W3# W 4... Ql/1:., 4 Iv N I W N I I A N. I I I *NIJ -"__ ,.',,‘,'_`é". _ _ _ __ _ ` , , ]\IO‘Fl1\| IIWG- IJA-I]_s'Y' yi.. * . A, I ‘i'“INN5§Ti¥?§Nl‘5’i"§5li'$"i53J3b‘.m} 'lm meer News , oHARLoT'1‘n'rowN,_ CANADA, sA . UADAY, Novi-:mesa s, 19.3. mn- of u...-- {-»,g,1;,r,i;,;,f=.,=.,»;,;g>g=,l,1`;'.§~;,=p, A HIIIIIIIHNLI--.i$IIIINE lirnuu 1 . . . 1 ` ‘ Servant Girl Fonud Bound and Gagged In The Midst Of Burning Rubbish: _-i (Canadian Press.) - `, CHICAGO. Nov. 7-Gertrude Hau- son. a 16 year bid servant in the house of Otto Johnson, was found bound and 588506 in the midst of burning rubbish in the basement of the house today. ` . She wasunconscious but the police believe she had been attacked and the perpetrator had taken desperate measures to conceal his crime. The glrl"s clothing had been saturated with kerosene and papers and other rubbish near at hand set on fire. The smokc attracted -neighbors who rescued the girl bnforc she was con- sumed_. SIIIIIHNMENI WINS _ IN NIWIIIIINIIIINII i (Canadian Press.) ST. JOHN’B, Nov. 7--By the small majority of 32, candidates of the Conservative party have been elected to the House of Assembly for the Burge district, according to re- turns today. The Opposition party, under Sir Robert Bond, has captured fourteen seats. Returns for two dis- tricts have yet to be ereported. KINGS EIIILIGI IIIIIIII lI.N.II. (Special ,to The Guardian.) , . WINDSOR, Nov. 7-In the football _match here today Kings defeated the University of New Brunswick‘ 3 to 0. CUHDENSED ADS '|00 LITE FOR CLASSI FICAT l0ff One cent per word each insertion in this column. Cash must accompany order. Minimum. charge twenty-five cents. __ 'l'O LET IN A PRIVATE FAMILY, bright furnished room with board. Apply here. 2569-11-8M3i. BOARDERS WANTED-PRIVATE family. Apply 229, Sydney St. 2564-11-8m3ipd. LOST IN CHARLO'1"1‘ETOWN A gold brooch. Finder please leave heLe_____ ____ _______ _ _ _ §5_$2-ll-7_r_n2invxl\ht::§ui€uN;)1N'l1\:areLc1:N1d5'1s duiitlgls tigayfrlfgmsf Port .Elgin con' before a large audience. His subject for Quebec and the Maritime Pm_ Day Alliance by its activity has pre- q ' _ was The Palace of,_the Alhambra. lvinces), Messrs. A, W. Sterns ('l"reas- Vented alll' 011% trying ILO OPBD H1080 Several reflectoscope views of the llrer). J. Lawson and C. J. Relleyshows on Sunday In ou." midst" In palace and its environs as \vell as (Se°""t“rY)' - Isomg of the other provinces there is other interesting views, were shown MIG? l‘l"~lY€l` PY Ml- HWDGY. tllehperslstmt attempt to 'wen tm doors meeting received the report of the president on the past year, in which he stated: tance which our Secretary, Rev. G. W, Mingie, has given me in the .pre- paration of this report. We are also deeply indebted to him as an Alliance He has watched over our interests as a province, in reference to the pre- servation of the Lord's Day. As pre- sident I would like to make special, mention of the splendid work which' position. “Prince Edward Island rightfully boasts of the best kept Sunday in position. It should be our constant effort to hold what we have to make an increasing tendency in our pro- “I wish to acknowledge the assis-I of the theatres and moving picture shows on the ground that they are not business in the technical seuse_ This has been defeated. They have -tried to open by giving one-tenth of '__ ths receipts to charity. This also has been defeated. They have tried HALIFAXI N,5v_ 5__BecauBe H70 Of-‘ell by taking a collection. The of the Artic winter setting decision on this point is now pending in 9, month earlier than usual, dis. in the courts. They tried to open by aster for a whole week haunted the Passing amendments at Ottawa, government survey steamer Acadia as adroitly worded. The Alliance has she labored towards Halifax through endeavored to meet these efforts at expansive Hudson Bay ice-fields. The ‘ML Mingie is doing in his importimtievery point and has been very sue- Acadia arrived yesterday afternoon, cessful. bringing along the shipwrecked crew _“The value of the Lord's Day Al- of the steumer Alette, which was bcu- liance to us in this Province is much ched in the Nelson river after receiv-. ICanada_ We are justly proud of our like that of the dyke. The dyke pro. ing fatal damages in the ice-fields. I tects the land from the sea. We see Ui-‘PNP-ill F- Alld9l`50ll. C0l1lI¥l&lld€l` how much damage is done by the of thc expedition exploring the sea iii; better. Without a doubt there is breaking 0! the dykm in °“r sister approached Fo Port Nelson ami the provinces of Nopa Scotia and New Efllatest living aul3ll0l"1tY 011 HlldB0ll Y I1 Y of plrusurc instead of a. day of rest and a holy day. The Lord’s Day is more than o. holiday. The Alliance should continue to wisely and more widely educate in the interests of u day of rest and worship, | “It will be necessary for our Al-, liance to watch the small shops where sales ure made on Sunday. Children _going to Sunday School are in this way tempted and started on a wrong course. This is not a small matter, as it may seem, for it means the betraying of a, trust, contempt with moral and rellgiousness. The vidual store may be small, but the aggregate may be large. , "T'he Lord's Day Alliance of Can- ada of which we are a provincial- branch has done good service in se-I curing a number of cases in thcl, courts. By the decision of Judge, Morson, icc cream was a food and] tobacco was a drug. This judg-ment was reversed by the initiative of thrl Alliance. If it had not been reversed we would have had no control overI Ivince to make the Lords Du du Brunswick by the recent storm. We Bak' lllllvlglllilllll. l9P0kb UlllSlY_ Of the muse, keep intact the Lum-B Day Act experience following the Acadia’s de- iu Camu;\a_ 1; means more than we parture for Halifax in mid-October. can estimate for our country_ "Hills and valleys of ice niet every “It is most important that the h“""iz°“- forming 9- m-HB5 fl`Um f0l‘i1Y pastors of our ehurches preach sep to fifty feet in thickness. We broke mons and use their influence in every tN"°“gh_ the ‘loudly Packed Pm" fm' way to help preserve our great herb forty miles. Then came zero temper- tage. Teachers in the Sunday School uture' Pr°"“"”“g t° °e"“’"I' them have L, grant Opponumty to help together-to render further passage in the development of our great CMP impossible. There in eastern Hudson ada by teaching those under their Buy' hundreds of miles from help' care the importance of observing the the Hmty me" on. board the Acadia D ~ h gave up hope, resigned to a slow and Lord’s ay arig t. In this way and . . in many more we can hclp preserve certain (Neath by st""v“t"?“ “mm the one of thc foundation stones of our worst winter ever known In the b“y' ,for the law and the “Societies 0- ' . ,, 'rue Acacia was helpless in the grasp ,the day with business rather than °“,;fhz“t‘°“'t t , _ of the gent noe. The awguiuegg '01 he Wpor was adop ed unammmm it was thrilling and for three days Iamount of business done in the indi- Ny' we moved about ln silent fear of im- The financial statement was then - - submitted by the Treasurer, with a §?,l;gN;gah;§gslx§§ peggggg giggllfgfllé Bupplemeritary statement by the Rev' the tension lasted. Mr. Mingie of sums that had been ~Had the mercury dropped below Pflld ill f-0 him; TI1050 9h0W°d that zero the pans would have frozen to- the amounts paid in to date totalled gather and the Acadia hemmed in $306.43, while the amount of the al- au-055 the bay from Nelson to blizard location for the past year had been for th.; whole winter' 8 mutter of a. flied HI- 5-300- Besides lille” WSW bout seventeen months. On the night some small amounts yet. to be col- of October 25, when we were. si, 1¢C'-°ll- '1`§°_f5l1P°_ll_il2_\jllS d0°if3¢>dlJ days in steaming 450 miles across (Continued on gm-cn.) and the thermometer began falling. _ Next day thc Acadia was forced a‘ To a crowded house lust night the W. H. llarkfns Dramatic Company presented James Halleck Reid’s pow- erful‘ tragedy-drama. “The Confes- sion." With the c0mpnny’s presenta- tion iherc is little fault that can ba found, although the minds of some may have been concerned about its propriety, from a religious point of view. These remarks refer, of course to the play itself and not to the manner in' which it was produced by thc company, who in last night’s their versatility as histrfons of con- siderable ability. The play was well balanced and depended for its success upon the acting all round and it was well staged as regards scenery and ef- fects. especially in the reproduction nf a storm raging outside, the whist- ling of the wind and the dashing of the lightning being very well repre- sented. - Al its title implies the story is hound up with a priestfs conflict between his duty in the solemn office ,of confession and brotherly love. On the night that hehoars the confession of,Joseph Dumont that he has com- mitted murder and be administers the sacred duties of his office to the performance g`o,ve added proof df that his own brother, Tom, is accus- ed of the crime. The evidence is strong against Tom. The man whol has been murdered is the brother of Rose Creighton, the girl to whom he had been bethrothed but who had "broken their engagement” on ac- count of habits of intoxication. Tom takes the blow of the separation badly. He drinks more and has a quarrel with Rose’s brother; they get to grips and while they are strug- glfhg a shot is heard, Creighton drops dead, Tom disappears and on the ground nearby is his riile,'s. gift from his brother John. Tom de- clares his innocence to his brother and in a harrowing scene subsequent-I ly is arrested in his home and _torn from thc bosom of his grey-haired, mother to be taken to prison on B good Irish spirit and fun. shipwrecked sailor, mc\ude(\_ ,»e¢°ve,_|, ’"""""""""""""""""`""""""'”""""f""""""""""' """"""""""""""`I""""""""""""""”"'"""""" gainst the ice-barrier to breuk. a pas- sage, After backing up and rushing HE ahead eight times her bows bore high up on the ice cake. It gave way und- er the strain and in a few seconds the Acadia slid through an aperture that enabled her toeventually force 8 passage into comparatively clear LLIIIEE IIIINSF 5 Demoralized and' 13000 n S Hall when young Edwarh shot himself (canadian py-uugg, be hanged. An unexpected denoue- ment taves place. Dumont, who has been injured and is on the point of giving up the ghost confesses to the crime and Tom_ Bartlett is Pardoned. As Father Bartlett Mr. Frank Con- way had :1 difficult part, but his in- terpretation was very clever. Mr. Herbert Charles' acting in the part of Thomas Bartlett was also good. Miss Sue Van Duzer played Rose Creighton with charming sympathy- and her characteristic ability, while Miss Grace Geurnsey, Mr. Eugene Le Rue, Mr. Harry Stubbs, Mr, Victor Mr. C. N. Stark did their various parts admirably. Miss Eileen Cos- griif was decidedly clover and naive fn her gurt as a Bowery boy, while as Mich el Crogsn Mr. Stark showed charge of murder. in that sceneI On the whole it was sn excellent h ~ in A F Ch y Rose's love for Tom triumphs and representation of a powerful play and zfgatrezirnggr 1€1'“d;-,n (gt,-a|€§l:.;;,:; she reconciles herself with him before ,he is removed to gsol. Follows the trial, nt which the principal witness or the Crown is the man Dugout The company give n Matinee per- An M-ea 0| mm- hundred mum-Q who has confessed to the cri to formance this afternoon at three mug, WZ, surveyed by the Acadia in the priest; he swears to hnving seen Tom Bartlett shoot Creighton. Fa- wnter." I _ _ ___ HAD T0 CHOOSE BETWEEN A WRECK OR STARVATION The Acadia was caught in this fix near Nottingham Island, on the east- ern slde of the great island sea. When it was found she could make no head- way, two alternatives offered. One was to wait the chance of the pack opening--highly impossible because of the weak current-and the other was `to but away and risk injury to the ship. This had to be taken as the former meant, so Captain Anderson remarked, "that we should simply starve to death." When the vessel got out of her difficulty, Captain Anderson says the whole complement, uw ““‘H°"°° \’°“"°v"°d °“ the 9"' navigation became normal again, on- °f hearty “ppl°‘“‘°~ ing encountered. °'°"’°k' "tI‘5I“5 "The M“°"" 0' th” her two months in the Near North House," and tonight at their closing This was about the entrance to Por formers the reward of many rounds ly scattered [cameras and be,” “_ ther Bartlett declares on “the witness performance, 'Ithey will present one N°:;°“» ‘gt_°\_:ld:_“S“{’t“t_“`lt‘;__C_*_‘r§’_‘?t'\;_;‘_§' SMNLI IIIIE INITII is Montreal Telephone Service d 1 MONTREAL, Nov. 7-As the result of a small fire in the Montreal tele- phone exchango it is now estimated by the general manager that it will ake all the available mechanical stef! f the telephone company working hree shift men continuously more han 30 days to repair the damage one and give the 13,000 subscribers ffected, down town service. A complete qquipment of new cables, comprising 50,000 connections have to be installed. This will require making about 190,000 solder connec- tions. Nhnncr- iiniinmnis SIIIIIIE SIIIIII] (Canadian Press.) INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 7-The strike of employees of the Indiana- polis Street Car lines was settled_late today through the efforts of Gover- nor Ralston. The employees now de- mund abribration. Nothing is said about the recognition of the union. The troops will be sent home. vigutiou showing the depths, dan- r spots, etc., of the vicinity. IERCE GALEE RAGED PER CENT. OF THE TIME 3”1'.§S Sixty-five per cent of the Acadia’s ay in Hudson Bay she was swept by heavy storms, the season being the worst in history. It was climax- ed by a blizzard on October ‘12t\>. that blew Rt a. velocity, varying from 75 to 100 miles an hour. The early ap- pearance of the ice is usually this year, the Miuto having cruised throu- gh clear, water in Fox..,Chaur|el as » late as Novembcr Sth llilt leer. But no two seasonsare alike' iii the Polar regions, according to Captain Ander-» no rr son. The feature of the Alette wreck was the rescue of her crew by the Acadia. The Alctte left Port Nelson with her cargo aboard on 'October ‘Ith a month after her arrival. At daybrelgk three days later a field of ice pans was struck north of Mansel Island, damaging the Alette's bow so severe- ly that the pumps could hardly. keep pace with the inrush of water. Ex- aminations showed B great hole was torn in the port bow plates, this ap- erture measuring four feet. in length it was six inches wide and situated three feet under Water. ALETTE RETREATED ` 'U IN SINKING CONDITION 'l‘he collision bulkhead appeared ready to give way at any I-lmoment, so the steamer returned to Port Nel- son and was driven at full speed on to the north bank of the channel three miles below the terminal camps, This was Qctober iith and the Nel- son river was then strewn with sheets of ice about three inches thick. The crew of the Alette entered life- boats, but they were stove in and filfed with water before reaching the cadia. Had the latter vessel not en on the scene it is probable that any would have been drowned, as safely reaching dry land under the rcumstances was almost impolitblt. aptain Anderson of the Acadia did ll in his power for the shipwrecks and while he modestly takes no cred- it- himself he praises the efforts of his officers and crew during such a trying season. , While at Port Nelson he learned that the wireless apparatus which. was in the hold of the Ceursnse when she stranded had since been recovered and that Port Nelson would be in daily communication with the out- side world during the coming winter. The dredge Port Nelson is also safe .it Port Nelson, As fifteen of the Alette's crew are Chinamen they were taken ol the Acadia at the dockyard yesterday and placed in -the immigrants' datal- uou nosvitai panning instructions from Ottawa regarding their diliwlil They have to be under s stron; guard as there is a bond forfeit of o =osgsg> ve hundred dollars if Buy "MP0 ill Canada. It is probable they will e sent to England. ' AIIIIOUHCEIEIT3. COIIIB EYBITS. lEl`ll|l$» EIC .___ One cent per word each insertion in this column. Gash must accompany order. Minimum charge twenty-uve cents. e ' "Miss Daisy Rudgsny. Manufacturer. of fine hair goods; also Wig-rushing. i1i. Great George Bt. $508-11-illstlmd. 5‘¢Fl "Rcmeniber the concert lnvilon Church on Thursday, Novlmblr llih i under the auspices of' the badass* Aid An exceptionslky fins-program. , g mission in eip ` - . ~ n,m.d°,.“, yan” Jam, BM-¢,\.f,|; r|‘stand as it is his duty to his God he of this season s hits in New York, ‘;3Mf"°';| hygrofuwt chan h to be i - _ ° }(9@g_\|;_15|g_~;_5yY_|||g`|-q'¢__1,fuipg¢uf,bcms;_Cu\d9,sf.c,.,;confi'ontcd with the terrible shock cannot tell. Tom is condemned tng"Bought and Paid For." ,prepared at oregon M A guide gl, Mi\\srd'l binimenif » . -.e*s&..\~&_ ..,¢ae5.£s