=| The Daily British Whig YEAR 89; No. 154, KINGSTON, ONTARIO. ALLEN TO-DAY TOM MOORE MR. Barnes of New York TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1922. PRELIMINARY TRIAL OF BARRIE ON FRIDAY MAY PREVENT THE , STRIKE nina Farmar Took Place NEW- PLAN OF ENDING WARS Is Submitted to the Dis- armament Commission. Would Divide World "lato Four Regions in Case of Aggression. eral world disarmament, which was laid before the temporary mixed commission on disarmament of the League of Nations yesterday after- noon by Lord Robert Cecil, of Brit- ain, was presented in full detail at | sion. {favorably received by most of the | delegates. | According to the plan, all nations {would sign a general agreement and would agree to go to the defence of the nations in their respective reg- fons or continents in case of aggres- sion. A permanent military com- mission would be the active control- ling authority. The world would he divided into four regions and only the powers in each region would be Jobligated to aid the menaced nation |upon the commission's recommenda- tion. Foresee Empty Results. | Paris, July 4.---With each week lof The Haguetconterence that passes |the conviction grows in France that {no more will result from it than | justification of the American atti- | Paris, July 4.--The plan for gen- | this morning's session of the commis- | The plan is sald to have been | {care consented to the French repre- sentatives attending the conference, and today it is his convicition that his first view, that The Hague would produce no better results than did cers are at work on the case. o | Railway Board Holds Confer: the history of the township. | shooting, although he originally | |Way shop employees called 'outlaws"" | whose named is Pearson, is stil] liy- shop craft officials last Friday, to-|him as to what led up to the tragedy, ing washed its hands of the shop-|upon the victim it has been ascer- of Maintenance Way Employees in | Position, as the entering of the builet i Halts Strike Order. - yesterday averted, temporarily at Against Asiatics, wage reduction. measage from Srinivasa Sastri, who Shop Laborers was mapping plans to the irrigation and reclaimed lands meet with the Labor Board in Chi- to alien Aslatics only, thus removing | his will, and simply to meet the de- of the union board, with E. F. the conference brought to an abrupt ADRIFT IN THE OCEAN Genoa, was the right one. announcing acceptance of the Labor : Belleville, July 4.--No' new de- | velopments have come to light re. e y . lo garding the murder of Wesley Moult, | Sunday the funeral of the viciim | took place to Victoria cemetery, the . ' Maurice Barrie, or Pearson, tie ence With Men's Execu- |e1czet assassin, was vrougnc up not tive Board at Chicago. 1 : came from Sherbrooke. His par- by the United States Railroad labor ing. His preliminary trial is fixed board, whose summons to a media:- | for Friday next in this éity. No day entered upon the fourth day of | but the supposition is that Pearson their walk-out in protest against and Moult had some words in the men's strike the board is now centre. | tained that a bullet from a .2° rifle ing its energies in a conference with | Or revolver was fired from behind an effort to avert a walk-out of the | Was at the back of the head. Death maintenance men. | resulted instantaneously as the bul- Detroit, July I a TO AMEND LANDS ACT. 'least, a threatened strike of 400,000 maintenance employees of the na- London, July 4--A4 Reuter de spatch from Simla, says that the Just as the executive board of the United Brotherhood of Maintenance. is on an official mission to Australia, intimating that the South Australian send forth a strike call, the Labor | Board made a request by long dis- | oot which disqualified all Asiatics att from acquiring lands dealt with in |tude in having nothing to do with it. cago to-day in an attempt to adjust the differences between the railroads the only disability to which Indians |Sires of the British advocates of a of South Australia are subject. | policy of reciprocal concession with Grable, international president, left last night for Chicago. end a meeting of the brotherhood board. Two Portugese Were Found in the Last Stages of Ex- . M Tyendinaga farmer, although ' ofli- | funeral being one of the largest in | many miles from the place of the Chicago, July 4.--Striking rail- (ents are dead, but his stepfather, ory conference was defled by tho statement has been obtained from wage reductions by the board. Hav-|barn. From the post mortem made officials of the United Brotherhood |®nd whilst Moult was in a stooping | let entered the brain, States Railroad Labor South Australia Loosening Bar tion's railroads in protest against a Indian government has received a of-way Employees and Rallway | Government has decded to amend tance telephone that the union chiefs the act, so as to make it applicable | and their employees, The members The 'Labor Board's invitation to PICKS Up FISHERMEN In addition to the brief statement haustion.. Board's invitation, Mr. Grable de- clared that, in the event the Chicago conference met with failure, "a rea- sonable length of time" would ensue before a strike call would be issued. He said this meant at least 10 or 12 hours. MAXIMILIAN HARDEN VICTIM OF ASSAULT re r-- m He Was Attacked in Berlin on Monday by Monarchist Plotters. Montreal, July 4.--When the fog, which had enveloped her for hours suddenly lifted off the Grand Banks of Newfoundland last Thursday the steamer Chitam, an oil tanker bound from London to Montreal, found her- self within a few feet of a little dory in which were two men in the last stages of exhaustion. They proved to be Portuguese fishermen from the schooner Laura, which put out from blood, Harden was just able to reach Lisbon to fish on the banks. Four {nis home. where he collapsed and days previously they, with another | ye taken to a hospital. His injur- man, Rad left thelr schooner in. 4 les are serious, but not fatal. dory, and had got out of touch with One of his assailants who was it in the fog. The third man, it was captured had a blackjack and a dag- explained, either fell overboard or ger in his possession, and a card of jumped into the sea in delirium. |p op pership in "The Association of When the men had been restored, one Nationally Minded Soldiers," a reac- Of them fell on the deck and kissed | ;,,ary monarchistic and anti-Semi- the feet of the captain of the tanker. tic organization of war veterans. - A sensational telephone report has THE STRIKING UNIONS just reached me to the effect that HAVE BEEN OUTLAWED |, gathering at Potsdam, prepared to invade Berlin this afternoon THE JUNE RAINFALL ESTABLISHED RECORD Nearly Five Inches of Rain Dry Weather Is Hoped For. Berlin, July 4.--Maximilian Hard- en, Socialist leader, while walking a suburb of Berlin, at 8.45 o'clock last night, was assaulted by two men with blackjacks. Covered with During the past month Kingston has had a record amount of rain, the records from Queen's laborator- ies showing that four and nine-teaths inches have fallen on the level. This is greater than the records show for the month of June for thirty or for- ty years. The average for June is about one-half the amount which fell this month or two and nine tenths inches. The surrounding district has had too much rain and the farmers are hoping for dry weather. Hay!ng has It was to a large extent against | armed reactionary forces are secret-| By the United States Railway Board For Action on Saturday. been delayed and the crops will need lots of dry spells. Travellers through the district have noted that the low- land is under water as a result of the week-end rains. Gardens iu the west end of the city are in a similar Chicago, July 4.--The six railway shop crafts unions which went on while the workers and radicals are demonstrating. This is a sample of the wild and disquieting rumors which are rampant in Berlin, largely ow!ng to the fact that the news- papers are not appearing and the public, accordingly, is completely plight, and many have not been touched for some weeks as they have not dried up sufficiently. strike Saturday were outlawed by the United States Railroad Labor Board yesterday. In a formal resolution the bYoard declared that the Uniors, by their cut off from all news. Indian Chief Appeals Slipping of Wrench Burns a Motorboat action forfeited all rights hefore the board as railway employes and that new organizations of shopmen, tak- ing the striking men's jobs, should be formed to represent the shop em- ployes 'in disputes before the board. The board requested the employes remaining in the gervice and the car- riers to take steps immediately to form new organizations for the pur- pose of representing the shopmen be- fore the board. The resolution formally declared 'that the striking shop workers are no longer employes of any railroad and therefore without the jurisdiction of the board or subject to the applica- tion of the Transportation Act. Al- though applying directly to the shopmen at this time, the board also said that if the maintenance-of-way men, signalmen, stationary firemen and oilers and clerks joined the walk-out, they would be relegated to the same position as the shopmen. Brockville, July 4.--Tho slipping of a wrench while repairs were being mado upon a motorboat balonging to Mrs. W, H. Comstock, Sunday after- noon, caused a short-circuit in elec- tric wiring to take place and set fire to both the boat and boathouse, which were destroyed. An adjoining cottage was also badly damaged. H. A. Morton, who was making tho repairs, was burned about the face and hands in attempt- ing to put out the fire, Rain Spolling Root Crops. St. Catharines, July 4.--Whila the fruit outlook in the Niagara district dor a prolific crop is as bright as evor, the successive heavy rains with 8 lack of sunshino are causing coa- sternation among the growers of roel crops. Several hundreds of acres of potatoes have been plough- el up. Premier Mackenzie King Addresses the Zionists Ottawa, July 4.--Premier King | addressed the Zionists in comvén- tion here this afternoon and express- ed his sympathy with the aspirations of the Jews the world over for a homeland of their own. A man with- out a country had lost what was best in citizenship, he said, and the love of homeland was one of the contrid- uting factors to the lighest and best in humanity, SEPP LEIPTFPIRS LJ { oo MORE THAN AVERAGE | CROP YIELD PROMISED +4 Winnipeg, July 4.--The third report published this morning .by the Manitoba Free Press states that West ern Canada is promised more than ax dverage yield, as the outlook is certainly bigger - thaa it was at this time last year, > * * + > + > > + +* * * ratify the nine-day $0440 480000004e + +> * Japan is to > PPP P ELIF TIO TSSTTS Power treaty, For a Square Deal Regina, July 4.--" Give us a little more of what you call a square deal," asked Chief Lofte, president of the League of Indians of Canada, when addressing members of the Rotary club here yesterday. "Do not think so much of the al- mighty dollar and of the station. It is to you men that we are going to appeal on behalf of the Indians." Champion Life Saver Is Called By Death Ottawa, July 4.--Known all over Eastern Canada as the champion life saver, Louis Beauchamp, aged fifty- three had to acknowledge defeat at the hands of the grim reaper yester- day. He had saved more than forty lives and possessed numerous medals and certificates. He was born In Scholasticque, Que., and lived in Hull, Que., and Sudbury, Ont. Fourteen Years in Prison Belleville, July 4.--John Haley, a comparatively young man appeared before Police Magistrate Masson, of this city, and pleaded guilty*of as- saulting two little girls. A sentenre of fourteen years in the panitentiary was imposed. ------------ Man Expires in Buggy Brockville, July 4. --Driving home from Merrickville where he had been engaged in business, John Driscoll, aged 54, of Montague township, sud- denly expired in a buggy without ut- tering a word to Ais companion. |cURZON MAY NEVER | RESUME HIS DUTIES {As British Foreign Minister Owing to Serious Condition of Health. ndon, July 4.--Lord Curzon, the { British foreign minister, is never .ex- | pected to return to take up his duties {in Downing street. | It is reported that Lord Curzon is | |attended day and night by four male {attendants to prevent him from do- ling himself bodily harm. Doctors at- | tending him, it is reported, do not | hold out any belief that he will ever | be able to reassume his diplomatic inister Lloyd George is to appoint a new for- , as Lord Balfour, who 1s carrying on the job temporarily, | hag definitely declined to accept the | post permanently, pledging his age | prevents it, Premier Visits North York Tcronto, June 1.--If a change is as good ns a rest, Right Hon. WwW. 1. Mackenzie King, prime m | Canada. had a real rest Swurday {Far from the political battles in Le { House cf Commons, Mr. King enjoy- |ed himself among his "ain folk" in {North York, attending picnics and | Dominion Day celebrations, meeting | the people whom he represents in | Parliament, talking to them of | everyday local affairs. ------------ NAPANEE HORSE RACES HAD 10BE POSTPONED |The Late Alexander Henry and Mrs. Edward Uens, of Napanee. (From Our Own Correspondent) Napanee, July 4.--Owing to the |inclement weather the horse races Iday afternoon had to be cancelled. | All forenoon the weather looked bad |and the sky was overcast and light {showers falling, committee thought best to cancel the i races, The only attraction at the Park was a ball game in the afternoon he- tween Tamworth and Deseronto and resulted in a victory of 6 to 3 in rav- or of Tamy The Fri Saturday last of Alexander Henry, a well known resident of Napanee for many years. Deceased was 85 years | of age, and had been in poor health [ tor over a year. He leaves besides his widow, two sons and one daugh- | lam, Toronto, and Mrs. Parish, Port | Hope, and one brother, Thomas S. | Henry, Napanee, and a sister, Mrs. { Fuller, also of Napanee. mains were brought to Napanee on | Monday and 'interred in the family | plot in Riverside cemetery. Another sad death occurred | Uens passed away after a short ill- {ness of pneumonia. Deceased leaves | besides her husband, four small children to mourn the loss of a lov-| ing and devoted mother. The funer-| 1 al takes place on Tuesday afternoon lat 2 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Clare Ballance and two children, Watertown, N.Y., are guests of Mrs. F. W. Knapp, and {other friends during their holidays. | { | ---------------- FALLS TO HS DEATH BETWEEN RAILWAY CARS | Belleville Brakeman on G.T.R. | Killed One Mile East of Lansdowne. When a coupling, connecting two freight cars between the top of which he was stepping, gave way, Norman Meldrum, Belleville, aged | 35, Grand Trunk brakesman, fell p:- |tween the cars and was killed by th2 | following cars one mile east of Lans- downe at 6.45 Saturday evening. The first intimation that thers was any thing wrong was when the others of the crew noticed that three cars had been dropped off their train. Om returning they found the brakesman, with his head crushed and many in- juries about his head and neck. The train was in charge of Conductor A, Abrams and Engineer Morgan. It is thought that the coupling between the cars broke as the brakesman was stepping across the gap between :he cars and the momentum of the for lowing three cars carried the wheels over his body. The body was taken in charge by A. J. Sly, undertaker at Lahsdowne, and was shipped to Belleville. The late Mr. Meldrum is survived by a wife and one son, living in Bellevil'e. He was for eight years an employee of the Grank Trunk. Dr. John Campbell, viewed the body and ordered an inquest to be held Monday evening. ------ rs Adelarde DeLorme is going to write a book when he gets to the asy- lum and explain in detail his defence against the charge of murdering his half-brother. He says the book will startle the' world and brand him as a man of shillty DUBLIN FIGHT NEARING END ------ UT [NOVA SCOTIA TO LOSE FREIGHT ( TWO SEATS IN COMMONS | The Four Western Provinces VERY SMALL "= 235 7 Ottawa, July 4.--Upon the final of a | . | results of the decennial census But This Has Caused 1921, which were made public { | few days ago, will be based the leg- | | Little S rise | islation which will redistribute re-| urp . { presentation in the House of Com-| Collins' Troops Closing centain 1 "ae Toure of con' [0 ON the Rebels. intimated, will be introduced at the | - 2Xt session of parliamen y tha | Foto Pig Peis 5 ar | Statement Issued By Arthur { House of Commons will be 'increased Griffith Regarding the Goy- ernment's Action. | by ten, or from 235 to 245. The four western provinces will be given [twelve additional seals in the House | | Ottawa, July 4.--The judgment of [and one eastern province---Nova | Dublin, July 4.--The enveloping {the Railway Commission, making a |Scotia--will lose two seats. ontario | ny gyement by the Free State forces | decrease of only 7 1-2 per cent. m| Will retain its present number of |i; (po gackville street area is com- the freight rates on basic commodi- | Seats. {plete and the final defeat of the re= | bels is in sight, says a communique | ties, is not wholly a surprise at Ot-| itawa, in the light of what has been | {issued from general headquarters in i own before in judgments of the! {the Beggars' Bush barracks this ls but it is ne ot the| Returns to England and Repeats|,,.;i;s The insurgents have been spirit of the recommendation of -par-| Prohibition Prophecy. ,, | driven out of their positions in Earl {liament. Ordinarily, heed would be| Idverpool, July 4.--"'Puesyfoot" |g irae, so that their comrades in the | paid to the indicated desire of the Johnson invaded England to-day 20d | Gresham Hotel and adjoining build- |elected representatives of the people |Pegan immediately to organize whit! ines in Sackville street are entirely even though a recommendation has/he termed a world convention gyrrounded. {no binding effect. (against alcoholism, which is to bel Ap offictal bulletin issued at noon The railways offered held at Toronto in the week beginn-| to-day says the Genfarn barracks at decreases up to 18 per: cent. on|ing November 19th. | Leitrim, near the Ulster border, held | various commodities and 20 per| The United States reformer told | py national army troops, was attack- (cent. on grain and flour. Parlia-|the British newspapers that he €X-|ed by Irish irregulars, 'The small iment eventually capitulated to the|Pected England to go dry in ten garison stuhpornly resisted," says western demand, restored the Crow's |¥ears and the world in fifteen. He|the bulletin, 'but eventually was [Nest rate on grain and flour, which [declared the economic burdens of the | forced to yield." involved a thirty per cent. decrease | European nations was so overyhelm- on these articles and left the rest|ing that they had to unload some-| : to the say so of the commission. thing, and alcohol was the easiest. | Struggle Near End. That body now comes along with| "I refused to sail on aw American| Dublin, July 4.--The Irish In- {reductions of these articles, less|Ship," he indigantly informed inter- | dependent says the citizens of Dub- "than half of what the railways of-| viewers, "because of the) hypoctisy lin will welcome the indications con- fered providing the "Crow" rate on|Of my government in countenancing ( veved in this morning's reports that grain was not reverted to. Such |the sale of liquors on American ver) the struggle is nearing an end, and comment as is made here concedes|sels. I prefer the honesty of This great national disas- Railway Commission Should \ Have Paid Heed to Wish | of Parliament. "PUSSYFOOT'S"" CAMPAIGN themselves so that the Park Tire oe sess | The steamer Canadian Command- "occurred In Toronto* ox ler is ashore at Flat Poni, C.B. | | The re-| on | Sunday morning when Mrs. Edward | in full on grain and flour does make | |a difference, but not sufficient to! | justify' a cut on other commodities | jof only 7 1-2 per cent. Chairman] Cavell of the Railway Cummtssisn | | regard to Russia, that Premier Poia- | Which were to have taken place Mon- | has gone to New Brunswick. NEWS OFF THE WIRES | IN CONDENSED FORM | Tidings From Places Far and | Near Are Briefly | Recounted. The DeLorme estate may Sue the | insurance company for the policy on | the murdered youth. | Sidney Irving Macklin, a member of the Ottawa Journal on Saturday staff, was drowned evening at home to his villa in the Grunewald, |ler. The sons are Donald and W:ll-| Woodroffe, near Ottawa. He belong- [tO this country for a three months' ed to Milliken. | According to the London Evening Paid a visit to | deValera | Ireland. | Standard the report that was with the beleagured insurgents | in Greshem hotel, Dublin, has | been confirmed. { Fire swept the Locust Point river front of the Baltimore and Ohio rail- | way Monday night and caused dam- | age estimated at almoet five million | dollars to grain elevators, warehous- | es, piers and barges. | William Strachan, known in Mont-| real theatrical, brokerage and { ad- vertising circles was found dead over | | the weekend in his room following | | inhaling of gas. His wife had start-| | ed divorce proceedings. | a | adds: that the west getting its demands | British ship, where I could see my | ter could have been avoided had the countrymen patronizing the smoking | differences which arose amongst us room and drinking what they likad|O0 the signing of the treaty been without deceit." | settled in the ordinary constitutional | way which Eamon de Valera himself { counselled in December. The depar- | ture from that constitutional path THE INDIAN AND IRISH | has forced on the nation all 'the | horrors which ever attend civil war. { oi SITUATIONS NOT ALIKE: c.oeore oma wren { | London, July 4.---Lord Mayor O'- Comparison Is Made by Irish Neill of Dublin has been captured, {according to an unconfirmed report Priest in Mission at {received here. His captors whether Simla. | rebels or Free Staters, were not dese {ignated in the report. Quebec, July 4.-----One of the most interesting passengers in @rrived |. Geiflith Issues Statement. OF 8 amudhty Em-| pup, A : replying to a resolution of the Irish on the new. ! press of India from Liverpool was Rev. Father B. Baker, an Irishman by birth who has lived ia India most of his life with his church headquar- ters at Simla. He said he is coming ing the immediate summoning of the Irish parliament, sald: "Before July 1, the date fixed for the meeting, the authority of the : govérnment and. its sovereignty wera t his native country, {challenged by an irresponsible 1 Speaking of the Irish}group which, in defiance of the peo- situation, he said it was lamentable |pla's will as expressly declared, at- tour, and before leaving England and due to the perverse, impossible | tam ped by the seizure of persons character of de Valera. The people of [ang property and the menace of Ireland, or rather 95 per cent. of larms to arrogate to itself authority them are with Collins and Griffith, | over our lives and the liberties and and had de Valera been eliminated | the property of the citizens by whom with the peace treaty, Ireland to-day |it hag been repudiated. No govern- would be in an ideal condition, with | ment could submit to such a chal- its population working together for | lenge without being guilty of a be- the progress and prosperity of the|trayal of the people's fundamental country and happiness of its peopl * right. The government, therefore, Father Baker, discussing the In-|met the forces of despotism and dis- dian question, said that it had no {order with the forces of a democrat- analogy to the Irish. The latte: | je nation, and is determined to re- were a civilized race and close neigis/ establish the security of life, liberty bors to England, seeking the right | and property within Its territory, * uly 4.--AFthur Griffith, Women's International League urg- rof self-government, while in India | conditions were altogether different. | | To begin with there are twenty dif- | Hall Causes $1,000,000 Damage in ferent nations having different| London, July 4.--The Evening | Certain Districts of Saskatchewan. [viewpoints on nationality and relig- | News says several fighting aircraft, Regina, Sask., July 4.--Over alfon in India. Gandhi, the agitator. | bearing the markings of the Irish { million dollars daniage was caused [who endeavored to raise strife and | Free State, and flown by pilots of the | by hail storms in the Kronau and [revolution in India, is no longer | Free State forces, left Croydon to- nn ONLY AN AVERAGE CROP. { : Free State Uses Aeroplanes, Richardson districts, and around | Osage, on Saturday evening. Crops] | for an area of four miles wide and When the government |day for the "Dublin front." -- spoken of. authorities stepped in and sent him to prison his agitation fell flat. under the wheels | eleven miles long in the Krogau dis-{ Speaking of missionary work, ri LIBERALS MA [trict were destroyed, the 'damage ther Baker said the civilization and |approximating $750,000. Consider- | Christianization of Indians is a com- | | able damage was also caused at the | plex problem. It is easy to make | THE PROGRESSIVE PARTY {Christians of the lower strata as long {other points, 10,000 acres being af- | fected east of here, and the Osage |as you remain with them, feed them, | . area, which was hit, is reported to|and give them money, but when you The Ottawa Citizen Sees Pree be large. leave them, and they receive no ure) General crop conditions in the[ther assistance, they go back to mier King as the Complete province obtained from travellers | paganism. Master, and government field men Indicate | that the farmers have a bright pros-| pect for an average crop. | Thousands of Actors Are the parliamentary performance of cat Out of Work in England the Progressive party in the recent | | session, the Ottawa Citizen, Duty of 30 Cents | London, July 4 --Thousands of| Supported that party in the general A Bushel on Wheat | ctors and actresses in England are | lections, has come to the conclusion a * { out of work. The hot Summer, the that the Agrarians are edging up Washington, July 4.--The Senate losing down recently of six London | fast to fhe SoviTuueal sige, " The on. Saturday agreed to a duty of 30/ playhouses, and the exodus of the} tROCL 9 oe Toye Eve party at cents a bushel on wheat--dictated | theatre-going public to the seashore | i ou Le 8 ers ' by the farm bloc to the framers of | have been the main factors. In their} Je neji a Sep OF : ors, the tariff bill. Senator Underwood efforts to keep the wolf from the | | S piv iy another session, declared that this increased rate up-| door, men and women of the nist (S438 add ey there is ; ke on wheat, higher than in any other|rionic art have accepted small parts, ot Jo: less Shere is 3a ava American tariff measure, even the|in cinema productions. 15a : oe in py air a Payne-Aldrich law, would place an| Ap endeavor is being made to re-| 1°! 5€ : n i : that elected Progressive represen increased tax of approximately | jjeve the situation by the formation . | {tives to the House of Commons, t $100,000,000 a year upon the Am-| of a kind of co-operative theatrical | overnment can have all the su erican people and benefit the farm-| company for the benefit of the work- 5°" °" pp of sufficient Progressive members | wi ers of only three states | less actors and actresses. Those tak | keep them in power on Macken ling part receive $15 a week. i King's own terms. Another sess --_------ jof the glamor of Ottawa and ¢ Cobourg, July 4.--Rev. John C. Bix Lives Lost in River. [Liberals seem likely to have the Wilson, Toronto, father of Rev. J. Montreal, July 4.--In a collision | uation entirely in their own han S. I. Wilson, B.A., B.D., pastor| with the Cairn-Thomson liner Cairn-| They need made no special ow of the Cobourg Methodist Church,|dhu in the early hours of 'Saturday tures. The belie? in the importa preached Sunday in the Methodist| morning, which occurred off Lanor- | of holding office is sufficient, church here. The occasion is an aus- aie, about six miles west of Sorel, "Mr. Crerar"s quite. obvious des picious one, as it marks the sixtieth {the tug Spray was sent to the bot-|to link the Progressive party up anniversary of Mr. Wilson's entrance tom of the St. Lawrence, carryingithe Liberals and Premier Drury" into the Methodist ministry, and nis | with her five men and a woman, the frank declaration in favor of som diamond jubilee of service. Mr. [cook of the tug, who were caught thing like fusion in Ontario 8 01 Wilson is still vigorous in his pulpit | asleep in their cabins at the moment very plainly how Progressive po : al the disaster, 'golitics is tending." -- -- Sixty Years In Ministry, Ottawa, July 4.--After sizing up which = rt --------e LT ----------