MAXIMS ' or A . MERE MAN lcvleedcnsicr urccursnirccdhwcrth. manhood mess- lior-ninfl Guardian, Iolndefl Charlottetown Guardian Two m1‘, Ones Handwriting On Certificate Not Genuine » Claim Graphologist-T-e-l-ls Court Signat- ure On Certificate Of Owner- Ship 0f “Gypsum Queen” Not That Of Former Registrar I3RELIMINARY HEARING SET FUR TRIIAY L i q u o r Conspiracy Case May Be Ad- journed -- E i g h t Have Not Yet Ap- peared For Ar- raignment. (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL, Jan. 10—Prellmln- sry hearing of 62 persons charged with defrauding the Dominion and Quebec governments oi $5,000,000 in a huge liquor conspiracy was set for tomorrow, but sources closely . identified with the case intimated sn adjournment was probable. I. Lilllngton cf Prince Edward Island was today added to the list of 01 persons charged. Including Liillngion, there are eight persons charged who have not Yet appear- ed before -ili0'>00ill't for ment. The others are William Yule oi’ Scotland, who will leave Eng- land tomorrow for Canada, Frank Paturel and Willis-m Oxncr of St. Pierre. lvnquelon, Alan B. Robert- son. Newfoundland, Maximo Albert and Thomas Wiggins, New Bruns- wick. William Crawford, Canso, N. 5., and Louis dliintrement, Brooklyn, N. S. A total of B4 were reported eith- u- in Montreal or on their way here for the preliminary hearing tomorrow. ANNOUNCEMENTS COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS, ETC i "We will be buying chicken all next week. Highest market price. R. ll. Imkieson. Is-3600-l-i1-2i. "Dance in Florida Hall, Pownal. Monday, January 14th. in aid oi Rink- L-3508-l-ll-1i. "Fancy dress carnival in Bed- tqus Rink Friday, Jan. 18th. L-iicll-i-il-ii "Reserve Thursday, Jan. 31st, for s bridge party in Notre Dame Academy Hall. Charitable pur- poses. L-35l3. "Poultry! George reightizer 00.. next Queen Hotel, buying dressed Chicken and Fowl. Correct gradin highest prices. 1.4048 "Buying live hogs Hunter River ond Emerald ' Tuesday forenoon, lnnuary 15th. Kenslnglcn, Monday. Signed A. E. wedlock. L-3.’>02-1-11-3l. "The Joint Annual Month‘ of the New Perth Dairying 00., and the New Perth Egg Circle will be held in the Creamery on Tuesday, January 15th. Signed Douglas Mc- Laren, J. L. Dewar. "Dr. .7. D. Reddln, Dentist, will be at his oiiice on Great George Street every day except Wednesday, when he will be st St. Peters. Lrslfl-li-N-i-i-ii. "We will be ing live hogs at Remington on mdsy, January iii-ii. If P16 not fine ‘mesdsy. use call for prices. H. S. Moliwcn sud 1 10-21 . rams-fad 1 i (C-P. By Gui-dim’: Specie] win) UITAWA. Jan. iii-The disputed certificate of ownership o: the Gypsum Queen", filed with the Canadian reparation commissioner 111 Oct-fiber. i930. did not bear the 891113110 Bliflilture o! J. 8. Hender- son. former registrar oi shipping at PlYYlbWil-Ji- 5-. Arthur B. Farmer. hP-fldwflflns expert. testifiou in the kdlfilllltl‘ 9°11“ o Canada today. "I have arrived st the conclusion beyvfld any shadow of doubt." the jiomtc witness told the court. i!" limhue on the certificate zrognnot written by J. S. Harder- Hls evidence occupied three hours today in the hear-ins oi’ the gov- ernment action for recovery of e71,- 000 reparation money from song. tor H. J. Logan and Captain Hat- fieid. native Nova Scotisn. Called =5 B Rovernment witness. Mr. Far- mer will continue his evidence to- morrow whm he will be cross-emu smlned by W. N. Tillcy. counsel for the Senator. Compared Signatures In considerable detail. Mr. Far- mer told the court how he had compared recognized genuine sig- natures of Henderson with the signature of the disputed docui- ment. To def/amine the genuine- ness or spurlousness ci the pur- ported certlficate, witnesses said he hadwicsmiped age gross or con- spicuous features? er minute and the microscopic features, or the document, with admitted signatur- es of Henderson. There were differences in the slope, singularity and in the pro- portions of the length of the sig- nature in the disputed certificate with accepted signatures of the ‘Iii year old retired shipping mgistrsr, stated‘ Mr. Farmer. Filed By Logan The disputed certiiicaie was filed by Senator Ingan with the repar- ation commissioner as proof of ownership by Hatfield of the three- masted schooner. Henderson on the stand yesterday denied signing the document, while Senator Logan st sittings oi the royal commission held by Chief Justice Horace Haf- vey of Alberta. two years ago swore Henderson had signed the certifi- cate. Both sides to the action have summoned witnesses to support their conflicting contentions. with the Crown enraged for the fourth contQuous dav in ,. ‘ in: its evidmce, testimonv of two witnesses taken on commission in New York City was placed twfore the court. The much-di*"""<"d Alexander Allison. colored r s“ of the lcst vessel on her fatal voyage in 1015, and now a rigqer employed on Staten Island. iepudlhted in hi evidence on commission the state- ment he had made before the re- paration commissioner in Boston on oct. 1i, i930. that he had seen a ffl"l'\°dn which struck the “Gyp- sum Queen." He only had Men "told" bv his first mate the "Gyp- sum Oven" had been strwk bv s torpedo. This was when he had nvrhed t» the deck after hearing n "crash." and first mate Andrew tlrsiww was now dead Allison stated. Claims Vessel lost in Storm John Pratt. s Canadian mariner living in Massachusetts, swore in his evidence on commission that Hatfield on arriving st Liverpool. England. after being rescued. had said the "Gypsum Queen” was lost in s stofln- Hatfield. who before (Omitiiiiiod 0n Plfl ‘D Commission ny durum spun! win) an. 10 an HANIJRRITINB INTRHBUBEB AS EV _|_n_ m: “Jafsie” S t i c k s To Story That Haupt- mann Is “John”, the Cemetery Ransom Taker. (By John Ferris) (Alocistcd Press Staff Writer) (AI. By Guardian's Special Wire) HEIMINGGZON, N. J., Jan. l0- A tired but firm accuser, Dr. John F. "Jafsie" Condon stepped into the background of Bruno Richard Hauptmanrfs murder t :'|l today to watch the stale of New Jersey seek to cement its charge that the kid- nsp-murder of the Lindbergh baby was a one-man job. Prosecutors, much of their grim story already told, began the te- dious but important task of trying to link the carpenter's handwriting with the long series of cryptic notes in the ghastly ransom hoax-~$50,- 000 for a dead baby. ' "Jafsie," the '14 year old former school teacher who paid Col. Char- les A. Lindbergh's $50,000 for the baby already slain, stepped down from a seven-hour witness stand ordeal unshalmn in his story that Hauptmann is "John," the ceme- tery ransom taker. t His story was corroborated, his good faith affirmed by Col. Lind- bergh's attorney, Col. Henry Breck- inrldge, and "daisies" own daugh- ter, Mrs. Myra Hacker, bore him out. Both father and daughter re- pulsed insinuations that tic." ran- com man might have been the late Isador lllisch, tubercular German who, Hauptmahh claims, gave him the tell-tale ransom bills. And auction's relentless inquisi- tor, Edward J. Reilly, chief of Hauptmanzvs counsel, failed to get "Jaisie" to uphold the defence con- tention that a “gang" kidnapped and killed the baby on the night ocf MB-rch 1. 1932. Samples of the carpenter's hand- writing, penned 15 hours after he was caught in New York with thousands of dollars in ransom bills. were introduced through tho testimony of New York and New Jersey police officers. Fighting back sharply, the car- penter's defenders insmuated the samples were obtained under dur- ess. Obviously- weary, but keen and exact in his responses, the big for- mer ieacher in the baggy black suit gave way to Col. Breckinridge after brief re-dlrcct examination in which he described one of “his re- plies yesterday as “an error." The defence put him through 2 l-2 hours additional riiorous cross-examination and sought con- tinuously through w variety oi leads to impeach the aged Jamie's credi- bility. There was little of yesterday's banter exchanged between the flor- - (Continued on Page '1) ' Appeal Court To U" i v e Juagment A bo u t Feb. I (C. P. By fiusrdiarrs Spcclal Wire) QUEBED, Jan. l0.—\ludgmcnt on the appeal of the Crown against the acquittal of Nelson Phillips on s. charge of murdering Maud Ascoh. 15, at Gaspe is expected to be ren- dered by the Court of AliPefli-‘l he": about Feb. l. The five Judges heard flnsl argument of the prosecution and defence today and took the ab- peal under advisement. Phillips, once convicted and un- der sentence of death for the mur- der of the young girl, won a new trial on appeal and was acquitted at the second trial. The Crown ap- pealed the acquittal verdict on grounds of misdirection of the iury by the trial Judge. Mr. Justice Noel Bellssu, sud on grounds that con- fessions alleged to have been made by the 19-year-old accused should have been admitted as testimony. Probes Farm Machinery Manufacturers other big companies. loot so pol’- cent annually on their credit busi- ness. This was divided equally be- tween bad debts and the cost ci collections. ' former il purine the 1r. it. atevons form!‘ trade minister when he led an et- tack on the companies for higirsd- liinistmtive costs ihrc the tributicn lyltem oi mocks trenlffer warehouses which was costy when sales dropped. The companies also were charged with rolling up big inventories in 1Q and 10D, goods they could not sell during the, depression and whim‘. {Neil-last IN PELT PRICES Rise In Pelts on. Pounds And Under Reported From London Yesterday -—- H.B.C. Had 7% Per Cent Increase In Sales Over p9 Covers Prince Edward December. News of the silver for auctions in London continues to be satis- factory. The Hudsoifs Bay Com- pany sale of 25.000 pelts conclud- ed on Wednesday with l9 per cent sold, an average advance of seven and one-half per cent over the De- cember sale. The Company consid- ers this e most satisfactory show- ins. Last evening President Pgter G. Clark of the P. l. I. Put Pool, Summersi‘ , received s cable from Frederick Huth and y. London, stating that their ssle yes- terday was very successful, and Austria Shipbuilding P rogra mme Is Favo red. TORONTO, Jan. lO-The Nat- ional Association of Marine Eng- ineers intend to demand. immed- iately from the Dominion Govern- ment that the l0 ships of the Canadian Gcvernznent Merchant Marine, now used on the Canada- Australia route, be replaced by six new ships at a cost of $80,000,000, H. N. McMnster, president of the central division of the association announced today. Mr. McMasier said the. had been _“‘ was learned the Government pro- posed to sell the Canadian-Aus- tralian line to an English syndic- ate. This would mean that Canada. would lose s. trade route which in the last 16 years brought $64,000.- 000 to Canada. he added. Building c! the six new ships for ttho route would employ 10,000 men at Halifax, Hamilton, 0st,, Levis Quebec, and Vancouver, Mr. Mc- Master claimed. MliRE TAXES FUR IIIJEBEB QUEBEC, Jen. lit-New forms of taxation being considered in the Quebec Government were outlined by Premier L. A- ‘Iiaschereau in the legislative Amembly today as fol- lows: A tax on soft drinks". A tax of between five percent on large incomes; A tax on certain commercial op- emtions: A sales tax; And an increase in the gasoline tax from six to seven cents per gallon. provided Ontario would agree to make s similar ‘ The veteran Premier QORD length following opening cf the stick-a in reply to o nutter and l0 Maurice musicals, K. C, the opposition, who affirmed belief lire uinihlsisutim had lost con- “ legion, composed of tried Island Like the Dew that silver for pelts valued at i0 pounds and under showed an in- crease of 10 per cent over Decem- ber prices Those under l0 pounds continued firm with keen demand, with pelts for sll qualities running 90 per cent and over. with the large quantities being offered and readily purchased, the ranchers have every reason to still feel cheerful concerning the in- dustry. Frederick Huth and Company will continue selling today. They will be followed by C. M. Lampson and Sons and finally by Anning and Cobb. Rushing Troops To Border Austrian Legio-tiT-Composed or Exiled Nazis, Reported Concen- trating Its Forces In Bavaria. (C. R-llavas) (By Guardian's Special Wire) VIENNA, Jan. 10—Al|stria rush- ed troop reinforcements to her Bavarian border tonight as the sp- proaching‘ Saar plebiscite sharp- ened her fears of trouble to come. It thesanio time she launched‘ a spectacular drive on Nazi elements in upper Austria. Fearful cl s Neal "poison" from beyond the border by Austrian fol- lowers of Hitler when the returns from the Saar begin coming in, the government strengthened the troops already standing guard on the German frontier. Every section of the Ger-mm frontier was under- the eyes oi vigilant federal soldiers as reports trickled through that the Austrian Nsrla who fled to Germany ailer- the July 30 “putsch.” in which Chan- cellor Engelbert Dollfuse was slain. was consent “ its forces in Bavaria. Additional precautions were de- sided upon when it was learned that exiled Provincial _ Chancellor Char-liner oi Babb _, upper Aus- trls, had been appointed oom- pnnder of lbs Austrian Legion. Unconfirm ’ reports that Italy was also preparing for s possible flare-up in Austria by concentrat- ing troops on the Austrian border were received here. Move To Get Germany Back I n L e a g u e (AP. By Gllhlfflfl Special Wire) ' GENEVA, Jan. i0—.Ne'w moves to get Germany back into the league of Nations stirred enthusiasm in Geneva tonight on the eve of the League Council's January meeting. which will consider the result of the Saar plebiscite. Great Britainls suggestion to the Reich that she send representatives to the council sessions during dis- cussion of the plebiscite, although poorly received by the Berlin Gov- ernment, wrq taken here to be the first step in a campaign to get, coor- msny to return to active league e mom ip. The British initiative also was considered as probably an outgrowth cf the new Franco-Italian accords. As Boone's statesmen began sr- Yivilil st the Lug-us seat for to- m s initial scssiin of the coun- cil. ctfioiels emphasized that- Germany remains s mil-fledged member cf the league until her becomes effective in 00% lhd hobo! the ltelch dele- RIN could attend the council ses- sion without an invitation. stayed in their shops, eating up in- fld 01$ ~ j ' Buy Salads Grange Peirce _. Blend end discover the piece are tinetiinc tee gives. ' U \ q\“\ \ FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, ‘Q21 Read Everybody 1935 sulnviiui MAY a E RESTUREII Civil Servants Receive Assurance F i: o m Finance Minister - Revenues Up $30,- 000,000. (or. By Guardian's Special who) OTTAWA, Jan. iii-Representa- tives of the various organisations of civil servants from coast to coast received today from Finance Min- ister E. N. Rhodes assurance that the government would give every consideration to their request for restoration of the ten percent sal- ary deductions now in effect three years. But full restoration would depend upon revenues and a bal- anced budget, the minister stated. spokesmen for the delegation ex- pressed themselves as hopeful that th -- " with respect to sal- aries, statutory increases, pYOmW ticns and superannuations, would receive favorable consideration. Two sets of estimates are being prepared for presentation to Par- liament, one with the salary de- ductions continued and the other with salaries restored. One or the other will be presented as soon as possible after parliament meets. But presentation of the estimates with the deduction continued would not necessarily mean that restoration would not be made, Mr. Rhodes intimated. It was desirable to leave the decision as late as possible in order to ascertain what the rev- enue will have leached at the end of the fiscal year. Dominion revenues are now near- ly $30,000,000 above the figures for the last fiscal year. with nearly three months to run. Iest year there was a deficit on ordinary ac- count cf ‘$22,000,000. in addition the current year had seen expen- ditures not foreseen in the lest es- timates, of about $8,000,000. To re- storc the salaries and statuory in- creases would cost about $7,000,000. Ii the revenues, at the end of the current fiscal year reach s point where they are $87,000,000 greater than for the pievicus year. the salaries wuld be restored and. Mr. Rhodes would be in a position to present a. budget balanced on ordinary account. No assurance .cculd he givenmhowever. the min- ister said. beyond the promise that sympathetic consideration would be given. llbrpenditines dining ti» current year, not provided in the last esti- mates, included over $2,000,000 for general election preparations, far- mers creditors srran t act and other new leglslati , old age pensions increases, technical edu- cation grants, coal subsidies, Meri- tlme freight rates, ‘ 1 her- bor bridge guarantees, and many other items. V. 0. Phelsn. Ottawa, heed d the civil service federation. acted as spokesman. He asked for full restoration oi normal salaries to all civil servants, renewal of the custom of statuary increases and promotions. extension of the super- annuation act to take in those working 0n prevailing rates of pay. and that umporary workers hold- frig pmicfons ordinarily permanent be placed on the permanent list. It was claimed by Mr. Phelsn that msnv large corporations hsd restored their salary lists to nor- mal and that improvement in con- ditions in the last l8 months should fustlfy the government doing the 581119. T. R. Lawrence P a s s e s (or. By Guardian's Special Wire) BARNIA, Oint., Jan. lii-Tliomas Reginsld "Dick" Lawrence, 36. died in Petrolia today from pneumonia. He was born nesr Woodstock end recently lived in that city, when he will be buried Saturday. He served 1n the Royal Naval Air Force and was formerly branch manage oi the Hardy Manufactur- ing Company, mraflottctown, P31. 74 Per Cent (GI. Dy Guardian Special WIN) ssocrmaar... Js-n. io-Amczs- motply ‘l4 per cont of the entire oi- ferings have been disposed of the past four days st the January Iii: Auction of the Canadian nu Auction Soles Oomblny Limited, it which mil-tens, wolf is. and timber woi nmsln ct stationery bric- O te liwl! bu!- fil ting the icsdini fashion Rinses: centres of the world. - Out cf an offering of 68,080 er- 2h: ZEMs-THs-“ui Amceklikcsnohrvqmoves tnigirlcrwsrd. MAXIMS OI L MERE MAN 2-11-1- (O. P. by Guardin’: Special Wire) HALIFAX. Jan. iii-Hope for l5 men aboard two Nova Scotia schooner-s 041F171!!! salt from ‘Turks Island dwindled tonight when it was learned that another vessel which left the Bahamas three weeks later was well on her tray home when she lost her rudder and her skipper was swept overboard. The rudderless three-master Fieldwood, out of Windsor. N. S.. was taken in tow today in Vine- yard Sound by the United States cutter Argo, which reported that Captain Harris Oxner of the dis- abled craft had been drowned. The Fieldwood left ‘lurks Island Dec. 24 with salt for Lunenburg, N. 5., and while she sailed imp-the Ai- lantic seaboard. Nova Scotlans were expressing anxiety for the two other three-masters, the Nova Queen of Yul-mouth and the E. P. Theriauit of La Have- Powered only by sail, the Nova Queen cleared from the Island 36 days ago with eight men aboard, including young Kenneth Taylor of Weymouth who was making his first voyage to sea. The Therieult, manned by a crew cf six under Carp/coin Eber Barty, left for La Have one day lezter. No word of either- vessel has been received here since, and when it was learned that the Fleldwood had rrsade such fast time belief was eqmemed. that the Nova Queen “and the ‘lfhoriault had Xoundered in one of the series of gales that swm the Atlantic since they left the Bahamas Other craft had limlped info United Stain and (‘Aired-ion har- bors reporting the word. etonns in years. - ‘armed tonight that her hus- band had been lcst, Mrs. Harris Oxner of Lunenburg refused to b0- lieve the report. She declared the Fieldwnod must have made un- usually fest time to have reached Vineyard Sound today. SKIPPBB DOST B%'ION, Jan. l0-—(A.P.)— The coast guard cutter Argo, db- to Vineyard Sound to aid the rudderles Canadian schooner Fleldwood, m. ‘ sed to head- quarters here tonight that the sehooners skipper had been lost (Continued on Page '1) Lord Montague ' Convicted On Charge (C. P. Cable By Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON, Jan. l0-Convictcd of “dangerous drivlns." Lord Edward Montagu, second son of the Duke of Manchester. was today fined the equivalent of $150, ordered to pay another 840 costs. and disqualified from driving a motcrcar for thc next two years. Lord Montagu appeared in the West London police court to ans- wer a summons issued last Sep- tember. Police testified h;- n-as driving n, sports car nl Hammer- smlth on Sept. 30. ivhlch knocked down and fatally injured n woman who was crossing the road. A police witness, nskcd how inst the car was going. replied: “About the speed cf an express train." 10rd Montagu, who is 28 years of age, and at whose christening the late King Edward was a spon- sor, spent some years on a ranch near Edmonton. His wife is the former Norah Macfarlsnc Potter of Ontario. 0f Offerings Sold To Date At Auction l) percent. Medium and small pelts remained unchanged. in price. In white foxes 7B percent of the 600 in wits offered were sold st an ad- vance of- five percent over: Decem- DI! prices. Izry-five percent of the 3,340 shortens offered found ready mar- ket st prices imeheoled from the sole’ ‘I1 percent of the 4.- ffi wolf pll and OI percent of th Ito timber wolves cicsfed st rmcnuieod from previous ‘hmflilow I'll fishers and 28.016 minis will he put up for auction. Eltllflily cross foxes. blue foxes. ottfl and beavers win be imtwcs I Q l i Vessel-s Overdue From r Bahamas Are BelievedLost l; Little Hope Held For Crews O! Nova Queen And E.P. Theriault, Which Cleared From Turks Island Over Month Ago 6? Have Not Been Heard From Since. Aland Subscription Dslive u. f1. _ II" Oolllllllld ,___ NEWBRUNSRIBR us umcu or 016.551 Uncontrollable I I s penditures A p For Difference Be- t W e e n Estimated And Actual Deficit. (C. l‘. By Guardian's Spccifl if ICTON, N. B» -bn. 9-:- New Brunswick finished the year ending October 81 wfii deficit of $16,561 in the 1071K account, according to the i“ financial statement of the peop- Luce. l leased for publication This was $722,709 more than estimated deficit of $153,842 i7)’ Hon. A, J. Inger. secretary - treasurer, whn brought his budget down It last session of the legislatuu. Over-expenditures by departments and revenues short the two factors combining e5 the difference between and actual deficits. munozinrcron, n. n, Jun. (C.\P.l—-"I'he difference the actual deficit and the not mmlJiB-i-ion st the time of the page i118 of the budget. ohllguticll bwusst about by emergency occul- rences." Premier L. P. D. Tilhy in commenting on the smug; nanclal statement of New an. swick. "In addition there was i230 ther rmoontrollable expenditure connection with the serious fires, the expenditures in 001mg;- tlon with the some running mi 3190.000." he stated. wimated sen ceilpts mil short by 9373M, mus ‘Ewendituzec amounted to revenues per estimates fell M: ' $337,925 and the estimated had been $158,000. in: MlSER Aivim Recs Rlivoafs BEFQRE lie {Mfrs c secures i‘ i a‘ 5 c fll U’ rf, ,/.\ "ha? Unscitlod with some rain, fol lowed by fresh 1.: strong westerl winds and somewhat lower tern ature at night or on Saturday- (‘illlmiinn rm...) )l.u1ll\'.\i. (lldldlfl-l, and To ma! i .\i li’l‘I-l()lll vllllClvllVflr i-‘nlmnnllon (‘nlgnry .. Saskatoon ltcglin . Winn peg 33.3 Maritime Wash-direct: westerly winds; clearing whta lower temper-slurs. Nlnriilnic East :—L'usetiiod some rcln,( fnllnwou by freon strong westerly winds and mint lower temperature at Saturday. High tide m. afternoon a cl d inumrrnw morning lit l. Bun sets this s tcrnocn at l. f rises tomorrow Illitfiilll, st ‘I. Fire! quarter moon ridsy, ii. 8 lift p. hi. Surumerside mic "w: than (Yherlottstown. Lean-e Borden use A, l P.2d. nee-aural" theestimatednmrkwereglvmfl -~. \