uttetelrp Guardian Two Cont: flung Guardian, Ion IIII CPCLAND AND u,‘ BRITAIN MO VES cmsriiimici MAINTAINED m lav cmsis Seek Peaceful Settle- ment Of Poland - ’" Lithuania Dispute. * i ed f . 5% “mam Cirraczberlaln one the liouio of Commons the United [ingdomwaa-in close touch with both Governments and that the British Ambassador at Warsaw, Sir Inward Kenuartl. ‘lad impressed upon the Polish Government the lope the ultimatum presented to iithnenia would not he used a: a [retext for making wider demands. Mr. Chamberlain declined to de- d on League of Nations action prevent the situation from flar- g into war." "not Majesty's Government are a gue Council. .lvLr. Noel-Bake" pointed out that league action in a. threatening eonfllct between Greece and Bul- ria was taken "largely on jhe filtiatlve of sir Austen Cha ‘ - in", then British Foreign 8e0- retary an the late half-brother If the Pr e Minister. t Mr. Chamberlain. pressed by his opposition to take a strong. clear- v , gum} on European affairs. gennedflio make a statement of reégn policy,“ Connmons next We _ g .1 . .. . Chamberlain’ zprcaaed "hor- Mirne cnsnnevelvir-dtne cowl-h to sioo raids d ect- ivillairxi rather: than mili- al to both D " ir at ob “M”. Go e rnent have toaone n. (oenurnreewolceunllel-Il COMING {VENIS “as te‘ vie Rink tenlsht- a L-‘xlrgtl-ld-fl-N-Bat-tf. ' " n Monday "Buyin ve 0i! u‘ i" "person. "See more "Listen "in llurrey Rives- alga ‘ I ‘polo-anoint. "c Bale nlnltv Mule“ . i, I M. oh mo" a ‘gr-Oid-dii-lifll. "Zion o. u; I. '1'. will cold c!" gle at Holman’: "Borden Line Club loedins hm l: be. el every TlieldlY- 5°“?! 12mg; a,” m Ir-IAB-lfl-M-I-d-ti. "B moccasin dance at Marsh- I l8 field ink no tone elound m "Tex Oocbrane, nogsnfil-eguffi moi al t in ' reefer?“ r-ue-v-lv-fl- “s com "Simon's Inven- gme cglcwkarhlcillln Bell- s d" L-vldd-d-ld-lii-II. "' I mite-IO ‘w. wit» “did;- diifl" w m‘ Kin anew impel’ A- h,“ ' , ll 0th. d}... l‘ qmeii“ of Bap: It Ohilifli athmm do “us: f‘, . ie--—- u“, bu’. unis‘. l . lobed-g ‘M mm afternoon ; i» uooaa-ie-a. . ‘ ' c ‘ 1&1‘ “ o can / -P'1--'»/' 4 //1/ ‘s aper Covers Prince Edward i Island Like the Dew A T9 E ma. cu mil 1o REST Interment Yesterday oniod by Messrs. A. J. lmman, bouts Taylor and J. P- , March kmri-dolii-a-xa-ri, I ITY. March 18- Preeldent Inzaro Cardenas to- night announced expropriation o tlolgmgiorviamment offlforrei ea o ra n Mexico. De B The President announccgdina ‘of the 7 British and perties United States 011 companies, resenting investments of The nnonucement was made less than two hours before the -nation-wlde “folde ' arms strike" as Grew Abandon Sinking Ship (A. by Guardian's S olnl Wire) EW YORK, Marc Iii-The Radio Corporation oi America re rted tonight it had receiv- a message from its Chat- ham. Mass, station that the German steamer “Clary Boga" was elnklrg ‘I5 miles went of liornerev tghtlhip and that the crew had abandoned the craft in lifeboat: at 8:10 p. _rn. A81‘. No further details were immediately available. Lloyds register lists the Claus Boge as a thud-ton vessel out. of Hamburg, Germany. Built in 1936, the steamer is owned by Johann M. K. Blumenthal. it. C. A. gave the llghtehlp": slilon as a point in to orth Sea just off the western coast of Denmark, where charts‘ show a Ham's rec At Summerside. The body of Mr. D. _K. Currie, 82-year-old xeociate edrior of the who died in Charlotte- town Wednesday after a short ill- ncee. was laid to lest in (the Peo- .. Summernide, ye:- terdoy. she Rev. William Verwolf oonducic the ommnittal service at graveside newspapers were repres- R. Brennan. J. Fascist Plot In Brazil Uncovered RIO DE JANEIRD. March 18- Police announced today the frus- retlon of a plot lgucmembera of he once-powerful let In l- rt to easaninato Pr dent and to engineer in- wesicrn Capital bymwled hi: tbs ear y an were met at the station b old fir-lends and member-J of tho own ice‘ headquarters laid Mexicon Govt. Tavkes Control Of Foreign Oil. Properties (A. P. b; gollllgllll’! Special Win) mom , The n- still “.2- . mediately following Cardenas’ - after a three our rnee hastll urnmoned cabinet. SPEBULATE on ATTITUDE or luminous Belief Held Dominions Favor “Hands-off” P olicy In Central Europe. BY PAT USSHIR Canadian Preea Btaff Writer LONDON, March 18 -(0P ould be the attit- dominlona in the event have been ed here the dom ne-not specified individually by not re- to Motion Brit-Hi in - creme in central Du but are aid Brl shoud she bc atiedud. Attitude Unknown Informed sources. however. my the attitude of the domtnions to 4L- plecge to Czechoslo- v in. has not been . Canada has not told the Brit- ish Government what stand she will ialte should Britain under- take to Czechoslovakia. It wee recalled that the Government regularly advises the dominione of developments abroad and her iioy under certain situations. ut the dominions are not ab- llggtod to state their liMi-lldilik (Ckmrtlniled dll P88! 13. O01. C) FCA Act Repeal Urged In House (By The Canadian Prose) OTTAWA. March lii-Repeahof the Farmers‘ Creditors Arrange- ment Act in Ontario and New Brunswick was ur ed on the Gov- ernment in the ousc of Com- mons tonight while weste mem- bers pressed for its retent on. The House was considering a- mendments to the act which would 8130mm‘ the vernment to re- be its Operation in provinces but there was no indication from Fin- ance Minister Dunning what use will be made of hlVd D203 staged till early 1110111- New Anglo Pltalian Trade Pact Effective March 28 explained the latter was not eon- nected with plane for Anglo-Ital- ian nmiations on lar r issues. u“ rim“ ierioofliid leflletti M “inflow Ill’! (lbfilifi ".100!- gltlflll. 1111611, were from '3” r cent oi the lire value liaei year bought lean than Q! m0 Gilli‘ 0i t9!- lh: flan Britain in c». highway connec the Insurgents cap ured yesterdxy, with the main route between - daniz and Gandesa. lid "ab": ture. Id hfilig ill-Pill: _ Concessions. Made 14 PAGES ‘h . ' ' v , . what.‘ . nflllalaunldilallo-IIT ASE BAL Tic ICTENSION A 01v BRINK 0i‘ W |usiu na"lui s um lavas 0N BAllliElilNA Death r011 ‘Mounts In Air Attacks - ’ l- va-nce 0n Catalonia. (By The Associated Press) BARCEIDNA, Spain. Mar. 1e- Y bombers pitileesly pound- narcelona today raised the toll of known dead in a. 42-hour series of raids io 600 and the num- ber injured to 1,200. Seven attacks today alone killed more than 100 and wounded an estimated 150. An unknown numiber of persons lay buried in the wreckage of the blood-soaked city which the Insur- nts converted from a gay capital one of mourning. Tonight the populace either moved into subways or fled to the suburbs in expectation of more attacks to come. The United States Embassy and Consulate temporarily were trans- ferred to the outskirts of the city as were other foreign embassies. Vice Consul Killed The French Vice Consul was killed and e. Consul injured in yes- terday's raids, The raiders today skipped the central section struck yesterday and concentrated on the quarter in the southwestern portion of the city near the former exposition grounds. Attacks began at 1:10 am. l3 8:40 am. the day's death lists M; 50. Twelve bombs dropped in l. raid at 1 pm. killed approximate- 1y another 50. . ‘Ihelspecial algleaaircrafingefencet serv ce repo an, uvgcn bomber was downed ency, said a captured Italian p ot said the ursurgents had 700 planes, mostly made in Italy and Germany and flown by Italians, Germans and Spaniards. Continue Advance AYE, France, March l8»- KIND (AP)—Spanish Insurgents ham- their wedge deeper into mered Government-held territo todeyin thgbodrive for the Med terrnnean ee 4i. Mogrized columns were reported appro five miles aching Ms 11a, from the boundarglee of Catalonia. Maella is the junction point of a. Caspe. which The Insurgents announced 2.000 Government flghtommoet of whom yore volunteers, were killed in the Caspe. reaching Qezbore, from Spain said a freighter flying the British flag ran aground hi‘ mes near the Spanish rt of po anao. It was believed at Le. Nouvelle that the vessel, which Spanish re- rt-s id appare tly had bee dead, was therlli l03-ton Naval: rino, registered in Glasgow. In eastern Spain, Insurgent Gen; eral Franco's centre columns Ban Francisco in their push to- ward Maella. Hepburn Presents Balanced Budget (OJ. By Guardian’: Special Witt) TDRONID. March 1B — Premier Hepburn today presented his soc- ond successive balanced budget in the Ontario Legislature. e lore- cast a surplus of 03.01350 in 0t‘- dinary account for the Jsoal year March 31, based on l0 d gout s’ actual figures and two 1n m mardhedlction th pro- m ‘ e ° r p the roar-so ru- the black" came cal ‘our ' 0n the eels of a 89.818.988.04 surplus recorded last year léeafog: his [ox {or a aurnlus of $2 £17.99, on the an reven of , ncoml elllltndlturee ' ereaiillbe no increases in taxation nor any new forms of tax- ation for the coming fiscal year," he declared. Nevertheless the gov- ernment would spend more money °e n °° ‘ “Eididw-e ulorly. To (leech-Germans mm. “*- ia-(mnoev) <s' m ‘Mm (or oer-mam in onifiomm- noun-mun " cabinet dietrteieuoto be ad- wflenaaenationau. Japanese no}? Drive Towards Gity 0i Suchow The Associated Press) GHAI, Mar. Iii-isot- urdayl-Japaneee asserted to day they were forcing a wedge Into the coastal eide of China's central front behind artillery and aviation bombardments. One column, they said, was well pant llncheng, within 50 miles of Suchow, ob octive of the oflenalve where -Pukow and the east-west Lunghai railroads crou. They said the other, con- "flinl frun a wide angleJaad driven Chinese from Llni, a- milee northeast by out o! Lineheng, and expected Chinese denied they hadbeen forced back. They declared fl hting still wal go “t withdrawal" (taint-ain't? city. mm Heavy Ice And Freezing liain Delays Traffic Car Ferrydakes More Than Twelve Hours For Round ' y d timberland Strait, p powerful icebreaklng carferry 8.8. Charlottetown hours behind sched- fr Canadian Airways planes greatly raflic to and from Edlward Island yesterday. carferry docked at Borden est night, taking slightly hours for the round iron terminal at 11.09 yesterday morn- passenger Encountering very hes ed hard ago t shore by strong easterly wind, the erful ship did not reach her erth at Tormentine unftil 8. cloning. Conditions had greatly improved on the return trip, how- thc crossing was madein an hour and 3'7 minutes. The train reached Charlottetown at 2 o'clock Earlier in the night pi passengers for 0 arlottetown. zing rain kept the Canadian olaue on the’ Charlotte- merslde-Moncton service ‘ here until about 3 o'clock wi a rising temperature Pilot I-l. S. Jones took oiI with the nine passenger twin-motored Dra- e wings of his big mono- up ‘ somewhat and hediac. l-lo took off in after a brief stop and land- at Moncton without mlsh The eastbound flight was canoe led when rain continued with low mit. regular schedule will be re- sumed early today. Ice conditions Thursday were fairly good and it was hoped rev- ergl crossings could be made dur- inc the night to clear rapidly ac- land term nal. lhsterly wind, how- ever. ra idly pushed heavy drift the New Brunswick boat, leaving Bor- den at l0 o'clock Thursday night to reach Tormentlne. e returned to Borden at 10.43 yesterday morning to the New Brunswick e docked nine and er. ile 1'10 freight cars were ‘lbrmentine last night, iieimhffié’. erafors. Freight on the ride was almost clear. After landing mails ere at Borden last ni on a full load cars and left immed Bile was scheduled nlsht. Granddaughter 0f Pioneer Cleric Dies omaoow, n. s. Mar. 1e ' otic the pioneer Pree- SAYS AUSTRIAN BllllP AlElllEll B l 00 ll S H Ell Hitler Makes Implied Warning To Czechs In Upholding Con- quest. (By The Associated Preee BERLIN, March ldv-Relc neb- rer Hitler tonight held up Austria's fate as an implied warning to Czechoslovakia. He asked the Rolchstaf at its farewell meeting for “ano her four years that I may create the tasks ahead in the greater Reich." Before Hitler began his 88-min- ute speech. Field shal Her- mann Goering as Pres dent of the Relchstag announced its dissolut- ion and called legislative elections far ltohe new Pan-Germany for Ap- r . The Feuhrer as he com leted his address announced all ermany- not only Austria-would vote in the ueblsclte on union of Austria and Germany at the same time. A plebiscite April 10 in Austria already had been scheduled. The new Relchstus will be the first representing the greafer Ger- many. ‘ Thanks Mussolini Hitler thanked Premier Musso- lini egaln for hle- approval of the Austrian con ‘ and pledged: "Ital ‘s frontiers rmnain for us invlola e, Behind this word stands the German nation." _ He pitied "the democracies" bc- cause i-hey did not understand his move into Germany's southern neighbor, a state which he said was "based upon o. stark violation of seli-deicrminatlon of the 6,000,- 000 peo le of German nationality." The grrnan Leader stood before a cheering Rcichst which in- eluded for the first e on its government bench the new Gover- nor of Airstria. Arthur Seyss-Irrq- unit, and other representatives of what is now a German province. Justlfles Seizure? Justifying his swift seizure of Austria, he said his decision to march into the land of his birth {gas dictated by the realization hat otherwise bloody civil war would break out. _ "I was determined to spare Aus- tria the fate of Spain," he declar- ed. “(Kurt) Von Schuschnlgg can thank God I acted-dot my decis- ion saved him and 10,000 other: their lives." Speaking slowly and enrphaall- ing each word. the moulder and master of the greater Germany declared the time was past when Germans lust across the border could be mistreated. __"T.ll£l'.¢l_¢.Qnl!_8_I_ UQLLWBQIL . J5 (Continued on page l3, Col. 3) Drought Area Is Flood-Stricken (C. P. by Guardian's Sprinl Wire) REGINA. March ilk-Saskatche- wan drought area along the in- tvrnntionnl boundary. flood stricken. Rivers rose five feet in four days; cattle were marccncd and schools cloted because of floods. From Meyronne, Woodrow and Estevan areas came reports today of the unprecedented flood condi- tions, with water covering flats that have not produced crops. even ha for years. In the first two dis ricis farmers were u=lng boots to take feed to anirmvs ma- rooned in river islands. ‘Poachers were dictating lessons over the tel. hone. orcl from Shaunavon area in- dicated farmers were heartened by the fact there was little spring run off and water apparently was soaking into" the ground. At Iiisiovan the Bouris River roee five feet in four days but there way no danger of a flood blrlckthe a; our. "ma: , March 1a - British Columbia would have no unem- plloymentuii it ware not for tiihye fr:- n lpparen a - fired bvutii’: mild coast climate‘ H . minister labor. iodfl informed Rowell Ooumuas ion. ’ l h an directive éuhfitiwwfi t3"?- t to from Q Oil "A? moat of ‘tiim°§““..i' who and of iuiddie- ed Colombian-resident: or-iae- bbuecf the - mm swdirhmflrt raid . the Dominion mucosa; enlugo ins {would be nmre wisdom nnd ch n g town. as the water was over hey flats west of the town. the grid." blinded. Influx Of Transients Blamed A For Unemployment In B.C. Brlieh came Wily a ohaigaon ti: ‘pars; manta viii-b the Dominion’ now- 9.06 15m. this . labor minister strfiitnliri Memel & Danzig I .Under Shadow Of Nazi Heel EuropeTensclyAwaitsLithuaniafs Answer To Polish Ultimatum T021 y . WARSAW. Poland, March 18— (AP) -The danger of war between Poland and Lithuania: hung over Europe tonight more ominously than . ever- Peace depended on Lithuania's acceptance oi a Polish ultimatum that will expire at 3 p-m. EST, tomorrow- One Lithuanian offer already had been rejected- . Poland, with an army 13 times the size of Lith- uaniafis, moved troops to the border throughout the day to back up her ultimatum with force. Her. preparations were said to be complate- . Authoritative reports in Berlin said Germany, had agreed to keep hands off if Poland would ac- quiesce to Germany's seizure of the Free City oh Danlig. " ~ The possibility also was raised that hostilities might lead to German annexation of Memel, a for- mer German city and now a Lithuanian port, and the Polish corridor. . All three are territories‘ tliatGei-imany lost af- ter the Great War and which contain. minorities over whom Reichsfuehrer Hitler has proclaimed himself protector. . ‘ ' Polish Demands ‘ _ Poland demanded that Lithuan- - . in renounce claim to Wilno, ~ _ once her ca ita but now held by -esta Poland. an re blksh relations with Poland that have been brok- c 3 eh for l8 years. ' There has been no exchange o! r . diplomats and no traffic, either by rail or air, between the neighbors since Poland seized Wilno-and ‘This use flared < . u... more 3r a psrnri“§u§?€'hr"r"$ D; .._~s Grave Is- ll on the frontier-which Lith- uaaia ilrmsts merely la a demar- SIIC. . ca on . ____, Bald German , th it ti v was tailored with purified’? i? ‘figrfiiggfii?’ s’°°"'M,,,h",'§1! tereet by Soviet Russia and by the Little mandarin’: rm cent, Antalu little Baltic states to the nori/h—- as Bmflong, m’; gum“ "m, m‘ I-atvin and Estonia-who wonder- 1111mm»; we u-m “My”, on m‘ ed whether they, too, would be eve of a special parliament aeuieq ‘éfnbhhfilit°‘eiii.“s‘i.tii‘ if.‘ “fr”? “‘ .".‘.“"i‘.i"‘...‘"’..“‘......’°"h‘* - p. . m nexat on of Austria set in motion. gg-‘réhng dignt-lred-vereliga of ti; n m Offer Unacceptable gial-edtrlilllhd “Wilma: re‘ an A Polish Government communi- non-enistant girlice 00M 1920. que said Lithuania had made an A semi-official appeal was broads unacceptable offer to settle the cast emorting the e la to rqnul sex dincidcnt by appointment of w‘: flee of id? “éohu: a. e commission. e o o (In Paris, where it 415g“. near the Lithuanian frontier. ed‘ rrenee and Ruesiawfiad taken Reports that Uthuanla refuaea oint efforts to bring prusure on 1° "Trend" h" olllln to Wllu m muons 1°;- a Demegm "ma, were described here as prematur- mtiegtp iihed Iinimlihltflllifllé (Irrigation cfictlsion had bee sa oan urne own an - offer to name envoys to meet in a Dfllllllo report: of mass troop neuu-a-l cm.) movements across the border, nq Developments were watched in °"""‘°"“""7 ""1""! "W" "ll Wetssaw by at légfi. three domin- “bfhrgf-l gguihghtliggmi ‘half-l ‘i3... Frgiigg “inf: naiyffwllraririe “'P'°"‘"=lf* i" "w "I lie" 0' ‘h diplomatic representatives ‘vere in Iii“, WW" _ a“ ""13"? G constant Wllch with both sides. andfifiltfn‘ M" "W" “W”! wgrgti-lligorgd-Iltfra hwd- ‘fglillzngliplbwn. (Ovnilflued on wee 1a, Col. s> scntatlona both at ‘alum and Bible Reading .ll_?.‘.1f_m Value Stressed _______,,_____, (CI. By Guardians S eclal Wire) TORONTO. March l The habit of regular Bible readings has been of "incalcrllable value" n strength- ening the national character of the people of the British dominione and of the United states, Lord Tweedsmuir said tonight in an ad- dress here to the British and For- eian Bible Society. "I am inclined to think that if the Bible was the habitual text book of statesmen today. £1181‘! You Nomi: fag Cur Willi Mower ‘to Bums NEVER. (chutes ANY Marches! ts relief contribution while leav- nghcontrol of relief administration . wi the provinces. 'I'he Govern» ‘IORONN, Mar. ll-Minlnuq meat at he same time urged and maximum temperatures: broedenlngoftheacopeotthe Balntlohn 20a Dominion own r billw in I-‘ialifrz I8 this held to cover e transient Cltaaaattotown lo so em. . Premier T. D. Pattullo held the Maritirnee: Fresh to strongwinda should eooalente to the with rain, probably part elect. eat extent with e Dominion. High tide this afternoon at 12.41 Be said if the Dominion set sten- and tomorrow morning at l8. British Columbia would do Sun alto this evening at 0.10am] ltsbeliooli uptothem. toutorrownrcrning at 0.00. ti: of re t" quarter moon Jeny. 3rd, ever. the province often hid only Biuilnersidc tide eighteen min- " ‘a czoigeé" h." w w" .- utel later than Charlottetown. .. l greemente ‘we can . ‘till on It!!! out." he ea . "Ottawa ah dknow wecarfica havetoailntomogtdlit R m; ‘E§‘.°.T‘2,"i‘.5.’,’ “***"~“='~ “*- Ilithuania C a b in e o . rry momentous? igevueelereeuelaiaalgiz.