MAT. PRINCE EDWARD "THE IRISH m . . . LAUREL- HARDY evil. tee-while- "LAST TIMES TODAY—-3--7'—-8.45 P. M. US Comedy ,A - *1‘ f)_ an PRINCE EDWARD . The new Grace Moore picturel Grand drama net to glorious music! A gift for the - whole worlcll Comes To the Prince Edward for Three Days starting MONDAY ADDED NEWS s. ciinrooil‘! lllll liiiilli.....d BVER LEAGUE sl T u lmlll Shippers Are Recom- mended To Include War Risk Clauses i In Charters. .1 the tlon. daughter. with curly sanrr JOHN. N-B. Sept. 26-49- PJ-One-of the latest rifts 10.11111 New Brunswick Museum is a. 1.111110- painted‘ banner presented exactly a2 years after the first sod was turned for New Brunswiolvs first railway, the European .1105. Nmfl‘ American‘. The11i)1i;_1;1;$. rairéieodv e13 i, “ififififflisintef or w. n. attrition e1 Robinson, superintendent of the A~ Moi-rem“ division oi the Canadian f-..sion. National Railways, and received by Lieut-Governor MacLai-en, presi- dent of the 11.1".5°“m~ The ceremony in 1853 was wit- qeggeq by a‘ typical Victorian crowd with crinolines. parasois. hairy ion hats, yield-over cravats and sled- runne collars. Lady Head. "l1? 05 Sir Walter Head, Lieutenant-Gover- nor of New Brunswick. used a sil- var-plated "spade to dislodge the sod m the vvalley” mllstrict 0L Saint John. Queen Victoria had been reigning l6 years, and Saint John was '10 years old. As early as 1833 the people 0f New Brunswick were talking about a. railway following the opening oi the first practical steam railway’ ll) Great Britain. the Liverpool and Manchester, in i830. Merchant-S and business men of St. Andrews. us. met in lass to organize 1i r0111- pany under the nameoi the St. Andrews and Quebec Railway- 1111" perial authorities backed the scheme but the Ashburton Treaty of i842 brought it to a stand-ill"- Demands were growini! 5°!‘ 9195" union with more developed sections of the country. and Upper 111111111“ wanted Maritime port outlets_for freight. After lengthy negotiations with legislators of the Motherland an act incorporating the European and North American Railway Com- pany were passed in i851” to cori- istruct a continuous line of railway from Bangor in the state oi Maine through ,thc provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scoiia to Hal- ifax, thereby affording an uninter- rupted route oi land to all pal-ts of North America and from some at- lantic port in the most direct 1111c oi emigration, traffic and travel be- tween th Old World and the new. The Nova Scotia railway was or- ganized a year later with the inten- tion of linking the two systems but that province failed to agree on terms and delay resulted urilll the consummation of "Confederation in 186'! made through rail connections to the upper provinces possible bY means of the Intercoloniai Railway, a provision of the Confederation pact. The Intercolonlal, now part of the Canadian National Railways system, was declared open for traf- fic July 1, 1878. Prince Edward Is- land started its railway construc- tion in i811 and the line was upen- cd for traffic May 12, 1875. Beginning of work on the Europ- ean and North American Railway between Saint John and Shediac was g festive occasion for this oi . Visitors crowded the hotels whie fashionable bars and ale houses were toasting ‘ for the suc- cess of the first railroad in the East. Fort Howe belched a staccato of 70 guns in thrilling overtcne to speech- es of‘ iiamcntarisns, financiers and imperial representatives. Mu- cic had been imported from Bolton-and Portland. and a thou- sandmcnih uniform marched in grand procession. ft. was then that humorous citizens instituted the cslithumpilils, grotesque plough- inakcia suggestive offutai parades in-lurope and aarly uardi Ora! h ties of the southern United Sta In‘ ‘yuan- tho Calf- th developments the Poly- morphianadteiilieil exist-today. " - The railroad out of Saint John met fiiIl-Iicial diflicultics and years elapsed-before the line reached its lhodiac objective. Elderly folk to- iill! ‘grandchildren by 41t- early railway outlngl, lioouvlila. than hothou. d so dd ffbmyear to vim new ma. England. _(By Charles P. , Aloclalcd ' Press Staff Writer) (A. P. By Guardian’! Special Wire) LONDON. Sept. ‘ZS-Tho dead- lock between Premier Mussolini and the League of Nations must come within the next 1o days, it was predicted in some official quarters today, the break coming with Italy's resignation from the League and the simultaneous push .of its armies into Ethiopia- Despite the League of Nations’ action in placing the Italo-Ethi- o iari deliberations under Article 3g of the League Covenant, offl- cial Britain saw no hope that ll Duce would hold his East African legions in check until December. Article XV calls for council re- commendatlons. Should Article XV -and its accompanying recommend- ations be disregarded by s member _l'l8l.l0lIl-—Slll}l‘i as the advance of Italy's troops before Dec. 4—A.rt.icle XYI—describing such disregard as ;an act of war—ls automatically in- voked. Other Foreign Office officials clung to the hope that Mussolini .wiii finally be overawed by the » gravity of his East. Africa advent- =ure and makesome olive-branched gesture to the League at the last minute. “Today's development is one of the most important ever taken by the League," it was declared in an .a thoritative quarter. "'I‘he British -_ g "mfnient regards the action without surprise or fright." This source also said any hope Mussolini may have for restoring the matter to tri-power discussion is doomed, as it must remain with the Council until -- ncluded. Recognizing the ‘gravity of the present emergency," the chamber of shipping of the United Kingdom recommended that ship owners henceforth include war risk clauses in all future ship charters. The chamber recommended the clause permit owners to refuse shipments to biockaded ports or ports liable "M-‘mtoloe blocklded. ‘ f sweethearts loyal. She this side of thickening Extensive here. she f declares. posture. the species declares. Increase In Apple Crop l “w. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) , orrrawa, Sept. "cubic increase {was mail-ma 20-00 - in apple production compared with last centenary ' round-tho- fi not. '~ A woman d British osteopathic mother of an IB-YEB-T-Old but sllmr and blond hair, describes Dr. Dora, Sutclifie-Lean, of southport. opened practice in the thrd woman eel-co clan in England. Dr. sutcliffe-Leans practice n and children, h the women often husbands and The British mostly wome says, althopg send their brothers. are conservative new forms of treatment, they are helped they notes many mam; iilncses in England than on rheumatic troubles of the muscles due to damp weather. walking and by ‘English people. ate better feet and boast. Feet participated in she believes. cre legs than Americans can and leg muscles are less inds, than there. Ameri- “American young years old. are far more English girls of those doctor declares. She more independence, social instincts-and The Aimrican this feminine physician do the men. Women are cultured. good conversational- isls. well read. while the males of are a little too businem minded for her taste As president of the pathic association, she its twenty-fifth annive simultancoulslv with jubilee in London- Dr. Sutclifie-Leans duced her to study os pastor of St. olic Church. took over directing affairs of the Ticonder- oga National Bank. Rev. Mi‘. Stevens was the post to succeed Roy Lockwood. Ticonderoga attorney who forced to retire through ill health. He has been a bank director for several years. “I'm a churchmen," Stevens said, "and not a banker and I'm only going to serve out the unexpired term of Mr. Lockwood. That will be only until the end of the year. After that I'm going to give my full affairs, where I belong." Rev. Mr. Stevens explained that ho was named a director of tho ____._____._-;:_‘——-€—-___;—_—; English Better Feet Americans Better Poise Dr. Cutcllfie-Lean studied osteo- pahty at Kirksville, Mo.. College of Csteo ltS to her. and slow the Atlantic, and can shoes have improved the last g0 years, Dr. Suicliffe-Lean girls she WOMBJI ‘ tention octcr, president of pathy, the first in- kind established by T. Still, founder of the D110- Twenty years ago she southport as pathic physi- become most poised than finds in them freedom and she t British Osteo- officiatcd at rsary held the King's father in- teopathy. she associa- youthful. American is she to accept but when more cli- especially fibrositis- sports developed greatly in of 18 t0 24 ages," the likes their appeals to more than hinks p MacAvenney. c..~.~c~..~wf.-~u.. ... Nil‘ CAPITOL a - 1 - us r. u. ' ZASU PITTS in “ens. ours nu. IAN." 25?: y gglacrAobo-rl Tl”! Al“ U) “l! Gaycty 0| U"! AilARDlNfr \O'O BpoK$IART£< MUSIC I. -_____. t fflly f. it. I.) Willa. Catbor’: new novel "Lucy Gayheart" recalls her earlier “W Antonio" in style and potting, and the characters of Lucy and Mr. Shimcrda. Personally I prefer “My Antonio.” But. “Lucy Gayheart” is most certainly marked with the game perfection of style and beauty of characterisation apparent 1n all Miss (father's work. It has been highly praised by reliable reviewers and one of them has called it. "o. story that belongs to art. both in itself and in its setting. For Lucy and the man she loved lived and worked in music and through the the power upon the emotions of songs and the interpretation of them." one of the foremost contempo sor of English at the University of )/rf/m2/\ /) BACHELOR CUNNND EVERETT iDRTOil EDWARDMMD ' UNA MERKEL ALSO . . LOWELL THOMAS AND BABY BURLESK MON-TUES-WEI. DAILY 3.15 — 7 — 8.45 P. M. Mat. 11c, 26c. -Eve. 26o, 32o. publications are to enhance celebration. Harper and Brothers have an "Mark Twain's Notebook," It is a classic German children. The book has an 1mm 611M011 by Mark Twain's daughtc colour by Fritz Kredal. My of Ethiopia: Governor Native 0f St. John, N. B. SAINT JOHN. N. B.. Sept. as- (C. PJ-Cha-rles St. John Collier, governor of the Bank of Ethiopia, is remembered here as a small boy seen frequently riding hi; pony ab- out the streets of Saint John, The banking head oi tho little country 5° prominent in world news these days was born here in laao. lost May he had a special con- ference with Premier Mussolini. Whit they discussed has remained a secret, but newspaprenen who besieged Collier in Great Britain during a recent holiday trip ba- lleved it had considerable to do Willi imllortant financial matters involving Italy and Ethiopia, The omcial who now resides in picturesque Addls Ababa. "City of Flowers" located on mountainous terrain. followed the profession of his fB-liliei‘. William Edward Collier. an ambitious Scot who emigrated l0 Sil-llil John from Dundee. The elder Collier clerked in the old Bank of British North Ameriqg here. 1151115 to assistant accountant and accountant between 1817 and i879. He married a Saint John girl, $111115’ Watters, daughter of the late Clilrlee Willlfife. judge of the county court. At the time o1 his death William Collier was manager °l the bank here. His widow took their chidlnen. including Charles, to the father's native city of Dundee when the boy was seven years old. His only relative still living in Saint John is a cousin, Miss Helm who occasionally hears from him in far oiI Ethiopia. He has never returned to Saint John but has often asked about the .._‘__-_—--—< CLERIC IN ODD ROLE AS MANAGER 0F BANK TTCONDEROGA. N. Y., Sept. 26 —New York State banking circles had something new to talk about today in the way of bank manage- ment as the Rev. Cyril F. Stevens, Mary's Roman Cath- the job of named to WIS Rev. Mr. to church bank under reorganization plans effected several years cause they asked inc to serve." Air Race" Planned r Across The World Despite obioctiom and setbacks. Adelaide is determined to arrange another acrou-the-worid air dash to Australia in connection with its celcirationl. next year. advice I now being ob- tained from Retold Cow. 1M oom- panion of the late Wiley world flight. ago. ‘be- Pootonlila Git” ll 110% ‘a4 vilt to his Dannie in “ ' goal difficulty is to provide of $0.0M. no City of his birth. an letters de- "Plbe 1791110111 as a wonderful ""1""? Mid he expresses himself 55 V"? 10nd 0f Addis Ababa and its people. Numerous citizens who as hqyg and girls used to play with Char. les Collier are still residing in Saint John. He lived with his family over the bank, and it was a. com. mm! $8M to see the little follow "d1"! h-l-I beloved pony. "That's how I remember Charlie best -—out around with his pony," said one local man. Educated in Dundee, Collisi- graduated from High School mm and embarked upon the business career wilich was to bring him dig. tinction in int/emotional banking. In i835 he was made a Command. er of the Ordercf St. Mchaei and St. George, ' Wlieh I young man he entered “n "wl-lllli-"W office in London. l-ie become a chartered accountant end then worked in a bank. After 5 Pfiflod in India he joined the Bank cf Abyssinia, in; he“ of the institution and retaining his oiiioo when its name wag changed taothe Bank of Ethiopia two years ‘IICIINICALLY nun: may now twine we momma. soot. zv-A baby "ieiihhielliy dead" for 1n hours and s1 rninuioo after ail-m appeared w be entering excellent health ic- Tilo con of Mrs. Court Aroucnmciarrwni.’ tumult whoiico limo Oln timeto "Whataieyouooing woaian-tothctramp ogcrtiiowail tin new edition. in two volumes volumes at $12.00; and supplementary chapter ed in booklform. "a collection o1 Mark Twain loie, and a lot of Mark Twain himself," "Mm! Nam’! "iv-Wins on Thacker- lYs Swift" by Coley B. ‘raylor, a. new edition of "Mark Twain's Am_ erica" by Bernard do Votc. and a new boys lie of the author of “Tom BIWYQP." are also contributions to the Centennial. An illustration of the design model of the new Mari; Twain monument shows it to be a very 11111119451110 piece of sculpture. It We designed by Walter Russell of New York and is to be displayed 5g the new Mark Twain Museum at Hannibal. Missouri. The monument conslrtg 0g . cm. tral figure of Mark Twain himself with representations of many of the characters of his page known works grouped on either side n1 him-twenty-eight figures are in- lggldid in this remarkable pigce of New material about Walt Whit- man the “good grey poet“ o; Am. “l” h" ‘mm-ll’ been unearthed WHY "id W959 Pipers have now be“ Bothered into an octavo vol- ume with appropriate comments under the‘ title lication of "leaves of Grass." Walt Whitman's manuscripts sale. i eluded in this very rare editions of "wave; $3300 taming interesting Iongfellow, ‘Ibnnyson. 1802 he writes: "A (like, 111-‘; ‘The Living Picture" is w b; pg}- l-Iouoe during tho ins-u season, On September 38rd was publigh. Oil bi! All!“ A- Kmbf a volume on music entitled "A igugiagi 0011100’ and edited by Dr.- John Irlkinl. noted American novelist andpianint, and President of tho Gayheort cannot fail to remind- '0ne of Antonia and her father MLI’. whole composition and over it lies Willa Gather is without doubt American novelists and, according to Howard Mumford Jones. Profes- Mlchigan. she is the most classical in style of all contemlflfury novel- The Centennial of the birth of a very noted American novelist- Mark Twain-is being observed this W111‘. and many Mark Twain fall its nounced two hitherto unpublished books by Mark Twain. The first, to be published on October 3rd, is edited 511d offiihfled by Albert ‘Bigeiow Paine. The second. to be published on November 1st, is Mark Twain's free translation of "Slovenly Peter." tale and Mark Twain made the translation for the amusement of his own Clara Clemens, and illustrations in HB-Yncfs are also publishing a at $2.00. of the authorized biography of Mark Twain by Albert Bigelow Paint. 1011118141’ published in four a Biblio- Krophy of Mark Twain prepared by Merle Johnson and containing a of Mark Twain material hitherto unpublish- . "Mark Twain: The Man and His wmk by Edward Waifloknechw by Emory Holloway and Ralph Ademari. Walt Whitman was once connected with a rare New York notes and "New York Dissected." This book, pub. lished September 10th by the Pr”; of the Pioneers, throws a new light on Whitman during the yggrg 1m- medistely following the firstpub- Last June a large collection of first editions. once the propei-tymg: lils friend and biozrapher, the lam D1‘. R. M. Bucks, or gummy we" sent from Canada to London for library are Grass." first editions of which m3: been known to sell for as much as Dr. Buoko had also many mm Ind letter! from Whitman con. reference; to 001100111901‘!!! writer-g _. any“, 0f Oscar Wilde who had visited \wh1tmm 1n 11111111011111 yeiiiinter. Had the good some to take r. great flllcy to may" An American living in Egg-Mn. Mr. C. Flick Steeger, has recently P41111110!“ In opera lhlnimf by and based on Oacar Wilde's novel "Dob ll" Orly." The new open “nod formed at the Berlin Stars 0pm I‘ Geneva, meetin place for states- men of the world's major powers as the lmague of Nations attempts to solve ltalo-Ethopian differences, Will PUBLISH [AWRENBFS 800K TIJIJAY “Seven Pillars of Wis- dom” Tragic Per- sonal Record Of Eastern Campaign. (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK. Sept. 26-T. E. Lawrence's "Seven Pillars of Wis- dom," perhaps the most tragic per- sonal record since the war, is to bc published tomorrow. Excerpts of the text compiled by Lawrence in 1926 in book form _be- came familiar to thousands of readers as "Revolt in the Dcse ." This abfigcment was published by Lawrence at the urging of friends to finance a private edition of the "Seven Pillars," the complete re- cord of the stirring British cam- paign in Arabia against the Turks. Although Imwrenoes dissatisfac- tion with the cause and results of the campaign in which he played so unique a part was well known before publication of ‘Seven Pill- ars," the poignancy of his feeling is evidenced in such phrases as these: . "Next day we moved into Azrak, having a. great welcome, and boast- lng-Cicd forgive us-that we were victors-yet hardly one day in Arabia passed without a physical ache to increase the ccrroding sense of my accessory deceitfulness inwards the Arabs." And again: "Not that my maimed will now care o. hoot about the Arab revolt -yet. since the war had been a hobby of mine, for customk sake I would force myself to push it through." , The manuscript of the "Seven Pillars." mounting in hundrledsof ‘housands of words. was lost in ' 1010." A second draft was written, and a third. -All but one page of tho second text was burned by Lawrence in 1m. Eight copies were finally Printed in 10M, of which only five are said to be in existence. In 1022-20, while the disillusioned Lawrence attempted to bury him- solf in the British Tank Corpa and tho Royal Air Force, he condensed the work and had another limited edltionprinted. This was the ver- sion abridged to make "Remit in the Desert." Lawrence permitted "Seven Pill- ars" to be published in the United Statoafo protect copyright, but at 130.000 a volume to prevent sale. Onl! Lawrence's death ‘recently, in I iMMoycle accident. releases "Seven Pillars" for general circu- lotion. A posthumous manuscript, ‘The lint.” laid to be a spiritual record, 1w hm whiunosia limited form at 0600.000 a volume. It may not he fer, mother lonoraticn than will be published for general emu. lotion. 1 1111mm upon .of the ‘Arabian is seen here discussing poitlcal rassment to the inventors." whole war-drew to an end." Respirator Keeps Paralysis __,__. OAKLAND, Calif., Sept. Mechanical lunlfl wheczcd another boy for nearly a year. Raymond Rambo. pital here. The other started last September 24. he was stricken. caused their lungs to ccllopse. N01‘ WIIAT R1! MEANT fight for o soldier.’ Accused "I did once, nearly killed me." A Sam and during the moli was small pocket. "Oh. Mildred," she doing?" back to nurse for a pattern." rr. ransom- school." Honor Soil for September: Grade VII-i. Olive Jenkins: l, an Gillie. Grad: vi-i. Doiona um; a Willie Miller: 8.10mi: Jenkins. Craoc rv-iiuas- um. I. m-‘a. aural emu; a. one‘ i: l mm Glilis ' Undo I :- " Ioaco Jflftba . ~='t?".9‘.“.'l9§‘l*'.=.?~ W‘?! ethnic- brulqualy: _ '7'" ‘W100i M ‘down lay w‘ qoioaonca in the Arab fraud to m.“ —4 was visited recently by the Prince of Wain, travelling under the name of the Earl of Cheater. The Prince weakness of character or native hypocrisy: though of course I must have had some tendency, some apt- itude, for deceit. or I would not have deceived men so well, and persisted two years in bringing to success a deceit which-others had framed and set afoot. Jphad no" con- cern with the~Arob revolt in the beginning. In the end I was re- sponsible for its beingan embar- Hls estimate of the value of his delivery of Damascus was high. "when Damascus fell," he wrote, "the Eastem war-probably the Victim Alive 3q_ on monctcnously today. staying off death from infantile paralysis for one youth who doctors thought would die momentarily more than l8 months ago and keeping life in 18, spent his 546 th day-a record. his physicians believe~ln a respirator in a hos- youth. 15-year-old Fred Betlach. was reported gaining at S kane. Wash, in his mechani- cally ided fight for breath, which Rambds condition was described as “just the some" by his doctors. one of whom said they had expect- ed him to die within a week after Both youths were placed in the respirators after infantile paralysis customer here and always charg- ed with disoirlerly conduct or the police. I1 you are so fond o fighting, why don't you go iii but ho lilo Ills-lad Jennins had token her hie am aug routtoteawithhgl lmtmlmghommum to sec- the child trying to force a thick piece of cake into a very uid in shocked surprise. "what are you "'I‘l'llt'l all right, mother." said the child. "I'm Just taking fllil slice one; I a -i.».nmmm a.’ Prince of Wales Pays Visit to Geneva ' events with a group of officials. Ho wu on his way to Budapest from Colf Juan where be hag been spend- ing a vacation. Australian Babies To People Land Australia is tackling the problem 0f peoniing its vast territory in no uncertain and. as some people think. the best way. There is al- most an epidemic oi new babies, in Sydney at least. Fifty-four ngvq been born in one hopsital in a week and 55 in four days at an- other. The record for the latter in a recent week was 65. Sydney, however, has Just lost its world record. held for ten years, as the city of more than a millim people with the lowest death rate. It is 8.4 per 1,000. Detroit, U.B.A., has now beaten it with 8.4 per 1,000 —-Australian Press Bureau. ‘ Anti-Cosmetics League Formed INBTANBUL. Sept. fl-“To free women from the slavery of fashion and make-up" is the name of the league which has just been founded in Turkey by s number of young women. "No more powder. rouge. creams and such-like fads for ‘Turkish wo- men." declared the girls- president of the new body, outlining its plan of campaign. ' “We shall fight with all our might against fashion adopts. Wo- men who have recourse to make-up only do so to hide their physical imperfections. _ "Practically all women who rely on their hairdressers 0r on cosme- tics for their beauty are physically defective," she added. “Sane and natural beauty has no need of fashion or disguise." Pounded by a n ber of girl uni- campaigning for members.‘ ‘ ‘ At the local police court "Bruigeor" Bill, the $101‘ of the L d nelgh rhood. appea for tho fifth time in five weeks. ea’ S . "What's the charge today?" ' “m, ,,,,, mm,” HIS Own Pursuit Diwrde ly conduct, sir." "l-gistn‘ "You're o. 1101101‘ STRASBOUFO. Sept. 2'1—fAP)— The police not around "the Stras- bourg strangler. Franco's moot dieaded cnminal, is slowly tighten- g. Authorities. pushed by a frighten- ed public, have worked for three years to catch the daring minder- er who signed his crimes and even attended the funerals of b victims ‘mo. shadow of the‘ unknown city in 1082. A raohloker. trudginl atonéltho 01g’ Schiltigholn: . out o flic ll his lantern on the h oi a young girl. she had been strangled. The after her funeral. police received a letter that the writer had committed c crime and had attended we burial ur- vlco. Details that he gave loft no doubt in the miiidn of the police be had been than. Another girl wu found murdered cimiliar circumstances. The dranglor wrote his lowi- to tho the nut dly proving he had attho cemetery. m the third crime when Qn 11-year-old bov was Illlld. the ail-angler telephoned police when they could find the “B90308! Oillil. Perfect Imiendnnce: isooo- Com-go Jenkins; ‘Deity Inert,‘ l-l Delano “non versltyystudents. t e association is