_ ~ , Ol IBHUIIIAN iv -,' .. -‘. ' u f - \ renal.. _ ..%: 1l¢ls Covers ldnndlihstholnl mmm _ wNe SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1934 . 12 PAGES rrsxuusl~ i UUA k MERE MAN M ' ~ f Amit h lad wh-he eimtahlataussuwlli. f 19 s a E; if f l 7:1' Japanese Monroe Doctn RIOTINGS IN TWO _EUROPEAQI CAPIT!-\LS_= .1-L;-_ , M Paris And¢Mad1°idilT0'EURTHER °,£‘§f.'§esT“,';:_.',, THR0l|(il| Rllll Radicals Stage l||il|T SHED RE Remgfg G°°-1 TRAFFIC STILL Demonstratigns Elllililss BERT" ‘°'3"“*“""‘5’““"l`~"**~i‘<>""~"`""*`“B |. U C ll E Tl ' ____ U! mlritd R0 lllll ARR C1-h“fif1~A--‘"2-‘If-if-5“‘”S-°l’-°-“rig RURAL- RUSSIA -_-_- “Intensive Militarlza- i siden tion” Demanded By Soviet President. ly!tanlsyP.lslar&ol.Aa- aooisbdfrollhbltsl \¢CBXJW,AprilN--(AlooiA_tod .-i- Za i E; _;§ rr Egl llilgi g§‘; rig; l’l§§§§§;§§ gill iii; 'iiliil ills lil? ills E 5 Second Strike e-I .(lf Dill (Zeal Miners Called egg l“§z =iEs rag. 9.§ 5 is ..§5 a § f 2 'lko involved the empmod by Welton `. in the Black near Newcastle 8, the \|lnto's lners; N0 in all, war m and have not yet k. at unlm wceto -_.Q-_>l_ _-la are iasereelh sash pd ward alwnoa, _...__ F35 EE!! Ek ii! ills lie li ‘-neu-trouser- ensues aa in--ag edPol1ce.Many Are Arrested. , is (C. P. By Guardis.u's Special Wire) ' Riots disturbed the quht oi’ two European capitals last night. with extremists ‘peiited against the authorit- In Paris, a shouting throng of 6,000 many of them Communists, staged a noisy protest against the goverumeut’s ecoaomy pay cuts. After numerous skir- mishes with mobile guards and armed police, 940 demon- strators were marched off to jail. In Madrid, extremists and Faschts engaged each other in a gun battle in and around the building of the amault guards had quelled the dhorder four gravely wounded young nes were elif-”;igA=;§~.e léeiluihlr 5‘i§=’l 3 §¥iEli'E '§;§§§§ ggggirlllir Eilili leéailllg' sous was ‘ ' I Gukds and oarshinlsls throw a sous nn emma me ony neu neighborhood. Demonstrators. gn. ing before the effloare’ onslaught, took romeo in subway ki&s and continued to do banla. Ono policeman aeparstedfromhls fellows was badly beaten by the lnfuriatel time _g liilizé-ag gint l iililrigii if lil? if qketl gurl I ss til ¥;= Erig s lille le -let Hit hedsmmsiatrll dtpersedautheritteeiookspsoisl Wtostatioutrumpsters waning :=..ss£LsdsJlL;2: caeeaeaunsua itil! liable newspaper El Debate. After' ing Tragedy Is Or dered. (0.P.DyGUrdhn IIIQUKBI poolal Who) pill 30.-N0 illqillt *E l if eiiilriglif ugpelig §§sl;:»§§ge§§“ ieeele for ur. mruess when he did not reach Rlohibuoto Cello. afwr leaving Riohibucto llllldsy evening. liolrslfs lhtdrellt Aoolrdingtoastatarnentmadeby Mat Richard, contractor for the construction of a lighthouse at R.lohib1sotoOape.toRoyalCanadlan l|ounwdPolioe R . “”§§5§?§§?E§§§5i§ -iliééeélgéilegr a;'s'z. =§' Ql r Eisétiflllrlit-=‘§§= oounsotidr with the lighthouse. Ordered Ingasst t to Moncton and Gunner ty. ordered esnpannel- Rich! ugeeeeu it-r§§§;§e‘5i§ 5352"# *rg* .ie-§.E;§€@ 5 §§§E-ii” i” 1-. l s§§§ EE remains. to a later bucto. the water. RUN! Oanadlan Mounted Police ilBfU» NIA I litidl' 00 the jurymgn' noeived fromtheR..C.lLP. at Charlottetown. It was e copy of a letter said to have been received by Mrs. Furness, fran her husband be- filo his death. in which he had ln- “m*“4 l-Nl* mflht be some trouble before the lighthouse was completed The bg u 3‘%§§2 is - § .gilg ig; .ii r travel, nveniant for loe will oall Coal Vessel Loavea Sydney For Montreal gl 05’ in-_ Win) IND VI! Stool eolltsr la?- UID! N.S'. Franchise lnooio' ofNewBrunswld,sacoox-dingto arahorltativestatunenuhaveer- there- ‘lililllilleclalil .. 3 c ._ :gl ,B §§;s§§§li§.§§;*g§§ xiii; l.;§;;:§§.§§;.§u; £3522 §éun§:s§lé§§le;; til __-____-1-_- FREIRHTER IS REEl0 AT E D _.-1. Danish Ship Laila ~Frecd From Mud Bank in Stl. Croix River. (OI. ly WDM!-. .egguogeeccgup ga;E'.*Q§3§ZF%E§E2?§g§ Q ...;g§§q_§ 8-; gt,-?%&§E§;§§-5;g§ 2*; §é§§§§ arE5i',§§ iiiiélill ~ umsd the red .'&§""“"‘\?Z‘ eep em - k.'Ihe‘lnrushi.ng thefloodtideiooeened terandwiththealdoi lswamshewsspullsd was feared that has me to rest on s dm- ledge, which brought s similar craft two than being strain- it is believed the by her rm- treacherous- ohsnnessen when Cap- tain , her skip- per, was attempting to dock the hollhtl' yesterday afternoon The swift needing waters twisted his craft sideways in the narrow stream. lilo posed into the bank when sho was oerlht in natur-e's clumsy dry-dock. li- __ - Moving Ice From Mat- apedia River Pre- sents New Menace inFloodArea. (C. P. ly 0sasd|an’s !P°¢lal WIN) MONCIDN, N. B., April Zi. - Flood waters in the R/estlgouche River at llhtapedia, Que., just a- cross the New Brunswick border on tba Intex-colonial main line of the Canadian Natimal Railways, were rising tonight as the ice barrier be- low the railway and highway bridges still held fast. Further menace was added today when the toe in the Matapedia River, which joins the Rutlgouche at the scene of the floods, began to move in the upper reaches and came down for a dis- tance of eight miles. The only hope lor improvement lies in the moving 'out of the ice jam into the Bay itihaleur and rmcertainty enahrouds this. although resource to blasting the ice barrier has been considered butwlthsuchsvsstexpansetocov- er such a course would involve a great deal of time and the belief is ithat wlthpa ccmtlnuance of. mild weather and heavy rains the break may come anytime. Cr'om0lll'rei(l\tGrs transiu' oi passengers. over the flooded 5=g§= r§r5;E § r .§;c§§§;és§A§ ° E 5 .gg g ,gi-fléllé eng Eggl ililglliilli walked ursdsy, and - cultous haul of mails and baggage over flooded highways by horses. lmohssrgehmeagars Thursdays eastbound Ocean Lim- lied train from Montreal for the Maritimes exchanged passengers the north bound Maritime Es- yeaterday from Halifax and arrived hero short- lock tonight carry- number of travel- ed through to Hall- substitute passenger operated from here a- iurniahlng service in ose which were held up la. Transcontinental dlvlslon k, Que_, where some B0 track was completely washed uraday night, strenuous ef- belng put forth to have this in and ready for resump- ln service which is expec- s place lute Saturday. E 81 r§a§§i§9;;§gr§r“r;; éeilielzeirliili 55;; (continued on Pa¢"é'6> CZ _ § -1 K Tourist On C f°&.'$f2'»l1-"5'?»7°,'i.'f.l"u.'.'."°’ kd lei. Rates Still Possible ar Ferry Railway Minister Makes State- , ment In Reply To Mr. J- H. M ers, M. P. Y -Srl Rh lr- all? twww éiiili ,ill Ergrl gf U E§a§¥ l%§§§ l ` H ! ne Strrs World Would Prevent Meddling ByForce. A UPSET RELATIONS * Setback Feared In U.S. - Jap. Ne- gotiations (A. P. By Guardisn’s Special Wire) TOKYO, April 20-Japan’s admonition to other coun- tries that meddling in China ;will be stopped by force if need be aroused fears in lhigh circles tonight that it might check efforts to im- prove relations between the United States and Japan. Foreign diplomats, ss- tounded by Tokyo’s “audac- ity” in issuing the manifesto Tuesday, and highly-placed Japanese admitted that at- tempts to reach a prelimin- ary American-Japanese na- val accord were definitely set back and that the good- will expressed March 21 in notes between Secretary of State Cordell Hull and For- eign Minister Kokl Hirota may come to naught. lappseobdnoht Urged Onenewspapsr, the Komunin. urgeda npprochemollt between thstwonsnunsonthe srvimdl ths.t‘°ifthsUnitedstatssisou otfearany our aids we nad n comblnatlm of other powers." Oth- er papers, however, approved the document, and printed 0111116* dispatches purporting *-0 BMW "ill tho powers an 801-li!!! Willinl parts oi China. Diplomats BPPOUM dasad I1! what they called a “whits-hands off-China” policy. but concurred al- most unanimously in behaving the document in be more startling than any declaration of foreign policy since the 21 Japanese demands to China in 1915 and that Tokyo's in- terpretation and application of the manifesto will determine its effect on world peace. Well-informed persons. in this connection dld not believe Jai?" will attempt to expel American aviators now in China teaching Chinese flyers and selling aor0~ planes. Tokyo Surprised 'rmyo was s un- friendly repercussions ed the w - (Continued on Page 6) _____._.-- BILLS SENT GIVEN A8 (C2. By 0§rdhn’s Spaotal Wilol OTTAWA, Ap`rll 20-Sir I-»y1'1‘l3U P. Duff, Deputy to the 00v€m0'l‘ General. today gave assent in the Senate to the following bills: Respecting Prudential 'Trust Company, Limited; to ritifl' md wnflrm an agreement respecting me youu un by nu llaiolty and the commissioners of the transcen- tinental railway of attain tracks and premises of the canadian Pa- oifto RA/ilway OORIPIBY ll' Q\¥b0¢l rupeaing rolls! measures; to sm- end the criminal code. (race meet- ings); to amend the precious met- iii# League View (A. P. By Guardia-u's Special Wire) GENEVA, April 20. - League oi Nations circles admitted tonight that Japan opposes a league project for the reconstruction of China but emphasized that the plan involvs no political danger for China. league officials described the pro- ject as including technical advice for the development of Chinese communications, education, hygiene, river control, and silk culture. “Its only political character ts to render China stronger end more united," they declared. taking cog-» nizance of a Japanese manifesto de- claring that “the time has passed when other powers or the League of' Nations can prosecute their policies for the exploitation of Chinn." Several European experts were sent to China to car-ry out the re- habilitation plan. No Japanese is a member of the commission since the Chinm wanted none. A Japanese spokesman said the econmnlc, financial, and technical assistance may prove desirable pol- itically because of the lack of unity in Chinn. Nevertheless, lt was un- derstood Japan might repeat the wsmfng to the League. BRITAIN PTITS DUTY FRREIGR PAPER, BUARD New Import Duty Will Greatly Benefit Canadian Paper Ex- porters Claim. 9 (C. P. Qble By Grsnlsllllfa Special Wire) LONDON, April 20-Effective t0- morrow the import duty on foreign paper, and board made from paper or pulp, will be increased to Il percent. A treasury order in this effect wal issued i»0hi8hU- xii” board however is exemDi/ "Um Rh* increase. The action is expected to benefit Canadian paper exporters substan- tially since it will chiefly be bvmo by the Scandinavian producers. whose toll ls increased by five PCT' cent. Th, nr-der was made on recom- mmdatlon of the import duties sd- vlsory committee. 'me increase applies to PHP" .M mpg; gr pulp board, whether coated or otherwise treated in ln! manner, or not treated. Oi-1101' UW” K,-ag; board imported in reels and straw-board. Paper uablewuudutyllf-he* .,119 which when fully extended weighs more than 90 pounds to 1h0 resm of 400 sh:-et; of double crown. measuring so by 20 mwel- The duty 11095 U0* “DPW £0 DSP” or board forming part of another article. ` Kraft board. which is exempted ` from the increase in duty. is large- ly used for making comrgated fm;-Q board packing-cases. Good News for Canada rsorrrnrzau. April li -"OM ds indusryaoi dUutEuotiVomIotandpQ.act. al nmrkinl edt, ill: to amend the news for Canada." was _tl1e*d_eB¢flP- s en amend :nel--'-’='”“*f-ff f' "I- (Continued on Page 6) °F§;E°mi§¢»§ E Thomas Hage ,;»,;§;§l;;luAi§s~ ,.1-;»9;,.lil!l;:.-.al cfs? fu: g *lm .lrigl llEEElE»EEEt'l Iieurriiqg C)f` rQyl41liotzrrnecl |gp¢na).0.Pet¢a ad (mas- atsbloH.V. ($011811. boi-bottle Boys-lcanadlanalountsd Police. Dr.-LO. llleahall. ulwer lor o\ouout¢Oounty,endU.LD. Dunmore. wrn`l\lfiH°°4 U autopsy. -r-lmetnyeeuneaesueammm shotaandseennromas firethe htmtatdeihehomswherethly quarters rwturneda ’l‘lmothy,ool~ walk owl! he witnil onverss- augggaiul i;§§i§§§§;i lscéit r§rf§i'8 i- lla White - Hands - off - China Policy Evokes Upposition From World Powers Extreme Caution Britain’s F a r East Policy. WORLD REACTION United Front By E u r o p e a n s Proposed. (A. P. By Guardian’s Special Wire) Japanese warnings against assistance to China that might lead to political med- dling brought forth thus reactions in world capitals Friday: TOKYO-High sources be- lieved the manifesto, describ ed by diplomats as “auda- cious” and “a Japanese Mou- roe doctrine,” might check efforts to better American- J spanese relations. LONDON-High authorit- ies said Great Brltain’s Far Easicm policy will be cau- tious and that the United States must take the initiat- ive if she wished a united front of western powers against the Japanese move. EE‘!’Ec iiilggi 5-*gi Eégiig gsééai PAR.ll-The Iwnign Office was said to be oommunioahng with wuningum and ummm regarding the document, and the fear war exgresed that the new policy may bring to an end the “open door" in China. R¢OMI_-The newspaper Messag- Kero urpd European nations ta present a united front to Japan be- cause “Japan shows me considers China as her own." W - Ambassldol Bl-ifnmtdhewouldpruent an ofe iarntinuod tn Page 6) Une Weather, Etcf PRoSPr.R\fY is S0“R.f|'\\i‘\i`a THE l Busmtss MAN cvrnfc FUR its Raimcim ` fo iss: cR\=.\>n' Z U.-4? 1 -A // f lg! '\f iaiill 1>7`!;`. / ,E H Fresh er strong wish. unsettled with aeeasional rain. }('.\laAl|an Irena) lslrson >1.4ni1\u\I. or-'l-‘ICl:, 'ron q||¢g_ April 20-Minimum and mask mum temperaturwm- Ihwmon . . . . .. M _'lb Amvir an is rs 8 vlemne ._ rn Vancouver . ~ lldmouton .. -. » - ‘Darn .. . . .a ry _ . . .. gssrstoon .. wulm . f I. ffl ,1'eros?:‘... . ... . Ottawa . 'Montreal .. -- -- \§hQ .. .N ... .¢. glen Ckflbmetawa 355 Hi 40 R0 ill' T5 4'! so ssaaesxsr. Siliittt Iarirhe 1Ye¢.--Ins! wtalsl cloudy with scattered saowosw. F bltl last:-Frm! er strc wil:d:; ‘zassttlad wil oceedaa re _ lip tide t& afoeraooa at IS and tomorrow mental li- 5 U ~ .u'.‘."..'.'.‘!..f.'-‘»‘£.".lTI' il 335 “" rise; quagur noeu Eaesrlsy, .af :b“€¢=:ieie¢'nae umm -mas |, . on i&$i“ili»mm wg lessee iQ El I R ll E 2 l . .._.‘:f’:f‘7§k A ,.5-°°l‘:!'r»‘=.'.il » / 1' , . ‘i fr ' f Aja; I/‘. -r ._ £1/i" al; |-` A \} I 1 ,. fs ll ‘-; -1- .V-1 r .., r \ 1 l - \ ` \~`* ». f \ -. `\` 5 \ -"hh ..». ,~ l _I1 Lip.. _t'_(‘,;! _sf \ -.kk . ,. .s -,ir L" \ " ._ ‘-1. 2. . \ I i e._ » :'i_ .-, 5; K4' >!f'."-,-