Y I \ _ ” ' ......s ......... - » _ g 1 It snvunlaios-w1n¢v.~»ea . f ._ 1. 1 ~ ....v amqp. ...._ _._,,,,““,,_,”_q,_,,m_,_m__‘,,__~__ A J w__m’_`__L_v___ ,__ ‘ V ~ _“_ I . ~ l “ l. _ """<.f'~. 'i s '*5<,»,. ' A mmm ' - - ss ,W I Maxine Nfl “ERE MAN Mens MAN E -ii £3 it we ‘ Covers Prince Edward. island Like the Dew Wifi' 3 _ lille YO I lH‘l ‘Rea Cents it ii 52 Y ll min llll AN .il °‘ °""‘°"' 525” _ .gs The People's Paper 1;;;-:son.'ri.A.N'D. ore.. May 30,-A compromise plan calling for mini- mum wages of 50 cents an hour was aoccpted by l,000 union mill workers at Longview, Wash.. as ramifications in the Pacific north- west strike picture followed co_l- lapse of the NRA. The vote fav- ored a compromise 9 to l. About 2600 men working in the weyerhaeusc, and Long-Bell mills and an additional 400 employed by smaller plants of the vicinity were affected by the decision to end féhe strike and return to work Mon- ay. CONDITION SATIBFAUIOBY tc. r. ay oohroian-s special wire) WINNLPEG, May 30-The condi- ernment wheat agency head un- dergoing a.'rest cure in hospital here, was reported satisfactory by waiting automobile. his physician today. Y munou, may so-Adolf inner today offered Europe his draft of an "Air Locamo"-the first specific German moposal for peace bul- warks on the continent. Copies of t/he draft were sent simultaneously to Britain, France, Italy and Belgium. the four lov- ernmemts which with Germany signed the original Locarno con- vention designed to guarantee wsatam Europe! frontiers. 'Nnlght the llbreign Office was giving the German plan, details of which were kept secret. close svedy, but authoritative sources said Bi-itsin's answer would ask that Germany. eimultaneoilly ers" Europe sires being used; the kind and' ' - quality of crops grown; the rations ilsiiit om. convocation 27 years ago § Whether force actually will be beins fed, and other details inim._ Mwumw led the graduating This demonstration spread con- 'used and if so how far southward sternation among the Chinese and it would carry the armies oi the connection with dairy and live- gmgg samgréaafnglxgeiéxegn tg: injected a 'graver note in the cur- Japanese Emperor remained ob- with accurate information com- hu _,med mn phbuc obligation. vfnt tenslfm between the two °°\m- scure. but military snvkesmen hm s iw the cues Mya successful “_ ;ries following bandit operation: discussed freely "the advlsebility of imc has taken I leadm aft' in i-.galnst the Japanese in the North including Dining and Tlentsin and every support will be given by ithe' development of pubficphmlth China. demilitarized none, and thc within .the demilitarized zone,” - ima musing services in his ngmvn assassination of two Chinese edi-iwhlch was established by the Tang-- the '_ tors holding pro-Japanese senti- ku truce of May 31, 1933. i in g"°v1§“fi°'hf’5“d “°; 1°’ hw° “"5 ments, in the Japanese concession such an extension of the demill-] weeding out unprofitable animals. M°§“8:m_,, WW ce M us Prim” I here a few weeks ago. tariraticn would place northem ' The illin was ollowed b a o e, d‘ be ci t Fh1:0}l;I£§i¢yL-deMH; 3£;;°-13;! protestkrhuigsoay ui chinese tlitn- bziisisfreligicui lncivrririiercglal “ned and 584 shf;';nt_ were gradforities from the Japanese military city of North China, almost as “ted from Mogul University he" ‘ heads in North Chine. completely undef the domination of today They included students ml TOKYO, May 30-(A.P.)-A stem the Japanese army as Manchoukuo, ' e an based the emi carved out of Man-, Encouraging Re- ports Received From The Lon- don Fur Sales. Resiliancy of the Silver Fox Mar- ket was shown by the strong trend of the May sales of Tuesday and 1 Wednesday. The I-Iudson's Bay Bale lon the first named day found a ‘willing crowd of purchasers who took 88% of the odering at a con- servatively estimated average ad- vance of '1%i%. In some coiorings 14% advance was registered. The darlfs, which were weak in the March sale were strong ln this sale with the quarter silvers best of all. although, of course, not highest in price. The full silvers which had been so strong on the other sales did not advance, but remained firm. The probability is that the Italian buyers were not present in great numbers or these would also show an advance. . Hudson Bay companys results as received by wire to Mei.-ure and MacKinnon from Ralph Parsons. Fur Trade Commisioner, Winnipeg. says: “At Company's sale 86% sold at average advance of 75%”/:. Dork-S advanced 713%: quarter silvers 14%, half silvers 10%, three-quarter sil- vers 5%, full silvers firm; A cable to the Charlottetown Fur sales Company yesterday afternoon from Anning ds Cobb, said: "The sale fully equal to yesterday. especially four to six pound goods and best grades, very few withdrawals. In view of the disturbed conditions in France, the splendid comeback in prices for the Island's chief product is news that will be received with the greatest pleasure. The prob- ability is that the pelts remaining unsold will be easily disposed of on or before the next sale at as good prices. Then once again, as in 1933, the manket cleaned' up and eager and ready to absorb the new oner- ings which will be pelted this fall. LGNIDON-A policeman directinz 1 waming and strong d in ds. p re _ medmm' 'hw' ‘5°1°;‘fs;’°;'g‘i°én;?”L"; on charges of Chinese treachery, churla. V _ ,_ , _ Prominent in the convocation 9 ° ceremony was the presentaticnof 1 4 u I1 the honorary degree of Doctor of Definite plans have been con- Laws to Dr- A. S- Eve. rellrlns structed by . -them-Departlnent _ Deen._oi .thi Faculty of graduate __ _ H 4 g, _ ,-_ this respect, and the Deputy Min- studies and research at McGill. Dr. " ` * ister, Mr. Shaw, and the Doiryi . . - e .Accidents Claim' Six Lives In Mt’l. (C. P. by Guardiaffs Special Wire) MONTREAL, May 30-Accidcnif al death foil reached six in Mont- real today as Coroner Pierre Heb- ert prepared to investigate four automobile fatalities, one drown- ing and one death from blood- poisoning from a cut finger. Automobile accidents claimed the lives of 67-year-old Mike Hereck, four-yealr-old Marie Claire Hard- ing, Marcel Larocque, five and Jean Boivccrt, 52. Hereck was struck and killed' by a car as he crossed the street today. Boisvert and little Larocque died today from injuries received Sat- urday. The boy was run over while he played in a lane while Boisvert was struck by a car as he Walked along the highway at Ste. Gene- vieve de Berthler, Que. The Hard- ing child was struck by a car yes- terday while crossing the street in fron; of her home and died today from injuries. The drowning victim was Pat- rick Dooley whose body was tak-Sn from the waters of the Lachine Canal. He had been missinil 011° week, Opening a can of preserve, Albert Beausejour cut his little finger several days ago. He died today from blood poison. Financier Dies (U. P. by Guarfllalfs Special WHS) 0il‘I‘AwA, May 30-Charles J. Tulley, former controller in charge of Oi,ta.wa.‘s finances, died today in hospital at the age od 57. He had undergone an operation for a. kid- ney ailment. Tulley came to Ottawa in 1912 from Picton. ont.. and entered the civil service in the new defunct forestry department. He was 'elect- ed a controller in 1924 and served for seven years. He was recently acquitted of fraud in connection with the sale Jubilee traffic in Piccadilly byl, of securities. The case against 1 means or a microphone had s. sud 'Pulley was brought by col D F 1. Join some general armaments and security agreement, and 2. Reium to the League of Nat- ions. Those, with the air pact proposal. were the principal points involved in the' Anglo-Psendh security pro- gram drafted at London early in Pkabruary, which also contemplated relaxing the Versailles 'I‘i'eaty's military restrictions upon Gee- msny-soirnething the lleich hal since done on her own inittatlve. 'Ibis government, it was stated, has no intention of loosening the Anglo-Ita.lo-Frczich common front evolved at Btresa and subsequently, by cooperating with Germany in as ° 99 _ _ P an den attack of hicooughs. Ho waspidgeon, chief investigator lor 'the Ontario Securities Commission 19915666. . AddsZestmrheMeal LAI! " 'rs' " =>5l.:'.'.‘°i.'@."'~.':m.':i'.i_*“”'=-°-»~'f=‘°~s-‘"~°- °r.‘:1:'..-:°s~°".........~ M-, A , vmssu IS .H UNURED Stern ~ War_ningv FINE BIINIIERT French Ca b in et AT M C Gill. Is Sent Chinese BY iIH'T0\iNResigns Following ii R A lll|AT|UN Govt. By Japan MALE (IHllRl|SeDefeatIn Chamber _.M1 M _"**" M Hon. W. J. P. M M1- - - Ch - - _ - - - lan Receives H“§n0‘r_ Japanese Troops In Tientsin I_)em- i‘;\‘;S;‘;‘§s?;‘g‘ _» Flandin Fails To Obtain Support mg performance A; In Measure To Curb Speculation Against The Franc. Bouisson Mooted For Premiership. A il . in- terest was glven in the P.ince of, =;:;-_;.-_:~-_-_-;:~__---___. ---_-»---_ (Cupyright, 1935 By The liavas i ._ News Agency) i P. W. C. Hall. rogramme of excep'ional ` m Wales Col‘.>ge Hall last night by‘ the Chai-lott-etown Male Chorus and assisting artists. The choral nu -4 bers making up the major part oil the performance were varied ini theme but of a cciisisimtly hlghl standard, and were rendered with; admirable effect by this talented; local organization which is now in: the third your of its existance. i Opening with a rousiig Viking Song, the choruses ran the whole gamut of the emotions “from grave to gay, from lively to severe." Tin? old favourite "John Peel" aiain pioved its eiidiiring popularity, as Cid the Perkins arrangement of "Carry Me Back to Old V.rt_;inny". "The Wreck of the 'Julie Plani.e'." with Dr. Robbins as soloist. was giv-E rn with fine dramatic effect. So too was “Tho ltiariyrs of the Arena" |De Rillel, 'a magnificent chorus, which has something of the .sweep 'sf a Prethfsveii symphony. Each number, indeed. met with warm ap-. peciniifsn and applause. By i~equ§i,i ihe Chorus sang at a concluding number the majestic Hallelujah Chorus from I-iandel‘s “Messiah” "1'i‘.,': Serensirlers. consisting of Miss Eerna Huestis, dlr-2':tJ'.', Mrs. M. Nash. Mis-. Lillian M:.cKen-y zie, Miss Davids. Baker, Miss Pearle 1 Burns, Mrs. Robert Holman, Missa Doris Tait. and Miss Margaret` Stems, with Mrs. G. Elliott Full as , nzctimpanit. appeared in i'.'ro de- lightful part songs which iwrrc very (Continued on Page 37 Plan- Mass March V ` ' On " `O£t£ii4>d' (C.P. By Guardin.n‘s Special Wire) VANCOUVER, May 30 - Relief cam-p \vorkcrs congregnted here have votcd 623 to 270 to continue their strike in protest against ex- isting camp conditions and they were almost unanimous at a mass n~eetin here today in their appro- lC. P.-llavas) (By Guardian's Special Wire) PARIS, May 31-(Friday)--The cabinet of Premier Pierre-Etienne Flandin resigned early today after it had met. a decisive defeat in the Chamber of Deputies on its de- mand for sweeping powers to deal with speculation and save the franc. The adverse vote was 353 to 202. Feriiund Bouisscn, presiding of-i ficer of the chamber, immediately attempted to form a new govern- ment. M. Bouisson is committed to support of thefranc. Defeat of the Flandln adminis- tration came after the young premier had risen from a sickbed '.o make an impassioned plea for upport- A wide split in the Rad- .zril Socialist party, bulwark of his govemment, resulted in the defeat ci the six-months'-old adminisira-l tion, Crisis Looms A national crisis loomed as the result of the governmeni.'s defeat, with observers gloomy over further chances of the franc to resist the pressure brought upon it by inter- national speculation in recent weeks. It was forecast Bouisson would attempt to form a National Union government. President Albert Lebrun accept- ed the reslgnal-ions of the mem- bers of the Flandin cabinet and then called Bouisson into confer- ence. Subsequently Edouard Her- riot, leader of the Radical-Bo¢lia1- lsts, and Francois Pietri, naval min- ister in the defeated cabinet, were summoned to the Elysee Palace to confer with Lebrun. The vote followed a historic ses- sion cf the Chamber in which Premier Flandin desperately de- fended the bill. despite a. painful broken arm, and former Premier Edouard Herriot. chief of the Rad- ical-Socialist party, had made a | S l val of proposals for a massed march on Ottawa of all relief workers in Canaria. The plan is that the men start east Monday. employing any avail- able mode of transportation. Word would be sent ahead to all relief camps for the inmates to meet the main body and .join in the march on the Dominion capital to present their demands there. "I think we have properly laid our case and grievances against the relief camp system before the people in Vancouver and British Columbia and we intend to take our case our- selves dire:t to thc Federal authori- ties," a spokesman said. Will Be Asked To Accept Lower Interest Rate (C.P. By Guarrlian’s Special Wire) VANCOUVER. May 30-Vancou- \‘|"r`s bondholders will be summoned sometime in .lunc to aiiothfr moot- advisrrl by Vancouver members of thc British Columbia ic-ytislaiiirc at thc -last session ihe Mayor said ing at which they will be asked to ‘Saskatchewan drought. areas. The accept a refunding plan at lowcrlnumber on relief was 4,000 more interest rates. Mayor G. G. MC- than the highest figure ever re- Gncr announced today. pozicd before. ‘ The i‘ciii\idin:_; pmpisal. cicslgriiodi The arm covered in the survey to briii.; tax,"n\'rr_s _cllci from a ,has been hit by drought and grass load oi 55.539000 in annual fixed lhoppers for four and five consecu charges for interest and sinkingltiuo years. Early spring rains and fund. will be patterned after a plan .additional moisture, with _yggding _._._____._l_,_`_ ___ ‘_,_ `____,_ __ _[__ ' 5 5"_,____'_ (Continued on Page 3) Bright Crop Prospects In Saskatchewan (C.P. By Guardian’s Special Wire) REGINA, May 30 - The merry potter of rain on Saskatchewans drought-ravaged farm lands to- night promised a big reduction in the 163,000 relief recipients in the dry area-possibly l00 per cent in the view of Hon. R.. J. M. Parker, Saskatchewan Minister of Muni- cipal affairs. Better crop prospects-the best in five years for some of the affected areas-may mean the removal of all farmers in the area from relief sued the latest survey on the drought situation, relief conditions and crop prospects. Mr. Parker announced there were 45.00() Jamilles, numbering 163.000 persons, on farms in the southern ,nearing completion, gives the 'brizhtest outlook since ihe ~ _ _ ,._____.... - -t . ' . _, - .. ,, _ ....,, ‘ -~'\»~~»rf"‘~ l "~ V ,'.-._.~l».“.=¥.-_»::i°l.‘* ..,._~i"i Cabinet Concludes Work On Price Spread Measures every weekday since his retum to work a week ago last Monday, t.cld the House of Commons yesterday it was the intention to place these final price spreads bills on the order table tomorrow. It was learned after ioday‘s Cabinet ses- sions thai. the measures had been finally approved. Constitutional obstacles in the way of complete compliance with the 0ommission‘s report caused the Govemment great concern and re- sulted in long and numerous Cab- inet sessions almost entirely de- voted to these bills. The effort his been made to draft them in such a p manner as to implement to the greatest possible degree the recom- mendations of the Commission without running the danger of having the measures deemed im- aid. Mr. Parker said when he i.s- ‘ If/“"\` <1.\f\ UF GREAT SEA BATTLE Written for The Canadian Press By Harry Eccles '_ (Copyright, 1935, by 'The Canadian Press) Nineteen years ago today was fought the greatest sea fight of tht War-and the controversy as to wht won rages cn. The Battle of Jutlani as a, conflict between greater ships bigger guns and more combatant than ever before struggled- on 'neav ing waters provides the classic prob lem for the naval tacticisn. but oi the greater questions there is nl argument. It is written in history that th German High Seas Fleet after ir: fiicting heavier damage on the Bri tish Grand Fleet than it receive itself, retired to the base where : had already lain nearly two year and never emerged again until _ surrendered. More light has been shed on Ju land in the passing years. It known-now-that the German Gras Fleet sallied forth in hopes oi’ mee ing, not, the British battle fleet, bi a. scouting force or at least no mo than portions of the main flee Ounce the titans collided, the Britil fleet was unable to get a. square gr on its elusive adversary. Twice tl High Seas Fleet blimdered into tl teeth of the main British bati force, and twice it escaped; the thi time it hacked its way through t tail of the British line in the dal' ness and found shelter. In supreme command of the B: tish fleet was Jellicoe; of the Ch mans, Reinhard von Scheer. 1t'w caution against genius and in t and Jellicoe was right. In ships a men he could afford to lose mi than von Scheer, and he did, hes ily. But it has been said often a it remains true, that Jellicoe was e only man who could have lost i Great War for the Allies in 1 space of hours. The Grand Fleet put to sea fri its Scottish bases the night of M 30, warned of an impending Germ demonstration oi’ some sort. 'l British had 28 battleahips, ni battle-cruisers and eight aririo cruisers; 26 light cruisers and flotilla leaders and destroyers. 'J Germans had 22 battleships and 1 (Continued on Page 3) A A SE£oND-Mano CAR iS i