Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Sep 1920, p. 1

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OUR NEW FALL HATS Have Arrived. Collier's Toggery YEAR 87 : NO, 222. al British Wh Collier's Toggery The Only Store Where You can buy DR. HAWKINS INVISIBLE BELTS { KINGSTON, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1920. ig % LAST EDITION | AN EARTHQUAK KILLS SCORES The District North of Flor- ence, Italy, Was Violent- ly Shaken on Tuesday. Rome, Sept. 8.--8cores of lives are . believed to have been lost in the dia- | trict north of Florence, which was severely shaken by an earthquake Yesterday morning. As reports from the stricken region come in over faltering telegraph and telephone lines, the extent of the disaster seems to be growing and there is a possi- bility that the damage done may be much more serious than was at first believed. : : The territory violently disturbed seems to be lozenge shaped, wita Florence at the southern apex and Medena at the northern end, It ex- fe tends along the Etrurian coast and | . Tuns over the Appenines eastward . for upwards of a hundred miles. In © this district there are many populous ~~ towns, and no tidings have as yet been received from many of them. WILL NOT BARGAIN WITH SINN FEIN London, Sept. 8, -- Bonar Law, Sir Hamar Greenwood, chief sec for Ireland, and Sir Nevill MacReady, the com- mander of the British military forces in Ireland, held a confer ence yesterday, Greenwood im- mediately afterward issued a statement saying that the gov- ernment would not bargain with Sinn Fein because Sinn Fein is not in a position to guarantee the stoppage of the killings of the police. CANADIAN STARTLES OLD COUNTRY FOLK F. C. Wade Tells Them That in Busifiess Canada is Be- ing Americanized. "Montreal, Sept. 8.--The Gazette bas the following London cable: A graphic word-picture of the rapid Americanization of Canada at Britain's expense created a stir among British publicists at a public mer to-day. IF. C. Wade, British lumbia's agent-general, was the Speaker, and the 'occasion was a din- in eonnection with the Interna- lonal advertising exhibition, which be held in London November to December 4th, and will be attended by Canadian and other Em- re representatives. Old country ivertising and publicity men, ex- ting platitudes from the Cana- representative, were somewhat 8 Wade pointed out in 'in- "tense terms. that in trade, commerce and immigration, the mother country © had lost ground in Canada to the United States during the last four | years at an alarming rate, Imports from Britain, which in 1914 formed 21 per cent. of the Canadian total, had dropped in 1919 te eight per gent.; while those from the United States were tenfold greater. British emigrants, who in 1914 formed 30 per cent., in 1918 were only 18 per cent of the total, as compared with 71 per cent. from the United States. Americans had established 520 branch factories, while British con- PF terns had not established half a . Giozen. There were a thousand Uni- ted States commercial travellers in the inion to each British repre- _ sentative; one American consular i agent in each city and only two Brit- ~ ish trade commissioners all told. If over there was need for trade pro- anda and publicity, .concluded ade, it existed in Canada and in British interests to-day. Hold Coal CiteSeer serene Miners' Claims A Portsmouth, Eng., Sept. 8.---The | trades union congress to-da¥ adopted & resolution expressing the opinion ~ that the coal miners' claims were . reasonable and just, and should be conceded forthwith. The corgress also passéd a resolution urging that ~ the trades union movement concen- _ trate its efforts on reducingsthe cost of living and instructing its parlia- mentary committee to take immedi- _@&te steps to prepare a policy which . would include nationalization, and refer it to a ballot of members of all affiliated unions. 5 1 Serbia Faces Trouble, Rome, Sept. 8.--S8erbia is going a critical 'period. The go Magyars, Bosnians and . Montenegrins have prepared a col- ~ lective rising against Serbia, which rexpected to commence within a - week. : -------------- Tidal Wave Drowns 200. Tokio, Sept. 8.--Two hundred drowned in a tidal wave which _IWept over buildings and barracks | om the island of Saghalien, according reports received here. FINANCIAL BOYCOTT HITS IRISH CAPITAL Dublin, Sept. 8.--The first Sitacts ot De itis jSorern: : jment's policy of withho ing fi- hance from Irish: authorities until "seditious practices" in ] ind have ceased were visible The corporation of Dublin ts expemdi- 4 This, It 3 partially accoms- hot vente 8 Duy. E Ye per cen of the salaries of ali offic and employees of the city for 'nine months, and by closing the sanitorium, dispen- house. .To be Reasonable. WORKMAN CONDEMNED "TO PAY DAMAGES. Revealing Information Regarding Machine to His New Employer. For . i --_ | Montreal, Sept. 8.--Justice Guerin {bas handed down, in the Superior {Court, an important decision on the {question of the ethical and coven- | ental obligation between employee land employer, in condemning Sieg- fried Sanders to pay $100 damages land the costs of an action brought {against him by the firm with whom | he was formerly employed in this city.. The company maintained that Sanders, in the course of his work, acquired in confidence knowledge and information respecting the mak- ing and methods of a special ma- chine, and that after he left their services he revealed this informa- tion to his new employers. His for- mer employers allege that they sus- tained a severe monetary. Joss. The company further alleged that Sanders had been employed by them to devote his time exclusively to their manufacturing department, and they also alleged that he agreed not to "directly qr indirectly" make known to any persons, either during the period of his employment or thereafter, any of the special pro- cesses or knowledge of special ma- chinery, which he might learn from the company during his employment, EXILED FROM IRELAND BY SINN FEIN "COURT" Boycott Against Police Con= tinued--Man Who Refuses Freight And Passenger Rates To Be Increased; = Coal Increase Is From Ten Ottawa, Sept. 8.--By virtue of a judgment which will be issued! from the offices of the Board of Railway commissioners, probably to-day, the railway companies in Canada are granted an jncrease of forty per cent. in sastary/Cauadn freight rates ana thirty-five per cent. in western freight rates, effective on Monday next, September 13th, and to con- tinue in force until December 31st. After December 31st the increase in freight rates in eastern Canada is re- A -------------------------- SOME REVOLTS NEAR MOSCOW They Were Suppressed By.the Soviet Government With Much Bloodshed. London, Sept. 8.--Several serious revolts against the Russian Soviet government have broken out in the is Kidnapped. Se-- | Belfast, Sept. 8.--The boycott | against the police in the west and other parts of County Donegal is be- ing rigorously enforced. In Bun- crana armed men visited the resi- | dents during the night and warned them that if they were caught speak- ing with members of the Irish con- stabulary they would be dealt with | drastically. Thomgs McGovern, for fifteen | years chairman of the rural district | {council of Manor Hamilton, County | | Leitrim, was kidnapped by armed | and masked men. The kidnapping is | believed to be the result of MacGov- | ern's refusal"to ceasd Trading with Belfast. i Three men concerned in the Foe | cent outrage against a woman be- | cause she continued to supply milk | to the police, were arrested by Irish | volunteers, tried and sentenced to two years' exile by a Sinn Fein court. They promptly left the coun- try. . GOVERNMENT ADVISED ABOUT UNEMPLOYMENT Thirty Mijlion.. Dollar. Emern gency Fund for Soldiers' Relief Still on Hand. Toronto, Sept. 8.--One way of warding off unemployment amongst soldiers during the coming winter is being suggested to the federal gov- ernment by the Ontario G.W.V.A., in a plan to extend the branch of vocational employment done at 200 College street. Similar institutions should be opened up in other parts of Canada, the G.W.V.A. officials contend, and a bonus, based on the selling value of work done, be paid to veterans employed, in addition to pay and allowances.-- The G.W.V.A. remind the government "that $30,- 000,000 of the federal emergency fund, appropriated for the relief of unemployed soldiers, 1s still in the treasury. MINISTER WOUN EDITOR IN DUEL Montevideo, Uruguay, Sept. 8.-- Julio Maria Sosa, editor of El Dia, was wounded Sunday in the first duel fought under the newly legal- ized dueling law. His opponent was Minister of Public Works Humberto Pittamiglia. The men fought with sabres, and Sosa was slightly wound- ed in the arm. INSISTS THAT GERMANY INTERN 128,000 RUSSIANS Relujoes in East Prussia Not isarmad, Complaint of es. Paris, Sept. 8.--The foreign office announced today that 128,000 Rus- sian soviet 'soldiers are refugees in East Prussia. The allies are not sat- istied with the conditions of their Internment, the announcement said, and have asked their ambassadors in Berlin to demand that Germany in- tern the Russians according to inter- national usage. ' The allies parti- cularly demand that the refugees be disarmed and kept within intern- ment camps. / The Twerity-8eventh Da: Of McSwiney's Hungor Strike London, Sept. 8.--The lord mayor of Cork entered to-day on the twenty- seventh day of his hunger strike. Reports from Brixton prison stated he was a little brighter this morning,' but much weaker and more exhaust. ed. It was'added that he had pass ed a fairly good night. A bulletin issued at noon by the Irish Self-De- termination League, sald: "The lord mayor suddenly got much weaker. Ors are very anxious." + To Represent Canadian Labor. Ottawa, Sept. 8.--E. W. O'Dell Hamilton, general representative of the boot and shoe/ workers for Can- ada, will represent Canadian organ- ized labor at the coming meeting of the governing body of 'the interna. tional labor office (League of Na- tions). The governing body meets in Geneva early in October. He will substitute. for P. M Draper, secre- tary of the trades and labor congress, ' neighborhood of Moscow and hava been suppressed with much blood- shed, says a despatch filed in Copen- hagen yesterday. It quotes telegrams received in that city from Riga. Semenoff's Adventures End. London, Sept. 8. --General Semen- off's adventures in the far east have ended, and his troops, under General Lokhvitski, have gone over -to the government of the Russian far east- ern republic, according to a wireless despatch from Moscow. Semenoft's entire gold reserve is said to have been captured and handed over to the Vladivostok government. Describes the Railway Increases. "Outrageous" Toronto, Sept. control to-day, after describing the rallway board's order for increased ~~rffeight and passenger rates as "'out- rageous," passed a resolution calling for the taking of an appeal to the Bovernor-general-in-council and call- ing upon Toronto city to seek 'co- operation of other cities and towns in Canada in opposition to the increase, The government was also requested to re-organize the board of railway commisisoners in the public interest and grant a stay of the order of the board until an appeal is heard. POLAND AND LITHUANIA NOW ON VERGE OF WAR Warsaw Qovernment Files Protest With League of Nations. London, Sept. 8.--The Polish gov- ernment has dispatched a note to Lithuania, the tenor of which amounts to an ultimatum, says a Warsaw dispatch to the London Times. The note says that unless Lithua- nia completely halts the southward movement of her troops Poland will be-forced te consider that a state of war exists between the two countries. A full statement of the case has been forwarded to the ledgue of nations. It is reported the Lithuanians have already occupied Augustowo, twenty miles southeast of Suwalki. Lord Mayor of Cork . A Murder Conspirator London, Sept. 8.--*"If we let these men out we cannot govern Ireland." That was the answer given by Pre- mier Lloyd George to one of the questions asked him by a correspon- dent of the Daily News, who inter- viewed him on the case of Lord Mayor McSwiney and other ah hunger-strikers. Ir The lord mayor of Cork, hi said, was concerned in the general con- spiracy which' had resulted in the death of eighty-five policemen and attempts on seventy-eight others. The government must either protect the police or withdraw them. They had no right to engage them to carry out certain functions and leave them to their fate. The government has a duty towards the police. A Hold Cashier as Assassin Of Motor Car Driver Belfast, Sept. 8.--The sonsational killing of William McDowell, on Sept. 3rd, when he was a motor car, which according to cur- rent account was held 'up by armed raiders, who robbed the car of £1,- 300 comprising a factory pay-roll, had a surprising sequel to-day in tha arrest of William McConville, cash- factories, who was a passenger with McDowell at the time of the latfep's death. MoConvilla had vividly described the killing of McDowell and his own treatment by the armed men, whom he said stole the money intended for the company's workmen 3 Ciyil War in China, Pekin, Sept. 8.--The new civil war against the Canton mili gov- ernment by General Tang Yao, Yunnan leader, is growing in magni- tude. Kwang-Tung province troops 'to have surrounded who {is official labor delegate from Canada, were reported , Wechow, 100 8.--The board of ( fer of a linen thread corporation's| duced from forty to thirty-five per cent., and in western Canada from thirty-five to thirty per cent, "Simultaneously with the increase in freight rates the passenger rates all over the country are advanced twenty per cent. so long as they do not exceed four cents a mile. This increase is effective omly to Decem- ber 31st. After that date and for the six months' period from January 1st, 1921, to July 1st, 1921, ten per cent. increase is authorized. Fol- lowing July 1st, 1921, the passenger rates return to those in force at the present time. . BELIEVES BRITAIN IS OVERBURDENED Sir Thomas Mackenzie Dissat- isfied With Way Dominions' Raw Materjals Handled. London, Sept. 8.--Sir Thomas Mpckenzie, late High Commissioner f6r New Zealand, who is leaving London to represent his country at the Chambers of Commerce Congress in Toronto, expresses the opinion that the Impgrial Parliament is over- burdened and that there is lack of touch between the executive and the constituencies. He is also dissatis- fied with the way the dominions" raw liaterials and foodstuffs are handled here, men at the head of affairs not being commercial experts. Sir Tho- mas admits the British people's splendid character, tenacity and per- seyerance. Nothing could outstrip the old land if it were a little more adapt- able to necessary changes, he be- lieves. The London Times, discussing the position of the agents-general in con- nection with the foregoing inter- view, remarks that it is clear that so long as the Imperial system contin- ues a thing of vague undefined ties with ambiguous constitutional reia- tions al commercial relations which often have at least the appearance of being conflicting, so long will the personality of the men who fill what may be called liaison offices be ex- tremely important. The Times thinks that at least the condition of possess- ing independent means by holders of such positions might be removed by general agreement among all states of the Empire and salaries be suffi- cient for proper performance of such duties. SEEKING TO SOLVE THE FUEL PROBLEM Substitute, for Cost Chief Topic at Deir Gon+ vention at Chicago. Chicago, , Sept, 8.--More than 3,- 000 chemists from all parts of 'the country are in Chicago attending the sixteenth annual convention of the American Chemical Society. The fuel situation will be the chief topic of discussion. All are working on plans to. manufacture a substitute for coal. It is stated that "celloidal fuel" or liquid ceal will be the next fuel for home, factory and transportation. "There are extensive deposits of lignite in Hlinois mines", said J. W. Harrington of New York. "By a cer- tain process this coal, which is some- times like peat, and which has been considered refuse. may be combined with petroleum, The particles are suspended in the liquid by celloia chemistry, and it is burned like ofl. Its chief value lies in the fact that the petroleum is used after gasoline, kerosene, and other products are ex- oh from it. Both the refuse pet- toleum and the lignite are consider- ed worthless now, but combined form a valuable fuel." Death of J. D. Collie, Brockville Brockville, Sept. 8.--John D. Col- ile, Superintendent of the local plant of the Office Furniture & Supplies, Limited, died Monday morning after a short illness. § | was eventually landed by the Cre- § [tic's crew organized into longshore- M AmemsisHor MalNIX ar SATE SER le, Tr res lv County Cork, Treland. Ehe is in perfect health, and pr morning at six o'clock. A lannix traveled miles east of Cantons | 20H by Brit- Australis Belay to visit his visiting to Twenty Cents a Toi 'ward Lord Mayor MeSwiney {which arri {withou | Noniconformists to Consider |e ro The judgment will authorize in- creases of fifty per cent. in sleeping and parlor car rates and an increase of twenty per cent. in the rate on excess baggage. No increase is authorized in rates on milk. Authorization is given for an increase in freight on coal from ten to twenty cents a.ton. A summary of the judgment; which has been handed down by the railway commission in the applica- tion of all Canadian railways for in- creased rates, was given out last night by the chief commissioner Hon, F. B, Carvell. THE ENQUIRY INTO TARIFF Starts Next Week And Will Be Completed Early in December. Ottawa, Sept. 8.--The tariff en- quiry which will start in Winnipeg next Tuesday, is expected to be final- ly concluded in December, well be- fore Christmas. The ministers leave for the west on Saturday night. Sir Henry Drayton will preside and with him will be Hon. G. D. Robertson and Hon. Dr. Tolmie. The ministar of agriculture acts only tentatively pending the return, in a couple of | weeks, of Hon. J. A. Calder. The |itinerary which has been outlined is {considered to give sufficient time for the presentation of the views of all land sundry. Coming back in On- itario, the commission will start in at Windsor on October 21st, and the ftimeraty for Ontario and Quebee will {be published in a day or so. After- {wards the maritime provinces will be | visited. With parliament practically" |summoned for January 20th there {will be none too much time for di- gesting the divergent views that will be presented but the budget is likely {to come only in March, STATUS IN DOUBT Three States May Bar Women From | Voting. Washington, Sept. 8.--Loulsiana, New Jersey, and Mississippi are the I only states in which women may find | themselves unable to vote in the com- ing general elections, aécording to suffrage leaders here. All other mta- tes were said to have held officially | that adequate provisions for this pur | pose already were on their statute | books or tq have arranged for pas- | sage of enabling legislation. | Attorney-General Roberson of Mis- | sissigpi, has written to the National | Woman's Party headquarters \here | that the state constitution require- | ment of registration at least four months prior to an election preclud- ed any hope of women voting in that state. | In a: statement today the party leaders said they had received no | replies from the Attorney-General of | Louisiana and New Jersey to re- quests regarding the status of wo- men 'voters, and accordingly the sit- uation was in doubt in these states.' | HUGO PLEDGES EVERY AID TO JUDGE MILLER Former Opponent Who Left Race for Party Unity Offers Services. Albany, N.Y., Sept. 8.--Francis M. Hugo, secretary of state, ome of the | leading contenders for the Republi- | can gubernatorial nomination who | withdrew in the interests of party unity, today announced that he will campaign for former Judge Nathan L. Miller. "I have notified Judge Miller that he can use me as much as he wishes in this campaign," said Mr. Hugo. 1 "I have also notified the Republican state committee that my services are at the disposal of the party in any capaeity, "1 can with pleasure advocate the election of Judge Miller for gover- nor, and will exert all of my energy to. promote the success of the na- tional and state tickets.' DELAY BRITISH SHIPS. White Star Liner Cretic Organizes Longshoremen Gang: Boston, Sept. 8.--The passengers on the White Star Liner Cretic held in the harbor overnight because of a late arrival, wera further delayed several hours yesterday by the strike of longsheremén .in protest against the British government's attitude or an Archbishop Mannix. Their baggage vmen's gangs. The British freighter Mississippi, d from London, was a longshore crew, and. no work Was done on her cargo. . Appeal for Reunion London, Sept. 8.--Dr. Hartman, noted Comgregationalist minister, preaching, sald that Nonconformists ndeavor to respond to the An- Bishops' appeal for reunion in the right spirit. Non-Episcopal chur- ches were now frankly acknowledged as part of the Hii of Christ The congregation a ted a resolution re- quiring the Free Church council to arrange a conference to ifquire as LL ip ENGLAND TO ERECT STATUES TO HEROES New Monuments Are to.Re=- place the Memorials of Olden Days. London, Sept. 8.---More modern kings and queens in the statuary line are now in demand for decora- tions of London squares and streets, especially people known to the pres- ent generation. Therefore the Office ot Works has decided that various statues of Kings of bygone days must be removed to give place to new. King George III, will leave his pedestal at the entrance to Pall Mall and King William IV, will be depos- ed from his wonted throne in the city. Lord Napier leaves Waterloo Place and probably will be succeeded by King Edward VII. Lord Napier goes to Trafalgar Square. Sir Row- land Hill will be removed from be- hind the Royal Exchange. . New statues of heroes of this war to be erected are those of Lords Ro- berts and Kitchener, somewhere near the War Office and the Horse Guards Parade, and Lord Fisher near the Admiralty. 2 MOST STUPEFYING IN ALL HISTORY Marshal Foch Thus Refers to Yon Kluck's Advance on Paris. Paris, Sept. 8.--Marshal Foch, ge- neralissimo of the Allied forces, has for the first time explained first German defeat on the Marne, He commanded the centre of the French army in that engagement. J " "The German defeat on the Marne." he said, "was unquestion- ably due to the collapse of the Ger- man general staff plan due to the German generals, each of whom was eager to win the war on his own ac- count, The advance of von Kluck. was the most stupefying in history, but, obsessed by the idea of reach- ing Paris, -he forgot to protect his flanks against the attack by General Gallieni. Meanwhile the German ge- neral headquarters was unable to save the situation, because it remain- ed at Luxemburg, far from the scene of fighting." 5 GASOLINE-WASHED OVERALLS EXPLODE Boy Fatally Burned When He Struck Match on Them. Winnipeg, Sept. 8.--George Mohen twenty-four years of age, of Dako- tah, a settlement twenty-two miles scuth-west of Winnipeg, washed his overalls in gasoline, when he had finished work on a threshing mach- ine. Later he absent-mindedly scrat- ched a match on them. The contact of sulphur with the gasoMne causeq A miniature expl + The flames spread quickly and Mohen died from bis injuries after being brought to a hospital here Sunday. { haa Austrian Empire Records Disappear From Archives / Vienna, Sept. 8.--So many impor- tant records of the last days of the enipire have disappeared from the files that the war achives commis-. sion has been forced to appeal to of- ficers and officials to come forward with verbal testimony or personal papers in order to complete the his- tory of the period. " It is presumed that these docu- ments were removed at the instance of officials upon whom they reflect- ed unpleasantly or to hide personal guilt. The sovernment promises im- munity from punishment for any of- fense which the testimony they seek niight disclose so that the complete hist of the breakdown, both on the/war fronts and internally, may be /written. "Air Thief" Headed For Spanish Border Paris, Sept. 8.--Every air drome in Europe is on the lookout for an English aviator who disappeared from the Pau Airdrome with a Mor- ane 'parasol' airpldne. At last re- ports, the '"'air thief" was reported to be heading toward Spain, the bor- der of which is only an hour, as the Morane flies, from Pau, : This is the first recorded theft of an airplane in Europe, but not the first in the world, for ten years ago | a daring burglar succeeded in gett- | ing away with one of the Wrights' experimental planes from Dayton, Ohio, He was captured. X-ray Finger Tip Beats Finger Print Paris, Sept. 8.--X-ray finger-tip identification is a much surer met- hod than the finger-print system, Dr. Henry Beclere told the Academie of Sciences. "An X-ray photograph taken of the entire finger tip," he said, "shows the precise depth and shape of the nail, which differs in all per- sons. A slight surgical operation can utterly change the finger prints, but there is no method of camouflaging the interior of the finger except cut- ting it off." - -- Ye S-------------------- . CHURCH DEFILEMENT Sussex Vicar's Appeal to Holiday- Makers. ' Losdon, Sept. 8.--In the porch of Friston Church, near Eastbourne, a notice has been hung requesting vi- sitors to treat the church as the House of God, pofiiting out that it 1s not a place for smoking for deposit- ing cigarette ends and matches, for picnicking, impromptu concerts, or noisy conversations. The vicar and church wardens ex- press their regret that this notice has had to be put up because of re- peated breaches by some visitors of the elements of good manners and reverence. ? ! i -------------- to the practical basis for a response ita the Bishan' messes, © . | . 4 § bad SE EE ET ERT RRR . Toronto retailers are ADVISE VOTING 'FOR BY-LAWS Board of, Trade Heartily Com- mends the Trade on Tuesday evening Scheme to the P - -- At a 'meeting of the Bodrd ot , & resolu= « tion was passed expressing hearty approval of the agreement entered into between the City Council and the firm of Wettlaufer Bros., for tha establishment of a manufacturing in- dustry in Kingston, and recommend- ing it to the property owners, tos gether with the by-law for the rafs- Ing of $30,000 with which to pur- chase the necassary site struct a railway siding. and cons The mem- bers present pledged support to the passing of the by-law on Friday nex, , and a commiftée was formed to carry it | pressing regret at into effect. A resolution was also passed ex- the removal of George B, McKay, for many years manager of the local branch of the Bank of Toronto, and treasurar of the Kingston Board of Trade, to Kitchener, and wishing him every success. J. M. Campbell, president, occu- pied the chair, and introduced Dr. W. Ww. of . Sands, city clerk, and sacrotary | the joint industries committee of the city council and Board of Trads, who gave an account of the negotiae tions conducted with the that resulted in the agreement 'establish a plant for the manufacture of negotiations were openad last company to improved concrete machinery. The De- cember, and the success of the pro- ject is dependent upon a free site and railway siding. Tha site was chosen by the manager of the company, and it consisted of six acres of land be- tween Montreal and Rideau streets, |and another piece of land | Rideau street. across In all thirtecn and a half acres are needed, ani the land to be secured comprises twenty-one acres in all. Dr. Sands described what had been done to sectte the site and also the rallway siding and an ex- penditure of $30,000 had to be made by the city. Of this amount $15,000 went into the land and $15,000 for the railway siding. The company planned to build houses for their m= ployees and while the land and plant would be exempt froin taxation, the houses would not be, bu' would add $85 a year each td tha city's taxes. In to order to pass this by-law on Fri- day, two-thirds of the votss cast had be favorable 'and ealy owners and twenty-year tenants cou) vote. - : A Splendid Propnsition. The agreement was {fully explained by Mayor Nickle clause by claus2, and it or. had the approval. of {he city solieit- The company is {caged to carry an aserage of one hinerel «"mpaiy- ¢ © nu its pay lists and if at any time wi thin five yearg that nt falls to carry ont its bh the plant, land and fant] rg ; city. The manager explain 4 that ths co amalgamation of looking Wettlaufer Bros. is a going concern, become the p: :» 'rty of the incorporated is an two companies suitable location. mpany now for a manufacturing the fellowing machine br machines, gines, ory: Cement mixers, hoists, crushers, tile and sewer pipe pumps, -en- bollérs, ick, . block, sereens, tile monlds, elevators and conveying machinery, crushing rolls, paving mixers, brick presses, dump cars, cement tools, motors, tile and brick cars, contrac tors' and builders' full ete. erected will hundred feet. ] chinery exhibited at the Toronto ex- equipment, One building to be immediately be eighty by four Photographs of mee hibition, were shown at the meeting. It 'wag recognized by the industries committee that Kingston must have industries. to employ all available labor possible, and the benefits, di- rect and indirect, that will come from the establishment of this company here will far outweigh the induce- ment the citizens are called upon to offer. Nickle, provision has been made in the locating of the buildings by this ' As pointed out by Mayor company for access to adjacent pro perty available for industries that may follow. £& 'After considerable discussion 'the Copeland States is | above-mentioned resolution was mov- ed by J. R. Forster seconded by Cap- tain John Donnelly, and adopted. York Health Commissioner ims that the United or another influenza New epidemic, but not nearly as wide' spread as last winter. Contrary to general expectations,' there was no general movement of Wilkesbarre Pa. work Tuesday. + > * + + J Te miners back to 3 2902900440004 008, * NEW. POSTAL RATE * 'HITS THE NEWSPAPERS. 4 3 Official notice from the Post- & office Depa:tment has reached &. Kingston publishys concerning 4 the increased of postage # On newspapers. : : The new Igsislation is effective # January 1st, 1921, upon which & date second-class postage will be raised from % cent per & pound to % sont pot Jouihd. On #& January 1st, 1922, a furt crease is provided for, and after ¢ = that date the rate will be 1% cents per pound. A considerable amvunt of new revenue will be collected by the department, which has main tained that the present rate does not begin to meet the cost of transmission and mail service. ¥

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