. s KIDE GUAR AND PRINCE COUNTY WESTERN GUARDIAN Adam's-um. J hn r sundmasibg‘ rNigvPwlgiluégilIikl-llrhon. w" News. Subscriptions, Advertising lhollld be rm with m; B}... The Guardian ma Summeraider- Bell Bookstore. Water st. Toronto Bakery. Water 5g. I l" lwurht dilly n any of the following m... ..'.. Gourlie u- i, , . m.- nlrrlrhntt: s: The -nardian will be du “m” n” " 2° P" d" l" lai-‘viierlfdweta.‘lrgonliiuab-fiol?em b, give your order to the boy responsible for deliveries on your shits" or -'l‘bla column l: reserved for news of local Interest but advertising of a newly nature may be insert. 6d at 2 cents a word stricly pay- able in advance. ~_.___.. —FOX WORM CAPSULES just received at Taylor Drug 00.. Ken. sington. - —WI HAVE a com leia‘ stock of beds for foxes, poultrgy, horses and tattle, at lowest prices. Pond and Dummy. Wholesale and Re ail, dealers, Sunimerside. L-l313-3-23-25-2B-30-4. —WBEN in need of feed for livestock see Pond and Delaney. Bummerside. They have feed for every need. I..-1500-3-30-4-l-4-6-8-1l. -F0lt RENT — Large bright rooms, heated offices. professional or business pu uses. Dalton Building, Summers de. L-1490-3-30-4-4-6. --SNOW PLOW WORKING EAST-Jfhe Giivernment snow plcw stationed at Summerside is working east and has opened the road to Kensington and Bedeque and expects to get through tc Bur. den today. 5 -mAc'rUar-:s ANKLE -- Mr. Keith Howatt oi Kensington had the misfortune to slip as he was leaving his house on Monday cvcll- ing. breaking his is; abovo the ankle. He was taken to the Prince County Hospital and tllri fracture set. Mr. H-swatt is resting as well ts can be expected. S —-GOOD PRICES A1‘ SALE ~~ Good pri cs were realized at thrl] sale of st k rind form implements L rn the farm of W. N. Jenkins, Loner Br-deque, which took place on Tuesday afternoon. Two cx-J cclltnt work horses sold for $175 alld $165 each. A jersey ww fetched $75.00. The day was eXoelhnt and many people attend- ed from neighbouring districts. B —FUNERAL 0F MRS. WM. HUNT-The funeral services for the late Mrs. William Hunt. who passed away in Windsor, N. 5., on Friday last. were held on Tuesday from the reside-n of her brother- ln-law, Mr. Richard I-Iunt, 5t. Eieanors. to st. John's Church. Rev. GR. Harrison oificated, as- sisted by Rev. Dr. Hunt. The pall- bearers were Messrs. Bnice Ber- land. Benjamin Andrew. Herman nard. Harry Andrew. Arthur Hol- Maynard and Arthur Jones. B. —GE'I‘ TOGETHER MEETING —Members oi the Summerside Yacht Club met on ‘Tuesday even- ing at a get together meeting to discuss the program for 1939. Com- modore Jlchn E. Campbell presid- ed. Two new m rs were wel- comed to the Club, Captain Basil Kelly and Mr. John Arthur. It was decided to put on a drive for new members and a meeting was called for next week. Th’: clulb is looking forward to a e-I] success- ful season. B. -I-‘UNERAL SERVICES -- The funeral of Mrs. Azzur Reeves was held on Monday afternoon from the residence of her step son, Mr. —WIIE i Xiveswck it!“ Pglelgd ahrd fgeeqanreor summerskm They have feed frIr: "ery "wi- lrlzes-a-zz-li, wnvsran-vrcronra game l" Bmuue postponed until next “ek- 1.4514 -ovr AGAIN-Ml‘. J.W. Waugh wall-known drllggst of Albertcn. a": fir! k211i mgglsitfiune to) frac- uble m be About Blane. ago s no; —l-IOCKEY AT KENSINGTON. Fflduy. March filsl, 193a. at a P. M. Cerium“ vs. Sarina Valley. Ad- mis~.l0n ioc and 20c. L-l50l-3-30- -—WE HAVE a complete stock oi feeds for foxes, poultry, horses and cattle. at lowest prices. Pond and Delaney. Wholesale uho Retail dealers. Bummerside. L-l5il0-ii-30-4-l-l-fi-b-ll. —WINS GAME —- The Maple . A Simple Home Treatment llovl You May Reduce Varicose or Swollen Veins-Heal Ilium The world mogreasu. Toflg m“; minor ailments the/t took weeks to overcome can be helped much more quickly. Ii you have varicose veins or bluiches. start tcday to bring them back to normal size and Y°ll B" W150 you will do so. Just an Moone's Emerald Oil at any dis- Den-Slnll pharmacist y gt lught and morning to the e veins. In a short time the m Should begin to llrcw smaller and by regular use soon a. normal. . People who want to reduce var-f. cose veins or swellings, shcmd hot hesitate to trv a bottle at once. It is so penetrating and economical a. small bottle lasts s. long SPANISH CIVIL iQJ-“QLQM”. . l)‘ . churches, some oi which hadmsen used ior food stores and other Purifiers by Republicans. Sand - bass came awn from doors and wundowa. utter-ed stores began reopening. tragic resumed a semblance of the nor- mal flow as temporary police took CllB-Yse pending arrival of civil ' will Not Yield i French cvci- m stations IILFTBXIOB and her North African possessions ‘"15 W“ relB-yed through the world latcr in Italian. German, English, sPuullh. Portuguese and Arabic. While irwiting ltd-ll’ l0 submit her demands on France, he in- sisted his nation would yield no tflffliofy to satisfy Fascist ambi- iiluflfi. and that France eases the strenrth to defend her rights, Reaction Awaited Italy's official reaction awaited fcr an indication of whether the address would mark a step toward reconciliation be- tween Paris and Rome. Daladier 1°“ ll ll-D l0 Wily lo move next by Leafs won the exhibition hockey game at Bedeque with a score of 7 to i over the O‘Leary Marocns, These two teams are playing a re- {.3321 game in O‘Leary this 9W3. --FARM 110 acres, Carleton, for sale at bargain, owner leaving PmVllll-‘e April lot-ll. 60 acres clear. Flair buildings, part purchage money can he lr-ft secured on properly, Leo Kccugh, Albany, li- R- L-l5i0. Personals ——It is plcnsillg to report that Mrs. A. J. Poiriol". who has been undergoing treatment in the Prince County Hospital has now returned tn hcr home in Mis- couche. ,5. —Mrs. Hugh Gamble. who has been a patient in thr- Prince County Hospital is 113W convalrsc-l ing at the homo 0f Mrs. John l Frimeifs. Central Bedcque. ‘ —It is pleasing to report that Mrs. Daniel Smlallman; Oilcary. is doing nicely nfter her recent operation in the Prince County Hospital. 3 —Mrs. George Sheen entertain- ‘Dominion Govcnuncilt to brin Buards. Despite the city's war damage. estimated unofficially at $500000“ 000. the capiiiai shrug ed away its bitter memories and cgan p13“- nlng an elaborate welcome for Franco's personal entry. Double rations of bread and the sl-ht oi food trucks dimmed mem- cries of hunger and s'.e'_;e. The traditional capital had begun to think about rebuild- ing._ Thc National Reconstruction Service plastered walls wit-h plac- ards urging Madrilcnos to dedicate all efforts to this task. First. however. was the welcome to Franco. The citv d‘cl not-know when he, would arrive. but he was expitctcd before the end of the WOC . untoward." i <1_<>lul_a1nu-.ll2llx- Pli§°_!?.. already address, the convention hoard Fed- eral Agriculture Minister J. G. Gardiner forecast steps by the i- bout bettcr conditions in the airy industry. The Minister expressed nope that. "by legislation or other- wise." thc administration would be able shortly to make possible "a closer association between the or- ganized producers and the or- ganized processers in Canada in relation to the dairy in listry” ed the Study Club of the W. M. S. of Trinity United Church on Tuesday fatcrncon. Mrs. MacKiei. had charge of the study hour. S. i —M.iss Helen Boultcr of Glen- home W001i. has returned from the Prince County Hospital. 8.; QUEBEC PLANS (Continued from page l) d . He could not disclose details for a few days, he said. telling the convention that "a minister's hands are tied beiore his legislat- lcn is brought down." The minister urged upon the more than 100 delegates from m five eastern provinces that proceed with a greater degree of cooperative organization among themselves to better iarm condit- ions. rather than depend too corn- pletely on govterrunents ior hel the royal visitors on behalf of Que- bec DIM/lute; and Mayor Lucien Borne will speak for lhe city. From the Red Qhauvcr, the King ' and Queen will go to the thick-wall- i ed sLone Citadel, completed in i832 at a cost cf $35,000,000 and htrlc years’ work by the British, consol- t idatirlg their position in Quebec.‘ The Citadel, the big summer name ‘ of Canada's governor-general over- i ioking Qucicc harbor from thc‘ southern fortress wall, has been set aside as their Majestles’ horn: Frank Reeves. Freetown, and was very largely attended. Rev. J. W. A. Nicholson conducted the ser- vice at the house and grave. The pallbearers were: Messrs. Leonard MacCarville, George Rogers. Ro- bert Reeves. C. D. MacCallum. George Pickering and Wallace MacCailum. Interment was in the old Methodist Cemetery. a —SUCCESSI~‘UL CARI) PARTY --'I'i'le card parly under the aus- pices of the Summerside Lodge I. 0.0.1’. on Tuesday evcnuig was a successful one. a large number st- tending. The prizes for bridge were won by Miss Neva Mathieson and Mr. Harold Nicholson. Con- solation, Mr. Llewellyn Rcgers. For auction forty-fives the prizes were awarded in Mrs. Lloyd small and Mr. Maurice Bowen; consolation. Mrs. Willis Warren; lucky chair prise, Mr. Spindle. Refreshments were served and a social hour en- joyed at the conclusion of plays . __.- —'l‘0 B! 0BDAlNED—Frlends in Bummerside will be to learn that Mr. G. S. son oi Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis Piran- ton oi Bummer-side. will be or- dened to the Holy Priesthood on Palm Sunday at Emmanuel Church. Dartmouth, NS. Rem-Mr. Tau- ton is a graduate oi Kings Col- lege. Halifax, and has been con- nected with Emmanuel Church since his student days. and most highly thought oi by the congre- ratlon. . 8 Fiiliiil than Bad lluoi the time When boils start to break out on different parts of the body it is all evidence that tile blood is loaded n? with impurities. Just when you think you are rid - o! one, another crops up to take it! piano and prolong your misery. All the lancing and pouiticinfl y" nay do will not stop more comlng- , ~Why not v0 that old. reliable. Blood purl n; medicine Burdock Blood llimra a chance to banish the Milo!‘ Thousands have used it l0!’ y , pose evangelism-room"- V. 13.8.3. and get rid u! the ill avid-tie m. agyiaunnnhfi J , . during their brief visit in the city. Though the landing at Wolfe's Cove is scheduled for 9.30 a.m.. it will be almost noon before they enter the Citadel. They will leave silol-tly afterwards to attend a luncheon given by the federal gov- eminent Inter. the Kim: and Queen are in motor through the city and beyond ils northeastern limits to Monimorcncy Falls. I'm-foot cata- ract pounding down ilito l-hc St. Lawrcnc" I'I\'l"l' lvitllin sight of the Island of Orlcans. wllosc farmers still cherish lhe r-usoms of their grandfathers. On the return from Montmcrcncy the royal party go to Spencerwoori. est-ate "of Lieutenant-Governor EL. Paienaude, for tea. Premier Duplcssis and his cabi- net ministers will be hosts at a din- ner in the evcillnz. Their Majesties will afterwards rctirc tn their Cit- adel quarters while Quebec folk celebrating i-he visit. stage fire- work displays and parade through flag-draped streets. Early on Tuesday May ll. I! King and Queen will leave the city by train continuing the tour on wh’ch they will cover thousands of miles between Canada's Altlaniilc and Pacific coasts and in the Unif- led ‘Estates before returning to Eng- a-rl . Other Royal Visits Quebec has received a number of visits from the King's royal pre- decessors. Hers lived the King's great-great- randiather, the Duke of Kent, fat er of Queen Victoria. while on military duty in Quebec 1701-4. His country home is now clubhouse for s golf course. Edward VII as Prince of Wales visited Quebec in 1800. The pres- and mother. Duke and Duchess oi Cornwall and York, were visitors in 100i while lr Empire tour. King George V as Wales formally inaugurated tlhe Quebec tercentenary celebration in 1908 while the present e cf Windsor. then Prince of Wales. opened the great Quebec bridge in i910. CLAIMS SETTLE) March Io-(APY-fin Osptain Anifus Wa- ters of Llmenburl. N-B-Jvhm Bill banker Bluencse captured the lu- ternatlonal nshermenb races oi! usetts last fail, announced all Waiters‘ claims against of the eon been BOSIION. attorney for wnilht P can't do half what "G prodiiégs could do if they were properly organized,” he asserted. Mohy whocallsdoh governments to help them emulate the success of agriculture in other lands, notably Denmark and Sweden, forgot that what these countries had accomplished was co- operating‘ asigong the rather an y Bwflllm "And'f see no reason," he added, "why we can't so organize selves as to take care of ch09"!!- lems which we-ask governments to look after." CHAMBERLAIN _-»--‘°°“ . service. Tm pluh for increasing the Ter- ritorial Army calls 101' Ultra-Bi“ its present actual strenllh 01 130.000 mch to the Wart-lulu strncgth of 170,000 and then doub- linrl ll- Total Anny‘: sun-mill War Office informants said this clalifylng her (ielnands through the French Alllbflssadm" in Ron-iv, Andre Francois Polloct, who has bee" Vlllllfll-ly ignored since his asslflllmflit there last Octcbcr. if contact should be luade through diplomatic channels. France was Expected to usc her firm p:si- tion as a lever to force withdrawal oi Italian troops from Spain be. low meeting any Italian claims. Simllklh Stresscrl Daladicr stressed French strength in the PlBSflit "international crisis. He said this strength was. "finally. the friendships of France, thosr- which consccra-te our accordg and ‘those which spontaneously assoc. atc her with free peoples and peoples who suffer." The M11918“ Minister followed up the Premier's address by publish. int; the text of ‘the Italian note of Dee. l7 declaring the French. Italian pact of i935 invalid. MIISS/Olllli and King Victor Em- anucl of Italy asserted last week the Italian claims were set forth l" the now. while the French have insisted it presented no specific demands. Italian Note The letter. addressed to the French Ambassador. Andre Fran. cois-Ponoct. in Rome by the n51. ian Foreign Minister, Grunt. Gal. euzlo Clano, cited the failure hf the French Parliament to ratify ‘he 1935. word. 1841K of a. special statute for Italians 1;. 51a wavlnooutumtpurtcrthcpuct. and mull!!!» Joining in League of Nations economic sanctions ag- llmll Tilly in the Ethiopian war as reasons ion- denouncing the treaty. Tile: note cotrficludem- oreover, e constlmum o; the (Italian) llknplre has cmatcd 1W" flifhts and new irlmruts of we“... Mo“ c0 onsen the inte- est-sottmeir nUVfiflvflIxl-{Ibfllg- French relations could not still have for their base at the praent hour the accord of i985, and pre- cisely if it is wished to impmove them, it is evident that these re. lotions mrust be examined anew by a common accord between the two Governments." The French rep! Midi-cued to “"1811 Minister unt Glano by the French Ambassador on Dec. 25 also was published. It made three points:- l. Francs ad undertaken ex- ecution of the i935 pact. by hung. in: over 2.500 shares oi the Djibouti-Addis Aibalba Railway Company w mly despite the ab- some of formal ratification of the 3. The French Government had undertaken to "facilitatc the im- provement of relations" between the two countries notably by re- Qflsnizing the Italian conquest of Ethiopia and sending an amt-ms..- dor to Home after that reorg- nitlon. 3. Italy knew of the um“. would bring the total of Brltflllls land forces under arms to l 793.000 nlcn. This includes thc regular army oi 204.287 men, fully trained and equipped with modem Wed-Pulls which critics have asserted U0 lacking in many territorial divis- lons. In addition a War Office spokesman listed a reserve of 139.- 312, a supplementary reserve of 35,087 and anvil-aircraft units oo- tslllns 74.799. The expansion of ials is to be effected by ilc of s. regsmlbsttalion ior each ex- isting 0Y1- The central council of Territcrw 151 Anny Associations directcd that the new setup be out in" film] immediately. Instructloru were telmrslphod tonlwht to all units. . Chamberlain forecast the Terr fur- thsr expansion oi the 1989.40 de- fence program. for will“ ml‘ mates already have exceeded the $500,000,000 mark. Negotiations Proceed mic: 4 France. glpporters .__._._.-_ ___..._ 1 & NI ltlflr "I merely asked a lflueatlonfja- corrupted Mr. MadNe _'_'I to remark" aaid it is not desirable that we take some rather st measures with Mpcct to such tcmente which People not only govern- ment but in the institution of government as such." Mr. MaeKenzle said the article alleged the department hsd decid- ed only Bristol engines should be used in Rcyal Canadian Air llbrcc airplanes. He had made no such decision. Each type of lane had to have an engine suitab to it. It was alleged Canadian agency ior the Bristol Company had been given to Frank Ross of Montreal in 1930 and that Ross had obtain- ed a contract. The agency had been given to Ross l0 years ago and was actually held by a com- pany wit-h 30 shareholders Nb commissions were paid by the Department and engines pur- chased were obtained at the same price paid by the British Air Min- istry excepting CanaVan sales tax- es and freight charges. r Ebrcept for one section. that lim- [itcd profits on contracts awarded without. tender to five per cent. the purchasing board bill was ap- proved by the committee of the whole. it provides fcr creation bf a. board of four to handle all pur- chases for the defence department. Mr. Dunning told the House the Defence Department would be used as “a guinea pig” to try out, the feasibility of amortlzing capital expenditures. The bill provides for payment for certain capital expen- ditures by the Department over a l0-year period. Eventually, Mr. Dunning hoped. the principle would be applied to capital expenditures for all de- partments as it wasa step towards an. plan by which the Govemment could pay its way instead of ac- cumulating deficits on capital and ordinary account both in the gen- eral public debt. Hon. C. W. Oahu-l (Con. Mont- real St. Lawrence-St. George) said the bill was designed to meet a political difficulty and objected to the removal from the Defence De- partment of responsibility for its expenditures. He thought the De- fence Department was not under competent administration but the cure was not to take away its re- sponsibllity. Mr. MacKenzle said the bill was modelled on the system used dur- ing the Great War and would in- crease. rather than decrease the control over expenditures as three mlnisters-‘Lcfence. finance and na- CHRONICLE But France D0esn’t Gare ii —.-.~.,_,,,._.,.? ..-._ . _ DI Edouard Daladier --Europe’a Newest ‘Dictator’, l i It Makes Her. Strong". IIlllOKBIDNNII. was lerviee ltaif Correspondent i’ ‘ l PARIS, Marl-d: - If stocky} - Edouard - Daladiel" i. dwells to have become. least l , tceiporar , a dictator to make l Rance in the growing. iEuropeenorisis. itiabecausehel lholk no illtrdons about Adolf l Il-Iitler. l j who hast three times been premier of his .- " country in recent stormy years, lhckis no illusions because he is a keen student of history and be- ‘ cause he has been a. soldier, both 1 as s. vate in the trenches and , as off cer. i Above all. Daladier believes in j constitutional government, but he - believes at tihe same time that to have peace one must be strong. . ‘lihalt philosophy more than any- l thing else explains his demandi gm- emergency powers that have . put French workers on a fiihuur week. that have geared the na- time basis generally. . i Edouard Daladier. ticn to a. war- lt YEAR»! IN POLITICI As minister of war, the one- time Provincial baker boy be- gan to strengthen national defvetgsr: l esponsib TlIIBl _ Prenoh army to its present high point of efficiency. With Andre i Maginot, he has been called the 1 greatest war minister since the Anndstice. 4 Dalaldierks political career startgg on Armistice day. 1919. when waselected to the Chamberofl Deputies. Herriot gave him his first portfolio five years later. nam- 1 ing him minister of colonies. From ‘ that. point he rose swiftly. He has been mimster of col-g omes, of public instruction. , public works andpf war. , He was fu-st elected premier in 1932. l-lfis great chance came when Herriot was overthrown on ._ the debt question and DliIBdlt-‘ll ed him as a “stop-BED mmed out bl pre-z EIIrIQIS Onthsotherhand, hols aim-n evidenced the mt that he lcr direct action. i roved himself a "strons man" in gperiod of great crisis in the CITED ha“! Frlelacti galrlilgnexrjit. m WORLD IQUJTAC DOWG! again 1934end fortlhe din-d tlmeln flllhflumimu°b°i$ hpcrlioaa. m has cred 00d int-l“ Il-lml’ Y m,“ upon in the present country of south France. He term l-le has demanded emer- WM bum ii" 8°11 d l “mm gency I‘! 0n 1'9 ted occa- butrhis hfather hm hi’? b as; "r "y" h" We salami"... st... c. .3. But there has been no fanfare highest honors. I» °_ of the dictator. for all idiot. about worked if Retrial!“ Edouard Dalariier. He is a man yer-filly. 3B '9 mm ‘A; n" ew that he has francs an hour. s8 up of few words. so f Inn ccliIU he wmmfismrn " flihmirhanberetlraed W gion cl Guerrre and three bravery. BI some onn of battle ever Daladic ls lcnown todq Radical-Socialist. But those dsnotquitemesnin‘ nlwydolnAnwriea. reteiyhe issaidtobe can and a Dem webs‘ weapon in the hands oi the in enable it to dbtsln fair prices on lenders. If the board saw that tenders were too high or that there was collusion between con- tractors it could proceed to malkc a contract wlttlou tender subject to the five per cent profit limit. This five per cent profit is on the amount of capital employed in the performance of the contract and is made effective by the im- position oi a tax equivalent to the amount the manufacturers profit exceeds five per cent. Mr. MsloNetll and '1'. O. Dcllllll (0.012 Weyburn) endment to bring contracts made on invited tenders under the five per cent profit limit clause while leaving vet-tired tcriders unrestric Fire Prevention Statute Reviewed Ze-Jiihe best legislation that canbepreparedwill bedreftedby the Nova Scctia Government. Mines Minister L. D. Currie told the Provincial Legislature today. Fire prevention statutes of every province are being reviewed by his department, he said. In one of the busiest days of the session, discussion turned to the Queen Hotel disaster of March i! national obligations" which requir- ed French imposition of League of Nations sanctions on the Fascist regime during the Ethiopian con- quest. The French ilote said the Gov- crnn-lcllt rlirl not wish to “discuss the ctlucqllellcrs“ which the ll- ltlian note could have, but simply was recalling these facts in acknowledging reception oi th Italian note. fur-iii; House Ratifies | Trade Agreement OTTAWA. March 29-(CP)~Rat- ification of the Canada-United Sta- tes ‘Prade Agreement, signed last Nov. 17, was voted by the House or Commons toda following weeks of debate. The bii to ratify the treaty was passed through second and third reading in a few minutes discussio thout a word of n. full-dress division, demanded B; Government supporters, show- 158 members favorable to the Hreement and 32 against. The 32 reenter-s were all conservatives while‘ Liberals, Social Creditors, of the o-operative omn-lonwealth llbderal on and in- nependents all voted in favor of the treaty which affect the most “weeping downward rev ion of the Canadian tariff structure under- us. anairvs BEBE-Word been received here of the death of ma. D. J. Msclean of West Hill. Ontario. Dr. D. A. Macias of d’... hommfmsufilt‘ l‘; e o y ls bf the deceased while Mrs. giaamelPmar-gyoni sodi- and 4, . slsflerl. 181:2‘: aonéefilicemen: from‘ g; a’ ery o one rarevisiistcthe Houseslhehad cometohea-rdeba-teonabill for to which child- .IQ~‘IIIIMUIOM during consideration of estimates fcr the factory inspector who is also inspector under the act for J-cvention of accidents by fire in hotels. After the investigation now bring conducted into the disaster. there would he "such n. follow-up that there will be no cnusr: IQ; complaint," the minister said. FOUND DEAD AT THUR-O ‘IIRURO. NB. M-l-PCII N-(CH- John Canning, four-year-cld son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Canning of ‘Ii-urn, was found dead today in a few inches of water In Salmon River. It was believed he slipped and fell into the waier while play- ing on the river bank. No water found in his lungs. A physician attributed death to exposure. i-Iarrlimtoil can roushen fonn and e. And want can quench the eye's bright grace. —Seott. For Sale byifender P R 0 P E IITY at North, Tryon contracts made after ad- o: ted. . action tional revenue-would share the be, pm, 119d the “Coolidge qr oclock in the morning to prepare FWM“ "‘-l'-’..°“"."“i." fth u. ..... I?» one my “F” y;r::.~..“r..:rs" l’ .'°......."..."§..l.'f; P EIIQIICYO 0 , mane YCMI-SDNIIIGI‘. _ m. Dunning. would be force ' a endumme- t‘ “k” “m” ‘mm competitive bidding ’ ‘ ; contracts and tn out a powerful Unification lleld Only Solution To Railway Problem _ OTTAWA. March I-(OH-Ilhe w“ "ll"? um“... "'6... is...“ nate w n , w n - entatives of the Canadian Na. onal and the Canadian Pacific Railways come before them this year, that greater advances have been made since last July in effecting co-ugr- erotive economies than in any o er Raoul Dand German-Polish Talks Begin Over llanzig a momma‘ n. PARKER. n. Asayociaied Press Poreirn Stu") whnsaw. March zo-lAP) — Poland. reluctag: ti?‘ lolofloficwgéalfxfé; m“ m Etalks with the and Fr , has started future status if, was n. was uh erstcod the conversat- io were intended by the Warsaw any rlin Governments to attempt satisfaction of Germany's deslrecfgr y and a the same time to guarantee Poland's heavy economic interests there. Danzig, a. city of more than 400.- papulation, is largely German. sions of the committee were occu- pied by C. W. Peterson of Calgary, editor of the Farm and Ranch Rc- view. Earlier Mr. Petcrson had lengthy brief, and this he was examined on his presentation. Unification of the railways was the only solution of the present problem Mr. terscn said. He would divorce the railways entirely from politics, placing them under an executive board oi I5 men. I-Ic divided these as to five representa- tives from each of the railways anri g the other five selected by the 10 al- ready named. ‘rhey would be drawn i - from the ranks of labor. agriculture commerce and the technical profes- sicns. He agreed with Senator Arthur Meighen, Conservative Leader that if mutuality of interest predomina- 000 To gfve Poland, who won her in- dependence in the Great War. an outlet to the sea the Baltic port was taken from Germany and made a Free City under the prom-lull ul the League of Nations. A slice cf former German lcrrlt- ory, known as the Polish Corridor. also was given Poland so >110 wulll have access to the port which un- til recent ycars handled nearly all Poland's foreign sea-borne com- merce. Danzig already is llomlllalcd by Dun-W NM“ “"1" “mxwded m tel nvm- rlivcr=itv of interest in the nysggfnlggfllilfifilxjlggx‘i“guifgginled n 0pr(‘l‘-lIl0ll of the unified road. the L; only "lIiltilITl that. Poland and: “°5“1"‘ “Wm beuhgl"gc‘“ilzé° an“ » - ‘ . . _ ._ country. 1i rcca e t at r - ggrflllnany are discussing tilt. qucsl {way syswnfs m Great mum“ had 21°” “r§“1““i“L“l§§rd hi’ ‘filly- 5Y5 rns. a s i op- FEVEMSH ACTIVITY péssled lthe uniflicatlon but ‘was rtiiow 29 _ _ s rong y agllat ng or the l-KI 0n tc nllfiiigricaixtlvltv tfrfiéhlgc MALI“ m“ m“) m]? 0m‘ "clarification in Poluctl-(iernran re- d Rgélglaivhigggr Hg)?" ggetaklcBifij latlons was rcpcrtcrl tonight by the tan" Sam Senafi. X T‘ H“ Swn usually wcll-lhfor-ulcct information ‘bu; QuebecL “Theyr "'0 Iogcnab service Dicllst Ai-Ls Deutschiand. The service indicated Liernran newspapers generally _ ignored Nazi allegations or anti-German in - dams in Poland, except "several German papers in Silesia and East Prussia. and those organs which us- ually serve the Third Reich as mouthpiece"; ior reaching the out- side world believed this ionalization of the railways." Ho suguesterl that the changed attitude} might be attributable to the ad- herence of labor to the polltloll pol- ' ieie; of the party. i Is Sentenced For Attempted Murder riore n observers meant, t other countries were be- '—"" m ed 1 ‘b1 t1 (By The Canadian Preaa) mic?» y Gfifglrlfwl ghoufd 9.0:: MONTREAL March ail-Romeo Goudreault, 23-year-old milkman, was sentenced today to eight years in penitentiary for attempted mur- der of his sweetheart, Lena Ray. soy fail-while Germans generally were not to be disturbed at pres- ent. Bitter attacks 0n Poland appear- aggheai. or ally ten lltr not I. I‘. MORRISON. i ~ In I16. Senna-lid . l.-1all-1-n+s._...-._._. L... e. deaths from the disease in i937 as unmanned with . ed in newspapers in German cities m. _____ t the Polish border. Ooudrea " who fainted in the Qflelnellle Zulllllll 0! dock as sentence was . Sealed - ‘ willbe. ' ‘ Kwnlcemrmaastr-russiai-cporled w in b m- J cc Wilf . - ' ' o ilploliltlih r * in Poland m“ “i, ' “w... w} ‘all: “W”... p. . 15th. =~= “"'““‘ “"°'" ‘“""°-"=~ ...:":..:....-..r:.is .....:l"..... thexopertyat euth- he" and. The paper demanded - brought w my ‘gammy as e Preabyterhri Manse Pro- aiding rzcllélianntlottiqgremedy this in- Tm, yo...“ who Wm“ u ,, mllkman at 5t. Maxlrne, Que. -- -___»=~n- ~m mo» ls.m:l=-::..r : 351.11%}; M, h 39__(Qp)__'y1 wrenlch, and left her in the ditch tuhmuiqgfg dutfi “m; h. Nod: for dead. Rain later revived the Scotia had dropped from 90.3 girl and she was able to crawl to | deaths per 100,000 of po ulatiou in a nearby house. . i936 to 86.1 in 1937. the c ief health -——————-——— |offieer reported to the Provincial 11-... (m1. mung mg hem)“ us- Legislature today. There were 461 scrlption of assistance is that which r ‘- independence, and - fli the year belwe- helm-NV- lli. . lidlwul. Fire Probe EALILK larch I —( » William Morrow, former Hotel, testified alt the probe into the blaze destroyed the hotel March had once seen an evergreen row was a handyman in the hotel for more than eight years. ~ Morrow said he remembered sq cleaned hte flue in the v parlor. The flue had no connect-lop with the main or kitchen chirnnq. mlssioner, 1th‘. Justice M. worms Court, it was the ryracétise tag place an evergreen tree n c c imna s. of the Quelu I a 9N0 used for cleaning a ey occasion when a chimney He told the Investigating m bald of Nova Scotia and pull ft down to the cellar piece of rope. Morrow said electric lighfltz“ the dining room and other p the building would flash on if the floor above was walk heavily. rlin.- lotlll” cit; wllrl sm i... e llelp he Quick Relief Assured Are you shivering cold one minute and hot the la your chest tight and paid!" your throat in the I'll! 0|. ll lei n? Hleae a tons Indicate Iii Ia Ellery-val: cold. The noel: and chest should be only rubbed every two or hour-a with NERVILINE. Acting a counter-irritant, NERVILINI anon draw out tho congestion. Don't n: lee! lo [argle with HQ“- una- abaaapooniulhltfi oiwannwahr. Your more willfeelbetterlafivominahe. '~ To warn up the circulation, a s65 dose u! NERVILINB in VII-IN! E b lweebnedwahr. HER a wlsehrnadlelnaelseotinlhalhfidl bottle today from your a