‘ti. The Peep e's Paper _ a g (lovers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Read by Ia NamodSuccess- or To Archbishop jlc. r. s; omens-s Special wire) mmmwron _wlm nu electiclr today as use- ropolitan Bishop o: the Anglican Canada Provlnoecf .Rt.1isv.Joho Alli became the first oflredericton. which is now the metropolitan see oi the ecclesiastical province embracing the dioceses of Morltreai, Quebec, Nova Scdtia and Fredericton. The new nreiropoli‘ also became president ad the House oi Bishops of this ecdeslastical province. As metropolitan, Archbishop Richardson succeeds the Most Rev. Clare L. Worrell. Archbishop citNova Scotia, who died last Aug. us . ANNOUNCEMENTS I COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS. ETC "Announcements an laaartsd Ia this column at l cents pc wnl strictly Disable In advance. "Masquerade Dance in Iona Hall, November 15th. L-3337-11-l3-Si. "Board of ‘Prado Council Meet- ing tonight, eight o'clock. L-HQ "B. i. S. special dance Thursday night, Elliott's orchestra. 11-2374 "Whist and dance, St. Charles Hail, Thursday, Nov. 15th. L-2347-11-13-2l "Come d: the dance in ‘lraeadie Hall, Wednesday, November 14th. IFIIiOO-ll-li-li. "Dent forget the Salvation Army Bean Supper Tuesday, Nov. 20th. Tickets as cents. L-2870 1 "Allin watch for station an- nouncenlent fiomtllb Y. is.’ . A. Auxiliary. “ 1,4915 "Auction, lunch and dance at Mrs. J. L. Murphy's, Millvsle, Wed- nesday, Nov. 14th. Ii not fine. Thursday night; L-Hss-ll-ls-lii "Meeting of St. Joseph's Sodsllty in Hall Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock. A iull attendance is re- quested. L-2338-l1-l2-2i. "Regular Monthly Meeting Ladies Aid P .E. I. Hospital, Wednesday, 1.90 P. M. in Trinity Social Hall. o L-2319-l1-l3-l. "Buying Chicken, Fowl, live and flrflsSed Wednesday afternoon. Frank Cutcllife, nedcrictcn. L-flsm-ll-Ii-ld. "The annual meeting of Cape Traverse Ball 00., will he held on Thursday 16th, inst. at 2 o'clock D- m. H. R. Clark, Secy. L-Wil "Seven Mlle Bay, Wednesday, Nov. 1i. Chicken supper, 8.80, 35c- Card party, 8.80, 10c. Coma and- brlns your friends. n-aaoe-u-lr-al "Whist and Dance in St. Mar- garet's Hall, Monday. November 19th. Admission 30 cents. L-Zsce-ll-ii-ll. "Opening of New Library in Leg- lcn Hall, Mt. Stewart, Wednesday. November 14th, 8 P. M. Prominent wankers in attendance. L-2882-11-18-2i. "Poultry. Llgfxtizer 00., are buy- ing on grade, fair grading, and Prompt returns. office and Ware- house next Queen Hotel. Geo. l-lumlm Co. L-sras-li-la-tl. "We shall be buying live chick- ens and fowl Wednesday, November 14th. D till I P. M. paying top Uiflrket prices. Signed Delany a "may. Albany. 11-2838-11-13-21. “Ioultry. We are buying every illy Live and Unused Poul and Olilcken at our warehouse on Queen m Market-prices said. iii Ia-uw-lldfl-lal. "W 001% Poultry daily at lemons Malina °£ mtllfillflfiflllllecllnbsretitlleep chicken and get best grades Will‘ "idle 1-13-21. “Ii In a tbs Liberal 0on- wnlin, fin‘ u m m: "“ "' i“ ma- s: ml l ‘or, a If "incubus-leis ~11’ ‘i “tr ‘WWII u’; ssnsltmtcat N’. 3., Nov. 18 H‘ David Meisncr (WOULD WELCOME I N C R E A S E IN A US TRIAN ARMY Would Aid Mater-lolly In Solution Of Unemploy- ment And In Education Of Youth Says Chancellor. i (A. P- By Guardian's Special Wire) VIENNA. Nov. 18—An incraass in the dse of the Austrian army, would be welcomed by the country “both as a. means of reducing unam- ployruent among the youth oi the land and for its great educational nine. Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg said today. ‘ghe Austria? srngy in_ limited s! m. peace tnatics m some troops. a a ‘ -‘ ......, u“, Antrian Chancellor declared dechiveiy than. there would be no mon- lrfhilt restoration in Auatrla-“at loll not in the immediate future.” Election Prospect I Asked if an election was in pros- pect, !“ “ Schuschnigg ans- i wered: “The Austrian constitution provides for the election only oi a 8'1‘. JOHN'S, Nfld., Nov. 13-(0. P. Cabin-A gaping hole in her president, while n. ment is flattened bow, the French trawler 1.»... s. Labial-t Steel ‘Cage Made For Meisne To Bock Feared Gang Rescue nun llluuv, SUSPECT "MAN has its first accused abductor David based on the corporate principle. ‘This means that tbs various cor- Bois Rose limped into harbor hele| today with hcr decks awash and‘ iporations elect representatives |from their ranks to various state her crew exhausted ircm a 12-hour ’ fight to save their vessel after n councils. "Whether or not a plebiscite will collision. The crippled craft made port un- take place in Austria at some fu- der her own steam, creeping into, harbor after two other snlps nadl tress signals she fleshed earlier in‘ the day, when her safety was threatened by the inrush of water into l!!!‘ hold. nonwszu. CAPE, N. 3., 110v. is-Gordon Balser, of‘ Moncton, was committed for gal today by Blameless 7'“ ‘f-ifihtlifil ture date will be determined by the Austrian government alone." The Chancellor denied that any negotiations were under way to normalize relations between Ger- many and Austria. "However, we are doing our best lped to sea in answer to the dls- i to avoid anythlns which would’ increase the present tension," he said. "We ask only that Austria be let alone. Those who leave Aus- tria alone will always find her a good neighbor." Before addressing the newspa- permen, Chancellor Bchusohnigg, following Dollfuss’ policy oi culti- vating closer relations with Italy, completed preparations to visit Premier Mussolini in Home at the end oi the weak. Chief Engineer Is Held By Assistant r. IN |RON MASK” Authorities Take Ex- , treme Precautions In Guarding. Alleg- ed Abductor. ’ (‘By C. E. (iarruthers, Central Press C ’ p C ‘w: LONDON, Ont, Nov. lit-Canada Meisner. in a specially cage today. It locked five doors and dared both gangland and "insiders" to free the anaemic, thin. nerveless prisoner before the courts are ready to proceed with the charge that ac- cuses him oi the $150,003 snatc‘ oi John S. Labatt, wealthy brewer of this city. Meisnerls extradition from the U. S. and his transfer to a prison 115 miles from the American border followed a long battle in which the accused man steadily fourght dc- portation until he was satisfied he wculd get a "square deal" in his trial-without precedent in the Dominion where the mbfitt "snatch” was the first abductio case on record. Ordinarily Meisner would have been detained at Sarnia. a border city. But high provincial officials after consultation ordered him tak- en to London --whare-thcre is adee quste sa lklinet all cecal)! built steel plots. - Built in the early '20s, the “strong box” oi the Middlesex county jail which now houses Meisner was first believed to be irhpregnable. In 1927 the opposite was proved. Ed (Gasoline Joe) I-Iarlton was inside its complicated maze of corridors and bolted doors awaiting his court (Continued on Page a) STURM TAKES suuum: mu (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL, Nbiv. lit-Death rode the wings of winter Tuesday. As snow and chilling drizales blanketed many sections of Canada and the United States, heavy winds I i .-.___.... Iielen Lyster of New ltochcile, N!» when accused at Munich, “ , of ' was arrest- Qll. searched, stripped and impris- oned for several hours. She was then a leased, without apologies, and after a prison meal of black d. Fxrlneesinllt TAKES llFE. Gas Tank Explodes In Boston Navy Yard C a u s i n g‘ $175,000 Damage. BOSTON, Nov. 18-The thun- derous explosicn of an acetylene gas tank in the Boston Navy Yard today took one life, caused dam- age al.3175900,» shattered windows in' the thickly settled tenement district surrounding Bunker Hill Monument and alarmed awakened residents for a " ‘ of six miles. ' The blast wrecked the two-storey brick and concrete building which housed the tank and caused 825.- 000 damage to a boat house 15 feet away. l “‘ ‘ities believed a leak- age or a spark caused the accident and a board oi inquiry was fenn- ed shortly after the ruins had cooled. Daniel Dunlea, 35, attendant of the building, was caught in the splintered, falling wreckage and was dead when firemen dragged him from a mass oi smoldering debris. The tank which exploded con- tained 25,000 cubic feet of gas. A ZLOOOQOO-gnllon tank of iuel oil near the scene was unharmed as a fire boat played a drenching and protecting screen over it. Authorities said it was doubtful that the destruction of the tank would cause any halt in the con- lashed the Great Lakes and the Atlantic, causing fears I01‘ U19 Two men were killed in automo- bile accidents attributablc to a sncwstonn which held Ottawa and‘ the district surrounding the Dom- inion capital in its crip- Search for three small boats was conducted by sea and air along the’ United States Atlantic coast. Hope was all but abandoned for a silrlmh smack and its three man crew. lost fcr two days off Florida. Two Gov- ernment quarantine boats out of New York for Philadelphia were long overdue. The number oi men dinarily each boat carries six to eight. Shipping in the lower Great Lakes was distressed in the mount- ainous ssas kicked up by a frigid gale. 8.0m signals flew and coast- guardsmen stood by through the night. safety of sailors. | | | aboard was not announced but cr-lmgn, The number on board was structions or repairing oi vessels. Extensive Search ForMissingShips IHA, Nov. lit-Two missing government quarantine boats are being sought by sea and a r. Both ships are 75-foot cabin cruisers, officials said, which op- crate out oi Reedy Island, 39 miles from Philadelphia, and usually carry a crew oi from six to eight not u ounced. Both left New York Sunday, it was said, and by today sufficient time would have elapsed for them to make the run. They are used to contact steamers to remove pass- engers reported to have contagious diseases. FROM SYDNEY comissnahas HIGH PRAISE . . . Mrs. E. R. _ Edwards, Sydney, wrilen“ . . . ex- tremely good. I find i! compares in every may with ~ ll m": mam a l" l“ '~ g=i~,-;;‘,;i~;;i lenoeclOhiaf Ingmar-Isms mumreollaecuezeuglam ill -. "every- Abbott from his out in tin cash: have ban down mineral" “ma? (Li? tire Iaoaioxpanslgra room, Induces’ - . Ooigeh. other e | may Bujis testified teary. u- om asd. t: 4:”? fzfl‘: fectcd in no way the cf "m", Buiia answered. "He had - - - J the Mono Oastie in the . many other well. Hundred: we ihldli$fidl “IMIIVU- ufliiflltlikibbbfi pggyglg, Tgygngggn ma..." m- stat: ........~ """ "at". amp are -iv-ii-»~~~-~--»- obugcd with Iicdllflwe. l. hid his to ‘won sa long Hlllbillhn-Miimm!‘ not guilty wins arraigned term as you can and you shut made ...6usnnlccd. thetriaihoardodthe ateanlsaetdown thlzenglneafee lat the amalgam ‘charged ‘zidthl de- I "Wheceloom ca; onus fire QQIQ QIIIIIIQ 1%! QBV- flflhfl" m, ' the belnndsaid use "Inchargeoftisenrglneroom." SCHWARTZ gseqmtlntbaealilzorocu- "Doswthinkhsddbhdlsyv" l-*.-:'..'~.*:-..-“:.""'"""'" ma... .... .. ... zoom-am m tied c» reachootniouAmfetllLhzaescnoe $50K 9%} W BAKING POWDER Soy Scluvorlt Ind be rare! the more c: - sivcbrondsl an INVESTIGATIBN l8 BIINTINIIEI] age Scales and Other Details of Wool- worth ‘Stores Given In Evidence. (O. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA, Nov. iii-Managers of Woolworth stores receive a fixed salary plus commission based on net profits for the store, G. H. Gibson, Toronto auditor, told the mass buying commission at the afternoon session. In 1983, the 136 managers and 18 executives were paid $725,000. while 3.000 general employees re-f ceived 81,511,138. The auditor promised to prepare a table showing wages paid ln' stores in provinces with minimum‘ wage laws, compared to stores in provinces without wage laws. Wages Paid In the Woolworth organization, there were 619 full-time employees receiving $10 a week or less, the auditor said. The lowest paid was a messenger boy in the Province of Quebec (the city was not given), receiving $3. Ten sales girls in Quebec were paid $5 a week and 14, $6. Five sales girls in Nova Scotia received $6. In Quebec, 3'1 sales girls received $7 a week and. in New Brunswick, i0, Nova Scot-la, 19, Prince Edward Island, eight. At the time the low wages were paid in Quebec there was no min- imum wage law applicable to store employees. The table showed that employees generally in Ontario, with minim- um wage laws weld. paid “more than in the other provinces In all Canada a total of 619 employees received from $3 to O10 a week. (Continued on Page 6) HIE CLAIMS THREE LIVES (A. l’. by Guardian's Special Wire) IDNDON, Nov. Iii-A thick fog which cost three lives during the day tonight had spread generally throughout the United Kingdom paralyzing transportation in some sections. London and the arm to the south were clear, but the country westward to Bristol and north- ward to Glasgow was thickly smothered. A train killed two railwary guards who were unloading race horses near Derby while a motorcyclist dlied after s collision at Kettering. Six fishing vessels collided off Iowestoit and fog held ships at‘ Liverpool, while the Caledonia from New York was forced to wait at Greenock before proceeding to Glasgow. Shipping in the Channell, on the Mersey River and- the River Clyde did not move and boats for Dublin and Belfast were held up. A: the fog thickened. visibility in most places was reduced to a mat- ter of a iew ynrda. Those trains and motorbuses which were noi forced to cancel schedules were proceeding with utmost caution. Over the English Channel the fog was not so thick but vessels nevertheless were moving slowly. Bristol ‘threatened the centre and pushed Inning Guardian. Ioaalad aardial "Iwa oasrlcmfin o Killed In Battle 0n Chaco Front. Smash Lines i? Paraguayansil To Recapture Territory- League Urged To Intervene. (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) l BUENOS AIRES, Nov. 13—A new Bolivian offensive‘ in the Chaco Boreal today had recaptured approximately, 1,600 square miles of territory. in the northwest portlonmfi the disputed area, reports reaching Buenos Aires Slldf," The Bolivian drive, launched despite the onset of the rainy season, virtually wiped out Paraguayh conquests, hard won in the course of General Estigarribia’s daring advance toward the Psrapiti River and Bolivian oil fields in August. New developments in the fighting, in which diapatchy l. es indicated 20,000 men on each side were engaged, will. I depend on whether the heavy rains now due come soon and whether the Bolivians, satisfied with having averted Paraguay’s threat against towns along the Parapiti, absrn. don operations until after the rainy season, Rejoice Over Victory A crowd of 20,000 persons, sing- ing patriotic songs, jammed La Paz streets last. night in celebra- tion oi the Bolivian victory which. the lvilnister of War announced, smashed the Paraguayan right wing in the northern Chsco. VERSIBN ISLANIINUVIEI.‘ M r s . E. Macdonald Views Picture “Anne of G r e e n Gables” Soon To Be Released. the enemy back 25 miles. The Bolivian ministry claimed the recapt s; oi Fort37th of No- vember, "smashing the framework of fortifications constructed by Paraguay in preparation for con- trol of the petroleum region and opening a new path ior a terrific threat against the Paraguayan army." A ' . admitted loss of the fort but asserted the recent heavy fighting in the Irlndseua and vlllazon sectors cost Bolivia 513 casualties against Paraguay’: I00. Used Cavalry As result of the Bolivian offens- ive, in which Col. Enrique Per-lar- anda used cavalry for the moat part,‘ the westerly Paraguay“ llneg which at the height of the‘ drive in August nearly reached 63rd meridian are now straiihlm" ed out roughly alone the 01nd meridian. capture oi Fort 27th of Novem- ber and the rrmdezue fortifica- tions left Bolivia confronting mu- jor Paraguayan strbnflholds at ‘Piculba. and one of the most im- portant battles of the long W" was expected to be fought there either within the next. few day! t l “e u.‘ r my altered to bring the story within pie. ggagwem“ ‘y ' r a B‘ ture length, an act which she said _ h.“ A c‘ t d made her feel “a bit teary." sh‘ (By 30512;! 205d“ gnu?” a e ‘explained, however, that the clung written a quarter oi s. century ago by a. Canadian woman now living in Norval, 0nt., will be seen on tho screen soon. Its authoress is in- clined to like the picture “Anne of Green Gables." Mrs. E. Mscdonald, who grew up and started writing in Prince Ed< ward Island saw the p cture yesterr day in a tiny projec ion room in which she was one of eight. 5M said the first two-thirds oi the filma lng of the book wlflch she wrote llna der the maiden name of L. M. MOIIM gomery was true to the story. Ending Altered The ending. however, had been was inevitable as the love story 13_Pa‘mgua'y‘Anne Shirley, adopted daughter (Matthew and Marllla Cuthbert exa llllls SCREEN (c. 1'». By Guardian's Special Wire)“ TOiFoONTO, Nov. 13. -- A novel " Nations tonight putting it square- ly up w that body to awn the Chsco War by uslfl! its POW" under Article XI of the League tended through three novels. The picture now released is s. sue-a cessor to a. silent film produced ll I Record &Forecast, Of The Weather . i 1919. In the new version Ann Shin Covenant lley the former Dawn O’Day play; The "Ole from Magma“ aw“: the partofannc slilrlcy. MIS.MIC<\ within tWO day-Sits!!! 6t ‘fr: donald said she has some ginge must either use powers c s ‘she is peppery, Just as I imagine guard pence or suffer a grave loss he; when 1 wrote the hooky 3h- of prestige." said she did not like the periormnncl (Article XI of the Covenant pro-‘ of Mary Miles Minter who played vldes that “any war or threat of the feminine lead in the silent veto war—1s hereby declared a matter slon because she was "far too sugq of concern to the whole Ieaguefl. cry-sweet." - Liked Performance Although she had pictured Main thew as a man with a long whita beard Mrs. Mucdonald said she-Ilka ‘ed the performance of O. P. Heggia in the part. The big criticism, she said, was that the scene of the story is laid in California and not in Prince Edwhrd (Continued on Page B) Strong winds, shifting to east and northwest; cloudy with some light rain or snow. (Canadians Pro-an) l BIETROROLOUH‘ l. isFi-‘ICE. Tor»- onto, Nov 1!i—-.\iin mum c1111.. .‘.".".l1- I 12 Zero mum temperatures:- Dawsml Akiavik .. Vancouver . Ilidmoninn . Saskatoon . Winnipeg London .. . Toronto . . . . . . .. ‘l0 8B 40 Ii roll-can linen-Strong sb lag to east and northwest; cloudy Maritime winds wit some light rain or snow, Maritime Wash-Strong west to Northwest winds; mostly cloudy Ind rather cold with some light rain or snow. High tide this afternoon at 4.50 Mil tomorrow morning at 4.07. Bun sets this ilfloruooli at 4.38 and rises tomorrow morning at 0M Full moon moon Wednesday, 21 1121i p ‘Nov. island as she laid it. The letting she added "is California and has n0! I the austere beauty of Prince Edward Island." ' . iioti 0i ills (my. its A REUEF ‘l0 QET BMK is Millage Yti) wear. gum (c 0:1’ Avuv rkcu Hanson F o r’ Cabinet Post‘ OTTAWA, Nov. lm-Meeting in two brief sessions today, cabinet council devoted its afiantilon l0 ll accumulation of routine miter! At the close of the llttinll there was no matter on whids announcement was available. The public works pmgrammd ‘was the main subject under cone isideration. Tender! id!‘ VEWU [works were gone over with a , to deciding of the awarding - ntrscts. . An official announcement entry of R. B. Hanson (Ours, Sunblrry) into the cabinet. ~ the pin-tfolls o! Minister of and Commerce, is expected (Ilnra) iy. Mr. Hanson has not Ottawa yet. and, in tb u a. sl. h GAB FEB!!! Leave Borden 0.46 A, I. l 1PM. Leave Tornientine (Iltra) hmrmerilala“ ' can amass ‘masts... th armcuncement heir‘ w-i-l. . was. '“"'ea _,_,;,_' -. 3 fiifllrs‘. . ,‘,- ~