_ths cruiser question. Allegedly vin- biAXiMS p a p MERCHANT 1'50 kind or beauty procured L l druulst is more than akin deep; its origin is in the depths oi a valn aoal. olths \/ (l aroma Wounded llfl. t.:':.".'.".:...:..'...£... ... a... En gland iMakes Known Its I7irst (Public Move With Regard Reductions In Naval Armaments-First L_ord Of Adiriiralty Makes Important Announcements. (Special to The Guardian) SHEFFIELD, England, Jan. 1i.- Greiit Britain tonight through its First Lord of‘ Admiralty made its first public move in precise figures toward ,, uction in naval arma- ments. Rt. Hon. A. V. Alexander, the First Lord, speaking in his own constituency, announced that ithe Empire at the coming five power conference intended to propose rg. ducing her requirements in cruiser strength from '10 to 50. The Pact of Paris was said by him to have so al- tered the situation that the Admir- alty felt warranted in setting its ir- reducible minimum of cruisers at.50 instead of 70, considered necessary atlthe time oi the Washington con- ference. This was the first time that the British people at large had been authoritativelyiniormed of the es- act position of their government on spired statements following the lines of the speech by MreAIeXander mu been circulated however, in Britain during the last few months. These reports were that the total of 50 would be made up of 15 eight-inch. gun vessels oi 10,000 tons and 85 ves- sels of__a smaller type to carry six inch-guns. Mr. Alexander emphasis- ed the fact that these figures would be operative pending a further naval conference in 1030, which he hoped would confirm and extend the pres- ent agreement. The First 14rd of the Admiralty made another important announce- ment in reference to capitarships. He declared that his Government. would like to ice “if replacements an to take price as they must," a capital 9111b which would be less expensive, both to build and to maintain thin the ship which is involved in the maximum tonnage rule laid down in the Washington treaty." Mr, Al“. ander has sat in parliament for the iiillsborcugh district oi Sheffield since 1022. For many years he we; a Baptist lay preacher and he has act- ed as secretary of the parliamentary committee of the oo-operative con- gress. Mr. Alexander also expressed the British hope ior reduction in destroyers and ultimate abolition of the submarine. The first he said was predicated on partial ‘Qcqmpugh. meat 0i the second and the latter upon winnins the consent of other powers. .5 . ( iojiilfie Guardian) cbuvanllarqrssu, Ilr-A n", "Ill rllod all _ ht reduced the Cleveland Grain and Milling Co. elevator to a mass of ruins today with loss estimated at 81,000,000. ANNOUNCEMENTQ comma avams. MEETINGS. arc “Loading Hogs at Millvlsw, Tues- day, January 14th. Signed, bdillview Uveswck Shipping, Club. 1000-1-18-11. "Hockey at Milton Rink tonight. Sherwood Tigers vs Milton Homers. One hour's skate alter match. 1000 "Buying Hogs, 51100;: and Lambs st Kensington every Thursday forc- iloon. Alden Mouse. 9342-lU-I1-M011tlldtl- ‘ "Annual Meeting oi Emerald Dairying Association. Wednesday. 15th January at'1 o'clock p. m. in Emerald Ball. r. r‘. Hughes, 5w- retary. 1010-1-10-13. "Annual meting of the Belfast Egg Circle will 5e, held in the Belfast l-lsll. Eldon, wedriesday, Jan. 15th. after meetink of the Federal Dairy- ing Co. W._ B. Maclnnls, Sedy. 1' 1056-1-13-11 "Annual meeting oi Ulgg and Grandview slilvains club wiii be held in visa Jan. 10th at 1.00. n stormy on our. , ‘Mbziflol, Bwy. . " iocs-i-is-ai "The oi mull-fern District Scarlet obapm, will l» held in McPbee Lodge Room, Jan 14th 1H i». in.“ .1‘ lg r . - fill-ll. ~ k v . "The L. O. L. meets in Thistle Lodge Room, Eldon, at ‘l P- W. Diffluflday. January 14th. g 1087-1-11-81. "Emerald 0i taking h Wed- wdly. Iii‘: ‘b18011, List atoncai). Jaserstuy, 10824-1141. I Prominent Man Passes Away (Spsclal to The Glllilari) TORONTO, out. Jan. IL-Prcsi- dent Edgar John ‘lorry, President of the 5t. John, N. 13., Exhibition and director in the James Robertson Complny. plumbing supply firm of Montreal, died suddenly while talk- ing over the telephone in his room at the Royal York Hotel yesterday afternoon. A native of 0skville,.he was for many years manager of the Robertson Company's banch in at. John, where ho was prominent in Masonic and club circles. Ha was 84 years old. Have Asked "For Po lice Protection (Special to the Guardian) ’ BUMMERBIDE, Jan. "ll-In eon- scqueiice of the disturbance which took place.on last Friday night's hockey special whilst in the station at Charlottetown asit was about to leave on return to Summsrsidl. the Crystal Hockey Club have asked the Department at Moncton whether they will furnish fishes protection for any future special that may be engaged by tho-Club. If the railway authorities cannot guarantee this protection the Crystals will hone!- forth travel by the ordinary trains. They are desirous of having spacial trains iorths league matched. but they want them decent. i i i ‘ sent try-vacuum 33-.‘ C. Approves Increase I In Butter Tariff (Special to The Guardian) KINGSTON, Jan. Iii-Eastern Ontario Dalrylneu‘: Association ‘Pllfoved the action of the Na- tional Dairy Council In pressing for an increase in the preference lsrlff on butter from Adair-dug and New Zealassd by one cent. making it four cent; Au 1| l_l_|MATlIM (Ulloclal to The Guardian) LONDON, Jan. lip-Lard Beaver- brook has delivered an ultimatum. He is 80in! to oppose every parlia- mentary candidate ir. spective of party “who does not adopt and fur. m" "I policy of milk‘: free trade." Whatierinthisoppositionirtutsu Whether merely a newspaper “m. alien or the financing of nupire free trade candidates is not yet clear. The latter task would be a tremend- Olls one, but Lord Beaverbrookb en. thuslssm in the matter is so great, there is no toiling what he might do. Charge Against Partner In Brokerage Finn (Canadian Press) EDMONTON, and, Jan. ii-R warrant has been issued by the Al- berta Provincial Police at the in- stance oi~the Alberta Attorney Gen». era's’ department ens-rein: 1. w. o." Soiloway. partner in the brokerage house of, bcliowsy Mills Limited. with conducting ,1 wqpnlrwya or. common law. 101i‘. it y», _ m‘. or W. C. Bryan, head of Adaerie. police force, left last nisht for Van- couver. - - Harvey Mills, Mk. Soliowayis part- ' iier, who ls in Toronto, faces a si.mi- ' lsr charge. The chlrlfl ldlinst both spiracy at common law in connec- tion with the operation of their brokerage busineu in Alberta. VANCOUVER. B. 0;. Jan. 11- Issac w. c. Gollowayyhead oi the‘ Canadian brokerage firm of Solic- way Mills was under detention by the provincial police hero today, a- waiting the arrival of s. formal war- rant for his arrest which was stated to be on its way from Alberta. The charge is that of conspiracy in con- nection with stock exchange trans- ant-ions. I MR. SOLLOWATS STATEMENT. m reference to the above telegram (he fol ’__ statement has been received by Mr. A. A. Pomsrfly. Pro- vincial manager of Bollovway Mills a Co. 1.01., from w. r. w. o. Bol- lowly:- "Tho Alberta Government for some timshas been making an invsaiiga- _ tion of the _ businesses in, the Province of Alberta. We threw our books wide open ior their ism-f tighter; and assisted them in every JlI. 10th. epop es’ partners is that of conducting a oon- I cloud m“ uwmoon, was 501d to l (Nltionai (flty Compflfly. I-inllted, o1 wished. unds, an advance of 1.8371 over the '/ v/iflfer" <§>" .. w’ Covers PrinceiEdward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETUWN. CANADA. MONDAY, JANUARY 13. 1930 RETURNS FRW $500,000 Fire ass-a n-si: II r May Co To 17w Senate The photograph hero shows Mrs. W. C- Kennedy, widow of the Isle minute;- of railways,_‘llon. W. C. Kennedy, who, according to recent Ottawa reports, may be aplfllllh-‘fl l" u" 5'1"“- ‘$3, 358,000 New Branszoick (Per Cent. Bond Issue 501d Tesyaaliciiieui-ssrsarauaid FREDERIUIDN, N. 3., Jan. 12- much as $2,158,000 of the new lssuc 'I_'lie Province of New Brunswick! is to refund an Lssue of 5 1-2 per issue oi $3,358,000 of 00 years five cent. that matured on December l5. per cent. bonds, for which tenders lust and which had been sold in 1010 at 96.12 there will be an annual sav- Harrls, ing in interest to the province 0i and ‘$20,000, or e. total of $800,000 before the new issue r-aachu maturity. Nineteen of the lewins financial companies of Canada and “is Unit- ed Stats were represented in the dicato composed oi Forbes a Company’ Limited. at 08.9371 Fredericton wick issue sold in September last. tenders before lion. A. J. Leger, The basis of the successful bld ProvinolaYSecretary-Treasurer, who means that the loan will cost the was present to open the bids person- PTQYUIQQ 5.0-1 per cent. and lnas-lally at tine Ireasury Department- prioe at which a similar New Btlilllfi PopuliarizingAir iTraivel In, The United. States if not recommended by Col. Charles Lindbergh, chairman of thstechnical committee oi the air system. He is at present on an air survey of the system and subsidiaries Tho cut followed on the heels of reductions in the Southern and Pacific coast States, part oi what is viewed as a determined attempt by air lines to popularize air travel in the United (Special to The Guardian) NEW YORK, N. Y. Jan. iL-A new move to place air passenger travel on a popular basis in the United States was made today when tho ‘Transcontinental Air Transport- Maddux Air Lines announced‘ the most drastic cut in air travel rates in the history of transcontinental flying. The new rate to the Pacific w“. PM,“ u, “w, my (ngmm. Coast from New York ls $159.92, 1a‘: 5m"- Wli-‘P lotion recently by tion they wanted as we have always m: "m l?!" 1:111 ltzgrtpullllilil" tlgsvzd° xonhz xxhififz: u: u“ t I l; “u; PI 8. Mid Ill. I 0f V! brushes wszogondfiretid ‘honestly i): cents a mils will be effective for "mrzdha "fesrdcomPl¢X-"!;’h‘°7‘mm°7 u“; w. h“; 119mm‘ qua-y” m trips. The rate 0i’ i110 Pacific Coast "'9 '5 "F" "Fwd e “t! m‘ 'wn°"_|_ 30mm, m, My,“ Gay- izzedsznis a roudluctiai; of $107.51. The ‘mm PIBMhU-‘r towel- srnnrerir. has taken the rsaponsibll- all" F‘ W" IPPIWQfl-r ity of, ‘ti-lug a charge to be ~ Mdifiimr; It “I: A l M _ terest of people the world over in this H" "W" I ng- work. Mr. w. w. smith read the Wmt- KWWQ- 1t ‘WWI W 111° nnua eat‘ minum of the last eating, and w. i‘ u m‘? "9 "Vi"? i‘, ‘uh " i") , ° Willard Philips gave the ‘hassuror’: "l! "W m" @9911 5011017“ Sutnrnerstde report which showed that the sum Mills BMW we m the 1mm ~ . i oi 0411.00 bad been collected in the brokerage arm in Canada. Parson- BIbIC SOCIGty pm, "u; u.” i; m; 1mm amount 51W 3 WWW l!!! 0110810 0t lavas- _ ever raised in the some. After "Cl-Wm "h"! V") "ll" 10. IN N- -—- aomiadiseusslon concerning the wci-k. 7°"! 1°!‘ “'9 and some remarks highly cenuaend- l "m “p” °' m“ MW" l" a" Maul in 0mm y n» annual business meeting of ing m. work of n. collectors we 8*" °l "WW1" will continua m. as visual the ma: swumsunmmiso uu- officers. the following officers were ti" mum! b"! five yam- inw the ind are at all, tlmll moans w crictwubolsqn the Baptist Church elected ior-the coming rearz- "'- lllfit W!‘ ~ carhidsponniag‘ at the close of Pres-C. B. Jolly- _(ls¢) J-W-O-lvllam!’ drowns Hayorsorvisallsa VloaProa-allflloks. v . T- D Itatlsay. ocsu- secretary-w. W. Smith- lfl take placed Ii tbs @014 Tffilfllnra-willllfl Philip. ' Qdumniersldmvnihurlllwi, ‘rbamaatingclcndwithprayerbyhlmflfldillflwollldbtfwfllltdw Read by Everybody f. M9301 to INBBME TAXES (Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Jan. 12-'l‘he retin-ns from income taxes iorihc first nine months of the present fiscal yearI were almost tan million more than’ for the some period in 1028, accord- ing to figures made piblic by the Department of National Revenue. The periods covered are from April to December inclusive for the two years and the total for the 1920 per- iod wI-B W0,463,232.80 lnd for the 1828 period $56,600,260.42: The Mon- treal district i-ad (he list in collec- tions, showing an increase oi 83,-‘ 407,852.83 ior the 1m period. n»! ronto district had an increase oil $2,414,898.20 and London district had an inotol-Ee of $1,224,581.30. ! l I Are Excavated At . Ur Of Chaldees PHILADELPHIA, Jan. lL-Excav- sting to levels which. it is believed. date back to the early part of the fourth millennium before Christ, archaeologists in the Joint expedition of the Pennsylvania Museum and the ‘British Museum at Ur oi the Chal- dcos have uncovered ruins of ” almost as old as the pro-flood city. The houses described in the report of C. Leonard Woolley, director of the expedition, as the “in-ailments of an era new to Mesopotamian archaeology, “had walls built oi small mud bricks laid herring-bone fash- ion and within their ruins were found clay vases‘ of types foreign at -Ur sad to the rubbish heaps . which those graves were found. "W9 Propose this season to find ‘out something more, about that city _cf Ur which existed before the flood, and for the last three weeks we have been working on a site‘ chosen as i likely to give the best and the quick- est results in that connection," Mr. Woolley said. “The site is pecutisr. 0n the cem- . etery area the first remains that come to light are those of the Tem- anos wall built by Nebuc‘ ‘ in about 000 B. 6.; in most places where we have excavated, the upper levels are as late or almost g3 1st; as the sixth century. "In 1925-26, however, when our |work brought us to the lower slopes of a hollow worn by wind and rain ‘at the southeast end of the Tem- choc and we found there, flush with the surface, walls built not with bricks, but with shapeless lumps of crude clay, I felt Justified in de- scribing these as terraces of a-pre- historic age. We are digging in (m; hollow now and the conclusion ar- "Wd at (our years B20 has been amply proved. "Cut down into and through the walls and floors of the highest stratum we found numerous drains. ‘These are made of short sections of clay P191118 about a half a yard in diameter and set one upon anothgr- i-n a circular shaft. "31’ the type of the vessels rep- resented we can fix the date of the drainls construction. We know by ex- perience that such drains are never les than fifteen feet and may be as much as forty fset in length. “Hero in many cases there re- llillMd lust below the modern sur- face only the three or four bottom rings of s. drain which we could date to the first dynasty of Ur (1300 B. C.) This means that the floor level of that period must have been at least fifteen feet above our heads, and that the walls we were laying bare .must be older than that period byl u... toraiss Moot Ancient lllllia Y“. "_At a normal rate twoor three hsnsawbobaystoomaaysslras willaoasolliba obliged lolalllals absoluionooeaaitloa. MAXIMS » l or a , > . *1 MERCHANT j; q, .._._. g; A: St. . Anon labors-loosens fldlolnl _ II Illl (hill! all U. I. l. ...'._.-.‘..:.:_. ..-.-.....:. .,_,. Stephen l i .... Thirteen Stores And Three Ten-IL ements Razed By The Con-ii flagration. (Canadian Press) CALAIS, Me, Jan. ll-The bus- iness section of St. Slephen, N. B, across the St. Croix River from this city was sir-apt by fire today with losses estimated at more than $500,000. Seven buildings in the retail dry- .goo:ls district on Water Sh, extend- ing along the st. Croix River, '15 yards from the International Brlh were burned or seriously dunagoi before the nre was brought undo control this afternoon. -'I‘hey con tsined l3 stores and three tenement- Tho principal loses were sirstainoi in the ladies‘ garment store of Ver- non Grimmer and the men's cloth- ing store oi Oak Hall. (Canadian Press) WASHINGTON, January il-The lccument given to a Senate com- mittee by William B. Shearer, naval propagandist and described by him as a secret British memorandum, was indicated today before the commit- tee by Dr. William J- Malcney, oi New York as a skit on British pro- paganda, written by himself. Shear- er gave the committee a copy o! the document during previous testimony before it, while an inquiry into his activities in behalf of a big navy at the unsuccessful 1921 limitations conference at Geneva was being mode. Chairman Bhortrldge handed the many paged photo statistic print of the so called secret British docu- ment to Dr. Maloney. "It seems to be identical," replied Dr. Mslcrrey. .'.{S€S-13Q!Yl.°¢!Y.-QPFPI "l" i?" PF?!‘- "with a pamphlet r wrote 1n 1m of skit on British propaganda in this country." Dr. Malouey explained that lie wrote tlic "satire" to offset the old-t liusi A smut cunl“|lAcl (Canadian Press) LONDON, 1118., Jan. ll-Th Sunday News said today that l lasj shipbuilding oontrset ior a new Ci nsdian Government line passongl and cargo steamer may shortly b placed in Liverpool. The nswspapa slated contracts had already beq invited for construction oi a. fled of ships to rim between Canada. Cape ‘Iiown and India. Entire Family Burned To Deatli (Canadian Press), FINDLAY, Ohio, Jan. 12-5: pusenainciirding dva-,ianmiica_» ~ the same fan-lily, were burner! it death early today, ‘when lire dos troyed the home of Wilson Lem, 1i miles east of hero. The dead: Wilsol propaganda work in this country in 1819 of Lord Nortlicllfle of the Brit- ish press. The article was published and widely distributed to newspapers, afaloney said, and served as an “an- ticllmax" i0 Lord Northclifieb report. He said 500,000 copies oi the article were distributed. Shearer. who in turning over tho document to the committee, dramatically described it as "the amazing secret Brtilsh docu- merit," sat, in the committee room today. Dr. Maloney said he came to New York after he was dlschafked from the British army for wounds receiv- ed in the Great War. "The British document" was addressed to Right Hon. David Lloyd 600186. then Pr!“ mier of Great Britain and was dated from the British Consuls office in New York my. 1t purported 1° 811W the operations of a vast British sill‘ system in the United States with s 0n the most moderate estimate then. ho had only to turn a few spades full of earth to encounter, here in the middle of the city, some of thfl yct seen at Ur. "But this was only a. beginning. We had now dug down some fifteen feet over the whole area and already have the ground-plans of five totally distinct buildings super-imposed lone upon another. Each of these bulld- lngs enjoyed a reasonably long life. iudging by the repairs to the walls and by the way in which floors have been relaid and the levels we now have reached must take us back into the early part of the fourth millenn- lum before Christ. "It is not the pro-flood city; that lies deeper. But it is the work of a‘ civilisation almost as old, and those walls, built of small mud bricks laid herring-bone fashion, are the monu- ments of an area new to Masopota-| mian archaeology. | "On the cemetery site, where we have not worked down to the levels pected, our most interesting results published in m0. the earl! date f view to “the re-conquest of America." _ most ancient ruins which we have~ at which the best graves may be a»; Long, 46, his mother Nancy Long, ‘ll his sister Laura, 52, a daughter Hel- en, 17, a son Leroy, 4. and a friend Noona Wing. The Weather, eta Evan lr ‘fwo can Liv; AS CHEAPLY As ONE‘. B01‘ who WANTS 4o LNE ‘(HAT CHEAP Fresh southerly winds. mild wit! occasional rain and probably fog. . Toronto, snow lib-N» Quebec, clear 10- boloI Charlottetown, fair 14-18 below Hslliax, clear ... ... 38-01 St. John, clear ... ... ... 16-01 Boston. cloudy ... ... .. 80-14 New York, fair. 48-11 l-llgh tide this morning at 10.03 an! tonight at 8.56. . Sun rises this morning at 1.38 an sets this afternoon at 4.42. Full moon ‘mcsday, January 14th at 5.57 p. m. Bummerslde tide eighteen minute! later than Charlottetown. Ur, and definite proof of an is nbi easily forthcoming. Now, uaexpect» edly we have it. ' ' “All the Rives were dill dowii the gust rubbish mounds which ha! grown lip Ollhlda (-110 walls oft-lad again have been chronological. lomef prehistoric city. Where we are work- scientists have been reluctant to ae-' lng the stratification oi the rabbit: oept, before the evidence could be is extraordinarily well dsfinsdzaud enscanu-sestbamoimdsgiowdiin , -,-“-,wmsié-- ...> . ‘ -.- ~. {up-woman