ON SALE. Special Bargains in SHIRTS, NMLCKWEAR, CAPS apd" HATS Our best rages only Collier's Z he TO CARRY REBELS A8 HOSTAGES LONDON PRESS | | i | | IS SCATHING Anti-Government Papers Com- ment on the Cork Fires | Report. London, Jan. 20.--In the editorial} | Pomment of the anti-government Bewspaper this morning, thers is pT | Scathing comment on the govern- | THE CRISIS IN PERSIA } ment in connection with the report | SEEMS TO BE PASSING | Of the recent fires in Cork. Srem---- | {Premier Withdraws Resigna- "We most strongly urge upon the Sovernment," says the London Times, tion and Shah Remains in Country. | Dublin; Jan. ~The mili- tary authorities issued a procla- mation to-day declari iat if | bomb and firearm attacks on crown forces in motor cars con- tinue, "known rebels . will be | | | i | carried as hostages for the safe conduct of the occupants of all motor vehicles, which are the | property of armed forces of the | crown." The notice applies to | the city and county of Dublin and county Meath. "that it should have been impossi- ble for any document of this descrip- tion, whether founded on truth or London, Jan. 20.--The Persian | falsehood or both, to have angicipat- | premier, Mochir-ed-Dowleh, who | ed the official report. Owing to the | had resigned from office, withdrew | gabinet's foolish hesitation, we arc | his resignation after the merchants Bot in a position to deny any of it." i had threatened to close the ba The Daily News says: 'No more | famning incident has marked the government's catastrophic Irish pol- Ry." Hl or Insets Sense is the meeting of Persian notables Satur- » | day, announced his intention of re- #14, labor organ. | maining in Persia-during the na- franrcd crisis. This, the correspon- ars and other pressure had been home | to bear, according to a Terehan de- | spatch under Sunday's date to the | London Times. | The shah, who was 'present at a| Cor iar Doe? ows. the dent thinks, is a definite answer to ficial destructions for attacks on the persistent rumors that the Shah bo: forces in Cork city since the intended to abdicate in favor of his enforcement of martial 'law in this | brother Valiahd, the heir apparent, @rea was carried out this morning, | 82d proceed 'to Europe for reasons When two houses on Washington | Of health. Bail | | | | | IS CHANCELLOR Appointed to Succeed Late, Judge McDonald in Ontario Diocese. The Bishop of Ontario has pointed J. B. Walkem, K.C., city, chancellor of the diotese of Ontario, in succession to the late Judge McDonald, D.C.L., of Brock- | ville, ! Mr. Walkem has had a long and | distinguished career as a da ap- | f this and citizen. He was educated at McGill university, He was articled to his. brother, a former chancellor of the diocese, Dr. Richard W 2lkem, | In 1870, and was admitted te the | bar in 1876, and subsequently enter. | ed into partnership with his brother, | the firm being known as Walkem & | Walkem. Hence the new chancellor has acquired, through his long asso- clation with a former chancellor, wide knowledge and ripe experienc in ecclesiastical law, which more | | 2 [2 estastionl Law, whisk wore] f titled to under his mother's will, go-| ment will suspend work on the ships | he ---------- Street, where two members of t . WITHDRAW SLOWLY Irish constabulary were attacked on Saturday last, were destroyed by military forces. The military auth- Orities assert that crown forces were fired at on Saturday from six houses ih Washington street, and that 'the Wo worst were selected for destruc- | QUEEN'S ASKS FOR $725,000 Prom the Ontario Government ~Considered a Very Toronto, Jan. 20.--Included in the eight million dollars demanded by the Ontario universities, which was brought under discussion by the royal commission on university finance to-day, was an application for 725,000 from Queen's University, ingston. This was a modest claim, however, in comparison with ™ to University, which wanted m¢ #an four million, and Western . diver- sity, London, which asked for a mil- lion and a quarter. Queen's also asked for an additional $344,000 to { help finance the session of 1921-22. Queen's asked the $725,000 for capital expenditure, pointing out that it 'would. be devoted to the construc- tion of new buildings and the repair of old ones. The details of their budget are: Central heating plant, $260,000: library, $175,000; wo- men's residence, $100,000; Gordon Hall extension, $37,500; Fleming Hall extension, $37,500; Kingston Hall extension, $35,000; hydraulics laboratory, $30,000; new equipment for applied science, $20,000. Queen's 'suggested that payment of this amount might be spread over five years. CANADIAN FIRM'S CONCESSION Generals Make Timber Bargain With : Russia, London, Jan. 20.--A Canadian firm of timber operators and contrac- tors in which General Alex. MacDou- gall and General B. R. Hepburn, late of the Canadian Forestry Corps, are | partners, has been awarded one of the biggest timber concessions in the world by the Soviet government of Russia. The concession is one of the big- gest, if not the biggest, record, 'and if it were in any othe Sgountry but Russia, it would be worth many millipns, but under the circumstances it is only a speculation. No attempt will be made, said General Hepburn, to work it until more stable condi- tions are established. va Large areas of timber lands have also been bought by the firm in Lat- via, After the sum of thirty thou- sand pounds had been paid down, the Latvian Government stepped in and confiscated the money, but after prolonged negotiations the goverh- ment has been induced to reconsider its action. General Hepburn also stated that his firm had a contract with the So- viet Russian Government to seil sev- enty-five million standards of Rus- | slen timber In the event of a trade agreement being concluded between he Allies and Russia. His fism's lings, he added, have no connec- tion with the Vanderlip concessions. ------------------ No G.W.V.A. Candidate. \ Ottawa, Jan. 20--Qgficial denial has been received here of the report that the Pgterboro branch of the G. W.V.A. contemplates putting a candi- date In the fleld in the West Peter- boro bye-election tight. ------ Reports from Doorn say that the former Kaiserin is growing weaker. . ¥ | FROM MESOPOTAMIA | | British Troops Leaving Only | as Country Becomes More Pacified. London, Jan. 20.---British troops | are being withdrawn gradually from | Mesopotamia only as the country be- | comes more pacified, making it pos- | sible for fewer troops to maintain or- | der, according to an authoritative | | statement in official circles.' No in- | | dication is given, however, of the J. B. WALKEM, K.C. number to be withdrawn, because | fADpointed Chancellor of the Diocese { this will depend on how Tong it takes | of Ontario. | to restore order, but as the districts | than qualifies him for his new hon- become normal the troops will de- | Or as legal adviser to his bishop and | solicitor of the diocese. Mr, Walk- em is also an enthusiastic church- man, having been a representative of: the: synod for: the parish-of St. Jokn"s, Portsmouth, continuously since 1883. | The new chancellor has completed {fifty-one years in law in Kingston, jand it is of interest to note tha: the | office he occupies on Clarence fireet | Temporary Dormitory Built for |was the one occupied by the law Sleeping Quarters. firm of which the late Sir John A. Neb., Jan. 20.--A tem | Macdonald was senior partner for Mr. Walkem part. Official circles flatly deny that any | jin the fundamental policy has an decided oR ¢r even contemplated for Great Britain intends to carry out her mandatory obligations ac- | cording to her pledge. yn PENITENTIARY CROWDED. Lincoln, porary dormitory is being installe(|over half a century. in one of the shops of the Nebraska [was born in Preston, i.ancashire, state penitentiary to provide sleeping [Eng., and is in his seventy-ninth quarters for the overflow population (year. - He is still in active practice of the institution, Warden Fenton an-| of his profession. In 1905, he was nounced. The temporary dormitory | appointed local master in chancery, will contain fifty beds. and in 1908 was made a R.C, The penitentiary now has a popu- teeter lation of 570. Two years ago there | NEWS OFF THE WIRES | were less than 300 at the prison. The | IN CONDENSED FORM population has increased steadily | ---- during the past few mon.hs and, | Tidings From Places Far and with the state parole board's new poliey of holding down paroles, the Near Are Briefly housing problem has become a ser- Recounted. ious one. ; i | League is being | A Moderation TEETH MALIGNED BY PHYSICIAN | formed at Winnipeg. ; The work of the Canadian Trade Warner Proved It When New Doctor | Commission is about finished. Accused Them. | Two Woodstock firemen Winsted, Conn., Jan. 20.--Charles | Seriously injured when a fire t S. Warner, of Prospect Street, a|turned over. | commercial salesman, loves a joke| The first shipment of radium | and likes to tell one. Hamilton, no bigger than a | Getting no relief from a doctor's |Point, but worth $10,000, reach | treatment for neuritis, he said he |PhYsician. | visited another doctor and received Alanson A. Young, M.C.R. engi- | fa thorough examination after which |R€€T, dropped dead at St. Thomas as the second doctor told him his ail-|D® Was preparing to board his en- ment resulted from poor teeth ana | Bine. ers. = | that he coull not expect any relief | Frank Wilkins, an old-timer, per- until the teeth had been taken out. ished almost in sight of Stewart | Mr. Warner protested, but when | City, Yukon territory, because his | the doctor insisted he yielded and |[°€t ave out. | removed and handed his false teeth The executive council of the Bel- to the surprised physician, {gian Federation of Labor has put a hea = jban on business activity between' § Dr. Peever Goes to Hamilton. o'clock Sunday morting and 6.9 London, Jan, 20--A call from |¢lock Monday morning. Wesley church, Hamilton, has been accepted by Rev. Dr.'R. G. Peever, of Firsh church, London. The local vacancy. will be filled by Rev, Dr. Sparling, of Centendry church, Ham- Ilton, were | ruck i to | pin- | | igi Three Bombing Ambushes Take Place in Dublin London, Jan. 20.---Three am- bushes, in which bombs were used, occurred in Dublin between éight and nfne o'clock Tuesday evening, says a Central News despatch from there. Th. first of these took effgct in Par- liament street, near Dublin Castle, where a bomb was thrown at lorries, wounding two cadets. In the second ambush aq lorry was fired upon and bombed near Portobello barracks. Auxiliaries, who were similarly at- tacked in Mespil -road, returned the fire of their ¢ssailants. No casual- ties were reported. | English Cricket Team Loses to Australians Adelaide, Australia, Jan. "20.-- The English cricket team lost its third consecutive test match to-day Ee ------ [8400000000000 00ss | # DOCTORS OBJECT TO | with the all-Australia team by 119 runs. The match was the k2enest of the series so far, with the English- men leading on the first inning. In the second inning, the Australians {piled wp 582 rius, which their op- pongnts could not reach in their Secopd attempt. .is Mini cabine LY. : ster oF France in the, LOUIS BARTHOU of war [LF KINGSTON, ONTARIO. THURSDAY, JANUARY RAID SINN FEIN PLACES IN LONDON London, Jan. 20, -- Alleged Sinn Fein centres in this city were subjected to simultaneous raids by Scotlapd Yard detec- tives late last night, says the Daily Graphic. Buildings, not- ably in Bayswater, Barnsbury, Haddington, Stephney, East- ham and Panwell were raided, and it is stated that many im- portant documents were seized. Local importance attached to a raid on a four-ftorey house in Colville terrace, Bayswater, which was thoroughly searched for hours. * WIDOW GETS $100 OF ABOUT $130,000 Will of Joseph J. Ryan First Intimation of Estrange- ment Dating From 1915. New York, Jan. 20.--The first in- timation that the late Joseph J. Ryan, youngest son of Thomas Fort- une Ryan, had been separated from will was filled with the surrogate. It leaves but $100 to his widow, Mrs. Nannie Morse Ryan, the residue of eet 20, 1921. NOT TO RAISE RATE OF PAY Government to Close Toronto Shipyard If Wages Are | Rejected. Ottawa, Jan. 20.--The government {has decided that it won't raise the rate of pay of the Toronto ship work- | ers engaged by the Collingwood Ship- | building Cofhpany to finish the two stip in progress there, Its reply was sent to Tom Moore, head of the | Trades and Labor Congress yester- | day. The union has demanded the | payment of "prevailing" rates. British Whi ON SALE. Special Bargains In SHIRTS, Our best grades daly Collier's PARISIAN STAR GAZER SEES TROUBLE AHEAD LAST EDITION. --8 TARIFF BILL "sims ne" TRICK MEASURE Trouble for England. Paris, Jan. 20.--President Wilson is in considerable danger of personal violence as a result of his policies and as an aftermath of the sefious politi- cal and labor troubles which threaten the United States, according to Mme. De Theleme, who has taken the place in Paris of the late Mme. De Thebes as a fashionable star reader and for- tune- teller. Revolutions and strikes all over the world are predicted by her for 1921. Grave trouble, possibly disaster, is Will 'Tax US. People For | Benefit of Sugar Specu- laters. | New York, Jan. 20.--The Wash ington correspondent of the Evening World declares that the Fordney em- | ergency tariff bill, introduced te | netp American farmers, is really a {medium through which powerful | The government's answer is double- | barrelled. It says: { | "(1)---That in the light of investi- | | gation by the marine department the | rates of pay in the shipyards are | what "prevail" in similar trades in | | his wife since 1915, came when his | Toronto. "(2)--1If the unions think this is not the case, and that they will be prejudiced in making new wage ag- | | Drophesied tar Buglapd at Hany [best sugar interests will "tax thé points, especially in the east, and the United Kingdom will be torn by eco- | P€OPle of this country $366,000,000 nomic and social difficulties during {in the next ten months for the bene- the year. fit of speculators who took a gamb- President Ebert, of Germany, Will ing chance when they thought thé have to keep a close watch on his | ice of sugar would continue ta personal safety, according - to the | A 1 fast soothsayer, while for France, whole. rise, and now find themselves facing sale bankruptcies, economic troubles |€R0rmous losses. and labor disturbances are read in | the stars, e | designed "to protect the beet sugar Russian disorders will continue, the feliners, the Louisiane fane Sow fortune teller asserts, and there is a fe and retiners, the banks Wee possibility of a sudden change in the have advanced money an e Suga ¥ " ne . 4 crops, and the vast accumulation of the estate, including * hat he was en- | Féements in the spring the govern- | Present soviet regime which will not ing to Miss Dorothy Lucille White- ford, of 172 West Seventy-ninth street. Miss Whiteford, +ho had known Ryan for several years is the daughter of John H. Whiteford, a manufacturer of toys. She has been on the stage and was in "The Royal Vagabond," until she was injured by the fall of a lamp used in a setting At present she is in Florida. In explanation of the small boquest to Mrs. Ryan, the will states: "I make this small bequest to her inasmuch as ample provision has been made for her support and the support of our children during her life-time by a Separation agreement entered into between us dated 1915." WON $100,000 ON, HONEYMOON TRIP Woman Passenger on Imper- ator Tells of Success at Monte Carlo. New York, un. 20.-Mrs. Betty Behwartz, six weeks a bride, returned yesterday from her honeymoon to Europe $100,000 richer from a visit to Monte Carlo, while her husband, H. H. Schwartz, of 880 Broadway, was $12,000 to the good as the result of a crap game Sunday night aboard the Imperator, which docked at noon, nearly two days late, after making the roughest voyage of its career. Mrs. Schwartz, who was Miss Betty Sadowsky, is pretty and twenty. She believed her age was lucky, so she played twenty on the roulette wheels of Monte Carlo. And she wen, time after time, without losing once, until she had amassed $100,000 of winn- Ings and hubby decided it was time to quit, Mr. Schwartz won his from five professional gamblers, who had found the trip lucrative from the use of a pair of "magic" dice The gamb- lers' never-failing bones, however were "'lost" Sunday evening, and Mr. Schwartz decided that a man with a 800d throwing arm had a fair chance, The $12,000 was the result. armies a pei Fourteen Murders in Ontario Reported Last Year Toronto, Jan. 20.--Jos. E. Rogers, superintendent of provineial police, in his annual report for the year ending Oct. 31st, 1920, reviews, the | work of the force for the year. The number of arrests and summonses was 1,641, a decrease of 216 from the previous year. There were 14 cases of murder during the year. There were three executions, and four were sent to serve long t% ms for manslaughter, The number of per- sons sent to jail was 165, and 924 were fined through the work of the provincial police. The four inspectors of criminal investigation were en- gaged in 115 cases, of which 84 were at the request of crown attorneys. Superintendent Rogers states that it Is gratifying that there were so few murders in comparison with other provinces of Canada and states in the United States. D'Annunzio Leaves Fiume Amid Demonstration Triest, "Jan. 20.--D'Annunzio left Fiume yesterday morning by auto- obile. His departure was painetic, he poet made a long Spee<n in the Council Hall, and Dr. Antonio Gros- sich, the provisional governor, re- plied. The stores were closed and there was a great public demonstra- tion. - +> + MONOPOLY IN DRUGS + ge -- + Toronto, Jan. 20.--Doctors + urge objections to the exis- 4% tence of 'a monopoly in the # manufacture of drugs. The + # cases of two women who died + # from the effects of injections + # administered brings up am im- 4 portant point. * ON 0302000000008 0%0¢ + + + * > * * Rockledge, | the 6th of May, | until May, when the agreements are) | made, and be. governed thereby. It | | emphasizes that the work is going | ahead to help employment, | SECRET PATRONAGE | STIRS THE CAPITAL Premier Meighen Has Nothing | | to Say About Charge Made. | i | | Ottawa, Jan. 20.--Charges of "se- | cret patronage" in the Civil Service | contained in a memorandum to Pre- | mier Meighen by the Federal Em- | ployees' Association have created f some stir at the capital, and have | been replied to by the Board of Hear- ing in a memo to Mr. Meighen, which memo has not been made public. One charge is that the Premier got a raise in pay for W. M. Graham, In- dian Comniissioner at Regina, a rela- tive of Mrs. Meighen. It is understood here that Mrs. Gra- ham is an aunt of the Premier's wife. Interviewed the premier was not inclined to be communicative, "I have not read the memorandum," he said, "consequently I have nothing to say." STARTLING ANOMALY. Retailer Gets Mone For Canadian Apples Than Grower, London, Jan: 20.-- J. Forsyth -Smith, Canadian Fruit Trade Com- missioner in Liverpool, writing to the Pall Mall Gazette corrects the statement recently made .n the press that Canadian apples are selling here at 130 to 140 shillings a barrel while importers' prices are generally 100 shillings below the price fixed by the Food Controller. He says: "The Canadian grower receives no probabilities. be without grave risk to Lenine and ined min. sii Yo his oundy his cohorts: i . British statesmen who have had an jisvesced In mea lag: spring and x opportunity of reading the pronhesies | 8 ih Som Jud sment § hop of the Parisian star-gazer make the | 87707 z iy Rose a : shost significant comment that her predic- | {18ured that, because i ' 5 crop in Cuba, sugar would remain tions all are well within the realms of [at a high level for a year of mops, | The other purposes are to make thé | people pay the losses of men who have suffered business reverses. JOHNSON NEARLY The correspondent says the bill ia * more than 22 to 30 shillings a barrel. The retailer, for merely handing out | the contents of a package, receives more than the grower for his work | in growing, cultivating spraying, | picking, grading and selecting fruit | for export. "This is surely a startling anom- | aly," he concludes. Paris Now "Wide Open" As Before the War, Paris, Jan. 20.--Complaints that | the term "Gay Paris" had become a! mockery will no longer be heard. All| restaurants, bars and cabarets have | been given permission to remain open { until 1 am. and a regime of toler- ance promised as regards Montmar- tre cabarets and dance clubs, which kept open/all night. Simultaneously the minister of the | interior has given orders that Paris | was to be flluminated as before the | war, thus retrieving her reputation as | "la Ville Lumiere." | As a result Paris is now a "wide | open' 'town. l Offered $800 Increase | Pastor Accepts $600 | London, Jan. 20.--Rev. George 4 Leichliter, pastor of the Adelaide | street Baptist church, established | | rather an unusual precedent at the | congregational meeting by refusing | to accept an increase of $800 salary, which was voted him unanimously. He declared he was willing to accept { $600 and no more and it the con- Bregation insisted he would give back | the $200 in the collections. The con- gregation desided to meet his wishes and made the increase $600. A Famous Foxhound | Sentenced to Exile | Lexington, Ky., Jan. 20----0ld King, the most famous fox hunter in Ken- tucky, has been convicted at Win- | chester, Ky., on a charge of sheep | | slaughterer. County Judge W. Lee] Evans ruled the dog was guiity, but | that instead of the death penalty, ask- | ed by the prosecuting attorney, the | judge ruled that Old King must be | exiled from Kentucky for the rest of | his life. . | . i ------------ It is announced in Paris that prem- | ier Lloyd George and Earl urzon will arrive on Sunday for on Al- lied Premiers' conference. LOST OTHER EYE "Pussyfoot" Had to be Res- cued From Crowd in Weish Town. New York, Jan, 20.--W. E. "Pus- syfoot"" Johnson returned from the British Isles on the Imperator yester- day to report'to the headquarters of the anti-alcoholic movement here, and said that he believed that the northern part of Ireland would in time become bone-dry. He met with a cool reception in Wales, he said, and-added that un- til he was rescued by the pojice at Wrexham the crowd wished to put | out his other eye, or otheywise do him bodily harm, Johnson said that although he har- angued the second cabin passengers ----among whom he travelled--telling them of the evil effects of strong drink, they drank harder than ever after his exhortations. He lost hope in them, he said. Scotland, he believ- would be eventually dry, but after a long campaign. An Anti-Foreigner Crusade in France --- -- | Paris, Jan. 20.--With more than a thousand alleged agitators roped in by the police "Communist drag- net," the anti-foreigner campaign to- day took a new turn. A section of the press is urging that all foreign banks: be compelled to surrender their holdings to Frenchmen, sliding scale for a visitors" tax is also proposed, by which tourists and foreigners resident here would subject to a levy. The federation of Paris theatres has passed a resolution urging that only five per cent. of alien perform- ers be permitted in any French thea- tre. i. i A. L. Sifton In Critical Condition re Rt. Hon, Ottawa, Jan. 20.--The condition of Rt. Hon, A. L. Sifton, secretary of state, is still critical and little hope for recovery is held out. Mr. Sifton is suffering from a recurrence of arterial trouble manifested in an acute condition of the heart and kidneys. ---------- Canadian National Railways. Toronto, Jan. 20.--The gross earn- ings of the Canadian National Rail. ways for the week ending Jan. 14th were $2,168,969, and for the corre- sponding period last year $1,864,220, an increase of $304,749. From Jan. 1st to date the gross earnings have been $3,983,026, and for the corresponding period a year ago $3,506,428, an increase of §$476,- 598. {men attorneys. MRS. MARGARET CURRY liton, Ont, who is oad at the age ninety-nine. T lv to be 102 and her mother 101. : be | { "The Fordney bill, in the judg- {ment of men in the sugar business {who are best qualified to speak of [the matter, will, if it is adopted, | automatically raise the retail price {of sugar four cents a pound. other words, through legislation, on [a day after the Fordney bill be- comes law-----if it passes--the con- sumer will find his sugar costing {him four cents a pound more than |it does to-day and the United States |consumes approximately 960,000, [000 pounds of sugar a year. The jconsumption is rapidly increasing. | The Fordney bill is a trick bill, [tramed for the purpose of deceiving [the people into thinking that they are to be taxed for the benefit of the | United States treasury. This applies | generally to the whole bill, but es- pecially to the amendment affecting sugar," or TAFT IS SELECTED. He May Be Among the United States Cabinet Ministers. Washington, Jan. 20.-- William Howard Taft, former President of the United States, wiil be offered a seat in the Harding cabinet, it became known here. If he acecpts, accord: ing to this information, he will take his old post of secretary of war until such time as there is a vacancy for him on the supreme court bench. Information éoming here from Marion is that the actual tender of the place has not been made. How- | ever, informal advances are being | made in behalf of the president-elect {in the hope that the Harding cabinef | might take its place in history as the one boasting of an ex-president ir its membership. "Every effort is being made to pre- vail upon the ex-president to take the war portfolio, the argument being made that he will show himself a big man by so doing, and incidentally give the Harding cabinet a prestige such as never experienced by any other incoming administration," re .. lated a prominent party leader -------------- | WOMEN PROSECUTORS. Especially for Female . Trials in Chicago. Chicgo, Jan. 20.--Robert E. Crowe, state's attorney, announced that he { would appoint one or mor» women as assistants, and that in the future all women on trial in Cook county | would be prosecuted by women at- i Appointed torneys. "The average womar. is more com- petent to understand the problem of a delinquent girl or woman," said | Mr." Crowe, "and for thic resgon I { think both the state and the defend- janis will be more sure of receiving Justice with a woman prosecutor." ; ! Announce Good Surplus, | Quebec, Jan, 20 Hon. Walter | Mitchell, when he delivers his bud- | Bet speech some time néxt week or {the week after, will be able to an. | pounce for the flack! year | June 30th, 1986, a surPlug of $951.- | 910.50, or ordinary receipts over { ordinary and eXtraordinary expendi- ture. The Provincial Treasurer tah led the publie accounts in the House" to-day. THE receipts were $14,472, 50.87, and expenditure charged | against revenue, $13,520,740.37. | To Appoint W Attorpeys, Chicago, Jan.. 2 Ron E iCrowe. state's aitorney, announced | that he would appoint one or more | women as assistants and that in the | future all women on trial in Cook | county would be prosecuted by wo- ending i G.T.R. Weekly Earnings. Montreal, Jan. 20.--Grand Trunk j Rallway . earnings for the second | week of January were $2,088,691, an ipcreage of $405,842 over the .ame | goo last year. 5 + Ia' ~