_ MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Th: or tliolr own. ‘tori Infant religion, wiiun they calm "fir! Irlkln. aro wisely coroful novw to lot up any ->_ I l! t a%rl|".;llOlu\lp hnsdol ill! Ouldlu I've 0on1; INR World Faces Wheat Famine All RGSGTUGSW-B-Gd Up-Some Countries May Be Forced Into War Rationing —- Bible Story Of Pharaoh ’s Days All Over Again EDINBURGH-A serious situa- floii faces the world In the suPDlY of its most basic of all means of supporting life-wheat, writes C. _a_ Lyon in the Edinburgh Dis- patch. "Few pedple realise how serious the world wheat situation is S1,; year; ago there was more graiiiered in wheat in the rrwarles or the world than has evsr been in iiistory. The wheat 81111 “'35 a commonplace. ' Now it is all changed. Our iii-heat reserves are practically nil, allfl we arc living from hand to mouth on crops of which the prmpacts gm COIlbtIUI. The price of wheat has gone up more than so por cent in a yw‘. and now further price increases are certain, with the possibility OI l. real famine-rationing and so on- in the background. why is it all? The answer to this vital ques- tion is like a tapcstry of many brilliant colours of which tho sub- ' iject matter embraces all the in- habited earth. ~ Really’, the underlying causes are almost Biblical. They are basically the same as in the days oi Joseph and Pharaoh-Abe fat and the lean years. There is an age-old cycle in whvat. The cycle is seven to ton yciia. in which the earth goes the ful; turn of the whcei from fat yrars to lean and back again, lvhy it is we cannot say; only that it is so. _ Until Six years ago we were in the fat years. iThc grnnarles were chock-a-block with more wheat than they had ever had before. RIJINOUS Then drought. as in Pharaoh's day, struck the land. For the liist ilirce to three nlld a half years crops have been so bad that all the great surplus was wiped out By next August we shall have nczhing but the harvests of this Ivar to rely on. The low prices were ruinous to farmers, and evciy country had to iielp its farmer after its own fashion-Britain wth c. guaranteed pricc, Canada and America with sci-d and maternal aid. The glut had one unexpected lT-llll} that was to be far-rcachuig. Although the world wheat price ‘ff-Iii s0 low Canadian wheat. hav- "lf; Special quifitisa. was still in- dispensable to British and Conti- iivnlal bakcrs. (riimida took advantage oi this. (liroiigii her ivlicat pool. to try to sci a somewhat better price than the miserable returns then prevailing. Continental countries regarded this as being held up to ransom. Tlli" also saw that iii time of war ilicv would be in a bad position if :1 Single country could deny them .lll‘il‘ dai'y bread. So France. Germany, miiy, spam "Almost every country ——started Efforts to become self-sufficient. BALANCE UPSET But it is the efforts of Germany ‘(Chin-INC rvrm? "wood Islam... Mills closed until next wheat crop. L448 4-1341- "Cako Bare in aid of Basilica Altar Society, Prowso Bros, Satur- lav afternoon. L-1437-4-12-0i. "Ross‘ Mills. Vernon Rivor, will low last throo days of each week. L-IQBT-I-li-Zi. "Bllylng llvo hogs Albany Thurs- illl’ lllth, Emerald 10th until noon. Q. U. GINO. L-BOZZ-I-W-L-ii-W-b-u. "Bordon Lino Club loldinl hOII. limbs, calves ovory Wednesday at Ulilhr. Hours 12-0. L-ODH-IO-M T W ti. "Mrs Bale in aid of Trinity Mission Band Boturdoy. April 11th ll Moon sii McLeod. IrIBOQ-i-ld-ld-IT. "At sol-don Wednesday niuht- fibril is at U p. m" three one-act PlIYs sponsored by the Y. P. U- Mmlslion 25 and 1B cents. L-IBOQ-l-IS-Il. "Vlflillhl llvo hogs st Kerwin!- i°ll all doy Thursday. April 15th. Nicholson Brno. loading at Hunior River. Friday till noon. Signed Mc- l-‘Wen at Campbell. ll-BO-TI. and Italy that matter in tho 1W9. They planned to be self-suffici- ent. when the weather made this impossible both countries wore loth to admit defeat oven by nature Italy (we know) and Germany (we suspect) deliberately overestrnated their figures to show that a good harvest was coming. Ibr propa- ganda. Nowthecatisoiltofthebag and the whoie world knows that Gomisny and Italy are very short of grain. Tho facts had to bo reluctantly admitted at last, and much foreign wheat ordered. - Now the unexpected needs of Italy and Germany (obscured to the lost minute of tho misloadinl figures) upset tho dolicoio world wheat balance. An international scramble for wheat l-iu broken out. Wheat WM undoi- cs. por lilo Ibo. in Liverpool a your ago. In 108i it had boon 8|. 10d. Today it is 8s. 8d. The Australian crop is small. A large part of it has been sold. The Australians are hanging on to tho rest for the time being. The Argentine crop came in during December, and already in March she has exported more than half of her available surplus for the whole year. an unprecedented state of affairs. The Government proposes to step in to prevent too much being sent out of the country as a resut of tomptiiig prices. Russia a few years ago was sell- ing wheat while hor Dimple ltarv- ed because she wanted monoy des- perately and wheat was her most easily rearsable asset. Russia now doos not need money so urgently and is selling no Inoro wheat. Three years ago the American Government was bribing the farmers to grow less wheat. New it is entrusting thorn to grow more. ' America does not like exporting wheat. The Government finds that fluctuating foreign demands make home prlces fluctuate, with resu'tant discontent. They would prefer just to fulfil domestic needs. EARTH IN REVOLT Nover before has the world been so dependent on the Canadian wheat crop, which _comos on the market in August and is not yet sown. ‘The outlook for it is not good_ There is not enough moisture in the Canadian roll, ‘rigs is f (Continued on pogo 18) (thief Enginoor 0f Montcalm Drowned UITAWA. April 1$~—(CP)-- Chietf Engineer E. aomson. Que- bec, was loot overboard yesterday from the Government Ice-Breaker Montcalm near Curie Ray, accord- ing to advices received hero by the Department of ‘rransport. No details wore given other than that tho officer had evidently fall- en overboard without any 0f hl-i follow crow members witnessing tho mishap. 'I"he Montcalm was at anchor in a cove near Cope Ray at tho time and a search i; being made for tho body. The loo-breaker has been 0on- ducting an loo DfllNl in U10 V101!!- ity of Cabot Btraitl. Great men are they who see that MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN ii "ff" W spiritual is stronger than any ...w---"’ ““*----.._._., tmhzztcitilla-lld-force, that thoughts rulc Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew GHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1937 14 PAGES ;;--.-,'_..=-.,~.--,,-,-_---;,.;,=-g;-;y-;_ 3,1 PREMJiEPBURN DEMANDS Slillll BABINELFRUNT C o u p l e a Ultimatum To Colleagues With Move To Re-inforce Police. (0.1% by Guardian's Spools] Wire) TORONTO, April Iii-Solid cab- inet fmnt was demanded todayby Premier Mitchell Hepburn of Oll- tario as he moved to bolster pol- lce ranks and to prepare for any Bfnergency that might develop from the Oshawa General Motors strike. _ Coupled with the Premier's ul- timatum to his cabinet was his move to reinforce the police brought here last week when 3,700 omployoes of General Motors wont on strike at Oshawa. In his state- ment Mr. Hepburn levelled his at- tack on John L. Lewis’ committee for indust i=1 organization with the charge it was hand-in-hand with Communism. While provincial police heads started recruiting about 200 special constables the Premier emphasiz- ed any cabinet member opposed to I tho government's stand in the Oshawa strike situation must step out oi the ca-binot. "The only thing for that cabinet member to do is resign," said the ‘government leader who described tho Oshawa struggle between Gen- eral Motors and the Union cm- wloyees as a fight against “the forces of John L. Lewis and Com- munism which are now marching hand-ln-hand." Members of the United Automo- bile Workors of America. the Osh- awa. strikers. led by Hugh Thompson. C.I.0. organizer. arc demanding the Company recognize their Union. extend wage increas- es. a 40-hour week and generally implement the agreements the plants in the United States roach- ed with Lewis‘ organization. Mr. Hepburn who declared no cabinet resignations had yet been placed before him admitted such would be forthcoming if he mcida tho request. He was determined his cabinet should be united in the fight against Lewis’ C. I. O. which dominates the Auto Work- ers‘ Union. (In an addrest at Oshawa Sat- urday night. Hugh Thompson. C. I. 0. representative, said Mr. Hep- burn‘s cabinet was split over the government's strike policy). When ho reached the doclsionto present a strong front to tho C.I. 0.. the Premier said. he summon- (Contlnued on page 13) Predicts Record Tourist Season OTTAWA, Ailril l8‘——(0'P)-—A.n all-tme record tourist traffic for Canada in 193'! was foiucast tozal‘ by Transport Minister Howe. 1'18 based his expectavon on the num- b91501 inquiries received by tho Canadian Travel Bureau and t . general‘; improved business condi- tions iii United States. Coupled with the Minister's forecast was a reiteration of his Qdvicg given a year ago to all ag- encies assocfiaied with or catering to tourist travel to exercise court- osy and fair dealing in their treat- ment of the visitors. "Thc Canadian ‘Travel Bureau has received 20.000 inquiring sinoe tho first of the year." Bald Mr- Huwe, "u; increase of 93 per cent over the number received in the cmmgponding period of a year no. These inquiries give every indiuition that our tourist indus- try in 10B’! is to be much larger than a year ago." Nazis Ban Jewish Meetings In New Anti-Semitic Drive BERLIN. mu il-(AH-(ior- mmyi. govoo-nmont struck mot-hos" they know of no recent oo- .5312... which milht have caused ‘w. u only four Jon gather. f“ my dlspetll thsm. Jewish societies. musical clubs. Willi!" organisations-aid all other Jaw- M. |1~¢u,|fi—l'l1ly hold no mootinll Jews feared they would be oont t ation compo and their in concenwigm b. m-d u violated the order. Some expressed bolinf tbs Government's next anti- oornitlo movo would bo to compel all Jowish store-owners to Ill"! public notion of their race. Tho Noni drivo to make Gonnany purely "Aryan." which began soon after their accession to power-An 108i, has isolated Jews from other qgmmg 11y denying full citizen- ship and barring mania!!! with non-Jaws. when mac won enacted l“ "fun for the protection of Genniin blood and honor" in 369W“!!! . i“. Nazis now assert Jews in Oonnsny no not Germans and never can be-they om "Jews in Germany." and German subjects, but not citizens CED REBELS Lobster "It ls my opinion that ovary fisherman in Alberton Bout-h pooch lobsters. I cannot name you one who dooo not, why they oven put up lobsters in fox ranches down our way,“ said Mrs. Bessie Kinoh. Alberton South, Lob‘ter Factory operator before a Royal Commis- sion probing the (legal fishing of lobsters and smelts during i930, which rmumed sitting at Alberton yesterday afternoon following a three weeks adjournment. Mrs. Kinch who operates a cannery at Goose Harbor during the Spring season told the Commissioner, NLr. Justice A. T. LeBlanc of the Kings Bench Division of the New Brunwlck Supreme Court that she was the mother of l5 children and remarked “We have to pooch or starve. We have no farm, fish- ing is our only source of income and the lobster market is, of course. the best of the fish markets." 1 Four witnesses were called dur- ing the afternoon and the enquiry will be continued in the Court House this morning. It is expected that sittings at Alberton will con- tlnue all this week. The evidence of Mrr. Kinch was not completed when adjournment was made and she will conclude her testimony this morning. Graham Kinch and Raymond Kinch along with Daniel Morrison, a. Montrose man, gave evidence yesterday, the two Kinch boys ad- mitted iilegal fishing of lobsters for as many years as they could recall and also admitted serving a two months term in Prlnca County Jail at Summerside last fall after having been convicted of a fishing violation. The first witnrs called was Graham Klnch. who told Commis- sion Counsel, Hon. H. F. G. Bridg- es. that he was 18 years of age and told of being chased by a ps- trol boat, on which Howard Arsen- ault was the Captain, on Sept. 26th last year. He said the patrol boat he and his brother Raymond were on for some time had eventually caught up with them. He said there were nine lobster traps on board at the time but that they had not been fL-hlng lobsters but had been fishing cod fi h. Subsequently, however. both he and his brother wcrc convcitecl and sent to Jail for a period of two months He told Commission Counsel the family-had fished illegally lost Fail and packed lobsters in their mother's factory fit Goose Harbor. but in previous years the lobsters had been canned along tho shore. "How long have you been fish- ing illegally?" “As long as I remember?" "And the catch was always can- ned along the shore until last year?" “Yesy. "Why was the canning dono in the factory last year?“ "Well one reason was the officers bothered us considerably when tho Island Express Train Kills Moncton Lad MONCFON. N. B.. April 13- (ClP)-—-'I‘he Prince Edward Island Express train, (carrying among its passengers Montreal Canadiens, National Hockey League team on s tour of the Maritimes, this after- noon struck and killed Reginald Carver. l2. a few hundred yards from the Moncioin station. The lad, riding his bicycle b9- twcen the tracks was seen by the fireman to turn his head several times as if to judge tho train! ap- proach. As the locomotive was almost upon him the front wheel of the bicycle sworved and the en- glno struck his hood. He suffer- ed a fractured skull. An inquest will be hold Maori-aw. . Oyster Bods Widoly Destroyed By Snails (C). By Guardian's Special Win) WASHINGTON. April i3 — The marine snail, sharp-faded villain of the oyster beds. destroyed about 00,000,000 of the tasty bi-valves in tho 1036-3’! season. Reporting this today, the United States Fisheries Bureau slid tho total was almost equal to bho en- tim income of oyster men for tho season. Commissioner Prank T. Bolbsoid the fisheries Bureau had complet- REPEL Enquiry UpensA tAlberton Widescale Illegal Fishing In Al- berton South Claimed. Four Witnessgsileard. l 658ml!!! was done along the shore." "When you canned along tho shore was it dons in the open or in hiding?" "Right in the open in daylight." Ho rserted that prior to being named patrol boat captain last year that Howard Arsenault and himself poached lobsters. The 18 year old reddish haired youth told the Commissioner that Edward Lewis, Joseph Gallant, Basil Acorn, Daniel Palmer and Charles Coughlan fished lobsters during the closed season last year in the same vicinity as he and his brother. He said that he had seen these men himself and said that Herbert Fraser, Silas Matthews, John Skerry. Eldred I-Iutt and George Adams. Herbert Avery. Frank Mc- Dougall. Percy McCabc, Ainsley Hutt, Bud Fraser and Maurice Perry of Alberton had poached lobsters last fall. "Do you know anybody around Alberton, fishermen I mean, who did not fish illegally last fall?" asked Commission Counsel. ‘rMaybo. there were two or three but ordinary fishermen have to fish illegally to make a living." The witness charged that the day he and his brother were caught by the patrol boat Capt. Arsenault the boat had passed two other boats operated by Joseph Gallant and Basil Arsenault who were fishing lobsters. Raymond Kinch followed his brother to the stand and the evi- dence was of a corroborative na- ture. He rtated the family had packed at tho factory last year durins tho closed season about 25 or 85 boxes of lobsters. Daniel Morrison was the third witness of the afternoon and he too admitted fishing from July 15th l-O the and of October in the Hardy Channel district last Fail. He stated his share of the catch amounted to 4 or 5 cases of cam _ncd lcbstcr‘. These were canned by_h__imself and his brother John ~ ---— - (Contlnued on page 13) iiiciiiiiizliinii iiiuinjiiiiin Baldwin Fears Mass Mind Will Supplant Individualis- tic Thinking. LONDON, April l3-—(CP Cable) -Primo Minister Baldwin tonfght oitnrcsed dread lest a meohanzed world would mean Britons would lose their independent, individual- istio character. Guest of honor at a dimer given by the Federation 0f British Indus- tries. the Prime Munster discussed at length industrial changes of the past 50 years. The increasing speed of the mod- em age had brought problems, he said. Nervous breakdown. un- known 50 years ago, was a com- nion ailment today. He stressed the importance of research by lead- ers of industry. labor and doctors, into the reaction of a life of speed upon nerves. Baldwin urged maintenance of a healthy export trade and asked industry to promote enterprises in tho special areas of industrial dis- tress in order to assist the Cov- einmenifis efforts in those areas. Referring to the modern trend, the Prime Minister said: "I sao a danger ahead that our pooplo may mechanized. mechanized not only in body but ” "w! in mind. "I dread the mass mind. I dread the loss of our l. ‘opondont. individualistic character that has mode tins notion what it is." Explosives Found 0n Mcrchant Ship BORDEAUX, France, April 13- Illfty tons of explosives were found 800 tons of merchandise aboard the French merchant ves- sol. Oharento. halted at nearby lo Verdun today. customs officials sold. Tho ship. en route from Oslo. Norway, in a Spanish government port. was ordered buck m Bordeaux where the explosives were to be imioodod and sent book to Oilfi- FLIJBTIIATING BULB PULIBY FUR BRITAIN No Action Planned To Fix Gold Price In Face Of Business Recovery. LONDON, April 13—(AP)-'l‘he Government will refrain from maintaining a fixed price for gold in terms of the pound sterling. Neville Chamberlain, Chancellor of the Exchequer told the House of Commons today. "The price of gold is one of the factors to be taken into account in deiermhiing monetary pzllcy from time to time," Chamberlain said. “The Government are fully alive to the uncleslrability of in- terfering with the flow of business toward recovery" Robert Boothby, Conscivative. had asked the Chancellor for as- surance the Government did not intend to take action “to check the rise in commodities by raising the price of sterling in terms of gold. in view of the deflatlonary effect it tvirulri have." The Chancellor added. in‘ reply that the Llovc-rniiient did not con- template at present entering any "economic agreement of wider character" with the United States and France. Rumors of a possibility the United States might lower its buy- ilig price for gold as a check on rising commodity prices, while de- niod in Washington. recently have stirred financial circles. They gained wings after Presi- dent Roosevelt. followlng boom warning; from other administra- tion officials. criticized tho prices of copper and steel recently and announced a. shift in federal spend- ing away from durable goods in an effort to discourage advancing pri- cos in those lines. Some authorities have urged re- duction in the price of gold, re- versing action in the depression campaign to raise prices. as the most effective brake on “inflation tendencies." However, many finan- cial men recognize government leaders are faced with a. delicate problem inasmuch as it feared low- ering gold prices m‘ght set in mo- tion "deflationary forces" which would halt industrial recovery. Negroes Burned At The Stakaly Mob GRENADA. Miss. Alpril I2--(AP) —Offioers asserted blow torches were ilscd today by a mob which Deputy Sheriff G.W. Frazier said lynched two negroes charged with the robbery-killing of George Sam Windham. a white merchant. Roosevelt “Red" Townes. 26- ycar-old Grenada negro. and Boot Jaok McDrifels were scared by angry central Misslsslppians who seized the pair from Sheriff EE. Wright and two deputies at the Winona court house. The Jackson Daily News said its correspondent reported the two ncgroes were "burned at the stake” and a third. Shorty Dorroh had been severely whipped and ordered to leave the county im- mcdlatcly. withholds Comment 0n Court Ruling WASHINGTON. April l3-(AP) President Roosevelt withhold oom- nient today on the United states Supreme Court/s decisions uphold- ing the Wagner Labor Relations Act rind told his press conference he had an opportunity to read the long opinions only in a cursory way. Seek Bitter fighting at the door ' Repeated counicr-ziiiucks versity City suburb. the Mzinzzimires River. Czipi the Cash dc Czimpo forces. SERIOUS FOOD SIIORTAGE l l A biockadeby Insurgent war- ships aiid troops manoeuvres to ‘surround the city and “starve out" the defenders accentuated a ser- l ious food shortage. At London Italy agreed m have studied a plan for repatriation of foreign volunteers in spiiin. some weeks ago Italy. through Ambas- sador Grcmdi blocked such a plan. Paris heard that Gencralisslino Francisco Franco might soon trans- fer the supreme military command of the Insurgents to some iin- nnmecl high oflicer to devote all his time to affairs of state in In- surgent-lield portions of Spain. (Copyright 1937 By The Havas News Agency) MADRID, April 13—(CP-Havas) —Ceneralissimo Francisco Franco's big guns again opened up against the heart of Madrid late toilriy nf- ter two successive Insurgent in- fantry attacks had been smashed by Government troops in the Uni- versity City and Casa. de Ciimpo sectors west of Madrid. Scores of‘ non-combatants u/cre killed or wounded by high explos- ive shells which landed in ihc Puerta dcl Sol and the populous workers districts of the besieged city. The bombardmcntresulied in an angry protest from (Icii. Jose Miaja. who declared bombardment of the capitals civilian populat- ion was unnecessary in vicw of the fact that military concentrat- ions complctely ringed the capital. Lines Battered Insurgents attacked in the Uni- versity City sector shortly lifter dawn. Tanks, armored cars and mounted machine gun batlcrics battered Government lilies iilciii; the river bank. when» Minn-ids dc- fenders are thrcnteillng io isolate the 8.000 Insurgents barricaded in the university grounds since the early weeks of the Madrid slctze. Detachmenis of Moors and Civil Guards. throum into the Insurg- ent drive, were reported decimated by veteran ii~"rilriiiicii and Astur- ian dynamiters. ' The batile i-iiged along the rlvr-r banks for several hours before tho Insurgents finally retreated in dis- order. Rebels Reinforced Insurgent reinforcements were moved into position m the summit of Mount Garabitas-sstrateglc liill in .the Cass de Campo. After comparative calm had been estab- lished in the University grounds. wave aftsr_ wave of Insurgents rushed down the side of the hill in a determined effort to SIlltFll through Government lines at its base. Then the Government ciil‘~n tanks into play. forcing Insurgents ..__.ti_.."'lii:_—ii _ T42??? (Continued on lagg_isi____ C.B.R.E. Cut Restoration Recommended By Board MONTH-EAL. April .1I-—(CP)- Acceptance od the Bmlloy Concili- ation Board's report, ailing for i0 per cont pay raises for about 10.000 Canadian Notional Railways em- ployees by next April l. was iridi- cated tonight a; virtually certain on the port of men and employer. ‘The report. made public at 0t- taws today. recommended that the . C.N.R. restore depression pay ciiis, to members oi tho Canadian Bro- ' thcrhood of Railway Employrcs. Implementation would put tho C. BJLEonthesame wagebosisas Intcmationai Running Trade Union workers who coached an agreement with the t/wo major roads a fort- night ago. The National Railway. it was iiii- dersfood tonight. was willing to a- hida by the Board's proposed terms". and at the same time JE. Itiagiiii-c. chairman of the C. B. R. Efs sys- tem committee. said the Brotlisr- hood likely would signify accept- ance tomorrow. acceptance in iotri." Mnuiiiv- smil The system committee received a copy of the report today. and ivas going to mect tomorrow morning to draw up its answer. "I think wo will adri=o (ho dc- pnrlmcni. of labor iomorroiv of our MADRILEN OS T_'o_ B reah Issolation Move By Government Insurgent Gurfiound Madrid Killing Scores Of Civilians- gBilbao Faceflood Shortage. (By The Canadian Press) way of Slaldrid brought heavy reinforcements of Spanish Insurgent troops into the front lines last night ('l‘ucsd:i_v) in an effort to brciik a "bottle up" manoeuvre by gilvcrnmcni soldiers. mct gilvcrnnicilt charges in the Cusu dc Cumpo park sector and in the nilrihivcst Uni- Fighting zippeurcd concentrated in a small urea along urc of this would completely cut oil‘ 3,000 insurgents filriiiicd in University City from Government troops at Bilbao “'0l‘0 reported in have slowed an Insurgent drive on that northern port. ISees World Banger j in Empty Empire LONDON, April I3—"Tll€ great- est danger to the world today is an empty British Empire,“ the Bishop of London. Rt. Rev. A. F. tlliiiningion Ingram. said tonight at a City of lnndon school dinner. "Canada, for example, if it can get iheni. “unis l0.(l00.(l00 more Briiisliers to help it i0 DFwDeTll/Y." added the Bishop who has been a frequent \‘.SliOl‘ to the Dominion in recent years. The Blrlllll) rapped Fascism, Communism lilld Pacifism and as- serted it. was the public school man's duly to defend his country. t J Anniversary 0f l Titanic Disaster (AP. By Guardian's Special Wire) BELFAST, Northern Ireland, Aiii-i‘ ilk-This city which built the Titfullc ivill observe ii period 0‘! mourning ioiiiorroiv. the 25th anni- versary’ of tragedy nhcli bofcll the liiioi- mi licr maiden myrigo. A wreath will bo laid on a mem- orial to Thomas Andrews. the dc- sigrici". mid tho 2i export workmen who sailed on ihr- tlicn world's largest boat to aid tho ship's engin- eers. They uicrc among those drowned-the numbor of lives loch has been placed between 1.517 and l(i'§6-when the $10,000,000 vessel it down. Qr-ci" " 4m: MoRE MoNEY You HAVE ‘THE MORE Pool’. RELATioNS You l-WNE! i i l METEOROLOGICAL SERVI Toronto. April iii — Min mum an maximum icinpcroiurcs: Dawson 32 42 Victoria 46 54 Edmonton 3i 44 Regina 24 58 Winnipeg 36 4H Toronto 3i! 6'.‘ Oi i awn. 2B 5G Mont rcnl 38 5G Quebec 32 5Z1 Saint John 30 54 Ha l if ax 28 50 Charlottetown 26 48 Maritime East rind lviist: F‘rc:".i or strong" $0lliil\\‘(‘SiPI‘l_\‘ winds partly Flfilld)‘ with much liio some iciiipcralurc; probably n low light son l i I‘l‘(‘(l showers. Hiiili iirie this IIIIPHIOIIH at 1220 miri iriiiioi"rovt' iiinriiiiig iii 146. Sun sols fills (‘Vflllilil n? 6.44 aiizl Tfl-“S ‘flll\0l‘l'0\V morning nt 5.17. First quarter moon Saturday. April l7, 3'14. p. m. . Siiiiiiiirrsidc tirlo rightccn rnlii- ~ ulcs laicr than Charlottetown. TIE (‘AR FERRY’ [mun Ilnrdrn 0.45 n. m.. I l. lmnvoo sormsntlno ll n. In. l-IIID- lllly 0x007! Insular. III. I.