i . ‘iti3ERr21.31928-. l i M THE CHARLOTT w. :17» . t ,_Ev=_§§ Puff!‘ is 3;", l" the memins Cont. LBrace‘ ad- dressed thesenior classes or prince o! Wales College on the present p0- iitical situatio in China, and at 15°’ °l°9k "ii e evening he told the ‘ 61rd or Dir torso! the Y. M.~_C. .‘ -‘-- “Who treat Jerusalem Council oi’ Ch iiitian leaders young and old _. ,9? ell saris of the world. a ‘ ant. ‘Brace leaves today“;- Tm- im- Where he will speak at the Nor- - "$1.3 ‘ _‘ this afternoon. " lecture with the i3»; m Bépdlltiflll 161.1115 at‘ “vial siest- . . at; n.- * >rFllmged 1n Color . In Fox Drama ‘a most n" tented m which Cap , ‘ th this ‘sub l" has resliieb for one t tyihei in china... where for most qbr e t v he has worked in Cheng min this wpgolty of Y. M. C. A. Secretary "Qgmilgngé said here that Cheng m . p; is a city of some 500,000 people, located on the Minsw“ trlblllbby 0f the Yang-Tee rlver—~It is about 100 mflgg from the Yang-Tee, and the tributary empties into this river W022“ "n“.i°l.’i8é§.éi“ 5832i”... Cliirrlia Unnifiersity, which is control- some of the leading Protest- git hgenomlnations. ‘, 1t offers‘ full University courses in Arts. ,5, “ '0 Medicine and Dentistry, of , very many Chinese stude 4 advantage. There are also v to it the theologicalyxcsoliegefiay be g-jqgflt‘. firacc, in addiv; . “$254K. work, lectur- nl, Qreitvgln . special =11”- "Nonc but The Brave" Proves De- lixbtfui Entertainment, ~ With Wealth of Scenic‘ Charm. QBYFYiHZ a wealth of scenic charm and feminine pulchritude, “None Bllt thebravei’. Fox Films produc- tion with Charles Morton and Sally Phipps. openedvat the Capitol ‘rhe- atre yesterday. , It is evident that Hollywood onust have beer! closely searched to produce such s/wealth of-femlnine bfillllli! as seen in the production. e channel's participate in a contest that was aimed’ in Techni- color. ' The picture is a realistic descrip- tion of a college hero who ls thrown into the maelstrom of the business world with nothing to offer but an armfill of ‘trophies, won in ath- letic contests. . He soon realizes that his record said here tion to his ed at the U is. , , _ _- . ' .‘ . ' jueflpt. Braceviecturerleait, in the main with the acbnerycnobuiyiteied by the trav einin a voyage upfihe Yang-tee, wltit-tiie-speelr- of winning the hundred yard dash ers travels . ‘Tibflt- H! dewllmd l" is no earthly use to him. as a. meal alrwstin__ inowavthvilvee and ticket. and he takes o. Job as an the customs of the peoples ‘inhsblt- insurance broken. in: these lands. And it may be well l Filled with bitterness‘, he encollxi- to state here that Cfllliiliil Blllfiihters nothing but. defeat and at inst, has a very high resflrd indeed "Jribecomee a lilc guard at o. fashion- -the Chinese llfiilille- b5 919° ml‘ "lihable beach. However, a. tiny mite Tibetans. It is his opinion that, i119; t’ and asunsp1$m1nded 8mm one meets, them in their eillirlm’ e5 in] ' sufficient enthusiasm "into man Wotan, with n0 Mlillllllllm" °5,the youth to make him realize his superiority; or "side," they will treat “mm” and w ibuckla gown in him withx but the greatest earnest andlpiay the courtesy l1 , filil-mll- I‘ is ’I‘he love st ~- is supplied by only those who‘. iilld "'- W" .these people svlioilméet ‘with ill treatment attheir hands. lie also paid a trlbubeflfmtbe Sin-r cerity of ‘General Feng Yu ‘Iisian ,; who is a sincere Christian. and who v is not. moreover. as has be?" will‘ ' '~ i , . _ uated by some, in the pay of the cate, but Holloways Corn Remover Russian Government, but is a Chi-i will drawthem out painlessly. . I _ x , , , I nose patriot. v e e e e e er‘ too-cool cast: are Farrell Meod-onald, Iiynrband ‘Tyler Brooke. {Oa\-- _-_“ v 50‘ v¢v1¢ It Classified Advertisements ‘£11’: ill’: I: i: 11.5.: v w.tt.x v v v_v..v . One insertion .....'.,... Three ‘insertions ..... .....-----.-...i.u- ' tour Insertions I“ y" "l," ‘l’ 5 ""'“ ‘in. “gouging 1.. . .. . 1e p" "III ill 5 W0?" _‘ . a c" e _ w "h ~. v -~ee~ u. Articles For Sale FOIt SALE PLAYER PIANO WITH 100 music rolls. Apply "W" Guar- ‘AGENTS WANTED“ ' IAN OR WOMAN TO TRAVEL and appoint local representatives- i -_. >- ‘ Position‘ permasogt‘; yaelrly ‘ dill" om“ gmadbzmm antee 1092 e . _ . .W ' '-" average) and expens _;.‘ iliiwil T0 Let ma. rivals? " ‘ i co.. ‘Dower n - = '- .__.____._._---- 5-" W-billi" TOdHlENT-I-‘URNISIIED norm, n ‘ BL. i Beam‘ iiireasomti. oaaarmd canoe- m “m” “we” ‘m . . her 8th. Phone 931 for inspec- ‘Asenis ,.wmted._w..ieke- elder!‘ ml‘ _ 9184-11-20-21 . .11“? J ymahoyfi Hnl tifln . y, the fifit , i Veil" -" . . ‘M? 0019mm’. ‘m tar-z ROOMS suirviatn i Wiallulwlllrelb-“luo swam" T°"| for dress making. Ap ly 5"?!‘- fll onto. A._W. Nov. 21., dun 0mm 91 3.11-3941 if.‘ lcomoaraaa: ruawrsnaxn ‘ ‘ _ house in good locality to let for ‘ lwlitcr months. Apply in wriiins to Guardan Office.‘ 90804-2 Lost" _ LOST-BEACH: numirio rur. ~" ten ’ uardian. "»‘3“-“’~“..““‘ w!“ ppmll-Bl-kl Miscellaneous . -‘ volt sri-avica-A‘ wit: anal) é] York Boar. Boswell Jenkins 8r - Hons, mt. Albion. QilOB-M-ll-Zl-Zi. , . . 11101-1 cunning: r4 nouns ‘all ,, Hligheefipeciajltreatrllehhfl hes 9'9‘. . .'. 5'7‘. 4 . _ ' igflgf-‘lf We none-lit ______.__€__g______ ,. , . edger. ‘ - . ,' TWO“ BILLS- ‘ " ‘ ~- ‘r°m""“"‘ wigigderlhiefvgtinu ‘office. ‘ ,-" . . , ‘ . Galas ' AND . family’- a r - BETWEEN‘ vicroa =,. . _' .. . ' ‘ Bordirfjiiiiifldlyufiilv- Il- lllb“ tire chains. Finder please news .- -_ , ,.-. ‘ xeith Boswell. Vleiel:l-u_u_‘zo_m lyvf-dvlsl-rann issvwNgl-g- ‘ “ . n mum,“ _ _ r. s ‘ a .-t_|3e-il_-i'I-i,mo. = F0!’ 53h ‘ - A . ' i a IICISTRI. yuan- ~ Help‘ Wellled ‘$2. 3&1"? .m-;i<alm ‘mwsrmtb. - Amyatbo! " - I ‘ ‘ ‘ ' 00d. ‘ ' ' lfim-ll-ilbgfli Fol!‘ ado: g2]- . ' ,, ‘ ‘ . . . ‘. h, M! _ n u: 0x0: ‘liisrlialkuo- °" "y?" * ii "l???"- . 1°“ 31-10%? ,c....-...z garden I c911. Thursda i Cirelghan. Dolron- Llwky . warned- dainty Sail . hippo. Others in. thirDoucettefrhe r pelwngswere 1011-3} . ‘ Levin t ccrns are difficult to eradi- be buying argument. 1 wear-At xnnisiailfi barrier c ’ _ cert. Thursday’ popular a; WRIST IN Hall tonight. BAPTIST ST. J 098131.13 Sodallty 9225 U! lrfvopular con- nieht. . m4 route lfcouar At the police “W” Yesterday morning one drunk Wile , fined“ $20.00 or. five days; a Similar offence 45,00 or five days and a third $10.00 or twenty‘ days. A young man charged with the theft of a gurawos given thirty ‘days in iaii. An autoist charged with being drunk in charge _of a car was fined $30.00 and costs and the defendant in a prohibition case fined $200.00 or three months. CHOIR CONCERT .~ in Baptist schoolroom, tomorrow night ' 922 CHOIR CONCIEIVI‘ in Baptist schoolroom tomorrow night.’ ~ - “ e224 MR. ALBERT All-ANS of the Levin Fur Cob-Ltd" ‘Iiorontn, will be buying furs at B. R, Holman-rs ofliee. 145 Great Georze Street. Charlottetown. Highest price will be paid, for all kinds of raw fius. 9226 STUDY GROUP MBETINGw-On November 17th Inspector MacPhail and twelve of his teachers met in ‘Prince of Wales College for a study period. Mlz-MacI-lhail gave, an out- roa ‘\ ‘ CXM ' PHOTOGBAP S" m“ "’ CRASWELL Flume 692-1. ‘n..- Appolntml TIE MARKET was poorly attend- ed yesterday with very little pffer- ingancl only slight change in, prices. Butter sold at 44c t0 45c; eggs, 500i chickens, 31.0040 $1.25; ducks. {L- 50 w $1.15: apples. 10c toiiliadozen: ‘Hay, 65c; straw, 40c; oats 52c t4: 559; turnips, iilc i, wmte potatoes, 20c; i0 22c; blue POW. “$501 i . ..i PERS ONALS Miss J. McVlttle spent the week. end“ visiting ‘friends at York. Miss Florence‘ Woolrldge. who‘ 4 spent .,the_ pastsummen with her par-chit dtlqovelieadjleaves shortly on re , "_. < ‘rn to Boston. Mr. Richard Woolrldge, Covehead. spent yesterday .ln the city. 1/ Mrs. Simon Power, Pleasant’ Grove. spent yesterday in the city. v ' -—-dv‘--l-i"v"il‘ '. Mr. Benianlin Rogers has returned from an extended visit to Western Canada. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Jenkins, Sher- wood, and Mr. Garfield MscKinnon. Guelph,‘ Ont., were guests at the Revere Hotel on Monday. ‘ line of a. lesson on Confederation. There was a question box which contained many practical‘ questions. The topic for the next meeting is a disc ion on thetimrtable. Each tea er is to bring his or her own time table. The next meetirigis to be lciieo lllgfld on Decemben-ilithnt l o'- c . .- Mr. Hussel Jenkins, Salesman of the Singer Sewing Machine Co.» Dewar‘ Jenkins o! Sherwood and Mrs. C. -H. Jenkins and Mr. Garfield MacKinnon of Guelph, out, motor- ed to Vernon, Montague and George- town last week, calling at the Mc- Donald Hotel and other places whereMr. MacKinnon was combin- amovnanit JVHIBT also nanca -‘- m whiétund Dance held in ilie*§>eledemiari~_qiuii>nnli ‘leshevemns. iiiiderjrhe auspices of the Junior‘ Catholic "wfllnClfg 1m, gue was flnmCSt succesafuYal-id very ellllilYil-ble affair. ' About ‘twenty tables at‘ whist was, "loved after which dainty. were “Well Denellls y“ ‘the-tolerated ilggfoifihewrgjslrzainder‘ 3n! the even- - . e- _ prim nnems were mnwm“ . e tied. thefornner. Con- SOIAMOIl-JMXHCS, Miss Ppgught Gentlemeq_ _ .M;-_ mun-Rs- definite...‘ Mr. r-red Sharon PeterMcCfllTbifl, MIS- Pété!‘ McDo . ald. _ ' ‘all! i Ma- Anaa hams ‘of the W.“ Ltd. ‘Ibrchto. will furs at B. R. Holmarrs offloe. 145 Great George Street, Charlottetown... p11“; Wm be paid for all kinds of raw furs. SUSPENDED ma. sixty nAys -Aceo,2l‘ii!l8_ to a Sydney dispatch Wlllek MeKenna. Canadian middle- Weiflht champion will be out of the American ring for rtwo months. The following speaks for itself: Jack Mc- Kenna. local fighter ,who has been showing-up well in w n bouts since he went toith 1‘ tales to join Eddie Meade's ,_stitble about a year ago, arrived back-home‘ this morn- ing, arid will probably remain here for the next two months. McKenna told friends that he has been‘ sus- Boxirig Commission. fight after he injured a hand in his go with Johnny Nemis here several weeks ago. Although MeKenna. had a bonl. flde reason wh he could not fight with‘ his injured hand, the Commission, which is very Yi-fiet. lived right‘ up to. its rules and laid him off for. thje t month . period- fighting in Nova , _ f he wishes. and it is possible tho a bout may be arranged before he_r~etilrns to the States at the end orxhis tied of can be fou nd' togive him ah ammo v wmugyAt Fredericton on NOV- gg, m‘ m. and Mrs. nprntrnweelw- g daughter. 1H.‘ iatyto rranr and . Mrs-five?‘- dailghter. colts: ,0 £1‘, Ilfllfl _ eruiorir, “twin boys- ta. N9"- B. r7. litllrorir. Ans n. r . '_ st. an~ l§gv.gg§tli?‘igWXIW.-and 9°“ _ ‘. . - , , fltll-(itwheailey River-en" ‘n a ‘ ‘My -. wil, - ,. - » l uoiti ' ' . - r . —-~_~--w.-~-v.-<-v~—-"" pended for 60 days by 'the Ohio because he the Dominion organization. failed to show up for a scheduled On Wednesday afternoon. several fliers‘ is nothing t» reverit him. rustication,” orevldins e evil-ebb! alter and Mrs. noel-t “u”; “L i lng‘ business with“ leasure and re- newing old frlendships. I ‘Mrs. W. D. Crosby, of Boston. Mesa. who was attending the fun.- erals ofher father and mother. the late Mr. and Mrs. Donald MacDon- ald leaves this morning on return to her home. She wil be accompani- ed as tar as Moncton by Mrs. Meier D. A. MacDonald. I00 Delegates to § . AftendMeeting HALIFAX. Nov. 20.-0ver one hundred delegates representing practically every Board of Trade in the Maritime Provinces will be in the city on Wednesday to attend the opening sessions of ‘the annual meeting of the Maritime Board of Trade} ' ' Business sessions, at which many matters of importance to the com- mercial and industrial llfeof the Marltlmes willbe considers‘, will be held in the Board of Trade rooms. Hollis Street; The opening meeting will take place at l0 a. m. A. P. Patterson of Saint John. chairman of the Transportation Committee of the Maritime Board. will read a paper on transportation problems on Wednesday morning, this to be followed by a report on the present condition 0t freight rates in this territory by F. C. Cornell, of Montreal, freight ratte expert. W. L. Clarke, Becretary of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, will alsdbe heard in an address onthe workof resolutions, dealing with the var- ious basic industries, will be intro- duced" and ‘discussed, and W. w. Hubbard. of Oromootfl. N. 3., wilrbc heard in an address on agriculture. The executive Board for 1039 will be announced at the close of the ulter- ‘noon session. . A dinner will be tendered to the fvisiting dele atesj on Wednesday ev- ening b‘y‘th Halifax Boarcfof Trade ;at which Holfl M. B. Baxter, Pre- jnler of New Brunswlckjis expected tobe one of the chief speakers. The address of qelcome will begivenjby L‘ . Castonguay. Invited guests lat the dinner ‘party wllipuniber in the vicinity of 1,50. ‘ ' The thankoffering service or the w. ‘M. Bfiwas held in-the church last Sabbath atil a.m. _T_h_e address was given by Mrs. (Rev) M. ‘.1. lune-f ‘Pherson ‘Woodlands; MacPher- son is -a very interesting speaker. and gave an addreflfs that was greatly appreciated‘ by the large prigreganbn present. Her husband. aeviioamncr‘ __ conducted the rlevotionalexercisea. " i. CH . i ‘ sclved ~ out having to summon aid. It is true crown. GUARDIAN "EXPLANA TIDN ‘ tlContlnucd from page l) ' MYSTERY MAY woven m: soavan "Whether the enquiry which Tut- tic (United States Attorney) is now conducting amid . such "theatrical siirroundlngii-of threats and wam. inks. will produce testimony valu- able in explanation of true causes of the disaster, seems very doubt. fui. Unless Chief "Officer Johnson or the captain's steward, Duncan, erepbleiio supply the intimate d3- llils e! Captain Carey's-ideas dur- 1118 the ship's last twenty-four hours. or to explain what prompted his apparent inexplicable indecis on at the moment of the supreme cris- is of his long and honorable career, it is likely the mystery will never be "What caused the vessel to sink lllld Why Carey so long delayed his 8.0.5. are two mairt questions still llllfilsweffld. and even ofllcials ~of Reuters, could not offer any reply beyond surmise and guessing. The suggestion that the wreck was caus- ed by shifting of the cargo was‘ dismissed as preposterous. The car- go was packed so tightly, oflicl ls claimed, ‘that it could not budge - en in a heavy storm, far worse than any the Vestris encountered. "The possibility that the ship left the harbor with one of her coal ports-which are about three feet square-open. is admitted, although this would show certain negligence, as it is the well-known duty of the first ofllccr to report all ports closed before sailing. A’ very heavy sea might easily and probably did drive in_ this port.,thereby taming an inlet through which large quantities of water could enter the ship. But even‘ so, experts do not understand how anything like enough water to sink a. ship as seaworthy and as large as the Vestris could enter in this fashion. even if the ship had been o. week afloat. The second question as to why Carey delayed the‘ 8.05. is ‘equally inexplicable. It can only be sur- mised that, up to the last moment, he underestimated thedamage. and with that independent spirit of masters of ships, hoped to be able to look alter his own trouble "with- he must have had full warning oi the danger, because five or six hours before‘ the 8.0.8, went out the ship had developed a. 32 degree list, and every sailor knows any list over 35 degrees -is highly dangerous. and that after the 40 mark is passed the ship may turn turtle. Finally, to continue our presumption of events, Captain Careywas forced to realize that the ship was sinking under him and "at ten o'clock on that fateful Monday morning, he tele- phoned the wireless room from the sloping deck of his bridge to flash the 8.0.5. ' ‘IThercafter events must have moved rapidly to their melodram- atic sequence, and Carey, whose ax- the bridge watching the terrible scenes below him "whlchhave been so movingly described by eye-wit- nesses, dld his best up to the end. Then like a true seaman he paid his tribute to the tradition of the sea and waving aside a life beltthat his faithful Duncan had carefully kept for him. stood immovable. his hand on the rail, as the ship quiet- ly slid below the water. not making the slightest effort to save hirnself." Denies He Was Intoxicated NEW YORK. ,N0v. Zil-Capt. Ed- ward Keane. Department of Com- merce inspector of hulls, shouted s- denial today that he had been iri- toidmtcd when he passed the steam- - amport and Holt, interviewed by . pression of despair ashc stood on ' the 691 life preservers aboard, which he said he examined. Capt. Keane and he found B new ones ‘defec- ve. - Captain Keane said food, water, lanterns and flares on the lifeboats ited States Commissioner teetifledtliat flares were defediive and that there was no oil in lan- terns. The life boats ‘hemselves. said the captain, who is 62 years old and the holder o! a license for steam, sail in the United States and British j tars certificate. could not-have bet sustained thel banging they were subjected in if. they had made of rubbeni Keane said his itestsi of the life- boats had revealed‘ no defects‘ in boats or in the fails by which they were lowered. NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—'1‘he muf- fled bells of Trinity Church at the head ‘of Wall Street tolled yesterday in a. memorial service for Michael OLoughlin, chief radio operator of the steamer‘ Vestrls, who stuck to his post and went down with the ship: Among thé_2.000 persons who at- tended were rescued members of the Vestris crew, representatives of the Veteran Wireless Operators Assoc- iation, army and coastguard officers, and Sir Harry Armstrong, Brit Consul-General here. ~ Members of_ Vestrle Crew to Make Vaudeville Tour I NEW YORK, Nov. zit-Three of the rescued members of the Vestris crew are to" make a vaudeville tour at $65 a week to describe their ex- periences in the disaster. ._\__ » . ._ ‘ \\. Solve‘ Mystery . v ' 2‘ '- ._ of Ml88lng Man SACKVILLE, Nov. 20.--Discovery today of a skele s at Beechaurs camp, about four miles from here and a half-mile‘ into the woods from the Dorchester road, proved the. so- iution of the baffling disappearance from here in July, i927, ‘of John Parsons, 70-year-old resident of Dor- fiH lEiiEfl ,iiKE§§T[P5 Move to Improve Po- tato Indlistry .‘ is Rye- ceiving Serious Con- sideration. (The ‘iouowing article from the New ‘Yorkl Packer, ‘will be of in- shlppers in this province.) CHICAGO, Nov. 20—Irlitia.l swps deciding 1o improve general condi- tions in the Potato Industry were taken lby a group of serious-minded shippers and distributors at a spe- cial meetiing iheld here lathe step- hen's Hotel. plan of action is. basedjargely- on the principles ~.of ‘teaching the grower how-to produce ‘better pota- toes, and in educating the house- wife how to buy potatoes. It was agreed that the quality of potatoes must be standardized before anoi- aborate campaign of advertising could prove profitable. Most of those resent favorably ‘inclined s n through advertising,’ and it is possible thatthe on may lead to publicity which will eventually benefit the trade. Tihe adoption of State laws requiring compulsory grading and inspectl was favored by the entire assem- blage . Ii: was suggested that the ~ United States Department 0f Agri- culture be requested to lend its influence in this campaign of irn- provemeni; and to ctr-operate in educating the public ‘as to the food value of potatoes. It was also de- cided that the meeting ‘take steps ‘ organize the potato growers. ppeis, dealers and handlers into a National Association. A Big Industry cheater, Mass, who was here at that timo- with his wife visiting the lat- ter's father, Hanford ‘Palmer-“The discovery was ' made by William Roundell, of Sackvilie. who was out aged man's underclothing and his cuffilnks were identified by his wife at the inquest here tonight. A ve‘r- dict of death by ‘exposure while temporarily "out of his ‘mind was re- turned by the coroner's Jury. The wife testified at the inquest that her husband did not appear quite nor- mal shortly before his disappear- ance and subsequent ‘death, and oth- er Witnesses gave evidence of a sim- ilar nature. ' THE MARKETS‘ MONTREAL, Nov. ZO-The export trade in Canadian grain ‘here to- day was ofusigvlirnited clmracwr owing to the lndifierent demand from foreign buyers. A fair amount ‘of busines was done in car lots of grain in. the local market and prices were unchanged. Prices for spring and winter wheat flour were steady with a moderate trade passing for domestic and accounts. A feature of the inillfeed trade was the stronger feeling iiiat developed’ for bran and shorts and prices were marked up one dollar per ton. This was uttrlbuted to the good demand and the small sup- plies ion hand. Standard grades of oiled oats were steady.‘ The trade er Vcstfls which sank a week a3". yesterday, with a loss ofmiore thar 100 lives. Captain Keane was the gation o! nth» Vest/sis‘ fmlndering be- ing nducted by tihe United States steamboat inspection service at the Customs House. The mull-line officer read a. let- ter davted Novonrberlé and signed " uel Larson." The letter was tiqn service. The letter connnined ‘ , that the inspection of the V by Capt. Keane and 3i in- specter of belle" eaneleied lb" lnspewor enieyino e iieelfly-bveelr- fast on the ship wil "ewllllll! "3315- ‘key and beer-in the ships W- "The inspectors left in the after- Lnopn." _ letter read. "with certain weakness m their lets each with a package under his gnu," The IQMOI,‘ with the remarks that iihimwiis ‘the kind of murderers‘ that comprise “l9 pcrsonrieLof the steamboat inst!”- tion service. ~ _ _' Ooptlieane was asked how mus: if any or this letter was true. "'1 . whole thim is the moot olive-Bell lie I aver heard," he sa-id- “I am t1‘!!- Sam received by the steamboat inspec~ ansinadian fresh egg markets are steady l time Provinces we _ in Canada; Cast. ll maoderofthe .16 ' iaanqllot ‘n fresh and storage‘ eggs contin- "icd good and the imdeiltono to theNmirket was firm, Receipts were first Mamas ma“ “m”, mvestpiiim cases. The inquiry for butter. iwas confined to small lots but values ‘were firm. Receipts were 53 pack- ‘ages. The cheese ‘trade showed a ‘slight improvement and values were well maintained. Receipts were 4.- 025 boxes. The demand for beans |was good and prices were unchang- ed. _ _' ‘grades were sold at $6.25 per bushel and Canadian grades ‘at $4.85 to $4.90 per bushel ex store. Potatoes were steady un- der a far demand. New Brunswick green mountains at 65 cents per bag of 90 lbs. in iblllk and Prince Edward Island grades at 78 to 83 |cents in bags. - OTTAWA, Nov. ilo-(Eggsl-Ca- ltoday but the sin-cage quotations {American withdrawals recently have been unsatisfactory. TORONTO-The local fresh egg market is very ilrm with prices un- chaxllled. Dealers are quoting coun- try, shippers for ungraded eggs de- livered extras 58-80; first: 53-51 ' seconds _35: pullet extras 43. Stor- age markiet is weak with o. "good dealofpncecutitingnAsaleisi-e- ported of storage atras‘_‘40c: firsts manger-ac; cehdiedotltplswrasecasos _MCN'I'BEAL,-'rhe local egg mar- két“ is quietwith activity centered . is ‘ V b8; firts 52: pallet extras 44. . . .,-‘.- , .,¢ lmirtrmms rro .111: roan ‘n , l??? \- MONTREQAL, ‘Nqvf gifi-Thq A M511. fore lien‘ last nik t a bonqn .12 youthful winn and swine A5111 p ‘l. _, , r1! . U“ hunting in that section. Part of the‘ on fresh irtres. Vaneou , for‘ 00-11375 ‘mo. can‘? . eentests oimducted throng out eastern Canada during the! . veer. Thewiliiflflfil wet-nad- - dressed director of ~ American Frill-t lGr-owm, recogniz- yed the need oi" improvement in Lthe potato trade. He said: "The {potato industry is one of the big- igest- and most vital to the welilare of the producer and consumer, of |ariy produdt of agriculture, so that any contribution that can be made ward the solution of this problem would loo of great benefit to the en- tire public," He bold of the close ctr-operation in other branches o American Commerce, citing the automobile industry ,as an illustra- ,t\ion and stressing the need of pull- dmi toilether- in the potato business. H. C. Moore of the _Mlch.iga.n State College, East Lansing, recom- mended better quality potat as a stimulus to increase cons tion telling of the successful adoption of grading methods in Michigan. He also mid of several points that might be advertised to the consum- er, including the fact that pota- toes contain iron: consist largely of easily digested starch which pro- duces‘ an alkaline action in the biped and (tends to reduce disease. I i C Government E ‘lmates Charles Hetchman of Ossco. Minn. criticized a chapter in The Cmp Estimate issued by the United States nt of Agriculture, expres- sing the opinion that potatoes would be selling 20c ‘higher today if it were not for the August estimate. nal guessing contests" which do no one ' any particular (Cod. "TTAW guess the crop when potatoes are under the ground and not visible to the eye," ‘said Mr. Hetchman. He recommended that the Gcvenunent issue information covering condi- tionsfwiietller with the acreage and let those interested make their own guesses. He told of his success in pecking potatoes in 20, 50 and 100 lb. mckages which he introduced and which realized u. prioflt as high as 100 per cent. After other ad- verse factors in the trade he filled the Chain Store as a hi8 09111-1110“- tion in the spoke of the wheel which tendsito inlure market condi- Chiain Store ‘VH5 can usually buy for less ovirinlZ i0 their facilities and purchasinz PW- cr, and exact an open biliinl- Wile"?- to inspect a ear before the draft ‘ a Victories. , flotel 0 . - < Onepi’ ‘the larfgclsht and b9!‘ we n which llama-z; 1, atlas. .0 llIflwflIt_lI01Qfl~""" i um “DWIIQE-“Dfllfilly .ctnritrirdm ‘ terest to our potato growers and ‘ statedtnieriy‘ the. P towalds the idea of increasing con- ‘ J. s. Crutchfleld, head of the ‘ He termed the esiiirriates as "lnfer- 1e c9 with several of ‘the large retailers, ‘ as the independent jobber is luckv ; PAGE ‘nntnn ll . afar’; 1 v n. Last night ‘thoeooéiliarr-Yrat; Co.” succeeded inhdefoatgngls", . ,3. olfs Ltd" yl e margin, o ., i ‘il-‘Buflyof , i bothtbe highh: weirdo h i ' siiringeeoreo of- 1nd~ofl pins. Inthesecond ' ofjbeeven» lng “llennellsc Chandler" won over "The Rogers Cabbylflfl PM. ' ‘ U. ‘Blanchard of “Ffennell d: l Chandier‘s."-.r%iiedu'b0tl1lthd.. biilb ’ ‘ single-and trl le scores of 25f ‘and - ' 648 pins respect! . " “ ‘ ' thBJiI-‘IBQIIPSI The following are "Guardian rat. co." ~ E. Vessey . . . . . . . . . .. 205 1B8 301‘ qlfyaw.v—‘ “‘>‘ .,,~ ,, . W. Power. .>. 192 169 148 gnulfy‘; .. 22'! 183 21B .-Steniford. .*. 126 l3’! 118‘ A. Martin' . . . . . . . , . .. 1'10 r180 204 ,. 920 8771344 ' _ 2m "Bettina Lid." , i‘ 19a 11'! _ i T. McLaren 10B 181 _Doucette 127 159 ‘l. bKcLareri .. 169 168 I " . _P. Worth". .... .. .... 168 nos 10s , K s05 0642151 . "Rogers Hardware“ l-l. Ford ........... .. lbe 144, B. Stevenson . . . . c. Whitlock ‘. .... . , ‘ 7oz s23 ‘u “Fennel! 8t C-hbhdlGI" L. Blancliird .. .. 184 108 143 j H. Stevenson . 220 136 140 ‘ U. Blanchard .. . 221 176 251 G. Arsenault .. . 99 131 13 - P. Coyle . . . . . . . . . . .. 229 1'78 20 953 730 875 " BOWLING ‘IO-NIGHT City League ‘x ' 7.00 w 8.30 "Railway" vs. Oddfel- lows." ‘ . ‘ 8.30 to 10.00. “Y. M. C. A." V5. “Telephone Co." ' i L; o. ‘c. Bowling ‘a Stars vs. Anchors. Nov. 20. STARS R. Duncan . 146 174 200 E. Ranahan 162 155 H. Henneséey .. 97 162 * ‘- A. Blanchard .. 156 231 2i5_ E. G05! .*.~: . . . . ..< 220 246 246 .T0tal—2907. . BNCHORS I I ';, . i: : .1. Chandler "..- .... .. 168 m. n!‘ -’” F. Prunty . .. 118 1B4 189 . H, Morgan 122 124 141 .1. McInnis 19a lsc- 11s. _ W. Burke . 210 138 I'll. ‘.1.’ Total~237 . - Tonight Victories and Spuds roll at eight o'clock. ‘. _ I "ll"? is paid. . ~ P. C. Miller of Albert Mflle r d: Ca, Chicago strongly endorsed the 3 idea of improved grading of pomp toes. He estimates that“. che half-oft ‘the potwiczs shipp-"xd in Unlfld States will not technically gnde U. s. No. 1. Advertising tends to an- pmvethe quality of a product, Mt‘ Miller found from his own exper- n . , ',A1bert‘A. rticharyis of the East- _ em Shore of Virginia). Chamber of‘ Commsroe said that during ‘the rice and bdans were reooinmenllbd ‘,to the consunaer as foods to rp- plaice datamelowing to the ‘high [cost of Mela-tier. The boilsevwife must he now with thll food value of. potatoes. He added ,_ uawr/u. SURGEON ' Corner Queen and plohlnond ‘ nouns-s to lzso. " F" . - ivo+oo+o+-..-..“<_-o+o4+od ‘ L at ' éliorfdfrblefo reme- every" qr‘- "HIM I §He¢el ‘2 ‘ I \ . . ,_ ~ w.-.~.~~.,ae, w-gv ‘x 4r“- 4, ‘n w‘ »