A A F l / l , E --Wh! ,. nAi'1'_. _ ‘”“'1efM_r"° _ *_ i U _ )_¥ vi V _ _ . _L-. --- - __ CANADA. MQNDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY §_, 1913. Imam' or nav; {"*g§%&*$§§W °* n MUST A ' _'.'=;"_¢iix: " " A ‘.~_ be Placed on Entry _ 7". .\ :=_,_\.'*1_;\‘, v L ? ~ . » , , i I l 1 v v.‘~._‘.‘,‘..7f "r, ~. _ ~' * ` Press) ‘ _ WK&Ugro1v, Mona-Unless one- bm _Ah _ulsurance that no limit Wé. ,_ 011 the amount of tim- b `»_ _exported to this country fr°9i&fhQ’¢Qwn lands on which nm “P-° ` °mb“_\'l0 was ~_` raised, th' »U_@W'd States Government will lll=°1g:f\ll9»to :rant the privuhge of 7-hi, ,, _dlliry of wood pulp and paper mauufaetfred from the woods' on Que- '>°e _1‘°4!'~ L_ ~ LIW_A_i`il. I A snlnuirn ,mi _ Ki* % ..» _ _ V,,€v__ 1 ‘t -___- »L¢1»(_» ., . =. .'l rm "3" , Pgiegg) 3j_The LT nlmerigen lineréarnnn on _- _ , _ __ °l‘6_Yes rday, ol- 1id» n¢M_mh.__ -sank are mg. :fur- m __§'l°li00h0l°.' City of George- f0 ‘ ',~ netrly this morning near the D! ,_ lr; Breakwater. The Captain and_"re__ of this schooner escaped. The`.I‘rfnls Oskar returned to this P0 .i » _ °°lrrsii’ii._1rn1uin¢= - Fon onlfmcusn I I ilk; NIPEG, Jan. 30-Government ins path for workmen in Manitoba W _d§e§_i§s;l!,.principle_ 'by both eni _ Y ‘a d dmployes at a confer- e1.c Atoday of representatives of the B0 V of* Trade and the Builders' Ex nge and the Trades and Labor 0° , It _was decidedyto approach the* _rovlngzial Government at once, HU of ‘the three parties to the _$381100 ill at once draft a mu to _nie Legal..- WT A _ 1i_I\r'». n on* is a strong Nl '_,.~ 0 __,téi`e,‘ scheme, and his de- - .,, ~ _ _jgwpyernment system ‘“'.f.-V-""fii'~?~_=.e... W-°¥““» "°i~ ' Culidllflclis. LONDON, Feb. 2-A speech by Davld 1-10Yil~George, Chancellor of the Exchequer, before the National Liberal Club on the land quegtmn hascaused a considerable sensation. -_ The Conservatives declare it a pro- test against Asqulth's refusal to _make the question a leading feature =of the Liberal pro ram this ses 'on . . B si - ‘e nu euro;-1 - one .isqis The Conservatives also claim that Lloyd-George is attempting to sup- plant Asquith as party leader by ap- pealing for the party's support aga- inst their chief. In the course of his speech Lloyd-George said that .hundreds of thousands' of men,wome`n ,and children are living under condi- __ tions with regard to wages and hous- ing which should _ nialie the Empire -hang it's head in shamb. .HIGHWAY MMT KELLEBY PULIBB 1|-_ (Canadian Press) ` CHICAGO, Feb. 2.-Jas. Higgins, 22 years old, anhighwayman, was kill-» ed here early to-day in a iight with the police. f With a companion named Cantwell Higgins held up one saloon and was going through the pockets of the patrons in the second when the detectives rushed in. ' Higgins dropped his revolver at the detectives’ order but was drawing an- fother when shot through the head. r. P; ns.. arrests ro E Joi-My BI6 PO0L W. '_'-rl-'i"~:"` ‘ '¢‘§wgr..r°1>§1i¢-=»-_: lee- the fig’ ixnlinut s restriction- oi the pr den term. Senator Will- usmq,_°.°l:moui-tt. proposed is -_ ~»¥°“,' year term, -with the rrivile ° 9f.‘.t°;. o1eoti`on=onu` but me nidndliidn' wg gh" 5,-‘Wd-fp to prevent Colonel googgyelt irgiii seeking another elec- °m;.f_~. _. »_ .~.’..‘.._.. _ Y 1 nsianm, Jsn~;.~ ni-'i1n`»».n_oi~t|. at- Tlantic steamship conference, which _ _ __ 8\ _ _Bd Y.. ed today, when »the__C`anadie.n'Pac'liie Railway' refused to doin in the pool. ,The other members unanimously de- ;eided _to renew _the combination, and there is a lively rate wafifor steer- age from Trieste. A statement was given out by the conference that the lines- represented failed to reach an agreement with the Canadian Pacific Réllway, and decided to continue without that Compsny's co~operation. A representative of the Austro-Ame- rican line announced the 'intention of his company to inaugurate a regular service between Trieste and Canada. Gao. McL. Brown, the London repre- sentative of the ,- Canadian Pacific Railway, in an interview later_,refer- red to the fact'th'at"the Canadian 'Pa- cific Antwerp line withdrew from the -pdol last year.` He said the chief bu- .siness of the present conference gre fto endeavor to _win the Canadian a- 'ciilc back. He declared 'that the con- ference had flatly demanded that the Canadian Pacific surrender its con- ,trhct with Austria for itsnew Tries- te~Canadian line; and_pay a‘ default. The combination odered not a single recompense of any nature, and he had _therefore refused to join. -_ , _ _M°r'. Brown added that the Canadi- 'an Pacific Railway faced ,the sltaa- tion cheerfully, and was prepared to meet any rate' reduction by the pool. I-le expressed' the opin`ion,- moreover, that low rates would benefit. _ Both the Canadian Pacific and the §A`ii§tro-American companies expect to __ .L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _______:__:__:______::;_ begin the 'l‘ri`este service _in March. The latter line is controlled by the Hamburg-American and the North Lloyd. were mr QW _ - of the taken advantage of this unpar BANK PBESIBEUT (Canadian Press) , New YORK, neil; z-For niissp- nlying $50,900 of the' innns of the Audubon y Nati'o`n'al l§a`nk in a deal to obtain contnol ofthe institution Da- vid Mills, the_4_banke`_r's n former presi- dent. hfls been sentenced to seven years in the Federal Prison at At- lanta. < Mills was found 'nut in the nit- ed States District gOourlt'. U FUUB llllll ANU A SEVERAL IllJ’UREU¥ (Can dian ress) _ - BACRAMEWMO, Iisib. 2.-The St. Nicholas apartment lmuse was burn- OG t°`dBY. Four people are dead; an- other Uying and ten in the hospitals. The ruins are still being searched for bodies. ' A defective burner in the basement allowed fumes of oil to escape. They exploded causing the tire. The pro- perty loss is $70,000. suusnn nnnn nfcuvfnv nnu nn (Canadian Press) BELLEVILLE, Feb. 2.-Reuben Flindell lies at his home, near Smitha field, with a fractured skull, the re- sult of a quarrel with his son, Bruce Flindell. The father is 55 years old _and the son 25. His recovery is d‘on5tiu1_ '» .sms :sooo for " ~ Loss or 'rssm beg.” its sittin 5 ham Tue B md_ TORONTO, Jan. 31-For the loss of_several teeth, a severe shock to hal* nervous system and other injur- les,.1llfiss Margaret Swaekhamer is suing for $5,000 in the Assize Court at. the City Hall. The injuries were caused by a flying stone from a blast inthe quarry at Limehouse Village, Halton County, owned and operated by the Toronto Lime Company, Lim- itlid. the defendants to the action. ’ .The accident occurred on the last dhy 'of May, 1912. "I ,was in our house at _the time," said plaintiff, who is' thirty-four years of age. “I lslilrd' the men shouting as they usu- Y do when they light the fuse for the hindi. I saw the smoke and the stents blasted up in the air and I knew no more. A stone had come through the window of the summer kitehoh and struck me on the face. I‘ “gas ‘unconscious for five hours and lconfiligd' to bed for six weeks.” Q _,dents say they used all reas- Oda _,precautions and blame plain- tid or contributory negligence. .illimrss -_,.»_;7|'lfE TEHPERHUEE i A `\- ».. `§Sn:ecial to The Guardian) C l‘O, Feb. 3.-Fresh south- we ly winds; fair and moderately coldtif. . til-it-lg at- three olclock the Rexall Store with a northern degrees uthern ex- IBFO B B0 recorded above twenty the previous night' At nine a.m: and at recorded degrees for- prev- and at above. 'this morning at 10.9.2; it at _8.09 and to- gfternoon at 5.09 mn; it __to- at 7.18 and tomor- itts' this afthriioon at , - , . r- --_ of' :giéhmggn bt: nine - <4 -__- ‘BS 'lZl2T"§.ZT.§..§l"srvrAinns nn °‘ and Children. (Special to The Guardian) e 0'I’1'AW.i, rob, 2.-with thnohject _of improving vthefconditions of em- Dl0yment of woxn;eri_ and children in Canada hy"nnen'ns_ of giving publicity to such abusesas are found to exist, Hon.`T. W. Crothers is appointing women correspondents of the Labor Gazette ln Montreal, Toronto, Win- nipeg and Vo.nc'ouver. If thc experiment is successful fe- male correepondents will be appoint- ea in other cities including st. John, Halifax' and Charlottetown. - The correspondents will be required to study and report the conditions of employment of women and children in domestic employment as -well as in shops and factories. These reports will be made _month- ly and _will bear on all the phases of _female employment and child labor with special reference _to changes, wages, hours of labor, strikes, lock- outs, women's` organizations and op- portunities of employment. They -will also be empowered to investigate the living conditions and the opera- tions of employment agencies, lodg- ‘ing house conditions, wages, sani- tation etc. BABES SATUBUAT Owing to the exceptionally mild weather the ice-races on 'the Clyde River Saturday were run off in half mile heats under poor conditions but nothing was lacking in the enthus- iasm of the horsemen and an enjoy- able afternoon was passed, There are several speedy horses in the virinity and their owners may well feel proud of them and no doulbt the public will hear further from them in the future. _ The 2.40 class had four entries namely llelle Ringwood, entered and driv`€°f'T"T)'y" James MacPhail; Minnie Parkside. entered and driven by C. Scott; Parklo Parkside, entered by Gordon McLean, driven by Boyd Liv- ingstone and Chief Jolly, entered and driven by Neil Darrach. Following is the summary:- CHN lil-*e593 Leos#-H l\7C»\7P“|¥ Nw»=~»-\ Belle ltiug\vood...._. Minnie Parkaide.._...... ...l Parklo Parkside..._.. Chief Jolly ...... The judges wcrs Angus C8II1€I`0l1. Angus McPhee and Austin Hyde, starter Neil McKinnon and Patrol Judge, Fred Beers. EITTANIIIAL STATEMENT .UT S. U. BATHEUBAL »- The following is the financial state-_ ment of St. Dunstan’s Cathedral for the year ending Jan. 31. 1913. HS read' by the Rev, Dr. G. J. McLellan, P. P., at the 10.30 Mass yeB1ZeI'dBY morning. It shows the amount of aentstiii one ns $19,150.31. which is a considerable decrease from last year. ' Tothl receipts for year $7.523-55 Ordinary expenditure .... __ 1,589.95 Balance applied to debt 6.033-60 srarnmsnfr. oIArHr§nRAL' DEBT bt _ . "‘l‘.‘§`$“?__fTf _ffl mn... Amount applied to l>BYm°“t °f 0 3 60 debt this year 6. 3 - ,_______-.__ . » ll J . 31 A'§Afi`§".t._.(_’.‘ ff? 19.150-81 connssssn rms, _ o |_s1's___ .08 To cisdirlcrnlon Ons cent per word each insertion in this column. Cash must accom- pany order. Minimum charge twenti' five cents. _ __________ saonsonfn sausaoms 'rr-In Brl_ls'r made. Fresh every day at Baun- ders, Newsom A: >Co.__ ARAUMFYL F011' 3_.iI.E-T tYDiifBDALE TAL- 11_0|1_` C;-gicfhmo __N`0. 2891. C, Taylor, Granville. 1-30M5ipd, old ' gr `I€lol;tein ull 10 J.‘§l’. Dingwall, lgortfh omr. to learn in pasta OWU- Uolll. -lie: A BASKET RESULTS [;m~°ne sure one menu-cue osrnivei 1='on"‘s‘A`r3a. 'rmwn Quarcremn ,, urn nun n inns Airnnn ,_ - (Canadian Press) ‘_ GONSTANTINOPLE, Feb. 2- The A Grand Vizier issues a statement de- nying the reports of fighting among the troops. The Tcholitja army declares the troops were never more devoted to ‘the fatherland than now. Sl.lBU.rUUU TIRE _ Ill SAUATTNAH. BA (Canadian Press) SAVANNAH, Feb. 2.--’l‘lie river front was swept by fire this morning doing $1,500,000' damage. Two business blocks were burned. No lives were lost. snnnn Mrxlcu = (Special to The Guardian) HAL'l}<‘AX, Feb. 2.-The French liner, Mexico, is still 200 miles away. The weather is very bad. She is ex- pected to arrive Monday night or Tuesday morning. SUUUETT UEATH EBUM PARALYSIS (Canadian Press) MONTREAL, Feb. 2.-Harry A. Price, Assistant General passenger agent I. C. R., died suddenly to- night ut the- Mount Royal sanatar- ium following a stroke of paralysis. (Canadian Press) the Crescents here Saturday night. ' Score 8 to 5. ll DOUBLE n n P TRAGEDY PARIS, Jan. 30-A double tragedy was occasioned here during the night; by a doctor's order that a man and wife would have to be separated ow- ing to the woman suffering from an incurable spinal disease, she going to a hospital. The sick woman was Marial Paul Carriere, the wife of a ‘ workmen in poor circumstances. Her husband sent their son aged seven- Y E uncle. The boy left his father and . mother distracted with grief at their coming separation. She expressed the wish to die rather than be sent away , from her husband. This morning both were found dead in their home, the woman strangled, it is supposed, by ber husband, and the man hang- ing dead. * llllllll HCEIEIITS, . C0ll||0‘ EYEIT5. IEETIIUS, ETC One cent per word each insertion in this column. Cash must accom- ____ B °_°N_ow’s,the time to t ou ;Arexi ‘oi-i"l'iiesiday evening. . Ask anyone that attendee the It URPQAVGI if they _snio ed lt. If dy will be at Prof. IBN NEW YORK, Feb. 2-The VACEOIZTB. Hockey team of Montreal defeated{ teen, to sta over ni ht with an rnew Street and repaid the meal fur- pany order. Minimum charge twenty- _tive cents. , ` the Arena to-morrow night. `”7°"' I The six! bigprsrctlca for the Chi- of Norma Bffudfo. Tuesday nlghtr at 8 p;-xl., sharp. ‘ All been notided and intend to 'be at Hall ~ --_--_-'__-'-__i rl; ii: Laura, me wen Known (Tanner, Suc- cumbsto Paralysis- -..-~ In the death ol W. A. Leard, which occurred in the Prince County Hospi- tal last night, about 8 o'clock, Sum- iuerside has lost one of its best cit- izens and the province a man who has won ia deservedly high place among its manufacturers. He had been ill for some weeks, having suffered repeated strokes of pural2si.s_aud the end was not unex- pected. I-le was 7_3 years of age and leaves to mourn four daughters, Mrs. R. J. Wood, Summerside, Mrs. Dun- can Nicl1olson,' Bedeque, and the Misses Hanna and Minnie at home, also two sisters, Mrs. Jesse A. Wright and Mrs. Solomon Bell, De- deque and one brother, Charles, Fern- wood. _ The late William Artemas Leard was one of the pioneers in the___lobs- ter canning business. Some eight years agn_ he opened a chicken can- ning fnctory in Summerside which he conducted with marked success his trade extending across the continent, the invariably excellent quality of his goods making his label thc syn- onym of honesty and real value. 1-lie way, grew to very considerable pro- ; ` _ business, although begun in a modest portions ig the last fcw years and was limits only by the qlwntliv Of material available, the demand for his product always greatly exceeding the capacity of his factory. In this line he fully demonstrated the value of a good name in the world’s mar- kets. As a citizen he was uilfiléht Bild honorable and he will he grelli-TY missed in Summersidc where he was best known. 'rue funeral win take place T\1°Bd“Y- the service at the home commencing at one o'clock and at the 1VlIetl10diB\1 Church at 1.30. Interment will be nt Bedeque. _ -_____.__.___.._- A SUPREME ERUBT _ At the Supreme Court, Charlotte- town. Saturday, the jury in the C1180 of Purdy vs_ Nicholson and others went out at 11.30 a.m. and rcllllrllfid with a verdict for the plaintiff to the amount of $100. The trespass case of Harper vs_ Egan will come ull this morning, McLean and McKinnon for plaintiff and H. J. Palmer for de- fendnnt. THE RTUER SEINE (Canndinxr Press) ILARIS, Feb. 2.-A rise in the riv- er Seine cnuscs considerable anxiety. The water threatens the subway working and engineers are building dams to protect the work. River navigation is at a standstill. STIFF SENTENCE AMHERST, J an. 30-On the fourth of January two young men invaded the home of Leander Trenholm, Ag- nisbed to them by stealing a. watch from the premises. They immediately afterwards left town, but returned to Amherst last Saturday. The police aonal description of the men, but they had hardly landed back here be- fore they were placed under arrest and after a preliminary hearing' be- fore tha stipendiary were sent up for trial. This morning they were brought before Judge Patterson and received a sentence of two years in Dorchester. BKATING CHAMPIONSHIPS MONTREAL, Feb. 1-The Canadi- an Outdoor Speed Skating Cham- pionships are being held this after- noon. The entries include American LLOYD-GEGRGE R frmrlihi lull PR'onilNENT cmzen runxlsl urlruru l-= lllllillll, CAUSES STIR,|smlmInrn1s of SUMERSTDE DEAD m.srlr|n_Lunun|l s--as* ~ Until Hostilities are Resumed and Army to Await At- tack. (Canadian Press) LONIDCN, Feb. 2,-The Porte has ordeied the Turkish delegates 1101; 1,0 leave London until hostilities are re- sumed and has instructed the army to await the attack without firing a' shot. The Balkans reject the ideif of Tur- kcly retaining any fraction of Adrian,- op c. Osman Nizemi Pasha declares that Adrizinoplc cnn resist indefinitely ten times the number of men the Bal- knns can muster and if war is resum- cd it will be a long struggle. The allies on the other hand expect to storm the fortress in a few days. nm nn noun lnusl (Canadian Press) NEW YORK, Feb. 2.-Two women were killed and eleven other persons badly injured in a panic following a small iirc in nn east side moving pic- ture lrmise. No damage was caused i`rom thc fire which was soon extln~_ guished, - BELEASEU UN STUUUU RAIL (Canadian Press) M LEAVENWORTH, Feb. 2.-Frm* M. Iiyan, president ,of the Intern tional Iron Works Union was sent to jail recently in connection with dyfg namite conspiracy cases but was re- leased this afternoon on $70,000 ball. 'Ho went to Chicago. BUBKET MATf.UES,, UNTARIU ABU UUEBEE (Canadian Pres) MONTREAL, Feb. 3.--At Montreal the Wanderers defeated Toronto 3 to 2. At Quebec the score was Quebec! 5. Tecumsehs 4; at Ottawa, Ottawa 2, Canadiens 1. ..___.€_-*_--_. _ BASEBALL PLANS (Canadian Press) NEW YORK, Feb. 3-Plans hava been completed for ,a world’s baseba tour by thc New York Nationals and Chicago American teams after the world’s series. They will start in Oct. had will end in Dublin, Ireland. The teams will leave San Francisco and will visit Hawaii, Japan, China, Phillipines, Australia, New Zealand, Egypt. France, England and Ireland returning to New York on March first. ~ SUDDEN DEATH- HALIFAX, Jun. 31-While in the Bunk of Montreal this morning, en- dorsing a cheque for $100 as his pen- sion for his part in the Fenian raid in the sixties, Matthew Lynch, of Fcrguson’s Cove, suddenly dropped had noghing to gliida them but pe,-_,r the pen, reeled and iell dead. One of his sous was with him at the time and Dr. Trcnaman was sent for to see the body. Mr. Lynch was 75 years of age and had been a fisherman for the best part of his life at Ferguson’s Cove. The order was lately issued that any who took up arms against the Fenisns were to ha/ve $100 pension. In a state of excitement old Vlatthéw rowcd down with two sons this morning and it is thought that he got over excited in the bank when _he was about to draw the money. Mina.rd's Liniment Cures Diphtheria . . E0 Y l`;_ 008-- » ' ready for the Garnivai in me The bodyvwas removed to Joszh Spcncer's, the funeral director. . Lynch leaves seven sons and three daughters. iiiifhl-iii 'llurf News D 'rnrrravrnvlanlnc 2=i@=»‘ii’°¢i§*e=F° °""*“"l .inn runs monninc = _ - --};w_Afymeu.~ *"°m‘;t2.:§.'r.%§.€.2;2::,”s.F°“‘”.ne.f»fH»»»;»»» "Good Roads, for ___,_ _, ,_ “_ - to Prince . ' v i _l r l » < r ‘» 1 »-:- @ . -\‘ -'mae' »~.-.iv 1 A . TQ . 1 __~‘ `i fi .< 2 E A A 5. if 1 rl -1 _ i e ,.-..., ae... .5411 f _ _ ,I _ \§ _ ‘\