agent of the Eastern Steamship Lines, stated last night. Thirty-seven tons-in 515 crates and 25 barrels-of lobsters, which wcrc shipped to Saint John by ox- press from the vicinity oi Slrcdiac, Pictnu and Charlnttctolvrr, were trarrsieriori in the S. S. Saint Jullil. today's talk had not changed the status qun. which sailed fru- Boston on Saturday (flight the guilder mm sac 1-2 to ass‘ Dutch guilclers to the pound. Such a. stabilization. th'e high authority said, would mean direct, despite waves of pesslmisnl the Con- ___._____ _____ .____.______________ (Continued on Page 7) UUNMISSIUNER UF S l} U U T81 NRRIUESL NERE Mr. John A. Stiles I In Province On Official Visit in Connection With Boy Scout Movement. Mr. John A. Stiles, M. A., B. Sc., M. I. M. E., Ottawa, Chief Execu- tive Commissioner of Boy Scouts for Canada, arrived in the province last evening on his official visit, and will be here till Monday next. He will visit the various scout or-. ganizations on the Island and will; confer with leaders of the move-i ment here. Today Mr. Stiles will go to Brudenell, and will visit the Annunl Inblorlptlon Delivered Q00 ByXMlCnnndnn-ndU.8.A-I4J0 BIG FUUR NEAR sooono §Australia—n__ Objections to the Reduction of Wheat Acreage are Believed Met. By Alvin Hellman. Associated Press Staff Writer. LONDON, June 26.—(A.P.)-—Aus- :l'allarr objections to the wheat acre- 1.5m reduction progralnrne were br xlcved tonight tc i13\8 been met b! .1 formula devised at. a Conferencl with Stanley M. Bruce, Australian High Commissioner in the United Kingdom. Frederick E. lvurphy, publisher or the Minneapolis Tribune and an American wheat expert, said: "I am sure Australia will assist us. Failure to agree wculd result in unbelievable chaos and i. am confid- ent. of ultimate success." Canadian and American represen- tatives are pressing for the reduc- tion scheme by which the "big four" exporting nations would reduce acreage up to 15 percent. Argen- tina, the other prospective particip- ant, is agreeable to the reduction but one of its spokesmen said today "l? Australia is unwilling to coma into the arrangement we will have to withdraw.“ I: Convinced Mr. Bruce, although antagonistic toward any restriction scheme, is (Continued on Page 3) (Canadian Pres!) BOSTON, June 28.—(A.P.)- Massachusetts, through a con-. stltutional convention, today ratified the amendment repeal- ing the 18th amendment, becom- ing flue seventh state totake such action. The voto was 1111- anlmous as the 45 delegates were elected on their pledge to vote for ratification. 4r Nof-HEADED MAN Doesn't ALWAYS MAKE A WARM FRlcNo y proposed camp site there. He will also visit Montague where he will interview Scouts and those inter- ested in Scouting. At 6.30 this even- ing he will meet the Cub Packs oi Charlottetown in Zion Church, and at 7.30 he will meet the Scout leaders. On Wednesday the Commissioner lvill visit Rcdequc and Svmmerside, 4 (Continued on Page 7) W/IreatSoars More! Than 7cts. Bushel (Associated Press) CHICAGO, June 26—Excitcri trading which in volume surpassed wariimos accompanied prices that. soared more than 7 cents a bushel today ior voile-at. Widespread ‘killdltlons approach-é lrg crop failure seldom equaled in‘ tlic Ul\1:cd States were reported as, a rcslft. of three weeks of_ abnorm- = a1 heal. and drought. Alvprcximate- ly 150020.00 bushels of all grains shrugged lrmtls here today as pric- es shot sky-ward. Violent. fluctuations too’: deliveries of wheat to ‘Within near- l_v immediate reach of $1.00 a bushel. a iigurothntsecmedinlpos- slbio n.’ realization a few months ago when wheat was wort-h less than half that prim. In the last. minute oi trading, May wheat. touched 99 1-4 cents a bushel and‘ closed st that figure. The wheat. market as n whole clos- ed flurrrod. 6 0-8 to '1 s-B ccllis :1- lxwc Sleturriayls finish. corn 2 3-4- 3 1-2 up. oats. 4 5-8-5 3-8 advanced nnd D‘O\‘l$10llS show-rig s rise of 7 in 45 omits. i l Moderate to fresh soutirwe; Win68; Partly cloudy and nludergtes ly warm with scattered showers and some fog. fllfTfl-Tfififlilifililkl. (Il-"lflVlT 1min, June 2l‘.._,\linimum n.1,‘ rumn temperatures;- Dawson iiklnrrk Victoria Ynurnlller ‘hlmnnlon llzrlvfi‘ ‘Tcb 111:4 iJ Saint John .. rrlif.l t . . . (‘h-lrlnlinlrlm» .. YURI] A \*"‘ .\1fdl*flgin lmrlll .|- luly ..-l' lrW] llnrvliivnl‘ Prov‘. rs.- frr-nlr wmtlllvosr wiu-l-i lllli] nhilcr-illoly- nnrllr \\il'l shawl-r- null sluv fog. High tllc the‘ lit uni tllnl-rrr-rn‘ null Sun so‘: ill’: m 111v or rises inrn~5r|uu~ u wr-liinif u‘ Fret qnnrioi" ruoon l'rl.7»»'. 9 ll p nl. Svruuu-r illc fill.» r-iylllucu llrirr than ('h.’il‘l|\(lf-ll|\\'ll. (‘All I El(ll\ ' ‘IIHDYLE I “W-nk rims -l i"lll ' PWTIEFII lg m.:1 P.1d. (Y-Trlrn :51!» p.111. 1 \\'-~ -k II.'\l‘l~Iil‘I\\| a (‘rum 'l'wrlurn"ne lit)" n. n1 (Extra): 23'» p. rn.; 1 n. 1 H‘ Jun: m‘ u- null" 91.1 ,1 m. l 5.-u...<n_,_<..a~_»-____......~_._.¢._. ._.._. .-...» ...-.,_,, ,___