p financially the best off in Canada. - i161? as it was a matter . OFA MERCHANT —.-o_¢ Many a fellow has found out that when a girl's Io.ve settles upon hlm it i: already n shop-worn article. .i \\ w’ of; /, /21/‘ , :l Q1 ‘- "Q l) -\ “l/I’ ‘l N‘ . l. Annual Subscriptions By Mall, Canada and U. B. A. Delivered liLW $1.50 A |_ M E N ‘Tlisstii ;:.:::.;‘;‘i:::..fi":l;'.2: P . bate, Bflti-sh Preference (From Our Own correspondent) omlanvh. Ont. Feb» Z4 "Th1" was little of interest in connect loll wltlh the budget debate thi ilfieruoon. H. C. I-iockeli,"i'01'°"l°' commissioner of taxllluon lsznclflllli Spoke first, the prlllclpu] feature of‘ missioner of customs! us lfiretemps whose speech was a spirited aiiqto an amusing sor o co - tack on the Minister of Custom h t f num-l (1 lth gh he has never mixed for Permitting t e en rY.0 a the n; £13“ 0:8 an Omaha]. However of which dealt mamllllthe Ottawa Liberal executive delib- with sex problems, the reading 0i efated yesterday and adopted a refl- bcr of American magnifies- contents which was unfit for any dew“ person not to speak of the youthi of the country. He exhibited thrs: which he had bought B-i 9- b°° stand in Ottawa. but U19"! “we; at least slxtvlwhlch h?‘ Calfiffl‘: (T1108 "w"! 0i‘ a" will" y t to pay no attention lo , , took the trouble and incurred thelggeiiii-ggigl executive as he claims mg signals eacll connected with its Km, “he Mm “may voted Tory at the December appropriate adjustment, In reply to ‘a. flilfifllio" ° ' " ' ister oi Justice if he would havelgiecimnaldate these barred from the mails hi: TY m“ -, said. decidedly yes. l-Iocken wen -_ ll i t th question of Alli‘; 5:122‘: ......Swam to Safety in free to this country, which he! cost of getting them. - strongly opposed. iI-leniry Bourassa and other dissident groups cheered him quite heartily. In respect of the Maritime prov- incos he referred to the attitude McCurdY. who openly in press and on plat- form stated that protection had injured their small industries. l-le of’ such Tories. as ‘Mr. went farther and said that the large industries in ‘Ontario and Quebec had suffered by it as well. The Liberal leaders after 1896 had been between the devil and the deep sea. They were between their own professions of free trade and their manufacturing friends. and they compromised on British refer cncc. which he denounced as inimi- cal to Canadian industrial inter- ests. and a departure from John MacDonald's true national policy as Canada for Canada, which protect-- ion applied to all countries alike, Britain included. To make the em- pire self sustaining within itself by preference was impossible by reason of diversity of interests, conditions and people and by reason of long ‘distance dividing them, which ren- dered trade relations unstable, un- certain and unprofitable. As a profession of fiscal policy ho was in favor qf a revision of Adam Smith's political economy and a readjustment of overythinl,’ Ho as to bring about an era of soc- ial justice, but just what that was or how it could be dono ilc did not explain. lie believed that in Ont- ario there was a strong sentiment against the national policy. and lhcro was a growing feeling in Quebec against it, on the grounds that it had ‘been unsuccessful in achieving that what bad been pro- mised. and he described the rural population of his own province .a.s the sanost. the most contented. most susceptible to reason and His speech, highly oratorlcnl, ‘very interesting in spots, theoreti- cal and widely discursive, was. however, delivered to seats largely "WW1 h! Liberals and Conserva- ves until six o'clock. ‘IE. W. Ernst. Queen's _raised l? question of the return of tho toms commission to the Mori- l" 9 Proviiwfil. iI-Ie understood at the commission had lett there wing to imminence of the general elections last fall and asked lg it were the intention to have the members return. ‘ Mr. W. D. Euler, Minister of Customs, could ‘not answer dell“. entirely within the jurisdiction of the com- mission itself. but he stated that Condensed Specials RATE-dc. per word. net each insertion in this column. ‘YOU WANT GOOD ENVELOPE! Prices 50 for 20c. I00 for 85c. 250 for 65c. 500 for 01.00, 1000 for $1.96. Postpaid. Guardian Office. Guardian Job Printery. ti ‘HOMI MADE POTTID MEAT, Fresh sausages, Saunders. New- lom b 00.. East End Marker Bing. g1 '~id°ol.cflgm"l’llfllfl or avlnv. mm ‘m c elpi endmeixpceilni: r- 113M388?‘ S1t>@gi;S;ri:"‘i;‘::-..i:‘ lass‘ ‘° In e ll ge ' house. Denouncing’ - ., ' Protection and theiLlberals Protest l followed M1‘- Hocken in his usual dramatic fash- ion, In s general way it was an attack upon the whole Principle °7 protection and with aitpflfem m‘ partially took flings at thc policy of Consenratives and Liberals. As a whole it plea-sod the Progressrvleg \V laundered near Ilandon when it Ltruck in attempting to cross the Rev Dr Com" Mn w_ h Comm l, . . . Mr. Lloyd Shaw and tendefflli iile lecture by the chairman. ln responding to the vote 0 thanks Dr. Robertson briefly mm‘ tioned the value which intelligence tests and attainment or achieve- ment tssts play in education. r the former the native captivity ‘i; the student mBYiW m°"""°"' y the latter how much thc Illliiiii" has profited by his Ituliief- Ships Collided With two lifdboats containing the 29 men.- The Mary E. Moore was piled up inside the breakwater and it was impossible for other boats to enter ,on account of unusually heavy sees. The Ruth Alexander made several attempts to reach the stricken vessel but was unable to battle the waves. er of 1.783 toue owned by the Moore Mill and of Bnndon, Oregon, 100 foot schooner Becndla of the ifnternstlonai Fisheries Commlgglon struck a reef and sank early today near Kodiak, Alaska. A radio mee- Passes Senate (Canadian Praia) INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 2»i.-— Th9 mlttlng surgical sterilization of ,mentaily unfit confined in state in- to the l Appointment of l‘ l B. W. Breadner (Special to The Guardian) orrnwa, Feb. 24-——'i‘he provos- sled appointment of R. VW. Breadner, e . S; Mr, Breadner is known as a 0011891‘ i olutlon of protest against his a?" Gordon Henderson. Liberal lprovincial election is wljitihgliiie , Through Sea 0f Fire feet to safety uninjured. Chris Chrisfionsen. were alone on the ship. er's oily surface. Manila Swept By l . l (Canadian Press) l trauma, Feb. 2~i.—Fnr tho sec-l "and time in less than two months, ,‘a disastrous fire swept Manila early ,today destroying nine business; Every iwztilnbio Caloflnnlan (Jlub itnouls inst hi was occupied on the o most interesting uud voking lecture by ilr S. N. Robert. son. L-L-D» Jhiucibal of Prince oi’ Wales College. Dr. Robertson ill thc course oi’ his address said in part: An outstanding characteristic of P ‘tine hutmau boilng (iudecd'0t' all’ e .. > . Tomllflllleutallltl l-vllllll bglfaell)“ 1222110; tllrepgody: lllliltcs qablghllclllllelllsllcnvir- l“ and n’ assigns mm there are "A g lonmcut all kinds of dangers bcsct i N rth ttawa at the it, to which candidate n 0 q succumb if it were not endowed Mr‘ Henderson was a tglllelrcdhilztf guardian oi’ the body, the higher [specialized and therefore lllorc ef- fective modifications of it. Tilougll primarily protective all these sells- es give knowledge that is of cultur- al value. But such is tllc variety and multiplicity of the sensations (Canadian Press.) lreceived that to grapple Wllll them CAMDEN, N. J., Feb. 2-1. —-Thelii1 any effective way a choice must captain and mate of the oil tankelwbe made Socony leaped into a virtual “senlthem ignored and some no of fire" caused by blazing oil onlalluded to. the surface of the Cooper Riverlknown quality of all mental activ- here eurlytoday and swam iifty;ity. 1 thing we learn most about. thr captain for us is it that we have learned tb and Ole Johnson are the survivorsattend to the important things, to slam [he clrcunnnanccs as l-uulnvs; 0g the harrowing experience. Theylthose which contribute to our con; H” , , . . .. .. W . tinuuuce as living bltliigt-l. AFTER 1925 ELECT|QN_ The fire one of the most extraor-Zthis native or inherited disposition _ dinary ever witnessed here started to selective attention instinct. 'l‘hu on a lumber barge and within alinstlnct to flight makes us attend few minutes had spread over scv-‘to objects (aapnblc oi‘ exciting [cur eral hundred square feet of the ri\'-,c.g. loud sounds, crouching objcr ‘etc. nvhat tilings sinlll be ziltenrlcrl to, it guides our knowledge. To the child everything is por- ~, . lceived or Flrellvero trying to distinguish (lhjci lin a thick fog. ling oi‘ thc fog, the grczlirl- ollliglll- enmout. is thc ‘growth of kllowicdlzc land zlontlnucs through llfr. knowledge already acquired llclps to new attainment. It lhouses and badly damaging fourths; {others on the city'fl principal Bileei-l in lDamage was estimated at between-a $1,000,000 and 52.000.000- sessions in the Maritime provinces tion there. ‘Two bills of rather specinl inter- est to the civil service, nlld the is vale members. Ono was by labor member Woodsworth providing forlso Whiteley councils in eonnocllonl with thc civil service, and the other ed 0f Mackenzie, for lo- work civil service commission itself. The; oi’ the house which in 1922. Both bills were read the first time. Crew ofStrickeu Vessel Picked up By Motorship (Canadian Press) POR/ITUAND. Ore., Feb. 24.—A message received here last night by the Federal Telegraph Company reported the motorshlp Admiral Peary had taken the captain and crew of 28 men off the steamer Mary E- Moore alter tho vessel had The Admiral Peary picked up The Mary E. Moore was s steam- lLumber Company QEATILE. Wash» Feb, 24.—ll\ho 01¢“. "0 u" °h 'Pi'i§'*7. {linens ill. sage said that all of the crew of i‘! escaped, . .1... ,.. the A, . terplay of sensations that those re nothing but results or pht mena connected with well kn physical processes in the and that as far ,meutai he understood that it WH-B t0 hfliilthero is no need tn think of the human being as and complete its work of invcstigo- mind m- “out confusion of processes with sensation, this vlcw ll}. N. ul. Hi h; Nil A Large A-udience wasl Treated to an Inter- esting Psychologic-l al Address by Dr. S.l N._ Robertson Lastl Night at the Cale-l donian Club. . the . l-{lll ccusiou of u. thought-pro- seut ill ldeniai. S it must speedily to The sense of touch is senses being only moral“ M l‘. among them; Attention is :1 wcll- ma,“ The tiling attended to is the Woll We call Since instinct ‘detcrnllllllsm.“ 19 Oi‘ felt vaguely M ,3 us if one The griulunl clean"- Tllc org; has sometimes been argued knowledge consists of n mere, ‘no- own brain,‘ as the study oi‘ is concerllod,l processes possessed oi‘ n} But, spurt from the} identifying thinking. istenco of an iudopclulclli, llllllll olgstnlelncnt in the legislative. ibly this Mind however lllllsl Ilnl lw luolt-ltnizll oi’ upon m; “R1011! zlgelll-y of kuuw-lllle business of tll Every experience has ltl-uilln fiscal your the uppoiut-lomotionui ment oi" a director of civil service-‘somc desire or will. by (innlpboll. Progressive llltlfllllunlflllgtl. tho present or actual. by Rev, Mr. Bruce Muir. BBC-Chile“ by Dr. Dewar and talaeoglrggo ebipi that crashed in night ol the Virlihil (firs! .1 aspect null lssutas ill‘30,i.'l27. The sight of‘ iic Shame or As nnllcr character esiull- probatod Character is the supported by BY Terriiiti Impact (ounulnn Pren) 33s., Nb .2l.-—-Th0 ' l’ lillfllll ///~ _ he eop|e's Paper Covers Prince Edward Is CHARLOTTETOWN, not a “credible witness" correct. by Premier King, iiyugKiug (lissoiutirlu 0i’ the last i’ stalled that the letters (lid not re-i velrl illle complete and vital facts underlying the difference hetl 1PM“ °i General. “"00 m publication it possible, 0 pill ion . Lord Byllg. “To understand the position taken by =Lord Iiyug, in rviusilng Mr. King dissollllioll. it, is llcccs,s.ll'y lo go hzrck in Octo- ' Fl)llll\\'lll); the election . wihicll saw Mr. King return to Purlizunlellt with iii fun-- supporlcrs King or that llnlc who Blfciget Stabément Made Yesterday in . N. S. Legislature Rhodes. Proinicl" untenable and modern wrlil-rsscniin and public who pays tho bill. by prl-lon mental ucieuco argue for ill!‘ oxquud treasurer, nlaflc re ported Tile estimated ‘ . in l.“ “i hills! lolecom 0-\'l.'l3..,WiCI e renter at ' ' ‘ ' I All dolilmcr-lloss than the prevllous year's estiln-l ate choice 0f disagreeable duty is ate nnd less than any estimate as ' a manifestation of character of 111"‘- fnr buck as 1915. suit of an ideal. it if! iliiiiiltllo previous 0 \ l”"l" Read by verybody land Like the Dew Fllilll/ \\‘.~\\l\ bk“ \\\\ OFA ‘MERCHANT Iéiz Apron! many will court the friendehip of an angel just to get to borrow his wings. ' Related Them. (Yl"l‘.'\i\\'.-\, ()llt.,. Foil. 24.—(Spuc- l)~-- ’llilo UlltHY-ll Journal, elilloriul reply to lilo stulunl Premier Kill}: in day, which declared lillill. the “sec-in rct history" of the Byng-Klnlg con-lto ‘troversy as related b lWtiu‘; n "fnilricntion", states it can- llot ltcccpt tho ‘Prime Minister's “at lossi a flozeh nleu in Canallal today. men holding Ihigh auihoritzplin th-e event oi‘ tire lmeitlous," who know illlat tile-himself unable to govern, he (lbord Wm‘ a protective System of ‘vamp NCWSPTIDQPS version oi‘ the maiterlByngl ‘would lcaonsglizri-gfiten-bils) 0r not he con-id form -it cllzlllcnges , g to ns-k Lord Byng for a state-font whether Hal-e‘ lnentcn the illspute. Tille editoriall in lull follows: “in its, print of February 16th. le Journal, commenting mt cor-' rcspondenco tabled in Parliament ‘that Mr. relative lo ilhefstantliug k over thcjMr. King lLl‘lll.lIl18lll,l'l|llC mutt controversy justified illlzlll well l. M r. flown in told him in ulfllfllrlizlulullt. null take out of surviving Piifllllllliilll, Fri- y ube Journal l tol in the lust. veen King rrnri tho late (lnvernor-l 'Dl1»e Journal added tllati of the correspondence and (lOSliilblG to (llscloso the {exact circunlstnncesj which ictl up Io and wilicll, in itrrssid that in the circumstances he the action st lit ilhcu proceeded to and appreciate Nlclgilrll. ltlrlcllll ‘i linll and ilztinluioll lo lmrd liyup, that lie intended to ltllilgll. or four days lull-r, 'llI)\\‘tl\'t3l‘. ufi llc hull cullsulirgrl will) ‘his dlllllSlr, that llc must not resign, Mr. King visited Jmrfl ‘liyng zlguih and told lhilu that ho, l hnd changed his nliud, that he, 'l‘llrco {thought it was ibis Mr. 1 to cal-i upon a M ilnisf-ry, ,ly satisfactory. lxvnrd the end oi‘ June, 1926. MR. MEIGHEN'S TURN Mr. Kill-F; went to Lord Bynlg and would have to advise him to dis- solve Parliament. Lord .Byng at standint?illaiifbéforeklibli a. thing would be done Mr. Melgllen, who had 117 supporters. in bile House, would be grossly unfair for him to 0TH. Mr, King's resignation was ac- ccplcrl. ogc in Parilallncnt on Friday, Prom, ler King emphatically denied alll (Continued on page 5) ' (Canadian Press) llALlFAX, N. 8., Feb. Ll-i. -~.llnn.l finc capital is in til Nova; ll new vehicle, the secretary sr-izlxi" l)o not. picture to yourself buliuc! n killd of iloati ussolll-l for um unrlcruuntll illo bridges. for $7,l.'l.'l.l-lli.il7 tn curry on is only a small lnotor-iloat. which e country during (‘illl be hired like an ordinary taxi culling Soptcnlbcr of provincial his nfiorumlll, nskiuf: conslrlcrably less than ’l‘llls (lerlirc is nor nlwnyflbstilnntod deficit, for the reason hol 0n for oiher instincts lll- pointed out that two yours urrczlrs ulny,in taxes from the Canadian Nation- ifl nl Railways voluntary restraint ofduos on the instinctive action becomes lialled. and the lll Nova Scotia deficit for "k Tile estimate of expetndiglrc gr; true self which implies He ~ HOW-line present year‘ .8 lzrea 9i‘ "H1 l‘. ledge and self control. I I m, sq 8m _ up day by day and not lltllzfllilifilenl‘legal7lzihfgrzizgéfllllt?gllfllgeliiléllfiésilflnntblgovernment h“ decided to sum! ulflver before and idealism ables it to mtllllllillllifirrlllfi PIPViOTIB Y8K!‘ by Wiiiimlhcrulser m ‘Nimmgua "5 a "place °E itself. 120,- At the conclusion nf the lecture; Premier Rhodes dealt _ "h a hearty vote of thanks was mnvedlwlth the budget figures. forecast no, on ere, hlQrallfie in taxation and polntedlday. out that since coming into office the nnly increase in tnmtillh ihkl posod by his government was the t, gasoline tax which he believed had‘ been received with universal com- ,last Friday was told for the first time here yesterday. , l The American steamer Evans- m; gig from ville arriving in Norfolk with a car/gee“ 11095:‘?! n m! ‘go of 5,800 t s of coal had bent. ra ce e er from Pre- ‘platen and o for the collision. l-ler officers said that in- a. thick fog a steamer sud~i denly loomed up dead ahead. Tile vessels came toiqihel‘ with “"15” impact and then fell sway. ln thel fog it was impossible to mnks out; the identity of the other ship. lln addition to bent plates. tholvsgunces. manipulation of figures, Evansville bod Dart of her rail sndi lop gear carried sway. Wreekagelgsrdin! the use made and beln: found on the deck of the coliler indicated that the other vessel was 0- "Willie "UWIVYYIUVI- of rwli construction u deficit covering; in con-junction with the‘n terrifying object nrousos tho cnlo-ltherpl-erious fiscal year, of $85"- tion of four and the desire to run 463.57 latter was along the lines of thelaway. recommendations of the commltteeiacted up investigated,‘ terveno. the whole question of civil servicedifuvflnt flight» developed lllli? zlucerl for succession largo sheet of largest estate elven; nu l It becomes, not n case flflbrought lli a large amount of uncx-l la stronger instinct overcoming nlpoctozl revenue. jweaker, but tho weaker motive rc- linformod by the weight of lierfliiiiii-i" 'ity overcoming the w of powerful instincts. tllc year by $348.li22.25‘ briefly dilllxered by'the civil warfare going er damage to showimifii‘ Kin! or any member of his Water Taxi Makes“ l l Its Appearance l In Holland; l l A..\TSTTTT‘1lTAl)A|M, libel). 24. — This; pushes along tho latrceil-l as well; it In make your way from one endl A ship-‘ (lwuers flrln is responsible for this- nr-w invention. which it has intro-l the benefit oi‘ thoael people who have to pay a call to. .ou0 of the lllllnorous factories on‘ 1h" ‘YPDO-‘ille sido of the lj. tile‘ water at which have a small cabin wbicucan con-l , tam six persons; the fare is aillfllll. ‘ equal to the continental taxi. l 1 For Nicaraguan (Canadian Press) LONDON, Fob. 24.—-Tl1e Ilritishl refuse" for British subjects en- it was officially stated to- mendatlon. He criticized the fed- ‘oral government strongly for hold- linx the Duncan commission report the public and charg- at this date there had government that the recommenda- om of the Duncan report would be implemented. lion. William Chisholm, leader of the opposition, subjected the budget speech to nearly two hour's duly lo ‘lllccf a chance 0i’ o non-wnfidencs motion, "lfvfii Byni-f. naturally surprised, vlcw of what Mr. King had said 'll'lill at their previous meeting, d Mr. ‘King hhat he wou-ld agree to having him meet Parliament, but he added that he tihought it I should the understood that in the Mr. King, says the Journal, isllcvent of his (Mr. King's) Govern- {ment being defeated, eiiiher upon the meeting of Parliament, or up on a later date in the session, or Mr, King finding “Mr. King said that was perfect "Lord Byng thereupon suggested King make this under- nown to his Cabinet, and said that ho would do so. er res-ted there until to- ‘ “Following adverse votes against lJlS (luvcrlllncnt in ‘the House of. Cnlnlnons toward the end of June, once reminded him of their under- ‘should be given an opportunity t gmsiguftflztgzofolltig: h??? . , , , , _ , _ ‘ r . - - _ . ljfld“ 11333211,?xllfiuftlifdlgollfgfilt figiflve United States men of wax-swing hilht llltllilllllffll as lm had lglven Mnlm‘ “chm l,“ whungpoo “V”? all“ Km; 11w fight 1., gm-m y, mnisu-ylfour more Lnited States destloycls when M? ill-til but 101 followers, itlwQr" 0.“ .l-ii.°li'..‘l"*1¥ h“??? refuse illlc some opportunity to Mr.| Melglltln, when he had 117 ffillow-j l "Rising to a question oi‘ prlvii-lionlgtht. i defence of the city. e pgggggglgn qflresideuta were called to arms in so-c-alied "wat-‘Shanghai today to prevent possible ng motor cur. whichfeated and domorallzed iruler of this province of ‘Volunteer ling into the foreign districts and i looting homes, business houses us by the Amsterdam is situated. The boats ed mm‘ ‘sungkhmg’ ‘28 "m" 50ml‘ laud falling back toward Shanghai, iburned steadily as the men of war criticism in which he scored the administration for alleged extra- nnd withholding of information re- m l" "c" m~~v...::-““hz...-°-carsnntsrc:l ' I00 _ 1sdluunlsd. the some. a... mymgggggg yang ' CANADA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1927 lllllllNlll llllll NllT ACCEPT PREMIER KINGS STATEMENT lOttaWa Newspaper Is sues Challenge to the ‘ Prime Minister t0 Have Lord Byng tell (the Story ofLast Summer-Editor De- clares There are a Dozen Men in Can- ada, Including Liberal Publishers, who Know the Circu Instances to be as He STHIKEHS Ill] lllBK TI] WllHK Executions Called Off ment Sends Troops to Aid Marshal Sun. (Canadian Press) lSllAlNGliml, 1°01). was declared ill the conflict be tween nationalist labor in Shang- hai and the tottering regime of Marshal ‘Sun ChuansFeng tonight. Simultaneously proclamations sent scores oi‘ thousands of workers back to their jobs and called off the exeeutioners of General Li Pao- Chnng. Shanghai defence comnlis— sionen who ‘beheaded 100 or more agitators during the five days walk- out which involved more than 100,- 000 Chinese. The strike began to peter out at once. Strikers thronged back to their work, partly because 2 l.—-A truce IN slllllhlll and Truce Declared! __Peking Govern-tern stepped from an automobile in Morning Ounrdlnn, Founded II‘! Charlottetown Guardian Two Cont! Used Mop Handle To Discharge ' Shot Gun‘ (Canadian Press) SYRACUSE. N. Y» Feb. 24.-—-.Sit~ ting in the front window of ‘his for- B‘ P I H! liner home yesterday, Frank T. lllidd, 4a awaited the conling of his] I lwife and children. Opposite him on l gllligtther chair he had propped up Zlllmmpany gun and in his hand he lield a , mo». as Mrs. Iiidd and her delight-l From Board of C011- . . . , front of the house he touched the Clllatlon S brlxxcr of the gun with the mop ' ‘handle and the entire charge from Report‘ the weapon entered his heart, Do mastic difficulties. Killed His Wife Then Shot Sheriff (Canadian Press) PHILADELPHIA, - Feb. 24.——Ern- eel: Rickert, 30, who lived on a. farm at South Lsnghorne near here yes- terday shot and killed his wife, Helen, and shot Abraham L. Kuip, sheriff of Bucks County through the abdomen and escaped, 993- . The shooting occurred “then the Mr" "a" “Med “m1 ‘ha, decision m - :1}:bgfieficgilfrgiflcugglug assaunlboard had been communicated to (Canadian Pren.) MONTREAL, Feb. 24.—The maj- ority report of the board of Concil- lation which inquired into the wage dispute between the Cans- dian Pacific Railway and 5.000 clerks, freight handlers, station and store men in its employ has been accepted by the employees, it was announced here today by F. H. Hall, Canadian vice president of the men's organization, the in- ternational Brotherhood of Railway and steamship clerks. freight band- lers. express and aatlon employ- of lack of funds and partly because of the atmosphere of terrorism which has bung over the native city’ and even penetrated the foreign settlements since the strike started Although nothing official was ob- tainable to verify the report it was, learned that General Li's agentsl penetrated the French concession and kid | pped at least 30 members of the Kuomintsng (Cantoneseli a. meeting there. tiements but this likewise could not- be confirmed. Those kidnapped were. taken to General Life head- quarters and their fate is unknown Marines arrived 0n the transport Chaumont from lSan Diego, Calif. . l, Rcinforcemcnts Arrive destination is believed to be Sung-l kl , 206 mil. soutl of lercf ' ' wlfelli the Cantfallese urlc expelcted to attack next in their drive onl Shanghai. These are the filst nor-l thern troops to arrive here in the. Peking regime's programme for as-l sisting lliairsbal Sun Chuau Fang iu Foreigners Called to Arms SHANGHAI, Feb. 2-i.-Forelgu invasion of their settlements lby ‘de- Marshol Sun Chuan Fang, deposedlf Kiangsui companies mounted ' to halt any irresponsible‘ body of Chinese soldiers from pour- was done a week ago at ‘Hangcbow same troops before they were forced from that city by thc victorious Cantonese, Trainloads of Sun's troops arriv- of Shanghai where the army of 40.- 00 men was reported crumbling without waiting for the attack of the Cantonese, moving northward from Hangchow. While volunteers remained on duty all night to Buard their con- cessions against invasion the lights of some thirty foreign warships rode at anchor in the Whangpoo the city. More than 10,000 foreign soldiers were in the t)’ ready for the call. SHANGHAI, Feb. 24. —Foreign. are who had been living. outside the foreign settlement districts of Shanghai were brought within its hiJFdBFB ivdfly because of the ar- rival ln the city of large numbers of defeated and demobiiizod sold; iers of Marshal Sun Chuan-Fang deposed war lord. The retreating troops arrived by train from the front between Sung- klang. Haugehow, where the vic- torious Cantonese invading armv are preparing to continue its ad- vance toward Shanghai. Premier‘ King in Atlantic City ATLANTIC CITY. N. 1., Feb. 24 -—-Prefnier W. L. Mackensie Kins, hoe arrived here for e brief vacu- - , . 1 wheat growers with the extensionl , party) uglmtors’ “ho wele hold “glof the wheat line further nortlllgémbaigiag? llrgvrlfjild azlégpgllllglengg . , han ever before and possibly cui-i A few kidnappings also were felt. jthe majority rcpnrt, Pfirted from tho international set-ja‘:lgliigtgiazltlggfiggftigrfiiaglgvzin;ideclared today that i, committee of garnet wheat is forecast in all‘! me men“ "ailreflnmtive “mud bulletin on the garnet wheat wblchmieet ha” m“ Mmlday t” could‘ has justbeen issued by L. H. New- m‘ the “u” °E the Tammy mm‘ mall chief dominion lcerealist atlimny M“! decide whether "'57 Wm As many of the strikers returned“... Conn-a] to their jobs 1,200 United States-‘hgpe, Strike Legislation curtain to develop April 1st Sonab‘ {or Copeland of New York will urge I ilcgislation before tlleh sciiisloixll of SilANG-llAl, Fob, 2-1-0110 ilous-lrlongress ends to give t e res em‘ it l iumi Silungtuus troops arrived hcrcuutilhrlty lo deal with tile expected 5mm“ C Y ° rom Nanking. Their final emergency. ensign will fly over the Canadian legation at Washington. The n01"! was raised ill t.llc T101186 Yeilwrday by '1‘. L. Church. M. l’-. l0!‘ N97“! West Toronto. mi t ft th iii i . troops of prclnier. stated the (lomiuion would u“ es a m‘ 8g“ as lu London. hilt hi‘ what flag flics ovrr nlissioncr | inquiry at illu department. of ex~ tiou that it ls the red ensign- moderate winds, mostly cloudy, not much change in temlwffltllffl- i101 p. m. utes later than Charlottetown. Tomato. clear, I l‘ Hon. Peter HCEIHHZ, Minister of W t Labor, Ottawn. 'l‘he men's orig- inal demand was for s ten cents an es hour increase for hourly rated men and $20.40 incrtnse tor month- fll) DISCOVGPY ed by David Campbell, r; c., Win- nipeg, representing the men, and (canacflan Pr”! ) ‘.13. R. (l. McLean, chill-man. J. OTTAWA‘ Felt 24_A gain OUR. Coyue, TVlflnlpfll: representing ly paid employees. The majority report M111 render- nillions of dollars to westernllhe ciimnilny. dlHB"‘ll0d. The Canadian l-w-iflc Railway F. H. Hill mrmlagain negotiate with the Canadian iPaclfic as suggested by the letter to the Minister of Labor or wheth- er the men will take the matter be~ hnre the Hon. Peter Heenan at OllflWfl. ' .S§_ea:mgr Sunk in __ Chesapeake Bay (Canadian Press) BALTIMORE, Feb, 24.—-Tho AnnapoLls was rammed and sunk by the S. S. City of Richmond off Smith's Point, Chesapeake Buy, early this mom- iug. The City of Richmond is re- turning to Baltimore with the City of Annapolis crew and passengers approximately 100 persons. The bows of the Richmond were stove in. The Annapolis and Rldhmond are sister ships of the Chesapeake vStoamship Company, plying be- tween Baltimore an West Point. There was no loss of lives- The passengers and crew were taken from the sinking ship which set- acung tied iu twelve fathoms of water 25 experimental Will Be Urged (Canadian Press.) WASHINGTON. Feb. 21.“"=C0l_1r- lnceri that fl soft. coal strike is Fly Over Cana- dian Legation (Special to-the Guardian) QTTTATWIAl Fvb- 24- — Th“ "d Hon . Ernest l-aiwiiiifi- ly the smile flag in Washiugifl" filly-iCggyAnnouucements, headquarters.‘ i Meetings, Etc. "lDon' i r e Carnival in Cor - AFW- Wm F°R iii‘ "wants? OPPORTUNITY WHILE THCWISE GUY RUNS "Hunter River Concert in the dilasonic Hall postponed until fur- DOWN fHE ROAD To liner notice on account of death in MEET 1T»- Larkinfil ernal affairs elicits the illiflflnil- the village. 4074 i l "Kelly's Cross-Big dance in |Kelly's Cross Hall, Friday, Feb. |25th. Good music. 4039 2 24 2| l "Don't forget Carnival in Corn- lwall rink Friday night also band I and luncheon. 4031 I 24 2i "Hockey match ir Borden Rink Friday night, F-Jb. 25 1927. 8t- yPats of ‘Aillbony against Nationals =of ‘Borden. 405i ///- Z ' -—~—— f/Z "Hunter River Shirl-lug Club ' [l - l loading hogs. Thursday, ‘shrub 81'4- / / l 5/‘ ,_. ‘listing must be completed by 81t- Z ?’ Z lurday. February 28W. -- Allin Z T» J 5 ‘Brown, Secretary i04llllli l TORONTO, Feb. 25.—Maritlme. “vmtofl. mack tanner no u; vollrl meet in Liion dmlm loom I. Ul Tlh-ulnsudy Mir-h 2~d at l0 l- lHigh tide this afternoon at 3.49 g8 l“ m. All mnmibers nlqu-sbod (o lb ling tomoyrorgimorrlliarli-fiozthdftl5‘z itemt B, 0mm- 01- wqqgptqrko" un se s s a - and rises tomorrow morning at‘ ______ _ 3-44 ' "iBig concert and B06!!! it? New moon Thursday. March 3rd. Cardigan and Bridgetown Institutes in cardigan Hall, Monday. Fdbrlury Ith. If stormy Ierel lst. Indies with pies 1N0. Bummerside tide eighteen min- 46-40 30-44 era-s» f. - 'Idfi‘,7|'.i|"|§e"'i7f_\q-ms>7\ x ww-