' +L E Y BRITISH WHIG _ ____Friday, November 19, 1926) of ~__A PAGE OF BRITISH, NEWS FOR THE READERS OF THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG SROUVERLODGE [HOW LONDON GO | _.™ Meuory or rie cuards [ESE QIESIN | GHOSTS ABROAD DID MADE PROFESSION | TS COLLECTION OF FE | HEART OF LONDON NOT MATERIALISE BUT x t OF HIS BELIEFS, GASSOT PETURES JR ER R00 VERS] 7OSE AT HOME DID . "a Member of Parliament and Wife Sought Italian Spooks Declares Proof Overwhelm-| Tact of Director, Old Port, Y Te Pay Few Shillings Rentall ppp). Faithful Dog's Spectre Appeared in London to ing That Humans Have and Chance Convers . ; be While Adjoining Prop- : : Persistent Existence sation > BA erty Worth Thousands Three Women as Animal Died MAN'S DESTINY WORTH £84,000 nuts B. . ANCIENT DEEDS Wn English MP. Mr. Crampton good with me. and after 1 had pafted home Peter's head, him away to the . 1 v 1 F p 3 ' : vain for ghosts in | police station uieb as a lamb. Memory, Affection and Per- {Conversation = Started in| Fa ge New Bond Street is Practi- rea mall * | Bering Dear * sonality Survive Bodily | London Ended in Brigh- ; ow, 3, cally All Held Under Death ton by Great Gift : Sir Oliver Lodge has made a pro- A chance remark over the luncheon | fession of faith at which he said he jable Sinaited for the Guballa however, | . EE ie had arrived through nearly haif a cin- | EOF Onion, 13 4 i A ws ! spect: . or 30 minutes Lh pictures, worth £54,000. ia | describes . i signs of poisoning. and I tury of study. The history of the gift was given by | ; Je I went nearly six | telephoned to the hospital and made The declaration was made by the [Sir Alfred Temple. Director of the Nad {My wife and rn Sr T tury | ure that there had been No mistake. famous scientist in his thipd lecture, [Guildhall Art Gallery, since it was fn- | . i 400 h jweeks In. a Moory wot IG od the dog very carefully, at the Memorial Hall, Far augurated in 1890 : pl Upder } tion which came Into | Castle on the island of He vg wor ana ae) to me that he was, with Street, on 'The Reality of the Un-| For upwards of 50 years Sir Alfred | ¥ | foree at the beginning of this year, all; Naples." Mr. Crompton Coors '| his mind, deliberately resisting sensed.' has served in different posts under | & a a { perpetually renewable leases were con- | for Bridgwater, told & REWSPADEr Te: | ttects of the poison. s0 obvious "1 am convinced," he sald, "'that all the Lord Mayors of London. : NT ' ib {verted Into leases of 2,000 yeqrs, an | prosentRtive. ly wanted to go home--kept tugging the body, which appeals to everyone's *1 was having lunch with Me | on Ea 3 g . S j official in the Controlier's Office at the| "We went because the castle was and straining at his lead, poor brute. senses, is not the whole of us; that Charles Gassiot, a wealthy retired | £ = § k 3 / " a Guildhall told & press repfesentative) | said to be badly haunted by an old! "Peter was still alive at the end of real meaning is not superficially | wine merchant, who made his pleture | 5 = . (£2,000 FOR 45s. / | German baron who had murdered his | 40 minutes, and then, in & moment, apparent, but lies in the unseen, {gallery a great hobby," said Sir Al-| BE J 3 OR \ The lease referred to above relates | wife! None of our servants would | without struggle or moan, he fell over "A human being is far more than {fred. "One of his prizes was a Con- | Rl x a . , to a small piece of land in the heart) sleep In the piace, so my wife and I) dead. The time was 3 o'clock." : his body, and thers is evidence to Stable worth £20.000 | iggreeeg 0 . of the West Epd, occupied by & pub- | slept alone inwthe castle bk | COUNTESS'S VISION. show that he has a persistent exist H ROHANT'S COLLECTION. | Rh Iw 5 lic- house. "1 am sorry to say we saw nothing. ance. To thass who have studied the | My old friends, and Charles | nd . 'Che ground rent of a similar area | One night we heard ghostly noises | The Bown heme of Tankuevitie oe evidence the proof fs overwhelming | id 10 me that as his nephew had | 1 aa be about £2,000," =i] n one of the dungeons kh a 3 ny ng na es - M G! ied memory and affection. charac- | aied he didn't kho hat 1 J ithe . | volver and a lamp I wha . i ham Castle urns ter and personality, survive bodily fied I a a i "The whole of New Bond street is|the time I got there the noises had magasine. death. Fionn ¥ i { held on thése old leases, known as the | stopped, so 1 fired my reveiyer inte writ ' i . 'S -] i BASED ON FACTS. | ** "What are you going to do with JE x HOA rele of rs -- des of the) He Sunseok. TO path te Boy, which used to be seen in what is *"Fhis may be set down As a dog- [the pictures? 1 said. with a great RR Rey Sa ' ys when the City received its water. can {now called the Pink Room. Thers, matic statement, bus #t i based on |!DOURRL at the back of the question. TO A RE ily Ty meena of conduits, '| CANINE SPOOK. { when from the clock tower the hour through these facts it is] Po with them™ he repeated. -- ! . . 5 "There Is nothing to prevent owners] . The "ghost" of Peter, an Alsatian | of midnight sounded, were heard the of us have gradually grown | 'Why, 1 think 1 shall hand most of from sub letting their leases. Some of | 408 which lived in Atherley-grove, | cries and the moans of a child. "conviction, here inkdequately | them over to the Tate Gallery.' To the of the officers and men of His Mages: y's iments of | the temants do Not consider themselves | Westbourne:grove is serfously be-| "Always the noise came from & Bt BAD Bas 5 destiny tar] "Down went my beart into mY | Foot Guards, gave their lives for their King and country ing the specially fortunate in owning leases at | lleved--by three persons--to have | spot nearest to a passage cut through this morte} life: that he and |Poota, but 1 had the presence of mind | Gregt War, this cenotaph was unveiled on Horse Guards Londen, by | these ridiculoysly low figures, yet they | Sppeared" at his former home. [the ten-feet-thick wall nto the ade are boingh of high value in |'0 80 on sipping Charles's very fine | yp i the Duke of Connaught. . H. J. Fleming, the Guards' are able to sub-let at enormous profits. | Tog a io death at Fuaaings Joining ro ane a8 we Sool niverse, that they will be able | PY 0 So chaplain, conducted the dedication ceremony. At the left are seen some of | 'Property in New Bond street, for O70 08 on on a m © 8 | cundliing © Away, a t rive and ssrve and influence long | Then 1 ho the King's picturesque "Beef-eaters," who attended the ceremony. ny Ne vahoe but because | Order after he had savagely attacked | halo of Nght began to form close to F they have shaken off the mortal | you je your money in the city, so . the original leases were perpetually re. Mrs. Peggy Sullivan his owner. old four-posted bed. Anyone "The dog died in my presence on | sleeping there saw . . . the figure of i » ' newable it is not poasible for the Cor. i 8a 3 EY tat R ) : Many | doubtedly | "hI E00 was: " join BRITAIN S BEST le a Ch of Loadon to in. | Saturday at 3 a.m." is the statement |a young boy dfessed in blue. and sur. existed I eh pn the lia Jeoly 1.71 ua Mm. A the reat of on. and for 2,000 made to a Daily Chronicle" repre- | pounded by the light . . . The bones i . ¢ senacs. Thus it was with wireless. years the owners will enjoy the bene- | Sentative by Mr. R. Stokoe (of a boy, and some fragments of a Waves," said Sir Oliver, |THE PORT AGAIN. SCHOOLBOY WINS fits of the ground at its value of 300 | MRCVS. aturtay. do [DES drem, were later discoversd. . "are only apprehended by special m-! "1 left the house thinking I had or 400 years ago." And at 3 am. on urday," de | They were decently interred in con. i E a clared Mrs. Sullivan, "I heard a quick | secrated ground, since when the strumed nstruct pose. | . later eee Eres . The ior rater fa Th full [ay SE -r him - ¢ ANZAC HONORS scratching at my bedroom door. figure has Dever been seen again. . . + 'of the result of distant speech or | Brighton. Nothing passed between us : saa "IT'S PETER." SHE TUNED IN, Te i A work and {about the pictures until we Se SU : "There was no light in the room. 1| After describing many other ghostly mow nothing of it unless we have again sipping his wond . : . : . was in bed with the bandages on my | visitors the count - t up a special wire to tap it. and | Looking at me over his w..oglass, he Son of Composilor Will Spend Two Years in Melbourne is Countess relates a remark au a: 1 cing to 46 it." v arm and chest where ine dog ad bite able personal experience one day just ve provided ourselves with a tele- isa '1 am going to aye ten me. sprang out , erying, | before 'the Great War. phone and other accessories. + *All of them? 1 almost trembling College and Be Assured of Position After NOT DEATH CAUSE "It's Peter! It's Peter!' : 6 as fl 15 and switched In the formal garden the form of a 3 A. ly asked. : on the Hawt. Y my watch the time | woman seemed to take shape before UNSEEN PHENOMEN "Yes. all.' was 3 o'clock. me, walking on the parapet of =a "We may be living in a world full | «eppat's how the Gessiot pictures $ : "My moth who was eitth |. of physical phenomena, and yet be |.qme to the Guildhall Art Gellery." Eric H. Mundy, the 1§.years-old son amination, said Dr. Jones, and then | Pure Carbolic Was Put in y i. TD MAE aaa In the gD OE 8 with me, came rushing from the oth unaware of them. of a Londen compositor, of Arcadian- | followed a series of examinations by | § trom other A man stood ""We have never seen an atom; yet " : ) th , AR th ly | beside -- se _- atom; gardens, Sood Green, has been | interviews by a committee composed | Old Man's Eye by Side. gf 3he Joain, SRY WE > piainiy her--handsome and richly we study the laws of their behaviour | awarded honors as one of the best|of Sir George Fairbairn, Agent-Gen- | i ig Sn dreseed. in remarkable and Intricate detail. LUNA CS EN types of British schoolboys. eral for Victoria, and leading English | Mistake the door. My sister, who was in an A few paces behind were two men **If anyone is able to contemplate Such a boy was sought by the Gov- \schoclmasters A story of how a male hospital at- other part of the house, also heard the | in velvet Court dress of the time of the Universe in all its magnificence scratching. Henry VIII. They were chatting in the Unive Jp all tia magnifies } ramen of Vlctatin; Australia, to held A REAL TYPE. tendant dropped carbolic into a pa- "1 did not then know that Petar was | subdued tones. . . I got up to watch and coms to the conclusion th noth- 1200 pr oy Sanu, at SE of the Six |. athe real test was moral character | tient's eye instead of the drops pre-| dead, and my first thought was that | the scene . . . thinking I was about Bad Cuma Sonsiiie A tht hah 3 pe Bnd of Victor! Anll_loadersiiip, for the best type of scribed by a doctor was told at the] he had broken away from the police jo witaem some tragedy of former . oat SC y was wanted. | station. ve Ee ess amour il o bin ae lt Sop et av 7 Sted x ns | ENS, ity fl MEE 5 HES BT 7 aa Rs HENS : ublin » i ©_is =a splendid type of British |g : before time fixed b: " A 3 Dee 1 abbas an ermine capa, man's i design, plan, (ntention, purpose, Pisco e Made Sus the Malus eS par, Eevee), schodlboy. He was the foremost boy | the bist B for holding "the inquest lieve that it was Peter come back." |rich dreas was covered Row by a sure . en - Feuson. in the school, in his studies and In "I also," said Mr. Stokoe, "am no | coat. The atmosphere was tense with CRADOCK 0 JECTS pended for Drunkenness Ta rants, head siAgter gf | IPOIt: Ho. was an active Hoy Scout, hehe exhumed on & Home | ypiritualist, but the case is distinctly | a fesling of impending danger i rious. "1 spoke to them twice . . . whan 8c 1 captain of his house, a prefect, and | "gg, James Lewis, tem ata {9% # An extraordinary system of money Trinity, County Secondary School | latterly captain of the school | |iundant at High Teams Hospital. 5 | touna re. Sullivan bess. from | It was the face of my Basband. ng oy scholar five years, told afl ' LUSCY 28s ; | McKay had an affection of the eye, . the meeting of the TRRgegoan . a tine that his -pupti in Australia at the end of his WO | and the doctor prescribed some drops bltts, 20d Si sity hanging oa =e . (Dublin) Mental Hospital Committee, | 4. distinction in open com- Jean. hal Als. of 'th | which witness kept in a GUDBOAN | poi looking on. ago when three night attendants were sus- petition with British schoolboys ail A olarship of the same value, | whore there was a bottle labelled "As it ha all dogs are the 1 h, pended for a month for drunkenness. over Great Britain and in Northern which. was open to boys of Scottish | «pure bolle." ppens very | the long ago. ------ When other attendants had to take parentage ouly; and tenable at Gee-| "ywitness took the bottle and put ahd Southern Ireland, 3 Nes k Protests That Falkland] hu" tae suspended attendants | "BANKED ON MUNDY." 5 gonn Hood, of George Heriots | tomegmoty that he had mide & mis: Island Battle Should owsd them Toner.) that an attend. "They hall to pass & qualitying qx- 'Sehosl. Rdinbureh. | take and had put in carbelic. ; ' » AR Not Be Reproduced 0 1s. 84., another 10 Dr. Westrope, medical officer, said SEL Re 1S ALMOST AWAKE (HOSTELRY SIGN #2" ~~ GEISFORTUNE| CLERK RELATION t Pesos Suu er \TTERYEARS SEP] PAINTED BY VIGAR | TER WAITER HAS cc Sc Shop pm The chiet has comé Mr. O'Neill, head attendant, replied 1 - assec ca a ; 000 to Five Unsuccess- TOIL | pat he dig mot think so. membe Lisutonant Montagu Cradock. . i -- | Named Town ful Claimants brother of the late Admiral Christo. | Another r asked what com- | Girl "Who Dropped Into|Famous Swinging Board The turn of Fortune's wheal has| A statement, published recently, en Ck Brian Anis Mon: mission the patients Con fat the bor-| Trance Shows Signs = | Has Now Been Ween! IL : laced & strest musician of Kirkcaldy, ve " : and Good sunk * | that Lady Houston is prepared to give Hope ware sunk. {Owing sytem was ht confined to the of Recovery as Memorial itu, In a position of great affiu- | cop oon Coo to the five members of states that he has nt as decided to request the Local m------ it |p ishi Off Reward The lucky man is Andrew Hillock, |the Skinner family whe were claim. from Government Department to bold o| ARTIFICIALLY FED NO NAME arishioners er aged 0§, of Nicol Street, Kirkcaldy, ants to the late Sir Robert : Houston's sworn inquiry into the alleged system to Catch Anonymous ; who is & familiar figure in the street | millions, brings fortuns to a humble agen We 3 :.8 7: - {and at Raith Rovers football ground, | Wallasey family. Specialists and Spiritualists| Cleric's Viewpoint Was] Critic © |'Whare he plays a meiodeon. The head of this household, Cecil of money-iending fat WOMAN GIVES LIFE Completely Baffled by Shown in Lamb and | The indignation of the whole vu-| Hillock has succesded on the death | Houston Smerdon Skinner, who Is now 3 + {lage of Yateley (Hants) of nearly 2.-| t his grand-uncle, also named Andrew | printer's clerk, suffered great priva. Strange Case Lion Design odo - peop aroused Hillock, to an estate in Australia | tion when, on being discharged from sinister je haa { of an os uy they which is said to be valued at several | {he a2: 2% trated the renin look -- RE 11a | hundred thousand pounds. i or work. a a year in a trance, Miss Das Mrs. Robert Hole, of Seavington, | letter WHE Bas bigbtis 60 acute. che grand-uncle left Kircaidy in| "What will happen Bow? Ihave on, the young draper's assistan x near Iiminster, Somerset, notad jecal that the Parochial 1548 and went to Australia. He was not mille any plans,' he ry adding ~Colonel dock, and the Ad- { Chilwell, Nottingham, whose st artist, has repainted the sign of the | Church Council has issued notices of-| one of the early settlers near Adelaide, | that wo children wo benefit Lieut. A Cra r the matter, A case was reported some mouths age; | New Inn, Hambridge, originally paint- fering a reward of £5 for the discov. and he called the place Kircaldy, after | mest by his god Jortune, that sha An of the British Instruc ; is beginning to show signs of Te-led by ths late Rev. Charles Marson, |¥ of the author. {bis pative town in Scotiand. He Ia n, ayy tn Te comgany. Told the. West. covery. y " 'A Prominent residents and officials of | amassed great wealth in the form of inate Gasette that the objections to "TR 3 3 She understands what the wall-nown writer Sollectons {the village organizations have been in| extensive sheep ranches and fruit BE ¢ ia said to Ber, and she recently spoke | Cp 1" Boer Th BO The of Sir Robert Houston's sister of a few words, but only to relapse info] go was vicar of Hambridge for |gyised hand. The writer, evidently a : | person of education, would appear to Many years, The famous sign swings from a post | be od with the : in the centre of the wide approach to | Dima acquainted of the These the. inn. | Village, and a regular attendant at the | laide to Kirkcaldy to convey the news. An amusing story is told of the pyurish Church. Andrew is going to sall for Australia painting done by the Vicar. He Was' The vicar , , in about a week, acconipanied by his a man of the people and regarded tha | Howell) has received daughter, aged 14. he aif Sas 1a. 5 Weather SeRtan | of th CEPR, SET the sign was in 8 ten | condition, and in a chat with the land. 1 lord offersd to repaint it. 3 from | in years age the LOW appointment to sue- N Sionst at the A FATHER HIS FAMILY i iH Ef ii