‘W3 JUNE 17. 1933______ Ambit ious hie .__ Tough..Life For Jim Crow.As‘ Novel Attack Is Launched In Saskatchewan Government Offers Prizes For Banded Pests—Guns Ring Out By Andy Mcoermott lcentral Press Canadian Writer) REGINA, Sa£k., June I5-Johnny as Jim Crow, Saskatchewan's blic limemy No. 1: There‘s a price of $500 on his head and other amounts varying from $253 to :1 are offered for his relatives, including his famous moll, Magpie Meg. Every Saskatchewan citizen, from the 1lttle- boys who use B-B guns to grandpop, and his Indian gun, are to be seen these days, tramp- ing the wheat fields, hunting around bluffs where a. few trees may be found. clambering over barbed wire fences, driving along roads in cars, their eyes all search- ing only one thing—Jim Crow. With ammunition sales mounting Q a height they never attained be- fore in the “off season’ ’thc gun industry folk are right behind the movement. Wipe out Jim Crow! It rings everywhere. Why? Because the Saskatchewan government, through Hon. W. F. Kerr, minister of natural resources. has started the biggest sweepstakes of its kind on the American continent. There are $3,500 for Pflnes in this shoot-the-crow carn- paign! Top prize is 8500. Almost every day in May J. R. Hill. game commissioner, and his Isgtants, journeyed from Regina to Moose Jaw wild Animal Park where crows, trapped by members of the Saskatchewan Fish and Game League all over the province, are waiting In big pens to be banded and released. By the end of May nearly 500 of the 856 birds needed were to be trapped, sent to tile park for banding. crated and sent to other parts of the province, released. and then shot at. Already thousands of crows have been killed and the campaign is hardly under way. Campaign Against Bird The crew. is carrion bird, and the magpie, his black and--white com- panlon, wage B. ceaseless war on the bird life of the province and for years the game league has been trying to stir up hatred against the birds. They have finally received government support to the extent of $3.500 divided into 856 prizes. Just as many birds will be blinded and released. Shooters will keep the bands until Dec. 1 when the contest closes. An envelope con- taining the list of prizes and num- bers placed opposite and known only to Judge A. E. Bence, K.O.. Battleford, has been placed in I safety dcpcslt box and will not be opened until the closing day. What if the band worth $500 is —:_4 lands and Pure Rich Perfection Ice Cream. liEI.IC|0liS S SERFECTION‘ 0 ICE CREAM ’ Cattle are Knee-Deep in Daily to be Skillfuily Crualicd Fruits and Cane Ita Velvet Smootluiua to It’; Pure, Wholeaomc. central iiroameries Ltd. Lush Island Pasture- Cream is Reaching Us Blended with Sweet Sugar to Produce Unaurpaucd. Healthy. .7 Old Jim Crow is having a tough time In stchewun, and no Joy- ous singing marks their sojourn in the province. In fact the longer “I?! keep quiet the longer they live for the government has hit upon 3 novel scheme or getting mi of the pests by handing hundreds of them (Left) and letting them. loose J4; be shot It. elch band being worth a prime. Thousarids have sirvcarhr been shot in search of the prize bands. . not turned in? Department officials just smile. That'il, make a, mag start for next year's campaign,-' they reply. The band is a. small metal strip that is attached to the left leg of each crow. It takes a keen eye to see it at 30 yards so the govern. merit anticipates plenty of un. banded crows will be shot before the banded birds are found. Game Commissioner Hill and his aides carefully keep check or where the ¢T°W5 3-T9 CBDtui-ed. what band they receive and where they are re- leased When they are shot and the bands turned in the government will have a complete record of migratory habits of the crow, of which little is known. Birds are re- leased in an area entirely unrelated to that wherein they were captured. Probelm to Trap Crows Originally announced to get under way May 1, the campaign did not really get under way until near the middle of the month, as trap. ping the crows proved a real prob- lem. The government. through the game league, offered plans of 150 Wpea of traps but results appeared disappointing, To offset the cost of building the traps the government is paying 15 cents for each crow captured. They must then be crated and shipped to the . wild Animal Park for handing. Charges of shipping are collect. ’It has given country lads plenty to do. It is probable that early in June the birds caught in the northern part of the province will be tagged at Battleford and shipped to the aouthem half for realeese in order of speed up the work of getting 856 birds in the "money" class. Inspired by Saskatchewan’: cam- paign, Manitoba has poined in on a smaller scale. There $100 is being paid as prize money. It looks like Alberta. home of social Credit, will shortly become a haven for I:/uskshot-shy crows and magples. Legion Gunman Tells Of Death Plot - (A. P. By Guardian’: Special Wire) Dl!7I'ROI'I‘. June 15 — Dayton Dean testified today that N. Ray Markland, former Mayor of nearby Highland Park, complained repeat- edly that he would be ruined pol- itically unless Dean and other Black Legion gunmen succeeded in their persistent efforts to kill the fighting editor of the cmnmuriity iiewspape_r._ Markland is one of 12 men charged with conspiracy to murder Arthur 1". Kingsley, the editor whose newspaper helped defeat him for re-election in 1934. Dean, the Black Legion’; con- fessed "executioner" in the slaying of Ohsrlcs A. Poole, calmly told a packed courtroom at the examin- ation of 11 of the 12 defendants today of signing in blood an oath with other members to carry out the plot Get Rid of the Rooster The master has no place in the modern flock after the last settinu of 0:1! has been laid. In most farms end commercial poultry yards roosters up sold as soon as tbcbroodingaeaaon is past. This is done when the male birds ale not especially valuable, in case they are taln them. they ahai“.'.'bo seoax ad from the hens and kept individual pan through the sum- mar and lull. only those moatsra that are capacialiy should be mvod for next years breeding. _ As a amoral thing, several roost- on may be put in one pen without WI on I be remem- ri rm \JHARI..O'l"|‘ETOWN GUARDIAN Many Enter Big Subscription Campaign FIRST GRZTVD PRIZE Choice of Chevrolet Master Coach or $800.00 Cash SECOND GTSZIND PRIZE Choice of Ford V-8 Tudor Sedan or $650.00 Cash Enter Now-Take Advantage Of Extra Prizes Of First Week ITI.-IIN a few weeks, The Guardian will present someone with their choice of a brand new 1936 Chevrolet Coach or $800.00 cash and another person will get the choice of a Ford .V-8 Tudor Sedan or $650.00 cash for soliciting sub- scriptions to this newspaper. _WiIl that someone be your- self or will you permit this great opportunity to pass you by without giving it a try ? See the double page announcement in today’s Guardian and read every word it contains. The next step will be to bring’ “‘ the Entry Blank. get to work, keep working and make your reward a new automobile. This is Entry Week and those contemplating taking part in the race_shouId not wait another minute to start. More votes are given during the first week in the campaign than are given Iater.'Generous cash prizes are offered during the first week in addition to the regular commis- sion on SlIi;)ScI‘Ipi.I0lIS.. Sell 12 one-year subscriptions and 1 six-months subscription, or 25 six-months’ subscriptions during the first ‘week and you will be paid $5 CASH. Get busy at once while subscriptions are easy to get! Donn let the other fellow get ahead of you. -It costs you absolutely nothing to enter and you can- not lose. You are guaranteed 20% commission paid every week on each new or renewal subscription you sell. An entry blank is printed in this issue which counts 5,000 votes for entering. This gives you a ‘lying start and puts you well ahead on the road to a successful finish. Clip the entry blank, bring it or mail it to the Guardian Oflice NOW ! . The campaign office at the Guardian will be open from 9 am. to 8 p.m. for your convenience. The Campaign Man- ager will be glad to give you additional information if you will telephone 133 or call at the Guardian Office. ......¢. ..--¢-¢-...¢¢---..-- ‘ you to act quickly. Special Prizes! For Opening Week of campaign To Be Awarded n, Women Urged To Ente Saturday, June 27, 1936 i 12 special cash prizes as listed below will be awarded to those bringing in the best cash sub- scription reports before !) o’cIock Saturday, June 27th but a minimum of $50 in cash sales is required to qualify for one of the special prizes. $15.00 IN CASH Will be awarded the candidate reporting the largest amount of cash during the opening week, ending Saturday night, at 9 o'clock. $10.00 IN CASH To the candidate scoring second $5.00 To The Next 10 iillalifying 12 big winners the very first week. It will pay I START EARLY-N 0W—TOIiAY ! ‘ Turn now to the two-page announcement and read it carefully, there are several valuable coupons. In one corner you will find an ENTRY COUPON, which is good for 5,000 free votes; in another place you will find a “FIRST SUB- SCRIPTION COUPON" which is good for 100,000 extra votes, but only one of each of these coupons may be used by each candidate. Read every word of the opening announcement. The all-Important thing is to fill in the Entry Cou- pon and bring it or mail it to our office. Get I1 subscription book and start getting subscrip- tions at once. The Charlottetown Guardian , Phone 133 Charlottetown P. E. I. dffbefore the next season will go long ways toward buying a vigor- o-rvrrorooooooeeeoo-oo H woo 04+-coo-+¢o+o4+o+++o++oo Phone 1474 -:-_- .__—- --2 L valuable, making it amicable to r;- I in ‘an i ous cockerel in the Fall. It also must be remember 3. when cutting out the roosters that cockerels in- vdrlably give better fertility than older birds. Don't run the risk oi keeping roosters with the 11001: over the summer if you expect to get a good price for your eggs. Don't that an infertile egg will blood lines or will it ‘ OI! T0 RENT Dcairablc property. 75 Dorchester Street, dwelling house comprising 14 mm and shop. bathroom, hot water heating. suitable for store and f°‘l'8¢ti boarding house or for conwi-lion “CV91” .nIo apartments or tenements. Alli”! Puwllal Street. 14-|hI.8,'~«. ...i_ :ilSE:lTi5lTESD7BSliSli rams r Subscription Drive , Stolen Myste Seas In ABOVE is sketch of the diesel mot ored mystery vessel ‘-Girl Pat;" ma p shows location of buried treasure. my Central Press Canadian) HALIFAX, N. 5.. June l5—.—Latest report is that the Girl Pat, mys- tery, pirate treasure ship, has been sighted on‘ the coast of French Gul- ana. Police all over the world are on the lookout for her. Said to have been stolen from a North sea fishing flee‘. near Grimsby, Eng- land, this British trawler, with pow- erful Dlesel engines, is thought to have been heading for South Amer- ica and thence up the coast to Canada. She is also linked, it is stated. with stolen Spanish treasure bur- led on an island somewhere in the Atlantic and guarded by the re- mains of a murdered Spanish sea captain. wherein lies the connec- tion between the treasure (reput- edly on the Salvage Islands) South America, and Canada is just one of the mysteries surrounding this vessel. The story of the treasure goes back to 1804 when Spain was at war with England. Two ships met on the Atlantic a hundred or so miles oil’ the Spanish coast. one. Cadiz-bound, was flying the span- lsh colors, the other from Holland. They spoke as they pa=sed. For the first time the Spanish captain learned that his country was at war. He also learned that English men- : of-war strctchedfrom Trafalgar to Cape Finisicrre, and that a safe passage to Spain on this route was impossible. Rather than let his iI‘€ilSI.II'f‘. valued at approximately 32.000000 then and almost five times as much now, {all into the hands of the British, he decided to turn back. His crew, already in a mutinous state of mind, did not see why they should endure hardships to save the treasure for King Phil- ip, Although the treasure never fell into the hands of the English INTEREST RATES IEN|_J_EREli l(‘. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) EDMONTON. June mt-nt of interest due on 56,000 000 Province of Alberta bonds and $10,- 000 city of Calgary bmds was tendered today at a 50 per cent rczlurtinri. The Province and the foothills city deposited sufficient money in the banks to meet the cashing of coupons at the reduced rate but it ‘ was still unknown tonight to what extent. the bondholders had cash- crl their coupons. There were no l(‘DOI“i£ of coupons being cashed here. The provincial reduction was in I line with anncuncrrnent by Prem- ‘ ier Aiberliiirt cuilimz all rates on the province's $160,000,000 . public debt in half. The reduction was made cifcctive June 1. A saving of $5,484 was claimed for the Government by Hon. Char- les Oockroft. provincial treasurer, on the interest payments made today. Under the rates of 4, 4 1-2 and 5 per cent on the issues on which payment was due today. the government was called upon to pay $131,605 to the bondholders. But the Government computed the payment at the old rows up to May 31 and under the reduced rates of 2. 2 1-4 and 2 i-2 per cent on the period from June 1 to June I5. The amount deposit- ed in the bank to meet the pay- ment was $l25,l2l. The bonds in- forest was payable in Edmonton. Calgary, Winnipeg, Victoria. Van- oouver. Toronto. Montreal and New York. DISCUSS ,SI'I‘UATION i5—With JASPER. Alt.:i., June the Alberta. ii at at on and 15~—P3l’- i interest I ry Trawler Search Of "Girl Pal" Last Reported In Distress Off Coast Of French Guiana neither did it reach Spain. The crew got their opportunity to mutiny one daybreak when the ship was passing a cluster of is- lands unknown to them and seem- ingly uninhabited. Knives flashed and the captain was murdered on his own deck and the ship fell into the hands of the mutineers. who dropped anchor and set out in small boats with the treasure. on the sand. well above high-water mark. they buried the treasure. placing on top of it the body or the captain. Their treasure hidden. the mut- ineers went back to the ship in- tending to run it aground on some island and burn it. They succeeded in running aground. but all but two of the crew were killed. Of the two survivors. only one lived to tell the tale of gold. He also died before he could give the exact whereabouts. As he was dying he took a fellow- patient, Christian Cniise, into his confidence. After keeping the secret to him- self for flvc long years, Cruise ev- entuaily had to tell someone, so he went to the British admiralty. They believed his story and sent a king's ship to the islands with Christian Cruise aboard. when they reached the island it landing party was sent ashore. They dug deeply into the white sands but found nothing. with treach:ol‘us reefs and no safe anchorage oil‘ the islands, and bad weather brewing, they were forced to return to their ship. The Girl Pat. it is indicated, is on to the Salvages. On April 1 she left her home port and three days later arrived at Dover. Here her engineer went ashore and when he returned she had gone. Next 1'8- ports stated she had arrived at. and left Spain. Oorcubion evidently was her next port-of-call. which sh!) reached. on April 12. After a twelve-day stay in port for rvpairs slated YCP debate, the 20th annual convention of the Investment Deal- ers‘ Association of Canada conven- cd here today. “'I‘hor<~ is no doubt that the Al- ; berta slturillon is just about the ,most pressing problem we have before us and all our members. as ‘representative of the people who , have in\'c.<,tcd their money In Al- Ibcrta, are vitally concerned." said J. Ernest savnrd of Montreal. pre- sident of the Association. Mr. Savard expected the reduc- “ ton of 50 per cent in interest my- . mcnls on Alberta's $'160.000.000 inublir debt would receive consid- crmblc attention from the '15 dele- yznts-s gathered here for the three- day convention. The interest re- durtlon was made effective June I and (hi first reduced rates of- fered for rtayrnent today. I i . IIIIEIIMAIISM Wanders Buried Treasure? she left, léaving a but equivalent to $1.175. After a month!» disap- pearance she agnin .s‘nowcd up at the Senegal pbrt oi Dnkrir with a. sick man aboard who was reported to be her male. Lloyd's aL',€‘IlLS were prepared to pay the insurance. When she left port uuzllii and was not seen for smre time the owners and Lloyd's agreed he ship was not lost but stolen. Clinrgcs of barralry were laid :igo.:n;~_'. the crew and police all over the world are looking for her. Nothing more was heard of her until Julie when the authorities at Dakar reported she was headed for South America and possibly plan- ning to sail up the eastern coast to Canada. Where they got their information was not disclosed. Al- though she has not been reported at sea since she left Dakar it is still 3 mystery why u Grimsby trawler. the Girl Pat, would want to visit Canada, a long way from Salvage Islands and buried ti:~E1_irv. Strawberry Boxes We have just received direct from the FACTORY 125,000 best make regu- lation sizes, quarts and pints. Sold in any quan- tity at lowest prices. WHOLESALE & RETAIL carter & co. Ltd. At Seed Store Charlottetown ANNOUNCING the Opening of Steele's Bakery 40 Lower Queen Street Fresh home-made Bread and all varieties of Cakes, Pies, Pastry. Try our Chicken Pies. ihcy’re delicious. Our prices are right. Our Bakery is strictly sani- tary. AS AN ILL OF THE BENEFIT DERIVED FROM WEARING EYE-GL1! SSIIS I-‘OH X X USTRA TION DISTANT VIEW. WE FITTED A GENTLEMAN LIVI\”('. .‘_(‘l’.0SS THE RIVER. WIIIH A PAIR. AND HE TOLD US THE OTHER DAY THAT HE CAN NOW SEE OBJECTS AND SCENI-‘.RY ACIIOSS "HIE HARBOUR. AND BEYOND . CIlAItLOTTETO\‘l'N TIIAT III-1 IIAD NEVER SEEN BEFORE AND DID NOT KNOW EXISTED. YOU MAY NOT BE ONE WHO COULD BE GRI-IATLY HELPED. BUT SURELY.-IN VIEW OF THE PROSPECT OF BENEFIT, IT WOULD BE WORTH A TRY. E. w. TAYLOR. Charlottetown J. s. TAYLOR, Alberton.