TO-DAY JACKIE COOGAN LL] ol ircusDays id ish Whin = Ren, MON., TUES, WED. "If Winter Comes"? YEAR 90; No. 346 MCGILL WON | TRACK HONOR Defeated Toronto University | hs by 59 Points to 49. I'or more than one hundred years 2 THREE RECORDS BROKEN Queens Finished a Poor, Third==The Meet Held | at Toronto. Toronto, Oct. 20.--One of the best fntercoliegiate track meets heid in| many years was won by McGill un- | iversity athletes yesterday afternoon, | when they scored 59 points at the | University of Toronto statium, ten | more than were earned by the Uni- | versity of Toronto athletes, and en- ough to give them the championship, even should the blue and white win | the one-mile relay race, which is to be at half-time of the University oi Toronto-Queen's football game this afternoon. Three intercollegiate records, | those for the half mile run, 120) yards hurdles, and pole vault, were | broken. The display given by Irving Prancle, 1923 Canadian champion in setting a new Canadian mark ce 12 feet 7 inches for the last men- tioned event, was the feature of the meet The MeGill track team has held the honors for a number of years. Walll, a member of the Queen's track team, was successful in tak- inz the honors in the disc throw- ing, which marks the first event won | by Queen,s in a number of years. The triscolor athletes have never won the annual meet. ! 8on of Hugo Stinnes To Tour United States New York, Oct. 20.--Hugo Stin- nes, Jr., son of Hugo: Stinnes of Germany, who is en route to Amer- fea, will make a tour of the United States during his brief stay in this country, It was announced today by ® business representative of the Stinnes .ergcnization in New York. He will femain in New York for a few days and them depart for the Pacific coast. No special significance is to be attached to the visit. officials of H. Holleson, The, American agents for Stinnes, deciared. Rather, the trip is considered a vacation tor him. QUEEN'S TEAM THE FAVORITES In The Betting At Toronto-- A specal despatoh to the Whig from Toronto says: A fairly cool morning with bright sunshine greet. ed the rooters here for the Queen's- Varsity game today. It looks [lke the fast field the Queen's delight in but both ' faction are pleased with the weather outlook. Lettie seems to be very light wita odds asked by Toronto supporters, =o far Queen's are steady favorites. ::un- dreds of Queen's graduates from au directions are converging at the King Edward hotel ahd the happy re- unfons here today can only be made more pleasant by a victory for me tri-color. Al players are reported iu good shape. . Both teams will use practically the same |ineup as against McGill. ~ Ferguson 1s exepcted to start at flylng wing for Varsuy. Capt. W. A, Orr, M.C., has been appointed director of the amusement tax branch of the provincial trea- | the life of Sir Thomas More, ; ment surer's department. " KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SHAKESPEARE FIND IN BRITISH MUSEUM Whole Scene of a Play Is Writ- ten in the Poet's Own Hand. London, Oct. speare find of the first magnitude is! announced by The Daily Express hundred and forty-seven lines of manuscript have lain indthe British Museum. They were additions to a play written by Anthony Munday oa which was published about 1592. The play was correctcd by various hands, ani | it was sugg-sted that one scenc was written by Shakespeare. The Ex- press says it is now established, ac- cording to eminent scholars, that the handwriting is that of the poet. It is identical to that of six proved sig- j Diures of his will and other legal uments which hitherto have been ih only known examples of the handwriting of Shakespeare. "The manuscript is the most valnable in the\ worlc. It can never. and will never, be bought by Americans, un- ! less they buy the British Museum," says The Express. Turkish Women Join In a Public Dance Constantinople, Oct. 20...For the first time in Tugkey native women are joining in a public dance to- night with foreign society. The oc- casion is a charity soiree organized by Shukri Naili Pasha, commander of the Constantinople troops. The director of police issued a state- that the civil code contains no veto on Moslem women partiel- pating in dances. Turkish women will also shortly appear here on the stage female parts previously having been taken by Armenian or other non-Moslem actresses. 14,000 ENGLISH DOCTORS ARE GOING ON STRIKE Threat Against National Health Insurance--Protest the Cut in Pay. London, Oct. 20.--Doctors are threatening to strike against any cu: in the amount paid to them for look- ing after patients in their care under the national health insurance scheme. The threat will not in any case take effect until the beginning of next year, but if it dces the ar- rangement by which thousands of working men and women got their medical attendance, practically free, will break down. Since health fa- surance was introduced into England a large number of medical practi- tioners have become '"'panel doctors," and have undertaken to treat with- out further charge mer and women who are required by law to pay health insurance. Rccently they have been receiving annually nine shillings and six pence for each pa- tient on their list, of which the "ap- proved socleties"---that of tho friendly society, trade union or in- dustrial insurance company to which the insured patients belong--hav? Leen paying seven shillings anil threopence, while the naticnal ex- chequér has made up the two shil- lings and threspence balance. But in future, for cconomy, the govern- ment has suggested that after the end of the year, the doctors should be content with only eight and six- pence, that the gbvernment should pay nothing. ard that the approved societies should find an extra one shilling and threegence. To this proposal the approved societies hav: objected on the ground. that any further contributions they mad» should be devoted to 'preventive and curative" work, rather than paying ordinary doctors. But much stronger opposition has ceme from the medical men them- selves. They declare that they will net work as panel doctors for a penny less than their nine and six- pence, and at a meeting of the panel doctors' union held this afternoon, they declared that they would re- sign wholesale if they lost their shyl- "You Said It, Marceline!" | MARCELINE FALROY oa Maa 1s a Career. MAN used to be Woman's great CAREER! t Why is he so no longer? For one's SPARE time. And 'men are no longer By their business. Men USED to be able To keep a woman busy, Now they can't even Keep her QUIET. To the modern woman The modern man is Not a CAREER, he's A CATERER-- A source of materail supply; And Woman, who ngeds more, 20.--A great Shake-| lived to tell the story of tie longest | SAVE HUNTER | 56% er FROM DEATH Proposed by Archbishop of Belleville luspecior Caught in the Ooze e of a Bog. SANK TO HIS SHOULDERS ance on Nov. 11th. Before His Comrades Could Draw Him Out With Im- | London, Oct, 20.--This year Arm- istice Day, November 11th, falls on a Sunday, and 11 o'clock is tiie regu- lar hour for the beginning of church service. So the Archbishop of Can- terbury has suggested that the ser- vices be put forward fifteen minutes and that the "silence" be kept in church. Moreover, it has been ar- ranged that the king, the prime min- ister, the cabinet and dominion re- presentatives should attend a special | service in Westminster Abbey at the grave of the Unknown Warrior, Probably thts will be carried out as the most feasible way of keeping provised Bridge. the day on Sunday, but there are Belleville, Oct. 20.--Dragged fiom the brink : | very many protests. of a horrible grave after | Men who are little given to senti- being engulfed te the shoulders in | | the coze of a dezolate bog, Game DICH pave realize] thal i toad tWo | silent minutes fn the midst of the | Inspector Coburn of this city has | | regular daily rush there has been an | | extraordinary revival of the wonder- | time. With Inspector Nugent, | 1! feeling of national unity which | North Hastings, and Fred Braudt, | "0° out of the war, and they are he was hunting ducks in North Has. 108th to lose it. They fear that any tings, when he upset his canoe, 123 interruption in the regular annwal feet from shore, and his friends, an- | observance may lead to its gradual swering his call, found him hip deep neglect, and they are protesting that in the muddy bog. They gathered | Whatever the churches may do, the poles and wired them together aad street ceremony must be maintaffied. pushed them to him in an effort to rescue him, but Coburn sank to the waist. i Frantically his comrades extended the improvisod bridge, using shoe | laces, suspenders and belts to strengther the snake link contri- vance. After two and one-half hours of desperate manoeuvering, the res- : cners managed to shove the bridge ! within reach of Coburn who by this time had sunk to his shoulders. Then began the tedious haul to shore. Fin- ally the dripping black figure set foot on terra firma. two and oné-half hours of his life-! CANADA PORK GOES BIG. Bacon Slice to Overseas Market Ine creases this Year. Ottawa, Oct. 20.--Canada's ex- poris of bacon to Great Britain rose almost three million pounds during the first nine months of the current calendar vear. For this period during 1922 theré were 70,988,000 pounds of Canadian bacon shipped to the British market. while this year the Mould! p correspondir'g figures went up to 73,- $34,000 pounds. The same compari- son regarding bacon exports to the United States shows a small falling afi, according to the returns pub- lished by the markets intelligence service of the Dominion Department of Agriculture, but these figures are negligible beside those relating to the English market. The total ex- ports of Canadian bacon to the U.S. for the nine months this year were only 114,000 pounds. 'ADOLF -HITLER The Bavarian Royalist leader, who Prince Rupprecht the Attitude Scareely Edifyifg. - London, Oct. 20.---Bidney Brooks, in a letter to. The London Times. makes a plea for a settlement of the rum-running problem between Great Britain and the United States on. the iines of friendship and good sense. He calls the traffic legitimate in the sense that thers is no law forbidding commercial dealings in Itquor on the Ligh seas, 'but he says it is scarcely cdifying, and that "good business' is A 'new club, called United Col- | about the oniy plea that can be urg- OCTOBER 20, 1923. WILL CONSULT WITH NICKLE In Regard to Dominion Co- Operation Over Racing. STATEMENT FROM OTTAWA By Under-Secretary of State Over the Extension of Rights. Ottawa, Oct, 20.--Assurance that the federal government would con- | sult with the attorney-general of On- | tario before making any further changes in charters of Ontario rac- ing clubs, was given by Thomas Mul- vey, under secretary of state, to- dey, in reply to complaints by Hon. W. F. Nickie, attorney generai of On- tario, regarding lack of co-operation by the federal government in the re- striction of racing. Mr. Niokle complained that in con- nection with the London Jockey Club Limited a dominion tharter issued in 1921 was amended on Sep- tember 10th last, extending the | right of the club to hold race meets. Originally the charter was limited to London, Winnipeg and Montreal, but under the amendment the world "and elsewhere in the Dominion of Canada" were added. Mr. Mulvey said that the amend- ments rectified improper restrictions {in the original cherter. He stated | that it is customary for all dominion | charters to give powers throughout | the whole of Canada, and while the original wording of the charter was made on the application of the club, subsequent representations had been made to the department that it was causing the club a loss and a re- quest had been made for the inclus- fon in the charter of the wording customary in other similar letters patent. QUEBEC FARMERS QO TO THE LUMBER CAMPS A Party of Five Hundred, With Their Horses, Leave the ¥ Quebee, Lot. 20.--Attracted by the good "wages paid in lumber camps near Ville Marie, Haileybury, and Kippawa, by the Riordon inter- «sts, five hundred young farmers, re- siding mostly 'nm Champlain county, left this city today by the Canadian National Railways. for those Quebec- Ontario border points. They will ¥pend the winter in that section, leges, will enter a team in the O.H.A.* ed for it. CANADA'S GREATEST BOOK WRITTEN FOR THE WHIG BY ARTHUR HUNT CHUTE. I visited recently the office of a leading Canadian publisher, where one's mind "turned naturally to books. "What's the best seller ?" I inquired, in casual conversation. "Three years ago, 'Main Street'; last year, 'If Winter Comes'; this 'The Covered Wagon.' " "I think you are mistaken," I replied. "The best seller was, and is, the King James version of the English Bible, of which Canada alone sells over a quarter of a mililon copies a year. This one book stands out beyond question as the most persistent and most influential of all publica- Travelling through the rural section, I used to see innumerable copies of "Pastor Russell." . To-day no man knows their sepulchre. Other books come and go, but the Bible remains, a standing miracle, in the vitality of fts appeal. Its sacred words, "awaken echoes within the heart which sound lke sheep bells tinkling across the places of memory." .The Bible holds its own at the top of the lst {i Canada, disseminated in the tongues of the English, of the French, of the Micmac, and of the Bskimos. While this one book is circulated amonst us to-day more widely than ever, I believe its diligent students are not as numerous as formerly. Where the Fathers used to réad the Psalms, and the Prophets, the Sons read Mutt and Jeff and the Katzenjammer Kids. year, COMPANY WITH THE BEST, An Indian Prince once asked Queen Victoria the cause of England's greatness. Her answer was to point him to a copy of the Bible. - No man even lost anything by keeping company with thet book.. I had. this brought home to me at the time that Admiral Sims made an undiplomatic speech in England. I asked my triend George lies what he thought. af the Sims episode. Hi: : *g i ii £ i { bappea to Murrell now? opinion of Crown Prosecutor Rigney who conducted the case for Crown, Murrell will be sentenced for the part in robbing a laundry prior to the Melbourne affair. Mur- rell pleaded gulity to this charge joining som~ two hundred residents cf the district of Quehec, who last week Init for the same point via the National lines. This is a record number of men lcavipg herg at one time for lum- ber camps. The majority are tak- ing their own horses To meet the requirements, the Canadian National Railways local officials organized a special train, which 'comprised twelve colonist cars for passengers and twelve freight cars in which the horses were conveyed. In the last few weeks over one thousgnd men from this district have ieft for those regions, where wages are said to run between $1 and $110 per month, in addition to \ped and board. Those bringing te of horses are given extra. 9 young men will return to their farms in the ihe spring. MURRELL WILL LIKELY COME TO PENITENTIARY On a Sentence | For Taking Part in Melbourne Bank Robbery. London, Ont., Oct. 20.--What will In the the FORD MAY RUN oN PROHIBITION TICKET Presidential Nomination for | Henry Regarded Certain by Chairman Henshaw. Los Angeles, Oct. 20. -- Henry Ford in all likeliluoaa will ge: the presidential non ination of the pro- hibition party according to Virgil G. Henshaw, chairman of the prohi- bition national committee, who is- sued a call for national! conference in Washington, Dac. 12th. Asserts Ford will be Elected. Duluth, Minn.. Oct. 20.--"1f Hen- ry. Ford is nominated he will be the next president of the United States," Dr. Willlam Stidger, pastor of St. Mark's Methodist Episcopal church of Detroit, declared in a lecture at the First Methodist church. Dr. Stidger is . well acquainted with Mr. Ford and declares Mr. Ford "has a Bible in every room in his house and he reads the Bible every day." OLUB I'ROJECT. Promoter in Quebec to Organize , French-Canadians. Quebec, Oct. 20.--The organiza- tion of a "Service Club," the mem- bership of which will be reserved ex- clusively to French-Canadians resid- ing in Canada or in the United Stat- es, is the project which was sub- mitted yesterday to a number of lo- cal French-Canadians by Mr. N. A. Viollette, chief of the Forestry Com- mission of the State of Maine, who was in town in this connection. The first club of the projected series was organized in Maine a few months ago under the name of "Calumet," and if the idea is well received it is the intention to form clubs in vari- cus sections. The cbject will be to look after the welfare of French- Canadians in America. RESENT INTERFERENCE OF AUSTRALIAN PREMIER Lord Beauchamp 8ays Brit- ain's Fiscal Policy Purely Domestic Concern. Londen, Oct, ' 20.--Dofpinion in- terference in the fiscal policy of the Mother Country was strongly resent- ed by Lord Beauchamp, president 'of the Free Trade Union, at a meeting of the union here last night. government had already made prom- ises to the Dominions, he said, which would throw a heavy fresh burden on the consumers and taxpayers. While the Free Traders hoped the results of the Imperial Conference would be most satisfactory to the whole Empire, they were determined that they should not include any ar- rangement which would rivet the shackles of protection on this coun- try. The question of free trade and protection was for this country alone to decide, and any interference in this matter of purely domestic con- cern by Mr. Bruce would be resent- od. . "Were those Dominions who ask- ed us to tax ourselves for their bene- fit going to give us a return, or would they still maintain those mountainous tariffs through which preference did sp little to help our manufacturers?'® the president ask- ed. "At present our foreign markets are four times as great as those of- fered us. by all the Dominion to- gether. Whether in peace or war, free trade had proved itself the right policy for this country, and had been the main cause of our prosper- ity in the past." It was unanimously resolved, see- ing that the Board of Trade pro- posals for extending preferential and discriminating duties were incon- sistent with Bonar Law's general election pledge, the government should not legislate on them until! the proposals had been submitted to the country at a general election. SERVICK WILL CEASE BUYING ' OA : | arrests followed. Decision Reached by British and U.S: Packers in the recently enacted law cof ~yng them to buy from producers at fix- ed minimum prices. The companies The | LAST ? EWEN SHIP LIFTED _ FOUR TIMES To ie, Crest of a tic Wave on hi fr LE EMTHQUAE Passengers Were Terrified== Captain Never Had Such an Experience Before. New York, Oct. 20i--The gigaatie Cunarder Aquitania which reached port yesterday from Southampton was lifted four times Tharsasy night to the crest of a gigantic Wave, resis ed there an instant and then coast- ed sidewise down the stoop at an angle which caused all on board whe were standing to lose their footing and slide or roll across the decks. Many passengers were thrown from their berths, and all first-class cab- ins in which portholes were open were drenched. To say that 1,268 passengers were terrified is mild description. Hundreds remained up all night. More than a score required the ser- vices of the ship's surgeon. Many of the women passengers were still hysterical when they came ashore, Captain Sir James Charles, who has been crossing the Atlantie twenty-eight years, said he had nev.' er had such a freak experience. It. was as though an earthquake in as tion at the bottom of the sea, was transmitting its influence througa the water to the surface. Instructions for Police In Use of Firearms Toronto, Oct. 20.--Prior to the shooting of John Gogo by the To- ronto police, a circular of instruc- | tions to the provincial poMce in re- | ference to the use of firearms had been sent out from the attorney general. While Hon. Mr. Nickle does not think it in the public interest to dipclose just when and under what circumstances the provincial police may shoot, it is understood that it confines justification to self-defense and enforcement of the Criminal Code. 3 'Lloyd George Pays Homage To Memory of Lincoln Springfield, Ill, Oct. 20.-- David Lloyd George came here and paid homage to the memory of Abraham Lincoln. With bared head, heedless of a cold, driving rain, the war-time pre- mier of Great Pritain approached the monument and entered the tomb of the martyred president where he placed on the sarcophagus a wreath with his card hearing the words: "A humble ani reverent homage to the memory of one of the words greatest men." POLKE AND KLANSMEN ~~ HAVE AN ARMED CLASH orists Driven From Field By the Kiansmen. ---- : Niagara Falls, N.Y. Oct. 20 An armed clash ocourrei on the outs skirts of this city early yesterday morning between Ku Klux Klang men and Sheriff Gould and deputies, and as a result nineteen men were arrested and two men, Charles Las- ier and Charles Turner, are still be ing held. There was a huge rathering of klansmen just outside the city with flery crosses gleaming, and the police found that motorists had been driven from the fleld by armed men in kis regalia, Shots were exchanged King Predicts McAdoo And Hughes 1924 Rivals Washington, Oct. 20.---Senalor King, Democrat, Utah, predicts t William G. McAdoo will head vember and Charles E. Hughes ti Republican. The Republican eq vention, he said, will be committed tration and "in looking around fer something to indorse it wil! find © the disarmament conference,