70 THE PUBLIC THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. ------ The following Dares of those who were killed or died on service overseas will be inscribed ondthe Honour Roll to be pladed in the City Hall. If there are any errors in or omissions from the list, will you be kind enough to advise the City Clerk not later Alkens, Vincent. than May 21st, 1921 2 W. W. SANDS, City Clerk. M Mackney, W. H Maclennan, Ward. Madden, Jerome. Maddigan, Michael. Martin, H. C. Matier, James E. Maund, Frederick. Mepstead, S. J. Metcalfe, P. L. Mills, John Salter. Minnes, Harry S. Milton, Charles. Moore, Melville Henry. Moore, Peter. Moran, James. Mowat, J. McDonald. Muckle, John. Murray, Frederick John, Murray, George Winder Myers, Henry, Mec MacAuley, F. McConville, Joseph. MeCormick, H. H. MacDonald, Donald. MacDonald, John. McGall, Hugh J. McKenzie, Kenneth. McKenzie, Thomas W. McMahon, Bruce. MacPherson, H, W. McQuaig,: Earl. N Norton-Taylor, H. O'Grady, Lionel B. Oldrieve, Ewart. Olsen, 0. \ P Parsons, Bar, Partridge, E. P. Partridge, Ernest William, Pecor, Charles. Pepin, W..J. T. \s Peppin, A, : "Perrin, Lawrence, Pierce, Benjamin Clifford. Poffley, Thomas Ralph, Powers, Harry. Preston, G. BE., Jr. Purtell, Vincent Edward. Q E. R Ramsay, William. Ravenscroft, Walter. Rea, Stuart Henry, Richards, B. y Richardson, George Taylor. Ringwood, T. D.'T. Roadhouse, Lewis W. Roberts, William 8. Robinson, W. Hartley. Rogers, Garfield R. Ryan, Martin J. Ryder, Edward, S Sansoucle, Ovila. Saunders, George. Saunders, H. C. Scanlon, Joseph. Scott, H. Serson, John Herald. Shangrow, J. Lawrence, Sinclair, Archie. Spende, Robert Thomas. ' Stewart, O. Rodgie. Stinson, William. Strange, Frank. Stuart, J. Duff. - Suttle, Garnett. Swaine, H. M. Swallow, 4. B. Taylor, Daniel McClennan. Taylor, G. G. R. Thomas, Edwin. ' i © Tierney, Michael. Tryon, Frederick Harold. - U ; Uglow, Henry Wright, Aldcroft, George. Allgn, Erren L. Allen, Oliver, H. Andrews, E. Ashley, Percy. Asselstine, L. M. Atkinson, J. Attwood, H. . Barry, E. J. Beevor, Vernon. Bertrand, Denis. Bickpam, William J. Bocking, Thomas H, Boswell, Leonard. Boswell, Stanley, Boyd, Harry. Brian, F. O. Bridgen, Miller, Bristlon, F. Brouse, Harvey. Brownlee, Archibald. Bryant, A. R. Byron, Stanley Roy. Burke, C. P. C Carr-Harris, Dale. " Carruthers, Kenneth B, Carter, F. A. Clancy, Michael. Clarke, B. W, Clarke, E. Clarke, R. W. \ Clarke, R. Cleary, Jerry. » Cockburn, R. J. Collins, John. Conley, 1. M. Connelly, Edward. Connolly, Harry, Connolly, Thomas. Cotter, Oliver. Crawford, J. Wilson. Creighton; Stanley. Cromien, Lawrence. Cunningham, Stanley L. - Ee ivyre, Wilfred. oolan, Edward. . Drake, Victor, Drake, Walter. Dunlop, Harry. Duff, Hugh Ramsay. Earl, Wallace® 8, E-vson, John. ' well, G. twell, G. BE. nDI'LY, % ar, William R, © vards, A. F.lis, Sidney B. Fives. Leo Joseph. Farrar, H. J. Farquhar, Fraser. Farquharson, J. Ferguson; Neal. Ferguson, Roderick, N. Fisher, Harry, : Flanagan, Thomas. Fleet, William. Fleming, G. i" Fornerf, Agnes Florion. G Garrett, W, G. Germain, Russell. Godman, Walter, Godwin, Harvey A. Goodearle, T. R. Gow, J. Eckford. Guild, Stanley. Quirt, Albert 4 Y , Michael. Harrison, A. Ross. Hawior, Ro ius awley, 1g Hazlett, er, : ol » m. 4 . Hanes. ha Hooper, Leonard Alfréd. Hora, T. - Hunter, Stanley. James, Wiltred L.- Jeton, Slatry H. , Alfred Ross. Frank. "Walker, Altred. Walker, Pred. Walker, William. - Waldron, 8. M. Wells, Herbert Charles. Williams, Ken. ' Wilson, Edward. Wilson, Eric Victor. - Wilson, Harold S. ; Wilson, Norman, Wood, 8. J. Wright, Matthew, G. Y Young, Clarence. | tion picture actress, {Warner's uncle, A MYSTERIOUS SHOOTIN | , Bedroom of Woman New York, May 17.--While John H.. Reid, a manufacturer of silk lin- gerie, living at 66 West Forty-sixth street, lay between life and death at the Fordham hospital with five pistol wounds in his face, neck and thigh, the police searched for - his supposed assailant, whose name 8 | withheld, but who is described as a | "Broadway sporting man and gamb- { ler." k took place under | mysterious eircumstances Sunday | morning in the bedroom of Mra. | Hazel Davis Warner, who occupies a | house at 1892 University avenue, the | Bronx. In, addition to the man whose name Is withheld, thé police also have sent out alarms for Mrs. Warn- er, Francis T. Boylan, who is believ- ed to live on the west side of Man. hattan, and Miss Lila Wiley, a-mo- who is Mrs. Warner's cousin. The three, together with Reid and George Keriger, Mrs 4 are said to have spent Saturday night at the Univer- sity avenue house, and were there at the time of the shooting. Reid was taken to the Fordham hospital by Keriger and Boyland in the latter's automobile, and neighbors say they saw Mrs. Warner, Miss Wiley and Boylan drive away 'from the house {shortly after. They have not been | seen since, | Keriger described a drinking party [the five had had Saturday night in {the furnished attic of the houss, | where empty bottles and glasses tos day gave evidence of a celebration Miss Wiley, Boylan and Keriger, the latter told the police, came down- stairs for breakfast this morning ba. fore either Mrs. Warner or Reid. Finishing breakfast, Keriger said (that he heard "tiptoes" on the porch {and saw a 'strange face' peering in {the window. Then, he saifl, there was |a kicking and pounding at the door, | which frightened him, and he ran |into another room and hid. | 'A few moments afterward$ | he {heard five shots in Mrs. Warner's | bedroom. After he heard the assail- ant run out of the house, he rushel up and found Reid lying on the floor unconscious. Mrs. Warner, he said, was in the bathroom, and Keriger re. | The shooting in and shot him and ran away." MURDERED IN STORE IN BROAD DAYLIGHT Furrier Robbed and Killed by Unknown Man in Montreal. Montreal, May 17.--Georges Jobin, 32 'years of age, wholesale fur- rier at 297 Amherst street, this city, wus brutally murdered and robbed in his store in broad daylight Saturday evening. The victim was battered about the head by » hammer, which was later found by the police, ani was slashed about the neck and head with a pair of tailors' scissors. The murderer. after robbing Jobin, washed his hands in the gink n the rear of the store and walked cut. No arrests have so far been made. The murder occurred in one of tae most crowded séctions of the city, tas store being a short distance from St: Catherines street, a main thorough fare of Monireal. Hundreds were passing the store at the time, but so far no material witnesses have been gecured, Eyaminatior by the police showad that the victim had been robbed. His watch and cka!s had been taken and his brother-in-law states that he was in the habit of carrying large sums of money with him, usually about $2,000 on Saturday nights, the total sales during the week. ny CANCELS LICENSES OF MONTREAL HOTEL First Time ' Quebec Liquor Commission Shows Its Hand. muntreal May 17.--The frst out- standing case under the new Quebec, liquor law was taken against a fam- ous Montseal hostelry, the Lumkins hotel, at Cote des Neiges, which, on Saturday, lost both _jts tavern and restaurant licenses. Further, the Quebec Liquor Commission is taking action before the courts against the hotel proprietor for selling lquor without a license. "The grodnd on which the licenses are cancelled in addition to the charge of selling liquor, is that the report sent to the commissicn pre- vious to y 1st, showing the quan- tity of holic liquors held by -the hotel, was not correct, in the opin- fon of the commission. i? There is no appeal against the commission's decision. .. : The Ontario rament has re cently deposited 100,000 pickerel at folly to be wise"-- but ported her as saying: "A man came | | i BLACKS CLAIM TO BE OF LOST TEN TRIBES | . Of New York Manufacturer in | Seize South African Estates Preparatory to Going to Palestine. London, May 17.--A despatch 'received here from Johannesburg, South Africa, says a strong force of police, armed with machine guns, is concentrating in the Queemstown district; where a large number of blacks, claiming to belong to one of the lost tribes of Israel, have seized large estates and committed a num- A ber of crimes against the European populace. : These blacks, the despatch assert- ed, declare they are waiting for a divine call to return to Palestine, and that their present activities are in preparation for this, : ---------- "THEY ALSO SERVE 1" Did you ever wonder Why the trees so tall, Rear their stately grandeur In the forest hall, Straight and strong, and slender, Clothed about with green, When, perchance, their beauty Ne'er by man is seen? Once I caught their secret, on a ing breeze-- "God has willed our splendor, and "tis Him we please!" & drift- Did you see the morning Passing on his way, Coaxing out the sunshine, Bringing forth the day# Silently he cometh, Making us rejoice, Calling us to join him, Though unheard his voice. Lifting hearts to praise Him on the earth below, ! Who made fair the dawning, I'd the night-shades low! Have you seen the violet in a leafy glade, Hidden 'neath the grasses, Fair and unafraid? Lost, its suttle fragrance On the summer air; In obscure perfection Blooms the flower there, Viewed from Heaven's glory, honor- oring His peace, Who doth hold the secret, its per- fume to release. All His works do praise Him Whether near, or far, Every lonely toiler, And each unseen star; Snows that tip the mountains, Clouds that veil the light, Dwellers in the valley, Or on unknown height! As the-Master willg it, each one in his place, Making known His greatness, ing bright His face! Nell Ruth Roffe. mak- Gravenhurst, NEW ATOMS EVERY MINUTE Old Idea Immutable and Unchanging © Proved Wrong. The birth of an atom is just as im- portant an event as the birth of a world. If not more so, for everything in the universe !s composed of atoms, ven the worlds themselves. Not long ago atoms were thought to be immut- able and unchanging, but the amas- ing truth has just been disclésed that new atoms are bork every' minute, just as among the faraway stars new worlds are being born, says a writer in the Edinburgh Review, Already certain kinds of atoms can be producéd in the laboratory, and such @' business would become im- mensely popular if gold and silver could be created in the same way. be thought, for already it has been discovered that all atoms are com- posed of the same kind of material-- positively electrified particles and mi- nute negative electric charges. All that remains is to learn how to put these quantities together in the pro- per amounts, just as chemists now put the proper atoms together and produce--though ofttimes under un- commercial conditions -- synthetic rubber, silk, steel, artificial dyes and the many other miracles of the labo- ratory. To understand how certain atoms have already been produced in the laboratory it is necessary to remem- ber that there are about ninety dif- ferent kinds of atoms, corresponding to the elements of which all other substances are made, and that all at- oms contain equal amounts of posi- tive and negative electricity. Just as solar systems consist of planets re- volving about a central sun and are held tegetlier by the force of gravita- tion, so do atoms consist of negative electrical charges, revolving around a central, positively charged nusleus, held together by the forces of electri- cal attraction, 3 Much Work For Little Resuit. One of the legends of antiguity credits a man known to Cicero with having put the Iifad 'of Homer into « nutshell. When the legend was 1,700 fry in the waters of the Nation river || "Where ignordnce is bliss, tis | I 10 Brock Street Ci C0oC00000nng : hy Sport Shoes FJRHE very name suggests the kind of shoes they are. FLEET FOOT-light, easy, flexible--springy and buoyant when walking the links--firm and sure when on the tennis court and bowling green, FLEET FOOT shoes were designed originally for sport. Men liked them so well--found them so restful and comfortable--that the demanded FLEET F 0OT styles for every-day wear, y Then wives and mothers and in dainty summer insist on having FLEET FOOT Pumpe aus msummer gowns insisted Now, there are styles for every member of the family--men, women, boys and girls--for morning, noon and night--work and play--in town and for holiday time, Gen FLEET FOOT shoes have the e sta them. It Bulge J get the genuine FI. FOOT pays ped on them in style, comfort, long wear an economy. R Ask your Shoe Dealer for Fleet Foot and make sure you get Fleet Foot, ey Coch i U0 0D00L00 0000000000 0DD0oonnNnnT C000000000S0000000000000 00 61 LUC00C000000000000000000000n0!: JU000000000000O0n00no: ~ ------ 0 0000D00COn0nn. Willard Attention Now WILL SAVE YOU ANNOYANCE AND EXPENSE LATER ON OUR SERVICE and ADVICE are the result -of years of battery experience. We most Strongly fecommend great care in keeping your battery well charged while car is iu uss, and WINTER DRY STORAGE for it immediately when car is laid up. 4 'Our workmen are experts----our charges most reasonable, \ Send them to us--Kingston's only Battery Specialists, WILLARD SERVICE. STATION Phone 1840. I. LESSES, Prop. \ This is not an idle dream, as might |. ROOFING AND BUILDING PAPER We carry a full stock of 1, 2 and 8 ply Ready Roofing; in plain and Slate surfaced. Also Building Papers of all kinds and our prices are right. Lemmoné&Sons | "187 Princess St. ie 1 | 3 h May 24|Juis 18July | ERG TRS AGENCY FOR ALL OCEAN STEAMSHIPS @ . - "For particulars apply toe J. P. nanCkx, ER ERE USF PIG RNEE AE FTN Ho) N. Y.,, GLASGOW, (via Moville) May 21/June 81d uly 16 June 1[July 2%July 30 ... Cameronia June 25{Aug. 20 Algeria NEW YORK---LIVERPOQL May 17|June 15(July 18 Carmania June .1jJuly 2July 30 . 'aronia June TJuly 12/Aug. Albania Sept. 3/0¢t. 1 ..Scythia Boston te Liverpool & Glasgo May 21July 9» * Chstalia N Cherbourg, Shmpton 5 ......Aquitania ..Mauretania -.Berengaria June 8 July 14lAug. 11 . 2) : . HAMBURG Jura N. Y., PIY. CHER. June $[July 21jAug. 30 ubro Trieste and Flume wall, May 17 .. June 4... SR Tune 13 (0) Pannonia **italia (0) calls at Corunna instead of Vigo. *Also calls af Havanna, -THEROBERT REFORDCO.,LiuTes GENERAL AGENTS BO KING STREET EAST TORONTO, ONT. . i MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW | i -------------- i] MONTREAL TO LIVERPOOL May 26!June S4iruly 23 Victorian Mav ny 1| July 29 .. . Melita June 3(July 8lAug. 5 . Minnedosa June 16/July 15 'Metagama £ QUEBEC TO LIVERPOOL May "4iJune 21|July 19 Emp. of France June 7{July 5 Emp, of B in MONTREAL TO GLASGOW May %;Tuly 2jAus. Li «Tunisian Tune 15/July 24|Aug. 30 +. Pretorian VONTRE.LL TO HAVRE-ANTWERP May 2:Juy 9lAug. i6 . «+. Sietlian Jute 1% ++. Montreal Mont cpi--Southampton---Antwerp Mev "Tiluns 80/Aug. & \ Corsican June 17)July 23 ., we. [ FREIGHT ONLY | Appr Salling Dates MONTREAL--LOSDON be | Tune 1. ] aie 16 , "Apelv te agents everywhere or-- 1 LiF STREET EAST, TORONTO CANADIAR PATIFIC RAILWAY 'Traffic Agents. Partridge Wire Works NICKEL PLATING AND BRASS FINISHING Now prepared to do this work. Msaufacturing Wire Fencing, Flower Border Guards, ete, ' 62 KING ST. WwW. PHONE 380, THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987 Wantleg sarything done 8 the ea - tery ne. Eatimates given on all ind of vepnira and acw work AL" eters re op ond floors 1 kinds. PAN bot fle fh BLM LF 28 Queen Street. R. H. JONES recover. ed; slip covers; all kinds of cushions repaired. $ BOAT CUSIUONS made all sizes with KAPOK filling. Auto Tops repaired, 390 PRINCESS STREET Phone 152, COLUMBIA SIX It's the shutters (hat mitke the Columbia Six & true 8ii Weather © EDMOND WALSH, Agelit 118 King or . Shon 1 " See nee ers ..Bollnghroke| . \.Scandinavign