MAXIMS OIL MERCHANT i _-——- Many a wonuuwho keep! the ket- iie boiling over foils to vvork the who process on her temper. "y", founded Ill‘!- I"‘"" “u. guardian Two floats. thsrlulit-i lwr. llMPlTES XTENSIVE ll R V E Y r. Leo Frank Looks Into Fox Breeding Conditions in North- ern Provinces of Ja- pail. (Crlnrllllnn Press by Mail) 101410, Feb. zo-Dr. Frank, Prince ward Islnntl I-‘ox Breeder, has just lnpleteu an extensive survey of fox ding conditions and prospects in ile northern provinces of Japan. okotian flllfi Karafutu, south Hag- lin. lit- wns accompanied on his u.- by Kcissi Lumino, fox expert of t Ministry. Following llls toilr of inspection, r. Prank assured Japanese Govern- zrlt 0iil€i3l5 that the fox fur indus- y lll Japan should have an excel- ht illl‘ll(", as climatic conditions rd redo available are favorable. l-le rpressecl the opinion that if the ioiffiilflflli. lends its support to the litillslly, five hundred fox farms ould be established in Karafutu one. l-{arailltu has a climate sim- u; to tilnt- of Prince Edward Island. e original foxes on the forms in e northern provinces were import- - from P. E. 1’. and their descend- llts now numbered about three hun- td and; sixty pairs, on about sev- l farmsufrhe quality of pelts pro. rrtl r0 fer however. has been rath. unsatisfactory. ' ,1. __ , i. Trapping And booting Escaped oxes In Fred ’ton (Canadian Press) lREDoRICTON. N. B» March 4__ ‘1- of sliver black foxes esclsp. l: from their pcnsland being trap- ’ "lid bllJI have been received by ‘i Clliei game wardenhivlfll. Ritch- "lll llw oases are ‘being investigat- vitli a view to wtablmilrlg awn. "' l! o! the valmblq gummy; The rt report comes from Oak Point. ‘are Alfred Patterson caught a tr black yesterday. ‘The animal l8 i iittl at about $300 n-nd is mimark. . The other case is from Point Bip- - lit-lit County. Sgvgm] days "m "ml ll-llslc. resident of- the d13- sllot one of ‘the niirnals. and ' "Kl ll l0 discover that it bore -‘ tuition lllarks on m; “y, NUUNCEMENI‘ ‘ colvlllvu lzvl-zivis. MEETINGS, l-yrt; "P-"lliol- scold??? Joseph Mac- ‘lls. cllnlllbellton, Wednesday ev- "f. March 12th. lll3il-ii. ‘(giimii by the Hazelbrook I In ll pt. Albion Hall , Marl: “l (mo. Saturday. 2l27-3-5-2i. v-Kflllfililltl‘ Egan supp". m Limb Church School Room. "ll. March em, g m; 7_ 2140-2! ru~ i*'“" ‘nillm vs. Beavers. Hlghfleld onlgllt. Skate after match. . 2145 wont- to the a " m _ can Supper at “T3311 Palomino Wednesday. n“ ce- 1- Adults 30 cents, child- "ls- aiao-a-e-zi. .. h0g2: 1° Rowe's Hall and hear h... Th“ "M play. "Rel- Buoy ' "mlllv nlshi. Mal-ch eth. - 2088-3i n ‘- gillllc to the Chicken Supper in umzlzttrt Church Hall in men on m" lion." Mzlflve March 10th Concert and M" wusilclll. resalbone lull. h“ m“ ll baskets free. if stormy ' flN-b-l-Ii. "Till! bum“ r motto Club will "utrfollr-stt oily "roe noon so this m ‘““"'~o'- mu. at “Y-Fmoy. smart 1th. u Y. the fouqym‘ _ 1 _ 210044-21. h n10 Pp; b h» ' YWll-n rslulon Band. l tom‘ '“'° "Mine a Parlor eoottl {-1 cnAlttorri-zrowlv. CANADA. WEDNESDAY. MARCH s. 1930 N0 Hope For His Recovery centiy resigned chief justice of the time. The present crisis is the result Wm. Reward Taft, fcrmeelpreeident of the United States and re- supreme court. who iagrowirig weak- , er, according to physician's statement, forced the ex-preeideui. to retire. only recently. from chief justicesbip.‘ and his deoth may come at any of along period of ill-health which l _ Summerside " appeared on the cve of the tr Journal, under the caption "The Lost Detective," says: "what a. fine title for a really up to the Minute Movie Scenario or dime novel plot. something new and different with the blinds drawn and Melgodramatic'Myst_ery Qt The Vanishing ‘Detective i Discussing the case of a prohib- being sought. but this time they 81:0 ition detective wiho mysterlousbi dis- all in the scramble together and it inl of is somewhat difficult to know just certain Summerside cases at Chsr- who the vllllans are. b lottetown recently. the Bummerside |turns out, in dire mysterious plots. it will probably be more of those at first among the suspected tel-s. Interested In ut as usually charac- “At present it looks as though the real viilians had turned on their owil detective and, for the present at least t- with subtegflgjpspafiflgt; back and forth but sometimes glim- cover up some steps taken without rners of light‘ through which even the sufficient consideration of their com- outsiders can see to some extent. ------------ "It is usually the detective that is dark shadows cf rumors. passingvput him out of the way in order to (Continued on p056 3) to the fore and the criminal who is (Special to The Guardian) wNDON, Mar. 4.-'l'he French delegation will return to the London Naval Conference Thursday night. prepared to reduce the French ton- hogs chin-f‘ from 120.000 tons, the ll- gure of the Tardleu memorandum to an even 700,000, but not a ton low- er- unless some new security pact is concluded which France may feel would seriously justify further cut. it is understood" here.’ This new Prcirclr figure would give France a ratio of virtually '10 percent of the 1.200.000 rims. each of amt Britain sho theUnlted States. Bcven hund- red thousand tons for France is in- seceptablo to Great Britain because. if ltaly has parity with France, then. France and Italy together would have 1,400,000 tons against Great Britain's 1.200.000 and the Admiralty insists on applying the two power standard to France and Italy. Moreover with- in thI French iilllfQl Great nritain obiecte to the French clotm to ten modern eight lhoh gun cruisers and 100,000 tons of submarines, so that if the French" reduction operated irl other than big cruiser and submarine categorisnevenatotoieftottlootoas for muse would be ihuceptosle 0s Greet sl-ltuh. _ ' NEW YORK. Mar. 4-—An appeal for reduction and "not merely limi- tation of armaments lilatd by more this i200 prominent lnon ens wo- men throughout the nstienrwu in ibo hoods of the American delegates to the faction novel Conference to- Latest. Doings The Conference t clashes recur over attempts to over- day. The formulation of the appeal ratlnwtmn by the signatorims and its despeltch to Londrm Nqllllefl bu‘ seventy-two hours. It was accom- plished through an intensive tele- 6a graph and telephonic campaign. ‘rials speedy- mobilization of public opinion was nccorpilll-‘lleil by I oouimittee of four. consisting oi‘ Raymond _ B. Fosdiclt. Professor James T. Shotwell of Columbia Uni- versity. James G. McDonald. direc- tor of the Foreign Policy 5550m- tlorhlho Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt. n-o-vi. Expect Tariff To Pass Soon ..___. WASHINGTON. March if-eehato leaders look for a final passage of the tariff bill this wilelr unless extensive turn previous decisions. which denied an iacreeoed sugar tariff and de- footed proposed duties on hides. loam- e-nd shoes. " ‘Bulb! ‘debate preceded the re- ieetlon of these proposals and foe this reason the party prinolpl-ll anticipate speed! uispocitlcsi other: they collie up again. But it took el- even hours of uninturilptod oratory in turn back a lumber levy and as long to wove that a maiorlty was lin Silli- Mr. W. -J. Boulters Name Mentioned Re N. S. Enquiry Into Fruit Industry. , KBNTVILLE. March 4—Aeeordirlg to information given The Halifax Chronicle representative-here. the Royal Commission iowilquire into tho Nova Bcotia fruitJriduatry has been selected by-Promiir Rhodes and his Government lofoiliywl: Chair- man. Dr. H. L. Tory, Ottawa; J. W. Bouiter, Charlottetown, deputy mm- later of Agriculture for p. 1:. Island: Dr. M. M. Goody. Antilouilh: Geo. A. Boggs. Greenwich, Kill! County; Prof. W. S. Blair. Kentville. if reports, which could not b1 con- firmed are correct. theflitoyal com- mission should be an exceptionally strong non-political onefip the opin- ion of a number of prominent apple men, interviewed today} ‘ ' Dr. H. L. Tory. a native of Como. and a ‘ brother of LieuL-Gcverrlor -__ .-------.---____ tcohtlnueo chive?“ s) Prince Making -.~.- (Sroolsi to The quot-lion) NAIROBI. KENYA‘; COLONY. March da-Thf Pglfljlhf W510i is‘ making good reeovoli in hisbeit ’ . lfi ' bed in Government House hcrw attended by, physicllns’ and nurses who have specialised in this complaint, and thanks to their care with ‘his own strong constitution and optimistic temperament it is believed that any den, of complications or a vellum, is Illrht. It. is even stet- ed that he hopes to be able to leave his bed in a dly or two. Ontario Divorce Court i/Vill Be ' Reintroduced ‘ (Canadian Press) UITAWA, Ont. Much t-The on- tario Divorce Court will be reintro- duced in Parliament, probably to- "WWW- Inltlatod in the Senate lest woolen by Hon. w. a. Willoughby, lslhlinfmlGgver EESTED FUR! cilllllisslilll. Good Recovery R A E n m: (Special io The Guardian) OTTAWA, Mar. L-A spirited dis- cussion arose lest evening over resci- utiori moved by Mr. Spencer of Bat- tle River relating to health units. lt decil-red that the Government should take into consider-tron the advis- lblllly of mil-in! III-Btu to the pro- vinces equal to one third the cost of "f-lblllhlhl. Ind t0 govern perman- ently. such full time health units as may be organised. A health unit. it may be explained, usually consists of ‘a medical officer, a. trained nurse, and o sanitary inspector, with the equipment of a laboratory. Mr. Spencer urged the necessity of‘ ifiiuil-SNWTHAT lliiHEilTY ills p (Cr-radian Press) UITAWA, -Ont., Mar. (.-A special compactors-limitation to u» waning carom-um tim Leonard o. o0- herty. of Emerald St, Medford. ar- rested in ririectilon with the gar- ment makers trouble, is being "fram- ed" by the police and by e. socialist lawyer for the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, in connec- tion with a murder in Ottawa. The strike committee of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union to- day planned to call on the entire La- bor movement of America to prevent inother Sacco Varwetti affair. Ben- jamin Gold, of NewrYork, general secretary of Needle Trades Workers nlade this announcement on behalf of the strike committee. He said that this commit has visited Dohertys Barents in Boston and established that the charge that Doherty was wanted in Ottawa for murder was a. frame-up. Other high union officials llfvod here from New York and Chicago in connection with the Do- llefl-y cue this moraine. ' Krupp and ‘Iliyleen munitions fir-ms sen of having sold intensity breast iY be introduced wlnoiflrw in the‘ House of Commons by J. B. Woods. n-orth, (Labor, Winnipeg, Nam-l gm- I tre.) In the upper Chamber last ses- l olccl. the bill passed all stages. 1t, w” then introduced in the Commons by f 1w. Woodsworth, but was defeated‘ onseoctnd resdingbyavoteofiiiito Warns Canada Of “Outside Influences 1 e _.._. HALIFAX. Mar. 4-"We Canad- ians, when it is too late, will realize that outside influences, penetrating silently into our country by various and devious ways. have weakened many of our best and grandest trod- , ltlons in the national and Christian order.“ This declaration was contained in the Lenten Pastoral Letter by l-lio Grace Archbishop r O'Donnell read in the Itcman Catholic church yesterday. ile had previously assort- ed that the family was all important and the basis‘ of Bociety. ~ "Our honest. Christian pride ought to hinder us from spin! 010.4"! paganism of a country only material- ly great. 1s it not e. grave folly. and one deserving of censure to follow after a country in whicbmurder and robbery is a bulinesl. we organised. highly profitable and y safe end- in which criminality is so rampant willing to to: foreign oil and gas- oliaoxr " b thstho country in the world can equal it." (Moose Jaw) the measure will like- z Last Minute News Flashes .__.. (Special to The oumrahi eraser. N. s. Mlr- 4-- Three personl. two rlrln and I nrsn, were drowned when a car broke through the harbor ice to- night. TORONTO. Mar. 4--An offl- cial statement of the affairs of the defunct brokerage lirvn of Btoblo For-long 00-. presented to a meeting of creditors todly. ah -a surplus of assets over liobilifll of 33.052340 asourllll on the surface at least full psy- mont of all creditors claims. LONDON. Mar. L-It. Hon. Stanley Baldwin. leader of the Conservative Party speaking be- fera tho council ef the Notional Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations may. de- clared the eoooiien of taxation of food should be taken out of party polities. ' IIANGIAI, Mar. L-Iooiili ties in Teobew and lbaatung . loomed imminent today with military movements reported responsible for severance of cea- teoeio on the ‘lienteiu Plhew ~ Iallwby- General 10h Di Shoo is sold to have purchased 00.000 rifles and l0 naohlll l“: from Germany. ‘in i030, when St. Andrews Church fruits. Oalflvatopublloity elwoss Iluflfl doeouotaooaueeooearygtiuhypm Wmo when you will MAXIMS or. o MERCHANT lather the i these organizations, more particularly in tlic rural districts, arguing that they promote public health generally and are of special benefit to remote settlements. A good many on the left side of the House favored the pro- position, on humanitarian grounds, and also on the ground that what promotes public health is a paying investment for any country. One of the proposals was by Mr. Garland of Bow River, that every- body snouid have a thorough going over in the line of ophyslcsl exam- inltion at public expense at least once e year, so that physical decay might be discovered and arrested and 8 PAGES nrnent Shifts Ground. On War Pensions Proposal, "Political Manoeuvering To Place Pensions Dis- tribution In Hands Of Government, Bennett p. Charges. Health Grants Available But P. E.‘ I. Not Eligible, Says Veniot. t a strong virile ram propagated. Several members of the legal pro- fesslon spoke at some length favor- ing the ides. 1n fact, most of the speakers had o good word for health prevention at public expmse, but the only question which arose was as to the jurisdiction in such mat- ters. federal _or provincial, s very old question with H quent recurrences. Towards the end the debate de- veloped some client contributions from Mr. Dunning. Mr. Bennett and Mr. Llapointe. The Opposition leader emiifiaslred that the very basis of the (Cmtinued on page 3) Krupp Sold War Goods To Allies, Book Avers BERLIN. Lia's-ch t-uhaor the authority of federal status relating to high treason and treosonable fav- oritdsui an investislltion has been or- dered into sensational reports that the sold large quantities of war mater- ials tooaeutral nations during the GreaoWaf with. the knowledge that they would be delivered’. toenemy nations. These charges against two of Ger- monies ingest lrlunition manufactur- ers are contained in a recently pub- lished book, "The Bloody Informat- ionole of We: Industry," by Otto Lehmtann ltussbueldt. The book specifically accuses Thys- protectlon shields to Holland dur- ing the war at lower prices than the Prime Minister Unveils Tablet K At Si". Andrews (Special to The Guardian) TORONTO. Mar. t-St. Andrews. God bless her. The old grey church on King Street was filled last night to her farthest corner. A great con-y grcgstion met to remernberl it'll.“ thanksgiving that March night‘ u-as born of faith and loyalty in the hearts of the Scottish people of the little town of York. Remembering that night 100 yous agofthe people of st. Andrews remembered with thsnkfulness as greet the men and women who through 100 years had given unfaltering loyalty to their church and received from licr their faith. A commemoration w-ltl-lin a commemoration marked the night one to be lung cherished in memory by the rteople of st. Andrew's Church The Prime Minister of Canada un- trsllcd during the service a tablet set in the west wall of the church in memory of their father and mo- ther by himself and his sister Mrs. Janet King my, "O God of Bethel. by whose hand Thy people still are fed." Many hundred voices Joined in the Scottish paraphrase as the tab- let was unveiled. Will Retire (Canadian Press) LONDON. Mar. 4-811‘ Ohls. Mad- den. Admiral of the fleet who is principal naval adviser of the Brit- ish delegation at the Landon con- ference, will retire from his post as 10rd Commissioner 0f the Admir- alty and chief of the naval stat! about July let ills poet automati- cally eerrin with it, the position of firm asked in Germs-my. It alleges that the Krupps turned over to lllnglar-ld patents in the mur- ufacture of hand muscle fuses. To substantiate this Herr Russbueidt cites s, suit brought by a German bank- of which Dr. Gun‘ v ‘Krupp von Bohleoi grid Hal h was chair- moh-of the board, slim the En- glish wsr munitions firm of Vicklars. ‘The suit was said to be for prior- ny payment of one shilling peo- fuse. o: a ilotai of 123,000,000 shillings. (about. $30,750,000.) 'I‘he book allel- es this claim figured on the debit side of the Vlckers‘ ledgers at the time of the company! merger with the Armstrong company. "Fl-con this figure one can realize how much the Krupps profited from the death of each Ger-nun soldier." Russbueldt wrote. f Will Represent The Island At Convention l t (Canadian Press) ‘I MONCTON. N. 15.. March t-Couht l ing of ballots. cast all over the At-l iznritic division. C. N. R... to select chairmen of division for the Ordsri oi‘ Railroad Telegrapiiers. who will ei- I so be delegates to the convention at‘ Los Angeles this spring was complet- ed here last night .Among those. chosen overe; Prince Edward IslshdI division, .1. .1. Trainer. oi-lsl-iotzstowhl Spotter's Evidence Fails To Convict WINNIPEG. lihr. f-Declsring that he could not believe the ev- idence of two provincial "opera- tors" without corroboration, Meg- lstrate It. B. Graham. in city morale court. dismissed s charge of keeping liquor for sale. After all evidence had been given. the magistrate recalled one of the provincial "spotters" to the witness stand. "Did you go to the premises for the purpose of buying liquor so that you could give evidence against the accused?" he asked. The "spotter" admitted that he had. so the magletrai imm ’ lately dismissed the charge. lanolsl Iobaeelptloua Delivered 05.00. l! Ill! Ullrllll lid U. I. l. “ll lillIlSlAiiil liliVERNiiRt APULEGIZED To Commander of Ger- man Cruiser Emden —R_eceived Common. der and Staff in His Pajamas. (Canadian Press] NhW ORLEANS, La, Mar. 4.—A formal apology by Governor H. P. Long of Louisana to Commander Lothar Von Arnauld De La Pierre of the German cruiser Emden, has end- ed l twenty-foul" hour diplomatic crisis which resulted from the Gov- ernors choice of a pair of green silk Pllllnu as attire in which to receive l. csu from the Commander and his stalifl- A red and blue dressing gown and blue bedroom slippers completed the Govrmors attire. The German naval t".ers came attired in dress uniform. The Governor's rsiment was an insult, Commander De La Pierre asserted after the reception. The Bmden would’ weigh anchor and steam out of the part unless on apol- ogy was offered, ha assorted, IN MliNTREAi rlilii HIT Heavy Arrivals of New Zeaiand P r o d u c t‘ Again Affects Mar- ket. MONTREAL, Mar. 4.—B€3l’l5ll mar- kets throughout the world and heavy arrivals of New Zealnnd product". had e. bed effect on local butter market: again today, although there were no further price declines. Quotations remained at from {it to 35 cents for New Zealand or Eastern townships Ne. 1. Retail prices fluctuated frorr 37 to 38 cents for solids and fron l 38 to 39 cents for prints. f 'i‘he egg market was unchanged ii" spite oi’ steady arrivals of America: ,eggs for the local market. Potat |prices were unchanged at 01.50 t l $1.55 for New Brunswick green rnoun tains and 01.45 for Quebccs. |T71e Weather, ett Sonaflllaa Foa noflllvlc orfon tosfs Mont filth ll liloli Phtceo starlets. Westerly it'll-ids, temperature. Blah tidc this Llkrllfldll at 2" and tomorrow morning at, 43g Sun sets this iifternoon at 5 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.: First quarter mom Friday, M; 1th.. use p. m _ 3"ll\m°-l’$ld° l-lfi! Qlihieen mihui .: llttr than Charlottetown, u little higi: Safety First‘ (Special to The Guardian) PARIS. Mar. ll-Ten thousand soldiers and fifteen thousand police. the entire garrison cf Paris have been placed st the dispcsol of the orders from Premier Andre Tardlt those forces augmented by mo. "i" °l "Mlle rum Nliec will t tempt to confine the threatened u flflplvymfl-t demonstration eh . quiet movement inside French fr twice. The Ministry of m, mm; believes the movement will thereto ~ fail to attract wide attention n" l first loo. Lord. Re will be succeeded by Admiral lir Predaiq Field. military governor to prevent any ouieus outbreak Thin-edu- one: o l T» lillirlillilllii lhticlvolee no trouble in tho . inoc- m“ ., ~ r597“ "frvrtuf-f?‘ w‘ -¢-.-_~_-. — -.