PAGE TWELVE | TH a LC! London, Lam-, paign which is being waged py Can- adian motorists for different treat- ment when touring in England with their own cars, has evoked a Jetter in the Daily Telegraph, which puts forward the arguments 3 by a Canadian to the 3 It says, in part,: "A Can- 'adian friend asks - why Britain 'does not give the Canadian motor; Ang tourists a preference ad of ' enforcing a deposit and a banker's f tee, the same as upon for- eigners?"' After outlining the Canadian and American practice ADIAN MOTORISTS ASK CHANGE IN"TREATMENT ON TOURING BRITAIN 'Mar.' 27,~The cam- | of period ) permits, the writer says: "It we want to attract the Cana-| 'dian motoring tourists we should} - 'consider the question of preferen- tial treatment for their cars." ' An official of the Royal Auto- mobile Club states that the idea was at one time presented to the British customs a who then were unable to relax the reg- ulations except in regard to the preferential duty on Canadian made cars which were finally left here, The suggestion that there | should be some revision of the cus- | toms regulations may now be again presented to the authorities. FEW MEMBERS NOW REMAIN IN OTTAWA! Rumor Says Grain Board is Likely to be Changed Ottawa, March, 27.--Three or four mémbers from the Maritime Pro- vinces who had brought their families to Ottawa for the session are prac- tically in sole possession of the Par- liament Building this week, . The others have gone home for Easter, The Cabinet also, save for Hon, Ernest Lapointe and a bare quorum have left the city. No council meet- ing is scheduled for the week and all activities are at a low ebb, Among opposition members who really have the most to say about it, there is a divided view as to the re- mainder of the session whether it will finish by May 24 or run into June. Generally speaking the dis- position is more to get on with the plans outside than to prolong the ses- sion here. . ; A fairly long inquiry into the Grain I Act is cussion is } acter and extent of the remainder of robabl depending what he r ad, depend e amendments and Ay suggested » ia 4 ganization. There s to be an} c t of bel hat the Costa : ; an ence an a Back fn" 1888 the steel for Sicle Sota tion and pow. Before e United Si re Wo fey dh 8 ' affected, the subject can be oe after thi Soles. for discussion § disposed of. This is another up budget ¢ makes uncertain the char- hidden thing to-day Sudl use o the session. : 't Hon. R. B. Bennett is here but will spend a few days in Toronto during the recess, For H, B : e picture'aboveiwe 8 A "THE yourieNady? at the kel that touches d lo a telephone user lif 8 path to the operator's signal 8pe, a. right'in! apparatus parts which have heen plated ad 8 first trans- and the mine owner's surprise the ol an old German name for the evil : bothered the early Saxon miners--was in the copper ore. This troublesome nickel Hoket that ¢ eos bo all with zine and for the contact prings ly life y is an alloy c and copper for the contact | lifts the ceiver off the hook these springs make contact an rho work in a cupola of the Taternational Micke! Co. at nial 8 t 'Electric factor el for pr in the ore proved to be more valuable than €he copper and 6 tric 1; at Montreal, is inspecting telephone tection against rust. ydro Extension Brockville. --Efforts are now be- ing made to obtain signatures to a petition asking that the Hydro- Electric transmission system be extended to the vicinity of Ivy Lea. Firman Cross and J. G. Mitcheu, ur Lansdowne, are the prime movers in the undertaking. Rome, March 27.--~The problem of a definite settlement of the question of the Holy Places in Palestine prob- ably will be revived in the near fu- ture as a result of recent activity of Vatican representatives in the near By Authority of His Majesty King Edward VII. (Tncor, rated By Act a of Parliament) THE COMPANY'S OWN BUILDING Cor. Sherbrooke and Hutchison Sts, MONTREAL PULL GOVERNMENT DEPOSIT-FULL RESERVE TO PROTECT EVERY POLICY Leslie Burden, 27 Simcoe St. S. ? ' Manager--Telephone 237 £ east, it has been learned. The revival of the question is con- fidently expected to develop into an international discussion. Recent movements of personages to and from the Holy Land have been LIFE, SICKNESS, ACCIDENT ASSURANCE watched with greatest interest by members of the Diplomatic Corps of the Vatican and developments have tended to confirm reliable indications that the problem would be re-opened. For instance, Monsignor Robinson, who is Apostolic delegate to Malta, recently visited in Palestine, Imme- diately afterward he came to Rome and conferred with Pope Pius, Monsignor Barlassina, who is Latin patriarch in Jerusalem, visited Rome and was received by the Pope short- ly afterwards. It was assumed that HEAD OFFICE: they discussed the problem with the Pontiff although there has been no NE of life's greatest problems was sold when business men carried over into domestic life the "long look" ~--the practice of looking and planning ahead, which has proven the secret of every successful business enterprise. 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THE QUESTION OF HOLY PLACES IN PALESTINE LIKELY TO BE REVIVED official indication as to the purpose of the visits. ¢ In addition there are several other visits scheduled for the near future which well-informed sources believe will have a bearing on the question of the Holy Places. ' Among them is the visit of Monsignor Fumasoni- Biondi, Apostolic delegate to Wash- ington, who has gone to Jerusalem to spend Easter, The forthcoming visit of Dr, Cos- mo Gordon Lang, Archbishop of Can- terbury, to Palestine also has streng- theped the discussion of the issue. It was reported that the Archbishop would be a guest on the J, P, Mor- gan yacht on the trip. It also was recalled that the Pope recently extended the jurisdiction of the Apostolic delegate to Egypt, Monsignor Valen, to include Pales- tine, RONE'S ELABORATE SERVIGES START Holy Week is Ushered in Amid Great Demon- stration Rome, March 27. --TItaly"s Holy Week began Sunday amid great de- monstrations of the solidarity between church and state. In every province, and particularly in Rome itself, the clergy did their utmost to show them- selves in sympathy with the regime which finally solved the Roman ques- tion. Domestic prelates, so-called because they belong to the Papal household at the Vatican, made a point of going to the polls in person and voting .in favor of the slate of the Fascist Party, It was the greatest outpouring of Catholic votes since Pope Pius X. lifted the ban on Catholic participa- tion in Italian elections, The commemoration of Christ's tri- umphal entry into Jerusalem was cel- ebrated in the 400 churches of Rome with all the pomp and splendor the church knows how to bestow. At St. John Lateran, the mother church of Christendom, "Cardinal Chief Penitentiary" Fruwirth, an Aus- trian dressed in purple robes, arrived at 5 am, and was received by the Franciscan Fathers, Penitentiaries of St. John, After praying at the altar of sacrament, he went to the chair from which he wielded the famous penitental robe, touching the heads of all penitents who came to confess to him. ? Ancient Rite This ceremony was commemorative of the anci¢nt rite of public penance, and those submitting to it received 100 days' indulgence for their act of humility. 'Elaborate ceremonies are scheduled for each day, reaching their climax on Holy Thursday 'which, commemorat- ing the institution of the Lord's Sup- per, which is colorful in the extreme, Immediately after comes Good Friday, with its remembrance of the cruci- fixion and sepulchre, On Holy Saturday, or Easter Eve, there is a faint note of joyousness, as a sort of fore-promise of the resurrec- tion celebration of the morrow, Yo be ut during the whole week the priceless statues and paintings of Rome's fa- mous churches remain shrouded' in deep purple or black, and the clergy wear mourning garb. Although Catholics are at liberty to 'partake of their Easter communion at any time between Ash Wednesday and Trinity Sunday, most of the more: pious----and that includes a goodly number of the faithful - in Rome itself--prefer to do so during oly Week, particularly on Holy Thursday, which is specially dedicated to the blessed sacrament, since it is in a 'sense the anniversary of its in- stitution. On Easter itself there are equally large throngs wending their way to the altar rails, and on the afternoons and evenings before both feasts the confessionals of all Rome's 400 churches are literally beseiged by would-be penitents of all races and languages. = Practically every nation on earth has its own national church Lor churches in Rome; and in St. Peter's there are confession booths for the contrite of nearly all the races of the world, ° Will Investigate Channel Tunnel Plan London, Mar. 27.~Feasibility of the long discussed channel tunnel project which would link England and Continental France is to be investigated by the British gov- ernment. { Premier Baldwin announced to the House of Comons that an im- partial inquiry under the auspices of the commitee of civil research will be made into the economic as- pect of the tunnel plan, the mili- tary side of the problem will be considered after the committee has CROWNS BALOFFER 1S WITHDRAWN FOR HAMILTON TEACHER H. P. Niece Is Being Held on Nominal Charge of Vagrancy Hamilton, Ont., Mar, 27.----Crown officials today withdrew the offer to release H. P. Niece, Commercial High School teacher, on" bail, and he is being held in jail without bail on a nominal charge of vag- rancy arising out of the death in his apartment of Miss Eva Cole- man 20-year-old stenographer, Miss Coleman became 111 in his apartment Sunday morning and died from poisoning on 'her way to hospital. . Niece has sent in his resigna- tion to the Board of Education, Detectives are conducting a searching inquiry into the pur- chase of the poison, said to have been strychnine, Many local drug- gists have been questioned but so far the source of the fatal draught has not been traced. Niece told police Miss Coleman swallowed poison in a candy after she had asked him to marry her and had received his reply that he was already marrfed, and had pone child, He is separated from his wife. REPUBLICAN PRESS PROTESTS LETTER German Nationalist Party Leader Criticized 'for Expression Berlin, March 27.~A storm of pro- test has been aroused among the Re- publican newspapers of Germany by ublication of a letter by the German Ritionalist Party leader, Alfred Hugenberg, addressed to all members of the United States Congress, many Governors, mayors, newspaper edi- tors and other prominent Americans. The letter concludes with an appeal A : RESORT HOTEL witha COUNTRY CLUB ATMOSPHERE NAUTILUS MIAMI BEACH." FLORIDA Ome of America's finest and miost modern fireproof resort hotels, Buperd Tennis Courts 8 Ewcellent Golf Courses Bathing--Yachting--Motor Boating Fishing Connected with the Nautilus are sixteen nom-housekeeping villas, { serts that "it is a downright lie: to also your course." pretend that German prosperity is .in- Hugenberg declares that under the Dawes plan of reparations payments "America's finance and French mili- tarism, furnish England with means to build warships and also furnish German Marxism a means of making socialistic experiments in administra- creasing and that Germany is cap- able of paying." "The accumulating burden of Ger- many's debts," he continues, "is des- tructive to loans and to German cur- rency." tion." Evidently referring to the attitude of S. Parker Gilbert, Agent-General The bonds of friendship can never be inflated beyond their true reported. to the United States: "Our course is for reparations, Hugenberg's letter as- | value.--Christian Science Monitor. THE ARCADE 'been able to show The Smartest Millinery Never before have we $ more varied 'range of natty Hats that are the latest creations at, each OF ar 95 -- / Dresses, '8 gorgeous array quisitely 'trimmed flowers. The these go! are as bags, Umbrellas, The Greatest Value In Silk Underwear Ever offered to the Ladies of Oshawa « 800 Garments including Night Slipy, Teddy Knickers, Pettinickers, Bloomers, Vests in All departments are showing a wonderful range of shades ex- in lace and regular prices of high as $3.95 'each. Our Easter offer Neckwear, Lingerie, etc. VISIT THE ARCADE Before selecting your Easter Purchases. SUCCESSORS A Big Easter Special Tweed COATS of EASTER ACCESSORIES in Hosiery, Gloves, Hand- EASTER DRESSES | 100 latest creations in Silk Dresses. All new styles and won- derful range of shades. Every possible style to suit the most discriminating person. Easter Special 95 EACH E---------- HE | Smart, high grade quality, good colors. A special purchase of excep- tional value. All sizes with and without belts at