Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Feb 1922, p. 1

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\ ALLEN ro-DAY Constance Talmadge > YEAR 80; No. 30, NEW POPE IS CHOSEN Cardinal Ratti, Archbishop of Milan, Bsa on Mon- ay. 6 A AT WASHINGTON Washington "ab final session of t ence was after and it crowd of any Art J. Balfour received a great Afte Hughes treaties Signature fol- United Britain, France, Italy, Japan, Belgium, Nether- lands, China, and Portugal At the conclusion of 'he sign- ing of 'he treaties President Harding delivered his address to the delegates and the conference ed journed n at 11.13. He offered the thanks of his na- tion and the world for their hav- ing wrought "truly great ach ievements."' calied o ePock brought out ten gathering ception on his arrival opening tary nounced "the now be signed." this Great Secre that order: Cardinai lowed in States, Rome, Feb Achille Ratti, archbishop of Milan, was pro claimed elected pope, in syccession | to the late Benedict XV tt morning, He the name of Plus XI. Thousands waiting in front of St Peter's for wisp of which would tell of the election of a new pontiff, gave a mighty shout at 11.33 a.m. when a thin wisp came from the chimney leading from the Sistine chapel. It was then known that the Roman Catholic church had once more a head. As soon as the two-thirds vote for Cardinal Ratt! had been verified Car- dinal Vannutelll, dean of the Sacred College, arose and proceeded to the throne of chosen one, accompanied by Cardinals Logue and Bisleti, and | asked Cardinal Ratti if he accepted the election be supreme pontiff, and the new Pope answered with the formal, "since it is the will of God, 1 must obey Cardinal Vannutelli = later aske the new pope what name he chose take, and upon his reply "Pius XI." Monsignor Sincere, sec retary of the conclave, verified his election to the papal chair After formalities, the cardinals of the Sacred College paid homage the new pontiff, kissing his feet and hands, and received the benediction. As Pius Xi proceeded to St, Peter's. ha halted at the great balcony and bestowed his benedic tion upon the multitude. The crowd acclaimed him with wild cheers. and troops assembled there presented arms. London, Feb. 6. Cardinal was elected pope by votes in conclave, says News Rome despatch. Pope is will take smoke, y die' IRISH NEGOTIATIONS RESUMED IN LONDON Collins and Grimth Meet the Committee of the British Cabinet. to London, Feb. 8.---Negotiations on "he Ulster situation and other points in the Anglo-Irish treaty were resumni ed at the premier"s residence today Michael Collins and Arthur Griffith headed the Irish negotiations with the Irish committee of the British cabinet. The conference lasted for an hour and a half but no insimation was given as to' whether an agree ment had been reached 0 1o apostolic Put Murderer's Glands In Another Man's Body Ossining, Fab. 6 Glands taken from the body of a murderer just at ter his executhion in Sing Sing have Ratti been transferred by a remarkable on thirty-eight eration performed at Sing Sing a few a Central! days ago, to the body of George Han- ser, a prisoner from New York city = | The purpose was to rehabilitate Hau- =a | ser physically, and to eliminate epi MANGLED BY SHARK, | leptic tendencies. DIES ON THE BEACH | A famous New York surgeon | said to have planned and performead {the operation. He was present a | the execution of Edward Parsons on | January 13th last, and dmmediately |after the man was pronounced dead "the glands from his boos London, Feb. 6. --While swim. | It was one day last week when the ming in the sea at Coogee, a wall. | surgeon reappeared at Sing Sing and known seaside resort' near Sydney, | performed the second part of the op-- Australla, Michael Coghlan, agel |eration. There hag"not yet been eighteen years, was attacked by a shark and both arms were almost sev- ered, says a Reu'er despatch from Sydney . A returned soldier, Jack Chalmers, although dazed by a fall from a div ing rock, with magnificent courage. swam to the rescue and dragged Cog- | hlan from the monster's jaws. Eye- | witnesses assisted Coghlan ashore, but ihe died on the beach Lad at Australian Seaside Re- sort Attacked by Monster While Bathing. | the success or failure of the experi | ment. : | Woman Patient at Rockwood | Jumps Out of Window A young woman patient at Rock- wood Hospital eluded her attend- |ants on Sunday and, with suicidal in- tent, jumped out of the window of her room and sustained a fracture of the ankle. The patient has been un- der mental treatment for some time, and previous attempts to suicide were frustrated She jumped from the window before her design could | be prevented. SIXTY YEARS WED, Mr. and Mrs. Tobias Carr Greedet by Host of Friends, Belleville, Feb. 6.--The sixtieth anniversary of their wedding was celebrated Saturday by Mr. and Mrs Tobias Carr at their home, 263 Fos- ter avenue, where relatives and friends gathercd to extend congratu- | lations to the couple Sixty years ago, at the home of the bride's father, Jacob Roblin, in Adolphustown, they were married by the Rev. H. Lanton. Of the thirty To Attend Fair's Convention, Robert J. Bushel, manager of the Kingston Fair, and James Hender- son, ex-president of the Kingston In- dustrial Fair Association, left for | Toronto Monday .to attend the twen- guests present on that occasion only | ty-second annual convention of the two, Mrs. J. F. Roblin, sister of the {Ontario Association of Fairs and Ex- groom, who was bridesmaid on the |Ribitions to be held on Tuesday and occasion, and G. W. Percy, of Ro- | Wednesday. Mr. Bushell will open chester, nephew of the bride, are now | the discussion on Tuesday afternoon living. with an address on the subject . { "Should railway rates to fairs and hn To Consider Waterways Re port. Ottawa, Fab. 6.---Government con- sideratdon of the report of the joint internattonal wa'erways commission | on the St. Lawrence project will | probably be given between now and the opening of parliament. | war basis?" -- Must Pay Compensation. The Workmen's Compensation | Board of the province rendered a de- cision giving Bella Thompson, wid- ow of Aden Thompson, who was ac- An explosion, followed by fire, {cidentally killed by a dynamite ex- spread panic among thousands of pa- | plosion last summer while working rons of the Lyric motion pleture | °F the township of Matilda, the sum theatre on West Twenty-third street. |°f $70 a month for the support of New York, Saturday afternoon, but |Rerself and family . The township all got out safely. {appealed from this award and the Portugal's eighth government | board at a recent sitting confirmed since February 24th, 1921, assumed |! office Monday, led by Antonio Maria | go x i Silva, Neglected To Register. | When a number of residents went HUSBAND AND WIFE. {to tha pois on Monday they found | they were not on the voters' lis's ai- | though they had cast their ballots in | the federal election in December, | They had taken for granted that the | same ¥st was being used in the pro- | vinolal election, but such was not the case. Registration in their case | was necessary, ; - | Died in New York. | Word was received in the city of [the death at New York at noon ou | Monday, of H. J. Smith, a son of the jute J. A. B. Smith, of this city, and [a brother of Norman Smith and |} Suey Smith, The Mtter went to | New Yark on Saturday. My wife forgets to empty the drip- under the ioe box. --H.K.W. What Does Your Wife Do? | ford, dies at Ingersoll, agéd 57. New steamer service to start wi April to Southampton and Bremen. | time for Hauser's condition to revea: | dhe Baily KINGSTON, Counsel For Upton Brothers And Fred Bryant Visit | Them. | When the Beard murder case is |taken "up on February 21st before [Justice Logie in the supreme court sessions at Napanee, two of the young men charged with the murder of Night Constable Richard A. Beard, Erwood and Sherwood Upton, will be taken from the penitentiary, while | {the third, Fred Bryan: will go from the county jail Bryant was commit- [ted to stand for trial for receiving goods, and his trial on 'his | charge is booked to come before Jus- | tice Riddell, at the supreme court | sessions in Kingston, and they will | be held at the same time as 'he su- | preme court sessions in Napanee. | The Upton brothers are serving | their four-year sentence for burglary. | All three of the young prisoners are in good health, so it is stated, and | are bearing up remarkably well un- der the ternible ordeal. They have | been visited by their counsel, from time to time. and are all ready to face | Canada Should Abolish the | their triat It is stated that the alleged con- Upton brothers pre- | Magistrate Rankin at the | hearing will play the big case for the prosecution, t is understood that the has some new evidence tess'ons of the sented to preliminary part in the although crown to offer The case has caused widespread interest all over tho dis'rict, and it can be taken for a certainty that the court room will be crowded during it also the progress of the case Another sensational case is booked tfor hearing at this court sitting in | Napanee when Michael Maker anda | Roy Wagar will be charged with con- | spirinz to commit an ind'ctable of- fence, that of arson It is alleged that Maker, who conducts the Strand theatre in Napanee, offered Wagar and a man named Thomas W. Walk- ler a sum of monye to burn down the | l Wonderland themstre in Napanee, | | which 48 Mr. Maker's opposition the- | atre | Indian Nationalist Mob Kill Staff of Officers { { London, Feb, 6.--A mob of two [thousand Indian nationalist volun- téers and villagers attacked polce |officers at Casura]. on February 4th, | and killed the entire staff of officers, | | watchmen and eight armed police | | who were sent as reinforcements, says a telegram received by the In- dia office to-day | The officers were bufned, and the! bodies of those killed were stripped] PREMIER IRISH PEER IS CALLED BY DEATH The Duke of Leinster Suc- cumbs to lliness in Edin- burgh, Scotland. Edinburgh, Scotland, - Feb. Announcement was made Saturday of the death of the Duke of Leinster (Maurice Fitzgerald), line, and premier to the title in 1893. The duke was unmarried, and the | heir is his brother, Lord Edward Fitzgerald. The elder brother of the Duke, Lord Desmond Fitzgerald, a major in the Irish Guards, was killed in action during the war. The family seats are at Carton, May- nooth, County Kildare, Castle, Mageney, County Kildare, Ireland. The family is one of the most noted in the history of Ireland, dating back to the beginning of the thirteenth century. Lord Edward Fitzgerald, the heir married May Etheridge, musical comedy actress, in 1813. HE ADVISES A CHANGE IN IMMIGRATION POLICY System Which Only En- riches the Carriers Toronto, Feb, §.--The total cessa- tion of campaigns on the part of steamship and railroad companies {to foster immigration simply for the | sake of increasing dividends for the transportation concerns is advocat- ed by Rev. Dr. §, D. Chown, general superintendent of the church of Canada. Dr. Chown has for years made a keen study of immigration problems, |and he is convinced that the country {will come to grief if the loose pre- war system is not abelished, "1 cannot lay too great emphasis on the necessity for greater care in the selection of our said Dr. Chown, "Naturally, I would advocate that immigrants be drawn, as far as possible, from the Anglo- Saxon races. Not only those from the British Isles, but Americans are desirable classes for us. In many ways they can teach us. For in- stance, the Americans who settled in | the district from Portal - to Moose Jaw some years ago showed us, how best to culticate those western lands. They came in with the knowledge of the right' Ting "of agriculture to ap- of controversy, and sec ply to that territory. "Ot course, in past years there was a feeling that if the Americans came into the country in large num- But there is no fear of that now, in view of the increasing feeling of neighborly friendship existing be- tween the twe countries." Briti sixth of the | peer of Ireland. | He was born in 1887 and succeeded | Methodist immigrants.' | and burned, says a telegram, { Coaster Fatally Injured ls Dn She DOUCY Sf ringing Geniial : | Europeans a. | By Collision With a Pole .onsidered it a bad move to allow -- foreigners to settle in masses in cer- Belleviile, Ont., Feb. §.--James | tain sections of the dominion. Under Alfred Loney, eighteen years old, such a system they are not readily whose home was at Rednersvilio, | aseimiiatas into the Canadian atmos- Prince Edward county, was on Satur- | phere, he pointed out, and he feared day the victim of a fatal acoident . He {it was from such sources that much was coasting down a hill near nis |agitation arose. home, when he collided with a pole! "The palicy I would favor with | exhibitions be again placed on a pre-| | tall of rock in mine Robert Fewster, ex-warden éf Ox: | | mndmarks in Quebec to be appointed. | the Atlantic, from London to New York, in five hours, and of encir. ling the earth in two days. With an oxygen-driven vlane, he contends and sustained interna! injuries, which / | resulted in his death at the hospital : jin this city today Dublin Government May | Have to Go to People| | London, Feb of Dublin newspapers here ldeclare | that the Irish provisional ment faces difficulties 'which somewhat acute, and that the {ling cabinet will be forced endorsement from the 6 are | Col- | to obtain | people | would be able | before it. IT. H. Gillespie, Belleville, Dead. | Bellevile, Ont, Feb. 6.--Thomas | H. Gillespie, aged eighty-three vears, | a well known resident of the city, | died Saturday evening after a few | {hours' illness, Deceased was born in | { Hastings county and for for many years followed his occupation &s a carriage-maker. For the past few years he lived a retired life in the | {city. He was a member of the Mas | ionic fraternity and an Anglican in re-| | Hgion ---------------------- i i To Scat Common's Members, | Ottawa, Feb. 6€.--1t was unde-~ | {stood this morning that a conference | of representatives of Liberals, Pro-| | gressives and Conuirvatives ta ar-| {range for the seating of members in | the house of commons would be beld | here Wednesday morning. ---- Federal agents at Buffalo, N.Y, arrested Jacob Lavine, of Chicago, | in connection, they said, with al {$100,000 drug robbery in Philadel. | phia lest week. London has 2,000 eleotrie ranges, or more than Toronto, with ten times | London's papulation. | William McCraw, miner, killed by at Coleraine, { } | { | | | e. Commission to preserve ancient | | Gencral De We: is dead at Bioem- | fontain, South Afvipe, | . © regard to Immigration. of Central Europeans is to bring them in limic- ed numbers at a time," he said, "and | to settle them in the townships in | small numbers." Steamer Adrift Again, Halifax, Feb. 6.--The Swedish --Correspondents (steamer Thyra, rudderiess in the At- lantic for more than a week, is govern- | 2drift again after being in tow of the { British oil tanker Suwanne for a couple of days. Sir Robert Borden says the educa- | there arrived MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1922. THE RUNG DOWN Ci 'Upon the Arms Conference The Treaties Were Sign- ed on Monday. | ington arms conference on Saturday {formally approved the groundwork | | for another international conference to consider rales for governing new | egencies of warfare, | It also gave its approval to a reso- | Kilkea | lution strengthening the naval limi- tation treaty. The navy treaty resolution, |erto unrevealed, declared that the conferees regard themselves in | "honor bound" to sell no ships be- | now and the time of final tween | the naval limitation | ratifications of | treaty. Delegate hith- Root read a resolution whereby the five powers agree to | | the appointment of ar commission to {be composed of not more than two members from each power, to con- sider whether existing rules of in- ternational law adequately cover new methods of attack or defense since The Hague conference of 1917, and, if not, what changes in exist- ing rules should be adopted as part of the law of nations. The resolution provides that no- | tice: of the appointment of the mem- | {bers of the commission should be conveyed to the United States gov- jernment within three months after the adjournment of the conference |The United States is to fix the day land place of the meeting of the com- ission, It has been suggested that | The Hague will be the meeting [ place, Approve Sweeping Covenants, The conference also formally ap- prove sweeping covenants to govern the future activities of the powers in | ! wi China {i The Washington arms | will pass into history today when the several treaties will be formally signed and President Harding will ring down the curtain with a final speech. Secretary Hughes, closing the ses- |sion, declared: "The measure of suc- conference | cess which we have obtained is due {to two things: First, we had a de- finite aim. We have set ourselves determinedly to removal of causes ond, to the reduction @f armament so far as that {eould be obtained. "We have not devoted ourselves | onty to hopes, We have devoted our- | bers they would carry on a campaign | 5¢lves to hopes which could be at- |of peaceful penetration, until Can- |tained. | ada became absorbed into the union. | | . | national conference to renounce di- "No one is expected in an inter- | rect national interest, but what we have sought is a recognition of a higher controlling interest." He Pays a Huge Fine For Scores of Bottles Brockville, Feb, 6.--A fine of $2,000 was imposed in Smith's Falls police court upon Edmund J. La- foret, Tecumseh, who was discovered on a west-bound C.P.R. passenger | train by Provincial Officers Tabor land Sykes | cases of liquor. One hundred ani | twenty-nine bottles of Scotch whis- | ey were seized -by the officers and | brought here, another man accom- panying the shipment making his escape with several additional suit- cases sald to contain liquor. Last of Canadians Home, St. John, N.B., Feb, 6.---Said to be { the last man of the Canadian Expe- | ditionary Force to be demobilized, in St. John Saturday on the Empress of France, Captain through a general election before it | tional influence ds the highest value |J. J. Ruston, Vancouver, who has to solve the problems [ot the army conferende. | been overseas since early in 1915, | alae WILL MAKE JULES VERNE LOOK STATIONARY. Amo Busch, German aviator, declares his intention of crossing i be can fiy 400 miles an hour, , Washington, Feb. 6.--The Wash- | "ALLEN | "The Battle of Jutland" er --The strike Africa ap toward a Feb. 6 South working London, in be Situation pears crisis to According to Joha burg messages, a huge meeting of mine strikers on Sunday pass- ed a resolution requesting those members of parliament in Pretoria to proclaim a provi- sional declare now government and a republic | NEWS OFF THE WIRES IN CONDENSED FORM [Tidings From Places Far and | Near Are Briefly | Recounted. I Sh | business | W. Ferguson, ex-M.P., is dead in Pasendena, Calif. Already 120 applications are before the senate for divorce Gasoline-driven cars to be run on | St. Clair branch of M. C. R. The Chilean cabinet, | Ismael Tocornal, has resigned, Burford high school, built by 23 school sections, formally dedicated John R. Boyle chosen house leader by Liberals in Alberta lk gislature Lord Atholstan offers a $100,000 prize cancer work A Reuter dispatch reports an out- break of paresis in the Montpellier, France Arthur Griffith and Michael lins are to discuss the Ulster situal n with the British cabinet in Lr 1 Quebec is proposing a commission second for research University to preserve to future generations the old landma The M presentatives lize the playing chess on Sunday. For the first time in m seaborne traffic out of Denn ks in the province, "hussets House of Re defeated a bill to lega of checkers ny years ark has been virtually stopped, as the sounds, harbors and the belts are ice bound The Manitoba government is urg ing the Railway Commission to order an immediate and substantial reduc tion in freight rates and removal of discrimination against the west. | Immediate circ ulation of a petition praying for government con- trol and sale of liquor in t ince of Manitoba, will be made by the Moderation League "of Manitoba URGES, SENDING OF A BIG new he Ontario Public School Defence League. | | | | Toronto, Feb. 6.-----Organization of a big delegation to come to Toronto, and present the arguments of the {Ontario Public School The German railway strike ties nop Chatham, headed by Col- and ' DELEGATION T0' TORONTO |To Present the Arguments of Defence | LAST EDITION ES 10 MAKE GRANT For Church College Support Till Nature of Teaching Revealed. Peterboro, Feb. 6.--If all or a large number of the Presbyterian churches in Canada follow the lead of St. Paul's church, this city, the chureh's theological schools and col- ieges will find themselves cut off {from a large source of revenue, i When the money for missions was allocated by the sessions of St. Paul's church the sum of $420 was voted to the collezes on recommen- lations of the session, It was re- vealed that at the annual meeting a member of the congregation moved an amendment, "that in view of the 'reported character of the teaching in some of the colleges, that no money be given to the colleges this year until satisfactory answers have been fobtained from them that the teach- ing is in accordance with Presbyter- ian beliefs." £L Rev. R. Pogue, pastor of St. Paul's church, advised that no action be taken until the session could make further enquiry. In spite of this the motion to withhold the money was carried by an almost unanimous vote The charge was made that the ' modernist" movement is spreading in the theological schools and col- e and that few of the training remain unaffected by its tive tendencies and as a con- ma vouns people de- off' 1g for the Christian tifficult to obtain the e without runaing t! having their faith un- {dermined To meet this need it is proposed to establish a new college for men in London whose aim will be to give a sound spiritual and in lectual training to its students. being Ss destruc sequence, rous of try find | tre ng they des risk of special committee of session of St. Paul's *tters were sent to the prine ipals of all the Canadian Preshy- terian colleges, asking them if the pro on their staffs were true in their teaching to the Westminster of faith, One repited fully, stating that his |staft stood loyally by the word f {God. © One principal failed to ans- |wer and the other six claimed that. their stdffs were true in their teach- ings to the scriptures but did mof answer all the questions as frankly as the session desired. Instead they took the stand. if any person had changes make against any professor or professors, they should be made through the courts of the church. Through a e8S0rs confession frankly and to 'BUYS BANKRUPT PLANT, THEN SLASHES PRICES League before the Ontario govern- ment, is belng urged by the leader of this movement in Eastern Ontario {It is announced that the lex ding Pro- testant clergymen and public school authorities of the eastern counties of {Ontario are enthusiastic in the new Detroit, Mich., Feb. 6.--The movement and are taking the leader- |greatest slash in 'automobile prices ship in many cases. ever announced was made here Sat- rday by the Lincoln Automobile Lincoln Automobile Company Goes to Henry Ford for $8,000,000. with a number of suit- | | ALL MUST EON NZE, Alberta Premier's Advice to School Deputation, Edmonton, Feb. 6.---"1 when you ask the prov ment to foot the bi for seventy- |five per ecnt. of the ccst of second ary education in the provinee, you 'are making a big order," declared Premier Greenfield, in answer to a delegation of town and city trustees who waited on the cabinet from the Alberta Trustess' Associa tion, 'It all works down to this.' think 3 school said the premier, "it's a case ether of increased taxation or living with- | in our means, and I want to tell you now that the ti: has when {the province, the cities, towns and individuals, must within their 'come; must economize if we are to get out of the situation in which we {fnd ourselves after years of expan- sion." a come live | General De' Wet, Boer Commander, Is Dead Bloemfontein, South Africa, Feb. {6.--Gen, Chpistian de Wet, | the war of 1889, died at his home in | Dewetsdorp on Friday He was born in 1854 / He served in the first Anglo-Boer war of 1880- 81 and was a member of the voiks- | | radd when the second war--in which | {he took such a | broke out. | He was sent to relieve General Cronje, whom he succeeded upon the katter's surrender. prominent part-- | Asked to Form Cabinet, | Rome, Feb. 6.--The task. of form- | ing a new cabinet was officially of- fered to Enrice de Nicola, president {of the chamber of deputies, by King j¥ctar Emmanuel to-day Nicola | will give his answer this evening, | : Cardinal G.T.R. Station Burned, Brockville, Feb. 6.--The Grand {Trunk Railway station at Cardinal { Was totally destroyed by fire last night, wcial govera- com- ! mander-in-chief of the Boer forces in, immediately after it had been yurchased at bankruptcy sale for 1,000 by Henry Ford. Princes of all modeis were slash 1 ing from $800 to $1,200. Announcement of the cut was made by Henry M. Leland, president of the concern, who will be retained in charge under Ford's ownership, 28.00( IRISH CAPITALS DOWNCAST, Over Breakdown in Negotiations Talk of War in Northern Capital, London, Feb. 6.--Both Dublin and Belfast are downcast over the break down of the border negotiations. in the northern capital there was talk of war, The foreign office, however, {s not perturbed by the extremists' talk, pointing out if direct negotiations fail the question of Ulster's boun- ries can be decided under the {trealy, The British government is said not to be in sympathy with Sir | James Craig. dari Mrs. Stillman Is Refused More Costs to Fight Case Poughkeepsie, N.Y., Feb. §.-- {Counsel for James A. Stillman sue- ceeded on Saturday in blocking, at least temporarily, another effort by Mrs. Anne U, Stillman to obtain ade ditional expense money and the ape pointment of a commission to take [testimony at Mqntreal in the Still (man divorce case. Motions to these lends were held pending for e week {by supreme court justice Morcheu- {ser, who upheld the objection of Mr. | Stillman's counsel that the affidavits supporting the application were base ed on hearsay and therefore were n= |suMficient, } | Age vs. Youth, g | New York, Feb. §.--Nearing Sfty | years of age, Btaneslaus Zbyeske will defend . his world's " heavyweight ywrestiing championship title to-night against the former champion, Bari | ho is two decades his {Craddock, w | unior,

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