MAXI MS 01A MERE MAN ly to break wway from ‘ifidranees. A new year h a welcome oppor- zv/w c»- Thie People's Paper -----___._\ “ ___ Tl.- F |l 1'" 52; Covers Prince Edward" II/ v// "fps-w- Qifl f ~c--~-"’ “""‘vvvwvywwvwq \ Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody arid-saw... ' ~ ' MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Rope springs eternal in the hu- man breast, especially as the old ycnr begets the new. tatawn Guardian Two (bib ug Guardian, Pounded n11 CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 2, 1937‘ Annual Hubncrlplltlll "y Hall Canada and Delivered l5.” u, s. a. 05.00 10 PAGES , GERMA BRITAIN clfirs 19s 7 umsifiiini AIAY Tll A rivulisiiii Decrease In Unem- ployment. H e a v y , Expenditure F 0 r Armaments Reveal- ed. LONDON, Ja-rrlrltish trade 5 o“ f» a flying start. 0n all sides 1937 h greeted as I P705115"!!! I 111' nae 1e months you closed Irittlh indlutry touched levels without precedent. Over the whole employment role BPPWXI- mataiy five per cent. 5011"“! b! demands for arluamentl. 9W0! 911- glneering industries are busier than has ever been known- nr Sheffield the output of steel hgols and castings was 70.000 tons greater in 11 months of 1036 than for the whole oi 1935. Shipping aoflvity reached a high figure. Re- ealos were up six per cent over previous year. . Bang of England figures show ealea of men and boy!’ Wear dur- ing November were 13 per cent higher than in November, 1935. hallway receipts were up substan- tlelLv. Coal production improved 0,000,000 tone. In the last six months 0i’ 1030 commodity prices rose steadily. Lead and cocoa were w by more than 85 per cent; wheat by i0 per cent; rubber 40 per cent; copper 80 pea- cent. South Wales, where valleys oi distress sear the ~ hills, al- ready has a new year's order from the Portuguese state railways for 100,000 tons of coal. The admiralty hes ordered coal to meet require- ments believed to be in the nature of 060,000 tons. Yet while the country rejoices in the return oi better times there is another side to the picture. Brit- ain still holds first place in world trade. She now enjoys a. larger share of world trade than a year ago. Her exports. produce and manufacturers continue to in- crease. "The iazt remains," frankly rec- ognizes Captain Euun Wallace, mlniste oi oveneas trade," that our export trade is still very far short of what may be described as ‘sub crisis’ level.” Energies now will be directed zo- ward development of the export trade by means oi which Britain lime to maintain and increase her standard of living. Yet the burden of increasing armaments cuts ever deeper into national finances, making ever Brcater demand upon already over- burdened taxpayers. I-Ieavy expenditure for arm- aments is revealed in returns of the national revenue expenditure. Deiiblte satisfactory increases in revenue the defir-g, rm- uw nine months ended Dec. 8i was £24,800.- 000 higher than for the col-res. oondina Period of i935. Armaments zifienditure was mainly respon- e. And big armaments are the log- ical consequense of intsmetlongi alarms and fears. RECOVER. BODY SYDNEY MINES, Jan. b-Grepp- lers today found ihe body oi Robert Campbell, I, in the i m, waters cf Big Pond. He had been missing since he went skating Wed- nesday night. --_-____. COMING ‘EVENT! “Geo. lfifliicio-Li‘ 00., (next Queen Hotel) now buying au kinds 0f dressed poultry. Try us. I-Dfil-lfl-fl-ti. "Poultry - Buying Poultry all kinds, daily. Paying highest market mess. Island Cold storage 00-. . Iri828-l2-304f. “runes; in Tarantula Schnoiol “I.” anuary 7th. It n“ G hides. dominion 2o cents. Lunch rm. n-ioz-i-i-a-e-e. "Annual Meeting Wlllehiie Dairying 00.. will be held in the hall on Monday, January iith, at I P. M. Roland Easter, Secretary. L-liill-l-I-ti. "A Joint meeting oi Live Stock Branch and Live Stock Co-opcr- ntlve Marketing will be held at "Ownal Hall, Monday, January 4th ‘ 7M. Should the day prove may this meeting will be held on wraday all. the same hour. r-ivae-i-a-u. N i WARSH i .1i_?“PR3§-I’ERI I lines; .clt Confers 0n Social Legislation (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) WASHINGTON, Jan. l-A. source close to the White House disclosed today that President Roosevelt had conferred with other United States ‘administration leaders on e. tenta- tive plan for abolishing child lab- or, shortening working hours, and raising "starvation wages." Although details oi the plan re- mained to be worked out by legal experts, its chief features were: 1. A federal regulatory agency with broad powers to fix minimum wage and hour stardards for ell firms engaged in interstate com- merce. ' 2. A “re-definition of interstate commerce by Congress, to bring much industrial production, as well as distribution, under federal sup- ervision. ‘ Purely local enterprises would be exempt, but major industries-such as steel, coal, automobiles, and tex- tiles—whlch vitally affect the en- tire United States would be denu- cd as port oi interstate commerce. INll l-lllPE IlElll FUR REBIIVERY 0r PDPE Plusl Pain Returns Follow- i n g D a y, M a d e Cheery By Rallydri‘ Health And Spirits. VATICAN‘ CITY, Jan. 1—(A.P)— Pain returned to trouble Pope Pius XI tonight after a New Year's Day made cheery by a rally in his health and spirits. Attendants said the Pope was e.- galn suffering to some extent from ‘u. varicose condition in his left leg. Dr. Amlntu. Milunl, the Holy Father's physician, previously had expressed relief at a clear-in! "P 0- ihe local circulatory condition af- fecting tlfs leg. H's optimism was ffiitfillllE-d. 110W- ,‘ ever. and it was known h: feared the ‘arterio sclerosis (hnrdennfl 0i u" ' arteries) with which the Pope is af- flicted was so far advanced that l there could be little nope for r881 "=- covet-y. Nevertheless, the fact that the Pontifi slept virtually all last nizhi Ifor the first tlmo in WEEKS flYlJlW-‘d hope in the Vatican that he might once again take over full administra- tion of ihe Holy See. Today the I-Ioly Father listened to early Mass said near his bedside by one of his secretaries. talked with IEugcnio, Cardinal Paulli, and r8- ceived the New Year wslres of his sister, Donna Camilla Ratll. who was ‘permitted to visit liini briefly- Sources close to the Pontifi re- ported that special treatment was oi gangrene. They also reported the POP“ ‘i? pacify for nourishment has setadlly increased. 11 ‘Prlbuna, which heretofore had published only the most hopeful re- ports concerning the Pontiffs con- dition. today said: “The condition of the Pope at this moment offers no hope of recovery. One thing is certain-the worsening oi the Pope's physical condition is permanent and consequently one may not entertain optimistic hopes, The Pope is fully acquainted with this state of things and has re- signed himself completely to the divine will." (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) MOSCOW. Jan. i-The Soviet Union today pushed a movement lo train 00,000 11:01am 011w. an idea which originated from the suggestions of obscure munitions workers. Throughout the country has spread the slogan, ‘$0,000 air hawks in 1937." This ic Russia's reply t0 the recent assertion of Germany's General Goerlng that Germany must train 70.000 evieiore. It was officially announced at the recent congress of the Soviets that the Soviet Union has about i00,000 qualified pllotf, and the new plan is to increase this num- ber by 50 per cent without inter- fering with work in the factories and (m the farms being applied to forestall any threat I REBEPTIBNS FEATURE NEW YEAR’$ MY Government House And Mayor Turner’s Reception Yester- day. New Year's Day was observed quietly in Charlottetown. Principal social functions were the receptions at Government House and at the Canadian National Hotel where Mayor P. W. Turner received. 500 persons, representative of the Government, Church, profes- sional and business life oi the Province attended the reception at Government House. The more than a _ century old Government House was gaily dec- orated for the occasion. The guests were received by Hie Honour Lieutenant Governor George n. DeBlois and Mrs. De- Blois. The Lieut. Governor was at- Itended by his aides, Capt. Roland Paton, M. 0., Col. G. E. Full, Major W. J. McDonald and Lt. H. A. C. Scarth, R. O. N. V. R. and his private secretary, Mr. M. n Farmer. Presiding over the coffee cups were, Mrs. Murdock MacKlnnon and Mrs. Paul A. Murray. '.i'hoee ushering into the Dininl Room were, Mrs. Noel H. DeBlots and Miss Beatrice MacKinnon. Assisting in serving were: Mrs. Robert L, Gotten. MrsJJ. Rowland Mrs'.*w.~m9ail.*~acrr."»8:-:n.-. ' Miles, Miss Queenie Jenkins, Mizs Norah Jenkins, Miss Lena. Mac- Lure,, Miss Doris Prowse, Mrs. P. S. Fielding, Mrs. P. A. Creelman, Mrs. James E. Harris, Mrs. P. D. Williams, Mrs. F. I. Andrew, Mrs. R. '1‘. Holman, Mire Lorna Weeks, Mrs. H. R. Large, Mrs. E. F. Seller, and Mrs. W. J. MacDonald. Music was furnished by Blan- chards Orchestra. Charlottetown citizens, 500 in number, attended the New Year's reception at the Canadian National Hotel. Receiving with Mayor Turner were Mrs. Turner and City Clerk, Mr. George P. Nicholson. Mrs. A. A. Hennessey and Mrs. G. P. Nicholson ushered. Mrs. G. W. McLeod poured tea and Mr". E. A. Foster cut the ices. Those serving were Mrs. Heath McIntyre. Mrs. R. C. Chandler. Mrs. Henry Lspthorne, Mrs. H. S. Vanlder- siine, Mrs. K. M. Martin, and Mrs. H. A. Messervey. Reception rconis were artistically decorated with flcivcrs and shaded light}. Kathleen l-lornby's Orchertra furnished delightful music during the afternoon. IPria". Killed In Auto e Accident I (c. r. by Guardian's Special Wire) I I Cl-iATl-IAM. 0m. Jon- l-—R.ev. William J. Stanton, 0, M. 1.. PTO- vinclal of the second American Province Oblate order in Unite: States, was killed late today when his motor-car overturned in a emu on no, three hiBhWflY be- tween Cedar Springs and Blon- helm. Father Stanton was driving alone and there were no witnesses t0 the accident. Police said they bc- lieved the priest was eatlnz B 11mm and lost control of the cir- Tho car was demolished. “50, OOOAirHawksIn I93 7" -Slogan Of Soviet Russia The plan originated in the Men- zhinsky airplane factory h"! m l meeting of workers called to dis- cuss the new Soviet constitution. Ila author was Nikolai Nlkitlch Krupehatnlkofi, 45-year-old fac- tory hand. ‘The German Fascist General Goering has declared Germany must train 70.000 pilot-s. h! "id- “The an:wer ehould b0 81"" 9”" ing that the Soviet Union W111 train 50,000 pilots within the whortest period of time. They should be trained without aband- oning their work at the factories or in the fields. We workers oi the aviation industry will supply m" country with the most permi- planes, which like hawks will de- rtroy the enemy in the air." Large Attendance At I IKing George Sends Creating IDNDON. Jan. 1 — King George V1 last night issued a New Year's greeting to the Em- pire, reading: “In this first New Year's Day . of my reign I send all the peoples of the Empire my warmest wishes for their wel- fare and happiness. "In succeeding to the Throne I follow a father who had won for himslf an abiding place in the hearts of his peoples and a brother whose brilliant qualities gave promise oi another his- toric reign. Iiisreig-n was out short in circumstances upon which, from their very sadness, none of us would wish to dwell- “l realize the full responsibili- ties of my noblo heritage. I shoulder them with all the more confidence in the knowledge that the Queen and my mother, Queen Mary, are at my side. “Throughout my life it will be my constant endeavor to strengthen the foundations of mutual trust and affection on which relations between the Sovereign and people of the British Empire so happily rest. I ask your help toward fulfill- ment oi this purpose, and I know that I do not ask in vain. "To repeat the words used by my dear father at the time of his Silver Jubilee, my wife and I dedicate ourselves for all time to your service and we pray .God may give us guidance and strength to follow the path that lies before us." IREV. THUIJIJRE “r1 " i Beloved Parish Priest Passes In 66th Year -Funeral0n Tues- day. Rev. J . Theodore Gallant, beloved pastor of Mt. Carmel Parish. died at Ilhe Parochial House yesterday ai- ternoon after a lingering illness. I Rev. Father Gallant was born at I Abrams Village on October 8, 1871 l and was the son oi the late Mr. and Mrs. Sylvain E. Gallant. I-lc rc- l celved 11's primary education at the district school and inter attended Si. Dunstans University, Charlotte- town and St, Mary's College, Church Point, N. S. After a period oflll- ness Father Gallant was for four years u. student at Grand Seminary. Quebec. On July 29. 1900. Father Gallant was ordained to the holy pIlESJIOOG in his native parish church at Eg- I mont Bay by Bishop J. C. McDon- aid. Following his ordination Father Gallant was made professor of music at St. Dunstan: University. Not long after taking up his duties ill health forced him to enter a sena- torlum where he spent two years. . m; then reiumed to the University staff where he continued his work I for some time. Later he relieved mother Reid at Kelly's Cross and I was parish priest there and at Stur- geon. In December. 1927. alifl‘ i-hc I death of Rev. P. P. Arsenault. Father Gallant was appointed parish priest at Mt. Carmel a position ‘which he held until his death. l-Ie had been in failing health for several years and for the past few I months has been assisted by Rev. 'Gavin Monaghan, D. D., of St. Dunetans University staff. Pr. Gallant was an accomplished musician end a collection of foil: songs of the Island Acadlans. which he made. is in the archives at Ot- tawa. A kindly. warm hearted and char- itable man Father Gallant was very popular among and great-Ir bl- loved by his parishioners. Rev. Father Gallantls hilrvivifil relatives in this Province are his brothers, Messrs. J.N A_. Gallant. lemme Village. and John M. Gal- lant, Hops River, and a s‘ster, Mrs. . pgfgg 5, Gallant Fgmont Bay. Another sister resides in Nova Scofla and a third. a member of a religious order, in Western (IMMI- The funeral will take Place at Mt. Camel on ‘Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock. INCORPORATED HIDE UITAWA, Dec. ei-Nouce oi the incorporation of the Imlltflll on Shipping company 1400M- Charlottetown, with e capital 0i $10,000,000 is contained in today's I Canada Gareth ‘WES’ JAT MT. CARMEL BY FASBISTS British Warships In Spanish Waters On A l e r t Following.‘ Latest Marine Inci- I dent. LONDON, Jan. 1—(CP)—Britisli warships in Spanish waters were put on the alert tonight after a new marine incident involving a British ship while advices from ‘Berlin indicated Germany still was reluctant to out ofl the flow of volunteers to the “ ‘ helvil war. I The steamship Etrib, bound for’ ‘Liverpool from Halifax, encnunler- . Id Spanish Insurgent trawlers in? lthe Straits of Gibraltar and was Ihnlted by a. blank warning shot. I naval officials said. I Lloyd’! advices said the Etrib I was permitted to proceed after her master had refused to submit the Iship'| papers to the commander of one of the trawiers. WILL BIDE TIME British men o’ war charged with protecting English shipping off the troubled coast oi Spain were in- formed of the incident by the Ad- mirslty, althougnit was said no Idrastic representations were con- , templated for the time being. I Thelltrlb is a 1,043-ton freighter Ewned by the Moss Hutchlson * ino- . czibreieerwiici-c the Captafiivnmnoti- fled authorities oi the incident. The Ill-rib is expected to arrive at Liverpool. its home port, next Tuesday or Wednesday. I A Gibraltar dispatch declared s. Equadron oi armed lnsurgenttraw- lcrs halted the 1,934-ton Belgian freighter Navex and forced it to make port yesterday at Ceuta, ISpfilnlsh Moroccan Isurgent strong- o . , “LITTLE wonbn wan" In the face of continuing com- pllcatlons for the Franco-British Dian to stem the influx of foreign volunteers who have made the Spanish conflict a. "little world WHY." London and Paris went ahead with parallel proposals io bar arms imports fmm the fight- err. New and undisclosed sugges- tions along that line were forward. ed to both the Socialist Govern- ment and the Fascist Insurgent Commander, Generalo Frnncisc Franco. Berlin observers. meantime. heard reports that Bamn Konstantin Von Neurath, Reich's Foreign Minister, had fold the French and British ambassadors yesterday that it was "too late" to stop volunteer sail- inge. Diplomatic sources there said one strong reason for Germany's reluc- tance to foresake General Franco was fear lest a. "Communist vic- tor-y" in Spain menace Portugal, with which the Reich has been negotiating in an eflort lo obtain at least part oi African Angola. In Rome, too, the authoritative writer Vlrglnlo Gayda wrote that I Italy's reply to the finance-British "stop volunteers" plea would take into consideration the belief that Italy cannot permit establishment oi "a Red Republic" oi the Med- iterranean. There were authoritative indica- tions the German and Italian re- Dlies would be the same. 'I‘hey are not expected before next week. The International Non Interven- tion Committee meets here next Wednesday, and Britain took some ‘heart from the fact that Italy agreed to the placing of the volun- -teer matter on the priority list on the Glenda. ____________ ‘ lllne Fatalities In llew Year's llcvelry Iy The Canadian Press Welcomed by the wildwt celebra- tion since pie-depression days, young i087 swept merrily on hie way today while Canadians sought recovery from revelry and rejoiced inthelowdeothtolliromthemed celebration. A coaet-to-coeet check last night showed nine accidental deaths, five of them in Ontario, where the weather was more like spring than January. Sub-acre temperatures prevailed across the Prairies while British Columbia's weather was crisp. from Ontario to the Mari- tlmea the weather was mild 1P SEIZES SPANISH i YE-A-ki’ [Repris WSEHIPIArrcst-ed For Murder FIRED UPUN ‘hmmt ed In‘ 1906 1C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) KIRKLAND LAKE, Ont-Jan. 1 —Rocco Fspeslto, alias Strange, arrested last night in this north- ern Ontarlo mining town on a charge of murdering a Newcastle. Pa., Italian in 1906, was takemto the district jail at Haileybury to- Iday by Frank Costa, special in- vestlgator for the Pennsylvania Justice Deparlmcnt. Esposllo, resident I Lake district for the of Kirkland last l5 years, Iwas taken into custody by Costa, and Constable Alex Wilson oi the Criminal Investigation Department cf Ontario Provincial Police. The m-rest follow/ed an ll-months search by Costa, latest investigator into the murder of Francisco Romeo. The two officers left for the north Wednesday nfterron-f suiting with officials of the Ont- ario Attorney-General‘: Depart- ment. They obtained a. provisional warrant of arrest from Mr. Justice Keillor lVIacKay of the Ontario Supreme Court. IMITRU RITIES AWAIT “BREAK” IN KIBNAPPINR Fears Arise For Safe- ty Of Charles Matt- lieved Work Of “Amateur.” BULLETIN TACOMA. Wash» Jan. 1— Police sezed a suspect in the Charles Mnttson kidnapping case here tonight, look him be- fore Federal Bureau of Investi- gation agents nt headqua ICID and their sent him to the iden- tification Bureau for finger printing and photogralfllifll- Person: who saw him Mill his appearance corresponded closely with the dcscrinlion given of the man who broke into Dr. W. W. Mattson's home 135g sunday night and carried away the 10-year-old Mattson boy in the presence of his brother, sister and her 8|" chum. TACOMA, Wash, Jan. 1—-An all‘ o1 pcsslmlsm appeared tonight in the lengthening wait for a "break in the kidnapping of lii-YBBY-illd Charles Muttson. Fear for Charles’ safety arose in one quarter as ihc family maln- ialncd b. silence indicating it W88 awaiting an overdue move from the abductor, who seized the boy last Sunday night in the living room of his home, and left a ran- som demand for $28,000. So far as could be learned. the family of Dr. W. W. Mattson had received no word from the kidnap- pcr since that time, although some sources were certain ll. contact had '~ " ‘son: ‘Abduction I Be- ~ . Governor of Santander, advised of SHIP __i___- al Action I Against ‘Bilbao __Regime Growing Tension In Interirziional Situation Farther Aggravated By Nazis Action. BERLIN, Jan. 1-—(CP)-F0l' the first time since the Great War a German warship today seized a foreign ves- l sel at sea, invoking reprisals against the Spanish Socialist Government which last week sequestered the Nazi freight- er Palos. A brief, semi-ofiicial communique announced capture o! the Spanish ship. The Foreign Ofiice declined to add fur- ther details, but ihe seizure WHS siaicd to be in retaliation for the Bilbao Government's refusal lo surrender the cargo and a passenger of the Palos. The vessel, the communique said, was a “Red Spanish Steamer” and was taken prisoner to emphasize the Ger- rnan Government's determination to regain the Palos’ car- . o passenger, an unidentified Spaniard. l l FIRED WARNING SHOTS I (The Pails newspaper Le Journal, in a London dispatch, said the Koenlgsbcrg put several shots across the bows of the Spanish freighter. Seton, near Simtander, and then wok the ship to an urmamed Spanish Insurgent port. '(Thc Reuters News Agency said in adierlin dispatch that the cap- tured steamer was believed to be the Aragon.) The Palps itself was released by the Bilbao raptors at the demanfl of the German Government, which dispatched the warship Koenigsbe g to the Bay of Biscay to back up its virtual uitimat The Koenigsberg and the pocket battleship Admiral Grai Spee were said to have participated in today's seizure, first oi the retaliatory men- silrcs-thr ‘ jhythc" ‘ 5f‘ ’ W’ ’ . reprisnls if the Pains’ cargo were I not released, and the apparent in- y 0 A F E s tent oi the Bilbao authorities to‘ , l I Warned of Reprisals I The Commander had warned of I ignore the warning presumably in- spired today's incident. (The Paris Le Journal said the the capture, radioed the Comman- der of the Koenigsberg: “I protest energetically against this act of ug- gression mid I ask immediate re- lease oi the crew. made prisoner against all international lnw." (The Commander of the Nazi warship was said to have replied: Two safes, stolen from the oflice of the Baird Drug Company, Charlottetown, and from Cutclifies ‘ _ general store, Hedericion. were ‘Capture 0f i110 500M511 shill Sot- Irecovorcd from the waters of North on is a, measure 0i’ rcprisal for il- ; River Tliurscldv by C,N_R, Diver lcgal detention of a part of file ‘ George Ccrctil. Borden. The bur. OM80 011d one passenger of the I glars had removed money from Paws- "Thc 5°70" did mi obey my Iihc snfcs but valuable papers and °Yd°Ts~ lcdgcrs were found to be intact, and in a. fair state of preservation. A third safe, taken from the Im. vpfrial Oil Company office, Char- Rogarded As Serious The development, regarded as serious by foreign diplomats, ivas (Continued on page 9) announced in the following com- " -. nI-iuniqige issued by the German . cws urcau. ‘u: om” {ME SOME RUSBANDs 651A CHANCE “The refusal of ihe Red Govern- I merit at Bilbao (capital oi‘ the 10 OPEN (HEIR Moufus l5 Wueu flier ‘fawn! semi-autonomous Basque loyalist I state) obliged the Reich Govern- ment to bolster its demand for re- striction with measures of this or- der. , "Capture of a Spanish steamship ‘ is designed to defend Germany's,‘ sovereign rights against acts of‘ piracy." been made. No "Direct Word" The communique repeated the German charge that the Palos was Dr. Maltson himself sold no “di- rect word" had been received from his son. However, he did not in- clude the kldnapper in the state- ment. (Continued on page 0)" MADRID, Jan. 1--A strong In- surgent drive on Madrid from the southwest has been halted in stiff international fighting. Government dispatches from Cordoba Province said tonight. Government forces. in a counter- nttack aided by warpfenes, used bayonets to drive the Insurgents back in the Montoro sector, the dispatches said. Inlematlonal forces participated in a still battle between Bujalance and Villa del Rio, other reports stated. in which Insurgent units were dispersed and seven machine guns captured. (The Socialist Government, which has formed InternetLonnl brigades made up of volunteers from Rus- sia, France. l countries. has charged the new Fascist drive from Cordoba Prov- International Force Aids In Halting Fascist Drive Britain and other; seized by Basque authorities 23- mllcs north cf Cape Mnchluchace. and therefore fnr outside Spanish waters. The Palos’ Captain was asked by Basque authorities to sign a si-aic- (Continued on page 9) Moderate to fresh w and a little colder. TORONTO, Jan. 1 — Mmlmurr and maximum temperatures: inds; fai Dawson 6B 2 Victoria 28 36 Vancouver 20 40 ince was reinforced with Gcrman Edmonton 24B 2 {roomy Regina 28B 4B From Madrid. where the dull ‘VIYIYIIPPS 4B 5B sound of cannon and the rattle of 0mm“ 34 34 machine guns sounded through New Mcnirm" 7f 35 Year's Day. 144 members of the Quebec 2" 34 British Colony travelled to Allcante 8M"? "h" 3* 46 to board destroyers for Gibraltar gzigirzftptown and Mflrsflu‘ Maritime East: Moderate to . The clerical staff of the Embassy is leaving tomorrow and ihc diplo- matic staff Sunday. Consular of- ficers will remain in llladridin rcp- resent 1B0 Britons still in lhc cop- ital. Todayh fighting on the Madrid front was confined to the Univer- sity City sector, and the positions of both beslegers and besieged re- mained virtually unchanged. , The day. bright and sunny. was I i hailed hy the Government as the . I start of a "victory year’ fresh winds; fnlr and a little cold- er High ilile this afternoon at 2.84 and tomorrow morning at 2.28. Sun sets this afternoon at 4M and rises tomorrow monilng at 7.37. Last quarter moon, Monday. Jan 4. 9.22 n. m. Summersidc tide eighteen min- uics later than Charlottetown. rut: can runny ..,- -.-, V5550 iNURTH RIVER-