MAXI MS OFA MERE MAN r""" i— ‘eritanoe. Purity of hen-rt. is the noblest in- ciiarlotfetown Guardian Two Cont! Morning Guardian, Ioundod i881 Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA‘, THURSDAY,‘ MAY 6, 1937 10 PAGES Live thy creed and be what thou seemcst. ‘ MAXiMS OFA MERE MAN ll)’ Mull Carludib illill I. Annual Subscription: Deihen-il $5.00 . ..\. $5.00 F0 UR KILLED, 25 INJURED 11v. TRAIN u/REEI? RufilwiiwwnvmméiloAL CAR Bctters Cape To London Air Record INDUSTRIAL PEACE PLEA IIESTON, England. May 5- (cr Cable) —-Bettering the Capetown-London air record by 16 hours today, ll. L. Brook brought his pale blue plane to rest at Heston airport. climbed out and remarked that the trip lhul “had its exciting mom- cuts." in completing tiie return fli-zllt from the Cape in four days and ‘.30 minutes, the Brit- l-‘iil "Yer eclipsed a record set by Amy Mollison in May, 1936, of four days. l0 hours, l7 min- utes. Brook's outward flight was ruined by u. broken tail wliccl suffered in taking oil’ from Juba. Sudan. and Mrs. iilnllison’! record for the Lon- dnli-Capetown flight of three days. six hours, 29 minutes still stands. ' Brook brought his machine to the ground at. 3:22 p.m. (11:22 5.11. ADT) after a. flight from llfarseille. Landing at Rome inst night Brook hit o, patch ol‘ water and his landing gear was again damaged. Repairs acre effected in time for a dawn-takeoff’ today. A large crowd at Ileston swarmed on to the Tarmac as soon as his plane appeared on the horizon. Mrs. Brook kissed the flyer excitedly as he climb- ed from the cockpit, looking bronzed and fit. 0n Mercy lioyaige HALIFAX. May 5-—(OP)—'I‘he Canadian Government Steamship Ardmore was steaming toward bleak Sable Island tonight in answer to h. call of distress from thnt isolated sand p’le, 100 miles off Nova Scotitvs coost. Superintendent Charles Faulkner of Sable Island wirelesscd Halifax today his wife was iii, gave details other illness and asked for a diagnosis. Physicians hcrc decided the had acute appendicitis. Department of Mnrinc officials lnilncdlalcly ordered the Ardmore, flu-n laying buoys at Fourcliu, N. 5., \o proceed to Sable Island and take oil the woman. ‘ c "Buying live hogs Albany Thurs- licy 6th, Emerald 7th until noon. G. C. Green. L-ZQZZ-i-W-t-t-W-t-Li. “Coronation Dance Bracklcy Blalch Lodge, Mny 11th. L-l33-5-6-2l. "Reserve Saturday Moy 22nd- lor Zion C. G. I. T. cake sale. L-i62. "KINKORA-dsingo, dance und lur ‘h in Kinkoru Hall Friday eve- ‘lilliz. May 7th. L-22-5-3-6-2i. "Borden Line Club iulltiing hogs, lulnlls, calves every Wednesday at hllllly. Hours 12-3. L-BQIZ-IO-M T W Lf. notlcc-Debcllc lor ‘e from this date on. Juiili D. tirlvvr, Kliikorn L-loll-o-li-Zi. “Furnlcrs take J1‘. will be lit home evenings 5.. "Donn C. M. B. A. Hall, Vern- on River Friday night, Ivmy 7th. Orchestra. Admission 25cts. Lunch. L-i22-5-6-2i. "C. W. L. dance in Auburn School Friday night. May 7th. Bus leaving Nobana Tea Rooms at 8 o'clock. Ir82-5-6-1i. “Sec the Play "Southem Cinder- ella" by Stanley Players in Caven- llsli Hall, Thursday, May 6th- 14-100-5-5-21 "Come to Marsiifleld Hall to- ilisllt. if not fine Friday and iiflrrlngton ilnll Tuesday the ilth Incl sec "Hired Husbands" and en- ivy a laugh. L163. "Livestock Marketing Board un- lomililg cor cracked com and com- mcnl at Railway Dump ‘Thursday. Mil’ 6th at lowest possible price. L-l0l-5-5~2i "Cream Route. Beginning Friday. M"? 7th, Five Houses to Char- ilmkinwn over same route as loot i681‘. Justin Lerkn, Hauler for Central Creameries, Limited. 11-10-5-8-10-17. “Cream Route beginning Mon- “Y- Mav 10th. New Haven. Trvon Rom. Baltic, West River iii-lace. Wide River, Bannockbum, Kings- ton. Cornwall, York Point, North El"? in Central Crcamcrics Ltd. Charlottetown, one trip each wcck. moherlu, hauler. l “ - v . ,_, w‘ BY BA_llllllN Moving Appeal By Veteran Prime Min- ister To Avert Threatened C o a l Strike. LONDON, May Fr-A few hours after Prime Minister Baldwin ap- pealed in the llouce of Commons today for industrial peace. it was announced the busmen's strike would not spread to London's l2.- 000 tramway workers. While there was no apparent connection between the decision not to strike and tho Prime Min- ister's appeal, Londone a breath- ed in high relief as the prosllefii- disappeared that two o! the mu- ior transportation services would be tied up slmuitaneoufi. nouncru. May 5—<0P>—Pl1'lm° Minister Baldwin today made f} moving appeal-"my 18st 5911951 —-for industrial peace. In the M1118 of the King and Queen he wile-d for settlement of the MSW“? threat" mm; m devélqp in a. national coal strike. Only the phrase. "I am B01118 to ed his approaching retirement as the veteran Prime Minister leaned over the brass-bound box on the clerk's table of the House of Com- mons and, urged that the country show “this democracy can wantin- thearts ofpeacein s. world of strife." Outside, the big red buses that normally rumble through London were stilled by strike of more than 25.000 drivers and conductors. Hanging over the country was a strike cal for May 23 issued by the Mine .Workers Federation. “This day week ‘our young King and his Queen. culled suddenly and unexpectedly to the most tremend- ous position on earth, will dedicate themselves to service to their people, o service that can only be ended with death." Baldwin said. His sppeal was to that little body of mcn "who are going to decide whether there is going to be peace or strike." Baldwin said: "I appeal to that small body of men to give the best present to the country that can be givcn-thzit is to rend this dnrk cloud that is‘ hanging over us and show that this democracy can practice the, arts of pea in a (Continued on page 9) Fascists Would Extend Alliances _j__.._ RQJME Mny 5-—(CP) -—P1'em§Bl Mussolini and Rclchsfuehrer Hit- lcr joined wow-Y m a“ We“ m‘ vitntion to other nations to Join their cooperative lineup. Mean- wlillc Italy prepared to strengthen her defences. An official communique issued after e. three-day conference bc- twccn Mussolini and litters For- eign Minister. Baron Vffl Nclmlih- ilrred “broader colloborftloll. 11150 with other powers," to 855111‘! Europe “surer economic and twill-1- cal stability." (Though the Rome conference strengthened Into-German bonds. Gcrmnns high in Nazi councils hailed Von Neurath as Berlin's best "neinsager" (no-sayenfor not committing Germany to on out- right alliance wlthliiuly.) (C. P. by Guardian's Bpoelll Wire) IDNDON, May 5-'1‘he Irish Free Stale, having achieved homo rule "can put whatever interpre- tation on it may like" but Nbrth- ern Ireland will ntinue un- ‘ shaken in its devotion to the mi- pire. Viscount Ora; von stated today. The Premier of Northern Ire- land made his first statement. on the new constitution 1110mm! W President Eamon de Valera of the Free State for the whole of Iro- land in the event partition of the Istruid were removed. If by a miracle the two coun- tries were united. Viscount Oral!‘ nvon said. it would result "only in civil war." Audi-casino In Over- sea: League lumhcon he stressed that there were two separate coliti- meke my last appeal." foreshadow-' NorthemIrelanfIUnshaken In Its Devotion To Empire Commanders of three of Canada's are Commander W. J. R. Beech, of oyalist BILBAO, Spain. May 5-014?)- Spimish Government ships moved into besieged Bilbao tonight to take out 2.300 refugees in face of Basque declarations that an “Ila- ltaii destroyer" and Insurgent yes-- sels were massing to prevent the evacuation. Britisheand French men-o-wnr stood by outside the three-mile llinlt to protect .112 rescue vessels, flying the Red Cross flag. B a s q u c Government officials charged seven Insurgent warships and the alleged “Italian destroyer" were waiting outside the port. These officials also said that Italian troops with Insurgents in the Bcrmeo sector, eight miles from Bilbao. had been surrounded by Government troops after heavy fighting. Blames Germany Jesus Marla de Lcizaola. Basque minister of culture. in a radio broadcast, pliLCCd "full blame" on Germany for the air bombardment last week of the Basque sacred city of Gucrnica, wlicrc 800 per- sons were reported killed. He cited alleged stalcmcnls by two captured fiyers that tlicy bc- longcd to a squadron of 24 Ger- man-madc bombers flown by Ger- man army pilots. (A German Government spokes- mon sharply denied the Basque accusations terining tiitm "atroc- ity tales". He added that “with a huge nilmbcr of foreigners lighting on both sides. anybody may pose 3,5 a. ‘captured Gerliian pllot‘.") Surprise Offensive WITH SPANISH INSUR/GENTS ON THE ARAG-ON FRONT, MaY o-(APJ-Insurgents tonight dis- closed a surprise offensive in cost- ern central Spain had blasted their Government foes from the entire Sierra Palomcra region W; 1.72:: "It makes not a pln point of dif- ference what takes place in South- ern Ireland, a: for as our position in the United Kingdom and the Empire is concerned." the Prime Minister said. At another point hB said that home rule for the south “leaves us free to shake hands with those of Einsllsh. BCOl-ilfih 0i‘ Welsh birth, toying to each other: ‘i-low can we help develop the Em- plreT" He did not believe the man was yet born who could Rover" i319 whole of Ireland. "If the union did take place, the situation would be comparable only to whnt is taklns plm in Spain todoy- The 0'11? difference is that, whvroflfl "10 terrible state in Spain mni’ 1m f" five or i0 year-s. I bcllcve in Ire- fl-iilrlillél Vfififififiiiifi‘ Canadian Commanders 51th». up; trail. l.'.'it to right, they l. C. S. Sagucnuy; Capt, V, G. II. Brodeur, of H. M. C. S. Skccna, and LleuL-Commander R. E. S. Bidwell. whols taking commando! the new up-fo-date St. Laurent. -~--- _ - n ... w‘ -; ,,_;¢- -;-__;_.~_- Ships To EvacuateBasques British, FrenclTi-Narships Stand By To Protecigsscue Vessels. north of Teruel. » A swift serics of attacks in the last fivc days swept back the Gov- ernment forces more than 20milcs in u. nortliezistcrly direction from s. point near the highway shooting nroth from Tcruel to Cnlamoche. Gen. Emilio Mole, commander of the northern Insurgent Army, or- dered the offensive from his head- quarters on the Bilbao front. Dispatches from the Insurgent front disclosed that the Govern- ment's troops were driven out of the entire nrcn they had gained in five months of infiltrations, minor attacks and their recent of- fensive. GlllIEllNMENT iilJEilS REViliT 100 Lives Believed Lost In Anarchist Uprising Against Catalan Regime. (A. I’. by Guardian's Special Wire) PERPIGNAN, Fiance, May 5- Thc Government of autonomous Catalonia. put down a bloody in- ternai rebellion of Barcelona an- archists today that cost an esti- mated 100 lives and threatened the Catalan coalition allied with the Madrid-Valencia. regime. Official dispntche: said peace was restored to the city's streets with the Government again in control. However, occasional shots still were heard in parts of the city al- though street fighting was ended. In some streets barricades remain- ed. Anarchist forccs still held the towns of Puiggerda and Belver, near the French border. Lstet reports indicated the an- archist uprising represented a spilt evcn within anarchist ranks. Just as the Barcelona bat/tie was a civil conflict within Spain's civil war. More moderate anarchists did not Join their militant colleagues. Three anarchist lenders who were members olf the former Cctaloniiui Government called on their fel- lows to stop righting, but without avail. Reports said the tanks which rumlbled through Barcelona's streets during the fighting were in the hands of anarchists, to whom they had been assigned for front line duty against the lnsuruents. Instead the anarchists paraded them to impress Government forces with their strength. Travellers from Barcelona. declar- ed the anarchists for a time took over the ‘relephone Exchollso and held out for seven houm lamina!» Government infill/la in hand-to- hsnd fighting. if‘ neared dispatches from Bar- celona reported the formation of o land it would ilst more than 1 ' . oo new provisional go@imu$ ill-l wlllsllln HUNEYMDBN mugml Duke Of Windsor De- fers Revealing Mar- riage D a t e Until After The Coron- ation. I (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) MONTS, France, May 5—The Duke of Windsor ha". won the con- sent of his bride-to-be to his plans for s. honeymoon in Austria, with a vast, grey 13th century castle as headquarters. , ' The Duke's plans for such a wedding tour, to be filled with golf- ing, mountsin-climblng and yacht- ing on the Adriatic, were made known in Austria a. week ago, be- fore his hasty departure for France, but it was not known until tonight how this would suit Mrs. Wallis Simpbn. While he was still at St. Wolf- gang the Duke permitted his suite to announce he had rented Wess- erleonburg Castle, set among the Alpine lakes of southern Austria, from his friend, Count Paul Muen- ster. He had taken it for the summer months and let it be known he intended to occupy it after his wedding. That the future Duclies had concurred in this program was dis- closed by a. member of the Castle household, although there was no formal announcement. The offic- ial spokesman for the couple, Her- man L. Rogers, made no mention of the honeymoon in his talk: with newspapcrmen, in accordance with the wishes of the former King that no announcements of plans connected with the wedding be made until after the Coronation in London May l2. But while deferring to the Duke's wishes concerning the near future, Mrs. Simpson, it was dis- closed, was holding out for hcr own preference for the United States or Canada as their per- manent home. Meanwhile she yielded to the Duke's enthusiasm for Austria's mountains and lakes. which caught his fancy during his recent exile. His suite had already disclosed his hopes to spend the summer at Wasserleonburg, where there is swimming and golf and which would make ideal headquarters for yachting trips on the Adriatic or for climbing of Austria's highest peaks. Coalition Rumor in ilntario Denied (CI. By'Guardia.n‘s special Wire) ARTi-LUR, Ont, May 5-411 B. pronouncement of opposition to the Hepburn aidmnistrotioii, Hen. Earl Rowe, Ontario Conservative lender, today declared against any 9055M" fusion of Liberals and Conservatives in Ontario, as had been rumored recently. Clearly outlining the stand of the Conservative party on labor issues brought to the provincial political from in the past month, Mi‘. Rowe announced his party would “adhere to its traditons mid stand united in opposition to the Hepburn ad- ministration." Coalition, he told the North Well- ington Conservative convention, would be o. stifling of constructive opposition in the legislature and "endorsation of the estabislunent of a dictatorship" or it would be a. refusal by those responsible to in- stitufe progressive legislation for the betterment of the province. (Last night in an address belorc the convention of the Ontario Wo- men's Liberal Association in Toron- to, Premier Mitchell Hepburn sad he "wished to dissipate" the idea. of any coalition government in the province of Ontario.) liurh Smuggling (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) OITAWA, May 5-—A.s a new weapon against ruin-runners and smugglers on the Atlantic coast the Royal Canadian Moluited Po- lice is Inquiring four De Havilond dragon fly cabin biplanes, it was learned today. One, perhaps more, or the planes will be stationed at Shediiw, N. B., the others at suitable points in the Mnritimes. They are equipped with Ibo-horsepower engines and have s cruising speed of about B00 iflwl Will Ilse Planes To. G<DD _s glint) TYEEANWTIMITED QQUDQCC-IIJCC-IQ CRASH Locomotive “And Three Cars Plunge Over Bank’ At Springhill Junction Engineer "Clarence Bauer, Andi Partial List Express Messenger Camille Le- of The Dead Blanc, Moncton, Among Vic- tims In Wreck Of Crack Flier. (By Norman Sorge. Cnnzidian Press Correspondent) SPRING-HILL JUNCTION, N. 8.. May 5 — At least four persons were killed and 25 injured. four of them seriously. tonight when the Canadian Na- tional Railways crack Montreal-Halifax Express and a string of runaway coal cars collided a mile and a half west of this place- Driver Clarence Bauer of Moncton~ N- B-- of the train, the Ocean Limited, Alfred Leger. 19- and of his clothing- The loaded coal cars were the oncoming Limited. track. into flames. (Continued (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) CLEVELAND, May 5—.Another reminder of Cleveland's mod head hunter-the lower half of a woman's torso-floated to the sur- face of Lake Erie today but it failed to break the secret of the city's eight beheadings. .I-Ioward Yochem, 38, trying out a “swan boat“ for this summer's Great Lakes Exposition. found the half torso about a mile from shore. The piece of human flesh was taken to the county morgue where. Coroner Samuel R. Gerber said, it matched perfectly with the pre~ crved upper half of a woman's torso found in February on the lake shore nearly l0 miles away. Detectives who searched the his sum M: will in liners There was a terrible crash. gage cars on the train teiescoped terrificnltv. The loco- motive rcnrcd up, hung for a moment in the ziir and then toppled over the steep embankment there. The other cnrs followed. Only four of the coal carriers remained on the Ernest Long, 22, of Maccan. N- S» were killed- Searchers had not found the body of Express Mes- senger Camille LeBlanc of Moncton. N. B. They were positive he had perished in the flaming car- FEAR TOLL HIGHER Railwaymen and searchers alike said the Jam death toll might be higher- There was no way of checking hoboes who might have been riding be- tween the baggage and express cars- ‘ Five were believed to have been aboard. spot- ted when the train passed a station a few back- Whether they had fled after the terrific crash or been burned in the wreckage was unknown- Bodies of Leger and Long were found between the still-flaming wreckage of the express and mail cars- Both were badly burned and identification was almost impossible. A cap. scorched but still recognizable, found beside one of the bodies was Identified as Leger’s. Long was identified by parts LOOSED IN SHUNTING OPERATIONS being shunted around the junction yard when eight of thcm rolled out on the main track from the impetus of the shunting operations. shuntefs crew and spectators alike realized what disaster neared with the Ocean Limited due in a View minutes. With every pound of steam that could be raised the tiny shuntcr set out after the runaway cars. now travel- imlZ fllSi. on a down grade. Trnmmcn and spectators alike at the station Jumped into automobiles to attempt to ling The They lost their grim race with death. A mile and a hnlf from the station the Limited. speeding at from 50 lo 60 miles an hour struck the siiinglutravelling almost as inst. TERRIFIC CRASH The express. mail and ling- Wrecknge was hurled 40 yards away. Lumps of colii rocketed across the ground on both sides. The l.imitcd's- express, mail and baggage cars pitched down the bunk after the locomotive, splintered as they struck nncl luirsl in the passenger couches were thrown .~-~--:_» -—- - _ ,- _ . Finding Of Torso Serves To Deepen MurderMystery “We hove exhausted milntlcm theories and have made no pro- grefs." Coroner Gerber said. “Po- lice have arrested hundreds oi sus- pect: since the first torso was dis- covered. but all were sooner or loicr rclrzvcd." All the bodies bore llic some marks of CJITilli cutting with :1 shnrp knife. Examination showed flint in luosl cases tllc‘ bcilcndlng occurred while lhc lived. viclim still poiioerlnnefromo Theorle; of -MK Illlllil- lAncl Injured if‘. I‘. by (iuairdinlfs Spec-int Wire) AAUIICHSI‘. N. S .\ili‘,' 5-—Plit- iilii List of klllvrl and injured in the wreck of the- Cnliadiun Na- tional Railways Ocean Limited ncnr Sprlnclilll Jlilliiwli, N. 5., m- nzrzht lollons: Iii-ad: Engineer Clarence Mont-ton, N. B. Exprcs Messenger Camille Ip- Binuc, 39. Alolicton, (be-tiered burned to d 1th). . l9. Nlglccan. N. S. ‘, 22. Maccan. Injured in hospital at Amhardn Mrs. Mary Kennedy, Walllacd, N. S. Campbell-ton. N. B. John Door-y, I-lillifax. Albert Hicks. Halifax. An Indian named Philip, Mali River, N. S. Clements Donovan, Saint Gordon Pinney, East Bauer, 88. Kickieson, L. J. 5t. Louis. Campbcliion. Frank J. Irvine, saint. Join. ton. ' l-irrpilnl official: Stiifi they had». i)(“ll informer! si-vcrnl others who pnileg lied been injured hrld remained iii the ieniporoly lirxspltnl in the din- ing cur. They were illirtble i0 give lllPll‘ names but believed fife! were m3;- s-‘lglltlv injurcrl. Their Majesties Hold‘ Court Reception LONDON. Nlaj.‘ 5—\Ci‘1-Tl\'g illlllillfCfi ‘ii \.i(>i)ill/rlil\7i>r~, wltl! i4 Ulillicd b ates \V0lllf.“.l, were pro- srnlcd to iilFl-l‘ Mnleslrvs tonight; at the fir»! court reception 0i tliq new reign. Tomorrow lllZllL asccond rrrcpiiozi wil‘ be hclrl when 3, num- brr of Cninuuluh; will be presented. other Connrhnns will be presented iii liie July i rrcoption. In shiniincrizlg g0\\'ll$ and scintil- latinlr jewels filo pmscntccs passed lwiort- the King and Queen as they stood ‘in front. of the gold and rcd, ~‘ lct thrones at ilif‘ ind of the ‘om iii Buckingham palace. ""';:L.';i' ._ . ‘LZTI A Cur HAS ‘fo KEEP Movmc. rower (u: RENT Clarrncc Sfecvcs, fireman Morto- prrnl urc. and tonight a: 1.0.1. 8. ill. on page 9) ’ ' " I 1 (Canadian Press) TORONTO. May 5—Mihimllli't and maximum temperatures: D ‘son 30 54 V cfin. 42 f8 Edmonton 46 670 Rrtzinn 52 B‘! Winnipeg 42 '73 Toronto 53 66 and prnwled through two miles of Ottawa 52 till e huge storm sewer in scorch for ltionlrcai 58 ‘l7 other parts of the body, viewed to- Quebec 50 M days discovery gloomily. Still snlpl. John 4o U missing ivcrc the arms, legs and Hfilifflx 42 d1’ head through which they hnd hop- Chnylnlfr-(pvgn 36 H ed to identify ihc womnn. r-‘(nmcnsr ltiarilluic Provinces: Moderate t0 frcsli variable wind»; cloudy wit! showers. not much change in tem- llirh tidc liil~ lllOYllilliZ at 6.4! Sun sols this evening at 7.11 and rises tomorrow morning at 4.41. New moon Monday, May i0. l" Stlmmerside tide elshbm III‘ ottetown.