putiee are ours; events en the o Cute s REC The Pe Paper MAXIMS g - ~ o“ MAXIMS E MAN °' A ' - “ER _ MERE MAN Hehnrteenemoflwholevhhl, Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew 5' CHARLOTTETOWN. 19; 192.6 “sf-urmrmtrrsttrl. UED AS GREEK F El CANADA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY iiiiiiiiiiis n BE lllRlllER lillNilllEREll Sub-committee Report Forwarded To - At- torneys-Gencral For Study. OTTAWA. Feb. lie-Further con‘- iideratlon oi methods by which the mug, North America Act may be emmded will be liven by the full Dominion-Pmvhitinl Oomlnltioe on constitutional questions at s. meet- li ‘Z ‘WWW III l" "W110 "ii III! m announced tonight by Hon. m‘ upointe, Minister oi Justice end chairmen of the commission. This committee, made up of pro- vlnclel attorneys-general and offlo- es at the Federal Department of lutlee, wee convened Jen. t9 pur- ulent to a resolution adopted at the Dominion-Pro‘ ' ‘ Conference in December. ' At the Jenner; meeting e sub- committee of experts wee nppointed h drew up tentative plane of rn-o- otdure b on ' discus- dons. The report of the sub-com- iiiittee hes now been completed and pieced in the hands of the provin- otel attorneys“ J for study prior to the March it meeting. Iain obiectlve of the committee wee to agree upon a formula of pro- cedure where‘ the Dominion might obtain from the United Kingdom hrliunent n statute that would lieve the efieot of extending to Cenede the right to amend lie own constitution-a right dljoyed by nil other self-governing domlnions. Dean 0f lling’s College Resigns HAMFAX, Nb. iii-Resignation of ven. Arvildflfifitili F. W. Vroom eftcr 48 years of service on the teaching staff of the divinity school of Universitv of King's Cel- lcze was accepted today by a snac- lal meeting o! the board of dir- actors. At the same time the board an- nounced the appointment of Very llev. J. H. A. Holmes, M- A.. D. D.. Dean of Christ Church Cathedral. "Wtflfilon. lsPi-ofesscrpf Div- lnltv and Dean of the Facultv to succeed Archdeacon Vroom." CALfNDAk el comma {VENTS ~==u—-== "hockey at Victoria. Rink, Cove II. Victoria. Wednesday, Fab. 19th. 14-201’! "Hunter River tonight, Royals vs Hornets. If not fine, Thursday. . L- “Bis Concert and Entertainment at ‘Pracadie Hall, Friday, February "at n-aoos-s-io-ii. CONFERENCE 01v Fauoi Grew llail Blose Gall (A. l‘. By Guardian's Special Wire) BOSTON, Ebb. lS-Capt. Patrick 140311111 of the Gertrude M. Fauci, which sank lest Wednesday oif Sable Island said today he end his crew of l0 men would have per- ished if rescuers had wma an hour later. McHugh, who was brought hare aboard the cutter Cayuga af- ter being rescued by the Canadian trawler Lemberg, said the cmw had struggled for five hours manning R11 Pumps in a futile effort to save the ship. , The seams forward in the vessel were opened, he said, when the _Fauci plunged 20 feet over a comb- or. MBHIIEh said he and two other men remained aboard the ghip m1- til the water reached their waists. He estimated that the Fauci sank m hour after they abandoned her. "I'm ashamed to lose her," Mc- Hugh told Charles Feucl, owner of the boat Fauci said the boat. built in 1931, cost 8105.000 and was one of the most modern fishermen oft the coast. YlllllH FlllFlllS liilNlilllill or FATHER Locates Mother Throu gh News- paper Service, After 19 Years Separa- tion. (C. P. By Gnerdiank Special Wire) HAL AX. Feb. lB-A youth from Lexington, Kentucky who worked his way north, braved unemploy- ment, endured hardship in relief camp and hoslcl tc fulfil the dying wish of his father-that. he find his mother whom they had nut ‘seen for l9 paler-completed his quest to- day through the aid of newspaper service. Brown-haired. keen-eyed. Ray- mond "Johnny" Doyle received, a tclegrum from Mrs. Lila Doyle a1’- tcr she had read a Canadian Press despatch in a Toronto newspaper: “Looking forward to seeing you. wiu wire funds....come to Toron- to as quickly as possible..." it was the first communication he had ever received in his 25 years signed- "mother." . Yesterday. Johnny Doyle sat in the Salvation Army hostel at Hali- fax, frlendless. Today the phone jlngled telling oi new-found rele- tives and 1116M!- “But these am not so important" he said. "I've found my mother. A1- ter all these years. What else mat- tars?" He had given up his job as boll boy captain in the Phoenix Hotel. when his father lied told him on his death bed he would find his mother in Halifax. They had been separated for l0 years af- ter the Halifax explosion o! 1917 broke up their home. The parents, had been propiiatcr At Opening Agriculture Urged. Co-operation And Credit Unions Discussed- Mr. W. D.‘R0ss Re- elected Pre- sident Of Cegl Institute A resolution urging the Far- ed chicks. Hon. w. Dennis told mers’ Institutes of Prince Ild- the meeting. ward Island tc endorse the Dr. J. T. Croteau, professor of principles of adult education. Economics at Prince of Weiss Col- end recommending that the‘ iege and Bl. Dunstanm University, institutes study and form cred-urged the farmers of the province it unions, was adopted yester- to weld all their agricultural or- day as the farmers oi the province ganizations lntc one educational opmcd their three-day parliament lnstltutlo . here. ‘There was a great need for them The Ozntral Farmers’ iinstitute to study their own problems, some was the first provincial agricultural .01’ them “so close to you that you organisation to hold its annual haven't seen them." he said. He meeting. Five other farmers’ orgeu- advocated a plan of broadcasting lzatlons will meet during “Farmers adult and agricultural study talks. week." In credit unions the speaker saw 1n another resolution the Cen- the opportunity for the farmers tc tral Farmers‘ institute urged the gain control of their own financial Prince Edward Island government resources. There was no credit un- to give through the schools and ion law in the province at the colleges of the province more com- present time, he said, but attempts prshensive study o! agriculture. were being made to have such law "We have an increasing rural enacted. _ population of boys end girls who Other speakers were Messrs. must. be a into farm life," Peter Brodie, York; J. A. Dewar. the resolution stated. The rural people of the province should be “more thoroughly equipped on prac- tical farm problems, marketing end rural citizenship." The meeting also asked the gov- ernment for laws which would es- tablish control of dogs in the pro- vince and give sheepowners pro- tection from “roving dog-s causing great. destruction and loss in flocks of sheep in this province." and which would press control of para- sites in farm animals. The delegates to farmers’ parlia- ment were welcomed to the city by Mayor P. W. Turner of Char- lottetown and Hon. W. H. Dennis, Minister o! Agriculture. Mr. Dennis suggested tc the Cen- tral Farmers’ Institute meetins that the annual agricultural meet- ings be held in future during the early sessions of the provincial legislature, one month later than the usual time. He thought members of the pio- vincial House would have a better understanding o‘! farmers problems if they had the opportunity of meeting delegates tn the Fennel!‘ Institutes, and of personally hear- ing their needs. speakingwn horse breeding he told the meeting that in all probability four additional first class stallions will be avail- able w the farmers of the uwvlnw mum; the coming year. One will be brought in by private interests but the other three will be under the control of the iwv meni- They wi‘.l be distributed so as to interfere in the least possible man- ner with private individuals. The department intends tc con- bank; R. A. Profitt. Freetown; Ico (Continued on Page 9) Scores Charges that the people of Prince Edward Island are being "betrayed" by reason of failure to enforce the Prohibition law-that "a great smuggling and bootleg industry" exists in the Province; that Sum- merslde alone has thirty" illicit "Joints", eight o! which he knows personally to be doing business "as openly and as well equipped as any retail storc"-were made "last night at. Kenslngbon by the Rev. C. wat- terworth, educational secretary of the Temperance Alliance, in the course of an address at the quar- B.N.A. A61 MA Interesting Discussion Session ' Of Farmers’ Parliament More Compreh-ce-n-s-ive Study Of "’~ Will Gompensate WheatProiluoers __._. (C. P. B? Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA, mo. iii-Western wheat producers who sold their 1930 crops to the pools and received an initial payment of less than 60 cents a bushel, will be enriched by the Dominion Government to the extent of close to 86.000000. The government's intention oi distrib- uting the money was made known in the House of Commons by Prime Minister Mackenzie King. Legislation will be introduced shortly, the Prime Minister said. to authorise payments from the fed- eral treasury sufficient to equalize the initial payments oi the pools on the 1930 crop at a maximum of 60 cents a bushel. An ordcr-in-council, passed by the last administration on Oct. 10. 1935, authorized payment of this equalization fund on a. basis re-‘ commended by John I. McFarland. who headed the sovemmenfs New Perth; J. W. McLean, Hlgh- ‘ T0 Enforce The Prohibltion Act Grave Charges-Made By Educa- tional Secretary Of The Temp- erance Alliance At Kensing- ton Meeting. wheat policy operations from 1930 to near the end of i985. Payment was co be rnade subject to an audit. ________ GIRL 1S PAPER-HANGER Y‘, N.C.—As a _top-of-lad- der hanger_,hlld wall painter.‘ Helen Queen, young S helby wo- man, concedes nothing tc man. She likes heflwork, too. Failure NfllIA. SBDTIANS FACE CHARGE 0F BIJNSPIRABY Warrants Served On Eight In Connection With Liquor Smug- gling. (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) HALIFAX, Ebb. lB-ililightliova Scotlans, the majority of them Lunenburg County residents, will 1MB charges of conspiracy in con- nectlon'with smuggling of liquor, in Halifax Police Court Thursday in an anti-climax to the trial o! ll Marltimers last September on sim- ilar charges. Warrants have been served on the eight by Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the, have been told tr- nppear in Hal fax to answer tho charges. Their names have not been disclosed. Fines totalling $16,000 and jail sentences ranging from one day to a month were imposed last. septem- ber on l0 Maritlmcrs who pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges grow- ing out of the revelation of an sl- leged 85.000000 Canadian liquor ring. An eleventh, Genoa Sanford of Clementsville, N. 8., chose to be tried before a Supreme Court jury. After twu trials he was convicted of three charges and sentenced to a fine of $2,300 and one month in jail. An appeal was thrown out and the sentence raised to s. fine of $3,000 and six months imprison- merit. 0f the l0 who. pleaded guilty, four, Colin Chisholm, and B. O. Johnson,’ Halifax; L. A. Rltoey, Riv- erport, N. 3., and Wllloughby Rit- cey, Lower Lai-Iave. N. S., were termed the "central figures" by Magistrate Barnhill who heard the- case. They were ordered to spend a month in jail and pay fines oi’ $3,000 with a year’s imprisonment in default o! payment. Two Prince Edward Islanders am- ong the accused. Clovis Perry of Summersldr and Rib)’ Clarke of Union Rcad were let ofl with sus- pended sentences. They were termed "lesser ofienders." in the brief recently presented tc the Provincial Government. Following ls the text of Mr. Wattcrworthh addrem: MR- WATTERWOBTKPS ADDBES S It is quite natural that my audi- ence should ask themselves, “What has interested youin this temper ancc question?" I can assure you that I am not a politician’ and have no ulterior motive in pursu- ing the dictates of my conscience Issues Denial p , From Prison (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) PORT OF SPADI, Trinidad, Feb. 18-——(O. P. Goblin-Denial that he had ordered police to fire on dem- onstrators in Caracas last Friday was issued from plrson today by General Galavls, former governor of the Venezuelan capital as the death-list of the bloody riots mount- ed tc l6 persons. Gslavis was dismissed from oflloe and arrested following days of demonstration and protcst against censor laws announced by the Ven- ezuelan govemmcnt. A general strike in Caracas lasting two days last week had paralyzed business and brought out masses of people to demonstrate against the new laws. GHTER FOUNDERS RCH 2 In Rough Seas To) Passenger Liner, Faulty Positioaport Delayed Rescue. Five Ships Grounded In Fog Off Misichusetts Coast. (A. P. By Guardian’s Special Wire) _NEW YORK, Feb. 18--Ir_i a terse radiogram the mas- ter of the passenger liner City of Newport News tonight informed the coast guard here he had taken off all 33 men from the foundered Greek cargo ship Stefanos Costomenis and was taking them to Norfolk, Va. The rescue of the entire Greek crew from .the wave- tossed leaking vessel was accomplished in heavy seas about 500 miles off the Virginia Capes after more than 17 hours of fateful uncertainty. . ‘Capt. Robert Wrightfs message to the coast guard said: Creek crew safely aboard my ship. Cannot lose time standing by derelict, She is lying with colors flying and anchor light exhibited. Have already broadcast derelict position. Proceeding Norfolk.” The coast guard vessel Champlain was sent to mine or ghgll u‘; derelict to mmove it from the path of shipping. "Kills 111ml!!! the glans o! night and the high wevee of n. storm- bolied ocean which generally hampered Atlantic coast shipping, eight ships sought the founderlng freighter after ghe gem “m, g, gm,“- u“ last night. _ The Newport News reached her first after a faulty position report took the other: far of! the course of the ‘search, To Abolish Ancient Right (C.P. cable By Guardian's speohl Wire) The freighter was abandoned af- ter the crew was rescued. Boston coast. guard headquarters first re- ported the contact 280 miles south- east of Nantucket Lightship. Limp- lhg toward Hampton Roads at eight knots, the distressed vessel had pleaded for someone to come and "save the crew." The message was in reply to a. query from the Newport News, which had turned toward the phosphate-laden freighter when she first called for help last night, saying she was leaking “badly? Along the Massachusetts coast the weather was so thick that fivc vessels grounded and sailing schedules were altered at Boston. First distress calls from the Stcphanos Costomenis gave her po- sition as 180 miles southeast of Nantucket Lightship. The Newport News proceeded to the spm but found no trace of the freighter. She wlrelessed the Costmnenis her position reports were unreliable and unless the freighter hove to the Newport News would resume her course. Sometime later the Newport News again queried the leaking ship, asking what asslstancc was needed. The reply crackled back: LONDON, Fob. 18-41110 House of Lords gave first reading toda tn s. bill which will abolish the {Edith ional right o1 a. peer to be tried on a criminal charge by his follow peers in the Upper House. The was presented by Viscount Bankey, lord Chancellor from i029 to i085. Supporters of the bill contend the practice involved a waste of money and violated the principle that all Brltcua are equal before law. The last such trial was that of Icrd dc Clifford on Dec. 12. The 28 year old peer was charged with manslaughter following an auto- mobile eccident. He was acquitted. Mam A GREAT » "Save the crew." Qifi“ 5.1.0,“, Growl, Chill stlkillpléls OWN ~ eanw e e ooner Island, Mass. Her, skipper and 20 men reached safety after most of them had spent the night rowing through the fog in dorles. Two tankers, the Gulibreebe and the Bayonne, were in collision 20 miles north of Cape Hatteras. Re- ports oi‘ the accident received by the Norfolk coast guard base did not, include a request for assistance. Two large steamships, a trawler and another fishing schooner went Crew Tkansferred a é who in Hall!“ u ibl t arose “any,” m, m" M, “my of uie Royal Hotel, was advance m“ 'f°x°:mnf°“nof 3,333,, so tcrly session o! the Grand Division: in the interest of the great and Police had fired on mobs w dis- aground on Boston harm“ mud_ My Ms P Sons o1 ‘Ilem oe Mr Wetter timely cause of Temperance pel them Six persons were killed mmdlh llbb, 30. Emerald Willi-Y. “Wm and Johnny w” .' c‘ much in the eastern and central ' ' ' _ ' banks. The steamshlps" were the n worth urged the organisation to In order that you may under on the spot l0 more died later and M’ "m" "°°“- 51¢- °'--°- 9""- Wm" (mg m mu- pert o! the Pmm“ l" "i 1‘ m" demand u) "an honest effort to stand and realize the foundation some no others sufiercd gunshot DOW "MY President HM“- which L40“ “my 10st “'11 ‘xbwlligr hoowes u“ “Nl- enforce the law we have before stone of my interest in this field injuries. Galavls was arrested and ‘Wed he's-e" Win11" l‘ Shim time» .. "- “d ‘mhmy’ m w In w-Qlimtm "m! m‘ u" substituting anything else m any may 1 us. you back to u» year accused of having ordered nu p01- and the Japanese vessel Kiri-Shun» - Will all times 1min: 5W1“ '19‘ “All do w mow wlwther my 5M1‘ British the mlirmmll‘ "m degree with any e-mount B: frills" 1m in the city of Windsor. On- icetouse their guns- Mm» which We W" 8"" W“ among?» mmyn-rgsuil-liiliulli‘ l ‘ n hpmag“ $°’»%“§l‘$i“ “M d’ "" mmmml °1 i!“ "it “m- r-isirnniuuiv ossriruru hfiaisiesea in around the steamer iosmii-iwmgsmfllgiegll" filling - - - . , - . y; a or __ h W to 1 m (Oontlnwl °n m‘ i" ' °' "IF “"5.” “n mmldm “d my first ride in "Black Marla." - ._~.~ gzutlaem gwtgrd in Longd Isltfiled gears" but turning colder wiui mow- HIYQ time tdhiie n , "“‘ ‘ . th ll ' , t r cu l‘ ‘irks-r ‘- '~ “im- ..':*-..v.~.>'rns-..“..r.-. ‘on has’ firs": ;r~s."::: " o _._ Rev ltull referee. - ' some 62 us pmhibitlonists travel- m, k111i d 1i m; shore Wreckage found in the nwuui ronouro. res. lib-Minimum o m m n Late News Flashes do???‘ ""=.:".:.."ss* "r ‘r iii? ‘$2: ices.“ we've“ o: ‘"2? r has; s": 111mm ’°’“"“‘““‘.°.‘s .... _ we-r . emawcnwe lLFlsh Bu or n y ape ay. --. own " limb. WWW!“ m“! riiirniilgnfgiliirtiirgligl start walking in our slvcep as he 1?“: $5,121 Ngwgasetlle, sgledrhsro in an effort to determnie whether Aklavik sea can mmmb ° °'°1°°*- "M" W. m!" ‘ ‘ - Others present included m. w. o. would have us. We travelled several M,“ [nulpment worth nooooo n was from the fishing u»: Anna Edmonton ans . ea l! - 041 putts, Feb. 1s. - (ll-Yellow) — A "I"! 5'10""! m" All?“ ahead, er the Presbyterian blocks from the police station and m, “HM o“, p, s... by running and Ella, missing with six men Rcgina nus 10B -. i mus tonight svwllh "W-°m°*'l*l4“"°9““'§'l"°°°9°°“' ch .Boniemin FIEIIILAUE" turned up an alley such as lei-so ioe last month. A report on the aboard since Jan. 21. m flotsam wmrpa- 10B an m“! NM It Buvlew rink n. Muir-id but that the plvthedhlldell tvoltlfllltll WWW‘ licen urch, and Rev. a. Chalmers city alleys are. m wagon stopped m,“ m m“ (omndeu p, 0r.- consls‘ - of a awn and several Toronta u; a him" 5m“ Yl- 3W1"- M" been arrested. . . . ’ ., selter, o! the United Church, Ken- and we dismouh‘ i Very much to “n. M, mm. “m, timbers. QWEWB- i 14 mlnionis Ifnotfinitflrst ° ' ' ' ' eingtcn. I mydisniaytheobjecrofourcall "~'* Monlm-l 8 18 line night. 1.4048 nnms ABABA, Feb. IB..-_(O.I.-I.e.vee)-;TIIQ.'_IIIO|II _ bag mfluticpg adopted included one was s woman so or so yeers old, . guiebecJ h is as "RM mTTiae-e interested l. “m” “Tiiefls-n-‘miivv- m women's-awe‘! “law-a new» pgrgnmdol-eiewlbdtem. “t2” M muww¢° m” A P-se F D. F01’ SCIfBt ' Hilliard) n a l: "i "Mk5 Pflfltv-sbrighton Bridge wmg.,n,.u.u.s only m dead at Jzfflmt. u obi-ml " ‘°°“‘"‘“°‘ m, J2 t, 3a r3 ISPQ y Ch-rlottletcwn so 4o wltlftanflnilflhurodeyevon- gclome.‘ i _ _ . . , MH"i8ggi‘tld::l:neornin¢stl.3tend Jtllfllerrlotnatrsoase. . G rt e .. » v , I-o-QOH-I-IO-li. umnafl, lle-(fifhtleblfl-Jlhe can a raw g _ Sfllflllfl Orange PQkOQ BASIN! ye ra e e a" “in sets on. m": 3.1 "lcdniineelb n “m” tothelThfltiliwll eeMItreidfieIM-l , ~—-- Nvwmoonlatindeyflllebdmflfl- u‘ u ldfwdllll m. neh- 1- gmen- diieilleriiblintheloyelllrieroa hi‘ by hr the flIIQSt "CV01" 3mm’ I“ 1km m, 1:; $.23, 2:118 m receiver: 1:111 ,,_ m . . ‘ Gloucester omissi- Gertrude 1. ri-ie- Mm“ Y Bummerside tide is minutes 1am with N baud was being repelled here to- gfm‘ Ewtfegmfl“ mwxcrhm‘ gaioe shifting to i some . nignrigzi-eeins second time in lam m,‘ m u: an,“ mi Mm sleet or‘? at in: but turning m, fo; u» sohoonerb safety mmgvmflaffufimfig; Maritime was: Westerly geios‘ W" WW1“ W" "i" i!“ up withthe Thebaud just on m: ~ m‘ "‘““<°°“"i “MM ~ {$1.51 “P "$1151! ‘gmgyijffinf; Island. so miles from fleiifur. i l“. . “F “"- Wi" ° ' sll t wind - h. Mwlrlmm Rmwi-i" ti: 10$,- nm“ileli’.'“le“.lt“fi. T“ c“ “u! ' . m‘ ‘mum after temporary . ' t? despeterag mmauew M“ h‘ ab‘: ‘:0: Ioeden 0.4a e, I. (mm) ,$wu Ilnbmd $0!‘ C one no d mo: soc e win- eumieq engines ..';“.-'.'-.s*"'ll',‘2..‘1'.“-';2.ll." "' ,;.