Agrees Y (On ‘ . o, commons screed ioniabi lfgflu... boom-reentry inim- ‘wabyNevlllcOlll-Illbflllllln fill“- Iflmqgfliskohflilol‘... » n, ma ebswce o! WWW‘ 5m who was 8111M" m“ l?“ w“ Walter Elliot, financial sec- w the ‘lreusiii-y, described m‘ pyqpowd - um" fund as acniaes of Jam; Britain to counteract the ef- {gga of sudden movements of 01D!- ‘bl 1a declined to deiins the Gov- nmeavs aims regarding Mb qw- ’w as the rats of exchange for ‘w, pilllllil stcrlilll- I * CAN. DELEGATION (Continued from Page l) ...--——-—-'.-——-—-— ‘mu: Beauchesne, clerk of the Oom- ‘W as Secretary. However, owing {M119 prospect that Parliament in]; not prorogue for three ‘neither of these officials wiiibe w, to leave Ottawa. Senator .l.rl u. Casgrain will act as chair- of executive and F. W. Turn? mi, (Cons., Regina) will act as watery. The other members of the delegation will be Senators C. lrsuubioh, n. H. Horsey and Gen. w, A, Griesbach, and from the commons, J. A. Barrette (Cons., "iertlller-Maskinonge), JJA. sum- jlll, (cons, St. Ann, . Montreal), Innis Spence, (Cons., , Parkdaie), “J. ‘Tl. Harris (Cons., Troonto Scar- iaough), C. 'B. Howard, (Lib. which’ would eliable\ Annual Report Frontenac Oil deducting a ieserve for depreciation OWWJMOO as against 8450.000 the Previous year, and making provis- ion for bad and doubifuldebts of 0167.838, reserve for contingencies hf $384.16. amortisation oi bonds discount oi $48,502 and U. l. ex- ‘charlie on bond interest or some there remained a net pmiit for the iyearaor $1,524,150, ssalnst $1,242,211 the preceding year- Provision for income hi: of memo, and div- idends on the preferred. stock of $473,892 left 8907,58 equal to-tLill. on the common as againgt 31,43 ma, preceding year. Common dividends totalled $37,852, leaving a balance oi $610,605. Previous balance brought forward at $1,428,537 leaves a net pmlii and loss balance or $2,039,142. Stock Market Inquiry Today wasnznrerlirr, April 2s. (am- The mystery behind which chair- man Ncrbeck of the UnltedStates senate banking committee today hid the identity o! the surprise witness who is to appear tomorrow at the stock market inquiry was pushed aside tonight to reveal the stocky figure oi Representative La- auardia, Republican, New York. As the committee resumes its Ln- vestigation of the stock market, it will be the colorful New Yorker who will be called to supply the "big surprise" which Senator Norbeck alerbrocke), O. Imldclintcsh, (Lib, forth Battleford), and G. M’. Mc- vu return to Canada foaine Lady i ... promised from the mysterious wit- ness. msnfeau of documents to the pol- ice headquarters for safe-keeping. Clothing Store Ocmpany iuued today showed not son‘ and Oudmore, mt the vsitorg illuminated ‘by a and unfasten the catch. more and the police. quickly dlllwfiared. Broken Into small electric light was broken, which allowed the would be burglars to reach inside i Formnately Ml‘. Lloyd Wellner happened to be in the rear o! m; store and on hearing the glass be- ing smashed telephoned Ml. Cud- .- $iiv<¢a1_.~_q, p. _ rue Sketches.‘ Life Of Te legraplrer CAREER or molds a. iolsdil The geniuslof the lstenhemas a. Edison, acclaimed-by ielesrsvil- ers as the "grand. old_mal\"_ of the craft was the subiect of an inter- esting address at Rot!!! WW“ tay afternoon by nourish a. u. Murley, provincial manager, Cau- adian National ‘Iielegrapbl. Edison's early career as a news- When they arrived and the awraiboy and his devotion in the study was opened. Mr. Cudmore saw plain- 0! iillrmlllly were first described ly the feces of two men looking by Mr. Mluley, who then proceed- through the back window- They ed: In 1863 when Edison was ‘six- wfioilisninto the alleyway, omwrltcen and a first class railway op- vfllggirls met a young man coming I orator in every respect. he wasap- oui. whom he placed under arrest, on a charge of vagrancy. The young man anneal-ed before the Stipen- dihry Magistrate yesterday mom- ‘ ‘ ‘- night operator at Stratford Junction, Ontario, on the Grand Trunk Railway and it was here that he made hisfirst invention. til today- sociated Press today. ing and his case was remanded Annual Meeting Associated Press NEW YORK, April 25. (A.P.)— Cunblllilbtliln oi the highest quality and‘ efficiency in news service was approved in dlscussi In by members at the annual meeting of the As- A statement by the board of dir- ectors read at the meeting point- ed out that over 60 per cent oi the total expense of the organizat- ion is absorbed in wire operation. In innumerable instances voluntary expansion of special services has saved members the greater expense ary reductions would have a neg- ligible eflcct upon assessments All Early Experiences His hours of duty were 7 11in. to 7 am., and a regulation required him 90 lignal the figun "8" to the train despair-h every hour after a Pm» as an evidence oi his being on the lob and not asleep. Hourly each night came the signal from "SF" as the junction was called yet llirflllsely cnoush. a train message sent to "SF" almost immediately afterward often failed utterly to brine a response. Investigation rs- vealed the cause. Edlson, devoting l Heater part oi his days to re. search work, felt the need of sleep at night and had therefore devised and put in action an ingenious contrivance. To both the telegraph line and a clock he attached a wheel with a notched rim. When the lino was quiet the clock was started. On each hour tbs wheel of the familiar district call-boar is somewhat similar. Whatever may have been private opinion as to Industrial Expert In Dom. said Charles D. lb preliminary work in the lnicrdi-l oi British industry prior to the op- ening oi the Imperial Conference in July. Mr. Le Maistre is to meet the Canadian Eilgineering Standards Auociation to discuss a method which will benefit the industries of both Britain and Canada. “We real- ise, however," said Mr. IleMaisti-e “that Canadian secondary industries flourish and prosper and we must do nothin, to damage their pro- Agreement on National Purchas- ing specifications. which are based on standard practice, is of flmda- mental importance to the develop- ment of inter-Empire trade, said Mr Le Mlaistre. mplaining the national standard specifications be said that they supplied the consumer with a recognized standard of quality at a reasonable price as well as giving him an equitable basis for the com- parison of tenders. "Iihey also serve to protect the manufacturers from unfair com- petition. promote economy in pro- duction and rapidity of delivery from stock," said Mr. Le Maiswe. hall bad rigged up a telegraph line to the stage where Edison had a key and» sounder. In an interval between the speeches, one of them came over to my table and asked meiildidrrtwautiospeakw Edison. I replied "certainly! I have never met him, but we were born four miles apart more than sev- enty years ago, and it is time I made his acquaintance." So I went over to their table ,called Edison I presume, was equally out of prac- tice; but I talked with him more easy by wire than I afterward did Be Controlled By day says that although no official become the Royal Canadian Alr Force Reserve. A recommendation to this effect is reported to have been made with the suggestion that it take effect March l, 1933, the newspaper says. NO DECISION AS YET OTIlAlWA, April 25—"No decision has been arrived at." ‘Ihis was the statement of J. A. Wilson, director of civil aviation, when questioned today in IESpBCi; in a, report "W? ‘the flying clubs in the Dominion were to become the Royal Canadian Air Force Reserve. Questions 8D- pcrtainlng to the future of these various flying clubs are under of- ficial consideration. Pay Tribute To Fighting Anzacs MEIBOURNE. Australia, APT“ 25- (By the Canadian PressJ-It is 1'1 years since the glorious but costly storming cd Galliwli 011 B11111 25. 1915, by the Australian and New zeamnd (Anzac) division with the filth division oi the British army and marines and naval brigades, but the memory oi that day is as vivid as ever in the Commonwealth. In the lonely backwoods and in the great cities thousands of tributes were paid to the memory oi those who fell, and city OBHOtBPh-i We" massed high with floral wreaths. His Majmty sent a. message of remembrance to Australia thrcueh Governor-General Sir Isaac IsancS. in which the Governor-General re- LEAK Flying all. May ' ' Extravagance In Civil Service ten per cent cut in salaries of civil Ryckman, Minister of National Revenue, today mme out strongly in favor of the reduction. While it could hardly be said that he had ever cut anyone‘s salary, and while he was opposed to the cut until he had thought the matter over, Mr. Ryckman declared himself now in favor of the reduction. Through n, he said, “there has been brought about a special sense of real financial responsibility that goes throughout the whole civil service. The cut is from the Prime Minister down, and there is such an attitude now towards expendit- ure that there never was before, and which never could have been brought about except for that cut." “Is the Minister in favor of the exemptions?" interjected I". G. Ban- derson, (Lib, Perth South). "I will tell you thatwhen the voting comes," replied the Minister. “But in case that answer is too short, I will say that I am in favor of everybody paying who can rea- sonably be made in pay." m. Ryckman added that he had a reservation in respect to judges. In the civil service, he said, there had been extravagance, "great ex. travagance." He had never seen, prior to coming to Ottawa, such ex- penditures for stationery, telephone and telegraph charges. “There is no business in the world that would put up with the telegram policy of the Government," said Mr. Ryck- man. No thought was given to sav- ing by sending night instead of day essages, and telephone calls were carried on without any considera- tion oi time. Mr. Ryckman was interrupted by ‘iSaint John ” PAGE FIVE iii!- sham Fight I s Predicted April 35- (B1 the predicted a sharp light for the seat between l‘ rvativu and' Liberals on June 2'1. Others saw a in Royal. N- n, has been set for the suns date the two seat; yuuld be paired off so as to save the money usually spent in organisation work. 1f this arrangement was ef- fected, Maisonneuve, considered a strong Liberal stronghold, would be left to that party and Rflyal to the Conservative standard bearer. Maisonneuve was recently made vacant through the death of the Liberal sitting member, Clement Robitaille, and Royal thruugh the resignation of Cl. B. Jens. GOV’T. CONTROL (Continued from Page i) an official announcement will be~ made from Ottawa shortly. “Ln anticipation oi such recom- mendations, m Press radio ata- tion CKAC, Montreal, contemplates" . . It is understood that other" radio stations in Eastern Canada ment and expansions, including _ radio station CF01", of the Cana- dian Marconi Company in Mont- “The report in be handed door. by the Parliamentary Broadcast: ing committee is believed to invclvi a plan retaining features oi boil major schemes that divide publi opinion on the question of radi control, I. E., private enterprises a in the United States and Govern merit control, as practised in 1mg by telegraph and introduced my- W“ ‘°°"s-- “°'“‘“mb°“““°)-- Wm‘ m“ “m” ‘°"°d' h°"°"°" o! mfmmmve ‘mm “m” automatically revolved and sent the self 1 had hard] touched a k PM’ Wm‘ mnk" the Speaker‘ “nmummg m‘ “me Md‘ ' ' ' “llledeleflation will remain. acianother entered the situation. La- Mamie-Md by individual news- ‘ y e’ was up- "n is understood that the Iileder Bfflllilda until my ll when theyflmdia recently sent a larse pori- - The statement raid "1- ’ s“ m" In" mumumm M!” m my m“ “d Em“ n Commission would be compose of three members, one from Quebe" one from Ontario and a third fro: a $400,000 expansion programme. . ~ will carry through similar improve-H... real. . . . Pmpo3edfmd_ -(MM---m) m’ ma“! mm Par Excellence OHWWAJQP,“ “Qymcm, 1718 Government States Minister In Byivection ‘o. a s a “m i " P” W" .. rdiaurreosl-"oiacbleetiaioeet _,._ , = __.. I - - All"! ""11" "l" W" limit 11 ovloek sundry night , . l industrial men u. ‘a into intelligent manure, April 25—(l5y The orrswa, April 25—(By the Can- , } N, April as. (AJJ-Tile nuflrepcrt oirseoou Irontenseoil to biuglarlae ma store or Hender- oil-operation to offset destructive Canadian Press)—'1‘he Telegram to- adian meal-characterizing the ' 7 ‘i 110i“ ~ r - I _ Q r A ‘ccmpetlti "I v _ Canadian Press)-With the an-M _ wlmancial resolution “mill! :3 3701 ll off before Kflinlng GRAPIHCAILY TOLD BY‘?- ‘usmr,’ 3mg, mqmtr-iai expert statement has beenymude it is def servants and indemnities‘ of mern- w “meat o‘ m. Dommhn bu?’ I _ V. m. “wbighmflnt o! I 5 NW- "um r _ __ Momma". a V_ - - , I. M. MUILIY l’! R0’! “d “new, o! we 311mb ggmd- initcly understood 1n Toronto ily- bera and Senators as ‘the best elecmon ‘or Muwmmv. w“, by ( _ ._ “than” quapgtion ac- year, In increase o! $020, . Bon ' Alarge light ofglass in awindow CLUB. » » ards institution, on hi; arrival in ing circles that the twenty-one ily- thing this Government did in the mm" “n. Dolmen I 65'" . _ which wssaif 4;, the interest totalled 0686.811 and. after in the rear of the store. which was Ottawa today to accomplish some lng clubs in. the Dominion are to way oi the budget," Hon. n. n. ' * l, possibility that as the b" election .. , ‘Milly- thc speakers commended the cf- ' forts of the board to effect econ- omles without impairing efficiency. Western Canada. Commanders l Edwards, Canadian director < radio services at Ottawa, wou7 He said they were from NewYcrk and certain persons were anxious to get their hands on them. his ingenuity, Edison received an (“unfilled 1mm Pa" l) official reprimand. by voice, because his deafness did not seem to extend to the ticking .' 1. - v Gets Welcome AFTERMATH (Continued from Page i.) i» ftlcn a total of 220 in a house ‘K450 members. thus affording a working margin of eight ‘votes. hints of all political camps eon- , ed today that the election raised isoentrlsts to a key position. The ca of power virtually is theirs. ‘M tho lasocfated Press learned -~-| tatlvely that among the’ _ ‘its there is s growing feeling - ~ an attempt should be made to hing the Nazis into the govern- Ilt before iheir strength has in- ~ - any further. vhwolisible oentrists argue that ale the Nazis participate in the Memment they will become more Index-ate, and at the same time M- political ascendancy willbe Iiiied because, in the nature of they will find it impossible ‘P W» the numerous promises lie in the course of the recent Mien campaign, ' Jlihovvh a lrasi-Cmtriit coalit- ili was accepted in many quarters b a lliomising way of solving the Mien oi Prussian ocntml, it~still '5 loo early for any pea-tum p". Flifillliillltl (Continued from Page 1) oral Ministries, was aimed at this type of importer. Goods purchased abroad at ' “ r prices, influ- enced by the world-wide depression, would not admitted to Canada without encountering heavy dump- ing duties, hs said. "An effort, is being made," said Mrsflyckman, whose department sets duty valuations, "to stop the importation of goods which would have no benefit to the consumer, and to give to the manufacturer of Canada the right to sell his goods in this country." Later, he added: "I will be very particular to see there shall be no increase in price." _The Federal Treasury would save $50,000 a year by the Government's action in abolishing free automo- biles for Cabinet Ministers, said George Spotton, Cons., North Hur- on. A year ago each Cabinet Minis- ecrwaspaidflpminlieuofa Government-opera‘ ‘ automobile. Cool?! also pointed out: each other. eral report. The - the lay reader- The report of Kent Cooper, gen- eral manager, said a large number of members in varying degrees had suspended individual efforts at news collection in the foreign, do- mestic and regional fields and more fully utilized what the As- sociated Press report afforded. Mr. Comment by members indicates satisfaction with operation oi’ the morning and evening services as separate entities but complementing Stress has been placed upon re. duction in the volume of the gen- elimination or shortening of secondary material has cleared the decks for really out- standing stories. The organization has stressed the development cf financial stories understandable to Dividend In June) WINDSOR, Ont." April 25-012.) —Although no dividend was declar- ed at today's meeting of the share- holders of the Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited, at the plant in East Windsor, W. IR. Campbell, Within a. short’ time thereafter Edison left Canada in a hurry. “One night," was his version of the episode," I got an order to hold a freight train, and I replied that I would. I rushed out to find the signalman, but before I could find him and get the signal set the train ran past. I ran to the telegraph of- fice, and reported that I could not hold her." m the meantime the despatcher had permitted a train bound 1n the opposite direction tc leave the next station. “There was a lower station near the junction where the day operator slept. I started for it on foot. The night was dark, and I fell into a culvert and was knocked senseless." ‘The alert engineers of the respective trains however saved the situation. Edison was summoned to T to to appear before the General Man- ager. During the course of the en- quiry, visitors tcnlporarily engaged the attention of the General Man- ager and Edison decided to slip, away. At the Grand Trunk freight station he found a friendly con- ductor who took him to lamia, and the ferry landed him on Michigan soil. There he felt somewhat re- lieved. He did not return to’ Can- ada, neither did he relinquish of a sounder. Edison was now in Cincinnati, the busiest office in the ‘Union, where he worked quiet- ly for long hours, to gain that ex- perience and efficiency so essential to his gaining advancement in the profession. By improving his writing and turning out a readable copy at a high rate of speed, he was shortly promoted from the ranks of the "plugs" or inferior operators, to those of the first-rate men. He was an excellent penman, and before his promotion he had added to his salary by making theatrical scripts. It was his ability to turn out good copy that primarily secured pro- motion aud brought him to Boston with the Western Union. A Great Reader Edison was not a mere routine‘ worker nor idle waster of time. Al- ways a at reader, he was fond of hunting bargains in the second- hand book shops. Once in a Louis- ville auction-rocm he got 20 volumes of the North American Review, un- bound, for $2. He had them bound and sent to the Western Union of- fice. Easly one morning when he had finished work he shouldered lowed the explosion. William Hy- man, 28, died tonight in the hospi- tal. . The plumbing shop recently was moved forward six feet to bring it in line with other stores in the block between Ford and La Belle Avenues. Highland Park officials expressed the belief the gas main may have been left exposed in the operation or that it was otherwise disturbed to cause a leak. Tonight, it seemed established that an exposed gas pipe had been broken while coal was being un- loaded into the basement. The coal delivery men spread a. warning of the gas leak, but before the stores and apartments nearby could be vacated the explosion came. /F1oyd Baker, Highland Park fire chief, was in the alley in the rear of the plumbing shop at the time of the blast. He was struck by a brick and knocked to the pave- ment, but was notseriously hurt. Bo severe was the blast that it literally blew the plumbing shop out of the block, leaving only a hole partly filled with debris of the shop and the walls of adioining buildings. Across the street store fronts were blown in; a block away all the on two sides cf a nosron, Mass, April 25-—(By The Canadian Press) — screeching whistles and a gully decorated har- bor greeted the new ocean liner “Saint John” of the Eastern Steam- ship Lines, as the vessel docked here prior to her maiden voyage to St. 101m, N. B., on May 2. The “Saint John", which recent- ly developed a speed of 21 1-2 knots over a trial course, will serve as a sister ship to the “Acadiafl making two round trips a week between Boston and saint John. Addresses St. Georgeb Club SAINT JOHN, N. B., April 25 —- (By The Canadian Preach-English perservcrahce and the application oi English common sense will lead the Ehnpire out of existing difficulties now as in the past, Hon. W. H. Har- rison, K. C., President of the Ex- ecutive Council of New Brunswick, told members of Si. George's society at its annual dinner here tonight. serve the connnission as goveri. ‘ ‘ statistical and ‘ “ ‘cl-l M'- viscr, it is understood." The paper adds that s ayflflfl ' provincial cormnissicns, serving 1' advisory capacities to the static‘ in their district, would be dcvelopc Boy For Sale mlwwmaprilaoifly" anew" is the reason I'll/m V! ‘ young man who today offered hilr self for sale, His selling P1109 ll Ii‘ chassrmdandhereiahisper 501ml description 0f himself: "Twenty years old, weight 15' pounds, five feet fight and thre- quarter inches in heisht. blond. srlr eya, capable and willing. health: and sane." TORNADOES (Continued from PISQ l) ross the Misissippi River from Ar- kansas after striking in the east- ern section of that State. Eight Canadian Pressr-A desire to “PE ‘ ‘ off my worldly debts and start 111 -\ ~ ' u- ‘Ihere remained many other f to art t b ildin wmbumuw.’ ma awn.‘ our s ry all men u 8 were shattered. President and treasurer of the Com- pany pointed out to the sharehold- telesraphy- ten volumes and started for his Picturing the election of a m- negro farm hands were illlllml N" '1 when were lrscussed. isille newnietisiiotlikelyin invelic before June, there is plenty ii time for political bargaining. The Millet of Premier Otto; Braun ex- t“ *0 resign when the new par- i is constiutcd. iwilleim Kube. Nari leader in the ' "i “i. drmunded today that the Emmi o» out immediately. k "or. Braun's successor mustglfs-a , Mai Socialist." he said. “and Will Hitler will 0110080 him." . millet centred in the manoeuv- ‘i to Provide Pruuia with anew Imminent, as 1g gmgggqm, m. m of the Reich. m4 “m”. . l‘ "i imliortnnoe any ofller state. W161" states - woman", lure. ahhnt and. iimria - “h diets yesterdayffiudlialaboliv ‘i: new I-llllmlmfg were futile . “is National "'° Iiwrsesi Dlrtyin a - lure Ind numb-undue ‘ m" "m"!!! n09" "ill - " the Bennenpeopifepsrty. y hrlllflllflllt lnuedaehiniun- Wilmer» rrilor declared lbs moves his pa“, a, a. u“ . m the mien, _ _ "°“""°¢eee is noldureo never ' " he said. “but to relentless ‘ m“ the limousines depart- ers that the dividend was not pass- Clrinese Have‘ Communists On The Move 5140?, ohms, April 25—(A.P.)— m‘ Illa” populace tonight when sensational repeats were circulated to the ef- fect that local Communists were planning to create disorders within ma‘ my, now threatened by i!" "lgd" forces of General Bun Liana- eben. instigation revealed no bas- is air-these reports but both the Chinese and the foreip authorities increased their precautions- Th“ Chinese landed a heavy detachment of Marines from 0mm" ,°"' ihu augmenting their military W“ migchrcughout the city. Guards and 10mm. m rci-eignmen of war in mo; harbor were snenlthencd- Additional United atatel. Jem- ~~ m4 finch gunboats steamed m» port. all told there a” WWW‘ m"; ‘my; c: war of various nations 15- harbor. Allison from Cbaocbow viu-“e an» the Communist arm w" °d_ . -.-__a. nounorr. Avril I5- the House oialords nmlnroo the north. coherently Ill‘ pelisnsivc or an attack by 0m- m‘ lihieved p; g r f brief weeks i; "ilirecedented." ' n -. ‘ m "Willi In ‘ -, a" ioy-ltransl . [this northward movement = mmlihisnciv-dholvsd mica troops. more m, danger here. mills”. ofQilQGI Alibi. so. Campbell said that the divi- dend is not due until June and the directors of the company did not wish to comnilt themselves at this time as to whether or not busness conditions at that time would war- rant the declaration of a dividend. Board President Not Entitled To Seat In House (Canadian Press Cabin-The comedy which began last ‘rhursday with the-dis- covery by W4 Hflmlbm- w" mu‘ later, that Presidents of the British Boardoffiade were not technical- ly entitled to} seat in i110 KW" or commonsense this even!!! when a biurqeuiliiacthc with“ became lawwlh/s bill. Jntmdiw“ hun-igdly when Ilcrd Hailsham ‘an- nounced his‘ discovery. has been “ms the commons and 111a presehVlhiiident of the noard of magic Walter nunei- man, who with his’ predecessors in utllorities saiifomce would have been liable to rhouliheevv nwsiiieliwwwwirlllv" mciicfloussofflmmonacontrafl m Wwmmmhmaytyfromtoanoidltatilbpaaisdinthothnl m: eoheiifpofarv» of disturbance. The streets Edison Al Operator Edison soon transferred from “raiiroo-d" to "ocmmercia? tele- molly with a view to acquiring speed and efficiency; to enabla him to cover a "press" wire, which was for many years the pinnacle oi WWW"? and the Ivai of all “brass pounders." _ Almost immediately Edison began to tour the States as a "boomer" 090N901‘ moving from place to Place. steadily sainlns experience and a reputation as a skilful tele- Irlpher. Such men as Andrew (isrllesie. George Keenan and ‘Sir William Van Home were operators in these "days. as also were many others who aim-warm became prominent and famous. Keenan, who euperintended the line construction for the humo- American Thlegraph Company in Siberia. and who was afterward aim manager o! the Anoeistdd Press, describes an unusual circum- stance with rsspect o» himself and Hr. "Although we (Edison and himself) were nearly of the same age, lived as boys only four‘ miles ‘apart, and were both tele- lflbh "operators, we never happen- ad ea mseeuntii we had passed the Biblical span of life. Then I made Within . by Wlofllfib. it a dinner or the ohio society. whee; guest and pat r‘ lodgings. Before long be became awrare of bullets flying about his ears. and then was seirad by a po- liceman who demanded why he kept on when ordered to halt. Ed- ison explained his deafiless and the contents of the package; and the officer, who of course had fancied Edison to be a thief, confessed to poor shooting. ‘To penetrate the mysteries of el- ectricity now bees-me Edison's ob- ject. This field wasthen even more mysterious than it is now. From the time he learned train tele- graphy from McKenzie, he was trying to get ao-cailcd "practical" telegraph men to explain how the telegraph worked. The best ex- planation he succeeded in getting was that of an old Bcotchman. a line Miairer for the Montreal Tele- mpn Ccmpllly. who said that u you‘ had a vast elongated dach- aliund.' long enough to reach from p to Ilondon, he would bark in Iondcn if you pulled his tail in IZDHIIU. This bad a cer- tain‘ plausibility about it; but Ed- Iiiii admitted that he never un- lldjttcod what went through the “l. _ ‘ Iidflcn‘: subsequent career as an inventor and electrical genius was than. dealt with b! the speaker, wiieseiaddecsi was received with that intllfi and appreciation. llotarian Archibald Irwin l1"- sided at yesterday's luncheon. A number of natal-inns signified their the District The injured included four women out by glass in the four story apart- ment building. THE FEDERAL PARLIAMENT RULING SUSTAINED OITAWA, April 25 - (By The Canadian Press)—A ruling by Hon. George Black, speaker of the House of Commons, was lmsuccessiully ap- pealed this afternoon by A. W. Neill (1nd, Comox-alberni) who attempt- ed, under a point oi privilege, to correct what he described as "gross misstatements" made by the Coh- servative member for Fraser Valley, H. J. Barber. The alleged misstate- ments were in I-fansard of April 22 last and concerned efforts made by some membrrs of the House lo se- cure better freight rates for British Columbia in I925. Mr. speaker's rul- ing was sustained by a vote of 62 to 35. Commodity 131108! in France drop- ped nearly one-fifth in the last year. England and Bulgaria have lust been connected by telephone. pxasgqiaelaannobm _ June 1 and 2. Rotarian L. D. Far- quhar, St. JohnaN. B., was a visit- Wfi v/W/Pv ' ticnal Government in Great Brit- ain as the answer of a people to a challenge hurled down to them by world conditions. Hon. Mr. Har- rison issued a stirring appeal to Sons of the Motherland and those of lilnglish descent. “Depression and apathy are the devil's own. They are not British. Banish them" he urged Proposing the toast to the Presi- dent of the United States, Rev. Brice D. Knott, saint, John, stressed the ties and racial language which bind the British Empire and i110 Republic to the south. He charact- erized Britain and the United stat- es as the "bodyguard of civilization." Youth Pays Supreme Penalty IDNDO-N, 0nt., April 26—('l‘ues- daM-(By The Canadian Press) —- Wailace Ramesbottom of Bernie, who was l8 years old the day before last chrstmas, paid the death pen- alty in the local jail yard early this morning for the killing of Samuel 65 year old grocer was shot close by the heart by a holdlll! min W110 n"! without loot. Rents in Argentina are decreasing. Airplanes are transporting auto- mobiles to the new goldilelds in Ne! _ r. Osceola, Ark, and properly dill- age in that vicinity was reported heavy. Two cotton gins were wreck- cd near Osceola. Ambulances were sent to the area from Memphis. some suveieilhl went there by aeroplane and others by automobile. A crew of workers from the county health department also went into the storm acne. BIRTHS €_{____________._ WISE-At Grace rsosviir-l. wlnuipes "' April 20, i932, to Mr. and Mrs. Ness W139 (nee Helen West), a son. i DEATH! WISNI-llb-(At Watervale, April i. Mr. and Mrs. Augustine Wishes... age 22. Funeral Wednesday mm" ing to at. Joacharrrs Church at Ver- non River. Grath, age '14, widow of the late James r. MacGrath. Funerll not- ice later. Weinstein, London merchant. ‘Ihcl GREEN-M the PM” Edmrd u" land Hospital, Monday, April 35- 1932, Mrs. Angus M. Green in he!‘ 42nd year- Funeral from her late residence Wig-more Road on Wed- nuday, April 27. Short service at house at 1.80, thence to New Inn‘ oi funeral- N? famed I! "l'*“‘ ‘u’ I Ill A Anal.‘ a \ I Francis sucusi-ine Wlmer. m ¢~~ MacGRATII~At Moi-ell, April 5v I 1033, Mrs. Phoebe Mildred Mac-P‘ s. don Clutch fk service on arrival.