rime JMinisterP Criticises Campbell - LePage Stdiute island Province _Has Become “ The Delaware Of Can- ‘ add” In Granting Liberal In corporation Charters, Says PremlerBennett In Proposins.’ Conference To DiscussPrevention Of injurious Reorganizations Of Companies. j ‘OTTAWA, may 2. (By the Can- ' m“ pressl-Calliilg of a Domin- pgovineial conference to clear h, ggmpioltlilfl difficulties sur- m the oriernilim 91 _ 9W1‘ and arising largely out of authority W" 919N995 m 1M Henge of Commons today h? W, Minister n. B. Bennett. Dominion and Provincial lini- Mnm, 1n granting ineorporatlons ‘companies and i119 1161051118’ 91'- jmethod to prevent injurious re- flnnlmions of gmnpanicl involv- m the issue of "enormous water- mgd securities" on the _pilblic m ersentinl for the maintenance ,1 ognadifs commercial life, the wygynment leader ’ ‘v “, Ml‘. Bennett thought this conference .m1d take place immediately on netum to normal times- q-hg Prime Minister was speak- log on s measure providing that Dominion concerns, which have _: tcred assignments 0f their .. debts with provincial author- _uwi11n°h bgreqlllfodtollllkol ‘were registration .with the Bec- Nigry of State. The bill was ad- jnnced through committee and iiow Sidlldb 101' itllifd 26841111!" wt iliill Should Be Uniformity , "if we get back to normal con‘ ditions," Mr- Bennett asserted. uijiere are two things that are es- nntiii for the maintenance of our isimmercial life, and one is that s0 [n- ss possible there should be uni- qormity with respect to the incor- pintion of companies as between ills Dominion and the Provinces- ;Wlitn I say uniformity, I mean ,iili52 That a company denied in- corporation on application-to the secretary of State's omce here. amid not go to rlme other office tin s Province and obtain all the ‘powers and more, asis frequently the case, that were soughtifor in the federal depaiitmelltl‘ . "Secondly, and thisils more im- iporiant, the reorganization of com- i-pries must be controlled where illie public are vitally interested as t; they are. Where enterprises with illlliiil capital have been able to quake great progress, they must be fpievented from issuing enormous j; Iltericgged securities upon the 3' public at enhanced prices for the iiiiirpose of enabling them to retain 310058 securitiu so that they shall its quotable cr_ saleable ; in the fiiniirkets of the world." i An importantphase of the Mob-- jlen was the representations made p by the companies to sell stocks, the :Prime Minister siifd. Mr. Burnett {went into some details of the vs!- iiniu company laws 1h Canadl. dis- iilugulshing between the Provin- ’ ti‘ and rho Dominion. The Prov- v Iiuces could grant charters that ‘would enable companies to oper- iyr lie in any Iuwiirce but could con- ‘lrol their stock issues only in the bovlncc in viilich the charter was flssiied. CITES ISLAND STATUTE Mr. Bennett referred to the law i itcenily passed in Prince Edward island gushing charters to com- ‘Plnle-sonsmoreliberalbaslsthan ‘ “"111 ‘>1 the othlr provinces. The L lilflhd province had thus become ‘ills Delaware of Canada." The ‘llfllllstateofllelawlroini-hlflh- ’ lied states had similar llssral com- . illny laws and of big - companies operating in New York 911i’ were charteredvin the state. ‘There should be "Hot up by which the libderal Bilvemment can maintain" pfoseo‘ utlons for violation ofjtlle federal mines." the iii-ans Idinister a- med. - . . - _< The bill before the m3 Willi explained, was ‘mtended to "move confusion resulting mm ‘h’ ‘"1 ihlt cempafllil. tinder 141° wesent statutes, obit!!! t0 Mister assignments of their book debts with the Secretary cf ~ststs llwellsswiththeproyficial au- “mililes. There was no neeclsit! ‘"1111: duplication or registrat- liiii which-redid?“ 1".1“P°.1".‘11‘9“°°' “"1 "time to ihvoomwiv. the Minister "m, g r111" siewsrt brought up the ques- "" bf nroteetisivsgarnst Denies issuin: their withserhind- "'1" mi mead tiillctilall Pre- mlfliients of thi He wu m we thstthsfmgpqcjpiu hgd Y i-fvnnectiou with, hi! eollfialnt. '1' ‘l 1": iruiticr-lfffislswsrt to exercise some control with re- flect Y0 11min: stock, over com- panies that secure a Dominion. charter?" It would seem, he ad- ded, that under provisions of the provincial charters, provinces had certain supervision over sales of stock. The dlfllicillty of the province! was that they could not interfere with stock sold under a Dominion charter, and there did not seemio be any lilpervlsion. "Ihose stocks can apparently be increased and sold without; let or hindrance,” Ml‘. Stewart declared, “whereas 1! I wmliany has a provincial char- ter there are restrictions upon its activity in this respect. I do not mean to say that companies are doing this deliberately but the stock gets into the hands of breir-I is ters who seem able. where there alnomiriion charter, to carry on criiiiiiiifeigiiiiiiiiiaii —s--,- last tLme this season. FURTHER ADIOUINlD-Tilo arson case in connection with the fire at China Point appeared be- fore Magistrate McKinnon yester- day and was further adjourned for one week, - " " " ' REPORT GOOD SALES — The special sales which are at present ‘b91118 conducted by s.' number of local merchants snow that despite the _, " Q ' business is being maintained. Prom- inent merchgntg rgmfb yogflgfllg_p sales to be exceptionally good\con- siderlng conditions, t ' ' nounur SERVICE-The new this practice without hindrance." , daily double ‘hm "m" w“ u“ ur- Stewart suggested-a Federal Ifillguratcd for the summer season Fwd 11°01 Whlvh W"? comuimv. Yesterday. The evening train from With a federal 011""? W001i! 58-‘ Borden, due here at 620, was over cure a license to issue stock. Pros-I ecutions would be ecess y, doibt, he said, but he wanted to see seine control over the issue of stock by com, tinder a federal charter- LOOKING uM OVER BY ‘TWO.’ NEW FEAT-OFF METHODS _ New hockey play-off methcdswill be proposed at the annual meeting of the National Hockey League. The idea is to have the second and third teams play off two games on the ice of the second team, total goals to count, the survivors to meet in the ilnai 8 out of ii. The Montreal Star says: “Had such a game» been in operation at the end of the win- fer, Montreal would have played two games at Toronto. The surviv- ors would then have played Canad- iens at Montreal; Detroit in‘ Chicago with the survivors meeting Rangers at New York. It gives teams the necessary incentive to keep whip- ping through the season and would prevent any loaflng by ~ a strong team reasonably making third place.” 30$? GEHBIG INJURED I011 Gehrig, the Yankees giant first, baseman, is having his own troubles these days. with an ankle thatcan barely sustain the weight of his massive frame he has been sticking right into the game, refus- ing to seek the shelter of the bench. With more than 1,000 consecutive flames behind him, in action ih fair weather and foul- Gehrig is out to surpass the record of Everett Scott for continuous games ,.‘ , ’. Built on the lines of a battleship i; takes more than an ordinary in.- jury to lay him.on the shelf. In spite of his ailment he has been ciouting the ball to all corners of the lot, has hit four home runs this season and is leading the Big Six with an average of .444 points_ 8.8.. Sydfold (Continued from m. n about 0.16 last Sunday evening. On Saturday the tug Foundation Franklin had made unsuccessful at- tempts _to tow her from her posi- tion. However on Sunday after 4'10 tons of coal had been removed to the Foundation lifasson. the tul Franklin was able to pull her free. The coal was then replaced in the hold of the Sydfoid and after wait- ing for a heavy fog to lift she sail- ed for Charlottetown arrivinl 110" at stated above. Captain neueirim report-l 111! chin in be in good condition after her dangerous experience. The Sydfeld will berln 111ml"!- ing hol- cargo, which is for the As- sociated Gas and Electric C0,. 1111! morning. . W?’ DAIRY PRODUCTION GIOWS The current issue of the Dairy m“ Letter, issued bythe Domin- ipn Dairy and Cold ‘Storage Brandi. provides an interest-in! indium" ertiretrendindsirvrrodiwtm" ghcws, for instance, that during the ten-year period under review five now products‘ have made their Ili- pearance. 111111017. 000401134. but‘ tiermill. evawr-M film-w‘- cream powder. butter milk www- sud. malted milk wvdvr- The" h" been s decrease of ass cu wit in the volume ofcheese menu!“- gm-ed, 40.1 per cent in the P0111111‘ tion of condensed milk and. "4 ps1- cent in the production of cou- densed coffee. In contrast with WI. and indicatinl’ the #1111181" ""4 of production. tho" h" 11°“ m increase of miss w will 1'1 '1" production ‘of casein, of m. m cent in the production d °°"' “"4 "its we“ eeri- stole.“- In the training period Gehrig was a disappointment. His hitting W88 feeble and even his appetite which ls larger than Ruth's had fallen oi‘f- Once he moved north and got the smell of the salt breezes he re- turned to his own and is new lead- ing his club at both plates. I HE'S A REAL FIGHTER. Mickey Walker, fighting New Jer- lsoy Irishman, whose draw battle with Jack Sharkey last summer stamped him s-s a. leafilng contend- er for the world's heavyweight box- ing crown, atabllshed his right to consideration in emphatic manner the other night when he trimmed King Levinsky at Chicago. Walker 1g onoor ‘no trilly great fighters of battler who ‘never knows when to quit and wouldn't if he did. ' He gavathe rugged Irevlnsky a 23-poiind_ puilfin the weights, crash- ed to the canvds mm ii jarringi right-hand smash that bewildered him inthe first round, bug at the, finish he wssgoing stronger than i ever. l-Ie was throwln! leather ln| the manner that has carried himi to the top of the weiter and middle- weight ranks, and has now- lodged him among the leading contenders‘ roi- Maxie. sohrneiinss world's heavyweight crown. ' Walker may never scale the. heights to heavyweight supremacy but he'll make life miserable and mighty uncomfortdble for every-i one who crosses his path. He hand- ed the temperamental shiirkey one of the toughest fights c! his career when the Gob mingled with him at‘ Brooklyn, and if the latter misses‘ his chance against Schmeiing in; June, walker is next in line for a crack at_the title- PRUNING TO GET GROWTH - An average. production of 4% boxes of apples iper tree in the r" Valley is not enough in‘ the opinion of M. S. Middleton of , Vernon. It could easily be doubled by judicious pruning, irrigation, fertilizing and spraying. In most orchards the pruning has received more attention than the fertilizing. The main object should be to keep the limbs well spaced and the tree sufficiently open to allow for good, strong, spur growth and to encourage good color in the fruit. Seine heading back of the spur! and branches may have to be practised in old trees which are heavily spurred. when atree isfound tobe making very little fzerminal growth it is usuallyhlthardv irtpruning with the idea of encouraging its growth. The ‘length and thickness or sturdiness oftlle terminal growth is always a good indicator as to how the tree is performing and the endeavc in pruning and cul- tural practices should always be to maintain a fair growth, usually five to ten inches of a terminal growth is sufficient. _'1‘rees making less growth than this need attention in fertilisation, water, or in some eth- er way to correct this condition. Beauty: In the cultivation of beauty the desire comes to protect it. Help: The truest , help we can render an afflicted man is not to take his burden from him. but to call out bis best strength, that be may be able to bear the burden. _rbillipa Brooks. _ in the manufacture of ice cream, of, 140.0 per cant in the manufacture of akin-milk Wider. And of 108.2 per cent in the antciint of cream "““'E'_'.'Y‘i‘3' ' 7 ' \- dolng business I an hour behind time due to engine not trouble. The second train was on time arriving at 10.20 with I. very large passenger list. ‘ AT GYRO-Mr. S. F. Doyle gave a most interesting address on the history of the I lympic Games at the Gyro Club dinnerlast evening. He traced the development of the Games from the start in Ancient Greece in H6 B. C., to the present day, with particular emphasis on their success since the revival in 1806. A vote of thanks moved by Mr. W. A. Gaudet, seconded by Mr. Harry Richardson, was tendered the speaker by the chairman, Mr. N. W. Lowther. Mr. B. Evan Perry of Toronto was a guest. PERSONALS Mr. Carney Blanchar’, left ‘this morning for Buffalo, N. Y., where he will take a course in laboratory technique, Toilers And l . ’ . t... siege-sinner.» slsshlngtypoof‘ TTOJGIIS Resting SAINT JOHN, N. 8., May Z-(By the Canadian Press-Winnipeg ‘Enlifi and Saint John Trojans were taking it easy tonight pending their initial encounter here tomor- row evening irrtlie series: ‘fertile basketball championship of censde. Tollers had a final workout this afternoon. They found the ‘floor smaller than that to which they have been generally accustomed, but the western challengers have played on smaller floors than the scene of the forthcoming struggle here. Trojans had their last work- out, prior to the Dominion finals, on Saturday. superstitious Trojans supporters who believe triple sequence is iri- vfallable and consider the number “13" to be a jinx, have little doubt the Sallie John eeam ‘will win. As the players of Toilers "stepped from the train yesterday, it was seen that they numbered thIrteenJIn addition to this "omen" they carried the Montreal Sportsman's Cup, which already has changed hands twice within a. three-week period. ‘This cup, symbolizing Canadian senior basketball supremacy, was carried over the Rockies to Raymond, alts... by Adanacs of New Westminster, B. C., who lost out to Union Jacks then traveled to Winnipeg and in turn delivered the tronhl’ 141 $119 Toilers. The superstitious now feel ‘quite sure the cup is ordained to ‘pens from the hsnds of rollers. completing a triple sequence. NEWSPAPER _ (Continued from Pass l) Expggftfif’ Brgntfopd, second vice president; u. P-__Ducheinin, the P9517; gydncy, N, 8.; Senator W. H- Dennis, Herald, Halifax: -i- A- Mc- Neil, Gazette, Montreal; Oswald Mayrand, La Bresse, Montreal; E- J, Archibald, Star, Montreal: W. Rupert Davies, Whllfilldfild- Kmm-m‘; gnu-y w. Anderson. Globe, Toronto; Jcbn Scott. M111 and Empire, Toronto; Arthur R- Ford, Free Press, London; E H. MacLln, Free Press, winnimi Major Victor Sifton, Leader Post. Regina; Thomas Miller. T1111"- Moesejaw; Jchnqllalmm- 51mm‘ n’ gnaw;- vw. A. Bu- ohpnqgnBg-ald, Irethbrldgo: F- J. Bord‘,- Provinpp, evaufehiscer 4nd m CfiNicholas, "Colonist, Victoria. unable"! to~ attend’ were. wnenfl -Ie_ eds». demon-mt vlcf president, and lr. P» Robin- son, TimwGlobaiSaintwlehn. meeting of the and continues Wednesday_ Annual general meeting of the Canadian Pffi will b0 held ThurldlY- iii MRS. DALTON WEI; IQVI at Government noose on Wednes- dll’ afternoon may“ A, for the ' * dead-u THE CHARLOTTETOWPLGUARDIAN W. C. T. U. Elects Officers At Annual Meeting The annual meeting of the Wo- men's Christian Temperance Union was held last evening in St. Paul's Parish Hail. Miss Nam MdcKay, "Wmnanled by Miss Helen Duch- emln, favored the meeting with a I010. and Miss Florence Simmons contributed a piano solo. Reports of the year's work were read by the different officers. Fees were Paid and‘ the officers for the next year were chosen as follows: Pres.—Mrs. J. M. McLeod. Ist Vice Pres-ms. w, n. John- ston. 2nd Vice Press-Miss Annie Wat- son. ‘Trees-Mrs. Garfield Bennett. Corr. Satay-Miss N. 1!. White. Rec. Secy.—Miss Edith Syerns. MORE TROUBLE (Continued freln Pelt 1) the border west of Tungiiao, and had been opposed by ’ goiian troops loyal to the Mhmchukuo gov- ernment. Meanwhile difficulties flared anew in three spots in cast- ern Kirin province, the province which borders on both Manchuria and Soviet Russia, A Mukden despatch from a Jap- anese correspondent said a. force of Chinese irregulars had occupied the railway junction point, Tunghua, about 80 miles west of Kirin, and had killed eight Japanese residents. General Jiro Tamon’s division was reported en mute as fast as pos- sible to relieve the situation. The area to the north and east around Harbin was also giving trouble, The Japanese claimed victory over 3,000 01111156 ifresulars near Wuklmiho, after two bridges had been burned out on the Chinese eastern railway by the rebels. Further north General Nakam- urak Japanese "Armada." which has been travelling down the Suugari River on boat's, reached Farigcheng en route to the Wukimiho trouble spot and clashed with rebels there. v SPBAYS in. sraevmc (Experimental Farms Note) There are three essential factors which enter into the successful use of sprays in the control of crop diseases. ‘ ' In the first place one must know iiiiici ciiiiiiii iiisiiiiiiiiiiiii NEW YUR-K. N. Y. May 2--Mias Nancy Cunard, daushter of the "British shipping family, announced ‘today she _hnd been disinlierlted by her mother for associating with negro artists. Miss Cunard, 3d years old and blue, returned from a week end trip to Boston today to resume res- idence at a Harlem Hotel patronized by negroes and to continue her study of the African race for pur- poses of writing an anthology, “Lady Cunard objected to one of my friends-a gentleman of color," she said in a statement ready for publication. "She bad detectives on rne in London because I knew a bronze skin. Of Course she had me cut off and disinherited, but hasn't the courage to say so." 'Flllllk€d by a painter and a negro novelist, she went on to say that, "I love everything that has come out of Africa" and to describe her mother as “an American of a cer- tain type." “If you delve into ‘atavism span- ning the Atlantic,’ she said, "you will find that one of my ancestors toward 1600 signed the anti-slavery protest in Pennsylvania." Miss Cunard is the daughter of the late Bach Ciulard and Lady Cunard, the former Maude Alice Burke, oi’ New York and California, She came to the United States as a third-class passenger from Paris recently and repifred to the negro hotel to be close to her subject of writing. $20,000 Action TORONTO, May 2—(By the Can- adian Pressl-Under a writ issued at Osgcodc Hall here today William G. Paton of Toronto, gave notice of an action for $20,000 against George B. Jones, who recently re- signed his seat for Royal, N. 8., in the House of Commons. Paton ob- tained the writ under a section of the House cf Commons and Senate act by which the Conservative member for Royal was automatical- ly disqualified some time before he resigned his seat. In severing his decade-long car- eer.as_a. member of the Commons some weeks ago, Mr. Jones said it had just come to his attention that the disease to be controlled. Sonia plant diseases, for ‘instance crown gall and wllts, cannot be prevented by spraying practices, and time, money and energy may be wasted if this is not realized. In certain diseases one application of spray as ln peach leaf curl, while in oth- ' ers repeated applications at inter- ‘ vals in the season are necessary; l. e., apple scab. Different diseases require different‘ control measures and it is only by knowing them that proper treatments can be ap- plied. of the materials and strengths to be used. Serious injury may be caused if improper materials are applied or if care is not taken to make up proper strengths. There are numerous spray materials, un- der various trade names, but be- fore using them, farmers should know whether they have been tried out by the experimental stations, and if so. are they a -‘ -‘ Experimenting with new materials is sometimes very expensive for in- dividual growers and caution in this regard is advisable. The third factor is that of time- liness and thoroughness of appli- cation. Sprays are effective by pre- venting infection and they can on- iy do this by being applied before periods of infection. The applications must be thorough as the spores or seeds of disease fun- gi are extremely minute and are capable of becoming established on very small areas of susceptible host parts. Falluer to cover all parts of the host plant therefore ‘may result in disease developing in spite cf spray practices. In order to aid the growers, the Dominion Department of Agricul- ture, through their various plant disease laboratories carry on ex- Pflrlnlental work with plant dis- "lMJI-nd Ii a result cf these re- se es are enabled to recommend W117. materials, the proper strengths to use and times of ap- lillcatlon. ‘This information is read- ilv svsiisbieln pamphlets and bul- letins and may be obtained iii/ouch the Division of Botany, Central Experimental Farm, Otta- Wlr ‘Ontario-G. C. Chamberlain. Dominlonhboratory of Plant Pa- "101087. 8t. Catherines. Ont. ‘ learning: In learning what oth- ers have thought, it is well to keep in practice the power of thinking for duo's self; when an author has ‘Iii tell chi-secrets is often folly; to cbommunicate those of others .l'..~".»°9°“-'E¥~°'- ‘ ..-.,..-. .__4-. material gives satisfactory control, The second factor is a knowledge - the firm of Jones Brothers in Apo- haqui, N. B., of which he is the senior member, had been accepting orders for goods purchased with government relief funds. This auto- matically disqualified him to sit in the Commons and he resigned forthwith. Suing as a private citizen, lvlr. Paton seeks to collect $200 damages for each day Mr. Jones occupied his House of Commons seat and ‘voted, after his disqualification be- came effective. THE RATES OF SEIIDING AND THINNING MANGELS (Erperimcntal Farms Note) In a time of economic depres- sion like the present, when prices of agricultural products are so low as to leave little or no margin over the cost of production, every effort should be made to reduce costs and increase yields as much as -, “ In the 1. of mangels, a crop requiring a large _ ‘ of manual labor, the Field Husbandry Division of the Central Experimental Farm at Ottawa has been conducting experiments for the last eight years to determine the influence on yield of various rates of seeding and distances of thinning. Mangels were seeded at the fol- lowing rates: 6, 9, l2, and 18 -‘ per acre. The average yields over the eight year period were 21.42, 22.38, 22.05 and 23.20 tons per acre for the respective rates of seeding. Aer. rding to these results, the rate cf seeding of 9 pounds per acre has given the most economical results, valuing mangels for feed at $1.65 per ton.- Comparisons were made among four distances of thinning man- gels: 6, 9, 12 and 1s inches apart. The 9 inch tillnning gave an aver- age yield of 25.63 tons per acre over the eight year period, which was an increase of 2.25 tons over the d inch thinning, the next high- est yleld. As hoelng and thinning represent nearly one half the man- ual labor involved in growing a crop of mangels, it would seem very desirable to obtain the high- est yield from this labor by thin- ning the plants to the proper dis- tance-H. D. Mitchell, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa. Mirth: Mirth is like a flash of lightning that breaks through a gloom of clouds and glitters for a moment. Cheerfulness keeps up a added to your knowledge. pause and consider if you can add noth- mliO Ills » .' . 1 kind of daylight in the mind and fills it with asteady and perpetual “Scarface” Must Go To Prison’ (csnsdisn rreis) WASHINGTON, D. C., May 2- Al Capone's long-deferred trip to a Federal penitentiary will begin within a few‘~ days. The United States Supreme Court today made that possible. It refused to review the gangsters conviction for ' of the income tax laws and his sub- sequent sentence to ll years im- prisonment. True, he now has 25 days in which to fyle a petition that the court reconsider its decision and the lower federal courts‘ may, in their descretion, keep him jailed in Chivcdgo for that period. However, indications are that this will not be done. Department of Justice of- ficials sald today the underworld chleftaln would start for prison Wednesday or, at the latest, Thurs- day. ‘ Which Federal penitentiary would be his destination was not made public. His sentence specified Leavenworth, but officials since than have adopted a policy of scat- terlng the Capone cohorts, avoiding any concentration of his followers in one prison. No announcement was made by the court of the reasons which ac- tuated it in refusing to review the case. SOUTHERN BEES also nonra- arm PRODUCERS c? HONEY (Experimental Farms Note) Beekeeping has advanced with great rapidity in Canada during the past ten years because it has been shown that Canada is an ideal country for’ the production of hon- ey. The demand for bees to re- place iosses and to establish new apiarles is quite heavy and unfor- tunately cannot be rnet by Cana- dian beekeepers because it is im- possible to rear surplus bees in this country early enough in the sea- for the purposes needed. The greatest demand for bees occurs during the latter part cf April and early in May, for it is then that the active season usually opens. In some of the Southern States the active season opens much earlier than it does in Canada and young bees can be reared in large num- bers whiie Canadian bees are still in winter quarters. In some of these states it has been found more profitable in produce bees than honey and because of this fact a tremendous business has been de- veloped between the southern pro- ducer cf bees and the northern producer of honey. The import- ance of southern bees to the Ca- nadian producer of honey is shown in the increased importations of bees during the past few years. For the fiscal year ending March 3i, 1920 the value of bees imported into Canada was $9,111 while for the year ending March 1930, the value of imported bees was $61,023 Because of a steady decline in pri- ces, however, the increase was real- ly greater than the above figures indicate. Southern bees are ship- ped to Canada in wire-screen cages holding one or more pounds of bees and as soon as they arrive, the bees are transferred to stan- dard hives. It takes from 24 to ‘l2 hours for the bees to travel from their homes in the South to their northern destinations. Package bees are of more importance in Western Canada than they are in the East because in the West they will build up rapidly and often equal those that wintcrcd in Ca- nada, many western beekeepers have developed the practice of destroying their bees in the fall and replacing them with southern bees each spring. In the East. package bees, if imported early enough, will give a very good ac- count of themselves the first sea- son. If interested in package bees wrltc the Bee Division, Central Ex- ‘perimental Farm, Ottawa, for Bui- lctin No. 107, “Package Bees and How to Install Thcm"—C. B. Gooderham, Dominion Apiarlst. Romantic Archibald on bended kngc; "won't you ever look with favor upon my suit?" “I don't want to abuser rude." admitted Annebclie, “but I think it needs cleaning and pressing." “Could you give a. poor fellow a bu‘, » “god (he dust-stained tramp. “I don't bite, myself." enlwmd the lady or the house, "but I'll call the dog." For concentrated inaccuracy of statement nothing can surpass the following sentence which occurred some time back in an account of a burglary: "After a fruitless search all the money was recovered, ex- cept one pair of shoes." "I want ii. revolver-for my hus- band." "Did your husband make of revolver?" "Ne: but I don't think that mat- ters. He drr - o... know I'm goins to shoot has! say what PAGE FIVE Boycott Of rJu ro rs In Mdssie Trial (Canadian Press) HONOLULU, May z-A boycott threatened Honolulu business today as a result of the conviction last week of Mrs. Grace Fortescue, New York society woman, and three men on charges of manslaug Iwr for the slaying cf Joseph Kahahawai, Ha- waiian." Walter Napoleon, Hawaiian mem- ber of the jury which found Mrs Fortescus, Lieut. Thomas H. Muscle, E. J. lord and A. 0. Jones guilty but recommended leniency, told po- lice he had received telephone threats, and asked protection. John O'Loughiln, who employs Napoleon as a meat cutter, said several customers had threatened to boycott his store unless he dis- charged the Hawaiian, one man telling him he stood to lose 250 pat- rons. Oirougblin said Napoleon would stay. Napoleon worked today as usual in spite of the threats. There were reports persons pian- ning to sail to the mainland on ships of the Matson Line, with which John l". Stone, white fore- man of the Forteacue jury, is con- nected, had cancelled their book- ings, but this was formally denied by the Matson agency here. The boycott was hard to trace. as much of" it was unorganized and unpubiicized. Willy Beyer, juror of German ancestry who makes ‘most of the potato chips consumed here, admitted he had not received any orders from the United States navy since the conviction. He said, however, he did not con- sider that evidence of a. boycott, as the orders from Pearl Harbor-the Island's big naval base-came ir- regularly, four or (five times a month. DOUBLE (Continued from Page l) were foo far spent to give them aid and they disappeared. Half an hour later , Willard and Vernon Johnson, fishermen coming from the lobster grounds, sighted the wreckage and thought it was a tow. but they saw an arm. waving and hurried to the soot. Skirting the ledge they gaw the father and son nearly unconscioufl. tied to the craft. They were untied rushed to Woodward's Cove, given medical treatment and later taken to their home in castalla. The children's bodls were found yesterday near Edmondu Rock, and interment was made at Castalia. WILL REOOUVER (Continued from Page 1) load of contraband liquor; when Lawlor-‘s car failed to stop en of- ficer had fired at the rear tire and apparently the bullet ricochetcd off the car and struck Wilson. Portrait Worth Million Dollars NEW YORK, May 2. (‘B7 the Canadian Pressn-‘For 79ers I portrait, believed to be of either William Shakespeare, or Ben Johnson, has hung in the 110m! of Frank G- De Heyman of Brook- lyn. N- Y. Today Dr. Maidmllian Tocb, art connoiseur and chemist, announc- ed after exhaustive study, that the painting was the work of Karel van Mander, the Flemish artist and probably worth "at least $1,000,000," Dr. Tcch explained that he had not been able to determine if the pesre. But after comparison with other works of Van Mander, he had found that it "conforms ex- actly with the style, personality and methods of his other works!‘ EASTERN tuiiiiiiiiii ..‘POTATO SHIPMENTS-JR» s. s. Pluto is loading potatoes it Georgetown and will load an addit- ional supply at Bummersidg before proceeding with her cargo to New York; She is being loaded by tbs Potato Growers‘ Association andwiil carry 50,000 bushels of table stock audseinlsstweektheilrstpotato steam y for the Association loaded at Georgetown with 00,000 bushels News of her safe an-ivai in New Ycrk has been received. DEATHS GILLIS-In this City’. tfay 2, 1932, Ralph Gillis, age l0 years. Filnerai from his mother's residence 00 King St, Wednesday morning at 8.40 to lst. Dunstan} Basilica thence to tbs {woman Catholic CIIMWB painting was a portrait of Shakes"