MAXIMS‘ OFA MERCHANT __-_, In our pride and satisfaction over the achievements of science. let as not forget that religion urea- ted the environment science possible. lhlt i Annual Flulmerlptionl Delivered $5.00 5y Mull, Canada and l‘. S. A. 14.50 ISHEHIES ‘Pflfll TABLE“ N.]MMUN5 ‘lmportant-lt-ecommen- ‘ datlons Made for the f ilcifiiilifin“; é ‘if viii Maritime Provinces and Quebec- ‘ (Canadian Press) QTFAWA, May 8. — Recommend- ations of major importance to the fisheries of Canada feature the re- port of the Royal Commission on fisheries tabled in the House of commons today by Hon. P. J. A. Cardin. Minister of Marine and Fisheries. _ Directed primarily to the im- provement of conditions in the fisheries. of the ‘Maritime Provinces and Quebec some of the most im- portant of the recommendations will, if implemented, have a far reaching effect on the fishing ln-‘ dnstry of the whole dominion. Tho commission recommends the establishment of a separate depart- ment of fisheries. While stating that the action oi parliament last year in authorizing, the appoint- ment oi a Deputy Minister of Fisheries has met with widespread approval the five commissioners point to "numerous representations" which were made as to the nec- csslty for a separate ministry. Unanimously they "recommend the creation of such a department to thc Government of Canada." The Steam hawler The report of the commission is unanimous with one important ex- ception. The commission divided on .ihc important question of tile steam-tratvler. All of thc commiss- ioners with the exception of charr- man A. K. MacLcan favor legisla- tion which would prohibit the op- eration of steam irawlers froln Canadian ports after June 1st. 1m. ‘ "We believe that one of the remedies for themrcscnt situation is the total prohibition of steam traw- lers fromoperating from Canadian ports. landing their catches in‘ Can,- adlan ports, or obtaining in Can- adian ports coal or supplies. And we recommend that such legisla- tion be enacted to make prohibi- iioncffcctive on and after June H, 1929,“ thc majority of the com- mission declare. This recommenda- tion iu made during the course of a lengthy section of the report in which the reasons for it are given. Chairman MacLean dlssents from the view of his colleagues on this important point. While admitting B regrettable decline in th"e'“total num- I made | J Prince Carol Asked _ To Leave England (Special to the Guardian) l LONDON. May 8.—Sir Wrn. Joyn- ecn-Hicks, British Home Secretary, announced in the House of Com-f mons today that after consultation! with the foreign minister he hadi caused Prince Carol of Rumanla to? be informed that his presence ln' England no longer was welcome and that he must terminate his visit without delay. Carol. he said, ar- rived in England April i5. r- -——-~{-O-}-“ Congratulations From Mayor Of Mons MONTREAL, May ii-Congratula. tlons from the Mayor of Mons were Yecelved hldfly by Sir Arthur Currie. Principal of McGill University aha ccmmander-in-chief of the Canad- ian forces during the Great War, who recently won a libel suit grow- ing ‘out of articles tvrittcn concern- ing the captureof Mons. The cable sent by Bu gomaster reads: “The ity of Mons congrat. "lines its glorious libcrator for his latest victory over his detractors." ~~ i ~—¢-O-§ Death 0f Nova . ‘ HALIFAX, N. S., May 8. —Judgc T~ 5- Rllkers, prominent in the legal and business life oi Nova Scctla. died here this morning 2t the age of dxty four. He had in pool health for several years. Former Moderator Comes Before Synod , ' With Olive Branch IF IKE HAD FORESEEN SIZE 0F MINORITY, WOULD IIAVE OPPOSED UNION WOODSTOCK, May tL-Uncxpec- the appearance of Rev. Dr. W. T. McMullen at the meeting oi the the Presbyterian Church in Canada, in session here, to extend-the “ollvc branch“ to admit that had he known that the minority in the Presbyterian Church was so large. he would have hcld up both hands against organic union, and to fore- cast that Prcsbytenans from the Old Land would find their church home within the ranks of the Pres- byterian Church in Canada. "' Dr. McMullen, now in his 98th year, and a moderator of thc Pres- byterian Church more than fifty years ago, was a zealous advocate cf- organic union and wrote many lot- ters to the press urging its adoption, Covers Prince Edward CHARLOTTETOWN, CAN ‘lllllolllllslfimas-“someor“A"llllll no ll lll iilliflii DA WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1928 Island Like the Dew HT SUPPHESEEU Maistraiu ] Judgeimity were in the nature of confus- been , ted and somewhat sensational wns‘w6rking satisfactory or Synod of Hamilton and London of to bring back conditions PAHHAMEN" Waturaiiz-zflln“ .Bi'll l‘ Still in Committee, is ’ Strongly ‘v Quebec citadel. The item Opposition. ‘ ___ . _ g ‘ , (From Our Own Cull , ‘i l . OTTAWA, May 8.—Thc naturali-I, ‘ ‘zation bill went through another. [stage of a rather hectic cxistencci ‘ _ lastevening, although none of thc‘ ihcnt of the afternoon was develop- Ied. At eleven o'clock it was still in ‘committee which reported progress. . Thc Hon. Mr. Bennett dwelt upon {the high government importance of‘. ‘British citizenship and one not! ‘lightly to be dealt with. An Ontario Judge had asked for uniformity in - ladministration of the naturalization l-laws throughout Canada and had‘ ‘ .' ' ' - larrcst and. the case could be record- Japanese lnterventlo l1 In China. ay B as , lasked in vain. The present amend- lments instead of leading to unifor- Tlle Hopes 0f The Plan 0n Getting C nlent 0f The Entir (Special to thc Guardian) | PEKING. May li—Japanese troops‘ ion worse confounded, and he inti-l [mated that ii the government did inot ‘choose to hold. the wholc mat- ‘Iter for another session the Opposi- tion would take all means possible .tc oppose the bill. , It was absurd to suppose that two, British subjects and a justice of the; _ . _ peace in Cape Breton for instanccimflay ‘Umtiinf’ fem.“ ‘£20 fiilgqgtagni would have the same conceptions inlTmiém‘ NR“; ‘lfiirt lgmmfse‘ qgldicrg Irespcct of the French and Englislfw?‘ hwlgéiflna 1",, was anfiounceép ‘language as m ‘Mbertanr “s to thelé$Clflllly that? "Nationalist aggrcs-l qunnncaflons ‘or citizenship gene!“ ricn“ had colnpellcd "offensive men-l any‘ lzurcs". Foreign military observers“ Three Liberals, Ross (Mooscjawifhfie ‘mmlvretcd the move as a vhxj Baldwin» ‘stansmad’ and Mmimitual declaration of war on 'the Nat-i “Qu 5999119) fawn“ the‘ m“ ‘Wionnlist armies under Chinng-Knl- ‘practical and expeditions and cal-fshim i iculflied l0 lQmol/B all Qhleflhllld- l, Simultaneously with the nnnoun-r ‘ Rnbt- GB-Pdlner- U- F- A~ li3i1f19l‘-.celiiclit.cnmc news that fighting, had $9011 110 800d reason for bclicv- had -l‘CC0ll'llllEflCBd at Tsinan bc-‘ ing that the present act was not,twccn Nationalists and the 3,000 JaJ that thc panese trccps defending the foreign; ‘amendments were necessary. If uheiquartcr. When fighting war "esumfi amendments before thc House were cd, despatchcs said. the Jnlmnese_ prigl‘ uycxpcditionary force destroyed the‘ certainly opposeChincsc barracks with explosives‘ ‘and delivcrcd.an ultimatum deman- L. Beaubien iLiberal-Progrcssivc-‘dhlg immediate evilcllfllhl" 0f Tshl- PfQt/(gncljgr) Said he would be m. an and a zone extending for seven iclln (o take the Same View o; “miles ench lildfi of the Tslnan-Tsmg- were it not that he had such faitlrm" "anwny" _ , v ‘in the present government doing Th" N“u?mal‘st."'col’s' ‘t was Ye" ‘the “gm thing Ha" a dozen com period. have taken the offensive‘ ‘servauves followed opposing. the against the Japanese force. JED-l, ‘i914 hc them. would , . » . ,_ ancse intervention in China long‘ ,bill, thc fcal being expressed thatlhas hem hinted at‘ Japan has we] i ,among other things. the machinery‘ - _ would be used for polmcm purposegmcndous interests ill Shnntung and (to keep mo “Hem Ommment 1 lfflflhCl north in Manchuria. 1 ow p g “‘ Chang Tso Lin. “Muchuriam war lp er’ ‘Lord’ who is in command of the llcm. Mackenzie King and It. B. were split as the government motion Bennett, Conservative leader, led was carried by the narrow majority Opposed opposing sides in the House oi-Com- c-f’ eleven votes. The exterior of of- , mons on the government motion to ilclal residence which has been used by Cfinfiervatlve vote $10,000 for the repair 6i thehy vice-royalty for part of each year historic residential quarters in the for several hundred years, is shown urriedabove. The commons’ vote means after long discussion and party lincsthat the building will be refitted i _ and repaired. in BETWEEN Nil IAPANESE IN llllll I Commissionerls Dec- laration of Big Re- duction Says Newspaper. CHICAGO, 1115.. May 8.-The Tri- ,are icing systematically suppressed Event exposure of mounting crime Itotals," and that Commissioner Hughes‘ declaration of a big deduc- ‘tion in crime “is an absurdity grow- ‘lng out of an attempt to suppress ‘the spread of criminality under the n gThompson administration." IN l The paper said that records avail- ‘ablc to the public have ceased to ‘contain reports of robberies, burg- laries, assaults, bombings and other major crimes unless there was an ed as “cleaned up." in Crime‘. ls ‘a n Absurdltyr: bring about vtlnc said today that crime reports terday‘ but the gathering re5u]u,,1,,n.my lin Chicago police stations "to pre-‘ can of the sham MAXIMS _ OI‘ A MERCHANT The Christian sometimes rebuke the scientist for the long periods 0| time he deals with: yet 5601100 hi! to do only with the finite end oi’ an infinite past. Mi“ 0 (iunrcilan Two‘ (‘ants l-‘oundell 1881 (‘iuarlutteloirll .\lUi'il|II|: l; Uilflll ._._ . iDeoreasel Value 5 Y i 0f B. C. Fisheries, - ‘ _ ‘ (Special ti; the Guardian) l OTTAWA, May 8.-—The value of; ' ‘ production of the fisheries of Bri-l ' ._ ‘fish Columbia in 192v was s2a.22v,-\, j. ‘ 1904. a decrease from the preceding year of $4,A1E,205, or cent. A H E n 30m“ Fall T0 Martial Law Prevails j Anlalgalnate‘ and Entire Rumano- Hungarian Border Closed to Traffic. (Canadian Presti SIBIU, Rumania, May 8. (By tele- (Canadian Press) TORONTO, May 8. — Efforts to an amalgamation of the Canadian National Trotting and Pacing Association and thc Dom- inion ffarness Horse Association were made at a meeting hcre yes-Yphone to Vienna» —-Wlt-h _ aeroplanes hovering over in a deadlock and adjourned at thelheiii ready to drop bombs if they attelnptcd to start a revolt in rural It was proposed that the execu- Rumanin, 5,000 peasants, fresh from tives of each organization with the (he Albajulla, Congress, reached this rPresidcnt of thc Canadian Stand- town late today in their march tn.- ‘ard Bred Society as Chairman. aCb‘\rl/al"d Bucharest, where they will as a committee for the purpose cfpyegen; me Rumaniarl regency with formulating regulatlbns and generala demand {or a change in govern- policy of (he proposed amalgamated menu organization, the regulations to be To reach sihlu, they trnnped submitted to the respective organ- most of the ‘night, preceded and fol- izntions at their annual meeting. ‘lowed by government cavalry. Per- The President oi‘ the Dominillllfoct order prevails among them and Harness Horse Association. howevel-Qme Gavan-y 95cm»; i155 lmci-uctimis objected to adoption of the proposal no; to impede their moi-cl; unless ,of union. It had been tho plan if they [fy to incite the countryside to W h Q fitgilélniorrsgisfs bgéigieaijwvqzljttlzg| the standard breeders to bring about‘ insurrection‘ lsee detectives" the paper said. Burglars were found to have been e entered as “lost property.“ ‘the amalgamation in order to coun-‘ _ The xvholc of Transylvania rescin- tcract thc influence of the AIIlEIIl-‘blQS an armed cam“ Martial 13w“ can Trotting and Pacing Associa- prevails and me entire Rumano. lion and the Amcricim l-larnoss As- Hungarian border ha, been closed sociation of the United States. on. for three days m automobile traffic, Canadian harness racing. ‘All travellers are sharply interrog- A stolen automobile was listed as to the outbreak of fighting lost, ‘worth $100. but on its rccovcry was valued at $500. week at Tslnth since the Nnnkinfil in“: “°“'s}?“l’°_"“, ‘nwnxlatloll lncldhhr of March 24. 1027. Tllcn,“l5°‘thf1l£_¢l1hl(-‘Z‘lCpoltc-(i u» ptohcc‘ Hunancsc troops of the advanclnlgstal“ m“ ‘equcn y me “O men “mfl nationalist armies took thc town Cd 1° p£m‘9]"‘°nl“'h° Lhcrcforc ma, and attacked foreign residents. hampered l" the" ‘Wm- TOKfO, Mfiy 8.—Ofl(! hundred‘ _ i Chinese nationalists have started on " ' -’ ' - ' ‘ attack on Japfincsc troops at Tsinnn, - ‘- and General ChinaNKai-Shck. the l nationalist leader has fled to Talon. _ ; the newspaper Nichi Nichi was nd- vised today. , Tho Chinese general, according to the advice of the newspaper, fled G 0 u r when hc found he was unable to I ccnlrcl his troops. Severe fighting is continuing in Tsinan, the Asahi LQNDQN, May s-Jrresentutlon (ll Sbinibulrs Tienstin correspondent Canadian wQmen and others at rI-pr-rtcd- and thc gravest of fcarpccurt in Buckhuihnlvi Palace will are Tainan and Tsingtao have been se-ccurl; of the season will be held ton vcrcd. it was said. been re-establlshed Monday. official and diplomatic character. Olll! the IIlO-‘it meagre deilfllli The Canadian debutantes will he‘ were received here. The war office pfegijntcd to the King and locks official advices of the new at-Zby Mrs, (Special to the Guardian! jchildrelfs Library fclt communications bctwcco take place tomorrow night. The first, Qlllwlfing cf the childreifs section of the in n telegram Larkin. wife of Hon. Pllihriiry. In Quebec and‘ ill 50W‘ 0T ‘hi’ ated and searched. Severe censor-w western provinces those powerfuhship has been reqnstltuwd and organizations in tho States‘ have news dlspawhgs are ggfljng rigid lllrifidlcllflll Ol/Cl‘ lhl‘ SIPOYI illlll ii scrutiny before transmission is al- was fell that to establish such ns‘lowcd_ (he $5.000 purse event for threa- V1ENNA_ May 8.—Thc tcnsencss, year olds as 1110008911 for til“ of thc political situation in Ruman- Canadian National Exhibition pro-‘ili engendered by the demand; cl‘ gralnnle in i929 there must bu. bill the peasants party that the GOV- ono controlling bod)‘ in the Domm‘ ernment he turned over to u. cnbln~ ion and it would have full juris- ct cf their choosing had ‘not relaxed zliclion in thc Dominion from coast tonight. A strict censorship was bc- to coast. ing maintained while government cfllcials iclcgrpphed brief assuranc- cs that the country was "perfectly cnlnl." In contrast to‘ theselofficial state- _ ments were unconfirmed advices from n dozen points in the Balkans In Fraser Instltute. which told of several conflicts with _ pitched fighting between‘ the peas- MONTREAL, Que, May ii-Mont- ant and government troops who after they hadinlght. but it will b0 lflrlivly 0f hllrcafs noted library. the Fraser fn-‘scught to prevent their march iotlle lztitutc, is entering anew chapter in capital to enforce their demands.» thc history of its growth. the open- The minister of the interior. Duos. to the Associated This will occur about the Press burr-nu hero did not amplify tockfi- but l5 rriclrltelhlus c careful C. Lax-kin. Canadian Hioh Ccmlois-‘umc the school children l-ciui-h- to with any details his statement that watch. The Japanese in Tsinan are sicnel‘ in London. grcotlv cutuunlbcrcd- At present 20cm: time for the presentation of transports . with troop-s arc beingcanadlan women to be made by the helcl in readiness for despatch tof-flgh Commissioner's wife as hereto- thc Chinese nrea as soon as the fore they have been mndc by thc Cabinet makes o. final decision omwife of the Secretary of State foNlFrancls McLennan the need of their being sent on tQDcminion affairs. Mrs. L. C. M. S. China. j Amery. ' This will be thetlicii- schcols after the summer holi- the government Last evening the Senate after‘ some opposition gave the federal‘ district commission bill its second. reading. northern forces has been friendly to Japan. Intervention would aid hin\._‘ Crlblrlct has decided 710 desllfllifih l1 and might blast financially the hop- illl/lshll 0f "PODS t0 Tslngtao, Shan- lada, Calgary: Miss Margaret Frame. has the situation ldays. and it has been made possible undcr complete control. by substantial gifts in books and Apparently thc next move must money from three well-known Mont- Como from thc peasants who have Trcal residents. T. B. Macaulay. Dr.‘ been told once by the regency that and hi5 sister‘ it sees no rcascn to ask the resigna- Miss McLcnnan. The children's dc- lion of the government unless the partment of the library has not developments of the peasant mani- TOKIO, May 8.—Thel Japanese‘ The following Canadian women arqbeen open for the fulfilment of its‘ fcstntion during the last two days to be presented: Miss Isabel Bourli-- intended function because of the‘ since the Albalulia congress have lack of funds, but now this has been been sufficlent to cause a change of b“ or men engaged in the shore A P k The principal opponentics cf the Nationalists (,0 sweep thc‘ tllng, and thc Emperors sanction is Paris, formerly cf_Calgary; Miss He-‘changed. One of the most delighted rllllld of these who rule for the boy s a cacema er i llshcrics, he expressed thc view that "it is difficult to say to what ex‘- tcnt this is attributable to the trawler, if at all, without careful in- (lfonilnucil on page iii ‘Announdtlments, Coming Events, ‘ Meetings, Etc til "Rchlh l-lood mpla China oats. better oats, better china. All Groc- crr. s-l-o "DR. cum‘, M. n. Start h...‘ home prevention-cure. . ml Prince 5t. Ch'town. 3-i3-3mos. “Borden Line Shipping Club lcrdlns Thursday, May 10th. 4337-5-8-Bi. “ Notice-The annual meeting of York l-lall is postponed until Wed- "ii-WHY. May 16th at 8 o'clock by said Mr, McMullcn. “I think the time has come in thc providence of God when we should all find thc grace to forget thc discussions and controversies of the past. God, in His Providence, has ordered things as they are and we should accept the facts. guise the fact that I was an advo- cate of church union, and in the sight of God and from my convic- lions, f voted union. it: a minority would have voted against such work. that. I would have held up both my hands in opposition." Dispute Settled OTTAWA. May 8.-Oeneral Mot- ors has consented to continue to pay to its 4,000 Oshawa employees who were engaged in a recent wage dis- pute. the same wages as were in force before the reduction of last March until the 1929 models are in- order of directors. M. R. Hardy. Barr-Treat. asep-s-e-zl “Distributing car of seed oats at‘, ills: Btatlon Friday. May llth and animous clover seed and etc‘. on Saturday. "its Institute. ~_ 4365 ‘ “Come to nee the three act com- "Yv "N0 ‘rrespnsainrf, in York m“ this hriday evening, i» sented bl thc Pownai Young People. - 4339-57841 "The Cape Traverse Dramatic cluh will present thcir u; “Pickle Fortune". in Cape TIIUJIO Hall. Wednesday evening. 1m 0th. ‘ isit-a-u-at. “The Tracadie Dramatic Club will present the t-act comedy ‘him "The Prairie Ron," in nope River lull on may. my ma. ssto-a-a-n tlxdléced. After that time a new so e ule will be proposed. This is the outstanding feature of the un- report of the Board of Conciliation and investigation rc- cently established by the Minister of Labor. The Board described the settlement as satisfactory. "Remember the play "The Man From Denver" and Box Social in Hearts Hall. East Royalty, Thurs- day, May 10th. Good specialties. 43 4 u ,__._.. "Don‘t miss seeing "Bashful Mr. Hobbs" at Honahaw tonight. Flay will be followed by a basket social Performance starts at 8.30 sharp. "Come to nELEIh Hall. May\10. and hear HonnMr. M. free lecture 0h "Hi! THO Abroad." lnoture b6- - “I colne here as a peacemakerflmrovemeiit scheme would cost in t c‘ I don't. attempt tools-l But it ncvcrl R‘, ' ““—‘ idawned on my mind that such aillamehi "9 “my” July 7m‘ m’ smggmmlmlnorlty would have voted against 435g ot era engaged in many walks of ‘was Scrlfltcr McMcch-s who sold thati north and take control of the Govi, ‘it was not realized what this i flernment of the entire country. ‘ There had been no grave conipli-. lend, a sum not less than $20,000,000.icntions international in China pricrl ‘It was altogether more than thcl —- expected to-morrow. On 'war‘lon M. Ryan, Toronto; Vliss Ruth strc th the division known as thcSl-latford, Montreal; Mrs. Alfred Gi- Nnglzsn clivlsioninilmbcrs 15,000 to anclli. Toronto; Mrs. Robert Mag- 18000 mcn. inor. Toronto, and Mrs. Frederick B. _-— “ Robins, Toronto. ltrcasury could afford. Incidentally} and it was hopeless to expect to he Ithc Senate had a scheme of its own‘ able to draw from that source. In for spending $100,000 in cnlarglngl fact British farnl laborers were ‘the gallery in space to permit aclncver so well oil‘ as now. He stated ‘commodating 350 more persons. Olfthat many of the most successful ‘state occasions such as thc opening,‘ farmers in the prairies and most l ~ - r ‘- ‘ I ;?J..§£§§“2i22°‘l¥..§3§.2$’i§’§.§. ‘Z35 $3,?‘ tiffiifiii.“ ,i’;‘.‘.’.i‘.§g"§§ $133,133.22 ‘lerics are very limited. of farming before settling there. ‘ Incidentally, too. members of par-‘Bfld thousands of intelligent. am- being filter-viewed by-bitious men oi that class would find ‘some of themselves about increasing V00!“ illld Qiillillfllllitv ill thc WCSI: }thc scssional indemnity $1,000 urlflnd as settlers compnrccl favorably| m a lyllnm-lgy that ha5‘$2.000 and thc proposal is still li-ilwith thc very best of those who, grown m so gm“ a church and dousbeyance. It is a delicate propcsslmame from the countries of Europe. If 1 had anticipated l" the Pie-Wm ‘ time, when them‘ While he had ll0 objection to a has been so much talk about ex-‘good class of aliens this wasp Brit- pen‘ditures_ for things not essential, lsh country and he wanted to keep, It s understood that the Opposl- it as such. So far as Saskatchewan ltion will oppose it should it come was concerned, it was not truc that‘ lbefore the House. ‘after harvest laborers flocked to the’ U to date the stul- ivltriess b9.‘towns and created unemployment. ifore thc agricultural and coloniza-lBlli R8 they 98ml? lmlll Olhi-‘l Pill“ tion committee was Mr, GeQrgqOi Canada for the purpose of har- ‘Ijangflcy, a prosperous and substan-il/iighi; 01;‘! W39 iggll? high X11805 - ‘ 1 x l s ifoarl stghréleyelilis svsglunfihhlzglheytlgwh goocclnflogzlfathgy silfililgsfigrrclkedoto lthe Saskatchewan Government who the nearest» Yllllwfll‘ i-OWll t0 lflkv =1 is now a director of the Saskatche- i-Pflhl hack i0 Wile-IT they Chllle [wan grain growers and who has Just ffhlll‘ l‘ recently returned from accompany-‘ Mfr Lhllillfiy hlld 110i lllllch use lng the canccllliii National puny opfor artificial methods, and imml-' Carillidian farmers who have beenWfflhts Were Dilly Sllhlled by ‘molly- tou rig Great Britain.“ cuddling." He was rather in favor ‘Mr. Langley who described him- 95 it!" 11:99? d3!!!‘ BT13 h" Eqllhl 0P" se f as “nearer eighty than seventy" P0P "ll Y °l‘ - and a sturdy looking English born, A crest deal cf cppcsltlcrl hurl farmer and who in his native lpndibflen aroused among politicians and would be degcfflbgd as a gyplml in the press to a resolution of which‘ country squire, rather upset many the Hon. Mr. Euler. Minister of Na- mittee by previous witnesses in a-llflwcflhl; him l0 ly convulsed the committee wlthfcraticn as may be determined by mun-lg“; the Governor in Council" and pro- From interviews in England and-vldlns for a gratuity bclolz paid to Scotland with those engaged in im-‘cfllccrs retiring and immediate up- m ration. farmers. It was regarded as a return to pat- life. he discovered wh t he deacrib-IPOUBBB Pure Mid 91mph ed as an invisible op ltion to em-l This afternoon when it came up reasons for that he thought wasiflhd the opposition were strongly, |out opposition as was also the reso-l lgrltlon and one of the prlnclpahthe l-Ion. Mr. Bennett stated that hefeoldlers skilled men all, and not give to tho‘, Mrs. Larkin will wear an embroi- Minister mcnt. with crystal beads and clusters of The rccolnmcndatlons wcrc madcidialnonds lei. in the bodice and all by boards within the dOllfli".i.’i€nl,,"0VBi' the skirt. l-icr train will be of who know betuw- than _lny (tfllllf silver, lined with white vclvct caught persons the qualifications i-wrlulrea! up with o lorcc chiffon bow on thc and thc kind of men l3CUlllf7iClld8d Shimlder- with llmflmehls 0f dhlh" for the special positions s-uoh aofonds and Pearls- _ appraisers. and referred t1 the try-l M155 All?“ Lhrkm‘ diillllhie" U5 il service commission. which haclr m“ (hmadmn High the power to fix civil service commission did not act] within fifteen days the appoinllnent‘ W" 1° be made by m‘: G)Ve“‘“r'-beads and a garland of shaded ink ill-council. This, it was normed slut.” roses Her Wain Wm b“ 0t. cmmgjub been presented nt court will accom- pany her mcthcr. did not give the civil service nvlch Bred crew do ohm“ she Wm cm‘ v r r i "ll kiiuitvtn discretion in the matter rind the _ - _. principle remained the salue. sérgfuglargéntfikmhltc 0mm‘ fem“ n't believe in a civil service coolmis- L b sion at all, coilgratulated the hfin- o e presented M court parturc from its rule and trusted‘ the first Cour; of m“ season at Bu‘, that other ministers would follow. gingham p313“- ihc example. Dr- Edwarrls. who was‘ Among those to be presented to the on the government side of thc house‘ King and Queen flPQ Miss Balahy‘ when the civil service comlnission‘, Pgvry, 0f Bgmbgy, who l5 well was created was a voice crjying ilflknown in Canadian social circles. the {wilderness ‘against it, but hay-g Lady Birkcnhclld will be her spons- ing aith in t e Cons VllllC nd- or. ministration of it ‘na assented‘ ~ knowing. however, that if a Liberal, Government came into power. e-reryl principle of it would be violated as: .____ it has bee‘ for‘ thc last three years‘ (special lo u"; Gummhm and every year worse than before, WASHINQTQN_ lvlny g__g0rp,w<. simply camcuflssc- - 'ations lost today a prospective rc- ‘Thc resolution passed in commie, fund of $l60.000.000 in taxes payable tee on the condition and under; this year on last yelfs income when of m; vlews presented to the com. tional revenue, had given notice em- standing that no member would. inl the State without a dissenting voice "appoint certain considering thc bill itself, be boundiwipecl out a provision of the House‘ quaint homely way which ‘irequent-iclasses of officers with such remun- by the resolution so agreed upon, as} revenue bill to allow the proposed the two were in divergence. Theicut in the corporation lcvy to apply 113m comes on gQcgnd madly“; retroactively. A decision on thc As predicted the resolution to pro- flmcllllt 0f reduction to be made in vlde gm- me bflngjng mm effect the the corporation and other tax rates pmfegggrs unuipolntment of officers in their place. recommendation of thc special com-t W05 delhlled "hi-ll l-Omflrrclv- iQ} mittee on pensions was passed with-‘ ‘ ARE EXONERATEI) lution in respect of the returned- insurance act, the power of appoint- dered court gown of white chiffonlhnd so many patrons as it has at Comlnislgoncl" when the staff on duty in thc cir- mc salmiei n the and Mrs. Larkin, who has already culailng section of thc library wns slip will we“ {l-YCICTCDCQ room. igown of pain pink with iridescent _ _ . _ , _ gave n luncheon M“ Lavmeu‘ ‘Quebec’ “m” ""'e‘“"yesterday' to the Canadian women LONDON. M 8.—T ‘ '- . ister of National Revenue on his cic-’ m5 the King “Th; Quegiliviwaligfd tomorrow night. RMID LOST’ extcndlnsi WAsl-uuoroir. May a-aicurcir-‘sulhl John clear the time for application for lnsur- ant Commander J. S. Bayliss. the Boston clear persons in connection with the pros- kins Michwl. pective opening of the children's - section cf thc Fraser Institute is the librarian. P. B. de Crevecccur. wEdi;§3'i‘ii§‘h.i;;“hf§,'i€8€;‘.§‘.§$£;‘S<3cdil1g' In West. Well Under Way -{~O-i»- .- - thc present time. and never have thc ‘library books been so free from‘ l ft l i.-. Tl l. . - . . tic by valita s 1e "ltter h: “Down m "m cumin” . ' . t . z i353 lih-l“i§°‘l ‘T.‘éf....‘?.i$°.iiir‘ ‘i155 .M<>~¢T@~‘ Mu r-cuw r w» |each department of the library and tmmmce or. ravonfblc weather cm?‘ vigilance over thc activitics of pat-lama“ Secdmg Wm be “nun m irons is ClflSCl‘ than in tho old davsiwcsler" Canada this week’ acomfl" ~ ling to the first weekly crop report. ‘of thc Canadian National Railways. Already Manitoba is well advanced. A large number of points reporting- wheat seeding from 60 to 90 per- ‘cent finished. and thc seeding of ccnrsc grains begun. Manitoba how- ever lias been experiencing betwi- conditions than has Saskatchewan and Alberta. In Saskatchewan high winds have hampered seeding tho some staff that supervised thc, 1M ‘(QQ NW- Pi“ Xow“ pksifit‘; b“ , but ‘u is iIDt thought they have a %“RE A“ DlCMIl-Clll/‘fllllflh ‘of the seed already ‘ sown. Drifting ls reported in light wEAQ‘ EM ground areas, however, and the pm. “o ‘vlncc weather conditions in the I AQK north particularly gave thc farmers n sot back in spring operation; but seeding will be Eencral this week. All parts of Alberta report plenty cl moisture m thc ground ant-la" lilcrcnsc in acreage sown to when, ‘is looked for. Plowing and dlschilz ,0"? helm; carried on vigorously all l .C\'cr the west and the threshing of ‘crops that remained in the fields durum thc winter i b l w”- cd with rapidly. s ens pr Frill rye is showi ‘Manitoba and Sasklrtlgchagvalflgw l“ YEW DOlnts report wet conditions '°" 10W Rround but in both Built. chewan and Alberta much plowing “ ' "shill-fies: be done. 8n a re rts _ TORONTO, May a. Maritime, ions the mhlpitvoiiiiifioihfiu? ‘ moderate to ircsh winds. mostly Yf-‘hffi. ' a ifair nnd clear. ,Toronto clear . i i i i i_‘ H 5246 §~§-§_;‘A - QA:‘A u . 54-38 4A4l_ .Moniroal clear . . . c d d i» ,Qucbec clear . . . . . . . . . .. .. 58-34 0H U189 ' Charlottetown clear .. . 62-448 special. ‘a RATE-—l0. put jun], u.‘ b '. co_aa - each insertion in this colqln, I . 5444 . 52-42 Halifax fair . . . . . . . .. a i, . . . . .. 50-46 High tide this afternoon at 12.60 and tomorrow morning at 2.43. Bun sets this evening at 'l.l8. and tlon with the disaster in a report bylrises tomorrow morning at 4.33. —*-_-.-_-¢_‘.- ~cnorcs coitus» our no]; stall-fed cattle. aundm'-M_ som dz Co. y... . a M Adnvilul i-l g5 thlt Canadian doctors were sent to and adamantly opposed to the prlnqance for five years from i928. Ditto. skipper and all others on boardNr-w York ear . "Noucknm or‘h.m.. m“ m ‘id o; south 1111-". the old country to examine pro-‘eiple of thc resolution. The mlnistertihe second reading of thc bill w‘when she crashed into and sank the‘ q Dramatic Club will waging I’ mell- wym wqmm-ggngglwuw 4391 posed emigrants instead of utlliz-‘ettplained that the resolution wentlamend the soldiers settlement act._Ma.ss., last December 17, have been com dam uyhnmw You,” ‘ _‘-__ . in] Brltlshuioctors on the spot. much farther than thc bill proposed bit not without some discussion of exonerated of all blame in connec- vlll, 'n New-x‘ ‘ Opnerally speaking he did not be-,,to be introduced based on it. He details. “will be unloading car flour and and o‘ -.‘.‘€\"’."'.“\‘* r . . snow Hail. Thilfl‘ » - -- ‘ r orrxwx M a Pr u n e ‘ ‘ ‘ My w“ a‘! ~‘ P. n. Th "l. ligvd in the “Mud _ ays- pointed out that it only re erred to . ay . - oroga o a coastguard board f inquiry. Last quarter moon Saturda . M . ‘J0! PRINTING OI "INN ‘e u “m Maniac o-t var‘! 18w illicit} Also have tent as at present in operation. on-‘appraisers. special customs officers is not now expected before the end _.... . 13m‘ 435 n m_ y ‘v description. elm _ ‘ g, Vlll be Bqturdgy my i i " . _ 5 c". of “m1,” an ‘I T‘ 1y “.1 pgf cent. of the population and preventive officers. 125 out of of the month. Premier King ln- adjournmeht over Ascension my summer-side tide eighteen mln- Wmlly one! '. ‘ ‘__ m i‘ r “w_..‘_fl‘bwuo‘ ‘ M34441»; qr“; Britain w“ (m the larln, 5.000 in the service at thl-‘most. tends to move in the House for (May 1'1) and over Victor-l; my ‘ um “m. m.“ Qmflwhwmw “ m‘ M . n~r . _.