or A MERE MAN cm: mien urinals! Ive llletsi Mel-ale; Guardian, lulled Illi- = . x lllANBE wml iilET RUSSIA ritain To Ha e Arm- ed Force O Million Men By End Cf Year. By J. i". SANDIRSON Canadian Press Staff Wri LONDON, April 30~—(CP Cable) Pariiiillidlelittlflll erect tomorrow cons er e la est proposals Zfi soviet Brush in regard to s wii-lrrressloc front, to t e finishing touches on the - _ Service Bill and to plan the lining up of a land force of 1.000,. | men this year. Ambassador Maieky is reported have laid before the Foreign rotary Viscount Halifax the iiowmg proposals on behalf of e soviet Government:- l. Russia to Join the Anglo- ench guarantee of the independ- ce of Poland and Bumania, and pledge assistance to Greet Bri- n and France in the event they their neighbor states-The Ne- erlands. Belgium and Switzer- d-are attacked. » 2. Britain and France to extend eli- military guararhteee to cover ssia's Baltic nelv bore-Latvia. illuanla and Estonia. 3. These reciprocal’ pied ea to he bodied in s military e e - ccn Britain, mace and lasts. one oi the immediate effects of encellor Hitler's iteiohetag speech t Friday has been‘ ‘a ‘lessening Polendés ioppoisitiorart? Russign dips en er ng er ev n lwartime»allhqsdo~vsvgrltarfled' re. ' " » ' l ‘ v when the ‘iteichefuehrer repudi- ed Germany's Nerf-Aggression ct with Poland, he threw Poland ectlv into the Russian sphere of liience, and definitely ended its clitlrmal policy of neutzriity as tivcen Germany‘ end Russia. Willi this change in Poland's rsign policy, Britain and France c: d to have considerably less iflCilllV persuading the Poles and umanlans they should accept sslans as allies against any rman aggression. Whether the British and French vernmenis will accept the re- rieci Russian proposal remains to $6711, but every factor points to eli- acceptance at‘ least, in priri- [l5 a basis of negotiation ever tails. One difficulty was removed on Russia. was understord to vs inreed to consider the Enro- sn siwatlon 6S distinct from that the Far East where she has to irh Japan. Conscription Bill The most important subject to me before Parliament-this week toe Gcvernmrniis Conscription ll. cniiinZ to the colors all 20- lir-oki men for six months‘ in- v tralnfng. D re the serious break with rm s 10ml tradition of r crvlce. and. the fir. violent opposition to con- rlntion, it is becoming clear the WW as a whole ‘hdorses the i1 Hitler's repudiation of two more eallss-Gemian-Rdlsh and Ithe 2i an Navel :e y- .. . ldlfy British opinion that ,m\1-=‘» be demonstrated to him ilsariwhil-B. military experts - "WW Brttrln will have a train- ‘ M14 cquinped land force of 0000M hv the‘ year end. Added ' Britain's paramount nav" end gi-fimending air force. this will ace the country in a stats of pre- redness never enjoyed‘ s'nee the tvs oi Napoleon. and their only a Comparable‘ géig. (Continued on u" 'y_ m1 3) EEKS Til SEAl fi-I RQAIN Pusulzs .4 LI-J‘ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, MAY 1. 192.9 Covers Prince Edward Island Like the/Dew iii Route Followed By Fliers l 000 mile' route New York City. Chaleur Bay in New Brunswick. hoped to arrive in for the r‘- The above map shows the 4,- over which Vladimir Kokkinaki, famous Soviet aviator, and his companion Mikhail Gor- dlenko attempted a. non- stop-fllght from Moscow to cracked-up at Miscou Is- land, near the entrance to opening of World's Fair yestreday. left, The two N orthern They had New York the f 8X08 ed wh in ones deep. twp inches were iotte hovered "W" iiipit.‘ and town. where aimmd sa olnts in the o... \ Earth-east cos-st weather vies aim- - sleet antes sec wires it Prince Edward Island lobster fishermen, on the eve oi‘ the open. lng of the "lobster season" iously scanned the skies for slsus. oficiearing wee/timer last nishl- Al» most fishing centres the outlook was blue for “running the shes." term used to describe the process of piecing the hundreds of n of r0139. to which lwt-sr the "traps ttached the W8. On l0lh5_8h°l15 drift ice was still in siBht and in places piled against the shore. Along the north snore of the Province ice and high seas combined to make it unlike- ly small motor boats would ne able to set out for the fishing grounds when the "zero hour". set by D0- minlon Government regulations at 6 o'clock this morning. arri ed Lest year gross value of the land landed catch of lobsters the Province totalled $459,525. we: by for ‘the harvest the island fishermen r689‘ from the sea iii the year. rem. is ounnnsr. HALIFAX, April StF-Winter re- turned belatedly to Nova during the week-end and coated the eastern halt of the province with heavy. wet snow borne on s HO-milc-an-hcur bl-eere. The storm also struck Prince and New Brtuwwio . At Halifax the fem aiiglhtly below fneez le the snowfall. already three K103i. continued. More than i-tozl in Cher- p temperature i‘ d!‘ Edward island k I905. PIWVIHOO IEzJ Snowfall More. 0...... “Blue” For Fishermen Opening Lobster Season eastern tip. willie at anx- the eastern edge oi province, reported no Dr tor. Waterford were schedule. pressed fear the storm v still snowing heavily» was one of the I5 _ in Lt profitable Earth Shocks Scottie. iversity here reported ism quake at an lmdlisfm late yesterday. The were recorded nture was ' " .. 8 toms“. Sporadic shocks Man Drowned AX ° giiiioréae ure. 1e mil when s dory eepsuied W‘ o. snowstorm. Ollfh sllili. reached canso. on Nova Bcotiirs south- Islaud, wet snow fell. The tempt?!" ature there was 38 dflilféefi- Yu- niouth. on the opposite end oi the lvlng. conditions were dancer- ous on Cape Breton Island, with hiuhways covered with treacherous melting snow. Meteorologist and Richards at Bydney said there was little prospect oi an linmeil. lute let-up in the storm. Buses be- tween Sydney, Glace Bay and New running behind In Pictou, lobster fishermen ex- the fishery. The season opens at dawn tomorrow, but tonight it was year's this dlstric. with heavily-drifting snow tying up traffic Are Recorded KALIFAX, April 80—-(CP)—Proi. J. H. L. Johnstone of Dalihousie U rded ohmic l.l;17 P- M. A. were rccordcd for three hours, Dr. Jchruone re-, Dflrted Young Halifax r11 30—(CP)-Har- drowned iwo companions Xverewgigai; otlnerirwo lwre e . m not been recovered comm» Sydney. on Cape Breton dllOW Rol- would effect ,__ The blizzard worst in n- tonight his Halifax o: from here , while lac and. 11g lng The ihg Wqrldis r lzooseveii - Stresses Peace ilfdlfllfl"llllyilille ‘reylvilllli of. Fair in the out- were the mother and i . Rn- "gin ‘hie 00 a Pair were lBERlIN SEES BERLIN, ii ail-Neale took ' the view taught that Chancellor Hitler had it up ~.r snownuwu on ullzlglssul “Peace Or War” Rests With Opponents Is Nazi View. put to his o n- ente to decide whwher theywaut war or peace. " quarters emphasized this as Ger-nanny tor Mo. Day fistivitles rrow w- give p t/wo more opportunities to speak. will ilddIB$ ‘s tier noon ('1 a_ m. ADI‘) will speak to laborers, dressed in Labor Front. HHUOMI and gathered around a May pole in the Lus . Three was no indication what Hitler may say. On the Baltic Sea, the Free oi Danzig also was prepared to celebrate May Day with fire- works and oratory in Nazi fash- If “Junior” Jones Prominent In R e s c a e Work MONCTON n. a. ’ ril —(0P)-Pllot: n. s.’ 9 unto?’ Jones, Superintendent of the Moncton Division of Canadian lrl. looked tired tonight. He had been up in the air much of the time since the Moscow-New York airmen landed on Miscou island. Yesterday Jones mode two will to u and one to Blhlor. Me. Today he made two more trips to Miscou. He used an old. two-seat open- cockplt plane which, like the one flown to the island by Joe Anderson also of Canadian Airways. Was the on type "bible of landing saeiy on on. When a field situated a mile from the wrecked Rus- llsn plane became too soft for landings the rescue airmen used a field farther away, be- side Miscou lighthouse. "Iakeoffs from the field, which was soft, rough and 5N8". were rather like an autu- firo type oi takeoff." com- mented Jones "We just got of! with no room to spare. I would ion with increased hopes that be- fore another year passes it again be part oi’ Gemlanv. Disputed Claim The press in war-lost Danzdg disputed Poland's claim to the city and denounced those who iu-ged Poland to take it u a pro- Doctorate. Danzlgers, conscious their city suddenly had taken a leading role in European affairs. placed their confidence in Hitler's assertion bo- fore the seaboard-masses, "antic is German and wants to return to Gel-runny." They regard. ed it 8s meaning the Puehrer in- tended to see that the city's wishes ere fulfilled. The City is predominantly German. - Rudolf Kirchor, edits of the Frankfurter Zelt , expressed in print w-hat inf quarters gen- erally believed to be the situation. He wrote:—- "A clear sltutaion must at last be creamed. A clear situation to- day means. in the first place:- “The weatcm powers must de- cide what they really want: War or peace. "They are standing at a half- way point. 0n the value of our e- weapons and of our fortificavio , they must be well informed-but is it not possible to try boycotting and ‘starvation’? “The Fuel-nor gave an answer to this: In such a case the nation would rather fight. . . It is now a matter for the English and Poles to investigate whether the ‘new pollcy‘~ahove all the formal interference of the ltlsh Gov- ernment in German-Polish affairs and the new ties between Poland and England-is valuable enough tc the Governments and peoples oi these two countries to com- pensate for the loss of the two treaties. “For the English the question arises whether. since denunciation of the German-Polish treaty, their guarantee to Poland has not be- iy was and more risky than Lon- eeecn." don had for It seemed arent an effort was being m e in Germany to show Britain she erred. by her guarantee to Poland. . Iiitier- today - Received. .. ..direcmrs of factories which have contribut- ed most to the workers’ well-being during the past year as his first act in. the May Day. celebration. . 13gb director received a decor- e n B. Besides his speeches tomorrow he will attend a meeting at 10 a m. in the German a House where Propapande for Goeb- bels will announce movie and lit- erature prizes for i030. Iliieid Mardui Gearing, Hitler's chief side. gave a luncheon today r Court will- ... .BY~fi .ii|l|l§ .. .BARE come more risky than it prevlous- . sieky and the Hunter-inn m- By Her 0WD CPCW 33% W 90m thNG 5:; ll 30—(@ He. l lute "irfdt w Berlin, __w“§f,'m;llé,nmwi,agr sing. """""""’"",""" leaves En l new ur y - i a Oma- migioo 4,001?“ c t i"*‘iil.ziil"it.'iiniiiitiz's"" m" Pr" a es " "- ' imi- i i1 1.- rom- niliidimuie ‘m t?tg“ns;:i;rhatl0l l‘ O Wllkh ' ‘ were to have sail- ed in deleted b” es would have a .mmq ..Anofficia.iflgf ganedian mummy“ Melitta" B. " ewlllfi“ and ' vwih th fl id . 3L e e was Just pass “It was a tough job, all right, Qliiecieiiy for this time of year and in such an isolated part of the province." P R BRUEATIUN PUSSIBILITY OITAWA. A gp._(qp)_. Course of the bu get debate, which resumes in the House of Commons tomorrow, may give the most. defi- nite indication whether or not Parliament will conclude its work in time for prorogaticn byethe King on May 19. Only the desire of members to register their views on actions or inaction of the Government de- lays nrooeedinas lrl Parliament. 0n the budget debate there ls a wide latitude for such eiipressions. and it is , slble members will de- cide to ‘ ‘ thcms we with this opportunlt and restrict fur- ther debate to t e technical aspecu and the principles of what legis- lation remains to be disposed of. From all parties there have been statements of willingness to co- operate to the extent that proro- gatlon by His Maicsty may be pos- sible but with the qualification from the Social Credit and 6.0.52. members that they frown on any ap rance of haste and that. they sti have ideas they wish to pre- sent for possible adoption by the Government. Peopoae Amendments Last year the budget debate proper occupied only three days. This year's debate opened Friday and has brought amendments amounting to want of confidence motions from the Conservative and 0.0.21‘. Parties. 8o far as known at present. the Conservatives will have only two or three speaker; in addition to J. Earl Lawson (Con. York south). who o ned the debate Friday for the of icial osition. Itfs not ex- pected the i'..i raia will put up many speakers. 1f the 0.0.1". and Social Credit grunge use this opgtunity E (Continued on page '1. Col 4) Liner Will Be Manned s PAGES _ JI-f iREIBH MAKES um DEMANDS on i0lAND Hitler Clarifies Views Concerning Danzig And The Polish Cor- ridor. WARSAW. April Bil-A reliable authority reported today that Chancellor iiitier had followed up German demands on Poland cou- cerning the Free City of Danslg and the Polish Corridor with more specific details of what he wants. This source said the Fuehrer notified Poland the extra-territorial motor road he wants across the Polish Corridor to connect Ger- many and East Prussia must he no less than 250 kilometres (15.5 miles) wide. Since Poland has made it plain she will fight rather than aban- don any of her territory, mobiliz- ing more than 1,000,000 men to back up hel- stand. observers took Hitler's reported “specifications” as a sign he intends to push his v‘ demands ll‘: vertheleee. Other Details Some sources said they 581W be- hind hls additional details, which were said to have been conveyed privately to Poland. an attempt to 1r ten Warsaw into granting whet he originally asked. (in his speech Friday to the Relchsl and in a note to Poland announcng denunciation of the i034 Gannon-Polish Non-Aggres- alnn Treaty. ililtlsr disclosed for the first time Gennenye terms for settling the Daring-Polish Corri- dor issue Rieichstag they were his "one and onlv offer." (He demanded the return of the Illree C1 within the German framvwor and a. highway and railway connection between East Prussia and the rest of Germany. (in return, he offered neoogn- tlori cit the Polish Corridor and Poland's western frontier, con- clusion of a 25-year non-aggres- sion pact. security of Poland's sco- nomiic interests Danzig and consideration or Polish interests in connection with the security of the independence of Slovakia. under German protection since the dissolution of Czecho-Slovakia.) Will Be Rejected Nazi leaders first: made their demands for an extra-territorial highway and for outright annex- ation ct Daazig a. month ago. shortly after the return of Memei fnom ldthuanla to Gennany. 1n- formed sources ssid the new ‘de- mand would receive the same neg- ative answer as the others Foreign Minister Joseph Beck was expected to make it plain in an address next Friday, May b, to the Parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee that Poland as noth- ing to give to Germany. 1t was reported reliably that the Iibreign lvflnlsterb speech would contain a strong ‘grotest against Hitler's assertion at the Polish- Gei-man non-aggression pact for- bade Poland to co-opersite with other countries. k was expected also to tell Germany that Poland cannot allow Danaig to become a German military base R11. the mouth of the Vlstula River. in a position to strangle Poland economicallv and politically. Danish Steamer In Difficulties KAI-WAX. Aim-ll lib-Her ope - ki- ioot, the 3.000.tan genial-i steamship Geese. Toft wee Idrlfl tonight off Newfound . accord- ing to wireless advices received here from the ship, . The disabled craft sent out no 80S the Foundation mnidin was dispatch mm 11:32 l he said bru 111076 hands The rived SDYYlY Gor landed The tlve of TAKE e route The ed f Ham to h and WW her 185K661?! “gaffe 1-, can woe-given as soc miles of the Newfoundland coach Exiled frog the piloted by Russell Thaw. occupants. in addition to the Bo- viet file Reveiv. VI’. Butosov. ed States. Dr. Iodwiok and Mr. Baranov ier one of a 310110;! Amlvrs 9W- tom piloted xpected The ecnnnetaflui of the you; a old w. and ti assists th ciroallI-latifm of ems’... a MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN is part of the hygiene oi lhll-P. l- l. gem subscription‘ nun-res sue . A 84.00; Canada lad l7. I. ‘~00. R USSIAN AIRMEN ARR] v12 11v NE W YORK Lf-J‘ iii- NTI-A cczezsslozv DRIVE Are Flown From Moncton After Miscou Rescue Pilots Joe Anderson And H. J. Jones Of Canadian Airways “Ferry” Fliers From Island. p. m. ADT, Brigadier General Vladimir Kokklnalri, ace Soviet pilot, n‘yl“fm--fuflo qpgfglof, Major Mikhail Gordineko. stepped out of I chartered plane after I qlllfli 1WD 1mm Mmmmn- N- 3' mew YORK, April 30—(AP)-—Two Russian aviators tonight eon- ciuded a flight from Moscow which was Filled"! ll b "ml-ll"? "nm" but mqulred three instalments. They landed at Floyd Bennett Field at and hie (By William Horne, Canadian Press Correspondent) MONCTON, N. B., April 30-—The two Soviet airmeh flight from Well And Sill’! Koiminsgi. who suffered rib in- juries in e crack . looked well and wry on his his finance no one wou B D the lnuries ises Dar val and from id guess , sa o magi-vets“ id mrled m" ribs had been broken. Gordienko. unharmed clasped his l oiverh ad estum of n m the crlowd gwhen he island. Speak Little English Soviet filers. who : oak little English, could not be induced to give an interview through an interpreter. They were keli: l“ Pfi- vacy by Russian officials who ar- frcm New York yesterday. When asked if he had learned the cause of the forced landing at Miscou. Albert hodwick. Vice- President of the Aviation Corpora- tion of America. replied, "No, we have been too b getting tile men out to start fl rig about that. Gordleniro, s we1l- man. wore a gray suit. topooat and fly- ing helmet on his arrival here. Kokkinaid. short and ruddy-faced. was in aviation costume. He yu from the plane. dienko, who was navigator on the long flight from Russia. was immediately whisked away the field in the car John Bird. of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. three miles to a hotel here and re- turned shortiy before the takeoff for New York. H0111 oi inspector He was driven Quick Departure preparations had been made for a quick departure after Kokkinairl here. He did not. leave the field, and it! minutes after arrivins was away again in the larger plane. Moncton-New York craft w: rs, were Co-Yllot John re resente- Boviet aircraft in c Unit- Lewis Specter. Mr. the lat- 5 .. TWO FLIE tion representatives who MW fir: yesterday from New York.‘ Four other soviet representa- tives planned to leave for New York orrow on an amphibian plane ital Borden. ‘They also win ieipriad at Sensor Stood B! Plane a RiBle-n official; who cracked-up on Miscou Island Friday night after a trans-Atlantic Miscou to Moncton today and at 6:30 p. m. AST, they took off for New York, via Bangor, Me., in s plane chartered from Harold S. Vanderbilt. _ The rescue was made by planes of Canadian Airways. Pilot Joe Anderson brought Major Mikhail Gordienke to Moncton at 3:38 p. m., and Brigadier-General Vladimir Kokkinaki, piloted by H. S. Jones, arrived here at 5:50. The wrecked trans-Atlantic monoplane was left on Miscou Island» with two Royal Canadian Mounted Police- men standing guard over it. Moscow were flown from Freight Train is Derailed . ilear Halifax SiF-(CPF-ANGJ‘: e Rail in lin t Grand W; 2S “éWim “rte hurled l3 train .‘_-‘ cans of a U-oar f-Nld across the ht of wit? 55¢ track. None l! d? ctifgwmfi lira: o westbound train in d. "i... ....°“...‘€Fd§ai°‘.‘i..“‘£.‘i‘.°. r. goes wietdiac An investigation W111 b. conducted tomorrow. The ears nav arsed e-fter the crash. were rarssfgried to another train. NOTED TENNS STAR DIES LONDON, A i] 30--(AP)-Oh.airv lea . IDlxon. Btllrwho led the British Du. cup team t-o victory in Aus- tralia in 1912. died today. He was rated one of the greatest stars in EQLI1§EQQQAI§_N.§.WYYA_ . _ _.:-=~‘ 4m: Moor Distortions or an. Nlfo Accoetomss IS Hones some! Moscow airmen could have _ (Continued on m: ‘l. 001 l" emu n. . oi u no atlas ' fiuartm in be tile marine memo . t sh t .and whet-moron." ma» fig] In "htaistfiili {V ieedirl 1:‘ n93! gig; IEabwGei-lnen fron Cerman Army Chief Of Staff Arrives In Rome For Talks . ._...~_-.._ .1 d l ill remain for a Quebec ~ '" ’°-""’.;.“i.i.'€£:l.. hired‘ savior . en recently mes-he'd lpterfist in servers to hi’ ti‘ “(gem H11‘- Libyan tyiihiloo urinal t“; "‘ i IQAL S ‘Ihionto, April e0-—(W)—Mi and maximum tamvtrstllres: c? Dawson Victoria DQ110211!!! Winn! ‘Hmong’ Otte/wa Montreal 8828i 8882882’. 885822533885 4,10. ‘lull moon ll 3, 11.15 a.ni. sirrnmerride t e i! min later than Charlottetown. rill use ritual: sefwms . s. —~'1‘~‘Y.'--il2'ii'.'1' to“. .3- ’ l W“ ,