. - _ 1-..- ,,§,.,,_.....- T. figmuszczrtsv-t: a v aealdmwbitofilu“ ltdoeaailthegood Ulnlllliotbsl" llllltilllfllitt ph- Int-hm. lllllllutlacilaoftbe g ' “sir mt iliiililillililllll illiillilii Morning Daily Mannie-d 1Q!) 8830 per year (in advance) delivered. use nrr YQaI (la alvnncel nailed In Canada and Ilaltel Itatea. Preaiilent. W. Cheater S. Secretory. Llent- Cal. I). Eelltar and llllllel‘. J. It. llnrnett Montreal ltapaeae latlve-ql. C. Merrill New \arl Ilepreacntn Cblrage ltepaeaentatlvv-E- J. Poise: llellnaall vice-emanates. J. It. Burnett! A. llaelilnaan. II. l. 0. Aaaeelnte Editor. D» If. Carrie. lve—llrank It. llea-thnp The GUARDIAN nay be eilalned Ire- the Olarlettrl at Hartline llntienen. (lrnlien st. Garter A Co. Queen llt. A. Brown. Stamp Vendor Hallway llaekntall Stephen Only. Richmond M. THURSDAY. fallen!!! ‘flats in .1". ‘I. Inaply. Prince It» Grocery . . Ir, Ina-en It. W. C. Wrillt. Kent StIQQt Went It. Tin-an White. I88 Ell Ave. Wh- Dulllcl. Spill] Pllk DO!‘ NOV. 29, 1923 his migrant-reg cult " Notes By the Way l1’ la undesirable that any prov- ince should elect .i.s entire quote of members to cuppa-t one politi- cal party. This has baJwued, how. ever. more than once in federal elections in Prince Edward lsland. A full quota of sit Liberal numbers in 1881. During 1814-8 the sit eup- Pflrted the short-lived Mackenzie government which was defeated in 15's. From 1887 tc 1891 our s‘: ‘ a n " the M " ld government uutli 1891. On and ai- ter the election oi’ 1896. the begin- was elected here in i874 and again I IlIiinmlaamlnr-len. chilgui: poems use, rile Mnetcmlc c». oi Canada, us. Montreal. Better than a mustard nlutcr i” score‘; ALFRED FRASER n2 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK I '@\9 C. M. LAMPSON & CO. 64Queen Street E. C. 4 London, ~ England Public Auction Sales of Raw Furs @)©@© srrrmrrr TOURIST ASSOCIATION. The organization oi a Tourist As- crnlnéllt of Canada mines. lands and hotels. the gov- guaranteeing sociatlon for this province. an promises to fill a want long fl-lt here. For years the need oi such an organization has been pointed out. publicly and privately, and some years ago associations were formed both in Charlottetown and Summerslde but, although they both did much effective work’ and sowed seeds, a small harvest from which is being reaped today. they both died a natural death —-— from starvation. Now, it must not be imagined for a mouicnt that the organiza- tion completed on Tuesday night in this city, finishes the work and, of itself, assures an influx of tourist traillc to the province from this time onward. The work is only be- gun. Nor must it be imagined that the full responsibility of carrying on the work rests with the oillcers nppoin-tctl. Theirs is to direct, to spcnd their time and energies frec- ly and voluntarily for the benefit of the province; theirs is a labor of love undertaken because they, in common with the rest of us, realize the need of it and the benefit it can be to the province if it receives e A Wise Old Trapper N the State of Uhio there lived a bunch of boys who bud this trapping business down to a science. Th9? each sent for separate price lists cvrfi" your and then uenl, a their furs to the house giving the best quotations. After five years they decided they weren't so dread- fully wise because they didn't. have enough profits to make their efforts worth whilc. tine day they met Tum McMillan drivim: a. now car to town. Tom laid he made the price of his stvcll outfit shipping Belts. He told how llo got wlsc tn those funny prices and found It was better to dcal with (lites. Porter. because he always know in advance just what he was sure of getting. He said that Porter never offered $5 for a $3 pelt. but he always paid the $3 which he promised and sometimes Just a little better. Chan. Porter now has five Wise trapper! in that section in- .-. .. FURS Don't Take a Chance with your Bend us your Your furs game laud ad- dolllltlre\to you pontionately. For this reason. if reps. ct our ' y sc tlem o Price Bullet- Blame fellow for no other. every man and wo- i . Shi i o . ‘Fangs lfldppflrlllgl. hi1? yin“ know man in the province should. and we l l 0 bl l ll Vl“"'ri‘g"h‘t‘"‘no$ luzgf’ t2“ gglwnfg trust will, be a membe of the As~ dongfi‘: fcffl; $5‘; ihewwia‘: sociction. The membership fee has $31!“ 5° dig‘; aflxyiipnrlelrczbwf been placed st the modest figure Write today. pivrmfildm of one dollar. The money is to be “i: wt: slim-nee spoilt in such advertising abroad 12a West 2m. My 31-. NOW VOPK brings sure money JEIT-ll-fl-IHCWRQ. Professional Cards Mark R. McGuigan B. A. HQRRISTER, SOLICITOR. Money to Loan Cameron Block Oilarlottslewn. P. E. Island ___.______..._.__. S. S. Hessian Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public Etc. ETC. MONEY. TO LOAN Montague P. E. Island Palmer & Palmer _ H. J. PALMER, K C. Barr-later, Etc. Money to Lean Bank of Nova Oootle Building Charlottetown. P. E. l. MacDonald & McPhee B. A. l. A. MoDONALO H. F. M=PHEE U. A llnrrleters. Attorney. Etc. one! t0 onn Illley llnlllllng Ullarletlelown i5}? c. c. Archibald Graduate at N. V. Peat Graduate Medical School and lfaaplfnl Practice limited to Ilye. Iilar. Rene and‘ Throat (lllee layer Building. Great (leery! street Telephone Ofllee lfenra-l te ______.____.____________. GIADUQTILI AIIIIIUAIGQSOIIOOI. O D‘ IUIIOL MITIIOD u‘? flFgfifll OOQIR we.“ ' _ . B604. IIa.—.lteIi mean A square dual and ov- s h l p m c n t N "We system. place than the support alnd the co-operstiou iilill the sympathy of those whom it is designed to benefit. l Who nrc to benefit from such a tourist business as this province is iontltlcd to and for the development ‘and maintenance of which we have ‘such natural conditions as no other purt of North America can boast of? Every man and woman in the {province will benefit; for every dol- :lur that comes to the province from outside finds its way into the general circulation and everybody receives his or her share oi it. Mul- ‘lllply that dollar by hundreds of lthousnnds, which is quite within ‘the mark. and every man and wo- men in the province benefits pro- aml in such publicity as the officials . may decide upon. and we may rest assured that they will make the best possible use of it. The ofllci- nls and the various committees are all “live wires" and we may safely leave the working out of the de~ tniis to them. ‘ of the value of the C. P. it. to the “mmmd i“ ye"e'd“y‘“ Guardum‘ {shareholders oi that corporation. According to this arrangement the C. P. R. was to continue as a cor- its almost unlimited laud areas. its other profit-making assets. gone through as the Big Interests for ninety-nine years eight per cent poration, drawing its profits from steamers. its mines, its hotels and Had it wanted it to and as Messrs. Fleld~ ing. Gouin and other leading Llh~ ersls supported it. the C. P. R. would have become the biggest div~ ldend producing corporation in the world. its eight per cent guaran- tee from lthc Dominion government. added to the profits from the u-n- attached assets above mentioned. would have produced a yearly rev- enue oi iifteen to twenty per cent for its stockholders. The scheme did not go through because the Right Hop. Arthur liieighen fought it and defeated it. This accounts for the enmity of the Big interests. Their anger at the men who was instrumental in thwarting such a profitable looking proposition is the most natural thing in the world. However, the people know about it; they ‘tlimire the man who had the courage and the ability to light their battles, and will stand by him. The Mail and Empire, in the course of an editorial, well says: “There are people who would like to soc the office of Conservative loader vacated by Mr. Meighen. but they sit. 1f the Ottawa Govern- ment had e franchise for cboosin the leader of the Conservative Mr. Meighen. it is bad enough for the Government to be embarrassed by a sense of its own incapacity and its own failure, but it could endure that if it only had u... com. footing reflection that the Leader of the Opposition and his lieuten- ants were also not men of the first order of ability." THE OTHER FELLOW What a barren world it wont.) be if it were not for the othpr fol 10w! Eliminate him and practical- ly all our feverlrh BOUI/ltleg (m- reform. for social betterment. for hm" cllllflllflhlli would cease auto- matically. it is for him we build our Jails and peultentiaries. m. him we build our almsbouses and contribute or solicit our chflflfleg T0 the ileneral public. however, We wish to say that they owe it to themselves anti to the province to give every assistance to the organ- izatlon. The most effective help they can givo at present is .10 be- come members and contribute the small membership fee. There is no doubt that our tourist business can he enlarged indefinitely as no other tourist resort on the continent has; such e wealth of advantages in cli- mate. ltealthfuiness. sea-bathing and such other attractions as summer tourists look for. THE REASON. To the Montreal Star and certain other Big interests in Monti-eel, more perhaps than to any other cause. save his own personal tit- noss, the Rt. lion. Anthur Meigher owes his rapidly increasing pop“. iarity and the transcendent posi- tion he holds today in the public life of Canada. Sbaugillnessys railway schemg proposed to consolidate the Cana- dian railways. including the inter- coloniai and the Canadian North- "F- "is belt vlyinr m.» in the all ne- for none of Us are going m jg“ and none of us shall necd the aims. houses or the need of charity. it is for him we enact our laws, prohib- itory and otherwise for We know how to take care of ourselves and how and what laws to observe. in- deed We do ‘not need any law for we are law observers. God bless the other follow, if would be a Door world wmlout him IF WINTER comes Had winter set in this year with its usual abruptness. sometime be. tween the first and middle of De. lcember, it would have caugh: mall)’ unprepared. Thousands or bushels of potatoes were in tron. sit in unheated cars. many thous- ands of bushels oi turnips were in the ground. all defiantly awaiting the winter which did not come and which has not come yet for we Irv Illli snioylng September wea- ther at the end of November. This however. is no guarantee thni future winters will follow the same programme. The first of No- vember is the beginning of wint- er, whether winter came: or not. inoe and never more so than dur- it is not on his side of the House while Prince Edward Island l! s!" party in Canada, it would be tempt-Isent t0 Ottawa solid blocks 0i sup ell to stuff ‘the ballot box sgainstlllvflflli» " niug of the Laurier regime. we had but live members in the House of (Jctnmons and this uunrberwas re- duced to four before the general election of 1904. ' Thus the election of a solid quota of Llberil members hae al- ways been disastrous to our prov- ing the present regime. No federal government ever did half as much for Prince Edward island as that which our people most ungratefuliy defeated in 1921 by refusing to elect a single Conservative mem- ber. The result is that. we have iuur voting machines at Ottawa ob- sequiously voting "yea" in support of s tottering government which can only command a majority eup- port in three provinces out of nine. From the Rideau River to the Pec- ific coast. an area containing five provinces and about iive-elgths of the Canadian people, the King gov- ernment hae not in art-y province a majority mandate to rule. And this is the government to which our province for two years past. has been giving its unanimous support. Even the Conservative party, de- cimated aa it was In the GIMUO" o1 192i, has a majority in as many provincial divisions an the Liberal party. that is in Ontario. British Columbia. Yukon Territory and a tie with the Liberals in New Bruns- wick, its reduced strength is dis- tributed from coast to coast. if a federal election could be brought on today there is no dour-t that with the present discontent in the Maritime Provinces, Prince Ed- ward island etubNew Brunswick. (if not Nova Scotis also) with Ou- lllfln and lBri-tlsh Columbia would be found in the Conservative eoi- umn and the tottering King gov,- ernment would be defeated. Moan- lng its unanimous support to a government which never had any mandate to rule from a eingifl province except the three which The situation ia altogether ano- malous and without PPWWBV" l" the political history of the 00min ion. 'lt seems to be almost im- possible of ever being repeated and quite impossible to continue. As Mr. Fielding told the Halifax elec- tors the other day, it indicates that there is “something WWIIS." in the system. which, however, the government has-done nothing i0 remedy and is now putting forth its most strenuous efforts to per- petuate. it is surely a rather un- gracious attempt to thus shut out the very large body of Nova Sculls Conservatives from having fl 51"‘ gle spokesman in the House of Commons. What seems desirable la some simple ayatem that will provide for the representation oi minorities in lair proportion to their numbers. if such provision were made nei- ther of the larder Dnrtice would ever be left without it spokesmilll in parliament in any province in Canada. That is surely a consum- motlon devoutiy to be wished. l! ls more than that. it is necessary for a fair representation of the people. As it is now ‘fully one third 0f the people of Quebec and Nova Scoila and, as we believe, more than half the people of Prince Edward lslsnd have no voice in the supreme parli- ament of the Dominion. ‘Mr. Field- ing admits the wrong and injustice of this, but neither he nor his gov- ernmmt have proposed any remedy for it. And it is and will be in vain to look for a remedy to a government two-thirds of whose c0990" ll made up from the provinces which elect solid blocks. Quebec alone dominates the dominant party in Canada. it was opposition to con- scription which made Quebec more solidly Liberal than it was even in the days of isaurier. in his time there were never fewer than seven- nnd up to 27 Conservatives elected at any general election in Quebec. in the election of 1611. tlurins ti“! war, there were only three and in 1921 no Conservative was elected in Quebec. ‘libs solid block in rs- prasenution has now become a pol- itical ful of the Lihertl Dirty. l! began in Prince Edward in 1814 and was repeated in 1987 and itll School in the Mt. Herbert Church llfl was the Superintendent. thirst; ~ dlaeuaaien ly _ at aueetiana er lataraaefbe - Charlottetown Gllerdiaaeaee enaeraa toe gfhiaaelumnlaollllhreba: x . o Mt. Herbert S_S. Sin-in fairness to Mr. Henry MucKcnzie. who I01‘ m"!!! 3'9"“ nus Superintendent of a Sunday School in Mount Herbert, anti also in fairness to the residents of 1M. Herbert, whom the public ntigbl look upon as a non-church-goins people, l wish to refute the follow- ing statement appearing in n for- mer issue of this pfllicl‘. VIII “Mi- Herbert now cuioys what. it has never known before. s Sunday School meeting weekly." There was s Methodist Suudrly Mr. H. MscKen- It was closed when there were p0 young people to attend it. About i911, through the efforts of Mr. Maclienzie and Mr. William John- son (at that time manager of the P.E.l. Protestant Orphanage) a weekly Union Sunday School, was formed in the MacDonald Consolid- ated School. Mr. MucKenzie was Superintendent and teacher of the Bible Class, and Mr. Johnston had many YBRTQ 880. charge of the junior class. Pres- byterian text books were used. Shortly afterwards the Sunday School meetings were held in the Mt. Herbert Hall and a much larg- er attendance was secured, there bcirlg about 25 people from Mount Herbert and Mermaid besides the children from the Orphanage num- bering about 10 or l5. The school was then divided into three class- es: Prof. B. Hurst, of the Orphan~ age, had charge of the Bible Class, and he certainly made the lessons interesting. Elton Raynor had charge of the boys‘ class,‘ and Mrs. Christopher Mscllean of the girls‘ class. After a number of years the Sunday School meetings were held iu the Orphanage and about 1920 in the Presbyterian Kirk at Mermaid ior a your and again in the Orphan- lge until 1923 when the Methodist Sunday School was fol-med in the Mt. Herbert Church. in 1921 there were very few at- tending the Sunday School meet» lugs other than the Orphanage children, and Prof. Hurst was thc oully teacher although he was aid- ed by Mr. McKenzie who remained Superintendent from 191i until i923. The last two or three years the Sunday School meetings were was no service in Mt. Herbert Church. ‘ Tito above information proves that the Sunday School in the Mt. Herbert/church is not u lmtnd-uew Sunlialy School, but a continuation of the one formed in 191i, null about ltait‘ of its members were members oi‘ the Sunday School from i911 until 1921, and it is again en- joying weekly one in i923. 1 am. Sir, etc. RESIDENT OF MT. HERBERT. (Patriot please copy.) Sir,——Like many others I was letter in Tuesday's Guardian. On 011B 1101111. however. I take issue with him. He would hold the par- ents responsible and punish them for the children's crimes. He, and this strain, shew a very limited knowledge and no experience in the difficulties confronting the av- erage parent especially in our pop- ulous centres. They evidently are not parents themselves or, if they are blessed with children. it is with more than the ordinary oi‘ itcniel inheritance "fill of nulsirlc social, school and street associa- tions. it is true that there are parents who take no interest whatever in the welfare of thir children, some who shamefully neglect their llu. ties and again others who avg" viciously incite their offspring to The Public Fortur i ' n. iy in the middle of the Irish! Y‘ pglulut diarrhoea. folks in the house 811W morphine. about a week. and emerged s very weak lookinS pep. lhlmseif sflain. pd! y case oi’ 1719mm"! "m" ‘fiolodli Egg-nose when Nature w.“ ti to 221mg? ill: vomiting and diarrhoea everything should have to hell) ll"- been to induce ! putting the auger down the ti!“ or giving a teaspoouiul of mustard m a “up of warm water. stopped Nature's efforts to get rid of the irritant. pwratus, ii. battle ensues, and wort‘ testine start all held only on Sundays. when thcrofcous working’ m.“ and diarrhoea result. ‘much distress one (lull to the sev en,- driving out. efforts oi these mus cular coats. ilzclpitltz N-aturt» stomach and inducini-t film's Wm“ mg llfKl likewise the Wash-l"! 0"’ |oi thc tionB ni‘ soullY Wale?- - - - The law shou . loo so ' Parental Responsibility ithmL The", a... 0th.... l Qttoultl Slay the large majority of our par = t.. . pleased with the general tenor and Zglngt n m the“ “(m-ts to control outspoken tone of “An Observefsmmelr children and rear them to 1n honorable manhood or woman hood. er would like to hello! the tfihilit‘ perpetually at their s es. i. s ' some others, when they write in practicum. ilibat £11112 oi yours w _ Balm. M-Do By lame: MIBTAKEN KINDNE53 A chop was taken down sudden- vomltins. followed - mo“ ‘nlenm with set/Bl? shortly aiterwliftlfl h distress UN As he was in euc Mm so!“ 11m nest and sleep. buifewglicbnilned to the house ior individual. , n w-"nearly a month before he why such a slow recovery m)" gut rid ‘of the p015- lbeleu don s thing‘ would havv Wh the rlfiht y more vomitinE b) Administering morphine 81ml“! in fact glvin‘! quantities of warm writer and then having it brouiihi up again would keep washlnK U" stomach out and getting rid of an) poison that might be still cilnglnf to the walls of the stomach. Ant‘ tlzcn as to the diurnhoea. The snmt preceduce here would be the lbesl treatmonl. Fill a two quart fountain syrlngt with warm soapy water and how this flow up into the intestine liavo tile patient hold it as long ili-Lpflsesibic. Alter it has been expell-cd, give iutotltcr one. and so on as long us the patient can stand it. ‘Perhaps a rest of hall an houl would be wise, and tlbcn auothet iuicctiou should be Riv?"- Whcu you get something intt your stomach that cannot be BM“! leil properly by your digest-Ive or is sent to the nerve willie- immetlistcly the stomach and ill .llcir musculsl the vouiitint The ])iilllt-l—-Cl‘i1m])S~"Lllili givc r1" tSo you we tho wisdom lltcn 0' by washing out till lgwgr bowel by the lnjoc __-—-?———— who are themselves up I18 However much s father or moth impossible. They chi? not be mollycoddlsd in the housc from daybreak till sunset. For their healthk-t sake and physical as wel as social training they must be out in the world and beyond the l)!" cnts reach of vision for tho butter part of their days. And in thcsl hours they can lnltlllc more of the ahluoflphylfg pl‘ up; vicious llfv than even ‘the most watchful of parents can offset or eliminate And those vicious trainings are tor often fostered by those whose du ty It is to discourage and prevent them. When I was n lzul i was not taught thnt my tonllcr years would Liberal st the last election. Alter all, ‘Quebec was the lust of u... three provinces to become solidly Liberal. in the five elections 1896-1911 inclusive in the baurier 1181's our own province always divi- 119d "B Bllitlwrt and elected during that time 1i Conservatives and 1t Liberals. Sir Wilfrid Laurier was the pride of hla party and much beloved and admired while be lived. lie he'd a lmuch strflllksr array of lminister~ ll“ Billlefliilofl than has Premier King. It is not for loveor admira- tion of the present Premier that three eastern provinces sent him the solid support they did in 1921. Ha has neither the eloquence, tho ability the grace nor the gift of leadership possessed by ms groups]- predscessor. Laurier at least led his government and Barty. King neither leads the one nor’ the other. The Laurie: government had some- ttlluss to u. credit in their earlier days. the reduction of letter post- age. trade preference for the Mo- um Country. surplus revenues. Tbs King government has given only added taxation. a continuation of deficits. weak compromises with the ‘Progressives and sectional rule. in its later years the Laurlor government made the hugs and atly blunder of building the rlnaoontinental and Grand 11-“; Pacific Railways. That at h“; l . " ‘f. . ~'O III" la Nova lootia e "solid 18" was ade fa alfark on the landscape" “M ‘v ...‘. protect me front punishment for wrong doing; the impression livell with nle sncl with other boys that the cops llilll a place in which ll put bad boys and even though harmless nnll innocent we would not care to be caught by n "blue coat" out after dark. Now tho son ter things is seduced to wrong be hind my back by the companion oi evil who, with the azstablished au- thority of law tells him "there is no danger. they can't jail a twulvs your old boy." in this tho anxious and careful parent's teachings and labors are set at defiance by the teachings and training generated by our law administration. Again. in the case of older boys those who are amenable to the law and who are old enough‘ to know bettor. what assistance does the parent got from those charged with the ministry of the law‘! Not many years ago a number of lads including clerks in banks and those carping money and able to nay. were summoned for l-laliown- en escapades. Damages were prov- en to a total cf not far from a hundred dollars. A fine of a dollar each was imposed, and some say not. collected unless paid voluntee- lly. Now what smart Aiack of a 50y. with money to spare. is there who would not Day a dollar for the sport of. say amasilinl '1 bun troll dollar plate glass window of tome store keeper whom he dislik- ed. if he was only chlrled one dollar for his sport? There are "w" ‘"10 DI! as much for lees ‘gratification in a theatre. instead of the project of bold- Il! parents responsible in ceeoe such as l refer to It would be more in humus with lllO principle! of inatloe to impose the fies: upon Willi-Vim this duty ie to pro» The only way to feel safe Ia to lngurg, a llisastdrousfire at Montague _, When you read of the recent diesatrous fire a; Montague did your theuqilte tut-e to your own Prcpgfly} Do It now with Hyndman s. cs. ma. The Oldest and Largest insurance Agency Y that l am trying to bring up to het- _ Offices, 61 Queen Street I. E. BURDEN, Fire Che rloltelown, P, 5_ Agent at Montague in P. E. l, All SEE OUR WINDOW FOR TONE or write today. i bfOfiOfiQi. 5 G Daily Selections ION ; Guardian Readers aasaaos- - THE HOMELAND By Dana Burnet vly land was the west land; my home was on the hill, L never think of m-y gland but it makes my heart to thrill;. l never smell the west wind that. . blows the golden skies. lut old desire is in my feet and dreams are ln my eyes. My home crowned the high land; ' it ball a stately grime. _ l never think oi‘ my land but l see my mother's face; l never smell the wont wlud that blows tlhe silver ships "tut old delight is in my heart anll mirth is on my lips. My land was‘ a high land; home was near the eklcs. l never think of my land but a light la in m)’ eyes‘. l never smell the west wind that blown the summer rain— m? little lad airaln. Mystery Man in Jewel Swindle (By Dominion News Service) LONDON. Nov. IF-Siaven Ron- all], a dealer in precious stones. vas so wail known and respected ‘n the trade that he was entrusted vith pearls ens dismantle of the "alue of 8750.000.00—for which he lever paid. ‘ex administration of their offic- ~a eucou u... the moat flagrant of wrongs upon varenia of many veil organised homes who have a struggle against ‘these conditions ‘n their-efforts to rive their lone mi mutton a mini place tact our deception fmnl Qqgngggflqggglgg lllliillllill THE NEW CONCERT PHUNDGRAPH $75. EXCEPTIONAL VALUE $7 biggest pearl Sui i am at my mother's knee. s 1h‘ FOR BEAUTY FOR PRICE If interested we urge that you call , A. E. TOOMBS 167 Queen Street Charlottetown gqnglly Well lll years ho was 8'51"" the acquaintance and iidcnce of all the best-Rn ere in precious stoncfl- Misfortune overtook clpal, with the result it is thought he W man fell. acting for another whom ho stole 10mm’ monds he got no refill’- Laicr. Mr. Kemplar t0 but added i don't want. to His it, YOU. somebody also." to nothing. After leaving Mr. boat Ronchi wont on nnstein. wanted diamonds l0! l buyer from Australia. stones to the value 0i paying for them‘ wit out lo ‘cl!’ SEE g OUR l WINDOW the money or a return of was a thief. and Ronchl "l am hero be a thief i0!‘ to make restitution. howovc Komplsr 0i! m" m Brussslfi and saw a dealer there film“! M: Ho told his man that hi Rouchi is s silort. thickflvl m"? known and on the Continent. Londflfl For mall!’ for one of ihil merchants ill ‘Y world, and in this l-atliifiilli Iliad" won the con- own deal- lilH Dim‘ that llonclti got into illilinclill durlculllw- 1 was in those circum-Iwm" temptation came to illm that Wt hi! as merely but Wit“ this man ls—t.he real Dglligwa] m the case, remains a mYB ~ Having obtained SW1“ mpg]: sold them. When Mr.Kemplarv l‘ wrote it)? ills dil- ld ilim ll" admitted to hail! promise r, Cillhe m; cash Ho 20'- 525,000.00 i.‘ two cheat!“ which were mmu9red_ The Pvt. “on Com gm allowed blur: h“ ppomliltl. a“? cltl W" ' ‘ggrvitude-ioul‘