Iv-M¢+0++o+o+o-o-o+vo-o+¢-Q-q li cilllslii‘ lildlllilil i.f..I“l°.‘$3iu‘*.“l..“Z.'ll..‘if"¢5.‘${..§’J°.’f -- ~ For First Five Months Of B(iii§““A?.'.§..§t.E“’f§“ he “mi Yer im- I . _ I :.1-.i::.":...-:_f.°:zr~.*:.:°.°'i:.-::‘:.‘:.: New Bmwick p°“§‘0A§§§§_,§h°W i - E , I- Shwnts _ §:2;“;‘;:;f‘:...i.‘.‘:i.i;§."f::.‘;1::z:.§; Qtfllf 2I.‘¢.."3.°3¥¢. °»‘i2“i‘l'§ ~- ` ' A eration by all the members with n (ga,-,adinn pi-un) (canadian Press) _ (ganidinn pun) desire to execute in good faith wut slrortn. N. in., s t. zo.--. - W _ . . ' _ their engagements" 'on sAl.E _ Pics 'r-l-mee one wfls killed uutl rour`l;IIily liurt ,,.,;),1i`h;II-,,l‘§`{i|i§‘I,II;t¢i i0'.,.,.1h?ri° I'|".T WASHINGTON. Sent- 20--The This Interpretative resolution Wttiiil old. Auolv Joseph F- Gal- this inornlnu when tho C. P. It totalIrstic 'ur curintldtiogsilienllrltt I B"'""“ 'GPH' I” S"°"°“"y H“gh"S "°w goes t° me Assembly' It is iallt,Colonlnn,iR. R. 557-0-21-3i. Express from St. John struck their five momhh of um c,h.,.cm__ mhhl proposal for a reciprocal agree- Keilefalh/_ Nigiifilfid HS 1”i?m0Vll1i§ ;___.__.. . - automobile at Byards Crossing a ycnn nm,-, (png i .t | "Wilt 0" BMP "iii-l0i` Hill! II‘l“°f 3|? SALE-GASOLINE ENGINE ini-lo south of here. public todgyliiy th)iwuDdi:1llI‘TIIltIIIEuc»‘I` Hmuggnng was received at the illorse power. Alirply Burt Bros.. Matilda ~MoAfoe died at noon from Customs Inn Excise, The |,cm,,._ North River Road. 548-9-21-2|. ll broken lback and other injuries. ment was larger ill ilnports than Icaiiidiiii PNN) ' direction. The whole effect was so described bl’ OTTICIHIB l1B"in ilellef' ~- ller ibrolller Jumcs has chest in- ill exports bllt was great in both. M0NT‘R»E1\L~S9I"-- 20-*Tile l`ll`~‘ii terrible -thili lllii P29019 '~`°“Id I‘“""d' nl’ ffm sympathetic t° the propos' ANTiED _ AT FiALCONWOOD.jllrles and is in u critical condi- Thrmotni ii-min of tin, D0,,,,n|m, refugee i`rom Japan to pass through ly keep their senses. “I5 Hospital a house.maid. Apply to tion according to thin mnirn fm (hi. Canada arrived here today in the "l do not know that war produced The Bflfiih K0V°l'l1m€ilf liliihti- Housckoeper. 552-9-21-3l. iMiss Maud 'McAfee has a broken five months ending with August li0i`S0il ttf Mii.IUi` M~ H- C» BPH-Ckleyl i1I!Ythlll8 more terrible- I k“°“' h°w°v”r “T pr°"“t the quemo” collar bone and »Mr. and Mrs. Oliver was $785,000,000 as against 5026,- adviser to the imperial Japanese Europeans who chopped OU their "° the Brmsh Imperial °°nf3“”°°_ :lN‘rEo.-A competent meld re- Gibson sulzmu cuts .una sruisiuunll ooo,ooo run-lug me some poi-irul u Nw/1tlAirServieo~ less lu frenzy _with sm- when "’1ff“t’“‘2,°" ‘Q I‘°“td°‘h§“’_"§ ‘“°;‘"‘ 6|-em, | d_ A 1 133 d Sh J h _h hd, _ d t a o opal' meri o cas vev\ F__z__offiiS__l`€illl T9 l_;g__f’___19_n hro from Red H66 0 il your ago. tho exact increasc being I-le_stated that in his war service pinned under falling u USS till the British communication as _“__ Y County, something more than $159,000,000. he had seen nothing like the Jap- others who met an eqllhlly i1Wl\ii ` ~<-n near-l-lousr-: oN bouo- WOP1d S RBCOPIT vfxvg fllgiislr thzmnugs ?>lImtuua< ixpiosion, lo disguise me met tuui me British. hatlonail ASS. ias street, Apply to E, E. snsr- _ . ~`_@_____ and then hohiomhhy in real emh of the Standard Oh and ,he Rising ii°"°""“°iii had indicated general -- |, "_ p _ _ 8, _20,2| _ disapproval ofthe plan and ral d NEW YO K. . _ _ -- , .- died suddenly at his boarding house waves' I with hundreda ol °tI‘€'i“9 Ifl Sun O__ _c0m___m_es___v_______; _b“,:_h_il;B objections against it. Ee L ABerry, pl‘ResitleglitT.p:>f 23,6 1512221? ____ ' i i . . ll d ec ns. Y ' ‘ ANTED-SEVERAL PAIRS SIL- ln Stellarton this morning _ in the building unablo to keep our oil running in a _ _ _io al ,P ,_ d A _ _ _ ver black foxes. give lowest MALONE' N' Y" sem' `20`T H9 W3” °“k‘“‘ I" “°°“ line’ Stall' left crawled wt on an fours' escaped by mk;n§thh'gher,.€;;'h1:${ Unxilon olfesig‘InlI1€;>lllriT-amI1nll_- day that two thousand five hun- imeh Box 451 Ch"h.Me¢own_ claimed to have lowered the miieved and when to his mom ln all directions. The second shock a spectacle of everYI UK W - d ed h _ 1, lR SALE-DODGE SEDAN 1918 Qi re: '€i°.i1‘“llli.’§_"II»’§.§§‘i‘T€{ M°”°““ M0I1IJI‘6&1 Mall Ali' is sate oAsbl_lNs smAcl< _ P0lIlI}0d OI] Saad' ‘i‘»’»i‘-"ni ‘°2¥..i::f“' i.':i;‘: valley commission \15o.oo cash. L. H. coffin. Mau ” Edward Island ff” ponumon of Canada . :_ l ‘ \\ \\ '£7 oples Paper . _._ Read by very ody A _______ _ _ _ A MOST MAGNMG ,-I.. ` »_ , - ;_ __ __ ._ _ < _ __ . .g so FERTDJ: AND. \\Y_ TIII‘l0l \\ "i -I I ° TI » ~ - = ~ "//ff' LAND Rica _ f . _ /_ //7 _L_ ___ ”“__ ' %\)\’ __ ~~; ., _ ___ _ _ _° e £535 The P9 ' rf* ' _-_..'~»;-fa' oon MAGN11-‘1cEN'r‘ ’/,I - ` I ° Y T f Covers Prince Edward Island Like the De _,___ __.f._»_ h._. _ `i __.._. -,__ ___ __ ~ __ _-. 4 i-~~ .3 v._t ._ _ _f__,__ .I ._ ‘ .4 -at ."p‘f'.-1.,-‘_ - 3 ,._.f:, » `_,,., ‘__-. -__ - . . _ - ~ ' _ll__.-- _ -'- . ~ _ -_f_._.\_,..-2 _ _, t -- --.'_ _~ `_ ' -f '_ ‘ I » No Place on Earth tv V/ “ I Pnovmca w l ___ .yn Gulllll 'Iwo Guts . e -bw ` .......u... tw... M -cHARLo'l"rE'1'owN, -CANADA FRIDAY, sEl>'r. 21,1923. ,,*,-,.-_1','m."'.'.': 3_°“""‘._ a..’§°.' Want Prince to Stay ' (Canadl an Press) WIN NIPEG, Sept. 20.--Officials of the Cana- n Coloni'/.ation Alssocln tion would like to keep prince of Wales permanently in Canada. _ lloward Everett, Ge nel-ol nmnagcr of the As- htion, today sent the following telegram to pwin G. M. Dix, clluirmall of the joint confer- c of immigration and employment officials bc- ‘gqheltl at Saskatoon. .II understand a Brit ish llarvestcl' travelling der the name of Renfrew is now employed on it rm in Alberta. Can co nfcl-ence ul'ra.nge to sc- ¢ winter employment: for Ilcnfrcw und keep in Canada. permanently.” . (Canadian Press) , DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 20.~A riot call was sent by police tonight when a illob estimated at 5,000 persons attempted to gain entrance to the home of John Lornec, to view the body of his thirteen year RIIESTERS IIISSATISTIEII ITITH TREATMENT RECEIVED glish Newspapers Publish Letters of Complaint From Britishers Employed In Canadian West But; Ignore Thous- ands of Letters of Appreciation. il an experienced farm hand “Xili- vas unable to obtain any work ""**°”`”i" unless he gets work for thirty ll stipulated he will be forced iiay return fare of over twenty nie--adsl-ci-1-i THIIH INJUHEII old daughter, Gladyslavn, who the father alleges, died from illtreat- mcnt at the hands of police after her arrest Sept. 11 on a charge of larceny. Threé patrolmcn were slightly injured by the crowd who fought the officers attempting to maintain order. The girl was arrested on com- plaint of J. F. Anderson. The day after her arrest the girl was taken to a hospital. She died Saturday. Before her death, accordingt to bor father, she told lllm she ILIVI been abused by the police, put l_ to icc water three times and that at- tempts were made to put her lil un electric chair to make llcr coi:~ fcss the robbery According to a statement issued United Preu) three pounds with the result that h Jam mu has __ sept. 20. -Desp_lt_e_ah-‘ ileHwiii_: -blzhstranded l:_t;‘ei_~_l:_;jW_I_;“0"_‘_'; ilftentierfts oipthe policziiltamtlii-U “I 'mth runway oncas I is "5 m;lfm.ys\-uwork.. was sent to the juvenile de."-rn. U10 Cnnadmn G°Vemme;"' mAH(1:in;;ir ‘iggnfan wrmn from tion home immediately after iler iiII_h*“"’°5I";'"`5 Wh°_hwe“t F Canada to asm, rather in Eondoh a.l‘l'cst and the .next tiny removed Uffmda nalst'nF;Ilvin areogd states that men do not know what to fl lmsmml' Th” “t“t°'"°"t “"3"” letteiguctltgtlnue gttibe is before tlleln when they go to d'3ath“'”'S °““s°d by “°“"0 i’Ie""IBy~ in _English newspapers Canada. Other cases of complaint f;‘;f__;"‘°p“y was hem “fm” the ___ written by __ `;_°man who who are Innocent or the chhdmohh fait-ilcr _is said by Sprott to have ` that exist in Western Canada and wif" l1"_"'“ “_;I‘§_I° Ulf Elrg who dc- ng latter fail to realize that among the " ‘ms 3"" _ " ‘"0 “lr “’i"‘~ AS £_"B_I;?_;§s:“hl5:1a_€:1°2n'h|a twelve thousand and more who len the l'i-suit of the fu.ther’l~'. clzurgcs or work M wmmpeg Brmsh hom, hmm. are “hm and the flint-lui sc_hcdulctl for totluy was __e_______ed before sumng to mam, are lmwmihg to wm.h_ postponed. Iostponelncnt ut the _mm __g____emg that he would Thohshhlhs of haue” prhmhg um funerul only served to lielghtgwil the thirty days or work in treatment theyhave mcBived_ good excitement among foreigners and to obtain the cheap return food they get, and healthy emh1oy_ others fxlthe section where the girl sixteen hound, Ammugh ment they enjoy never see the "Ved- -*-<03-n II INIIHTISE IN |IINIII]I’5 III o _ Jamgs Dr H L Stewart’ “fare the ranks of the resistors Dr. Stewari.'s lectures in St. James Hail yesterday afternoon ziud evening were followed with keen delight and interest by his audien- ces “M'r.'allt_v and Convention" tfnf: subject _of the afternoon address, was treated with cllaracteristlc tollchcs of Iiumor and rare analy- tical inslght. The application oi’ ethics to phases of modern conduct and nlisconduct was discussed very frankly. To any lover of literature the evening lecture on "Some Recent Men of Letters" would make an es- pecial appcal. The speaker confined ills remarks to Lytton Strachey, Lord Bryce a_ntl the anonymouse writer known as “Tile Gentleman with a Dust.er"; but in doing so he drew quotations and comparisons fronl nluny sources and his. occasion al digressions increased the charm and interest. lt is not too lnuch to say that ill every lecture Dr. Stew- art outstrips anticipation and sur- prises hls bearers into more and more enthusiastic appreciation, Tile Ladies, 'Guild of St. James Church, under whose auspices tho lectures are being held, ure de. serving of every conlmclltintlon for taking the initiative in an educa- tlouul feature of this kind, and for secliring tho services of a lecturer so ilistinguislled in thc field of phil- isophic criticism as Dr. Stewart. Superlntentent R. H. Rogers pre- sidctl at the afternoon lecture yes- terday and Mr. J. D. Seaman in the evening. lt was announced that this nftorlloon's subject will bo “Carlyle as I-listorlnn" und, in tho evening, “A Study of the lie. linvioi' of Crowds". A large ntton tluilcc is cxpcctod ut both meetings. AFTERNOON LECTURE Professor Stewart pointed Ont how an attack upon what is called ‘conventional-morality" now sup- plies by ful' the most popular mot- ivc for a modern novel or u moll- orll drzilnn. Tile “best sellers" in fiction and the plays which draw crowded llouscs`f.lirn llpon sonic prillciple of generally approved culllluct which by thc exercise oi' a little ingenuity in plot. can be shown to lead to very inconven- ient or even unjust consequences. It is thlis exceedingly popular to depict the case of a winsome and ill-used thief, of a murderer who has some admirable qualities and has been hard driven by economic necessity, or of an ill-assorted pair who in a moment of thoughtless attachment have contracted a dis- astrous marriage. The suggestion of such novels is that the social “conventions” under which we livo tyre partly stupid and partly dishon ost. The remedy apparently recom- mended is that conventions in gen- eral sllould be torn up, and that therc should be a return to the al- leged ‘natural" freedom of the in- dividual .whom laws have thus un- fairly bound. Plays and romances of this sort are excoetllngly popular, and that for various reasons. They have'ihe delightful element of surprise for those who have become bored by _the customary. There is a piqunnt charm ln seeing one's neighbors- especially one's most respectable neighbors-exposed as being "at bottom hypocrites." The judge and the hostile witnesses in trails of such unfortunate victims of “con- vention" are cunnlngly presented as really fi-lr worse than the men they try or against whom they give evidence, alld the onlooker or the reader is delighted. His delight is particularly keen when some vin- dictivc rascal who acts “within the law" is shown to be a pillar of the Church! And the spectator has his own self-esteem abundantly gratif- ied because he--with the help of the lltcravy artist-has been able to see through such pretenders to virtue. The lecturer recognized that there is, indeed in many cases a better ground for'pllblic apprecia- tion of such novels and plays. lt is a generous artist that likes to take the side of “the llnller-dog." Writers like Mr. Gnlslworthv ab- peal to that very commendable dc- slre in all of us to believe better about human nature than a stern- cr scllool (to which we owe our laws) used to believe. and to seek for extenuating circumstances in even the most vicious of our kind. But it is quite ilnother thing to ac- cept as a general truth the idea that humanity can be improved by a wholesale obllteruting of “con- ventions,” or thnt tlistrust in what is called conventional morality needs just now to be encouraged rather than to bc repressed. Real Meanifig of "Convention/’ For the elucidation of this mat- ter, Dr. Stewart invited the aud- Continucd on Pagé 3 SIISTEII YEJIIITNESS O'I‘.'I`A.W»A Sept. 20.-The Fin- “ln connection with his plans for meeting maturing obligations, the Minister of Finance announces the le f$50,000.000 five r cent for railway purposes. The railway loan was the largest operation of the kind ever handled in Canada. larger. and again testifies to the it is believed, will be deemed fav- orable to the holders of the Domin- ion bonds which fall due Nov. 1. Details of the s_vndlcate‘s plan of operations are being prepared and n pllblic announcement will follow llnnlediately_ "The syndicate which will offer the bonds wlll__fnclude practically all the important financial houses in Canada. The names of the syndicate members will be an- nounced in the course of a dny or two " _ mom- HIIITISH IIEPII TI] ll. 5. I5 NIIT Dilsapproves Proposal For Reciprocal Agree- ment on Liquor state department today and was lug passive 1'osl:-ltnnce has able. Pllliiili IIE- lilllllll SIIBIECIS Billillllll _ iii IIIIIIIIN *"1" E“i°Y’_P°“°¢ _ III III III SINE IN DR- SIEWARTS LECTURES IIIIIIIII IIIIIIII §.:f.r;;"‘.i::f UE' Afternoon and Evening Lectures In St. IRI III';I;`iff.;eiI;I»I?IIc§..IIIkgfe §>l;I'llIl;";lftl'.f»IItI':'Ii' - ' I One of the immedlat'e effects of the with- Greatly Appreclated' drawal of official creditors to the llndllsirlallsts, .___ employes and labor organizations is reflected ln l°‘i"=‘ii“" P"°") the growing inclination on the part of many of the ance De_,,a,.{m,,,,, ,his evening an. workers to return to their-former posts, nounoed the S-ale of $50.000.000 tive The altered attitude is not ascribed to any gshgigflothg 0-31,; gglemfgs \va\‘cl'lng of the put1'lotlt° faith in ‘Gerlnany's Cause ed in the -following statement: but to the fact that tho serial of chaos accompany- become almost unibear- (Canadian Press) GENEVA, Sept. 20. -An import- ant feature of todny’s League ac- tivities was the adoption by a commission of 8. resolution inter- preting Articie X ofthe covenant. Tile commission adopted a new compromise formula replacing the Canadian amendment. It be- gins by emphasizing the existence of a general desire for precision of meaning of Article X and recom- mends that the Assembly adopt several clauses ill ‘the form of a resolution. The first clause is that ill case the Council of the League deems it necessary to recommend the ap- plication of military measures be- ciiuoe of an aggression or a mem- ace of aggression, the Council will take into account the geographical situation and special interests sur- rounelng each state. _ , ‘The second clause declares that 5 it is the right of the constitutional powers of each member state to decide the -nature and the extent of its obligation to maintain the in- dependence and integrity of terri- tory of members, and to what ex- tent it should furnish military as- sistance. iThe last paragraph reads: "However, it recommenda- tion given by tlle Collncll will be U. 5. 5TH|KE I5 IIEIIIIIIIIII Til ’ 3| wonlll’s record for trotting mares Where he died hem,-B help .m.¢..hd came soon after I got out of the burned dead, or dylllit At i-hill CIW r mem ms M qw WN’ mes' lilan Office. 479-il-18-6l Nedda also holds the world's record for trotting mares on a miie oval. e I “mi ' ' 492'9'19'3;' (Canadian Frou) _ _. . GENEVA, Sept. 20.-Major (ico- I wr -.rlvs lltoom Tana- ` mm qu’ '_ I m _ A I no treal was elected today by the coun- hmhg Park °§;adf 5s9_9I;%_§|_ cil of the League to succeed R. D. “_A Mono Aho LAND au” the commission governing the . N - _*ini Harmony Jet. nos-1s-1mo. 9“‘“‘ V“"°" _ I , __ rge Washington Stephens of Mon Waugh, Winnipeg, as member of WTITED.-Idafd for genorslhousa Sudden of I » In small family. Apply 118 #_ " “'- """"°"°"‘ C. N. R. Fireman _T-New e noomlo cor. _ 'furnace and all modlm 'canadian Fran) _ ' niencoo. Apply to Mohan NEW LASGOW. Sept. 20.- ., °Kilmon, Royal Bank B163. Donald W. Gordon fireman on the 'INF '54'-l~'l‘l|~ ‘P+§'l»~l' POST OFFICE ROIBBER C-AUQHT BY POL-ICE (Canadian Preu) WI-NLNIREG. Sept. 20.--Monk -ll toba police mwde quick work 'I' in solving the robbery of the 1|# Rosenfeld post office, south of Q this and close to the border, 4' yesterday, when working on a 0 description supplied by the 4 assistant pootmigii-egg, Mrs. 'll <1-I. -C. Ruhr, they a-rrested O Jacob Nieman, aged 23. The O man, it is alleged, entered the O post office early yesterday. if beat Mrs. Ruhr over the -head C with a revolver. inflicting ser- # ious wounds, and escaped with O $321 and a postal package. He O was disguised, but the post- # mistress rlcomiled him as O her next door neighbor. The O money is atlll mining, -but the 2 package has been recovered, -|» O 0 Q il Q 'D 'O O 0 0 ‘O 'O O O O O O O O if C great (buildings toppling in every over n half mile track, when she H9 hm] been gagged Ove,-s;,as"v ' building and was even worse than they were cutoff from the sea by 5 LET-TEMPORARILY A i_i`“V9"ed a ml-I0 lil 2-05'/it ii-I ‘U10 ' the first. There were terrific rumb burning oil, but finally succeeded iliodern furnished apartment. Franklyn County fnlr grounds here --_-'l'§'l"I"l°* FIELDING TO ACT IN KiliNG’8 ABBENCE (Canadian Pron) OT’l‘-AWA, Sept. 20.-The cabinet was in session for nearly five hours this alter- + 0003. this ibeillg the final meet- 'I' ing attended iby Premier King -0 prior to his departure to at- O- tend the imperial Conference -0 in London. M-r. K-ing announc~ O ed that during his absence Rt. -|- llon. W. -S. Fielding would 'I' be acting Premier. while Hon. + Ernest Lapolnfe, Minister of if .Marine and Fisheries, would 'I' be acting Secretary of State il- for External Affairs. ' Q Prior to sailing on Friday ev- 1| ening from Quebec. Premier C K-ing will be it guest at dinner 4- with the Garrison Club. O Mr. Fielding who is at pres- O ent absent from Ottawa paying -I' ing a vi-tilt to his Nova Scotia if constituency. is expected toil' arrive ~back on .Friday or Sat- 4- 6 'F il' il' 'I' 1|# O O O 44 urday. 0 9 Q men's Local twenty five, on strike since midnight Monday, nre no longer affiliated with the interns- tional which has decreed ‘lie walk- out as illegal. Announcements, Meetings, Etc llA'l‘ES.»l0c per line per day. Sc per line per day for 8 days or over. lo A line per day for_6 days or over 5 figures initial letters, count as one word. 10 por cent discount for sash. Address forms part of ad. and must be plld for. "Montague Saturday. Katherine MacDonald in her biggest picture at lve's Hall. 530-9-20»2i Come to Cardigan I-fall Monday night, stupendous program. _. 530-9-20-2| ..°Comiag.-Big special show don‘t miss it. At Vernon Frillny, .Murray River Saturday, Mt. Stew- art Monday. 2| “The Ladies Aid of the P. E. l. Hospital will serve the usual good _`\____ sa 0 D9 _ v_v____ __ ___ wentyyear bonds The issue is to be Canadian, principal and interest i ' ‘ - _ payable in Canada.. The purchasers l are a Canadian syndicate. The price to the Government is a little .more favoralble than that of the recent very successful loan of $22,500,000 The Diesel" "““"°"°7‘ is Re Interpretation of Article Ten of Coven- §f.l’ll‘I.“'.I`..§1‘.§l.5“§?.'.‘iiI1‘€l;’.§.‘?“’ °““' ani;-First Clause _ Dem_ands_Considera.- ..§T§§...§’.L‘i*,..E.,i’;L‘;if’i.*Z.“i'.`i2"u?Z tion of Geographical Situation When il.i.°‘i.i.‘.'Ifi‘t.°§.'.§‘§.§”§.§"€§§5..§°.§i£i.f . Military 'Measures Are Necessary. many of the existing fears that Article X would force states too far into possible military advent- ures abroad without the sanction of tile home parliaments. The question of military assist.- ance was also treated by the Dis- armament Commisslon, which ac- hieved further progress in drafting the text ofa new international treaty of mutual assistance which starts from the fundamental Drill' ciple that the signatories will really help one another in the event of llnjustifled aggression. The Commissioll approved the policy of regional defence alliances and, by adopting clause eight, set forth the conditions under which the signatories would furnish mill- tary -help to parties to regional al- liances when there was a danger of regional difficulties developing lllto more general conflicts. “Hands off" the reparations problem, for the moment at least, was the decision reached today by one of the main commissions of I-he League of Nations. This de- cision, it is believed, will affect the entire attitude of the League Aa- sembiy on this problem. it was not reported without sonfe mur- luurs. The reparations issue arose be- fore the commission on technical organizations when Sir Henry Stra- kesch, t-he eminent financial expert to the statement at the opening of representing South Africa, alluded this yearn Assembly to the effect that the League was confronted with difficulties owing to t-he ab- sence of a settlement of the quell- tion of reparations and lnter-Al- lied debts. But after consultln8 his 'French and Belgian colleagues. Sir ‘Henry said. he was convinced oi' the slivisabllity of not starting a debate on this delicate subject which might aggravate the situa- tion and hinder eventual BENG- ment. Sir Hubert Llewellyn Smith. Great Britain. deprecated nllou-Sng the impression to exist that the re- parations question was outside the riomnin ol' their commission. H0 iul\~cclttc-tl that ‘the C0mli\lBSI0“ make rs-rommendatlons to U10 Leogli-_= Cl-uncll, n preferable 10 ll general dit-tusralon which fniKIlI3 calls:-_ lnfnrtllnale diseensions. The Weather, Etc. vvt~lL=t-l You G-ET S0 You Navel; HAVE AN \` (mee To Move. FAST- WQ\TE_ l>ovtn~\ lN\t0uR. \_\\_' B00i< - ‘I'M G-E‘l“l'tN(r ®§ - -=~<\. D' _ 1 TORONTO. Sept. 20.--Maritime east to west winds much fog. bc- colning showery. The temperature yeoterday: - Maximum 71, minimum 58. High tide this morning at 7.18 and tonight at 8.44. Suu sets this evening at 8- and rises tomorrow morning at 6.46. _ . \\\ _‘In /f lunches in the Exhibition Bllilding _ , y 00000-oooooooo-for lllxuilutiou men. __ sims moan. ___ _ Full moon lfondsy, .ui ,- in - 'fl