i s r F I » HT. TO THE cirmnsorrsfrowu cusnnmu 01v? Mts'l. S to ck Exchange (lupplled by Pltfleld and Company I Iclbese of Iontreel stock exchange) “up. Oren 140i 188% 10 39% . 4% Can Cement . fllb Cen Ind Al 14 Can Psc Ry _ll% Dom Bridge J"! imp Tob . 137s Inter Nickel . . 8U McCall Front .. _1‘3 Mont Pr . ~35 Net Brew 39% hat Steel Cur 5% Power Corp .. ‘l. Sbewinigun 31V: Si! Clll Pi- .. 1i Steel of Can 02% BANKQ 5.1 2% 203i 265 . 1S1 lS-l Royal a . . . . .. .. 1m loll Cln Bk (‘our . 14f 144 MT ’L. CURB (Supplied by Pltfield end Company Members of Montreal gtoek exchange) iwcg. Open Lnet B A 0n . .. . m; 161A m», am 211A 21% . . 37% 37% llelchere ... 1.8 12'»; New York Curb (Censdi Press) ltoeh Close ll sB . . ... 27-8 0mg’: E1 .. ... 38 1-4 AmSup Pow .. 21-2 Atlas Corp . . 13 3-8 Cit Berv ~.. ... 23-4 Creole Petrol ... ... . 22 1-4 El Bond Share . - ... ... 16 7-8 lbrdnfCnnA...---.... 268-4 Hum Oil ... .. 59 3-8 ImpOll ... 211-4 lntPet .. -- 87 3-8 NlieHud . ... 9 5t Oil Ken .. - 2! 1-3 UnLendPA. . 23-4 UuLsndPpfd .. 885-8 Currencies‘ (Canadian Pres) MONTREAL. Nov. 20-—A decline oi’ 1-8 of s. cent brought pound sterling d.own to 4.97 1-2 today on Montreal foreign exchange and both United Stem dollar and the French franc remained unchanged at 1.01 l-ld And 6.60 cents res- pectively. . _ maorrro, . _ ' - . w - . Exirhhhge» srmuvsmc-W Exchange Markets At A. EXCHANGE N. Y. Stock ~ °'"*:..."r'.:.'i‘:."""‘ t.“‘°“.i‘: ___ '" ~ . ‘ (By Irenk Meellillcn. Associated “Mug m u" york, tho big (c. P. By Guardian's Specie! Wire) GIGIICB (‘Xlilllllaov QLMM Exchange m. r. a; clinch-a‘: rail: Win) 3.2.3? 1% ohms‘? to? Eli's... taste‘; ~ -»“°"~1 mum» uu-l- =- it?“ "- “M” m ~ sir. h...“ aim! 10mm“ PM" 3"" “Sam”; ‘Q $23; . rezulrrllv bronchi lows o! 1 W new. Close to 100.000 elm-es sgvon ieeuee into m: blah terri- Tfiriihwv W1 Mimlrlihl-mdlis‘ 010,3 M“ ° m ""°r""‘ "Y "m" ""1 9°99"? around a points oh the stock ex- changed hands. my for e year or more. "in Mocks Iowa‘ ' l ' , “n. “ vain‘: n‘ "fink L today. ' Th0 market VIII ll I ll-Itlfll 301d“. dumpefl; ghgrgg of figu- Toronto mines-slam. A-irwmrw flan,“ u...» o... 1.... Some observers Ittrlbllled m. state until well m in the sfter- ,3... Industrial Alcohol and the N"! ‘mlk-Swcks °1°‘ed 1mm" 3,18; ‘b’: "o; ' drop to increased unreet over noon when bids for the high-price c”. “d "B" issues were down eb- Wlflnllfifl-Whclll "P 3'3 “m5- 0mm?“ 13%,‘, don,“ 3593 §§ F“ p‘ Drench flscsl troubles end economic and a. few of the secondary golds out n pom, 9M1, Nnmufl Bfgwgf- New Yolk-mill“ “d °°"°° mm,“ “if,” 2'3” ‘ ' Am hostilities aimed at Italy. Others were lifted quickly to show gains h, mnunw m 4,...“ m; my. ‘lflgher; rubber sud sugar lower. “m” ‘mm _ _ ' ~ L: n; said an equally important deter- up in l 1-3 for the N8 0M0 "14 5 9g with g mw mp of 8'0 8-4. - . c . » cum ammo pound 4.014s. Am who T "hi °° u" '1" W" the 0010b" i° l‘ “'0 l" l“ °‘”'P°' "W" moo new hlchr Wm “Mikhail T C K Holland flcrln .8880. gnzsouas ti? rnerkciihad 8.1011110 l00 10!: ‘tun? W in the power section Ind‘ “pee 37"“ ll b OLI I NBC 0D. “m8! - mini .2, P C [p911 L] 0 _ Jgpglnrygn 3e93, of J. P. Morgan. returrling from 0! I 40 00B" I011! ll! 8°04 W?!‘ wgwkomoomo ‘g s 1-4, i _ . .. _ . New Zeelend pound 4.01m. Europe, that he cm not think bull avf- 15am will’: 1-3. 90W m”. 1..., mun“; u, mm, us. _-——-— Norway krone 1500- whats make 1hr llmwfltv Wm 5. "i, q ,0 ' changed. Other outstanding issues (Cenedien Presu- south Africe pound 4.0m. also noted. l"! l‘ °- ~ i" " w," mum“ mm mm,“ w. MONTREAL. Nov. ilk-OW- Sweden krone sass. “"0"” by thellesocieted m»: ......- ferred, up one, lllll International mes on the W0 Mbhlml "WWW Swltnerlsnd‘ franc .8384.‘ average of co stocks the market wee _ A m‘ PM...“ u, three, Bsthurlt, down .1 of e point to cs4. Rails, g5‘; g mwuw, shgwmiggn mu British markets today totalled asa heed. composed of 85 cattle, 161- sheep and" lambs. 09 hogs and 118 calves. . Steers sold from $3.50 t0 5535- A couple oi’ good heifers brought $4. Butcher cows were nmnirmlly quoted st $2.25 to $3.50; and cen- ners and cutters $1.75 to $2.25- Lambs were $7.50 for good ewes and wethers with a cut of $2 on bucks and culls. Sheep sold from $2 to $3.50. - " veal calves made from 88 to $8.50 and s few gressers $8.25 to $8.50- Hogs were weak at 83-35 f0!‘ b80- ons, fed and watered. Selects drew $1 per hog premium. Butchers. hesvies and lights were Out 50 cents per cwt. and extra heevles $1 per cwt. Sows were not moving. Receipts were (Canadian Press) Losses. Felt On NeWYork cent premium. Closing exchange rites‘:- At Montreal-Pound franc 6.60 cents; U. B. dcller 1.01 l8. At New York-Pound 4.02 l-I: franc 6.58 8-4 cents; Cenadien dollar 98 29 32.- dollsr 15.18 fr; 15.91 fr. In gold-Jicund 12s; U. B. dollar 50.8?‘ cents; Csnedien dollar 58.75 cen- . Miscellaneous ‘(Canadian Press) MONTREAL, Nov. 20- Wheat, nor no 2 9i. NEW YORK, Nov. 20—Ie8dlllB Barley, O W n0 3 42. currencies were 91110010011? lln- Oats, feed no 1 34. changed in the foreign 0103131189 Flour‘, - spring wheat patents, markets today. firsts $5.70. . The Dominion dollar extended mom- monds 35,30, its discount from 1 1-16 per cent to 1 8-32 per cent. The pound ‘ sterling was off 1-8 at $402 1-4. The French franc held unchang- ed st 6.58 3-4 cents. when Junk - Becomes Dollars More than $2,000,000 were reel- ined from the sale of scrap meter- iel 11y the railway lest yeer end. in addition, $800,000 worth of material was made available for further use, according to an art- icle by L C. Thomson, Manager of Stores, in the November issue of the Canadian National Reil- ways Magazine. At the present time en average of 400 obsolete box cars a. week are being scrap- ped and thus “lunk" becomes dol- lars for the railway. The classify- ing, salvaging and sale of ecrep has grown to gigantic proportions on railways end in large industries the article states. NEW YORK. NOV." 20-10mm’! exohanm steady: Great Britain high 4.02 5-8; 10w 4.92 1-8; close 4.92 l-Z; 80 ‘day bills 1.81 5-0; France 6-58 8-4; Itely 8.10; Bel- gium 16.80; Germany 40.24; C!!!" ads. 9B 29-32. Advertising Rates-Payable lil Advance Control Genital locale. 4c. on word; Western and Eastern locale, . per woe-d: Announcements $1! Coming luvs, 8e. pr IO r word i llluullel lo. per Iorili In Ienoriua Notices. ‘ion. per lnobi Lists of Finn! end lplrltunl Offerings, Cards, new, (e per mine: Inrtere c! Condolence, 70c. otteee of Thank porlneln word. Other rules on application. Iirilmnm Change In I end Appreciation. 78o. nee [MIMIC-II new advertisement twenty-flee ode. ’ . For Sale FOB SALI -- AUCTION‘ I031‘!- Five Bridge end Wbiet Score Cards Guardian Central Job Printery. I08 SALE -- “WEI-AL CHOICE Red female foxes. Apply M. A. E. core Guardian. 1r3l12-11-2l-1i. i zf SCRATCH PADS-PAD! OF 100 sheets 5 x ‘Iii. Price 3 cents per Office. Ir-flilfl-il-l-li. FOB. BALE - BARB!!! ROCK cockereis and pullets from import- ed blood tested stock. B. Auld. W. Oovehead. L-8088-11-20-2i. _31 i-Z‘I Foil 5A1! - COMPLETE 8E1‘ 0F light batteries suitable for rink or any public building. H. L. Smith, 70 B/Jcbford Street. m: bamlmbmdl‘ located. Apply Palmer end Hee- lam, Barristers, etc.‘ Lost L-8087-1l-20-21-28. Miscellaneous only twenty-five cents. icy-family Income end ~ Retire- ment Anuuity Combined. Ask to eee it, stating age. J. A. more. jurrie Building, Charlottetown. » FUR. COATS REMODEIJLED RE- lined, repaired. cleaned. glazed. Prices reasonable. Ifiirrler. Caldefs, 205 Euston St. b8l01-11-2i-23- Flour bakers $5.20. Flour winter wheat patents, choice $8.70. Flour white corn $4.80. Bren ton $19.25- Shorts ton $20.25. Middllngs ton $21.25. Rolled oats bag 90 lbs 83.05. Heyho 2 per ton carlcts $10.00. Cheese no 1 t 10 7-8 to 11._ 2 . - Potatoes P E I nits M's-MAO to I oobblers 90's $1.35 t0 $1.40. g mts 80's $1.25 t0 $1.80. white no 8 80's 80 to $1.10. (Canadian Pi-eee) MONTREAL. Nov. duce section of modity ing o. little heavier. Butter spot: Sales: West (80 score), 20 l-4. Cheese Spot-No sales; United Btetee dollar 1 1-18 per 4.9’! l-I; At Paris-Pound r4111 fr; u. s. Canadian dollar g rivals of no 1 Ontario. 20—Pr'~ices were firm at the close of the pro- -Csnadia.n Corn? Exchange today with trad- 400 boxes Que (grass make). M l-4;‘200 80 l-2. Que (88- score) 38-28 i=4: West (82 score) 88-2814; West (regreded) >28- Ont my venues. nouss nrivnens 1-4102-11-21133. TIIERE IS SOMETHING NEW under the Sun. A Brand New Pol- white l0 8-8-11, col i0 8-4 to ll; Que white i0 i-4 to 8-4, col 10 8-8- 115-4; 20m. white (June make) l3- 2 - . Eggs-No sales; Ontario A-lergc, 86-88, A-medium 88-80. A-pullets 82-34. B-large 26 l-2-27 1-2; B- medium 20-88, O 28-24. HAZLEBRDOK WOMEN'S INSTITUTE The IlQl/lllgr monthly meeting o the H ‘ ‘ Women's met at the home Mrs. J. C. Wood on Tuesday evening, Oct. 8th. with an attendance of eight members and several visitors.» In the absence of the president, Mrs. J. C. wood occ-uped the chair. Institute eta Konnocott ... . Mont W Nis o. d‘ Paramount ltadio . Ho Pacific, Std Oil N l] S Steel Vanadium Western U .. Westinghouse ... PRODUCE (Canadian Prose) , Nov. ZO-Prleee ruled steady on Montreal open produce market today with butter, cheese, eggs and DOtatoes un- changed- Carlots or less of no 1 butter were selling at 26 to 28 1-4 cents per pound while lots to the retell trade were 27 cents for solids and 28 cents for prints. . Graded shipments of eggs in car-lots or less were 86 to 38 cents e donen for A-lerge, 88 to 34 cents for A-mediurri, 81 to 32 cents for A-pullem, 27 to 38. cents for B- lar-ge, 85 1-2 to 36 cents for IB- medlum, and 24 to 24 1-2 cents for O. Cheese was generally 10 7-8 to 11 cents per pound for current ar- On- the potato market prices "were $1.40 to $1.45 for Prince 10d- ward Island mountains and $1.35 to $1.40 for ccbbl ... per lib-pound bag, in 80-90000 begs, Prince Ed- ward Island mountains were $1.25 to $1.30, cobbler! $1.20 t0 $1.25, New Brunswick mountains $1.75, to $1.30, Quebec mountains $1.10 to $1.15 and Quebec white no 2 stock 90 centsto 81-10. ozumar. nanmue women's ms-rrrurs meeruiual meeting of theCcntml Bgglequd Women's Institute was held gt the home of Mrs. John Mackenzie. with the President in the ‘phairl flfhirteen members and two visitors responded to "Rnli Call. The minutes of October meeting were read and approved, also the minutes oi the last annual meet- ing. The President gave a. report of the year's work which was very encouraging. The Secretary report- ed a. balance of 828.00 on hand. A letter of sympathy was sent to Mrs. Mosie DeRoche in her recent sed bereavement. The election of officers for en- suing year resulted as follows: President, Mrs. Sterling Tucker. Vice President, Mrs. Mellvllle Johnson. Sec. ‘Press. Mrs. Ivan Dawson. Directors, Mrs. Brie heard, m1. Wellie Hogg, and Mrs. J. M. Web- r. ~ Auditors, Mrs. R. Callback and Mrs. Wright feud. Mrs. Tucker was appointed to visit the school dur- ing the month. Mrs. Wright leerd. Mrs. Harry Green end Miss Flor- rie Green, committee for program Meeting opened by singing linstitute Ode followed by , The ‘ were approved es reed. the .. z the Club Warren's Creed m imi- 50H y reed the minutes of the previous meeting which Ebrperienced HAVING ON MY PREMISES FOR. number months flDCK of- ducks. Owner may have same by paying expenses. Leigh Ferguson, Bethe]. L-fllll-ll-Zl-ll. selection by The sick committee reported bev- ing called on two sick folks end taken them fruit and a plant. The Secretory then read corres- ndence received. Our n stituie had the pleasure of callhg on s bride in the district end presenting her with e it. The program consisted o s. read- ing by Mrs. J. C. Wood, an organ Pearl Jones. hemwnica. T0 LET — GARAGE. OENTRAI-Io! by Miss Rita. Goody. Nil-s. Kent Jones invited the next meet- lhfiNlOI-lllbbfll-DIWQIQQIIYPI!" ing your membership fee. closed by sillllllil the 108T - BETWEEN MT. HERB- ert and Charlottetown. tire and -rim. Finder please leave st Flem- ing's Grocery, 96 Dorcheeter St. Lrdlidl-ll-lil-Sl. ‘m: t0 Sell a Wanted Cont. 170 Prince Street. W A N T I D SMALL Apartment. Apply "A" Guendi ply Gill n Liam-n- WANTBI) — POSITION HOUSI- with ll. I Iv-SIIB-II- ~11. .. " "Mile ljegfll/anteg "I NTED ‘I0 Ilimcoum Uncool- ‘I-Q. WANTED — QUANTITY HMELTS. Further information inquire mt 340 Queen Street. IhSWI-II-ID-Sl. WANTED -- 01D = MUIKIAT IrBMO-II-IQ-Il. ~ rlIlATlD II. L-Slbl-II-IO-Sl. . Work Wanted W4- i Mcotlllfl " l Anthem eftor which Mrs. Wood served e very dainty lunch, which brought s. very pleasant evermg‘ to s close. Canadian Bacon Wcl Received In India The consumption of bacon end hem in India. is confined elmcet entirely to Europeans end Anglo- hidisns, the native not entering into the picture, princlpeliy on ec- coullt of religious scruplee. Trial chi rite of Canadian becon were wen-rep _ nit 7.17mi... AGED Jedkyh. :1‘ housekeeper ‘gr ' If mi. oeiool’ m” food I!!! Island. It. Itelsuauiey: ' H i P718011 “I m ‘Q fimhrpm‘ $51’ for next meeting. Mrs. Rufus Bag- nall invited the members to her home for the December eating. Meeting closed with the Netionel Anthem. ' New Factories Opened Great Britain New factories to the number of 478 were put into operation in Great Britein last year. employ- ing 87,700 workers In addition 144 existing factories were enlarged eocording to the Industrial De- pertinent oi the Canedien Nation- al Reilways. 78 of the new estcb- lishments represented t. fere from o er areas. 50 of these go- ing to don. 71 of the 478 new factories were branch establish- ments, sn increase over the year previous of which 68 out of the total of 467 consisted of branches. As against the number of new factories opened lest yem 515 were closed. . IDWIB IBIITOWN 8%00Is Following is the standing of Low- er Freeing dchocl for Septem to : IX-l, Dorothy Rogers; I. Frances Calms; 8. helyn Rogers. Grade ‘VI-l, inure Bill; 2, itch- ertCeirns; 8, Feuete Reeves.- Illreceivedlnlndlsbuttrllns- _.|.Qw¢°ng. m miion "cuts end Ihlvalna 411- ...‘.l".fi'...’3’. Rsrarnill (equellilmfl, lclflfldl OQQTIUO Iflllhll. I111 C!‘ “d”! RQQV“. “HIDE of “IOU bQlIlI llifitlfl _ QnL-L jg!“ _ for 1 ibletime. e greet bulkof , m“; u (pm-g, goo“. gm the supplier who from Greet credo n (Jro-r, Pearl Btevert; Britain. ecccrding to the Agriefl- 3, ma; Queen. -1 rural Devertment M the Omldlm Credo r éshgl-r, wiuiem Cairns: Niticnli Ihilweye- Ilfluwelter vert; I, Frede Hem. Mo“ ......“ :2:- hu this...’ who’. '21.: Wu =- “bencfdlmbs vmedtobfw; " Touch- eeen ' (Patriot please copy) utilities and induetriele ell declined. shares against 3310.580 Tuesday. Cher-t readers pointed cut that to- day's market was the‘ first since Oct. 3 in which the volume expend- ed substantlally on the decline. In spite cf the decline, e few specialties bucked the trend, Collins db Aikman rising 8 7-8 to 48 1-2 and g-liaudaille-Hershey "B" _up 1 to 27 Iloesesofltospointsweresuf- feted by U. S. Steel et 49. Wbeting- house Electric st 95 1-2, Chrysler at 88 i-8, Continental Ceu et 90 1-2, General Electric at 89 8-4, General Motors et 57 5-8, Case. gt 107, 5m- te lib et 52. Union Pacific at 101 1-4 and I ‘ ationel Harvester at 68 8-8. In the Canadian list Mcmtyfg... Porcupine advanced 1 8-4 while Hiram Walker was ofl nearly as much. Canadian Industrial Alco- hol issues were somewhat higher, but Distillers-Sanguine yielded e major fraction. Elsewhere in the list International Nickel, Dome Mines, Brazilian, Lake‘ Shore and Holiinger were slightly higher. 08.n- edien Pacific lost half s point. The bond market was generally lower although a handful of in- dustr-iels advanced, lifting tho M. socisted Press average for that group 0.2 oi’ s point to 101.4, the sixth successive day this average iigsasfi risen to new high ground m; Crash 0i Trees Makes Wreck Oi’ Barnjum Dreams By O. F. MOIIIABITY Canadian Press Staff Writer VICTORIA, Nov. flo-wyg-A belief that making e will we; m admission of old age and o, dig. trust of the future actions of gov- ernments have spoiled the dreem of a. greet forest conservationist- Frank D. D. Bar-alum had v15. ioned the preservation for posterity of one of British Columbia's finest stands b! big timber, Douglas fu- sticlrs running from nine to l1 feet in diameter. 350 years old, and situated in one of the most beauti- ful parts of Vancouver Island. ‘lb this end he established a. 2000-ecm Cowichsm River, near Duncan, When he died in Paris, 19b. 20, 1983, however, he had not made a W111. and prior to that he had paid out large sums in taxes rather then deed the reserve to the government for fear local or provincial admin- istrations might despoil his gift. Now the greet trees are being cut down end within e few years the Bamiurn dream will be e wast,‘ of stumps and brush except, perhaps, for e tract of 2m acres comprising the most beautiful pert of the for- est with trout streams and magni- flcent falls in it. This Wis deeded to an old friend. Chandler flovey, oi’ Boston, who may retain (t. It is believed here that tracts in Nova. Scotie may also pass to pri- vate hsnds {or marketing. Mr. Bamjum, 74 years old when he died. was born in Montreal, e descendant of an old Norfolk, 1mg. lend family. ' As e young men h, boughlwlllie tmcts of timber in Nova flcotln and Maine, intimately disposing of them except for 800,000 cores in Nova Sootia and some holdings in Maine. Pulp and paper companies purchased several million acres from him during and shortly utter the WIP- Kc emeeesd n fortune esti- mated st various times es high as 880000.000. From I920 on Mr. Bernium de- voted his cnerglcs to n reforesta- tion campaign. He had s mailing M11000 W. sending out pamphlets on forest conservation every week to all parts oi’ tho world. Mlle visited Chine and he was so tened by the berrennese there that be resolved to crest, e perpetual reserve in British Colum- ble safe from wind storms and bed n" 111N708. Yet accessible to the public. Ollflflllhtlm with two old friends, R. W. Hibbereon end W. B. Ryan, timber cruisers, led him to the Cow-- iohein river. _. First he bought the dill-acre tract Quiet Session‘ 0n Montreal Transactions totalled 8,802,877 in: d 11h I 0o (‘lerlcy .. Coniegus - (Iqninruui .. .. 220 Domc Mince . . 4i Dom Ex-pl . 5% Eidorndn .. 144 Bamjum Forest Reserve on the [q m er . ... .. Total seize 604.000. UNLISTED, list of 8,000 which he personally so. “on Cen lilen 0 Church H 4 o Co 2am Del Ol i8 Hud- Bey 19s’ Lcka Me m; Mendy g Nordon 1g ll Bel s 5 (leleko 5 Perk Hi1 19 Pond 0n 1g Porc Cro , 4 Preston 1 Robb Mont .. 5 End Mine! .. 8 Tamleke ,.. 1 ___..-__.._._.._ Coffee And Ivory From East Africa A considerable quantity of Can- ada's coffee comes from Kenya. end Uflldl. ill Belt Africl. Other pro- ducts o.’ these Iknpire countries which Censde purchases are sisal "bm- i111‘. "l. helm. chillies and W017. to the Indiana-lei Demrtment of the Oenedien Nb- ei neilwlyl- 1h turn Kenya end Columbia firmed frectionelly. Late selling forced Consolidated Bmelters cfl three points end In- ternstionnl Nickel down e email fraction after it reached I. new peek of 88 l-fl, I-lollinger gained e few cents. In the steel division Hamilton Bridge preferred marked its first appearance in more than a. week with s. two-point gain while others held unchanged. Total sales were 48,186 shares; bonds 017.150. Ottawa Reckons Earth’s Shocks In Daily Round (By Guy E. Rhonda.‘ Censdlen Press Staff Writa) UITAWA, Nov. 20—Two men in a basement office of the Dominion Obserietory here tend five mech- incs that are watchdogs of the earth's trembling. They record en everege cf one earthquake e day. from vague. fer-off Jitters to smashing L ks thst wreckcitiee, cause tidal waves, cred: mountain sides and kill people. Dr. mic-st A. Hodgson, chief seismologist at the observatory, has been an earthquake men for 20 years. but he has felt only two ‘quakes himself, one in the spring of 1925 and cine last Nov, 1. W. W. Dcxsce, his essistentyhes been et the observatory l0 years. Since 1925 when s slip in the earth's structure nee: Murray Bey, Que, damaged buildings in east- ern Canada and sent the populace of s large eree into panic, seis- rnogrc here have registered three quekee that were felt locally. The first was the Nov. l8, 1828, Newfoundland ‘quake that wee followed by e tidel wave that took about two score lives. Ottewe ree- idents felt that. The next occurred lest July l7. It was felt in some sections of the capital end apparently was local to the city. It was barely record- ed. The Nov. 1 shocks were felt over the eastern half of North America and here for about two minutes, although reports of their duration varied from 10 seconds to 14 minutes. v The obeervetoryk eeismogrephs record earthquakes from ell parts of the world. They ere construct- ed especially to register distant shocks. Sometimes they record ter- rific shccks from fer-off regions, indicating extensive ‘amage which is never reported because the dis- tricts arc uninhabited. Susi} e ‘quake was recorded Nov. 20, 888. It occurred in Baffin Bey. the Canadian Arctic. . l The seismogrlbhs ere set up on concrete bases in e veult 80 feet underground where ‘they ere pm- teoted from surface disturbances except nearby blestmg which hes been known to Jar them. ‘they meke their records on photograph- ic sheets by reflecting tiny beams cf light from small mirrors. Observatory officials make no able in forecast ‘quakes. although they say it is e safe assumption e 'quske will be followed by milder liter-shocks. However, they and other eeismclo- glsts know where faults. or week- neesee, exist in the earth's crust. ‘Quakes are rnoet likely to occur DOMINION 0P‘ CANADA IPru nee of PRINCE IJIHVAIIII ISLANII l_n ibe Surrogate Curt, llib George In re Isiah el John Ielisnn. Into of Cnllforriln in the Unit Melee ef America, formerly 0| West Royalty in Queens County n lbs loll Province, deceased intestate. a the Honourable l. ROI!) IALIII, IIHOIIOQ cf Prlbfle, 84., I0. To the lbnm If the Conn ID Ill! l Plume 1a.: Todag (TKNU/NE nauseous, tfXT/RA FANCY along these faults. Seemingly unconnected occur. M11088 may b0 lllllllQdllie cguggs c! earthquakes The bums result‘ when e pert of the earth's crust breaks or slips under- stresses- which may have been blllldlllg for thousands of years. A change 1n atmospheric pressure, reverber. etions of s. thunderstorm or shocks from e distant earthquake may prove the etrews that break tho earth's beck. Xmas Cards PRINTED TO ORDER Your nuns printed on roar I‘ ‘ ‘ rmilnr mun: the utmost in sincere wishes. The Guardian Central Job ‘Printery _ Charlottetown | .— PRESSED HAY PRESSED STRAW FEED 8: SEED OATS FEED & SEED WHEAT HARLEY, BUCKWHEAT For which we ere paying hlllialt prices In cub or in house QUEEN 8T. Garter & 0o. umrsu _ i’ Professional Bards McLEOD 6r BENTLEY W. l. BINTLIY, K. C. l. A. BENTLEY, l. C. lerrlltere end Attorneys-et-l-II MONEY ‘IlO LOAN Ollee: 180 Itlcbmondbtreei. . _- J.A. ilactclniild, 8.0. Uhnde teke Oenede tm’ u... " more end rmtormgere mo... 533.‘: .'.bsl:'..iu"oo..-o" sentient. eoucrrca. he. mil wcfllvries. motor time end “I Tl ‘Ills; Building tuhfll. egrlcautinsl machinery, u- ,, m, ,, 3,‘: "m" ,‘,'",,,,",',F',"1: Qelletieiawn. r. e Island. "mlllllm ebeatl. meuu- o»... 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