MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN am-monse irlifnillinla act. i l! ll they ouxht to be nee is the hunch of p“. hey are. and doing done. >Z&// ,. The People's Paper Read by Everybody Covers. Prince Edward’ Island Like the Dew l MERE MAN The law of culture u that each should become what he was created culpable of being. i MAXiMs ' or A chuletletown Guardian Two cent; ~-—-~ - _____, ,_ ,_ _____, M’ “.°,'f""' °'"““"' """"‘"' "'" CPARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JUNE 1s, 193s s PAGES $‘.“'il7.l.5'i5i-‘l.'."i'.'°§'...?>‘Z"E25.°l‘..;°;°!. ... .. u... A g1 ISORDERS MA I l IV‘ C . . - B. R CZECHOSL 0 AKIA ELEC 7 IONS “' lel- -} m.’ j “United Protest” To _--- ud) Germany Planned (A. P. ‘by Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON. June ill-Representa- tives oi’ nations which in 1933 guaranteed now defaulted bonds for a $50,000,000 loan to Austria here voted to make a “united pro- past" to Germany becauce of her refusal to take over Austria's ex- ternal debts. A communique announced Satur- day the guarantor committee hmd received a letter stating the Ber- lin Government considered itself "under no legal obligation” to as- sume the debts. Austria was alf- nexed by Germany March l3. Great Britain, France, Czecho- sloviakia. Italy, Belgium, Sweden. Denmark and The Netherlands 111.4411" swim nationa- comuo {viii v "Reserve July 1st Ba. tist Picnic, Tryon. 1.- 248-6-10-31. "Wednesday is Dance Ni ht at The Highlands. L-l257- -1l-tf. " J i 6th i’ the lawn partfirggw given. L-fiiifiil-G-lll-ll. er une Doyle, Readings. 1B5 Prince Street. L-1399-6—l3-3i. "For Sale-‘fresh frozen Herring in 25 ed lbs. boxes. Signed and Cold Storage. Ii-loifi-fl-l-Y-I- "Mt. Stewart Legion Hall talk- les on Tuesday evening June i4. L-1350-6-li-3l. "Dance in Cardigan Hull. Tues- day. June 14th. Webster's Orch- ptrg, L-1273 6-10-41. "Borden Line Club loading boss lambs. calves every Tllfisflhy- BORIS i2 u» a. L-348-l2-M-2-5-tf. "Bee "Dot The Miner's Daugh- ter" in Stanhope Hall tonight. June l3th. L-137a-6-13-ii. "Ice Cream Social in Clinton Bgmg esda i ht. 1 T“ y n g L-1373-8-13-2l. "Palmer Road picnic Tuesday, Aug. 18. Remember day, date and place. 14-1383-6-13-31. "Perfection ice cream at Darn- iey Hall, ‘Tuesday, June l4. l..-1377-6-13-2i. "Reserve Thursday, July 7th. ‘or “m” t“ and iiiliiks 13-21 "Drawing for Institute rizes at the play in Stanhope Ha to- night, L-l390. "Cape ‘Traverse Hail. June 14th. Norbaro Players will ‘present "The Old Mind's Courtship.’ Dance after. L-l309-6-l1-2i. Mount held "Reserve July 1st for Stewart Lobster Carnival to be at Savage Harbour. L-1052-6-3-4-i0-il "Webster's Corner Hall. Holy Redeemer players present "Sis Perkins", a comedy iii three-acts. Conservatives (C- l’. by Guardian’ S OTTAWA, June 1L final Brtflfigementg 1°;- tional Conservative convenflpn here Jlltlg 5. 6 and 7 ware made when e National Convention Committee. under the chairman- Bhib of John R. MacNicol met here yesterday. ' The 30 committee members met 11101111118 and afternoon. At lunch they were guests of m. Hon. a. B. Bennett. Conservative leader, whose decision to retire led to the call- ing of the national convention. Their next meeting the day before the convention. A statement issued by Gordon Graydon. M. P., and Georges Hec M- P» Ellilkh Bud .l"rench_ sec- the Na- Insurgen Coastal N. S. Hospital Post (C. P. by Guardian's 5 In! Wire) HALIFAX, June 1 pointment o! Dr. Pearl Hopgcod, ormcriy c! Summerside, P. E. I., to the post of assistant medical superintendent of the Nova Scotia Hospital Dartmouth, N. 8.. was announced by the Nova. Sootia Department oi‘ Health tonight. Dr. Hop graduated from Dalhousie medical school in i920 and was soon after apopinted to the staff of the Dartmouth Hos- ital. For the last 15 years, Dr. opgood was assistant physician at the institution. lllltiliipmifilli FIVE NAHBNS Believed To Have Had Origin In N o r t h Sea. (CI. By Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON, June 12—A new earth shock, third in 24 hours. rocked northern Pumice and Belgium to- day as experts prepared to examine the foundations of St. Paul's Cath- edral here to determine whether the historic building was damaged by Satuninys tcmblors. The shock fclt on the continent today was quite light compared with that experienced Saturday morning when five nations were jolted over a 400-mile front from lilngland to the Rhincland. There was a lighter quake Saturday afternoon. Monday, June 13th. L-l279 6-10-3i. "Rustico dramatic club present four-act. Slay, Kelly's Cross H111- Monday, une 13th. Good special- ties and orchestra. L-l20l-6-10-3i. Hall. Hilly present “Sis 1n three acts. Dance alter. "Webster's Corner Redceme players crklns" a. comedy onday. June 13th. "Fishermenh Carnival at Rus- i-ico Harbour July 27th. Proceeds ioi" Educational 1111190895- L-l225-6-l3-ii. "Sec “The Wild Oats Boy" grcscnted by the vsileyllvld Y- P- . ut. Valleyfield, June l-i and Flat River, June l7. b1332- "Bee "Oh Aunt Jerushal" in Mt. Stewart Iiegion Hall, June 17th, by Lorne Vabcy. Y- P~ S. 11-1381-6-13-21. "Plsy-"A Little clod Hopper" at. Conan Ban Hall, Wednesday. Junta 15th b.v Teéit lgile ggllsgdgl“ '- Ti ll!‘ f . ma m club I" n frilWi-G-lli-li. "Qpgn d es by request at IFLEiIIOWIIWTUaQEn-‘ldiiy, June 14th- Thgsclis piece orclégstra. generéiitlgg; m on. 1m o accommo a later, pr v D1389. "Lecture by Rev. J. A. Nicholson and entertainment by lwll and Charlottetown talent in Canoe 00W Friday. l IONIDON, June l2—An earth- quake born in the North Sea cited five nations Saturday rumb- ing over a 400-inile front from England to the Rhineland. There was scattered damage. surprise, alarm and even panic among the countryfolk in Belgium and Northern France, who drop- ped to their knees in prayer as chimneys toppled, walls cracked, iéléndows broke and furniture jump- Three capitals-London, Paris, Brussels-felt the shock which some semlsmographs recorded as having a duration of l0 minutes. lciidoli felt the first shock at ‘11159 a. m. (7:59 a. rn. ADT.) Brussels a severe tremor at 11.57). i Three persons were killed and about 20 injured in Belgium. In Brussels a frightened man leaped Ill) his (loath from a balcony; in {Ghent an out-of-control streetcar ‘killed a pedestrian; a. crumbling wall killed a bricklayer at. Cruys- hautem. Two children were injured ser- iously at. Hazebrouck, northern France, and in several continental towns there wIe injuries from falling bricks. LEGION AIDS V. C. COALVEiLE. EH31 d — Disclos- ing poor circumstamggs when fined for not holding a dog licence, Will- been shred lam Bees. V. C. has 1o shillings (mic) a weekgy the British Legion. ill Wire) 0st o! the It- Finalize Plans For Convention Next Month {fx-lrslessaclvfizths committee respec- "Enthusiasm was at a high pitch durlllfi todl! '5 proceedings in an- ticipation o the greatest conven. tion in the party's history," “Every province had representa- hves at the meeting and they card the convention chairman re- Pbri the progress made in con. eluding the convention details, Sfilme of the finishing toucha have s to be completed including the Preliminary work of organizing the WWW people and women. Impetus W“ tiven at the meeting to both these movements which will be more comprehensive than that Previously attem ted by the con- servative Party Canadg, ts Press A ttack iLoyalist Troops Return From Albocaccr HENDAYE, lib-dime J‘ _ PJ-Five columns of 1n. surgerits. 20.000 strong. Converged wgfly on rich Castcllon de la Plans ggigéoflnglélla lily under General sevenwfeek guns after a bitter. caifl-Daign. tea??? Jose Mlfllos coastal de- ne. which blocked the In. wax-cut drive to the south since o drove a salient to the Med_ iterrangan in mid-April crumpled yesterday with a Government. re- "hllzhm 91'. es north of Cas- tellon de la. Plana. had been weak. 080d as a defence bulwark by In- 811180111‘. penetration deeper imam. and closer to the port city from the northwest. This had threatened isolation of Albocacer. By dawn insurgent troops were streaming along the network or in. land roads and t/wo main coastal highways for a conceited assault on Cmtellon de 1a. Plans. princi- Dfl-l barrier to conquest of Valen- slump miles to the south south- Scores of lesser towns. villages and hamlets fell to the insurgents. Their dispatches reported several thousand government prisoners were taken in the last two days but government sources said Gen- eral Miajifs retreat was orderly. with o. minimum 10$ of men and s es. Full control of civil and mili- tary affairs in all government ter- ritory except Catalonia was hand- ed over to lvliaja after the insurg- enrts lopped off Catalonia in their march to the sea. Miaja, known as the "Savior of Madrid." norw has the task of saving Valencia, if not Castellon de la Plans. 17 Ordained Ai Closing 0f Conference SACKVILLE. N- B» Julie 12" The Maritime Conference of the! United Church ended its annuut meeting tonight with a service B which Rev. Bruce Gray, Toronto. , assistant secretary of Home Mis- . 310113, was the preacher. The Con- ference will meet here again next. June 6. Seventeen young men were or- dained in the Sackvllle United Church this morning. The Con- ference president. Rev. Dr. L. H. MacLean. Newcastle, N. 13., con- ducted the ceremony, assisted by Past President Rev. Dr. H. '1‘. S. Gomall" Saint John, and Rev. George Christie, York, P. E. I., secretary of the Conference. Rev. Dr. A. I... IlTa-ser delivered the ser- mon. An organ recital was given in‘ Charles Fawcett Memorial Hall this afternoon by Prof. Harold S. Homer, of the Mount Allison Han, muggy, 4.5m km; at_8 conservatory of music. u d 1 Provincial une?‘ ,X,“'Dk“ °I_.-1337-6-ll-2L "Our "Wanner Mixture No. 1" 101' yo is working wonders 1h many pens. Why pa 40 P01‘ cent or feed of equ or less vgluel e bag eff wa £2 fl"_"°"‘ v i897. ' 1i when r Char- lotw v evegy We“- Ob Monday and ursda after- ‘Nesday and Fri ay fore- h unuj - n ce. Re- member-co-cperutlve marketin will 20$ the price where i lhould be. meuiuigkito ark“?- ' nisvf "W be chiv- mcnt. 3e. vac Mnghtmai duroia "l! ‘of "June 87th., and l ll follows: June b0. afternoon. courts and Oiiuicttetown- WM may P- "i. ... ~.. us: VI‘. "l"!!! pom please list with ‘fr; .- meow. in lid-Pith»... llorketin Premier Pierre today the o was prepared Idol‘ - tion to aid Czechoslovakia. if aha were invaded by Germlny. (trance and Czechoslovakia are bound by a assistance mutual DIM-J in Vienna, Franco, It liance Party. he warned that the dgnger of war was g moi-ope and his f qpqntmdm RID“ it" "Jilin henchmen will be aston- ished b0 learn." Fiondin Add. "flint onMoyfl iuiedmuuis Int German fnlntiet in- cidentl accolfllby the munici- v.1 QXQQPOIE) 01:" for’ Iner- Ofl . giilfiii‘ the when civil war ‘an w‘; the [IOIQ ‘Q Jun lb-(Afi-Iibriaer Iimnce PARJB. e d“! n. conven on of his Democratic Ai- ‘a; Former French Premier Warns Nation Read): For Emergency flint “official ansnd your Bflilll is VICTIM or, SAD FATALITY Summerside C" Ilies Of Injuries When Struck By Truck. A verdict of accidental death was returned by a coroner's jury Saturday night following an .in- quiry into the death of Rena. Arsenault, six-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin A. Arsenault. who was almost in- stantly killed when struck by a truck in front of her home on Ottawa Sweet, Summerside. Walter Jerrior. driver‘ of truck, told the jury he had been driving for Messrs. M. F. Schur- man since 1931. On Saturday afternoon he had s t o p p e d at his home on Ottawa Street and then proceeded on the same street at about ten to fifteen miles an hour. The truck was empty but for a few bundles of laths. He did not see any children as he pass- ed the old eastern school, which is now a tenement house. The only person on the street was Jerry Doucette. He was on the sidewalk. Jerrlor said he felt that he had struck something but did not know what. He looked out of the rear window. There was no one behind. He felt a er but had no idea what he ha struck. He opened the cab door and as he stepped on the running board he noticed a child's feet out from the rear of the left hind wheel. He called out. to Jerry and asked where the child came from. Jerry replied he did not see a child at all. Witness said he picked up the child and laid her on the side of the road and amred Jerry to look after her while he went to the Mounties. The R. C. M. P. sent him to the town police who came back with him to the scene of the accident. The child's head was just in front of rear wheel not under the wheel. The body was out from the truck. The accdent happened right in front of the eastern school. Jerry Doucettc gave evidence that he was walking along Ottawa Street around four o'clock and had just passed the Eastern School when he heard car brakes squeak and at the same time he heard Jerrior shout to him. He was twenty feet behind him in one of Schurmans trucks. He noticed somethin under the truck which he thou: t at first was a rag doll. As he went toward the truck Jer- rior got out and nicked the child up. She was lying half way be- tween the front and real wheels. Jcrrior laid the child down and asked him to watch her while he wont for a doctor and the police. Witness said he thought the child was living. He looked round to see if anyone was about and saw a. small child running into the Eastern School and and found the mother of the little girl. Witness told her that a child was hurt and she found it was her own daughter. She called her hus- band and he came and icked up the child and laid her at) the side of the building where she ed. Doucette said e did not see any children on the street while he was walking along. The truck was tlengmfeet behind him. He did (Continued on page '1, Col. 4) EllEtiflAfliiilii G 0V E R NMENT D e m an d s “Clear Stand” Against Dic- tators. LEAMIINGTON, Emgland, June 11—iC.P.)-—Anthony Eden warned Saturday night that concessions to dictators "are not the way to peace" and demanded that the British Government make a. “clear stand" against them. In an address before his consti- tuents Mr. Eden made his most en- emetic attack on the Chamberlain Government-without naming the Prime Minister or any cabinet min- later-since he left. the Cabinet Feb. 20 in protest against its way of dealing with Italy and Germany. Elected To Lead iluebeo Liberals ADELARD GODBOUT QUEBEC. J1me l2—(CP.>—Ade- Godtbollit 1am 46-year-old former Premier and head of Quebec's Lib- eral Party since administration of the province went to the Union Nationales two years ago, was eoted Saturday as the Provincial Liberal Leader. He was unanimous choice oi’ a Provincial Liberal convention which concluded Saturday after meeting two days and outlining a new party program. Godabouts selection by the con- vention was a confirmation of his leadership of the Liberals since i936 when the young Union Nation- ale Party headed by Premier Du/p- lessis wori a general election vic- tory ending nearly 40 years of Lib- eral rule in Quebec. R ll S S 0-1 i P FBRBESMASSEB 0N BURIIER Conflict Between Or itries Hcll Uh- likely Under Pres- c ‘ Circumstances. By ELMER W. PETERSON Associated Press Staff. Writer SHANGHAI, June 1$-(A.P.)— Along 2,000 miles of jagged fron- tier. from Vladivostok to Outer Mongolia. Russian and Japanese border guards face each other. Back of these guards complete Russian and Japanese armies man- oeuvre and drill and wait for orders. If Japan and Russia. were to go to war. military observers are agreed. there would be no delay in starting the guns booming. The guns are there already. as are air- planes and tanks, cavalry units and other war machinery. Japanese forces in Manchuria are estimated from 300,000 to 400.000. Russian troops are reported to number at least 400,000. Both armies are readv. Will they be used against each other in the near future? In the opinion of most military and diplo- matic observers-no. Rum-la. never has held so advan- tageous a position in the Flai- East. 0s long as Japan continues well occupied in China with the present hostilities. And Japan. finding a difficult. military problem in what was judged an easy conquest, is regarded as being in no position to go to war with a major power unless forced into it. There is still no reason to believe Rsissla intends to intervene directly in the war in China. To Russia, the war in China is developing. observers believe, far more satisfactorily than Moscow had hoped for. Each month of continued military effort by Japan means a loss in Japanese soldiers and a tapping off Japanese military strength generally. Foreign military observers are tweed. therefore. the issue rests with Japan rather than with Rus- sia at the moment. Japan is judg- ed fully aware war with Rugia, with Chinese hostilities unselned. would mean fighting on two major He warned that the Government wuasxkguilitder gravehdelusion" i.f it can reac European ap- peaeem it "by a policy o conces- sion to violence.” The word "realinn." he contin- ued. might "become indistinguish- able from defeatisnv-if so. we should then merely be retired in good order from position to posi- tion until the battle is lost." He expressed concern over the of British ships and open towns in Spain. Reach Agreement In. Fishing Dispute c.r. o rill -smiuwml (mxyo twang-Soviet. auth- oritiu haire agreed to grant to 10,000 Japanese fishermen w to to Sov t waters off in B08904 Dlflll ch hzd threcte-ned to take s11 _ ereas fighting on one 010M l6 Drwihd strenuous enough. King Replies To Loyal G; tings GITAWA. June l2 —(CP)—-An exchange of greetings between King George VI and Lord Tweeds- muir on the occasion of His Maj- esty's birthday on June 9 were released Saturday. The Governor General sent the following greeting: "On the oc- casion of Your Majesty's birthday. I have the honor. on behalf of loyal and devoted subjects Canada. to send your Majesty our most" sincere and respected Kin; George replied: eonvq tn the people of Canada cordial thanks for their loyal as- ‘Please cumm- and wishes on the . acute turn. good celebration of my birthday." Fiililil WATERS DELAY DRIVE or JAPANESE Stubborn Chircse De- fenders Slow Down Invaders On Central Front. SHANGHAI, June 12—-(AP)- Heavy rains and flood waters breaking through dikes along the mighty Yellow River tonight aid- ed the stubborn Chinese defenders of Chengchow and helped to de- lay the Japanese drive on Han- kow, 300 miles to the south. Ankle-deep mud on the fields and roadways along the Lunghai Railway to Chengchovvs east and lowlands inundated by rampant waters from "China's Sorrow"— the river-restricted the attack- ers to snails pace movements. The Chinese seized the op- portunity to counter attack along the Lunghai and reported they repulsed a Japanese attack on Paisha, 13 miles from Chengchow where the east-west Lunghai cros- cs the Peiplng-Hankow Railway. Key City Capitulation of Chengchow is necessary to open the way for the Japanese land drive on Hankow, provisional Chinese capital deep in the interior of the Yangtse river. Stalemate at Chengchow shifted Japanese pressure to the Yangtse river front and what the Japanese had proclaimed as their naval of- fensive agalnst Hankow. A Japanese spokesman said this phase of the war was "progres- sing on schedule.“ About 40 Jap- anese gunboats and transporters bearing landing parties were re- ported within 250 miles of Hankow and already in action. supported by warplanes. Meanwhile. Japanese land forces reported progress in drives - to reach the Peiping-Hankow rail- way between Chengchow and Han- kow and at the same time capture Nanking. Monoton Man Held For Assault 0n 15- year ilid Daughter MONCTON, N.B.. June 12-(0. Pa-Ruth LeBlanc, l5, was; gun] conscious in hospital tonight Wm, s. skull fracture and severe {we lflfierflblws. and her father, Claude IcBlanc. 33. was under arr-eat on an assault charge. The girl's w“- dition was reported critical, Police were holding a. pinch bar, said to have been used in the al- leged assault Saturday night, and 3195595 i110 Klrl had been wearing. Acco to police information, she went outside to hang up a p31: 0f Slboklngs and was struck on the head when she stepped imp a shed at the rear of the LeBlanc house A younger sister was home at the tlrrnle. ‘e lllJll-Wd Rirl, a student in Glide 8. is a daughter of Police Matron Mirs. Maude LeBlano who liciird licr daughter scream.’ Mrs LeBlanc and the other daughter found Ruth unconscious in a. pool °f blomi- Tile ten-bound iron bar. covered with blood. lay in a cor- ner of the kitchen. The father. a war veteran, was arrested soon afterwards when he entered the house without wear. in»: shoes. Police said they were told that both girls had been order. cd tobed and that Ruth did not obey immediately. New Glasgow ' Ian Drowned In Lake ANTIGONISH, NS., June 13-- (C.P.l—Wa1lace Norris, manager of the Metropolitan Stores, New Glasgow. N.S.. branch. was drown- ed today at Trout Lake, Antigonish County. when a boat from which he was fishing capsized and threw him into the water. persons were injured tonight ities predominate. isch-Schoen berg where pressed. Led by Father Andreas Hlinkf}. the Slovak Catholic Peoples Party, although gaining many seats in the various districts, only obtained between 40 and 45 pcl’ cent of the votes in Slovakia. These figures contrasted sharply with claims made by Fame!‘ Hlinka. that his group represented the entire Slovak people. The third and the last of the municipal elections, involving some 4,000 communities. brought nearer a decision the nations dis- pute with the 3,500,000 German minority. A fatality was recorded at Jihlava where M. Hott, nephew of ffresirlent Eduard Benes, fell dead ”..‘§.“““...' *.""l.°.....'..”;.°§:.i.'; er at Czeéhefgfo b’ ‘a fill-ill will“ of municipal elections. today read in the Nazi press v.olerit. attacks on the Praha Govern- ment. Headlines told of torture 0,1, "Sudeten German lunowlli-I “Bolshevist. menace" was slovak “brutalitle5." newsPflllerfl claimed the elections were neith- er free nor democratic. The Su- deten Gennan§._ no rs Mid- were being terronzed by Czecho- flwh-k MeliXisliiL from a. heart attack after a ErouP of Sudenten-Germans invaded a polling booth. _ The town was thrown into near panic when news of his death spread. Hott was leading candidate in the district for the Czechoslovakia National Socialist Party, of which President Bones is a leader and which has no connection with the Nazis. order as unofficial returns gave the Czechoslovak Govern- ment and the Nazi-supported Sudeten German party each \°°‘ strong gains in the regions where their opposing national- m, ' Sudeten supporters of Konrad Henlein unofficially polled 90.9 per cent of the total vote in Germanic districts. r In Czech regions pro-Government parties gained inajor- "4" ities similar to those of the two previous Sundays of ballot- ing which were interpreted as a vote of confidence in Premier Milan H0dza’s Government. The most. serious election-day outbreak was at Macr- five Henleinists were injured after police dispersed a victory parade celebrating a big Sudeten vote. Shouting ‘ ‘police have been clubbing our women," about 50 Henleinists fought with police but were sup- ,- Government And Sadeten Parties Register Gains Henlein Sweeps-G-ennanic States While Czechs Rally To Support Cf Premier Hodza. PRAHA, Czechoslovakia. June l2.-—(C.P.)—Fourteen 155:’ ‘cm I m in a municipal election dis- policemen and nine MBBALI. BASE UPENS TilllAY Grand Jury To Hear. State Evidence To- day. MIAMI, 11s., June" lfl-Sizvte Attorney George A. Worle com- pleted today the case he w pne- sent to the Grand Jury tomorrow, starting Florida's bid for the life of Franklin Pierce McCall, accus- ed kidnap-slayer of Jimmy . Worley said he would ask the jurors to indict the 21- ear-old. Princeton truck driver or kid- napping and first degree murder, both capital crimes in Florida. On hand to appear as witneu was J. Edgar Hoover. director of the Federal Bureau Inveeti- gation, who announced Friday Mo- Clali had signed a detailed confes- SOD If indictments are voted, Worloy said he would tr to speed the case to trial in less than a month. The five-year-old boy was snatch- ed from his home in Princeton May 28. McCall. still maintaining that: “Skcegie’s“ death was due ac- cidental suffocation and not a part of his plans, was finger- printed and liotograplicd. Joseph Hi1] rird. fatlier-in-law o! McCain said his (laughter. pros- trated by licr finally had bccn icld of his confession and was bearing up At. Bratislava 2U persollfl “Tire injured when police rushed a crowd of 4.500 Suderiten-German. Slovak and Hungarian Autcnomist sympathizers milling about ‘the offices of the newspaper Slovflfi- More than 4,0000 young Cer- ans and Hungarians, marched to he newspaper offices as soon as election returns were KllOWll. cheering Henlein and P311181‘ Hlinka. Nearly 400 Slovak Auto- nomists were dispersed by a de- tachment of 150 police. Several oi the demonstrators were arrested. Hlinka‘s Party silffcrcrl a seriousi setback at. Bratislava. obtaining‘ six seats compared to the 2i won t by the Pro-Government Slovak Union. As they rrovxdcd the pollinl’ places the highest juridical auth- orities of the republic devoted the day to an intensive study of the Sudeten German clcmnricls for autonomy and other con- cessions and of the possibility of satisfying at least some of ihcm within the framework of the constitution. Hess Claims Czechoslovakia Menace To European Peace STWITIN, Germany. Jung 1z_ (APJ-Rudolf Hess. Chancellor Hitler's general representative, ac- cused Czechoslovakia today of be- ins a menace to the peace of Eur- ope. He asserted the neighboring republic was in a condition "prac- tically akin to a. state of war." With Hitler listening attentive. ly. Hess speaking at. a rally in Pomerania mid tribute to the Pup. hrer as one who "alone is to be thanked that. Europe is not in flames" as the result of Czechoslovak acts. rm" “it. “s. e or Deane m n be trifkd wi th. Hess spoke pointedly nceming Onechoslovekie but avoiggd men- tioning its name. "It in a threat to Europe's pence if there is a certain mobilization --e. mobilisation without w own-- (A pa ‘ . "But this state not only mobil- izes but. a condition has set in $10M the borders of this republic glhfi is practically akin to a state 1'. "0116 provocation a nst nei li- bors follows anotherfgfl 8 ifilechoelovakia called up a class of reserves and manned her bor- d"! Mil-y 31 on the cve of the first of a series of three municipal el- ections. The action followed pre- election disorders. during which two Sudeten Germans were killed. and tension cver the reported movement of German troops to- ward Czedioslovakia.) He rebuked “states who have in- fluence" in Czechoslovakia, un- doubtedly referring to Great Bri- or tain and Fiance. not "bringing ‘ "T" "" ‘Wnhtlv to rea- well. she made no effort to go to McCall's side. Evian (hi; MAN WHO Ktiovvs \ l2~Minlmum and maximum tempera turns :- TORONTO. June Dawson 40 73 Victoria 50 55 Edmonton 48 B3 Regina lW nipcg Toronto 58 B0 Ottawa 58 73 Montreal 88 7G Quebec 58 74 Saint John 50 N l-laiiiax 52 U Charlottetown 50 ‘H FORECAST Maritime East: Fresh welt northwest winds; probably light scattered s oven. High tide this morning at. 10.2 and tonight at 11.56. Sun sets this evening at, 1.46 end rises tomorrow mornlh l.t. 4.13. Lost. quarter moon. une M, II p. m. Summcrslde tide eighteen min- utes loll? than Charlottetown THE CAR FERRY SAILING, Leave Borden 9.45 a. m. l p. I‘. ""1 4.45 p. m. Tormellilne ll 5.1. m vor- 0th. M. if ALL MAY LWE ti}? i \ AN!) humans / . Y, g/ a . . -l 4.‘- Q-sin. -».>. .-- -_ -_:-LE-\-:-.sv~.--~.: _.-..=-- we... . ..,~_5,_ ' -__.\... _. me sift _ dot ti?“ l‘? l‘ i a“ l! i“ .' 53 \' ~11 f. . :1 i . l‘ 5t .5‘ m.‘ I } R- l tr’ n6- . @_ 3T1 ‘ ii. fifi i’.