Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Apr 1923, p. 1

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NOW PLAYING The Christian YEAR 90; No. CALLED EACH OTHER NAMES 00. Cols. Cutie Aud Cormick Almost Had Fight IN ONTARIO LEGISLATURE Drury-Merrison Truce Also Causes Flutter---House Sat Till 4.10 am. Toronto, April 27.--The Ontario degislature sat until 4 o'clock this morning, the night being occupied with estimates. moments about one hour before ad- 'jjournment, when Col. Carmichael, ;enraged at the attitude of Col. J. A. | Currie, (Conservative, Southeast, 1 oronto) left his seat and headed in fee direction of the Toronto mem- | ber. High words had passed between them and but for intervention of {Hon. Harry Mills, who caught and {held Col. Carmichael by the arms, & scene unprecedented in the house ti have been witnessed. { On consideration of supplement- jary estimates for game and fisheries, HCol. Currie had bombarded Hon. ! Mills with questions concern- pissy i items, and particularly with reference to the purchase of a 'boat. Col. Carmichael leaned over to Mr. Mills and spoke to him. Col. pCurrie, suspecting that Col. Car- (michael knew something about the Jaatter, wanted to know where he iSot his information. : "Perhaps the minister of power can give us some information," he said. "Don't you take that line with me," shot back Col. Carmichael. "Don't talk to me like that, your senior officer. You will get court- martialled," shouted Col. Currie. Col, Carmichael protested and Col. Currie exclaimed: "Don't think you can put it over me and you can't Jick me either." "You dirty scoundrel," came back Col. Carmichael as he made across e floor. he I. Currie thinking that he had sheen. called a 'dirty skunk" shout- 'ed: "He's double skunk." When calm wns restored both members . withdrew their offensive remarks. Drury-Morrison Truce. A second sensation was the an- * nouncement of the Drury-Morrison truce, by which the Premier pledges himsélf to abstain from further : "broadening cut" overtures and from alliance with other than Farmer- bor members. Sabor 3 charges made by Andrew Hicks, former government whip, in an interview at London, also creat- .ed tense interest. Hicks accused tho premier of "treachery'" to the Hydro 'cause, of planning to enter the fed- -eral cabinet and of proposing to Pring Sir Willlam Hearst, Hon. N. + W. Rowell and R. J. Fleming, into the Ontario cabinet. His charges Brought forth a denial from Premier Prury personally and from the U. ¥. O. caucus. The House spent most of the day in committee on estimates, voting | among other items, $5,000 for road bullding, colontzation work and Joans to settlers in Northern On- tardo, In the afternoon A. C. Lewis ask- | ed why W. A. McLean, deputy min- ister of highways was being sent to Spain to deliver an address on the development of motor transport at a roads congress to be held in Seville in May. "Why couldn't he write a letter and save a costly trip and the loss of his services at a busy time?" asked the Tory member. Attorney-General Raney that Mr. Lewis wait for his answer until Mr. Biggs was in his seat. Help For Northern Ontario. Hon. Beniah Bowman moved a Yote of $5,000,000 for Northern On- tario development, under the terms of the act which provides for per- | lodic grants for this purpose. "It it had not been for the great fire of last fall we would not have had to ask for this vote now," said Mr. Bowman. "This is the fourth vote of $5.- 600,000 that has been asked sinco 1612," he added, "making a total of $20,000,000." * E Substantial Agreement. Toronto, April 27.--In a state- nt issued to-day Premier Drury' that the resolution passed the U." FD. executive yesterday ressing 'theft intention of lend- Support to the candidature of Farmers upholding the plat- and principles of the farmers' ization, was ex:eedingly grat- to him. conference Yesterday, he said, Was a substantial agreement 'broad matters of policy and ad- istration. ------ Simpson Company, To- DO, announce immediate com- at of $1,000,000 building. { Toronto, April There were tense | | asked | British Whig NOW PLAYING The Christian ---------- "KINGSTON, ONTARIO. FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1923, 'Occupants Had to Flee From Burning Building <i ~A gas jet left burning under a coffee percolat- restaurant Nodel- result- er on the counter of the owned and managed by A. ENQUIRY INTO | SSEELEEES CORN BORER | ted the store premises. The fam- Stalks Ca ed ly, who were sleeping in the wir Have Corn ITI I of the store, were forced to leave by | Across Lake to US? | dee -- the back door while only partly | os | ENTONOLOGSTS' THEORES Bomb Explosions Cut' mmunications in Ruhr { Dusseldorf, April 27.--Five sep- |arate bomb explosions on the Ruhr railroads during the night cut rail- | way, telegraph and telephone com- { munication, temporarily disorganiz- | ing. traffic. French headquarters |said the explosions had caused the {most serious damage since the be} | ginning of the octupation. | Shipment From Austria | | to Ontario. | St. Thomas, Apri} 27.--Along the | South shore of Lake Erie, opposite Port Stanley and other . adjoining ---------- [places on the north shore, several Ordered to Investigate {young men are engaged in an unus=} i ual task. They are wandering up! Firing on v. 8. Schooner and down the shore of the lake, ac- _ -- cording to reports given out by the dominion entomologist, any corn stalks, ! | Washington, April 27.--Frederick M. Ryder, United States consul at weeds of Other plant Vancouver, B.C., was instructed by | Po | | Secretary of State Hughes today 1 hg A rashed ashore The, {investigate the firing on the United ¢0 ° Oe o Mis are lo be care | States schooner Siloam by a Cana- a a Bed 7. e eran ol] {dian fisheries patrol, which resulted B.8L8 2 © Dburpose o el in the death of J. M Yorke. a mem- termining whether or not the Euro- | ber of the Siloam's crew. collecting pean corn borer found its way to the | United States from Ontario in corn | stalks carried across the lake. One body of entomologists hold | to this theory. Another group be-| lleves that the corn borer flew across, the same as the pests have entered C United States. The borer moths are | capable of long flights, as experi- ments have shown, but doubts have j been expressed as to their ability to make the sixty-mile Journey over old | | Lake Erie's bosom. That the bor-| {ers originated from Ontario is gen- | {erally admitted, the first of the pests | | being traced to a large shipment of | [broom corn that came to this city | | about twelve years ago from Aus-| tria, several | anada from the "oy NEWS OFF THE WIRES | IN CONDENSED FORM 4 | | Niagara growers plan ipments of high-grade peaches to the west this season. General Board of Presbyterian ~1Church fixes budget Wt"%1,800,000, an increase of $300,000 over last year. . Sir Edmund Walker, president of the Bank of Commerce, joins the (FRARCO-CANADIAN TREKTY | GETS SECOND READING» == in opposing amendments to By Vote of 130 to 26--Am=! Three boats, belonging endments to immigra- rected Zorigitese ave arriv at Port tion Act. |gola, Africa. Eastern Canada Live Stock Un- ase for freight extensive JUDGE LANDIS United States Commissioner of Base- (8h ) ball, who may pitch the first ball of the | Season when the International league/ | sd4mes open in Toronto, a to . the SS. Mossamedes Alexander, An- | Ottawa, April 27.--The Franco- |, i" ; Canadian trade treaty, the subject ot] 0 Pegens Sirois ts of Can riticism in th | : hes ~ considerable criticism a house] an Freight Association. Justice McLaren, Toronto, 'is el- during the past week, received sec- jond reading last night by a vote of l130 to 25. Ee Conservatives oppos- ected president of the world's Sun- |ing it. Hon. Hugh Guthrie was ex-[ day School Assoclation, succeeding {pected to submit an amendment, | the late John Wannamaker. {but withheld it, probably until the | Large amount of live stock feed | treaty is presented for third read-| being imported by Denmark in- ing. dicates that. farmers in thst country Amendments to the immigration [2re not considering decreasing pro- {act were Introduced by Hon. Charles |4uction. |Stewart. One amendment js the| That a message of congratulation |elimination of a clause permitting and good wishes from the House of |the deportation of British subjects | Commons be sent to the Duke and {not born in Canada. uchess of York upon the occasion | ---------- lof their wedding day was decided {Steamer Is in Danger; {on Thursday night, Ashore in Packed Ice The annual Statement of the Ber- {lin reichsbank for 1922 shows a net 27.--The steamer | PTOfit of forty-three million, ¢ five reported by wire- [hundred thousang. marks for the § about a Halifax, April Cymric Queen was , less this morning ashore in packed |Y®ar. The profit in 1921 wa fce about five miles from Point gt, |Malf billion marks. : | Esprit on the Cape Breton coast. 1t| The Prince of Wales left on Fri- |1s said the steamer is in immediate [98Y morning for Brussels where, as (danger and has asked for assistance, [TePresenttive of the British govern- -- jie nt, he is to attend the unveiling of a memorial to commemorate Bel- Pests Traced to Broom Corn ¥ moths | his head, | : | After the fall he had never regain- | Fxhibition "Wiis RETAIN COAL ir di FOR CANADA THE GRAVEST MENACE a TO THE WHITE RACES Ottawa, April -27.--The Breatest | ally -1 pda ni Cirenund ip An Area ing Aliena erner, who persistently has refrain- | ed from carefully studying the sit.' uation and who has always looked For Old Hoppe Leases in Al- berta, English Firms Are on the appeals of the British Col umbian as being of a political nature | ope Notified. 2 and has not taken this whole mat- ter very seriously, according to Hon. Dr. S. F. Tolmie, member for | Victoria in the Federal House, an! A member of the Meighen Cabinet, | in the late government. Dr. Tolmie, in an interview with the Canadian Press went on to say {that in epite of British Columbia legislation, backed to the limit be | Ottawa, April 27.--The evidence Lusiness organizations, the People which has been disclosed before the of the coast province had been met secret senatorial committee ap- in the east by "procrastinating pol- {pointed to examine the affair of the iticlans who have failed to Bive US Hoppe leases has convinced the gov- legislation that would properly meet {or nment that it must intervene to the situation, and no single Party | check the move planned to secure is more to blame than the other Ineor private individuals one of the this particular respect." The Fesui | ost valuable coal fields in Canada. had been that they had seen In is understood that Senator Beique, "abortive legislation, halfway Tueas. fe of the most influential of the jres, lelly-fishing for fear of Murt. Liberal senators, has been the main ing the feelings of the Orientals, taktor 1 vinoin the Vern until the Chinese question, once at h convincing gove very simple one, is now developea | ent that this must be done. Yes- Into an Oriental problem that {s|t¢rday there was a meeting of the very difficult to meet." special committee which Sir % . "I want to say that this country | Gouin attended, and an agreement and its representatives must wake | Was reached that the up if we are to preserve Canada as | Would take immediate action to pre- a white man's country. to be en- vent any possibility of the coal joyed by this and future genera- (being alienated. What they tions," he said. probably do is to introduce a FLINTON MAN'S DEATH DUE TO NATURAL CAUSES Napanee Coroner Makes En- quiry Into the Passing of Reuben Gonyou, will {cancel fiats which have been issued. |Its provisions will be made retro- |active and will as soon as possible |be applied to the fiat granted to the |Hawailan Trust Company, who un- [der it had entered cuit {- the res- iteration of the Hoppe-Isenhery rights. | The prospects of their rehabilita- {tion will be ended. ari probably the | government will also agree to fur- -- In response to a telephone call [ther legislation which will make this which claimed that Reuben Gonyou, {particular tract of coal lands inalien- aged seventy-five years, Flinton, who |ahle without the coneent of parlia- died this week, at his home, had ment. Such a measure was propos- been a victim of foul play, Coroner ed last year, but the minister of the Cowan of Napanee, and Provincial {interior refused to accept it on tha Constable. Thompson, went to that | ground 'that it cast an imputation place on Wednesday, and made an (upon the integrity and capacity of investigation. Coroner Cowan when himself and his «It's speaking to the Whig, stated that | the govern: after making &*very careful exam- ment have cabled the high commis- ination, he was satisfied that the sioner in London and asked him to late Reuben Gonyou bad mot been notity certain English firms to tha i found that the detdased effect that no title for the Hoppe Who had lived with his wife and | ¢2%S Will bo available. Son on the farm about one mile ------------ back of Flinton, had stumbled while | in the yard near his home, and in| SEEKS CANADIAN TALENT. falling injured the back of Amw:ements until -the | Conung to Canada. morning of April 23rd. Coroner | London, April 27.-- Fred Bussey, Cowan stated that the deceased had [amusements director of the British suffered for some time from an all- | Empire Exhibition, will leave for ment, and had received the best of {Canada shortly to engage Canadian treatment from his son and wife. (talent and receive suggestions for Mr. Gonyou had lived near Flinton | for about twenty years, and due to advanced years was somewhat feeble. |bition. One suggestion - has It. is thought that he must have [¢}4¢ a western stampede be produc. stumbled, and in so doing struck his faq by Canadians. head when he fell. Dr. Tindle, who| attended the deceased shortly after the accident, made a careful exam- FARM LABOR IN WEST. ination, and was satisfied that noth- ing, other than the fall, was the 'Manitoba, Saskatchewan arfl Alber. cause of the death. ta Require Assistance, After careful investigation, Cor- | Winnipeg, April 27.--With a few oner Cowan ordered that the body iyien leaving British Columbia for be buried, as he was satisfied death |r) work th1s spring, a widespread Was due to natural causes, shortage in the supply of farm labor -- [ie reported from the three Prairie Britain Plans Protest |provinces. Two thousand workers {are required by the farmers of Mani- of Soviet's Violations toba and Saskatchewan, each prov- -- ince having 1,000 unfilled applica- London, April 27.-- The British tions, while Alberta is also asking Fovernment to address |g. outside assistance. without delay a serious communica- tion to the Russian government {in i -------- UNDUE PUBLICITY, Director ed consciousness, and lived regard to the series of acts commit- To Increase Wages. 4 ; New York, April 27.-- The Great |Elum's kindness to Britain's troops On- {in the great war. | Northern Paper company and the tario Paper and St. Croix Paper Com- The Quebec seminary, the oldest pany have granted union demands educational institution in Canada, Fo 4 general wage increase of five [Nas completed the programme for {cents an hour, it was announced to- |'he celebration of the thirq centen- (ay. Union officials are confident |ary of the birth of its founder, Mgr- jother companies will make similar [Laval, also first bishop of Quebec, on the 16th of May. increase. - During the fiscal year ended March 31st, Canada's total trade in- TWELVE BURNED 10 DEATH creacec nearly a quarter of g bill- | IN I BUILDING ~ dollars. Total trade during the ---- | | |year was $1,748,530,880, an increase [New York Firemen Find Char- -- | May Name Sir Adam Beck, { St. Catharines, April 27.--St. | Catharines Conservatives will meat { in convention here tomorrow to name a standard bearer for the rid- ing in the provincial elections. It 1s said that ex-Mayor Graves has strong support for nomination, but there is [over the previous year of $246,840,- 87. red Bodies--Other Persons Seriously Injured. -- New York, April 27.--Twelve per- sons are believed to have died in a fire which swept through a tene- ment building on East 109th street early today. Scores fled from the fame-filled structure by way of fire|® ETOWINg feeling among hydro ; dial Conservatives that the nom- escapes, while a dozen others were [72 : spectacularly rescued by police ang 40ation should be offered to Sir firemen. Twenty persons were in.|Adam Beck. ured, man of them seriously. = -- J y Ye] Hanged Wimself In Hospital. Many policemen and firemen were : burned in effecting rescues. When| Brockville, April 27. Obsessed the firemen were able to enter the With the idea that he might be hang- building they found ten charred bod-|ed for the imagined killing of peo- ies, those of two worien, two girls, {Ple about his aome, Peter Laraviere, three men and three boys, All were aged thirty-two, an Ottawa patient removed to the morgue where hys-/at the Ontario Hospital for the in- Sane hanged himself in a lavatory of ted by the latter in which British subjects have been the victims, the House of Commons was informed by Konald McNeill, under secretary for foreign affairs. These acts, he stat- ed, had excited the profound indig- nation of the British government and the couniry at large. Mr. McNeill made his Statement while answering questions referring among other things to the recent confiscation by the Soviet govern- ment of the trawler James Johnson, and the execution at Petrograd in 1920 of I. F. Davison, on "trumped up evidence." Indecent Details of Divorce Cases Being Published. London, April 27.--The undue Publicity given by certain sections of the press to the indecent details of cases recently tried in the law courts here, especially divorce cases, was the subject of a debate in the House of Lords. While all the speakers agreed as to such publica- tion being an evil, opinion was di- vided as to whether legislation to curb it was necessary or whether action to lessen the evil would be possible under the existing law. There the matter rested. EE ------------ Protest Against Titles, Capetown, South Africa, April 27. -~The House of Assembly yesterday passed the third reading of the bil] establishing export bounties on beer and livestock. During the session Labor Leader Cresswell notified the Assembly of kis intention to move for an address praying the King to refrain from conferring titles on residents of this Union of South Africa. ------ rg Coal h St. Catharines, April 27.--Anthra- cite coal, which during the winter ranged in price from $18 to $20. is today quoted locally at $16 to $16.- 0000000000000 0¢0 * » + + * -- » Greenwood, B.C, April 37-4 --The Providence Mine, for ¢ . Which a million dollars was re- | fused 20 years ago, fetched $2,000 under the sherift's ham- mer here yesterday. The pur- chaser was William Madden, former manager, who is backed by the Madden Brokerage in- terests in Chicago, ome of the principal bond holders. The sale is subject to a bond issue of $50,000 and operations are to be resumed within a couple of months, * + * + + * + terical men and women tried to identify them. the men's ward last night, + * * + * * * + * + * + - e * + + + + * + * * * 0000000000000 Lomer | government | area | bill | |giving the government "the right to | the entertainment of 20,000,000 peo- | {Fle expected to patronize the exhi- | been | LAST EDITION. |A UNIQUE SCHEME | OF PRISCN REFORM {Would Have Flowers in Cells i and Allow Conversation | Among Convicts. | S-- 9 !. London, April 7.--"Saying ' it With flowers" may be a feature of {prison life here if the scheme |prison reform outlined by the chair- |man of the prison commission, M. L. | Waller, is carried out. | The chairman's scheme for im- |proving prison conditions, besides [providing that flowers and plants {may be kept in the cells, and cor- {ridors, substitutes for the present | degrading costumes of prisoners, jclothes similar to those worn in or- | dinary life, allows washstands, mir- rors. and book shelves with books [to be introduced into the cells and |8ive larger opportunities than ob- {tain at present for conversation be- {tween the prisoners and their res- | pectable relatives, Prisoners' hair no longer will be Waller's cropped, according to Mr. |scheme. Lectures and debates, even plays, |already have been introduced into | prisons, the chairman of {mission states, and so far not one | experiment along this line has failed (® producing a good effect. DR. VROOMAN'S CHANCES ARE GOOD IN LENNOX Not Likely to Be Any U. F. 0. Candidate in That : Riding. Although it is rather soon to make any definite Statement, it is a)- jmost certain that the provincial |campaign in the county of Lennox {will be a straight fight between the | Liberal candidate, Dr. J. D. Vroo- {man, Napanee, and Charles W. Ham- {bly, cattle dealer, of the same place, | who will be the Conservative stand- ard-bearer. This seat has been vac- ant owing to the death of the late {| Mr. Fowler of Amherst Island. | here have been rumors to the effect that the United Farmers, who were successful in' electing their candidate, E. J. Sexsmith, to the | Dominion House, in December, 1921, |would have a representative in the | field, but later reports do not veri- {fy this. The farmers are evidently |satisfied to see a straight scrap be- tween the two old parties. . The Liberal candidate is very popular and should have a good chance of winning. The Napanee vote will in all likelihood £0 to Dr. | Vrooman, while the rural commun- ity is very doubtful, { It would not be at all surprising if the United Farmers would have a candidate to face W. D. Black, who | will lkely be the Conservative {standard-bearer for the Addington | riding. | The election board, which will | have charge of the registration for | the county, met at Napanee on Wed- | nesday, and talked over matters re- {lating to the campaign. ---------- GIRL SAVED BY DOG. | -- Animal Held Child, Sinking in Bog, All Night. | North Brookfield, Mass., April 27. {--The life of little Florence Coderic | was credited yesterday to her shep- herd dog. "King." | lowers in the woods north of here | Yesterday, the child was caught in a quagmire. She began to sink and |grasped the dog. As Florence went | deeper into the swamp, "King" stood firm to his task. All night {child and dog remained there, too {exhausted to make a sound. | A brother of the girl, searching {after a large posse had gone to rest {trom a night-long hunt, found some {flowers which she had dropped and {discovered little Florence holding "King." The child was in the Swamp up to her arm pits. The dog's legs were deep in the mire. Florence was exhausted and speech- |less for several hours, but it is be- lieved she sustained no permanent ill-effects. The dog responded read- {ily to treatment and frisked about {his little mistress today. te ADOPT DAYLIGHT SAVING. ---- Summer Time Efective Sunday in Niagara Section. St. Catharines, April 27.--Prac- tically every urban point in the east- ern section of the Niagara district will go on daylight saving on Sun- day night next, Welland being the only exception. Niagara Falls, which adhered to standard time last year, is back in the line again. The Niagara, St. Catharines and Toronto rallwy, which touches all points, will also on that date adopt summer time, which will prevail on that company's steamboat line from Port Dalhousie to Toronto. ---- Student Marriages Banned. Syracuse, N.Y., April 27.--"Mar- riage of any student enrolled In Syracuse university henceforth will [be accepted as withdrawal from the university. Marriage will automa- tically cancel a student's enroliment {and all of his or her connections iwith the university." This edict was issued by Chan- iceilor Charles .Wesiey Flint, "in 'keeping," he said, "with similar moves taken by other leading univer- sities." of | Seeking May- | lis HICKS MAKES NEW CHARGES Declares Drury Was Faith | less to Progressive Ideas. UFO. NENBERS' DENIAL { | -- { That Premier Planned a | Union Cabinet With Lib- | erals Aad Tories. London, Ont., April 27.--Andrew Hicks, of South Huron, who sprang [a bombshell in the legislature by (renouncing the Post of government !whip and renouncing Premier Drury, | returned to the attack on the pre- |mier in an interview here yesterday. ! Hicks bluntly declared that the attempted and Planned Ito resurrect in provincial politics {Some of the men and much of the {principles of the "war-time junker |8roup in a new Unionist party," de- | signed not only to represent erst- | while Liberals, but such Conserva- {tives as former Premier Sir Will. {iam Hearst. | Moreover, he claimed that | premier had so remolded the policies lof the United Farmers of Ontario | that the government is to-day by venomous attacks on the Hydro {enterprises of the municipalities, 'serving the purpose of the private corporations with which the farm | people of Ontario have never had |anything in common, The farmers, | be declared, are not the anti-public | ownership bloc which he alleges the | premier has made them appear; jin- | stead he argues, they are the strong- {est exponents of ownership by the {people and they are asking not to have Hydro killed but to have g¢ | 8reater share in its benefits. the -- Would Join King Cabinet. "The members declared that he d been selected as their leade: d that they required his services. he replied that in consideration of their past loyalty to him he would withdraw his request for release, and he pro- mised that he would not leave until alter ' Which is now at hand. He stipulated, however, that when the time came again no ob. stacle should be placed in his path, {as he said he could go into the King |cabinet at any time with no ques- [tions asked. "The Progressives at Ottawa were {In need of a leader at that time, but {he said nothing of giving his ser- | vices there: instead he was to join [the King cabinet as a Liberal." | ha lan {After some discussion | { U. F. O. Denial. | Toronto, April 27.-- The U. F. 0. | members have issued a denial of the | Hicks' charges made at London yes- |terday against Premier Drury. -- | Drury and Morrison Argus. Toronto, April 27. --Lrenier {Liury returned to the parliament | buildings yesterday aliernooa seen:- {ugly well pleased with his thrae- {hour conference with the U.F.0. ex- | ecutive, "We found ourselves." said he 'to ibe in complete agreement as to the | present political position, and the pioper course of az.'on to be taken Jy the U.F.0O. and the government. Mr. Drury declined to discuss his relations with Mr. Morrison, bayond saying that "the p'iblic has Dbgen given an exaggerated jdea of the {differences between us, J. J. and 1 | Joined hands to bring the U.F.0. into being, and will continue to | work together for the extension of |its usefulness.' -------------- OLERICAL UNION, -- Of the Bay of Quinte Held Sessions at Napanee, Napanee, April 27.--~The Bay of Quinte Clerical Union met in Nap- ance on Tuesday and Wednesday, April 24th and 25th, the Bishop of Ontario and twenty-two clergy be- ing present. The Rev. H. Pringle, Adolphustown, gave a scholarly. and {somprehenaive outline of Christian doctrine and practise. Bishop Bid- [well contributed a lucid and intense- ly interesting analysis of Gore's | book, "Bellet in God." At the pub- [te service in St. Mary Magdalene's church, which was largely attended, the preacher was Canon Broughall, St. Catherines, who made a strong {plea for loyalty to the Christian | faith. Canon Broughall also gave a { helpful devotional address to the clergy at.the concluding session. Rev. Canon Armstrong and Rey. { Rural Dean Coleman were re-elect. ed respectively president and secre tary of the Union. ---------------- Dances 109 Hours. San Antonia, Texas, April 27. |A. C. Watson, yesterday claimed the world's non-stop dance record when he passed a mark of 109 hours and forty-five minutes established by a Washington dancer. ---------- | The Grand Trunk shareholders will press claims in Canada. Former Crown Attorney Dingwal dead at Coruwall, .

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