a l 1 , Sum-nierlside Bowling t E Q-u-qui IIUIION "l" Idling Stones 694 ‘f... Muttart , 45B y, squarebflssl 4'73 ‘_ Omfk 589 L Hui 415 2582 Lumber Jacks s. Williams‘ m u‘. c. umber 54° r, s. r-riekey W? 1, lyicholscn 491 l. Mainly" “o H15 High three Dr, ,Clark. 594. High single M. C. l-lachcy, 286. New York ' Rangers p, Arsenault 558 L. J. Abbott 4'"- Il. Gallant 4'71 m. Nqqhgn 415 1815 rim: sum‘ H. Gallant 555 O. Lea 444 P. Gallant 513 g, K. Morrison 460 199'! . r-ligh three H. Gallant, 686. ‘High single F. Arsmault, 285. I A woodpeckers l, MacPhersov H6 . McMurdo 61B , Boates .- 4B6 Doc MscPherson 787 ' 2327 Lucky Strikes George Meikle 440 q. Garvclssn 454 Gust Arsenaull 512 140w score 4142 ‘. 1828 High three Doc MacPher-son, 781., _High single Doc MacPhersori, 802. PLAYOFF SECTION "B" . . Easy Aces i. Williams 634 3. Clark 613 G. Houghton 60B E. Ward .535 l". Daley 606 2096 Spare li-ibs F‘. Callaghan 738 W. Tower 672 P. Nconan . 611 C. Montgomery 603 H. Gaudet '10s 8327 ' High three r; Callaghan, iaa. High single l". Callaghan, 263. s .110 FALSE TEETII Rock. slide or Slip? PASTEEHI. a new, greatly im- proved powder to be sprinkled on upper or lower plates. holds false teeth firm and comfortable. Can not slide, slip, rock or pop-cut. No gumm , gooey. pasty taste or feel- ing. akes breath sweet and plent- cnt, Get FA good drus store. ___...__.. _.__. Tenders for Farm _..AT.._ ALBAIIY, P. E. l. ____-_- Sealed ‘renders addressed to the undersigned will be received up to ‘Bltllfflly noon, March 14th. next for farm property of late John w. bfiittart, mid consisting of Ill acres more or less, situated one mils from Albany Station and near churches and schools. All land in llshsst state of cultivation. conven- iently watered and well fenced. lure m non Bungalow snails- Illr new sud sli other buillillll ll wood repair. Considerable quantity l sf hard and soft wood. Mill. LIVINA MUTTABT. llblfliil-l- .‘.llst t i Benediction. A goodly number were today at any W“ v At Suiiiiiiersiils The regular monthly meeting of the local W.C.'J.‘.U. was held at the home of Mrs. Strong Hinton, Bum- merside on Ihursday afternoon. The " vctlcnal period was con- ductcd by M18.’ Sharp. who took for the opening exercise an article "written by Rcv. Dr. 11'. Crossley Morgan. son of Dr. Campbell Mor- gan. the famous bible teacher, who took for his text “Then Said Jesus Unto His Disciles. if Any Man Will Come After Me, Let Elm Deny Himself and Take up His Cross and Follow Me." After the devotional period the president, ‘Mrs. (Dr) John Mac- Ncill took charge of the meeting. In the absence of the secretary W!) Mrs. Bowncss, Mrs. C. Callum was appointed. First on the program was an in- teresting article on tempcrancc by the President. Mrs. M. F. Schur- man read s. paper written by Dr. John Haynes Holmes, pastor of D. Mac- Comrnuriiiy Church. New ‘York. - entitled "two yours of repeal of prohibition in the United States." The wamlngs of the drys, he says. as to what wcu‘d happen if pro- hibition were abandoned have been confirmed down to the last. Jot and iittle. Drunkenness has increased. as has also crimes o! pazsion. The Keeley Institute is once more doing s. good business after the lean years of prohibition. Another interesting talk was given by MIG. MscNeill "Liquor and Progress." A poem was rewd by Mm. MacPhersoii. ' Meeting closed with the Mizpah present .-6 . Young People's ' Unions Meet ____._ On Wednesday evening, March 4th, a Joint meeting of the Ken- sington and the Margate Yount People's Unions was held in the United ChllICh Hall at Kensiuswu with about eighty in attendance. A hearty welcome was extended to the visitors~by Keir Duggan. pres- ident cf the Kcnsingtori union. ‘the devotional period, was car- ried out by the Margatc group with their president, Fred Howard, in the chat:- snd Mr. Ernest Dunnink as organist. They also presented cu excellent program based on that great sccial poem writtcn by Ed- win Markham.‘ “The Man with the Hoe." Introduction to the sublim- was given by Rev. George N. Bcmcrs. Sketch of the early life of the poet by Ernest Dunning. Story of the writing cf the P091“ by Mrs. Charles Woodside. Re- action to the poem by M155 Vlvllm Woodsidc. The room- "The M“ with the Hoe." was recited by Miss Mamie Coririell. At the conclusion of this pro- gram the Kensington Union took charge of the recreation period. after which lunch was served. The singing of Auld Lang Syne broushli a very pleasant evening to s. close. _.__----—-- KINGSBORO SCHOOL Report of Kingsboro School 101' the month of February! Grade X-‘l Velma Jardine. Grade lX-i Mfdrcd MacDonald 2 Jean Young. 3 Robert Boll- Gradc VIII-l Gordon MacDon- ald 2 Louise Ladner. 3 Pa?“ rt. Btgrvgdo VI-—1 Evelyn Robertson. 3 Joyce Robertson a Dorothy MW- Dxftde v (a) i rimoiiiy Massey. a Horace MacDonald. 3 BWWE“ Robertson. Grade V (b) 1 Stirling Robertson 3 Amen Rqbgytgori, 3 Peter Stew- urgi-gd-Q Iv-l Kenneth Maclflflfl- mien R bertscn. a graade III-oi Arthur Rcbertsontfl y Les, a Mable Stewar . "gfiiififlil. widens Robertson. 1 Thelma Dixon Gmdc 1-1 win Robertson, 8 Stuart Perfect attendance: stewart. Ruth Yound. crtsori. Evelyn Roberta”- MacDonald- wgrien Young-Teacher. (Patriot. please copy) Could Not Rise From His Bed Mug Took Dodd’! And Soon Felt Better Ruth YounB. 2 Ed- Coffin. . Katherine Arthur Rob- Mildred Ll!- i‘ Ii-Hl-H-IPH-S-l-U- = _ lsuicioi Ilflfllltsnolal- Io! also ' saunas. nil-I'D - “mimfxn- ___.. w. iumru Them" B" Western ‘ Locals" -'l‘lsh ooluuin ll reserved for news u! local interest but advertising ol s riawsy unsure sissy no lnlgflgfl i eeistu a word strictly p-y-bh l; advance. —F0ll CIIAPPED HANDS 01‘ face use our Glycerine and Rose gator. Taylor Drug 00., Kensing- n. —GO0D ROADS, good ice, will not last long. Haul your fishing and other supplies from Bruce's now. 11-3425-3-7-21. .—BBACE’S prices are right on Glidderfs Endurance pure white paint. L-Zlt25-3-7-2i. —ANTl-GLARE snow goggles 25c _at Taylor Drug 00., Kensirig- —WORK 0N POST-0FFlCE- Work on Alberton's new post-omcc has started. Carpenters have com- menced work on the interior. They are auisted on the re-modelling job by several laborers. —-HOCKEY AT KENSINGTON Tuesday. March 10th, at 8 p.m.. Highfield Granites vs. Kensington. Skating after match. Admission 10 and 20 cents. L-3778 —A:‘0LOGY-:-A formal apology for the rough handling s. few Bor- den hockey fans were repurtcd to have given members of Bummer- side Crystals hockey team nfter a provincial playdown game at Bor- den has been received from Mayor Willard Lieard of Borden. —’I'RINI'I'Y Y. P. S. MEETING?- The regular meeting of the Young People's Society was held Friday night in Epwoi-th Hail. The pres- ident was in the chair. ‘The meet- ing was in charge .of Miss Hclen Nicholson who took as her subject, "What the World Needs Today." A solo by Miss Helen Davies was much enjoyed. B. —UR¢GE SUPPORT 0F PROHI- BITION LAW-Letters from every member of North Bedeque Wo- men's Missionary Society will go to the provincial government repres- cntative urging his support of the Prohibition Law, if any ;ropcsa1 for change in the liquor statute is made, it. was agreed at the orfllm- nation's regular meeting here. --FAII.MERS’ INSTITUTE BRANCH-A Farmers’ Imtltuto branch has been organized to serve the farmers of this district. At the first meeting officers were elected as follows: President, Rcuben Large; Secretary-treasurer. Ralph MacCaull; directors. Edward Cas- ley. J. C. MacQuarrie, Robert Bak- er. Scott MacMurdo. Heath Clark, Fred Clark. General business was discussed by the meeting and ar- rangements were made to order seeds for sprin! iflaulius- ____________. Personals "g ‘Aspirg uo isarquoyg so; 1m ‘BPW-IPWWHS ‘mm-v ‘Ni "I101"- -Mr. Waiter Waite. Shel-brooks- has entcred the Prince County Hospital for treatment. S. -Mr_ Preston Toombs. Kensink- ton, left on Friday morning on a. business trip to Montreal. Y. —Mr. 'I‘i':odore McIvcr, Kiri- kocm-was ii Kerisington on Satur- day on business. He foresees an improvement in. business. Y. PETERS-At North Rust-ice on March 4, 1936. to Mr. and Mrs. Jeri-y Peters (nee Jean Gallant) a soii. —MAGISTB.ATE'S COURT-A man from Bedeque charged with common assault was fined ten doi- lars pnd costs. S. —M.rs. James H. Arthur, Sum- mcrside, has entered the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal fir: treatment. B. - --Miss Marjorie McKenzie, Ken- slrigtori, is visiting in Searletolvn. the guest of her cousin, Mrs. Neil Bradshaw. Y. --Miss Cornelia. Boudreau. daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Boudreau, Tignish, is a patient in the Prince County Hospital. B. __..-__.-'---—— LAND BOOM ON RAND Jorrmmcsauao - tor.) 7- The Rand Townships Rollllmfi office figures disclose Wool-Mum‘ increases in rmrerty deals dull“! the "land boom" that has been ex- and PR1 “Watch On Claimed By MM ER IDE c; rice COUNTY NICLE hine” Hitler Only CheckAgciinstCommunism i (Continued from Page i) with her obligations under the Rhine (Locamo) pact." - Ha referred '.0 the agreement by which both France and Germany promised to keep their soldiers out of the Rhineland-ths area into which. the soldiers of the Rcich marched today. . He said the German government had no assurance that France would not elect-s. Communist gov- of ‘. and he declared that, in such case. France would be gov- erned from Moscow and not from Paris. - - W. invokes “Primitive Right" Ha continued: ‘In the interest of the primitive right of a nation to sccure her own borders and to safeguard her possibilities cf de- fence, the German government, beginning today, restored the full. unmitigated sovereignty of the Reich in the demiliiarized zone of the Rhineland." ' But. stcicd Hitler, the world should not consider this act milit- ant. “In order," he said, “to pledge the purely defensive character of these measures beyond per-adven- ture of doubt. and in order further to slvc expression to its eternally constant yearning for the real pac- ification of Europe andstates h“. ing equal rights and enjoying equal respect, the German Rcich Gov- crnmeiit declares imclf willing, on the basis of the following propos- als, to enter upon new errands. merits for the erection of a new system for the safeguarding of the peace of Europe. Hitler's Six Points His suggestion embraced six points: ' ' 1- 'I‘reatlcs among Germany. Flume. Bud Belgium creating new demilitcrizcd zones along their frontiers; 2. A 25-year non-aggression pact among Germany, France and Bei. giuni; . 3. The inclusion of Great Britain and Italy as guarantors of this P5115; 4. The inclusion of the lands in this pact; 6. A general defensive aviation B-Brecmerit among all western Eur- 0988" POWQIS to guard against a sudden attack by anyone: 6. A non-aggrezim pact with Poland and other nations on Ger- 'iris.ny’s eastern border. including Lithuania. Talked l“) Minutes After he had delivered his mem- orandum to the diplomats. Hitler went before tho Reichstag mg talked 90 minutes to the accom- Nether- paniment of cheers from his loyal... legislators. He told them in detail what he had done. He paid tribute to Woodrow Wilsouwho had envi- 58-891! a league of all nations. "de- stined to bring peoples nearer each other in mutual regard and under. standing.” But the reality was that the I-cusuc regard-ed thy, world as scp- arated into victors and vanquish- ed. and Germany, for the l-iorfor of her own people, had to with- draw from the latter classification. Obicrvcrs of the proceedings said they felt by offering to re- turn to the League of Nations, Hitler had made it impossible for the League to invoke sanctions against Germany. Nasl huslusm The men who faced Hitler in the Rcichstag cheered their leader's words until they were hoarse. out in the streets, traffic stopped, while citizens gathered around loud- speakers to hear his voice. Nazi flags suddenly flew from all public buildings, and most homes, as well, in celebration of what the government termed "the regained German freedom." A government announcement said the reoccupation of the Rhineland by the KEY-Ewen troops was completed today. Ap- proximately l5.000 men were stationed there. Nine thousand infantrymeri and 2,500 artillerymcn went into the area from the interior of Germany- Thc area between the Black For- est and the Rhine was assigned the heaviest concentrations. Other units include air groups and anti-aircraft merits. Tribute To King George V 1n the course of his Memorial Dw address, Gen. Von Blombefil paid a brief butc to Kins! George. The arm leader praised corps detach- ths late" British sovereigns "spirit of true chPalr-y." In the opera house's former im- perial box sat Hitler. surrounded by Major-General Hans Von Seeckt, military adviser to the gov- ernment; former Field Marshal August Von Msckerisen; Admiral Eh-lch Racdes‘; General Werner Von Fritsch, chief of staff of the army; General Hermann Wilhelm Goering, Minister of Air, and other members of the cabinet and generals and admirals. To the creator of the third Rcich, who is our supreme com- mander, the defence force rend- ers thanks from an overflowing ever assigned to s. German soldier vthat of rearing a, new defence force, anchored in the people through s. universal obligation to service." said General Von Biom- berg. A huge black iron cross on the rear wall of the stake and 39 battle-torn flags of the Great war, held by a6 young soldiers and three blue-jackets, formed an im- pressive background as the milit- ary leader continued: “Today and for all time the de- fence force feels itself indissolubly bound up with the National Soc- ialist Party and all of its form- ations. The party J d the army are two pillars which carry the new stoic and which cccpcrate most intimately in forming a new Ger- many." Hltlcr, somewhat pale, and his face ncvcr relaxing iii its serious- ness. sat impassivc as Von Biom- bcrg paid his !)I"S0l\f‘.l tributes. Referring to Hitler's offer sign a 25-year non-aggression pact with France and Belgium, Von Blomberg admonished: "May com- mon sense, not passion, guide the decisions of European statesmen. The acceptance of Der Fuehrefls offer will secure the peace of Eur- ope.” ‘ He dcscribcd tiic latc Miirsiiul Pilsudski oi Poland as a “path- finder for international under- standing.” He warned youth against "the false romanticism of a happy, jolly war" and told them instead. "war today destroys the flower of hum- anlty and bring; gain neither to the victor rior the vanquished." That rumors of frequent fatal crashes in the new German air force seemed well founded was for the first time officially indicated when Von Blcmberg paid tribute to the memory of "those of our comrizfieg wjio in the most recent past have testified with their blood to the spirit animating this de- fence force, especially its youngest part. the newly-organized air force." Gen. Vcri Blomberg closed with a long appeal for peace and with assurances to asscmbled diplomats that Germany harbors only the most peaceful intentions. Hitler reviewed honor companies of the army, navy and air forces after the exercises and was en- thusistically cheered by thous- to ands of spectotors- Germany could occupy the posi- tion today ci’ being able to sit buck and tcil international qucstioners about policy, "it's up to you." The situation was much like that of May 2i, 1935, when Hitler en- unciated 13 points of foreign policy and offered to restrict German arm- oments. Those who asked then "what next?“ had to be content with the reply that iiiuei- had spo- ken. offcred the world something concrete and now expected others to take the initiative. VcuHlomberg pleaded for pence in his speech, saying: “We soldiers, and with us the en- tire German people. thunk Rcichs- fuehrer Hitler especially that this, the first year of military independ- ence, at the same time was a year of peace. "We have learned bitterly of war servitude and the disgrace which accompanied missing battalions. We have in present-day Germany no nameless forces which can un- loose war in the world . . . . ..we have the single goal of being able to work in security and quiet for peaceful reconstruction of the new Reich. "This work is the rearing of up- standing, clean, industrious and brave men. We ask nothing from the world except to be evaluated according to this standard. Unilat- eral military agreements and sanc- tions . . . . ..iire preparations for fu- ture explosions." Some quarters imca to Von Blombcrgs statement attached import- heart for the most honorable task. BRIATAIEN ETAKES (Continued from Pa_ge 1) tho ‘Treaty of Versailles provides that if Germany violates in any manner what/ever the provisions with regard to the demilitsrized zone. "she shall be regarded as committing a hostile act against the powers signatory to the pre- sent tresty and as calculated to disturb the peac of the world." . The difficulty of applying sanc- tions in the event of unilateral ra- pudiation of a treaty without re- sort to war was recognized when Germany reestablished conscript- ion a year ago in defiance of the Versailles Treaty- Denounced Move . Britain, Italy and France met at Stress and denounced the Ger- man move. The council of the League met subsequently at Gen- eva and again denounced it. But nobody propose-f economic sanc- tions. Feeling that the peace structure needed strengthening in this rc- gard, the League Council appoint- ed s committee-of which Canada was a, member-Jo propose mens- ures i- render the Covenant more effective “should in future a state. whether a member of the League or not, endanger peace by unilat- eral repudiation of its internation- al obligations." The French‘ Government later submitted a plan to the committee. ‘This suggested the European mem- ber; of the League should adopt s. certain interpretation of the Covenant and embody it in a pro- tocol and should secure the assent aitd cooperation of non-member states. This interpretation was to the effect. that the duty of the Icaguc unfloi" article XI of llic Covenant to irks any action that. may bc‘ rlcsmcd wise and cffectiizil to safeguard peace mcans that when a state violates a treaty in such a way as to endanger peace, it isthe duty of the members of the League to adopt economic, and financial measures to make 1t more diffi- cult for the violation to be suc- cessful. For instance, if the violation should take the form of illegal re- armameiit, the members of ilic League which were parties to the Pf°l7°53d Blrliflkfimefit should take steps immediately to prohibit the export to the responsible state of raw materials particularly suitable arms, implements of war and all for the manufacture of imple- ment: of war or any product of which it might be considered that ‘the treaty-breaking stats should be deprived. The French plan proposed that in the first place the‘ European states controlling markets and essential raw material; should take prt in this arrangement through regional or other treaties. The agreement should include as many states as possible. Once it was adopted stcps should be taken to come to terms with non-European states with a view to making it easier to carry out these various arrangements. The hon-European states. it was argued. must. desire consolidation of peace because peace all over the world is lndivisible. The committee proceeded 1n the traditional way of League com- mittees by appointing sub-com- mittees. Its activities subsequently were lost in the clamor over the Ethiopian war. that one-sided alliances and sanc- tions are forces that prepare the way for "future explosions." They did so became of reports. empha- sized by thc German news btreau, that France is preparing ssn tions along with appeals to the League and to Locarlio signatories. Some foreign observers held the question of colonies arid Germany's relations to Austria. might. be brought to the forefront because of Nazi success heretofore in getting what they wanted. On the surface, however, there was little concern- ing this conjecture. while, for the plebiscite called by Hitler for March 29 for a. new Rcichstag. Hitler dissolved this rubber stamp body yesterday in a move to prtwc t0 the world that his Rhineland step was the will of the German people. _.__________. . TAP DANCING POLICEMAN CAPE TOWN-ACPJ-Geoffrey Middleton, iap dancing star of the Gaiety ‘Iiiestrc, Iondon, was one of i5 Englishmen who arrived rc- cently to Join the British South African Police in Southern Rhod- esia. A1 EVIDENCE IS _-._.____ Continued from page 3 °11°6¢ W be tried by a ind-Be and pleaded “not guilty" to the charge. Margaret McRsc appeared 0n a charge of receiving stolen 300g; and pleaded “not guilty," The case cf the King vs Richard Keefe was called first. Mr. D. Em sar- Bhaw. K. C. appeared for the Crown and Mr..R. R. Bell for the accused. The first witness called was Mr, Owl Campbell. Norm wiiismie. He lives at North wflLghlgg when he keeps the store and post office for his father. On February 22 1m; 011 Going to the store in the mom. ing he found the door iuiiocked a?“ 0n antenna the store he found e wicket into the post offlog broken. The office i; “mum-i from the store by a partition. In the main store the wall at one sido was broken in. There had been at one time s. window there and the ‘Welling had been closed up and g show case put there. The Opgnlng made would be largeuenough to sq- mit the entrance of s. man. Mr, Campbell then proceeded to enu. merate the different articles he ml-‘lfed- Included in the list were: i‘ 1°" 9°11" but; of feed corn meal, 24 Pound bail’ 01' flour. s. five pound and two one pound boxes of choc- olates. a box containing 24 show ‘Flaw bars. ton pounds of ‘tea, one- quarter caddy chewing tobacco, several packages of pipe and cigar- ette tobacco, a pack of playing 078F115. B. box containing about, ten iioiin strings, eight; piyunds o; but, ter,’ several boxes of yeast cakes; W“ to fifteen rounds of lard and _____. .__..___, 1a crown; (Continued from Page l) sergeant fainted. The accused lad, Arthur Bau- nlster. was seen t. dging ‘ the snow towards Pacific on Jan. 5 witness Hartley Stooges told the court. .. AlbertA. Powell cfjdoncfon told of his "frequent visits" to the Ban- nister home and. identified s. hunt- ing knife produced as evidence as one owned by Arthur Bannister... Mrs. Maud LcBIanc, Moricton police matron and Inspector H. “V. Harris of the Moncton city force gavc evidence of tho finding or the six month old "extortion" infant st use Bannister BOYCE following the grim crime. A mitten found near the scene of the crime was identified by Cor- poral J. H. Pettigrew as one belong- ing to the accused. Earl O'Brien. friend of Philip Lake, said Arthur Bannister was at the Lake shack Jan. z and had informed flake "he might be back Sunday to stay a few days and tend his snares." "I was satisfied the body was that of Philip Lake" declared Dr. R. J. Caldwell, coroner, who viewed the charred body lying in the ruins of the Lake ramshackle hut. "The extortion" child, Betty Lake,‘ was born to Mrs Bertha Lake at her home, Mrs. Mary Cussck d. Catamourit told the court. f‘! know the Lake baby. it looked like its. mother" she declared. “Children don't change in features" continued the elderly woman who had be-. friended the unfortunate Bertha, Duke. V Mounted Police omcers and their assistants gave evidence of finding, smrtemng- 0119 P1198. four or five i Preparations went forward. mean- ‘A she also said it had been put in kitchen the WlEIlGS testified that mouth organs, several cans of salmon. a box of cigars and 3i quantity of copper coins from the‘ fills of both the store and the post‘ office. - The wlliics could identify onlyl ll. few of the above mentioned] articles, most of which were pro-l duced iii court, as those taken from, his store but the brand and quan-l JLV corresponded to what had been, taken. The articles identified by the witness were the box of violin Sifmzshnd the mouth organ boxes cu which in each case was the liricc iii what the witness said was his own writing. 1 The second witness was Corporal Cordwell of the R. c, M. p, who had been called to investigate the break at Ncrth Wiltshire on the morning cf February 22 last. Con- stable Swindell had accompanied him. As the result of investigations 1h the dbtrici he had obtained s. T-zdy following exhumation; Dr, A . search warrant to search the TKcefeLs farm. the farm of the father of the accused,‘ Richard Keeic. The police officers arrived there on the afternoon of February 22 last, the day of the break. They round the door locked and after knocking were admittcd. following a short delay, by Margaret McRae. After ascertaining where the occu» pants of the house were the police went into s rear bed room where they found Richard Keefe asleep on the bed. In the pre:ence of Margaret McRae the search war- rant was read to Keefe, who said he could not read himself. The pow“ lice then proceeded to search, the officers went first to the cor- ner of the kitchen where there was a flour barrel. A bread board over which was spread an erripty 24 pound Jlour rack covered the barrel. 0n top of the sack was a. freshly baked loaf of bread, still warm. On looking into the barrel the witness said he saw a pyramid of what ap- peared to b; newly placed flour as there were no marks to show where any had been removed. Asked where the sock had come from Margaret McRae said that Christo- pher Keefe had brought it home on the previous Saturday, February 15. the barrel the same night. Richard Keefe said also that the flour had been bought the previous Saturday. Asked when she had baked bread Margaret. McRae said that morning and that she had tskeri the Four from the barrel. Continuing the search in the parts of a rifle which the accused. according to the Crown, had thrown i-uway in the snow on the trek back to his home with his sister and the kidnapped Lake child the early morning of Jan. 6. Then court ad- journed until tomorrow morning at i0 o'clock. There were indications tonight that four witnesses might be cali- ed by the crown tomorrow, in- ‘cludirig Dr. J. W. Rousell, assoc- fIEc of Dr. Rosario Fontaina Montreal, ballistics expert, who is expected to give evidence regard- ing the builet. said by police t1!‘ have been extracted from Lake's skull affcrhis body had been ex- humed following its first burial: Dr. -H. Paul Miiiiisoii, ‘lcmcton. who made an examiuziilch or Lake's burned corpse soon after it was discovered and who found the bullet. on examination of the R. Landry, Moncton, who assisted in the autopsy, arid _possibly, Mar- shal Ring, Saint John. husband of Bertha. Lake, common law wife of Philip Lake. FRANCE MAKES _ (Continued from Page 1) Rcich for unilaterally denouncing treaties and that ubsequently Europe will concentrate upon buiid. ing up o. new system of security. Officials emphasized that a tri- powcr resolution adopted at the Keefe sat down in the kitchen nudism-egg gonierenw in 1935' alluding to Gcrmanyks proclamation of com- pulsory military service, declared Germany's repudiation of thetrcaty of Versailles “had undermined pub- iic confidence in the security of peaceful order." Officials also recalled that at Stress. Great Britain and Italy in a declaration reaffirmed allcf their obligations as guarantors under the Locarno Treaty, which Adoli Hitler has new denounced, and declared their intention "should the need arise faithfully to fulfill" these ob- ligstions. that morning. The witness said he turned the cziriiiisicr on its side and found the tea 1n the bottom lighter than the top. Margaret McRae said it was another brand. The court, adjourned to meet again this morning at 11 o'clock. he looked next on top of a cup- T"! FAMOU‘ board where he found what ap- RUBBING I peared to be a freshly Opened l-"UMENT - package of icii. He asked Richard Rub cn-pain goiio 3' Keefe where be got the tea and, Keefe had replied at Hunter River. He then produced two bills from s » finn in Hunter River one on Feb. 6 and the other on Feb. i7. The witness said that he called atten- tion to the fact that the bill called for a half pound and the package was a pound one. Keefe had ric answer and could not understand it. Margaret McRac said she mo”... emptied the tca niovtho carnnisier‘. w only sin-Also svsil- j; able in smaller. reguip .. v size. “' M‘ "M" “am New a m M W s s bllM l lciin Holes --@-—-' a 9 __ . . ~ ~~ A an‘ y U QQTG C“ o. trevlllt. s. a. Mush W” i‘ Fortune The Morkclc Strikes g guano-é: “s? n; 1% 1;) ya: GORDQN FIFE, Soldier o _ I "c" ' ~ - ' ‘ - A icoMMAuo vou- m, o. m. pa... on. m i _ - ; ..// / our YOU can't co THiS so one . g i‘.i';..§.“““’mm’°°“l“1°8$h°$§& u“ . iyc.:u.'ey.“ts°""é“ / lift!‘ cum" iiyr.ii.~issl.iz.i“lltr. “om ba¢£t 444; t M _.» I AT § HRS‘? . m w ‘ a . I O / ,-s. / - §si“°$fs‘m1'mth' £51 i“?! MEANWHiLE (titre //. - mruicrsctmm- w“ i1- 4; . _ ' y“ gone I bill“ l" "91- ' -! r ' tsrthreemorebcresfwsscoin- THE /\f pimiy relieved and wsxout doius “ALMS , my work ss well as ever. m more mafia-u! hgnmbfg CAROL fiéfififn” to siliforcrs from aersivifi Bladder alimcsiuml-ig: a m" Eammggtfir-lefihgq and stain MYSTERIOUS who have used Dcdd's Kid!!! Hm M555“; m” “we'd-i mm u this ' ‘fa-fit’ .-‘ ' m‘ “" "Eskimo... its“ and“ a < Get the new large eun- 1',‘ JT-uctidn ‘