' backward: to the ground. iiifl rear Illa Paper That £03011 Prince Edward Island u Like the l d! uharlottolewn Guardian, ‘Him Gonna‘. lamina Gillrdlan. Pounded 1801. Ivan || rut SAD our i ' muss-mm Worth Reading . *1!!! MIR-i‘. t‘ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1920 ~1~aihmsn H 0F NURBERT HUGHES While‘ Retllning iron Camping With Pristine Club Was liiietl as the Result oi Falling from a Motor Tfllil. ‘Deep sympathy is extended to Mr. John M. Hughes, of the Char- lottetown Post Office staff, and Mrs. Hughes and their family. in ‘the terrible bereavement which they have been so suddenly called upon to bear by the accidental deatll of their son. Norbert, wllich occurred on Saturday afternoon. ~ The deceased was one of a party of young men composing the Pas- time Club of this city, whoso cus- tom it is to have an annual out- ing. This summer Cardigan bud been theiplacc selected for their camp and they harl just enric-l a deilghtfuLtwo weeks under call- vlls, and were starting on their return to the city wllcn the regret- table fatllity occurred. The accident happened at Cardi- gan about 2 rrclok in the after- noon. A motor truck with the last. load of supplies for the hon uvnrd trip was getting under way. Nor- bert Hughes was standing out on the running bOllfd when he notic- ed a chair at the top of tllc load starting to fall. i-le nlude an cf- tol-t to pl-lsvcnt it failing, and in rio- fng so lost his balance, tailing wheel evidently striking llinl at the back of the head. causing a frac- ture of the base of theskull. Rnsslansiiiier. - _ 0ft and Mining Rights (Dom. Press Special.) PARIS, Aug. 7.~inlpnrtant. oil. lumbering and llllnlng concessions in Russia have been otforrsri to British and Alnerican firms by Kfliflliillrfllld Kelllcncff, .Btllshcvlk trade representatives ill Lollrlon, lillJ Foreign Office clarllcd today. v oa_-—-- ieonnrrnsnnsreerllsi ¢a~ FOR BALE. -- ON MARKET Square ‘Tuesday at 12 noon three year old colt, bred by llarry lice, and Colllnlodorc Mother. . stcatusilip scrvic Death was alnlost instantaneous. There was no sign of n wound ab- out the body, but the blood flowed profusely from his ears‘. Tile sad affair has plunged his‘ comrades in grief for Norbert was the life of the party. being the soul of good humor, whose mirth and cheering presence lnade him a fav- orite with all. 'i‘llr-. burly arrived in the city on Saturday nlgllt accompanied by Dr. McMillan. Deceased was; only 20 tr-znrs of age and a you'll; lllan of exc.~p- iismnl promise. having mly gradu- ated from St. Dun-tails University irlFl term, where hc wou llis degrrie cf li..-\. He. llltrnlrl-lri lining to Quebec this autumn to enter tllc tirand Seminar-y to study for the priesthood. There arc left to mount besides his grief-stricken part-tits. f -ur bro- thers and one sister, all at home, with the exception of n brother, John. who rpttltucf. to Chicnfifl 111i‘ ly a week ago after a short visit. To the bereaved family The finrlrdlarl c-"ztcllds deepest sympa- .ily. Tile funeral takes. plat-o this u r llling at S i’, fronl ‘no ‘some, 12 Orlcbar street. to St. Dullstalrs t ' tlrodrui, tilcllcu to the cemetery. indies Trade Agreement Marie Public OTTAWA’ Aug, 4,__ (By (‘nun dian l’ress.)~'l‘llc new trade agrconlcnt, cont-tinted bulb/Hill tinnadu and the British West ln~ d)“, was rurulo public. today. it increases in certain instances the pn-sellt mutual preference of 20 to 50 l’. (l. itcxtends the free list; it provides for an increased e, ‘with a weekly ‘sen-vice between tllmarlian, ports and the eastern group of the Bri- tish West Indies, and ‘a fortnl5hl- iy service between Canadian ports rtnd tllo western group. 'l‘itc week- ly sorvlcc is to come into operation as soon as possible, and, in ‘any case, within thrcc years, tllc fort- nightly scrvicc with thc western group is to colllc into cffcct not 'LO5T — WATCH CHAIN AND ring of watch. Finder apply at this office. Aug 9 1i.| "iiWANTEJD l- FOR DARNLEY‘. school, principal and nssistallLi o l Total supplcluent $200. Apply t ‘Secretary Trustees, Dllrnlt-y. 3 ‘CAR FOR HIRE-PHONE 839+. 9089-‘5-2-tf. WANTED — GRADUATE NUR- ses at $60 per lllontil; under- graduate nurses at $40, having some hospital cxlrricnco; also maids at $25. Apply with rcfcr- ences to matron St. John Coun- ty Hospital for tubccrllosis, Erlst St. John. N. B. 2044 8 0 0i. ‘WANTEQ-M-AID FOR GENER- al housework. Good wages. Ap- pl-y Mrs. Lloyd Wellner, 164 Prince Street. ansn-n-zs-tr A .__.____..__?.______. ‘WANTED - TEACHER FOR New. Dominion Scoot. Supple- meno We. Hector Mc- Lean, Secy. 2091i 8 ti 3i. ‘TEACHER WANTED - FOR Springfield School, No. 95; first or second class; supplement $160. Apply to Wellington lins- lam, Sec. oi Trustees, Emerald, ‘R. R. 158D 7 14 tf APDlY .________________ ‘GIRL WANTED-TO AS$IST AT housework. Apply Mrs. D. Stew- art. 1B5 Prince St. ‘ 2064-24-5“. ‘POSITIVELY NO ADVERTISING- ments accepted at this other: for 1101i. day's issue after 8 p. m. un- less paid for in advance. sron irate -- NEWLY Fastin- ened milk cattle for sale. Apply 990110 McAuley. York Point. - 204s a 4 sl. ‘WANTED-JA TEACHER FOR the Suffolk School District. Sup- plement ~50. John Arblng Sec- retary Tllllhoh. 20408-4-tLr ‘WANTED BY AUGUST 18T- ZN "Pfirlenced maid in family oi "Im- Anniv to Mrs. F‘. a. New- lom. 12 Ambrose Street. . . - - . lsrr-r-rr-tr. ‘VI-Miran A. vouno LAQIM "it: foul-Jun eminence n Mil e so stenogrsphsr and gen; Oral office assistant wants po- sition by Beat 1st or later. Ap- ltl! "H." Box 110, City. .. 1908-7-30-tf. iii-i ‘F0! can. -- utcnv LOCAT- vd cottage at Brighton, contain-v ill-O room with veranda: lrrlrrl ..estsres~sna-u.unr: inter than January 1, 1921. The ngrcunlent provides that the var- ious governments of tllc British West indies will contribute to~ wards tllc necessary subsidies. ill tho case of the fortnightly service t-o the western group-tho lirlllrllnas, British Honduras and JilllliliCil~-lil(7 vessels are to bc provided by , tho govcrnluent oi Canada. l-iore. if the service proves unremuncrative, the three West; lndlan Colonies nlontloneli will contribute twenty-five per cr-nt. of the loss with certain res- tricllons. Tho rlgreelllont concludes Wi’ii rt declaration that the representa- tives of Canada and oi the W's-st lndlan Colonies, will rocomnlonrl for the consideration of, their res pt-ctivc governmcntsdhttt Jirltisll owned and British‘ controlled cables should -be laid as soon os possible without waiting for tllc termination of the agreement with tllc West indies and Panama Tolu- graph Company to connect llorlllu- da lwitll Burbadoes, Trinidad, Bri- tish Guiana, tho Windward ls- lrlnds, the Leeward islands, and Turks island of llalllaica. Senator Harding Makes Declaration (Dom. Press Special.) IMARIDN, Aug. 0— in ills sec- ond “front porcll" speech today, addressed to a delegation from Wayne County, Ohio, Senator Hur- dting, Republican candidate for the Presidency, touched on the League of Nations and declared it to be the other extreme to a rcferendulrl on a proposed declaration of war." I emphatically agree," he said. "that no authority other than Con- gress "can call the boys of the ‘United States oi America to bntl tic. Accepting this truth wily make a covenant that violates the good faltii of nations." Will here a Land gin Ireland (Dom. Press Bpaolal.) QUEENSTOIWN. Aug. 7.— Des- troyers hnve been dispatcher! to meet. the steamship Baltic and es- cort it to rLiverpool to insure ag- efnst any attempt to take Archbisn 0n Manila oflthe steamer and iidriillrtirlffiiiisrsii° ”‘“"" lien M-annix to go to lrelsnd. He ts enZroute rust r Big Decline -in Regular End of This Week. The real live candidates in the contest will be hustling as they ‘have never hustled before this week. for the simple reason that the subscriptions they receive before Saturday night will bring them thousands 0f' votes more than if they secured them next ivuok. Tile regular vote schedule will take a big decline at the end of this week, which will mean that the subscriptions you secure this week will bring you much lrlore ill votes for your efforts than they will if you secure them next week. This is one, oi the points that every candidate should pay atitcn- tion to. The really ambitious per- son will not take any chance of losing out on one oi the big prizes by a small margin and will, tllorc- fore, try to gct every available subscription willie tho vote sche- du-lc is at its present high tllark. Don't leave anything over until next week that you might just as well have got this week. You will be losing thousands of votes if you [IHHTEET Hiiiililiiifi Witt HHHEANHS Hi iflitfi do. Those few thousand votes may just nlake the difference in whe- ther you win the Gray-‘Dort or not. SECOND WEEK OF THE "AE good showing on this week? if not then you should c r- tainly make up for your lost time this week. Remember, the winning of this special prize is one oi t e vital points of the ‘Contest. It almost surely lllean to the winner that he or she will win two prides ,wh1¢h the parucrpflnts iigctllrsugigglcht" A" the vines yo“ Lloyd-George and Admiral Wilson. "Aeronoia" winning of the big Gray lDort. thrflMurshal Foch. s w given away to the candidates with the highest vote tember MtAKE. A SPEClAL EFFORT T0, wllu THE "annouotlA." Vote Schedule at {r .w‘_' 4. The first week of the "scrolled" RONO LA" OFFER. offer has passed. and we are now nto the second. -Dld you makoia‘ Qffer l‘ t' ll during the spec l; offcr go toward tle totals 0n Sop-r lltth. Elli SURE YOU. Hiiiiil HEHiTE Personal Scene Betw H. H. Asquith, the Situation. (Canadian Press Dcspatcil) LONDON, Aug. 7.—-Aftcr n do- bntc which developed great ilctlt. and a personal scene between Mr. Lloyd George and Herbert ll. As- qullil tile government at 11 o'clock tonight defeated the nlotlon nt’ John Robert Clynes, Laborito, for rejection of the new lrisll Urllnes Hill, and the nlcusurc passed se- cond reading by a votu of 2B9 i0 71. The voting was carried out. unlit-tr a motion lllovcd ill tllc house early today by Andrew Btr nar Law, providing for [lttssngc o the bi-ll by 0 o'clock tolltorrow evening. . At tho vcry opening oi debate the days oi Parnell wore rccrllltvrl Ml‘. Asquith started an allgr/l duct with tho Premier by declaring the situation in Ireland needed Croluweillan treatment but that. he could see no Cromwell in the government. The prctnler retort- cd by describing Mr. Asquith as Cromwell when he was ill power. Sir lianlar Greenwood, chief Secretrwy for Ireland, opened thc discussion» ‘i by explaining it was not ihicnrlcti for tllc hill to super- sede the ordinary courts; it would only apply to disturbed areas nt the discretion oi the Irish govern- nlellt and would not be operated in a revengeful" spirit. Mm. Asquith then spoke, blanl- ing nllo government for the pres- ent position in lrelrlnd. This met with angry cries of dissent. Ho declared ho was not scared by the spcctrc of an Irish Republic, but believed to concerto ‘dominion home rulc to lfttillllti would cause the cry for n republic to dwlndie away. Heated protests were nlarla that Asquith llntl never offered n so- lution of tllc difficulty. -__. "No," he replied. "hut l am prepared rto offer one now." Mr. Lloyd George in his attack on Mr. Asqultth. said lt was use- less to make vague, ill-considered suggestions about dominion homo rulc and challenged Mr. Asquith to present the nanle of any ollo ill Ireland able to speak for the lrishpeoplq, who would accept his dominion proposal. 'i‘llcro ls not a single dominion, ‘ ‘l l HN IHISHHISHH inion Home Rule Bill. Preml fd-lsctrssion and wcrc far less acri- m tilllllllll nus at, een Lloyd urge and Latter Favoring Dom I 'er Reviews could not be forced into a borne rule parliament. LONDON, Aug. 7.— Hy an over- wllclruing lnajority of 206 to 18. tllc govr-lllnlerlt this evening jalnlnell through tllc lrlsh Cfilliltti Bill, dc- sigllcrl lorestorc order in Ireland.‘ Lr-rlgtby debates preceded the vot-l illg ill the ilousc oi Commons but lnrakiul: thr- presence of Prcnlior Lloyd George and licrbcrt ll. As- quitll they did not stir the inter- est which tlttncllcd to yesterday's lllthiitlllti. .\ notable exception was n fur- ‘ious outburst by Joseph Devlin,‘ Nationalist nlclllbor fronl Belfast.‘ who drafted the authority of tho iluusu to bring llilll to order and precipitated an exciting scene as a result of which ho was suspend- ed. lic stalked out, followed by nil tho miter Irish lnelnbors and alllllosi tllc ctltiro Labor represen- tation. For u tilnc it scenlcd as though tllcre was no way for suppressing Mr. Devlin except YClHOl/illg him bodily. He unloosed a flood of invcctive against the hill, demanded that Mr. Lloyd George "be summoned to pllaro ‘Tnsnonsibii-ltty iior tlllis iniquitous measure." and vehemently assert- ed the reason the Premier was absent was that. he nligllt "con- coct anotilor war with tins-silt." run wnawnnn, TEMPERATURE TIDE. noon are The title will be high this even- ing at 6.24 and tomorrow at 7.43; it will be high tomorow morning at 6.44 ulld Wednesday at 7.02, ' The stun sols this evening at 7.21 and torllorrow at 7.18; it rises tomorrow morning at. 4.54 and Wednesday at 4.55. ' The highest temperature Friday Illitht was 62; at 9 a. nl. Saturday it was 72; at 9 p. ln. 70; at 9 a. m. Sundray 77. The highest record ed Saturday was 82 and the high- est Sunday was 85 -_-_________._..___ Noozie the Sunshine Kid. tho premier addcd, hut ‘ an ltruly and power to possess a navy, and asked Wiitltiltll‘ Mr. As- quith would give ireiand an army and navy. lrish ports, Mr. Lloyd George asserted, wcro tllc "most dnllgor- oils spots in the empire. were these w be handed over to tho dominion parliament? "Mr. Asquith is merely adding to the difficulty and lnalclng worse! the situation," declared tho pro- nller, "by allowing it to be made known throughout Ireland and the United States that though those rthinxs arc not intended, British, statesmen are willing to grlvo Ireland» self-determination . " gulnent was that the government was prepared to make great con oeeaions ‘for the sake of peace, goodwill and partnership, but, he said, any dominion solution re- Quired definite associations r0- lvo 142A. Hillel. 188 lins- S , some, I A p) $ _ 4.1 u, . J ‘- to Liverpool from America, pvbere larding the army, navy and ports. mm lllliiil, Mlilile Jillian- Mr. Lloyd George's general nr- ‘ wrap rs GOOD eon POLI- rrcet CAMPAIGNSNACHI} RACES non THE HAT ‘Busrasssf .._..______.___..-___‘__ v \ %\\\\\\\\\p \\ , 7 71 cw ' ened the Persian stun ninth-f g lwtriuss It Hill aswa in which Admiral (Dom. Prena Special.) -LONDON. Aug. 7.—Premler Lloyd-George's meeting with Kn- nleneff of the Soviet delegation to Great ‘Britain. lasted Friday for over five hours. Admiral Wilson was called into the conference. When the meeting broke up K... mnnefi sent a lengthy wireless des- patcll to Moscow. The Russiah answer to this message will be con- sidered at a conference Sunday in will be Premier Millerand of France and At that time it ls Wilson Joined. Wheiilt?! the Allfes shall declare War on Russia or make peace with the Moscow government will be tu- ken. There has been no rupture in the negotiations with the Rus- sian delegation and much it is now held. will depend 0n the attitude of France. lit is believed that if France is wlllius’. Lloyd-George will agree to peace being negotia- tied direct by Poland-Russia. it is generally granted that in accord ancewith the practice of previoui wars Russia is not called upon to Illflllelld operations until an armin- tice is signed. Immigration To Canada (Dom. Press Special.) OTTAWA, Aug. 7."—lmmigt'atlpn to Canada during April May and June. of the present year shows an increase iof 68 per cent over the corresponding months ill .1919, ac- cor ing to a statement just made pub lc by lion. J. A. Calder, Mi- nister of llnnligratiou and coloni- ‘zation. Tile greatest increase is shown in June when the imlnigrn- tion to Canada was 109 per cent greater than in June a year ago. 0f the 49,242 ilnnllgrants who en- tered Canada in April, May aud- June of this year 28,487 were Bri- tish. 16,307 were from the United States and 4,358 from other coun- tries. Commission To Meet in September Press Special.) Aug. 7.—'l‘lle Tariff Commission will open its sittings at Winnipeg on Wednesday, Sep- tember 15th. The Conlnlission will consist of Sir ilenry Drayton. (Dom. _ OTTAWA, President to Give llis 0|iinigl (Dem. Preu Special.) WArSHlNG'i‘0lN. Aug. 7.—An in- timation that the Presiderr soon - may declare his views (-1: the question of saving Poland fwrr :~‘c- vlet-ilussia was given ‘today, wr- lowing a conferepce on the 1,... -. l10n between M_r. Wilson, Selin- ifll‘? of Shale Colby, and Pct-t Secretary of state Davis. l‘... President called in the two off- .=. . K to advise llllll of thc latest it» opulent in the plans of lilt l: lies for halting tllc Russet" .. war and 0f thc extent to which United States might aid them in averting a Polish catastrophe. ‘It was indicated that the President i8 considering the presentation to France and England of his views on tllc pondy tovbe adopted but. that he had not fully determined what suggestions he would make.| Speculations 0f the possibilities in official circles run all tllc way, fronl a proposal by the President that the machinery of the League of Nations be set in motion to stop tllc war, to the suggestion that ‘m, Minister of Finance. Chairman. Hon. J. A-. Calder, President of the Privy Council; Senator Robert'- son. Minister of Labor." 1t is necessary," Sir Henry Drayton in- formed a Canadian Press repre- sentative tonight, _"tilat the Com- tnisslong sittings should commence as soon as possible so that the labors of the Commission be com- pleted‘ in time for consideration at the next session oi Parliament." it has been determined to open the meeting at Winnpeg on Wednesday,‘ September 15th. the Conlmsslon after the ini- tinl sittings in Winnipeg will pro- ceed direct to the coast and take evidence in British Columbia and hold sittings in the prairie provin- cos on the return journey in Oc- tober, so as to meet tllc conve- nience of those whose farming op- r-rations would render their atten- dance in September difficult. On the return journey a second meet- ing will also he held in Winnipeg, ‘the exact dates of the sittings at other points will be stated in the near future. Persians To Evacuate Teheran .4 (Dom. Prcu Special.) WASHINGTON, Aug. 7.—Be- cause 0t the rapid advance of the. .Boislievlk army the Persians are preparing to evacuate Teheran. their capital. Tile State Depart- ment was advised today by John L. Caldwell, United States Minis- ter to Persia. This wna the first news to reach tllc United States government that Bolshevlk ad- vance in the near east hnd threat- capital. The probability oi a drive in this firec- ton had been expected however. €i<0->-———— 80TH CIRCUIT DRIVE DETROIT, MIC-1i.. Aug. fw-Babe Ruth hit h_ls 30th circuit drive of the season at Navin Park Field to RUTH HITQ Hi8 a»; ~~r .‘~._..¢-v-...a, a. day. The first batter up in the second inning. Ruth hit Ebmkds rllli v ' iii iii! lilht Mil lliir Mr. Wilson nlay reconvene Con- gress i special session to consider means of furnishing effective aid to Poland. Will Await (Dom. Preaa Special.) MIAMI, FLA. Aug. 5-The Bri- tis-h cable ship Colonis, chartered to lay_the South American cable British West indies, will not enter American water until permission is granted by the state department ces received today from the Bri- tish ambassador, Sir Auckland Geddes, by A. 1i. Hubbard, British vice-consul in Miami. Hubbard was ins-tructcd in a long code despatch from tllc ambassa- dor to tarke command of tllc cable ship and to keep it outside tllc three-mile limit until further in- structions from Washington. Schooner Launched (Dom. Preaa special.) HALIFAX. N. S, Aux. ti-Jfhere was launched at Spencer's island (N.S.), today, the ‘tern schooner Rupert K, registering 400 tons. The vessel is fitted with all the la- test improvements and is classed in Bureau Verltas. Silo will load deal-s at Parrsboro for Europe. Empire Delegates (Dom. Fran Special.) MONTREAL, Aug. tl-Word was received today by Captain Evan J. Edwards, H. M.. senior trade com- missioner for Canada and New- foundland, from the imperial nov- ernment that the 400 deieg-tir- to thtfCongress of Chambers 01' (‘om- merce of the Empire to be hem st Toronto, next month. would rlrtwvtl at Montreal and spend som~ unto hcre before proceeding to TQIt-IFO to ti! congress. is/IKES to Warsaw. they are speculu- "iIPIIliSllCB is signed. ‘that thc Poles do not use the ps- ‘clares that the uninterrupted as- of the Pollsll army of the troops of l I from Miami to Barbadoes in the, . in Washington. according to advi-. HAHHS The issue Now- Depends- (Dom. Preaa special.) ' LONDON, Aug. 7.-—The fate of Europe illlngs in the balance. The situation at this time revolves about thc note which yesterday was forwarded by the government of Russia to Great Britain, which is Said to propose that the London conference be one, of all tilegrent powers of the world since “with- out tllc assistance of these leading nations the other states could not wage war against us, and only such a conference really could guaran- tee the general pence oi Europe." Lloyd-George’ will announce in the iiouse of Commons on Monday that Great Britain accepts the con- ditions of the Soviet reply. that the conference will be held, and that Germany and the Baltic states most probably will be represented. This acceptance of the terms of the Soviet note it was said in in- dependent circles would unques- tionably mean n ‘great general peace conference involving ques- tlo/ns of revision ofihc Versailles treaty, an effort to assure the par- ticipation of the United States in such a conference would be ine- vitable. ll it s l1 \V C 0 B The text of the Russian note _> claims that the Soviets are justi- . fled in inferring that by the re- ‘urn of the Polish armistice deie- u " u: on foreign assistance and de- .r~ mg an agreement with the So- ‘viets irl expectation of such ald.. it declares tllc Bolsheviki have, every precedent for continuing to make war on the Poles urltll an Guarantees 0 riod of armistice when it is sigllcd for the renewal of hostile acts, are demanded, in the note which de- 5 d slstance the French have given Po- land and tile presence of General Wrnngel, Russian anti-Bolshevlki leader, supported by tllc French on the Polish right wing. have made it. necessary to ask such guaran- tees. ‘M. Kalnencff. one of the Soviet delegates said today, “the history of the Polish attack upon Russia, the patent facts oi system- atic and uninterrupted assistance to Poland on the part of France and the presence on the right wing G G l‘ General Wrangei. who also is sup- ported hy the French government, render it a matter of necessity for the Russian Soviet government to demand the inclusion in theiterms ‘of the armistice with Poland of such reasonable guarantees as ' would prevent all attempts on the pal-t of ‘Poland to use the armir" 'tice period for the renewal of hos- tile acts against Russia. t BRITAIN PREPAR-ES FOR ViG- OROUS ACTION. FLONDON. Aug. 7. —- Whether -tile great powers will engage in actual war to turn back ~the Rus- sian tide in Poland depended to- day on the result of the Lloyd- Goorge-tiViillerand conference to be hold at Hytlle, near Folkestone, to- morrow. Although tllc British Cab- inet favors nction which 11011701“ male; war, the popular disapproval which grpctt-d ‘tho announcement of this attitude llns cruised Pre- mier Lloyd George to tlelny putting his‘ VHOKHII“ before Prlrliarucllt un- til after he had had a chance t0 go over the whole situation with thc French Prlnle Minister. Mean- while high British army and HIWY officers wore preparing plrms for vigorous nction against Russia. ANNOUNCEMENTS. ' oommq “EVMENTS. lemmings, are, ‘POOITIWELV NO ADVERTISE- rnenta acc ad.at this office for next day's saua after ti p. m. un- less paid for in advance. -~ » "CHURCH or ENGLAND PIC-i nlc at Crapaud on Thursday. Auk» 19th. 1920. 2009 n-t- “If. .MMM' cream. festi- val at Mt Ryan. Tuesday evening August filth-Bean suppers also served. BasebalL-lfort Augustus against. lit. Ryan st. 6 o'clock. Colts one! Como all! t» rocr-t w||.t. srrsno,.ooufiiai ENOE. _ will participate in the conference nllcr Millerand of France audqlfre- rnler Lloyd tleprgg, at. which the Russian situation will be cons der- ed. hirrnrlay. Foch favors military ac- tion against Russia. law was declared in Denver today, addition to 1.000 civilian volun- teers and police the city was be- illg patrolled by 250 federal troops from Fort Logan. nlore troops were en route from WANT SOVIIErT GOVERNMENT ists lisllment of a Soviet government an Warsaw, according to a dispatch from that city today. istn argue that this is the only way to halt the Bolshevik advance and troops, resuming their drive ag- iiue of Strypa River, about sixty miles from that city_ it pounced today. has requested iii rwarsaw. dressed to the Soviets was sent out from Warsa aggressive military troiivlty he rnu- turllly suspended. communicate freely with their gov- tllroughout Germany if the Fre attempt to send troops across this country to Pol-ind, it was reWlIi-‘iii today. posed peace to Ronmanla and l1 suggested that a conference" held at Kharkov. the Foreign 0f- fice was‘ advised today. is an import-ant city in Southern Russia. . ‘ ‘runx TREATY FURTHER Pearl Po .. postponed today until ‘Pueldni n . Maritime Provinces- —John Desmond colored. charged with the murder of Daniel Mcinnis, was yesterday committed to was found dead- fhree weeks ago‘ and Desmond-has arlnlitted striking thc mall in face and knocking him riown. 9K; . .. 7km.‘ lino tile-- Sentlstothe British Note; Rrnssisiléliemurls are lixtravagantsnrl Complications hgrelirisee F r r tPAR-IS. Aug. T-Marehai rot-n t Hythe, England, between, Pra- 'I‘he Foreign (lcice announced ldny that Mllternntl curl Fr-cb will mrt for Ply-tile tonight. returning DENVER, Col, Aug. T-Martial s a result of street car riots ilicll were resumed last nlsilr. ln Five hundred amp Funston. AT WARSAW. lanterns, A-ug. T-Polish s» iai- favor the immediate es ab- The Social- btaln favorable peace. ' i OLSHEVISTS. STILL ADVANC ~ ING. l MOSCOW. Aug. 7.— Bolshevik inst Lunlhcrg, have reached the WIQS kill‘ i POLEB ASK FOR RESPITE. a ZURICH. Aug. i-Wnland again s Bolsllevikw to Base military operations against A wireless lnessagz art" w today. lt asked-ior nliiitary respite and Suggested that Th“ lllr-ssagc ah o requested that the Polish PPBIIB elegates at Minsk he permitted to rnlnellt. ERMANS THREATEN RAILWAY STRIKE. 7 .—-A general bu. declared nrh BERLIN, Aug. rtiway strike will . £155" 5r RUOSIANS PROPOBE PEAUE WITH ROUMANIA. PARIS, Aug. 7.—-Russia has ‘pro- h-J be Magma‘ Kharkov .Jrsuu. NED. PARIS. Aug. 7.-—'1‘he signing of he Turkish peace treaty was again ext. ......_._4-a>____ I Telegraphic NW8 (Special to Tha Guardian). H \ . DESMOND OHAiGlO WIT MURD R NEW GLASGOW. N. 8.. Aug. 8. tile preme Court ‘for trial. Mclnnil in an alleyway the l TWO OEROOUO C-HARGIO‘: rnrnunsncrou. N. 1a., Au‘. ir- Warr-ants have been lss 4 nftzlr-the 1 Simon hscobe. charge of criminal aliwalt upfl a fivc-year-old lndlan girlr an£ other, John Paul, who fie a on the charge of aesauitinga pol- ice constable in the town of Devon. o.,\.,¢'. anon? APPLE chop ‘m JL M. . l- —-The New Brunswick ‘sprains-tip due to the sustained dry weather. will this yegr be only B0 per cent. of last year. Oi the dlffon - cites, Alexander and .'_,',4. . \.' .. at ~' Wi- ‘it...