Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Apr 1921, p. 1

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ALLE N | NOW PLAYING! Claire Adams in "THE SPENDERS" YEAR 88; No. 76. KINGSTON, ONTARIO. SATURDAY, APRIL 2, The Daily British 1921. hig [ALLEN NOW PLAYING! (Claire Adams in "THE SPENDERS" FIRST "EDITION COAL MINES ARE FLOODED British Houses, of of Putienent to Meet Monday Over Coal Strike. London, April 2.--Six British coal | mines, left to the mercy of inrushing | waters by the strike of miners and | pump men, have already been flood- | ¢d and some of them are said to be in such a condition that they may be permanently wrecked. Four of these mines are in South Staffordshire, one in the forest of the county of Glou- cester, and one in Flintshire, north- eastern. Parliament Called. London, April 2.---A minor sequel | to the coal miners dispute is that the House of Lords will reassemble eight lays before the time stipulated for them to do so. The House of Com- mons had adjourned until April 4th and the House of Lords until April 12th. Under the emergency procla- mation, the government is bound to convene parliament within five days Hence a royal proclamation was fis- sued last night convening: both houses for Monday. Lively debates are anticipated. COMMENT ON LEGISLATURE Premier Drury Turns Down Labor Leaders Twice This Week. (Special to the Whig. Toronto, April It win take more than the fire from a defective wired cigarette to smoke out those | VU.F.0. members before they have "earned" that $600 bonus. Some | are in no hurry to go back before the referendum anyway, and so long 2 as they do get back for the summer | picnic it will do. Fortunately the $100 coal scuttle | was never in danger, historic bedroom where Minister Biggs bought his trucks while he ate breakfast. These garage men from | Dundas having seen the '"'ornate" (whatever that means) furniture in Biggs bedroom could go back home |: and tell their constituents that their | member was no piker when buying ther bedroom furniture or , sand trucks he wanted and who to buy them from. Twice this week we have had the premier turning down the labor inci- dent and then Rollo's employment agencies, The legislature will have to come back to the old-fashioued plan of the government thrashing things out at the council table or caucus, and then standing or falling upon the issue in the house. We had early closing of fruit stores up on Friday, b ut the farmer members have no sympathy for such legislation. There was also a bill by the attorney-general dealing with the bill, the attorney-general said that the principle of the bill met with the approval of thé societies. Professor Kills Dean Of a College, And Then Suicides Syracuse, N.Y., April 2.--J, Herman, Wharton, dean of the college of business adminis- tration, Syracuse University, was shot and killed by Holmes Beckwith, professor of finan- cial and insurance subjects, in college this morning. Beck- with then turned the gun on | himself and committed sui- cide. Offer Government Steamers. Glace Bay, N. §, April 2.-- The department of marine will put Can- adian government merchant marine steamers at the disposal of the Cape Breton coal trade if they are re- quired, according to word received here today from J. C. Douglas, M.P. for South Cape Breton. Officials of the Dominion Coal Company here say there is little improvement in the coal trade outlook, however, and that there will He a complate shut down of the colleries here on Saturday, Monday and Tuesday. PPP HPP PETPIEPITRO ® + HON. N. W. ROWELL + OPPOSES PROHIBITION -- # Toronto, April 2.--Hon. New- + ton Wesley Rowell made pub- + lic announcement yesterday that 4 he would vote and work ag # a bone-dry verdict in the + preaching referendum. His A + cent privilege in visiting sev- # eral other parts of the world, # besides Toron'o, has opened his # eyes to the possibility that there & was another side to the ques- 3 tion, Ceemtessssssens * > + <* * J * * > + * + + * > * * * nor was the | "ia fire on Friday night the most des- 110 PER CENT. INCREASE IN TELEPHONE RATES | Granted the Bell Company | Not Granted the Measured Rate System. i Ottawa, April 2.--The board of wailway commissioners, in their judgment on the applica- tion of the Bell Telephone Com- pany for increased rates, refused the measured rate system to | the company. The company is | | granted long distance and ser- vice connection charges: together with a ten per cent. addition on exchange revenue, REFUSED TO ACCEPT SANDWICH CONVICT | The Nevesvary Recommitment | Papers Could Not Be i Produced. | When a constable Northwest Mounted Po! the « 1 Sandwich ¢ ternoon with a young | served a term in the Portsmouth pen- itentiary, but had been released on kWparole and was being returned complete his sentence, it was discov- ered that there were no re-commit- ment papers, so he was not accepted The constable arrived in the city on | the fast train and immediately pro- | ceeded to the prison with his man. When the prison authorities demand- | re-commitment papers, the constable | was unable to furnish them, so he had to take his man to the cells at | the police station. | According to information received | { the young man served ten months in | penitentiary but was released on par- | ole, when he had about a year more time tq serve. He wawearrested at | Sandwich, and appeared before the police magistrate on five occasions and was remanded on each, The man will be kept in the cells | at the police station until such time | |as an order comes from Ottawa to | | receive him, or the papers arrive from Sandwich. It is not necessary risoper, who is out on parole, | of the val | arrived in Friday af who ity fron 1 man iad | {for a | to be found guilty in court before he | | is returned to the prison to complete | his sentence, CHILDREN HOUR FOR OLD FRIEND Ends Birthday. Poughkeepsie, N.Y. April 2--All the little school children in the hamlet of West Park, where John Burroughs | lived and studied nature for almost half a century, marched to his fun- eral Saturday, each bearing flowers plucky in the schoolyard nearby. Had death not claimed the famous naturalist last Tuesday, the children would have carried their fragrant gifts to Riverby, the Burroughs home by the Hudson river, Sunday, his 84th birthday. For years the boys and girls of the neighborhood have gathered to- gether on each anniversary of Mr. Burroughs' birth to hang garlands of flowers about his photograph in the village school, and then visit his home to learn more of the birds and beasts, rocks and rivers, flowers and weeds. This year the likeness of the 2 nowned lover of the outdoors | draped with the black cloth of sor- row. The flowers will be placed x his bier, and on his birthday they will rest upon his grave at Rox- bury in the Catskill Mountains. we WEDDED AT SYRACUSE, N.Y, a Bride Was Miss Loretta McConnell, Formerly of Harroysmith. In Syracuse, N.Y Monday, March 28th, Rev. Raymond Lawrence, St. {| Anthony's Roman Catholic church, {united in marriage Clifford W., eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Howe, Rome, N.Y., and Loretta (Laura), eldest daughter of Mrs. and the late Edward McConnell, of Watertown, formerly of Harrowsmith, Ont. The bride was dressed in a vay tricotine { suit, with grey blouse, shoes, hat and gloves to match, and wore the groo's | gift, a beautiful mink scarf She was attended by Miss Murney MacNam- ara, who also wore a navy blue suit. The groom was supported by his brother, G. A. Howe, Rome. After the ceremony, wedding dinner was serv- ed at the Onondaga Hotel and was followed later by a theatre party. The young couple left at midnight for a trip east and in the very near future are leaving for the south to reside. The bride is a trained nurse and graduated from a Kingston hospital four years ago. The groom served as a sergeant in the 78th division and spent eighteen months overseas, Upon their return from their hon- eymoon, Mr and Mrs. Howe will be at home to their friends at 223 Bloomfield street east, Rome, N.Y. At Manila, P. 1, fifteen thousand persons were rendered homeless by tructive in more than twenty years. {It destroyed 3,000 homes in the nor- thern section of the city, a native quarter known as the San Lezaro trict. Two bodies were found mors, i between Germany and United S as to reparation payments brought as | authoritative statement from admin- {istration officials yesterday that the | |it was understood to ja | mittee would provide better *oppor- {tunities than at present exist for the { constructive problem. 'Disorders in Londonderry; | sion. | sador to the court of St. ruins on Saturday. Bo THE GERMANS MUST ACCEPT Us Attude I Is That ie Huns Must Pay Obliga- | tions. Washington, D.C, via Landon, April 3.--Ru-| of conversations | States attitude of the United States toward | Germany is that she must accept her | responsibiity for the war and pay her { {obligations to the fullest extent she | {is able. London advices from Berlin say | Germany* had | made certain proposals to the United | States regarding reparation pay- ments, including a suggestion that | he assume for part of the! debts of the allied powers to the | liability { United States, There was no confirm- tion of the receipt of any such pro- posal, although Commissioner 'Dresel | {at Berlin has reported on conversa- ftions with German officials, in which | question came up | 'these conversations | | the reparations' { The nature of | was not disclosed. Standing Committee on Railways and Shipping | Ottawa, April ghen announced in the commons yes- | terday that the government propos- | {ed to move for the appointment of a {standing committee of the commons | on national railways and merchant {shipping. The organization of such {a committee is proposed in a motion lof which Hon. A. K. MacLean gave notice sometime ago. The idea put forward has been that such a com- discussion of railway A Constable Shot Dead 2.--8erious disor- ders occurred in Londonderry last evening. Constable Higgins was shot and killed by assailants who Belfast, April Hon two bombs were Shows at. hn eledtAle Nght NEW diers were RE in the rl firing that followed the attack two civilians were injured. 'Station pro- perty was not damaged by the explo- Feels Strongly For Prohibition. Toronto, April 2.---Father L. Mine- han, pastor of the St. Vincent de Paul Roman Catholic church, feels very strongly for prohibition. "In making this statement I am only per- | forming my duty. I would deplore it | if there are any bishops or clergy | men who think they would not be| preached the prohibition gospel," | said Father Minehan. "My congrega-| tion also feels very strongly for pro®| Libition, and we hope to have a cam-| paign in co-operation with the refer-| enduim committee before the coming election." Great Britain advises the United | | States state department that George | Harvey, the New York editor, is ac- S| ceptable as the United States ambas- | sador to th court foedport James. Fire destroyed the building and stock of the American Tobacco Co., at Kingston, Jamaica. The loss is a | million dollars. i | --ee een MAY BE FOUGHT OUT ON FLOOR OF HOUSE A Hornet's Nest Stirred Up | Over Catholic Labor. Unions. Ottawa, April 2.--The intimation vy Ernest Lapointe, M.1',, that he in- tends to bring up on the labor depart- ment estimates the question of the strictures of the minister of labor upon the Federation of Catholic La- bor Unions of Quebec and the rather embittered controversy on the sub- ject between the Minister of Labor and a Montreal morning néwspaper, threaten to stir up a hornets' nest when the subject comes before the house. A rumor in circulation that Senator Robertson, the minister, had offered to resign because of the fuss which has been created was treated humorously by him. Senator Robert: son intimated that if the question is introduced his side of the case will not lack presentation. The difficulty has come to a head over the refusal of the Minister of Labor to give the Catholic unions re- presentation at the coming building trade conference here next month. The minister intimated that his stand has' the endorsement of the great volume of Roman Catholics in the international unions. The patronage system must return is a statement made by Sir Sam Hu- ghes, in Toronto in the course of an 2.--Premief Mei- la | CHILD FINDS BOMB, AND THREE ARE KILLED | Policeman Threw It in Dublin | Street With Terrible Results. 2 Dublin, April .--A child found a bomb yesterday in the ruins of the Rosscarbery police barracks, the scene recently of a Sinn Fein attack, and handed it to a policeman, who, seeing the pin was missing, threw it into the street. It exploded, killing two persons and serious- ly wounding three others. Sev- cral persons suffered injuries. SIR WILLIAM MEREDITH Chief Justice of Ontario, whe was eighty-one years voung on Thursday. His brother judges congratulated him at luncheon NOTHING BUT BRIGANDS "If Community Submits--Ruin," Says Chronicle, London, April 2--The Chronicle declares the miners are attempting to enforce their demand by putting a pistol at the community's head, and this despite the fact that even with their reduced wages, they will be one of the best paid bodies of workers in the country. "If the community such brigandage," says the Chron- icle, "for obviously it is nothing else, a very wide door will be opened to national ruin. A surrender would be an invitation to @very other body which can provide itself with a sim- ilar pistol, to come and do likewise." FOR IRELAND submits to Lord Edmund Bernard Talbot, a Roman Catholic, Suc- ceeds Lord French. London, April 2.-~Field Marshal! | Frénch of Ypres will be succeeded as lord-lieutenant and governor-general | { of Ireland by Lord Edmund Bernard Talbot, a Roman Catholic, who has held the post of joint parliamentary secretary for the treasury. le Viscount French was appointed lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1918. One of | -his great achievements was in the famous battle of Ypres, the winning of which barred the channel ports | from Germa® occupation, and saved England from invasion. His rule in Ireland never proved a happy one, | because of his strong stand against | radicals, and his declaration that a| Sinn Fein republic would never be established there In December, 1919, {an unsuccessful attempt was made | to assassinate Visceunt French, while he was motoring in Ireland. The appointment of Lord Edmund was due to the necessity, under the | home rule act, of appointing a civil: ian viceroy. The first important move since armistice towards rehabilitating the United States army's air service, was taken on Monday when the war de- partment placed orders for two hun- dred Thomas-Morse type pursuit and thirty-fiev Martin bombers. The condition of J. L. Englehart, former chairman of Temiskaming and Northérn railway commission is unchanged. A despatch from Pembroke reports the discovery of gold in that vicinity. _jernment, he claimed, had exhibit:" SAYS BIGGS WAS SILENT" = Prupoiiion Made That He Should Receive $3,- 000 Graft. Toronto, April 2.--It developed at | the conclusion of Rev. A. Reynolds' | testimony before the public accounts | j committee yesterday, that Hon. P. C. | Biggs bad listened without saying a | word to a suggestion that he should | "get something' out of the big motor | {truck deal of December, 1313. | "When I found that Parkin wasn't going to give .me my share of the commission [ went" to Mr. Biggs' home to see if he couldn't help me," | g said Reynolds. 'I explained matters | to him, and he promised to see Par- | kin, and assured me that I would get { my'share. While I was there 1 said: | 'Frawk, whatever is coming to you, I'll give my share,' He didn't say any- | thing in reply. Shortly afterward a Dundas fawyer | tried to settle Reynolds' demand | from L. C. Parkin, the motor dealer | who had sold the twelve motor trucks | to the government with Reynolds' ald | by asking Parkin for $3,000 cash, | but was unable to do so. Hon. Mr 2 Biggs made the same effort. l Reynolds also told the committe2 that Parkin had charged the govern- | ment $59 apiece for driving the 12] trucks from Toronto to Dundas. When R. L. Bracklin vainly tried | to tie Reynolds down 'to. a confes-| sion that he was a guilty party in the | proposal of graft, Reynolds replied: made $15,000 or $16,000 that Bigs | should get $3,000 out of it." "You had never approached Mr Biggs, nor had Mr. Biggs approached | you, nor Parkin either, with any sug- gestion of his taking money in con- nection with the deal?" questioned Premier Drury. "No," answered Reynolds, but within a minute he reversed his state- ment by telling of his conversation with the minister of highways at the latter's home, when the minister received the suggestion in silence. ADDITIONAL CHANGES BY BRITISH CABINET Capt. Frederick ick Guest, A.D.C. / to Lord French, Becomes Air Secretary. London, April 2.--Among ths cabinet changes and new appoint- ments are: Dr. Christopher Addison, minister of health, is made minister | without portfolio; Captain Frederick | Guest, aide-de-camp to Field Marshal { French becomes air secretary; SirAl- fred Mond, first commissioner of works, becomes minister of health; Viscount Peel, under-secretary for | war, becomes chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster; the Earl of Crawford, Shatvelior of the Duchy of Lancast- | becomes first commissioner of | ike Right Hon. Frederick G. Kell- | 2 - partment, becomes postmaster-gen- | eral; Charles A, McCurdy, food con- troller, beconies joint parliamentary | secretary to the treasury; Major Sir Philip Lloyd Graeme, parliament- | ary secretary to the board of trade, | becomes director of overseas trade, | There are also a number of changes fin minor posts. Albert H. Illingworth, | who held the post of postmaster-gen- eral, is retiring on account of ifl- health. ASSERT THAT QUEBEC PORT SUFFERS NEGLECT Charge the Government With Nonfulfilment of N.T.R. Terminal Promises. | Ottawa, April 2.--The export trade of the port of Quebec was discussed | in the Senate, Complaint was made | by Senators Tessier and Chapais tha: | bthat port to the United States. Senator Tessier asked for all cor- respondence between the Government | and the Quebec city council and the | Quebec harbor commission with re- | gard to the diversion of the northwest | ern grain to New York, and the al- Jeged non-fulfilment by the Govern-| ment of its undertakings with regard | to the terminals of the Transconti- | nental railway at Quebec. The Gov- | hostility toward the port of Quebec. | The reilway policy was hostile. There | was an excellent deep water harbour there without deepening the St. Law- | rence, and immense sums of money | had been<invesjed, but no effort was! being made to direct export Canadian trade through it. In six years 518. 000,000 bushels of Caradian grain | had gone to Europe via Buffalo Hon, Thomas Chapais eonplained | that the special grain rates on the Transcontinental had been abrogat- ed, and that this had forced Canad- fan grain through American chae- nels. It was a great loss to Canada. | and steps should be taken at once | A%| to utilize the facilities of the port of Quebec, inounced f the {| Harmony, {to abou® [there being 138,340 | MAY GIVE GRANTS "TO URBAN SCHOOLS Education Minister Intimates Deserving Cases May Receive Help. 2 - Toronto, April 2.--During discas- | sion of supplementary estimates in the legislature Thursday night, tha minister of education an-/| the possibility of en-| legislation whereby in certain deserving small urban schools abling might, place same respect of financial grants, Such | legislation, he intimated, would be | purely of an enabling character, and | each case' would be treated on its merits. cases, The minister further hirted at the | added aid to high | | possibility of schools. Details, he said, would be furnished later to the house. THEY WERE ACCEPTED fay Approved Settlers and Receive Free Passage. April 2.--Up to January London, 31st, { have been accepted as approved set- tlers under the Overseas Settlement | Scheme, and had received free pas-| ! sage vouchers, was as follows: --Cau- |ada, 16, 776; Australia, 12,912; New | Zealand, 7,889; South Africa, 3,277; Sow adiand; 43; Rhodesia, 376; Kenya Colony and Protectorate, 526; ! and other parts of the Empire, 781. | The majority have already proceeded | | overseas, except in the case of New | Zealand, where the shipping situa-| tion is difficult. AN UNFORTUNATE REPORT To Port. April Washington, 2.--The chief {of engineers of the army announced | following a survey conducted | that, by his office of the proposed improve- ment of Clayton harbor, an unfavor- | able report would be made to con-| gress. The adverse report is based on the grounds that, due to its large cost and thes comparatively incommensu- rate benefit to be derived, the con-| struction of a breakwater at Clayton is not comsidered necessary or ad- visable in the economic interests of | 'navigation at the 3% {hs present time. CF FARWELL, KC, | COMMITS SUICIDE Ex-Momber of the the Legisiatdre Shoots Himself at Oshawa. Oshawa, April 2.--Charles i'rank- lin Farwell, K.C., committed suicide here Wednesday, He had been playing {cards with some friends in the club during the morning. After lunch-on, he was found lying on the floor of {the lavatory with a bullet through | his brain. Business troubles is sug- | gésted by some for his sudden end. Deceased was a member of the Ont- twenty years ago, repre-| senting Bast Algoma constituency. He was later registra® of deeds at] Salt Ste. Marie. Mr. Farwell was a | | Mason and an Anglican. NEWS OFF THE WIRES IN CONDENSED FOR Tidings From Places Far an Near Are Briefly Recounted. Mm d| After marrying Kiyoski Hosokawa, | a Japanese, for love, an American he | i upon | basis as rural schools in | the number of ex-service men | | and women and their dépendents who | 64 years old, of! T0- RECEIVE HYDROPOWER Sydenham District To Be Served----Meeting Held on Friday. | (Special to the Whig. Sydenham, April 2.--It is very {likely that the Sydenham district will be served with Hydro-Electric power in the very near future. At a meet- | ing of residents from the townships | of Loughboro, Portland, Storrington, and Kingston, held in Wesley Hall, Sydenham, on Friday evening, two engineers from the Hydro-Electric | Commission explained the details im {connection with the scheme. A. M. Rankin, M.P.P. for Fron nac, who has fathered the proposed scheme for some time, acted as chair- ! man of the meeting. Mr Rankin se- cured the services of Mr. ller and Mr. Purcell, of the Hydro-Electric Commission, to explain the details. IMr. ller explained the technical {scheme such as the construction of the power line, etc., while the other engineer told of the great advantage electric power would be on the farm {and in the homes. It was stated that it was the inten- | tion of some of the mining concerns in the north part of the section to use electric current if it can secured, | so this will help greatly toward get- ting the power It is also understood | that the Bowes Milk Products Com- | pany, who own the large condensory {in Sydenham, have signified their de- j sire to use the hydro electric current {if it is available. The proposition ap-~ "1 thought it only- fair that if we] [Not Likely To Make Improvements | pealed so well to the:psople who wera | present at the meeting that it was de- | cided to appoint a committee to get all the information possible and re- port at another meeting in the very | near future, If the residents of these four town= ships are able to get hydro-electric | power it will mean a great thing for the county It is likely that the pow- er line will have to be run out from | Kingston to serve this district. For some time the electric light sit- uation in Sydenham has been very | unsatisfactory. During the evenings | there is sufficient power to light the | homes and stores, but in the day time the power is nearly all required to {run the saw and grist mill, Some {time ago, Frank Anglin bought the | power plant in the village, and he hasbeen unable to get someadditional power by [hofeasing thé amount of {weter, but there is still a shortage. | Most ¢ of the homes in the village of Sydenham are wired for electric light, so the people are anxious to | get electrical energy. WAS WRITTEN IN 1888. | Letter by Colonel Vankoughnet i Found in Attic. | Cornwall, April 2--In looking | over some old papers in the attic of | the house on the Butler farm, just | east of the town, formerly the French | family homestead, A. D. Loynachan, | who is boarding there while engaged {on the provincial highway, found a away, head of the overseas trade de- | ..;, legislature for eight years, up| letter written by Colonel Vankough- {net in 1838. The letter, which is ad- | dressed to Benjamin French, Corn- | wall, reads as follows: "Sir--I haye the honor to acquaint | you that the Adjutant-General of | Militia has notified me that His Ex- cellency the Lieutenant-Governor has been pleased to accept of your re- | signation of Lieut.-Colonel of the | Regiment under my command, -#nd His Excellency is pleased to thank | you for your past services in the militia. "I have the honor to be, sir, your | most obedient humble servant. | "P, VANKOUGHNET, 4 "Col, Commanding 2nd Regt." girl committed suicide at 107 West | 109th street, New York, because she | could not stand the stares and sneers | of friends. The house of bishops and the Ang lican provincial synod, after four ses- | sions at Winnipeg, failed to reach a decision as to the next bishop of Kee- watin diocesé and adjourned. Deaths from tuberculosis in Eng- land and Wales are decreasing rapid- iy. The figures as given by the min- istry of health are 46,312 in 1919 much trade had been diverted from | Agninst 58,073 in 1918, and 59, 924 | Lesher, a teamster who {1p 1917. The degrée to which Uncle Sam's | revenues from the income tax this {year will fall below those of a year ago is indicated by figures compiled {last year was $59,234,617. Persons making returns increased from 316,- | 085 to 420,432, but the number of # was greater this year and | non-tdxable incomes 91,441 last year. FAVOR A TURNOVER TAK a Bulk of Meribers of Montreal Board of Trade Assent. Moutreal, April 2.--At the meet- ing of the Loard of Trade, William M. Birks annqunced the result of | the questiopnaire wich was seat to all members in order to get their {views on tgxation questions. Out of 520 replies regelvaod, 455 had replied 'n favor ¢f a general tutpover tax. ic answer 10 the tirat question sent out, namely;" "Are you in favor of the retention of the Lusiness profits tax?" 22 had answered in the affir- mative out of the 520. I > 3 Five Generations Living. New York, April 2. --With the | birth of a baby girl to Mrs. Harry | Klipper, 2330 Washington avenue, there are five generations of the fam« lily living. The baby's great-great- | grandmother is 104 years old and {lives in Austria. The other four gen- erations are in the United States. Weamter a Millionaire, | Cheyenne, Wyo., April 2.--L. C. ran away | trom his California home many years | ago, has been informed that his {father has died and willed him $2.- 000,000. He will keep his card in i the teamsters unjon and erect a home | tor the Boston district. The total this | pr proken-down laborers. | year is $37,593,008. The aggrega'e| [0e0e00000000000: + |* ie CALLS "TIS BROTHER MINISTER A "PRUNE" london, Ont, April 2.-- Rey. G3. A. Leichliter, pastor «f the Adelaide Street Baptist church bere, scathingly con- demned the action of Rev, L. 8. Hughem, of Stratford, who resigned his pastorship recently on doctrinal grounds. At the anpual gathering of the Men's Brotherhood of the church 'to- day, Rav. Mr. Leichliter refer- red to Dr. Hughson as "that poor prune mp at Stratford," .and said it wag a reflection on the Presbyterian church to which he was going. o 84s sttesesesrenanase Pet IIPIIPIIPIOIEIAIIE SY ECP E OIRO 3 .

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