f, UR fmzvczz SEEKS Ludendbrff Again How's Man ANNOUNCEMENTS comma EVENTS, MEETINGS. ETC "Sec Milton Hornets vl. Llndys It Cornwall tonight. Skating alter p.010, 14-5593 “cake sale at Moore dc Mc- lecd’: today by First Charlotte- town Girl Gl-liflbl. 14-6594 "Borden rink tonilht. first lame semi-finals, Lea and Wright league, Tryon ve. Victoria. Good h. Admission Ii and l5 suits. n-raee “Mount Herbert ve. East Royal- ty Bearcata tonight, 8 to 0, Arena. 11-553‘! will 25th . $590 "Dr. lAOouniei-e, Dentist. be in Murray River March Hill and 27th. “Parlor Social at Fred Mac- lwene, Stanley, Wednesday, March i'!th. 11 not fine ‘rhuradey. "Hockey, ‘Victoria Rift. Mon- day night, March 20m, m. and Wright. League, ‘Pcycn vs. Victoria. Admission I0 and 15 cents. L-55t'2 hill show him (UPPER. he uttered army: RIGHT) Von Ilindcnblrl. hi! Ill‘ peflor in name only; with hla medals, and as a elvilian. THREE SHIPS [Diiii DVERDDE Fears Held For Over Two Score Mariners. (n. P. by Guardlan‘: special WIN) B , March more than “m” “d...” sought wmht w mariners Mme“, who Mm Bu” t $33‘... 3.111? t... of tr- forindered, and hoired _ Gloucestermefl. was Wt- Erich Lndendorff, now 10. [rut- eat of the Gemmn 80mm‘ i“ m” lint world war. called back w duty as Much" 0* the Reich’: vast new army. Be Ill auoclated with Hitler. with he il seen. LOWER LIIT. famed “Beer Putach” in the bellfl‘ Other limtce is expected to be whom In the of" Nazism. LEFT) M. time with (UPPER 22—'i‘hree two score vessels had in close-I'D will; 011E, l ADDRESS DN IMIERATDRY DAME BIRDS Interestin Address By Mr. . W’. Tufts At Fish and Game Ass’n Meeting Last Night. m. R. W. Tufts-Wclfviile, N. 8., Migratory Bird Officer gor the Mari- time Pmvlnces, addressed a. meeting c! the Prince Edward Island Fish and Game r ‘ ctive Association in the Board Room of the City Build- ing last night. Mr. Tufts spoke principally on the migratory water fowl, outlining existing conditions and making several valuable sug- gestions in the course of his address, which was intensely interesting, especially to sportsmen and- those interested in the conservation of wild life. ‘Q19 o1 the suggestions he made was that the fish and game associa- tions of the Maritime Provinces, which have many similar problems, should havea sort of "get. together". perhaps not every year, but at least every second year. The speaker referred to education and what could be accomplished. by that means in the way of obtaining public support. "If we have the proper backing of public opinion we will gue much better." Mr. Tufts said. In Nova. Scotla. he said, they are trying to carry out tangible problems to which they can point and aay, "We have done so and so, instead of in: numerous ruolu- tions. New Brunswick is also carry- ingdon kl much the same way, he se ., Reference was made to SWQKWI with pheasa ‘ and‘ a ‘ ‘par- tridge in Nova Beotla, when with the latter much the same success has been obtained as in this Pro- vince. In regard to game laws, what is wanted most, Mr. Tufts claimed, is “sensible laws, thoroughly under- stod and backed by the general pub- lic." Referring to the closed seuon on rough grouse or partridge every second year, he claimed that it is a matter of scientific knowledge that there is a. cycle of abundance and scarcity of partridge. The cycle talcea from seven to ten years to complete. Be thought that some provision should be made for a longer open season when the birds are plentiful. As to how to tell when the cyclc ranches the plentiful stage that could be determined by inter- ligent interested sportsmen through- out the province, Mr. Tufts said. As regards the advisability of an open season on Hungarian partridge, he thought that. alnco the sportsmen were more or less responsible for bringing them here. l1 they felt they wanted an open season they were perhaps entitled to a short. open season. Condition of Wild Fowl Mr. Tufts then spoke on the 8011- oral condition of wild fowl life ull ovcr the North American Contin- ent. The picture, he said, is not at all a may one. l-le made reference to the disappearance of the eel grass, which he claimed is one of the greatest phenomena in recent years, as contributihg largely to the scarcity of water feud. Other causes. UNT B UD GE UNITED A Broke? -_ _ '__._.___.. CHARIAYITETOWN CANADA. SATURDAY, MARCH sld 1. the Dew 2a, 13s Vlrhlehthehbildbhflflli\ ilbilldlug. MAXIMS or A MERE MAN 1 PAGES Annual lnhaarlntlou Dellvcul a B] lfnll Callie lld U. I. L, FRQNT TRIPDWER Andrew Iahr will get a reception when he reindeer from Alaska to the Mac- weulbfit wait will] he got back. OITAWA, mm. 23—Atm.in¢ a and bootlegger Hon. B. N. Rhodes, Minister of Finance, today an- nounced e. drastic reduction in the in his bildilet The dutqyr is gall are imported spirits and the effect of thcchangeswill belcvwerpriceefor all herd liquors in Canada. The step is taken, m. Rhodes said, "to protect our reven " and “b0 eliminate illicit sales which would otherwise umtinue ee a menace to our revenues." The re- duction brings Canadian impceta on spirits into line with taxes in the United states Revenues from qalrita topped from 041.000.0113 tn 1000 $2,260.- Whilc tho menace of a flood of cheap liquor hum the hero's returns tn Seattle after spending more than three yearn driving a. herd of 3.000 kenaie river for Canadian Iakimol. But Bohr will find hia life savings wiped out. it is reported. by ealea of his. property to creditors who iun.t£I . AiM x DIRECT Biilti AT Sitilliiiilii direct blow at the liquor miuggler excise duties on Qinhuuis liquor! speech. out from U! tc 040a on. Corresponding reductions made in the cutouts duties on United States supplied by smugglers is great now. it is wider-stood. it would L _, ‘ aa DDNFERENDE DPENSIDDAY Laval Will Seek to Re- group the Allies Against a Rearmed Germany. (C. P.-A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) PARIS, March 22—France tomorrow will endeavor to plant Great Britain firmly within a united front with France and Italy against a rearmed Germany. Anthony Eden, British Lord Privy Sea], who came here today for a tri-partiie conference preparatory to Anglo-German conversations in Berlin, almost certainly will be asked to drop the role of mediator for that of ally. Foreign Minister: Pierre Laval, who will confer with Eden and Italy's Under. Secretary for Foreign Af- fairs, Fulvro Suvich, told the ‘(Fhamber of Deputies today: afirgsnse aeeka to regroup the T0 WARN EDEN French officials said 1mm woum 31am Eden against Sir John Simon's ~ We or Promising eiiythlng" m his conversations with Adolf Hit. ler next week reminding the lord Privy up! themri-sneo-nritiah llveem eons each other Ind Italy . A tel-power conference at Lake 00m. mlv. with Benito Mussolini and the British and Premh foreign ministers “present. turns from Berlin. France will obtect strenuously to inviting Germany to that meeting, officilla Mid tnnilllt, expi-egmg imwillinzness to negotiate with 00mins’ except within the frame- work of the League of Nations. WILL CALL CONFERENCE i 149mm March 2z-(A.P.>-.A erence of_ - s major powers —with or without Germany-mill be called in the near future to work out new safeguards spam war, it waalesrnnd on the beat (Continued on page 15» mi m» urns gizmc Priest And Assailant Lie Dangerously Ill. (O- P. By Guardian's Special Wire) L-NGQ-S-QS-Ii .. y”;- aflile gauge“ d3; 013$ on were duties not T, ‘iolf-KTDN. SE51!» MBTCh 23. -- ‘Jllook out for Scout Rummage iiromcriiamiltcn, 'Ber1nuda, to New (Continued on P080 15> American liquor stock‘; increase gfitmn gilioigmlgfegféllgl nfiiiitfm“ “fisdfilfifilt lsfgg*wi*gf,y,“f,f,lj'3“‘2nuél‘t"ll’fi $fimmfiiti£tiéiffi°mr fitliiai w; gghrwhé-‘ggrlqggerggk; I . n10” ' U1 u e "Carnival. Bedeque Rink, Mon- ma“; n‘ Qiiiiiey, mfivewsiiigoon: n v T U ma... the s, lac-k of smuggled 20% 11°F "WV" "W1 the" w’ M"'°h a o“ i °G flu‘ ‘with I- “Wii a “'7'. “m” 5f” "my, at. yesterday allegedly ran m“ 54"“ Amiflmhk ioundland herflm- g; ‘nA rdumd 1m amok with a revolver. kiuirs Father 1- 4-1141 The wigbird. a ti“! M180‘; ‘ m, ‘m, mm, mwm, ,1 mm Dulforge, of the (Meek omi- "We W111 be lending live hoes m mnmms’ m M" i" °"'“ l '° u draizherogirlzhthei-ierriigriywtemndhkiie ‘ihureda . March. 2th, ll day at. {at “y, Cont. uardamen ex- , E° m‘ ‘Ivar’: $51,, MW. hlaown life when chased by police. Nlelnlmn Ems. lcad- m,‘ belle! ab: possibly 1M ——- °""‘“:,”' m,“ rumi- mu has not mt. consci- h‘ ‘i 3"“ 0"" "my i“ down m a hurricane which tim re m“ h “n eulueal it was said at the tie-plan ‘Mm I!» l- "QM W1 01"" $5, u... West mam l0 days m. Two Local Y0 ll til I l 1%,‘; m, MM“, ,, u, forgave m.» assailant, but was -I- 4-"41- eweeowned who [if W‘ m enumeration-sincere T“ "diam West mdiea emie- Him ByfHli l! wail: um°°“""“", b5“, imam nuuigetguteusiti "Re . .' " h . ‘ o n t. ":2: u» W“ A‘*“°'__-‘ '°" mwmlwiniiei?" ailetchlthatflflr. . I! . - (announce-capsicum) 1"““"'m‘m' . Icon and Prescott madman. I “vum-cégwwnuu mono: I8 C,“ Em“! ‘... .°.'.’.......°“" 3x12; wTrT-t: ~ . - """"‘ "it 5°" ¢ onulmwm of! ted. were mini S wswwmimw (Qgbytlllallmfil ‘Iblgmqqnemtheeiwrmgnideot . u ‘ "l" W“ I noamir men - =9‘ " ‘" ““'“ “M Mmovmcm """"Z.fi‘*°""““' i! ...... M" . w“, with flue mm mum m cathsertl beglvq, "s -m°‘.tl."t,'.°l.i.‘.’..“ eemicmrnnethwlflflh ewe-on Home tom stumbles with until"! wen Indies. r "v ma: ---= --,,, v g , , dneheinathl the were lent .341, aehuaetta W". iieefleulfll! tin ‘d "lhlelfllloamafigofth mwmwfibmmmgno 1a d, m 3n] IN“ l!“ - . o», raw“ h 30 me other come-nice. - rerun an “lP,t,~_~mdwwgfl bflnfllfllilflouiwoilg Qifilliflifialflfllba" IiedurIUeInnwnahei-un- Ne" °°"'“" ~"lw"-u‘""'"““m ~',,,ahmml_mu lmleeanittheepieeqwttbtmeeveelaiaiail otexum use. wtieneimuwwincww. C Wes proposed, after sir John m- d pansion Minister E. N. Rhodes. gold tax but made it up by and inheritance impoats. A feature of the tariff ‘ of the Tariff Changes At A Glance (C. P. By Guardian's Special wire) OITAWA, MuAtl-JIh-rifiohslldee in the budget brought down today by lilzihtster of Furnace E. N. Rhodes, totalled 76. 0f which 48 were increases ecu-eases, four and 24 clarifications of wording without chense in rates. epirituousliquocsreduoedunder the British prefcsentcc from $8 a proof-qiritgellnntole. Corres- [portllngxedaictimisoncartuiian madeliquoreeoccisetaxalsowere Oerhainwoollen fabriu reduced underthecpeciflcmteottheBr-lt- ish preference from 18 8-4 cents Wlwundtoljcento. WOOIRIIIHMH‘GIDWLIGUI§JW 1-3 peeomt, plua ll S-dcentaa a pound, under the Edible prefer- encenowfree. Melton cloth for making tennis balls, formerly ?! 1-2 peroem», pi/us is 3-4 cents a nmmd undec- t/he British prefererroe: mow thee. To encoirege me of oenadim potatoes in the manufacture of sinmh a deferred duty can helm- posed by crdcr-ln-eotuieil on dex- itrine. 0 I O 'Dle.loetdc hreodc and bbouita will come in free under the British mefemnce. one Palestine orumea will enter free tinder the Bfltidl: p. ‘ . O O Books of a certsh w!» In My ireo under the Brlidli preference. n similar ntefpgllee to France. duty. The min was formerly five cents a pound. O O O The femmu hfméirfidhnlnm for aerial photogaphy tllowed flee mite-y under the Bniflsh pref- erence. . . O met-um’ on ciauretatepapere irumiflevdtedfiififiqnhuit. O O Ankle’ .forrnetrlyliper cent pedezuaczuauwhee. an new a due were. except remioeduncbr the British n; barbed fencing wire, formerly 10 miter the British free. per cent , now O O Ohot release need in coal mines. formerly 15 per cent British preference. now free. - Levels Ed’ Rising Employmen to the United Kingdom and other Empire countries. Involving about $4,000,000 annually, the special excise tax of 1% percent against United Kingdom exporters. will be abolished. The lax of three per cent against the reat. of the world, will stand. . pile velvet when BALANCED; Downward —Revisi0n I 48 Customs Tariff Items Announced In Parliament inance iMinister Rhodes Makes Gratifying An- ' nouncement In Introducing Budget, Which Reflects Canada’s Upward Progress Out Of The World Depression. Increasing Revenues, Ex- Of Trade, Improved Commodity Price t Figures Are Noted. (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA, March 22-An income suriax and other levies aimed at the man who has the money and wide- range tariff concessions t_o the United Kingdom featured the budget presented to Parliament today by Finance interpreted generally as a poor man’s budget, it in- creased corporation and income taxes, abolished last year’s special levies against mining companies and their shareholders and, for the first time in Canada, taxed money and property passed between members of a family with the design of thwarting income 1e rim!!! cannons Out of ‘l6 tariff changes, only four involved increases- But the l ‘ were the granted Extend Favored Nation Treatment The Government took power to extend most-favored-nation treat- ment to all Empire countries, the ‘Finance Minister announcing the United Kingdom and Northern Ire- land would be named s; once. It was believed this would prove of considerable benefit to English manufacturers who, because 50 per cent of the cost of their goods did not represent Empire goods and labor, were faced with the highest of Canada's three-docket tariff stmucturc. Under most-favored nation ‘c - the goods would pay the intermediate rate. The third concession to the Uni Kingdom was considered exoe tai but. might develop in- to a far-reaching feature of the tarliif structure. A drawback of B9 percent was provided for cotton velveteens and cotton-back silk- lmported under the British preferential tariff and ueed in the manufacture of fancy boxee or cases. Experiment It was the first time a duty drawback was provided exclusively for goods imported from Empire countries. It might lead to a sys- tem where the British preference was extended to the drawback chapters in an inverse manner to the tariff schedules. For instance, it might lead to a drawback of 09 percent on an Empire product; 75 percent drawback on the same product from a country with treaty connections with Canada. and 50 per cent from the rest of the world. For the man on the street came the announcement that liquor prices would fall. The excise tax on Canadian-tirade liquors was drop- DK! $3 a. gallon and o correspond- ing reduction made on the duties against imported spirits. It was be- lieved liquor prices would rim!) 40 or 50 cents a. bottle. Taxation chiillgt“. The feature of the mxativn (flanges-liquor taxes were practic- ally the only ones reduced-was the income mirtcx. It will smlv In 9X" tra tax on investment incomes with nothing under $5,000 touched. For instance, a man with en income of $10,000 of which $5,000 is salary and, $5,000 income from Divestment. will pay ordinary income tax on $10,000 and a surtax on $5.000- Iin addition, all incomes of 814.- 000 and over will be taxed twice- the ordlnery income tax and the smrtex. The aurtax will be 0f! I- graduated scale. two percent be- flwggn $5,000 grid $10000; four per and 10 percent on $200,000 01‘ 0V9!‘- The Finance Minister said he ex- pected $12,000,000 this year fwm» the sirrtax; the gold tax changes: increase kom 12 1-2 to l8 1-2 per cent in the corporation income tax, increases in the income tax paid on consolidated evmbflny "Wm! and the gift tax. No change was made in the six- percent sales tax although the exempt on list was widcncd to in- clude casein. grain separators. pit. props and packwood. (Qmtinned CI! III M) (Ctmtinlied 0n PDQO 14) cent between 000.000 0nd $00,000 0"‘ .. HON I. N. RHODES.“ Minister of Finance Taxation Changes ma; —1- (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wirel OITAIWA, March Z-Illa-xartioli dianges announced in today's bllde get. were briefly as follow: Burtax on investment l over $5,000 ranging from two per- cent on lowest figure to 10 percent on investment incomes o! $200,000 or more. mommies from whatever source id be treated stuns as investment in- comes for surtsx purposes, if ex< ceedtngtlipilo’. ' ' In; on premium value of gold started. fi your to empire on May 31, 1926, but; depletion allowance on income tax of precious metal mince reduced from 50 pencent to B3 l-Zi percent, and on dividends to share- holders of such mines reduced from 50 percent to 20 peceent. t . a Tr~~i'".'i$n of one percent in ea tContlnued on page 15v Weather Etc. A Como‘! 0F? §ERROR% ; ‘ii-it. ,;£~0v\eo\t.t~\ ‘Ni-lo mounts his Monti ‘TAX foo Low! (Cnnltllan Pro-an Fresh DOHRWPRWH)‘ winds; fail with slightly lower temperature. .\lFi'i‘i-ltllitll'.tllvlt‘.lI. lil‘l'it‘F}, TM nntn. Xian-h ‘J2 Nliniuiuirtn 4nd fllilXI Ilium ICIIIDCPIIIIIY‘: :- llznvson ... . - - -- L": lifi 4K SS {it , . . 40 nl. - “R0 ~14 Charlottetown ... ... 10 3'.‘ IOIIOAFI.‘ Maritime Provincea:—lt‘r~|h north westerly winds: fa with slightly lower temperature. High title this afternoon nt 12.20 tomorrow morning ut. 2i linrl Sun sets thin evening rit. Ii ltl and risen torncrrr: morning at 5.5T. Last moon Wednesday, March 27. 3 M m. Rnmmsrsltle flit! eighteen minutes Inter than Charlottetown. More Borden 045 A. l. (lxtra) 1 Pjl leave 1v l1 A. I. l’. rt l 2.56 H. daily “excl-pt Sunday-