i' i , .' , , i I ,_ . , ,___ . ,._ ; i ALL OVER P§ll`lCE~ EDWIARD ISLADIDW* f i 1 l * i A ,.,l .~. ., . . _ \ . ~ i, , _ ,__ .. ,__:_,___ _, .i ____ ____ .... ,. _ .__ _,__ _ _ _ wit.. . 0 G IID __ _ j f _ w%35‘l~'5'lW5\ll2¥l'>"#ll-'3l"»~=l we i.Air.sT News . cHARLo'i"1‘EToWN, CANADA THURSDAY APRIL 6, 1911. msc or ...U- is 22 ,E #si-..‘.'i.-iieis§. ’-1'" ' " ~ -T;.-'~i¢;____-» . ’ ’ . . ‘»- . . _ * -~--~ _______ ____ ___ _ __ _ __ ____ _ _7___,, ____ _ ,_ _ _ , ____ __';°__,_._._...._.,-_ FFARFUL FLIGHT PRocEEiJiNGs iN THE iiiiiiwiiiis i=iiiEi> oi-' BiiiiiiE i>iiiEii ASSEMBLY YESTERDAY BY commission ____..___.;-._- special to The Guardian. ' SAN FRANCISCO, April 5-Impris- uned in a diving suit at the bottom of the bay, his air supply shut off nnd his shlpmates, upon whom his lilc dellendedi Struggling for their f.\\~ii lives in the water, ninety feet iihore his head, J. C. Hicks, a navy iiiiarterinaster, faced death in awini iorin near here. l The pump that supplied him with iilr was installed on a flat-bottomed liouil. A ferry steamer' passed, capsizing it and throwing thc occupants into the water. They dived iintll they found the ilivei"s lines and then, hanging to the capsized boat, hoisted him to the siirfiicc. HIIIIII _ CIIMINE Illll Pl. IIIIIHUII iipi-i-iiil to The Giiaililian. 'l'iillilN'l‘(l, April .'i~ll`. ll. Ki-,i-ici', who is retiiriiing to i'ort Ariliui' ai- ti-i~ un extended trip to England, says tliiii. after the coronation a party of lli'i..tol cnllitalists will visit Port Ar- tliiii' with a View to founding it meat,- l»iii;liiiii:; establishment at an estiniat- i»i| ilxpiliiilitiiie of .l$l,500,(l00. 'l‘hi-y expect to secure the hulk of llii- contracts for supplying the llrit- ish nriiiy and navy, wliirli liif.Iii~rt.o hn\'i» gone to Uliivalgu. PIIWEIIS WILL iI]IlI’l AHBIIHIIIIIN SEHENIE \l'.-\t~"l-IINGTON, April 3-Represcu- tiitive Foster, of Vermont, ranking iiiinority leader of the house commit- l.i~i-. on foreign adairs, predicted at ilii- White House today that arbitra- tion treaties would be negotiated be- tiveen foiir of the great powers of the irorlil. _ ‘ Illi-_ Foster named Great Britain, l~`rniice, Japan and the United Sta- tes :is the four powers who would en- ter into such agreements. Eventiml- ly, hi: said, 'the other powers of the \viii~lil will be forced to take similar iiction. Mr. Foster said that he had had licrsonal conversation with the May- or of 'I‘okio and other Japanese of liriiininence and that he believed thel . _' ' _ seiitiiiieiit in Japan was in fiivor of siicli' agreements. I KIPL ING YIRITES » HIS FIRST PLAY _l.oNDON, April 1-Ruilyard Kip- llllil has written his first play, but for some reason the matter is being l‘_"l*l ll Profound secret. 'Neither the titli- nor the plot is revealed, but llllj fact that all the characters are iuiiinals is known to Kipling's most iiitiinute friends. __The charactelrs are taken from the .liiiigle Book," but the play cannot he rnllcil a dramiatization of that ll'lll‘ll. as the stories are not follow- ed, nnd the only animals capable of llelllir Customed and acted are being selected. ~ ’ The play is declared by those who ll_ii\'c read it to be replete with Kip- lllls humor and virility. It is in no sense an imitation of “Chsintecler," lllllliiiigli Klpling's animal characters liiie iiostanil’s, talk, understand and fill* endowed with human emotions. l`llll lilny is bellig considered by one Loiiilon an-d one New York manage- |ni‘iit_ ` IANUELYIIIITS T0 (IET HIS CLOTHES Iill~lll()N, April 3--The Seculo prints ii report that the dethroned King llliiiinel and Queen Amelie have re- lilii-sted the Provisional Government lo send them, through the British lll‘i:atioii at Lisbon, the remainder lil tlieli- jewels, clothes and dresses, Wlllcli were left at the royal palace ol the Neceasidudes and the royal lllllnres at Ajuda and Gintra. The niniister of finance. it is stated, has lli~<~iili>d to grant the demand. Mlnnril'i.1i,inimeng cm-eg Bin-ng, into sought eml>lflylllf’ll_l_~_ ___________________________ The piigseiigers, express and u\§\_ EIJLII IS IUIINII IN IILII UIIEBEE Silccial to The Guardian_ l"0B»'ll/1', Ailril 5-li half the virtue claimed for the new field is iii-overly were will lm l€l`9Ill» I'll>=li of frce lance lll`0SIlcciors from l’orciipi|i¢ iiisirict in Oiitnrio to Keckelie in tluehec this summer. ‘ .4 . Sixty miles nortlieast of Hailey. Iillry about fi0,l)0il acres of t.ei'i‘itory has been staked out ,mil gpviii-ui ,,_,,,_,| free gold finds are cliiiiiiicli-,il, SENSIIIIIN IN. M NEW YIIIIK CIINIESI IIIH IIIILLIIINS Niluv voiiii, April :i-A g.»..,. |.,.i.~_.,, lvolnnli of sixty ciiilil. yours ii.|»pi»nri»ii today under siibpociiil. liilfiii'i~-Siu-|-0. gate (liilialnn, and ass-ei‘l.eil thai, she wus thi: widow of fleiii>.riil 'l‘homnS l<‘. lll lll 1900. Wlllfll llli llH'll V€l`¥ lll»l~l0 the enormous crowds which had ga-l ' - - f '_ ` ll tliered to watch the proceedings. Hume Wefll and a ll1l`8" l`fllfl'”@ll“ \f0Ul“ ,They blocked the entrancei-i and pre- ‘ml‘l~U*l‘ llllll <"lli1l'if.‘l’ of ll~ llllll ill" 0ll»l’ vented the ingress of the suflragettes, to do with lt was the yeai of Ol I grant.. which he affirmed was not satisfacto- Digby. committed suicide here this _ , , mornin _ reciprocity agreement with Lfana-ilu. ~ swer given as far as he knew was cor- to a door knob. ' were services done in one year and her sou have been supported by the payments not madc because they neiglihoiirs. INIIIHEII IILIEII I MR.M(!l)(.iNAl.l|, (‘iai'digun, resum- ed the budget debate, taking up the. iiiiestioii of cold storage, in which he ridiculed the statement that it spoils pork to freeze it, whereas nearly all the winter-killed pork was frozen be-_ in lliirke's bowling lea ue the fore It left the _f"“'m¢r'5 llremlses" He (,l,,_,.kS met defeat at me Eands of held that no proper elioit had beeii_ the Mechanics lust night after piit-,mmm to °°u_ect °.“" “mlm” al' Ol't9"; I latter who seem almost invincible. he ex___a___cd_ The ___0m_y°w___B‘Badly| needed. MR. CROFIBY thought the Prem- ier had made a frank and satisfacto-_ ry financial -statement which the country would endorse. The country is prosperous. As to cold storage the country knew and felt that the gov- ernment had done right. There was 151_394 only one cold storage proposition ‘be- ___ ___ifoie thc country last year and the, _ 2334,Opposit.ion had opllosed it. They ad- " 'mitted that Davis and Fraser were CLERKS hcnorable men, andfyet they challen- 1` 2 3 Tt_1_lg_ii_;i the r_¢;ti;rn_s broug_ht down. Hu . ~ i-» i- _ r. Eros y , ia( ma e more inquir- l`('t;2ilanMcKw'm ies and confirmed the return that no <‘hs\veii‘." ` . I 122 156 141-420 I Perl* Wall Placed I" “Old “°"“€°~ E‘l’ wehBt____"' 148 17,, 174_500}nally erroneous was the statement M F cl ' H0 129 123,392: that Davis and Fraser had taken un- c ‘a I ' __ ____ ___'faii- mivsntaga of other buyers. _The 22ii7I H (Coiitiniieil 'pn page 3.) _ __ C_ __ __ ____ HUMAN REMAINS ox Keenan io ie er s ma le _l ,__g,_m __gmga,e__52_,_ ,_,_,,_,,_ M,,_,,,,,_,, FOUND IN CIGAR B ’M.h ' t i' ies iniivii- , '*‘*_ , llfiltI‘~iE;(ii'ewlElE“f>:lnsle lg NEW YORK' Alml' 3-11” nndmg ' ` of a. human hand and foot encased SOMETHING NEW lll "‘-° ”‘g.‘°"~i‘.T.‘§“i °“i‘.§‘.”“.§'.’..‘.if..t.i.°.§°.'.`.'§-° crime s mi o ~ - stery, today started the police upon ___ a thorough search of halls and area~ INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., April 3-A ways in 125th street, in the vicinity novel six-day race was commenced of Park avenue, for the other Darts in 'Tomlinson Hall here today under oi the body. _ _ the (ii,-eci,i(,,, of Dan 0‘Leary, the The only clew, contained in two r tcran pedestrian. The contest is initials on a ring discovered on one illl' ill l`f5(fU\l(!I`. ' BIIWLING The following arc the scores' ` MI*l(IHANI(‘.S; 3 Ttl. 160--455 ' 197-521 157-496 108--468 1 2 147 148 168 156 160 179 146 1614 100 143 Total... Capt. (‘.iirric.... McIniiis.,. Strain... . Jewers... . Mallctt.. . Total... Majority for Mechanics . . . . .. a (dmI‘\i)iiI’ndi`s DzEi'reEl in’ teams. Thellicc. One initial on the outside of *ln n rs are to use the track from 3 the ring was “A~ 1"-" The Oth” 0“ I,“n5€-li) i m and the walkers from 8 the inside was "A" & “W.” W‘l`HllDc‘iEilv§li0~_ M- ~-_,___-_._._._.,_._.Y._._._.v_____Y___V.'____._____._.___._._.___._.___-_-_-,-_-,-_-_-_-_~.-,-,-_-»------=-‘- - ~ ~ - ~'- - - - - Y ' ' W are brought t0_ th | S ci ty by g|)(n,(\, ii __ ____ _ C __ __M_ .MISSING I o _-img-_1»_l_ N0 one ever ought to notice a slight, that is intended for him. The best way to avoid noticing them is u0t to see them; and the beet way not to see them is to decline to ex- llevt th-em oroven to ibelieva that they coins iiiniit. 'rim blind mam nie lu enriched by his missing a great "lllllrthilnigs that people with eyes H00; and love ls deliberately blind a great deal of the time. Love refuses ‘W Hee imlove that le directed toward lt. And we must choose between ax- tremes in this matter; for unless we deliberately close oui- eyes to sllghts ,"9 Sllallose loin that never erlstedi 'He who lodkswor sllg-hts is silt £0 find them"- whether they are there Or not. It ll mor not to see 'the Hllizhtl ` intended for he *lun to obs; some :lights um were not intended for un. , what iiileiicsn we keep year alter 108|' i *.__.__._,.~,f‘§.___\._. . _ _ ' ~. -_M '~.»~y.---- ' . ~ _ i. ,.. train which arrived at 1.20 ll- lil' ` 'The Miuto loaves today “t 7'0" n' 'l`0RfIN'I`ll. Al-‘l`ll I _ m. for Picton with paaseuizers, 3 ¢l\l`ll winds, cloudy and wariii. niixed freight, express and thirty-five mail sucks . The Earl Grey left Georgetown at _ 7.00 a. m. yesterday ___a_;1il___n'v U er Prince Bt a ladies' open stem winding watch. Finder please return to G. H. 'ra lor, Jeweler. 4-6d3lpd. Y __ _.,______. ii a l Messrs McLean & McKin fit, 4-6d6ipd. . . No washing. Good wages. Apply af- \N7~ . y . . ‘ 'Parties having same for sale IJOBT, DP -. 01' , Prince St. Tuesday evening last iRoYA`1L'rY i.o'rs-I win an 2 acres sltuate on Lower Malpe- que Road, near Elliot's. For particu- lar . DPY - - ' non or Mrs. L. Youhlier, 172 Kent ADIES HAIR GOODS. Ladies J call and have i'°\lf llell' mill” iiosros, iviiuis.. April :i-rin i..».i “D ln tllllf lllll-“ral Brtlatlc ellecl' “Ml of a woman found -in n pool of water Florida, yesterday, came here several at Deering, Maine, yesterday. has years ago from Prince Edward ls- efy- l*llM\1lJ00lll§ llllll fll'Yllll¢ ll 9P°°° been identified as that of Laura land. Siu- was born in Cape Bmton, ialty. Faded switches can be made Ka“,._ ¢m.m,,,.iy 0| 0-hem-y_ |»_ i.;_ be ready for the new Easter millin- 9_ message iirgiiig"'early action on the He said that he based this message upon a deference to polriilur senti- meilt and of duty to the great inuss- cs of the American people. EXIIII SESSIIIN . WILL LIIIELI BE LENSIHY LINE. i --- I WASHINGTON, D. C., April 3-; Pursuant to the l"rosidr-nts call lor, an extraordinary sessioii of the sixty il second Congress, the Senate and I-Iouse of Representatives will meet tomorrow at noon. The l-'|'esident’s message relating to reciprocity with Canada will not be sent until Wed- uesday. In the Senate the routine pro- gramme will be followed, Vice Presi- dent Sherman will call the Senate to order. and the President’s proclama- tion calllng the session will be read. A Committee will be appointed to call upon the President and informg him that tne Senate is in session,i and another committee will similarly! advise the house. I A big shift of seats in the Seiiiitc will accompany the opening of the session. Not only will there be ab- sent many of the familiar faces that have seemed fixtures in the upper house and be in evidence many new faces. but also many of thc old ones will appear in new places. The greatest change in thc seating in the Senate will be the wiping out of "Cherokee strips”-that group of seats on the extreme end of the minority side which have been oc- cupied far a number of years by lie- publicians. That is due, of course, to the replacing by Democrats of Re- publicans in several delegations. The Clerk of the House will call that hodyto order at noon, read the President’s proclamation, and call the roll of those entitled to seats in the Sixty-second Congress. The oath will be,administered, and the draw- ing of seats will then take place, the members standing behind the rails until the name of each is drawn from a box by a blinded page, Following custom, Representative Joseph G. Cannon, the "father of. the House," probably will be allowed the privi lege of selecting his seat. The chosen leader of the Democratic majority will also be accorded the same privi- lege. First _and foremost on the agenda, however, is the subject of recipro- city. That the Canadian agreement will be given prompt approval by the house is not doubted by any fraction. All the democrats appear to con- sider the vote in the last house g commlttal of the Democrats to such ding when it reaches the Senate. President Taft will urge his per- manent tarifl commission plan, whlcli sentutlves will bc able to et awa weather begins iii earliest. iioii. iii. .i. iiiiiiiui- niunsn on ~i>iiison W. J. Hannah, proifiiiciiil sccr¢~t.ui'_ of Ontario, addressed a large nuinbci of the members of the Canadian Club here this evening, on Prison Reform, work carried on in Ontario. 'l‘ho Graiiil ’l‘i~iiuk Pacific will uliio' be |»i‘i\.~u-,<~iii.cil for crossing about eighty highways in Alberta without, the Honril’s approval. ' 'l‘h<» pciially iii $25 n day for each iiIIi‘l|i'<‘. BIG SNIlWSIiIIiNI IN [III] ENSLINII Siiiiciul to 'Vlie (liiarilimi. l.ilNliiiN, April 5-England and Wales are in the grip of a severe blizzard \'.‘.l~.if'li luis ni-i;i»ii-ii tiuiilic and all thc syslf-ni;-. iii roiiiiiiiiiiicii tion and has already caused hund- rcds of llitiiieanilir of dollar's worth of iliiiiiiigr. The blizzard mis accompanied by a terrific northwesterly wind. HEIIEL IIHIEEIIIN I IVIIII IIIEEI Iililll. El. PASO, April 3-On the surface, proposed peace negotiations did not appear to make much progress today br-twei-ii the Iiisurrcctos and the Mex- ican Fcdcrals, but developments camo to light. that promise much in the is expected to cause a wrangle in C°“gr°ss "ml hell’ EU l"`°l0“f5 the from wliirli it. was mailed to Mrs. session. Then, again, should the Mead committee accede to ileiiiands for a ' general "evl“l°“ of the l*‘“`llI U' ll” some years ago and Mrs. Mead is °p°“ E" the W°l`ld» the He"l“l0“ Pl'U‘l}’addcck's only surviving relative. bably w°“l‘l ‘Img EIU"-lllgll me 5“m`l'l‘he letter was in reference to timber mer and well into the E“ll~ In Unyllniid owned hy Paddock in the nor- eveut tlwre “ppeurs E" be llll-le llk9‘ItIicrn part. of New iYork state, and lihooil that the Senators and licprc- I MON(`~'I‘FVN, N. H.. April fl-Holi. ,next few days. li. is known that Francisco I. Ma- dero, Jr., has not been heard from regarding the proposals of the Mexi- ican (lovernment, and until he can be iliearil from negotiations are impos- isihle. All efforts now are bending to- Iwards rc-arraiiging a meeting in this .city between l<‘. I- Madero. Jr., and otlicrs, with representatives of the Mexican Government. To make this possible immunity from arrest must be granted Made-ro by the United States, as a warrant is out for his arrest on charges of violating the neutrality laws. An agreement to suspend this warrant probably will ,be made, ii Senor Madcro desires to come to El Paso. Tile next step will glie to procure traiisportation for Ma- ‘dero to El l’aso from the Mexican ‘iGoverniuent. It is known that such a. proposal has been made. The father and brother oi thc lnsurrecto chief- tain today said they had nothing to 'add to what they had already said. LETTER DELIVERED SEYENTY-THREE YEARS . AFTER IT HAS MAILED ll/\NB[llt\', f‘oun., April 3-A let- ter mailed in Geneva (N. Y.) seventy- tliree years ago by Peter Blthy to O. S. Paddock, of Yonkers (N. Y.), was delivered today to the latter's sister, Mrs. Mary L. Mean, of this city. The letter, which was written before envelopes came into use, was folded and scaled with wax and had Legislation' The p"°p°5e‘l pact- 0" been mislnid in the archieves of the the other hand, will find it hard sled- Geneva omcelmm a short time B 0 8 . when it was discovered and mailed to Yonkers, where no trace of Pad- dock being foiind, it was sent to the dead letter iiilice at Washington, The writer and Paddock both died Iby its meiins Mrs. Mead hopes to es- Itahlish a claim to lands which she Z Y . from Wushliigton before the liot.`|m,, vainly tried to get in the page POLICE ESTABLISHES 3' ORDER IN SPRINUHILL REFORM" AT MQNCTONE ii.~.i1r~.7; fowl. .1--»~...n._.;..=-ii»»i~i~r ".I`hoiiipi;f 1. .i|'.iI i iiii-i-i~ i., thii't_\` iiii-li ‘took charge of poiiw ,,.‘.i..»iii>=ii~iition :it Spriiigiiill Mines today. For the L iirsl. iiinr in ,thc history of the town no loitering was allowed on the streets and everybody had to move I dealing more particularly with thel The boy and girl problem. now nt- tracting so much attention, was dis- cussed also by the speaker, who gave an interesting account of philanthro- pic work in this connection in On- tario. Tlie address was highly inter-I I on. llominissioiicr Thompson, besides being the-head of the police force, is also stipendiary and before him must come for trial all except civil cases. The provincial police wore white hel- ,mets, yellow leather belts, pouches 'for handcuffs and a socket for bat- ons. Non-strikers returned to work estlns und instriictive. the sneaker toiiny iiiiii more are expected tomor- being extended n vote of thanks at row, the close. C. F. Burns, the pre-sldentl - _ was in the chair. Minard‘s Liuiment Cures Dandruff. rises tomorrow morning at 5.32 and Saturday morning at 5.31. The moon sets tomorrow morning at 3.05. ' That once we might have a . te la they have hoard. ,ty minu s te. ._James Russel Lowell. ‘ Minnrd'i-i Liniiueiit llclli-.vos Nournlgla The tide will be high this afternoon natural at The Hair Dressers, 154 Miss iram. Wm, mi,-ty ym,,»,, ni R Pownal, 4-6d3IDd. shlvoii 1-IBM. int 3.18 and tomorrow afternoon at ----- 4 I-I u ii," '_ '°H__’ T and Waterville hotels She prevlo B'6 ING, Bin-kos A eva, un er ,» - ~ '_ mu-g,t_ op” igqfui ag" gm gn ,ly attempted to kill herself with Minnrd's Llniment for sale everywhere who was possibly fatally iniurc hatpin. TRAGIC END 0F_P. E. I. GIRLS y an automobile ioy ri-de at Daytonla, l. twciify-tlircc years ago. She is en- ge caged to marry Frank Beverly, third nnd recently employed in Augusta ensilll‘l‘l‘ ill llll* Hleimlllllp Memllllls us- of thc ilostoii-Savannah lllne. Felix a Faust, ‘the cliaifrur, 'was killed and three persons were seriously hurt in Bessie McDonald, a Boston girl the accident. ~l'in .aa f.-. ...z "1 i;i'.i .. i1i.=.ii'.liiI ' it .ii isp. . ‘.'~1'Z` . , . IHE CHARLIITIEIIIWN G ARDIA A