Gunrdlll. lauded Ill‘! ni our-I" I -' Two Dania endow: Guardian le’s Paper Covers Prince Edward Read by Everybody Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1936 TURKEY GXRRISONSA THE DAR SPUR, Former 0h’town Man Passes In Halifax Many in Charlottetown will re- gret to learn of the sudden death at Halifax, following a tonsil opera- lion, of Mr. Reginald f-f. Morris of the brokerage firm of Johnston do ward in that city. Mr. Morris whose home was in Toronto came to Charlottetown as accountant with the Canadian Bank of Coin- maroe. subsequently he went to Messrs. Johnston do word and was successively manager of their of- lives at Sydney, N. S. and London. Out. For several years past he has been with the!-laiifax office and had a very wide circle of friends and business associates throughout Nova scotla and Prince Edward island. Mr. Morris married while living in Charlottetown, Miss Ruth Watson. daughter of Mrs. L. D. Watson of this city. She with her trree young children. Bobbie, Jack RV,'i‘i Sheila wil‘ have the sincere silrlpathy of a host of friends here ro well as in the other centres in which he was located being generally popular and very highly esteemed. The remains will arrive in Char- lc"“i""'1 this evrririzr end will rest at St. l'-‘Flora Cathedral until the funeral service tomorrow, Sunday aft:-rnom at three o'clock. llitallty or llilllll Surprises Doctors I’. By Guardian's SIICVEBE wlrel ., JOHN'S, Ni'ld., April 17.-St. JLl3l'S “babe in the woods," nine- ylar old Lucy Harris wllo spent 12 days without food or shelter when she was lost in New Melbourne for- est, was ano‘..her step on the road to recovery today. Doctors were con- fident amputation of her hands and feet. frozen during her exposure. would be unnecessary. The vitality of the child has astounded physicians summoned when 200 searchers, led by her uncle. Chesley Harris, found her. too weak from exhaustion to take another step. Her only sustenance during the 12 days had been snow. At night she laid on snow-covered ground to sleep. Proposes To llefund Bonded Debt ((7. P. By Guardian’: Special Wire) VANCOUVER, April i'f.-A pro- posal to refund Vancouver‘: 872.000.- loo bonded debt at lower interest rates and defer payment of prin- cipal ‘or 25 years was submitted to Elli’ Cour-ll in a. resolution by Mayor G. G. McGeer today. The proposal provides for a meet- lny of bondholders in Vancouver as soon as it can be an-unged to con- sider the plan or any other develop- ed in the meantime. COM|NG f‘/{Nil = "Potai/oes wanted. Buylns W9"? day at our store warehouse. Clark Bl-ca. Montague. L-8757-4-is-it "Pantry Sale in aid of Basclllcll Altar society at B. A. MacDonald's Saturda fternoon. , y ‘ L-aces-4-in-1'!-la. "Oaks sue by Fourth Char- lottetown Girl Guides, (Ii. Dunb- tan's Bisilica) Saturday, April 25th at Holmlifl. L-3Il0-4-ll-Ii. "Cavendish cemetery Meellnt. mmm United Churcl:;:m«;P1’“ . 0.00 P. M. Important MI- L-3885-4-10-ll. "P11! entitled ‘The Old may " be presented in Emerald 1-nu, April 1). Dance ai- ;l.|:'Ilerr7f:l'and ' l;£;: en. I:i.l. . L-3830 "Iuy t if ll Kensins on. all day1tu:urId:V.A%laI. Nichol- ‘"»- Bree. buying. Hunter River. is date. l: I. Mmwen and i ‘l’ i,'’‘ ntpbell. Ia-3M0 nivcgtufi Mu-Ietlng Board -llil hogs during week of Apr“ ll as foliwe: Tuesday afternoon Manny River and Millvlew, Wed- "fldlv forenoon Bedford and flun- le_r River. afternoon twelve to three ,°,°l°cl. T?-oi-den line at Albany. ‘site hit with local Beoretar1y.'“7 LEAGUE PEACE NE[lllT|AT|0llS 80 l l A P S E Critical Session Of the Council Called For Monday. (A. I‘. By Guardian’: special Wire) GENEVA, April 17. — League of Nations negotiations for peace be- tweeu Italy and Ethiopia collapsed today. A special session of the Council was called for Monday to deal with the critical situation. Italy, confident her troops would be in Addis Ababa by next week. re- jected an earnest French appeal for an armistice to permit peace nego. tiaiions and ease the international tellsion. The Ethiopian delegation firmly reiused to accept a peace program advanced by Italy and the commit. tee of 13, which is the council with- out itnly. then admitted its 46 days of efforts for peace had failed. Italy is prepared to participate in Monday's session to state her case Harlin. An Italian srflkesman said iv lvns 000 early to say whether troops could take Addis Ababa by then. but “L000 molar lorries al- ready are rolling in that direction from Dessye." Fmflcer trying to keep both Italy and Great Britnlngas her allies in the Rhinelnnd crisis, sought 3 way out‘by' annealing to Italy to halt hos.illties. even for a short period. A resolution concerning the wu- probably wiil'be adopted by the Council Monday for submission to‘ aBll members of the League. Great ritein was said to hope the League resolution would show that the in. tematicnal orga“'zaticn is "stand. ing firm" behind Ethiopia and will Proceed in an effort to secure peace, Fascists Slain In General .... ike MMADRID, April l7—Spa.nish authorities. seeking to halt polit- ical disturbances which have claimed five lives in the last two days, began a wholesale roundup of members of the illicit Fascist party tonight. several hundred followers of the militant sector of Jose Antonio Primo De Rivera's Fascist party were arrested. The government struck out in a stern attempt to prevent further disorders as two new fatalities to- day were added to three deaths in rioting yesterday. A general strike arising from clashes oi Communist and Fascists yesterday paralyzed business in EFFORTS TO REA CH ; Fears Held For MaroonedFamllies In Flood Area (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) WINNIPEO. April l’l—Fiood wlters of the Assiniboine River backed up from lee barriers at Portage La. Prairie tonight to in- undate additional acres of low- lying farm lands 50 miles west of here. Fears were felt for two fam- ilies marooned in the path of the wide overflow. Less apprehension was felt at Brandon and siiton where high water levels that threatened dam- age of serious proportions yester- day were subeiding. Peak of the surplus run-oil from mountain creeks also was reported passed at Edmonton but north oi the Al- berta capital culverts and railway right—of-way were washed out. Burns and outbuildings were washed away two miles east oi Portage La Prairie when ice piled against bridges near I-ligh Bluff. Telegraph and telephone lines were carried away as surface water leddtiied over a huge expanse of low an . iiiliiiiT;liPs Allll|S_ABABA Italian Battle Planes Carry Out Raid. ADDIS ABABA, Apr. i'i.——swoop- ing low in a lightning raid, two Italian battle planes fired machine gun bullets on Emperor Hallo Selas- sie’: palace late today in what some observers said was an attempt to kill or injure members of the Eth- iopian Royal Family. I The shots wounded 12. number of persons and threw the city into panic, but failed to hit any mem- bers of the reigning house. Many residents of the city have taken to the hills. The big craft circled over the city at a. high altitude and then droned into the distance as rapidly as they had come. Many of the bullets were found imbedded in the earth and walls of the houses for some distance beyond the ghebi (palace). The terror which gripped the Capital earlier in the day when two bombers suddenly appeared an-' showered the city with green, whit’ and red flreworks—the tricolor col- ors—had become acute tonight and a state of alarm was ordered. clllld Burned In Quebec Fire QUEBEC. April 17-A seven-ir'68I‘~ old daughter of Adelard Pequot was burned to death and others of the family had a narrow escape the capital, and a number of per- sons were iniured in scattered clashes. when fire destroyed Paqur.-t's home at Dundee. N. B,. according to men- gre details reaching here tonight. Cites Savings By Ab olition OfCommi‘ssi0n Premier Campb-BT17-Tables Answer To Query Of “Critic” In Friday’§__§_uardiav‘. hi the Legislature yesterday in Premier Campbell tabled the fa owing answer to a fillfimofl which had” appeared in ll'ridI7‘l no go, he said, “in view of the fact that then is no omcial opposition in the iaginlature and illIt.:“l&lt'l1;1‘ enema“ was » epeteon signing - sell ‘Drills’ in the morning paper. threw doubt on my auertion the other-n btthattbenbadbean a saving of approximately 08,000 hi’ the abolition of the Prohibition Commission. I deem it pertinent at this time to table an answer to that lalan of leorst: /ofCom- miuion . Balaigy of Yurchoalng M- 001 800.00 8.400.130 Lean additional amount paid Attorney Con 31 \ . 500.00 . 2,900.00 Reduction of volatile of .eniplo!eIe to basis of other Oover: neat de- partments 1.90000 Reduction rent and lieatinc of Charlottetown whole- can and\ Retail vendor fimm vinu by mm as oom- binlng enforcement with Attorney General’: De- partment 2.40030 Total lhtimstedsavings aooooo TIIANI A. CAMPBELL, quntlon." ' The answer as tibied reads as follows: Answer to question re savings af- fwted In abolition of Prohibition Commission: Salary of cluirrnul 01.‘-‘00-00 Q-llary of Commissioner loom salary of commissioner 400.0% Attorney General. 3 ii. SIXMAGDALEN FISHERMEN IJRUWNEIJ Prince Edward Island- er Named Ding'well' Believed A in o n g Victims. (0 P- By Guardian’: Special Wire) GRINDSTONE, Magdalen Islandb, April i7—Hurled into a raging see that capsized their motorboat, six Magdalen Island fishermen were drowned today near the mouth of Grand Entry Harbor. Only one man. Henry Clarke. lived to tell the story of a terrifying eight-mile trip from Old I-ferry Head. Threatened with disaster a dozen times on the rock—bound coast, they were just within sight of a haven of safety when a giant camber turned the little craft over nnd spilled the helpless fishermen into the water. only meagre reports of the tra- gedy were reported here as boat- ment from Grand Entry began a search for the bodies. Clark escaped with his life by clinging to the ov- erturned craft until help arrived. Three of the men who perished in the worst tragedy the Magdalen has known in years were members of one family—Ray Dunn and his two some The others ‘drowned were Foster Clark, Baxter Turnbuil and a Prince Edward Islander named Dingwell. Exhausted after holding on to the derelict in icy water for hours. Clarke was almost unconscious when fishermen from Grand Entry reached the scene. A few minutes more and he would have gone. He collapsed when the rescuers hauled him into their boat but was recovering at Grand Entry tonight and belief was expressed that he would live. Meanwhile the search for bodies went on while grief-stricken fisher- folk waited along the shore. All the drowned men except Or- rin Dingwell were Magdalen Is- landers. Dingwell had arrived is week ago from Fortune Bay. P. E. 1., to spend the summer fishing on this coast. He was 22 years old and single. Foster Clark. 28. is survived bv a wife and three children. aged three and five. Tlirnbull was unmarried. Disorder Marks School Strike (5. 1-. by Guardian's Special wire) HAZLETFON, Pa., April 17——-Up- roarious pupils of I-Iazle township carried their strike to two more schools today, throwing classes into confusion and precipitating the first disorder of the four-dily- old protest against dismissal of 12 teachers. Massed pickets shunted aside pupils who tried to break through their ranks, invaded class rooms and ralsed such an uproar the! classes were impossible. Parellts quickly protested the pickets, charging many of them were adults who had no part in the controversy. condemned Pair Denied Clemency (C. I‘. By Guardian's special wire) TRAPPED MEN llccord llumber 0f Contestants For French Election (0. P. by Guardian’: Special wire) PAR-I5. April i'l—All records for French general election nomin- ations ‘Vere broken today with 4,- (ill aspirant; already in the run- ning for the April 26 ballotting and a total of 5.000 expected be- fore the lists close tomorrow The highest number of candi- dates previouay recorded was in 1928. when about 3,800 fought for parllamentary seats. In View of the great number of candidacles few candidates are ex- pected to get an absolute majority. Second ballots will therefore have to be held 3. week later in most cases. The formalities for becoming a. candid are simple. Any male French 'itizen over 25 years of age may go to the prefecture of his district. announce his candidacy, and have his name inscribed. No deposits are required. KING CABINET MEElS_l_(lllAY Announcement of Em- ployment Commis- sion Expected. (C.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA April 1'1 . {it cabinet oounoil ». led morning. the .irst meeting of the government in more than a week. itappeared likely tonight that little more than a quorum of ministers would be present. It was considered possible that Prime Minister Mac- kenzie King would be in a position after tomorrow's meeting to an- nounce the personnel of the Na.- tional Employment Commission. Extra efforts were made before the Easter adioumment to obtain royal assent to the bill authorizing the commission and it was passed af- ter some demur in the senate on the neceuity of hasty action there. It was believed the government wished the authority so that the commission could be set up during the recess, but there has been no announcement. » only a few ministers were in Ot- tawa today. Finance Minister Dun- ning was one of those to return from a week's rest and others are expected to arrive tomorrow. Mi’. Mackenzie King remained quietly at home throughou the holiday season. . San Francisco Port Shut Down Seen (A. P. by Guardian’: Bpclnl Wine SAN FRANCISCO. April 17-- Fear of a general port shutdown grow along the troubled waterfront tonight as jobless longshoremen patrolled the area, appfilrerllll’ watching for any move to put stevedores to work under provis- ions contrary to their terins. E. P. Marsh, federal mediator. telegraphed Labor Secretary Der- kins that the situation looked ‘'bad‘‘. 0. Lyn Fox, spokesman for the employers, said no men were ap- plying for jobs. only seven ships were being worked by union long- SAN FRANCISCO. April 17. - Virtually the last avenues of escape having failed Alexander Mackay, n . native of Scotland. Lnd Joseph Kristy tod on the so old April 21. Yesterday the State Supreme Court denied clemency to the two men who participated in the Ban Quentin prison break last year dur- ing which four prison board officials were abducted and a prison warden was severely beaten. P|l0RllllAT|llN THIS inlillilc, The Provincial Legislature will be prorogued by His Honour Lieutenant Governor Deflloie at 11 o’cloek this morning. There will he the customary ceremonial and military display. were resigned to death i shoremen. More ships steered away from the port. Usually between as and 40 vessels moved through the port. fl'0|l\ Train In Broad Daylight (A. P. by Guardian’: special Wire) NUTLIY. N. J.. April I'I—'rrain robbers luooaaefully carried out n daylight Job on the Newark-Pat- arson branch of the Erie railroad today. seven of them oowed the crew of the Wsldwiok-Jersey Oitv train. frightened I station master and two clerks into silence, kept pass- engers. chiefly women. in ignor- ance of their optatims while they took 80303! and I50 worth of x- BNTTRIB MINERS [END AID Drill Down 60 Feet With 30 Feet To Go Before Contact Call Be Made. (By Ralph S. Morton Canadian . Press Staff Writer) MOOSE RIVER, N. 8., April 17 —Four experienced Ontario min- ers, rushed to Moose River to as- slsl in releasing three Toronto men cnlombed in a. gold mine. shook their heads in disappoint- ment tonight when they saw the task before them. They were trained specifically for rescue work and could do nothing to help open I shaft to the 141—foot level where Dr. D. E. Robertson. Herman R. Mngill and Alfred Sr-adding had been trapped by a cave-in ‘Sunday. Hold Conference After a conference with the bosse; on the job, W. H. I-fennigan. leader of the newcomers, handed out the following statement: “The Ontario miners arrived this afternoon and made an im- mediate survey of the mine prop- erty. followed by a conference with officials of the mines department and the compan and other per- sons familiar wi the situation as it has developed since the accl- dent. “'I‘his crew of four, trained spec- lflcallv for rescue work, had ex- pected the shaft to be open on their arrival. As soon as the way 16 PAGES 770 pliinent, To be MAXIMS OIL MEREMAN ' ' trusted is I. [filler com- thuntobelovod. v-101 Germany and Austria, and column. In Geneva, London and 1’ was regarded an unfortunate, key was being praised for iii INSTANBUL, Turkey, April 17.- Turkey arided her name today to the list oi‘ nations violating post- war treaties. sending troops to strategic positions in the demiiitar- ized zone around the Dardanelles Strait. (A Reuters News Agency dispatch from Ankara. Capital of Turkey, stated a semi-official news agency had denied that Turkish troops had occupied the zone. Turkey recant- ly had sent notes to the European powers, asking permission to fortify the area, forbidden by the Lausanne Treaty. Troops moved into the de- militarized area following 3. decis- into the workings is clear they will proceed to their task. “Plans have been developed for the pressing forward of the work. In the mearltme the Ontario crew is standing by." Additional Equipment Carrying 300 pounds of emer- gency equipment, I-Iennigan and his companions, Sinclair MncMil.- an, George Mitchell and Elmer Moran. came to Moose River by car today after rl train journey from Northern Ontario to Morro- ton and an airplane dr.-sh to Hall- fax. Their arrival cheered Mrs. Rob- ertson and Mrs. Magili, who had been on the ground for three rinys watching blasting and drilling op- erations toward their husbands in the mysterious mine. J. P. Messervy, Nova scotia's chief inspector of mines, was handicapped in directing the res- cue work by the lack of a map of the workings, and even miners who had taken gold out 30 years before did not know all the honey- combed passages below. A diamond drill with which the engineers hoped to open a narrow tunnel of communication wasdown 60 feet shortly ‘before midnight but it had about 30 feet to go and there was no chance of dropping food. water and messages to the trapped men before late tomorrow. A 30—ton grab crane was clear- ing away the debris of dynamite blasts in attempts to break through from the surface to the old Meagher shaft that might lead to the lei-foot level but there was no assurance that it would be suc- oessful. Meanwhile work was continued ion reached last night at a meeting of the Turkish Cabinet, at which President Komal Ataturk presided. Marshal Fcvzi Pasha, chief of the army general staff, also attendecf the Cabinet session. Under the Lausailne Treaty relat- ing to the Dardaneiles, signed July 24. 1934. a zone on both sides of the straits was closed to Turkish milit- ary forces, Great Britain, France. Italy and Japan guaranteed security of the area and freedom of navigation through the straits. Turkey gran- ted them a. restricted right of pas- sage for their war vessels. SOIFIA, Bulgaria, April 17.—’I‘llc government announced tonight the mobilization of 20.000 youths for. Wmpulsory labor service llegiiming. May I. Officials said the move was in ac- cordance with an old law and that the government did not contemplate military service for the youtlls. The order was i.\s‘ll£‘(.l before Ll'lL' Turkish occupation of the dcmil— ‘» itarized zone around the Dardrmel- ‘ les was disclosed,-The Tuitkisll move created excitement here, especially “"08 Bulgaria borders European Tlllkel’. There were some unofficial EXDT9SSiOYls of concern for the sc- cclulllv of Bulgaria's southern fron- er. Says Empire Facts Must Be Altered QUEBEC, April l'l.——-lizmpire trade treaties between Canada and Great Britain would have to be altered so Canada might gram, more coil- with a "death shaft" direct to the spot where the men were believed to have been trapped. That shaft would not be completed for a week at least and it was being opened to recover the bodies if other at- tempts failed. caseions before this country felt the full benefit of the treaties, V. G. Bartram. Montreal, vice-president of Shawinigan Chemical Company. said today on arrival here froln Europe aboard the liner Duchess of Bedford. Re Peace (A. P. By Guardian's special Wire) ROME. April l'l—F‘allun& of the League of Nations peace commitn tee of 13 and the convocation of I special session of the League Coun- oil to consider the ftalo-Ethiopian war was regarded by well-informed sources in Rome tonight as having produced one of the most delicat- eituatlons since the war began. In some quarters the c- rnoning of the Council was viewed as a step toward additional sanctions. Premier Mussolini saw count Charles de Chambrun. the French nmbaasador, but no information was forthcoming on the subject of their rwnversation. ray machinery equipment from the baggage our strong box. and made 1 off in a. stolen automobile without llirlngaunot. ~ \ Usually well-informed circles said ii'\ly's viewpoint would continue to be that negotiations for peace must- be carried on directly between Italy Italy Adamant On Stand Negotiations and the "remnant of the Ethiopia govemment." with the League not participating in the talks but being kept informed. A high source asserted Ii Duce plans to crush the Ethiopian gov- ernment and is prepared to lice any international actions which may result. Italians asserted that "the forth- eoming occupation of Addis Ababn would be Ital!"-I next WSW" ‘° "‘° League. These sources said the Italian met ma air force are at the peak; of efficiency and are ready for any ‘ trouble in the Mediterranean. Leaves of absence are restricted in ‘ a maximum of 24 hours. Great‘ Britain‘: political nnd naval l'll0V(‘.‘ cst attention are being wnlCi‘l€d with the gl'cal- K Annual Subscription Dellvu-ed 34.00 By Mail Clllldl Ild U. S. A. 54-50 ELLES ate:Treaty Of Lausanne By Entering Zone Troops Occupy Strategic Posit- ions Along Straits — Action Creates Excitement In Bulgaria. (C. 1’. By Gullrdilln's Special Wire) Turkey gilrrisoned the Dardzln:-lies yesterday in viola» V tlon of the Treaty of Lausllnne. Marching troops to strategic straits, diciaiol'-ruled Turkey joined her former allies, positions along the fully in the il'eai_v-brerlklng zlris, Kemal Atatui‘k’s action, coming at a time when Tin‘- 'st asking for revislon of the Lausanne treaty. But yesterday the government decided to act before replies to the Turkish note were received. CREATES EXCITEMENT The move created excitement in Bulgaria. now the only membeu of the former central powers that has not violated the post-war treaties. Concern for the security of Bulgaria's southzril frontier was expressed. Russia regarded the rcmiliiurizaiion of the straits with equanlrnlty. Reports from Athens said Greece feared Bulgaria would new demand the return of salonika. ceded to Greece by the Treaty of Neullly. Italy, lrnddtlonnl enemy of the Turks, regarded the reoccupntlon seriously. New Lecturer For Mt. Allison SACKVILLE, N. 13., April i7.——.Dr. George F. 0. Stanley, of Calgary, Alberta, has been appointed Lec- turer in History at Mount Allison University. Mr. Stanley graduated at the University of Alberta in 1929, with First Class Honours in History. He was fortunate enough to win the Rhodes Scholarship, and ill the fol- lowing autumn entered Keble Col- lege, Oxford University. He receiv- ed his B. A. in the School of Modern I-lkstory in 1931 and his B. Litt. in 1932. That same year he was award- ed the Belt Senior scholarship in. Colonial History at Oxford. and in 1933 a Fellowship by the Royal Society of Canada. In 1935 he re- ccived both his M. A. degree and his PhD. from the University of Ox- ford. Dr. Sianlcy has not confined him- self so‘ely to History but has given ll good deal of attention to Econo- mics and Philosophy and is profici- ent in both French and German. Dr. Stanley is contiilliilig his studies at Oxford during the prcsoilt acad- emic year. and will begin his work at Moiilli. Allison in S(‘l)i(‘m“(‘l' next. ’fllE ONLY faouatas Peovte \NAnT to HEAR Aaoxrr one file ones You pom’ WANT <0 cm! (Carmdlnn Press) TORONTO, April 17--Minimum and maximum tempci'iliure;:_ Dawson 14 32 Akiavik 613 44 Edmonton 36 76 Regina. 30 63 Winnipeg 25 so Toronto 34 42 Ottawa 32 14 Montreal Quebec Saint John 34 ‘a Halifax 39 4‘ Charlottetown 34 44 FORECAST Maritime Provinces: Fresh southwest to west winds: partly cloudy with much the same tem- perature; probably a. few light scattered showers or snowflurries. High tide this morning at 7.50 and tonight at 8.02. sun sets this evcnlnu at 6.48 and rise: tomorrow monlillg at 5.10 New moon Tuesday. April Ii, 6.32 R. m. Slunmerslde tide eighteen‘ min- uics later than Charlottetown. I'll! CAI IIIIY IA-nvr Iler-den 0.4a bl. (Inn) 2“ I‘. M. Dally one-pt luau. .1. Laura Tormenilno (Inn) I1 5- “- I I‘. M. r ‘.. l l -v . *--‘