Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Sep 1919, p. 1

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--m 14 PAGES PEP P , -- WANTS DEMAND FOR EXHASER » Lloyd George Determined to Have Peacs | Quis aN Confercice Make Application. - WILHELM NOT T0 G0 FRE { } | | | | BG WRECKAGE. BY HURRICANE wher Kilked And Scores Are | OK Reported Injured. PEOPLE IF THE BRITISH PREMIER HAS| SAD SOME HIS WAY. - Sorbid' Signed the, Austrion Pence] Yet! Treaty--Rumania Has Not Signed the Document. (Canadian Presy Despatoh) Paris, Sept. 16.--Lloyd George determined to have it settled | the peace conference demand from | | is! is | that | The Storm Sent a ---- THREE THOUSAND PERSONS ARE HOMELESS, Tidal Wave Ten Feet High Over the Business Seo. tion of Corpus Emerging From Effects Disaster, (Canac Corpus Chr Holland, the handing aver of former | Corpus Christie to-d 8 i Emperor Willlam, according Journal to-day. The serts that the premier who i ne Br ing to leave Paris to<lay will insist] possible thi before his departure upon having such action decided upon. Serbia To Sign Treaty. . (Canadian Press De Paris, Sept. 16.- the Serbia, one of two nations inter | ities, I | | between i | | to Le| emerging from s like a correct In the lst was placex that was rega [too conservative. ested, which did not stn the Aus- | it was said the trian peace treaty .(Rumania the other), will attach its belated g to the Echo de Paris to-day. STARTLING PLA = CUT THE BRITISH DEBT Lord Rothermere Would Sell the Bahamas to the United States. London, Sept. 15.--~ILord Rother- mere, brother. of Lord Northcliffe and owner of the Dally Mirror and Sunday Pictorial, Jnakes the following pro posals: "We are enormously in debt.to the United States; but we also possess assets of extreme value which the United States government might be willing to acquire in liquidation, whoily or in part, of our American * Habilities. "1 suggest that we should endeavor to dispose of the Bermudas, the Ba- hamas and some of the West Indian or Trinidad, to the United States. We NTO i | Signature to that document, accord-| | is that might even offer British Guiana and British Honduras, "Such a cession would be entirely different from that of Heligoland, which we handed over to a nation alien In language, sentiment and na- tional outlook to this country. 'It would be & blow to our pride. but when a man is near bankrupted he sells his assets, Landowners and others in Great Britain are doing this. The nation is no exception. It must cut its cloth to suit its circum- stances." TIDINGS FOR OUR READERS The Whig's Daily Condensation of the News of the World From Tele- | graphic Service and Newspaper Ex. change, ' Peter McLaren, a pioneer contracts or and lumberman of Bruce county, is dead at the age of ninety. 1 Knox Magee, editor and general manager of the Winnipeg Telegram - for the pust 'two years, has resigned, t Kent county milk producers have!) } raised the price to the dealers, ef-| fective 1st October, from 6% to 9 cents a quart. . W. F. O'Connor of the Board of Commerce is holding sitt fngs in Ham- iton to investigate complaints of pro- fiteering In food. | Milton on the closing day three days' celebration in wele preturned sol than ninety gold watches. | "Liz" Marriott, former Hamilton Tiger coach, is being sought after by R. and A. A, and will likely aec- So the request of the Black and ite, : y The efforts to ralse the German ¥essdls scuttled at Scapa; Flow have (resulted in one battleship, three ) sors and fifteen destroyers being of a oma to} i ted, David Gilmour has been appointed ident of the Standard Chemical pany, in succession to- L. M. od who becomes chairman of the d of directors. rs, (Dr.) 0. H. Duncombe, Wat- ord, diod as a result of the motor r collision near Brantford Sunday ht, In which her brother-in-law, Charles Duncombe of St. Thomas killed. The members of the Commons are King so hard for that $2,500 ses- al indemnity that at times there danjer of the debate on the h from the Throne blowing up want of a quorum. * Us. 8. Secretary of State Lansing not issue a denial of the state. ts attributed to him in regard to treaty of peace by Willlam ©. tt, formerly .a confidential .at- of the peace commission. Ben. F. Allen, | of the Cleveland Plaindealer, member of President Vilson's party, and James R. Patter- of Canyon. City, Ore, were killed d two other newspapermen injured automddile collision on the Co- Am, bia highway Monday otternoon le the Presidential party was re-| rning'to Portland, Oregon, | "Colonel John A. Currie, \Conserys- | xe member for North Simcoe, was idetracked in the Commors Monday | noon when he tried to adjourn House for the: purpose of djs Sing the demand of the War Vi for a further gratuity of §2.. being | exceed 200, One feport 120 boc cognized Christi, In Nueces Bay thousand pe less by the sto tained that be Treportet towns, s as T ( + ly in the path of 1 "storm high ove h districts 3 of life w aue to the pro to the lc unday sons at expose in the higher a had been sons plaon- | the city early on 8 Christie--Slowly of the ateh) t. 16, -- began slow} reckage cau as-| by the gulf hurri ane which struck . It was im- & to get anything € cit 1 rded In he ieath bu as fa some quarte fatal- | { | KINGSTON, esate emi, Boda a SL A oT | NED IN TE | | | | | | number injured would | in 11 idents . More rm rom + Most of th of the city. S not appalling mpt warm ning sent out | *Wer portions of the cireulation taken from-a an were made Fears are a heavy casualty il the surrounding | cl morning urging all 1 plac of them re Cor reef | thre home- | enter- | st vy : eral of which were airéct- | the storm. _ a, ~ J Sent a tidal wave fen r the business and No | That was carly | per-| 68 to seek safety ricts of the city. Seventy Bodies Recovered, (Canadian Sinton, bodies the entire territory, Made Paris, Sept. assistant state fgr fore ish cab tomorrow, héen "appointed dary on the Supreme Peace Conferen rank of an Am (Canadian pP I secret Lon British co, bassador, ary, don, plenipoten: ouneil of He will pave the bal STOCK MARKETS, Quotations Furnish Ryerson & Co, Street. New York Stocks. Atcliison C. PR N.Y. CG Reading ns Southern Pac, So. Railway 8t. Paul T A tie Guile . e A C Motors Studebaker ll Baldwin Loco. Opening. Close 16 7 8 10 Ee: ap Pid... ye Overland as Loc. Am. Smelters .. Sa Anaconda Chino Inspiration i Coppe . Crucible Midvale .. Rep. Steel U. 8. Steel , Allis-Chalwmers Brazilian . .. Can, Steamship i? 3 Can. Steamship, Can. Loco. .. Can. Cement Dom. Steel Steel of Canada 9 By Russian Vol © Bolsheviki Canadian P Paris, Sept. 16 on the Archangel front are on cessful offensive against the viki 'n the ra Archangel m led the town taken by Bolshevi recent pushes nor eet Kin, Man In Trouble, ar fralls, Sept. Gumsey, "Twenty Niag contravention minal Code, i have abducte under sixteen police arrested house on Rive manded in cus The girl was leville. He wil with two offen ment to the Cri flezal to regis: Gumsey where hb Canadian Ste essage Russian volunteer | Bethlehem, Steel | 5 6 , pid. 8 unteer T il of thwar 1 © 2% 314 03% 21 ocks. 2%. 0 914 698, ------ ee SUCCESSFUL OFFER) VSIVE. oops Against d, 16. --William -SiX years 'of age, of Kingston, 'was 'arrested charged with [of Sec. 315. n that he fs alleged to 4 2 girl from Belleville years of age. The local the man in a boarding r Road. He appeared before Magistrate Fraser and was re- tody for a week. Georgina Peace, Bel- |. Ah probably be chafgedi €3. a5 a new amend- minal 'Code makes it ter as man and wife. Wis taken to We e will be held un comes up for disposal 'ress Despateh) Texas, Sept. 16.--Seventy of flood victims, mutilate yond recognition, have been recover- ed at Sinton relief headquarters from surrounding Bay British Representative, ress Despatch) 16.--Sir Eyere Crew. under ign affairs, &1 the Brit. inet since 1912, will from ed by Bongard 287 Bagot % 83 Asked 85 698, ress Despatch) ~--Russian way sector, says an received here. troops have oceu- Onega, which was ki in one of their Hand jail, his case be- Shore of the arrive having tha 1€ | 9014 153 to-day | ' | osts gogerally, haa been. given Photo shows W. F. ing Commissiofier, and now Ciommeree, and J. S. Lundy, of ney-General's after the first session of | MUST SETTLE. | HOME PROBLE 15 Betore Canada Tries to Settle Ay Dis- | putes in Europe. | MESSACE OF LABOR LEADER ee TO THE NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL | CONFERENCE AT OTTAWA. i Appeal to Dgop All Hostility and Po. i litical Views, and Approach Ques. ! tions in Spirit of Good Fellowshi (Canadian Pre Ottawa, Sept. 16.-- of Canada trying to settle disputes in | Europ if problems in Canada cannot | be gottled first, and tie labor problem is one of our'greatest,"' was the mess age to the national industrial confe- | ence delivered by John Bruce, of To- ronto, the spokesman for the labor group this morning. He appealed to | every one to drop all feelings of his: 1 tility dnd political views, and ap- preach the questions before the ton-" ference in a spirit of human good- fellowship. The third group in the conference | representing agricultup¢ eivie vice, G.W.V.A. and the Not p. | i 1 ser- | fe inter- i al voice In shaping committee reports, althongh their delegates - on the | committee will have no voting power. A pecial committee was decided | upon to take up consideration of re- commendations of the roval commis- sion on industrial relations that the findings of the commission be {nto effect in all work controlled the government where principl democratic management can be ap- plied. It was pointed out by Presi- dent Tom Moore, of the Dominion put | t i | troops a suc. Bolshe- the Cri- Trades and Labor Gongress, that the | purpose of this committee was sim- ply to give civil servants and public emplcyees the same rights as enjoyed by - employees of corporations and ! private employers. | ol i t & To Take Legal Action. Toronto, Sept. 16.---Legal action in the courts to geclare the Jesuits an illegal body -in Canada outside of Quebec is likely to be taken as a re- sult of the investigation of the Guelph Novitiate raid. ¥ wn ONT: ARTO, ALL PROF | BEEF PACKING COMPANIES HAVE | : | omt---- | | To Appear Before the Board of Com | Morning--Retailers | Warning. | T0 PROSECUTE Ontario Government Confers Wide Powers Upon J. S. Lundy, K.C. STORAGE 10 BE PROBED BEEN SUMMONED, on Wednesday Are Given merce Enquiry Toronto, Sept. 16.--""1, 'shall not RS RAILWAY TO MINES | Manitoba Government May | Ome, Says Hon, Edward | Winnipeg, Sept. 18. --1If minion Government will not Build Brown. the Do- build a | | railway to the rich mines north of | { The Pas, the Manitoba Gove rnment | | Will consider the fea fof pon- | {structing a provincial way, Hon. | Bdward Brown, provincial treasurer, intimated yesterday. i | Mr. Brown stated that members | {ot the provincial government recog- | | nized thé necessity of such a rail- | {road to enable the mines to operate | { BaD that the Duilding of sTich?a line'| {was up to the Dominion Govern jment. He thought it would be any { ®asy matter for the Canadian North jern to comstruct a seventy-two-mile | { road. | | The Canadian Pacific, it was star- | jed, proposed to erect a line running | [to The Pas and the mine ftelds, but it | |wolild be several years before i | completion, Mr. Brown said. He b | {lieved that the mines sre of such anada and the THE-0LD WORLD MUSTRND sees LOYD GEORGES CLARION ¢ IS Sounded to the Builders of the New / World * - INDOLENCE ALONE SHALL SUF." FER WANT, HE SAYS Waste of the Earth's Riches Side By Side With Want--Must Not Bo. tray the Heroic Dead. . London, Sept. 16.-- Premier Lloyd has issued a message to the Iname an offender, but just as soon 1s we have word that any retailer is | Georg | of Great Britain in "the fu. {immense value to Fa Was essen- | {N° . t whigh' was distributed free { province that a railroad | tial. PROBING HIGH COST OF LIVING IN TORONTO. O'Connor fright) former Cost of Liy-| Department, thecourt in that city, TTT" he. no sense destroying illegal com- | Metropolttan Opera chorus \ he, vice-chairman of the Board of the Ontario Provincial Altor- leaving the Toronto City Hall VATICAN BOY SINGERS - . TQ BE DEPORTED As They Are Not Eighteén Years Old and Unaccom= panied By Parents. Despatch) ghteen choir, >d hefrw New to rs and not allow ,¢ are under een ied their parents. This action c osely followed the detention of Urelio Bod- ini an Italian tenor, who arrived last week and was ordered excluded from the country by a special board of in- quiry, on the ground that having been engeged as a member of the , re was-a contract laborer. * HOPES FOR RECONCILIATION, ; $s Assistance For Ger- 'man Brethren. Chicago, Sept. 16.--German Cath- olies are 'urged to help in bringing | about "the reconciliation of nations' in a message from Pope Benedict to the Central Verein of German Cath: olic societies, delivered by Archbish- op Mundelein. "Moreover," reads tho message, knowing the dreadful condition undar which your brethren in Ger- | many are now living, the sovereign | rvently | pontiff implores you m to 'lend them every: e terial as well as moral, and in the quickest and most effective way, especially - facilitating the early re- sumption of commerce and all those thenefits that naturally follow in' its wake." st fe ¢e, ma- No Longer A Hearst Candidate. eSimcoe, Ont., Sept. 18. --1 will never wear a Hearst tag or wait for a Hearst convention"to pronbunce on my record,' are the words of 'Lieut.- | Col. A. GC. Pratt, M.P.P. for South Norfolk, @s pubilshed in a local week- . There will be no Liberal conven- tionsand np Liberal candidate. Joseph UFO. candidate; has Liberal leanings and always was classed as a Liberal, but was not a party worker. rp pe iti in Alien Prisoners Escape. Salt Lake City, Utah, Sept. 18.-- Between seven and seventeen enemy alien prisoners at the war barracks at Fort Douglas, near here, escaped early on Monday by way of a tunnel constructed underneath the wire enclosure of the prison. An early check of those missing indicat- ed that none of the important pris- oners escaped. Toronto building trades unions are m6¥ing to have agreements signed in the fall instead of the spring. ee - ONE OF THE LA This picture, taken vi Toronto woman. shows a structed. Itis considered & $5,000,000 vices, each costin . sunken vessels. 2 NAVA Sussex, FE. ship of a very to be oné of .rque, EM > ! 5 aid, by a relative of a novel type, being con- a number of huge de- to be used for the raising bf Ee A : ta x prison | {equipped with an ef | making more than one cent a pound | {on his sugar, I will order that he b prosecuted," was the statement made iby J. 8. his law office. iby { Mr. Lundy has been appointed by | {the Ontario Government to co-oper {ate with the Board of Commerce in | | reducing the cost of living, and has {bean given very wide authority. He | may call upon the city or provincial {police and crown attorneys to take | l action against profiteers and if he $0 | desires. the provincial government { will appoint special officers. to assist him. { "This is no move; made as a mat- ter of expediency, because of {lingering of war-time | declared Mr. Lundy. t binations if we then got off 'the job {and allowed them to form again and {plunder the public." = » | "Mr. Zundy added, "and the Gover { nor-in-Couneil at'any time tan direc: | it it deal with any matter affecting | de, commerce or industry, instead of ls to appoint some 'Royal ComnfiSsion with special powers from Parliament, -- "It is true, of course, that Board of. Commereo has to rely the on e, tthe provincial attorney's-general to |es. {enforce its decision and penalties for | d, | contempt of them, but no difficulty jon that scope is anticipated. "Suppose we find that somebody {has a monopoly.in connection with a | patented cereal which is in great de- | mand, and the price of which is | scandalously high. The Board of | Commerce could step in, cancel the {patent and permit competition, and if this did not bring relief, fix a price above which the cereal could mov be sold." Mr. Lundy pointed' out how easy late the priees of many articles. lin the main that is responsible for |any unreasonably high prices. But | the exporters cannot do business these days except as the government provides credit for the buyers in Europe. All the large beef packing houses in the city have been requested to appear before the Board of Com- j merce at ten o'clock on Wednesday, {when W. F. O'Connor resumed tho Board of Commerce enquiry here. MEET ON COMMON GROUND A: Conference Might Have Stopped the War. Ottawa, Sept. 16.--Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, in a essidg the National Indusirial Hehiefonce made a forceful appeal both employers and employes tb meet on the com. {mon ground of joint conference to { adjust all questions of industrial dis- | pute. To empirasize his Plea he guot- {ed Sir Fdward Grey's remark, "Come | what may, 1 believe that our great- | 'est of strifes (the great war) might { have been averted had: there been jconference.". te - 2 Representatives to the conférence applauded the statement af fre- quenly, interrupted the speaker as he outlined his plan of the four parties to industry, in capital, labor, ma- nagement and the community, i | | { | i | | eels aa $ GRAND DUKE AS PRETENDER Joins Kolchak's Forces After Eseap- : ing From Bolsheviki, chael Alexandrovitch, brother of the former Russtan Emperor, who made his escape from Perm, where he was imprisoned by the Bolsheviki, has reached Admiral Kolchak's- head- quarters according to Humanite, He Is known to only a few of Kolchak's officers, the paper adds, and is pre- paring to act in the roje of pretender to the Imperial throne. ---- * A New Patrol Boat. Gananoque, Sept. 16.~--George To- ner, fisherfes and game inspector {or this district, was advised Shy the department 2¢ Toronto on Saturday last to proceed to Windsor to bring the patrol boat Hopewell to Ganano. He left on his mission the sane evening. ) The Hopewell ; has been engaged in patrol work in the district about Windsor, and was replaced by the Outlook, recently rebuilt at Ganano- que. The Hopewsll is forty-five foet long and nine feet beam, and is Vad Blerck an ! Lundy, K.C., when seen in | the | condit'ons." | | "There would | it was for the government to It | It is the vastness of the export trade | Paris, Sept. 16.~Grand Duke Mi- | husband, survive, { ddesindedudradrdodedode dobrifdod db donb bd pede | | MILLION POUNDS OF POULTRY RELEASED, oo] bo fe Br Se be & o de & 0 18. --Fif- of frozen ralossod released New York, Sept. teen million pounds poultry were to be the public the War 0 - PRA w announced, 50" cents for similar charged. stock no ope Wolo dob Bop ARN 2. { ed ede dds 3 a oh SHOULD "INCORPORATE: 0 ence Ip Daw, Ottawa, Sept. 16 Th , decisic the present national indy ¥i { 1, if any goo -| | plished. that the Go 0 d | {at once promote la ti - ing these fi ngs lion expresfed by {dent of the Domin {OT congress yesterda { Prominent labor leaders at the na- | tional industrial conference are frank {in their prafsts of Hon. W. L. Mack- enzie King's plea for closer co-opéma- tion beiween €mblidyers and employ: ch was the o ym Moore, pre rade and Lab- All invited parties to the confer- tence have sent their full quota of {delegatés. There is special interest iin the presence of seven women de- {legates from the various centres of {the Domdnidn. It 'is noteworthy in {this particular that since the politi- ical franchise has been granted the | women they have also been conceded ia full representation on labor execu- | tives. A MAN ELECTROCUTED. Frank Ford] Employes of Toronto Paper" Co., the Victim. Cornwall, Sept. 16.--Frank Ford, {a machine tender in the mills of the i throughoe; | dreds of thousands {The Views of the Industrial Confer-{ , | i | afternoon. | i | Toronto Paper Company, here, was | killed on Saturday when he came in | sontgct" with some ive wires on tha {root'of the roll room and lived only ja few, minutes afterwards, Peter | Gillie," back tender on Mr. Ford's { machine, did not witness the acci- {dent proper; but heard Mr. Ford fall | and, asked him what the matter was. | Mr. Ford replied, **1 am going Pete." | Mr. Gillie went to 'get help and Dr. | C.-T. Hamilton was summoned hy | telephone, but the man was dead be- | fore he arrived. : One of his half-brothers is C. W. { Ford, principal of the high school at | (St. Lambert, Que, and another, John | | Ford, resides in Ottawa. DUKE TO COMPLETE TERM. Talk, of Successor at Rideau Hall V7 Considered Premature, Ottawa, Sept. 16.--Ottawa has no official confirmation of the report that the Earl of Athlone is to be the {next 'governor-general. With a fre. Bids that causes a degree of irri-| |tation in gome circles the story | Heomes over ev few months; | Imay be stated that whoever is his| | the Duke of Devonshire | | successor, It is regarded here as i that the Earl of Athlone will be the! next governor-general inasmuch as| it 'was known that some Years ago, as Prince Alexander of Teck, he was selected for the pesition, but had to change his plans. Beds To Visit Bishop Gabriel. Ogdensburg, N.Y., Sept. 16.--Car- dinal Desideratus Mercier, Primate of the Roman Catholic Chureh in Bel- gium, "the priest who defied the Ger- man army," who ar-ived in New York Tuesday, on "the steamship Great Northern, will visit the oldest | Belgian priest in America, Rt. Rev. | Henry Gabriel, bishop of the dio-| cese of Ogdensburg. The cardinal {s expected in this city, if plans do not miscarry, about October 14th. et ---- tig Fatal Fall On Stairs. "Belleville, Sept. 16.--Airs. Robert W. Sullivan residing near Tweed, met with a fatal aceldént at her home While going down celiar, she was ap- varently seized with dizziness and fell down stafrs fracturing her skull. Death resulted in an hour later De- cased was born in this city where her mother, Mrs. James Orr, ono bro- ther, and two sisters, reside. Three young children) in adétiion to the ------ « Quebec School Figures. Quebec, Sept. 16. --Seatistics fur nvished by the official organ of the Roman Catholfle ergy, ¥ 3 thelique, indicate at at time, after school reo Da- present 4 ink. there Are some" 18.0600 Fy "Canadian Catbdlie children attefiding the var ious schools in Quehee oity. probable! Pooch. jag a » - 4 Treaty will bé hand. ed to the Bulgarian delegates Wed. nesday, Li the country yesterday, The ¥r says: "Millions of gall ant young: men have fought for the new world. Hya- died to establish r the promise gi. or ourselves, the next world mean? old world lke? It way where teil for myriads of workers, men and 'women, *d nothing better than squal- y Y, anxiety, wretchedness; a world scarred by stums, disgraced by y where unemployment, thru the vicissitudes of industry, brought despair to multitudes of humble mes gn world where, "side by side th want, there was waste of the in- haustible riches of the earth, part- through ignorance and want of partly. through entren- ness. renew the lease of that we shall betray the herole dead. We shall be guilty of the bas. €st. perfidy that ever blackened ..a People's fame. |' Nay, we shall store up retribution for ourselves and our children. "The old come to an e It. If we fail to hono ven them we dishon "What does What was the a world honest purcha world must nd. N t up much longe who feel inclined them beware and overwhe holds in ruin. "It should be the & all, without thought to help ih the building up of the new world, where labor shall have Its just reward and indolence alone shall suf. fer want." ¢ : and will 0 effort can shere r. If there be any to maintain it, let lest it fall upon them Im them and their house ublime duty of of partisanship, ee, ANOTHER "FLU EPIDEMIO tegarded As Possible By U, 8. Public Health Service, Washington, Sept. 16. --That a re. currence of the influenza epidemic this year is probable, but by no means a certainty, is the d SE made hy the United States Publie Health Service in a Statement {ssue by Surgeon-General Rupert The health service has made a ecare- ful study of the disease, and"asserts that if the epidemic sheuld again Soeur indications are # will net be 188 severe 4s it was last winter, Urging state and city officials and the boards of health throughout the country to prepare for a possible re- turn of the epidemic, the statement calls attention to the fact that no positive preventive of the disease has been found, and it is not certain the Eerm has been Isolated. The only precautionary measures known to the health service are rigid enforsement of sanitation rules and avoidance of personal contact hid | NEWS in su Sane It has been organized assa cials was plan LLETIN. positively proven that ssination of police of. ned by Sian Feiners. thousand frregular It. are now in Flume. | rench were compelled and ordered from . Twenty-six alian 'troops British and p 10 lower their the city. The Supreme Council have ordes d the Germans to evacaate the Bal. IC, through the advice of General -- » It is now stated that after a 'con rence with the former Emperor the entire former German royal od ily will remove to Holland, TTANt has just boen is. tially increasing all of my pay. pe ---- SIR DOUGLAS HAZEN. Report Hon. C. M. Ballantyne Be Succeeded by Him. Ottawa, Sept. 16.--The latest re- port in political circles is that Hom, C. C. Ballantyne, minister of naval affairs, is retiring from the govern ment, and that te wilt be kecoeded by Sir Douglas. Hazen, chief justice of New Brunswick. 4 : Mr. Ballantyne, it is said, 1s retire ing because of ill-health, y ; of naval A roval wa sued substan t Mr. Hazen was ater affairs from 1911 te 1917. i eo To Raise Fund For Annuities. Watertown, N.Y, LL 16.~Dr, Nathan E. Puller of Syracins Iatunehs ed a campaign in this city to raise $2,000 as part of the natien wide campaign for $5,000,000 « dv~uities for Congregational mints. . ters and 10 retire them at the age of sixty-five years, | ; Belleville, Sept. 18 At o special meeting of the connell a by-law was Passed authierizing the turning back of the eity clocks one hour, 10 take effect Sunday, 21st inst. A by-law was ee passed nat on _ ; and in all gfoce In the elly peta- ioen are to be sold welg the 12th inst. hn fit atin : # z 5

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