.rest at Sixteenth street and First ‘celved the honorary degree oi LL- wiié 13s» rm ‘ . , g "i p y Oovere Prince Edward . .1, Like The Dew l Charlottetown Bull Ioninl Gnu-lien, Illllqd 1891, Miilllllli llliE . till. NEW'.YORK. June 20.—Flve hundred men and women attacked Anatole Zelenchy, 33 years old, a Russian. of 441 Stone Avenue. Brooklyn, this afternoon, when three policemen had him under ar- avenue on a charge of attemiliills to kidnap Virgen, the two-year-oid son of Mrs. Agona Bpgradorff. a widow on 401 East ‘Sixteenth street. , The tenement in which Mrs. Bograilnrff lives with her three children is th-ree blocks from_ t_lie home of the parents oi Giuscppi Verotin, the flvo-year-olil boy who was murdered by kidnaiillerfl Bevel‘- al weeks ago. When residents o. tiio neighborhood saw Zelenchy hustling the screaming child into a taxicab a fewlioors from his home they set on Zelenchy, and several iii the crowd set up the cry oi "lynch him!" Policemen Faust. Strunk. and Vnllnsky, of the East Twenty-Sev- onil street station, wcrc attracted by lic shouts. and trnnizlit Zelencliy as he was placing little Virgen flllll several bags of clothing in the taxicab. They were endeavoring to l-narn the cause of all the comin_ tlon woman urged the throng to take Zelencliy from the policemen. One muscularly built man struck Zelenchy in the face and knocked iiim_down. When the policemen at- tempted to protect him from Fill" ther harm they were set‘ on by the IIIaTIIIO Uilil» ii iii lii il lll with drawn pistols, charged t e crowd. and in a few minutes the street was cleared and the police- men hurried their prisoner and the child into the taxicab and took them to the police station. Soon after their arrival there Mrs. Bogradoif appeared. She as- serted that the attempt to kidnap the child was in retaliation for her refusal earlier in the day to draw her savings of $300 from a bank and elope with Zelencliy. She said she had known Zelenchy in Russia before the death of her husband, two years ago, and that he had followed her and her three children to this country. . On Wednesday night, sire said. Zelenchy called at her home and announced that he intended to re- main-tliere all night or until she her mind to comply with ,. made u his req est._About 1,1 o'clock this morning, she said. she left her home to get some groceries, and iii the little boy's clothing, placed it in two ‘bags and then left tlie house with the child. ‘ Later when Zelenchy was liclu without hail for the action‘ of the grand jury by Magistrate Sweet- drawn attention to the attempt- i" adbuct him. Tiiey explained that the residents of tenements in the vicinity were in a highly excitable angry crowd. Seeing that they We"! liable to lose their prisoner, liceman Faust drew his pistol and nnounced he would kill the first an or woman who laid hands on elanchy. The other policeman. ailing Tale t Murder». Told Iirdonlessions ‘iiollowfli dea-ths oi Mr . in Rutledge and her four cli-ilidren in a fire which ilestroye-d their home nine miles from iiiiisfail Tuesday night, J.J. Rutledge, tho husband and fat-hero‘?! Wlmlell- was ioiin-nuy charged with ‘murder today's session of ills council . , .__| CiJllilLli and as he is in a hospital suffering ‘from burns, ‘the preliminary hear- lng has been adjourned until June 25. The details oi the tragedy, as related by Rutledge in a signed statemen-t wlilc hhe gave to the Al- ‘borta Provincial Police in hospital are appalling. ‘He declared that following dlscussionswith his wife, over the possibility oi the Chil- ilren's Aid Society ‘hiking ‘their children away from them, tlioy de- cided to kill themselves and their children. Debatod the Method. They debated whether they would drown ‘or shoot the little ones, but found that the means were lack- ing. so decided on death in the iirc. Rutledge described what he said were the arrangements and for sheer brutality they 111W‘! law parallels in Canadian trasfiliy- 0i"? child when she screamed. W“ struck by him, he said to render it unconscious and save it Dill" and lio may linve struck more. Whcn thebeds were blazing with the, all] of gasoline and coal oll. his courage failed him and he fled. carrying one girl, Poppy. Geddes Receives LL.D CDEVELAND. Ql-llO. June - 201- Si-r Auckland Geddes, British um- bnssador to the United States. re- l). from Western Reserve Univer- sity today and delivered an ad- dress at the commencement exer- clues. A total oi 360 degrees were con- ferred upon graduates. President Charles F. Thwin! presided at the commencement- Po-l murder of_ the Verotia boy by kid- sate of mind. owing to the recent nappers. Keelnchy denied that h-e was attempting to kidnap tlie child. Port ‘Arthur Next ventlon in Halifax for Flrst__ her absence Zelenciiy gathered up ser. in_ the Yorkville Court. the policemen said that li- WllB U"? struggles of the child that had Nat. Council City Women May Hold Their 1923 Con- Brit-ish Columbia y Against Japanese Government Cables Premier Re- garding Anglo-Japanese Treaty VICTORIA, lune 2C~—'I‘he provin- cial Government, through Premier Oliver, has forwairded to tlie Right Hon. Arthur Meiglien in London a cablegram strongly urging that an-y renewal of the Anglo-Japanese treaty should preserve to Canada the right to restrict Japanese iiiiini- gration, something which the exist- ing treaty does not stipulate. in connection with this subject, i-Ion. E. G. Darrow, Minister of Agriculture, has collected data showing to what extent Japanese anid Chinese are engaged in the business of agriculture and horti- culture ln this province. This infor- ma-tion has been forwarded to Hon. Dr. Toliiric. who is ‘accompanying Premier Mciglien on his mission to England. lThe text of‘ the cablegram for- warded to Premcr Moiglie-ti is as folloiws: . “Strongly urge on behalf of ‘this province that renewal of Japanese treaty preserve to Canada right l0 restrict Japanese immigration in tlie interests of a white British .Col nfmliia. Minister of Agriculture has ‘already furnished "Polm-le with facts supporting _our contention. Minister of Justice iia.s advised. anid ls supported by Court of Ap- peal, that present. treaty precludes this province stipulating in public works con-tracts against employ- ment of Japanese and precludes stipulation i.n leasing Crown lands against employment of Orientals thereon. Stronglyprotest against renewal treaty containing clause so interpreted, and urge you to preserve tior this prowl-nee its right to control its o\vn lands and make its o\vii contractual stipulation. (vSigned) AfJOHN OLIVER" _ AllThe News Worth Reading ‘All File. A?! . Worth Printing“ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA‘ TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1921 Annual Iuboerlpllol. lellvelol C1-C0. liy Mull. Cumin, 06.00. U. B. L. 00K I i iiiii National Railways as c. system. The railways of Canada, generally, entered that year in ifcondltion more or less impaired. Many _oi' tlic essential improvements and ‘re- the war,-such as, improvement of Maintenance oi Way, re-condition- required immediate aitention. was, ‘therefore, a your i_ii which emi- sidorziibie tleferrcii was taken up on tiio National System. many new conditions brought about by the amalgamation. traffic of the lines formed Canadian Notional from thissengei" traffic only $14327,- eacned iby tlie Canadian Pacific from that source. was found from tin» (lovernmenfs ian Pacific. with 39 per cent, gore-l railway mileage oi C , Maegan! "Reversed: -1. .‘ - -._._,.... CALGARY, Aura. June 20-» Port Arthur will be the next mes‘.- ing place orthe National Coiiiiolli This was decide-J all it: was also urged that. the consider Halifax as tlie convention city in 1923. It was stated that the first parliamentary recognition tlie council had received was given to it in Halifax when .the delegates were‘ invited to hold one oi the first convention in- the paiiliameiit buildings. The council's‘ famous sumage. resolution was also‘ passed at another convention. held later in the historic Nova ‘Sootia city. Mrs. W. Dennis, i-lolifax,_ was el- ected convener of tho immigration committee, and Mrs. E. M. Mur- ray, Halifax, convene!" of the tax- ation committee. Equine Slaughter In. Mesopotamia ‘Army Reduction Means Killinq Thousands of Horses for Econ- orimy'e Sake LONDON, Juno 20.—-Animal lov- ers are shocked :by the statement tlll the Iiou-se of Commons by Rt. Hons. Winston Churchil ‘that the reduction of thc British forces in Mesopotamia is equivalent to tlie sentence of death on thousands nt horses. The present establish- ment requires 47,000 horses, but when ‘the garrison is cut down 17.000 wiill be enough and this, in the words of the Colonial Secre- tairy, "involves -the wholesale des- truction of great numlbers." it is declared oftciiilly that there is nothing else to be done if eco- nomy undhumanity are to he ob- served. Many oi tlie light horses have been sold in Mesopoillmiil» but the trouble is to know MW 1° 41100090 of the heavy dwushl- Mll- inals. The surplus, the Events?- lie resigned this week after thirty- one years as president. "There is no sane mm Blillill‘ in Great Britain or the United States who desires any but the“, 30,000 to be. sot riii oi. ibest relations between‘ the W" countries," the embulldilr the graduates in his adduu. "There are only i" Illillmmmm look moi- thlln would ‘rlin into "°“°motlier till fltllfl- ll a feverish competition for mil-m an-i-mal would bning in £100 it kets, ending in the ibloody untrue-would no; pfly to bring them home for there would surely be a larie before the world." be hid- ‘tion oi civilisation . "The other is the ‘Ovoiution ofnumm, which would ‘machinery which will‘ IMP "NQIIYUIIIIWHKO that price and the Dues .0! tile flwlil"fii'"\li' NWQ-"pniy alternative seems to N. i9 toldw“ 1mm £40 to £50 apiece and News points out tonight. is really immense. in all ‘London and the five adjoining counties there are today only 09,000 horses and here To‘ ‘nwpmg 139m u; England would m}. My and maintenance of grooms Even if each not fetch possible. ed, ~be for more cruel to leave them to eviery important community in to the ill-treatment they would be Canada. lit was therefore, decided ‘ ' sure to get from the; natives, or py the management to ’ l9 ifllrfl "N!!! 1W0! iii "16. flflllri- daily transcontinental passengerflelty of its route; its scenic attrac- general increase in the cost of all s. ‘Apparently l‘ Abantious‘ Protest PARIS. June zobrhn Iillitcd States Government has ‘ illllndctl through dipitiiiiatic clinc- nels that tlie League of Natl...“ has received no answer to its in. vitation to tlie United states u, send a representative to (llggugg iiianilates. ' . . Both tho class "A" and “IP 1mm. dates are on tlie agenda for thc "leelilig of thc Council of tlic Lea- gue to be held in Geneva on June i7. The colonial offices oi’. tlie var"- ious countries are lnteregtgi] in bringing pressure for an early‘ solu- tion of the (liiflfliloh-oi mandates. The British are reproted to he Particularly anxious to close up the matter on account of ‘tlie situ- liiion in Mesopotnmiiu. The‘ French colonial authorities also are urg- llle 11 Prompt settlement. n. is "01 quite clear. iiowever, when the iluestton of mandates will come up. _ » There are two tendencies inside "l" Lillliiuc of Nations with rc- surd to the question of iiiaiitlates. One is to refer the whole question 539k "D011 the principal powers which negotiated tho Versailles and are responsible for ilin attri- bution oi the mandates. Tlio con- tentionof those holding this view is ‘that tlie league rcn-lly QXOFUISBS no initiative regarding nianilateis "d has only l0 do with the np- Drovai of the terms and the super- vision of administration of terri- tories under the terms of tlie man- dates decided upo.1_ The llrencli Government is understood to favor modification of the terms of the mandates to meet the United States views, while Great Britain op— poses this. " The other tendency is to consid- er that the United States has de- faulted by not sending a represent- ative to the League o} Nations as she was invited to do, and finally accepting the terms of the class “A" and "B" mandates. Those ill/Orin! his tendency profess to rc- gard the. failure of the Wahington Government to reply to the invita- tion to attend as equivalent to abandonment of the United States priteet_ been rc- siiaughter them u mercifully as it would. it is contend- liiwdled 03 per cent of the total passenge traffic oi‘ Canadian rail- ways. During i918, tlic percentage was 45, but ailiiitioiinl sci-vices and troop iiiovciiiniiis, (which itigcihcr zidilesi 3% million pnssi-nuvi- train miles) biruuizlit. itlie pcrctiiitage‘ for thc year ending Juno 30th, i910, u, to 58.7. ‘The Canadian Pacific was able lo maintain this high pcrcciitiuze 0t passenger traffic, not alone by reit- son oi‘ its Iona-established and sol- ldly-e-nlrenclied organization, but through tho iiit-diiini of its taoiiitiletti transcontinental jmsseiige-i" train services. Realizing tlint io obtain, nil i- mately, a reasonable participation in tlie couutiys passenger iraffltx, it was essential to provide conven- ient and attractive facilities for the promotion of passenger travel over its lines, tlie managenw-ui oi Canadian National Railways Sys- tem considered it necessary in in- augurate a daily transcontinental passenger service. This was to on- sure not only the longest. haul ovcr its own rails from existing traffic and tlie corresponding ‘increase iii passenger earnings, ‘but to bc of local il‘ili'i'iC,_fLl\£i to provide able service to handle successfully an dio encourage, tho growth of im- migrant traffic frmii overseas. axiomatic that innin linc pzisscnccrj services oi reasonable frcqiicncY and relatively competitive in tlie matter of running time, and ‘stiindq ards oi.’ service and comfort, are as; necessary in the successful opt-r- irtion oi’ a transcontinental systi-tii of the extent. of the Canadian Nat-t’ ioniil Railways as tlie rails Hlflllr‘ selves. The main, or through. illl-‘l’. senger trains i'orni the backbone, or,‘ trunk, of the entire passeiiizci" scr- vices, with branch or connccliml‘ lines at junction points reelvins!‘ and acting as feeders for throualr traffic, as.well as expediting and, developing travel ibetwecn thc var-l loiis communities on, and adjacent. to, the main line and branches. The participation of the Nation- al System in the passenger traffic of the country to an extent greater than bud been the case hitherto. was recognized naturally as essen- tial to the carrying out of a policy in line with the solution of tlie Can- iulialn Railway Droblem accepted when the Canadian National Rail- ways System was ‘brought into be- tog-tho preservation of the oom- i pint Biliiiii. The first year after the oval), ltilflsvrvlcc over its lint-s, was also the first year of Canadiaripiaci-il tlic trbwoz-lily Plfifiliifffiili iii FUH N50 llilllll . r i i lul- l which Juno llilli. 'l'lll*- new service was cniiiiiienc- loll under conditions that wort- muri» ll‘ii\'ill'l\l)|l‘, llflilSibiy, lllitfl‘. (ibtztinctl lziici". lpzissa-iigi-i- lravci ivas on a. ilii"li _ , v .. ,ll*\'I~i. This was iluc, '])l'i)l)ill|l_\', it) lllll 0f P11599113" Pfllllllillellt. Ell‘. illlr flirts that warfiiiio l‘('.‘lll'li‘ili)li‘i‘pmq-U “and, Iyrluvllils‘ ,.».,,-,|,.,, “N... lt4llllii lwcn rcnitivi-il and liit)lli‘_\' was ,t,,,.,.’ lih-iitiilii. .\ business ilcprts. . si-t iiiziintenniim- in in (‘niinila lllltl Pnitcii 5.1mm: in‘ iwnrds the 0nd of lililil. 'l‘iii‘.\; had .1 ‘lhlrllillvlllill effect oii pulsating -r l ‘tiiriiiigii place in tho aiitiiiiin oi’ i918, tliiipilzllil illll'-li=iii!it‘l1r.-‘-l' iflilll i-.‘.-rvl.-.-n.| reorganized staff’ of tlie system, in, lii iiic suiiiiiicr Ul i020, tin» (‘ii- hjghpl- .,\.,.,--,..,. “H” rm. U“, p, .. . ‘ ‘ I‘. i , 4 T. 1919 were_stiidying_ carefully tlit- oriiiiiiitioii in purl with tho. tii':i.iiil‘[,.\v \\.,.,.|,.,-_ I. i l c. (l rand 'i‘runi< i'i‘i_'uni< llniiwziy Strata... “m1 ' ilic (‘niiiitiitiii National itaiiwnys Rlilljmiifl" li- lvosziiblo ziiiil desirable fallen-ii, lint an excellent. tiraa|ii' ways System with. that of its Cllli*.l'liill'llii‘l' HIIDYUVO ‘U10 through iraris- has bcnii iiiiilt ifrtim tlie cxpm . competitor, Ttlie Canadian piiClfifinifQilllllillllill fHlSSOIILIPl‘ sci-vice. lt;froni tiic mist two _vcars in fisjiitiii: showed that during the calendaiuiiicn lwCitlllii DUSSlhlO to select theltiiese pcSts and no alarm is fi-lt. yeziir of i918 tlie lines of the nevwfiilorlvst and iiiost. -%-——-_ a‘ System, wliih slightly more raihvayirmiivs st-rvini: tlie larger fifillllllllfl-‘ilflnS and the natural desire on tli mileage than its competitor, earnetL-itics resulting iii advantageous an increase in [llfilllilll an illucal (lanaiiizln traffic 353, as coiiipiireil with $30,837,25Il,f'i‘iii¢ l|ll|tl'ii\'\'tl services ziisn ])l'(iVi(i-lii_'t' eii a iiivaiis of tlirecling via tin- Cziiiatiiiiii Nntioiiai Itnliwnys Sys- fviousiy was carried via other chan- railway statistics that the Canad-‘ncis. Even tlie iiiipi'ovctl pnsscnu-‘aiew line taken over, liliflnd Tpifnfi-Pfl§m,§..h\?9.':‘§9l:“§$§d1ll.-flwREAR! iii-wine under the con-‘ the "entire tiTickiliffli or one National Railway-i‘ e rservice o ftlic Canadian‘ Nation- ln any way as BXlPitVlli-Zlllil. thc inilc: til liziilw vs iii:iii:ii:'t'iiiciii. tlurinc ilic. f‘illi‘llilill‘ I020, tlii- pas- Fm". iinlfiiiliiiiiyé" cniiiibt lhe conéiifoi-tl i Fill‘,"lllili3it§.‘,'f‘. iiicrcast: Weather Is Ideal For Crops in West- Prospccts Better Than in Any Year Since 1915, All Reports State WINNIPEG. June 20.---l)xiring tlie Dust week-thc WPiillii-il‘ lilia been ideal ovor thc llirov. wostvrii lllilPllillllll AEPEBT ' I t Tllld HAGUE, June 20—‘Alth0u;;li lflffllliilffi VISIT lrisltcd by thc Japanese Prince iii- Pmvinces for Palm] gmwlh U, H“, hitherto reticent regarding the as-irlit-ates that she is an important rrops, and ‘soil moisture. and other i'(lil(liili)ll$l i1ontinue 0.\'i“l&|lt*lll, it is‘ ports of tlie Japanese Crown l’riiii-e's visit. the Dutch press is iii“l'l.'i('.l‘ii iii %,._,,,,,.,,| h, me Weekly “Tuulvr ‘UHUWIUW unanimous in calling attention Ifavtor iii thc Far East. ii regards lhuropciut visits as a brcal." in illf‘. ‘ififliatiflli of Japan (Hill as the opini- ii-rop report which will l... |.u|,|[_<|,,.,|l'il ill‘! Hfcnt political and cconufling of ii history and a $il'.".il},ill1"Il- my u", (Huh, Tm,“ Nuws [Olmnullllliifill important-c attaciiedvto his ing of tlie mrturzil bonds of sympa- ‘row. ‘ 'i‘iio banks, railways and‘ liilfi. l Willi tho waiuii, humid llillltni‘ as wcll ‘as ilnld ('l‘ll]l>‘, liiii; llliiiiO nliiiitiirinal progress. Albnrln has perhaps liaii ‘iif‘ll|‘i'(‘l_\' ‘suffiz-il-iit iiiuisiiirti during tlit- Wiliili ‘to isiistaiii ilir» liuavy growth, biii As the consolidation of the Cnn-‘irniiii- UilPlliliii-‘i lint not iii an or. km. ,.,,,,,_. 1,, M“, g,,§k,,,,.|,,.“.,,,,"*\'l‘l' ill“ lllllilvlliiiy lrlliioiis . aidlnn Northern Railway and {kin-dent that would ivarrziiii. K.!lll‘i('l|l-‘un,[ Mannlnhu have l-Hmislmd Sum inc; iii-tween tlie two countries for ‘lfifl of ‘the world's oil ;ii-...i||.-1iu1| iulinn (lovcrniiient Railways took lm-nt or witlidriiivnl of ‘r-iciii lll(lii\‘l||i'i‘ fiir thc-in provinc- ‘ifi-mih-rnturl-s SlliiW a llllli‘]l‘ l . f ltopnrts of insect iiiilllfli-(ll iii iliui sliiipr- iii‘ grasslioppiirs ill all flirt-o‘ The oouuvurifltm of the imsscnsci- "Hull" lloillvar to iln- lilllilililviliifili,piwivllict-s zilill of ftilllwufllls‘ in ‘Xi ~ of the newly-,~ill' ‘ ‘iwrla arc fairly pupil-ruin; antlurat- |.lt)il .(:t.* i part of lht- public to glvc tiii» new. Hi-rvitci- it siiziro iii iirtlt-r to cnroiir. liii llli) main linc sci-vice liowcvci" is‘ 10f value to every community along Ilflilvilltc. since 19K’. is justified by‘, and, it‘ the‘ il3.G per ‘cont 0|‘ | would be adili-. ,‘ And _\'i‘i it is roinarltitiili- that not; .‘Vv'||llSlfllllll|i_‘.',’ this opt-ulna up of stay in iioiiaiitl. Nothing definite "ha" “mumifiiivcriimon-t reports all state that i“ "WWI m‘ ‘u’ [ms-lune ugreemmllil‘ _ d r l d ’ I liuring liil1l‘,,,.,,,,|,,.,,,,, 0f Unis .11.“. “H. Mum. m" unilcrstaiitiiiigs, but it is _l'l8l‘.!l'- the war has nruust-ti pairs, e erred unavoknbly lil.illf.,].i‘ll< for the greater portion m‘ 192i) Um, “my ha“, ma" ‘my your QM,“ :i.lly concluded tliiit thi- lluts-ii Ellnl interest. and enthusiasm lii-i-n. ‘flit- iiiilios will ibc the subject of any ilist-iission flint may ii-risa from ‘t. it. is ill/I'll l'llll'l(]l‘i‘il that Ja- pan wants to use the Dutch nir- liirtinivis in Llli‘ blast I:i:l‘c.~ in ro- the rccciit lgnorng of illl'i| for ('(‘l‘iillll iiinso colonies. .\'n offoi-l. will bu maria to mun/ill] Lmarzintces to illi‘ ywniwi, iiixulc iii-lilo during tlic . mviiii; to constant i‘i-:ii' fin tlii- t‘~l|li|||‘i‘.\'. |'i‘iill'i£ lliroiiito tliaiikcl Qlli“ii \vlllli‘l'llllilit warmly for the r tiic I)\l:\'i| warships to Japan i'i lfllfi. 'i‘ii<i Nii-iiwl: lttitfcrdctmsr-lic. (‘nu- rnnt ‘i-citiairiizs that, owing to tlie gvetigrapliitial position of her col- onies, iioiiziiiil must remain friend- ly with Great Britain and the lini- _ tctl Statics, as well as with Japan. visit ‘which might load to the e. ulhlll ll Sliys that. tlie fact that Hul- trangemcnt of‘ tlie United Stzitcs. land is llin only neutral i.'(>lllill‘_v' t-iiiiipieiiiliiil. All lill]ii'tiVt‘il|i‘illl"Hltprjulny and paruculnrw mm m tlic greater proportion 01' skilled labor Going back to ‘prewar years, idiom, considerable trnvt-i which 1ire~Etlie routc. A large increase in ihelmm Wiiiic thc Grand Trunk Railway Board. yct certain joint services oni|iiili>r(fiiiiatii:|n Nililfllbillflilfi to tiio (lovvrniiit-nf SYHtBIiLHVPlV: zirrangi-il through the co-or- tiinntitm coiiiiiiittcri iiiciit,) and as tlie (of lines ‘iiinnagie- of flint. i. (If utilized in their construc- thy. The first visit of riiiwiliy tijoinciilloiis siiicc fitit-iailst papers lii-t Volt: iillli iliis Vryzliiiiigc Democrat, litiwi-vcr, rc- iiizirli ‘that ilii- t-iitburntu rcccpliiiii to Prince iiiroliitii, coming after AmcriviiK: rctiuost for (ill cont. ions, ‘i-ri-itlvs. ‘a singular antbAmci :aii i-niprt-e- iaioii. These papers ri-ft-r to iii‘: » iiriilab-American light. for tlie cou- iinlcing iip,“thi+ .'itiprua<~liing prplon- Linn of illir- nldllfiliulllliitiliflrd‘. al- liance,“ with ilIH lntnriiatiiiiial nil Yttue-ititiii. iict Viiik says that tlie 'i.i{l‘i§i'.“ ineirt by which America on gl-il to protect tiic iluii-li colonies from ti. possible Japanese altar-k will soon lose all its value. it ailris that the (iovernment would do well to avoid anything in the receptions ‘or speeches attending the Priii ‘is South-Africans Have Liquor With A Kick Bushman Fermnt Fruit of Cashew gum, in so... DliitiiLJuice sap‘- ~ ‘ ‘ There You Are CHICAGO, June 20—--iiiimn brow lmrkcs liiislliiitlii of ill!‘ South Afri- Ivan jungles walk backward and . sonar-r lfiilll si-rvicc aivvllllu-il l)ll',llt~\\' riiiilsls with r-onipotiiivi- has iloiiibiiiiy are zibnui to bccoiiic pzirtlfimidm“ “h” l"“i“"“"‘ "'“ii‘-““~ 11"‘ 2.32 trains pt-i- ray i)\t'l‘ the S)'5'1Sl*ll'~',i‘i“ train Rcfvici-S. ire Ililfi audio fihn (lovt-riiiiii-nt System, it. is in-“‘°"di,"g u’ u” “m” Willim" G~ Will's lllilciliél’. "i" lllii- Hi3 li=i$sciiu-ll92i) Sliarvliiiiiii-rs‘ ltv-poris of llli‘.-lL'l‘(.‘$|lIli( to ociiipzire tlie passe-ng-lTerrM Methodist missiomw-l" “h” 9" lllllllli Pllfll Will’ lull’ filly; \Vili"‘-.'-i(Tanudian Pnt-ific ltniiway indicatcrr tic-tires o ftiic consolidated N'i.i-“"“rl“efl at his hum” m Cm"“g“ w‘ . . , general assistance in building up} __ rlllilffhc mileage trains, or 11.00 i-niii way. lnt~iii1lini' inixcd trains, miicr also i-tzrry p~ sengers, the: t-tiiiiparisoii pnr niiic oi‘ line per tiny was, iii i020 - - No. of 'i‘r:iiu.s. (7.N.il. (.‘.l‘.ll. Daily. 'i‘oi.'il. Hiiidl Tliliil. l~ \Vay. W: _ _ Pilflfitlllgill‘ ..L'.2’.2 Lil; 4.1x 11.00 ‘Mixed ...... .. .00 .570 Jis .1!) ‘Petal carrying Passengers -....2.!)L' fit; 4.7.0 i To sliow tlic llllilllivl‘ oi‘ units in- sli0wn:— ‘,'i‘rnin miles ruii t‘ Tasscnger .... ..ll.77€| ,.. ,0Iili Mixed ............ .. Il,il(i.i,i.. ifii-iibil-iii '25“ "Total carrying Passengers ....'i-i,ii~i.".,iixi irlflli-biiii-i (ipcrated was... l1’. £51.!) IL-iilill The most coiiipli-ti- t-hiiipiirisiin is formed by Cfhlilliilfilli’ thc nuinlici" ill 1410i. ii lliily b0 51111841 ill liflof Iinssengeri-i iiinivcti Ullt‘ llliliii (LNit. (Cliff. Passcngcrs innvuii one‘ mile 7/i9,2til;,liiI; i.7l.‘i,illi‘i,G0il Rcilucctl to a pm- lllill‘ of line bas- is, tlio "density" coiiipnri-s as fol- lower-- (LNJK. t‘..l'.lt. Passenger niilcs por niiie 0i‘ lino ...... .. 54,075 lil2,22fi in entering a flflillllfiiilVl‘ ilcid oc- cupied by a Iirosperous, ivcil-innn- aged rnilwny, ilicrc iiiusi ‘bu. init- ially, some train mileage oporuiwl tiinlf will not earn its full share of’ operating expenses. ll‘ tlic railway first in the field is allvc to tlic sit- uation, there will never be a time when the relation of train service to business offering will indicaic that there is enough purely coin‘ patltive business to support a ti-ain on the new line, because as bus- iness of this kind developed, and- pnnticuinriy when the construction of the competing railways lines was. nearing colmpletion~the train service on the senior line would bo kept well up to the traffic require- ments. The junior line, then, it that System has lii-on inr-rensietl since the war sufficiently _-t0 kccp is pcrcciiiiigc iii iiiii ioial for all ifiziiiatliaii ltnhvziys at just about‘ ‘ilio pro-avar ‘p|'tipoi'iioii. ‘this shows iliiil llli‘ (i. l’. If., is natural, is tiiiiiiiiiiit: nlii-iul iiicl-i. all now ('i)ill]lir‘tl|.lflll, and is ‘not standing back tu iiiakc room‘ ifoi" its rival in lliP iriuisconlincntnf iflcld. Th? Nliiioiizii ltztllways, likc- It) 13.135i,\visii, are out lo cot a sliari- of this Yiiiicazo opcrntctl 20,3071 } lilcvcnuc Pas- volved i.iie passenger and inixcd; To lianillt» ilflllilitlllill passenger sengcrs (fill'i'l0(i 25,l7l,79l 16,700,555 train miles run in Iiii- your ili'i‘-_ll‘iii‘i'if2, it. is necessary to (‘IICUUFURGVPIIUC Dns- _ Ibusincss. iagc business by intrrtezisiiig pas-L lscngci" train iiiiloagn. A caiiiiiniizii Fare-i would not lll(‘l'i‘ with lllll('ll and is living iinno, with inaniniiilei‘ freight. Iiul passe-poor traffic is not subject. to llli‘ snnio i-coiioiiiic hand- ‘ ling or control as frciglii traffic. lefty '|\_ 1L it. should. ll()\\'i!Vi‘l‘, ho understood also flint ll'illlSlit)l‘l.tiii(lil expo-uses with llii~ int-roast: of passr-ngor rev-l crcahr- in ‘ii-cirflif rcvcnuo. Aliliouiiii‘ tlic (‘. N. If. pussciiizci‘ train scr- vicoiirci-iigi-s but. slitzli|ly' niurc We llllVf‘ not dnno anything ‘"' r-t-tlor! no itlrcntly stain-ll. it 0"", rylni; iii) pcr cciii morn rcvcnue‘ safety through sironrtlionlni.’ illE construction of cars and through tho inirodutititin ol‘ steel curs. The Canadian National Railways have n’ gi-nater percentage of steel cars in their passenger service than other Canadian line? have, and there is no doubt that wliilo this feature adds somewhat to the cost of hand- ling, ii. is a factor nmklng for greater security, is much valued lby tlie traveling public and is, therefore, an important competi- privtitciy-owncd competitor. The figures coiiipzirerl below are for tlie your ended December Blst, 19201-- Passcnger Traffic Statistics (lovt-rniiicnt System National Rye. and (irand Trunk Cillllltliilll Pacific Ilailway ll ems. l3,~i02.2 sengcrs carried nnc mile ..l,ZlG6,6/ii,-i-i3 1,718,084,609 Nil.- (Klfilllfor lienvicr lnzidiiii: of ~]lili-l.'i0ll_L','f\l' Itovoiiuc passengers carried i iiiiio public support. 'i‘iiat can be tlniic, 1..., mp9 Ul- Hm,’ _‘__67,293 132323‘! .-\'.'cr.'ii:n journey:- (iziii. Nor. (‘an (iovf. . 102.15 Avcrncti rcvcnuo Froiii tliiu izililc it is HQPII that poi‘ ct-tii. iiiui'(-. llill ‘i_'.*,i\ iliiin tlie. (,‘.i‘.it.. thc lziiici" s_ iciii moved ‘J5 per cont. more {insscnger miles basis tiiu (LIKR. lins nearly 2V, furnish a ("Hlllilidliilhl will“ ‘Vmliinivs the ioiol passcngr-r icvt-niioinnii, .ilic (Y. l‘. it. btrilvvrll lllllsl 0'11"" of its transcontinental competitor. silty he iiiaintalnctl at n liiuii sland- lnntl towns. illlll JTlP-‘il’ llillll“ "m", Tim management of the Nalicnnbarrl. Train for train those on the runninil. H"? ijillilli‘ (‘llllillllli "l ‘Jnriiincs is planning to remove ibis National will coiitparo with those We have scan of its privately ownc-l conitii-‘ii-ur. witliuui iiiucli zuldiilonzil cost. 'l‘iie,h,,, a _.,(,;],|1y_9nu.,,n,.hc,| .,,_,,.,m,,,‘h,i,iany_ m, “Heady s‘;l[')“. i, 5,, weight. of thc train has incrmiscti;tii|-"-n!:il syslom. such as ilic illillwprissiblc that it will bc unrciiiun- cnnrintiuslin This i>l litli- till" i" ‘hells, will not stand idly by and en-‘vi-ativiz in HOMO‘ parts. ‘ IITPIl-irl‘ lllllllllf‘? "l ilimwnbmr“ ‘"""‘.'iblc a competing system to com-business will conic. i-lcd. but i0 illc l-Irldliel‘ lll‘°l‘lsl""lplete its lines and commence np-‘ordinnticn of the Gland ‘fin-r: Sys- niadc by the Iiilllwllyfl l" "ll-‘illleeraiion of tnylnz passenger scr-‘tcm with its lines in thc more 'l‘liaf is, of course, quite a (loosely-populated ili~t..iriiy~ in purl. vice. ‘l9 "l9 C- |'- 1'» ill 193" ililvlliiril ‘Liidlizit thc IlilHSPllKPl‘ train mileage (ll‘,iflllill System as it. will be, with itsidfly ("Mn "ohm'n'”"'l""‘g' , "The ihliuiiriaiit juicc of lllf‘. fruit 30f the cashew tree is ililSily obtain- liti," ho said. “it fernieiits in ltiie sun in a few hours and thc tlniiger it remains r-xtitisr-tl tho :=troiigei' it bccomtvs. lly ilistill- iing this juice the nzrtivcs Ollliiill .:i liquor of very liigli zilirtilioiii: can» ‘lfilll, and tlie wildest tlriiiikr-ii or- icies arc held continuously through- out tlic smisoii ivlicii thc casliclv fruit ripoiis. “These jungle mmi also tiiiiko li- ruor from oranges, linii-s, swcot ‘potatoes, yiiiicnpplcs, corn and (tus- sava root. “Still, prohibition is making steady progress iii tho mining con- ircs of South Africa, whore lii-i ‘economic loss caused by iiriiiikcc- ncss is checked by tlie most strin- soil-t laws and heavy penalties. in sixty-three ('0m])0llllii.‘~l iii wliiih 8,000 native laborers are (|llfll‘ii'l'(’il I saw oiiily two intoxicated incn in ‘ciglitccn tiinnths. Tota absti- iicni-o is nut vnfnrt-ctl. Tim nil- M“ m" mwvflsoll “rulmnlollutplyl)” '“H“"r 1m" 51-99593 $‘4'X'H-73 ping rompaiiics isaic a bot-r ra- |tion 1o their ‘laborer out-c il week." cuucs. nor oven in the Billll" "i-llovviiiio. llli‘ (i0\'i‘l‘lllll('lll System (in-I __ __ . .- . ‘ . . ‘ as oxpoiiscs int-rouse uiiii .in in- phuln,“ n“. (mind 'l‘rnni<) iris ..l puqfltchy. mvnm] m“. . .~;ll‘lll civ- liig a sc-rvi c in all thc largo com- ‘muniilcs in Canadi. llvc-n with ‘this objeilre in vi~w ill!‘ passin- h-"Zlliztn thc Nltllflllill and Grand TTllnlWgQf train gerylggs m‘ tho National than onc irilili 1i Ilfly lll (‘flfll il|l"‘cti|iiliiiii-tl. And on a iiiilc of line Linus. as now orizanizoil [annoy 1m jrcaurtletl in any “Hlj as extrava- Tlie service mus‘ .ii‘ nor-os- llu‘. the Ciiiiipi o.» co- districts, and natural position for ‘lie. C.P.l"t. iolvnluable United Slni 1". connections, lake as regards the services of tlielwili help greatly. tliatnient. of new sections of country (7.N.R. We have seen. M50, tlie solution of tlie Canadian rail- ndopied b_\' iheladvance under peace conditionsmlll way problem as Government, and bcing carried out create new business. The develop- I know getting treir first chance tn ‘ improved by tlie Board of Directors of C N.R.,‘equipm‘cnt will attract travel, and provides for this very element ofthe publicity under I In fncr, service is management, together with the en- competition. consolidated essential to tlie building up of a. couragement of proper facilities to second strong and efficient irans- handle tourist and other traffic by continental system to give Canada new routes, and into new ground, the advantage of competitive lsr- will, under a competent direction vice in the broadest possible mcan- place the Government System iioon ins oi the ‘oi-m, viz, iompetltionlon the pariw that the physical ex- muet be recognized. can only ex- pect from its services ‘what ‘through it can attract by the ex- cellence oi tis service; by the nov; peiitive situation and dual service tive factor. There have been tre- mendoiis advances in tlie oostlof mtg n passengei train cars due to the between a privately owned and acellence oi its property warrant; - ,