l‘ I in r um m1. _ :‘.:p#:t|M1g-I.: Gardlzn ‘lwc Cute. l/ w» The People's Paper in iiiiiiin llP iiiiitiii iIIIIi m oiiiiiiais (Bahia, Cuba, Terror- ..ized Recently By Al- [Qged Bombers Now Ugo;- Arrest. (British United Press) p>aAvANA' Cuba, March d-Char- p, that men "higher up" were pat- m of a bomb gang that terrorized m, Carla] recently, were made by m, ring leaders of the bombers, the P5110, revealed today. Political op- Wm; of the Government were de- dmd to be responsible for-outrages which have been occurring with in- nmng frequency recently, includ- [pg one abortive attempt on the life “president Garardo Mschado. The m, men, the police said, had con- md in preparing upwards of 100 my; and that of one of their mus was ready for delivery to a went" to he placed in the residence ii the Mayor oi the City of Mattin- lfflhe arrest of the men followed the mvgry of a great quantity of qyiismite and paraphanelia used in up manufacture of bombs 1n ahide- ‘out under the banks of the Almen- dires River, near Havana, the police wort said. The, police were confid- uit this evening that they were on the trail of others implicated in the morning mystery; which for the put fortnight has shaken the Capi- tol with the recurrent boom of ex- ploslons. The city was startled last night I l; lull a dozen explosions. Little umge was caused in most places, but one bomb wrecked the, workshop o! Dr. Enrique Recio, director of the fictional Laboratories. ' "min of the bombs exploded have contained tear gas or a quantity of powder sufficient to make s. fright- ieiliig noise, but do little damage. ‘his police are working on the theory iii the gang or its "patrons" sought only to cause disturbances and un- feli in an effort to arouse uneasiness lnd keep the people in turmoil in order that they might be ready for Ill uprising against Machaclo. ___________. LONDON, March is-Lord and Indy Bessborough wore present at lion College yesterday and had the h! uf seeing their son Viscount ihincannon win the Loder pflge Iolf ruling and reciting. Lord flieimsford was the Judge. ANNOUNCEMENTS, - comm; EVENTS, MEETINGS arcs. i “leserve Tlllltdz; March 26th, "biotin: at Cornwall Rink to- lint, 3775 ' "Printers Vs. Granltes Saturday iiiiit Forum. 3795-3-7-11. Ir 1Q Si. James‘ Bazaar and Tea. I . 3782-3-6-31 "Rummage Sale at the Y.M.C.A. $955M morning, Mar. 1st',' at 10.30. 3773-3-7-21 ‘Notice-We will discontinue buy- drcssed pork end bee! after Sat- iifliu. March 14th inst. Harold s. PPM. 3701-8-7-31. “glib! Ileeting of Uigg Institute ursdsy. March 12th. Seed and w. D. _ Secretary. 3708-7-11. nehmfltherdale. March 11th. Hear , i-D. M Sinclair. Scottish Lecture 1M musical program. Admission W ‘ sm-zi-o-zi. ilizer prices on hand. . Ind Idris Hopkins, celebrated ‘W artists in Hearts Memorial 0n TUPSdflV, Mi- Tickets, 35c fail to hear H1508. wil- 8.15 March 10 at . 3770 CHARLOTT Liberal Organ Garbles Its Own News‘ Despatch Re Counsel At Ottawa‘ ETON. CANADA. SATURDAY, ‘Much In Public Eye At Present I :19?" MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN ‘Iheleienoeofthefutlnewillbe psychological. PATIXOT, MARCH 5 “OTTAWA, March 3.-(C. P.) —April 0 has been set as the date for hearing by the Su- preme Court of Canada of the reference to decide the respec- tive iurisdictions of fthe Do- minion and the provinces on radio broadcasting. ‘This was fixed today on application of the Dominion. - "Ontario and Prince Edward Island will Join with Quebec in disputing the contention that the Dominion has jurisdiction to regulate and control radio communication. These three provinces were represented in court today." PATRIOT. MARCH e “By one of its upside-down- readings of a. Canadian Press des- patch the opposition organ tried to make out a charge of extrav- agance against the Lea Govern- ment, alleging that counsel has been employed to test the right of the Province in radio broadcasts. . Our reply was that Premier Lea solid it was news to him. Our contemporary comes back, quoting the Press despatch, that,—‘Ontar- io and Prince Edward Island will - Join with Quebec‘ etc. Upon this outside rumor, without ofllcial au- thorization, the snipelng i?) organ ‘magnifies a guess intojact, and aims its heavy artillery against its own created shadow. What the 10a Government "will" or "will" not’ do, can be better discussed when it is materialized into some- thing more tangible than an im- ported floating rumor." IOW- (British United h...) Bower. whom-ed- seeking to discredit the Irwin- Gsndhi accord, which has resulted in"s truce in the civil disobedience cam ' was begun in ‘Bombay. The propaganda was spread by ex- tremists, most of them young radi- cals denouncin the accord and de- claring in fiery terms that it be- trayed the Nationalist movement. Their agitation was not regarded as serious, but it was believed signifi- cant. It was seen by some as presaging the split which many fear is immin- ent in the‘ all India Conlress as a result of the concessions made by their leader, the Mahatma Gandhi. when he signed the agreement with Lord Irwin, Viceroy. ‘The working committee of the Congress approved the accord only after an acrimonious debate, during which osnahithi-eot- ened to accede to their ultimatum and break off negotiations with Lord win at a. moment when it appear- ed peace was assured. Even such men as Jawaharlal Nehru, President of the Congress in‘ the committee session, declared that ‘summer. the accord was a defeat for the Na- lgress volunteer corps members par- tlonalists and a surrender to the inded during the day. Extremists Seek To Discredit The In d i a n T r u ce Irwin-Gandhi Azcbrd Denounced by Young Radicals at Bombay —Wholesale Release of 25,-- 000 Political Prisoners Tomor-y himself admitted that the "new era‘ of pedce was purchased only by compromise which at best was pro- visional and transitory. Nevertheless, business men generally here and elsewhere remained optimistic. They insisted that the accord, while pro- visional, was a step toward coopera- tion and agreement. At Calcutta, the Stock Exchange reacted to this optimism, and was bullish even before the terms had been published. Speculative stocks, however, eased when the market opened today. Government proin- issory notes were steady. The Ir- win-Gandhi accord has accelerated preparations for the All-India Con- gress meeting at the end of this month at which many of the dele- gates will be formcr prisoners. The wholesale release of some l25,000 political prisoners still held will‘ begin Sunday, it was learned. The Gazette today published the Govemments cancellation of the various ordinances hgcinst unlaw- ful assembly and the press, estab- lished during the height of the anti- Brltish campaign last spring and A parade of 1,500 Con- P3- (Canodldn Pren) CYITIAWA, Ont., March Be-Thl in- corporation of the Can. American Dan American Com , Charlottetown ny For Company, Limited, of Charlottetown, P. I. 1., with an authorized capital of 810,000,000 is noted in this week's ilue of The Canadian Gazette. , __._.___ ‘Me to the Social and Elli-Br‘- ‘umfiit at Canoe Cove Hafl 0t: "fled-y. March 11th. Ladies with “Hits free. If stormy, first flne - ' . 3789-34-21. ~u _*‘_— his?“ to the Concert and Pie mmin Belfast Hall. Tuesday, 10th. “meted! in aid of Mt. Buchanan on“ i’?- If not fine, fiut light -» "ii!- s-lsa-s-‘i-n. hlenuyln "'i___’ m] H g ve hogs Tuesday. March hm-n "liter River. Everett Haeiam. "m: Same date. Emerald. Alden M iliiiiilns same date, lensing- .‘_- vciett wedlock. SWB-S-O-M ggllfhfliiwiei seneral meeting of the ma‘, ders and patrons of the he M ‘Dairy 00.. will be held in h, movie Hall. stsnlew on Tues- )’; Wrch 10. 1931. at l o. m. A n". cndwnm- is requested. ‘if l. ' ‘iii- Bsmwv. flll-lohdi It County, at the age of M. Honorary President of the Freder- icton exhibitions Ltd. loath my ocusodiwpnnepun. FormcrMemberef MB. House Doll (Gemini) or. n. l. lentil-A message from Predericton reports the death of John A. Ollliihll. 1G‘- mer member of the New Brmlwiek legislature, which occurred teddy hhhwlt h HIIIQIOI. K’! ‘IQ Children Burn (special to the Guardian) March d-Bleeping h the upstairs of a. tiny lhfuIemthewoltblyshorenearDes hi, Canal, Kathleen, 5, and Jim- mie. 2. children of James and Mrs. Giqinie were btrnod to death last HUI. while “fir mother and neigh- frlnticslly tied to rescue them diplomacy of Great Britain. Gandhi, India's civil disobedience campaign came to an end on March 8, w ‘an agreement of peace by Lord Irwin,_vicoroy o! India, abd Muutnis oiindhi, Nationalist lesion- 4-‘ liliiiliiiisi, orwimiisnivi nutrient: Rosalind Without Pro- " pellorStili At-Sea - N. S. Coast Gets a Drlibbingz-I >~‘~ i-i (Canadian Press) HALIFAX, N’. S., March 6.—Wliile waterfront districts of Nova Scotiifs sea. towns and villages were still lit- tered with debris resulting from the storm and high tides of Wednesday and Thursday, the most pressing problem tonight appeared to rest with the steamer ‘Rosalind, which with thirty-five passengers aboard from St. John's, Nfld, has been both of whom shown in the P11091811. . , ‘need above. The Viceroy, it is understood, acted upon h" 110W" and acquiescence from Million. Under the agreement peg-- mission was given natives to make and sell salt, thus ending government monolwly. while Gandhi ieilnquish- ed his claim to the right to boycott British goods. Makes Charges Agains t Dom. G0 v e 1:_1_1 m e nt Sack. Official States Government qlfbcketed Profit Between Seventy and Hundred Million Dollars In Handling Wheat “Crop of 1917-18—Prem. Ben- nett Repudiates Charges. (Canadian Press) PRINCE ALBERT, Sash, March awaiting aid approximately 100 miles northeast of Sable Island since she lost her propellor in the storm yes- , terday morning. The latest word received from the, Rosalind was reassuring. Captain J.i W. Harrington, supervisor here for‘ the Fairness Withy Steamship Com- pany, local agents for the Rosalind, wirelessed his wife from the steamer- that all were well on board and that the Dutch tug Rlioode Zee, from St. John's, was expected to reach the! Rosalind at nine o'clock tonight and take her in tow for Haiifax. | Additional reports of storm dam-i age were received here tonight from, various provincial points. Testing its strength on the light house at Par-i ker‘s Cove, Annapolis County, the! sea tore the structure from its foun- dation on a breakwater, and tossed the house back and forth with wave and undertow until e, giant combo: picked it up and hurdled it 400 feet overland and into s. field. The breakwater, oneof the finest of the Annapolis coast, felt the gains full force. A large hole was torn in the centre and other damage caused. At the fishing village of Broad Cove, Digby County, a f-ish house was lift- ed and thrown 50 feet into binaries Spray from breakers covered fields 500 feet from the beech. ‘ The steamer Yarmoubh and Keith Gann arrived at Y-rrnouth today nt- i tersiormy v ,, , from Boston and Saint John, respectively. Capt. Hank Crosby, of the Yarmouth, re- ported the round trip to Boston was the worst he hod ever cnerienced on this route. Announcement that he was ap- pealing to the Dominion Governmmt for financial assistance on behalf of Nova. Bcotia lobster fhhernoa, who suifered heavy losses in destruction of traps and gear, was mole tonbht by Br. Richard loner, Octal lee- retary of the United filo Xi- elnen. ‘Die client of till hols hoebeenvaeioiliyestinoiidwtoludq.iteaisllisdhoilupswithi more fill QIOJIU, but determin- Em °‘ m’ m" "$28.13!! K soclatlon of d-Pirst step was taken today to- ward investigation of charges by Robert Whiteside. of Bil-say, sasir, that the Dominion Government pocketed a profit of between $70,000,- 000 and $100,000,000 in handling the prairie wheat crop in 1917 and 1018. With two dissenting votes, the As- Saskstchewan rural municipalities instructed its execu- During the discussion, a letter from lhe Prime Minister, R. B. Bennett, to Premier J. T. M. Anderson, of Sask- atchewan, dated January 29, 1031, relative to the charges was read. "Your wrote, “is in were measure act to deal with Canadian wheat. board or‘ informant," error. appointed Mr. The under Bennett officials the war They were known as the grain supervisors or the 14 PAGES firms-ominou- oourmo some. (British United Prus) LONDON’, March 6.—-Fire works tive to ask the Dominion for an ac- counting, Whiteside, in making his charges, asks that, in the event thaey are substantiated, the millions involved be returned to the West, either as a wheat bonus or in part payment on wheat freight charges until the price reaches‘ 80 cents a bushel, 1i‘. O. B., Fbrt William. Canadian wheat board. The wheat board sold the Canadian crop of i929 and after paying all expenses, they credited to the Finance Department available for relief purposes in the West. the sum of $428,781. After every- m thing was wound up the money sent to the West provinces was $660,000. There remains upward of $100,000, which is in the process of being made Interesting Event Expected (CINE to fie Guardian) IDNDON, March 6.-—An interesting event is expected at Government House, Ottawa, in the early summer. Indy Bessborough, wife of Canada's now Governor General is ili s. deli- cote state of health, which will pre- vent her accepting public engage- mnts during the next few months. it is learned here. Toronto ’s Crime Rocord For I930 (lpoohi to the Gordian) 74308110, hhrch 0.—Toronto‘s able record for 1090 included six Idea, times attempted murders fluteen class of manslaughter, d than the ruult of Idris, ac- culng to he Imus! report issued fiidccstfllenllwerycl- l: its cittflare lhted b! he Giief. uding two bank-nus roi- which Mon here from the Ill Palomar fly- pnnnslaiqhter mom which totalled Increases In Princes Reach Savings l" Objective of cllrhforMmlth Tluir Long Tour ,,,,,,;7,T.,..., (Epoch! to‘ the Guardian) BUEOB Amfi, March d-The Prince of Wales and his brother Prince George reached the principal objective of their south American tour this afternoon, while a flag draped qoeclol train brought them into the trmscmtinentnl Retire ste- ing field. Thousands of persons who lined the streets obtained only a fleet “i ing glimpse of mo) Princes, who were whhilod in speeding autmiobiles from the station to the residence of the Hitish Amb ’ . Other crowds were packed along the route to the Can Rasuia, when the Royal party went almost immediately for an d- flcisl visit to President Uribiu-u: his the president returned the vilt. smiienceaflihiheelccfllim of mhiisaitihofiourellhvwlnin- X‘ A-QeQIH. \- .. going to howl against Russian com- pgflfldn," Baldwin said, "but I will stop it when I get s chance!’ creases in savings deposits in Cona- ds and in current loans outside of the Dominion are shown in the monthly statement of the Depart- ment of Finance for January. reserve fund remains at the some! figure, namely 010238.000. Bavinl! deposits totalled January as against $145,046,166 in December ladt. Current loans out- B00,5'i2 as compared with the De- cember figure of 0018.06.02. crease of 870,368,906 in ordinary rev- enue and increase of 021.8939” ordinary eleven months of the present fiscal year are lhowri in the February fi- nancial statement issued today by the Department of Hnlwe. During the eleven months ended Pebrusry I lest, ordinary revenue snail-Md to KIIAW ll Gfliilnd with Qg§_‘ _ QB“,§,'"I § In y“ , ijgjmk ilifififi-kfifiIl-Qlfiin“ and fist fights disturbed but fail- ed to break up an anti-Soviet “slav- ery” demonstration in Albert Hall tonight. A resolution was adopted liming the Labor Government to ter- minate the "most favored nation" clause in the trade treaty with the Soviet Union. The resolution offered by Sir E. Hilton Young. Conservat- ive member of Parliament, caus- ed an uproar of frenzied shouting a- mong women and recurrent fights a- mong men at the seething gathering. Lord Brentford, formerly Sir Wil- liam Joynson-Hicks, Conservative leader, presided. Influential membe of Parliament attended ,including Winston Churchill. Members and sup- porters of the trade benefit union were present. The entrance of Lord Brentfoni precipitated an uproar. The stewards eiectcd the demonstrators. and af- ter quiet had been restored, Lord Brentford said “these episodes show the sort of things friends of the So- viet are compelled to resort to be- cause they do not dare to hear the truth." Fights broke out while he was speaking, necessitating assuran- ces by Lord Bxentford that the crowd was in no danger. He had no sooner spoken than s. great shouting broke out in the gallery, where a. Free for All seemed under way. Women hoot- ed and screamed as the battered stewards struggled to eject them. The fight moved into the corridor outside. Quiet was restored for a mo- ment. Lord Dientfcrcl, when he could be heard, accused the Soviet of the wvholesale murder of men women and children through forced labor. "It is a crying scandal," he shouted. "that goods polluted by this curse should be Pennitted to enter the country." . A mmoent later Young offered his resolution. The din which broke out was deafenin,,. Churchill, neverthe- less, shouted a second to the resol- ution. The uproar increased. Women shrieked and men whistled and booed. Churchill glared at the agit- ators and shouted, "You miserable hirelings paid with rubies to give trouble." The resolution was carried amidst tlie singing of "God Save the King" on one hand and cries 0f “long live soviet Russia" on the other. Meantime Stanley Baldwin in a speech at Newton Abbott. character- ized Soviet Russia as the greatest p0- tenflsl danger to Great Britain's‘ dustrial, development. "I em not OTTAWA, oni. March fi-ifl- The, $1,%,706,006 in dc of Canada amounted to 8014.- UITAWA, Ont., March 6.-A de- in expenditure during the and!‘ 8.1.8450. Fire Works And Fist Fights At L0nd0n__Meeting Anti-Soviet “Slavery” Demon- stration In Albert Hall Almost Ended In Riot. itiuniin”fii MURBERUF HER HUSBAND (Canadian Press) v KANSAS CITY, Mo., March tt-Mrs Myrtle A, Bennett, 35, was acquitted by a. Jury in connection with the slay- ing of her husband John G. Bennett, following a bridge game quarrel. ISLANIJER GETS APPUINTMENT (Canadian Press) _ UITAWA. Ont., March 5—TI18 De- partment of Agriculture announces the appointment of Garnet ilieLach- cur as seed branch inspector for district No. 1, comprising the prov- inces of Prince Edward Island and Nova. Scotla and New Brunswick. lvlr. IeLacheur i.s a. native of Prince Ed- ward Island and is particularly well known throughout the Maritlmes as n, seed sepecialist. During‘ the past year he has been active district seed inspector at district headquart- ers at Baokville, N. B. Proposed Bill - I: Dead Issue (0lna&n hose) , N. 3., March 8- The proposed bill to pennit the sale of light wines and beer in hotels in New m wick is a dead issue. R was learned authoritatively here to- day that the embryo legislation sponsored b! the Maritime Hotel Association has been deserted by its proponents in view of the stren- uous opposition on the part of or- ganisotlons and the niembess of the legislature. The Weather, Etc. q... V" . -- _ k Slim “is lint?" MkfAuoas; jfiiEi” . JJ._,,._ i UNITED 81mm 1 HAS HER’ $ENAT0R5 ‘IURONTD, March 6. - Westerly winds with a little higher tempera lure. lihthmm ... -.. ... ... 84 Minimum .. :0 lflgh tide this afternoon at 145d and tomorrow morning at 1.28. Bun sets this afternoon at 5.56 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.26. ldlnary expenditure totalled $301.4 143,100, as compared with l3l0,14G,~ 104. The statement represents only; the roceipts and payments which have pained through the Depart- nfltofllhoneewhhdbflud-