Minors OF L . MERE MAN n-ni-n of the world. Juetlcoktherlgbtfilwmolll ‘——¢ Charlottetown Guudlnn ‘two Canto Inrnlnr Guru-n. Founded ill! 4s BODIES RECO VE Covers PrinceEdward Island Like the Dew 1- ...s____- _..... . CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, APRIL 2s, 193s ~ A 1o PAGES CONCESSIONS DEMANDED B Y CZECH-GERMANS mnniiuuu izinin LISTS ziuiggiiuns utonomy And Com- plete Equality With Czechs Sought By German Minority. J’- Bv 0a???- Special Wire) KABLOVY BY, (lzechoflo. SL-Konrad l-lenlein, I. M‘!!! a formal II I l]! to the midst of pence." n1eln's eight demands were: Complete equality in the eta: Sudeten Clennans and Czechs. Recolhition of these Germans a corboratlvo group. . Definition and recognition of V. man districts. Aiillswhoilibils administration of are affected. a1 protection for Germans tr, outside purely German “inluatice " th gene sinsce will 86. n of lnite pledge c. official recog- lon of Imzi doctrine inCzechu- vskia. eclaratlon not to tol- "l kin oi war in the lmust peace" was enmhasized by rrnnz Sudeten party member . , chémovak raniament a1"... ,t.000 district functions..- arty. vakia comic. permit a loreiui licy "which places Czechoslovakia oniz the enemies of the German ace l Czechoslovak tmwrlglgis_of_vllci_latlngflthe_ pust- m) >- Lqmytiouedgcn page 9, Col 4) fQMlNG fVfNll "Dance Iona Hall Wednesda . prll 27. L-402-4-25- l. "lhserve May 12th. and 13th. “A Dreezn of Qucen Esther’. ptist School room 8.30. L-401 . ...__ ., "Borden Llne Club iuziuins “v85 ‘calves evcly Tuesday Hours anssu Province was reported BHANGHAI. from a-uirTI-A “wholesale” Chinese retract in Ki; military authorities by Japanese ed who said the withdrawal Bnmbl their fighters to Ipueh ncare the vital East-West unahad ay. lcn a ' , oblccti e v . Chinese retreat wee said to have halted north of Pihslon, about eight miles from ad, where the Japanese said thiuv expected a determined Chinese stand against their advance. Twenty thousand Chinese were reported t0 have fallen book in diwlifl nu ‘ before they relhedanddiglnrlorthofPlh- elm. Trade Official ll Native 0f Island . (C. P. Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL, April ZL-Re- construction of the storm-dam- aged Canadian Pavilion at the British Empire Exhibition in Glasgow has been completed, A. T. Seaman, assistant exhibition commissioner of the Department of Trade and Commerce, today. Mr. seamen. lssistlnt exhibi- tion Jesioner in London for the last nine years, returned to Canada. aboard the llnor chess of Atticli afler super-visa; the tion of the Canadian ex- hibit at the. fair. He be staéloned in Canaan pennan- en y. Canada's pavilion ls the sec- 0nd largest In the exhibition grounds with 24,090 square feet of space, Mr. Seal-new ulzl. It was flattened ‘y a gale in Do- cernber but rebuilt. , The sssistv‘. commissimer is a native of Ciwrriottefown. .0. PRESliliii was BUSINESS Roosevelt-Ford Con- ference Stirs Specul- lation. WASHINGIION. Avril 24-(0?) -—President Roosevelt's impend- in; meeting with Henry Ford has stirred speculation about the plow it may have in the cycle of presi- dent's] steps to meet the recession and United states congreeiional challenges cf his leadership. That the Ford conference dcee have some special significance in the minds of the President end his close advisers can hardly doubted. There have been hints that it would befcfcwediry simil- ar talks will other industrial and bilsiness leaders presumably in re- gard to the administration‘; lead- 1 yr..- ing spending-credit expansion prfimm}. . .. -. . _ .. ,_ Moreover. the Ford visit seems to mrny cbservers lmprrttrlt be- cau e lt conveys a. suggestion as to the lypc 0d industrialists with ‘ IJ-SQtl-iZ-ivi-Z-a-ti. "Mafia: lthe Auxllsr of the l int U. . - ‘in... so?» . ‘Edna-Eli. "The Ncnbcro Dramatic Club _ ens i .' Liair-a-za-ai. "ago-n. "unwise; "w" Width-Jain. filaments MW cogopsretlve " lotion. I -4.g1.33,g.flnQ "stock Marketing Board at Charlottetown this week 1 l on on am. r. n. - In mum - 11. r l - "ghflifimsne ‘filial; my? m o-opcrctlvc chi in: wipe» maintain better Em. whom the president may talk in- rllvirluaiiy in the near future. s long record great flnencle ofcn Of $500,000 (A. r. Ouirdilfl’! q vmb l t no m t uleeplni ‘lumen d and i ‘(u .000) wag}: of palnliflll , Five o4 meager»- wes . mg V st wife, tol'ot"-'-wcrut t bel need Devil? artdlcoltiexctdr cc o . mmrllhd floor tury Chi ' Lfmltedrcf "Montreal "Wholesale" Chinese Retreat Claimed In Kiangsu Province Ooiitoiding with Kiamlu Province operations. the Japanese said a left flank column driving south from Lint in neighboring Bhentung Province occupied Tanchen , im. portant town lust north o the Kiamau border. Tdinchohg‘ was added to a widen- ing Japianme salient in southern Shani/inns. a few miles east of Taierhchwazlit. Chinese asserted the Japanese offensive suffered e. serious set- back Saturday in vicious fight-mg north of Talerhchwant wher‘ 5,00) Japanese troops who eascaped from bee! ,, “ Yihsien attempted to join the maiin column advancing from Canada Réédy T. Supply Aircraft Pledge Elihu... To Government And Empire (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA, April 24-—If the Bri- tish military authorities want Cen- adlen aircraft, constructed in ac- cordance with the standards and designs of the Royal Canadian Air Fore itself, Canadian industry can supply the need. This emerged from the conference held here {yes- torday. at which executives o 12 Canadian aircraft construction companies met ht. Col L. R. La- of na- Fienche. deputy minister tlonal defence. The manufacturers offered their ent e ff\'.‘l‘ltlf!l'i',0 Canada and the Un ted ‘Enltdoih iIinml-imatter of ‘meeting British requirements. Everything, however, hinges on the attitude of the British mission which wll‘ shortly surv the pos- sibilities rf having mlltury air- planlies built on this side of the At- an c. The program of the mission has not been disclosed; but the assum - tion is that efforts will first made to enlist the assistance of United States a'r raft manufac- turers, with the possibility of the British purchasing American stand- ard equi ment. Severe problems are. however, tied up with this. One is the posi- tion the United States might be compelled to take in the event of Great Britain helm at war. ff the United States invoked its neutral- ity act and refused to furnish s. belligerent United Kingdom with war supplies. then Britain's sit- uation would be worse than if it had not embarked upon United Grates purchases. A solution to this problem lies in the establishment in Canada by American aircraft companies of branch plants, or, as an alternative. the granting to existing Canadian companies. under regular commer- cial agreements ,of rights to Unl- ted States standards and patents. The Canadian companies have, for the most part. arrangements of this character with the Brill-uh menu- facturcrs. ‘This circumstance en- ables them to manufacture for Canadian defence purp~=~s the type of machine now helm: flown by the Royal Air Force. Canadian Firm To Manufacture Planes (C. P. by‘ Guardian's 84pecial Wire) LOND .N, April 2 -—The Na- tional Steel Car Corporation, and Hamilton Ont.. is going to manufacture Wcsilavrl Lyrender army coopera- ilcn aircraft for the Canadian Government it was officlnliy an- noun~ed flcturdcy. Tho manufacture will be under a licence agreement with Weetland Aircraft Limited of Yeovil, Eng- nd. The terms involve a sub- stantial cuh payment to Westlend Aircraft and s s lding scale of» roy- sltlu of machines manufactured. R. J. or, of Montreal. presi- dent of tlcnalnfltocl Car, ls at - r heve Kentish Castle Art Collection floorofthc. b! u. : we: valued URI Slilll PRUGRESS IN CANADA-ll. S. TRADE P A B T Agreement Not Like- ly To Be Concluded In Time For Debate This Session. OTTAWA, April 2d'—-(OP)—-Dir- ect trade negotiations progressing concurrently n Wudlizigton be- tween Canada and United Srtates and the United Kingdom and the United States will figure largely in the interest of Government and members when Parliament resumes tomorrow, following the two-week Easter recess. But there is s growing belief that agreements arising from those ne- gotiations will not be reached in time for them to be debated at the present session. Nor ls lt any details of their progress be given the House. Refreshed by holidays spent in the south or in their home consul- tuencles the ministers and mem- bers will resume tomorrow wlithiho 1938-30 Relief Bill the first matter on the agenda_ GROUND WORK LAID Preliminary discussions on the t of commodities which might ibe included tn the proposed B.-United Kingdom agreement were completed some weeks ago end direct negotiation; entered up- on. The Canadlan-American nego- tlatlcns formall opened more than a week ago, fdliowmg o fortnight hearings aslvl ton. . scum-renounced from Canada olf es n the United om market. It also has been ted that United Kingdom t be called 09°11 to abandon to some d - her preference; in Canada. as that on anthra- cite coal. PROGRESS SLOW Apparently negotiations have been lng slowly and the trade picture has changed radically olnce the preliminary steps were taken last August io renew and revise the Canada-United States recipro- cal ear-cement rcaehed late in 1935. Business recession in the United Staten in the pest six month: has brought ghoul; a drop in Canadian exports to that country and changed the balance until Canada recently has been buying more from the Untied Stmfeg than she sells there. It had been thought Finance Mlnietes Dimninrr woifld have the new avmement. with United States in W- budgw this year in the same Yh~mv~"v< n: the new Canada-United mun-l». t-wde agreement was in ti“: one.» ioqt picnic“, Definite indication ued 0n page 9. Col. 3) f Con t‘ FilWiifEi wuriuss Remove Cargo From “City 0f Salisbury.” noerou. April 24-—((;Pl—-Whi1e a northeast wind kicked up a troublesome swell. longshnrmien today worked feverishly to salvage part of the 51.000000 curgc 0f the hard-luck freighter City of Sel- isbury, which was half nubmerled off Graves Light in Boston Harbor. A crook severed the L800 ion freighter. from which more than a score of monkeys esce whdle it was in f-hilfax Harbor last week with its cargo of wild an- end bl-lea of wc~l lute and steal. The bow 0f the vessel was below water vmiic i stem mnem- ed caught 0n a . 0n vmich it flitting l t ..':."“.::."e.t' dlllfildllllldilmlh cabin _ il-tfi “ltd. eso- "um vri l Pride _ manila the skipper of the British Wm. Captain Owen Morris. tnn°ttétltr thfiséi‘ t. To? e uprated vessel, men work. ed throng ololtufi; Now the" l‘ ~ orcwln." belief m» n11; "u" n'\ he n“- regal prrbotiy will l To Receive Honor D. RAYIVIOND 2A— fC.P.) '- Raymond, REV. H. TORONTO, April REV. Henry Douglas rector of Si. Paul's Anglican Church st Charlottetown, will be presented with an honorary de- gree of’ Doctor of Divinity tomor- row night at the dist annual com- mencement of Wycliffe College. Mr. Raymond, a graduate arts from University of Toronto and in theology from Wycliffe Col- lege served as financial secretary at the college from 1912-1916. For some years be has been president of Prince Edward Island branch of the British and Foreign Bible Society. llilliE-BELiSllA ivisiu Rillii Stresses New Anglo- Italian Friendship Agreement. PARIS. April 24—(CP)—Les1ie l-Iore-Belleha, secretary for war in the British cabinet. reached Paris by air tonight following his talks with Premier Mussolini and For- eign Minister Count Ciano in Rome Qitturday. Representatives cf the French Government and the British Em- baaey greeted the energetic Cabl- net Minister who dined with Pre- mier Daladier at the British Em- baeey. Mr. Hore-Bellsha will leave for London tomorrow to report to his colleagues on his conversations and his inspection of the Malta defences. ROME. April 24—(CP-Ha.vas)- The sincere friendship between Great Britain and Italy cemented by the new Anglo-Itglian treaty was stressed in a statement here Saturday by Leslie Hore-Bcllshn. British wur secretary. enroule homewerd after an inspection visit to Malta. “it was for me a particularly good omen that my arrival in Rome coincided s0 nearly with the birthday of so ancient and yet so modern a city," he told the press following a talk with Premier Ben- ito Mussolini. "It was furthermore a special satisfaction to come to Italy at a moment when the his- toric British-Italian friendship had been revived and find eo warm and sympathetic a feeling towards my country. “I would like my countrymen to know how sincere and general is this feeling. and I c_a_n_giv_e__ass_u§; (Cmvtiirucd on page i9. Ool 4) Boy sodas Parade Before Royal Family WINDSOR. England. April 24- fAPl-One thousand Boy Scouts from all parts of the British Isles paraded toga in he uadranole of Windsor O e ore ins Gem‘ . and Qu Elisabeth Princess ililibeth Princess flllrflaiet. rm Queen. recovered from a col ,8l/00d beside the King. their of r- aders me a bolder of the Kngm e or I. medal for gai- lantry. the went to St. Gem-en's dismal for their m1- nual neticnll service in oomrnenh oration 0f 8t. 000G‘. England's patron holl- ay to Q0 from Ofllflfifflfifllld only fi g ' s. w be widen- ill hourly. illlllfd tho Watb...“ .‘§“‘t".it.i‘§'tt' “it” B , 3 l B he! wll keep the stem of the we r. Churchmen Held In Soviet Plot .--.~.¢- orlnsrs‘ lfircow) rflported that the Archbisho» of Mos- et least eivh "Fa-chat l uoecow. | af-(Ari-Tne -n ‘Ber gobs». Mmklvs. _ t Nhrr rhuroln. we arrested on cirrrm 07 overthrow ‘of the soviet fllflnc in h Prominent Lawyer Charged With Forgery GRAND FALIJ N. B. ,Al1rll 24- Maalsirntc f‘. K. kerinon yesterday committed Stephen 0. Mooney. prominent Andover barrister and former president of the Maritime Board o- Trodc. to stand irlnl at Andover on a chnrne cf nbtnlning money from the eetate of Helen V. Stevens by means of n forged docu- mcn . Mooney was reler rd yon $8.00’) bail. Dismissed y Meals rate Char- les L. Olmsted n. _~erth rpvil B. the earre charge was re-lald m l‘ oher lurledlctlon on lmtructim of ‘ic at orrvv-fiencraln deonrim- m. Th nilvietl forged drcument ls a if ed ccoy o fixation oi the Stevens‘ estate. msuntuus ADVANCE u run. rum 1 5 , 0 0 0 Government Troops S a id Sur- rounded In Capture Of Aliaga. (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) MUAYL, rrance, April 2d--1n- surgpnt troops m ieruei Brovince, smashing UEBD into government teriLory north oi the Niaurld- Valencia illkliviily, forged u. new front in eastern rlpain today. uencral Jose Varcla sent cavalry and ruiantry units into the ban Just Mountains to mop RD what he estimated as 10,000 uflifillilfleflt soi- dlers reported outflenked and eur- rountled as a ieeuit oi insurgent cmiurc of Aiiaea naturday. vdreia described as a "war of ucmete" the conflict ha; raged to- unv B10112 a. curator from, between ‘it-fuel. the partly fhstroyed provin- cial capllal 130 miles east oi Mo.- qrid and u.) miles northwest of VB-lencm. and Albocaoer, 65 miles north northeast of Valencia. ENDS BATTLE LULL Until yesterday when the Insur- gents smashed tile Government de- fence ol Allaga. this sector of Te- ruel ‘Province had been quiet since Vareiu-‘s army recaptured the pro- vlncini capital Feb. 22. Fuili‘ separate insurgent culumng were carving out new pockets in the terrain between Terue. and Al- bouncer. One drove northeast from Teruel to meet another moving from All- rvza ‘J2 nulee away. Their objective use to cut off a large government force UDEfBtlfiiZ along the valley of- tho Alfalnbru river. A third column moved east from AJBRB toward Villarluengc, l0 miles away. to meet a fourth driving west from the San Marcos Mountains Just north of lworella. Morelia is about 60 miles nor-beset of Teruel and less than 30 miles from the caslern coast. Vllule varela directed operations from Peruel. troops under General Blutista Sanchez swe t into All a after a bitter struflge outside tie ty. To aid a. government ocuntcr of- fensive. General Jcse Miaja rushed troops from Madrid. Grada and other points in the central Spanish territory over which he is military ruler. The civil governor of Castellon Province. theatre of bitter fighting last week. decreed mobilization or all men between lhe ages of 18 and d5 to boitser the Government de- enccs. Police Disperse London Fascists LONDON. April 24-(AP)- Heavy Police reinforcements were rjishcd to Piccadilly Circus Satur- day night to break up a sudden. riotous Fascist demonstration which snarled traffic a-t the height of the theatre rush hour. Led by Scotland Yard officers. police arrested selv- eral demonstrators who shouted slogans and showered pamphlets on mllllnf; theatre crowds. Bnb 1168 who tihssled iviih Sir Os- wald Mosiryie blnckrhlrt marchers finally herded them into sideetreetw, where they dispersed. Drought In Australia Hits Sheep Industry (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) YDNEY, Australia, April 24- ousands of sheep died in west- ern New Snuih Wales as a result of one of the worst droughts ex- rienoed in this rich wool-grow- ng country since 190i. The drought also extends over many other psi-ts of Australia. including Victoria, arm of Queensland and Western ustralia. Prayers for rain hav been said in many country churn es. If rain came now lt would be worth mil- lions of minds to pastorallsie in western cw south Wales, which is the source of some of the most famous wool figs e world. _. Steal (Cy. By Guudtnvc special Wire) 0A DER. Ont... April 2 ~ ldttle Merle Dionne todsv provid- ed the Dafoe nursery with a mys- tery that drew more attention than the battle between her father Olive and her auurdlans for possession of the quintuplets. While Dr. Allan Roy Dafoc. plead- ing for "a little ixszc." refused further ccmmenl‘ on nlonncs au- pllcation for a udlciu lnvesJga- tlon of quint affairs. Marie hetchuf the mystery by attempting tn ca _- er wooden horses with a beach pal. The act would be ordinary or another youngster but it Wu Wim- ordinary for a qulnt because no one letters of admin-k could lmaulne where Marie. who has never been out of he De oe nursery arc inds since ;he was two l months o‘d. ‘wt rm n “D158, much less lh~ “f "‘ '* "“ Malina . __ picture Ouomayboahletotchandyet beuospeukeo ‘ ,Mmuus 0! A V MERE MAN By Lilli-J'- Annnll loblorlptlen Delivered IA .00 ‘l. L, Il.00| Cnnldn Ind U. l. “.00 RED 11v‘ MINE BLAST Died “ih-stantlyl l/Vhen Trapped By Terrifg Blast Pathetic Scene As Rescuers Re- move Charred And Broken Re- mains From Seared Pit. — GRUNDY_ Va., Apr. 24—(Al')-l<‘oriy»ilve charred and broken bodies were lzikcn from ihc soured depth of the Keen Mountain mine of the Red Jacket Coal Company Saturday, victims of the v olcano-like explosions which greeted the night shift as it entered the mine Friday. The United States Bureau of Mines officials said no further bodies were in the under the mountain. Sweating, sooty-faced me “drifis" which extended far mbers of mine rescue squads worked in 30-minute relays in the furnace-like atmosphere until they had explored every avenue of the big mine. Two members were overcome by bad air. ~ For many hope of finding life among hours the crews worked grimly, without the victims trapped by the blast, but unwilling to cease their efforts until every miner had been accounted for. PATHETIC SCENE No word of cheer came for sor- rowing wives, chlldremsweetheerte. Only bodies came up from the mine as 400 men worked to bring them out. A sooty-faced miner named plain Bill Smith, who had been riding with bodies down the four-mile narrow gauge railroad for many hours. paused long enough to tell his eye-witness account of the dis- aster. He was standing 50 feet from the mouth of the mine when he heard the roar and saw flames belch from the mountain. “The blast was away from me. and that's why 1 didn't get hurt." he said. "1' paw coal-c cars. motors, slate and timber spouted as if from a cannon." Bill didn't finish his story. An- other load of bodies was ready to go down the incline to await iden- tlflcatlon. HIG INVAYS J AMMED Automobiles filled with people jammed the highways as the ree- cue work went on and state police erected ropes in front of the tipple so that those carrying food to the tired workers could go and come to the cable cur that carried them under the mountain. The payroll office was besieged for hams of the dead and the missing. Townspcople at Grundy. l2 miles from the scene. gathered with grim faces and bowed heads as the salvation Army held a prayer service for the victims. DIED INSTANTLY “All the evidence indicates the underground crew died instantly," said C. P. Kelly, chief mine in- epector of the state department of labor. He said federal. state and mine officials would make a full investigation after the rescue work. The mine was a new one, opened last November", and was described us, up-to-daie in every respect. Mlngo Keadle. vice president of the Red Jacket Company, an- nounced that air had been circu- lated through all passages but workers found progress slower in the main shaft than in the “B“ shaft where l7 bodies were found before lt was fully explored. Three of the first 22 bodies came from the mine entrance and two were found badly burned in the "A" or main shaft. Eighteen victims had been iden- tified tonight. They were: Ernest Boyd. Hammond Varncy, Orville Street. Cay Reed. J. L. Blevins, Kilmer Patrick. Ed‘ Glllcy, Ciaud Dollar, J. W. Combs. Glenn Rot- cllff, Arvil Norris. F. L. Bucklcr, Marcus ’I'hacker O. C. l-filo , Ohlriie Keen. wit. Grand. Sutherland and Ancil Owens. HONEY FROM THE GATES LONDON-(OP) -— All English county crlokct teams received £100 ($2,000) each from surplus funds of the Australia-New Zcelsind tour in 1936-7. Playing field sociellee also re i rents- Marie Provides Mystery T0 Spotlight sight of the aulnte’ playroom. Little Merle remembered and, af- cr. went om one to another of the nrmk. She dlon“. seem at all disen- pointed that thev dkln’. cooperate bv mklfuz ii. She kissed thcm nil "Now. that" said Dr. Defoe luler. "is reel news. All this ludictzl m- v Oouiiterc-einie-reliie bores me about it“. for filling her beach pal with wai- l‘ five hobbv horses offering them a vestinnticu buslncas. statements n 1.; Ml. . l ihlnk. the public For the pmmt at least I'm not saint: any‘ more linii riiinwf UBSERVE nun iuuvmsiu ship At The Central Christian C h u r c H Yesterday. Charlottetown Odd Fellows, serving the 119th anniversary the organization of their order. M- tendcd divine worship at the Coni- tral Christian Church yesterday morning. 100 members of the two local I0ctges,Si. Lawrence and WLi- dcy marched in the parade under the direction of Mr. John T. Mar- tin. A band directed by Mr. Thomas MacForlnne led the pro- CEKIOll. A’, ilic f, 11ml Christian Ohumh vbi u: O . Feliovre and Rebek- nhr. who “tended in a body, u/ero wrlccznczl by the Rev. SC. Cooper, pastor of the church. An eloquent sermon on “The Love of Christ” was preached by Mr. Cooper. A male quartet. Afesers. McKay, ltfcGregor. Burk and Stewart. sang "Tarry Avrliilc" and Mr. A. R. Gil- lts, member of the Odd Fellows ordrr sang ihv “Odd Fellows Ode." Route of march to the church from the 1.0.0.1". Hall on Rich- mond Street. where the procession formed up. was by way of Rich- mond, Queen Grafton, Prince and Kent sx . Return march was mndc bu‘ \ v nf Kent. Queen and Richmond Streets. ' Odd Fellows and Robclcahs will conclude sprcinl OllRPYVRXiPP of the anniversary’ of the founding of their nrdcr hr n dnncc in their hull Tunsrln_\'__lviulii_.__ —~~.<-<::’ CouPAuv our [YUGERY . Loves B01 meow j, AN Aumcucc 1 ./ lily The Canadian Press) TORONTO, April lid-Minimum and maximum temperatures: u n Victoria 46 60 Fslmonton 2i 42 Regina 2G 38 Winnipefl ' 3'1 36 books brought no explanation i0 Toronto Iili 52 their teacher. Nor Roueseile. or Ottawa 34 6'1 gieir nurses Slur Ulrichson and Montreal 4o M Jolly O‘Shau hneesy. riiialiy flu-y Qm-us; 3v; m caled in Dr. afoe and he cleared saint John 3'2 60 up the mystery A veer ago a tcam- nlifax 26 54 sier was employed on gardening Chmnnerown 32 60 work around the nursery and eome- Fmmms. limes watered his horse wlinln “hrmnn, may. Mrvhmu, wmda lshiftlng to cnstcrly: fair, not much change in trmvirrniure. f-fizh tidc this morning at 6.55 and tonight at 64B. Sun sets this evening at 6.57 and rises tomorrow morning at 45B. Ncw inn-m April 30. l2‘! nm. Summu-slilc ll(l(‘ r-ishWr-n min- ulcs 1.12m" firm ('l;’ll‘l"lT'_“.Kl\ki\. Tllli CAR FERRY ,.leavoe Borden 9.05 u. m. l p. Q Lrsvr; Torneniine ll l.m.2~55p.fl\ . w»... Attend Divine Wor-