01A MERE MAN _—¢_-_ s4 The highest arts, when perverted. have the greatest power to debase. Covers‘ Prince Edward- Island Like ,0 the Dew CHARLQTTETQWN. CANADA, MONDAY, APRIL a, 1939 dishi- Guardian, Guard Annual Subscription ' Dsilvorod ll-lli) B] lllll~lfi I. L “.00; Clnlll lld U. ll. I500 t» . rams - aa-aa. .. ._._..._. ..___....__.- ...... __.... .. .__.. ___ .. ZER SPEiEgH B OASTFUL 3' UT CUAIRDED BRIZZIYN PUSHES ‘nazwaibiwran ca" PRocRAMTaMellation 0f Naval Treaty Is no: n s 'hC' ‘IW ‘Inna rmnct IINPEF . . I "'°""‘"::u cilvlglizzylvkndgh aunnnnsr v rnniIlIsB Hmied I" Speed" Declares Gsmfiy Will Stand 1 if Gunman a Hundreds of u-sssssss is... AGAINST WAR mum SPEECH NM .0. ,,,.,,,,,, ,. N ___ ~ ' 1 a 1011 or Churches Celebrating Palm . , --_ . Sunday And End Of Conflict. P'§Zl.‘.°i1.ii€.'““f.f’ K52 °'L'i.‘i‘s'3°"“it‘ss§§p.§sii glfffiiiziznt “m” Spleen — 1 Q a p5 s... Associated as... "s... v... as... v... g1‘ 8,8 s Euloeizinz Support 0n Policy. . m” ‘Pugllm ,1‘; w h" m“ m“ u“ resident Lebrun. In (Jommons. (By Louis P. Lochner, Associated Press Foreign Staff) * WILHELMSHAVEN, Germany, April 2-Chancellor Christ the King. Long ve spam. “""— —-—-— ." BULLETIN . ‘fig nfgga) Wm mded w Hitler threw back the Anglo-French anti-aggression chal- ltlfiemggtiortrlsi oiihgarééalgristilijsig gig‘- LQNDO-N, Apr“ 3_(Mon_ lenge_ Saturday but avoided going beyond the intimation would be bacon to m with mm day)._(Ap)__pl-ime Minis, he might cancel Germany’s naval treaty with Great ter Chamberlain was said in Britgén- u t d informed quarters to have _ ermany wi s an neither for intimidation n r e - offered Rumania a pledge of clrclementv" l" declared- o n Japan And Russia Reach Agreement Over Fisheries (Dy The Associated Press) NIIW‘ YORK. April l-A Pfiflt - cddrom his Palm Bundsy do- otlons stepped bravely into atcar- - dillcd apartment today to per- e slnrandsr oi a gunman who seized a fElf-Bbfllikbh elderly is as hostages aitor his ascspc ... a street gun battle with pol- "llhe dramatic dsnoucmsnt, the ~ - hcrgugimwhlob was Rev. Fran- . . I. . ollmased the holdup an Eighth Avenue caie by a I .oi bandits who scattered in igiirtaslileyenizhsngod gunfire Bglyweekandthe endoi police. oi war. John Naumo, 3d. who was book- Tired soldiers laid aside their cruclilnes guns. clasped med the long processions oi worship- pcrstothoaltarsior-Palmsun- (B The Associated Press) M5BCOW. April Fr-Ja and Bovictegussia today | . I es agrccmsn to loll-lo a controv months had diatur‘ ""5 h?" "i0 threat oi graver trouble between Tokyo and Moloow over llshing ri his oil the cast coast o! Slbcr-‘ia. The agreement was said to be a flvc up ligament such Ia the apanese had been insisting on ior a number oi 70in in place oi the one year extensions which Soviet Bus- sia had granted since the old Soviet-Japanese fishing treaty nxplrpd in i988. Japan agreed accord, to a 10 PARIS, April Iy-Premler Dal- sdler assured Pianos tode that "i! we Frenchmen are uni d we shslvlv nozuhsvc war." “ c want Peace in liber- l-"d dilllitlfl" ho said. “Men abr know than; France is determined to cos cessa-ry to throw back all agitators by next Tuesday. A ilcotoi trucks last t brought 200,000 dozen eggs song with {A000 gallons of milk, considerably improving tho l" u" '1" nvlucs him not to m ouble-aocuttbe iact t at it was w m Sunday; about d heaven and hell. _ Naumo, the oirlcers said. . then id ihepriesl “I'll go 0.10M. Faith- . I‘ll surren.er." ‘Phs priest took Kim and Naumn was lsrl away thaWcet 90th street station. vesti rated hunting. 0i‘ alifax lien the announcement . t flu.» I w . ootimlsnt at ‘harm. u um. ,,theslivcrci' 9M‘ .s tyoiven’ _ I eta uplo oi you,” they said sumo s bombs were discharged I‘ ' the kitchen oi the apartment. ~ closed the door. 1:120 the iumcs isiled urren then said he would talk Father Quinn was the Church oi the An ls a iow blocks a- tho oiiicsrs to them. _ s: coma in with I quoted as , Ofliccrs, said ha 1s with. his ‘ every- might e further "his mother ‘W! "m. P1111106." laces a mur- . s- a. sills ‘it, t ord ton-r services. General Ikanco city's food situation. do! his family attended mass in a pri- vatc chapel in Burgos. The Nationalist lssder, recovered sitar an attack oi influence. which kept him aibcd for several days, signed the last war bulletin which proclaimed the end oi the civil conflict lad 0i Btrusgle Irsnco his wire. their dsllbtsr Carmsnoits, and the Generals brothar-in-law. Minister oi ior and ads Ramon Ber- ncd to the broad- pém. (0130 11m. ET) h h told Spain oflic- rmo Sunel‘. stteamezupfhsc wo do: "Ia Guerra Ha. ‘rerminado. Viva in quantity. silver, which the Nationalists dc- monetised, must tomorrow along with Newspapers were ordered -to re- irain from publishing an thing- even oflicial anrsouncome until oiilcial approval bad corne from Nationalist headquarters. Another order directed that all letters be posted unsealed, to per- rnlt quick ccnsorinii. or‘ better The money situation eased. and boarded silver began reappearing However. gold and still. to use postcards. be surrendered all foreign xchange, ‘rho Bart oi Bpsin announced the Peseta exchange rats would bo nine to 10 to the dollar and. 42 to sterling. United States 4e to the bound l In Iiaval Might IDNDON, April 2—Herc is the mitten Gov rnsncrlfs ofllclsl com- parison 0! .Bl'itlsh and German naval tmngth a Britain Germany Battleships and Battle Cruisers: Built — '— - - -- ‘l I n-n 4m I I I I s. II FEE 3a‘ BS 1s Named P ess Representative IDNDON. April 2-41.. K. Car- negie, parliamentary rI ton- - dent oi The Canadianmgesns at we, hos been nominated by the Canadian Govcrmnent representative on uéms. names with the Royal ty Emilio. it was an- at Buckingham Pal- 'n=' will bo - ° no’ United inseam" i . V’ 1.7‘! A uric , . NEW Rajcllo cello: Hitlerb speech, disclosed to- night that thousands lists ed hows ‘broadcast: by deilanoe oi high as dent i130,” oer-many {he ‘objective’ news foreign stations and the ncwrthroug-h ign casts as much as 20 hours beiore thsuoiiiciizl‘ that Germans gather in groups to iii?“ to in“ bllshed c de- iser arrives at. m” ° P“ °' m‘ Oil’ v ‘V and Qllscn “was gm? F“ ‘ “is. on‘ tbority °°v I ‘m m‘. c‘ a be h‘ letters a month 95S’ ‘Drivin ~ were ensued w . ' ' ‘ ‘General Electric Company short- g_ wave motion at (sfinectady. N. Y., as a routine prceilurc, rebroadcast N803 pickup bso Ilse Explanation 0f Broadcast . YORK,’ April 2 —(AP)— oiiiclals, pulblod by the cut-oii Yesterday on Chan- o! Germans to short wave in alties ranging as A national broadcasting com- ofikesman said there were radio receiving sets in , with at least ‘bali oi oi receiving short- “Durlng the ilrst. three months l9 we have received 1,848 short-wave the spokesman said. o!“ th lr ma? ti wot? o e apprecs on o sugpllsd by ssi they got broad- wavc broadcasts. oi 89 letters irom German listeners,” maj HA dodly lore German releases. the letters indicated roodcasts, in tbs mutual brood- d thcyslso re- appreciative from an icill OI s ab shutoff oi Hitler's e Minister Grarnber- biltcd by German ot- cisls to tcclmnical reasons. oii hassrdcd the ex- as German oiiiolale ’ hell WQXAD tho to Gennelw. . . DEB AT OXFORD ' [April 24hr):- ils i’ ms onw- yo! being in l "' -osc‘if»fsal»iibnns§'s§ii“:* oi disorder and crime." sateen at“ “m n» ow aident asst‘. Lebruraiumt ‘l’; received in political quart“; u 5n open decks-rotting“ oi um om rsslsc Wednesday at the national ‘s’? oombly in Versailles. Both Lebru nd Daladl at the dedlceftlgn oi a mam and at a. memorial banquet m honor oi the late Emile Loubet, lgggldeitirt tgi Prong: from 1899 to Monhlo ‘e sou am town ‘oi b13119 oeremoéries. the lest o! Le- n‘: rose . gum oglsissii. siis€°dilslfish to ti‘; a on. Intraln Ior Paris 111s b: id t . trained 1;: lsenris nfzissplilmifmfi. cast to enter the i I phgpo 0g m; Pmltisntlal election “Wm . a ior reelectio , l», . store already! slvsmmi zgzlzixlxigyeuwaoégigrz-ktwior anothher ternal political bsinfvert a“ ' Dclruliers praise oi the Pro. sldent was expected to glvg mm "-1" mo‘ Slliloort oi a majority oi members oi the Chamber or De- uties when tho two Houses oi M. Versalll Chateo. iormtlhwonelecetion. u Wednesday H. who only Wednesday mmberoigdast “to thibu world a war. minted a brighlter pléfi. w. day. "Ilflltlflocd ih daxkn the skies. * ogiyng sell the dcestti-ugf tlva ioroes unleashed in Europe b“ “m i“ tho 11°96 we have oi the dflltlfly oi our country, with- Wl which limos and the world would lose their reason ior exist. 91100. ho said. "I wish to 119g 111E conscience and empress my m thgilyhtsi’ w en. liming the he B’ President, " r o my us i n oi Rbllublioan who. in 1:111 Millie ctr.- cumstances oi his llie, has never o doncd the tight ior demo- craey. ."lwlshioassociateinmyioaat E11 and all those who outside our irontiers do not do- spelr oi’ France and turn toward our country because they know that, whatever may their iatherland or race, wants Dome. "xiws all wont pcaoc in liberty ty. "Men abroad know that hence is determined to show the cour- Bkc and ilrmness necessary to throw back all agitators of dia- order and crime. ' "We deserve peace. Ii we French- gr-egrusrc united we shall not have Apps‘ Nominated For. Federal. Seat a . PARJjI, Ont, A J-Bylvanus -0id mickey star 0i per cont in- crease invent ior fishing lots oii Siberia. = Trans-Canada liir Service Inaugurated MONTREAL. April C. D. Howe, Fwibh H011. Minister oi Tr on hand to give his oflicisl bless- , ing. the transcontinental service oi the ‘Irena-Carma Air Islnes was inaugurated Saturday night. Mir. Howe travelled on the nrst flight as far as Ottawa and with him went C1’. Edwards chlei i. oi with w. Chamberlain on . . , ~°$s§q~~arsegu4o rslrsafilislt kmtlll.'~liliworotliorrdirlofliil‘idfio'wllitie“ shortens oi snl- grcssor ins lane a n .1 ‘Biymingtltw “x” "o o . - - on. - l“ c. and wumo Gagnon. 0d’ air 80711908,- i! Q10 Si. Hubert Prominent businessmen and wo- men were bound ior Toronto s-nd at Toronto nines.‘ ' ‘Then the photographs stored away in their compart- ments. the plans s law! the cheers oi 1.000 spectators took oi! om its history making flight. At 6.46 Pacino time the outbound plane took oii irom Vancouver. Acknowledging the congratulat- ions oi Mr. Howe on the comple- tion oi the two years’ organization work. Philip G. Johnson. T.C.A.. esident. said “Our hope is vice-pr that the service will merit the pct- rcnaso c! the people oi Canada." E. Alta, April 2—A ‘trans-Canada Air Linc westbound plane on the flmt regular passen- ger run was grounded hare today because oi conditions csuslnil heavy icing. After arriving irom Regina this morning, the machine began the mountain hop but cs/me back when loo formed on the plane. It was not known when th\ flight to Vancouver would be made. Ottawa Renews Trawler Licences (BX The Canadian Press) 01"]? W , ion Government 11°" w trawlcrs should be l» ldmOllhOGd the slasrltime-Nationsl Fist: tho angers and pgilmalpeg , taken, the w reel nd th adio ' Mme“ mm m M“ mm" broadcast sgsiipiensed inc in: horns tsrted n8 down the strip at 9 o'clock and to April l-Thc Dinnin- wlll make a w permitted to continue operations urNova Bcotia water Flshoriea Minister Miohaud ‘ ’ y. Meanwhile, the Minister renewed three licen- protection and was likely to announce the offer in the House of Commons today if he receives Rumania’s reply in time. LONDON, April 2—-Grcat Britain pushed her "armed " - ntly unper- gram today appare turbcd by Reichsiuehrer Hitler's threats as other nations took stock oi how his Wilhclmshaven speech affected their security in troubled Europe. Poland and Francs reflected optimism despite Hitlers angry retort to Prime Minister Cham- berlain's‘ statement to the Home oi Commons Friday that Britain and France had pledged support ior Polish independence. Foreign Minister Colonel Joseph Beck, oi Poland, was on his way to London ior important discuss- nations in the path oi possible German expansion. widespread support in the House oi Commons when ho 50¢“! W‘ marrow in a ioreign aiialrs dc- bate. To Back Pledge Arthur Greenwood. deputy op- position leader in the lower house, was expected to back the govern- ment's pledge to Poland but to urge that. Soviet Russia and other states be brought into an antl- j-{itller line-up as quickly as pos- s e It was considered unlikely, how- ever, that any iwnbsr major de- parture ln British iorelgn policy [idh as s pledge oi support to Rumanle. similar to hhc British- French guarantee to Poland. ior Listance. would be announced by the Prime Minister. In Warsaw. Poles looked to their new solidarity with the western democracies as a possible avenue t: colonies and iinsrncisl hel . I . Premier Dala orde- clared that "ii we Frenchmen are united we shall not have war." Displays Skepticism Among other powers, however Soviet Russlaebowed skepticlxn oi the British-French plcdgetoPoland and reiraIns_1-l__i_r_om eogungnt____on (Continued on page ‘I, Col I) Two Stellarton Men Injured TRUE/O, N. 5.. April 2-—(CP)— Two Stellar-ton men, George Chaulk and Leonard Fltasimmons, were in- juror} Saturday night when their car c it highway. travelled 300 s. ploughed field and broke oii s tree. Both were brought to Col- chester County Hospital here. a Htzsirnmons was nscious ior three hours. He suiier d iaclal sb- rasions and shock. Dr. E. M. Curtis ha. ld ‘ x-ray C won examination tomorrow ior a stoa in- Illolish i060 8011355 so... .~....»~ assert: and’ three sides today carrying that. Poland's mam lwPQ _ new solidarity with Great Britain lavorablo or- mighi bri atlas‘: torn‘ the nation's colonial fit. “gain scale-mosh military aid plsdldd Polilr independ- l0! d ti ci- lss Fri lagiinseciamr intormgtion dgryi hel ‘iorbls country. Mr. Chamberlain was assured oi‘ the Hum-New Glasgow a) this year, the Von Tirpitz. "I once concluded a navni agreement with Britain. I was animated by the icrvent de- sire that we might never again have a war with England. “Ii, however, that wish does not exist on the other side, then the practical pro-condi- tions ior concludi such a treaty have vanish .” On the whole the Fuahren- con- tended hlmseli with bee. ing scorn upon Britain, oi which c said:— "m: 300 long years she has not. cd in s. vlrtusless manner but only now ire her old age she speaks oi virtue. I Poland and the Anglo-French oiiqr oi military assistance ii her ind ndence were threatened were men loned only indirectly in the phrase:- "He who ls willing to pull the chestnuts out oi the tire ior others must expect, to Bot bumed." Aimed At Roosevelt’! There also was an indirect refer- ence lnterpreted as aimed at either President zcoosevelt or the American Secretary oi State, Cordell Hull. when the Fuehrer, in describing Germany's eiiorts at. economic ex- on, asserted: “We won't take orders in this mam: from any European or ex- tra-Ehrropean statesman." The Wilh ven Romans irom bo- hlnd a bullet-prooi glass screen. Only those in the immediate au- dlenoe heared his address as 1t was delivered. A scheduled short. wavc broadcast abroad was broken Just. alter he started to talk. Later, however, a recording oi his voice was broadcast in Germany. Oiilcisls said the {allure oi the short wave tra slon was due to “technical reasons." Axis Unsbakeable Hitler proclaimed anew that the Rome-Berlin axis was unshakeabls ior all time and he called Italy “the state with which we shall march now and forever." "It any nation wants to measure its strength with ours (the Axis) in any other way than a peaoeiul one." he declared, "we are ready for that also." Reichsiuehrer Hitler's warning to Great Britain yesterday in the h at. Wllhelmshaven and to all ohers, especially Poland, who ally policy, was considered the open- 1 un. “Elfin existed the Fuehrer's reply Prime Minister Chamberlain's coloration to the House oi Com- mons Friday that Britain and mrsnco would help deiend Polish independence would intimidate Colonel Joseph Beck. Polish Pot- eifi‘ Minister. c effort, apparently was to Minister l0 London For Conference (Continued on page ‘l. Col Ii) Enroute negotiate on an equal basis with Germany regarding the Prec City oi Danzig and Pomorse (the Pol- ish Corridor) and would do noth- lnght: join an anti-German bloc. Nssis seek a motor highway across _ths corridor, which apar- ates Bast Prussia from the rest, oi Germany and which like Danzlg was rt oi Germany beicre the Grea War. It was said Col. Beck would tell the British that his nation wished in livs on irlend terms with Germsrtlfv but wou repulse by arms, necessary, any threat by fine to its territory or its vital in- ‘n; '. svwspaper Kurjer Poranny. which i‘: close‘ to the Foreign Oi- iioe. smpbssited Mr. Chamberlain's u" ‘declaration oi Anglo-French aid WM told to [ior Poland “took place at tho initiative or Britain." "more ls "no alliance and bloc," it‘ declared. \ l Chancellor spoke outside the of h themselves with the French-British ' lie spoke to_ 50,000 m_en and women of Wilhelmshaven and its vicinity m a 62 minute address after he had witnes- ed the launching of Germany’s second 35,000-ton battleship In his passage on the 1935 Anglo-German naval treaty, under which Germany agreed her tonnage would not ex‘ ceed 35 per cent of Br1ta1n’s, Hitler said:- London Press Comment Cautious >~ incl-Ya IDNDON. Agril B-(Mondayi-s (OP Havas)— ritiah newspaper: general) agreed today the compar- ative dneos oi Chanoelor Hit er’: Wilhelmshsven speech_ should be given cautious welcome. e the Daily Herald warned oi “obvious trap. Dally Telegraph (Conservative) =9 ' . rve .- “Hitler's speech merely repeated ior the 100th time the wearisoma story oi Germany's alleged wrongs ifrnduscrvgd up t fiiorc all the am a: argon nbou ' v space,’ ‘vital rights, ‘a place in a sun,’ ‘cnclrclement’ and the rest. "It made no reference to Poland. Possibly the explanation is that he was surprised (Prime statement to make But it would be a g-ross error to interpret his silence as in itself a savor-able sign. In fact it is part be silen (Labor) " the ob- The Dally Herald's editorial said: “The speech brought no new lac- tor into the international sltuailoni Hitler, for all his tern ramenta moods, is a. suifiolenty astute statesman to realize when a pledge is meant and when it is not. when a sslon is sale and when it w involve serious consequences.’ "The British peo le take char oi ioreign policy. ey have decl - ed that they will tolerate n9 new Nazi adventures in east Europe. desire to encircle y h military action against her But they have decided to a1 ow no more excursions. because they want no more alarms." - Home vs fin: PLAcr ‘m; QRUMBLE 4A2 most Ann Ana: ‘mat-wrap 4m! BEST /'/ /%s ‘IUROETO. April and maximum temperature‘? FORECAST v Maritime East: strong winik moderate sales: cloudy with snow or rain. , H! tide this momlng see-es and Ight at 10:20. Bun sets this evening at MN rad’ rises tomorrow morning at ‘min moon. s a. ma a. m. Bimuhsrsidoi ‘halal-men min- utes later than, C ot _ n: can may. ssnmos “i? 043??» '.".1'.! I 7' .- '