MAXIMS 'OFA. MERE MAN God. The equality of men can only he afl-unplllllofl by the sovereignty of s,- lt town Guardian Two 5:33: afiuardlan, Founded 1M1 Tuesdu .1‘- "Afler inooulatlo 1 if ust Withdraw Picture FromAcademy LONDON. April 28 -- The Royal Academy today ordered removal of a pruning from its annual exhibit- ion because it looked too much like former King Edward VIII. The painting representing a crowned figure and entitled "The Lord of Creation," was declared by the aiiisi, Oswald Maser, to be fymboiical. Many who viewed it, however. be- lieved it to represent the abdicated K1118- Notilyirig Moser the picture must bc wihdrawn Academy offic- ials said: "Your picture appears certainly to allude to an affair which is a. 'matter of especially painful regret to the public." Moser denied the picture refer- red in any way to the former king. He said it. was painted two years igo. "It does not represent any liv- ing person," he asserted. "The noun on the man's head is purely tynibolical of man's supposed sup- eriority over birds and beasts." Earlier today, it was learned that the Duke's portrait had been re- iwred from the liner Queen Mary ind replaced by one of the King ind Queen. COMING {VENTS "New Sunshine Laundry opened today at 180 Great George Street. L-1960-4-27-6i. "Buying live hogs Albany Thurs- div 20th, Emerald 30th until noon. S. C. Green. L-2022-i-W-t-t-w-t-ti. "Grand Orange Lodges L. O. L. ind L. O. B. A. meets in Summer- ilcie May 10th, l0 A. M. L-2022-4-28-2i. "Beginning in May Dr. J. D. Rcddin wil be at Mt. Stewart, Thursday only and at Morell Fri- luys during May only. l..-1948-4-2'l-3i. "Borden Line Club loading hogs. lambs, calves every Wednesday at Albany. Hours 12-3. L-60l2-i0-M T W t! "See the play "The Prince oi Liars” in Hampton Hall, May 5th Vi’ Hampton Players in aid of hall. L-2028-4-29-5-1. "Canadian Grown. Clover. Seed now rcndy for delivery. Come early and make sure of yours. Prices 718M. Signed T. A. Rodd and Roland Benton. L-2024-4-28-6I. "Central Christian Church pan- lry sale Fennell and Chandler's Saturday afternoon, May 1st. L-1916-4-24-3i. Pconcert and Dance in Grand- view llzill by Victoria Cross Com- munity Club, Friday, April 30th. Proceeds h old of Kings County Hospital. L-2037-4-29-li. "South Granville players will Iiicscilt the comedy drama "The Noble Outcast" in Hartsvilie Hall “l1 'I‘hursday night at 8 o'clock. If 00i- fine Friday. 11-2013-4-28-3). “Buying live hogs, Alden Moase. ‘Een-slliklon, Everett Hashim. Ehner- ul, Monday, May 3. Lemuel Cras- "11. Hunter River. Tuesday. May t Truck will meet farmers at Rus- “W- A. E. Wedlock. Hunter River. L-2053-(49-2l. "Cream Rania-Beginning Mon- i! May 3rd, Murray River, Greek River. Peter's Road, Murray HM- North. Gaspereaux, Sturgeon, Bl- Whrys Road, Lower Montague- “Farrow: Road to Charlottetown. °“° "In each week. Gordon Hlylwfl ‘iauler for Central Creams-rice. bid‘- L-NlD-l-il-fl. "Livestock Marketing non-d "wine hogs. lambs and calm “men local shinning clubs m: "my 9rd u follows: Monday afternoon. . Tuesday fore- "°°"- Kensingtori. ohuriomwwn. “Macon. Millwew, Baltic, Sour-ll. - Poem. Moi-on. Wednesdly wre- "wn till train time Mt. Stewart. mllm. Hunter Myer, afwmoon ‘my!’ to three. Albany. flat. stock ‘W occi secretary, ship 00-00"- . '1! And maintain top prices. L-au-a-ze-il. Ouaog Conditions In Homes Appalling I outbreak 0f Ty-piioia Feared In London Ont.—Red Cross Raisirgundg LONDON. Ont. April 2s- (crl-sti-ingont health pnggpflqm a, Invent a feared outbreak of typhoid fever were prepared gunk)" by Landon medical men and the Rod Cross Society while efforts wen un- der any to repair dome-cc caused by torrential floods of Monday and "am" typhoid fever are received, residents may return to their flooded homes during the day time to do necessary cleaning and repair work", said Col. W. H. Klppcn of the London 3,“! cross. “No one will be allowed to stay in Wcst London after dark". A committee of physicians and Red Cross workers met 1n digcugg flan: for safe renovation of the flooded areas. To get a clear picture of the flood results. a committee of Red Cross workers visited the areas to- day. A formal statement which followed said: "We were appalled at conditions in the homes of London west and estimate it will be at least three weeks before the residents of these houses will be able to again occupy them. "The Red Cross committee rec- ommends to the executive that a minimum of 8200.000 in cash must be raised. Urgent action is neces- sary as the committee must. func- tion immediately in innumerable cases where destitution is appar- ent." To dale the Red Cross Society has raised 835.000 to aid the desti- tute. 400 of whom are being ‘fed daily at the armories. Hundreds of men. women and children were inoculated at the armories today by s. squad of 12 physicians and 24 nurses who worked in two shifts. The typhoid fever serum was free and inocula- tion was not compulsory but was urged on all returning to flooded areas, I Danger of a water shortage had not. been allayed tonight. E. V. Buchanan, manager of the public utilities commission declared. He feared at noon it wpuld be neces- sary during the day to discontinue all water service but his etafl suc- ceeded in bringing north side wells into operation with a supply of more than 750,000 gallons. "We have now a supply of nearly 4,000,000 gallons of water compared with s normal consum tion of 5.000.000 and l. normal supply of 6.000.000 Billions", said Buchanan. "This means all citizens must co-operate in order to avoid a grave situation". Mayor T. F. Klngsmill said to- night that beginning tomorrow morning no one will be allowed across bridges into west London without a printed, signed order. The precaution is being taken to avoid possibility of looting and to allow several hundred civic work- men there‘ freedom for prelimin- ary clean-up work. Zlf-Apprcc- TORONTO. April (Continued on page i0) Sit - down Strikers Bet Jail Sentences (A. P. by Gulrdhnh Special Wire) DETROIT. April lid-The first election to determine whether the United Automobile Workers of America should represent em- ployees of a major automobile producer in collective berflainlns sent 14.800 Packard Motor Car company workers to voting booths today and tonight. . Rlepi-osentatives of the National Labor Relations Board supervised the orderly balloting. Department by department, the Packard plant suspended production during the time required for employed: to mark secret ballots. In a downtown courtroom, mean- while, 120 sit-down strikers who held the Yale and Towns Monu- facturing Company plant here for more than a month until they We"? forcibly evicted after a half-hour battle with deputies April i4. heard Circuit Judge Arthur Web- ster convict them of contempt of court. He imposed the maximum W11‘ aity of 30 days in jail and $359 fines on George Edwards. U- A- W. A. u. anizer. Ind Peter P. Bed- ler. and ordcnd Bflwfi Wlllflh Ind George Oicich t0 fill for l0 don. He deferred sentence of other de- fendants until July 16 Ind "14 fl-igy might ive 11159011400 terms at that. time. Approximately 10,000 Packard workers had cart their ballots W noon today. The voting was ex- pected to conclude at. one n. m. qhursday after nllht shift. I01"!- ere voted. scslinl v1 W" W" ordered to preserve i-M B0110" until the Labor Relations loud representatives start the fut cf counting them st noon tomorrow- Reeult of the election. by "M011 the union expected to llln I010 “rump; rights for all yqykgfl, probably I111 U! DOW! before U A. W. A. NU"! re-ume n intions with Packard officials mflnint ‘Al. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1937 Walter Mitchell Elected Mayor Of ll a iifa x uanmax. April Bil-KI?)- walter Mitchell. Halifax insuranm adjust/or, was today elected Mayor of Halifax, to succeed E. J. Cragg. Mayor Oragg did not run. in this year's election. Mitchell was elected by amajority , of more than Boovotes over J.W. ~ McCarthy, his nearest competitor, with W. A. Gates in third place.‘ Mitchell gained 1,706 ballots, Mc- Carthy 1,145 and Gates 796. All three men were formerly members of the City Council. v In aldermanlc contests, W. E. Donovan was re-elcctcd, defeating his 0n'y opponent, Harry Brcen by more than 400 votes. Donovan re- ceived 7'74 ballots and Breen 336. The ward i/wo section in which they were running showed the heaviest voting of the day. Aldermen in other wards were elected by ac- clamation 0W0 weeks ago, with the‘ eitcemion of ward one, which is without an alderman, A plebiscite vote to decide whether Halifax should have a commission to investigate the City government tion was defeated. Those in favor of the commission showed a majority over those voting a- flalnst it. but the number in favor did not comtitute the required 51 per cent of the eligible voters. Madrid I Quivers Under Shelling (AI. By Guardian's Special Wire) MADRID, April 28—-Central Ma- drid quivered under Insurgent sliell- ing for two hours late this after- noon with 10 killed and 5 wound- ed. Upper parts of the Gran Via. suffered particularly. and were covered by debris from smashed birldings. The hotel housing many newspa- permen was hit twice. About 50 shells were fired during the attack. " Government batteries directed heavy fire against Insurgent trench- es outside the capital. Police began a. new drive against speculators in exchange and seized 200,000 pesetas in silver hoflrded in business houses and cellars. The shells which crashed :nt0 the Mladrid hotel destroyed four rooms. In one of the rooms, most. 0f the foreign correspondents now in the Qapltgl had gathered two nights bc- fore in a farewell party for Her- bert I... Matthews of the New York Times and Seston Delmar of the London Dally Express, who depart- ed. for vacations outside Spain. iLB. Govt. Will Proclaim Motor, Barrier. Act mupsnaorou, u. 1a.. April 28 ..s(GP)—Ne'w Brunswick govern" mcnt would proclaim the MOW curler Act passed at the last ses- sion of the provincial. legislatur6. so that it would be ln offcfl» by 3111'!’ 1, acting Public Works Minister. W. S. Anderson said today. Under the act the Motor Carrier board would be given power to license and regulate operation 0f motor buses and trucks in the province through issuance of cer- tificates of public convenience and necemlty. Exempted from operation or the act would be buses engaged in carrying school children. supported by school authorities, carrying mails, or transporting passengers to or from a boat. train or a'rplane providing the trip was not more than 10 miles. ‘Prucks used exclusively in con- struction on any public work. Or carrying primary products of the province would be exempt. Trucks registered nuts'd.-_- of New Brunswick but carrying goods to or from points in the province within 15 miles cf the border would be exempt from the regulation. provid- ing the province or state‘ ‘ii which that vehic'e was rcgistlcred grant- cd similar privileges to NewBruns- wick trucks. Bommission To llold Sessions At, Tignish BMNUDON. N.B.. Apr. 28-(0?) --A Royal Commission investigat- ing illegal smelt and lobster fish- ing in Prince Ediward Island and New Brunswick waters would again hold unions at Tlgnfeh. P. E. I.. Saturday. Oommimioner Mr. Jus- tice A. '1‘. Isefllanc of the Supreme Court. of New Brunswick announ- ced hero tonight. The communion had been con- ducting hoarfnp on the Island. when it won odjoumod lastThurs- day to allow the commissioner to // ///. The People's Paper and admlnistra- g voting ' Covers Prince Edward Hitler Offered Basques Sep. Peace, Olaim M. Piccavea Accuses Ger- mans Of Attempting To Get Control Of Wealthy Iron Mines. (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) PARIS, April 28—M. Piccavea, president of the Spanish Basque delegation in Park, tonight as- serted Reichsfuehrer Hitler six weeks ago offered the Basques a separate peace in the Spanish civil I war, threatening a “pitlless war" if they did not agree. ‘ He accused Germans of at- tempting to get Basque iron ores. “A month and a half ago," Pic- caves said, “an authorized repre- sentative of Hitler Jnade several offers of a separate peace to a representative of the Basque Gov- ernment. "Hitler's confidential agent ac- companied the offers with a threat to wage a pltiless war against the Basques if they refused. “We refused. The conversations were held in Paris." He reiterated Basque accus- ations that the presentgspanish insurgent offensive in the Basque countiy, aimed at the port of Bilbao, was directed by a German general staff to which reveral It- alian officers were attached. "It is a German war against the Basques," M. Plccavea said, “with the object of getting con- trol of our wealthy iron mines, which are the purest in Europe." BERLIN, April 28—The Gov- CITHIIBIIFCOIHFOIIBG German press tonight voiced angry protests ag- ainst foreign "legends" that the Basque city of Guemica. had been destroyed by Spanish insurgent war planes piloted by German flier; Apparently acting under official orders. the newspaper charged the reports were "Bolshevist lies des- tined to sway public opinion.” The press compared reports of the "Guernica legend" with the destruction of Eibar which they charged had been put to the torch by the "l-teds" (government troops) before they evacuated the city. "Part of the foreign pres is seeking to turn public opinion with these odious foreign facts," the Berliner Tageblatt declaredWWhen one considers that hundreds of Soviet planes are operating in the Bolshevlst camp this manoeuvre is too absurd to produce the desired effect.” BILBAO. April M-"Before God and before history I declare that for 3 i-Z hours German planes bombarded the dcfenceless popula- tion of Guernica with inconceiv- nble rclentlessness." Basque Presi- dent Juan Antonio Aguirre declar- ed tonight in protest against charg- es that the historic city had been put to the torch by retreating Basque soldiers. H: offered the testimony of scores of foreign newspapermen and- consular officials to uphold his charges that". the city had been de- stroyed by Insurgent aircraft. He appealed to foreign powers to come to lhc assistance of 300,000 women and children refugees in this besieged , capital. "I ask nothing for the men," Aguirre declared, "because we must face the greatest. sacrifices with calm and cool-headednees." Island Like the Dew Report lluke Will Wed Coronation Day (A). by Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON. April 28-Mrs. Wallis Simpson will be free tobecome the Duchess of Windsor next Tuesday, May 4, if her divorce action from Ernest Aldrich Simpson follows its scheduled course. Her attorneys flied notice in Somerset House today that appli- catmn is being made for a. final decree dissolving her marriage. and making absolute the decree nisl granted at Ipswich last octo- ber. The six-month interim period before the divorce could become final ended yesterday. A solicitors clerk flied the not- ice in the customary way. Issu- ance of the final decree will be a. routine matter Tuesday if no un- forseen hitch develops. something Mrs. Simpson's iawyiers believe is beyond the realm of probability. The Duke of Windsor and Mrs. Siivpson, in separate retreats on the continent at St. Wolfgang, Austria. and Monts, France. re- mained silent on what plans they have for a reunion and for their marriage. A Southampton newspaper. the southern Daily Echo. said today it learned “exclusively from most re- liable sources" that a Coronation day wedding was being considered by the Duke. No definite decision has been reached on the matter. the newspaper declared. Former King Edward's friends. however. denied the wedding would occur on a. date cncflicting with his brother's coronation. calling such a possibility “fantastic! 3O Bodies Burned In I Bhapel Fire (C.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) CHIOOUTIIVIJ. Que, April 28 — A few charred bones-all that re- mains of 39 bodies awaiting spring interment-will be placed in -ths neighboring d'Alma. day night in s. fire which destroy- ed the mortuary chapel of the par- ish church. Villagers combed the still smoul- dering debris of the little wooden chapel today and turned up only minute remnants of the 60mm and bodies. A carelessly-thrown OISE-YEW butt was blamed for the fire Whlfih started in dry grass and spread quickly to the frame buildms- T011- ing of the church bell by the “X- ton brought. villagers hurriedly from their homes. A bucket brigade felled to save the chapel. The_ bodies Wcrfl f0 have been taken out of the chapel this week for burial. Union Official Killed In Kentucky (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) WASIIINGIDN, April Zfv-Ufllled States Senate investigators inquir- ing into labor conditions in Harlan County, Ky., said today they had been informed that a union official was killed there Saturday "by four mine guards." Qolorful Scene As Canadian soldiers Leave For Coronation (C.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL, April 28-—A peace- time troopship. the liner Montcalm steamed down the St. Lawrence riv- or tonight with Canada's Ekvedit- ionary Force to the Coronation. Close to 300 militiamen-soldiers of land and sir-were aboard the big ship as she headed down the LOOO-miic ribbon of river to the sea. And the Dom'inion's official mili- tary contingent to Kng 000KB“ crowning tumcd. the clock back to war days. For when the Montlcalnfs bulk was pulled out from the pier today. it was the first time since the years of war that troops had left this in- land port under military discipline. It looked the same too. M the sol- diers. swarming over rlgglni ml} llfeboatl, sally 55-118 "T1999"? "Blighty" and other sonfl d war. . A great crowd saw them off. ' ming the pier and lining e long stretch of waterfront. Besides the soldiers and nurses. hundreds of civilians sailed for the Coronation. Among them were 160 achoolboys chosen from all over Canada. a thrilled group who plied busy cameras all morning and missed not a. sight in the colorful lcavetaking. Brig-General Alex Ross. Domin- ion president of the Canadian Le- gion, was aboard also. Ho and a delegation of Legion veterans were going in lmidon and then to Ber- lin to visit the German association of front. line fighters. In command of the permanent and non-permanent militia party of 276 was Col. J. E. L. St-reight, M.C.. VJ). The 22 novel Canadian Air Fbroc flym were under Wing Com- mander H. Edwards. who put them through drill on the pier before calling. Fragrant and Delicious preside over n. sitting of the Bas- dpnlio chili mm Us MO- Read by Everybody French Govt. To Take Over Raflroads Will Boost Freight Rates 10 To 15 Per Cent. (AI. by Guardian's Special Wire) PARIS. April 28 - The French government proposed today to take over control of the nation's debt-burdened railroads and put them on a sound basis by boost- . ing freight rates from 10 to l5 per cent. Finance Minister Vincent Aurlol told the finance cominitee of the single coffin tonight for burial atl -ps.risb of 5t. Joseph The bodies and cofflm in which; me to say the evacuation has their they were stored were burned Sum] full aplvrvvfll." x-hamber of deputies tlic railways |owe the state 25000000000 francs, ‘| (about $l,1l5.000.000) and have a ijoint capitalization of only 8.000,- ! 000,000 francs (approximately $356,- 800.000). He "suggested" that the govern- ment merge all iincs into a single company with the suite owningilf) per cent. of the stock. ~ Twenty-six thousand miles of railways would be controlled by the government under the plan. The state nmv ‘operates two lines, one serving the northwest part of France, the other Alsace-Lorraine, covering 6.971 miles of trackage. Four private principal systems cover 19,105 miles. n Railroad deficits have been in. chided in national budgets, having been paid for years by the gov- r-rnment. Will Evacuate Oivil Population (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON, April w-Jivacuation of civilians from besieged Bilbao, capital of the Basque Province of at Spain, should start within two days, Wilfred Roberts. Labor mem- ber of Parliament. stated tonight. “The foreign office authorizes Roberts stated. .“We understand this means the British navy will assist in the evacuation from Bilbao harbor." The refugees will be taken to St. Jean de Luz, France, near the Spanish border. Roberts made 11's announce- ment following a private meeting of members of the House of Com- mons who are eager to avoid fur- ther bombing liorrors in the Bas- que area. The members interested had a consultation with repre- centativas of the Basque Govern- ment who stated they were pre- pared to charter any ship; at St. Jean de Luz for removal of the c'lvil population. A nationwide appeal is being launched here to raise funds for the task. Members of Parliament at the meeting included the Duchess of Atholl. lmeanor Rath- bone and sir Arthur Salter. BILBAO, Spain, April 28-401’- Havas) —- The British freighter Backiworth arrived here tonight from England with a cargo of food and coal contributed by British Labor and Liberal leaders. A Brit- ish destroyer escorted the "block- ade runner" as far as the three- miic limit. Au ro ra interferes With Telegraph Services TORONTO, April 28 — Aurora Borcali-a, the enemy of ielegraph services, struck in record fashion throughout the Dominion today. Not for tcn years has the magnetic poles intcrfcrenoe been so wide- 12 PAGES ‘Of Bilbao) Finn thousand times better than relief alone. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN ncial relief with work is a . ‘ In Durango stand tonight in the Durzingu toward their capital, Bilbao, lain the last major outpost u them Spain. Three Basque Iiliilzilitius The Insurgents were reported unable to make any licucltvay‘ through llic town under a wither- ing fire from u veritable arr u.~.1 concentrated in the stronghold. In Bilbao there was surfaci- gaiety. The populace seemed uii- aware that the enemy was (ltilflllfl although the city vras swelled to 400,000 population by refugees from surrounding villages captured by Insurgents. But authorities quietly consider- ed evacuation of women and children and preparation to with- stand siege. The provincial coun- eil at Snntandcr. 4'! miles west- ward. offered haven in the event of evacuation. A second column of Insurgent .Gciieral Emilio Moles army was preported to have circled Durango iand prepared to smash its way , along the highroad to the Basque capital, Bilbao. Complete capitulatioii by Dur- ango would ease that task. Cap- ture of Bilbao would be a major fence behind the thick, old walls of ihewehuriclixv’ Annual Snhlcrlplion Dullvcrod ‘LN B] lull Clllldl IINI U. fl- A. Insurgents Press Towards Bilbao Govt. Defenders-Make Last Stand Church Of Santa Maria. HENDAYE, Franco-Spanish Border, April 28-(AI’)_. A desperate hand of government defenders made a last Church of Santa Marin. They drugged cannon info the church and turned hit‘- lcr iirc zigziinsi the insurgrcnis" in hzili the cut-my march l6 miles west. The church army sought i0 prevent the czipiurc of Bil- bao with it's valued mlllllllfHlS vaorkszind foundries, to re- f ihc government in far nor- fnriued the "laisi stand" de- —.;::-:-_—: H.P. Ouchemin Elected Pres. Canadian Press ‘ (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire} TORONTO, April 28~H. P Duchemln, managing director d the Sydney Post-Record. was, -\vas elected president of The Can- adian Press by the new board of directors follovling the annual meeting of the heirs-gathering oh ganizatlon of Canada‘ daily pay err». He succeeds W. B. Presto managing director of the Bran ford Expositor. The annual meeting unanimous- ly passed a vote of thanks to t retiring president at the close his two-year term of office. ‘blow to the government of the Spanish Republic. It would pennit the northern Insurgent Army to turn southward i quickly and. aid the drive against iMadi-id. It would permit General M01! to turn his shrewd military mind to the Madrid front. And lhvffiupofl perhaps determine the outcome of the ‘war and whether .Spain's republic shall wntinuc or give way to the Nationalist state decreed by Insurgent General Francisco Franco. CRITICISE AIR. MASSACRE PARIS, April 28~La Croix (The Crow). generally considered the semi-official organ of the Roman Catholic Church in Franco. ionilzht sharply crzticized the alleged Insur- gent alr massacre of Basque civil- ians in Cvuernicn. Spain. French Catholics, up 1o now largely sympathetic ivith the In- surgents, were declared to be “shocked and indignant" over the bombing. The newspaper. under the cap- tion "Frirzhtful And Uselcssk L (Continued on page 1m Scadding Welcomed To Moose River (CI. by Guardian's Special Wire) MOOSE RIVER, N.S., April 2a- Little more than a. year since lie was rescued from the depths of Moose River gold mine after an imprisonment of l0 days, Alfred Scadding was back here again to- day to see what is left of the mine and other sights in this little Halifax County settlement. Residents turned out en niasse to greet. the plucky survivor of Nova Scotlas most dramatic gold- Norman Smith of the 0t Journal and J. A. McNeil, man,- aging editor of the Monti-ed Gazette. paid tribute to the earn: estness and energy of Mi. Presto work, characterizing his term one of the most progressive in P. records. Approyal was given to the organization and enlargement the London Bureau at the tum the year and members expr - the opinion the service of Un Kingdom news as a result not/ably improved. It was decl to set up s. committee to mvestk Enlc the possibility gf a nation; wide co-operniive nevus picture service as suggested in the pre- sident's address. W. Rupert Davies, president ani editor of the Kingston Whig< Standard, ivas elected first. vice- president and J. A. McNeil. of tho Montreal Gazette, second vice- prerideni, M. E. Nichols, vice- presidcnt and managing director of the Vancouver Province, was re-elected honorary president. Directors elected were: British Columbia-Afr. Nicholl and C. Swayne, Victoria Colonist. Alberta-Senator W. A. Buchan- an, Lethbridge Herald, and John M. Imrie. Edmonton Journal. (Continued on page 10) Sons curs ARB 01021 HEM“ Junction may. Loco ctofazs! mining disaster on his return licre last night, and outside of the fact everyone areucd about. who would entertain him, cvcrffillllifi “Till great. - Ha supped with J.C. Grady. M- tended a dance at the home of spread. From tlic Prairies tn the Mari- tiliies and into the United States telegraph wires were gripped by the excess current radiated from the northern magnetic pole, Wire; 1191-9 grounded as operators in Canadian National and Canadian Pacific of- flces fougiit to maintain con- nections. Veterans of the services could not recall a time when the aurora borclis reached into so great a territory. from Halifax to the prairie country the northern lights danced across the wires. cutting into news services cominuncation lines for hours at a time. “Clock aurora" was the descrip- tion given by the telegraph officials to the latest attack. It charges the wires and appears with pendulum like regularity, they said, especially severe on high speed signals of the mechanical telegraph systmns. Wires running from cast w west generally bear the brunt of tlu aurora but today it's the north- south communications also. 0.1’. B. EARNINGS MONTREAL. April 28 — (CP)- Increase of 8300.530 is reported today in Canadian Pacific Railway net earnings of $1,738,104 for the month of March compared with 81.3715“ I F" IIX Mine Foreman George Fania-slept at the home of Clyde Higgins, the mail driver. and viewed a calm erected to the bravery of his res- cuers near the hollow which marks the land that settled into the mine (GP. by Guardian's Special Wire; TORONTO. April 28—Minimum during the cave-iii. scaddinguvas unable to walk for months after his rescue and all hi8 toes hnd to be amputated. Now he is able to bobble around, but suffered great pain from ivalking any distance. For the most. part, the village is unchanged from what. it was be- fore the cave-in trapped Scadding, Dr. D. E. Robertson and Herman Magiil and held millions of people throughout the world in suspense awaiting the rescue of Scadding and Dr. Rdoortson. Magill died before he could be rescued. The mine itself, however, was abandoned, and flooded. Grass par- t (iiliy erased thesharp edges of the 10-foot cavity in the earth's sur- face where it had given away on Easter Sunday night last year. And Alfred Scadding felt at home. He plans to settle in Nova Scotia in the near future. "I've seen Nova Scotia from the surfsvn and from the alr".he said today. “And I've seen it from be- low. I still think it's the flail h and maximum temperatures: Dawson 12 3g Victoria 4.2 52 Edmonton 40 62 RPRlIIa 38 64 Winnipeg 3a g4) Toronto 45 50 Ottawa 46 60 Montreal 46 B4 Quebec 46 62 Saint John 34 64 Halifax 36 50 Charlottetown , 38 66 Maritime East: Moderate to fresh easterly winds: cloudy with min in some districts; probably some fog; stationary or a little lower temperature. High tidc this afternoon at 1130 and tomorrow ntorning at 1.53. Bun sets this evening at 7.030116 rises tomorrow morning at 4.02. Last quarter moon Monday, Ill! 8. 1.86 pm. Summersfde tide 910919993 mm‘- utcs lntagntblflmghni.’ ""‘”' w“ "liars-ii md i