- MAXIMS MAXIMS 0F A OI A MERE MAN MERE MAN lhdloodlsaboveallllcheeaad , H I u. Itiatheeuebaeetbiugqioreoelve andnottogive. __ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ndisefi.'"i'r.'....'"“" CHARLOTTETOWN, cannon. TUESDAY,'APR_IL 9, 193s FRANCE, ITAL Y DEM ND A CTIONL 2i T STRESA Strict Control YOf Business; And Industry Urgetlljatior-l-s- Must MAIBRPUINTS LIBERAL lace squarely or commission Milli 0N ls German; Action n I) P 0 s E n italy Strengthens Link With Little Entente —- Britain Maps Out Recommendations 0f Lapointe Seeks To Policy At Cabinet Meeting. _ Price Spreads‘ Com- I-"mt Easter Recess (c. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) " Annual Subscription Delivered “.00 Br Iail Canada and U. l. A, $4.50 Commons Pays Tribute To Late Minister (0. 1'. By Guardian's Special Wire) OITAWA, April l-Tribute was paid in the House of Commons to- day to W. D. Robbins, American Minister to Canada, who died yes- terday in NewYork. Sir George Parley, acting Prime Minister, Lib- ersl leader Mackenzie King and Progressive leader Robert Gardiner I Where European Peace Conference Will Be Held . mission Are Wide Sweeping. (CI. By Guardklfs Special Wire) Aprii 8—More strict OTIAWA. paid tribute to Mr. Robbins’ char- acter and diplomatic seal. The Canadian Government sl- ready has eon the American Government. National Revenue, will represent the t a message o! sym- pathy to the Robbins family and Hon. R. O. Matthews, Minister 0! of Commons to One Week. (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) UITAWA, April 18—Five weeks’ Easter adjournment for Parlia- ment was in sight today when the Thursday, _ France and Italy were The difficulties confronting Great Britain were stressed in diplomatic quarters yesterday as preparations went ahead for the three-power Stresa conference on demanding firm action at Stresa while Britain was understood to be adhering to her "11"" W" l" bllli-"m ""1 l" Dominion Government at the fun- lrliulirv in Canada. more Intense el-dl which will be held in slew York g-vmipwntal hum} In company tomorrow. Canada will also be re- " in "l0 - " ‘ ‘. p. ‘ ‘ by Hon. W. D. Herrldge, ems-lover and worker Mul- l" him Canadian mulutel- to United States, ltlelf m mime recommendations who will go to New York from made in the‘ report of the ‘Mass Washington. 'immimswdmmi m n N T H l v traditional policy of supporting a collective security system. Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald announced in London he would accompany Sir John Simon to the con- ference. Premier Pierre-Etienne Flandin of France was expected to accompany Pierre Laval to meet Mussolini. government opposed a motion in- troducod by Hon. Ernest Lcpoinie, former Minister of Justice, to limit the recess to one week. Minister of Justice Hugh Guth- rie said a long recess was neces- sary to.enable legislation to be drafted incorporating the recom- mendations of the Price Spreads Commission. 1t was necessary also because Premier R. B. Bennett would not be able to return from the King's Jubilee celebrations in London before May 18 or 20. The Justice Minister intimated fee which will be tabled ih the Rouse of Commons this week, yob- bbly Thursday or Friday. The Canadian Press learned! to- night that the report deals with virtually evrry phase of Canadian business and industry and seeks to IIITLER. PROPOSAL REJELTED lfavas, in a copyright dispatch, said British key ministers last nigll rejected a proposal to support Chancellor Adolf Hitler's plan for a. l0- year general agreement for peace in Europe- Mussolini was said to be seeking a revision of the Locaruo Treaty RANGE i I .'\.--fl~-- ,_________;'vl:uw let boards to atious along a wide front. MAJOR. POINTS lfbllcwing are i! major points contained in the report: l. Reduction m the standard The Mum monthly meetln of hours of labor, not to exceed 44 ours a week as a maximum. but oxibility in the administration of such laws. permitting long hours when necmsary with time and half and double time for overtime. 2. More complete organization of xmd- work- employers‘ .. ers’ trade unions. , 3. Requirements that a company's _ annual statement, together with the auditor's report, should be published in the daily mm in "such a. way as to insure tho widest publicity," and in the Canada Gazette. i. That it should be made illegal to issue fully paid-up shares urlsss these shares adequate consideration in for directors, promoters, em, the company receives for mil. PYODerty or services. 5. Amendments to the Dominion Companies Act, one oi’ which arc-old be abolition of shares of no-par value. 8. lhtabllshment of a federal trade and industry commission to consist of five members, appoint-ed by Govemor-in-Councll, to “sup- ervise generally or co-operate in the administration of existlnu laws relating to merchandising and bus- iness practices for which no other agency exists.” 'I. Creation of a consumer corn- vllodity standards board. as a sec- tion o! the fed-will trddc and in- dustry commission. to establish government - appointed control and review oper- the City Council was held last Maritime Electric Co. police patrol. Coun. Holman, ing to the tact that the chairmen of all the committees had nothand- ed in their estimates, the bringing down of the estimates would be at a special meeting, which, after some discussion, it was decided tohoid rriday night. Aiter the minutes oi‘ the last meetings had been read and the bills that had been paid confirmed, and the relief bills ordered paid, the City Clerk read a letter from the free Dispensary committee. The letter asked that the present grant of $150 by the city be increased to 8300. The "letter called attention to the de- crease in amount of collections and pointed out the need for additional funds to car on the work.‘ The primary lune on of the dispensary is to supply medicine to the poor on the orders of a doctor. $200.00 was also spent to provide groceries for those absolutely in want. A mall amount of coal was also provided. MEETING or cm tiillNiili ht. The regular reports were" read and adopted and the reports of the chairmen of the various committees submitted. A resolution that the Light Committee proceed to secure the services of a qualified valustor to survey and value the assets of the Ltd.‘ was passed unanimously. ‘the Council ' also decided to accept the tender of W. B. Prowse 8; son for a new in presenting the report of he Fin- ance Committee announced that ow- VIEW rme EA '1‘ POWER behalf of the-Association. The Canadian ‘ .WITH ALARM CONTRACTS Canadian Bankers’ Association And The Canadian Cliambor Uf Commerce Gravely Concerned Over Results Of Such Action. MONTREAL, April 8—Jackson Dodds, Montreal, President of the ' Canadian Bankers‘ Association, today issued the following statement on on troduction into the Ontario Legislature of a b3} entered into between the Hydro Electric Power Commission of Ontario ‘ VE TO h; of the p. , ‘ in- to cancel contracts ifwlnwfdo-ogvs-rler». .__ o JUGO New photo (TOP) of SR9”. Pic‘ turcsqur Itoflzlll small town where Sir John Simon (TOP), Brill!!! ..gl millistrr, Benito Mussolini, (LEFT), Italian premier, and Pierre Laval (CENTRE). French foreign minister, will meet April 11 for conversations upon which peace of Europe may depend. In bM-Zurrawlnd is the historic Bella island. fronting the town on Inks Mngglore. HEAR SEAL HUNTERS illSl ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. Apr. il-Three seal hunters. missing for flve days, the election would be held when the government considered it had a. good chance of being returned to power. The present Parliament will die a legal death Aug. 1B— five years from the return of the writs for the 1930 election. But Mr. Guthrie remember " the ad- vice oi’ a Liberal stalwart of the pest: “The time to go to the coun- try is when you can win." Then, he added: “That, I think has been the gulldixlg 11s ciple at every dis- solution and it is because we think we can win when we go, that we are going." " “m. Lapointe argued for a short recess so the work of Parliament could be expedited and the elec- tion hastened. For instance, two important pieces of legislation would remain high and dry-min- imum wages and the grain board. Other items irl the government's reform legislation would remain stranded in the Senate. It would be "extraordinary pre- sumption," said the former Minis- ter of Justice. for the government to adjourn Parliament for five weeks while tu employment eacisted throughout the country and noth- ing had been done to relieve it. The government, he claimed, had lost the confidence of the people: it was suffering from senility and paralysis. A long adjournment would be only a sleeping powder for a dying patient. Canada should be represented at London by the Prime Minister, Mr. Lapointe agreed. but in the mean- time, Parliament could continue. McGeer To border in the Brenner Pass area. REFLECT PEBSHHISM Moscow newspaper comment re- flected Soviet pessimism at the outcome of the Stress meeting and was said to indicate the Soviet will not consider herself bound by anything done there which collides with her views of European needs. ‘ In Llandrinodod Wells, Wales, Stanley Baldwin, British Lord President of the Council, said Eur- opean nations “are walking those dangerous roads which may lead to war." Three anti-Nazi groups in Dan- zig announced they would demand from the League of Nations a new vote. Nazi Germany was disap- pointed at the failure of the party to secure its objective of a two- thirds majority in the Vol Stag elections. CABINET DRAFTS POLICY LONDON, April 8—'I‘he cabinet spent two hours today deliberating the British course at the meeting with France and Italy on Thurs- day at Stress, where Germany's rearrnament will be weighed and the powers will chart the next steps to pursue in the intensive search for peace and security. No official hint of the British proposals was forthcoming, but the House of Commons learned from Premier Ramsay MacDonald himself that he is accompanying Foreign Secretary Sir John Simon to Stress. There he will meet Premier Benito Mussolini of Italy, at Stress. to include among other things a. new nus-mice for the Italian Report Cattle Starving In .Nova Scotia‘ (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) HALIFAX, April il-Reports thafi cattle and horses are starving in many parts of Nova. Scotia are un- derinvestigation by the Society 101 the Prevention of Cruelty to Ani- mals, officials of the organization announced today. Shortages of feed because of last years hay crop failure is given an the reason forthe purported starve ation. Farmers have been forced to import a substantial part of theta feed requirements. B. J. Kelley, SPCA. agent, was to leave tomorrow for Cumberland County to investigate stories ad starving animals. Last week, he visited Pictou and Hunts. At one place, he said, two animals which apparently had not eaten for ilwfl weeks were found dead in a barn. .__._.__.__ (C.P. By Guardian's Special Wirej) PER/PH. N. B, April 8—An at- tempt to change a belt in a saw mill at River De chute resulted in death for Dennis Broad, 38. Caught in a wheel, he was drawn around the shaft and died soon after. Weather Etc. consumer standards and specifica- tions, and to enforce suchstand- al-ds. B. Recomlrr ‘ ‘ion that penal- ties for breach of the weights and measures act should be more sa- Be Federal‘ Candidate? Just WHEN we Make Bofn Enos MEET, SomEBooY tones Atom. AND were feared lost tonight on the At- lantic off Newfoundlands east coast. The three-a father and his two sons-had not been reported since they set out into Bonavista Bay with four power producing companies, considered it their public duty to advise the Ontario authorities that the banks viewed the situation with genuine alarm and emphasised the possible repercussions of such action upon all public and private credit in Canada. - who is his owrl Foreign Secretary; French Foreign Minister Pierre Laval and, in all probability, Premier Fiandin. Coun. Hennesse , referring w the letter, enquired why, with the city giving coal and no one deserving it refused, the dispensary should find it necessary to give out. uOll. i-le i suasested that I check uv be made re r n. n aching Results vmoouvnn Apr ill-Questioned Presents Report I were, but that the ri“ i l f n t “ a last W d sds in search osf the ' ‘ i! weight be modiiiedpto cpoeifmlt tlie t° see m“ some were not getting n CIOSCESCGpQIII seals Shae dig“, down emh you. UOday as to reports he might be a _ MOVES ‘HE ENDS ‘ ' inclusion of paw-r bags nr W"8l')- mm mam‘ The? lntlilifli/fid m“ "bum?! -- - ~ {pom we MOW on the ice noes‘ candidate n Ontario at the next At today's cabinet meeting Sir g P"! l" u" “tiilhi 0i Wilt goofs ‘mun’ Tum" thought “h” the cancellation and the results which ~ Plane Misha ‘The ‘small beat came‘, Adolphus fffleffll elect-OH. Maya-q. G. Mc- John Presented the bulky report ; ‘ m, om m, mm, ma wemmd d ell-wiry is coins a arm Work b“ might follow the establishment o! ~ v P whee," the mm". Ralph, ,6, m, w" sud he was eel-dun he could which Anthony Eden. Lord Privy ‘ l ' “ album m“ we“ is “ danger o’ such a precedent would be so ser- .____ 1 ’ Th i, wed W; m“, WW" B 5'1“ m 0min‘) 0i‘ Alllfllh Seal, had drawn up on his cxplor- ‘ 1 ltbugiaefiiorialzf a. iédcrzl de art- (“'9' “PPWU- H9 "K395i"! m”! m“ ious and far reaching that the (Q 5.1km") Ifgorseklandl mums if necessary but would rather l-ep- awry conversations M Moscow, , . P matter be passed over to the fln- banks Mt xmpeued to wee upon H3310". Eng" Apr“ a _ Mm residents the“ they would make resent British Columbia. Warsaw and prahm Th“ mp0,, r ment of labor of an entirely new division, "under thoroughly compet- ent supervision." for general re- warch into industrial relations. l0. National regulation of em- ployment rondivcns. preferably bv ance Committee and let them iflr vestigate. His suggestion was acted onThe, health realm was read by Dr. Keeping andthe Food i‘_@_l>_<_>r_t __...______.___ the Government, with all the force and infiuence at their command to refrain from deciding upon such a course. The banks are wholly dis- interested frcrn the standpoint of Dominion legislation if feasible. or. altcrnativew, by inter-provincial ell-operation. . fl. Revision of the present sys- tem of culling and weighing fish purchased from fishermen by dis- tributing companies. and the grad- ual discontinuance of trawler op- (Continued 0n Page s) Soviet Lowers Age Of Capital party politics but feel that any act- ion to prove the contracts other than legal should be taken through the courts ill accordance with pre- cedent. The banks view with grave concern the possible effects of acts an the part of any Government, whether Federal, Provincial 01' (Continued on ir-oe a) ANNOUNCEMENTS COMING EVENTS. MEETIN cs. arc m‘ llmday night dance‘ in dollar's demo also - _ ‘rials-Ail hindsef arti- ' esasoaeble novel- oi "Reserve but: hi’ Women's Institute “IYUW Hill. IrGTII-le Piunis hment (A. ‘P. B! Glllfllialfa Spbdlll WIN) April O-—'I‘he Soviet " lifltionl mnnil l, which would have an adveagepaeffeoi, on the credit of the county. GBAVBLY CONCERNID MONTY-EAL, April 8—-'I‘he Can- adian Chamber of l‘ “il gravely concerned at the dang" . w Canadian credit of any thmt- - ened repudiation eats, or bonded m , -a. Qotement issued iohy following a special “‘ meeting said. ‘ihestatementit was announced by W. Moll. Clarke, secretary. W" endorsed by the notional board d directors in each Province. Ind re- sulted flom pr ‘osed legislation before the Ontario Legielahue. "Canada has many foreign ob- and our credit abroad de- pends upon our izztsgl-ity as a nat- ." the statem .1‘. read in wt- “Impairment of credit will un- doubtedly remit in the refusal of the financial eentlee of the world to purchase new securities from Canada and to renew those failing due, terms. thin contract} Is of governmental Anthony Eden, wife of the l.ord Privy Seal, suflered a narrow escape in an aviation accident today as the plane in which she was riding with the Mayor of Deeds over-reached its landing distance at the airport and crashed against the barrier. The plane tilted perilously but landed upright in‘: flower bed. Sea lsk in Prices Up 8T. LOUIS. April l. - Sealskins which went on sale for the United States Government today were sei- ling at prices ranging from 25 to 40. per cent above those of the 1m semi- ual sale. Twenty-seven thousand of the sealskins. pick of last year's kill at the Pribilof ‘is- land ofl Alaska, were being auction- land in the evening at Green's Pond. their home. But they failed to turn up. And when search was organized and the bay waters combed for their boat, no trace of them could be found. Shore residents believed the craft had been swamped in one of the gales that has swept the Newfound- land coast in the last week. Pos- sibly, they have made land in some isolated settlement. but this was held tonight to be a remote pos- slbility. ____i___._ SCHEME APPROVED UITAWA. Alprli B-Jrhe Canada jam marketing scheme which primi- ariiy affects British Columbia, On- iario and Quebec, has been ap- proved by Minister of Agriculture Robert Weir, and the Governor-in- Council, on the recommendation of the Dominion Marketint Bulrd. ed off. Supreme in Quality “rue. it was announced today. “My own inclination," said the Mayor, "would be to go to Ottawa as a representative from the West. but. if it were necessoF-if. I would have no difficulty in obtaining a seat in either Alberta or Ontario." Mayor McGeel- attended the mayors‘ conference in Montreal and arrived home Saturday night after visiting in New York and sev- eral other Eastern cities. "'I‘he Montreal conference was a great success." Mr. McGeer said. "I think it opened the Way for a conference bet/ween the provincial governments and the national gov- ernment under which lmeanploy- rilcrlt relief would be ,, ' ‘ as a national problem lo be financed as e national obligation." Anti Nazis New Vote right. fill. by the Associated Inca) (a. r. By Guardian‘! spool-l Wire) mm orr! 0% DANzlG. April e-Charging the ails with illegal yesterday's parliamentary three anti-Nari groups announced tonight they will de- mand from the league of Nation! e. new vote. In a suburb of Darl- nig two men were shot and another badly beaten in an outburlt of vio- lance. The elections. which frustrated ital hopes or creating a dictator- siuproiebyiailingtopilewim two-thirds majority. were en@¢flqq petitions Llhvnqiinfllamgte- was completed before the youthful Lord Privy Seal, Britairrs security emissary, was ordered by physi- cians to take to his bed for at least a month, following a. heart attack and the strain oi his exact- ing tour. Germany's unilateral denunci- ation of the military clauses oi’ the Versailles ‘Treaty, which gent a, shock of apprehension through Europe, will be the subject of the Stress. meeting. France is known to want a declaration of support of her opposition. backed by a dis- play of force. Mussolini also is c- ntilllied on pace ‘I a To Demand In Danzig ioratlon of freedom" ill the so- celled Free City. These petitions will all be placed upon the League's council table May l8. Nasi opponents maintained the Germans smashed the liberal constitution of the district, framed under league of Nations control, creating one law for the Nazis and another for their opponents. The Catbolicfioclalists. the Poi- lsh party and probably the Jew! planned to present memorials set- ting forth the minority view. oppositiorlists appalently were great- ly encouraged by the unexpected resistance they mustered against the fill. (I nnmliun Press) Winds shifting to east and northeast and becoming strong: partly cloudy and rather cool: probably frliowed by some rain at night or on Wednesday. TORONTO, April N Mhlilnllln maximum telllpcrlltllresz~ Dawson . . . L" l‘. Aklnrlk hfontrcnl . Ill! T» u willlla oi nonli- rlllvily and Qur-hm- .. Saint John Halifax . . Charlottetown ... FORECAST hfnritlulc West z-Strollg moderate Rules from out in c-nat; cloudy with some rnin ovcr south portion. “Aflillflf: Eslltz-‘Vincls east snd norlbvllst and lrvconfill, strong: partly vlnluly' nnri rlulw cool: proh|lllly~ followed by some ruin at nigh! or on Wednesday. shifting (a High iivlo this afternoon nt lflfi and toulorrolr morning at 4. Sun sets this evening at 8.37 and rlscs tomorrow morning at 5.24%. First quarter moon Wednesday, . . m. Summer-aid uric eighteen minim-s later than Charlottetown. leave Borden I46 A ll. (ltrtu) i P .l. ...'."‘i.'°i?“*‘& "it'll- “tide-ii