Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Jun 1921, p. 1

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ALLEN NOW PLAYING 6¢ DESERT YEAR 88: NO, 139, KINGSTON, - ONTARIO. THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1921. . [ALLEN MON., TUES, WED. "THE BIRTH OF A NATION" ---- ly British Whig LAST EDITION sodlety in the broader sense because } if 'this thing Mr. Stillman is ye : agement. beyond measure to the rad- [ : to do can be done it will give encour- fcals of the world. 1 a "Worsé Than Bolsheviki." po DANCING MASTERS APPROVE "SHIMMY" ROGERS GETS "iu WILL (RERAR Davies, Borden, Meredith and | SENDS CABLE French Convention Decides It May be. Danced Within Limits of Decorum Lamothe Chosen by Dom= inion Government. iAldSidy people-are pointing to us TEN YEARS For AssaulingD i etective Dur- can-----Docters Fail Te ~ Prove Convict Insane. i Canadian government Ottawa, June 16.--As a permanent panel of judges to work in conjune- tion with the Hague arbitral tri-| bufial in the nomination of appoint- | { ees to the court of international jus- | tice of the league of Nations, the | has selected | Conflicting opinion from emingnt | Sir Louis Davies, chief justice of the | allenists was th of Convict Leo Rogers before Judge | Madden at the Court House on Thurs- | of Toronto; and Chief Justice Gu day morning' on two counts, first of | tave Lamothe of Montreal. wounding with inteut to do grievous | 3 bodily harm to Walter Duncan, and Other men of high standing, secondly of unlawfully wounding his | only of whom, however, can be C lawful detainer, at Portsmouth peni- | dian nationals. | parties To the league go before the tentiary on December 30th, 1920. The facts leading up to the trial are already well known and were rei- | terated by Waitél Duncan, inspector uf the R. C. M. P., who told of sev- | v8 form the international court. eral visits to the penitentiary in con- | nection with the investigation then being conducted. At the third inter- | view he told of the cunning plan ot | "the accused to brain him and make a! dash for liberty. Rogers hit him on | the head three times with a mitten | filled with thirteen and a half ounces | of lead, but Duncan was able to hold bim by the throat until he was aided Ly nearby guards. Exhibits were to show produced the ingenuity of the prisoner. A skull | cracker, and several daggers as well as the loaded mitten were shown and several lqtters written partly in feature of the trial | supreme court; Chief Justice Sir William Meredith, | s- | 8 | The panel may nominate four The nominees of assembly and council of the league and from among the total a panel of eleven judges and four deputy judg- HOPE TO LINK UP Organization, New York, June 16.- Espionage Act of 1917 the seizure and confiscation of arms or munitions intended for illegal ex- | port will bé applied to the machine guns seized by the customs officials on the steamship East Side and be- lieved to have been destined for Ire- land. Investigators hope to link® up the owners of firearms with an or- ganization engaged in shipping arms to the Sinn Fein faction in Ireland. Sir Robert Borden, |p DROP UF.0.? His Actions Regarded Sus- picious--Premier Drury Has Lost Friends. Toronto, June 16.--Is Hon. Tom erar, leader of the :; Agrarians, | through with the U.F.0.? This is the question which is be- all | premier {ing circulated pretty | telegram which the U.F.O. headquar- LWO ters received that Mr. Crerar will ana- net be able to tour the Drury and J. J. Morrison, has given point to rumors which have {Pears to be a mixture of thé Boston | been going about that the farmers, [2nd fox trot; the gliding, which ex- | organization in the east are not in " harmony with the tariff ideas of the | With it a dance with western Progressives. freely. Tae province with On the other hand, it is said that Hon, Drury Loses Friends. For instance, the truck deals of Mr. Biggs have And discussion. the actions of certain members of the {U.F.0. government have not Owners of Firearms With Sinn Fein | with approval of th {and that some of the things done are ~The Federal |regarded as having hurt rather than authorizing | helped the Farmers™ movement, not {only in Ontario, but in other parts. met © western chief, not helped much to add prestige to the Farm- ers' government, the good roads cney spent has startled even sup- porters of the U.F.O. then camo The Paris, June 16.--Two months age the Academy of European Dancing Masters solemnly rempunced the "shimmy" and all itg contemporaries at its annual meeting in Paris. But dancing masters, which lays claim to being an even more authoritative body, decided that within the limits of decorum the "shimmy" might be danced, and at the same time it ap- proved the Java and the whoie col- lection of what are 2alled modern danceg as suitable to be taught by members ef the union. These are the Slingan, which as demonstrated, ap- |aggerates the "shimmy" by mixing "three-time" 'music, and "Minette and Riptintin," a juvenile dance, which is likely to become the most popular of all, Other new dances, including the Chucha, which is the combined effort of eighteen English dancing masters are being displayed at the conference of the union. But it is with slightly cynical feel- ings that the daficing masters and mistresses are displaying their care- fully thought-out and beautiful steps, for they know that whatever they design in their inspired moments will count but little with the fickle public, which here, as in. America, begins to tire of toe-tripping. ADVICE TO DRUGGISTS yesterday the convention of French ! 70 MEIGHEN Wants Canada's Right to Re- strict Japanese Immi- gration Preserved. Vancouver, B.C., June 16.--Prem- ier Oliver has cabled Premier Meigh~ any renewal of the Anglo-Japanese treaty should preserve to Canada the right to restrict Japanese immigra- tion, something which the present treaty does not stipulate. Premier Oliver also wishes power given 10 provincial -governments to preclude the employment of Orientals on pro- vincial government land and timber contracts. British Columbia sought to exclude Orientals from this work but the federal minister of justics {and the appeal court of British Col- umbia have both decided such a clause contrary to the provisions of the Japanese treaty. | Premier Oliver said: "In any new jtreaty which 'may be negotiated the | gavernment is desirous there shall be I preserved to the province the right [to deal with its own resources un- hampered by treaty obligations." | Government investigation shows there are five hundred Japanese own- jerz of farms in British Columbia and one hundred hold leases. One hund- |red Chinese, own farms and three bundred and sixty hold leases. en in London, strongly urging that as people of high position and are asking what is to become of them if we are allowed to reek our ills on the world regardless of the laws of morality--regardless of those laws that we are supposed to uphold. When I consider what Mr, Stillman is trying to do, the thought comes to me that he is worse than Bolshe- viki. It also convinces me-that he is abnormal, as'T have said before' Here Mrs. Stillman lapsed into a period of silence, which she broke by saying: "I feel keenly what all this means. It is not hard to appreciate the feeling af those socialistic per- sons who would stone us for permit- ting these things to be. It certainly is not of my doing. Yet I scarcely could blame anyone who did attack us under the circumstances. But re- member Stillman is not the only per- son who is indulging himself in such a reckless fashion." - Two photographers appeared dur- ing the interview and Mrs. Stillman condescended to pose for them. One of them, a movie man, wanted to get her out into the fields,.s0 at his sug- gestion, the party motored down Lo Wappingers Falls, a village twenty miles south of Poughkeepsie. Outside of that town the cinema man obtain- ed the desired setting. After he completed hig work Mrs. Stillman sat on a stone wall alongside the road and continued to talk to reporters. "You are really fighting for your children?" she wag asked. "Yes," she said. "I always have Baseball on the Town's Half Holiday--George Exley * Is Very IIL (From our own Correspondenty- Napanee, June 16.--The Napanee baseball team opened its baseball season on home grounds on the firat Wednesday half-holiday when they took the Sydenham baseball team into camp by defeating them by the tscore of 12 to 9. The citizens' band and members of the Napande teain and town officials paraded from the town hall to the grounds. Mayor Mark P. Graham opened the fire. works by throwing the first ball, Ed- ward Roy doing the receiving. The mayor is some baseball player and showed the opposing team how to put the ball squarely over the plate. A good crowd witnessed the game and were kept on their feet by the rand rally made by the Sydenham team. Keon of Sydenham made the longest hit of the day, a triple to deep centre field and only fast fleld- ing held him there. George Exley, South Napanee, was taken seriously ill on Monday night and two doctors from Kingston weirs ° summoned and with two doctors from Napanee and a nurse, an opera- tion was performed. It was found that he had cancer of the stomach and very little hopes are held out \ visible and partly in invisible ink | were exhibited to show the obsession | See eae NOT LIKELY TO TEACH RELIGION IN SCHOOLS less All Denominations Agree on What Is To Be Taught. fer his recovery. The death occurred on Tuesday evening of Mrs. Hugh Davy at her home on Thomas street. Deceased was about eighty years of age and had spemt the greater part of her life in and around Napanee. She, leaves to mourn her death three daughters, Mrs. J. T. Glover, Napa- nee: Mrs. Mollie Welr, Chicago and Mrs. J. D. Thompson, Deseronto; And then, again, the action of Pre- mier Drury in the timber deals with Backus has not been considered good generalghip, but the last straw was found when the premier protested about the control of the waters of the Lake of the Woods being looked after by the federal governnfent. The bill passed in the federal housa met with approval from the Farmer members of the west, and the object- loved children, and they seem to love me. The young people of 'so- clety'--as it is called in a narrow sense--always were my favorites. I always was the champion of their rights. "The children of the rich, you know, really do not have such a good time. They have no individuality. They do not have an opportunity to develop themselves. As I think of Newspaper Advertising Recommend. ed by Expert. Toronto, June 16.--Newspaper ad- vertising was strongly urged upon the druggists at the annual conven- tion here of the Ontario Retail Drug- gists' Association, by Frank Stock- dale, conductor of the Retail Merch- ants' Institute, Chicago, and former- 'of the prisoner for liberty. z PICTURES HER HUSBAND AS BEING MONEY MAD Mrs. James Stillman Throws Off Reserve and Discusses Her Difficulties. Insanity Plea, | These exhibits along with the evi- | dence of Dr. C, K. Clarke, Dr. Ed- | ward Ryan, Dr. Thomas Cumberland | and Dr. W. G. Anglin were utilized in | the consideration of the plea of in} f sanity put forward, on behalf of the | prisoner by his counsel, T. J. Rigney. | A 7' tl tendencies to paranoia dementia prae Dr. Clarke testified that as the result of interviews with Rogers he believ- ed that he was suffering from para- mola dementia, which is always ac- companied by hallucinailons leading to violence. On the other hand, the other three witnesses considered that he 'could be classed only as a defec- tive, Dr. Ryan testifying that he had cox, a disease found among youths. The testimony of the witnesses conflicted and in laying the charge before the jury Judge Madden point- ed out that they must judge as best they could, The' brutal attack upon Duncan was admitted by the defence but in exteiruation the plea tion taken by Premier Drury seems ly chief of lecture bureau, Associated of insanity had been entered. This plea could only be sustained should it appear that the prisoner was suffering from such hallucina- | tions as, if in bxistence. would justify the -act he had committed. On the other hand, if the hallucinations were of such a nature as not to jue- tify the detion, or if there was reali- | zation of the action he could be held accountable. The members of the jury were: William Sloan, Storrington: Fred Truscott, Portland; Hiram Vaness, Portland; Thomas Garrett, Lough- boro; George Draper, Edgar W. Rit- chie, Miles Spafford, William 'G. Simmons, Adam F. Roney, Joseph Fowler, John A. Thornton, John F. Ramsay and R. B. Gibson, Kingston. The jury returned a vérdict of guilty against Rogers, after being out twenty minutes, and Judge Madden: sentenced the convict to ten years imprisonment. As Rogers has eleven years of his old sentence to serve, he is scheduled to remain in the peni- Aentiary twenty-one years. KILLS GIRL-WIFE, THEN SUICIDES $ Fires] Hamilton Foreigner F : Africa; and Hughes, Australia. Three Shots Through His Wife's Breast. . : A ---- Hamiiton, June 16.--Karnelo Sec- huk, a foreigner, residing at 29 Im- perial street, killed his wife vester- "day and then ended his own life. Sec- Ruk recently returned from the west. The pair had been quarreling ever since. Sechuk fired three shots through his wife's breast and then turned the weapon on himself, firing a ballet which pierced his heart. A pathetic feature of the double | tragedy was the fuct-that"the giri * was only fourteen years of age, She married Sechtk justiore year ago. i. Sechuk's sister alter hearing the shot ran into the bedroom where slaying took place and saw the proper and constitutional manner, it lftempted interference with elections the case for Canada on the embargo Toronto, June 16.--There is little if any probability of the Ontario gov- ernment's acceding to the suggestion of Toronto Methodist conference that religious instruction in the = public schools by clergymen be allowed within school hours. This is the consensus of opinion in school circles. Hon. R. H. Grant, minister of education, has intimated that he does not favor religious in- struction unless all denominations can agree on what is to he taught. The law at present allows religious instruction outside school hours by consent of the trustees. HON. DR. TOLMIE STATES THE POSITION OF CANADA In Regard to British Cattle Embargo--Churchill Pre- sided at Meeting. London, June 16.--Hon. 8. PF. Tolmie, minister of agriculture, last |. night made an.important statement regarding the position of the Domin- ion government respecting' the em- bargo in Great Britain against Can- adian cattle, In an address before the Empire parliamentary development committee, presided over by Right Hon. Winston Churchill, Dr. Tolmie made it known that while the Cau- adian government had for many years aggressively pressed its pro- tests against the embargo in a was in no way responsible for the propaganda along this line in Eng- land; nor for interference or at- or polities in England. Dr. Tolmie is in London to present question before the royal! commis- sion investigating the subject. The meeting at which he spoke last night was atlended hy several members of the British cabinet, and by Premiers Massey, New Zealand; Smuts, South NEWS OFF THE WIRES {to have lost him many friends. The letter which Mr. Crerar has tour CAPITAL GOING IN, ing Industries, promised to send giving his reason for not taking the U.F.0. leaders is being awaited with interest. with the It is Helping Australian Manufactur- Melbourne, June 16.--The move- tinues, not less sterling of new capital, Australian and Britigh, is proposed to be spent in new enterprises in Australia. From March 22nd; 1920, to February 22nd, 1921, he said that 22 new enterprises or extensions of old ones had been registered with a capital of 3,500, 000 pounds amount feing for woolen and knitting factories. ment of British capita] into Austral- ian manufacturing {industries con- Speaking in Sydney recent- ly, the federal treasurer stated that than 10,000,000 pounds sterling, half of this A 'large number of foreign (not ----. FIVE SHARE REWARD British) companies are awaiting ac- tion on their application fot permis- sion to register, which had been held up under the war precautions act. The aggregate capital of these appli- cants according to the federal treas- urer is 20,000,000 pounds sterling. .Regulations have now been under the amended war precautions act, and several applicants have been permitted to register. issued . FOR GARFIELD CAPTURE Toronto, June 16.--The reward of capture of Norman be divided equally among the five persons instrumental in rounding up Georgetown after he nad escaped from Woodstock jail. - hi Each Gets $200. $1,000 for the Garfield will ---- the murderer Attorney-General Raney An- nounces His. Decision -- at decision was afinounced yes- IN CONDENSED FORM terday afternoon by Attorney-General Raney, who has authorized the pay- ment of $200 each to Miss Elizabeth Advertising Club, of the world. Mr. Stockdale advised the druggists ser- fously to consider the newspaper pro- position if they desired to increase their sale and add new customers ta their lists of patrons. The druggist should place his advertisements on the basis of two per cent. of his sales, Mr. Stockdale said. --n A VETERAN DEAD Daniel Gayin Buried With Military Honors, Perth, June 16.~--THe body of Daniel Gavin was buried with mili tary konors on Tuesday. The Lanark and Renfrew regimental band and a number of returned men headed the funeral procession to St. John's Catholic church, and afterwards to the Catholic cemetery. The "Last Post" was sounded by Bugler James Smith. The dead veteran, who was 101 years of age, was born in Ire- land. For twelve years hé was in the service of the Imperial army and had drawn 'a pension for a great mauy years. On coming to Canada he joined the Royal Canadian Rifles. In the early days he was with the C.P.R. on construction work and af- terwards became an engineer. -- SAY CEMENT IS TOO DEAR Legislators Want Quebec to Estab. lish Plant, Quebec, June 16.--A delegation of members of the Legislature and of mayors of the province of Quebec will wait on - Premier Taschereau shortly, asking for the establishment of a provincial cement plant. This plant would be used for the making of cement used for municipal works and for the resurfacing of roads. : It is claimed that the price of cement is now 25 per cent. higher here than in the United States, and that this high cost prevents to .a great extent the development of pub- lic works. This plant would not com- pete with existing private plants, but would rather be used for the provin- cial and municipal works. ------------ Bank is Spreading Out. Washington, June 16,---A report received from the U.S. consul at Puerto Plata, states that the Bank of 4 Tidings From Places Far and Near Are Briefly Recounted. Optimistic crop reports from Sas- katchewan. A.' Bolwell, Toronto, was- elected president of the Quebec and Ontario conference of typographical unions. Rev, Wesley Elliott, of Belleville, was elected President of the Bay of Quinte Methodist conference at Whit- by. At Irvine, Alta., Hon. Mr. Crerar flayed the Fort William grain _in- aairy. He says it was hastened be- real, Appelbe, Mr, and Mrs. J. A. Tracy, Robert A. Appelbe and Walter Law- son, junior. 4 : Gathering of Rotarians 'at Brockville, Thursday Brockville, dune 16.--Upwards of Otta , Jot which, 150 Rotarians™ from Toronto, Mont- 'Kingston, Niagara Falls, Watertbwn and Ogdensburg, N.Y., gathered here to-day for the charter presentation to the newly or- ganized Brockville club t J. R. MeCullogon brother of Dr. G. °C. McCullough, Nova Scotia has opened a branch at Satiago. The Canadian bank already hag a branch in Santo Domingo City and took the opportunity afforded by the closing of the "local branches of the Americar Foreign Banking Cor- poration to extend its activities, to the north of the Republic, _ -------- Bight students are expelled from Toronto University for dishonesty in examinations. 5 Poughkeepsie, N.Y., June 16. -- Throwing aside the reserve that sie has maintained up to the present and diccussing 'her marital difficulties with the greatest frankness, Mrs. Anne Urquhart Potter Stillman yes- terday attributed the causes that ied up to the starting of the divorce ac- ticn by James A. Stillman, to the money madness of Wall street. Shé pictured the former head of the National city bank as but one of the many who have fallen victims to the money greed and characterized the women with whom he is alleged to have been intimate as "mere phonographs for the expression of certain emotions of such men." Mrs, Stillman takes the position that the ordeal she now is Rassing through will be of value to the women of the world and that a victory for her in the divorce suit will frustrate any other such attempts. . Seated on the arm of a wicker rocker on the front porch of tne home of John E. Mack, guardian .f her youngest son, in Arlington, Mrs. Stillman discussed her banker hus- band in the most impassionate man- ner, at no time raising her voice above {ts conversational tone. She answered virtually every question pul to het by reporters which did not have a bearing on the suit and ox- pressed herself as confident that she and her son, Guy, who will be three years old next November, will win. "I look on Mr. Stillman as I would on a sick man in a hospital," shesaid. "He has many good qualities but lie is abnormal like many men in Wall street. Mr. Stillman is not the only one of his kind by a long shot. The fault appears to lie with the life they lead down there. It is the constant struggle for wer--the eternal mania for making money. It is this complex power that turns these men away from their equals in their moments- of rest from business--in tig times of relaxation. - Yacht Filled with Women. "These men turn to their infer- iors because they want nothing to do with persons who are their equals. It was thug with Mr. Stillman. That is why he turned to poor Mrs. Leeds, and filled his yacht with women--- was it eight or ten of them?--and would have nothing to do with his ewn family. Such women as these are mere phetographs for the ex- pression of certain emotions of such raen. "Mr. Stillman's eldest son refused to shake hands with his father after learning of his way of living. Just consider that. Think of it. Does that not show that there was ab- normal «condition of mind in Mr, Seiliman--Surely this was not a normal family condition. - "Then Mr. Stillman started out to it 1 am more and more convinced the rich are not really happy." CALL FOR VENGEANCE AT BURIAL SERVICE Throngs in Tears for Boy Who Was Drowned by Black Hand. New York, June 16.--Sorrowing thousands, a great many of them wo- men with babies in thelr arms, afraid to leave them at home, 2d the streets yesterday while the funeral of b-year old Giuseppe Varotta, drowned by kidnappers in the Hudson river, passed through the east side neighborhood in which ihe murdered child had been a favorite. The sympathies of the mourners turned to mutterings when they caught sight of a 'broad white silk ribbon displayed by two of the four young men bearing. tha casket on which had been lettered: - "A_victim of the black hand. demand justice." The appeal for vengeance stirred the great crowd, The police with dif- ficulty succeeded in keeping order and the procession started for the church not far away. : The boy's father, Salvatore Varot- ta, whose visible grief so greatly af- fected the onlookers that women and children wept in sympathy, declined to ride in a carriaga He walked be- hind the white clad children who car- ried wreaths of flowers. He wrung his hands in anguish, fféquently mur- muring, "my son, my son," We Janis To Play in Paris "Peg 0' My Heart" Paris, June 16.--Miss Elsie Janis is to play "Peg o My Heart" in French at the Theatre de Vaudeville here during September and October. The extraordinary command _of French possessed by this actress won her the honor of being chosen for the part, - although eleven well-known French stars were eager to appear in it. "I shall not try to use an Irigh- French accent, because that would not mean anything in Paris," said Miss Janis, "I am going to give it French as she is pronounced at the Comedie Francaise." Communism Taught, Riga, June 16.---Most of the younger generation of Russians are \ Bolshevik, says Captain Merion C. Cooper, of Jacksonville, Fla., the Am- Lerican flyer who was captured by Russians while serving in the Polish army and recently escaped from a Moscow prison. He attributes this to the Bolshevik educational system, under which Communism is taught in the schools. : + Thempson. The funeral one granddaughter, Miss Juanita took placa Thursday afternoon' 'to Riverview cemetery. . Miles 'Plumley, St. Catharines} spent a few dags this week renewing acquaintances in town.' Mrs. Emsle7. Oshawa, is the guest of Mrs, M. 8. Madole. Dr. and Mrs. K.. L. Me Kinnon and son, Donald, Renfrew, spent a few days this week with hee mother, Mrs. W. C. Scott. Miss Cel- estine Daly entertained a number of her young friends on Monday after~ noon at a birthday party. Mrs. H. McCarthy, Yarker, is t guest of Mrs, E. 7. Pollard, Mae Steacy left on Monday for Ta- ronto to attend the graduating class of Wellesley hospital. Mrs. Richard Lawson, Bancroft, is spending a few days in town renewing acqaintances. Miss Lillian" Hartman returned to Teronto on Sunday after a month's vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Hartman, Thomas street. . oo Mrs. Gilbert MecGreer, Winnipeg, is spending the summer with friends in Napanee. Mrs. James CoKins, who has been the guest of her niece, Mrs. E. I. Boyle, returned to Morden, , Man., on Monday last. The ladies S¢ld their Wednesday afternoon tea at the bowling club yesterday after- voon. Mrs. (Dr.) Galbraith and Mrs. Herbert Daly poured tea and were aseisted by Mrs. J. E. Robinson, Mra. @h.alph Sills, Mrs. U: M. Wilson, and tle Misses May Hawley and Dia:z Miller. The men's rinks competed in the first round of the Gibbard: trophy; the final rounds will be plays ed off this afternoon. NO GREEK OFFENSIVE FOR SEVERAL WEEKS King Constantine Does Not Go to the Front Till August 3rd. Smyrna, June 16.--It is improbe able that the Greek offensive against 5 the Turkish Nationalists will be start- ed for several weeks, King Constan tine declared to the Associated Press yesterday. He said he would not go to the front before July 3rd, and that he did not expect to return to Athens until August. The Greek army now numbers two hundred thougand fighting men in Anatolia, and it has one Hiindred thousand reserves. The National X ists, it is estimated, have less than 2 one hundred thousand. . eer op DR, STUFFER'S DEFENCE Of His Practice of Anmonhcing Strik. ing Sermon Subjects. - Whitby, June 16.--Addressing the 5 i n r turn the revolver 'on him- 'Séehuk, after fatally wounding deliberately turned the wea- gain on Nis wife. 5 The woman some time ago an- Bay of Quinte Methodist conference S824 5 4444544949404 yesterday, Rev. Byron Stauffer, Tors # # jonto, defended his practice of an- # |nouncing striking subjects for his destroy his own home, to demolish it and to fling the wreckage all over the world. I mean what I say, be-|# 'cause of a bye-election. : Hon. Mackenzie King, liberal leads er, is working out the itinerary of a Who yesterday was elected at Edin- burgh as president of the Inter- national Association of Rotary Clubs. " A : + GERMANS IN SILESIA nounced that she was going to re- tush her wedding ring and be "just] a girl again." It is believed the fact. at sho intended separating from husband was the motive for the for a $750,000 policy | Magistrate Jones upon Joseph life of Alexander Smith, Presi- of their firm. \ : } . Sachkoff, Hamilton Russian, shoots - child-wife dead, and | -- next summer political tour which during the recess will cover the east and west. By a large majority, the National Council of Women voted at Calgary to come into federation with the So- clal Service Counigil of Canada: Two years in Portsmouth penitenti- ary was the sentence imposed by! LE § i man, who pleaded at Toronto. New York stats officials gullty to bigamy |, hope ro ake Pine camp on Pine 4 northwest of . Watertown, NY, a brigade camp for the national guard | he 5 Eb? | i : tess * > : : le 3 * ~ g : #77 g : 330 rh i if EI § 3 fiz I. "Pee é nd tresevaceesss 310 PPE 002 0002 09 old tress 000007 cause I have had letters of sympathy from as far away as Japan." . Mrs. Stillman was asked what she {meant and she explained: "This 1it- erally has gone all over the world. Tt is not a pleasant thing to say, but it and that is why I say it. A * ARE VERY STUBBORN + + * # London, June 16.--A semi- # + official dispatch reported here & # that all allied operations have 4% been suspended in Silesia be- $ # cause of the stubbornness of the # 4 Germans. + # The Germans were said to & % have refused to withdraw their 4 4 volunteers from occupied creas 4 # until the Poles have been forced 4 % back. + * ' CRF PFPPOP HOOD Oe sermon}, and said: "If the author of a book will Jook long and pa for a title that will catch the 11 eye; if a newspaper editor deems important to have a fetching head- line for a column of news; surely the preacher, bidding for the ear of the public, ought to be permitted to an- nounce attractive themes for his se mons, There is a good deal of f | ishness talked about sensationalism.' No great statesman or scientist b lived who was not sensational. preachers that count m be tional to a degree." ny

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