‘- ocronian 5. i932 x ~§T0c1<_.g,‘1éo1v1>_.g QUOTA TIONS “inch/iyrraiva Inannr ‘$ s: ii ‘U R 0f Exhibition IN-EFFECT ON OCT I3 - - cm v - . i -- ' B"'"‘h L°“" o 131mm“ D ' I T a Pm With Britain To Be Made ‘ - $ -2 5 utles n ta e , , LONDON, Oct 4—5luch interest st- . . _ Public On Presentation To Parliament. jfeflii,§°,j,i‘§yd'éii"li“iii'ifiiriififiinif. ‘ ‘i?’ and the balance of the unconverted _ ' OTTAWA, Oat. Oct 4—’1‘he Csns- of Canadian iron and steel iinports war stocks. 5n::;e"f@“l‘u b“?°\;z"h';"g;axl: Gohgbetweqn9¢tr 1531“! 22 ii." .."'""="::":..:;i‘.: ..:':::':.':3::. .2’: ‘.::.':=...""..€"':::1 us" :i:::“r..i":.:. i. —-— Rev-m 11w w- 24 ‘"' ‘l’ ‘"‘ ' ' lcnll establish the British 14.110: ' st least six weeks when it will he plished by increasing the present Which 1"!" Y t bu“ E sdlourned until _la e in January. On British preference on some itcius and 10H"! 0" B 3V1 P" "c" - _ V y c A N A D I A N oct 118 tiiedtrade-tagligeeglelrlit “hfiltwegi; izgrellllli the general tariff on oth- uglfaglorflffigilglaygiiunhfiggz“ fin 2:» W e a p d d Cans a an rca r e , _ tabled in Parliament and made puh- Linens from Great Br-ituln will be 5”‘fffiiiirgisingfniiig-iiiifi‘13$. .J N A T o N A L lic simultaneously in London, al- placed on the free list‘ a substantial Tin 6&6" o‘ low" interest "t" is though the British Parliament does increase in the Britain preference l? ‘d In tho “oclsmn or the gm" a not moot until Oct 18. made on expensive worsted and tweed {B Bificombmutin" m mm“ £15000“ Tariff changes proposed in the cloth and certain cotton goods, while 061360’ a er cont ‘Mmnlnres nn-d re_ trade pact will go into effect in Can- cotton thread of finer grades from I -a the‘: Wm, £01”, n00 of 1 p" m“ immeéugte? ‘thet-‘I-Efqmexil: a"? 3322219112“ “l? “Mam . sci“: stock the (iii- uce being pro- -'.i‘he attendance at the market yes- is presenc o a amen , s grea er - - _ ' , ,, _ , d , . 1d d_ M _ the customary practice‘ followed to it is cexpected that them will he s ivgglegroiliiitkfi.fv i°o"%ler‘sa'"pstie'tfl"s; £13m“), 1:; "tiflkmzgor lfdvnllnmge ogntyhe “:31; prevent importers from taking advan- substantial increase in the British l a conceina mcrmw weather “m, Hana‘, U“ at)“ .___ tags of knowledge of changes to move preference on electrical equipment. "PB - _ Th b H“ “,9” n1, (‘comma and as __SEE T] E No l goods affected out'of hand or to rush Canada is s large producer an well as - ma” mzgnlng were on bum"! became I ~ qua-my Mill-m- them ffflllfi :2» nip-an bfittates 111g: :1 eLiti-ze] yilrglgzller frfdfizrtvhlgeve feign; K b! _ l vtain Beaver Coats at sinchairs. Canada a e pcrc eweea _ r s m a . - 1 t 75 t 1 '1 _ _ _ presentation of the treaty and its products, and st present these ex- S antamfgexllogsd Cain; e531‘? 1,561,381 5634 1° 5 31 ulnptlon by Parliament. ports are chiefly from the United ‘L25. Ducks so“, 1mm u m ‘L25’ i The proposed tariff lchaiugesk are Siilifll-tfimigllllhl; is undefrettiaod, sisd V 0mm“ “JULIO n" m1, m can“. and _HOUSE AND LARGE LOT ‘or “mu!” ‘Timed’ but i ' “own B"! a t 5 mun“ "c “f” o’ (Canadian Press) . rhubarb 6 pounds for 25 cents, lint there are nearly 300 items sffect- cutlery, delf, mining machinery, piat- “ONTREAL o“ ‘,__M, M1119 1n. The fonowh,‘ 1111c“ were quoted, 88.10 by auction a]; Kensingwn, 2 oil, or about one-third of the number ed goods and leather products addl- and," 1“o,,,1,,‘y-,1 “flavors n 10,11 or mm" __ ___ '__ ___ __ 23c pm saturda Oct a 7 1n (‘unaiilan tariff schedules. tlonal preferences, ass beg‘, “we mm o“ me-m.” Monp "‘ ' H ._,_ ~ - Y. - . rooms. .~"."":..:.‘:i'.:is:" :".2.""::1: hirsnxiz‘: ..ii‘.“i‘.?l§1f.’.§‘..i°.iii.€€iii“.ii‘""i'"i"; Pr» new“ ‘M’ "Pm "Desirable “we” I cc ' 1 . -' so e o . . f, - of, tac- iron a'nd steel producers of the consideration of Parliament trade “at g:;:e:°‘§:;‘ figlgrazd gas?!“ “ new High scmml- James L- Sfllmd" (‘anaila and the ilniieil Kingdom, agreements between Canada and 1.71 game m“, 11rd,;- Cnmmm, m gm" "éuffi; "‘ era. 5633-1q_5_w15_31 The abJi-et sought is to divert ii part iouthqiifinicahélhodfislnpzrzuil the lrish medlum Jeers “verzlflllétpd from s” to awn-BE - ircc i ae. er c. TFiliiflR arl- . a - ,1 "erg ‘be. 11 .1 Journment it is undersinml there will ‘aw “uh memm" w“ s .0‘ s ‘ _L v he revised trade agreements with Aus- S?“ wiflsfit‘: $$,4,6'“:,h§1‘_’:flnr sigtfs: Bcfzmégm _ _ ADIES- select YOU)‘ 1U!‘ CONS , _ esmzge first}, fgfxlnwluhtm ,7“, . PKCIYCEBCHCON‘! made lop oflttiflfi and Parsnips I 7c ‘mm Mr’ Mccraes samples Show“ lug acmmoflnu grmgpogwnh; efvff,‘ common to h‘lr butcher (cows were ltnilish ... ‘g0 ill 0U!‘ R9941)’ i0 Wear Department , . f.’ ._ 1w» l .. . ‘yenhundlnnd and the Brmah we“ ziggilgrtiiimgffifilioio igriisrfii-s‘ :0 ‘giillifi .. 5g on Thursday’ Friday and Saturday‘ n es. for the medium good to good quality (‘nulifimvcr lgc Sinclair 8a Stewart Ltd. lv s. Gaol ewes iiiul wetiers iverc lettuce. ii icililiaifnflilgiirgit $5 wiili the 111111111 ills; (ircen '1'0lili'iiOBB . 151111‘, 563440-541 1 count 0 . per cwi. nu euls hill Two lbs. ‘Pom-Ito .. .11. __- _ bucks, Shccli hrniiitlit 5i to $2, lingmhluiilirooins . 15c BUY THAT YOUNG b were $5 to $5.25 fc-i uuii watered for Squash . 3c a lb. oar- 50w (Canadian Press) c‘ those of good qua ,1", Pumpkin 2c a lib. or ram at the big sale in cparmtge. 5m h High Lo ole _.___ — —-_-- 'i‘uru ps .. Ahhtliii 0% Palm] 21/1 1% 15'»; (onnadum Prom Rhubarb‘ . um 25¢ town. October 11th. Oct. 5-21 Allififiii Gfnln ' , ‘ L d M k (‘ranwrrv 11-11 1r 1 . 2 101=y1011/ Tonoxro 0" 4— 0n 0n ar Qts 1- . .. 3301101 111111111511 1% 11 ‘ ll. ‘ Mm ‘ lffl- 11g}; 011g; , " icilllillztffii‘ (“WE A" PAYING $190 for 1i. c. ‘Power 22 22 c2 ,- ~11 -1 C G d Iloast licvf v ame eese- 1.25 f Lliruck sun A 4 4 '4 M“ - ,1 Bf} Ontlnlle 0O p Roast Lauih lilo ,0 d d8 ' s m‘ mmgrels’ (Tan Cement m‘ m, 44 o1 ,5 "E71 Ilpnst Pork 11c l1 e 1H our Den 8t Poriflse this 11:“ 1'11}! ‘waiver "llflgh 3gb A,” _ _ ‘£15 ~21‘ -2 ,Lo\_nov o? F“ t k {fgirilstriheaags week only. Just two cars required. 1 s - s. 1e s - - - (‘an Bronze 17 lii 10 3'20 ,1," "' 2V‘ 9/? 259 kets continue healthy, but gflfifiliilnilisfi 30""! 5mm‘ 10" signed’ C‘ M" Austin 55 0°- (‘iln Bronze 17 101/1 1151/1 ".37 M‘: ‘"5" I‘ 4 4 enterprise i; ¢1,,.,.k,.,1 1,‘. 1,11,13,11,,- Slr-iinvi Steak 1S1: 5640_1o_5_z, Cm‘ C“? ml‘ 0% 0% B’ (J 1,00 a n", no. no commodity price inovi-luaiiis and the (“If 14"" -- w" . Do Pfil .. . 17 17 17 311M310 183;" erratic tendency oi‘ the New York \"::1l Chnhs 1ii~i.'ie Ciin Cottous fd .. 42$! 48% 48% ~ in rk t, P i ~ 1| 1,, - . ‘Mackerel 10-1712 __, .- , (‘an rlyui-o Elec pfd a1“ m 51 gm,“ T’ 17 7 17 lngnt: lflii'O](10'i\“f“:‘fillm0i‘:< 461‘ WIKMCCRALJIM‘ Relmsema" (‘an lud Alc 2 2 2 60131231111‘; 7112/1 01% fluence here upon sentiment and as ant- tive, at Sinclair's Ready to Wear - 1on1: ne the tenilrnvv is lljiiVllfll ilic m" D t - .~ Cauigails . 11o: 10s 1o: > war “lent on T'11u1sdas' Fiida Dome . 1265 1265 12M ififiikffi”i§§°i.§iiii"i'im'i" \€'ti‘lliltilé‘ili:ec‘tpslilii Jiii and Saturday with a complete rang): Fnlcolilirlilge .. 210 101 201 ‘ ' ‘ I “ Gmilnd“ 73 75 75 vniigrliilynnwiliilswfipiimiivh on the Wall of u“ that 1S new in furs You will £3: gtluifim“ B golmiligcztf. 525 Fifi) finer: outloolilnml expects a resuiup- P0 t l N w save 1n val“? and g3‘; better “up - ..' n ... v . . 1mm Text ... qmwy no i):iDi'9eTli):r‘i\!O\iflloli01'thglricgigirrfl Orisiridr a e faction by smectmg a coat through llryiuu .. 12"“ rm“ - - 28 more ilnsetilrd Winter outlook howl: » Mr- Mcfirfle a: Sinclairs (FWNUHII lifii . @1290"; " 0% o evcr it is possible (he New York mnr- 5634 10 5 31 uura ' ~5 lr t‘ b. i ' ' ' ' éitlnw Smith pfd Qflffafiasfll" "' 12% 12 l? Df-ofilturikini; smifliilptndC0ligflqliyigiizs ' at Nickel . 101/ 101 1o “ ~ _ _ n ii . 11,,“ ,1“, Woods 7* 7f; 71;: McIntyre ... .. 182041425 182a 1,0,0 ,, “m! “ms for n “och (Canadian Low 0mm —MR. W. H. MCCRAE, represent. Massey Harris .. .. 4% 4% 41/‘) Momma n. H" 18% 18% my‘ “iicciilative revival lu oil Biiflf-"B n iiili d Chem " 79V W?’ 13139110 0f the largest fill‘ houses lil llont (gotten pfd ...' 70 Til 70 Mining Cor- ... ... 145 1N 144 late rise iliscounis the beuifts of the Anlcnlul 1i‘ Pow. “I it. 101/‘ 103’ 3km, 1o“. __ __ _ 30% 3,, 3,, figfigit Hail 0 0;?’ 2 menu,“ 1,, “e110, ,,,.,;(,q Am Snmmug - ~ m 18;, w“: Canada, will be at Sinclair 8a Stew- ' .. s ...-.... - _. . - 1- 1\_iit_ llrtu‘ . 111,4, 111/, 171/1 N ., . }i ‘{- 2", Loiiilon closely follows ull rugula- Am T and '1' 111-34 1121,5112, art's Ready to Wear Department on 3 bfccl Lar . I 1".‘ "llllefl - ~ -- 43/1 5A 5/: tious affecting the New York uuirker |Annc Copper 12y 13s,’, 1211;, _ . 0.11pm; 111,1 __ _, __ 1 110 110 gmifiillllng - ~ -- and tlie- proposed stringent control Atchison 55V: 53V, 55% nlulsday’ Friday and Saturday 0t (Inigo? ... Norm Cnfmifz- "" as” 3,," 35' grsllzuaxai: sis ptrovroklufi Aubugn giotor 5301M 53% this W861! with B. wonderful ShOWIHg , -- -- - - - . ' n urea (1 1 ‘_ ___ "u 30‘ m) m) Eiisucosntollu ... 135 manipulation nlui excessive spllglllig- fmltrnit .ry 17 10% ill, or Ladies. Fur Coats in an the §,',‘§,}",“,§fi"" - 17% “V! 1,”! Shcrrlttui. 14 ma“ ‘gzwlrfgiiiligricrzrnssaileiuanie “from (‘use J. 1 "my. .21‘ an; 13,1. leading styles and furs. It you are . - 1 \ .\' . .‘ . . - L.’ '.. {Steel o‘! C ' 2i. 21 .... . n thought tho task of bringing nbou: ijgiciifinStilltguis o é considering buying B. fill‘ COM‘, 1i? Will will.‘ .2122" " t".t..:s:°;".':. iaimizrei. 1.122121 1- “"1"” M“ " Si"! “"51" -- "ii difficult ou the oiiur 111ml vcoiilililr"; m“ a ' 5534-19-“31 - - . . ~ ~ 1 . (r 1' li'is ~ “we ii-ii“'i'ifirica . . 2.2%,?":ii':i"..:"i..:i':i.."&.2.:;:::s.ii: 21'5"‘ “ - ——— Trciiilwell . . . 111i 12.1 1'15 ‘v1.1.1, ,,,,.,,,. 1,, " " "mm" Canaiiicnne .. .1.'inf};1.'i0-’\1 130*); Vacuum (ins 8 7"’ 8 vlthi - I“ o" PM‘ ‘mmmrt L“ Drug Iuc Cnummrce _ m" m", m“ vlpond Co" 8 8a B y" limunh’ {Indian vines not imlicre Ensimuu liuili 1,,,,,,,,.,__,,, m7 1m wane Ad," ‘n u. 05 65 lholonera. ins ull he prohibited cn- Gen 151cc Nuvii S- ti. 2 \V| h; 11 __ __ r . — o3- Gnn Ifooils 1,,,_,.,,, 1 a‘; mfvfr m $0 23s "m Gen Motors (Contnued from Page l) Total sa Q1311, 11nd; liolllnger ... _ _ int iiurv‘ iii? 1 Alum“ ' Iciiprliiolui with the flrmest determination ~ Car .\lal ... 1 . ~< - BO ND S i‘; £21620 gfx-fwigfii“: "Japan must quit the League Nonnwdn __ c Mr nor Am .. . The report insults Manchukuol" ' Slscoe .. ‘in ‘l7 “oqq-REQE" 0'1‘: ‘TF1: gene“, ;°,'“"s‘"; Si"? were the headlines in the ricwspap. Tack Hughes . . ... . ‘. n‘ ‘ ' —‘ "‘ ‘e ' ' (c 1| l, V, I _ rrucr tone prevailed on the prniluit‘: Rpdio e1- N111 N1 11L 110NT111.1A1‘:_nm n3ct"-')4__Mnmren] pond '"' 27 '3' 37 nml dairy mark-rt here (Milly, liuitnr 1191-111 c I c The Kokumm said‘ prices of Dominion of Canada Ilonils Total sales 265000 shares ',',§";}“°°"," quark‘; rot a Tm M 21 Sum on Dr 1t was absolutely prejudiced and un- ' - . 1 ecu s n pouiu or caf-ots or less Tex Gulf ... .. 11111;" The 11111 5111mm 531d 1t was T" E""‘"‘ 1mm‘ “"14"?” 3i.$10‘i.§§§§f"1§r§'§'“§e=§°§i§f§'i.13$? giihgiltrunrgllille~ ,1 . "worse than was expected" and 1 Ab u." I gains of one to two ccuis being rc-I l'u Cnrp . .. 11% 1 . ill,’ u 6% 1 Nov 103a .. 10,3510 ‘i353 mruiiisscurl" M‘ If‘: W1 rnrcieil_ nroiui Ontario extras were 1i s Ruhbei- 7 e51, 1’ ‘med with °"°"-" 5 l him- 1937 _ 110 on 110'" C0,, 11m, 1' quoted iii: 33 to {i5 cents, firsts to 2i Vanadium . 18% l8 i8 "Th6 T613011; is ignorant and d15- bia 1 Doc 10:11 10s'2~ 1 '-L (‘oulour ' "/4 4% 4% to as rents and seconds m. 1c in 11 u s Steel . 4:11., 401/, 411' . ‘ . u 08.4.1 6mm agate-r; .- . boo cents n dozen‘, Fresh prairie extras Westinghouse {i715 35% 35;’ iOftéd, filled with empty tlieorizini: 111x111“, "m" 111,101.11,“ " "‘ 1,10 519g flflifiegts-i? (In {l3 ccluts, flrsts ut Woolworth .... 401/1 30% 30%. and disregards history," sold the “ ' 1' ' ~ -'| ' lllH HCPOIIKE t f 1 sit. 1 Nov 1on2 . 100 o0 leor gziiilisllgil‘ so 3 53 r2 ionmi "Minn! “we H" “I?!” Firm“ {newspaper Asam "It Wm be 1m- 51 1 _ _- ' 1 -- I nus iirnci u\' rl \L1,- _' . . ‘f; 1 §§,‘,',1°,':f,o giitiilmgkiglay .. 10:1? aso IiSIIItnlIii-i pcr s0 ‘Llimfii ‘luv’; iiirr-giiliiiill-milé ossible to establish world peace if f ,5 . . _- -l .. . 10.15 10:0 (‘Pllfil mm \i nt l r .~ ‘\- Ins, 1e ado ts it." ‘in lfiogctla-itfifu m”? 1°3"'5 iii?‘ limilainny " 5" 51’. P" S" lieu"?! lihiqiggs llqfillceiiili: ThJ g‘ ' p - I 41,5 1 1e01, 1,1,1“ _ Notify; ver 41,5 4 41,1, clinuireil, Ontario's bet _ qllfltfifl. m 11. e rorfifin o“ “e a"'ma‘lcd 4 1 0,11 111,10 01:75 96-00 PM“, on; ,8 "a: "it Li’! l? cents fillil Qillrilfleffl at iiilfé in, ‘Jlilitliih Rfid J-"Dflnesc copies Of i110 m“ ' Pnnin Pete 12,14 11',‘ ,2! ,,},,f.‘_,"'s “ 1‘°““"- "(Winnie “are 11,011 aioxwlii-Lir» Oct -i-~llr urn - Conversion I Rllynliic "- ‘ '. . ‘ " ‘r. .- 1 1 ' 1 .1, - 1,, 1 w“ N, .3” ...0.~..,..‘:*-";!:;-.1:,»,~-,., ,. =_'_:.'.i.':..."."..'.i.'.:i? :;..:;;i.':. 3:: who rumor“ m1 Ecllerwhim, ‘i,’ l 47-1-30 ... .. g1 31 ,,,11,,,, “.,.5,,,,.,, N“ 3'35, (“Hrhfy (wax: 1] llnnk of f‘au:ulu, closed today which W11] sum)“, coq-ps to the , . _ '- II ,1 . ' 11g n -, . . , ‘ 1' ‘ ‘z n uws: _ i n --' 9W7 - -- 55 MIA 2i", (lifllljiliiflgiiiifiiig ‘r11, 2:’ Australia pound .'i.OI'.’4. Mpnvhnkno o" MM‘ 1* “"5 110i ‘ ' -s ' ‘ ' v ' ‘ ' ‘ -' - ,1: u - s - ° 00.75 100.50 Mm“ 6435;,Un1)l(:l‘lcyd agginrlelsot ifliii, w)" Fllivliir, seconds ~i .. "lri111- “"119",: ;'_;:,,',f'n'_‘-'§f"?t~ “Mud izeieizrapheri i0 1V1" Y ‘ii-B - . - . - - .- <‘ - .. ,, ~ . m“ banana] serfl” Lmm “i; l Sh I ', u 8' choice Fldiliicruh ii-‘dinriintigé? Ixmgmm Mn.“ (H527- even a summary w“ v’ 5 ,5 NOV 103“ 100% a “Tarri-‘aéiluii’; 5am? 3,100" Mines 13; lirun ton 17 ' ‘liurL-v i011 H.15- _\1'i,1_' 37mm ,'" 1'1"“ (“$1M VOlllifiiimilS. fi m N“ m“ 103.75 185.112 . c .41.». Total 22.1mm. illlilila mu 1:01:71 oats iiui: no "“"""" M‘ 3mm’ ‘ l, .... ... ... __. . 11m. 2.60, [my No 2 Mr m“ cnr1o“ (“liinn linug hour: vii-liars fi...i'.l".'l . - - - ‘he. luraliia crown 00320 Dominion of Cnnnil G 1 \ (“m3 . 10.50, Clioesvc Ouiarin ii to 116; Cheese 1o,’ vhf)?“ k o] ,7 ~ - "hind Will lire»; . . "'1'" “m” "d (iiuflrzifgsnfifklfi "m?! 911$," lcfiiiiiiilirriiiiiixi-‘k oiiiyri. 1pm“ v" ‘ " ' ii car nus .. : France fruua Onifii C. N. it ~41 M!!!“ froni .t : - c" . ‘ . ' 1.,‘ N. RI. M? 1x231 "m" m: ‘Egénflinmllzl-ge lti-zimflfrlflili Germany ri-icliniuarli 0.2M." (‘. N_ it. l-lilks storage firsts 27- Potatoes illfififielarlmi",lm.§'}§§,i,-3's°" GENEVA’ Oct‘ 4—Th3 Chinese (‘. N_ 1 B. green mouniai 801i Y _-. ‘I ' ‘ ""‘"‘ ' "' ~ i,‘ “mm mmml ‘cglm 8-0 r510, Po "M91866 governmient wll taint fine Lytton. -. ' ' ‘- "- mmi-BSOHSIEDO n uhitwas go N- oT.1-'“v\ 0 1 n _ India rupw 01-288. 1,.’ N_ Rheum‘ ‘In. reigémdcttro; 12101111111131‘! lrialy 1i_....‘<i anticipated in League circles today. :1. gféirllemnci-lkegimuomr:,,,|,.,.,. ,,,,. "kn," {Ohm The acceptance, however, will be - e- ‘m! ‘oflay. 0 iho principal ccn- “illgislspiaiaiallly prefaced by the observation that thaggl(;'é\'lggn—‘;l‘liis m: market con- 13o1,,,,',,‘ ,,,‘,,,, 015,-, “' China considers the establlshmeni 3,1,1“, Oman“) zggafiiflifo "ggwsfllgghf; klli\up(ii.ii"fi2i5"0fl5 of Manchuria autonomy as s. "su- rnnde on spot at i-xiru» 20-30 firsts i " " ' meme sacrifice in the interest of - 25-20. sccnnds l1-(lclii-crecl liar un- Spln MEN“ 0'08” s . ~ ,_ graded shipments flflfilflv‘! in. ,,. “wdon km“ 0-195“ 179M397’ F91- sc-M. or B 1 flu t Switrcrlw-wl frwne a 1 .. .. . . . ' u1-11s__131._ ng producers an ountry h] _ . , , 111cm". Eclectnc on m It. extras 27 firsts i_ summd: U. S. drimr in p 4 nmium m 1 s ndard aioxwnnan-unr recniptg m", ,0, a DEATHS _ ' 4 otnuacdfid.“ :10 Pfbmpt Lrgutmgng gig" “éiillgiiliaigncailcs as comranyred to I 1111 1711mm n. he l. t a corcspon ng day IASTER- ' mo“! Bu“ Ln" Ch" power quickly loom“ the mml-ullllnd ‘aszoytlarh £111.11" dfilllwe snlfiqrm" d At North Wilihhiie, 0n A1111‘! (‘ynn n __ M, m M a,“ a speedy mo" r at n car or WMtM-n egg; n, gum. 9;, es ay. Oct. 4, Mrs. Wm. Easter, Amer Sup Pow .. ,, 411,41 (1% m," FY mm i-hfl lfi- seconds 17 delivered for future ship.‘ (Canadian Press) 182d 92 years. Funeral from the. gs u and m a .. - W, Jury. It is also an excellent remedy men; WINNIPEG Oct ~i-—il1‘utures quo- _'"II Marconi ,, _, 1m. 1111 mum" o! out. . RALlFAX-While egg rccelpfs- here tations)-— ' ' residence of her son’ Edison Easter’ i=ti%s,n§e:'|3e|§h__ 1% ‘pram. u we“ u ‘or Bmbrll-ises and 11.1120 ggeiiinsalfill; uugr-“r m, 4.5mm; 1 caosn Thursday. Oct. 6, service starting at ,,,,, 0,, __ __ gm W“ m!“ 1mm M ‘ml “'1 "u. Prices are 1111-11 "0': tiimigi Wheat: 0c: ions; u“ sons; Dte 3 °'°l°°k- Interment. North Wilt- nt Pets ,, ,_ .,, 1° amnnmm 9! trades and dealers are now quotinii 536A t0 ‘>6: Ml? 5554A- ihlm cemetery. m ml-li d“ ... m“ WHO!!! kinds. A 130N191! $110 b01189 :"'l“a‘;a";fl lfriirl country shippers ex- guts: Oct 241/111; Dec 2mm; Ml! .' . n . , 1 1' I ~ rsts 11-19 seconds 11-12. . on x, "id ‘"518 "W! mlfly a doctor's sr JOHN-With ‘receipts quite Barley: on 2m: we 2014A; May n Lt Pow A é a M Plans i For 77w ureiliiaici l my. /.//. / 1| 12% 9% and veterinary! fee, I. ilv wwi/ i,“ i\i,,,,,,,,, l, .. - - im. H 1/1/ n//,,, ,., //,, WNW/H“ , "IV! the Iegg market here is quiet sad unchanged, Paying prices to pro- dneers and country shippers are ex- tras 28-26. firsts 11-18, seconds 11-12. YESTERDAY? 29% B. (‘ASH PRICES Wheat: No, 1 hard 00%; No. 1 nor 40%- l\‘o. 2 nor 47X; No, 3 nor- (i); No, 4 rinr 41%: No, i5 411,1; No. ti 31%; lfiizd 88%; Track 49K; No. 1 durum Oats; No. 2 C, W, 2H4: No. 8 C. W. 22; Ex l feed 21%; No, 1 fed l1; No, 2 feed 10%; {vcelpts 16!‘: Track 211A. k 0 M7 "L CURB (Ullldlnn Pro ) ltookl Ills‘: Low Close B. A. on ... .. 1 1m 1n gsuymog .. .. 2 2 s or ow fd 7 . Catelli pfd .. '31 T; 7-81 Dist Song m‘ 11y, 3% - 111w 0" 9% 01/. 1W. Imp Tob .. ‘s’; "y, ' ", -lnt Pete 1i". 11 Boil (‘an Povr 8n an Walker ... m m4, Dofl ,5 neveral European an» 18%: Track 21%. Airtificia‘. eyelashes are v 1:: in a THE CHARLQTTETOWN GUARDIAN Record Low Fares -_To__ Halifax Too Late To Classify FURNITURE llI-JPAIRED, UP- hoistered and refinished. Hemp- hiil 6a (ludrnore, 219 Kent 5t. Phone 044. ‘ 5635-10-5-31 "Yes, isn't it strange that whcn a §I"i$."5 'ii‘.'f..,‘ii"'§'é °",°‘§.°‘. WP" B" "m" "W “lb their Other grams Nn_ a (‘. . 24- N5. 4 c, limbs with snow until circulation is W 23%: Na, d (‘. ii‘. i o, 8 C. W. rutond-Pu Benevolent Old Lady: "But what. do they do with the poor people in summer-Photos) mm JENTRAL GUARDIAN This is reserved for news, hnt advertisements of s news character may be inserted at the rate or 4c. pes- word, strictly payable in ad- vance. ' l MRS. DOIIERTY speaks again today in the annex at this store. Another free‘ distribution of prize ' tickets and prize drawing. Iiectiue at 3.30. Moore 8t McLeod Limited. | 5636-11 ‘TEE—M1'. M. F. Tompkins, Mone- iton, General Traffic Manager for {the Atlantic Region of the c. n. a. . , arrived. in the city yesterday on in- vitation of the Charlottetown Boar. of ‘Trade to discuss with s commit- tee the grain freight rates from Charlottetown to other Maritime, points. Messrs . J.' W. Boulter and Hibbcrt Howatt, the special committee will confer with Mr. iTompkins this morning on the sub- ‘ ject. MRS. J. J. TRAINOR of 66 Prince Street was the fortunate winner of the pretty Bed Set 1n the prize drawing after Mrs. Dohertys, ,lecture at Moore 8a McLeod Ltd. 'yesterday afternoon. ELECTION TALK (Contained from Page l) rules and even Robert Gardiner, chairman of the Progressives, has 'no other prerogatives in debate than belong to the ordinary private member. He must conform, for i11- stance, to the 40-minute rule from the restrictions of which Right Hon. Mr. King is free. ELECTION TALK SILENCE!) While the (Io-operative Common- ‘nvealth Federation has not availed to secure its leader any status in the House of Commons, it has gone a long way in silencing the talk of a general election, which has -becn not infrequently heard in po- litical gossip. The view taken on Pariament Hill is that there is no felling how for a. radical movement might go on the Prairies at the present time, and the Government is taking no chances. It; will go t0 iits normal term unless some un- ‘forseen developments intervene, ‘trusting that in the interval the Imperial agreements will have ac- lcompllshed enough for Canadian |agriculture to end the farmer's long winter of discontent as well as the mushroom growth of new move- merits and parties. Rt. Hon. Mr. King, from the Lib- eral camp, is not regarded as hav- ing thrown any bombshell into tIhe political arena. by his recent Sea- forth speech, the tendency here is in interpret 1i: simply as further evi- , deuce of the fart that Mr. King is in opposition, iis content having ‘consisted largely of a. resurrection ‘of the promises and policies which ‘have lain dormant on the Liberal ‘shew during the party's tenure of power. Mr. King had virtually nine years in which to accomplish him.- seli the reforms which he now says to be so necessary. 'I‘i1ere is some comment upon the Liberal leader's omission of anv mention of Sen- ate reform, but it ‘s presumed that he is saving that plank until closer i0 the election. i On the other hand, there are r0- ,,,,.1 , report today to the Jap.,m.se com ii lcal observers who see sound Lib- Ycrai strategy in Mi‘. Kiflifs 531111" to break new ground, they take it as, indicative of his intention to ‘hold the Ccnsmvatvcs mainly re- sponslbie far their prom ses to end ,uncmp cymcnt, and they believe ‘ihat so long as he cleaves to this |issue the Lfoergl Lader will not ibe on dangerous fighting ground. I MUCH COPZTEOVERSY LOOMS Altogether, the prospect is that tho up," ‘of con; ‘i able political controv- ercy, not the nonpartisan affair which the business of ratifying the Conference agreements might sug- gest. Premier Bennett has indicated his desire to keep the Conference work out of politics, but it Ls un-, likely that he will reailze the sm- bition. For the Progressives to ad- mit, even tacitly. that Mr. Bennett has made a success 0f the Confer- ‘ence would be tantamount to ack- mowledging the ability of the Con- servative party to satisfactorily re- present the Prairies. This, so long as self-preservation is the first law of life and politics they are un- likely to do. The Liberals are sim- ilarly situated. They are threaten- ed with being ground between the upper and nether miilstones of a radicalism in the West for which they are not sufficiently advanced and a Conservatism in the East for which they are too radical. m the dilemma, they can be counted ‘upon to right strenuously whenever favorable opportunity for improving their position arises. l ‘Iii-sin bandits are wax-sting in Allisaih. SCIENTISTS Astronomers Askt Russian An iii HUNT um, insiuiiiuiis, PAGE FIVE iuiiEiiPinYFi iissiiciiiiinii MEETING -HDLB A meeting of the Unemployed Association was held lest evcnin] at the Strand Theatre and was followed by the initiation of a large number of members into the new WILL CONFER. WITH COMMIT- I French G0vt’s. Toi The president, Mr. Peter Mor- Heavy D a m a g e seas-n _ reaching session will be one‘ NEW YORK, Oct. t-Investiga- tiori of several recent falls of met- eors, those spectacular chunks of , iiron and stone which wander into the earth's atmosphere from dis- tant skies, is to be undertaken - shortly by several scientific bodies. Several million meteors fall to the earth daily, but almost all of them are harmless 1n the state of powder i 1n which they amuy reach the; earth's surface. A few meteors, however, survive in part the burn- i lag up process which travelers from I outer space undergo when cruising | through the earth's atmosphere, and ‘ strike our globe with many des- tructive after effects. Two such visitors from outer space have caused considerable damage, it is believed. The International As- tronomical Union, according to The Philadelphia Public Ledger, has asked the French and Russian Gov- ernments to send Elfpfliif-“dis into the Sahara Desert and into s re- mote region of Siberia lo find out about these dangerous meteor falls. The French expedition would have to journey some 300 miles in- land ‘from the Northwest Atlanti coast of Africa, into the Adror re- , gion of the Sahara. Nearly nine years ago French colonial troops emerged from the desert with news i that they had discovered a meteor 325 feet long, 125 feet wide and its third dimension concealed by the fact the mass lay partly buried in the desert sands. A piece of met- eoric iron was shown as evidence 0f their find. Yisitors Find No Trace . Travelers visited the region in which the find bad been reported. in the vicinity of the native village ‘ of Chinguetti, but could find no, trace of the meteor. However, the I winds of the desert are forever‘ | shifting the unstable sands, and it was concluded the meteor had been concealed from view. If the meteor really is there, it is of enormous scientific interest, for nowhere else in the world has so large a. meteor ever been reported. Even if dunes have concealed the meteor, it is hoped that by use of magnetic instruments its position § can be discovered. Once located, it ’wouid be a matter of merely dig- qing away a. few feet of sand. If the story the soldiers told is true, that 11st meteor must be a vast mass weighing something like a million tons. No such elusive search await-s the expedition the Russian Government has been asked by the flsironfmlefs to send into Siberia. It is definitely known that on June 30, 1908, lights flamed in the sky over a point in Central Siberia 400 miles north of the ‘lranssiberian Railroad; roarings were heard more than 600 miles away, and a native dwelling three days‘ march dis- taut, saw the top of his but biflwn off, the hut knocked down and his ‘brother stunned. Another native, only twenty miles from the scene, Tieard a frightful noise like an ex- plosion, felt heat more intense than he could stand, and was flown from ‘his porch and six feet away- A baf- iograph at Kirenslr, 300 miles dis- tant. recorded the air waves. When the Tungu natives of that sparsely settled region went to see what had happened, they found that over an area two miles in dia- meter o. shallow depression bad been pushed sidewise, as happens when a stone is dropped in mud. They came upon more than 200 shell holes, or craters, from 3 to 15o ifeet in diameter, with steep sides- already filled up with ooze from the mountain and forest swamps. Tens of thousands of trees, for miles around, had been destroyed. They were stripped of leaves and bark and seared as by a migiliv torch. These trees lay with their tops pointing sway from centres where apparently meteors had struck. Crater in Arizona an Example One of the most impressive evi- dences of the frightful destruction that can he wrought by such s. hom- bardment from outer space is in the United States. This is Meteor Cra- ter in Coconino County in Northern Central Arizona. It was long sup- posed ihat this crater. 4,200 feet in diameter, was evidence of poet vol- canlc action. Then a Philadelphia mining engineer, Daniel Moreen Barringer, prcvctl that it was cans- ed from above and not from below. He published a notable paper on the problem in the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Balances of i i ness the meeting adjourned. .011 Independence Square. organization. rison, presided, and in opening the meeting explained that a member- -sbip fee was charged to maintain , an office and manager. He explain- ’ ed that s benefit show and hockey matches would be held during the whiter in order to supply funds for the needy. Mr. Daniel Coughiin, secretary o! the L. P. U.. made a strong plea for enrollment of members, and made s motion that the president and members of the executive wait on the Government and Ciiy Coun- cil to find out what steps were being taken regarding relief work and that a copy of the resolution be sent to the local Government and the City Council. The matter of an entertainment to be staged by the Unemployed Association was referred to by the president. The executive intended visiting the Government and the City Council. He felt that 600 men had considerable influence in the city. On motion Mr. William Mac- Farlane was added to the executive. A vote of thanks was extended to the merchants who donated to the Association the secretarial Equipment and to Mr. C. J. Gal- lagher for the use of the Strand Theatre. It was moved by Mr. Harry Walsh, seconded by Mr. Joseph Kensiow, that the resignation of Mr. Earl Riggs from the position of treasurer be accepted. ' '_ Mr. Wm. MacFarlane was ei- ccted to the position of treasurer. F°11°W1n8 adjournment members were initiated by the president, and membership cards issued. Regular IVIont/ily Meeting C. L. The. regular monthly meeting o: the Catholic Women's League was held in the Knights of Columbus H1111 1m evening. The President, Mrl- F- J- Casey Was in the chair and opened the meeting in the us- ual way. Rev. Sister Perpetua and Sister Benedlcto of the Franciscan Sister: of the Atonement, of smoky Lake, Alberta, were present and spoke on their work 1n the mission fields of the Wesii- The)’ told of the need of good literature, of clothing and church supplies, and asked to have supplies sent. at intervals to them. A letter from the Sisters of the Sacred Heart Home, thanking the League for $421.00 from m.‘ Exhibi- tion meals, wss read. This money applies on the debt of the building, not the maintainance. The report of the Diocesan Cori- vention was given by Mrs. J. ~B. Fleming. Committees were appointed‘ to look after the Collegiate Club for the month of October. Mrs. A. C. Cullen was appointed Convener oi the Social Service Dept. Activities for the coming months were dis- cussed and upon completion of busi- Philadelphia in i906 and another in the Proceedings ct the National Academy of Sciences in MOS-both can be consulted in the library of the American Philosophical Society Phila- delphla. Barringer pointed out that the crater is underlaid by horizontal strata of limestone and sandstone, proving that volcanic action lino’ nothing to do with its origin. Yet this craters rim rises 125 fcct above the plain, and from that rim one can look down precipitous cliffs to a depth of 500 to 600 feet. Barrlngefs suggestion was that perhaps a SOO-Ioot mass weighing c. million tons had struck. 'I‘i1e best; modern opinion holds that it is probable, as Hal-ringer also surmis- ed, thai; a great number of individ- ual masses struck together. 4r H‘. Win11 "At until it ‘a '1 iJ5fl_ :‘, _'m'1 , EUMAT -. 111s?