MAXIMS’ OFA MERE MAN moment. The tonne of the who Ia health, an a lyinr "awe n but m a Moi-nine‘ Guardian. Inndod {In Forced Landing Made Plane Near Saint John. miles from hece. R. J. R. Nelson. general manager oi the Halifax shipyards. suffered only a small scratch on his left leg. John Rowley. Ottawa. Dalhousie University student. and p'lot All. cochrime were unmarked. Mr. Nelsm continued his trip to Boston by tram tonight and Rnwley re- mained here. The two passengers left Halifax for Saint John early ‘ this afternoon. One motor and a wheel were torn from the plane. one propeilor and one wing were broken and part oi the landing gear was stripped. A forced landing was necessary when the plane flew into 3 Qhow- |t0rm and visibility becari e ex- trunely limited. Circling in search of the mclt suitaibla spat, the Pilot selected a field at east Saint John. Rakes failed to hold on the slip- snow. The plane skidded some 100 yards. mapped a. email telephone pole and ‘_l'*i‘ (continued on page u) wCQMiNfi fVfNll "Women's uicJfc Cllll) meeting postponed until 13. L-237. "Hockey final MoniaguimvFfldflY nlghhPrimroeee vs. Victoria Un- ions for Island Intermediate championship. 'L-'l9-3-3-31- "York rink Friday. March 5. playoff game, Dunstaffnage Red Wings vs. York Rangers. L-230. "Stanley Sporting Club will hold a race on Stanley River Sat- urday, March 8th at 2 o'clock m...“ L-234. "Borden rink annual ice sports open to all surrounding school dis- tricts, Friday night. March 5th at 8 p. m. sharp; admission 20 and ' 1o. L-135-3-2i. I "Sale oi home cooking by the ladies of Baptist Church at Rogers Hardware Saturday, in aid of Hos- pital. L-87-3-5-li. "Hockey, Victoria rink toniBM- Cape Traverse intermediates v5- Ninc Mile Crock; Capo TFYWCT c girls vs. Hampton boys. L432- "Kcnsington Club 11111080108 rirr of corn products March 5 and 9. Please call for what Y0" have cooked. John R. Sharpe. secy- . L-225-3-5-2i “Come to Hartsville Hall Mimi‘ 5th end see the Bradaiiiane Am‘ icurs present their two act P18? ‘The Perp axing situation." Good specialties. Sale of lunches. L-ai-a-i-zi. "Don't miss the big concert and box socill in aid oi church funds It York Thursday, March ii. See York Little Theatre players ore- rent a one act comedy "When the Wife's Away", also local and out- iide musical talent. L-im-3-5-31 "Oom meal and cracked com can be bought at about half the value of your oats on a iced value basis. Why not make an exchanie and instantly make money. Cen- nrit your shipping club secretary or the Livestock Marketing Board lbout co-operativs prices. L-I28-8-5-2i "Remington farmers are usually alive to an opportunity. They l" now stocking up with corn meal and cracked corn for summer use. while (Jo-operative prices prevail. "Ow lilting for third car. Ii you ""5811! on first cars get V01" 01‘- der in for next one. John R. Sharpe, 5m‘- L-220-3-5-2l "Livestock Marketing Board loadimi during week of March 8th. thioilflh local shipping club! as fol- lows: Monday aitemoon. Elmedale; T"Psdav morning. Keneinilion. Charlottetown: afternoon. Baltic. Sour-ls. St. Peters. Moreil. Melville. lifillvirw. Mt. Stewart; Werinlidav morning tlii train time Mt Htewari. limiter River: afternoon 12-3. Ai- blnv. Feaae list stock with local fiecretuiea. ‘Lr-ifl-J-B-Bi. THREE ESCAPE _ llE i T H I N, Piiiiciiiciiur, By “City of Sydney” SAINT JOHN, N. B.. March 4- (CPJ-The three occupants of the, pasts-m Canada Airlines plane City of syiiney escaped this afternoon when the plane cracked up on a snow-covered field less than six Qnrlottetown Guardian Two Uentg >%/’ ~ The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. FRIDAY, MARCH s, 1937 Read by Everybody RIICC. A prudent man concealeth know- ledgc, a fool proclaimeih his ignor- MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN 1o PAGES .2: Annual liulrncriirtlon Delivered $5.00 Hy .\l.i|ll (ililllilil illiil l7. S. .\. $5.00 Taking a Flyer in Motors l Above .1’: an airplane and below it's an auto. And that's about the exact ltatus oi’ this "Arrowbile." the invention of Waldo Waterman. Santa Monica (CaIiL) plane builder. Above the ground it files. On the ground at the airport, Waterman merely parks the wings and chugs away. The craft makes 125 miles an hour in the air, 55 on the ground. Bloody Aftermat To. Kiroff Slayingf Purge Of Soviet-Fatty Continues Apace With 150 Official Executions To Date. (By Charles P. Nutter Associated Press Staff Wrliirr) MOSCOW, March ‘i-Nevcr in modern history has so much hum- an blood been spilled in avbrrging the death oi one man, Moscow ob- servers believe. at in the sen- satlonal murder oi sersei Kiwi!- When an assassin killed Kiroff at Leningrad Dec. l. 1934, he was not a very prominent figure. Since then, however. 150 official e':e:utiqxis have taken place as a Yect outgrowth of the assassin- atlon. Jails hold 23 other person‘ confined for the maximum term of 10 years. Forty-nine more were banished to concentration camps and 29 exiled to Siberia. And that is only the beginning of what some observers picture as a heavy cloud over thc Soviet‘; future. Several hundred persons-per- haps thousands-are under ar're.t and awaiting trial as the result of direct or indirect ramifications of Kiroiis death. Many of these seem almost certain to await only the firing squad. , These tolisdo not include per- :ons reported secretly executed Just after the crime or several others said to have committed sul- cide while under examination by Government officials. Although Klroiis death caused surface indications of national grici not seen in Soviet Russia since the death of lenin. Kimff was comparatively obscure as a world figure and wa" not even especially prominent-until his death-at home. ft is believed the vengeful blood purge since his assassination was because Joseph Stalin had mode Klroff a favorite, possibly had sel- ected him as his own succrsor. Kiroif. then 46. ms head of the Communist party in Leningrad at the time of his death. Also. he was a membcr of the Politburenu, the inner circle of 10 men who control the Communist party and, there- fore, the government and destinies of the Soviet Union. . The actual slayer, an unknown civil employee. Leonid Nkolirveff, 36. was among the first executed. A tctml of 117 men wore shot in the first 45 days following the crime. Work Assured For Steel Plants NEW GLASGOW, N. S. March 4—-Britain's rearmament, either directly or indirectly. would keep Nova Scotfa ‘reel plants working full shifts at lenst two years, Lord Riverdale, prominent British in- dustrlalist. said here today while inspecting New Glasgow plants. "You won't have to worry for another two or three years any- way," he said. ilrgos Development 0f Caspe Peninsula OTTAWA, March 4—iCP)-—Des- crlbing the Gaspe Peninsula asthe “neglected section oi Canada," J. A. Lapointe (Lib. Matapedia-Mat- ane), urged the Federal Govem- ment today to undertake. in co- operation with the provincial gov- ernment. a five year plan for the development oi that historic part oi Quebec. Churchill Sounds Warning In Loading Arms Program UONDON, March 4—-Winstcn Churchill, long a critic of whet he termed the Govemmentntardineu in rearmament. today Nd t!!! five-year defence plan had streng- thened the minirtrvir Willi-Infin- tarry position and promised, ii reso- lutely pursued. to put the country in a far safer and more elrtflbla position than it has held since German rearmameni. began in earnest. " ut," he warned the House of Commons during debate on third reading of the Defence Loans Bill. "we for the time beinl are not any longer entirely masters of W!‘ 0W0 fate. Much depend; on what bl?‘ pens elsewhere in the world. After 1.000 years of independence 1'» it hard for the people to realize this ugly and unpleasant alteration. "The announcement of these prodigious sums has made a pro- found impreesion and the re- actions have been highly favorable to the Government and the coun- try. I think the Government have placed themselves in a very favor- able position againtt critics who. like myself, for e long time have been urging more active and time- Iy measures. "The parliamentary position of the Government is as strong as it can possibly be. The fact the Gov- ernment are going forward with a five-year plan for armament on this scale is evidence of our grea financial strength." BRITISH ARMY iiiiiiiiizliiiii yiiiiiiicin Government To Speed Up Recruiting And Construct 14 New Munitions Factor- ies. IDNDON. March 4-—(CP Cable) —An intense program of army mechanization, measures to spur recruiting, construction of 14 new munitions factories. and the en- listment of 300,000 “air raid war; dens" were steps in Britain's re. figlnmenl program announced to- Tomorrow the Royal Air Force estimates will probably be broughi totalled {$82,174,000 ($410,870,000), an increase of £26.293.000 over 1936 Yesterday naval estimates totalling £105.065.000. an increase of 223.716,- 000. were submitted to Parliament, Together they comprise me b]!- gest armaments bill Britain has ever known in times of peace. The estimates will form a part of the budget to be brought down Shfmly by Neville Chamberlain. Chancellor of the Exchequer. 0i the army estimates $19,054,000 will ~be met from the $400,000,000 to be raised in defence loans over the next five years, while 227,000,000 of the naval estimates will be met in ‘his WRY- The remainder will be raised from revenue. A statement submitted with the estimates revealed that mechaniz- ltlon of practically the entire in- fantry oi‘ tire British army at home will be underway by April l, while overseas garrisons will start Oct. l. “fired D115 00008:‘. secretary for war, painted a somewhat gloomy picture of the recruiting situation, but said "certain measures" were in coirtemplation which he hoped would “lend to-substaniisl and progressive amelioration of the po- sition." He said mechanization had allowed a relaxation of standards of physical fitness in recruitapnr- ticularly in respect to defects or the icot. About 47,000 recruits will be required during the coming YELIX‘. Tire 14 new munitions factories are to be built in various parts of the United Kingdom at a total cost of £7,946,000. Tlrc duty of the air wardens, ivho are to be recruited by local authorities. will be to advise the populace on officially recommend- ed precautions againsi. air raids. assist in the distribution of civil- ian respirators and, in the event of war, play an active part in helping the public both during and after an air raid. One warden wil- be established io every 500 inhab- itants in residential districts and one to every quarter mile in in- dustrial and business. areas. iirge Strong Action To Regain Market WOODSTOCK, N. B.. March 4— (GP)~5tmng action to regain the lost Cuban potato market was urged at a m-cctng of the Associated Po- tato Growers and Shippers of New Brunswick here today. They decided to have a delegation interview the Provincial Govern- ment and advocate conceried act on by tho thrice Maritime Provinces in restore the former trade between Canada and Cuba. The members conferred with Rand H. Matheeon, traffic ofijicial oi the Transportation Oommi-H-Blofl of the Maritime Board oi’ Trade- Kxiension of the free period for loading railway cars and a time a1- lowance for pro-heating the cars were urged. COLNE, Englnnd-(C P)-Millie, a tiny Pokingeee. is thoushf- t0 5* one of the smallest dolls 1n t" world according to K61!!!“ 979"“- sirc welghcd just one ounce at birth. no larger than a monie- ‘I.’ t down. The army estimates today . ELZMJQZQZ‘. hamberlain Claims a Pacts Cement Unity (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON, March 4-Ricinova.i of i Iinperlal tariff preferences would "undermine if not de troy"‘tlic un- ity of the British Empire "which has so powerfully impressed tile world," Neville Chamberlain. Chan- cellor of the Exchequer. declared today in a speech at the annual luncheon of the National Review. Chamberlain said he ‘lookcri upon the trade agreements with the Dominions as nct only ccononrical- ly advantageous but as the means oi securing the Empire's common aims and idealz IIZTH ANNUAi MEETING iii IRISH _s_iciiiv Favorable Year Re- ported By Execu- tive — Officers Re- elected. Mr. James l-I. McKcnna was re- elected president of the Bcnevo- lent Irish Society at the 112th an- nual meeting of the Order last night. Mr. Edward Smith was re- elected patron of ilie organization. The past year lind been n most, successful one reports showed. Eighteen new mcnrbcrs had been added during the year, secretary J. , _, Th. l l Tea for every Taste JAMES ll. lilcKENNA __ President W. Hogan told. i - Other officer's elcctcd were: Messrs. Joseph Malone, first vice- president; H. W. Dalton, second vice president; J. W. Hogan, sec- retary; J. A. Cronin, treasurer; Augustus Dowiing, chief mirr-shal; the above were all re-elcctcd. Rus- sell Flood, sergcnrii-ai-arms; Frank Pfunty, door-keeper, rc-elccted. Assistant marshals, Roy McGill- vray and Joseph Costello. Standard bearers, Frank Prunty, Robert Bradley and Leo Mnlrar, Fioiloiving the disposal of routine business reports of the members of the executive were hoard. The financial siiiiomont showed a larger favorable balance than on former years, the treasurer report- (Continued on page 6) . -.;~~ . ~.—_—~ Opera Star 0n“ Visit ‘(a Ottawa (C. l’. by Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA, March 4-—-Llly Pons. petite operirsinger, was delighted to rec snow falling in Ottawa on her arrival today for it convinced her she was "really in Canada“ but she had local shoe merchants scratching their heads when she ordered "snow shoes." The footwear problem was solved however, when the screen and opera star explained she really meant overrhom-tlic velvet oncs with the fur trimming. And a mer- chant accommodated by getting the operatic Cinderella hcr “snow shoes” even fitting her tiny size- three feet. sell all the surplus and hai‘. insti- "21 L OST AS GREEK TANKER STRIK i! c0 VERNMENT WHEA T BOARD POLICY scoélrol Th ree _S_urvivors glAym-"Anmfnyl Reach Shore In BYABTIUN Labor Department Al- , so Under -» Fire As I Budget Debate Con- tinues In Commons. (C. I’. by Guardian's Special Win) OTTAWA, March 4—-Wettr<rn farniers suffered a loss of from $50,000,000 to $60,000,000 through the operations of tire present Wheat Board iiczidcfi by James R. . Murray, according to E. E. Pcrley j (Cons. QirAppelie), who spoke lll ilie bud-got debate in the House of Commons today. In a VlQOPOI-l» attack on the ad- lflifllstfflllOll of the Wheat Board Act under the pre out Government Mr. Perlcy charged the Board with a "crime against the producer" and claimed the farmers had been “be- trayed, exploited, double-crossed and sacrificed." By refusing to purchase wheat at a iixcd minimum price during the present crop year the Government had practically repealed the Wheat Beard Act, said Mr. Perlcy. It had appointed a Royal Commissioner who would not make a report until next session but the Government should declare it; policy now. "The farmers mean to ztick by tho Wheat Bonrd Act regardless of what the Turgeon report may say,” he said. “That act is here to stay. The farmer-s of Western Canada will not stand the skiillduggery that took place last summer with respect 0o the marketing of their wheat." ‘ Fire Ss-le Policy From the day Mr. Murray took over the chairmanship of the Wheat Bozirri he had pur-ired n fire sale policy with rrpect to the sur- p'us iviirat accumulated under the aciminisirniioir of the former chair- man, John I. 1\1~‘nrlnnd, said the ivrstem member. Mr. Murray lind determined to tuicd a policy which British mill- ers construed as an invitation to bid for Canadian wheat under the fixed price of 87 1-2 cents. As a rcwult of that policy Canadian wheat hrrcl been bought for l0 to 15 cents a buhcl less than would otherwise have been the case. Dirring the past summer. he went on. Mr. Murray had kept on sell- ing wheat in the face of a certain crop failure in Canada and United States While thc Board was un- its surplus on the market, (Continued on page 6) Death Ends Career 0f English Novelist LONDON, Murch 4—(CP Cable) --J0s(‘ph Hocking. the novelist. dicd today at his Cornwall home. A prolific writer, Hocking reach- ed perhaps the heigylt of his car- cor ivitlr his war stories that ach- icvcd wide circulation. Among them were "All For A Scrap Of Paper," "Tommy", nnd "The Path 0i Glory". Hc hogan writing in 1891 with “Jnbez Ensterbrook and turned out more than 50 novels. has last be- illg “Deep Calleth Deep" publish- cd in 1936. ~ A native of St. Stephens. Corn- wall, Hocking is survived by four daughters. His only son was killed in the Great War. l-ic was a Nonconformist Minis- tcr from 1884 to 1910 when he re- glig|i||r|g|gpgState OfCollapse Tragedy OccmTs-‘(D-ff Spanish Main- land. Postponement In Blockade Deadline Rouses Fears. PORT VENDRES. France. March ~i—(CP)_'1‘\v¢,-n{v. one crew members of the Greek tanker Loukia were be- : iieved drowned tonight zrficr their vessel struck a mine and sank oil Cape de Creus, easternmost point of the Spanish mainland. Spanish fishermen found ihe only known survivors of three badly-burned sailors, the ill-man crew, who swam ashore and collapsed on ihe irciich. A terrific explosion followed striking‘ ihe mine and ihe £3,000 ions 0f gasoline on board iiarcd irp. The innkcr, which ivus loa dcii at Consianza. Rumanian seaport on the Black Sea, was en route i0 Barcelona. Her captain was m issing. Earlier he had stopped off at Port Vcndres solely lo ask ihc French iruihoriiics for inform- ation 0n the positions of mincsoiffi the (Izrizilzin coast.’ HAD NARROW ESCAPES The trzigcfiy’ occurrcd close to the spot where a British and u French ircigliier‘ narrowly escaped the same fate vivithin the past week. The explosion took place an hour after the 2.1434011 iankcr sailed from Port Vendi'cs,n I-‘rcnch port near the Spanish border. Nearby vessels rushed to thorns- cuc, attracted by ilio fiiimcs as the Lcukins cargo of 3,000 ions of gasoline caught iirc. The ship. which carried no wireless. was ii floating torch by the time they ar- rived. Several of the crew could still be seen, seeking escape. The French freighter Marie- Therese le Borgne hit a mine oiI Cape Creus, slightly w the north, last November. It put into Pain- mos undcr its own power, irowever. The British steamship Llandovery Castle, with 227 passengers aboard struck a mine two miles southeast. of Cape Creus on Feb. 25. Her hull ripped open by the blast, tlrc ship limped the few miles to Port. Vcndrcs. ‘ MADRID SIIELLED MADRID. March 4-—(AP) — In- surgcnt shells screamed into Mad- rid's residential districts tonight. causing casualties among civilians. Official reports said the Gov- ernments Southern Army, trying to keep the Insurgents away from the seaport of Almeria, had cut a road between Orgiva and Velez Benaudalla. lying just north of Motril and occupied by Insurgents operating out of Granada. Government soldiers also gained, possession of heights dominating, QPElva and were pressing toward l Velez Benaudalla in an effort toi cut the main Granadn-Motr-iihigli- way at that point, ilicsc reports said. Another Government force was snid to have occupied Calaiionda, a coastal town just cast of Moirii. prior to beginning a further push westward. Fighting in El Pardo and Uni- iersiiy City areas of Miidrrd mat- i Luise Rainer And Paul Muni Win M ovie Awards HOLLYVJOOVDD-‘Sii. .\l.ii'<'ir 4 _ (APF-Llllsl‘ ltliirci" 1‘(L'€'i\'(‘(i Liic a- ward of the Academy of {Vlotiorr Piciiirc Arts lillfl Sclcricc.» might for Liif‘ host pcrforrrrrziicr- rrs< in 193G. for" licr- work in " ‘ Grunt Zicuic-iil.“ Pziiii Muni \\'1\.\ \i.i cl ilil‘ zixviird for ilic best ywriormancc by an act- or for his portrayal of the titic mid in “The Story’ of Louis Pas "T" Awards for the best sup ing nciross and actor" ivr-nt to Gail Son- icicrgnnrd for licr‘ ivork in ‘Antironyg Adverse," and to Waller Brennan for as performance in "Come and Get It." The best procliicilon was hold to have bven "The Grcni. Zicgii-lcl." Frank Cnprii W011 iili‘ bs: direc- tion mrrird for iris “Mr. Dcoris Goes to Town.“ Shcriiinn (Lbnrv rind Pcrro Col- iinss were double Winners. taking the nwnrris jniiiily for" iiu- frost 0~ riginai screen story and thc best screen play. "The Story of Louis Pnstciir." P0 S TfWdTTIGHT FORS;EITS NEW YORK, March 3—~ iAPl-— Lou Amber's and Tony Cnirzoneri posiccl $1.500 ivoiglii. forfciis writ the‘ Now York State Athletic Corri- mission today for ilicir iii-round lightweight championship match in Madison Square Garden April 2. A i-ioc. CAN ac AFFORD rfo ac $Noof~f 4HESE erlally improved Government pos- itions, official rcports declared. Insurgents suflcrcci their scvvrcst ‘ blow in tho Univcr-siiy- City suburb whcrc one oi their" major rcdoubts —-€lilliC hospital-unis cizimagcti by the explosion of a minc. POSTPONE BLOCKADl-l DEM)- LINE LONDON, March 4—\AP)—1n- definite postponement of tire dead- line for an rnicniniioiini naval and land patrol of Spain rniscd ihe question tonight wlicihcr" diplonmis would bc able Lo isolaic irossibiy graver dangers to pcncc elsewhere t_i_r'ed. (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) FREDERICTON, N. B.. March 4 -By refusing to continue the former administration! policy of guaranteeing limited bank loans for potato growers. the present Government last year drove many growers to the “lrrn sharks" and caused them loss oi "hundreds of thousands of dollars." G. W. Perry. (Con, ¢arletoni asserted in the Legislature today. l-fc bitterly assailed the Govern- ment, as he spoke in the budget debate. for "reckless extravldhnce" and also for develop "n new form of GovemmenfF-a govern- ment by_ patronage committees." ‘The member for Carleton told the Howe h» had a list of 30 “party henchmen" who had been "given a government job at the ex- A pense of the toxnaym (Continued on page 6i Sldfms IVESTZuber Growers Driven pTo “Loan Sharks” province" and "lnbellcd by this Government ‘contact mcnfi" “I have made inquiries." Mr. Perry confirmed, "and I lrnvc born told that these men occupy tho front line trenches in the nrmylof political hangers-on connected with this administration. Their particu- lar duty, Mr. Speaker. seems t0 b8 to see to it that no man who dot-l not wear the party lflbi-‘l- "bah" he be a white collared man 0|‘ R common pick and shovel day lab- orer, got: a job or n Jill’! W014‘ under this Government. Deaiingtwith guaranteeing 0f bank loans for potato growers he recounted that legislation had bcen by the Tilloy Government in 1935 to enable iliis policy, ilic i934 potato crop having boon rm utter failure so ihr as rcvvnlll‘ WHF concerned. -- iCPr TORONTO. hiiirch 4 hlliiiniiim and mnxliiiiirn icmpcrn- lillThI illrwsiiii 4h zcro Victoria 44 0'2 Wiiiiiipi‘: ..< ro 38 Tnroirio 32 30 QiiiiWfl ill ‘L! i\(i0lli l‘i‘fll 20 32 Quebec l? 33 Sniiri John 16 33 Irinliinx 16 36 Charlottetown 4 5? Forecasts Maritime East: Fresh or stronfl winds. shifting to northwest: PM“ ly cloudy with strrtioirnryi or some- what lower temperature: P70551037 snowflurrios. High iidc this niicrnooir at 2.54 and tomorrow morning ai 5.15. Sun sols this niil'f‘1’i001l at 5.53 and rise-s tomorrow morning at 6.30. Last quaricr moon Pridayivfarch 5. 4.17 am. Siimniorside tide eighteen mili- iitcs laici‘ ihnn Charlottetown. rilit (Mil fitiiii II-T" llnrlirn 5.15 n. m. I p. m. Lulu-n Tnrmr-ntlne ll a. m. 2.65 p. m, Dally except Sunday.