(j pull! and unlarltet d“ ml- protection ‘flhws: in twenty miles of the lo a great extent upon msnts. As tlhe plalcéil u dulhy of frln 20 ‘per cent parent time there iclnlty 3,000 market INDENSED snubs; An won ulna Pfldfilé an n. PM. ANTTED.——G|RL FOR GENE- ral housework. Apply Arllnzlm- llotel, city. Street. 3771 -ll~l9~lf WET-so..- _ ntald. good wages. Apply 171 Kent. St. 'FOR JOB PRINTING of every description, patronize the lCen- tral Job Printery, 176 Kent St.. Tel. 420-11. . Li. years of ago in work on farm Apply L. J. MacDonald. Mer ‘ Franklin Mills, Marshfleld. lmamler typewriter. In good con dltioll. Apply 40 School St. ,....__. ‘ORDERS FOR "l You with work. 'Wcst jhowoard - 31-. Ton-vim model, Studebaker car n" “no battery, No reserve I f,“ ALI-ans m, s Tionouato, “"0901; Ho rmnnlvills. 0720-11-17 .| '0 E ' ‘ . Iuvlm-Albout Ootober first ijnedlhfi nustnro- of the under- lcdonlc. Ono largo ‘llllf old Mill. light M white. Noonr marks. - C- McGovfln} luinir. 478N140“ IFO u: £514 ATTINTl0N.-- we _ "on: m“? 1"” t u in Elm“; Her In Breeders dullluflllnoflomn. _ lhnnlellfllr mango-nausea. i BTNTTIITN FAHMEHE NEETI PHUTEIITIITN Abiy Set Forth by Quebec Farmer, Before Tariff. Commission at Montreal, With Reasons Forcibly and Fully Explained. M l, recent session of idle 'l‘ar-‘ m Commission ‘in Montreal the gardners were ahiry "was -by Mr. Albert Monette in the rolling stock necessary to day market their output. There rarely less than 700 market gard-TSecretary of the United Bap-- m‘; rligshtfidtlsemliwlilontrealrl mlanlqet fist Board of Sunday School 1 a ,andtlisnum- w k, >1, . be? trequentlahmes to over L500. or u. o addressed the Con “With the competition provided by the 3.000 market gardeners in ship in the Sunday School Work"; this vicinity the consumer is amply guardeid dagainst unfalir prices. but task. It is the business of the S. as an n ucemen‘ for us to remain in our home markets against-heavy 8' “t 636,113 to 5111,1111 "xii seed m the shipments wlhilch might as made 5° ° ° ° 1 °~ I‘ i’ “l” 5mm the U_ 3_ m Demo“ of o", task of the S. S. to lead t-he child production tillers, and which if sold 1M0 the wild of God. and in this at sacrifice rprjcgg, as m-lgllg likely we must have Divine leadership. ‘l: gt: tvgloslgflntatyflalwsy from Tile teacher ‘must open up his life p c our ex- istence depends. “Our prices compare favorably Wm, me prices charged by market llzed in the life of the Sunday gardeners in their home market $011001 acmss the International boundary. must pay the price of ~the Divine gfiggotgligrmfige mtcgieevcgz‘? Leadership which is full surrend- sumler is in no way penalized for the protection wbdch we enjoy. “Much of our roiling stock and for the best and calls us to throw tlflliizllf‘ glllliflflllfillt 11‘! Dlmecled byiourselves out on God. ar ut es, ant policy on the rparit of th mcnt, we have no mta/ke, as we realize qgppczlr before rlihis Commis- “(m behalf of the Market Gard- nm Association of the Province o; Quebec, an organization which wom- 2.000 meunlbers, the very “m; majority of whlidh live with- building where we now are. Within the ‘mo radius there are. 1,000 mm- lst gal-doors, who, while they dl m; belong to tho Association arc fully in accord wdlfh the represen- ultions which I am about to make. "Before 1907 umarkst gardening had made very llltble llfmmess in this vicinity with the result that ms city consumer had to depend importa- ilons no furnish their requlrc Commission l- awnrc, the Tariff revision of 190T 1o 25 pa‘; cent. on vegetables and market gardening products gen orally. lmlmcdlatelly after this was dnna a. market. development com ulsnced to take place, and at thv are in this gardeners h employ 16,000 farm hands Hug the entire your and 75.000 iug the busy season. 'l‘hs.\' over ,fl1,l00.»|,000,fl invested bot houses, over S .000,000.0ll hbt beds. and over $800,000.00 ag inst this Govern- ccvmplaint to [thofoughlly in the lifs of the worker. When that our output can be profitably this is done the presence of Div- sold if industrial expansion takes me leadership l5 “Emu-KL Divine pllace in Mont/real." Miners Strike sonaiity and hence (Special to The Guardian) TRURO, Nov. 1—\lt seems ‘be The majority find God through the general opinion thnt a strike some other person who represents lis out oi‘ tho question; said Dele- llho Divine mind- gats lldacheod. oft‘. B, speaking The -Divlus leadership is realiz- UIB ed by implicit obedience to bile 01 revealed word of God. The disciple- llere were wortlrlittls to the Divine "Our local wh n first.‘ called but as ‘they in is largely against the agreement. ob lence continued l‘m against the “remnant; too but they became efficient. In this if anybody can show me that by assurance that we are workers voting against it ll. am yelling to with God ‘what are the difficulti- .4 it and problems of our U: at the afternoon session of Truro United Mine Workers yesterday afbefnoon. 3713-1l-17-3l cs1- eirw-ssu ovens House and railroad. note book contain- ing private papers. Plensc leave ut this office. Reward. Nov .19~1l substitute something needs careful consideration." MacLeodb remarks apparently re- flect the llight of the afternoon's by Run A_'.s_ Rogers on hum L . ANTED MAID FOR GENERA session of the conference. housework. Apply ~75 l-llllaboro French Steamer Successfully Floated l Th G d‘ S315)??? Ergo“ elsl-T-Tléag-‘Bench ihon look abroad and realize that gtealner Pmmtrm‘ which yeste], we ure over 30 million. Did t-h" day gmuuded i“ the thick w”, investment of Robert Parker pay? titer at the sin-trance of Itlalso Buy, N” imiamwnt ever paid a9 "Fem .lm [every exposed . taken oft-successfully by the flaili- fax tug, lloehling, H)! PEiRiITElNCE I2 ll768-11-l9-tf hill-Eels eov 1s on T1 w“, dividends. sum. uiss-u-lo-ct won SALE-PURE sass neo- istered Holstein bull 3 1-2 years left prospect. The dividend is on a far Louisburg and went to the Frencll- higher piano than that of dollars alien's assistance. ‘The returns that comes from this 301184146“? Mn investment not to the investor. roa sat: on RE.NT—A smrrr. A t Anytime mm w“ ma“. n ‘has Md the {investor much more largely in 37104147411 lthose invested. What has it meant (Special lo The Guardian) BRANDON, ~lllAN.. Nov. 17—1n to onr nations life. c1051“; m‘, prsmlel-ts "mggflng last meant to our home life? IWhat has we]. this investment meant to the “m1 church? What bacillus monument that 11 gnygng had m; idol), of put-lie the great missionary enter- tmg me out o; [bush-‘(gss m “7e5t.;pl‘l86 meant? What has tlli-s in- unmllr-l-jltesinlent tneent to the Spirit of CHRISTMAS Baking. Any one desiring cakes. Mdlngs or mince most deliver- ed n time for Christmas should order same "by telephoning 0684. '__-————-—-. ‘IIK! MONEY AT HOMI-— '15. Mill. paid weekly for your spart- flfllvriting show suds for us. Q canvassing. We instruct and conlcd n fight al. any llms ern Canada they - speaking o; n“, {runner-s Party What has this investment meant Mr. Calder said: d m“ cuss ‘novemm, and forms? What does this investment Ieltzllorzou tram“? “a no‘ gum“ w mean in loyalty and to the lifting Service, 57x ‘COLD IRlDAY,-N_OVEM~ ~ by public auction, on o‘ at emu". o“ a l hymn‘, no prophet," can“, m, Not the patriotism lc onwp own "lit time been tried time time again in the last. years and it dtatl never endured. All these gnoulps, fannters others, are lbased on class con-- sclousnoss and class selflshtless| instead of naiiional good," and , "r ‘ an,“ m“ yen‘ N" humrmbsanle life in other lands. Such on - "I electric starter and aaln-u-ta-sl “m, There was hand clapping shouts of "no," from various parls M‘ add” “m “ lovermnentlMflVfllllelli. and Religious Educa- “ever tlon". For five yours there was SCOPE. 116 ‘Ellflllllcfld H10 011M110 only one word on m". up,“ The 371mm h“ zzlfivgmlrgllzl“ ‘ma’ winning of viciory, but n change on y 1mm , t resu - suiting compromise and stagnation M" Calder “k615i” m‘ "rm. What lllas been tho tnllaltlnn of flu- Th° “fldmml WEN-lo" ages. A Better World. 111"" lWo are now realising that this cheer: ‘from a section of the au- “M, mgr“; can my come by based on groups applica- Pfliltflt on- of fox- o! M‘. Crenr called for eoplc’aper $1: i \\\\\2~ ‘~\\\ ~.\_\\ Read by Everyqdy WEDNESDAY EVENING The first address Wednes- evelllng was by Rev . arelw. (l. Macbum. Genlera ventlon on "The Divine Leader- The task of the S. S. ls a divine io the Divine will. To secure this Divine leadership it must be rea- worker. The individual er of this life to God. The task of the teacher calls If God is in the Sunday School it is because the Spirit of God is ‘leadership in co-operation wilh yllunlan effort is essential to the {best and fullest results. l ‘The highest teaching is by per- a spiritual consistent character is lilo high- est essential in teaching. v to f0llo\\ Sund - y Schools ? . The second address was p’ en Sunday School as an Investmen " The speaker said: “in lTSO the ,first investment in S. S. work was made. Wlhat of that investment‘? Did it pay? In this Convention we are only a tiny mite. In this con ilnent there are 19 million and This is retrospect. what of th- IEvery investment has two sides. but to those in whom the invest- ‘Wllmt has it Christian unity and fellowship? 11D the advancement of moral re- up of higher ideals und holler llfn. country but in that country as it stands as the champion of illat ‘TIIVGSTIHBIII. has its price and this ‘lg tin indwelling of the Divine life and love in your llfc as an more prayer. The "full price do luallds a greater willingness lo yield to (lod. Are we men and wo- men of burning hearts‘! The third address was given by ltov. ll‘. A. Myers on “The Forward with its conning Joy and giadnnss. YESTERDAY AT THE SUNDAY SCHOOL TIUNVENTIUN Report of the Executive C Field Work Submitted. . Address from Dr, liouliue. jection will be won. . voumg people and will endeavor to left-es this year, ‘he bounds of time Convention, Rev. in this cooperative work for all 'hey were worth. Denominational- ly their plans ‘were similar to the iocrertary at St. John, cal-d he hu attended. 14 Boys’ Conferences, 3 trainling camps, 1 Boys‘ Parlia- ment, 2.8 Fatther and Sorn meetings. 175 Tuxis Squares, formed 92 Trail Rangers. He also showed the good results of this. work by concrete illustrations‘. ed by Miss Mary Allison, showing the work of the year, and the ct- ference and other forms of ltciiv- lties, port (lll1l Education. As statistics were not gathered this year. it is not Possible To give tho tnumbe o experience. Then wc must invest classes. ‘But there has been an lu- crense 0i‘ intehost in the study oi courses presented by this (lonven- lion, Both Temperance and Mls slonary work are making good pm- gross. dressed the Convention. Ho sold ‘he duty of the lSmldny School l: in beach. The subject is Religion. The text book is the Bible. is fou-r-fold:-~ callls when Peace would come and l tisn Ssrvwlce. CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1920. save through religious construc- lion. We stand on the vantage ground of a victory won in the Forward Movement. We have en- tered on a second stage of the spiritual task. Wilat is the Spirit- uai- objections of the Forward Movement. It means the begetting in us of higher, holler and happier life. What ouglht our attitude to these things be? Flrst,—That as we have had success in the lesson that God w<lll give us success in the greater or a larger fall-h in God. .S-econd,--A new condec tion. A new willingness to give our loss to God. Tllird,-—We, nms-t take relig- iously a business attitude as we did financially to so out and reach the life of our nation. There is a need to respond to the national appeal of tilts Church and our ob- THURSDAY MORNING. Tllle ’l‘llurstilty morning session, after the tlevotlnnhl ilnlf hour was "D-"tlll in listeniul- .0 and discuss- ‘ng reporw ~'v\r.-Z.:g the work of he 111191 '- s and in formulating nlans Mill recommending changes "or tlve forward work of the incom- ing yenr. ’i‘ile first report was that of tho Executive (‘omnlittéta This report revilllvr-l the past your and recum- ‘lll ._-..l.ll in v’e‘v uf present coll lit-ions i1 was necdful to lake over ‘he ‘teen ztge girls’ work_ alli also cent-e u primary worker as soon s possible, The Financial Secretary. pffléfillt- "d ills report, showing an illllflllll‘ of $12,438.30 expenditure, exceeding "Pceipis by something over $700 to meet which are county allotments of over $2000. a percentage (if viuicil may reasonably be cxpccir-d. dlcv. W. A. Ross. General Field secretary, presented the report of he work done ln the Office nlltl by llc secremtries and other workers in the field..,'l"'his report sllawc-l tilcl. there had been held during ‘tho/year 31 County Conventions I75 District, 2 summer schools, 2 aonlfe-rencels, 2.000 schools, 125,000 flcers. Rev, W. (‘.. Manhunt, Baptist Field JSecl-efsry, presented his re- 17 County, 5 Boys’ Colrlfarnnctxg and otltel- forlns of aggressive work. 1e also presented to the Conven- don lite especial line-s of forward lvork lt-tt-emptetl by the Baptist per pie in the Maritime Convention. Rev. F‘. M. Milliganl, Field Sec retary of the Presbyterian Board. nr-“s-enlievl his flr=t report. He re- ported 777’ Presbyterian Sund- schools ennoliitn-g practically 40,- 100. Tlhls people have proposed a vigorous forwnmd extension move- ment_ ln-g to reach such of their c ltuency as is now um reached. The second part of thi.‘ forward movement is to reach thu- vrgaulze 100 Young Peoples’ Soc- l-n the absence cf Dr. King tron l. M. Rice spoke for the Metho- ltst people. saying tilat they were H.716!‘ denominations. Rev. A. M. Gregg, Y. M. C. A. Th» "fl-lrls‘ Wlork" was present- mlonca of girls M. the Camp l Rev. F. M. hlllillgan gave the rc- Ai. fills stage -Dr. l-lonllne ad- The object of the Sunday School (u) The conversion of the pup l. (h) The mvelopnllenlt of lllle wupilfis character. (cl Training the pupil for Chrl nmmiitee, Finance and Another Excellent "t-uplls and 12_000 teachers and 0i"! wort. He has attended 38 District . Character is formed from habit an of mind, a change 0f W111- 1111111089- outlolok. It is moral pioneering;- a. stepping out_-—and means t struggle. bnluglng d-lsloylal-ty to Ollrist? We mlust cut right awe/y from it if W9 would enter the Kingdom. There can he no tomporlnlnx. 110 negotiat- ion. Sin has lno right on the soil of your life. Coming to the point of entire concentration can seldom be done without a crisis." of oonforln-ing the conventional rules of society but which after all are lhelow the standards of J es us, This may be to fake the kink- dom of violence. The cost may 1"‘ tremendous, J-t may mean the cull- ing of the right. I-‘urthler Paul said somethllm of great impnrtnltce regarding tlhe llfnrltlnte Provinces will be discus- sod foulorrow at a conference of making up the sufferings oi‘ Jesus. Full surrender often demands suf- femhng with Christ. t Brunswick and P. E. Island. Among AFTERNOON SESSION . the matters to lbs discussed is a settlement of the western school After the devotions of the alter- mm quesumh n 1,, huped the Maritime provinces will be able to claim equal compensation for iiho cash subsidies paid to western The follwins 01110911 We" ‘my provinces m lieu of lands ceded to , Ontario and Quebec in which all -Presideltl-~—J. A-nCla-rk Charlotte “refine” had an mtermL town noon the "first matter of business was the report of the nomination committee. elected. St. John. New Glasgow. l“-"'?Ufiiaslii.orr~~~ (Special to The Guardian) WASHINGTON. Nov. 1S.—Bit unlinous. coal supply is out strlpp ing the demand. Production pro unlses to realdh new records, and prices continues dropping, coal men and Government officials lion. C. H. Doherty Was ills-translated (Special to The Guardian) GENEVA, Nov. 17.——It develop- ed lboday thatHon. C. J. Doherty, Mtlnister of Justice, wlss a victim of one of the high speed transla- tions made during the Assembly's proceedings which sometimes be- come miss translations. The tran slat/ion made hdm say that Canada woulld albsiainirom voting on the message offered Mm in the As semlbly for transmission to Presi- dent Wilson. Mr. Doherty in even better French than the translator, at once corrected the mlsfsakebut the correction got lost in the con fusion of the first session and the incorrect version of the delegates remarks became widespread. Rev. Spracklin Will K Be Put on Trial (Special to The Guardian) TORONTO, Nov. lll-After r conference this morning at till‘ n 1* "\!\'\t Blflldinzs. between Attorney General Rail/y and Mr. Rodd Cgvuan, Attorney at Windsor. it was announced the Rev. Sprack- ‘rln would be pllt upon trial at. tile tnswt High Court sittings at Sand- "'l'*‘l in con-sequence of the death of Beverly Trumble whom, accord to the Coroner Jury, the Minister llllAtllUTlllllK m u. 5. IS VERY PRUMISINC Bituminous Coal Supply is Now Cutsirippiug Demand and Prices are Failing. -- Anthracite Situation Not so Good but Expected to Recove 1' here that it also will recover from the effects of bile recent outlaw stnlke and riglht itself by lthe first of the year. " ritain and France Will Not Recognize Constantine Govt. (Special to The Guardlan) PARJB, Nov. 1S.-- Great Britain and France will not recognize a Greek Government headed by King Constatlnq, the French Foreign office announced today, The two countries as guarantors of the Greek Kingdom are lntitled to de- termine obs characters of the Government, lths announcement said. Russia Released , British ‘ Prisoners (Special to The Guardian) LONDON. Nov. 17.—-l<brelgn Minlstar Tclrltchorin of Russia. has informed Lord ‘Curzon that the lid/st Briilish prisoners have been released from Russian prisons Release of prisoners was one of the British conditions to resump- tion of trade. Carvell Will Not Slt 0n Telephone Commission (Special to The Guardian) OTTAWA, Nov. 17.~I-‘. B. Car- vell_ chairman of the Board of Ilaii way Commissioners, it was learn- shot. in self defence, in the formers madhouse at Sandwich while con t» "I"? c scorch. it is understood that the charge will be llmiflslallilh ' tr. Mr. Sprncklin when interview ed this morning was still silent Film not saying anything now," he replied. lie knew of‘ no interview ing such n. subject. He said noth statement at the time of the in welcome a ltrlai. The steps in the leaching DYOCBS: am-d rfinuily uclisz-lllahlt is formed. lharacter determines destiny To know W t» .1 must be "tuglrt; and to teach, you net‘ training. To cause them to know What ls Reps-nuance? lit is chanBB There is a denser confronting l“! l 1st. Vice. Prosw-E. a. ulllclmm 2nd Vice. Prss.-—D. W, McDonald (d) To enlist the pupils in politically or in any other way trained. Johlni that service for which he has boon --— regarding u triail for him and he exception had ""3911 taken to m ‘had attended no conference regard 6M9; Commissioner Sim-mg in U", 111*’! h“ 1131111939‘! t” “hangs ms a director anti shareholder with quest. that he personally would Compmnh M“ Carve“ however‘ was or’ the opinion that there was no reason wvby lite should stay out of the matter. are three: Iinowing, Feelinli. 1111 Willing. When one comes to know 11° 59°15. ‘End m” becmn“ wmmg" Jsun/les -u Drwided. Dr. Honlin- deait with tlbe religious training t t hrls was an ago of specialization Trades Labor Council, pram..- a f-acttrm‘, which he claimed, r vwgwgawa .1114; views of 90 Pl" cent of the labor men of Casino:- sadd that science hnd converter‘ winch pmuounced strongly in fu- ST. JOHN, Nov 18.-—‘Represen- u” ‘mfld m“ a nmgmmmom and nou ulusi have attention; lo have s1: JOHN Busmisa MEN on attention ylou must arouse interest The child is in-herested in different fillings at different stageenflfld 11118 49111811118 811111911 111880118. . F119 1191“ tatlve local business men especial- atep in teaching is to arouse curios I ' 11>‘. trade_ at a meeting of the railway Modgerfiesigi-rldlssga silpptlitlaihgelguillll icam-mission here today opposed the diam, It is an individual matter. Ad mission is not by annexation or any manner. Religion is personal be- fore lit. is social. express companies are requesting. out walking in the outskirts of, the town on Sunday, Harry Dlbbs was er in a barn and was not discovered is diet-o M01111: in W1" We gin-til inst night. d-Ie died this morning from the affects of the ex- haustion. ence of mind in leaping to the road saved ‘E. (W. Atkinson of this city went over a bunk at Lincon, caught fire and was totally destroyed. shipments are very heavy at pros- Treasurer-Radbelrt Reid. St- ant. Some forty can passed through the city today for the United‘ Stated and heavy bookings have been c-l led-av has decided not to sit as ciluimlun of the transmission ivhcn tlw hearing is resumed of the application of the Bell Tele- phone Company for an increase ir- rates. his‘. Canvoll presided at the opening lSlllJiII-g at Ottatwa at which the Bell Telephone Conllpsny pu‘ in its 0131111‘ for increase. Some (NW8 because of his connection a." the Nmv Brunswick Telephone (Special to The Guardian) POSE RAILWAY INCREASE ncrease of 40 per cent which the DIED ‘OF EXHAUSTION WVOODBTOCJK. Nov. 18.—While aken suddenly lll and sought shelt- JUMFE-D m vms. FREDDRIOTON, Nov. 18.-—Pres- ast night when his automobile OF INTEREST TO MARITIME’- PROVINCES. HALIFAX‘ Nov. lfle-Matiers of he Premiers of Noya Scotla. New POTATO SHIPMENTS HEAVY S/T. JOHN. Nov. lit-Tonto agreed toduy- While a less optimis- tic view dis taken of the anthracite situation lthe belief is expressed convert i’ into (brotherhood. Presl- 1 y those connected with the fruit dam Wngon had n“ the Great ummme o! mmmfle! whlch w“, War was "To minke the world sad’: a source of employment W a!" for democracy," and commencing “M, “mun Tlhe public schools provided tlv _ mi t m rrow at 4.30. dwempmm u“ m a Sulgsttc Lbls afternoon at 4.24 - and rises tomorrow morning at . in fidhteousnlssis. Unfortunately 7-03 ' ‘ the church was not keeping par \ g-“u ggng] ' demoni- IQ I7 Ill!- finale. Il-QiIT-l-Qalllls Mayor Marhin. in putting thv . Council Chambers and otiher fiwlli ties of the Cl-ty Hall at ithe dis ‘posai of the sitting in Montrec said he considered the tariff th- busls of lhe success of the Domin ion. lt was a. jmost important duty that of seeing nhat a Silltllilltktlll‘ BASIS Iii fliNilTTEi PRESENT PHISPEHIT Set Forth by Mayor Martin of Montreal, a Former Free Trader and a Liberal Mem- ber of Parliament. ' iff protected the interests of the peoplle. A prosperous country P" qulred to protect the sources r‘ its prosperity, wilqich were its lrn-l ksts, and to protect the three clas "s on whom its prosperity do?" ed, the manufacturers, tbs wor - ens, and the consume s. Bolsheviki TJfienses Are Developing (Special to The Guardian) \VA§tSAW_ Nov. 18.—A strong Bolslleviki offensive according to latest reports 8E9 developing along the entire Volhmian fmn-t from the River Dnleper to Deraznila. Ukran- ‘lasss, who temporarily successful are unable to offer any sustained effective resistance however, be cause of lack of munitions’ and supplies. Rioting Goes On In Belfast (Special to The Guardian) BELFAST. Nov 18.-——Iln rioting which ‘broke out rin Belfast this anther the Duncalirn Presbyterian School but the doors had been fast eased so the crowd contented itself with smashing the windows a pro oess which was repealed on. many houses along the line of advance The police rushed up after an ex citing turon-ty minutes and restor- ed order. German Empress Seriously ill press Augusta Vilctofin has again taken a critical turn. Frederic William- made a. hurried trip today from Wierlzen to her bed side. _-44;_._._ l Rotary Club er yesterday at the Rotary Clui luncheon, over which Rotarlu: of the young, pointing out that‘ and in order to halve tlhls chdldrca of the rising generation properly mined. it was necessary lto hlavl unlined instructors. 1t has beet it was the duty of the Church tr on this, n Massalclrlmotts senator had declared they (M first to finr‘ a democracy safe for the world inuist have the dual foundation of nstoldgelnco and righteousness, l- is limposslilble for a democracy to remain permanent that was not based on these dual foundations training and tolillgonco of the rising generation and ilt was for the Church no trait w-i-th the schools. The schools were turning out iintelikent ' ‘ at church was converting them tr ‘titghteoumess. 1n the United States, 69 3-10 per cont of ihr rising generation maceiverl no rel lgious instruct-ion in any school. ll Chllcago ulonle, 75 per. cent of thl children were allowed to grow u; without instruction m religion, and they all know whait state Chicagi was in. The solution he suggested was that thus respective dcnomlns tious should sstabillldlt religious day schools llio operate ll.n conjunc tlon with the secular schools. in was ridiculous to depend upon th: Sundavocbnoln as. with xeguilav attendance, lllhese could not pm vlde morethsn twenty-four hour: for religious education Ipelr annum The rollgllous day schools which he suggested would be the com-pie mont of tho day schools and would he thought. provide the moans fot laying the foundation of l. “ us nllswlonlpggwillibllhsttofh tdlldgmco in a dons , ilit for the world. 0n" tlio mutton of the chairman ‘ Threat To Tie Up ' \ C. N. R. Railway". Tuesday might. \ (Special in The Guardian) WlhNNlPEG. Nov. 18.—-A_ com piste tie-up of all Canadian Govern msnlt Railways would italic niece" almost immediately and your 80f ernmmlt be helld up the 91111151 M‘ morally rccponlllbllc ‘l! P1816911! Hanna does not back down upon his order, in those word! A. E- Moorc, mexnfbor-elsct for Spring field, virtually deillvorsd a strlkc ultimatum to Premen- Medzbe-n o:- frho Prime Min llsrter took the attitude that thl Parliament of Canada alone, and not the government wuld dictate in. this matter to Mr. Hanna. ‘nemlv e- eeemvt we- lm-d- m Prime Ministers , To Meet In June " (Special to The Guardian) coupon. Nov. 18-—Mr. noun-eve‘ 1 Law explained in the Commons last night that the meeting of the Prime lllin-‘isters of the Empire was summoned for J1me neat. ll will ‘be a meeting along the line: of the imperial War Cabinet meet- ings, which look place in 1917-18 to deal with urgent problems of . common interest, calling for 00m THE HAGUE. No“ 1s‘_The l“ mun policy 0f action by the difler- n95 of the runner German Em ant governments of the Empiri- Tariff And The Laboring Man (special to The Guardian) MONTREAL. Nov. 18-—0rgan‘ ed labors’ views rBSQTGiIIB 11 Dr. llf. A. I-ionline was the speak Tan“ we", 5mm begm-e the Tl‘. riff Commission. both by TWINE’ natives of the International Uni" _ and tho Canadian Unlions. Pr» = dent J. T. Foster. Montrv . Tor of a moderate tariff or prowc "on sufflclgnfl .10 insure the con- ii A despot-racy safe for me would THE WEATHER, TEMPERATURE» TIDE, HOOK, ET! High tide this afternoon at 4.54 [Pull moon. Thursday Nvv- 2W1- 0.42 r. M. l ~ a unuch more rapid pace than the NOOZIG "l9 BUIISEITDQ Kid ', (Continued on Fete Time.) wads for ms balance of the w”; nhsarwmfaollthnnks w“ M. NNQQEMQNIEW. ll