- ,;»c.'.-'u _ _ _..... _ _ __ _v_ '_ ~:_ 's-"»:~~.'r'."- - l;-_» -'~ “x -"lf xi-\""f" "l __ - ' 'I3 uf - ""‘ 1' ' -" - - _ - 1 fs _ -_ - l 1 _-___ of ui '. - ’»'-f-_.~':__f,-1 _ ‘ »_' ,..' .1 »..‘ y F, - 4'-' -'.- ' * . ;'."< '.__*4r,;7/_j f _ _ l ,_ _'.~i_- _., _ , i 7 ' ¢ I I I I I I I i 5 ,_ fa 5 -,- I _*Il ?:_\ ‘O xx/ ~~ L ar'-. 1- ' ,¢ e »f if .' \ ',;' Nfl '-;-- - Y' 3-_=-°°I°BER 22' 1°” 'rl-la él'1ARLo1"ra'rowN GUARDIAN ' PAGE FIVE §lI’r0minent _,Liberal 3 K-ing’s Speedy. yScores .-5.54-. _.1 fDrops Bombshell In Liberal Ranks I - By Denouncing King Govern- I ` ment’s Betrayal Of Public Inter- B MacDonald Asks Queltlon P I ` Prime Minister Ramsay MacDon- FFT. i _ :Allis ests. a ~‘.‘ J. rl. smnuasou. csnnllsn `!>res» starr writer . In "` normon, ont.. oct. ar-no suffering. _fmanding s generslpurging of the fldberal porty's attitude toward thd EBeauha.rnoil project. Harry Sifton. ggarominent Toronto Liberal, last :night issued a public statement. alter listening in Rt. Hon. Mac- n onlie King, in an address at tho|a Eannual convention of the Ontario th p _ gjtlberal Association, defend the re-'campaign funds. "It did. liowever.‘T ' ' I' Mr 'Ecard of his government in approv P g the navigation plans oi Beau C 9‘nar-row and technical" and the liaminisrratlpn had "betrayed useItool _ Biublic interests. . . - and broughtwthe least, a thoroughly unwortl-ly.th_ Qbout the present nation wide dis- citizen to be closely associated with frmght “nd passengers f°" their "e' present nation wide dissilluslon- Q _ nt under which the party is now nsNoUNcl-:s lvlcnouasnn °l°ll“1 Railways has been establish- ed The Beauharnols cunu-nittee dill te ove to the satisfaction of the . Kina. and the chief executive I illlusionment under which the party the making of the policy of the Sp _:pow 1. sunermgf. Liberal pm.ty_.. _ therefore, that the nationally own. “Weeks have gone by since that ed _'_' Mr. 8ifton’s statement, issued at fthe conclusion of Rt. Hon. Mr. committee met. “Mr. Siftorl declnr- es gingb speecl1, when it was said onxe __ is behalf, that he had been re~|Beauharnois grown as a. political‘se“g°rs and °btaI"ed °"g° mr gused speaking privileges from the issue. I have travelled across Can- m Qalatform, was as follows: _ a a- since those disclosures and ~- e _,i ype Dr ‘ WAS DISAPPOINTED t - h I “I listened with deep disappoint-I . ` lent to the le-marks of our leader _ w King, which can only be in- the power liven him by Parliament a ftlerrepted as an effort to justify on to §'§he narrowest technical and which Beauharnois exists and to re giegai grounds what is, in fact, a Egsclltical blunder of the most des- investor, who would otherwise lose di gpructive and far reaching charac- h Titel. a "Writers like the late Lord Bryce _tion and power development on the _ in Itnd Mclvor never tired of warning _Qu _ ifdemocracies against what is called i éths money power. They mean or-‘iso '£°'“Il'I°m exmtli' me that which _Pointe m 1927 and 3° happily 39' fectlve immediately. Commenting his would be to wpply the policy d_ "und more md more has well as this continent, booked pas- : Ib al return for this concession the ih- o L er minded citizens MoDougsld out of the party,I°p ould urge Mir. Bennett to exercise im-buroe the honest, independent C is investment, and to take over as C national work the entire naviga- m ebeo section of the river, To dn clearly enunciated' by Mr. La- fo put over the Beauharnois pro- i>l'0i/ed/by the Liberal Government on -posals.” of that day. tw Mr. Lapointe, in 1927 had made a. "Tho I-iberli party in Ontario ,u-,__ speech in the House of Commonstmust go to the public with clean an setting forth views of the Liberal|hands. D1°0miSih8. with a sincer- ‘th party on water power. developments !-ity which cannot be doubted. s full do on navigable rivers applicable toiiovestigstion into the activities of _V the St. Lawrence River. The prirl- John Aird_ Every dollar which ciples laid down by Mr. Lapointe, he receiv_ed from Beauharnois must m said Mr. Slfton were in no wsyIbe traced to its final cket destroyed or rendered in spplic-I Canada. This speech reassured the whole Dominion that before the dreams of the power trust could be consumsted it would he necessary for canada's Federal Government to approve of plans for the con- struction of that work on the* river and with the government at ottawa, holding the views express- ed by Mr. Lapointe. and a Parlia- ment drawn fromgell parts of Can- \ ada deciding the terms upon which. any such development would take; place, the public interest was bound to be protected. _ “To the shocked amazement oil the Canadian people, without not- ice. without explanation, after the Legislature of Quebec and the Leg- isuaturo of Ontario and the Hydro Commission had been re- duced to the position of serfdom to the power trust. the Liberl Govern- ment under Mr. King consented to tion plans submitted by the power lthlst, supported by its servants, the Quebec Government, the On- tario Government and the ontario Zfllydm Electric Commission bc- trayed the public interest, abdlcat- esm, position taken by Mr. La- pointe, and brought about the - When YourCough , Hangs On, Mix This at Home , “L For coughs due to colds. the best remedy that money could buy can easily be'mixed at home. It saves monei and vel you the most reliable, quid -act- ll medicine you ever used. he wly It filet hold of ltubborn cougiid. INDI Immediate relief, is sstonish ng. _ Any drugst can suvlliy N0" W"-1' gr ounces Pinex. Pour this into I ol. bottle, sad till up with Dill" rlnullted 'augur sgrup or strlilldl ` Boney. its no trou is at all to mixi- ', d ll it, ou wil lu w en ou once use y never be wItllout it. Keeps rerfwtli und tastes good-children reel v lilfei It il lurpriaiu how uicbly this loosen: tlls rmgleden llllliwlly lllli soothes the illllamed mslltbranss. At the some time, part of t e medicine is lllsorhsyinto tgle lbloodsmbgrebeit sctldirec onto rouc a ll- flnd llel the system throw at the -facie ¢'Kul>ls. lam time were coughs whllcll fslelgw cold epidemics, “;Il,l?xmI;¢e’ lIi='ili§'colicentrated com; N i tai i £2352 2'.-it-i".ll‘i...H'.°‘l'.‘. .'.§f.£%. pslmbls form. Norris: hm g medicine is. more helpful in cues severe coughs and brobuehisl irrl ons. Do not |lr¢~ev;t__in_eu‘_ for - It I rants o ___ cr refunded. ` ' "‘°’ '1 ‘ - P0 - today, was coupled with the state “Tho Hydro Conunission contract mem that pending the rebuilding able by subsquent legal opinions with Beauharnois must be cancel- |01 l ll s lx 1, gzveu by the sum-cms court o1=led and replaced by a new one. at-'tae New Brunswick port to replace Army of me R/Cpubuc_ historically 3_2? 013;; °°5t D91' 1'l0l'S¢ll°_‘;l_€l' 8*: ,those destroyed by fire in June, pas i ° WW" U-“IS W 5° sengers coming to Canada. by Carl- lla °°lhl>=llad to rut up the monev'adlan pacific steamsnlp would be I with hi h th to ht _ _ - "the gatitude eofpgfsacufls p:xi1;_.. ;;x;‘§;do?1;;ewlpx;_:a;o:cI;iHcZ1j;§;__;?;i; an economic committee, empower- The I-ih°l‘lll’s appeal Mr. Sllton applied for one winter only and st. ° | ueclued must be "upon the historic I John, would remain as Canadian und suggest concrete. Possibly rad-E srounds ol Liberal hostility to the _Pacific winter terminal port for the sinister and destructive lnfluencemndllng of through trams as ln “ _ _ of "negation of great weunu.. the msn ised immediate action and concert- i "Conviction cannot be carried to The port of Halifax will benefit ed thought' oDougsld. or to the approval of cas IHA Closer co-operation between the Can o ct t succeed in provlng that _the and ffeliillt for the V€SS€lS OPENE- ion of the King Govemment wa.sI,ed a direct result of romlses of‘f~h° Canadian Pll°IfI0 Sl€HlllSh1i>S~ h uuuduu, people that Du W_ L_, these two llncs resulted in the ne- Jlarnois, Mr. Bitton said this was|McDougald, a senator appointer by Us e of me power trust was to my and Steamship Companies other oo d loutside of the Dominion in prefer- verywhere I folmd the hlghestfn do _ I mg that Mr King would read terested steamshlp firms took every clients the employment of Canadi. n National lines in travelling for carlcal the order in council upon 310 Under the new conditions the anadian Pacific Steamshlps will vert a proportion of its traffic to anadian National lines and will also Halifax a port of call on both ward and outward voyages dur- ing the winter season. The agreement will remain in rcs for a. period of ten years, el- e d Canals, said several weeks ago at Canada as a whole would uh. ' ln . The announcement, which was I()n Bea_l_1_harnois Scandal l|FlIX Til ENEFIT ASI (Canadhn Press) MONTREAL. Que.. oct., 21 - adian Pacific and Canadian Na- throuzh the decision of the lat- i‘ henceforth to solicit passengesr across the Atlantic Ocean by e decision was announced today. Competition in the past' between tiation of agreements between Canadian National Railways an the Canadian Pacific to solicit I ective services. It -developed, railway organization, with offic- scattered throughout Europe as panics registered and owned ce to the Canadian Pacific. In portunity of suggesting to their ipping their goods through the minion. _ l this measure of eo-operation be- en_the two railways, 1-lon. Dr. J Manion, Minister of Railways u/btediy derive considerable ad- tages from such an agreement' Bde Dllb1lC Ht Saint ~7°hl\» N~ B-l itlcal life keep coming to conven- _ ` tl w :lsscn er landin facilities at the people of this Province,” he con - during each winter for the next dillddd. "if the Ontario Party gives ten years in that all Canadian Pla- V ts stamp of approval to the re- -cific Passenger ships sailing fention in good standing of Dr_Ito and from Saint John on _:__ tbound voyages will call at Hali- M e technical and narrow justifica- tllm af an set of Mr. Kings Gov- ,snlpslsaillng from saint John on 6 emment at Ottawa, which, was in eastbound voyllses 'will call at Hall- “ fact, a. most glaring example of fax for additional freight. ° how another wise, great Party can level of political ineptitude. -ll... RUSSIHII Chamber and restaurant owners as the search L of Commerce for the suspected trunk murderer d SYDNEY- New S°““‘ W"I°‘» 0°' the theory of illicit lnlimacles. ilu- I W t°b"“` 21"’(B’"'I°‘h United P"5‘)"' thorltles said this could have led J A Russian Chamber of Commerce is being iormedin Sydney to foster women were sm" in Phoenix and ident, Senator Hardy swid he_dui_dI pause, as Mr. Henderson put it. if _ _ _ _ I _ trade and encourage economic and placed in trunks ,md sum as bag, sn reluctantly lllld Hn" °°“i__ “___ - - ~ _- - _ industrial relations between Aus- gm ,D Lo, A,,ue1e_,_ Au ,mee _isle laressllre had bw* b"’“5 tralia and Russia. At the inaugural eu We, em 10 ees I u o,n_ ar. _ _ '----1 meeting. J. 0. Forsyth, the convener, Xwltlredlcuy Zu,-ul; y Q Ph There was nothin! Slfallilc ill the F who has spent 14 years ln slberla, Th, ,runes were d|,w,,e,ed uy u position or lvlucnell F. l-ieaburh bi; ____ said that Australia must find more ,.u|u-md exp,-egg agent/who ugméa ing a member of Parliament an _ Continued from page 1 overseas markets and there was no blood seeping through cracks in the also loader of a Proyillcilll Duffy' hotter field than an undeveloped trunk and uuem0ned1v|_,-,_ Judd and said Senator Hardy. Premier Tol- ¢°ll!1i»l'y- her brother, B.J. Mclflnnell Los An- hlie of British Columbia was C1105' Russla, via the East. ,vas com- gale, University gtndgng when they en Conservative leader ill lhlll paratlvely close at hanu. vrhile in “mud to claim the baggage, The Province and retained his sl.-at at_ sire-l-is he had sold Australian re- muy, de,,,,,,des the tmnk be open ottawa until the eve of me aravlh-_ frlseralvn- steel oelllnls- l>=lilll8l,¢d but Mrs. Juodfled and disappear cial elections. | and fruit. There were also markets ed from my by-nthey-'g my on 3 "The opposition to Mr- ll€Dllll"l_ for Austrdlen Wool. scoured sheep- dowuwwn gn-est, will blow over," predicted Senate; slnns, hides, munlles. hom. tallow. msxlnneil and nr. w. o. Judd, nerdy. "una solidarity will Nil!" ’“ tortoise-shell. aualllwtlu dll. dairy- phoenix physician and Mrs. ,ludlrs me Liberal party." only by lifes- ing machinery and fruit. Lemons hu_,,,,,,,d_ were ,m-sted u fs-y hours _cntlng s united front _:nd "by set-_ especially. would find ll ready sale. later at me home of nr. .ludds sis- ling na of sackblllna rnelllsdf’ as they were in s¢l'l0l’li ll!! 101' ter. but were latcr released from could the party hope to be il'i\lm‘ teal ` custody when Judd proved an alibi phnnt at the polls, said the PWS- m the period al 1920-30 Russia ana Mexinneil unclaimed anew- ideas. bought nearly 830,000,000 worth of ledge of the killings. -____'__--- Ioodl from Australia direct. Bhd A diary ill D0-Hessian of County* Tile Gerxllm gclvl-lament has llc-_ another $85,000,000 worth, including .Attorney L. J. Andrews of Phoenix, clded to proceed slowly in its saiaryi fax, while Canadian Pacific freight cited citizens, bus drivers, motorists, assumed fur flung proportions. U0 t-hc doiible killings in which both wool, sine. lead and Pllrl Shell. illlwho flew here to aid in thc search puts, Inndoll. In 1929 Australia boushtland investigation, revealed what he $618,000 worth of Russian goods; so said might be the basis for tile tween the two victllm .~-vi a sudrlcn | the balance was enormously inAua- theory oi intimacies. He said ltlchnnge or altitude and actions cf _ ts-alia’s favour/ Itold s. story of queer sjfeztl-ans bl' Mrs. Jl'r'd_ ’ Continued from page 1 Ish __ G. Fu _ _ _ ` "fi if ‘ -'pl Toronto. l-I. A. Plant of 0lll“""~ retary of State for home affairs, sl" -H .__ ID ; _ . _ _ . _ ,' -_ - 1 .»_=._ ;.__l_f.,_ Throughout me investigation mn as named trrrlsul-er and Hurry v-ho is lending the Labor Party. I__I_ » .' ' I ` "I ,fy ohnston of Toronto, SC'°"°t"ry‘ ivv:"r~__l‘s strcngtst S\lDP0l`i0TS- T112 ` -| *___ _ ` In accepting thc oflico of Pres- ' pl-cpzsnl was dropped, he said, be- _§§f-é=-;il_ I » CENTRAL GUARDIAN SOCIAL GATIQERING - Mrs. George and Miss Ruth Dickieson were joint hostesses on Thursday evening when they entertained a number of Summerslde and Char- lottetown friends. A feast of music was enjoyed as there was a number of musical artists in the different parties. Dainty eats were passed at the close of the evening.-N. SEES PROSPERITY HERE-A well-known traveller who covers Canada from the Atlantic to the Pacific writes to a friend in Char- lottetown: "I have just come from my Maritime trip and I am glad I0 Say that all ovcr your three Provinces I have found a state of DFG-sllerity not to be found in any other part of Canada." WARNING VOICE Continued from page 1 m__________ resolutions were passed by the A5- sociation, including one deplorillg the trade and tariff policies of the Bennett Government. But amid the many resolutions wus a. voice that warned the party something besid- es resolutloils was necessary before it could rcqapture the confidence oi’ the people of Ontario. Col. A. T. Hunter of Toronto, called for more concrete treatment of public af- failsand suggested establishing n committee to study present econ- omic conditions. The future of in- dustry in Canada was fl matter of conjecture, slid Col. Hunter, in ad- vocating the economic committee. Cites Significant I’.ll'allcl “If the vencrablg Druids of pol- cns and parsing resolutions we ill resemble that oillcr uninterest- lg annual convention-thc Grand ntercsting but exceedingly pathet- c," added Col. Hunter. The result was the crcrltion of d to delve into present conditionsI cll solutions. Col. Hunter WHS an-led its chairman and he prom- _ T - BRITISH ‘tween a protectionist tarii! and a 'evenue tariff and the atitude of the late Labor Cabinet on the tariff Question. The fixht was lJl'0V°k°d by a radio address last night in Iwhicn al. 1-lon. wiulsm Graham. the Labor Government, said: At no time during its two years in of- fice did the late Labor Cabinet ever decide to support protectionist tariffs." aid on his way through Notting- hamshire this aftemoon, stopped to ham would give him an answer o yes or no on the question: "Did he or did he not support tariffs when the newspapers were writing about him being 9. staunch advocate oi free trade, and was his position ac- curately or inaccurately described?" Having put his question. the Prime Minister said he might very well leave Mr. Graham to Rt. Hon. Phil- lil Snowden, retiring National-Lab- or Chancellor of the Exchequer, Snowden Scores Graham Mr. Snowden. on his part, to- night took up the legacy in a char- acteristic statement in which he called Mr. Graham to account con- cerning his broadcast on other de-I tails than the tariff issue. “Mr. Graham, in his broadcast last night." Mr. snowden said, "made several grossly inaccurate statements. Three times in that speech he charred the Prime Min- ister and myself with deliberately lying. I will not apply that epithet ‘to him, but will describe his state- _ ments as wholly without foundat- ion. “His three misstatcments," Mr. Snowden continued, are: "Firstly-That George L. Harris- on, governor of the federal reserve bank of New York, insisted on a ten per cent cut in the unemployment pay as a condition of a loan. "Secondly:-I-le and his colleag- ucs were, all through, opposed to Thlrdly-That he and his col leagues did not vote in the Labor Cabinet for the imposition of tar- Viffs. -"'Neitl'ler the Prime Minister nor I was ever in communication with President of tn, Board of Trade ml .. ask. through the press, if Mr. Gra-I I I because it considered the new wa-I t¢l‘W8y` would be beneficial to the fishing industry, giving the fisher- men easier access to Prince Edward Island and Magdalen Islands. It would also, he said, help them in Igetting salt more cheaply from the [Malarash mines in Northern Nova ‘Scotia ` I Touching another phase of the ;C-anal he expressed the opinion thllt it would probably attract to Camil- bello yachts from the United States. Dr. Surveyor made notes of his conversation with Mr. Calder which will be considered with the other data obtained when the com- mission compiles its report, The rest of the itinerary of the commission is as followa:- Sackville, N. B., Oct., 22 Amherst and Parrsboto, N. 3-. IOL‘t., 23, 24 and 26. Digby. N. S. Oct. 29. Yarmouth, N. S., Oct., 29. ` . Sydney, N. S., Oct., 31. ___ _ P.ci.ou, N. S. Nov., 2. ‘ New Glasgow, N. S., NOV-. 2- Cllarloitctown, P. E. slund, NOV- 4 Moncton, N, B., Nov. 5. i\'cwcastle, N. B., NOV~. 5 Chatham, N0V~. '7- Batllurst, NOV.. 7- Campbelito B.. NOV- 9- .=.2z _“Ellis LIFE Continued from page 1 ority admitted that representatives of the larger European powers have been greatly agitated by reverts from Washington and by certain interpretations of those reports. It was admitted that the Council sized the situation up thus: After giving the League cordial assurances of washinst0fl'S Sllllport in its efforts at pacification, and after accepting the invitation to sit with the Council under the terms of the Briand-Kellogg Pact, the United States Government now has evidenced unwillingness to sup- port the move to insist on complete withdrawal of Japanese troops by a definite date. Deep regret was expressed over reports from Washington that United States Secretary ot State Henry L. Stimson has assured Jap- anese Ambassador Katsuji Debuchi llllts in the unemployment ray- the United states ms no inten- | tion of participating in any pro- gramme of economic pressure. "Probably none of the great pow- ers contemplated-certainly did not desire-an -early resort to econom- ic sanctlons," one informed observ- Mr. Harrison." Mr. Srlowden sald.I "Such enquiries es were made from England. The bank reported back to Mr. MacDonald and myself. The American banks, he went on, "in- sisted we must first give assurance on or suggest a cut in the unem- ployment pay. “Nothing could be more grossly inaccurate than to say the Labor Senator A. C. -Hardy of Brock-_ _ I * " | N l M'r Representing the Six t'2"f"°1`I“I vin vice res Cabinet was opposed to a. cut in unemployment pay" Mr. Snowden 1119. Wi/9l'"IUB an °9~f“°" declslim I’° °°mI““ed~ "M15 Graham Wa’ 3' would call on the Japanese to ac- tire, was elected President of the member of the Cabinet economy uompush evacuation in Muuchuriu sgoeiation for the 13th term T B- _ committee which unanimously rec- without fixing a time umm and cQuesten, K. C., of Hamilton and ommended a. saving of £43,500,000 on would urge China and Japan to s. F- S- Gl'e¢nl~'°°fl Of SV Cm' I unemployment bay. and the L°b°" get together for on-ect negotiations s . _ . rines, were selected vice-presidents Cabinet unanimously agreed to rec- tu same their dispum J '.' ' We _ Matter of Tariffs ivisions of the pro ce. -P ' _ ents were named 501' 05011 5e°lI°“- Conceming the matter of tariffs. ___ _ _ _ i » _N :J \_ , i i I. A. P. Brickenden. L°l'ld°“' G' T' member who. in the Cabinet Hrst ____,`-*“`_j_II'_._-uu `°"` -I-‘f _- ‘_-rf lford. Brockville: Col. Malcolm _raised the case for tariffs. but he ' ' __-_ _ :__ ' _-_I I ._lf 15:5 ans. Hlllleybufyl H011- G- N Gm” does know Mr. Graham and Rt. ~- "4 I . " I I `}‘ l I ' on. Peterboro. and K. A. Cl`ll”lSi~I°~ Hon. Arthur Henderson. I-abor Sec- I _ ' _II _` -~ 1 fl Ili'-‘ . _ _ l _ _ _ __ _ L II , i r l R it had be°n pers'st=d in it would have broken up the Cabinet. tured the new waterway as a boon to Maritime agriculture and lndus- try. One written submission was re- ceived, that of the saint John Board of Trade. In this the advant- age which they said would accrue to the Maritimes and to Canada in general from the canal, were clear ly set forth and its construction was vigorously urged. Although it W0-S Mt able to have s representa- tive appcar here at the sittings, the Bolrd of Trade of Campbeilo. Is land strongly favored the project. J. F./Calder, President of that board and supervisor of fisheries for southern New Brunswick, pass- ed tboush saint .loan lust night en route to Halifax, While here he interviewed Dr. Arthur Surveyor. chairman of the commission. He cr said. “But what is the reason for throwing away your strongest him WON made by I-ile Ballk 0f` card before beginning the game?" L? Authoritative United States quar- ters in Gcneva. privately repudiat- cd the suggestion that the United States has altered its opinion sinccl that the budget would be balanced. uumiug to the Council mme and u At “° time did they GV" In-SI-it “P” declared the Government stood ex- actly wllere it did before. After sev- eral group discussions by Council principals, their secretaries were suggestion to be presented at a public session tomori'o\v or Friday. It was authoritatively stated that this suggestion probably would pro- vide ior three weeks adjournment, Halifax, N. S., Oct., 27, 23. . I I I I tlflll romance ol the _j___` 'N this illrlllllg all lean; great Klondike gold _ rush, Mr. Service has l'¢>er-cated in ps-"9 much ol the vlvldness and charm of Ll; P°8ll'y--lsls "Spell of the Yllkol,” “S0135 °f 0 5°'ll"|0ll£|l»” ew. It ls Intense In its Interest and compelling lui Its appeal. _ .\ .l lilly.-_w --t ___,_,________._._. :__ is.. 'sn _rf 2:2. '<;y,1,l*-‘ii U, _ #'34 _ »»i'-/lv _.4'- _'Hx 11- 1-. _~,‘f;-'.»:~,._.'_;»_¥f,'g 1,!"-' _ fl. _(_ 4, xl, s»» \ -»`_<§__-_\<,;u`;;»e -Q `73%p` as s -` ,__` _ 'l ~¢. ""_~ 15'* ‘-1;. - _ -3" ~ \.'l'¢e‘j,’§,. i_~f_:°e` \. ¢qf,§ ' . -is ._ "t'l‘~’f M' ‘I \ -.1/‘_ _-_fe -,a ..'.'._1`,`_-' » lg 'xt' ,.\~‘-~ .,.~T _._ _ _;,._ -.f‘_-ll ,U-¢‘3" Hu- ’iI ` ,y -_"M, .»j__ t _, i'-,_ ',,_“. _ f€,~.'»¢‘;r _'f "__ ,,._ l','l.-__` '."‘.',"/"' ' .` 'l ,F-'~ _‘.,`»-‘r-,’f’f`>»_'= ' .2 ,~ -.f .rf 1, .l ,_»g_-,.7 tg .__ - . _-., -I5- __ __.'»(S-_ ‘.~1U..;“.‘il“f .~_- _ ».'_ ” "--.5 ,ri‘-§éI- _ l. , -~-.1-'ri' ., »¢.‘v_»_ .~ »- _- of ‘flag ._' ` 9 _ ' _fe-til .- ' ._ jg Y--~_<_f“ .'f_ -l`»..ff% _- l--. _- "I."'-:"'~"§g- ¢_ f I" 'i 'C ,-‘J _ \ \ _=\'v .`-_,'73, .Pt _ ______.,._______-,________ _‘ -~1‘l-_“Ft” I _--we ‘\\. 'EL '¢ _.E _ _______. __. '- ~____.fl_*gl- _ "`» 1 _:JL-. , , _ _,‘ _ Jff- ,_._._, __.___l______! ~i ‘- .I,‘.'If_"i"§'t;i _- ,l f*.’_‘~.l. {.... 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THE GUARD1Af.- ° . _ _ ",151 ,- _ Starting' Next Week Chinese delegation declared the prospects were nothing less than N" 0PP°°°d "° C" set to work drafting a conciliation tragic, for they pongaly-,ed most dangerous possibilities of changes in the domestic situation in China. Schubert Theatres _ Are Bankr (Canadian Press) upt ii- League, were represented as being city of “big spenders" for B ing; of astonished and dismayed at the nearly ts,ooo,ooo in two years. ivrosrlect Opened by the susgestlon.{ nut ine shubert chain of meat, and the W0ld “b€llByal" was beirl§,rcs and the shows they produce in sed privately to describe taeuluitm um remain open. Federal view of the developments in thermldge Francis G. Cafley appoint. League Council. Friends of the pd Lge Shubefg ag one of the ya. ceivers, in $50,000 bond. The Irving Trust Company was similarly del- egated. Casll, rather the lack of it, caus- rd thc difficulty, the Shubert pet- ition in involuntary bankruptcy srid. l The Shubert Theatre Corporat- ions, organized in 1924 to t-‘ks over the extensive Shubert inter- Icfts, soivcnf. it explained. but » ,.-~ 1-. .‘ ~-'_-f,-1' *P~L"'“§’IE’ ‘» il I'...l*. , _ _. . .. __ .. ,_s._ .___,l--_H -_ ._ W. ,____{_.t»_,_ __ -as - - i -, f __ _ :.--‘ »‘._-_,,. - -__. _ »_-7'. . .I r-»'§f-:';.-¢{.~”-'-_ .';'_`;f_T.'_.>.;j‘__.;.»\'_ _‘,f_-£_ .f .lg-/_ _ . _ , l _ .,.t__ , gr _\.__ » olhv, ~."."_*‘ - _:_ fl -"\»-(fi I ' -?__/ua _,__ ,_,_.___¢__. 1 _...rum _,_ . '__ ‘-if I' -1"-'~ 5.2;." “vi 'i I -f~’_.‘;i"-;.'_'f_f,f§_I} 5- =_‘.~,-' _ gl '- '52 __»i{f~;;---_fiif--if » Qu-__-._‘_'_1_ ,$1 ',!5,;{ .`l _;' ",»‘ ‘J-*i_`°_;¢_}_' -,fgg __1_3-’.(‘»l»Z_¥,' ._/____,__._)(_I ‘_ _ ._- -_ f_.f~ f_ fu." ' '."'I_f-I.-:'13 "".I'~i‘# - “~_":i_1l'§ _ ' '.- \ ` I r,<_- ;.\ '.1-_-‘_ sf ‘_ . \-_ 'Q » _‘fx-‘_ .~ _-Q1 ‘-¢`_?I\' QT. ~“T'>= is NEW YORK- N- Y~» O05- 21--TIl@,llas_ not the ready funds to nzeei , .- 5 -`_' », ._ hubefm Of me theatre- L99 lmdIll.a'l:ring obligations although Lee ' ako. today placed their enterpris-Ipnd J. J. shubert advanced $100,- V ".- ,' f".‘f1 I'~,"-,'1- nd W_R_ P. Parker of Toronto, was ummeud t0 Parliament economies Du Alfred sm cmmse spokes _ _ _ _ hosen chairman Of 111° m“““€°' amountlns to f56~000~000~" man. and his colleagues. who have ._ ._ ._ __ ,, _ cs in the hands of receivers blam-Iwo in the ms. 30 ,im-s la -,.9 the I ' I ff-""".9‘I,` 5 L ,_-. ing thc stock market crash of frloIComu,m.~_ ment C0ml11ii-i0€- trusted their case wholly to the -years ago and thg subsequent .scar-' , `. ,_-,iz ‘V- descend.to an almost unbelivabie d ' I __ , _ _.._ 3,) .J ._ | ;s` ___f._ _.- ‘\ ‘ '_;_:_ -a%\`¥IiI\ _gg _ .*@`\ v.\' T ____ W Win* ‘iile‘=‘l`-1 6-!-_`:§_'_V _ il § ,I I we _ _ ,| -_yi - ` - _‘{;,'~§i _‘ 1. g, _ _.l _.»~ ..~: _--_\_=‘.»:‘ I: f_ ___:..`_-_:_ f__,____:.\4K_ ~_l _._ _» "‘_i` _~ -.-'_-tl " - i 'i 'lfq ~ -- __-`j~.-_‘_#_?___-f»__,‘¢5.§._ _ l¢;l‘; » _- In tl). ' -f . >§7I"iI7~`l_'.-‘-.\-'l. _ _ well-kept Kitchen _ ._r' ., ,_ " 'fiij s-:f_ T _ if-' __ -1Il_t‘~ You will always find a tin of Sultana \ ._ . ' ` is ‘ f 5 -_ -` ~._~,_ St." 5\;\§f P 5 .ul Pl' “_ _ _ P° _-r l _:__ °».‘~\` -,--2 cause it is economical - easy to apply - _// _ ‘ _ » giving a lasting brilliant polish which ,,/ makes the stove look alwayu st its beet. _ / _:_\__,q_,}.\,=-',.» _,___ - _ ____ . c \..\\_=_:- = ?=,\f5{l>\ ll-1‘_:_ = . sl'-§\5.‘»\."\\ _ _ _ €l‘§-'-"§f:'»"_7_` ‘ I ___\5_a__` zu ,-_ STUVE POLISH _ an ,_ , rf told Dr. Burveyer that the board of compbello favored the protect sorxrmm umrzn, nonranr. ,, 9- _ _-.wt-=_._._. _ " _ -__ .\ .1-`: . _~'7§r'-J. " _ _ _. =._._~. __ ..`- ~- .- ~_ `_~.___\ i _- . . _ '.;<‘- `_- :.'.“ - _.1 _ .'._.~_~.__ ~.: ._ . .\_-_- _-.__ f ..`__`~~`_-._T. -_ . 14:. .:-<.-= _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.__ __.____,\_. .`_______ - r 1- ~ -_e » _ . ~ _ _____________ _ _ _