ey, MON., TUES., WED. ALICE rany "THE SNOW BRIDE" EERE NN TO-DAY WALTER HIERS 60 Cents An Hour YEAR 90; No. 206. KINGSTON, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1923. E HORROR; 1 60,000 PEOPLE ARE KILLED cote Kags Gk CAPITAL OF GREECE IS NOW ISOLA! A Tragic Accident Occurs to A Boy at Chantry In Government Allows No Reports Broad * casted Concerning Internal Situation. Leeds. ltalian Premier Declares Italy Will Withdraw :|- From League of Nations If League Deals : With Greco-ltalian Controversy. husband is dean of the univer- sity. Her relatives here hope for the best. A daughter of Rev. and Mrs. : > * Rome, Sept. 4.--Athens is com- her terms for the evacuation of # | pletely isolated and the Greek Gov- Corfu more onerous it Greece de~ ernment is allowing no reports con-| lays in fulfilling. the terms of his cerning the grave internal situation' ultimatum, Premier Mussolini is J. G. Dunlop, Alice street, is a also in Japan. She was recently +» % icans 44; Indeepndents 16; La- # to be sent from the capital, says a quoted by the Daily Mail's Rome despatch received from Greece | correspondent as declaring, married and her friends hope # bor 15; Farmers 15. Total $ shortly before noon to-day. J ' Th funeral of Wilfrid Cowan's littlethree-year-old son was held iu Chaary, on Saturday. Much sor- row i felt, as the littie fellow fell into : boiler of scalding water, and after sulfering two hours, passed away His parents reside at Chan- |" try ad feel their loss keeniy. Sir Villiam Mulock Named Chief Justice of Ontario Tokio And Yokohama Are Ruins And the Streets Are Strewn With Heaps of Dead. Whole Towns And Villages Completely. Wiped Out--Over 300,000 Build- eS Destroyed in Tokio--7,000 Killed in One Pleasure Resort. | hama alone there have been 10,000 casualties from Saturday's earth- quake and fire, according to a radio message from the Governor of Yoko- hama. The Emperor and Empress are at Nikko and 'it is confirmed that the Prince Regent is safe. A wireless from the Korea Maru reports 200,000 peaple of Yoiohama homeless and without food. Thous- ands have taken refuge aboard the Paris Maru, Harbin Maru and italy Maru. Ottva, Sept. 4.--Hon. Sir Wil- liam hloch has been appointed chief jitice of Ontario; Hon. Justice latebl'd becomes chief justice Of the send divisional court; Justice Orde justice of appéal of the sec- ond disional court and Wiilifh Henry /right, Owen Sound, is ap- pointedudge of the high court of Ontaric MAIY CANADIAN WQRKERS THERE Method. Missionaries Chiefly in th Earthquake Area of Japan. CEPPPLPPPPPFIPEOIPEOIEYS * 3 o> + J FINAL RESULT OF shocks which threw down many of IRISH ELECTIONS the finest modern structures of the capital, destroyed bridges, tunnels, towers, manufacturing plants, banks and residences and from the fires which followed and are still raging beyond control, has been inestimable. Japan will 'lose ther position as fourth power of the world, accord- ing to the Mainichi, because the country has no financial reserve. The largest companies are bankrupt; ia- surance concerns and many of the strongest banks probably are ruined. The country's manufacturing inter- Dead Heap Streets. ests are blasted, Pekin, China, Sept. 4.- -The streets | Financially, and from the view- of Tokio are heaped with bodies of | Point of loss of human life, the dis- dead, according to advices from |aster is considered the greatest in South Japan. Japan's 'history. The casualties in the Japanese cap-} Part of the royal palace was des- ital are said to be inestimable. troyed by the quakes and the prince Most of the buildings wcre de-|regent of Japan fled from his house stroyed. into the family shrine where he wor- Nagoya, a cily of several hundred | shipped while portions of the palace thousand inhabitants, 170 miles {grumbled about him and his house southwest of Tokio, has been virtu- [Was partially destroyed. A major Dublin, Sept. 4.--The final 4 resulth of the Irish elections 4 are: Government 63; Repub- esses sssse det eee » LATEST SUMMARY ; i : T OF THE CASUALTIES 3 San Francisco, Sept. 4.-- One " @ million persons aré homeless %® while the death list totals 160,- _ #& 000 in a Japanese earthquake. & Few buildings remain standing # in either Tokio or Yokohama. % In the famous mountain resorts _ % frequented by foreigners .it is % sald to be easler to count the # ving than the dead. 4 A former premier of Japan % ang forty leading members of the government party are 're- ted killed, : Praia and French embassies % In Tokio are destroyed. The ® C.P.R. steamship's building in . @ Yokohama is wrecked. she fis fanther nortn than (ue devastated region. 153. All cabinet ministers el- # ected. ; | P| PEPE LFRRER LS Rb bby Eight-Year-old Girl Telegraph despatch from Rome to- Drowned In A Cistern day says that Premier Mussolini told the cabinet that if the council of the League of Nations asserts its com petency to deal with the Greco Italfdh "controversy, Italy will with- draw 'from the league. + v > Mussolini's Threat. London, Sept. 4.--An exchange Italy's Honor Involved, 4 London, Sept. 4.--A Central News despatch from Rome to-day says that Premier Mussolini specifically has instructed the Italian delegates to the League of Nations that he is absolutely determined to maintain his position that the league is fn = competent to deal with cases In which the honor and prestige of Italy are concerned. Agincourt, Sept. 4.--When the cover tipped, little eight-year-old Jean Gooderham fell into the cls. tern, yesterday, and was drowned. Missed by her ten-year-old brother, her haf was found, and then the lad saw his sister's body floating in the water. Without assistance he man- aged to pull her out. The cover of the cistern was floating beside her. Toronto Sept. 4. -- Methodist missionarit from Canada in, or near, the rons affected by the Ja- panese catirophe, comprise the following: Rev. R. Crmstrong, M.A., Fh.D., of Toronto,lio with his wife and children wiliving in Tokio just opposite tharsenal. Rev. D. RucKeizie, M.A., D.D., More Onerous Terms. London, Sept. 4.--Italy will make SEE RPVIL 2422202404408 BOCES LP0 0222220? FERBIA San Francieco, Cal, Sept. 4.-- i Tokio, Yokohama, and neighboring cities are ruins, while more than 0,000 persons in the vicinity of 8 cities are reported dead as a oived hy ress from ils Sbau-| dent and Ly the radio h and destriction were spread 'an area roughly comprised a radius 'of fifty miles of 0. How extensive the casuaities the malerial damage outside "that zone is, has not been determin- od, as all communications with Japan , still interrupted except for brief copnections by radio wih Tomioka and occasional despatches from Ja- pan to Shanghal. ~ With raliroad lines, telephone wires and all other means of com- Stications and travel between Mo and the remainder of Japan and the outside world cut off, Tokio nd the other cities on the central ern sea coast on the sland of do are isolated in their desola- The cities of Tokio and Yokohama "described by the superintendent the Japanese government wireless n at Tomioka which operates radio correspondence,/as "Like Wo 1] dldings were falling, fire was ding everywhere; dead and dy- were on all eldes; there were fons and cries of horror and the pan en populace. p quake and fire did not de- on land, tidal waves are report- to have crushed: or sunk at sea. sly 1 are honpesny wd Ram are without food and B iki Hit id E57 -3 thy ally destroyed. At Yokohama the naval station was overwhelmed by a tidal wave. Water Supply Failed. The people fled from thelr homes. Intermittent shocks continued until sundown. Fires broke out everywhere and the flames, fanned by the strong wind, spread in all directions. It was impossible to control them, as the water supply failed at the criti- cal moment. When the correspondent feft at nine o'clock in the evening many of the government offices had been burned down, including the home de- partment and the métropolitan po- lice siation The correspondent estimaies that 200,000 houses were reduced io ashes and the fire was still burning in many places. Estimates of the casualties for the moment are un- certain, but they are believed to have been enormous. Troops and doctors are doing splendid work do rendering first aid. + * ® + + * * Still Another Great Upheaval. Cairo, Egypt, Sept. 4.--The 'lel-|*® cuan Seismograph registered a vio-|¥ lent earthquaké beginning ai 3.11 o'clock Sunday morning. Greenwich time. The. intensity of the shock was tremendous. It was one of the greatest ever recorded in Egypt equalling that of the great Chilean convulsion. Foreign Section Safe. London, Sept. 4.--The foreign sec- tion of Yokohama, which is situated high on a hili, escaped destruction, according to an Osaka despatch to the Daily Express. Tokio in Ruins, Pekin, Scpt. 4. --- Fire followed swiltly after the earthquake shocks, according to other messages reach- ing China. Twenty square miles of Tokio have been burned. The coun- Ury between Osaka and Tokid is in ruihs. Yokohama, shattered by the Quake, was swept by a gigantic tidal wave, taking its toll of dead. Wrecked houses burst into conflagra- tion that later swept districts of seaport. oo TA typhoon preceded the first Shock. Twenty-five minutes after the first gigantic tremor, a second shock shook the broken houses. The tidal wave followed, spreading havoc). along the coast. 'At: Tokio the fire penetrated the great arsenal, entirely destroying its Vast stocks of munitions in g gigan- tic explosion that resuited in thou- sands of casualfties. : ey ess report that at least 000 buildings have been demol- ished by fire and earthquake at Seven thousand were killed when the resort town of Mount Hakoue, iii $e éve quake, 000 tons. i i Atame, or top of [1 portion of the royal palace saved, however." (Continued on Page 16. BOTH LINERS SAFE. Seattle, Wash. of the tidal wave zone off coast of Japan are safe, ) CPR. Enpress of Canad Enroute to Japan With | ie lo Jap AEE EET R EERE Sept. 4. % The passenger liners Empr % of Canada and President Jeff # son, which came within rad cording to word received by § here. Toronto, Sept. 4. -- The S. press of Canada. the largest ship on the Pacific g wQuld be from 800 to 1,000 hs off the Japanese shore earthquake shook the island. in 'board the vessel were at least $4- teen members of famil o dan Methodist missionagies, going out to their new fi turning from furlough. Ocean, and the Empress was due lo at the port of Yokohama yes The principal fear as to he: was in connection with 1h hu wave which swept the shores pon following close upon the She is a/new vessel @ The names of the Canadian dist missionaries known to board are as follows:--- Dr. Fi F. three fant, missionary apartmen I Miss ue: Story, wahesa, Man. » These four were bound China, and Miss Sto out to marry Dr. C, T, | i # Canadian Pacific Line agend sess sect a 23 ®h when | e | 1 a graduate (Victoria College, liv- ing in the sme conpound as Rev. Mr. Armstroy Rey. Fost¢ Hilllaed, of Morris- burg, Ont. ! GQ was vA B, MiKonzle, M.A., vig wil his wife and dnildren'at Nagoya, which is sup- msed ¢ have jeen otally destroy. ad Rev, F. Ainsvorth, of Hamilton, statiored at Torana. Rev J. C. L Jates, of Ottawa, presicent of the Methodist Union Collexe at Kobe. Rev. H. W. Outrbridge, of Nova Scotia, .in charge ¢ the Theological Department at Kob. Eev. M. M. Whitig of St. Thomas, stationed at Kobe. Rev. G. R. Treth of Manitoba. stationed at Kobe. - Rev..W. J. M. Cigg and Rev. H. F. Woodsworth, ofJntario, station- ed at Kcbe. Rev. H. H. Coate M.A, D.D., of Ontario, stationed t Hammatsu. Rev. E. C. Hennfan of St. John, N.B., stationed at latsumoto. Rev. A. T. Wilkison of Toronto, stationed at Shezu«a, At the foot of Mount Faiji. Amongst the femle workers 'in Tokio, were Miss I.Hargrave, Miss Annie Alen, Miss 3. Campbell, a professor in the Wenén's Christian College; Miss C. Drke and Miss L Blackmore, Many Canadian missionaries were residents of the midJapan area in- volved in the disaste, and news of the earthquake causd, keen anxiety in Toronto. In this area were con- centrated all the Yethodist and Church of England nissionaries in the country. . Headqumters of bot churches were locaed fn towns Which the brief cable despatches re- Ported to be "virtual destroyed." In Tokio the Fresbiterian church has one worker, whil another mis- .|slonary and his wife were staying . | there studying the Japanese lan- guage. Ontario Ronan Catholics and Baptists were not this field. "epresented in (Continued on Pige 16.) i MOTOR CYCLST KILLED WHEN HIT BY AN AUT irty ¥ into a Ditch Th Feet Away. Welland, Sept. 4. -- Ons of the worst motor accidents ir this dis- trict in years occurred vestsrday on the Thorold road near nere, when Solvio Borgatti, twenty-eight years old! South 'Welland, was killed and Amedio Vancini, was so seriously in- Jured he is not expected to live. Re- ports of the acoldent are that Bor- gatti, riding a moliorcycle, with Van- cini riding on the rear seat turned out to pass a Ford touridg car driven by W. Clendenning, Niagara Falls, and was hardly past when a Hudson six, driven by Jiminy Sahara, of this city, struck the cycle head on, throw- ing the lighter machine against the Ford and iustantly killing Borgatti, whose body bounced into a ditch thirty {cet away. Vancini aiso was thrown across the diteo into a fence, sustaiuing a fractured right leg, left arm and skull MINERS LOOKING FOR NEW JOBS Operators' Do Not Look For Short Suspension Unless Workers Yield. Wilkesbarre, Pa., Sept. 4.--Sus- pension of mining in the upper coal fields remained complete to-day. Many miners are looking for jobs in other industries, pending a settle- ment of the anthracite wage ques- tion of an early resumption, while the a short suspension as long as the workers demand a 'big increas in wages, the check off and other con- £ g hf nhs : 5 Mine. workers are still optimistic | He mt ronch SRE 3 Fo seized by Italian war ships w population. Half of the 60,00( Greek refugees from Turkey. to be part of a plan to close th ly an Italian lake. Janina, murdered, is shown on the ) I e ma WHERE ITALY COMMITTED AN Corfu, a Greek island off Albania, ith ten minutes' warning to the i No ACT OF WAR. has been bombarded and population are Armenian and taly's precipitate action appear Adriatic sea, making it virtual - where the Italian mission was p. Fall of Plaster. There was a great fall in plaster on Tuesday forenoon. ' While schosl Inspector J. Russell Stuart and the newly-appointed secretary-treasurer, W. J. C. Allen, were busily engaged in their office, a large portion of the celling plaster came down to tae fioor with a crash. Mr. Stuari had a very close call, but luckily, both the ofticials escaped injury. ee Decorated St. Paul's Vestry. During the absence from the city of Canon W. F. FitzGerald, several gentlemen of the congregation of St. Paul's church placed new hard- wood flooring in his vestry and de- coratéd the ceiling and walls as a surprise for him upon his return. Canon FitzGerald greatly apprec- iated the work. : The loss of life in Tokio is estita- ted at Harbin to. be 300,000. The Charges Villa Burned ; 200 Captives to Death Mexico City, Sept. 4.-«The ing and burning alive of 200 prison- ers by the late bandii leader Francis «= co Villa in Chihuahua after the battle of San Andres de la Sierra on tember 6th, 1913, is related in a 181- ter from one of the survivors puplish- ed by Excelsior. The 200 were about equally divide ed between wounded and umn jured, according to the story, and many of them, still alive after falling before the fire of the execution squads, were thrown screaming on the great byre of oll-soaked timber which had been prepared and eet ablaze. Aniong . the victims were several Women camp followers, with their children, who had dared to scream ourses at Villa for sacrificing their men. ---- Shipping 1s. still unabie to enter flames of ihe blazing capitai bave been visible for 200 miles. "You The perfect LOVER, In a woman's eyes, . Is a man who is, AT ONCE, A king and a SLAVE; A cave man AND a courtier; Controllable, yet Uncontrolled ; Totally blind, EXCEPT To her own beauty. Yokohama harbor, owing to contin ued submarine upheavals. wt Said It, Marceline!" He must be ready To eat out of her hand ONE minute, And the next, With his two ARMS, Be able to crush Al the lite | From her sweet body. /