av; p homes. g d] contact with (hem. The welcome daily ‘yputor, The Guardian “r1168 your message to most of the. worth while “aria ttetown Guardian Two Cuts genial Guardian; jfouarled I880 The Pe's Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew /'/-’/ A I’ "W974i"! pa :n~w7""'" .. ~. ‘ "ead \\\\\ veryshoiiy ' look for (pl soul“ news and advp. ll People's Guardian-Aha ‘cheapest, a most influential effective adv, ium 1n the Province. _. r Paper. most CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA ‘WEDNESDAY, NOV, 7, 1923 ' Annual Subscriptions Dell By llall, Canada and If. isegfi‘ med, , 0w" i Wrliysiflp- i“ t.- pgilli 0i" EUROPE FLOODS CANADIAN JAlvliS General St. Pierre llughes, sup- eriutentlcilt oi‘ peulteuturies, tie- t-isretl in u recent address that Canada is being liooded with the scum 0i Europe and urged immed- iate tnextsures to insure protection against endangering the loyalty 0i (his country lo its British assoc- intillllfl- llill Pllllll lllYEFfEET llllilil Likely to sling Influx 0f Canadian Branch Fac- _ torics, (United Press.) LONDON. Nov. 6.—-Premier Bald wins announcement st Manchester itrilillili that his tariff policy would int-little. no tnx 0n Whfiilii 0711mm- m-t-ins in put an end to the expec nttinns originally entertained that f'illlil(|iilil grain 8f0W9P-9 ‘MUM tens-fit nutter the changes in Brit- itn’s fiscal system. Wheat growlns in iiritnin will he encouraged by tiubsitiics in onc- form or another. and llttntgb the proposal has been mfldp nmt (bot-to subsidies should apply to wheat raising tiirfilltillv"! iln- Empire, it is believed to be quib- ill||ll'llL‘i.i(!1liliil. llnldiviifs announcement says nothing about. flour, and this sleep- ens tht- conviction generally eaten luliii-tl iltut British flour is t0 he plilictiwi and Dominion flour while n-rclvltu: u preference is not to be nlluiveti ill scot free. Baldwin's iiluietnl-ul howuvtir, opens the way inr grunting concussions by the ilritisii Government of grout int-- (ti-oittlnued on Page 3.) Condensed Specials _ llATlr.-2c per word. not cat-h insertion in this column. i! -_.__ ‘GIRL WANTED FOR HDUSE- ivorlt. Apply 174 Kent St. U i/TrFéo-es wooosmzn, WAG- "ri $6". Apply Jae. Hewlett, De- llllt llouse, 236 King St. 1i ITUDENTS OR BUSINESS liirls t-nn be accommodated with room nnd board in nice locality. “Dilly nt (luardisnfl22-1l-7-3i. FOR SALE -8ECOND HAND "linens wnggoti and curt. Proud l’: illort-sitle. 12i-1l-7-3i. -____________________ ‘LADIES ATTENTION! —i FOR B-ib- tctrnprons, caps, coliarsmnd (‘uiillsilliki reasonably priced lilies (lulnnn, 188 Grafton St. 1i A '10 tar --FURNi8HED eso- room with means of light house‘- iieeains. tan liilisboro Street. 2i ‘LOST-ON QUEEN iifelm rosary initialed A. llig- itins. Finder please leave at this oiflco, 11,5“ 8T. A t?‘~—~~-——————————— "QPBEEI-AiOUSE CENTRALLY (‘l . LUX KLAN MAN (Canadian Press.) CCIOOOUOOOOOOO§ KILLS ATTORNEY '5 ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 6.—.l. i- E. Fox, publicity man for the '0' ziiilll I15 Ill Willi '0 Ku Kiux Klan, late today shot '0' O and killed W. S. Coburn, At- 4' 0' lanta attorney and counsel 1- O for the faction righting lm- 4' Q perial Wizard H’. W. Evans 4' '0' and other officials of the ord- 'l' i er. Fox is held at police hesd- '0' O quarters without bond under '0' |'l' a charge of murder. '0' 1' Mrs. W. A. Holbrook, steuo~ '0' 1' grspher for Coburn, said that 1' Q Fox came to the office and 0' 'l' wanted to talk to Coburn 'l' 'l' about the Klan case in which '0' 0 Coburn is representing what '0' HlNlliHHEll- INELY UVEH EHNIANY i 5,000 to "H1500 Fully 'l' is called the '0' five minutes, according 4' about an hour. Fox '0' five shots at Coburn, 4' Holbrook said. DECLINE (Canadian Press) LONDON, Nov. ways iveekiy- from liuiulnlrg f|.' plate. The port (ilmuent of shipping and littlt- cargo mitorts tl'u July natives, the ertran liucs urn ices. ' IJlIl/EHNMENT Eiifl on the liquor duy. There are fiitydwo provincial i . constit ‘ and on incomplete ' returns, there been a majority control of liquor gary, Edmonton, Medicine list. OARGiARY. Nov. twenty thousand votes. Expenses Paid (Canadian Press.) MONTREAL. Nev~ nosees Delorme may refill!" funds. insurgent ele- 0 IO ment. They talked for about 4' to '0' 'l' Mrs. liolbrock and Coburn 0' '0' asked Fox to come back in 4' started 'l' '0 out and got outside the door, '0- 0 then turned back and fired!- Mrs. 1' iiiifffifiilhi-iiifi HAMBURG Piiili SiiiiiiS RAPID . 6.—Thc with- drawal of the Canadian Pacific Rail- Canadn has led the Times corre- spondent lo paint a gloomy picture of the decline of that port. A year ago he suys, llumburg wen in the tltlc of m-p-eperity. ‘iwi dent‘; days of the \ ar hrt-l her: wiped out by a recoveiy us rupi-i as cum held a full vom- ilugllsh and American liners flocked to the cheapest port in imrope for refitt- ing nr conversion. To-tluy imif th- qu-iy space is unoccupied, there ls or» onus-half port lens become very ospensive as a res-tilt of the approximation of (lermzin currency to world levels. nnd Am- believntl to be about to follow the example of the the mgkm These LEM)?“ Wm wk“ C. P. R. and withdraw their serv- iliiEHll Vlilffi 6.--iu by fur the largest. vote polled in Alberta question, prohibi- tion was beaten decisively yester- up-peurs to have for government lp thirty-six of them including the four cities. Cai- Lethabridge and 6.—-COH\'|'DEBEB will"!!! T01‘ Yeiiimdayls refers“ Pruasiou Caivarymun, has result- dum in Calgary. slim" -" ""'i°""Y ed in tho German stiuuci- being for government control of eight brought m Canada by those he thousand one hundred nnd saw.“ from starvation iiiiv-eishi- Trooper l-iarry Deacon of the Therc will! 11 will] 0T ilfflfi-V Royal Canadian Dragoons has For Delorme 6.“"Til8 crown is prepared 1° aiiimm“ ‘w’ expouso of calling all defence w“; his trial on u charBil 0E kmmg hi“ brother, with exception oi the eit- ert witness who may testify '19 ° the bullets‘ blood or handwriting. This was announced today Wimw‘ ing the report that Delorme cunlwl proceed with the trial till Novemb or nineteenth because he lacks fill! WANTED-MAN TO WORK o" farm. Apply George binchiiliau. Armed Troops Are Now Mtassed On Frontier Of Bavaria. (Canadian Press) BERLIN, Nov. 8 —— Armistice Week finds the fiveyearold Ger- man Republic in the throes of n tiatlonwlde political, economic and social crisis, the outcome oi’ which may he determined through such minor factors as the rising or fall- ing prices for bread, potatoes and coal. it may also terminate in the sud< den proclamation of a national dic- tatorship, the demand for which ic gaining perceptible momentum among all classes of the people, who apparently are willing to bar- ter their present political liberties for even a hazy prospect of amel- ioration of their social condition. Germany tonight. outwardly sug- gests a loosely fedora-ted pseudo-re- public without such elementary requisites as a ilationnl currency or a safely ant-bored constitutional Government silpportctl by a repre- sentative‘ parliament. into this situation President Eb- ert and Chancellor Stresemnxin to- night projected an appeal to the nation, in which they affirm their (‘determination to (lefend the rc- pubiic and its constitution against nil aittzu-ke from within and sum- mon the citizens to come to their aid. The (lctiiral Government, arous- ed by the apparently dangerous situation created by the Bavarian Nationalist preparations on the Bsvurisn-Thuringiau frontier, has ordered the (lespatteh of three Bati- enese Reichswehr regiments to to up positions behind the Thurlng- ian police with orden-i to resist to the titmost any nttem regular Bavarian hands to advance. Thu Govern-uncut will also issue an appeal to all republicans to be pro- purcd to defend the republic. it is reported that Chancellor iormetl that a Nationalist puischi has been timed to begin on Thurs- day, the fifth anniversary of the foundation of tbe republic. Estimates of the total strength of tho irrcgtilar bands on the Bav- crlan-Thurlnglan frontier range from 5,000 to 10,000. The National- ists are said to be under the su- preme commnnd of Captain Enr- iiardt, wiioeo “iron brigudta," fig- ured in the notorious Kapp putsrh. German's Kindness (Canadian Press.) TORONTO, Nov. er-Gffli-illliifi for kindness extended to a number of Canadian soldiers while prison- ers in n German prison camp by Sergeant Major Willie liatzmanu, been the central figure in s post- iiN NEEi The case for Church Union was ably presented by Rev. Dr. James Endicott, of the Foreign lliissitlu Hoard of the Methodist Church, and Rev. C. W. Gordon (Ralph (loo nor) at Zion Church yesterday uf- ternoon and in the Methodist Church last evening, there being a particularly large attendance at the evening meeting. Rev. G. C. Taylor presided in the afternoon and introduced tho speakers, prayer being offered by Rev. Dr. Pierce, district chairman of the Methodist copforeucte. At the conclusion of the afternoon meeting the members of the Zlieth- otllst conference and the Pinsby- terian synod, in session during the morning, met together. Rev. Dr. Endicctt spoke from his own experience in the mission field both in Western Canada and in China. In the West the deitomin- atlonnl barriers made n duplica- tion 0t‘ work on the part oi’ ntinis- tcrs and there was a disturbing sense of competition. in China the vast mission field hurl to be divid- ed into territories, in order that the work of the various christian churches would not overlap in this tuunnr-r. This division into differ- ent denominational territories is bolng protested against by the Chinese who. cannot understand why in one territory a convert tnust become arPresbytet-inn Chris- tian another n Methodist Christian and so on. The Board .01‘ which the speaker ls a member erected a Union university in (‘iliflit nnd it is the fine-st (example of nn raffort in cooperation known iu thtufoi» eigu fields today. Rut it. is still con- sidered necessary to give different theological courses in this lusti- I pts by the ir- h“ Strescniann has been definitely in-i/—-——~ tutiou. Dr. rltttlit-ott fell. that :t grout pro portion of mission workers are vu- thusinstlcnily in favor of (fiutrt-h (Union, which he tleclnreti. is no is olatctl phenomenon bttt ls as with» as the world. ii-B Dfflllliiwrs believe. that tin-y vc caught u vision of tho will oi‘ tuuu lliliiNES suit BYE - ElEEllIlN Two Large Meetings Were g Yesterday Afternoon and Evening by Dr. G. W. Gordon 0f Winnipeg and Dr. Jas. Endicott 0f Toronto. i Eiiii CHURCH liNiilll Addressed piaint-tl, us tiitl Dr. hlndicott, that IN ENEMNI] FUBALIZES INTEHEST Contest For Seat For- CHURGH UNIONISTS (Canadian lPress.) TORONTO, Nov. to the members‘ street Presbyterian Toronto, within tho last few 'l' (lays, that congregation has '0' evidently a strong anifuhurch 1' union element which has not 'l' until now been revealed. '|' This action is of additionali interest from the fact that 4' the pastor Rev. Dr. Pidgecn, 1' is chairman of the Union 'l' Committee. 1' The‘ letter, which is signed 'l' by six elders and several '0' Bloor '0' church, 1' 0f 'l"l'1"|'#i"l"l'+'l' '0' 6.—~.ludg- 'l' lug by a communication sent i‘ ++++++++++++++ + ARE GIVEN SURPRSE‘? ~ 4- ht- was not lit-re to tell people bow they should think, but lo gather for litc Church Union Committee anything thnt might help tho new united church to gut a clearer view of the task before it. He believed Church Union had come into exis- tence as the result of prayer. He. himself, a "tlyed-ln-the-wool" Pres- byterian but with his family tra- ditions and his passionate devotion to his church, he was convinced front his heart that the tinlon move ment was the best way oftlntiing the mind of God and of receiving His spirit. Describing his early ex- periences in the missionary work in Western Canada he said that when working side by side with lots of space for each man, every worker ivns happy in his task and i minded no hardship or drudgery: but in proportion as the churches become sticcessfui in recruiting _ men for this field, just so did the ' workers begin to experience the 0 pain nt‘ couipetitiou. Tho taunts. of proof iu regard to the rhurtzh lilli0ll question, declar- cti i)r. tiurtion, lies upon the man who says thvro should be two or throw or four churches. The union- ists have an easier task when they can say that the first experiment that‘ won the world for Christian- ity win: matte by one undivided body of Christians. When there is danger to ho faced 0r some task on hand church workers have always united. Why is it necessary, when the time of stress is ovt-r that they sbotlltl become divided ngnin? Th1» miutl of Christ. is the law of t r t c fl f O l‘ er Christ's llliliti nnd to open mil‘ hnnrte: to his spirit and it tlltl sot-m to him. looking buck over his his i tory, that. tbt- spirit of God moved tilting lint-s whore pouplu court-rt} t-ti Illllfii. closwiy. iio would not. suy to nnyouo who did not look upon church union in t this ivny. that ho should go into ti cal Britain today are fixed lliltml Central Glasgow where a bye-elm; Law. The result of this pivotal elec demonstration of although the candidates of the two old parties have not yet been selec- bor and already interest 1i the elec- tion far exceeds that displayed in the contest at Leamingtou .2. At Leumington the Larbor randl dmo- is opposed by both :1 liberal of 2.514 which titnrity of the former Prclnler was that occasion. ioruier editor of Statistics nnd one of the leading authorities of Britain. will win on this LIlfCHSiOH more es- pecially it‘ both the t-hitrch nnd tho spirit. oi’ Georgians put up n t-nlttlidnte in Christ is its power. Our tht- troutt-sl whit-b is :1 develop- imoiu buslnerzs is tn dist-ov- mout thn-ait-uotl by thi- former who claim that tho (iunrgiuns lutvl- stolen u march on their rivals by Lost tiin- stint. cept In vie-w oi’ tho heavy tit-frat which tho merly Held by the Late Bonar Itaw Will Take Place Shortly. (British United Press.) LONDON, Nov. 6.—Fly@s of will! ion 1s to he held in a ft-w (lays ecessitated by the death of Boner ion may be regarded by all politi- ol porltes to some degree rs a their strength mi Mitchell is in the ficlt! for la- which s scheduled to b0 held Nuvculbcr nti conservative nominee. Just a year ngi Mitchell was dc- ontctl by Bolr " Law by it majority l view oi tho ,i'ip~- ogzirtleti as exceedingly stuall on Sir George Paish n financial and economic subjects occlvt-ti only about. 2.500 votes. Labor is supremely t-otifitloni it Asqulthitius null uvltiug Winston (lhtlrt-hlil to con- lt is regarded us oubtful whether ("hurt-hill will ac- faiilPfiliil sustained in bis t-tmsllttuetitzy last. your. (lotl for tht- generations that :|rt' union. ‘Flint was u problem for Tim“. |_~_ 30ml author“), m,- b9]. to "onus . . ._._._..._..a.~ .______._» w [typing (y... |,y,..,.|,..-Uo,, w“; proimb. Dr. Gordon, tho next speaker ox» Continued on page 3 |y i“. udvanupd m i, ,|au,;3On,,awm.,-,. g _ — in mid Jnutlary owing m the m- ini-» p?“ port made by the government poiiti STRUGGLE On Corn Beef and Cabbage The mounting prit-t- of coni, rent, potatoes, cabbage, nun other ncccssart-s oi lite, lira-z become n chill iillii tlrentifili thing to .1 family which for years has loiled in the lap of auipic ill‘OSpt‘l"ii'\'-f~iil{\i of jiggs, the uit-rry little ex-tuiiiiousitr who for yours has made all the world laugh as the principal character in George Mc- \lattus's famous ucivspnpci" ctirtoou “ilringiug Up i“il.iiilk'l‘ " - Yrs, jiggs inn: pom- tint tirrokc. Anti in iilt‘ cust- of jiggs, BROKE tilt-nus lilitfllili. jiggs, who for ycnrs. kt-(vt a working i>zti.'tncc at tiic irtillk ncuriy as big as Henry Ford's, and ntc cornt-tl bet-f and cabbage. not because he hntl to out it but bu- war drama. On receipt of a letter from Hatzmann lest spring in which he told of his straightened circumstances Mr. Deacon and others forwarded money to enable the (lermati cavalrymnn to come to Canada Pthis chap is one of the cleanest. whitest men i every met. and so say ull others who were in Prison Camp with me," said 'i‘l'00p- er Deacon. Premier King T0 Re- ceive Honorary Degree (Canadian Press. LONDON, Nov. tL-Premier Mc- Kenzie King will motor to Oxford today and receive at Oxford lin- All modern conveniehc- Blacksmith, York ii. R. o. l. (varsity the honorary tiegree of Doc liflvlouardtan, 6-31 . nan-tat. tor of Civil Laws. D JQH" A- "smmfll-IJ- LAND wnwrsn - IMMEDIATELY. A “Wilyflr. ilarmony Jct. 470-0-l0-mo. x ‘LOST-SPARE TIRE AND RIM “MUM between Geo. D. De-Blois. l0 West Si. competent. maid. Apply i0 M‘; wewimo- nous AT 188 char. Another Earthquake Is Recorded Kingston. Fmdgummsilgidaalzg ton. 91., Miss Guinan. ti (OM-dun PM") 8 T“ y mall or leave at lilari Ken- FOR SALE — STOP-WATCH VICTGRIA’ Nov. liihis '1?“ yfia‘ M'“'°hli1l. ‘Kellslnlton scarcely used also Singer Sewins “Eiiiillfltlféillih rlzzgnilflillgfiaie?‘ $158" r , ' ’ rva Lo ‘his urine. tats-neat Machine. ADDlyflllardiiln. 1| gngfhqunknvuhock Saturday "m: 3T~NOV_ a r My which continued two and a a hm“ and BT- LAM! osmt Losr -- srnsvso FROM hour“ approxmmoly m moumnd tsn fro‘: Hnitnd. ans- cow. dehorned, color red- '""'x to name Di . rum m“. gilliiy Arthur hath th. el. R. No. 1.4_ 1“.11."(.g||_ Essory, Union Bond. premisesillnion Road, 1 Ayrflhi" Any (i to Lee lnmrmatlo“ ‘en "n" 1| at the great Japanese Earthquake. ._ miles westward Pfflblbiy "P" cause in- prcferrcti it lit-fort- tcrrapiti and giiiticn hen, is down now to hard pun in the fullest scuse of that fearsome expression. llc lmis nowhere to go but out anti can't go there ilcfélilfit‘ he is there :t'ireati_v, having bccn given the freedom of the middle of the street by 1t coirisilctirictl Inntiiorti to \\'il0lll uii tion-paving ten- ants look alike. in :1 scrics of txmiic tiI‘£i\\'i.llg‘S iris creator, Mi‘. Mt‘- Mnntts, will tit-pic: ihc motiruftri renewal of acquaint- anccsiiip between jiggs nnd hard brass tacks after more than twenty yours. it was nu ntlvctiiitrv into moving pictures that iaiti jiggs low. flut his crctiitors ‘have been powerless to divest him of his wit nnd sapirit, anti with these and his faithful spouse binggir for his only asst-ts, he is facing tiic world again uitii iiic some tinutitlres courage that illlCff rnisctl him from .'t inborci‘ with a hod on his back to the proud cniitienre of bank director and montwcti ctipitnlist. in tiit- rarrootts portraying his (ircseut poverty-stricken status you will laugh with him as wcll as at iliill——8i‘l(i you will applaud hislspirit while you laugh iinrtier ‘still, in tbt- tiny cottage where he plans the reucivzil of his fallen fortunes, willie biaggic cooks him .1 stcatnitig dish of this favorite comcd beef ' and cabbage on the rrnrkcti stovt- iilirti with bits of coal that hr gathcrcd tqituig n railroad track. In due course. and of course, jiggs will ‘be on top of the V\'0l'i(i again. for you can't kccp this manner of man down. So don't worry and gricvc about him but just tuuke sure that you see caoh and every one of his “poverty pictures." fir. don't look at them, and miss the laugh of your iifc. Formosa. it was half the intensity cal machine that :1 short sharp ‘cautpalgn will be the most effec- tunl in winning vntt-s inasmuch as the battle will probably be fought largely on the tariff issue. l London Physician Has New Discovery (Canadian Press.) V LONDON, tOutL, Nov. ii-Mltioh interest is being evinced here in 'the work of Dr. ii. A. Wand, of Higbgate, who is said to have per- fected a utechunlcsl apparatus for the diagnosis oi‘ disease through obscrvatiuti of the circulatory uys- tem. Dr. Wand ‘has applied for pat- ents for his apparntils, and it ie cult! that there is a race in this re- gard with the professors of the Un- ifflitlily of Michigan, who have been tixploring along similar lines. Saskatchewan May Also Vote On Liquor Question (Canadian Press) RidtiiiNA, Nov. 6.—-A petition ask lug for n referendum on the liguor question as it effects Sask- atchewan will he presented to the ‘government early next week it wits announced today by officials ‘of Saskatchewan liimlerstion lit-o- Igue. According to tho sumo source the petition will carry approxima- tcly eighty thousmtd signatures, P. E. I. Presbytery In Session Yesterday The l’. E. l. Presbytery nict in Zion Church at 11 n. m. yesterday and remained in session until 1 p. m. After the addresses of Rev. Drs. Gordon anti Endlcott in the afternoon there was n joint confer once with the members of the Charlottetown Dlstrirt of the Moth» odist. Conference and the Presby- tery mncting wus resumed at 5 p. m. anti again after the evening meeting in tho hfethodist Church. Notification of the cull of Rev. iirvi llicLean, Tyne Vaileydn Glen- sanficlti. Ontario, . was received Rev. Mr. MacLean has accepted the cull and is leaving his present 'l"l"l'll'tl"l'i"t+'l"l'+ 'l' n the church, questions the 'I' authority of the general as- i-“sembly to commit the Pres- 'l' byierlan church to union Il- without another appeal to '0' the people, in view of the de- '0' -l- cided trend against union as 1' '0' shown by the two previous 'l' + votes of 1911 and 1915. 1' +'l"l"l"l-'l-'l-'l"l'+'l'+'l'++ iiiililNiZATilN scum: BESi u wutn (Canadian Press.) LONDON, Nov. tL-Iienry l\lor gcnthau, fortner American Am- bassador to Constantinople. has it-ft London for Greece to take up the position of president of the [league of Nations’ Refugee Settle ment Committee. Before his departure he express- ed the greatest tenthuslasm about the new post. which places him in charge, he said, of lilo "greatest scheme ot’ colonization tho world has Giv!‘ known". in his new posi- tion ht- will be entirely responsi- ble for the \vt-lt‘ttt-t~ o1‘ millions of refuge-oi; ill Western Thrace and lilncedotiiu. Although lit- i)t'.'iit*\'t‘>l privately that charity will not stave oft’ star- vation of u great llllfllDHi‘ of rc- fugtvos, he is convinced that with» in a year the refugees instead oi‘ being‘ u burden on Greece, will be its salvation. ituifiiiisi mstsuuus , tttzt (Canadian Press.) liiUNTWtEAh, Que” Nov. 6.»~<Nlt- ro-(ilytrt-rine used by bandits Vagaitist the safes in the offices of lthe Charles Clceri Company whole- sale grocers and the tltslian con sulatc in the some building re- suJ-ted in u fire that chased the miscreants away tetupty-haiutled and gutted tho building causing two hundred thousand dollars dam- nge. Two firemen were injured while fighting the. blaze. Mother Shoots Her Daughter Accidentally (Canadian Press.) Nt')it’i‘li (WIATICOOK, Quin. Nov. tL-"Whilc. Mrs M. R. Lecours was showing a rifle to n (roller yesterday she accidentally pulled the trigger and sent. zt bullet throttgh the body 0i’ hcr fmirtetin your old tlntigitter Lillian who tiled twvivt- hours iiiivl‘ Indian Slayer? Taken by Police (Canadian Press- hETiiBRilXi-E, Nov. 6.-Joe Bluckborse alias “Two Stab" blood Indian charged with siayrzg and burning the body oi‘ Winnie ‘Toile- slrup at Raymond Friday, was rap- turerl nt midnight neur his ntlue fifteen miles from rltaymnotl, liiouuted Police made the cap lure wounding the Indian in the face before he gave in. Announcements, Coming Events, Meetings, Etc. ltATlrxt-Z cents per word each insertion. "Conu- to the "fir-an Supper in Stanley Hall, Thursday evening November ilth. if not fine first night following 11l-11-7~2i. field after next Sunday. Rev. Mr. Tetrie, of 0'Leary, is taking charge (Continued on Page 3.) .."The B. l. S. will hold a smoker members and active workers 'I' ll-iifll"? WANT CANADIAN IRON Dr. C-illllfléii, Deputy Minister of Mines for Canada, ‘in an interview with Hugo Stlnnes, the 0 _ capitalist, was told that Germany is ready and anxious to lmwlii huge quantities of Canadian iron ore, to replace the supply cut 0H - Piillii Mil ENiJEXIlE Berlin Gov’t Has Con sented To His-Re- . turn to Silesia. . Press) ‘A (Canadian BERLIN. Nov. Crown Prince ‘will probably, with his family at the Oeis Estate in Silesia. by Christmas. Theifler- luau Government has instructed Lite Consulate at Amsterdam N girt- him n vise, but has requested that bu defer his visit for a few in oks Whether the Gevcrnment think} that by that time Germany nt‘] bu so rcnctonery that there "xvii isn't lie any objection left to tho you'd Princes l-illlil or whether if. dotting (iermuny get used to the ides of his return, is unt-Jrtatn; but tho Government has tivoidviii ‘publicity on the subject uni bps ‘ttifflciully denied that the crops Prince's vise tact tho order been made. There in a rumor to-day that the Crown Prince is in Oels but. he is still in ilitriitgen awaiting s. tav- ornbie time. The monarchtst Debt- suite Zeitung says the former Kai- ser is angry with his son 10+ a-iug to return to Germany as; iticrt» private citizen. which ypi the form n1‘ his request to the i107‘ eruuicnt. as cabled to Tho Milli and Empire at the time. The neat- scltc Zsitung ssys:—- t Shortly after writing to Ger- muny requesting permission to re- turn, the Crown Prince wont w visit his father at Doorn. The Kaiser spoke to the Crown Prince scmcthini; us follows: Haw can you promise tho. Berlin Govern- mt-tit to live only as a private est- nto owner and obey lmpiicidy tiio 110w (:rti\~l'.\‘l"!lel1 your momrchiit is ready. when in for its issue i185 ~_ Continued 0n Page 3. l‘. The Weather, to». i" :- "r. DtJ-LE‘. r ‘i-if ‘wifltw ‘ mi . ‘so \__1'~;é\Rtl 1 t» m rmu ' TORONTO. Nov. I-Msritime increasing easterly and southerly winds cloudy and foggy with “is: Temperature yesterday maxi- mum 54. minimum 47. liigh tide this morning at 0J4 and tonight at 9.28. v Sun sets this afternoon at 4.3! and rises tomorrow morning it .5 . ' a 0 8th in their hall this evening at their regular meeting. 11»7-1i New ‘moon. Thursday, Nov, 11.27 s. m. ,, Summerelde tide eighteen mic. utes later than Charlottetown. ' the French occupation of the 6.—The former _ . .