y . PREVUST ’ didln C. S. Men ry.‘s happy sbry nftho Beautiful "Milo ciolk model who ‘ronouneetithepay ‘life sud found happiness in the most unexpected manner. IN an NIGHT 0|" NIGHTS Roulidii iifCTilc Leather Pushers” ‘PERSQNALS '.HOTEL ARRIVALS m. wn White, sol-den, spent l the weekend in ‘Georgetown VWTQRIA HOTEL Miss "Katherine Campbell, n. N. H- N- Fhrmivnl- 8t John: Fred zurued to he'l- home in Glenisnnlug 1* Bilman- '31- John; F. A. Jar- nter spending a few days in Char- "ti: Dwell sound; VD- Minllnnli. l ‘e"°‘i>°‘°.'ii...’.‘i.w' - - . ; one‘ Miss Philomena Campbell, x°h°°dv ‘hi!- Olliiv '1- M- R816. Campbell's cove passed through s" jun"? J" R» nilflilnfflldonb me cm, mum" on M‘, “y to reisl, h‘. C. Owens, 8t. John: H. Poriien wilcro she intends spond-‘gxfiggfm-s Tfirminmi. H- 3- Kirk- »“= "w "mi"- ... ties"... ..i....‘.-'f.‘i.°-' $5527.‘; M, u risen, Montreal; E M Tanner, l-isli ,8 u?“ "'°°“'“‘h'°"' n" N‘: m; H. a. Dryden, Truro; o. o. t toBoeton Saturday morn LN“ Tmrw B L Lo d n s d lng after spending s. very pleasant My, ‘B H ion‘ ,8; k Y’ ‘f - 7 ' vacation with friends in Glelrian-smfm ;r°mnm_ A gomuz-gé “m; ____ ‘wire, st. John: NV. o. Tierney, m. c.w., Baieeby. of Leunen.m°'°“- M"! Bus)“, ,, t ll. c. Low. Halifel; o. n. Shif- n. .. slit; ‘uh’; iifidte”; ',°;,'}-,-,."§"";§"= 1,",- gg, mm =5 today for Bumrnorolde when L‘ B s: ‘Ia-usi- 13°11"; iii deli _ ' - - - I - w V?‘ a“ "ma" _Vics_r._ Sydney; ‘ll. ‘Henderson, Miss Anna Gompboiirtt. 14.. ro- T“"°'*P' D‘ ‘uimmfl- 'B1°"" turned to Boston Saturday morn ’ - I .- . .. IND! from tj-llnslb Guidel- JQ-rlknluo sonnet m one ~ IA" in flaunts Hall ‘hells; ’v6_ whiten Ulihstsdoirolll rights engravings. Bduootiva. riiti sci-loosen rwvollso Wil- v- aiffigiidfiiiilfiifiié’. liiflii iI " ' i” - l w 1o NllW union mu on ’ i evening. Octliih st 1.80 lnfisnd-iiear-Bev. J..O. v ' use on ‘lirWVliteridotitf " ' d—@-—u-N ' -' . on. W-EDUTIVO Lsoruirm-l hr. Wobsterirliihtlnlod leotnroon cmmmh NW5“? “h” u“ 9'9”? mil-ring Queues-in Old Aeldla." ls very interesting and instructive. jyiesrtz Bail ‘Monday evening. 25 l cents. ‘ ‘ FIRE OAkL. — The firemen fwere called out Saturday shortly after noon for a slight fire" in the residences‘ of Mr. Percy Down, Euston St, . (No ‘serious damage is reported. . ‘ i HAD m scorers-an out-gt town car driver had a narrow es- cape Saturday while driving down the hill near St. Houston's Uni- versity, the steering genr- of his car getting out oi ords.r. He for- ‘y escaped WilhOill serious injury. . . ...,_gu FUR REPORT-diiessrs C. M Larnpson and 00., report by cable the following October l8, 1922:- ‘ Fox. silver biacla-IO per cent high- er than inst spring; fox, silver, eit dark ‘and dark. some as lest spring; fox. silver, and pale. 15 per cent lower than iasteprlug‘; tor, silver, low grades. 20 per cent higher than lnstellrins: fox. cross 15 per ‘eenlt higher than last spring; fox, biue,_.20 per cent low- er than last spring. ..OOLONE\L MUREHBN. m)!" Tomato is visiting this City tOIIH-Y and will the the speaker at the Salvation Army ilali on Great George Street tonight at '8. p.m.. also at Stvmniersido on Tuesday night. The Colonel is ifmiiILW-IIO 11881.11 lied ‘extensively and held many i rtant positions indes- laud, Canada, and Newfoundland. lie is an able speaker. a good slu- ger, with more than usual ability to entertain. l-le now lioldsthe position oi Young People's Socrel my for mutter-n Canada extendins from Fort ‘William ‘to Newfound- land. also the BormudaEa-‘An in- teresting and instructive evening is assured to those who silsil at- tend. MAJ. BE8T'8 ADDRESS/Mu eloquent _ to the churches not to neg ect praysrfand to reit- hghg, .0“; E_ L, nomlnwnh Qt. tore‘ age-in thelfamily altar lathe Martin - _ rouse...» rrenyligzm be n’ Infill“ _ £352.“ ma)’, our the ensue-Blur ' .,h ‘on ' % fen eye-an?" -'.e.‘&.'n’£ ' ' ta-ge mo" ‘ ccplnsideifio e Ooniierfntlre" MID tionjas an independent party with itsown leader sill its ownlepro- gramme.“ It wss ‘second by fdilJorjG. Lauefox and whspfCoi- ollei Mild-may made a speech in Javor of Lloydfleorgewit look as though the meeting was inter a long and perhaps inconclusive debate. ' But then cams a change. Benar Law, who had been listening ‘quiet- ly,.arose and in’ two minutes had turned decisively the scales against a uantlllllflilct! of the Coali- tion. liie begun by saylnl "Ill- he nee been doubtful until _ the lest ‘moment about attending the moot- iug and that it was only becaus he had considered that in rcrisir like the, present. 41.9 must either come and say what, he thought. or cease “to be a member of P811151 merit. that he had decided to at- tend. » ll-ie had =n worm friendship for Chamberlain and believed that nobody could have yvoidegi getlipg intlfthe serious position in which he stood’. . my Greatest Oriole He Mont on: ‘fNow W6. nfli lit» against what ‘i think is thetsreat use crisis that has ‘ pponed in my lifetime. leaving out, of course. the more terrible crisis of the "war We have to race it,. and each of us has to say quite honestly what he thinks is the best way of iecln-g it. The real Question-is," ought the present Coalition to continue? Chamberlain himseiiwwiii be‘, tile fir-gt to admit that there really hack yagsin it must ,be_ the some coalition and under the some prime minister. __ The quell-ion that has to be decided is not sonne- thiug that affects the House of Commons‘ clone. ltaifeots every Unionist in every constttuencynlf ‘it we're possible even at that lest moment-J am afraid it is not-u liing u; operate WRIFQQ’ ed result. ‘I union. lint " atisthecoaclli Knee‘ m. ‘J , . v u.‘ ., HQ ids for UrlIfithUoscI/wen ill in; Party would, -‘ more reactionary. - . ». “i fr one say.“ went on Law. "that ough what you-call the re- ' “ ry element in our party has always been there andmust always he there, if it is the sole element our rparty is absolutely lost? Therefore, if you agree with Mr. Chamberlain in tbis,crisis, l will tell you what/l think will be the You will see a repetition of what happened after Peel pa?!- ed the Corn ‘Biiis, . The mine ty that it cast ofbwiiisiowiy become, n Conservative Party. but it will take a generation before it llels back lo the influence which a party ought to have." waskuownss ‘ “H Good Chance to Win. "So," said Law, "l shall vote in favor or our going into the elec- tion as a party fighting to win (Loud cheers) and though we may not wilk-and I may say that my opinion is 0d no more value than anyone she's-ii‘ we could have gone as a united Unionist Party 1 zhluk there would be at least a good chance. For these reasons rery reluctantly, I shall vote in ‘avor of no coalition inrt in doing his Law disolaimed earnestly any isrsona: hostility to Lloyd‘ George ‘ust as he bad helped ‘to end lsquitifs government, because he lad felt that it bad lost tile con- ‘idenco of the country, so he was now voting to lbring tiffan end-tile Coalition. "i say today that whether it ls Lloyd George's "fault or =~force oi’ circumstances—-and l think in the main it is focre of circumstances, for believeme no prime minister could have avoided urlpopuiarity in the years through which-we ‘have .gone—~ln my view tllcrcis- precise- ly the same feeling in ‘our party today that it must 5nd, and for that mason there is no good try- ing ‘to keep . it alive." (Loud cheers.) ' " ‘BALFOURlS EFFORT. ‘(One former leadcrbf» the Con» servative party had spoken 'anri~ *W0lfltl say. let Chamberlain and those who think with him. had‘ those who disagree will; his. jinn- mitkto ‘the party the question, shall we or shall we not continue) ‘the coalition‘ and lot us abide by; their decision. But if it is" influence against tile (loalition and the die seemed already cast. But- there was yet one more ef- fort lo save the day for Lloyd George. it came from Lord -Bai- lour, whose reputation ‘has never I A Avalanche of D1’ " A ‘L. -. i! A ‘corona l “from? AT"'§;H*> silks:- rorllel-lr A1’ 1 AN A Matinee, Adults 20¢, "cruised; .19.,‘ ' Evening, Adults 87s,’; "fiisfliih he. World’s'Gl'.é8t¢flt._~ ' , " '" . ' . e _- n,‘ ,_ , . I V. 4"" W "m . "‘ 5M7. "i ‘i ~Mastéi1neee -of _I_IOY°."—‘RWK1¢IFQF'“BQYF“ u" . , 3 ‘H t. ‘ / “elsrllrsnnouise'~Ri§rsl1s;i§fj}§i*.%2.:? o, "tVlt-tlllltdl. Fox l i ‘ f I l't 915$ -» Tl had given all the weight Inf-his . - . ,, . . . fawn; =11. v. clemene, Montreal; name we madam-the {Methodist v°=m1<=-~-'-!=an wit" "=8 Wille- nstood higher than n does today. fie-fizz? 'P;,'§g'“¢h:r'°';a§m“§§ c. la. iieultou, nearer; 1r. n. Church yesterday moraine BY Mill-awe *1." lane-d 11"‘ "dfirwltn all his great authority he Campbell,‘ Co" ' ‘ Rains, Halifax: P- 1M- mfdnli. ii‘; m’ Tm B“ i "'°-“.31°“.°' w" “?°',\t° s‘! ‘m’ m” - a 5'9“! “n- véimnda an earnest appeoh for the r . Montreal; c;"~A;"Gq1-¢°n, ~345n¢t@5_ rotary, Natio ai Council, Y: .C.A.»arn_>aifraid the Bnxsestion l lie ycoumnuance of the alliance Wm, E M- D- 07mm"! T°f°llt°. m1!- ' u" Be" F!" ."°19"ed-. 4° meiput 9mm“ be admned‘ itlle Coalition Liberals. Picking up - ‘ _.__ '- WW‘ v! the TM-C-A- Bin“ "nnr-l "! “HMS "an"! "m l" lbtilaelnwllre allusion to Lloyd George ‘ Qugi" HO-fEL ganinellion in Ihlxlund 73 W8Tl"mm9dmm»°fl5m.l.n ‘Wm M“ I as a great dynamic force, and his M“ J_ D_ McMillan’ and chum ilgo. it started as, a Christian As- persouaiiy attach more importance 5,18,33,10,, that n had already (19% The medicinal proporm" m 06L Boston; w_ h Morrow. l M_ M0“ sociaiion of twelve young meuand tiilteeping our party spirited body; trgyed the Liberal party and was Uivnlvllilotlsav‘ Euijoclzlsl) A BY THE -l3Rli,ss¢ “A mighty avalanche of dramatic action."—Boston Ambrican. "A gigantic spectacle with thrilling scones anld episodcsP-Boston. Globe. ery are now sowell recognised that it "goes without saying" What intelligent people nut to know whore can we procure it, and at a reasonable price. We mow and‘ Fred Morrow, oncton; J. EM Whipley, Halifax; M. J. O'Brien iilaiifax; John Brown, Pictou; H. iM. Campbell. Sit. John; D. M. ;Proed'y. Hslifay; it. J. Bolyes, today its melmbe ‘lp exceeds 1,- than ‘to winning ‘the. flelflv ' EJ80- sooooo. meet year itsprosfllln of 0011-" . ' t “J activities cost 541000.000 slid 0011-‘ tributlons [totalling "$241,000,000, ‘ No Fear of u’ tiee. ’ were made towiirdsthe work. Than * __ -,._.,,_ ..n1,~_= ~_ city; . WI. Callback, Summerside; grow celery in such large qusuti“ s L“ Vernon ma’ ties, that we are enslliled o. pluggin- it (direct groin the producer to ml consumer) at s‘ be that ‘will: RENEE! HOTIL make you smile. hlnk of it, a J. Rose, Priest Pauli; A. R. large case celery for 1250-4; oases cor-ammonia. Mel-ell; M. J, Manor, Klukora —6 dale-i $118.50. Wellington McNeiil, setinlpett; Celery i; not wugmd, b“; gnu“. Hall-old Muttart, Miilview; Geo. Me ed re.- kggpin‘ (o, "m, time‘ Donald, lSouthport; 0. MoQuold. Send in. your orders for as many “m”! P -F_- fllnltll. Monclnn‘ J. cases as required, not forggfljn‘ J. Mcceubroy, Cavendish; fiiss to 1mm“ m; mun," “m, n“ Regina Campbell, Elmira; J. W. they will belorwardod to . “out”; Ihlppfn‘ wit“, 5m“ rington, St. John; F. R. Wallace. whether by freight or express. grim“ iBluhBfillll-Efiglli P- Ag (To non-boo stations add 9°"? l'°° °i - W" Yi-‘ifk- charges.) _D. A. Boston, Woburn, Msss,; A. J, ;_.@y ‘ '9" WI. MeLaron lBoiie River; Neil - Charlottetown. r. u. l. mwmn- Benin“- A- 1- Ma lNovln ilionshsw; John McFadgen. Kinsslon: A. A. Harris, Boston; M. A. Smith, Boston; Jas. Mo Gratlh. Tignisll; H. L. McKelldrick. Tignish; D. MoOoIium. 8t. Elea- nors. . lsrocx QUOTATIONS furnished by Johnson and Ward members of the Montreal Sim-k y .. .. 95. Canadian General Electric @8155 Canadian Gtosmsbip Oran .. ‘Z31 Qalhdicnitesmship Pd -. Asbestos Oojpony -- DOIYIIIOI! Q "an"... —'- . I-flilhlfbll er ... so More»: soil-i National-Breweries ‘Atlantic sour ‘A-tohison .... . .Ala'orlcsn Osr nd Foundry ‘Aristides Grading sill Ro- .l'in_in‘s 0% Pacific Rniiwny 168K New You-k Central 99H Cuban a o o aw...»- 10m A Udall- ¢§ ‘ . "Milli! ll m.“ otrstlnlihoa liflaydlfltfi y ~ , Dec mi my silt Iii (half barrel) Ilse enMwKay. Hopewell; H. v Sander 4°“ n“ W“ ““55°=‘ “m” y," Callback, Summerside; E. L. Har- M a“ chunk‘ M“ it is “m” m’ ELALIFAR. Oct 2l-r-(Qnotations. n‘ m2, J ‘amss Morrow. in the 77th lt is s egrowingqorgu‘ ' uization _ proved by menace that within the last t/lu years. it has doubled its melnborshylpults property vai- ne and itorprogrsm. Thisaseoctiin- g e war, the speaker- said, to unkind. unjust and untrnthfui criticism but this neenltogstncr psssedwwsyieiecliion," he said. ' “i, personally within the past two years, and the have no fear of a Labor Govern- Associatiou has more active friends today than ever in its history. The Association originated as the child Young Man of the Church and is worthy oi a place at the councils o1 tho "IIGPQII-i.’ organization. -'i‘hc speaker appealed for a more su- filusisstic support of the ioca branch slid for a wider recognition of the zwork ii’ is achieving in co- operation with‘ the churches. In the even! "hf-slot- Bost delivered an a-lmiri . message in the Bap- tist Church. BIRTHS in-uantt ‘ MeKlNNON.- in. this - city, Oct. ‘Z0. to Mr. and Mrs. LA. McKillnon a sou, (John Reginald.) * nnnrrns MORROW.—At his home at Littl- ltlver on. Sunday moraine". Oct. 16th year of - his are. . _ » MeELROYrtAt New Haven, Oct. 22nd. Alice widow of the late Au- iirew Meliiroy. lihinersi Tuesday. afifl- ' lltlthor Please Copy.) rl-rzomncor- at P. a. r. i-looi p. . o." m r Panpieslflelnotelry. “sell r...<.. rapt. Rheumatic Pain ,' Dllillll 1011i!" ‘When taro’ Isrlng so‘ on QHE. llllt l»?! Gil PM‘ all end you will iisvs the rsepoppoimiestetooonuyou mam "W" K Mild Issuroio ne.i"‘r{pe'e.§i&TTaea'm it...» ‘ u“ lnrcxqtyfiehi'°rcnl; 2 ‘ 41 Al‘; -> ‘av’. i Tlien Law took upItiYeflit-gulrient’ Chamberlain had pressed '01’. tile danger of the La ' ‘partygsinirlg! power if ‘the Coalition was ahead-I ‘oned, and ceciered that in his‘, opinion it was ltvtfinly baseless, {but actually worked the otherway. Wwhatever is the rehlllvot the merit coming in, but all the some in my opidon. for what it is worth having a party composed of every one‘who was not. labor or with labor, as the only alternative will ineviltalbiv have the eiiogt oi mak- ing a Labor Government some day." - _ , ‘Lew then quoted Chamberlain forsayingthat a coalition wssftno 300d ‘unless it was a whole-heart- edjtoalition. and asked how it was Posiible to talk of-s whole-hearted coahtion when one knew that half of "tlleirisrty lied meson already to stand as Coalition candidates. “it is." lie argued. "a marriage, bow in process of destroying the Conservative party he said: “Phat can surely only mean that in the coibillet Mr. Lloyd George leading as he does the Liberal ele- liiént" in this cooperative govern- ment, is gradually forcing his Con- servative colleagues to adopt Lib- jnfitl principles in preference to lheirbwn. I have watt-he'd the proceedings of the cabinet, of whicliwl was a member for many years, and I personally have seer. no siguot this operation, and no- body has ever suggested such sigm- Under no circumstallcr whatever has a division cropl- lon-Awhcri there has Ibeen any di‘ ision-“di opi-niou-lbeen influence uponwparty lines, and ii therehlr been a change of opinion, if therl has ‘been a profound lnndlficntior of views, believe me tile modiiica tion of views has taken place on the purl: of the Prime Minister much. more than on the part of his ‘Conservative colleagues." (Load Balfour suggested as o plain, practical cormrulonsense way out oi the party's difficulties, that it say: “Differences used to div- ide us; differences may again div; "Dumas himself would have been deilghtedJk-Los Anbles Timfcs. “The production is one of the .i‘ilm achievements oi the hourP-New verk Harald. "It ls all it should he as a motion picture entertainment, and we ltgirtvllyiieoom- mend lt."—Nsw York "Morning Telegraph." l...’ , lde us; uiflerences do not divide us at the present moment. Orr til.- contrary, iwe ‘are agreed upon all lose great principles which are elng threatened. Let us remain, t '11 only allies, lbut friends. until rculnistau-ces arise which make o-operntion any longer impos- bie." ‘So he declared: "i strong- y urge this meeting to suppolftils caller." This practically ended the dis- rusoion and the vote W!!! taken. ll. ‘was an open vote, each man murk- lug-a card on which his namo was printed. it resulted in 187 votes for Captain Prety-maus motion for a separate Conservative lead- er, to 87 against. The announce- ment of the rcsuit was received with wild cheers, which were heard _£ill(l T-c-Iaiiiovtali-lby lo l rom _____. _ _. / - tors, Stan ey Baldwin and Sir in the ‘street; if the defeat ,0!» the Arthur ' Grifillth iBosca-won... lwera (toalition wgls not alingetiicrwlli-irimuug the iirstitoséhdfln their! expected, tile size of the lulijorityifrbey weredpiiowsd’ by that/ll ilgiunst it was completely a. sllptColonei Leslie Wiisolu-cilief Chal- prise. it upset ail the calculations ition. whiprpud a nurliibsr of un- of oven i-he Unionist whips, and lier secretaries also asked" to be at once nlade useless nil. protrnc-Tliyeved of their offices". IAlTeady ted discussions, lit showed. tiiilf.\llllllliili'y was ‘visibly ormnilil there could be no longer any queJ and rqihgn Vlyloyd George met i lion of continuing the Coaiitionili llLlllhb8l“qt-_Zl]ii'i' colleagues‘ at j its present form. and whatever (Yciookiu the afternoon theyklle happened the Conservatives must lilnt- if'the cabipetnwasl-joigo on. stand on _iheir_ own feet and be it lvouldabave’ to ‘fill half a. score prepared to take over tltedreinsof of vacancies.’ Clearly ‘tbsrpositi the Government immediately wnsflimpossillio; and titers wash should they he invited to do so. one thing to do. The Prime Mime ‘The result was that in the next ter must seek audience with til 70W hour-S b10311 George at Down- King and baud |n_w.hlm immedi ing Street received a. shower oi steiy the resignation of the sutfr resignations from Unionist mimo- Govcrnmellt. _ ' i -z| 1 n 'st*A._ l to I y ‘fnrsjsrof ,. ‘QDOIIQIIO firilvislfimrillwiw" /'-~.’t L‘ n n n n AAAAAA mmlmAAAAA n‘ vvv vv v v vvv vvv Vvvvvvv vvy vvvvvvvvv $1595 TOURING - llileltjhiiididate who so; law's ' t‘ circulation Drl ‘Butli-ai-Caseida" ‘m: mi " r: litfliiiililldwtlloirlilhy I .'- rio- = ~ . -..-.----.--.. . AA A ‘ - M--.“ i. -.~- u- --. -- AAA AA A ~ i - vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv .---v-v-...-"v" w--- n -.-----v."-.----.. e-vooow" STUDEBAKER “LIGHT SIX” h FOR YOU~ " CAR IS FIRST PRIZE. yA GRAND‘ REWARD FOR someone 7f i " ‘r, _‘,‘,.1 lz-wflw‘ 1"’ tS-“o” The. ardeiti the Studebaker Light Six Touring Car. ' ' Seeit _- kewoeuo-nusilellolt ~ ~ fin‘? . n .‘ ‘l an.