iii lllliilfii Qqompanies Fail, . s, to Par Bales Tax Regularly (Special to The Guardian) OTTAWA. 0nt.. Nov. lit-Two tllotluuld companies in Canada ~hsve not paid their sales tux to the l5 liiiiiill. ill ‘S NB MEN- frnr. GUARDIAN. ‘- BY situations“ Oil Tanker Expiodes, 15 (Special to The Quit-dint) BALTIMORE, Md, Nov. Men Killed 19.——15. government when it was due. This ‘ n! the Premier's committee of the 71a» ' -... - the Dominions, according to an un- ' sitlllclcnt ' 4w __-_ Canada Against Ac- gept8l1¢8 of [local-no Pact-Middle Course Adopted by Conference. l. v s. LONIDON, Nov. l9.- Tlte report imperial tspnferentxe on the Locar- no treaties will commend the work oi‘ Sir Alusten Chamberlain in their negotiations and recognize the part. the treaties played in creating a new attitude in Europe, but will not express any opinioil one way or the other cu the acceptance of the treaties by the Dominicans. The treaties again were before the premiers’ committee today and they will be considered further be- fore ll/fiusl resolution is adflilleli. but the fore-going is now reilllfd" ed as the most probable outcome. Under it the» Domlnions as a WhOlB neither accept nor reject the treat- ies. it is left to any individual Dominion to assume i.h‘e treaties ll it wishes. On the acceptance of the treaties official report dividetF-Nswfound- land and New Zealand in favor of acceptance, alld Canada. Emil" Africa and the Irish Free State against Ailstralia ailillllfllllli’ “Wm” ed acceptance lntt did not wish to press the point unless tho Donrilt- ions united on the question. 'lhc dincusslott has continued at inter- vuls for several weeks. ’l‘ilcre were various resolutions proposed one favoring, it is stated. the joint ucccptatlce oi‘ the treaties by the pommlgng, ill view of the divid- ,..| V-Qpinlfln, howcyer, this was dropped botil sides leventlullly agreeing oll the middle (EOIITHU lit- dicaicd, in Lliil submission of which, l-t. is stated, the (ianadian delegation‘ played a prominent purl. in its constitution deliberations generally, in fact, the Premier's committee is following n. middle course. By one close to the corn- mltieo the respii of its work is des- cribcduolligilt as meetinz the d9- lnallds both oi‘ llmperialvuuity and Dominion autonomy. "The man who wants to stay in the Emillre yct. who wants the Dominion to govern themselves need have llo four oi‘ tho outcome." it. was stated "Tile committee ‘adopted no ex- ltrelno view of either side but have satisfaction to built." A report adopted today after |'uVlO\Vlli|Z the measures adopted by various Dominions, says there is ugreelnollt. _V_Vl(!lilll the lrulplrewto ‘warrant-nae unveiling" vl negotiations with foreign countries with a view to the conclusion of, a reciprocal agreement for the mitt- ual taxation of government tradlnZ cuter-prises. (in the motion of PrcutiorvMac- konzle King seconded by Premier Stanley M. Bnucc, the conference today passed resolutions 0i‘ appre- ciation of the work of the Imperial shipping and Imperial economic .i'iillllllll.ii‘.0 approves its tutti-tinn- nllcc oll the present illlsis with coll- iilltltlncn of tho committee's ill- quirios illio the marketing oi‘ ldtlt- pirc. tnodstilffs ill Grunt Ilriiuin. Truro Woman Killed by Auto (Canadian Preu) rnloalo. N. s.. Nov. 19- — ills“ Hertha N. Holmes, 36. WEB lllllllllll‘ ly killed on Prince Street. this utt- ornoon when an automobile driven by Mrs Henry Norrie of River dohn. mounted the curb and the sidewalk. and finally crashed into a parked cur, which stopped its flight. All inquest. will be hold tomorrow. ._'.\ "Condensed spa-nan . RATE-dc per word. M! each insertion ll thh column. rm MEMORIAM cnndo-ewcen- _ did selection to "choose from. Guardian Job Printer-y. tf. é?» SALE-ANTIQUE MAHOG- nuy llureau. Apply 7 Richmond isi, 2850-11-20-31 ________i___...__......-_-- “EXPERIENCED F O U L T R V pluckers wanted.--Harris Abst- mit- co, 2881 11 20 2i JOB PRINTING 0F EVERY description, cheaply and expediti- ously executed.‘ Guardian Central JobrPrintery- Phone 132 . _ i‘ oYOU WANT GOOD INVILOPIS Prices iii) for 20ft. 100 for 35c. 250 for Bile, 500 for 8.100, 1000 for 31.05. Postpaid. Guardian Office. “IN MEMORY" VERQES SUIT- shle for motlher, father. wife. lull- band, daughter, son, sister bro- P O ther. soldier or friend —250 YQIlQl-— may b0 consulted It Guardian Office. t? ‘HOME MADE POTTID MEAT. Fresh uuugel. Saunders. New- Iom d: 00.. Rut End Market Bldg. t! _e-enn-¢¢_~. “CALENDAR UALIIMAN. EX- periended preferred. start imme- is not ascribed. to inL-oliity to pay but to the islet that no interest is charged on overdue paylllelllfl- ll l! introduced- providilll 4791mm" m" will greatly reduce the number 0i’ delinquents. Heavy penalties are provided for persons who do not .pay their income taxes promptly. High Price Paid For Rare Edition (Special to The Guardian) LONDON, Nov. 19—lA copy of the probaltfle that: mamendment will be , of Poeifs Works‘ Hill PEHISIIEI] Freighter Burned to Water’s Edge Near Sore], Que. - Loss Placed at $600,000. (Canadian Press) MUNTIUFIAL, Nov, 19, —- Chur- les Edward Vulois, Stigunce dc Loyola, ll. Lalnontuntue, Strliuhol- as and J. ‘Lellcuu, address lln- knowll, urc nlisslng and lllnir fute llllkllOlVll as the tv-sult of the lire which burned tho Cutlmlu steam. ship Lilies freigllicl- Montreal, to the water's ciigc lteor Sort-l, about fifty llllles down the Si. Lllwront-e from hero lilril. night. it is presumed iilill Mliiiiii liiiii Woman Tells offleeing Defendants in Lane 011 Night Double Tragedy Occurred - Mrs Jane Gibson Was‘ Brought to Identified Widow of Slain Pastor and Her Two Brothers, Who Are Arraign- ed on Murderilharge- - .._.._.______ ‘SOMERVILIJI-l, N. J.. Nov. 19. .thut she saw all of them the night —-Mrs. Jane (lib-son came to court, Court Room on Hospital ' Got and‘ Question of Italian Emigration to Aus- tralia Wlll be Dls- cussed. (Specini to The Guardian) LONDON, Nov. l9.—-Premier Bruce of Australia wiii visit Musso- lini next month to discuss the ques- tion oi iltslian emigration. il-lis vis- it is tentatively arranged to take men were reported killed ma; 16" Injured as workers plunged fraud»; caily into the blazing hulk of the; r . ‘Pfllly at Boat-lows Point this after- noon. The explosion blew out the side of the oil tanker. Want Income v Heam fiReducedi o'l"11-i\\‘~.. xii-l. ‘.11 wt»..- lengs oi up i*_\l"ll.~;l\<3 truffle‘ tn liqu- Tor between British Columbia. and the United States was alleged be- Smuggie it Across from British Colum- bia, . Customs Probe (Special to The Guardian) TURONTU. Nov. l9.——The Oll- trade Norwegian oil tanker Mltntfliaf ' " ‘ 7--—- D I‘ ' ‘ wrecked by an explosion ln the dry- ' v dock of the Bethlehem Steel Oorn- American V e s a 5 ' ‘ mace Dem 16 and he w," mend tario associated boards of two days with t-he Dace in Rome. meeting M the ‘on!’ H3“ 1°45!’ Premier Bruce received an invlta- Passed "'9 ‘olmwmg Tesmlmml! tion from Mussolini before he ar- ‘That we petmm‘ ‘he d°mml°1lB°V fore the Royal Commission investi- gating the customs department, at. ‘today's sitting. C. P. Blair, chief executive as- Kilmamock Bums‘ m,“ owned byvhere that the tut-n, tho first two In"! Ghancalm a {new M. the poet of wholll were deck-hands and the price for this edition in its original blue paper wrapper was £1,800. The Glencall-n copy is ‘bound in calf. The poet named one oi‘ .his Lord Giencsirn and wrote laments on his death. Willingdon Honors Memory 0f The Fallen (Special to The Guardian) lAll-It-ORA, 0nt., iNov, 19.—'l‘o pay honor to tho memory of the solldier dead of Aurora was Wlllingdoae first act upon his visit here today. Unmindful of the (lrizzlillg rain fal- about. 11:30 a. ln. at the imposing masonry shaft erected ill memory of the fallen, His Excellency, vac- compauiett by Lady Willingdon. left his motor u-rld after being grout ed by‘ representative citizens placed a large memorial wreath presented by Sir William Mulock. at the base of the monument. A guard of Imu- Rangers was present and was ill- spirtztvt! l.y tho new c’ vcrnor g-il‘ .ul'lii. A military snlartlless tnarlwd the arrival of Lord and Lady Willing- don ui. Si. Andrew's College short- ly uitcr nooll today. Tile two hours before the prize day ceremonies wits occupied by luncheon and all inspection of the buildings, croctcd ut a cost including the site of 219 acres. oi about $900,000. The offic- ial Oiltlillng of tile llelv buildings and the presentation of prizes took filly-e baggie. gymnasium-attendant acDoita in his ail-irons stated that. though a Canadian school, St. Andrews held‘ Ilritisn. trnilitions very dear to its heart. He paid tri- bute to His Excellency, Lord Wil- lingdon, for the outstanding qual- ities that had led him to the high post of governor general. Makes Debut as A First Glass) Comedian FAST MOTION AND BUNCHED LAUGHS KEEP STRAND AUDI- ENCE ENOHANTED WITH GIBSON'S "CHIP OF FLVING . U" Plenty of action, plenty of coni- etly, all original plot and a cast filled with capable players makes "Chip of the Flying U", the Univer- sal productiomwhich opened at the Strand Theatre yesterday. one of the lnost entertaining pictures of the tuotltil. With llloot ‘Gibson in the stat-rim: role nu the unlucky ctlwpuncher of the Flying U ranch, the picture moves without a dull moment from the first to the last scone. llloot is seen. as the llll-‘lllle °l" ens, fleeing wildly from ‘SOIIIS un- scou, but doubtless terrible pur- suers. He hides shivering with lean-in a small ravine. His pumuers bent about the brush for their quarry, discover hint at last anti he is dragged protestingly to a country dance. it is Gib- son's shyness that causes ltinl to flee. but ho is cast by his fellow cowpuncherg into tho tuidst of the Dirty. The whole story chronicles the amusing doings of Chip and his comrades on the ranch, which is upset by a visit from the sister of the ranch‘; owner. Gibson is given excellent aid in is comedy scenes by Mark Hamil- on, Harry Todd and “Pee Wee" Holmes. _who appear at Hoots fel- low ranch-bends. Hamilton, tall thin and lugubrious. and "Pee Wee" lf-oimbs, short and aggressive, pro- vide tnuny laughs. ' Virginia Brown Falre, who seems to ho perpetuaiiyin the role of 0th- aon's leading iadyrsince she played opposite him in "The cslgary amn- pede" and "The Mun in the Saddle" adds her feminine charm to the role of the ranch owner's sister. of the owner of ranch who tries to thwart Qhlfl‘; love-making once he had swam-g. ed to the charms of the flir visitor. Dewitt Jennings _ gives a capable performance 0e the gruff owner of the ranch on which so many things time. , The fourth chapter of The Spe- "lllflly. ‘occlusive visits than; state notifications. Apply Box 5204mm on, Ontario." tau-noon: line. highest, commissions. 000d contract for-sud "The Radio Bus" a cisl "Fighting With Buffalo nllt" ,week-end program which will he repeated today. w“ 80m taday by eonwbys {mzthird a lookout perished, either ill £780 to a ‘London mam 4.1m record the flames or by drowning. ‘The loss to the steunlship com- lpuuy is lllflCPtl at $600,000.!“ lnid- day fire on the Montreal was still smouldering and thc. vessel was lyingYlilou-t 100 feet off shore where she had been beached by her mas- ter. The yltlntrcnl was (jflrfylng 350 tolls oi‘ cargo and 4 horses. ller ship's company illllflllfllBfl to ltllout 50 mun. _ {Oi Helium Used by Deep Sea Divers WAS-IIINKYIUN, l). C., Nov. 19.- Helilllll. that rare gas which floats uirships, is now ileilu-r Ililt to the novel trsc of aiding tion-p sch divers here today on a hospital bed t0 testify that site saw Mrs. Frances Stevens Hall, and her brothers Henry and IWillie Stevens at Mid ‘llsur the place the bodies of theiseemet] Rev. Edward W. llall and Mrs. Eleanor Mills were found on the. night they were slain more than four years ago. Front ltcr bed, made into a wit- nee-s stand, the witness said that she saw Mrs. Hall and Willie Stell- eus utillltilflg in trout of an automo- bile ill Dellussey‘; lane, near New‘ Brunswick, before she heard shots. fired. Later ho saw d-Isnry Stevens lust. ileiorc 511a heard shots and still litter oil-served Mrs. Hall kneeling! near ihc place where the witness hull heard voices littering oaths. She glointcd to the defendants in, the court. room and said they are‘ the person-s she saw. . The (lratnatic appearance of the witness ill the court room followed, a ride in an ambulance from Jersey |ulan Willie ling as the vice regal marty arrived’ |in their struggles lit oiled. .bot- ‘CHY- Whvr“ “he m“ bee“ a patient‘ |mm._,_ n in a hospital for tell-days. Hera lExpt-rilncllls by tho bureau of mre“ hm“ “my m the Cour’- room . ~ d‘ mines lllillfllll‘ t.llnt llr-llllm's utility be“ wu"-ended "l"? “m” she h“ i Ywlll he as great. ill the depths us it punffuy "M39" heme." “"6 scrum’ is ill tho heights, and considerably ed’ I 10m the tum" ‘onhalfihme more woldr-lt-dtly ill ltructlcul value. grliflerlflifluxfizfvnrifl- m: ‘hm: Willi HS assistance, tlew ‘low lev- l h‘ i , ' " ‘els lltuy llc ltiiaitteti safely llly till-kw ‘man M" salvage ivorkcl- undor water. -I)ivers who work with the iifillibl equipment suffer ‘from what is No lli-Eifechs prolonged. Tilc cause of this somc- appearance. times fatal oilmcllt is the ubsorp lMrs. Gibson's story was in many tioll by the divers tissue of ultra-particulars thc recital she has iivt- gen which causes bubbles in the en over a period oi‘ four years, u arteries. lielium, like nitrogen, is there were some additional details so inert, and transferable that it. today and some chlillfiefl- lll DPBV!" may be lnixed with oxygen, forming oils testimony she had not ldentifl-g a synthetic atmosphere, compres- ed llicztrlylfiteveeus right: fiflsqfigfirl: sibie for sllpiply to divers and very ‘Jaw ll f‘- fli‘ ">- - - . - nearly free oi‘ the tendency to pm. idoniliicd licnry (iarpender, cousin dilcc the interned bubbles for wllicll "l "l" tllfe" llelilililflili“ i" the M“ nmngel, h, ,.e,,pm,_q||,|e_ Many 1mm on trial, which charged the murder experiments were made by the lnin-“f Mr-‘b Mm“- ‘f"“l‘°““"“ ‘i New cl"s bureau with animals uttd then ‘Wgtkt bmkw- i“ 6:‘ 3"“n:"‘*""' ‘mug the bureau's fiqlfiflfitlfilwvlflliilllfll? n " mP-"J'~°" " H ' “M? ‘ _ for nhexdlverkww ‘turned M“, u, the cousins face. lie came to lit. the navy‘ “s first Extensive “why court roont today in have iMrs. "was proveh ill the raising of the submarine 18-51 which was stink near Newport, R. I. pointed lllm ollt us a person pros- ent. The direct examination was brief less than twenty minutes, willie the. croes-extlnlitltl-tion required‘ two‘ -_____<-o->~—- American News For ,hours and thirty minutes. Tho ‘trend of the questioning by defense Italy Mostly Stale _ attorneys after the witness had ROME, Nov. 10. -'l"oliticnl edi-,heon- led liq repeat her story of iorials uud cdltorlul-llelvs glories wllut she saw nnJthe night of the 1m- tho chief item of newspaper‘ dnirblc killing, was to draw infbr- ,i1e.;n|1a|y_ _ nlation as to her pas-t Ii-fe. She lAmterltizlll news usually comemwlls vague as to many details and second or third ilnltd, through Lon-ldenietl iha-thshe has had morethan do“ m. lpafls‘ in (he form of clip-jolts 'hltsilunti.William Euston, she pings front. old Attlerltealr hows-said is her only husband. Shc papers, No q-ogtllur telegraphic cor-‘was called as u witness under the‘ re-gpolltlellis are lnaitltllinetl in tltc name of Jane Gibson, but sworn ‘United lStatcs, and ralllllicutions of as "Jane Easton" her eXDllillalloll American politics and-the details obof the (liiscrepancy being that she American federal and s-tllle govern-look the name "rGibson" when she Philo Mcfiullough makes a olalmi “M lmmm“ "huv?" l" "l9 it!" domestic news. Advertising seldom heard mumbling voice; as if in ar- ll "Blzhbouring oxen,“ one full page. Display ad- gument. .a reference to nlent ltpparelttly ltucotly arc a mys- tery. When Charles dd. llughes visited Rome he was greeted by ihc newspapers Jig "tile iillrstriotls vice- presltleut of tllc. United Slates". Like Freak Stories Preference is given to flezlk and feature stories. Great disasters or other events pulling the iltlitcd States in the position of the ltearth of stupendous occurrences are good for u paragraph or two. Italian newspapers rely for well over half of their pictures on cllp-- pings froln American llcw-spapcrs. in some (nlsos the (lrlginnl cilptlous are freakishly changed. in others they are. dropped altogether and re- placed by odd silhstitutes. IA picture of lDnugins I-‘airbankfl and Mary Pickford showing tllfllfl visiting u children's asylum and holding two infants ill their arms was csptiotled: "Movie stars with ‘their two lovely children". Alter 1 recent disaster. a picture refllll "Showing tho damage lll lllfl ""1"- lshlilg town of Loo King west." Display Ads Unknown The newspapers generally are slX pages in size. Foreign news find! little space in (hem. almost all of it being of a political nature. mostly referring to matters in which Ital)‘ is interested or conccrnod. The typical make-up devotes all of the first and most of the second page to lengthy editorial articles and editorial-news stories (Filmed to doulesltlc politics. Similar artic- les about" the partimliar purchased the Gibson farm. Defence Tries to Discount The defence clearly indicated in its cross examination that its ef- forts to discount the indelltification of the defendants will be an at- tack on the creditibility of the wit- nesses. She was asked at lellgth as to whether gha llflil been divorc- ed aud if she had known tucn. whose names were given her. dlrr reply to ‘these questions was "no." She could not give the name of the town or city in which her mar-rinse to EIPSIOII look place. "I don't re- lnetu-ber," Wll-g the answer appear- ng frequently in tho testimony. lnurflug [he cross-examination. Mrs. Gibson was shown photo- graphs and ‘asked if they were like- ness of the defendants“ she slid they were not and that she did no. know who they represented. She was also asked as to conversations with detectives and investigators uttd asked if she had made state- mcnts that she could not identity any one she saw the nigh-t of the lnurder. -She denied making such statements. Mrs. Gibson's story of her obser- vation of the events of the nlslll- of the slaying of the minister and choir singer was brief, She told of riding her mule in pursuit of a rattling wagon, suspected as a veh- ‘icie used by thieves to curry away corn of passing an automobile in ‘front of which stood a man and a woman. She said the woman was lMrs. Ilall and although she sov- Ieral times said that the man was foreign "a colored than". she reiterated her. 1,011,“; pflugflfifl which happens to identification of him as Willie Stev- ‘ba important are sandwiched uln- ong those. From one-hall to a full page each are devoted to local and vet-lining is wholly unknown. On the average, the activities of ‘Premier Mussolini IBOIlODOlIIu fromo-ode hel- mills, away. DlSCflV8flllQ|K°od Ship. the trannfer of the. t o one-third of all thedhat she had lost a moccasin shelqiw" B" 10 "l9 "lwflllim" "miter baffled all one {our h t the pIROQJBOIIIQ few millions of her loyal to, sclst lPnrty and Istrcist (lovol-n- where she had tied her mule and Hillier! and the 1mm" Wm" “i “W” '" "M" “ “h”! "P"! "i meat rult the tltsl of domestic (and then saw Mrs. Hall kneeling "llilhll Qqllilllment. preventing an 8. between one- the gmumi making n "funny noise." 9- ‘5- hid one been necessary. Mike, before winning his A. i1, had had some dealings with been I unit he was sent Iltllll’ with m. oil 3 The calm of the three defendants smudge in ulcer the wine. Alltljip sq- puges survived again ape used. invents referring to the I Iilclst) politic! to lhelf and gyro-thirds of all the news. This. however, varies greatly. par- fast mow‘ iculsrl h n the premier is do III [lag comedy completes this llirte_:mggt||’n:q|:porgsng when he; Ir uke ilp two or three eatin- lli to tumult. , s ens. 1 iler story _ continued that she tied her mule to a cedar tree and "explain these debtors" sounds of a scuffle. ‘oaths. shots, and then she hurriedly ‘said she returned to Defllidlllb Maintain Calm ‘daring tint. GIQMnYI declaration. "l the killing. did it falter, and they restlnteti with unchanged express- lon-s u she repeated hel- out]; n5 n witness before being carried away. Mrs. Hall and Henry Stevens slightly less interested ‘Stevens. who leans for- ward when the unusual is present- cd in court" Arrival of the ambulance bearing the witness from the Jersey City llloflllitul found a court roonl packed ‘to its doors, waiting for a glimpse of the sick witness. ' ‘The witness was promptly carried through the crowd. with police ‘lliillllflil the way, and placed on a bed ill the court room. A doctor stood at her head and a nurse by her side its she begun her testi- "Wlly- ller voice was feeble as shc heard the special prosecutor's first questions, bllt as the examlna. tion progressed she sparently grew Qllllllltlel" and the tones of her voice were much louder. At inter- vsls the doctor felt her pullsa and the nurse administered nourish- lllen-t itt the form of milk, a glass lllbe being used. Most of the testimony was glvglt as Mrs. Gibson lay fiat on her back. She was elevated slightly w time the oath. again to look at the de- fendsrlts as she made her identifica- tion. and raised herself on her el- bow to shout her declaration of trilth-fulness. With the high spot of the drums Q;- [mm [he york Ranger,‘ rsglment-knowlt as "the bends" when thcirf She apparently suffered no ill-'of the state's case reached with the augmented by cadets of the York ill-fly llllll eXelllvll-‘i llllllel‘ Witter are effects frolu her journey and court llleflflflilillfln 0f Mrs- Gibson the prosecution will lile closed tomorrow in what promises to be an anti-cit- max. IBaok to Pospital JERSEY CITY, N. J.. Nov. l9.- Mrs. Jane Gibson, was returned to her bed in Jersey City hospital from Somervllle tonight l-n a condi- tion that was pronounced by attend- ants “as good as can be expected after a sixty rmiie trip." ;.Dr. Ohnrics Snyder, lnterne. who ' nleli "hUl"“B1ll§lllB1)C€§“ le- rltafed that the trip “didn't. do her -any good." Gibson say that. she had previously! .- Fiiillliil Bill Fill iiiiillfifi EXPjSS L. M. and S. Railway --Eig'ht Persons Were Killed. , (Canadian Press) RlOlTlbElbl-IIAM. Yorkshire. E118- Nov. 19. — ‘Eight persons were killed and all equal llumber injured- some seriously, in all unusual acci- dent on the lnndon, Midland and Scottish Railway between Park iGate and Rotherham today- A m“ ill a freight train became derailed. as the express from Rlrminsllllll to York was approaching. llllll l9" across the express, ripping vile" the sides of several coaches. The injured were brought here. “Hurricane” of Bees Threatened Ocean Liner NEW YORIK. N. Y.. Nov. 19.—lA "hurricane" of bumble bees threat- ened the comfort, if not the safety of the crew of the Dollar liner President Adams on her recent trip through the Mediterranean. Capt. W. A. Ross’. a voracious mariner. has the proper entries in his log to substantiate every detail to say nothing of the ship's hospit- al record noting three days conval- eecence for Seaman Mike McGrlW. one of the volunteers summoned to "Mpel boarders." “it was a calm afternoon." fe- so off the ibearn -i sew a black 690l- Thg gpgg "may and g, bun like ceptible. Through m)’ glasses. 1 coufld see the sir teeming with been." today. Not once Ills was under the doctor‘: Olflltltg mguufgegu time dun. it's all in ‘the record. l rived in England for the Imperial conference. Southern Italians deprived of their former oultiet to the United States have been emigrating to Australia, where climatic conditions are well suited lo them and to which they can adapt themselves more easily than other types of im- migrants. For this reason and be- cause Australia wants British im- migrants first last and all ‘the time, it is unlikely that Premier Bruce will be able to assure Mussolini there can be any general letting down of the bars as far as Italians are concerned. Report on Immi- gration Reaches eramcnt to introduce Lilo necesear legislation at the next session ‘Parliament to (A) reduce the i O Y slstunt of the department. told the f commissioners that liquor was ship "' ped from British Columbia ports. fg"t':r£“xl'“:%“ t?‘ ti“ 19"“ °7 fhmwkl-uch as Vancouver. Victoria and, refine awn‘; u‘: i; ‘ed Slalel- (B) Prince Rupert to islands or points and av m er” ewflt" P94110110" along the British (blumbia count. cor P“ “c” ° d“? calm" of m“ ' Once there, it awaited the arrival 9°" 0“ “cm” m‘- of United states vessels which took _ _ it on board without going through of Clvll the formality ofobtaialng clearance papers. and smuggled it into the ' ilaited States. Mr. Blair said he Servlce Exam‘ knew of nothing which could pre- - - vent the shipment of liquor to lllatlOHS-poiuts 1011K the“ small Columbia. ___ coast. 'l‘ e appl-e ension of the vee- (camdm, PM") sel which called for it at these OTTAIWA, o..." Nov_ 19_ _1~he points would deal s blow st the tt-af results of the civil service exams, c- held on Sept, 23m and 39m 1am.» Vessels were never cleared for have been announced. Several the M!!!‘ 5°"- the Win19" flld- A hundred candidates med flwvessei. however. could clear for a exams at tile different points lnicertaln. port, discharge her cargo Canada and lists are announced in along the Canadian coast and then order oi‘ merit, it being the prac- return "from the high was." Unusual Accident on- IDOYlI Capt. Ross, "when a poin-t or several aeroplane motors was per- Oondenettlg the details somewhat. his story relates the impact of the- N. B. Premier tice to offer civil service positions as they become ilV-illlflble with the (cqnudlm pa") candidates at the top of the list. ST. JOI-ilN, Nov. 19. — A mem- In the typlsts grade one Helen orandum of the agreement reached J. MacDonald. Charlottetown, P. E. lellllllively at the conference last L. was fourth; stenographers week in Montreal on immigration grade two,_Mary 'D. MacPherson. for the Marititnes has been receiv- Sunlrnerside. P. ‘E. I. fourth; clerks ed here by Premier Baxter and grade two, Samuel K. Todd. Char- sigrled by him and forwarded on lottetown. P. E. I. 12th. to Premier Stewart. Premier of Prince Edward Island. This report outlines conclusions reached at the meeting of representatives of the C- P. R. and C. N. R. and the Hllllflclfe Bay Overseas settlement Board and the three premiers of the lMllfltlm6fl. Bank Run By Students Has Rec- ord Day Deposit "MOBUYW Hon. Dr. Baxter said. this morning, "they are gengra] m LYNN, Kline's" Nov. 18. —- Stu- character, but we are hopeful" good dents in the ‘Lynn English High will follow from thgfn‘ M, Soon as School run their own savings bank‘ the agreement is glgngdl by a" sq comble, 1o practical advantage.‘ parties concerned, it will then)". study and thrift. The bank is said tion. Hon. Robert Forks." ‘ —-83lB0 —— received one Monday morning. The school has 1400 stud ‘Nte Lyntr-system or a student- operatedsschool bank has been teal- ed by twelve years successful Fe"- vice. It has been copied in four- teen states anti two foreign count ries. , Regular banking rooms are tnaill-L tsined. Students. themselves, fill the various positions, receive deposits and keep Rllllilreoittfltiii EVE!!! Favor Of Old Subjects MUNl-‘CH. Nov. l9. — Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria is one of the fe_w deposed rulers of Ger. man states who continues to enjoy the confidence of his former sub- jects. ln public functions he is giv- en precedence over all members of the republican government. Rupprecht has never abdicated 0r announced his rights to the 000 throne of his fathers public school's of the city above 1he third grade. In that time the stu- dents have saved more than $200.- m WINNJPEG. Mm. Nov. ~19. _ Beryl. a semi-precious gem worth, when cut, from ‘l5 .to $20 a, caret, has been found in the psgmatlteg of the Bird river, only 100 miles from Winnipeg, TWO claims. comprising 104 acres. have been staked by the dis- coverer. Kenneth Miller of Winni- 998- He report's 25 to 30 out- crops over a length‘ of 2.000 feet. The width of the shistose-mica banded area in which the crystals occur, is about 1,000 feet, and with- in this there are often lenses wid- enlux to 100 feet in which numer- ous fractured crystals can be seen even on the surface. Many of the crystals, as in the state of ‘Maine where the only: deposit being worked on the con-i tillent is situated. are fractured through the latter rocks being laid} down under great heat and pres-‘ sure. Many others are perfects but milky, and- so are of one col-tr’ rllercial value. The clear fractur- ed crystals are valuable provided‘. that they are NOT too shattered to‘ Permit of cutting and polishing. l night at Shiloh while tho State oi Michigan tkept an eye of surveil- lance of the movements within the colony of the House of David. IPurnell was carried to court late today on s stretcher by six of h-ls aides for arraignment on charges of siatwtory assault brought by a former woman member of the cult. He. furnished $5,000 bond and W88 returned in an ambulance to Shi- loh. Bonds for the captured lead- er now total $112-$000- DO YOUR XMAS SHOPPING EARLY. REMEMBER THE TIME. YOU HAD éi‘ LAST YEAR smaifstones. Many other semi-precious ustones have been found from time ,to time itl Manitoba. Gsrllots. too- small in size to be commercially‘ valuable, but interesting as curios.| {can be picked up on the Wanipi- ~gow river and on Clear Water (lake. They have also been re- ported to hMe been found in the Pas district. Amber. a fossilized resin, from . lprehiatorlc forests, is being found- todly in the lime district by Ind-l isns, who lilnrd their secret jea- llously. This finds a ready mafltetflgtearlng and becoming a little “mu” at um‘ “w” on mm‘ locally and on the markets of themoider. . “A: d“ Mum‘ N“ and n not world. Toronto cloudy .. 1m“ Tuna‘. ' d Amber lotto a a spot about ls-M ma. l in .. 48——3i ' ' Y- °° m"! l" miles out of the Pas. and everyfqxehecurel; . . . . . . . . .. . 44-42 “u '°"'°d- 3545 spring after high water the Indians gharlottgtown cloudy . . intake their finds on the east shorlfl-lslifsx cloudy of that lake. The source has so st. John rain . loll-chm- Boston rain . Dllmvndn Will rel be found in New York m.- .......... .. 54-4 {the north. according to Mr. Miller. ‘ill Ohio the glacial drift included and tonight st 11.01. Ind thOIO GINO down from file-um] flue‘ tomorrow Labrador-Ultimo country. sir-atoll. Miller's n: st present are to nee L"; quay-lay , v moan and rvllhited quart: in Nov. 27th 2.51 n. m. morning n .§nflll‘il:l) made in Manitoba souvenirs. I later than Oheriottewwlt. .4 I 1' s ~ .--' dents. i the|trict. the accounts. enough to‘ The school savings plan has spread were possible to use a hydraulic in one form or another to all the giant. ' - HEA-D OF HOUSE OF Seml-PPGOIOUS DAVID cavemen T0 Gem I ‘ count" ON STRETCHERl N lscov-ele.“ lJLN'l“J.\ hills-lit .\l.-E. w» .19.- W/l . ed I illne. . lter llili fourth ‘lldrlfggt whim. qislvjl days.’ "King" llellj. lulrlleli. rested lo- TORONTO, Nov. 10. —Maritime.l strong winds shifting to northwest. 41-44%- sz-a - .. sa-er N . 62-40 “all ‘High tide this morning lit use '°“"°"' volcanics with diamonds in when 81m vet; this afternoon at 4.28 in Winnipeg offlutntnerside tide eighteen minnlqflusedl ' Mr. Roweii suggested zhat ifvcs- eels entering port were compelled to state that they canto rrom some definite port instead of "from sea” they might be checked up. The witness agreed to this, Report Stampede To Latest Goldfield PORT ARTHUR. 0nt.. Nov. 19- According to reports s. stampede has started to the latest goldfield in the north. that of Savant Lake. At least fifty m-specto s have passed through Bucks station, on the National Transcontinental, en route to Savant Lake which lies laid before th Mi i i. . to hold the records for deposits illlibmll- twenty miles north of the e n 8 er of Immlgra such an institution in a single daylraiiwsy and l8 llclleflfllblfl b7 I fill“ ly good water route from Bucks. Recent reports are to the effect that a very sensational: ifintlrof gold has‘ been made-in ‘tit s' hold. ‘Wlili“ i: o-u- oi the {mill-rs u~ ihu pI‘iv'l'i!"'-- \‘.'.'l' r0 lio- .'..i'7\:-lllntl' is l" ...-.i..ll, lab-i; t». .~.,.1.lr.'l i-.-.._,~;.-_. - '01s. lion)’ _.t' tlgl- will-r‘. ii. ‘Lake lay .39“ unles- iron. Itll)'\i'llt‘l'". an engineer reported that he had found huge gravel beds in the dis- which would carry gold. pay for ‘sluioing. if 1t To Accept Honor But; Not. Money LONDON, Nov. ‘19. — George Bernard Shaw, noted English play- writgl" who avns nvrntdt-d the I92‘) \'-»l-ci i"i.'. j. it this?» is wlllllll: u. _..~--t: ' oi‘ lb.- :l.~':lr\l tint; rl-u .-‘ which u.<u:lll, fli;llllliii'~' l- . uhltMllf‘. Rllsln proposes that the money should be used to encourage inter-course and understanding in literature and art between Sweden. where the lwltll originated and Great Britain. Announcements, Coming Events, Meetings, Etc. "Come to the dance in the New Perth hall. Wednesday. Nov. 2i, slid have a good time. 2817-1l-20,2i "Uisg Orange Hall, Nov, 20nd, concert by Charlottetown talent. tats. "Victoria I-Isll tonight —— as» "When The Door Opened". Don't, miss this show if you never see sn- other. Comedy. "Conic to the Pie Social uml Dancc at Webster's Corner Hull. on Monday. Nov. 22nd. Excellent mllilc- 2826 1120 2i "Remember the Phiinthea Con- cert in Marshfield‘ ‘Hall Tuesday evening, Nov. 23rd. Some of 0h‘- I063 town's Beet talent. '°"The Path Across the Hill." Prilllillivll by St. Josephs Dramatic Club in Trscndie Hell on Monday, Nov. 22nd. Good specialties. 2887 11 20 ll "P01111110, Bridge. Monday, m“. l"! ‘ilieturee. wonderful show. ‘Don't miss second chapter ems-i’? .4.__._.. urses will he held at the PJI. l. d-iospital Monday. Nov. SIM-AG I b. nl. Matters lifetimes! All Private ‘Nurses are cordially invited is mono. ~ ‘n ion and jssir ruwrnday emits. " m. 7 \- t, ‘nnofl? forge. “h” ‘or harass in AIM Icvgq I ’ v_ . Yinltl t "A meeting of the ‘Pl-lute Ditty ‘ _. .. _,_'_;~.; 4- ‘ deli"- ‘