...s - ¢ . ._ “ A ""‘»7§<.'.=`. ilu" ' ~ .- ~ ' J ' '1'.-`i`:v__'.,';1sn_’l';:_ - I Alulrimblt oiimgoui not . v ‘ . iriakquwm "um un i S 5 'E e el € e 4 ‘ _ v . = _ _ _ l 5 °»-~=- - °---»- 1-- °-- _ . 1 ciiARLo'1*rE'rowN, QANADA, FRIDAY, MARCH zo, mo . 12 PAGES ?:.___........o.__,_-ggi;-g .§.»,~..__§ -»~--~-~- --~-----.__ ._ __ W4 __ _ __ _ _____ _ _ _ _ _ W Y f _ __ ! _' = V __ b 1,1 erf ~ `-"~‘\“ ' _ Maxine _ ' g, ... A _ ___ so ‘.~».~...ii“%,r/9,..,,., _ D _ _ __ on t luimvnl RiiiA y ... -»----i A _ The Peop e’s Paper Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island _Like the Dew , ‘_ " .=~~\~‘>"v¢' ..,__,..,»., . , ,- ~~ _. . : L "l»F‘.f'i ' fi - ` ~i` ` “ l" "i'.'Y ‘ " ` »‘ l -»-. _.. /_ . . i- " ' i ' l ` " » r " "Hi i' » - ‘ 1 ' ‘ ' .. ._.1.\'ir,'.="i".‘-‘.frrv.-w . ..._ _ . .. _ ’ - i »» ‘ ‘ .~ i ` ' ` ~ ’~ = ;u .4 J- +V _g -1- - ' . § .koi fi gi ii 2 5 i .MERE MAN _ Jie ii i i i i ._ Ll _ L ii -L2 Q Tl ..,. il FRA CE ,A GRE S TO PEAC NE G O TIA TIONS V- ii 'Q4 :_ _ .Y ,, I , 7 ' ~ i Will with draw in Esiiiiisii i~i...iS¢.....f...i..i on... Piiis min Demands Pending l|NEM|’|.0YMENl Parley In May COM_l_diiS|0N Germany Indicted By The League B iI,lal__H;:_t;'_‘;l“l§‘*___‘fp_};fi .Council For Invasion Of es Commissioners be The Rhiirféland. ' -.- (By Charles P. Nutter, Associated Press Staff Writer) om-Aw_i, Mmm 1o_g ngcimr (A. P. By Guardian’s Special Wire) ' unemployment commission. no-rt of LONDON, March 19-A French agreement to with- "M Libenl P“W'! PWFW Sin" draw her demand for evacuation of German troops from 3” I%m°,,°d! ffm d§m'”"`°?o°°"‘ the Rhineland and~to negotiate on Chancellor Hitiefs inline today by cubs? india; peace proposals at an international security and economic Resort A resolution on which the conference was disclosed tonight in high British quarters. l°“m"“°“ 1° 5”” W” °d°°°°d This development, the major one of six days of nego- X£§°,‘::,f§,;°t° md ‘M bm 'wen iiations and bickering among the worried European pow- 'rho proposed commission, duties ers, overshadowed a formal indictment of Germany by the °f W1\1°h will be to Supervise relief ' 1 Search wnh “_ M _ M “_ , . l expenditure' md devise meth: ds by I ° other lgcarno powgrs, iinls lmdcrc League of Nations Council today as a violator of the Lo- _ carno and Versailles treaties. ;’f1‘,°1§§”‘f;‘,f_p§‘s:§ b§,‘i’__j';;‘; r mod. tonight inionnod Joachim members including o chairman and ' '°“ R“’b°""°p' ‘iw G°"“‘“ "W m'i!ll||;`Brltish delegates emphasized that Germany cannot hope tn re- vicgcymu-m,,n - ` ' m"*'»|V'=» °f "S S¢“¢\‘¢\ tblillf- lf' es b peace with the westcm powers at the expense of Bulls or g°mmjg||0n¢'n Wm be rd --such. l I D ` - 3°” "0 7°-“si B\"“9¢ll I-“il her- eastern neighbor-;, ~ 9°' ‘ Raine for examination by the gov- Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden snmmonodiloschim Von Ribbon- 231°: l I m e ernments there. Tonight the Bri- trop. who pleaded Germnny’s case before the council today, to the may gem,-mu-,g fmm mn, to time tm' C"'bi“°t had B Www m°°““l roroign office tonight and gave min accrue or trio pun. widen, n 14 ,,_. wen ,A mm mveumg ,mi . , °° “°“““°f ii- T°“‘°“‘°W Mf- EW' typegritteuia rages lon§1wlt`l:nnu:ii;rous snlnexes and resolutions. living expenses," _ _ - s zflllc Tgllilec as statement in the Home ore Ill-Sidi' ll-il o renee Olllriiiil orrirlsfolilloethe pmvmanisam, mme for c"_ Th - h mf qw |,m,,|,_ Th '_ _ e -plan contemplates a. new start iriiizgib it dictum °:overninonii.x dlituiiifii ma mhmt f,iii,‘f‘,e°‘m‘;,,f'b';t,if“,f,l ',°§,,f°,’§,1 - ‘“ ‘“‘“"‘“"°““' ’°‘““°“““1’° '"1"' caused “the greatest satisfaction” ln- view of strained relations of the ,-worn' 1”-ig or M _'__' . o me pmsem' annum” B" wud pas, m du* I . Bl i'€l!1\m¢TB 011- S t M K' I _t ed over. The League of Nations will - ~ SP°°1°1 °1’°°“°“ ie Given the °°m- up o RC _ 11111011 I1 €1'V1eW no invifea io ninnnon in interm- ml5l1°i1 Wim l‘¢5D°°t W CBIDIDY' ' _ tional conference, prdiably at the ' ‘ end of May, which will consider not ment of women, youth and dis- _ _ -11-l\1°.¢i..pericns. lncludlns vet- IH only tho new peso. ea-ectnro ent ¢'~Ul- ‘ ‘ i' ' ` " ", ff: ~»~-f the allied problems of the arms- _ ments race and economic dlfflcnli whm th’ bm Vw-‘ pruenwd su ties which have been giving rise to “iADY”’iB't0i`i\‘T$ NUTQTU Gill. AT THIS PURT There was no ossibiiity of the D Lady Boots of the Canadian Nat-i ional Steamship Company making Charlottetown a port of call dur- ing th coming summer season. Secretszy Wallace Higgins told a meéting of the Board of Trade last evening. I-ion. W. D. Euler, Minister of Trade and Commerce, had inform- ed him through A. E. Mclrean, Federal representative for Prince County. that due to close sched- ules fixed for the Lady Boats for the coming summer it would not be possible to arrange stops at Prince Edward Island. the secre- r* (Continued on Page 10) COMING 'EVENTS °u>eniry sole .J did or Basilica Altar Society at Prowse Bros., Bat- urday afternoon and evening. "Notice _ Members of the Milk Producers and Vendors Association will be out off from supplying milk to factories unless membership fees are paid by April 30th. By Order of the Association. L-3164-3-18-ol. '°I"lna.l playoff same tonight, Milton vs. Hunter River, at Forum after sports. Special train leaving Hunter Rives' st 8 p.m., return fare 50 cents. L-8285 “Now is the time to treat your cattle for the oxterniination of warbls flies, your horses for bots and other internal parasites and y0lll’ vp for pests that inflict them. e can supply you with Doris Powder for cattle, Bur-shot bot and worm extermlnatcr for hcnd and “dry-kill” for sheep. Wesfewellstomediomeet your Nl st lowest prices: U _ llsrbetlng Board. L-3283 ii ...___ ~°t.iv¢tooz mnfoaog notre hogs through the following during the week of ss follows: 'ruesdav Afternoon, Hillview and Mount Stewart; Wednesday morning. llolilit ltwwlrt. Ymk. Hunter Riv- er. Flies list with local °°°°¥ nn mm oe und. L- '°Don‘t continue to feed lEi"°""... n‘if.f.i'.°i 'T3 ......‘l‘Z.’-' 00% rm or he :wmv mo' the our tini iii rp; it 2225 ~ i _ _ Up To Germs-ny "l‘hb"Britn1i 'reprtslntativee io- tlmated the four powers have now done their: part to relieve the strain and it ls up to Germany to contribute. Eden is said. to have told Von Ribbentrop there was no chance whatever of making pro- gress unless Hitler agrees to the "mild" security measures demand- ed by France to cover the period until a new treaty is effected. He emphasized how reasonable the French and Belgian positions were in view of previous demands for withdrawal of the German troops. The council heard o spokesman for unrepentant Germany defend her reinllltarlzatlon of the Rhine- land and then unanimously adopt a resolution condemning her* for violation of the Locarno and Ver- sailles treatles. , The verdict came within three hours after Rlbbentrop appeared before the council table-the first German appearance since she quit the league in 1033. Gem-many's sole "neln" was the only opposition registered in the quiet drawing room as Stanley Bruce of Australia, president of the council, called the :oil of na- tions. Thls vote did not count, nor did those of France or Belgium. who brought the charge against the Reich. Indlct Germany Argentina, Great 1'i'italn, Den- mark. ItaLv, Poland, Portugal lu- mania, Spain, Turkey and Russia voted for the resolution. Chile ab- stained and Ecusdor's represent- atlve was absent. Immediately after the vote, Von Ribbentrop arose and asserted, in the name of his govemmsnt: "This resolution will not bo maintained in the judgment of history. If the honorable members had lied more time to consider my statement this morning the vote would have been different." Whereupon Flandin Jumped to his feet and said: “I had not been prepared to speak, but since ths Paid. . (C. P. By Gn.srdisn's Bpeotsl Wire) George Pefrley, actlns as Conserv- ative leader in the absence of Rt. nts of unem lo ed workers (Continued (C. P. by Gnsrdillvs Special Wire) LONDON, March I9-(O. P.- Hsvss)-lisbor leaders represent- ing 85,000,000 European workers tonight wm warned that Chon- cellor Hitlefs "bullying" Rhino- iend oiieueose mul* be moootld. but that decisive action mud bs taken to halt aermmrs “nut lg- gressivs set. Addressing the first melting' d the International Trade Union and Labor conference since the wer, Blr Walter Cltrins. prsddsnt of the mterneticosl hdsrstion of Trsdo Unions, declared “thin must be no whitewsshing ol Cler- many." [R i i Ei A U "_vls¢nnstllUlDl!h U* its labor policy in the current ln- _ternetionsl crisis. International labor leaders un- animously condemned the ll.elch'a serspptngmf the Versailles and .ncesrno Treaties st s matte* to- night in 'Transport Hill. slit- yi ,.25 iéigii §i‘e§“ iiirii teresa slew! tween twist WABm'NG'IbN-Tata-l death tolli believed to be upwards of 130; Pres- ident asks $8,000,000 for Rad Cross, which estimated homeless at 200,- 000; Potomac flood visible from White House; Dlkes protect monu- ments. _ WEBT VIRGINIA-Floods from Pennsylvania. rush upon isrgo cities with vast damage; many lives lost; Wheeling inundated and isolated. WFISTERN- PENNSYLVANIA - Floods subside at Pittsburgh; Johnstown and other points. Death wil may reach 44; damage $100,- 000,000. Trsnsportation, communit- cabions still paralysed. EAB‘I‘ER-N PENNSYLVANIA -- 50,000 homeless; property damage in millions; many cities sevenely hit; Susquehanna river carries frwh threats. _ OHIO-Thousandls flee homes. factories heavily dains.ged._s.s Ohio river reacher- crest; preparations made for val1ey's worst flood. - MARYLAND-Swollen, Potomac under tons of slime; 85,000,000 dam- age in valley. NEW JERSEIY-Traffic is crip- pled, hundreds drlven from homes with Deigséware river on rampage. NEW ORK-4,000 homeless, two dead, many roads blocked, Bing- hamton faces wat/er shortage; relief mobilized ns waters slowly recede. MASSACHUSETTS - Thousands homeless, factories idle, traffic halt- ed; Boston faces milk rationing. CONNECTICUT-Hutford faces worst flood in history; Connecticut river still rising. VERMONT -- National Guard called out at four places to aid mnrooned families and guard abandoned property. NEW HAMPSHIIRE -- Ice jams dynamlted in overflowing rivers; towns isolated, roads closed. RHODE ISLAND - Blackstone Valley flooded; sandbags placed around Pawtucket City Hall. VIRGINIA-Richmond guarded 000 foot dike as James river takes four lives, buries Cuinberlsnd bv 2. - threatens disastrous flood. _...___- to discontinue pas ferry It is not expected that the no ` a iddi '-TW’-‘1 H8 W 8 m Page D 'mp Wm 1”v°e: I8: ;_néh,_,-S as though they were halrpins in the °f Apm'L”ty hands of some powerful giant, a lottewwn was over-hauled at Bt. John' N' B' Canadian National Railways bridge ___________ May |35 Train” iiliiilifoi £“o.f.i’.‘i.“.§‘13.”$’.i,n‘."i-.‘T’ went out shortly before 10 o-clock F0' British iiavv ::;‘li‘;i.“‘;.‘iis:;"z:.ki;;”:.2 ith Newcas- rail communication w w_ R B, Gm__dm_,. “Nm Wm) tlenxatngd Mor;ctI/on.' Damage. is les. LONDON, March 19-(C. P. - Rogers, bridge engineer or the C. °°'°’°)`°D°°““"‘¥ ‘Ni N¢Wf°“°d- .____ N. iz/s Aunniic Region. iii? n’Z’.§’°'i`.‘.°°{i.. °nT»n°‘.f§§.oi§`°3‘i ‘Bi “° °"“'““*“ "'°‘°‘ A’ “‘° ",§“‘“° W” ‘?’“ ‘Z"“i . "‘° “°°‘ 5*’ ""°“°' “il” *WS*-‘“°" nuii' iii""'i§'ii¢.i'°i°'irirli.i'ilon iiiiiiili iii"°inosvi.fii.ii,f"§§ii f>'n.s xo ed' in the Home M Ummm t°" floollseliodzywfor the (iirst time in a 52-year-old railway outlet was car- Toiémmteerustlfg 251°' ° °f week after ice ln the Moira River rled more than 100 feet rioiwn the ~ ` f Duma df-‘°“e°*°i= of the wells },‘,7,‘Zl',°‘.',,°“§,u”‘.i‘2.iiii'¢B‘i;,.°’;'iio`ii3ii=°°°h is the Wiz' 0 r - ii t. “"'° "°‘”° "°“°°” *‘°'*‘ °“° MY” ofEii1i>`io°inti`°iiii2“°ii'n'i-1§o°h§o°iiiiiwi§§..il°f.iiiiionbi>f°domiiifiiho oo- NWV md N°W!°“”d1“‘“d' it w°“m shore'removed the danger spot ln)gun in 1984 was inaugurated by slr mt M 'n “Nui” °n°°m“‘° md' Ontsrio’s" fiodo situation. Rivers John A. MacDonald. then Prime 'quid omy fun” ° 'mm ‘mu 'mp and streams in other ps.rts‘of the Minister of Canada. who spoke from ‘G st’ "°hn°' province tilreatcned to flood their , s horse carriage on the occasion. :md Btmw' P“""“°“t“‘°y “nd banks as mild weather melted Tues-' Canadian Pacino Railway officials n“‘n°m ‘5°°"“"7 w tm Admlnl' day‘s record snowfall but serious announced tonight they had beeen ty. replying for the government, ull wndltlons were expected nowhere instructed by the Botson and Maine V (continued on page 10) dertooii so consider- trio suggestion. some Quebec mm Wm ,,m,c¢e,',_ Rgllwgd to advise ,,,,.,,,ue,, they . , The Richelieu River town of_ could get no further than BanS0i'. _ m____W ___ __,__W_ me, Mm erman orelgfn . :ce wer and A highway bridge nearby was E‘"'°Pe°" L“b°"C°{'de"E"‘ §‘:a§.;;:r:3°:e..:“=.“;:.“sz Reied-‘S Lvwffiv Proposal communication lines were damaged I-Ion. R. B. Bennett, declared he would oppose the measure if it °““"“,§,‘°§ ff” “wif e,’°§e“ff,§‘e§ rmiv nor Lnvuran conreinpieted edmmiotr-ation or °‘n“’“§§sm§ _‘gd Bo"”‘”°ume§n ,mes 0, flmd5» Prime Mllliiiiiel' Meokonlio Canadian Nauonal Railways in the The conference will not confine King asked that debate be de- pmvmw would be discontinued f itself to any particular set of peace ferred until members had an op- during the summer months P,.°_ ' proposals. It will study Chancellor P°f;“‘;g’ ”° ‘t§f"'°th bm d M vinciai superintendent E. w.' Moc- _f?}§‘°’_'°15°"°“ Wan” 31°? W1*:_1h“-11 1 DICK!!! 8 8 0 "$ . el' D Bn EH EBVOF PER I that "unemployment has been' for Qggtifglnfénghaof' S§t,',,»Rce',,def§"£é . workable scheime to brine' the ten- eeveral years Can da* m t t 5011 9-il on I S m “men °Vm°° had me” °°"sid°"d’ mt When the plan’s full terms are national problem; and until such W d d ' tinge as the nof.-mal revival of trade gne’§§:§t1;,°;v§,e:s$"_,l,i:; ;;‘;_t:_.. plglliilglcigt is fiellitlilerehtilaetllak ot! an industrwwill bs b l ‘ Rm- W 9 2 U BY red. B' or a' "ge Rum” md it that me that the temperature of tortured P9199 K9 P Y » - it io essential tint stops be token §,’;,,,°1§§,“vff,, 0,, th, 5,,,,,,,., ,M - - ii o. - to und my, and means of p,.°,,,d_ Murray Hub” mms during me E llt 1 1' 9 NIUE - Span glgfilriiaiifih llifstwever, tlgt there arg in ,mer ti _ c rvers cross, an than nY_°__$:__g1°’.mt°n;i_e;hu‘:: ;;i3\1';:Th£\n°“g§3th;*;dda;ge;“$eef Structure D€Stl'py some sacrifice will be necessary by on relief and lessening the burden Mecxinnon who returned ed-*Damage ESLIIH' :;1nP_‘:;ti:€‘_ai;;*_§_'° ”' “M semement of taxation." mf, 'ni h 1 M bo _ did gr- ' The preamble continues: "To r-nngomhrits mvxidre mini: :node at ated 'lI1‘;’nl;:_€“Mf“1l5bi“t§eih‘°° P°’;l°€§’ achieve a nation~wlde co-operative pr-spent to can for tenders for the (C __ By G“;'d_-:IE Specm Wm) _;_L2'_Ll' e ort in reducing the numbers on annual over-hauling of the car- i__Rlf}DEmCT0N’ N' B' Much 19 (ommnued on Page 10) ii si i iron-S' one rein huge ice jam at the half-mile long t tl ' at 500000 by C G B League To Summon International Con- ference To Discuss Armament and Eco- nomic Problems. By George Hambietioin, Canadian Press Staff Writer (By Guardians Special Wire) LONDON, March 19.-(C.P. Cable) -The four Locarno powers-Great Britain, France, Italy and Belgium --today agreed on a plan which it is hoped not only will bridge the present difficiililei but ily the foundations of a new order for Europe. Anthony Eden, British Foreign discontent. Euro e will dro It is frankly re To lsfiue Additional Treasury Bonds (A. P. by Gunrdla.n's Special Wire) PARIS, Marcli 19-Tne French Government was authoritatively reported tonight to be planning to risk the Chamber of Deputies for the right to issue additional treasury bonds worth 5,000,000.000 franc; ($330,000,0T:0> to bolster fin- duces. It was said that the bill would be lniroduced in the Chamber of Deputies tomorrow. It would raise the limit on treasury bonds from l5,000,000,000 to 20,000,000.000 francs __ Deputies said that the govern- ment's need for funds was aggrav- ,ated by withdrawals from state avi s banks during the present loodi Death Toll In' nzted States 1 aunts, W Damage Placed ease, hunger, and other perils. and hamlets. Casualty lists and damage es s read desolation erslsboredfverishlytothrow To the northeast, anxious citizens of Hartford, Conn., watched the swift rise of the Connecticut River. More than half of the total deaths occurred in Pennsylvania, swept from border to border by the torrential waters. New York State and New Jersey suffered, but to a lesser degree. Flee Homes In the Ohio Valley, terrified thousands fled to the highlands before the river’s rise. A 55-foot flood crest approached the vicinity of Martina Ferry, Ohio, and Wheeling, W. Va. Parts of Wheelings business dis- trict were under 10 feet of water and the paralysis that gripped Pittsburgh Wednesday had set in. Wheeling Island, in the middle of the river, was entirely under water. In downtown Wheeling, panicky residents screamed for help from upper floors. Boatmen toiled to re- move them. All schools were closed. Trans- portatlon and cornmunlcntlon lines were demoralizedr Nine persons drowned as they tried to escape and four others died~ in an explo- sion. At least three drowned in Wells- burg, where the water was up to the second floors. “We‘re in terrible shape," said Police Chief Arthurs. “We’ve get to get help." Farther upstream, Pittsburgh was emerging from the wildest flood in it-i hiSf0l'l‘. But as the waters re- ceded the death and destruction tolls mounted. Fears were expressed 35 or more may have lost their lives ln the great steel capital and its suburbs. The damage was uncounted, but es- timates rsngcd up to g25_0o0,00o_ More than 15.000 persons were ro- (Continued on Page 10) F H8 Rhinelsnd crisis. ,. I r like , _ Reich Treaty Violation .. ..... .... .... .. o.. ..........». > __- my ,M ,__ ,,,_,,_,_,,_,_, .’°Y ""°"" , ‘°°““““°d °“ "Be “fl (Associated ri-ceo roi-sign sum O64 (A.P. By Guardl.\.n's Bpeclsl Wire) f:;f;,‘d‘*_';""““‘”‘°rymdy”__‘: m°°°‘° '°°°mf5 ' Q Bonus. Moron io-The foreign slr welter wld the delegate; u- ' ofiioo, centering amor comment rammed me so mmuim it dorm- M °“°° ’“°'° °“ "‘° ""““°°'°°"‘°‘ _ military pact, rejected as "unac- ceptable" tonight t.he reported Lo- camo proposal to adjust German " violation of the mutual security . treaty. . A Foreign Office spokesman ex- pressed surprise at the imanlmous vote of the 'League of Nsulons , ‘ Council in condemning Germany as a mclrno vlolator and declared d "sc t nothin . _ Germany _coul oep g less than parity, .nesrllng s two- eided demllitsrined zone" during . Rhlnelsnd negotiations. _ ‘ ' ‘i fl!!! l"ol'Il¢ll Gfloo official com- mented sharply ori the fact that no voice was raised today ln support of the German thesis that the Franco-Russian treaty first broke the Locarno pact thus creating ex- oentustlng circumstances for the German action. “lt is a sure sign of bad con- conscience,” the spokesman said. The Hague Court, the spokesman declared. "may be competent to decide the juridical side" of the treaty "but the political and mili- The paralyzing force of the greatest deluge in recent history of the eastern States battered whole cities, towns i i E Emergendy it FUR NEW PEACE Created To Aid STRUCTUR Fund E Flood Victims Death Toll Exceeds 130. Property At Over $150,-A __ 000,000 A,s__l\_/_I_enace Spreads. (C. P. By Guardian’s Special Wire) » The most ravaging flood to visit the eastern United States this century-its death toll already believed to eX- ceed 130-rolled on unchecked in a dozen states Thursday night. . _ ` .7 > Thousands of persons fied from newly threatened communities while those in ravaged sections fought dis- toils mounted hourly as the » over vast areas from the flood tid p Ohio Valley to Maine. Already the total of wrecked prop- erty has passed the $150,000,000 mark. 200.000 BOMELESS md Cross officials estimated 200,000 or more persons homelel. President Roosevelt joined in their appeal for an emergency fund ol $3,000,000 to feed, clothe and shelter them. - Pestlience, hunger and widcspnead suffering followed in tho wth od the raging rivers. ` Convulsed by the fioodwsters that left Pittsburgh s silent city of disaster, the Ohio River thunderod down the West Virginia. border, pu. ing into Wheeling and-Wellsburg, W. Vs. Washington, D, C., was menaced by the rosrlng Potomac and relief work e s cordon at ssadhsgs between ths downtown district and the-river bank. i n; Seriously lil .__.._-- OALGARY, Mnrdh I9-Georio Hn Bell, president and me-DIKUIC dirs ector of Albertm Publishers Lim- lter. is seriously ill in hospital hero today. ll/h'. Bell was believed io bl suffering from influenza. compli- cated bi heart trouble but natiml of the lness was not known defin- itely. NEVER Beau vow. _ BR\oc.r.e Brniluo ‘fov°. You View l-uw 'fo Swirl BACK 1 "___, E 4. Fresh southeast and south wtlulli mostly cloudy and mild with oc- casional showers. TORONTO. March 19-Mlnimlllf and maximum temperatures: ' Dawson Aklavik Edmonton Regina Winnipeg 12 Toronto an - Ottawa 32 Montreal 42 Quebec Saint John Halifax Charlottetown FORECAST Maritime West -- Modenh. tg fresh southeast to routhwest wlndsl S¥3S2£‘8BBSn§ 2B 108 36 28 5885 some disirricls. .- and tonight st 0.1!. 1 mostly cloud and mild; showers tl ' High tide this morning st |31 tary aspects would escape lt com- pletely.” (The reported Locsrno agreement would accede to French demands to have the military assistance pam submitted to the international court with Germany abiding die jurie- isl decision.) by \ - Bun sets this evening at 8. _ rises tomorrow morning st 0._ . `-l_ New moon sunday, Merch , at.; 12.13 p. m. . = . Bummsnilds tide eighteen mini, utes lstsr than Cbsrlottstcwi\,_ 1 'Ill CAI Fill! iasvs Borden 0.46 A. ll. (I 1 P. H. i u‘&'?»'.'i2°'n.n,"°‘““....,.“"§‘-’.¢‘.‘¢."