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Lindsay Post (1907), 27 Sep 1912, p. 6

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fiat! 9s Detective Duncan Investigation Is Started In Toronto. Toronto, Sept. 23â€"The investigation by the city police comMissioners as to the alleged laxity of Inspector of Detectives Walter Duncan in handling the mners of the Farmers Bank case w ””55 v- qu -â€"._-_- , mises to be much more far-reach- ing than was original!) supposed. Evidence was taken at the initial sit- ting yesterday which went to show that there had been more or less gen- eral dissatisfaction and lack o‘ confi- Bence on the force itself with Inspec- tor Duncan’s handling of police mat- tars. Certain oficers went so far as to say that the inspector‘s veracity was frequently called in question on the force, and that he had more than once endeavored to shift' blame for alleged indiscretions of his own to other members of the force. A num- ber of newspaper men were called to testify that the inspector had given them access to the papers in ques- tion, while the trend of all the evi- dence was to the effect that a friendly understanding existed between the in- specter and Percy Haverson, a repor- ‘1e. on The World, through which the latter was accorded privileges denied to other newspaper men. The hearing resumes to-day. New York. Sept. 24.â€"A Belfast cable yesterday afternoon says: The Ulster Unionist Council met here today (Monday) and approved the text of the antLhome rule covenant drawn up by its executive committee cm Sept. 19. Orangemen throughout Ireland will subscribe to it next Sat- urday, at what promises to be the most momentous political gathering gince the days of the Scotch Gove- ‘nmters. Former Solicitor-General of Ireland Sir Edward Carson was chairman. Other notables present were the Mar- quis of Londonderry, Admiral Lord {mules Beresiord, ex-Attorney-Gener- .1 for Ireland James H. Campbell and several members of Parliament of the “King‘s Privy Council; , e A..- â€" -Am an VM‘B" --"J '-â€" 7 The covenant pledges Orangemen not to recognize the Irish Parliament, to disregard its laws and to refuse ' yment of taxes to the Dublin treas- my. The utmost loyalty to King will also plan a provisional govern- ment, to assume control in Ulster the day home rule becomes effective. The covenant says resistance to .hctne rule will be passive “as long as possible )) g Ottawa, Sept. 24.â€"Sir Geo. Doughty, ILP. for Grimsby, Eng, is in Ottawa. to interview Hon. J. D. Hazen, Minis- tet of Marine, in behalf of a. scheme ‘0 establish a colony of old country fishermen on the Pacific coast. The idea was originated by Earl Grey, the intention being to have the colony term the nucleus of a naval reseu've. PAGE I- ‘ WI DE PROBE PROM ISED. Ulster Fishermen for Pacific Cogst. WOOl faDPICS. W6 UUY 11"" "AU uvnvvzl in all these lines, from 1 mm. The finest Blanke~. h~ vurest yarns, E and the cheapest all-w u: fl-mnels on the E markets The pl‘lC‘rS m» Inwest, on ac- count of the saving in f'wi hr. and saving m‘ of delay. Clothe you family in our woel- W len goods. Make you had comfortable £4 with our blankes, and vnu will have a W happy and satisfied hem-l for the coming L‘t‘ winter. Prices corvnc +0 gnods guar- E alumna tau mmwmm E4 7 'E CASH ANE: / at,“ * E ( . ED 7 anteed. ’ ‘ .____.._ E ~‘“”.”a g E “Ohmflmd Md“‘ M r. Approves Covenant. Horn Bros. are known ' ev- ‘mada for E their superior make:c of b «szkws. home~ made flannels, hosieH ‘ and char E wool fabrics. We buy Wm: wxc usively W in all these lines, fxom i firm. L w CASH AN E” ' The finest Blanke». h~ ourest yarns, and the cheapest all-w u! flannels on the markets The prices ch” lowest, on ac- count of the saving in fwi ht. and saving ofdelay. Clothe you family in our woo!- len goods. Make you bm comfortable with our blankezs. and vuu will have a The morning mist on the window panes indicates early autumn, and the pru- dent housewife will begin to buy her winter supplies now. It is time for blanket thought, warm, good thought it is. A Belfast cable But Ulstermen Will Keep It Up, Says Sir Edward Carson. Coleraine, Ireland, Sept. 23.â€""U1- ster has never yet. been conquered and never will be.” This was the keynote at the speeoh‘ of Sir Edward Car. son, who addressed a big meeting here Saturday in opposition to home rule. Ulster loyalists, he said, had been accused of plotting treason, but. they would sign the covenant, and not ea:- ing tupgence whether it was treason 7--.. :‘ Ant: Rn man against home rule. Denounced From Pulpits. Belfast, Sept. 23.-â€"-Ulster interces. sion services were held in the churches throughout the province yesterday. In addition to the special collect which was ordered read by the Most Rev. John Baptist Crozier, primate of all Ireland, of the Church of England, who had designated this week, includ- ing “Ulster Day,” as “days for Special intercession and prayer on behalf of our beloved native land,” sermons were preached making particular ref- erence to the solemn covenant. In many cases the national anthem was sung. Saturday the Climax. London, Sept. 23.â€"â€"Orr ‘Saturday, , _. -_J.L uvuuu...’ were, Sept. 28, the Unionists of the north- ern counties of Ireland propose to reg-- ister their formal defiance of home rule. Gathering in halls and market places, even in churches, the men of Ulster will sign a covenant pledging themselves never to submit to any Government from Dublin, which may be imposed upon the country by the Asquith-Redmond home rule bill pass- ed in the House of Commons. Fatally Hurt by Motor Truck. Winnipeg, Sept. 24.â€"Samuel Mc. Dowell, the aged father of Sergt. Jim McDowell of the city police, was run over, sustaining fatal injuries, by an automobile truck yesgrday: driyen by uuvvu-vw -â€" ..-_ hi son, Samuel McDowell. He was ti ing Wide his son on the truck when the machine skidded. throwing him violently to the ground. Before he ‘could rise the left. hind wheel of the vehicle had passed com- pletely over his body. He was alive, but unconscious, when picked up. To Telegraph Heart Beats. Cambridge, Mass, Sept. 24.â€"A de- vice just installed in the laboratories of the Harvard Medical School is de- signed to enable a physician to keep in touch with a. patient’s pulse by tele- phone 0r telegraph. Alter electrical connections have been made the patient’s hand is plac- ed in a. solution of warm salt water and electric currents from the hands are carried by wires to an instrument which records or transmits the heart beats. Youthful Burglar Heavily Sentenced. Belleville, Sept. 23.â€"A young man named Frank Smith, who claims El Paso, Texas, as his home, was on Sat- urday sentenced in this city to five years in the penitentiary for burglar- izing _Mr._I. A. Goodsena. music store {his city. MAY BE TR EASON. Teleggayh Hgart‘ Beats. Mrs. Leigh Delgerately Refused Food For 44 Days. London. Sept. 23.â€"-Discussing the release of Mrs. Leigh from Mountjoy prison, The Daily Express says that the woman had undergone a hunger strike and forcible feeding for iorty- four days and that her collapse was due to deliberate starvation, she hav- ing acquired the knack of ejecting food as soon as it. was administered by means of the tube. wywv v- ".7 At suffragette headquarters it was said on Saturday that Mrs. Leigh and her fellow-prisoner, Gladys Evans, who is under a sentence of five years for having tried to burn the Theatre; Royal, where Mr. Asquith was to speak, were offered the privilege of wearing their own clothes and having the hospital diet served to them if they would abandon their hunger strike. This they refused. It was said that Mrs. Leigh had abstained from water as well as food, and the prison attendants had to strap her in a. chair. as both she and Miss Evans smashed everything breakable in their cells. Unconditional Discharge. Dublin. Sept. 23,â€"Althongh Mrs. Leigh was released “on license.” the official notice of her discharge simply says the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland ordered it so that she might be remmo‘v- ed to a hospital for treatment. The woman was taken in charge by friends and immediately visited a hospital. Thence she went to a private house in Dublin. where she now it. Her re- lease from prison was ordered after a medical examination by Sir Christo- pher Nixon. ex-president (f the Royal College of Physicians in Ireland, and Sir Thomas Myles, surgeon to Rich- mond Hospital, and practically amounts to an unconditional dis- charge. ’ u Mrs. Leigh Threatens. Dublin. Sept. 23.â€"-Phoenix Park was the scene yesterday of a disorderly sui- fragette meeting. A letter from Mrs. Mary Leigh declared that unless Miss Evans was liberated within a few days, she would lead a march on the prison to effect her release. Dr. Eedy, a promising young doctor Whose parents reside in Harriston. died suddenly of hemorrhage of the brain at Powassan, Ont. “'Eiié Birp-henflchlldren of a. Lanark- shire miner have proved to be the heirs to $300,000 left by the late Ben- jagin guntieg 02 Brooklyn, NHY The Spanish Government is prepar- ing to mobilize the employés of the railroads, bringing them within reach of marial law, thus checking__strikes. James R. Robertson, 3 wéXI-known Owen Sound business man, met with a. serious accident when his auto turn- ed turtle and hurled the occupants out. Rev. G. M. Atlas, the Macedonian minister who was out on parole on a charge of defrauding a Syrian widow out of her husband’s money, has been pardone§.__ . . _£ cliâ€" Afih‘fi yuAUVA.\â€"u. An additional tax of fifty cents (gold) per hundred pounds on coffee exported from Guatemala has been ordered. The total tax now amounts to $1.50 (gold): -p“ p “A1B-_l W VLAIV \bv.u,. Joseph Devlin, M.P. for Belfast West, was injured in a. motor car accident while on his way to attend a meeting of the Lilclooney. The meeting was gbandoned. Joseph Goodison of Romney Town- ship, near Leamington, who had an arm so badly injured while threshing, has succumbed to his injuries, blood- poisoning having developed. Dr. Rudolph Hering of New York was elected president, and Dr. J amee Roberts of Hamilton, vice-president, of the American Public Health Asso- ciation in Washington Saguzday. Max Kessler, a Russian Jew, bound for Toronto, confessed to the immi- gration officials at the Falls that. he had stolen $70 from his employer in New York, and was sent back to the States. __._._ - câ€"vo yum-V... Captain Harper Wilson of Winnipeg was the only Canadian to get office in the Sovereign Grand Lodge of the Independent Order of Oddfellows, meeting at Winnipeg. He was elected grand marshal. ' H. J. .D. Astley, a. British aviator, who had made several notable flights. was picked up in a. dying condition Saturday at Belfast after a fall and taken to a hospital, where he suc- cumbed to his injuries: - At the close of the military manoeu- vres which terminated on Friday, Hon. Sam Hughes and the Canadian officers were presented to the King. The Minister of Militia. had also the signal honor of dining with His Ma- jesty. Seven Years In Prison. Gait. Sept. 23.â€"Seven years in the penitentiary for bigamy and seven years for perjury, terms to run concur- rently, was the sentence imposed u u Ernest. Moyes of Berlin in the po ice court yesterday morning by Magis- trate Blake. The crime \"as one of a most despic_a.ble cperacter, Moyesf vic- wvuv w ____-, t'.. being Lem Schnarr ‘1 Berlin, a blind invalid. She was also charged with bigamy and found guilty and committed to the house of refuge at Berlin. The convicted woman had to be brought. to Galt in an automobile. Moyes. who pleaded guilty to a charge of bigamy, had to face a charge of perjury, committed in taking out a marriage license on September 9 by saying he was an unmarriel man. boom NOT FEED HER. Killed Near Port Credit. Toronto, Sept. 23.â€"The body of the man who was struck and killed by a C.P.R. express two miles west of Port Credit Friday night when he was wheeling his bicycle along the tracks was identified at the city morgue on Saturday morning as that of Levi Pad- gett, 30 years of age, who lived be- tween Port Credit and Erindale. The identification was made by Harvey Peare of Lorne Park. The body will be turned over to the coroner at Cooks- ville. who wili hold an inquest. Need 3,000 Harvesters. Winnipeg, Sept. 24.â€"â€"The C.P.R. yesterday morning received 500 tele- grams in reply to a query as to the number of men still urgently needed for harvesting. These show fully 3.0m needed, of whom half are required at fianitdba points. At every station there are standing 25 to ~10 empty cars waiting for the grain to move. TELEGRAPH IO BRIEFS. T0 DIVIDE PERSIA? Britain and Russia Plan to 00 So, It Is Said. LIBERAL PRESS flOSTlLE Present Conference Between Sir Ed- ward Grey nd M. Sazonoff, the Rus- sian Envoy, ls Reported to Have the Partition of That Country in View â€" Means More Frontier for Great Britain to Defend. London. Sept. 23.â€"The practical di- vision of Persio between Great Britain and Russia appears almost assured as 1. result of the conferences which Ser- gius Sazonoff. the Foreign Minister, AII ‘LA 51a: Uabuuuu. uuv I"..- .. _..__-__~,7 , had with British smtesxifen. All the newspapers which are in the closest touch with the Foreign Office, particu- larly The Times. looked 11an _recently as Sir Edward Grey's mouthpiece, are forecasting this arrangement end ere apparently preparing the public mind for it. The necessity of preservmg order in the interests of trade 15 the principal reeson advanced. 4...! -LI.-- t“'.I‘.1-1Ve-VMancheg-tler“(Sr'tig'élian argd cthgr Liberal papers oppose the prOJect bxt- terly. The Guardian saysgn “The Foreign Office, although not ordinarily over-solicitous about the trade interests, knows well how to qugte the_m for is own ends." - A .._1- T).-- 3w“ -._--._ -c- -- Since the signing of the Anglo-Rus- sian convention of 1907 for the main- tenance of Persia’s independence and integrity. and incidentally for the divi. sion of the country into British and Russian spheres of influence there has been a steady growth of this influence and a corresponding shrinkage of in- dependence in Persia. The exact divi- sion of territory will not be easy. The Russian papers claim Teheran. If 1‘~e Emperor gets the capital, Great, Bri- tain’s share will be decidedly the smaller value. WISE-5e (it"fiié Liberal papers bewail the disappearance of Persia as a buffer state and foresee a great _iqe1:eese it} the British militry establishment when the British-Russian boundary is drawn across the middle of what is now Persia. . n 1‘ “U" L ungua- Nowhere is the outcome of the con- ference between Sir Edward Grey and M. Sazanoff awaited with greater in- terest than in the capitals of the Bal- kan states as it is believed that they have a vital bearing on the crisis in the near east, the gravity of which unless the powers induce Turkey im- mediately to introduce reforms in Macedonia, all are agreed upon. The representatives in London of Bulgaria, Servia, Greece and Monte- negro a.re watching closely the pro- gress of the convention which began in London Saturday and will be continu- ed at Balmoral Castleuto-day. Al's Vu uu Hub-“vou- -â€"â€"___v There is no confirmation here of the reported alliance of the four Balkan states to make common cause against Turkey, but it is acknowledged that a rapprochement exists for their pro- tectibh. Bloodthirsty Affray In Toronto Results In Arrests. Toronto, Sept. file-Six Italians are locked up in Agnes street station and three more are in a serious condition at St. Michael’s Hospital as the result of a terrible fight with razors, sti- lettos, knives, clubs and beer bottles in a little boarding-house at 103 Univ versity avenue last night. No of those in the police station are charged with wounding, while the others are held as material witnesses of the most gruesome and bloody combat that ever occurred among the foreign element in Toronto. , Five policemen broke into the house. ;where about twenty Italians live. and there found a vendetta. with all its ghastly features. Four Italians were fighting with stilettos and razors. their faces and heads badly gashed. and huddled in a heap on the flour four others lay helpless. andflbleeding as the result of wounds inflicted in the fracas. A woman, a Wife of one of the comb..tants, who is now in the hOSpital, was picked up in the hallway, her face having been smash- ed by a beer bottle. Six of the nine Italians were taken to the hospital and treated by a small army of sub geons, and the others were locked up in the police _station. -n n a“‘_ Rocco Leambardo and Guiseppi Pag- giera, both out up themselves, are charged with wounding. The material witnesses, all of whom came out of the affray with numerous scars, are Guiseppi Bagrinello, keeper of the boardihg-house, and Michele Pugg- n #A‘- nola, Donato Puggnola, Joe Canele and Fedele Rosino. All of them are street laborers, and, as far as the police can ascertain, are related to one anotherâ€"brothers, brothers-indaw and cousins. The affair started about 9 o’clock last night. According to an Italian priest, Donato and Mickele Puggnola. two brothers, argued about something, and, not satisfied with the result, in- dulged in wielding stilettos. Others in the house joined in the affray, and the entire nine men fought in one small room, hardly large enough to accommodate them. When the police arrived no liquor could be found, but there were a number of empty bottles, which seemingly had been used as weapons. According to the interpre- ter, the men arrested were responsible {or 1tihe wounding. Both are giants in m . The cause of the fight was a celebra- tion out of the ordinary among the foreigners. There is considerable clan- ivsh feeling among those from differ- ent towns in Italy. All of those en- gaged in the afiraiy hail from Monte- leone. Yesterday Was known as St. Roch Day among the Italians. St. Roch is the patron saint of a few in- habitants of Toronto’s “ Little Italy.” Those who worship St. Roch were afraid to celebrate the day on account of the enmity of the natives of Monte- leone. So the great day passed off un- noticed, and these foreigners from Mon-teleocne were so overjoyed that their hated brothers were afraid to commemorate the day that they sim- ply had to give vent to their enthus- iasm by consuming beer and otherwise making merrv. The fizht resulted. [HE LIN!) SLY POST. NINE ITALTANS HURT. @ifflfflffllffllfi St. Petersburg. Sept. ELLâ€"An luv tigation of conditions in Bulgaria (i; closes unanimity of sentiment t' z.‘ that country is on the eve of :1 Ion- ocherished war against Turkey. Ur: less the conferences which the Ruâ€"~ sian Foreign Minister, M. Sazanof‘.’ will. have in London with Britisl» statesmen are fruitful for Macedonia. the war party is likely to gain the upper hand. The army is already taking papers which havn been issu ed enumerating recent concessions made to the Albanians and the extenâ€" sion of similar reforms to othrr pro Vinces make the unusual admission that these reforms are the res..lt oi advice tendered by the ambassadors here, and of conversations between the Ottoman ambassadors abroad and the Foreign Ministers of tho respec- tive countries, notably Russia. Belfast, Sept. 24.â€"â€"The Ulster cam- paign against home rule was continuâ€" ed last night by a demonstration at Ballymena, Frederick E. Smith, Un- ionist M.P. for the Walton division of Liverpool, and the Rt. Hon. J. H. M. Campbell, M.P. for Dublin Uni- versity and ex-Solicitor-General for Ireland, were the speakers. The cus- tomary anti-home rule resolutions were carried with great enthusiasm. .Outside the Protestant Hall many ’ thousands who had not been able to ‘ gain admission held a. meeting around 1 a. huge bonfire. London, Ont., Sept. 24.â€"Prof. Dic- kie, who came here from Belfast, Ire- land, some time ago and has been lecturing anatomy at the Western Medical College, deliberately commit,- ted suicide in his boarding-house yes- terday. Going into the bathroom he stuffed towels under the d_oor and‘then turned UV Iv van â€"--â€" on the gas? five left a short note to the janitor begging his pardon for the trouble he was gogqg to gause. Diqkie ULUouv “v v w... 0""o ‘ was 35 years old and unmarried. Worry over ill-health is supposed to be the cause of suicide. Chicago “Rafiles’ a Lunatic. Chicago, Sept. 24.â€"Jacob Fay Guth. rie, known as "the educated burglar," who is charged with having stolen $250,000 worth of valuables from the homes of society people, was'arraign- Alvmvu v- ~vvvvrd ed for trial yesterday, but when be confronted the judge he threw a cus- pidor at a. deputy sheriff. Then he begun to snarl and show his teeth so menacingly that spectators fled from the court room. His case was contin- ued. It. was said he would be sent to ued. It. wa an asylum. "I noticed after {a} left the house this morning you went back a sin. Don't on know that’s unlucky? "We , it would have been a. good deal more unlucky for me if I hadn’t mne back. My wife called me.” ééfié back. Prof. Dickie Kills Himseif. Bulgaria «Now W=rH Meeting Around Bonfire. I CAME into being as the spoken language came: slowly gradually, and to meet an urgent need. I have bee; worked for evil, but mostly I have worked for good. I can still be worked for ev1l, but each day it grows more difficult so to do. I am at once a tool and a living force. If you use me wisely, I am a tool in. your employ. If you misuse me, my double edge will injure or destroy you. If you do not use me, I am a force that works ever against your accomplishment of the aims and purposes that animate your business. have a. million voices. I am the ambassador of civiliza- tion, the handmaiden of science, and the father of invention. I have peopled the prairie, and with my aid commerce has laid twin trails of gleaming steel in a gridiron across the continent and stretched a. network of copper into the far corneas of the globe. l I am the friend of humanityâ€"for I have filled the commoner’s life with. a hundred comforts denied the king of yesterday. I have brought clean food, health- ful warmth, music, convenience, and comfort mto a hundred mflhon homes. L I laugh at tarifis and remake laws. V I have scaled the walls of the Ispellservioe, economy, abundance, farmer’s isolation and linked him to and opportunity; for I am the one and the world of outer interests. only universal alphabet. _ I build great factories and people I live in every spoken word and them -w1th happy men and women printed lineâ€"in every thought that wholove the labor I create. moves man to action and every dad I have made merchant princes out that displays “a" acter. ofIcorner shopkeepers and piled the I am Advertising. Advice regarding your advertising problems is available through any good advertising agency or the Secretary of the Canadian Press Association, ._Room 503, Luntsden Building, Toronto. , _ ____1_ :1 .‘_J_--I-J Press Association, Room 503, Lumsam Dummg, .w Iva-«I. Enquiry involves no obligation on your partâ€"so write if interested. Beholdâ€" ‘ an Advertisement! a thousand tongues Baby Floated Down Stream. St. Catharines, Sept. 23.-The iii-- . iant child of Mrs. A. Reed, Winches- ; tier avenue, had a thrilling experience éSaturday morning and narrowly es- lcaped with its life. It was securely strapped in the baby carriage, which started rolling down an incline lead- ing to a bridge over the hydraulic , raceway, 'Ifhere are no side supports Niagara Falls. Ont.. Sept. 23.â€"-“I do not. believe that the firs: vessel will pass through the Panama Canal on Oct. 15, 1913,” said Henry Lovering, a mining engineer of Cape Gracias. Nicaragua, who is visiting U. S. Con- sul Edward Trimmer. “I don"t. be- lieve that any vessel will ever pass through the canal.” -- zlvvv wt 41 _ “Why not?” he said. “Well, the engineers have not been able to find bottom in the C-ulebra cut. and they have gone down 200 feet. You remem- ber what happened about two weeks ago â€" “that fall of millions of cubic yards of earth? That beats me out. I believe Stevens Shontz. knew that a canal at Panama was impossible, that’s why they quit. There‘s no bet- ter engineer in the country than Col. Goelthals. He was sent to Panama to dig the canal, and he is doing great work against tremendous odds. Army officers are not supposed to express their opinion. They do as they are told. The engineers who were sent down to make the preliminary survey some twenty years ago, reported that the Panama route was not feasible. They favored the Nicaragua route, de- spite the fact that the Panama route is about three miles longer.” on the bride, and the carriage went over the edge into the water. In some manner it became {tee from the car- riage, which sank. and the baby float- ed down stream. The mother saw the child, jumped into the water and res- su‘ed it after it had been carried seventy feet. Both were helped out by some canal employes. The mother collapsed when she reached home. Plenty of Cars. Winnipeg, Sept. 23.â€"Sir Thomas Shaughnessy on his way east declar- ed here that the Canadian Pacific had plenty of cars for moving the grain eastward though they were lying idie now owing to delay in harvesting and threshing. He found conditions sat- isfactory on the line between Mont- real and Vancouver. all of which he ingpected by daylight. Vanderbilt Cup Race Postponed. Milwaukee. Wis. Sept. 23.â€"â€"The Vanderbilt cup automobile races have been postponed until the wccu follm' iPé DGXt. because of rain for several days, which made the rac‘; unsafe. He was unable to say if the com- pany would build a. tunnel through the mountains, calling it one of the difficult problems whicgh need solution. Must Abandon Canal? wealth of a Monte Cristo into the laps of those who know my power. I am a bridge that cancels diStanoe and brings the whole world to your doors, ready and eager to buy your I find new markets and gather the goods of the world into a handful of printed pages. I fathered the tenâ€"cent magazines and the penny paper. I am either the friend or the foe to Competitionâ€"so he who finds me first is both lucky and wise, Where it cost cents to hire me yesterday, it costs quarters toâ€"day, and will cost dollars toâ€"morrow. But who- soever uses me had best have sense; for I repay ignomnoe with loss and wisdom with the wealth of Croesus. I spell service, economy, abundance, and opportunity; for I am the one and only universal alphabet. PLAN HUGE 8' Belgian Socialists Womd Universal Suffrage. Industrial and Public Service“ lnvolving Half a Million“ ls Under Preparation lnanm to Get a Change In Nat-‘3 Constitution â€" Revolvefi“ l n Big Quantities- Brussels, Sept. 24.â€"â€"A gmga- strike is projected by the 50wi Belgium in support of 8 m suffrage amendment to the ‘3‘ tion. Hostiliiifi against the“ meat which has msoluteljsfl: against the desired legism gin in November. Half 9mm?“ ers, it is calculated “11159 “5 in the strike, which, :t :s I"; shall last six weeks at 8 005“ funds estimated at ten W dollars. .. “4.1 d1 fu'I-ids eétimabed at ten unw- dollars. The railways, the postil 1: phone services, mings, will! factories and workshops of ' was! men in the pmpagama. _ ‘ throughout Belgium. Promli‘f: stantial financial syppm reoeivai, the commxtzee W1 from the United StateS, dad land, Germany, Sweden and 6‘ and arrangements have been ‘13 M according to the 531133;” \.‘ '4 to, send forty th temporan homes France on the strike. extra work in strictly avqidgd so (1181 43 M9 no aCcumulazi .' . the evil day. Szgmlar: taken in factones an BLOODLESS 24,-}. mt! XE 25th to 0m: wt of this 1 Q'onnd up. 1: I. and buckwl ling is.the orde: in is yielding v Minn-n, who in the Ross 3 Moving as netted. Dr. B has been V4 "'1 and Ruby Ihen the gas In naturally E sand to stop I plug. There h intention o the old pipe 1 and try to a IIS. Han? M “ting frien- We. .' from time he ago be: ad on in th rtor oil an cred at Ap: . that the 1 . into profit is an Old [4 ad it was 1 ’hss‘ ‘. Arthu '. and wealth »..w1a.v of 42] he :1!

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