Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Aug 1920, p. 1

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sr ~~across York street, giving the crowd . worst Belfast has yet seen. . od fire to clear a street in the Union- . will be introduced .in. Belfast tomor- a The strike went into effect A 'morning, after the men had voted to postpone action, further OUR NEW WALL HATS Have Arrived, 7 Collier's Toggery A YEAR 87: NO, 213. ~ OF MORE RIOTS The Troops Fire to Clear the ' Streets--Shops All Wrecked. Belfast, Aug. 30.--Rioting and ob- struction of property was renewed in this city early this morning, the unionist quarter being the scene of serious disorders. 1rcops rushed to the centre of the disturbance opened fire to clear the street, Young woman being gravely wounada} \ and 3 man injured. Further grave developments are apprehended. Shipyard employees, who are un- armed, were on their way to work this morning when they were attack- ed, it is charged by Sin Feiners and shooting soon began. Soldiers ar- rived soon after the disorder com- menced and assumed firing position three minutes to clear the thorough- fare. Most of the people fled to cover, At an early hour other disorders cceurred in the neighborhood of Ewarts Row, unionist quarter, which Was attacked by Sinn Feiners yester- | | day. Shops were wrecked and to clear the street troops opened fire from an armored car. Falls Road which traverses Joseph Devlin's poli- tical division was summering (this morning. Great excitment also 'pre- valled in other affected areas and crowds were gathering during the forenoon. Rioting the Worst Yet. : Belfast, Aug. 0.--Today's rioting Was said by the police to be the Up to one o'clock this afternoon it was definitely known that four deaths ALBERTA IN NEED OF COAL MINERS Calgary, Aug. 80, -- From five to eight hundred men are needed in the mines in Drum- heller district at once. With prairie districts, the great scar- city of labor is evident, many miners being away on their farms harvesting crops. The situation threatens to becom serious. PRESIDENT APPROVES MAJORITY REPORT The Anthracite Coal Miners to \ Receive 85 Millions In- crease Yearly. Washington, Aug. 30.--President Wilson today approved the majority report of the anthracite coal com- mission increasing the wages of the contract aver the present rates. ployed as company men are given an increase of seventeen per cent. and the same amount is given "con- sideration" miners and miners lab- orers and monthly men. ings, the report said, would fix the minimum rate of 52% cents an hour for the lower paid men in the anthri- cite industry. Anthracite mine work- ers will receive about eighteen mil- miners twenty per cent. Miners em- The bind- ion in back pay under the retroac- tive feature Wf the award which makes it effeaflve April 1st and the total increase will average at least eighty-five million dollars annually. WILL SIR CLIFFORD SUPPORT FARMERS An Editorial in the Winnipeg Free Press Causes Some Discussion. Winnipeg, Aug. 30--Has the Free Press, Sir Clifford Sifton's Winni- i occurred as the result of disor-| 8 Rewspaper, definitely determined ders. These included a young wo- man named Grace Orr who was shot early this morning when troops open- ist quarter. Numerous persons with wounds were admitted to hospitals. Before two o'clock the. death toll to support the movement? general in Winnipeg. Press has an editorial denouncing the tariff tinkerers and, asserts that "the difference between the Liberaltariff policy and that announced by Hon. farmers political This is the question The Free Arthur Meighen in his Truro address Was increased- by the shooting of a |; g Bn small boy by a sniper. Curfew law TOW night extending from 10.30 till five In the morning. CABINET TO BA ET SIR AUCKLAND GEDDES arse On Wednesda Evening--To Honor British Ambassador to United States. Ottawa, A 30.--On Wednesday - -DeXt t-of Can- ada will tender a complimentary din- ner to Sir Auckland Geddes, British to Washington, who will be a visitor inthe Capital. The function, which will be a notable one, will be attended by the Prime Minister and all the members. of the Cabinet in the city, as well as by many other prominent people. Sir Auckland Geddes comes to Ot- tawa chiefly for the purpose of ad- dressing the Canadian Bar Associa- tion, which meets here next week. He will be the speaker at a luncheon to be given on Wednesday, while ex- President Taft, of the United States, speak at the Tuesday luncheon. It has been suggested that while in the Canadian capital the Dritish am- basador will confer with the Govern- ment ih regard to the appointment of a Canadian representative at Wash- ington. While nothing official is available as to the report, it is pre- sumed that it will be one of the mat- ters discussed by Sir Auckland and the Prime Minister next week. There has been but little gossip of late as to the first Canadian representative at Washington, but it is likely that the appointment is one that will engage the attention of the ent. BIG TRANSIT STRIKE : IN BROOKLYN, N.Y. And One Million People Have Difficulty in @etting to iness. : i i 1 ---- New York, Aug. 30-- More than million Brooklyn residents, who y upon the Brooklyn company to take them gess, to-day were reduced to ¢ and even primitive me- conveyance by a strike of employees, that vir- I paralyzed the eatire transit m subways, elevated road and pending attempts to adjust 'wage demands. : Were Men. ~Peterboro, Aug. 30.--Detective S. whall returned to the eity with two men who he arrested after a le lasting four days, and which | into the Muskoka district. The L Were arrested at Dorset. who escaped the King- i penitentiary some time ago and Ho were believed to have fled in , @ivection of Central Ontario. ----------------------------. z Peete P NOS STROYS "PLANES INTENDED FOR ALLIES Berlin, Aug. 30.--The sea- H ad War munitions des- mtsche works at Furstenwalde @ the Spree river were to have + distributed among Great @ France and the United : <> 'The workmen profess to have + a'ned that they were intended * ir Poland. * : + BEL 20%00 00000 8 p the political prophets. Worts have distilled to be turned out by' that firm. E. D. Goderham, the manager, stated Luxury Tax against the Poles east in that vicinity. cording to a wireless has been and Russian Soviet governments as Ss merely the difference between tweedledum and tweedledee."* The impression in the West is pretty general that Sif Clifford has ole kind of a trick up his sleeve olitically but just what it is puzzles SOVIET FUGITIVES MENACE GERMANY Warsaw, Aug. 30.--The Ger. man government has advised the Polish government that are now seveaty thousand Red army in. terned in + German authorities consider it ous to leave such a hotbed of Bolshevik propaganda in the neighborhod of the frontier and requests permission of the Po- lish government to take them across the Polish corridor in order to convey them to the centre of Germany. NO MORE G. & W. WHISKEY Neither Methylated Spirits Nor Rye Will Be Distilled. Toronto, Aug. 30.--Gooderham & the last whiskey that when the present stock is ex- hausted the firm will go out of busi- ness as distillers. what disposal will be made of the famous distillery. distilled whiskey on hand will last for a year and a half or two Years. He would not say The quantity of ------ DRAYTON IS PLEASED Coming jn Nicely, He Says. Ottawa, Aug. 30.--The luxury tax collections are coming in "nicely," and in a they will short time it is hoped that be coming even better. Buch was the statement of Sir Henry Drayton. The collections have not progressed far enough, he intimated, to allow of any guessing as to what amount the new taxation will bring FOOD WOULD Now D0 LORD MAYOR H0 GOOD London, Aug. 30.--The hunger strike of Terence MacSweeney, lord mayor of Cork, has progressed so far that he is such a condition, that even if he took food néw it would do him no good, according to a statement .by the Brixton prison doctor to the mayor's wife, who visited her hus- band this morning. Sweeney is said to be even more gravely ill than at law reports, and @ change for the worse may come at any time in the next twenty-four hours. Mayor Mae- - Soviet Counter-Offensive East of Brest-Litovsk London, Aug. ¢.--Russian soviet forces engaged in a counter-offensive of Brest- Litovsk have occupied four villages Near Lemburg there is heavy fighting going on, and local fighting in the yindaTs region, - ac- m Moscow, To Confer Av Rina, : Warsaw, Aug. 30. ile: Riga agreed upon by the Polish the place for the future peace ne- gotiations, it was said at the Foreign ministry late last night that no word had been received from the Letvian government regarding the Poles re- quest for permission to ferqpee in Riga. held the coun- 5 . KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SOVIET REGIME Peasants of Western Siberia Have Taken Control of Important Towns. Harbin, Manchuria, Aug. 30.-- Western Siberian peasants have over- thrown the Soviets at Tomsk, Novo- nikolaeivsk, Omsk, Barnaulx and other important towns,is reported bere from reliable sources. Isolated peasant uprisings which have been in progress since the spring appear- ed to have culminated in a general insurrection. This was led by an uprising of the Kirghiz tribesmen which followed the withdrawal of Bolshevik troops, presumably for the polish front. The tribesmen were joined by cossacks and detachments, of anti-Bolshevik troops which fur- nished them competent leadership. This force marched on the more im- portant centres but found them al- ready in the hands of insurgents. Two thousand Russian officers re- leased from Bolshevik prisons are al- 50 said to have joined the new anti- Bolshevik forces. The insurgent movement is re- ported to be spreading. Outbreaks are already frequent in the far east, where it is expected that the Soviet regime will soon fall. Eastern Siberian authorities are dazed by the suddenness of the new developments. The main support of the uprising ap- pears to come from the Mujik farm- ers of the provinces of Altat, Tomsk, Tobolsk, Semipalatinsk and Akmol- insk, which are the richest farming districts of Siberia. THE WORLD'S" TIDINGS IN CONDENSED FORM Tidings From All Over Told in a Pointed and Pithy Way. . Toronto grocers will drop the price ct sugar to 23c per pound. An interim report on Ontario's peat resources was optimistic in its tons. Fighting tween Poles Brest-Litovsk. The United States steamer Wars- zawa has left Antwerp with muni- tions for Poland. The population of Hamilton, ac- cording to the assessment depart- ment, is nearly 117,700. The Cameron Highlanders, who broke quarters at Queenstown have returned to the huts. They invaded Sinn Feiners' dwellings and stores doing much damage. Announcement of the resignation of Col. F. -H. Cunningham, chjef in. spector of Dominion Fisheries for British Columbia is made. All possible doubts that former Emperor Nicholas of Russia and his family were assassinated in the base- ment of their prison at Ekaterinburg seem to be dispelled by Count Nos- kevila of Ekaterinburg. The Greeks are concentrating their force is preparation for a new offen- sive the object of which is said to be Ushak, 150 miles northwest of Smy- na. Considerable Turkish forces are concentrating against them, John D. McConnell, Vanvouver journalist, at present in Montreal, has been offered the candidacy in Yale-Cariboo, 'seat rendered vacant through the resignation of the Hon. Martin Burrell. He said that he might accept. CARDINAL LOGUE DENOUNCES MURDERS Dublin, Ang. 30.--Cardinal Logue; primate of all Ireland, issued a manifesto to Ireland yesterday on the shooting of policemen, which reads : "I have been told that this is an act of war. That it is lawful to shoot on sight anyone wear- ing a policeman's uniform and honestly disc a police. man's duties. I prefer to call it deliber. by its true n, ate murder, pure and simple-- hence anyone that encourages. with in the guilt fiercely continued be- and Bolsheviki for abets or even the act participates before God." STOCK MARKETS, tations Furnished Bongard, re x itheg Jy Done New York Stocks. Opening. Closing American Car Fndy..133 133% American Locomotive 9514 American Sugar ....110 Am, Internat. Corp... 74 Baldwin Locomotive.107% Baltimore & Ohip ... 39% (Bethlehem Steel "B". 6% Ce Po Re vouninnvianldn Crucible Steel ......135 General Motors .... 21% International Nickel . 20 Marine veseees T4Y Missouri Pacific .,.. 25% New Haven ......, 33% Northern Pacific wo... i 121% 136% 21% Trrssdmmane U. 8. Rubber ...... Southern Pacific ©... St. Pa ceeeaa 358% Tobacco Products ..... 65 Texas Pacific Tesemamass 39 Brompton Canada Bread ....ecw... 3434 bid Canada Cement , 81 Canada Steamships .. 68 Canada Steam. Prd. . 78 Canadian Locomotive . . .. Canadian Loco. Pfd.. 87 Cons. Smelters ...., 25% Dominion Textile ....... 26% bid National Breweries . 63% | Spanish 90 bid River ......118 IS TOTTERING, vv 's mm ---------- 0 DI SCOTLAND YARD ON WATCH FOR DOUGHTY London, Aug. 30. Detec- « tives over the whole United Kingdom, stimulated by large reward offered, are searching for John Doughty, Scotland, Yard believes there is a strong presumption he has arrived in. this country to visit his rela searchers are these. The authorites an engaged in the search rally maintain the greatest secrecy. They do not believe him to be in London. His suspected hiding place is in Wales. THE MOTHER OF TWINS IN SHADOW OF GALLOWS Controversy in Quebec as to Whether Murderess Should Now be Freed. Montreal, Aug. 30.--Quite a con- troversy has arisen as to whether Mrs. Gagnon, under sentence of death at Quebec, should undergo the penalty or not. A month or so ago she gave birth to twins in the jail and this has stir- red up a lot of sympathy among a certain class. They started by writ- ing letters to the papers throughout the province, but the details of the murder of the woman's stepdaughter were too vividly 'before the public mind and so a bitter battle of words is being waged. Undoubtedly the murder was the most brutal one in the criminal annals«of the Dominion and many there are who feel that it would be better for the mother and the twins were she put out of the way. During the trial the French papers printed columns giving all the details, but they were of so revolt- ing a nature that in almost every case they were omitted by the Eng- lish ones, So far no plea has been put in for executive clemency' and there is a distinct feeling that if one is made it will be refused. TORONTO EXHIBITIG:. OPENED SATURDAY Great Welcome to 28 Winners of V.C.--Sir Auckland Geddes Present - Toronto, Aug. 30.--Twenty- eight heroes, the pick of the Cana- dian corps, winners of the greatest honor for valor, the Victoria Cross, received at the hands of Toronto's War veterans a reception Saturday afternoon that surpassed all expec- tation and one that will Tive long in the memory of those that witnessed the spectacle. Sir Thomas Lipton viewed the par- ade from among the wd inside the Exhibition grounds. ! he did not escape unnoticed. Ond ofthe V.C.'s spotted him. first and started a cheer or him. In turn 'the veteran sailor tdok off his hat. : President Fleming read the ad- dress of welcome to. Sir Auckland Geddes, and the British Ambassador to the United States was received with a big cheer when he rose to re- spond, and declare the Exhibition open. There were 60,000 in attend- ance. ' ----ran Canada's Favorable Trade Balance is Disappearing Ottawa, Aug. 30.--Canada's ex- ports and imports almost balance as far as shown by the summary of trade of Canada for twelve months ending July 31st as prepared by the Dominion bureau of statistics. The total imports are valued at about a billion and a quarter and the exports exceed this amount by little more thax eleven millions, In 1918 the ex- ports exceeded the imports by 5,217 millions and last year by 4,027 mil- lions. Therefore, the favorable trade balance, which has distinguish- ed Canada's trade during the war years, is in process of disappearance. MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 1920. ¢ £ LOST IN WOODS * FIFTEEN DA EE Peterboro, Aug. 30.--For fifteen days lost in the woods surrounding Mud and Loon Lakes, in the vicinity of Fort William, David Kincaid, a returned soldier, suffered hunger, thirst and wounds worse than active warfare in France and Flanders. Kincaid, who saw service with the 8th Battalion, and lost a leg, went fishing near Loon Lake on 23rd July, and on starting for home got hopelessly lost in the jungle tangle of the bush. When news of his non- return was heard in Fort William, friends and relatives, assisted by In- dian guides and experienced woods- men, combed the bush for two long weeks without gaining even a trace of the missing man. All hope of ever seeing Kincaid alive again had been abandoned by Saturday, 7th August, when a C.P.R. freight train en route for Fort William was signalled from the tracks at mile post 97, between Pearl and Loon, by a ragged, un- kempt man. This man proved to be David Kincaid, who after fifteen days of terrible suffering, had man- aged to crawl on hands and knees over hills and through dale and woods, to rescue in the eleventh hour. He was conveyed by the freight's crew to Fort William, and taken to McKellar hospital, where he is now receiving the best treatment the city affords. x When the freight train reached Fort William, David Kincaid was met by his brothers and Dr. B. C. Hardiman; and in the reaction of joy at his escape from death by starva- tion and from injuries, the principal actor in a thrilling Ontario episode broke down in tears. Listened for Train Whistles. In his fight to reach civilization, Kincaid climbed hills, listened for train whistles, and tried to follow their sounds to the railway tracks, only to find himself deeper still in a jungle, from whence there seemed no road to home and friends. On the third day of his dangerous adventure, his artificial leg was broken when wading down a creek, and from that time onward the lost man dragged himself on all fours in search of some way out of the woods. When the stump of his severed leg began to bleed he used his necktie as a tourniquet to stop the flow from that limb's artery. During his two 'weeks' terrible experience all the young man had to eat was choke- cherries, one small supply of blue- berries, and a small amount of spawn bait he had in his fishing kit. When the few matches he carried with him were exhausted, Kincaid had no means whatever of starting a fire from which to get some mea- sure of comfort against cold nights and penetrating rains.' It is pite- ous to hear him tell of how he used his last match in frantic efforts to fire the bush and thus attract atten- tion. At the hospital Kincaid was found to be suffering from terribly lacer- ated knees, as a result of ten days' crawl over root and rock, exhaustion following two foodless weeks, thou- sands of fly-bites, and a general breakdown. He has been pronounced out of danger. ------ The Marquis of Blandford and Lord Ivor Churchill have been left $1,000,000 each, by the late W. K. Vanderbelt. They were his grandsons. Princess Marie Jose, daughter of King Albert, will accompany him and the Queen on his trip to Brazil. The Toronto Telegram has the following : ' The widely divergent views re- garding liquor held by the mass of the people of Britain and the ma- jority of Canadians y opposed to proliibition, declares that it is un- fair, it has led to the taking of substitutes and that the- frequent breaches of the O.T.A. by otherwise g Fit s ; i § 5 : E i | i i i i : | | i ; Bg 2g8¢ hi i Ii ; E i i deh : I; § 8 I 5 § E | B § | Bishop Bidwell Opposes: Prohibition Claims i Is Unfar--Write In National Review Advocating Strict Government Control of the ! Best Means of Combating Liquor Business As Drunkenness. tions and practices of the Founder of Christianity." Puritan Ideas. "For the better understanding of this question," continues the bishop in part, "it should be stated at the outset that in Canada in general and perhaps in Ontario in particular, the almost universal practice in England of taking wine or beer or some other alcoholic beverage at meals was never common except in houses run on English lines and at clubs. The present writer on first coming to Ess § 2 HUNGER STRIKERS " DYING IN CORK Cork, Ireland, Aug. $0.-- Twelve Sinn Fein prisoners Who have been on hunger strike for here to-day. Crowds of their relatives were gathered outside the prison. The drink water because the prison attendants attempted to add liquid food to it. : CONSTANTINE WAITS FOR CALL TO THRONE Former Monarch Asserts Ma- Jority of Greeks Still Consider Him King. Paris, Aug. 30.--Former King Constantine of Greece, still hopes to regain his throne, asserting he never abdicted and that he is still consider- ed the Greek sovereign by a majority of the people of that country, says the Lutern correspondent of The Ex- celsior. In the course of an interview with the dethroned monarch, the corres- pondent was told that Premier Veni- 2elos would not be able to so con- duct affairs in Greece as to give that country her true place among na- tions. Constantine denied having in any way been involved in the at- tempted assassination of the Greek premier in this city on August 12. "I await here," the former king sald to the correspondent, *'with re- i tion for the day when, by the will of my people, and the force of traditions, I will resume the throne which I undeservedly lost. I never ab dicated, and the greater part of my reople still consider me king." "Asked what he thought about the 1: end that I was the instiga recent attack upon the Greek prem- cr, the former king replied: 'I re- *t deeply that two eof my subjects mitted that cowardly deed: To r of that crime is monstrous. I have ne- ver maintained in Lucerne or else- where a centre of repression against the new regime." A HUNDRED THOUSAND IMMIGRANTS COMING Bankers Make Land Purchases in West--Predict Exodus From United States.: Winnipeg, Aug. 30.--One Jundied thousand immigrants to Can a will come from the United States next year. That was the view expressed gen- erally by members of a party of 40 American bankers, business men and farmers who Saturday completed a 8,000-mile trip through the Prairie Provinces of Western Canada, The party, which left Winnipeg on Aug- ust 18th, took the first of a series of immigration prospecting trips to be sources Department of the Canadian of prairie lands were 'ral of the visitors. ---- DECORATE DRUG STORES 8 in Saskatchewan To Show Liquor Stock Speuly, Regina, Sask., Aug. 3 ~--Saskat- chewan drug stores should present an attractive appearance when whiskey is displayed unblushingly on the shelves. This will happen when the Liquor Commission 'sets its seal" upon bottles of liquor. The old familiar brands will, how- ever, disappear, at least in name, and their places taken by liquor made up in eight-ounce bottles, which will be sold under prescription, with the status of patent medicines. Druggists have been notified that the commission is preparing a special #eal which will go on all bottles, and the stores as being urged to reduce their liquor stocks to a minimum in anticipation of the passage of the Saskatchewan Temperance Act. Chorus Girls Scarce At $75 Per Week New York, Aug. 30.---The high cost of things has hit that zippy, en- chanting high-stepper, the American chorus girl. ; Managers of "Musigirlie" shows seen today said that $75 is the aver- age pay for chorus girls today, and that even at this price the girls are scarce. Girls who draw this pay ap- pear six nigiits a week and two after- roons, which is pretty good pay, con- sidering that all needed is the ability to sing and dance a little, and to wear clothes, or rather how not to wear them and get away with it. The $100 a week chorus girl is getting more common daily, Peterboro Diocese Priests To Get Honors From Rome Peterboro, Aug. 30.--Bishop 0O'- Brien has fixed the dates for the conferring of the honors which he brought from Pope Benedict XV. for ihree of the priests of the Diocese of Peterboro. to invest Monsignor Murray stole prothonotary. On made by seve- A . op O'Brien, will visit Lindsay and induct Mor. or Casey into the office of apos- c prothonotary. -------------- EDITOR ARIIESTED 70.000 Gold Rouh. Caught Lugsing 800 Copenhagen, Aug. 20.--A spoil Sssvaten to the Boriingske ( heise 8s reports from Vard that custom suthorities there ¥tlos of Russian gold coins totalliag 70,000 roubles, 4) a ay of literature. owner of the luggage i= M Madsen, editor of the journal NyT:l .] in Drontheim. Madsen brought tha {Box from Russia'to Ke-kenaes in a motorboat. He was accompanied by . Is to be two foreigners. Action | Sroughit against all of them: nfl at v ~ . George P. Graham Mon, 5 for Race Unity wr Leeds Liberal Rally Brockville, ..30.--The rending of Canada by mongers, whose crowning achievement lies in the er. ection of a barrier of racial and reli~ gious mistrust, dividing the great provinces, was the keynote of a spir- ited address by Hon. George P. G: ham to the Liberals of Leeds, who rallied here Saturday to hear Hom. W. L. Mackenzie King. "The country," sald Mr. has been 'rent by 3nes Jeanie who, for part ur sores and, Boer alive sretudit. Liberalism knows of no such weapons, but not = a few so-called Liberals have allow. ed themselves to be n A dices." peals to their iE Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King con- to far- fined himself to a brief mers, Laborites, and als, to. rally under a standard to fight the Meighen Government's tar- iff policy. ¥ The Meighen administration cam in for the fire of Hon. Jacques Bur eau, M.P., for Three Rivers, Quebec, for its attitude towards Quebec, i MEDICINE WITH "KioK According to the Decision of Magistrate at London, London, Ont., Aug. 80.--~The © y of John McDonald, charged with sell- ing intoxicating liquor, to wit, bottles of beet, iron and wine, was Saturday dismissed; McDonald, who is a Middlemiss merchant, was tried before Squires W. H. Chittick and John Stuart last Saturday. : The case was regarded as a test one and had a conviction been tered several prosecutions of gists and merchants throughout } district would have been regi The court held that beef, § wine has been on the market years as a proprietary medich after the inception of the O Temperance Act, and as such Is oi tected by the t. : The bottle introduced as 'was shown by analysis to tain 33.17 per cent. proof ts and 15.29 per cent. absolute alcohol b) weight. conducted by the Industrial and Re-| ing National Railways. Heavy purchases| fast The pope makes history by : for a movie in Rome. Fin One hundred and seventy-five thousand U.S. miners threaten Quit. A general strike of hard diggers hinges on the commissig report. pr Mayor MacSweeney, Cork, consent to eat if he wishes to his life. There is no change in t| British government's 4 g Old' time telegraphers open a convention in: Toronto, h Tr New York "There was trouble getting British 0 Canadian wheat price control: cease Tuesday, » \ rok - -------- ¥ Toronto, Aug. 80.--*I h to a hearing at an early a will be able to clear up a lot understandings and false impre: that have been created about the a Pininration ro the J ands an rests, G. Howard Ferguson, In rane the timber probe before Jo Kemptville. , Nhs n & to conceal, and I will be glad tg give thy Com 8 assistance in my power. Th they make the inquiry, the will please me." | Left Many Wives But -- New York, Aug. 30.--N; G win, late actor and husband of wives, died leaving more Ii than assets. SR : This was disclosed in the gate Gout, ayhen, the father actor athanie . Goodwin, ministrater, filed an account; On Sunday he was in Co-| ch Bave confiscated a box containing 59 | Just gH

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