Y lraxlMs f oi A Msaayanuw 1am-1pm wltiblpllsstthsamsstercfit. 3 "island Like the Dew MAXIMS or A MERE MAN A Health which is one greet secret -of success is! gift of industry. I2" BROWN’ i, AT LAKEVILLE. BRIDGE Sees For Prov. industrially Economic Opportunities Stressed By‘ Mr. H. K. S. Hemming At Board Of lTrade Quarterly Meeting. Second“ Trial For Phillips Is Ordered f0. I. by Guardian's Special Wire) QUIBIO, Oct. io-Psii term of the Court of King's Bench openei heretodsy. lit was announced the second trial of ‘. won. Phillips, rout-h. was set was found sentenced to ~be gedfor the unler of Maud Ascsh, 15, d the same village but the court of sppelis ordered s. sec- ond Pill. ANNOUNCEMENTS comma EVENTS. MEETINGS, ETC "Assoc-censors an burial In this column at l out» pa .10!‘ strictly pshbis in advance. Pwhow-Brsdalbsnc ‘Thursday. L-1057-10-10-li. "Show-Ounce cove, ilridsy. L-iosl-lo-io-al. "Show-alt. Stewart, Saturday. .. . Is-IOW-lll-IO-Bi. "new m surest mu Hall. m... October 12m. piooa-io-rr-u innin- "HesrWse lscdrsgor," st Bt- Ohsrlss Hail on ‘Ihursdsy, Oct. 11th; . L-im-iil-li-si "a a c. ammo silage, Iimrsdsy, * 11 p.15 P. M. ' L-IVIO-liklil-Zi. "Come to ths Ohickeo Supper in I. ‘rerun Hsll, ‘Itaesdqy, October 10th. I-losa-io-co-sl. "Oome to the dance in Ses View ‘HI-ll Thursday, October 11th. Admission 15 cents. L-1081-10y10-2i "mum Tuesday, Nov. 6th, for LO.B.A.tesinY.M.C.A. flan, L-1111 "Dance, Portuns Hall, Iridsy. Oct. 12th. Webster's orchestra (ii piece). Admission 28c. l. L-IOSO-IO-D-fli "Jsnet Gaynor and Warner Bax- ter in "Paddy the Next Best 'I‘hlng" st Souris Thursday and Montague lsturdny night. 14-1074710-10-31. "De-nos in Summer-field Hell. Friday, October 18th. Admission 20c. Indies with cake free. Ir-IOBO-IO-li-Zi. "Sports and norms at Ste-nit! Iunk W”, October u. Danc- wi islm . m‘ ‘we ’ ulqL-Ofll-IO-ii-ll. I i1- "GhickenSunper, St. James Hail, Summer-field, F ‘ bcr 10th. Amuse- ments and dancing. Special music. L-IOW-lii-lil-fli. "Dance in Powssl st Florida Hotel, ma». Oct. nth, 0 pm. Oood music. In aid ofDsiry Kioll hockey club. live and lambs. ver and erald ‘Iirtsdsy, Octcber ma cu 1o s. u mums- m Manon. Oetober ma. Blsned s s Wodlock. ~ ~ L-llfl-IO-ll-ll. "Yfiil ‘U71!!! I “mm m over ago-arm should lnnui and double vom- revetme- e .‘..“5.5'.““§-3'a5$'. lwumfibi." la-IMB-IO-Ifl-ll male ‘Iihe economic future of Prince Edward Island was the subject of s. sflrring and informative ald- dressbyMnEK. SHcmmlngot s largely attended quarterly meet- ing of the Charlottetown Board of ‘Irade last night. Special emphasis In placed by the speaker on the Island's unique opportunity under present tradg conditions oi enter- ing the British market with manu- factured food-stuffs. sud it was‘ ursed. us s preliminary step, that s. representative Industrial Oom- mission be ‘ -' to investigate every aspect of the manufacturing situotion and report in full to the Pxwincill Government. m. Hammingh address was dis- cussed by the chairman, President T. E. Ilscmrtt, and by Hon. G.‘ S. sharp. nr. s. linrvin mu, car- ieton, D1’. J. A. Clark, Messrs. .1. O. ,R.E.Mut.chandE.'I‘. more. s summary of whose re- mlris appears elsewhere in today's Guardian. ~ A vote of thanks, moved by m. Hyndmsn and secceided by Mr. Higss. was tender *- the speaker, whose motion thst the Charlotte- fowlLBoard of ‘Ifrlde place itself on record as favoring the appoint- ment cf s commission as suggest- ' sugges _ postponed for Ilhiiowing is the text or Mr. Hamming’: address; - w. Chairman and Gentlemen: It is ‘not without s good deal of difiidence. m" indeed trepidation, that I appear before you this even- ing to load inthe discussion oilso important s. questio as that of "Ihrncctlomlc Future of Prince niwem Island." I realise fully that, irrthe three short years since I came to char- lotteiown to make s new home for my wife and myself, no matter how hard, I may have studied, in the very nature oi things I could not liope to obtain anything like the some knowledge of the Island con- ditions as you have who have lived be hero d1 your lives. My only apology, therefore, for embarking upon hazardous s venture as that of of- fering suggestions is that I sm not an Islander by birth but that I have lived elsewhere, both in other parts of Oanids sud in other countries, and therefore have some advanttge in making comparisons or, to put it another wsy, to"‘sse oursels as ithsrs see us." ‘ Now I want to make it quite clear at the outset out, if you find that I have been misinformed re- gsrding any of my fscts. I stand ready to be corrected, and further that I welcome criticism, for it is (Continued on Page S) QUEENS STUDENT ‘ DATE BUREAU OPENED KINGSION. Ont, Oct. l0-—'l‘he “dot-e bureau" is again in evid- ence st Queen's University, snd is conducted for the purpose of bring- ing lonesome male and female students together. During the psst weok several first co-eds and sopimmorev have been brought together for social times. fee of 10 1307111 EXTRA- a reasons TRAPPED |u nrurnx auzr (C. P. By Ggvnrdisrfs Special. l") HALIFAX, Oct. 11 -- (Thursdsy)-Eight persons were trapped in the ruins of a three-story building that collapsed following a mys- terious dynamite explosion here early today. A ninth oc- cupant of the building, Rob- ert Grouse, was. blown through the front door to the street. Crouse was not. seriously injured and regained con- sciousness in hospital but. he said he knew nothing more than that he had been stand- ing in the hallway when the blast occurred. At. four dclock firemen were battling flames in an attempt to rescue Crouse’s wife and their three child- ren, Mrs. Dan Dudus and her two children, and sn un- identified man boarding in the building. No explanation of why the dynamite was in the build- mdngmtlhtbcohthiriodiluiucfl.‘ ' mug lately as police joined fire- men in the rescue efforts and left. their investigation for later. At 4.15 the ruins were a mass of flames. A wall left standing after the explosion fell in and fears were ex- ‘pressed that the trapped people were doomed. REVIJLTIJYING .0llT hymn (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) MADRID, Oct. ilk-Eleven more deaths ‘were added to the toll of re from War Ministry thflt FOPEIQfl IAQADB long 1m. ported from Morocco had complet- ed s mop-up camps-in at Ovicdc. northern Spain. The Oviedo ganison was enabled to dispatch additional troops to reinforce the army in the moun- tainous mining sections of the Province where some rebel strong- fcrth. '~ It was reported warships operat- ing off the Asturias coast had backed up the Foreign Legion troops with bmrlbsrdments on rebel neon located near the coast on the Bay of Ebony. Government information reveal- command er of the‘ Ostslonian militia, had been sentenced to life imprison- if [they , Cont.i,n‘ties .~ (0. P. by Guardian's speeiil wire] - BOITON Q, ,o¢1o-'r_ne Boston Fishermen ’s Strike jTo"‘*_ Spread Woman Held For $50,000 Ransom (l. 9.3 Guard-ion’ BDNJIIW ) IDUIlVll-Irl, aeflot. 10B i 3 hi: , t iufi search. HMHMLFHIT .EAVESFOR Yllliflliiil-IA Uncertain Future Fac- and New King Pet- GI’. By Robert Parker, (Copyright, 1984, by Am‘!!! Press) (By Guardian's Special Wire) MABSEIILE, (tot. 10. - The bullet-torn‘ body of Alexander, King of Yugoslavia, started but to, his homsldnd today ll his weeping, widowed queen turned toward Paris to loin her eldest. Yflsoslsvhb. new’ A flower-snd-flag-drsped css- ket on the after-deck of the Yu- goslav destroyer Dubrovnik car- ried the corpse of the murdered King, shot down by an‘ assassin yclibrds, as he arrived in France {in important political conversa- ons. Confluent Tense Tonight the Continent waited, tense to learn the political anteced- ents of his sisyer-iib-yeer-old Pet- rus Kslemen of Zagreb, Yugoslavia- feariul lest historic Balkan passions simmering just below the new veneer of pesos and friendliness might flare up sgain. An uncertain future awaited the grief-stricken Yugoslav Queen, sis- ter of King carol of Rumanis, and her ll-yesr-old son-king, as they depnted-ths Queen from Msrseillc, young Peter from his English school —for Paris and, then, Belgrade. ‘The government Alexander left in charge when he set out on his tragic Journey watched keenly for symptoms of revolt in the Oroatim regions of the land, the while they mode preparations for Alexander's funeral and ths nation, recalling his Greet War gallantry, mourned him. Hardly secondary in importance to Alexander's assassination was the death of Louis Bar-thou, France's spry, 72-year-old liomign Munster, for whom the Terrorist‘! fast-firing gun also spoke death. binronte to Paris His dramatic dashes about Europe to mend Hench political fences for- ever at sn en the little full-beard- ed dlpiomat snroute to Paris this evening, accompanied by former Premiers Andre‘ Tsrdieu and Edou- srd l-Iorrlot, on s special train that lsft only a few minutes after the Queen's train. Since his dentin-that might have been averted had the taxi-cab bear- ing his wounded body been sble to break through traffic isms-his body “g, had lsin with Alorsnderb in the great, high-csilinged, candle-lit room of the llsrseills police prefecture. ~ The stete funeral for him was set for Saturday, but m ordinary W! car Thrill‘ hearse. the of was on verse disuse 3'3. went to her eomplrtr gt, g blinds or which were pul- es Widowed Queen - 0tBUFiNTS TRAPPEDIN clotgqcln Bridge Into Water of North Lake. ‘Hires men, Pius McPhse, Daniel McIsesc, and James McGregor met a sudden and tragic des late ‘rues- dsy evening when the car in. whichi they were riding skidded into the railing of Iskeville Bridge, crashed through, and plunged into the wat- ers of North Inks. A car proceeding in the opposite direction witnessed the “ ‘ and immediately sum- moned nid. The car, resting on some old piles by the side of the bridge. was completely submerged, the top oi the car being about eighteen in- ches under water. The bodies of the victims were removed from the car about half m hour after the accid- ent. Pius McPhce is the son of Vincent lMoPhee, and Daniel McIsdoc u the sonofAngusnMcIsaacbothsm ifrom St. Mus-gusts, and are about '23 years of age. James MlwGregor, better known as "Wee Jim" is about. i0 years of age. sod is thought to be from Dundee, Scotland, where his father is sup- posed to live, although to dilte no definite information has been rc- ceived. MscGregor come to 8t. Mar- garets shout two weeks ago and has since been employed by Mr. McIsssc, father of one of the victims. ‘ An. bid-time flddlers’ contest, in which McPhee and McGregor took part, was in progress in St. columns Hall, Fairfleld. Before the contest was over these two men drove some people to a neighbor's house, Mc- Phee driving Molasses car. On the way back to the hsLi they picked up Mclsaac. They had proceeded to Lwkevilie Bfidg¢, about a mile from the Hall when the accident occur- red. Thcrc was a good railing on the bridge, but the car skidded with considerable force. It had rained that day and theroed was very slip- P01’!- An mquest held yesterday by Cor- oner Daniel McEcchern was sd- iourned until today at 10 o'clock. 111s probability is that the verdict will be accidents! drowning. As it was thought that MoGregor cams from Glace Boy, inspector mcnt in Sydney for information. He has been informed by them that Mc- GregorisnotknowninGisceBsy but that he was around Point Tull- per and Port Hswheshury for three or four months early in the summer, leaving that neighborhod in July. It is not known where he was since then until his arrival at St. Margar- etstwoweeksago. Sofsrescenbe learned, he hes no relatives in Oops Breton. From an acquaintance m Port Hswkesbury. it was learned that his list/her is living in Dundee. Scotland. McGregofls description follows: 5% feet in height, slight build, weight 180 pounds, age, about 40, brown hair, grey-blue eyes, last two Joints of right front finger mis- sing. Anyone having definite in- formation as to next of kin are rc- quested to communicate with the n. o. u. P. UMBS HlIRlEll I N Ii A V A NA HAVANA, Oct. 10. -- Bombs Ind hand srensdss exploded throughout Havana today as s campaign of ter- gstned utomentum. six per- inmrod. ' d grenades were hurled Mitt-Psi police station. um action, nun; and arrested more in the market ..mmr M“ Frippd wired the B. O. M. P. detsch- ing Terra ri s Police Are Act- ive As Day Pas- i ses Quietly On ' Continent. (By Richard G. Massock, As- sociated Press Staff Writer) (A. P. By Guardian’s Special Wire) PARIS, Oct, Iii-Through- out Europe police were searching tonight for infor- mation about a\ group of in- ternational terrorists believ- ed to have plotted the assass- ination, of King Alexander. Meeting secretly. in some remote Balkan hideaway, police believe, the band of as- sassins drewlots to deter- mine who would give his life to slay the King of Yugo- slavla. The task falling to Petrus Kalemen, the gang are be- lieved to have planned the assassination in the fullest ‘detail and equipped the slay. er fully before sending him over the French frontier from Vallorbe, Switzerland. Every Move Checked Eve move made by Kalemen from e time he entered France until he leaped to the running board of the King's car over the body of a. murdered policeman. a roaring sutnnmtic of sub-machine gun type in his hand, is being cere- fuily checked. _ Here is how the police reconstruct the events leading up to the trag- edy: Kaiemen drew the fatal assign- ment. ‘rhe bend then provided him with u. false passport, giving his nstionslity as Czechoslovakian to avert close scrutiny by French authorities who have been check- Yugoslaviarls for weeks prelim- inary to the King's visit. The police of Paris were busy throughout the day chedcing on all members of the Yugoslavian Separ- tist movement. Leaders and refu- gees were rounded up in a wide- mread search of the city and sub- urbs. Homes of many natives cf Alex- ander's country yielded protozfflilhs and documents. Many men were held for questioning. The homes of Svitozar Pribltchevitch, former Yugoslav nlinister of the interior. and Vladimir Dadltch, a son of a Croati lender slain in 1928 in the House of Parliament, were srmng those visited by the police. Defends Department Minister of the Interior Sarrnut defended his department against criticism kr not adequately pro- tecting the Royal visitor. He said more expuislons had been ordered already this year than during the entire previous year. The police learned much of Kale- men's last moments from the pro- I prietor st s. hotel at Aix en Prov- ence where he stayed until shortly before the crime, with two compan- ions, cnd drank strong liquor to King Peter Slips. Secretly into P a r i s Large Crowd Awaits In Vain For Arrival Of Young King At Station. (A. P. By Guardian's Special wire) PARIS, Oct. 10—Cought up in the dangerous swirl of Balkan pol- itics, although but 11 years old, lit- ltcIPeter, the son of the assassinated King of Yugoslavia, came secretly into Paris tonight to meet his grief- stricken mother. Throngs jammed the station in Paris when his train arrived, eager for a glimpse of the lad, as author- ities prepared elaborate precau- tions to mask the route by which he was to reach his destination. Peter was awakened today at his English countryside school, told of his father's death and his accession to the throne and takensway at once by his grandmother, Queen Marie of Rumsnla, who had been visiting the British Royal Fs-ntily. I-ie will meet his mother tomor- row whsn she reaches Parzis- from Mnrsellle, where, eccomp ‘ ’ by the President of Frrmce. she sow her husband's body taken aboard the Yugoslav warship Dubrovnik today on its way home to Belgrade. French and Yugoslav notables. including Minister of War Henri Petaln and the Paris Prefect of Po- lice, M. Iengeron, were among the crowds that awaited the boy-king's arrival st the station. Police helped preserve the illu- sion that Peter would arrive there, heavy forces holding back the cur- ious and other squads shepherding newspspermen into the baggage room. ' But the special car in which Pet- er and Marie were travelling was detached from the train at St. Den- is, outside Paris, when: Etienne Fisudin, Minister of Public Works, was waiting with an automobile of thmgovernmeut. Thus they slip- ped into Paris unobserved. Enroute from England with Queen Marie. the little king was visibly moved. As the channel boat pulled sway from mlglish shores Peter stood on the deck locking back toward the land where only s few weeks ago he arrived to begin his school life. The Queen, apparently sensing tiiit his carefree school days were over and that it might be years be- fore he saw those shores again. took him gently by the shoulder and said: "Look. my my." Tears roiled down Peter's cheeks as the land faded from sight. He and his mother will go to el- grade together to meet the Dub ov- nlk. Tourist Travel Is Business Sti m u I a n t (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 10—-N0v effort should be spared ‘to keep the people of Canada and the; United States "travel-minded" and: to encourage vacationing on this Continent, D. Leo Doian, director of the Canadian Travel Bureau, said tonight in m address st the annual dinner of the American (Continued on Page 8) Hauptmann , (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YMtK, Oct. lu-Allxtradition of Bnmo Bsuptnlsun to New Jersey to stand trial for the abduction- nurder of the Lindbergh baby was moored st Albany late today by Gove Herbert Lehman. A vigorous defence fight to sieve ofl sxtrsditim was in wospect for psrmsritm: SLY... wlthdr “utm- 0 ‘W 7x1 Milton The mstiee Department said that 1t ma withdrawn from me case m- Extradited To New Jersey ihccsl. oemcut of the se- writ of hsbess corpus. wascoupleuwlthdlsclonlretlut It granted, evrtrsdition would be or the 110,000 ransom money held Hotel Association here. _ Is Ordered ssmuch as an extorticm indictment had been returned by o New York grand jury and e. murder indictment ilued in New Jersey. As Governor Iiehmsn signed the extradition ,_, . acceding to Jer- sey's claim of first lien on the stow- nwsy from Germany, defence sttor- ney James M. Fswcstt was hurrying i0 New York to prepare for the court test. Fowcett said he would apply tomorrow_in a Bronx court for s ininblyance unM-l a court could hear uptmsnrfs fefutstion of charges that he stole the first-born of the ‘thing Isndberghs from his Hopewell hone the night of March i. 1B2: that bsby Lindbacgh was killed in the perpetuation o! abduc- PLICES of ASSASSI E v e r y M 0 v e Made By Kale?- men Is Careful} A ' J ly Checked. M- A (By John Evans) (Copyright 1934 By The Ab. I - \ ’ m _ ;-- THURSDAY, ocroaan 11, 1934 11o PAGES s;'".':.‘.'.';:.'::'."".';':. t?":?".'. ill!" Group t) Of International _ ts Are Believed lRes;_1onsible For Trqgecly sociatcd Press) (A, P. By Guardian's Special PARIS. Oct. 10-Fear thaii the double assassination of King Alexander of Yugo- slavia and Foreign Minister Louis Barthou oi’ France l~ might wreck the continent’: peace as did the killing of Archduke Franz Ferdinand at Serajevo 20 years ago lespg ened as the day passed with- out bringing any imajor 08g Wire) velopments. _ But the 20 deadly bullets fired by Peirus Kaiemen zit Marseille yesterday .9 s‘ x 1- - ,..~..-*~...%,*1~ ‘f :<:"t:""-€7.3si§"~f§€~.jr~ left ‘ Fran cc shaken politically‘, and Europe nervous over what may come next. In‘ many quarters belief that Kaiemen may have alteréil , the course of events in Eur- 1 ope was freely expressed. Seek The question of the assassin’! nationality, highly important be- cause of its political implies" preoccupied police over the contin- ent tonight, and everywhere euth< critic; sought clues which might enable them definitely to identify him. France's Sunete Nationals and authorities st Praha, Czechoslo- vakia, insisted the Czech passport found on Kslemens body, which apparently had been visaed by Yugoslav was forged. authorities at Zagreb, His movements were being traced tonight. but whether he was Yugo- slav, Czech, Bulgarian or some. other nationality to which the des- tinies of the scattered Crosts-hsvf (Continued on Page 3» Moderate to fresh winds, $0M Collars. BoYs ARV. Solszr {mar wort m“ LE1’ - . ‘THE Fvmtmmfnzs t Rusk 4am! shift- ing co south and southwest: oiofl; with showers. Mmuultuuualctsi. OFFICE, Ton onto, 0n ill-Minimum and maximum temperatures :— I]li\\'|u)i\ . , Id Q .. 28 LU . 52 7's I71 l s; 7a ii inon on 4 (‘ullmry .. 44 ill-ginn .. 36 31, Winnipeg 4S . g . Toronto l8 Ottawa ._, , ,,, m‘, 28 ‘g hlunircnl “,- 34 Q} Quclvw‘ .__ , , 3v) (4 Saint John 3g 4g iinlifnx ..'. _,. ; so w (‘hnrioiteltvvru ..,... 88 I FORECAST linrilinlc Ploriuccm-Moddrlh t0 fresh winds, shifting to south liifl UPI. southwest; cloudy with show High tiric this iliivl tnmnrrnw morning at 12. . Sun_ svts this nflrrnoon st ll fl and nficrnocn st 124d risen inmqrmw morning It 6.11 i First quarter moon l5, 2.2!) p. m. Summcrsidc tide eighteen inter thsn Charlottetown. OAR PIBIY Monday, missfis . . {mgi-cjierlivn 046 A, M. (Ilrtihi . . .. 255 tics ‘ / 14...". ‘Iormeuline (Iistra) . P. M. daily esce t louse: 0st A-I-