® ALLEN NOW PLAYING! "Madonnas ---- NOT WAIVE ANY RIGHTS I Is Hoped That Negotia- tions For Conference Are | Not Ended. ° London, July 19.--Irish negotia- tions appear to have reached a dead- ! lock insofar as they concern the tripartite conference' between Lloyd George, British prime minister, Eam- onn de Valera, Irish repiiblican lead- er, and Sir James Craig, premfer of Ulster This developed last night when Sir James, as he departed for Belfast, issued a statement on the subject of self-determination whieh is interpreted to mean that he will not compromise on any matters per- taining to Ulster's political rights While the statement has made a deep impression upon political circles in many quarters it is not accepted as final and hope is expressed that the negotiations for such a conference are not ended. : Likely to be Recalled. Belfast, July 19./~--~The return to Belfast of Bir James Craig, Ulster 'premier, and members of the cabin- et who have been with him in Lon- don ip connéction with the Irish peace movement, must not be taken as a rupture of the negotiations, it was declared today by Col. Spender, secretary of the delegation, on its arrival here. It is thought, indeed, that the delegation will be recalled to London next week. MILITIA CHEQUES WERE FORGED "ly Stolen From No. 2 Headquarters. " London, Ont., July 19.--flvin T / Burgess, Toronto, is under arrest here, charged with passing a cheque on G. R. Stevedson, grocer, bot. Thomas. Burgess is about twenty, and claims to be the son of a To- ronte contractor. From the appearance of the cheque retained by Mr. Stevenson ,the paper + ..and several others of the kind must 'have been stolen from the depart- ment of militia and defence, Toron- to, or the men have had a confeder- ate in the office there. The cheque was far. $19.75 and was signed by R. T. McFurson, HQ, M.D. No. 2. It was payable to James T. Anderson, and was endorsed by | him. The sum payabla was perfor- ated with a protective machine and numbered 334-65. . The cheque was drawn on the Bank of Montreal, and was evident- ly stolen from the department of militia and defence, as it bore that designation. Burgess confessed hg got the cheque from Roberts, who, he said, had a dozen or so of the same de- scription, all numbered and perforat- ed, in amounts ranging from $20 to $80, and Roberts, too, had cashed several of other issues of the de-| partment of militia "and defence. And all bore the earmarks of the militia department. ] Burgess is a returned soldier, and had in his possession a discharge certificate of James T. Andezson, 34762, Toronto. When offering the cheque to be cashed Burgess produa ed this discharge and with a sol- dier's button in the lapel of his coat and a cheque with every appearance of being issued by the militia depart- ment, the proceeding appeared to be perfectly regular to Mr. Stevenson. Burgess confessed to Roberts giv- ing him part of the proceeds of his work in the city, and that Roberts had a big bundle of cheques of thes militia and defénce departm@nt when the discovery was made 'by Stevenson. Roberts has a wife Weston; Ont., Burgess has been wanted by the Toronto police for several months gn charges of passing forged eth on the department of miiltia and de- fence. These cheques, the police, say, are scattered all over the coun- try and total many thousands of dol- lars. "Lady Lena," a barred Plymouth Roch hen, registered at the Domin- 'on experimental farm at Kentville, N.8., as No. 63, laid one hundred ang 'our in one hundred and four lays ands, the Halifax Chronicle as- jerts, the champion of the world. HUSBAND AND WIFE | | telligent treatment is given," he My wife holds the cards $0 that © Jveryonp can see them --W.L.K. What Does Your Wife Do 2 j agriculture, | based upon reports "froth Mr. | -f ready this yoar, regeneration," ALLEN NOW PLAYING "Madonnas and Men" REPORTERS NEAR suis "77 DEATH IN RAPIDS Motor Boat Floats Into Whirl- pool--Indians Save Two Men. / Ogdensburg, July 19.--In secur- ing news of the fate of the Rapids King, newspapermen had to motor eight miles out of Massena and then | cross the Murphy rapids to Barn- hardt's {sland In a motorboat. After that they were forced to walk six miles dhe length of the island, in order tc view the boat. On the return the motorboat Hel- en, commanded by Henry Payment, failed to function in the rapids while the craft was in midstream. For a time the boat floated ea ly and then swung out into the swift current, which leads to eternity. For | a time the men believed they were doomed, : - Then suddenly a light skiff, pro- pelled by two Indian guides, Chief White and Joe Lant, shot out from the western shore, The Indians reached the motorboat, took the newspaper men aboard and carried them safely ashore after an struggle against the mighty curresg LESS WHEAT SOWN - IN 17 COUNTRIES U. S. Statistics Show Big Im-~ | provement in Condition of Canadian Crops." Washington, July 19.--Estimates of the amount of wheat seventeen countries for which statis- tics are available show an acreage of 151,000,000 acres this year against 155,000,000 last year, according to a summary. « foreign crop reports made public. by the department of The estimates were elgium, Bulgaria, Poland, Rumania, Czecho- Slovakia, Algeria, Morocco, Spain; France, England, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Tunis, Canada, India and the United States. Comprehensive estimates of the areas for the 1921 harvest in this hemisphere are not available, the report said. Wheat in Canada shows. a condition of 102 against 98 at a corresponding date last year; on oats, 100 against 93; barley 99 against 98; rye 101 against 96; peas 98 against 98; mixed grains 99 against 101; hay and clover 97 against 95; alfalfa 101 against 94, and pasture 100 against 94. = Crops in France are suffering from lack of rain, the report said. The second crop of hay is problematical in that country and the supply of winter forage is seriously affected. Climatic conditions in Germany have been favorable for growing crops, The reserve of grain in that country is sufficient to last until the new crops are harvested. Showers and light rains have im- proved conditions in the United King- dom, but the quantity of rain was not nearly what was needed. In the southern hemisphere crop .con- ditions have been reported favorable. Rains have been reported in Austra- lia and prospects for the coming crops continue favorable. Reports from Argentina indicate the crops at present are badly in need of rain. Killed by Lightning. : Saskatoon, Sask, July 19.--While plowing during a severe thunder- storm Friday night, Thomas Gnad- inger, aged twenty-four, of Aber: deen, Sask., was struck by lightning | and instantly killed. The farmer's two horses were also killed. Wilfrid Glenn, aged twenty-six, son of Peter Glenn, died at London, Ont., from the effects of being bit- ten by an insect while on his vacktion three days ago. MADNESS MALADY: "DECLARED CURABLE French Doctor Insists Intelli- gent Treatment Will Re~ store Sanity. -- Paris, July 19.--Madness in al] its stages is a malady of the nerve cen- tres of the brain and is easily cur- able, according to Dr. Louis Toul- ouse, the famous French alienist. Lecturing in Paris, Dr. Toulouse ectimated that there werd 65,000 idi- ots confined in asylums "n' France, the detention of whom costs the French government 50,000,000 francs annually. 4 In addition, he sald there were in Paris more .than 100,000 half-in- sane persons walking the streets of Paris who constituted a Public dan- ger and the presence of whom was manifested by the extraordinary Wave of homicida] mania which has caused 680 murders, including 1% patricides and eight matricides, al- "Madness is curable, provided in- "The prefnior requisity, is perfect res | pose. Nothing must worry the pa- tent. In some cases, particularly aleoholic, cures can be hel by a period of starvation varying from five to fifteen days at a time. This reucers the nerve centres more than 'Empire is Divided Re uphill | sown in | .| ing organizéd agricditure. The Uniteq KINGSTON, ONTARIO. TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1 021; Lr LAST EDITION JAPAN SEES HER CRISIS garding Effects of Disarmament | Conference. | | Tokio, | i | seams | | July 19.---Japan today aw empire divided on the great issués created by the summons of | President Harding to a sonference |on disarmament and far eastern | problems. On one side, largely in the anks of the bureaucrats, there ear 'that the (Jroposed conference i will be dominated by the Anglo-Sax- | ons and may result in strangling Japan's.-political and economic de- velopment in Asia | On the other side is a powerful | Libera! up, which demands that | Japa into the deliberations | fea submitting her wants raso- | Tut combatting for them with { confidence and not opposing just { claims, Haggling and bickering, they | insist, will ruin the cause of Ja- | pan, | Both camps agree that Japan,is facing a crisis; requiring tact and largeness of vision. Many members | of the privy council, according to the well-informed Chugai Shogyo Shimpo, are pessimistic about the | conference; they contend that the | proposal to discuss problems and policies of the Far East indicates 'co- { operation between the United States { and Great Britain in an attempt to settle international questions favor- ably for themselves, an indication of | which was to be seen in the attitude { of the English toward the Anglo- Japanese alliance. - MEXICAN TROOPS : ARE AMBUSCADED More Than 5,000 ¢ Said to Have Been Killed by Rebels. jr is or r Vera Cruz, Mexico, July 19.--It is reported that a large detahment of government troops have been am- buscaded and totally destroyed by rebels: More than 5,000 are declared to have been killed wher the regi- ments were attacked between Zaca- mixtle and Tuxpam. It was the first fight between the revolutionists and the loyal troops in that section and the ent're federal force was wiped out. -------- Mother Goes to Rescue Of Her Boy; Both Drown Detroit, July 19.--Mrs. Wolo H. Weber, twenty-eight years old, wife of W. H. Weber, was drowned in Rose Centre Lake, near Holly, in an attempt to save her son, Carl, seven years old, who also perished: Carl, who was ynable to swim, af- ter wading out a short distance, got into deep water and began to sink. Mrs. Weber ran to his aid and at once plunged into the lake, but sank, Both mother and sen went to their deaths within' a short distance of each other, . The bodies were recovered after several hours' dragging. ATTENDING GRAND LODGE. | Many Local Masons Went to the Ca- { pital Cify on Tuesday. ! A number of local members of the | Masonic fraternity left on Tuesday i alternoon for Qttawa"to attend the | annual communication of the grand lodge. Those who will be in attend- ance from the city as delegates are: Prof. P.G.C. Campbell, Major H. Lawson," P. H. Burke, H. Edgar, George Vanhorne, Charles Higgins, Harvey Milne, E. J. Hartrick, John Mercer, Frank Ludiow and F. J. Wilson. Tl IE FARMERS Calgary, July 19.--Farmers are in the saddle in Alberta, the secong provinee of Canada to send io its leg- islature a majority group represent- Farmers of Alberta fought the battie with the Liberal government of Hon. Charles Stewart on the broad issubs ot alleged iniquities of the old party system of politics rather than the record or policies of the Stewart ad- 'ministration and the polling yester- day recorded their sweeping victory. The United Farmers are prepared to accept the responsibilities of success and the Stewart government, which is heir and successor of other Liberal governments which have held office since Alberta became a province six- teen years ago, in due course will turn over to the Farmers its admin- istrative tasks. H. W, Wood was el- ected head of the United Farmers of Alberta, in its existence as a busi- ness organization. It does 'not fol- low, however, that he will become premier of the province. The name of Herbert Greenfield, viec-president of the U. F. 0,, is also prominently men- ticned for the premiership, and that ordinarily acute and assists at their I ¥ or . of George Headley, member-elect for x 4 | selves, | wages will { month with board. IMPERIAL NAVAL lion, Wainwright, Wetaski RAINS SAVE DAY. IN. SUNNY ALBERTA » ed Crops) Will Be "Average"-- Few Extra Workers 7 Needed. Calgary, Alta., July 19.--The Cal- gary Herald, in a crop review cover- ing Alberta, says: Recent rains haye helped the crops in Alberta wonderfully, and there is every evidence of the harvesting of | an average crop. Reports from the Herald's special correspondents from every section state that grain is in a healthy condition and filling. rapid- ly, but that harvesting will not com- mence until about the middle of Aug- | ust, In some Sections there has been damage from hail, but not to any great extent, considering the large field covered. ' From present indications the Wheat yield will be light, but much better than anticipated, and should there be further moisture. the con- ditions wil] greatly improve. The other grains are coming along splen- didly, while hay and grdss are in good shape and cattle are thriving. There is little-demand for harvest hands, as the farmers are mostly en- deavoring to do the work them-'| but where lp is needed run fronk $45 to $70 a Ek QUESTION SHELVED Action Was Inevitable in View of Forthcoming Disarma- ment Conference. London, July 19.--As the result of the informal discussions of the | past few.days, the naval question will | be shelved by the conference of Brit- Ish prime ministers, This course has been urged by Premier Meighen from the beginnings and its adoption has | been rendered inevitable by the de- cision to have the disarmament con- ference at Washington, It is probable that some form of resolution will be passed but it will have no relation to policy, or any contemplated act- ion, and it will commit the respect- ive dominions to nothing. It is not at all improbable that the question of the place and date for the discussion of other matters in connection with the proposed con- stitutional conference will be left in abeyance. The Cafiadian Press. is in a position to staté that this is the view held by at least two dominion premiers, both of whom, curiously enough, subscribed to the resolution of 1917, urging the Lolding of a constitutional conference as soon as possible after the war. The argu- ment they NOW use {§ thit with the | international situation in of flux, the question of machinery suitable to the status of the Empire with its at | tendant danger' of throwing the whole guéstion into the vortex of do- mestic politics can safely be de- a devising changed state {tus of a nation, de Valer | friends are quite willing to sing 'God ' | Save the King'. | | for hair-spliting over DEADLOCK INTHE ISSUE This is the State of Affairs | - "In Regard to Irish Peace Negotiations. Londen, July 19.--The Irish situa- i tion has developed into a virtual | deadlock between Lloyd George and i Sir James Craig. Sir James Craig has declined to [negotiate upon the basis of Ulster's | subordination. ---- | Waived Demand for Republic. London, July 19.--It is almost | universally agreed in political circles | where every scrap of information {available regarding the Irish nego- | tiations is eagerly discussed, that on | Friday morning Lloyd 'George man- {aged to obtain from de Valera a statement of Ireland's claims that j walved the inadmissable demand for an independent republic. As one English journalist put it: 'So long as Ireland is given the sta- and his | This was a graphic way of putting the idea that if Ireland obtains her claim for self-government, she will determine to remain within the com- monwealth of British nat.ons Under ° ordinary circumstances there would be a wide opportunity the formula in which it would be necessary td set forth such a position and great dan- ger of offending Irish loyalists of both No-th and South, but.in the present atmosphere. cf official op- timism and unofficial hopefulness it is thought that miracle. may be ac- complished. An Irish correspondent draws at- tention in The Sunday Times to one of the nmi~st significant symptoms of the moment, namely, that "Rarely has a plentjpotentiary, if de Valera can be so described, departed on a | pacific mission in-such absence of criticism. His whole party i behind him, and if he caf brin, ' «ck peace few voices will be raised in dissent. Much® comfort is drawn from the knowledge that Michael Collins, un- der whose direction it is generally supposed the gunmen haye worked, is strongly dedirous of péace. He is tired of being a hunted man, and a safe political post in the Dafl Eir- eann is said to be more in accord- ance with his wishes than a danger- ous, if heroic, existence as a fugi- tive." Most information discussed on the situation finished up with the remark that everything depends_on Ulster. How much will de Valera concede. i and how much will Craig accept? TARRED AND FEATHERED, Horrid Crimes Are Carried Out in Texas and Jlissourt, layed. In a word their position is to | leave well enough, alone. It js known | that General Smuts strongly dis- agrees with this view. practically pledged himself to secure | certain reforms, However, as only a few days more"Temain beforé the conference concludes 'its work, the probability of anything concrete be- ing decided appears to be exceeding- ly remote. : Mary's Former Husband Marries. New York, July 19.------The mar- riage of Owen Moore, motion picture actor, to Miss Kathryn Perry, his leading woman in several pictures, is announced. Mr. Moore recently Avas divorced by Mary Pickford, who dater married Douglas Fairbanks. 'Mr. and Mrs. Moore were married in Green- wich, Conn. : Any liquor in transit is now liable to seizure. A A i ARE IN ; "THE SADDLE IN ALBERTA The latest election summary gives the standing of the parties as fol- lows:--- : United Farmers Liberals Labor Independent . "* : Tie Summary Issued, Calgary, July 19.--A summary is- sited is as follows: Liberals elected-- Bow Valley, Ed- montof; §; Sedgewick, Victoria, Whitford, Calgary, 1. Total 10. * Indepondent-Conservative --T.eth- bridge. ' a Farmers ~-- Acadia, Alexandria, Camrose, Cardston, Cocljrane, Dids- bary, Gleichen, Hand Hills, High River, Innisfail, Lacombe, Lac Ste. Anne, Little Bow, Macleod, Medicine Hat, 1; Nanton, Okotoks, Olds, Peace River, #embina, Pincher Creek, Pon- oka, Redeliff, Red Deer, Ribstone, St. Albert, Stettler, Vegreyiile, Vermil- tal--31." / a ¢imealhands with'any but royalty, .. 7g } tor aid, In the last | general election in South Africa he | Dallas, Texas, July 19.--Five in- | stances of Individuals being tarred | and feathered or whipped by masked men in widely separated sections of { south, on Saturday and._ Sunday | nights, have been reported. These | included the. first woman victim of a score or more similar attacks in re- cent months. Besides, Richard Johnson, sixty- eight year old farmer who was tarred Lnear Warrensburg, Mo., it was dis- closed today that other victims were Mrs. Beulah Johnson," at Liberty, under bond on a bigamy charge, who | was taken from hotel porch in Ten- | aha, Texas, by masked men in auto- mobiles, removed to the country, di- vested of her clothing and tar aad feathers applied. Afterward her bondsman , withdrew and she was placed in jail. Phillip S.. Irwin, white archdeacon of the English Episcopal church, was whipped and tarred and feathered near Miami, Fla. and warned, it is alleged, that it he did not stop preaching rocial equality to negroes, among whom he has charge of the mission work of his church in South Florida, he would be lynched. R. F. Scott, Deweyville, Texas, was tarred and feathered and a man named McKnight, is reported to have been whipped near Timpson, Texas. T A REAL DEMOCRAT. Empcror Becomes a "Man"--Makes Himself Popular. Tokio, July 19.--The emperor left this morning for his summer villa, shattering precedents. This is the first tine the emperor ever traversed the city except in the strictest incog- nito in an automobile. This is the first: time the streets were not lined with troops when the emperor pass- ed, a few policemen' only guarding the route. It also is the first time street traffic was not stopped a half- hour before the passage of the em- peror. There has been much discussion in court circles regarding the new at- titude of the emperor toward the 'people, which many desired, but te which many old officials strenuously objected. A ' This new departure, which is high iy welcomed by the people, is the direct result of the Crown Prince's visit abroad, when, for the first time, & member of the ruling house mingi- ed with street crowds and shook SLAYER APPLAUDED ~~~ BY CORONER'S JURY Husband Freed After Killing Betrayer of His Wife. Washington, July 19.--For killing Albert J. Byrd, a world war veteran, who had confessed to breaking up his home, William E. Goetz has re- ceived 'the thanks of a coroner's jury and has been freed from all responsibility. Despite vigorous attempts by State's Attorney Ryan to have Goetz held, the jurymen, all residents ot | Seat Pleasant, Maryland, a Washing- ton suburb, not only exonerated their fellow-townsman on the ground of self-defense, but warmly congratulat- ed him. Goetz charged that his wife was guilty of repeated acts of misconduct with' Byrd in his suburban home here and in Nashville, Tenp, * CANADIAN FLAX SEED T0 IRELAND Approximately One Million Dollars Worth Exported in 1920. Ottawa, July 19. --Approximately one million dollars' worth of flax seed was exported from Canada to Ireland during 1920, according to an announcement made to-day by the department of agriculture. During the year Canada's export trade in seed made a considerable advance, die in no small degree to the com- bined efforts of the agriculture de- partment and the department of trade and commerce. Buyers of Canadian seeds were the United States, Great Britain, France and Newfoundland. In British Cglumbid, field, root and garden vegetable seeds amount- ing to 150,000 pounds were market- ed through the United Seed Growers, Limited, Penticton, B.C. Some Y5,- 000 pounds of mangel, Swede turnip, and field carrot seed, grown by the experimental farms, were sold at cus- rent wholesale prices to farmers' or- ganizations and individual farmers, Toronto Juvenile Court Is 70 Per Cent. EMcient' Brockville, July 19 --The Toronto Juvenile Court is seventy per cent. efficient, Judge H. 8. Mott said while speaking here. The boys and girls who continue to lead a life of critie after appearance in the cpurt com- prise twenty per cent., but, he added, if we had all the facilities in Toronto that we need we could cut that in half. Judge Mott regretted the paucity of juvenile courts in Ontario as com- pared with their number in western Canada. He expressed his confid- ence that if the large number of young men and women in peniten- tiaries and prisons had been dealt with from the right poin: of view in early life they would not be there, Union Pays Out $111,000. Toronto, July 19.--With no settle- ment in sight, the strike in the print- ing trade industry, affecting job shops, has cost .the Typographical Union $111,000, gecording to an esti- mate 'made by a union official. The strike haS" been in progress since June 1st, the strikers receiv- ing benefits of $25 a week if married and $20 if uhmarried. In the neighborhood of $16,000 weekly has been disbursed by the local union. RUSSIA 1S FACHG GREAT CATASTROPHE 4 20,000,000 Persons on Verge of Starvation Through Terrible Drought. Berlin, July 19.--Twenty millien persons are on the verge of starva- tion in drought-stricken sections of Russia, subsisting mainly on moss, grass and bark of trees, accord- ing to the Vossische Zeitung, which quotes information from 'reliable Russian sources." - Refugees are reported to be pour- ing into Moscow and Petrograd by thousands and to be fleeing hopeless- ly in every direction. The parched earth, it is asserted, is opening up great crevices, and wells and rivers are drying up. Foliage is asserted to have withered on the trees and a number of villages are reported on fire. ' . All cattle. in the stricken districts have been slaughtered to provide food, but it is believed impossihje to avert a catasthrophe unless food is received from outside sources. FY Plague of Locusts, Riga, Letvia, July 19.--A plague of locusts is adding to the famine in Russia, according to a despatch re- ceived here from Moscow. A swarm of the insects has greatly crops in the Kuban and Black Sea governments, where special staffs have been organized and part of the army mobilized to destroy the pests. In Turkestan vy rains have de- stroyed the irrigation works, inter. rupting rail communication. The government has applied to Moscow Nr I vo. | ---- Waterways- Scheme Threat: . 9 ens This Country's Inde- pendent Nationali Quebe¢, July 19.--Rev. Canon Scott, former chaplain in the C.E.F, in an interview, sounded a warning note with referemce to the scheme for damming the St. Lawrence in order to develop electric power and turn the river into a deep waterway to the great lakes. "The scheme," sald Canon Scott "Though expensive, Is feasible, and at first sight seems at- tractive; but Canadians must wake up to the fact that the international- izing of our great, waterway is fraught with the most momentous consequences to our national life. While we wish tG~iive on the most harmonious terms with our neigh- bors to the south, we must remember that there is one thing of even greats er importance to us as a growing nation, and that is the un'tying and intensifying our Canadian individ- ualism. .is a nation just starting on our coursy, we find ourselves bur- dened by &' heavy war debt and ham- pered for the time being by both lack of means and lack of population. As Premier Meighen said the other day in London, we have to face the fact that we have as rival a great colossus for our only neighbor on this con tinent. The United States have great lakes and great western cities and for them an open waterway through Canada would be a tremendous ad- vantage. "But what would the internation- alizing of our great and distinctive Canadian river mean to Canada? The St. Lawrence, with the excep- tion of something less than one hun- dred miles, lies wholly in Carada. It is a gigantic osset for this country. What part it wil] have to play in the development of Canada in the future no one can say. It is not merely a Canadian asset, it is an im- perial one, and must be wholly under our control. At some futu-e time the Empire might be at war with a foreign power with which the United ~ States. were at peace, 1nd it might be nec¥ssary for us to close the river by mines or in other ways. It is the very spinal marrow of Canada and on its shores and the shores ot fts tributaries lle the cities or villages of a large part of Quebec and Ontario. : 2 "The internationalizing of the St. Lawrence w:iuvdd cut us off both really and sentimentally from the lower provinces. The thing is un- thinkable, Would the Americans consent to the internationalizing of the Panama Canal or thé Mississippi? Our great 'river must be ours and ours alone. "Canadians must face the fact that the joint stock management of the St. Lawrence would be the first step to annexation. In fact, it would be practically the moving of the bound- ary line northward to the 8t. Law- rence. We might find ourselves at any time in a most helpless national position. » 'But, quite apart from these larg- er considerations, we must remem- ber that if Canada has any mohey to invest, two or three hundred mil: lion dollars spent on our rich wager powers of Quebec and Labrador would give us all the electricity .we need, and would leave our great waterway untouched. The Amerl- cans have most of the world's gold in tireir possession and could put the scheme through tomorrow, but are Canadians willing to endanger for a spacious scheme the integrity of that great country for which our men have died, and that independent na- tionalism which alone can enable.,us to achieve our great destiny ig the future? "Firmly and politely, let us tell the two hundred and fifty members of the American Congress who lately visited us that the St. Lawrence is ours and not for sale." BURGLAR SOARE ON BROCK ST. AGAIN Believed to be Nervousness on Part of People. The people residing on Brock street, between Division and University av- enue, were given a burglar scare early Sunday morning, between two 'and four o'clock. The police patrol was called and was around the dis- trict for some time, but as far as can be learned there were no suspic- fous charactébs seen. It.is thought that it was more nervousness on the part of some of the residents than any real attempts at robbery. Kutaia Has Fallen; The Qreeks Rejoice Athens, July 19.--An official ¢om- 5 thie events of July 16th, tells of the operations around Kutaia on the southern branch of the Bagdad railway. Confirmation of the report that Kutaia had fallen on Sunday afternoon was received here, through official channels last night, and was followed by general rejole ing, ; > --