MAXIMS 01A. MERE MAN marl w or place and power may y, y» dearly bought with [nit and corruption. l fl-fldlll, ream m1. ‘lfl-‘rizftetm Guardian Two Oouil. '1 * Tragic Ending To" Career Of Young Killers Missouri s1dy"é'r'~'s Cornered In Cottage Commit Suicide Rath- er Than Submit 1.. N... York NOTED ECONOMIST Sir Norman Angeli, former mem- ber oi British parliament and noted economist and philosopher, has Just arrived in New York on a visit. .“,In Tlie Ring” _ ~- ~¢Canadian Press) MONTREAL, Que, Jan. 5.—Judge Amedee Monet-oi the Court oi Ses- sions, today announced that "unless something uncontrollable happens,’ he would be a candidate for the Mayor's Chair in Montreal's civic elections to be held next April. Boy Killed‘ (Canadian Press) CAMPBELLTON, N. B., Jon. 5.-~ Another sliding fatality was added to this winter's list when John Gracie, Jr., coasted down a woods road this afternoon and crashed in- to a. passing truck at Flat Lands. a hamlet ten miles from here. Death was instantaneous. Another lad who was coasting escaped death by a few inches. ' ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMING EVENTS, MEETINGS, ETC ‘PCome to the Whist in Millvlew ‘l-lnll, Friday. January 8th. 11342-1-6-21. "Borden Line Club loading hogs ilizigbs- cfllvfil. Albany, Thursday, ‘mi’ m!» ll3l4-1-5-3i. i?‘ . loading live stock ggglxila station, Thursday afternoon, Ary th. 11341-1-0-‘1. "Belfast Club "North Will-Shim C] b gull Thursday _ forenogg, gig-w List with Secretary, E, N, " 11310-1-5-21. hTW-‘WWQ January 2i fol‘ the hot cncken supper and bingo oi oath. 0 c Womena League. 1,357 ___. IO Pertrisgryilllal Meeting of the New me Urea 1H8 Co., will be held in mm’ °" Tumifly; January 19th, 1932, at I o'clock P. M Doug- les McLaren. Secretary. 11310-1-5-31, "Annual meeting o: p“ m; will be held in ti: Faction; l, M "day. January aoth, at a ' - 11823-1-5-21. “The Annual Meeting oi the mg‘? t 00-. will be heldin “W481. inf-whirling“ a‘ “"1"” Emflnfltmtsry. ' ' iiao-i-i-r-u. . "Nmiflfi-The annual meet lug oi aelfiltrénton nrrnm mltituio will MWWW- Imam 9th at ' . QIIOII 7.30 P a B x lllflvl-fi-IT. "The B. I. B. are putt their halmlulaédsociall 1:: m “ti. °°°’- “salient mainly-t ttrilfif mm‘ l] the cards came and the “new. waflmfl and old tiir , ‘at ‘a 0i the usual high W; sow. . ma-i-o-u. To Arrest. (Canadian Press) HOUSTON, Tex, Jan. 5—Two Missouri slayers sought throughout the southwest nearly three days and finally cornered today in a. little cottage where they had sought to hide, shot each other. or them- selves, to death while a posse out- side fired at the house and tossed‘ tear gas bombs through the win- dows. g Harry and Jennings Young. brothers, members oi a gang which slew six peace officers near Spring- field, Mo, last Saturday, heard the hammering of officers on the door of the cottage and. while the fumes- irom tear bombs were gathering about their heads, one of them shouted above the din: “We are dead; come and get us.” The watchers heard shots with- in the cottage. They burst in, as soon as they got gas masks for protection from the fumes, and found Jennings dead. Harry lay wounded and died about an hour later. The Coroner wrote it as a double murder; some oi the police believed it was a double suicide. The green litt!e cottage was chip- ped with bullets the officers had iired. but iigwas believed none of them had struck the brothers, as they stood to fire their last shots, at fllflnfltivrzs or at each other. Their mother, Mrs. J. D. Young. at Springfield, Mo" had said in an interview published locally that she hoped they would not surrender alive. The bodies of the brothers in outlawry and brothers in death- will be taken overland by a. Spring- field undertaker back to the scene oi the murder which drove the two into Texas. J. F. Tomllnson. a mild manner- ed and frightened carpenter was their undoing. When they came last night, seeking a hiding place from officers who were looking for them with heavy arms at every turn. they gave fictitious names, and the carpenter rented them the room. i Later, as he read his evening pa- per, he saw a picture o! Harry Young. It was the picture oi one oi his new tenants. He left the house at once with his family, but Continued from page l Captures Wolf On Thoroughfare WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 5.—- (APJ-Meeting a wolf on Sixth Street, which Washington calls the "Avenue ol Presidents" was the pe- culiar experience this morning o! Gordon Rains. To prove it he has the wolf. captured with the aid 0f several cab drivers and milkmen a- bout one o'clock. After going to all the trouble, Rains hopes no one ex- plains how the wolf got there. lie wants to keep it. Gov’t. Holiday oirrsws, out. Jan. s. (By the Canadian Prom-Government do- partmenia at Ottawa will be clos- ed tomorrow in observance of the Pout of the lphiphany. A notice sent out today to heads oi depart- ments by the Under-Secretary reads: - "I have the honor by direction to inform you that Wednesday, the 0th, instant, the lphiphany, will be ioboerved as a‘ holiday throughout‘ e _.o town." .l¢s.. '\.. .- Oovers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 192.2 l2 PAGES N0 mill has trafficked in honours and patronage and errvp-d ti... ‘fir’ consequences. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Annual Subscriptions: ln-liu-n-il $ iu lly Mull (Jiuludis uni] L‘. h. .\. Si. Ambitions LATEST IN LECTURE TOURS Miss Jennie Lee, aged 2'1, labor member of the British parliament at the age oi 24, who says she is going to run again, is making a lecture tour oi the United States. NOHflPE iuniiisii (Canadian Presu) ST. JOHN'S, Nfld., Jan. 5.—Hope' waned today for safety oi the Buriri schooner Martha E. and her crew of seven, as a Fisheries Department broadcast failed to bring forth tiny report oi the vessel since she sailed from North Sydney on December l2. The Martha E's destination was Harbor Breton, a town on the For- tune shore, on Newfoundlandh southern coastline. Several storms have swept-the Cabot straits since she sailed in ballast. 4 The vessel was commanded by Captain Peter Mullins oi Jersey Harbor, who carried his two sons, Roland and Ran, as members oi the crew, along with Fred Moore, oi Jersey Harbor. Cook; Joseph King- slow and his brother, of Red Island; and James Tobbo, of Harbor Bre- ton, seamen. Labor Meeting (Canadian Press) Cl-IATHAM, N.B., Jan. 5.—Eleven resolutions were unanimously adop- ted and three additional recom- mendations accepted by committee at the initial sessions today oi the 19th annual convention, New Bruns- wick Federatlon of Labor. Three resolutions slated for discussion Wednesday include one protesting curtailment oi provincial Govem- ment grants to vocational schools in New Brunswick. For India TORONTO, Qnt, Jan. 5—(By the Canadian Prado-Challenging cit- in 88 PERCENT‘ Pnisounun ARE suin Can. Fur Auction Sales Company Will Place Balance of Fox Skins On Mar- ket Today. MONTREAL Que, Jan. 5—(By the Canadian PressJ-Eighty-eight percent of 5,400 silver fox pelts of- fered todav at an auction of the Canadian Fur Auction ‘la-lea Com- pany, Limited, were sold during the day, it was announced. The great bulk 0i the sales, approximately 80 per cent, were for delivery in Europe, the fashion centres oi which continent were strongly rep- resen‘ ‘. * A final group or 5,000 silver fox pelts will be placed on sale tomor- row, representing the balance of an original lot of 13,650 pelts gath- ered here for the three day sale which opened on Monday. Official Continued on page ll Novel Theft (Canadian Press) MONCTON, N.B., Jan. 5.—Some- thing new in the way oi thefts is being practiced here. Last night a telephone pay station and phone were removed from a building, fol- lowing the theft oi a box and phone from a local hotel a few days ago. The entire sets were pried from the wall, probably enabling the thief or thieves to open the money contain- ers at leizure. News Briefs YARMOUTII, N. 8., Jan. 5- Benjamin B. Conn. widely known ship-builder, ship-brok- er and owner. died here of pneumonia today. (Canadian Press) ANTIGONISII, N. 5., Jan. 5 —Cai.herlne M. MacNeil, wife oi Peter F. MaeNell, editor oi the North Sydney herald. died in Si. Martha's Hospital here yesterday after a long illness. GREAT VILLAGE. N. 5.. ‘an. 5-Way. F. Oliver, of Britten. 0nt., today was inducted into his new charge as pastor oi ill! Presbyterian churches at Great village and Point ‘in Pique. TORONTO, Ont, Jun. 5.- l-‘uneral services for Irving l3- Robertson, eilltor-iu-chlei oi the izens of the United States as well as Canada to support the present? policy oi Great Britain in India.‘ including the imprisonment oi Ml-l hatma Gandhi. Rev. Warren H2: Wilson, director on the hand o.‘ home missions of the Presbyterian Church in the Unibedjtates, speak- ing at the home mission council today. declared that the British Government was doing its utmost to promote self-government in In- dia. ‘Though the recent imprisonment of Mr. Gandhi will bring‘ mmy strikes, boycotting oi British goods, violence and great injury to Engi- iand's trade and commerce, India's government will carry on u usual, MI". Wilson predicted. England, he said, was allowing the Indian people to become auto- nomous as rapidly u was good for them, But the Indian Congress- the popular body-demanded that autonomy should be hastened and that complete independence be giv- en India. (Canadian Press) SAINT JOHN, N. 13.. Jan. 5.-'I‘he Agriculture Board of Great Britain will hold o. meeting sometime this week at which it is hoped to decide definitely what will be done iviih theamrtnttntrnndemmstot». ‘Canadian potatoes . ». I ‘xii to the existing embargo 011 Toronto Evening Telegram, who died last night, will be held Thursday afternoon at his home here. CHICAGO, lll., Jan. iiw-Nflf- ly $3,000,000 in ntolcn bonds taken from the Lincoln Nat- ional urn: and h-iut Com- pony in Sepiembflr, 1930, were recovered today. LISBON, Portugal, Jan. “$.- (A.P.)-'l‘wo hundred , were arrelted and bombs, rifles and revolver: were seized in Oporio tonight when IIOTIM 110l- ducted a series oi raids on III- plcion that a revolutionary movement was impending. wssumurou. n. 0., Jen. o.‘ (Al) —-Chsiruun Byfllu o! the United States Home oi Bepmeniatlvoc appropriation committee today. introduced a bill to coooolidate the If!!! and navy into a department 0i Notional Defense. HALIFAX, 10s.. ha. I-(ly the Canadian Penn-Outward groin shllmclin from the wfl» of lhliin increased by about 4o bushels during I931, accord- iu: kl 3 statement illued by the traffic department of the Influential-equivalence. Air-Minded o... TRAVELS BY AEB-OFLANE Marla D'Aicssandl'o, well-known Italian aviatrix, has travelled every journey over twenty miles in he!’ own aeroplane for the DB5! W” yum, Under twenty miles, Mlle- D'Alessandro uses her car or goes by train. silo-iii siiuiiini TIENTSIN. China, Jan. 5.-(A.P.) —Chahg I-lsueh-Lianll. delwsed 60V‘ ernor of Manchuria, whose troops have been driven out of that pro- vince by the Japanese, has received an unofficial ultimatum warning him to retire further into North China, it was reliably reportflfl he"! today. ' The Japanese intend to strengthen considerably their forces at Shan- halkwan, according to these reports. Chinese papers declared Japan plans to occupy the Chinese city of Tientsin and to expel 20,000 Chin- ese troops irom Lanchow, will with- in the Great Wall, where they hnv been since the evacuation of Chi».- chow. PEIPING, China, Jan. 5.—(A.P.)— advanced 44 miles down the Poi- ping-Mukden railroad from Chin» at Ningyuanchow, the (Chinese) news agency zeportcd t0 way between Chinchow and 51111"- hkwan, in China proper. “Telephone ” Case Closes SAINT JOHN, N. B-. Jan, 5. (By the Canadian Press» Brief argu- brought the preliminary hearing oi the principals in the case to a close. lfaglstrte Stephen W. Palmer will give his decision tomorrow as to whether or not - Stephen Burt, of Quen's Harbor, Nfld., skipper of the seized rum s"hooner, and Wi1i'am Hicks, of Eastport, Me. alleged owner of ihc vessels $24,000 liquor cargo, are to face trial before a higher court on a chm-iris laid against them under ,ihc z-viwtoms act. Warships Off On Winter Cruise (Canadian Press) VICTORIA, B. C., Jan. 5—On a four month's cruise to the West Indies, H. M. C. s. Skeena, under commander V. G. Brodeur, and l-l. M. C. S. Vancouver, under Lieuih-Commander F. C. Hart. will sail from Esquimalt Tuesday and head south for San Diego, Calif., their first 1101b 0f call, reaching there on Saturday and remaining until January l3. The next stop will be at Manzan- illa, Mex. They will reach the Pan- ama Canal January 25 and leave February 1 after stops at Balboa and Colon. Then they will call at Montogo Buy and on February i2 will join H. M. C. S. Baguenay and H. M. O. B. Champlain from the Halifax Station. Together they will cruise and visit many ports in the West Indies. !br a week the Sfieenl plain and the Jancouver will cruise together and will visit different Port. PITWER RATES STATED llN- SATISTiBTTTRY u . Injustice To L 0 c al Power Users yilleg- ed at Trade iidard Meeting. A short council meeting of [he Charlottetown Board of 'l'l'H-(il.‘ was held llst evening in the Board Rooms, President George J. Tweedy 5 presiding. ‘ The mflelillg was called chiefly to discuss two communications receiv- ed by Mr. S. A. MacDonald. ‘the letters, one of which was from Mr, Robert Smith, the other from Mr. F. McLurc Sclanders, related to the sittings of the Railroad Comis- sion Lobe held in Halifax about Janirry ll and later in St. John. The letters stated that the govern- ments of the Maritime Provinces were laying informatzon before the COllllYlllli£§l0ll regarding mvans of economizlng without l‘Cdll"ilOll in service, the competition of busses and trucks and other matters relating to the work of the FiTlTFOITKi. As the government h \c no organization t0 deal with the mutter the Boards of Trade were assisting them. Nova Scotia had already prepared a brief wihlch had been approved by New Brunswick. Mr. M icDonald stated he had sent for a copy of this brief to be presented to the local Govern- ment for their llppfOVlli. lt was a- greed that the matter be left with Mr. MacDonald and that he reply to the letter received. Mr. R. E. Mutch reporting for the committee to enquire into the powm rates of the Mritim: lllec“ trio Company, spaiezl that ih om- A Japanese unit of 1.000 men has l lynlttee had g hferred with .. num- ,ber 0f Charlottetown men who us- cd a con ldemble amount if ole..- ,tl'ic p l’ r. It was the general epin- lon Tim ihry W010 bring uirustly (By James A. Mills, Associated Press ' Stall Writer) BOMBAY, Jan. 0.—<Wednesday)— (A.P.)—Emergency ordinances have Gov ’t. Closing On Indian Leaders; Emergency O-rdinances Have Been Extended To Four Im- portant Cities And To Entire Madras Presidency. lid l rain? h“ ___ . .../ v I French .4 ctr-ass , been extended to four important cities and to the entire Madras Presidency, and early today the gov- ernment began rounding up leaders ol the Indian Nationalist Congress in meeting the civil disobedience campaign. The outlawing of the all-India Na- tional Congress party, led by the Jailed Mahatma Gandhi, and a ban on all contributions to its funds, as well as stringent repressive mens- lllTS against demonstrations and peaceful picketing, were among the ordinance: included. Bombay, Calcuitu, New Delhi, Aj- mei" and Rfljiillillllil, are the cities affected. In Calcutta alone, forty- iive organiznilons were placed out- side ihe law by tho extension of the emergency ordinances. Numerous arrests have resulted from the ap- plication of the government‘: ordin- Continued on‘ page ll nzhocnici IS within (Canadian Press) WASHINGTON, D. C., Jim. 5- Democracy was warned tonight by chairman John J. Jaskob of the National committee to find a com- mon meeting ground on prohibition ‘dealt with in reg rd ‘.0 pflvvr rat- cs, especl; lly since til. electric rates .on electric current. l " user. ozher than power had b'en r duccd In ‘ inc: the shrdule of 1aowrr rates now d 1 shed with thnchinr- , V chow an ca Kuomm h», m- m5 been in force sillcc Jung advanced as a solution a constitu- W921. Th: Cnmmiificc dinitnd a let- setfiug forth ‘thr- marior. The let- ter is to be signed by live promin eni power users of the Pity Scrsetriryr Hhgins read com- munlcation from the Moncton Boardi of Trude rnquiruig whether or not‘ the Chrirlcviotoivn Board were pres- sing for an‘ mail s*rvice and if, they required any assirtnncc. i It ivas greed that a copy of mm“ by “Ymsel this aftemm“ tho lc-‘fer sent in Otinwa regard ‘ inf! the service h: sent the Mone- ‘Telcphune’ ton Board and ask their support. Gov? T/Vill Assist Man. (Canadian Press) WINNIPEG. Mnn., Jan. 5.-Thr~ Dominion Government will assist Manitoba in meeting its maturing obligation of $2.000.000 in treasury bills which falls due Jan. l5 in New York. Premier John Bracken said today. Arrangements have been made to take care of the obligation, he added. Margin Higher MANCHESTER, Eng, Jan. 5. (By the Canadian Press Cable)- The mirgin of tariff protection ac- corded to Canadian coton mills by the Canadian Government is high- er than necessary. according to the report oi the home and oversea! dominions section of the Manchest- er Chamber of Commerce presented at the annual meeting of the sco- tlon today. The report declares the drop in m Britain's trade with Canada is due to three factors: The Canadian “d m‘ 5mm‘? 1M “i” ‘mm’ ian industry, and competition with tariff, the development of Camd- or face a. north and south split or i. third party. _ In a‘ letter to members of the lemocrntic nations. committee, he l? I k‘1/"r.:§ ., ‘- WRITES lilljllNiiAlilYl‘ OPERA Mlle. Marie Losscii. nottd l-‘rcurh actress and plnywrighi, has jus’ written an opera, inking as hci theme the life oi Sarah Bernhardt. Mile. Losseii will play ihi- part oi Bernhardt in the opera. GREAT ciiiti run Afliiiiiili SAYSBRUBE PERTHZ Wrsiern Australia, Jan. 5. rCnnriian Press Cablei-Tlv! ticnal amendment providing for day. Ninyuanchow is about ha‘! ‘tor to the hoard of Comm 551m. state control of liquor, which he lmder conditions of imnvrlil i111‘!- of Public Utltics of this Province has proposed under the title of a erencc. "home rule" plan. Talking later with ncwspnuermen, . however he emphasized that he‘ would not ask the committee at! Saturday's meeting ‘to commit it-a self on this or any other issue. He said. though, the prohibition ques- tion “u. bound to come before ih" national convention. The manager of the 1928 presid- ential campaign of Alfred E. Smith also iold newspiipcrmen that no one could say he was interested in any single candidate. He added he particularly wanted io avoid any party "oiigarchy." Casting tradition aside, Raskob favored the Democrats having their convention ahead of the Republican meeting, scheduled for June l4. lie proposed that the Democrats "lg-l nore the Republicans; adopt ai brief platform, touching all vitni‘, issues without the usual whercmcs." from weakness of coming Imperial Economic Coh- ferencn at Ottawa offers Ausirulzi her greatest chant“ fi-z‘ prospcritv, deviated Rt. lion, ‘Qan- ley Bruce, former Nsiinnnliu Prime Minister, on his return frozn E12’? l‘nd today. Briand Is Slightly Ill PARTS, Jan. 5.-—IA l’ 1-» Th“ FT‘- eign (Jlllcv said ion; ' “ tlclp liriund is followi trcniment which 0111i" s Ho. to his apartment for rcvvml . The Miui.:t-ry' rlcniczi l‘i‘p."ll“- luni the Foreign Mzuisiel" illifi sizffvx. .i a stroke of prlrnlfvsis, and pointed mi that he “'11s prrsonnlly (iil‘i‘(“.lll11 ihr‘ affairs of his oillcir. This (lune i came alter reports Till/l iii" n Cifrliii- nterl iu (liplomntic circle." in tiv vi- fcct that .\f. llriinvi vszi- s~if'-z'i:". lint‘ he. ’ Record & Forecast of the Weather .\ii'I'i'|-IiTIEULUIQTITAT. UFFTCH, Till‘ onin. Ont. Jnn. 5—- MINIWTK“ RN“ XIJXINIF“ TEM- PEIIVIFIKHQ . t llnu-smi Tm‘ \'- l"lll\'(!l‘ 40 41'» . if 1 2'.’ Winnipeg ii 1'" 'l‘..rnnt0 7H fill (Iliuwa T‘ '-'»" ,\TAIITTT‘\"-'TT T" 7T" Q“,.|,,,,. _ _ __ 14 ‘:0 Shiv-l Jnlm . 13 7" TT ..... ‘i2 1i" 12 ' all x (‘lmrlolicion-n FORECASTS nmuvn and (‘poor lit. ‘Lan-rcm-e Val- “ypru-esh nimihensiei-Iy wluiili cloudy nnd mllil with rnln. Lows-r Hi. Lawrence \'nlley—3ioilr~r- ate to fresh southerly winds: cloud! nml mild. (lull nnvl North shore-Modern?!‘ southwest to south wlndl, fair an i. Maritime Bu! - I-iabt "ITPP" winds: . _ Maritime ‘Vent-Fair aml milder, winds shiffink to easterly n! villi!"- lligh title this morning ot 0.54 and other countries. "'l‘hc tariff has been and still is the greatest ob- ltocle." the rflllort ll!!- i t lght nt ma. “gun sols ihls choruses‘ rang-WT '""T ' morn n -- - "T€..l~°$ZZ§.'"in....d-r. Jim- ‘I. 11-2" 1"“- Bummorsld» tide eighteen minute! later than Charlottetown As TAR A‘. NARRTED Fiiliis Am: (TINSERNED THERE ARa No oiilohsfic RtLAfiotis (‘Alt Flillli! N(‘lll-‘.lll'l.l". Wet-k lTfl_\'il--T.i'll\'¢‘|l lillflivll M"! 0.15 mm. IIITTT 11.40 um Leaves Tnrmcnilnedidily: 10.88 Lill- lnd zoo p.ll.