E "ivggzocsivr ENDDIINTER; TTUBBDRN RESIiUNBE ebel Artillery Blasts Caspe —- Rebel Re- infer-cements Rush- ed To Scene. Gcardia ' 8 iai Wire) . ii I KENDAYE. France. mroh 10- . ‘mt field artillery blasted .. into reins today in an effort . dislodge Government troope- . pacing the . o. at‘ armwarohing . . rran . a to drive thia "“"’.‘.'.‘.i“f. -..'.'i' communi- Iraneda fact-moving “s, vised control cl the im- » ant Montalha niloanl! hith- y and sent advance parties . gh the can Just Mountains ~ heart of iha n. V (Continued on p... 1, Col. s) OMlNfi fVfNTl "Pownal Rink Thursday 17th GXEDGQI‘ Vl- PQWUfl-L-aw-adfbh. "3'Aot comedy m Emerald Bail. ~ - ‘clock. Ad- Pfilfio‘ .'.‘.‘.‘i“ii;'& Aligdbl-ii-lb-Si. l M‘ ‘ ' "ilvo- '* c Fl no ; .J.'-urun. '° owe-fist! ricklsy Point Blood-Heralds“ o. Huskies. Milton B-iik t. I to after. Jr ' ~11 i“ Await». .~~ t n‘ n: Rink toniehi. lolfialifllibg§ vE, rtoyais, w}: ter. v "nun stew some terse ems"- ' ' p" ii-eoe-a-io-u. -- i t Albany a s... 1am ' '.'°°“' ' ', h-‘iei-a-rwt-u. "Varlo . conceit in chem Vai- ' ETEiiI-mv ily litalimonafi may v. r. 11-880-‘8-17-28. "short am and dance after s".:u"".'t"':*a.*li*. other“ ‘ L-BW-g-Uvli. artsvillc Maple Iieafs vs. lltshlre Allt sports at Wiltshire i ~ er Kennedy. p‘ n“ IO 0179B. "c ' to the vinl Pic so d ginger-ammo ly°O0l1lWlll%1l ioculsililyieouin .611 i! 115% réeifi-a-‘n-n. “Don't missthe mes not m (“Who's B In") in Emerald Ha ilgliillgi biotin: r M s‘ m i- 2s ceiits. Leia-a- -st "livestock Marketing Board "=- hoes at Oharlottetown this w m"'i""i.o’i‘.’£2€'°§8s . c . "tamwlltll v 01' bow. ovum UWDGP O MC 1h i iiifilwii ‘°'; Hy , yde River. n cor. ereby chal- ud to a match race Saturday for s . - L499. I00! YOUNG Aamuubregebdef the M! oi u m. Al" lir at ztillnl ova: ‘lotion o. rod-Y. "nine-in. p-eoa. HQ can 0 h "t". .. ‘ET-“mw... ‘i’ tliiiildiiieiei: ft flank of the » toward riie scruff ,-.-.. xnr- , as ‘~\':~\ ~ n Covers‘ Prince Edwartl Island to. the Bew- eadby tery ody _ _. _ I ETOWN, CANADA. THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1938’ fl-TTCEZTV SITUA TION Did Yesterday . DEATH DE MR. i ma. p. a. c l Associate ltditor of the Guard- Ill!- BRITAIN KEEPS tliiillitl ililH n 0M m | u is Rumors Of Cabinet Split In Crisis Go Unconfirmed. ' BynFAT US$831»... anadian Press Staff Writer IDNDON. March 16-(0? cable) -'1‘he United Kingdom Govern- mentpworliing in close consulta- tion with the nion Govern- ments in an endeavor to evolve a program to meet the lncreas nave international situation night was reported strongly divid- ed over foreign policy. _ Rumors 0L cabinet issensio were heard in the House of Oom- mons lobbies in the wake of Prime Minister Chamberlain's speech in whlcrrhe harried Persistent oppo- fltion demands for a definite statement on the government's at- titude toward Czechoslovakia, and the course planned with France in connection with the Spanish crisis. No Confirmation confirmation whatever could ieined in regard to the ru- more. (Haves News Agency said it was the cabinet was split. with the younger members said to b eading for a firm stand. War ry Les Hore-Bclisha was reported co erinfl Possible r8818- nation. (111313 gage-Polish: tlgieli-S, Hav- “me - llnrbecm i . Malcolm MacDon- ald. would tel No be ob ow.) Another rumor was that labor would be invited to Join the Gov- ernment to ensure national solid- arity in the event of emergency~a suggestion at which most Labor members laughed. Sentenced To Die In Electric Chair . h G rdlan’ (%HIIOAYGO?I arch‘ Duce Sounds lYdt i. K. BURRIE; visiiiuiv Associate Editor Of The Guardian Pass- ed Away. In His Eighty-Third Year. The death occurred in Charlotte- rning aiie “m” ii£."°'."Zi h. p. a OuErl; Guardian year. e was , at DeSahle, I gnunie, J. g3, - -- acher‘: lic- i r taupgflilt school for nearly years, in North Bed uc.i ‘ DeBabl and er he went to 8t. John, e was in the inxsiur- e twelve C sclhools. Subsequently B.. where h Riot r to came proprietor of a lead and statione y business in. side. Alive s keen! interested in pub- lic afla rs as we as in literary mat- ters. Mr. Currie was s, frequent contributor to the press during his early years. When the editorship of the Bummerside Pioneer and island Farmer became vacant through the resignation of the late Mr. ohn Pond. Mr. Pond recom- mended him as his successor. This position Mr. Currie filled for flve years. and with such satisfac- tion that in 1011. when the late Mr. J. E. B. McOready. Editor o! The Char ottetown F . i ed book succeed him as paper. then under the management | oi’ the late- Mir. J. . Hood. | He remained as Associate Editor when. ug ndness. 110 W88 unable to continue on full time u .v. Mr. Currie experienced defective eyesight shortly after the Great ar. On the advice oi local doc- e to be examined by specialists in was told that the vision of one e e was permanently imp . and e other aiiected. Subsequently it became neee to first one and then t e remaining Since 1915 he had been mm etely blind, but notwithstanding th cal- amity maintained an active interest in public matters and continued his Journalistic duties with the aid of an emanuensis. A splendid conversationalist. Mr. Currie enjoyed nothing better than having a friend visit him and dis- cuss subiects o! mutual interest. He was a great reader. and ch30?“ 6Y6. altheireed the Bfllfllll Will Ald France Protect Bolonial Route PARIS. March lit-Great Britain promised France naval aid tonight lf Italian and German tomes in Spain menaoed France's N African w unicati 1n return. um his cabinet France would maintain hon-intervention in BK this decision. France kept her er with Government Spain shut to men and munitions and droDDBd her laus for an immedi- ate effort wth Great Britain to negotiate a Spanish truce. That the Spanish Government appeared to have stopped the 1n- surgents drive toward the Medit- erranean. at least temporarily. also was cited by Blum as enab France to keep her frontier shut. Preparations. nevertheless, went ead to assure the security of France's Pyrenees border as well as om of communication on the Mediterranean. vital sea road- way; of France and the British Em- LOOK T0 DEFENCES The army, it was id, j dged the 70.000 troops now iaTrA-TrIsonTéd on the od. Spanish border asssufilolent under any circumstances. The navy was planning to add extra ships to its Mediterranean patrol. Four de- stroyers will be based at Port Ven- dres. closer tp Bpanim waters than ‘Iioulouee base. inun PLAY Blli sutciss use izviiimsr~ Three Act Comedy Presented In Prince Edward Theatre To Appreciative Audi- ence. The Benevolent Irish Society's celebration of the 118th annivers- ary of ttsorgenlmtlon in Char- n last night with the presentat on of the play “You Can't Beat the Irish". a. three-act comedy’ Packed with laughs from start finish. Between act spec- ialties included vocal, dancing and instrumental numbers, the ta- neous applause and epcores testi- fying to their acceptance by the 0d e11 l l TlOtAIEsiTiT-efrxlaim" {w haifitg “Tail:- icontlnued on page ‘l. Col. d) Moves Senate Probe Into Railway Problem I g, p, i, Guardian's 8 i Wire) (orrrs A. March ii-Apoouit- ment oi a special committee of 14 Senators to inquire into the rail- way problem was moved in the Upper House today by‘ Senator F. B. Black (Oon. Sackv le). to ' i t flail,” the bee‘: 1116828001 relieving tie: country from its extremely serious railway condition and fin- snfhlai hurdetn) 002:; ugiglt new Elpsnwrfil recoizisitlilf Sim-lug" mmi u ena . 001m n? wmBruéswick Song i | auidéiencgé" e orma distinguished £23031’. “urge: lei? Honour Lieutenant Governor Geo‘. D. DaBlois and Mrs. DeBlots, thlel . Campbell. and. His or- Mayor E. A. Foster and Mrs. Foster. thzittolifi Can't Beat the Irish," as e sue Irish play m??? mor so typical o! from old Erin. Bkilfulla by m. A. Mentcn Whi tn wholehearted support from a tine cast of characters, the uctlon through its three acts as the power to hold an audience absorb- ed every minute. And that was the case aat night, marked every few minu by spontaneous bursts of ause when some cleverly- stag bit of comedy brought .a wholehearted laumi from every member of the audience. . _ The scene was laid in a city and ‘time the present. First of the _ in_or_der;o_i__ appearancezwap i (Continued on page 3.001. t) M o '1 Bill ToAmend A Warning Note club , . 'n Austrian Seizure m ‘Approvl g I 0 Social Credit Act (o. r. hggggrdlanh s wire Mroroml itAct ov in eAi toits% turebeforetheend o! weer. while contents oi the bill not known. it is expected amendments ilbe irected at Boahl t tdeogifrd “lint! under eact. ' P NEilTRAilTY is REAFHRMEB BY tiiiiitinimu Labor Leader Critical 0f Government Pol- icy In Spanish Civil Wan. (By George flambloton Canadlm i- Press Staff Writer) IDNDON. Mamh 16—(CP Cable) -Brcezily, the House of Commons tonight swung to Insurgent Gen- eral Franco's victories in the Spanish civil war. Clement Attlee, L-abor leader. was bitter in his attack on what he called the "craven" British °°i¥.°".l"‘°i..d“" ‘“-“i‘ii.i”i~.."iii°'lsi the ec : ‘ ‘h Republic is the cause o1 ‘All’ °°“"‘ ‘I2’ scrutinis- Li; betray fiance is to betray Bri- n. "Jbin with w. Aitiee ressed. -‘Aot in concert with them me to help the people o! Spain. Ii’ be a case oi’ you "' new or never. A Labor motion oi censure pro- by Mr. Attiee was rejected a vote o! 317-141. STANDS BY NEUTRALITY Prime Minister Chamberlain stood by the policy 0d non-hater- vontion in halve taken ' scale- 2. 1t mated an interns: tlonal war earned on firsiésoi all ii, alter-war - g¥ali> beyond t... 182i’. tan Peninsula. IN’ GIDSE CONTACT "We intend to continue as we a}? ugh the Ffimin close contatoiz, e . . Chamberlain added. In‘?! believe today we shall best serve British interesta. We shall best serve the cause of ireedom- i1 we troop out or aoaio. will our licy of non-intervention. andrggnotattempttobumoirr fingers as other nations may well intervention. n tting the truth. laughed the r benches. The Prime Minister quoted a fitombllili by AnthoEyétEfQen. [Q lary, L t "% gld you sack him?" La- mfmdmemndedition rotests i-cse OPP“ D when Mr. Giamberlain declared he had def any fresh succesion of forces to General Franco's aids o! the civil mAll-izhough rumors might be con- £3782!‘ more or lees probable, he queet of Spa y power: would “endanger the peace. reedom and securty o_i___t_l1_ (Continued on page '1. Col. '1) Sees The Maritimes Forced" Into Union IREDEBIOION. Mar. ro-(or) -Belief that “sooner or later we will be iorced into a union o! tho Maritime ' was e teased in the New Brimswick Leg ature gap; by G. W. Ferry (Con. Car- p . = This would create one unit with a population of a million 9091116. lueh unit would have more are; at we man the present m‘ fine! agparateiy. he egg. Ferry ailgasted damming the mouth o! the Tobique River to de- voiog hydro power for the Upper 5t. ohn River Such a pro- would be f e and pro- for an im- e province. he teen-oi ‘so... cup a mist. c .t..r.....'::r 11"."; .. : 7:?" ---—-— ' ed tonight "poor" results ha m tended their hunt so far. DRIVES TO SEA ssowso DOWN 'Finds Family Asphyxiated BBGCKVIIJE, 0nt., March lit-Matthew M. Brown, well- knovm lawyer, returned from his office tonight and found the bodies of his wife and his two young children huddled in a corner of the kitchen and with gas jets of the stove open. They were renounced dead two hours Mrs. Brown Ruth Horroeks of Toronto an was about 30 years old. e children were Matthew Man- sella, four. and Trevor two. Coroner T. W. n Leeds County is stigating. Basia-ow nauauosnm SOUTHAMPTON, ., March iii-A third mysterious e aboard ithe 52.10140“ Cunard-White Star liner Berengaria broke out tonight while she was in her berth here. The blaze, in a tourist cabin, was extinguished quickly by the ship's staff. Damage was slight. TRID DETAINED IN ATTEMPTED AB D l] D T I D N Philadelphia Attorney A-nd Two Fliers Held In Moscow. Police records showed Forrest LL '1.- ’ -- ~“ m with an - plane a/bductlon of Scott's two dauughters. e girls, Eva. six. and Zoe. three. are hero with his divorced wife, now Mrs. Harry Clarke Bod- y en. Scott and the pilots, Stanley Boynton of Philadelphia and F.B. I iidlller of Miami Beach. were book- ed for investigation. most Nassau barristers. The girls’ nurse mid they were playing in a park on the water- front when two men drove up in a taxicab and attempted to seize them. The nurse and spectators w o were watching a yacht race rvened and the men returned to the cab and sped to a pier where a seaplane waited with mo- tors running. a third man in the cock-pit. A harbor pilot, Christopher Brown, tied the plane to his mot- glrbvéat and held it until police ar- Scott came here Monday by Pan American Airways plane. Boynton and Miller arrived yesterday in a private ship iloted by Miller which was ch red by Boyntnn. Mr. and Mrs. Boden and the chil- dren had been here since Feb. l. Sealer—s__ Report “Poor” Results (C. P. by Guardian's S cial Wire) BT. JOHN'S. Nfld., arch 16- Newioundlandh sealing fleet the Gull o! st. Lawrence re rt- , - The sagona had 2.500 seals aboard and another 3,000 still on the ice ns. The Ranger. another vessel w ch went to the Gulf this year, had only 500 aboard. From the ships which followed up the ru geri east count. the only word race ved came from the Nep- tune which repented capturing the or .2!"l¢_l98» laced iONDON-Great Britain fore Oppodtion tor Chamb bitter Commons debate. - meat upheld by vote ic 311-141- Rumors circulated the Government it divided on policy. German troops in Spain men- w! Mediterranean communication lines. France dela ai KAINAI. I-ithuanla feared both Poland and Germany midit pounce upon lheremhiction mounted a ron clash l March 11 ginzhioh a Polish Guard wfl killed. WARSAW~Palish leaders ed a more moderate tone Ulhuanla BEEN-sinner hurried homein a Ihxmhaot welcome. caneellinl adopt- toward ussssp. silicone. rvrmi». 1a_ ° Scott. Philadelphia attorney. and ~‘two~~tliera were-detained tomo- in- - - Scott retained two of the fore- 500000 q OA CHIN” P0li$h “Eordei- Incident Adds A Nazi Danger Britain Puts Peace Issue Squarely Up To Hitler As Tension Incieises. ' LONDON, March 16--(AP)--Great Britain toe night thrust the issue of peace in Europe squarely] before Reichsfuehrer Hitler as she. with France. became particularly active in the tensenees thafl involved most countries of Europe. _ _ There was a. crisis in the Spanish situatiom friction between Poland and Lithuania. fresh alarm in Czechoslovakia, while in Italy Premier! Mussolini declared Germany was right in taking Austria- » . Foreign Secretary Viscount Halifax. in "a Vigq orous statement in the House of Lords. called on Germany to respect assurances to Czechoalovaklq that Austro-German union was not aimed at her.‘ “We naturally expect the German Government to obey them,” he declared, “and. if indeed they desire to see peaeo maintained-as I earnestly hope they do-Jhere is nd quarter ln Europe in which it is more vital that unden- taklngs should scrupulously be respected.” A Polish-Lithuanian border incident ‘added new dan- ger in a situation already tense over Gernaaufs next move in central Europe and the growing possibility of Ithloq German domination in Spain through a victory of the Im surgents in the 20-month civi l l war. ~ i :~.:-¢-r:.=i France Alarmed ' mspm ilunner lip For mm, dhampionehip The price o1 ti: tinued French ngnugilnctiegrvantion in the S conflict. Enacted by the plgfiibiliilzy ofuya a a er a also had German mov Czechoslovakia, e aid in event of act- ion by Hitler-to ‘libel-aw’ the 3- . erman; in mUBO, N. S..‘Mamb io-(OP), -'1'he Nova Bcofla o! Ag- ricuitme annual winter, , cloned today with an enmqition of poni- 17- - Gerald Bmeltzer or Windsor, Ni, d ohamoion 8..wasdeolared odthetbreeda andwssa- s MAt§*'Vlinter*““Falr' 4= sought British the war-area -_ ed re ublic. 80v et Russia reaffirmed he: Pledge o! armed aid to Czechoslo- vakia. her ally as well, in case o! aggression. Hitler returned to Berlin for a ueror’s welcome after his ab- sorp ion of his native land in the German nation and summon- ed i tag. his sounding board for important pronounce- ments, to meet Friday to receive gendeclaretion" by the Govern- Sanctions Move Premier Mussolini assured his people Germany's lightning move- ment to the Austin-German bord- er in the absorption of Austria constituted no at to Italy. But. in what some interpreted as a warning to Hitler, Il Duce declared pan-Germanism would he Brenner Pius not cross . m: swept Lithuania that Po- land might useherarmy to force a settaement of a crisis following a hon-er clash last Pride in which a Polish soldier was led. circles said Poland E y. This was denied ‘giwan official spokesman in War- Fleet Ready Hitler's return to Berlin was stated to have been hastened by this develo merit. There was an report in Berlin that z5ihoti7ociTbit unconilrm g -—Europe AtA Glance- other enlugeme ‘— and 11mg to Berlin because of the grave uro- pean situation. He summoned the Betcha for Friday to hear a “declare ion." ROME-Premier Mussolini proved Hitler's Austrian 00$) warned that any Invasion ian frontiers would mean war. VIENNA-Nut masters of Aus- tm wigsd out or Aug; low: inoreasled. inkin- mu m. anti-Nari. his wits and son were i’ d dead. N aaid he tilt‘. it... lnd . KIRIBATI-Government noon! menued left flank of lézurfit Govern- ta attempted shell firs. 88178811115 — Foreign Minister Speak declared Belgium was deter- mined to defend her territory and said the fate of Austria should be a lesson to mall nations. ouch-Gannon w W»: IO‘ but ment mom-bar warned that aiovakia newt DI gamed the J‘ A. MscDonai 09hr ioi- hi est aoweoeite. nim- ner-up for championsh was dMacmnis of Prince an . Winner of the poultry exhibition was Gerald Bmelmer with Bil points. second Peter . points. and third Thomas Mem- tyre BigPond, 185.. with 82 points. RAILWAY REVENUES DOWN _ (S Ial To The Guardian) . MO ., March 1e_.. ‘The gross revenues f the all-in- clusive Plain Nat onal Railways system or the week ending March l4, i988. wereoglflliddb pared with 9 0 34 2S7. res crease of (u: Sifazar CAR is anal. 4m: PoonMoiire _ Limousine! 13201110. Minimum and maximum ieutperm Demon Victoria mrnon M ticeiemimoesllw can IIIGAIIBI! ‘Ulnvcalarilaamtlnmi ha . 011M116 tore li D601‘ It no r a Iaavas Torniantino Illtlll-I-l {hm ‘panther moon larch II.‘