Senet THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG . Momday, November 1, 1926. "A PAGE OF BRITISH NEWS FOR THE READERS-OF THE DAILY. BRITISH WHIG PIRSHELERKS|£ ciiae FARMERFARMERS | Zoe r=rr____ HUSBANISFORM LONDONSBEST WILFOLLONOUT | oot FORTOAEWILAD | 0 | NOPARINCREED, KNOWN CHARACTER jEERSSEED OC MDDECSS 8 | OF "DEPENDENTS" ISST. PAUL'S VERGER 'AD American, Whose ances- #1 | tors had formerly Nved in Hoi. born, wishing to trace his line- | Leaves £400,000 fo Help - hi ; 2 ¢ cay we & 3 | People Who : 'Mourn > at ls Now Completing His 50th gan Used to Lead | ags. applied to the Town Hall, Those Broken Down | Ck . : J Births and Rejoice at | Year of Service in Church Singing [5 mentiessar said the. Savor. in Health a R Funerals Cathedral but against it was the entry : 3 ; : + Ll Lda NO GAMES GREAT MEMORY | ! FHSS RRRY FOUNDED IN 1233 hace nded Without paying the Membership Confined ARREBRBNRAND RARE LL op Farm Holdings Dur- : Sect Founded 70 Years Ago) Expresses Opinion That the ing Big Slump in | Kf mL Vite [Express Orion The Nineteen Parishes in and | NGINE IS STARTED , Around London Agriculture . Cobbler Oyer { } fn a fine old ocak.panelled hall | A | yae pulk of his fortune of £400,- 3 Ay . Dressed in the fashion of 50 years| Ome of the most modest, yet, ia \Sunningty concealed from Inquisitive | | 000 has been-lef: fur the benefit of ; § | ago, a young woman with a peach-ltke spite of himself, one of the best known in a maze of city offices and | indigent members of the upper mid: : . ' complexion, turquoise blue eyes, and | to visitors of all Londags characters, warehouses, a goodly company of | Radio Microphone Works | 4 or professional classes under the | nut-brown hair twisted round her head | is Mr. Skinner, the head verger of St. i Slerka will dna; togtther this i 3 will of the late Samuel Willlam Far- | lin moumersble small plaits, walked | Paul's Cathedral, who is now in his week. Miracles With the {er, of The Maines House, Little S slong a lane in ibe Sussex mel ie SOn year of servies. fare Nah, on Hoga English Morse Key Alter "various bequests to rela- | | Chure! i "We do not get the congregation we of i | i h 4 rant : ; r used to have when I first came here." poul tes. etu---------- (ives, servants and employees, hs She might Bave served as a model oh a our Departed | MAJOR'S INVENTION | gave instructions tor the residue cf 4 { | a Dickens's heroine. She looked as | Mr. Skinner sald to a newspaper ré= in their thres centuries old {bis estate tc Le applied as to beth it nature had designed her for love |presentative and an old-time grace will be | {capital and income for the benerit played before and after dinner on an | Proves That Shouti n 8 organ of 1767 of the kind parish | Would Ring Servants clerks used when they led the sing- © ing in church. i A parish hter, with a dash of wistful Canon Liddon was the greatest ¥ 1 lar. iment | preacher St. Paul's has ever had, and of persons of either sex, particular santiment, | {iy for the apper-u jiddle or profes. | But in the course of a talk she said: | tens of Hausands flocked to hear him. { {sional classes, © lo. throm:a iil | "1 am not {nteresfed in theatres, | Canon Scott . Holland was snothe | Bell Automaticall {health or by witsen of advancing } } picture houses, fashions, games, or | great preacher. Those were the days clerk who is an organist | y { years, are incapahle of earning thelr i men {of the sermon. I doubt if people are i RT own' | sod: ot ff : : CW ' | 50 Intereste mons today. will the grace, and the other | Armed with a cabinét, from which | OR livelthood: for such cduca- : i When my day's work Is done I |so interes ed in sermons today top clerks wi : !ticnal purposes, or for tha benefit devote my leisure to prayer and the | But there is another reason * yound the lo Hn Antons i standing | protruded two metal branches like the | or such hospitals, nursing or con- | E ey hE | service of others. rather smaller congregations. Some wooden li BOAT riously-shaped |, niennae of a huge insect, a man has | valescent homes, or other similar | ' x ' "I belong to the Dependents. We | people are afraid to come to Fa { performed what seemed like miracles j charitable objects as my trustees | think it better that men and women { Paul's. They think the roof will fal RITUAL OF FEAST. lat the Model Engineers' Exhibith s | may think fit. i : | should not marry. 1 am fond of [down on them, and so they stay away. 2 "Walters will pl the dish 1% o ry auen & | Mr. Farmer followed the occupa - | , v % { children. But we think it better not | Apart from ceremonial services. the table Dike the = | Westminster. [tion of a farmer, hiit was intended | fo incur the grave responsibility of | national thanksgivings. and so on, the manding that the carving must €- | He' tapped out signals on a morse | for the medical jrofession. A dis- | N : | bringing souls into the world. | largest congregations we aver got are _ done and the wine dispensed by cer- | key and, some distance..away, two | ability, however, ade it hinrerative . | PROBLEM OF LIFE. jare on the Tuesda n Holy We > x ¢ : i J How als seon- Not irls can say they taller than their r. This tin Shet- | .. . { Bach's passion music. On these oct tain pan | mode! trains began round a | for him to fullow am open-a co many girls can say y are rt pony tiny . . of the company. i a, Foes Alu j i y 3 », | That is why we do not regard the | cagions 1 have often dis ributed 5,000 News of this dinner will still fur- | table Another signal and ome tram | pation, and he. thevefore, jyred his | land was exhibited at the West County Agricultural Society's show at Mar-1,,.., ,¢ a child as an occasion for re- | service sheets": > ' ther Dlgus the : curiosity of many |Stopped. Further taps, and the tiny | father, who fa med about 1.2%" acres | gate, England, held recently. | Jolcing. r¥ice Sheets. life aa verger Bas not Beople who have wondered at Xe | locomotives reversed, stopped and To- Tab Macias 2000 ACRES rT | %1¢ we knew for certain that al ber quite so serens as might be meaning of the gold lettering, "Pa- | tar a 6 will o operator. A he | ] i i | baby would grow up in the love of | ymagined, 'Think of the Suffragette rish Merks' Hall," on the door of a| Major Raymond Phillips, a well-| within a year his father died, and { | God, we might think differently. But|gays™ ne sald, with a whimsical very = narrow-fronted building In known wireless expert, was demon- | 5ithough only 20, and inexperienced, i | Who knows the fate of the soul of & |smile. 'They seem very remote now. {Silvas trust, Just off. Wood street, Rating tha possibilities of wireless | 14 decided to carry on the farm. | i . baby 7"* | but those were difficult times when wo Above his miniature station | pojiowing the depression in agricul- | .- . \ With serious eyes the lovely Young | found women who had chained them- «Tt in only when the Clerk of the | We "50 "U0 branching "antlers." | tyre in the closing years of the 70's | | woman put this question with passion- | selves to parts of the buliding, and 3 OY rh ark James Miyuew. and, these ae, Seng aa an aerial, picked land 80's, when many farms became | i | ate sincerity. ayhen ahs bowed | we had to get saws td cut through the 8! o or over ears | e | tet i t in- | i i jestly, took the arm of another t we coul } at Bt. Bartholomew-the-Less, EC | transmitter and actuated the mechan- derelict, he..and his partners Ia . | modestly chains, so that we could releases them . : iy roman, clothed like hergeif in | » Te fs there for an hour or so in the {ism of the tryins through a relay sys- Seated their or TE oy { young wo « against their wills i . i |a short, tight-fittmg black jacket, | Mr. Skinner remembers every mare . Surning nS. with respond. | teem. He was one of the first to realize the Doctor Declares Woman | Head of Selfridge Provides jong skirt, and binak honnet, and | riage that has taken place in St n the members of the | RINGING THE BELL. possibilities of milk production. i 3 : went on her way to church. Paks during hia BO years pe " Court of the Company are meeting Equally wonderful Was & demonstra } "It was not from farming that he Had Passed Away Three i for Firm's Continuance Loxwood is more than 10 mitles | "A fow days ago | asked a visitor or ish clerks dining that the | "or yw the human volce can be made most of his money." sald an Months Ago i After Death from Horsham, the nearest town, {ig he would like to see under the curious are able to satisfy their cu- frien, to operate electrical appliances {old friend to a press representative | i But in this remote village were re- | dome, which is now boarded off," he ty. | Connecting up his train Bi to alBy far the greater part of | At an inquest at Norwich on Miss | "I regard my business as a great | cently gathered together some 100 | gaia. *'1 remembered his face, al- Then, inquirers are told that the | Sir," wl ohone he has evolved, {his wealth 'came from invest | Jennle Foggen, aged 61, daughter [public trust. I want to leave all | men and women from various parts of though I had not seen him since he Parish Clerks' Company, If little jor Phill , "| ments boldly 'and judiciously made. | y Bidv to VoRmem.- vi ape " | England. They were here fo take |came to St. Paul's to be married 1a known, is one of the oldest and most Major Phillips gave a brisk com t the late Rev. Janes Yoggen, who | my affairs in order when I die, 80] = hi - honorable of all the city com To. | mand and the engines started once He invested largely In American pent in a special service that lastogm 1883 ¥y Pp %. | more on their journey { three days { It iy incorporated in 3498, and a | ots were then a de HY the great slump in American se- | tea on the previous Sunday morn- lon. That is why I am forming a| Theirs is possibly the most austere | charter was gran n 0 3 ing | en curities in 1895. { ing, the police surgeon gave it as his | £2 000,000 trust to take over the | form of faith to be found outside of | Chief or voice. { opi "a » hed bee « a l City Chit or Barish CT. for pe |, Major Phillips believes that upon | RICH YOUNG MAN. | option, that che hod been dead for | are capital of the firm of Sei. | MOOSE SLC nib honor { raliways and bought shrewdly dur- | Was stated by her brother to have | that the business can go straight | ee micnths. i a i e-! Susse e v i or of Almighty God, and these lines can be perfected apparatus | "He valued mofiey, ot as a 1theee hae said hs Rad lived at fridge s Ti ng Tarifer. witr § of the undefiled and most glorious | Which will be of great practical value. (means of gratifying Wis personal | tne same pddress as his sister for 13 | "This statement 'was made by Mr. | TRUCE "0 ery man one would | Virgin Marie. "In a factory," he sald, 'a shout|astes--he always lived in a curl- | years. Until May last year sh4 was Seifridge, founder of the great de- |. 4,., drinking from a pewter tank- | + ---------------- | transmitted by the microphone would | ously simple, unostentatious manner jg ¢ mam het 4 39 | partment stores, the shares in whose Bi i ! stop the machinery automatically. In| hy healthy woman, dpring he | ard in somte old village inn, said that | case of an accident, there might te hut as & oatans of gaining influ- {jae six months she 1:4 been gradu {pew ti! Were roost made avail: | since he had become a Dependent he | . { - Hy getting weake Sh 1d not | 1 , gh Asad experienc desir t lea- | ETERY FOR delay in reaching for the ordinary con-| "As he had na children. it became ay al ¢ would ne! | MAKING SURE. ' had experienced no desire for the piea i have medical attention. For some | sures gf lite. | Picnicker: Were Locked in ol ever aad A Sha a source of anxiety to him how he | hme she had slept downstairs, and | '1 have been feeling for some | '*We put no bar en our members, | $ ought to dispose of his large Prop- ihe had looked after and bought her | time the necessity of makin - l U til The PF Cleared x stand- 0 y g some | he sald. They are not forbidden to nt Y woud bring the machinery 10 4 d-1erty. He hid strong views on the (various things from the chemist. |such disposition." sald Mr. Selfridge. | play games; for instance. But none | Uo Rubbish 'Although shouting for the at harm. done lo a young man Who in- | On Saturday she was extremely |"I want to know that whatever hap- of us do. We admit husbands and | Pp tendance of a servant may not seem herits money and is not earning any | weak, and he sat up with her, and pris nines which I have | wives, but the unmarried who join us| The Vicar of Rulsiip. & picturesque -------------- 8 dignified, Major Phillips showed Si" by. Wis own artoctd and bs Jnstine! {she died early on Sunday morning. founded, and into which I have put | never wish to mary id spot between Uxbridge and Harrow, » . : y . by ot | The surgeon sald the body was |s0o much of myself, will go on. 1 | COBBLER FOUNDER Ih k emphatic action in an ens the microphone could be made to ring Lpeip themselves. During ti ar no | Wee he | . mn, ER ? tR. {has taken emp Woman's Memorial to All Tolls at a distance. 'With hib spark help Shenae yea. During the war DO |scanuy clothed and very dirty. | should like Seltridge's, naturally, to 1 y hy snickers' "lite , | R | The Dependents were founded 70 | deavor to stop the plenic iaye 'wirele he The inquest was adjourned. {remain in the family, but [ do not | ; ' ter" nuisance. Animals in Their New transmitter he also played a 89 | Zave to the sick and wounded. nquest was adjourne mat in Ae I cia of my, do. | JUAIS age by John Sirgood, the village | 160) BUISSAESE oy of nis grounds, R P carillon. Mr. Farmer was a generous con- - ob ave | cobbler, who lies buried in the grave- n ; esting lace -------------- ---- btributor to the Agricultural Benevo- | iH acendanta is weuic and incapable vt i yard attached to the small brick and abutting in five women who yi en The dead domestic pets of Lon. { lent, Institution, the Savernake Hos- | {go down with him. The trust pro- [she church. There are no headstones | o_. to let them out until they had don are no longer laid to rest in the pital, the Rosal United Kingdom | { | above the graves, but the resting] vides against that" * | cleared up a profusion of paper, tery Beneficent Association, and the! | dog's. come in Hyde Park. Dauntsey School. He had been an i 8 { " y Is a letter to customers Mr. Sel- | mah uf the founder is marked with a | © oo. and other litter which they | fridge writes : { ¢ 1 sente The . new pets' cemetery Is at alderman of the Wiltshire County | [I wn Tortune, of 'course, res) There are seven churches scattered | Dad left abort aie ing Hitter Molesworth in Huntingdonshire, Council since ils establishment In | i | mains in these shares, and I have no | throughout the country, but the head |, \ 'pen the viear opened the gates , where the faithful Fidos and fond 188%. | | possible thought of changing it Be {Chureh 1a hate, and,_thy ade 18 | and let them out they calmly. flung pussies sleep undisturbed by the y > of a Ke | the rubbish on the road and walked roar and rumble of the omnibusecs ori » a | Oft-Convicted Man Forgot i ye F_yetning "Som. 4gYe . Uh. jatare recently for two days in order to |, ; g , ; = a . : ai nhl evote himself to the long special ser- | > a . ha A betanan have been a dred Touches of Geniu in Arts LF] [ING BOOTS His Role When Police vice recently held. - r Picnic parties from London, the there to the memory of devoted ani- 8 x One of the dogs. is lald to and Crafts Ex i | i 3 > lains. not enly enter pri- A es ed Him I RS] Y | 1 attended the section of the service vicar compia k 4 | Th rn : | : | xyiw rd pat Sait nt two . { ute pros in and Buck rd vary. but * tal 5 1 - r telds and « e in Italy, was eat: and ! a . PREVEN WA KING ni oon A Yo his | ja in gh Jaree Ht ie th front of him, { Mtter broadeast wherever they have hy ¥ n 3 r . his ! ' totti Are London children clever? i the centre a long bench | leaden p, and brought to ENg- | A three-days' exhibition of work by | {home at Princes street, Pembroke, ap ! | facing the congregation {a meal In the ups when he pone land rial. | parently deaf and 'dumb through war | The Dependents believe music other | out to 1 e 1 ter is objec. There hg mysgery cross to the adhdinrs 1 Ere a ee | A 0 Si C al ew | than that of their own voices to be | tionable they reply with abuse, ati the ndon y ning College, ver Sixt overed| He spoke in Pembroke Dock Police | | unseemly, and they sang hymns with | ---- - memory of all aninals in the pets' ie Doctor ixty ered| nly. ang th : : Southampton-row, supplies the an- 3 . | Court, however, when he was charged | rns | great without any agree- | © man Ey as ewer on wer ia 3 44 Miles in One | Wihder the Prevention of Crimes Act. | Earthquake Shock Caused | ment as to the key. J | disclosed: |. Here: were shown hundreds of ex- Da ly Superintendent T. B. James said] 3 . | POSTMASTER'S TRIBUTE { tourists and. Colonia) |amules of werk in ary and crafis y { Webb pretended ta be deaf and dumb. | Cracks in Massive Tas bw i visitors are mow the prindipal visit. | that Eve evidence of both originality | ort four miles in one "day over and, in reply to Written questions, W | Loxwood is well accustomed to the | \ eT he dogs' cometsry 1n Hyde | ans siti. coral roads At the age of 4 is the | wrote, "1 have been blown ph LU | alls | austere men and women of their vil- | as the paifting by a very small boy-- | pojiday walking record of Dr. Sir | air raid, in London, and 1 have never Havciade, Jersey's oldest church. des | lage who belong to this ascetic sect » The first tomb which the visitor $e Wary af A Gn LCC. | john Robertsén, medical officer of | spoken &ince. = He 'iso, intimaed hat | Brelade, eJrveys oldent shurch, is de- | and to the visiting Detndefits. J we « ¢ ve en blown up in France > . ! ® - "lS - as Mon ne 308 44 he pass Ahtodgh the fate thild's aye for detail and imagination health dor Birmingham, while in lhe bad been 09) uD A ES JY Sinred to be in hmminent danger of | them." said the village postmaster Old Mary" Was First Baby i Seven years wo are such friends'" should take him far. The majority of people are de- **1 bave nothing to say This is the result of the extension otls They aren't always so mournful | Dorking Poorhouse There is & monument fo "Snow There were youthful demonstrators | parred, he says. from walking -- the | LI TO State] that since 1017 the RS BUN Me caused by a re- | ooking as you ate them today. the) Seg . ~ two faithful black cats, showing. thelr prowess In Pottery | createst of all exercises--through | Man had been in the hands of the! ontRe oo ike shock. The chapel | chauffeur of the car which brought| "Old Mary" 'who was the first h lived to the ripe old making, weaving. lace-making, t0¥ | foot deformities due to ill-fitting | Police practicaily all the time, and had | which stands in the churchyard of oy | the writer trom Horsham remarked. |baby born in Dorking W orkhonse g manufacture and printing. Some of | boots. - He firges that boot salesmen | over 14 previous convictions, "He was |B ed Chorch, - 4% y: Be You should just see how they | when it was comp eted in 184), has years. the things made by the boys and girls | ghouid be so educated that they | sentenced to one month's imprison- irclages Bren, tes from the | brighten up When there's a funeral 1|just celebrated her $5th birthday in of the 'London schools include: ' will sée that customers are properly | ment. form vf tenth Sentury had charge of a funeral party not long | the Institution A few betray genius, such Furniture worthy of any home. ,. | fitted It is only 43 feet long and 18 wide, and you would have thought it | Except for a short period, she has ee { white the walls are nine feet high and : | \ ! Pa ET ea ote to ann by pois he, ha oe ara: | a SS pteine. the way Wey laughed be, 0, RS! Sh "po re me na- | y 3 , \ mather, ide by two youngsters of oy XN the AY and have a knowl- Le There are traces of ancient fresc land hearing, Mary mothers the SM edge df the footwear worn by th | Model forts and a great big men- ge ho i i etre the best preserved Epica tine & the | othef inmates. and is an energetio ¢ i Ry . orm i | het in the infirm astery. naar To frrs he thes toot HOW | LF {about 1300 jrolber in, ee ny 15 years inhib gd ETN. |r i CPportamty | WILFUL OLD MAN Bere nina well. 1 Jock after some' 'Great Celebration ati The children as 4 whole love te been treated weil I Jook after soma : % : i 7 fof th th inmates who ov Charte practical work. which is now part of s : | Takes First Real Holiday Then! BROKE LEG TWICE WALK SEEKING JOBE of the health I am blessed Granting' of Charter thelr school life. This le what some £500 000 CONTRACT. Provides for Old Age | "A remafkable coincidence that tea | ! | with. 1 {to a man's death was revealed at an | ] ee x pn I vYWwhen a girl I was taught in the Of Incorporation Vera Daters, aged nine.--1 -like Over £11230 1s to be divided "be- {inquest at Kendal on William Pear- Abnormal Appetite Was! | school attached to the igstitution, made merry when It needle work and embroidery best be- %. W.. who died last June, aged gathering fruit in his orchéed, Pear. : i work, while the boys learnt shoe. BK tak & fortune of £112416. |son was blown from. a tree and Vain Pilgrimage making. is good for you because it makes your Miss Clouston was tHe last suf- |bhroke his leg. With boots badly worn, H { mussels grow. \ - vivor of the four daughters of the | On the same date this year, while Strand, aged 14, has returned to his {but had to come back through ills Bose Maciot, aged 12.1 'feel as|London Engineers Head | late Mr. Peter Clouston. a fone: | yimilarly engaged. a tree branch home in Gideon road, Battersea, health" » as anything when I am Provost of (Glasgow, and a friend of | hroke and he fell and fractured the B.W., after a week's absence. | Mary announced with pride that work. Rivals From America [King Edward VI | sme a With the idea of making hia far. | she can still dance well. . Sir George Hume, chairman of the > d German Legacies to servants range from | Returning a verdict of accidental tune at ses, Herbert tramped to) "1 was taught by a matron many 1.C.C., opened the exhibition which is an y £4,000 to my faithtul maid." Marie | death the coroner remarked that whiny all Through the | years ago" She aid. "and I know the first in the Lon-| The whnoudlement that a £300,000 | Christine Windfehr (with all he an from all accounts was a wil. | Bight. Unsuccessful fn his search | the polka and waltz." don Schools' Guild of Arts and Crafts. | cont had been secured by Messrs. | wearing apparel except furs), and ify old man, Ww bly dl 1 for a Berth, and with no money left, Se------------------------ "There Was of ract , who probably did things £300 to Mrs. R. 8. Dyett. "the char- [that nobody else would venture tof, - | DUCHESS FLIES ON BO te es be Tora on {ae : | MOTH TO HOME Hetty Kolsky, aged 11.--Handiwork tween the former servants of Miss [gon 83, of Storth, West oriand. . : | There were 30 other girls, and all use 1 nos 1 shall have to do It ") FOR BRITISH fzabeth Keir Clouston, of Holland 1 5n E aber 12 ns while Only Sign of Week's were taught needlework and house. ever married : ew erbert | "1 went out to service for a time, siderable time." . { ---- Mrs. Dyett told a press representa 3 h { A ANOTHER COAL CROP Hie. then wartad for home. BY | sin 3" oth 'sercbnne a va - of her legacy for a holiday at y tramped, an y night, 'al- | ' p Southsea--"the first T shall have nad | FOUND ON HIGHWAY [52,50 %2 Waa neither coat nor | pe SURES 00 this yeni $Capthin in my life" she added. | The discovery of a bE © of 1| mackintosh, he siept under the open | hy who won the trophy, acting "Fifty pounds I shall put in the {during excavations in ion with | sky. ly once was he able to | "pilet), reached gr be The Bank to be ready for use in case of {the construction of the new Birming- | obialn the shelter of a barn. | et Somcashire astate of he ke of neti and with the other £200 1 shail | ham to Wolverhampton road at "Bu Bia sbmormal appetite" | Decford, on 8 rer Aftarnaon, 31 4 National Saving Certificates. 1 | bury, Worcestershire. has provided | said Bers. Strand yesterday, "he | oock. RAVE Abney ehall keep these fo. ten years, be- |sdequate supplies for the inhabitants. | Seed none the worse for his adven- | 11 in Be warning. stopping at cause I il have more need of the | Migers and other unemployed werk- ture." : i nm. FE atoll in money then than now. ers are engaged in getting the fuel, | avintion, but this was the first time "STRIKE HOL FLANNELS UPSET COAL STRIKE HOLDS ; cwt. - rp |2D* 1Ad travelled to Wigtownshire by When a defendant at Hove was op» ied Jestarday « young maa entereds WAR TROPHY KILLS; t box w=tth in mele, with ai *, | Moni shirt with a collar wide open. | AFTER EIGHT YEARS Phe MRyor { While playing round a six-inch howitzer war trophy near Prestwich Town Hall £ boy was crushed to { death by the muzzle { At an ingest on Saturday the | coroner said it was & sad thing that ian English boy should be killed by ia German gun eight years alter the fashion. { war, | Later defendant appeared attired In| The mother saw the mussie fall { ordinary morning dress, and was fined | but was not aware that he iad was 'a seal! amount for a motor car oh. | ber son ! her NO SPECIAL PAY FOR ' AERIAL FLIGHTS NOW 1S BRITISH ORDER Go000000G0000 pay will be granted for 2000G00000000 tal death was the verdicly