i- MAXIMS 3» , o, ,, .. i MIECIAMS MERE MAN MERE MAN i»- -=~'"*~""-'"" Paper ;;;1*1‘*’”" ‘P’ Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward? island LiketheDew ‘ “in, I m1. gfifsgrra Guardian Iwe Bentl- lHitler Ordered T0 DisbandArmy German SociaTi-sT-Leader’s Shock iiES 0N iii l|N|JY__BABY , Tracing of Ran s o m ; Money Now Seems "‘ To Hold Spotlight 0f Kidnapping. (Canadian Press) JOPEWELL, N. Jo April 1s- m 72-year-old “Jafsie" of the Lindbergh case rode an elevated I train and a motor car in quest of new contacts with the kidnappers 1 iodiywvliile police followed the iisii of one of the bills he used in aiutile $50,000 ransom payment. ,0ther clues led to Canada. A bun giving the name of D. D. Dick- gosou oi New York was detained at list Thomas, 0nt., when police Joiiiid he had letters addressdd t0 o. Lindberghs. He explained‘ he "~- ly was sending suggestions for ltlilng the child and the import- ince of this do. ‘ appeared ' negligible. The Royal Canadian Mounted folio! were asked "tooaicl in appre- Jieiidiiig Harry Fleischer, Detroit “gangster long sought for question- , ingand now believed to be seeking to board a boat for abroad, pos- sibly from Halifax, N. S. Still confident of his ability to negotiate further with the abduct- (Coniinucd on Page 10) isad Death A Of Infant (Canadian Press) WINDSOR, N. 3., April i3-Don- lid Wallace Smith, 1'1 months old ion oi Reginald Smith, died today Itien s chestnut _lodged in his throat and resisted all efforts at removal. The child had been play- l“? i“ i110 yard, and placed the nut iii his mouth. Ho died before medi. "i help arrived. ANNOUNCEMENTS, comma EVENTS, " MEETINGS. ETC "how and Dance. Oddfeliowa "I Moniseue. semi-any. iori-i-ia-ai “Income tax returns repared iliigrmatlon treated confidentially. - -MacNeill 6: Co., City. 2013-1! on "_‘“ ' Borden Line Club loading hogs ‘PM. calves, Albany, ‘Ihunday, m‘ it iiivi-a-ia-ai ‘(Diffs Lyceum tonight (Thurs- ‘s 2am V1011". saxophone and - 5 imd 85 cents. 830-1230. i 3010-11 _"Bi'ldge-Knilhis OI Columbus méloggllévolgegigider auspices of Leavllli. 3011-4-14-31 inillhm" ‘“°°“"¢ "i Oflrdlsan may! £1111! in Cardigan Hall. . llril 18th at I p, m, m, Bflndh Ill! 10084-1141 “Th! East _._ viii make nfiéifii, Emails out: p‘? mmflu ‘Eaton Hall. April 15th at" I m, m“! linionéauo. and loo. Ia- P H 1r - aooil-e-ii-zi brim“ mllffllwe is the form “WW "mm which unpaid “have: are ennui] e u ‘ti? ‘Milw- ' m "l . “Judi?! the Live stoop "film nulls s, "is. oration as. 1n. y ‘mmwl- Avril ll, at sso om. mla-e-ii-ai Troops Numbering 400,000 Must G0, Says Hindenburg. - - .___._ BERLIN, Avril 13. (AP.)-'I'he German Government today ordered Adolf Hitler to disband his army of 400,000 Nationalist Socialist shock troops and to put an end to the terrorizing activities for which it held him Ind his legions responsib- le. This sudden blow at the strong- est single political organization in the nation came 1n the form of an emergency decree signed by Pres- ident Paul Von Hindenburg. As soon asit was promulgated police throughout the country proceeded to enforce it by invading the var- ious Nazi headquarters and seizing materials o! war and propaganda. The presidential decree dissolved immediately "all quasi-military or- ganizations of the National Social- ist Workers party, especially the‘ ‘iiizziin storm troops and police formations, with all staffs and other institut-l ions belonging thereto. including observers and reserves,‘ mofonmar- (Continued on Page l0) Believed Dead FREDERJGPON, N- 13., Aprll,18. (By the Canadian Pressl-Llttle hope was held tonight that Mrs. Charles H. Wedall, missing since last evening, would be found alive. An intensive search has, revealed no clue to her whereiibouis br- fate, and it was generally believed she had been drowned in the Saint John river. possibly falling from the rail- way bridge here. . News Briefs (Canadian Press) iALIDONA, Pm, April l3 — Eight persons five oif them children were burned to death in a fire at llensbeyiown near here shortly before midnight. NEW YORK, April Iii-The New York‘ Federal Reserve Bank today reported ',. of 'sz,ooo.ooo in gold from Canada. LONDON, April iii-A hill which would legalise Sunday motion picture shows passed second reading In the {louse of Commons, by a vote of 235 to I11 tonight, after prolonged de- bate. ‘ VICTORIA, B. 0., April 1s- After a session lasting eight _weeka the British Columbia leg- islature promgued today. Ioracsata were made before the legislature met that this would be the last session of the present House but nothing baa developed to strengthen this prediction. ---:—h (By the Canadian Prosn-l". W. Dean of Toronto. has been ap- pointed by the General Board of Minions of the Presbyterian Church in Canada to engalv in industrial" and institutional’ work In the Presbyterian mis- sions at lbausl, India. It is ex- peotedgbfr. Dean will leave for India next month. _ NEW YORK. N. Y». All!" 13"‘ Police definitely announced late toll! "Ill one of l" bills used In the Idlidberlh "mam payment bad been paged in New Yolk City with- in the last few his. LIMA. Peril. April, l3--.\ n01 Cabinet, beaded by Minister 0! I Interior Luis flares ae Premier. was formed today afici- the Cabinet’ of Premier Iraaohco Lanaita resigned. Senor Lanattah" mltlllu" "flvniuabiy was caused by I dhagteemcut with his WM" 1h his capacity as Minister o! Finance. Tr CHOICE 0F IL DUCE Signorlne Attllla Radice, one of Italy's most beautiful women, was nominated by Mussolini as prima ballerina at the Scala theatre, Ml- lan, Italy. She's 26 and the coun- tryaprcmicr dancer, having been‘ in that profession 20 years. MINIATURE iiiis iioiiiiiii MONTREAL, Que, April 13—-(By the Canadian Press)-—A shiver ran down Montreal's spine today as King Winter attempted to wrestle control of the weather from spring. The 01d gentleman did not quite succeed; but he did make it ex- eeedingly uncomfortable for those caught out in_ garments which had looked seasonable in the morning. He sent a snow storm which lasted for an hour or two and at its crest reached near blizzard proportions_ 1t soon died down and by this evening had melted off the streets. Many a. dainty shoe was ready for the cleaner or the ashcan, dc- pending upon its material, after its owner was forced to plough through the inch of muddy snow deposited in her path. The flooded condition of many rivers which cverflowed the banks during the past few days owing chiefly to ice jams was reported generally as receding tonight. Con- siderable inconvenlence was still be- ing experienced at Beaucevllle where the lower sections were bur- (Contlnued on Page 10) zoPfc. CutMay Come This Month OTTAWA, 0nt., April i3—(By the Canadian Pressi-Payment of salary cheques due civil servants on April i5 will depend on' the action oi‘ the Senate on the interim sup- ply bill now before it for consider- ation, E. N. Rhodes, Minister of Finance, told the House of Com- mons this afternoon. The minister was replying w a question asked by '1'. 1". Ahearn, (Lib., Ottawa), who wanted to know also if the cheques sent out. April 1t would bear the ten per cent salary re- ductioil. On the latter phase of the quee- tion Mr. Rhodes said it would de- pend upon passage of the bill pro- viding for the reduction, now in its final stages in the House. Jilted YoutIz In The Toils (Canadian Pres!) swans-cor... n. s, April ia-l Frederick Guest, 30 year oldadmlr- er of Miss Pauline White, 15. was may committed to stand trial be- fore the Supreme Court for the at- tempted murder of was White on Saturday night. The girl took the witness stand at the preliminary hearing today, bandages on her face, neck and arms. and told of having been attacked by Guest, ram in hand, on Saturday night when she went shopping with her mother. refusing to keep an ap- OTTAWA, 0111., April 13-(87 the Canadian Pressl-A bleak pic- ture of broadcasting conditions in the United States was given the house committee on radio today by Dr. J. E. Morgan, spokesman for the National Committee on educa- tion by radlo, Washington, D. 0., and Dr. Lee DeForest, described as the father of radio broadcasting. The submission of Dr. De Forest was read to the committee by Gra- ham Spry, bead of the Canadian Radio League, the organization leading the fight for public own- ershlp of radio brcadcastin, in‘ Canada. Dr. Morgan charged that power- ful interests were spending s. mil- lion dollars a year in propaganda in the United States to keep con- trol of radio in the hands of priv- ate interests, that educational ef- forts were being stifled by these in- terests, and the right of free speech on the air tened. The Fed- eral Radio Commission, appointed by act of Congress in 1927, had functioned weakly and failed to carry out its responsibilities of con- ducting the industry "in the inter- “_ Of Broadcasting Conditions InU.S. CHARLOTTETQWN. CANADA. THURSDAY, APRIL i-Zjosz ,l§leei,k Picture 154 i . h‘ est of public welfare, convenience and necessity," Dr. Morgan con- tended. Dr. De Forest also bitterly ex- pressed himself regarding radio conditions in the United States. “In the space of a few years," he wrote, "we in the United States have seen the radio so debased by commercial advertising that many house-holders look upon it in the same light as a bothersome itiner- .ant salesman. Much of the direct 'radio advertising was "a vulgar, cheap jack-show designed to draw dollars out of the people's pockets,” he declared. Further argument in support of public ownership of radio wascon- tained in a brief submitted by J. L. Ilsley, (Lib, Hunts-Kings), a member of the committee, on behalf of Professor O. H. Mercer of the Department of Languages, Dal- housie University, Halifax, NPE. Professor Mercer has been interest- ed in educational broadcasting for some time and studied the systems in vogue in several European coun- tries. " (Continued on Page 7) Trade tion Held In Canadian Marking a. forward step in in- creased membership, the quarterly meeting of the Charlottetown Board oi Trade was held last night in the Canadian National Hotel following an enjoyable dinner, after which mutlnc business wu despatched and an (address on the Pfllaibllities of developing the oyster industry of the Province was delivered by one of the new memibem of the Board, the Hon. G. Shelton Sharp, Minister of Agriculture. President; Samuel Kennedy pre- sided. Roportfng for the member- ship committee, Mr. P. W. Tumor read, amid applause, the names of twenty-five applicants who were duly elected as members at the meeting. A toast, The King, proposed by Dr. function included two finely rend- s'xty and seventy attended the din- ner, at which much enthusiasm was manifested. Stress Opportunity "We believe," said Hon. Mr. Board _Hears Encouraging Message Re Oyster Industry imtentialities or iuausgfipiiouicoa By Hon. Mr. Sharp At Quarterly Meeting. ‘increase Of Twenty -Five New Members Reported At Enjoyable Func- National Hotel. which was heard with keeu interest and appreciation, "that if this Prov- ince were to take seriously the flowing of oysters, we could supply the Canadian market and perhaps la portion of the American market as well. We have the quality; we ihave the proper temperature. Our ioysters do not grow fast, from the ifact that our water is cooler than on the coast of the Atlantic States. But our quality is bettor. we have no danger of our water being pol- luted, surrounded as we are by the Gulf oif St. Lawrence. The Cau- adlsn people are demanding oysters, and it is a "demand that we alone can supply. Nova sootia cannot do it; they have not the area. Neither tho Western Provinces nor Quebec J. A. Clark, was duly honored. The'ean do it. We have something here that no other Canadian people have, cred solos by Mr. Leigh Dingwell, and it is up to us in this Province who was accompanied on the piano to go ahead, under eoleutlfio guid- by Miss Lilian MacKensie. Betweellllm" "'4 develop this mat profit producing industry." "We could keep a very much larg- er percentage of people in the Prov- (Continucd on Page 10) Senate FYnding-s Re Beauharnois Expected Soon (Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Ont., April 18-In a front Page news feature today the Ottawa Journal says:-- "The political spotlight shortly will be occupied by the cial com- mittee oi’ the Senate when it re- ports on its findings as to the re- lation of Senato c Wilfrid Laurier Milmllllld. Andrew Haydon, and Donat Raymond with the Beau- harnois Power Corporation. ' "It is believed the committee will present a fact-finding report but will not ifiake any recommenda- tionl. “It is further believed in well informed Political circles that the 111141118! by the special committee will be ouch that as a result eon- ators Mcbougaid and Haydon will lose their coats in the Upper House. Senator Raymond, it issaid, will ""9 bl placed in the same position as his two colleagues. _ "The special committee has re- Plane Crash Near St John SAINT JOHN, N. B, April 13 - (By The Canadian Prowl-Two per- sons narrowly escaped injury when a plane owned and piloted ‘by H. W. Grant, Saint John, crashed in a field near the city this afternoon. The machine, of the moth type, failed to clear some low trees fls it gmlmd, and rolled over a 4o foot embankment. Grant and a passen- ger climbed from the wreckage un- aided. The wings, under-carriage, rud- der. propeller and coupe ton were smashed. Grant, pilot with ten years flying experience, brought the plane racmtly, reconditioned it, and had been flying it for about two weeks. reilresentlng the ‘three Liberal Sen- ators and also the views of its own- oounsel. Owing to the illness of Senator '1‘. C. Chapels, a. veteran member of the Upper House, the committee has not been called to- gather. pointment with him, . V. V I i 1 ceivcd the briefs of the lawyers (Continued on Page ioi i“; Sharp in the course an address. was taking off, nose-dived to the v Overjoyed I l L<w ‘ 1:» .-=u=z:;:_;.—~— 1 SEES FATHER AFTER l2 YEARS Isabelle Kearns, nurse, is en routo from Detroit to Toronto to see her father, who returned liome after being missln for twelve years and declared legally dead. Newf o u n dland ’s Legislature Will Resume Session ST. JOHN’S, Nfld, April 13. (By the Canadian Prcss)—Newfound- lands House of Assembly will re- sume lts session next Tuesday. April 19. Business before the legislature will so (xmcluded as quickly as nes- sible; dissolution will be asked, and an election will be held without delay. Decision to this effect was reached at a caucus of the govern- ment party today, Sir Richard Squires, present Pre- mier, will lead the party in the ci- ection campaign, but sir William Cooker, M‘nistcr without Portfolio. W. W. Halfyard, Minister of Posts. and Hon. Dr. Arthur Barnes, Sec- retary of State, will retire from pub- llc life. The government's intentions with regard to the citizens‘ ‘resolution asking "proper investigation" of charges that minutes of council had been falsified, were not disclosed af- ,ter today's caucus. Saskatchewan House Prorogues REGINA, Sask., April 13. (By the Canadian Prcssl-To thc tune of “pack up your troubles" members of the Saskatchewan Legislature liter- ally put the words ilito effect as the prorogation of the fourth session of the seventh legislature came into effect, th's afternoon. Long olnys and nights of wrang- ling, of bitter attacks and counter- cttacks came to a close with the members on both sides oi’ the house entering into the spirit of goodfel- lcwship. Attempted To End Lives Of Entire Family TORONTO, Ont, April 13-—(By the Canadian Press)—-Mrs. Corinne Chapman, 29, today attempted to end her own life, that of her six months old baby, and her mother and sister, according to the police. Mrs. Chapman, before the family had arisen, is alleged to have walk- ed into the kitchen of her flat, turned on all the gas jets, thcn with the baby in her arms, climb- ed to the roof of the house and jumped off. She was found lying in the snow, and is now in hospital terribly injured. The baby escaped serious harm. While her father, A. H. Taylor, and her six year old son were out of thc house, the woman turned on the gas, climbed to the porch roof and jumped. She was found in a lane alongside the house by a pass- ing milkman. The mother, Mrs. A. H. Taylor, and Mrs_ Chapuian‘: sister were awakened by the smell of gas and turned off the Jets as the police ar- rived. Neither was affected by the fumes. 12 PAGES Zéangster iIn Annual Subscriptions fictive-red 5.1.00. By hlull Cunilllis ulld U. S‘. A. $1.50. ~—--___j___ Arrives Maritimes? Man Resemblirigfiarry Fleischer, Detroit Racketeer Wanted For Questioning In The Lindbergh Kidnapping Seen In St John And. Halifax. HALIFAX, N. 5., April 13——(By the Canadian Prcss)-—A man who strongly resembled pictures of Har- ry Fleischer, Detroit gangster want- qucstlonlng in connection with the Lindbergh kidnapping, en- deavoured to get a jbo aboard the steamer Fernfield Sunday and Monday. Four persons who saw him, including '1‘. D. Farqiihar, of the Farquhar Steamship Company, owners of the Fernfield, and Robert Salter, chief of harbor police, have since been shown pictures of Pleische and think the waterfront job-hunter may be he. Turned down by the steamship company, the man told Mr. Far- quhar “when a fellow wants to go right you won't give him a chance." The possibility that he may have made a later arrangement with the captain will be checked tomorrow when the Femfield puts in at (Continued on Page 10) Shot In The Back, Boy Dies (Canadian Press) NEW WATERFORD, N. 8., April iii-Accidentally shot in the back, Henry McKinnon, 15, died almost instantly today in the home of a neighbor. He was reading with a couple of young friends in a room adjoining the kitchen in John White's house, when a bullet from a .22 calibre rifle Arthur and Wil- liam White had been using to shoot seals, crashed through the partition and entered his back below the shoulder. Mrs. White and a seven year old boy were thc only occupants of the kitchen at the time. It is believed the boy was tampering with the weapon and in some way discharged it. Protest FREDERICTON, N. B, April 13. (By the Canadian Pressl-Immed- late action in protest against a ‘GUVERNliIQETiil ;BOMMENDED (RE T _i_ RIFF iWise Action 0f Coli- servative Govt. In Invoking Anti- Dumping Legisla- tion Stopped Flood Of Surplus Products Of U. S. Factodes Into Canada. OTTAWA, Ont., April lIL-(By ihe Canadian Prcssl—Conmicnda- tion 0f the Government for its ac- tion ln respect to the tariff in i930 was voiced by A. M. Edwards, (Cons., South Waterloo), in the House of Commons today. Continu- ing the debate on the budget, Mr. Edwards said that Canada might very easily have been flooded with the surplus products of United States factories had lt not been for wise action by the Government in invoking anti-dumping legislation. United States manufacturers, said Mr. Edwards, lirid a zone systom_ In his own particular zone tho manufacturer" south 0f the liilc kept up prices to the level ivhicli he con- sidered they should maintain. When he sold his surplus outside that particillzir zone, however, lic frequently slaughtered prices in Oi‘- dcr to compete with his rivals. Canada was outside these zones, i r (Continued on Page 10) 55 Members In Sask. House (Special to the Guardian) REGINA, susla, April 13—Snskai- ChCWdll will be represented by 55 members in the Legislature n: thc ccnclus 0n of the next general elect- ion it nus decided yesterday when proposed fifty percent curtailment in the C. N. R. daily express service between Fredericton and Newcastle was decided upon tonight by the Fredericton Board of Trade. An in- terview with W. U. Appleton, of the, C. N- R. at Moncton will be re- quested. ' The recommendation in Sir Alex- ander Gibbs report on Canadian harbors that Canadian grain should be routed to Saint Jchn vis. C. N. R, through‘ Fredericton received fav- orable comment. i j the redistribution bill was given third reading. Marked by it (icbaio which for in- tensity of feeling has had few cqunls in the local House, the bill was finally carried, u-‘iih the Govern- ment acceding to several amend- ments suggested by the Opmsiiicn. i Record & Forecast of the Weather .\ll'I'l‘i€0|{OI.OGli‘Al- UFIVE. Tor- niiln, (Int, April l3. Minimum niiil niiixliniiiu nros: Una-Inn ill-W Vlincnuvcr 50-04 lililiiiniiiuil -i(\—i'r‘-‘ Rnnff 27—"> Winnipeg ’i‘iirniiin 2i temperat- Charlottetown .'H~.$(l_ _ FORECASTS Oiuiwn uml (‘ppor Si. Lawrence Vnl- yo: .\ia‘-'r.|(i- imrlinvnwiv-rly winds; mostly llllf‘ iiiiii somewhat lower frui- pcriiilirc. Lower Si. Lnwronrc Vnllei": .\fnil- orntc iioiiiliivost sniffing to northwest u-inils; partly clmnly‘ iiml somewhat rrolili-r: local annu-fliirrlcil. (luif nnil North Slinrr: hfmlrrnio Fflilill in ilniilhu-sat wliiill; mostly r-liviulv: lnrni nnoivfliirrioii, llnrliimc limit nml Vent: binder-ali- wlmln. mostly southwest; partly rlnmly, not much change in tempor- niurc. lligii Illll‘ ibis nffcrnnon at 2.50 and tomorrow innrniilg n! (Lil Sun loin ililil evening iif (HI linil rln-n tomorrow innrnlng at (Hit. Pull moon Wednesday, "April 20. 5.‘. n. m. ‘ summertime ilvII- olirhteen minutes later than Chnrluitoiowg, _ I “debts I liiiio ills His Piiici»; is ALWAYS Wit“ oven-tritium: ("AR FERRY RPIIEDFLI) weep dny5~-Ll\:l\‘f‘I lluruli-ii daily 0.1K ii. m. and 11.40 a. m. Igyivml Tormrntliie daily: 10:0 a. m. and 2.55 P- ll-