Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Apr 1922, p. 1

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- "ALLEN TO-DAY "All's Fair In Love" AN ALL-STAR CAST 10 WITHDRAW THE REQUEST Pool Proprietors Will Ask, City Council Not to Jn- crease Hours. On Monday morning, several presentative pool room proprietors met Rev. W. Taylor Dale, president of the Kingston Ministerial Assocla- tion, for a conference on the ques- tion bf extemsion of hours, and the proprietors agreed to withdraw ther petition to the city council, which that body granted a week ago As re- the result of this, the pool room wurs will be the same as hereto- fore. The proprietors stated that public opinion appeared to be against the extension of the closing hours. This had developed since the action of the council in deciding to make the clos- 1 ing hour 11.30 instead of 11 p m. ! The pool room proprietors, it S| | pointed out, asked for one of two hal! hour | things, either an additional of the each day or a reduction foe members of icense Some the Ministerial Association made the de- claration that if the eity council did not rescind the motion it passed week ago, they would, by petition, scure a test vote of the peophte at he municipal next Janu- ary on the question of wiping out | wmocl room entigely last week a elections INTERIM SUPPLY BILL yikely To Be Passed on Monday or | Tuesday. l Ottawa, April 3:-It thought | that the. government) interim supply bill will be passed in the commons to-day or Tuesday. This bill bodies one-fourth of the supply and will enable the government to carty | on for a while in this new fiscal year, which began yesterday. Much time this week be taken up with the civil govern- ment estimates. Hon. Mr. Mother well, minister of agriculture, has th items of his department to get through, but no particular difficulty is expected. The only other department upon which the Opposition is likely Lo make a drive is that of railways. The Opposition seems determined not to! vote any railway estimates until] some explanation of the govern-| ment's policy on this big vital issue is explained. is em- | is likely 10 Apo Came After Man. Paris, April 3 Positive denial of the Darwin theory has been made be fore the Academy of Medicine by no less an authority than Professor Ar- thur Coutiere, famous author of nu-| merous biological and medical works, | Coutlere bases his theory on the dis- covery of prehistoric remain in ail parts of the world which show, he asserts, that not gnly have the hu man being and the ape always been types apart, but that the ape was created after man. At the same time he admits that man at one time walked on all fours. But he had al- ways the gift of speech. Navigation Opened at Buffalo, Buffalo, N.Y., April 3.Navigation on the Great Lakes opened Saturday with the departure of four steamers for Lake Erie ports. The vessels en- countered considable ice, but appear- ed to be making rapid progress. | BUSINESS IN TORONTO ENTIRELY SUSPENDED During the Funeral of Sir John Eaton on Monday After- noon. Toronto, April 3.--Business was almost entirely suspended through- | out the city, factories were shut down and the Ontario legislature and the Toronto. city. council adjourned during the burial of Sir John Crag' Eaton here this afternoon The route from the Eaton Me- | morial church to Mount Pleasant cemetery was lined with tens of thou- sands of men, women and children | as the impressive cortege passed by. In the procession were many return- | ed soldiers in uniform, and the most | prominent men of business, religious | and public life of the community, | "HUSBAND AND WIFE. | i c {union * he Daily B KINGSTON, ONTARIO, MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1922. TTRIBUTES STRIKES TO UNTRUE THINKING Moderator of General Assem- bly Outlines True Func- tion of Church. April Speaking t th-anniversary services of the First Presbyterian Church here yes terday, Rev. Dr. C. C. Gordon Winnipeg, Moderator of the General Assembdy, said that he had reached the conclusion that (Canada peo 3 at of in ple could not work for six weeks at a time without fighting over it. This week in the United States 610.0,00 people, who ought to be at work, will not be able to do so be- cause of the ugly thoughts in their To untrue thinkigg, Dr. Gordon laid the responsibility for unrest in the world, and declared that the function of the Church is to proclaim the true God and to show that He be forgotten with impunity Rev, Dr. R. E. Welsh of Montreal was also special preacher at the ser- Rev. Dr. Gordon took part in ear cannot 1 i vices. (the centenary services of the Pres- cott congregation as well. DANIEL O'CONNELL, K.C Who has been appointed a the County of York by the Dor government COAL MINERS DESIROUS OF ENDING THE STRIKE Resumption of Coal Produc- tion Rests Entirely Upon Attitude of Operators. Washington, D.C., April coal miners, who suspended work Baturday in the bituminous and anthracite flelds, were declared today by President Lewis of the United Mine Workers to be desirous of ending the suspension of mining operations at the earliest possible date, but the resumption of coal pro duction entirely depends upon the future attitude of the coal operators. of e 3.--=The CHICAGO CELEBRATES 104 YEARS OF PEACE Twenty-five Speakers From Canada to Carry Greetings to Uncle Sam. Chicago, April. .3.---"Canadian Week," celebrating 104 years of peace between the United States and her neighbor, was ushered in by a parade, 5,000 strong, down Michigan avenue and through the loop, pass- ing in review before George Bell, jun., Commanding Officer of the Sth Corps Area. "Canadian week," which in- tended to foster social and commer- cial fraternization between Canada and the United States, is being ob- is served in all large cities in the coun- | try largely through the efforts of the | Kiwanis International, Twenty-five Canadians of note have been sent to the United States to speak various organizations throughout the country, and seventy-five Amer- ican speakers have been sent to Can- ada, where "United States Week" is being celebrated. Chicago is host of E. C. Drury, Premier of Ontario; Major J. F. Lewis and M. Fetridge, author, A Record Former Big Coal Strikes Number of coal miners striking at various times in former years and days of work lost by average striker are as follows, according to the gov- ernment"s Geological Survey: Year Strikers 1800 131,973 1902 200,452 19086 372,243 1908 145,145 1910 218.493 1912 311,056 1913 135,395 1914 161,720 1915 67,190 1916 170,633 160,240 Lost 37 83 52 38 88 40 68 20 15 6 5 371 COLLINS HAS | STORMY TIME | Meeting in County Mayo Stopped--Take "Republic" | Oath of Allegiance. » | Dublin, April 3.--A meeting ad-| dressed by Michael Collins at Castie~! bar, county Mayo, last night, was | (stopped by members of the fourth| | westepn division of the Irish repub-| lican army after stormy scenes, in which Mrs. Fogarty of the Commer- cial hotel was wounded by a bullet, ! according counts reaching here The crowd ni about two thousand, among ) were many | hostile to the provisional chief, who lorries used a speech to af a plat- frequently Spoke from form His interrupted, and after an attempt to rush the platform, during which a supporter drew his revolver, an offi- cer proclaimed the meeting in the in- was that Dublin battalions and the day show five left 'epublican of allegiance ) men of the Iris took 'the republic army oath to Refused Admission. Mullingar. Co y Westmeath, Ap ril When one hundred Free State troops marched to the gates of barracks occupied by theq Irish an army, adherents of Ea- Valera, they were refused ithe | republic monn de admission 500,000 FUNERALS WOULD HELP SOME Wholesale Removal of Old People Aid to Society, Says Labor Member. April | w Irwin, | speak- Montreal, { Labor M.P East, {ing at the open forum of the Mont- real Labor College here esterday |sald that, while there was a foment in Canada leading toward a revolu- tion which will eventually lead to a new social order, the time is not yet ripe for action, and will not be until there been a considerable pro- cess of organization and a develop- ment in education, | "The old people," said Mr, Irwin; "are no good. They are worse than | useless. If we had 500,000 Arst-! class funerals tomorrow of people of | 45 and up, it would help." LLOYD GEORGE ASKS FOR VOTE OF CONFDENCE |In His Genoa Policy--He Ad- dresses British House of Commons. for Calgary has London, Aprit 3.--Lloyd George | was warmly greeted by the govern- {ment benches when he appeared in ithe House of Commons to-day to ask {tor an expression of confidence on his Genoa policy. If his resohlition Mere defeated, he said, it would be | equivalent to a vote of no confidence |in the government. - The official op | position amendment, he said, chal- | | lenged not the object but the scope | | of the conference. He dd not be- lieve that such a policy as the Ge- {noa conference could properly con- | | sider the revision of the existin | treaties, even in the event that th was desirable. {"8ave the Children" Cry | Is Heard in Churches The claims of the starving chil- | ldren of Russia on the sympathy and | | the world were remembered in many {of the Kingston churches vesterday | {in the prayers of the ministers and | congregations and in the distribution | of envelopes for the support of the | work. In several of the churches | | collections were taken for the 'Save {the Children Fund," while other | {churches will take a collection' next | | Sunday, or on some future day, ! | i Springwater, Sask., Personals. | Springwater, Sask., March 28. --- | Mayor Culbert Bourk, Mrs. Bourk| {and daughter Ina have returned | | from the coast where they have been | spending the winter months. | Mrs. Russell Bourk and little dau-| ghter Thelma, Lydden, Sask., spent a | few days with Mrs. Culbert Bourk | .- | recently. i Miss Hettie Bourk is a guest at| the home of Mrs. Culbert Bourk. | 23 Dunning May Succeed Martin, * Saskatoon, Sask., April 3.--The | Liberal members of the legislature | and the provincial Liberal executive | {meet here to-morrow and it is be-| {lieved they will receive the resigna- | tion of Premier Martin and name | The Lincoln-Ford Motor Company. | Hon. C. A. Dunning as successor. + |corporated Saturday with a capital-| My husband takes naps on tep ois 2 freshly irored bedspread .F. L. i". What Does Your Husband Do? Lansing, Mich.,, April 3.--The Lincoln-Ford Motor Car Co. was in- ization of $15,256,000. holds 2,497 of the 2,600 shares Henry Ford, Henry Letand and fred J,atand oue share each. McKenna For Balfour's Seat, | London, April 3.--Right Hon. Re- | { Balfour's seat in the city of London | held no terror for Magistrate le * + Edse! Ford | ginald McKenna is being pressed to! ¢ aud accept nomination for Sir Arthur |¢ vil- "WITCH DOCTOR" HELD WHITE WOMAN CAPTIVE Threat of "Voodoo" Kept Her For Eight Years In Negro's Home. Pittsburgh, Pa. fous diamonds dangling from his ears, garbed in a swallow-tailed coat and wearing a white vest, Henry Washington, negro voodoo specialist, Baturday told Magistrate Temnsard De Wolfe how he.held Mrs. Charlotte Wyles, 45, a white woman, captive in his home for nearly eight years. it is aMeged he made her believe she would be seized by his voodoo witches if she escaped, Washington's supernatural powers De Wolfe 'and Henry was held on sev- eral charges, including cruelty--=and neglect. His wife, children and Mrs. Wyles were taken in charge by social welfare agents, Mrs. Wyles refused to talk Her emaclated appearance gave evidence of her bhalf-starve condition. Police expressed the he- lef that brutal treatment which she had suffered during her long finement had unbalanced her mind. It is through tives that police traced her and res- cued her, She fought police She had resigned herself to her fate and the doctrine of voodooism had takea root. She did not want to leave, FOUR THEATRICAL PEOPLE ARRESTED AT BROCKVILE For Entering House at Yonge's Mills--Fred Willis, King- ston, Among Them. Brockville, April 3 overtook members of theatrical troupe walking the ties em route from Kingston to Montreal Saturday when the police arrested at the Union station, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bostock (the Matter known professionally as Dorothy Padtter- son), Jennie Lindsay, Montreal, (known professionally as Hazel Pat- terson) and Fred Willis, Kingston, on a charge of having entered a house at Yonge Mills, west of here, and ransacking it. The 'quartette admitted having entered the house while the owner was absent for the purpose of seeking shelter from the storm, Willis was accompanying the burlesque performers from King- ston. : --Disaster -~ Italian Princess to Wed Belgian Heir Apparent? Rome, April 3.--The engagement of Princess Yolanda of Italy to Crown Prince Leopold parture of the Saturday afternoon, according to the Messagero, which quotes "the high- est official authority" for its state- ment, The engagement was rumored when the visit of the King and Queen of the Belgians to Italy wasproposed. Previously Princess Yolanda had been mentioned as a possible bride for the Prince of Wales. The Mes- sagero said the King and Queen of Italy would shortly visit Brussels. Ex-Empress at Bedside When Death Came Funehal, Madiera Islands, April 2. --~Zita, former Dmpress of Austria, | was at the beside of her husband Charles, when the ex-ruler died Sat- rday. She remained loyal to him hroughout his latter days when, broken in health and penniless, harles sought seclusion in the Ma- deiras after the failure of his last abortive attempt to regain the Aus- trian throne. Charles was of the Hapsburg line, descended from the Rudolph, King of the Romans in 1273, He was 34 before | SUPPOTt of the Christian nations of | Years old. Shaw Holds Calgary Seat; con- | the efforts of rela- | a burlesque | Fitish Whi MUST TAKG OVER MINES Unless Coal Industry Is Re- organized In Public Interest. Washington, D.C., April 3.--Pub- {lic ownership of coal mines will have [to be resorted to unless the coal in- jdustry is re-organized in the public interest. Senator Borah, of ldaho, (chairman of the senate labor com | mittee, declared after an tion of the strike situation Saturday With a nation-wide mine strike on in full swing, it is generally conceded that President Harding faces the big domestid orisis of his administra- tion Beljevin thing poo ut, the April 3.--~Spir- | inveslipgs h ne every- walk- 0 Las one st in his mina-- 7'olence." 1€ ju ough 1s m "thers shall he n¢ | Oonstabutary on D 1 | Oharleston, i April ¥ Con- stabulary men = luty through- out West Virginia Saturday as union |miners joined national [strike The majority of non-union man fought the strike with led coal production. coal increas | --by Tie-up in Pennsylvania, | Wilkesbarre, Pa., April Pro- duotion of coal in the anthracite re gion of Pennsylvania wasstopped Sat- jurday when 155,000 miners respond {ed to the suspension call of officers of the United Mine Workers The walkout is the most complete in the history of the industry. Says Miners Broke Pact, Washington, April 3 Operators in the central competitive field did not 'feel bound" to live up to their contrace to meat the miners before April 1st, because the miners have flagrantly violated their part of this contract on several occasions,' Al fred Ogle, of Terre Haute, Ind., de clared before the house labor com- | mittee Saturday. Can Fill Big Washington, April mines, working at top speed, {furnish the country with nearly [6,000,000 tons of bituminous coal {a week. This is fhe estimate by J Gap. 3 Non-union can iD. A. Morrow, of the National Coal | | Assocdation . As the strike starts, {the country is consuming about 9.- 500,000 tons of bituminous coal a week. This leaves a shortage of 13,500,000 tons a week. of Belgium | will be announced following the de- | Belgian sovereigns | President Lewis in Washington Wasdhington, D.C., April 3 {ed with arguments to support the ac- {tion of the union in suspending work lin the coal mines, President Lewis |of the United Mine Workers is here | today to confer with government ot | ficlals regarding the strtike, He will {also appear before the house labor committee. FOR PROVIACE FINANCES Member of Drury Cabinet Says | Plan Is Having Consid= eration. | Toronto, April 3.--While most of [the members of the cabinet are still {in the dark, it is stated that consider- ation is being given by at least one member of the government to a plan to appoint a finance administrator or {director for the province. A minis- ter admitted on Saturday that the | matter had received {but intimated that probably nothing {would be done until after the session |is over, | The scheme has not been submit- | ted to council, it is stated, and will MAY APPOINT DIRECTOR consideration, | LADY ASTOR TO SEEK AID OF U. 8S. WOMEN Will Try to Effect Alliance of Women in England and America. April thgs women of Brit WO PK London, Ar poses' is urged by. Vis- r in a statement to the \ former Vir nd first woman member of suclr a of gi par'ianeon will try reate wo movement of thd women r visit to the' atement 8 the salvation of this I xl world rests upon An- o-Amergcan effort, it most im- that the women of both perceive that their aims E this (rue comes the is Live niries re is to combating forces of are paraliel nen world wide i 'On my visit to the United States next month I try Al «rican women to take a construe i interest in world affairs their efforts I hope the s Will ab#fidoit its theor and take a the work of which is neces will to persuade hve Ilircough ited State respon- re isolation share of y the Tunope explain English ding peace, and kindred I hope I can create movement identical pur- ible struct world, sary if "1. whi the is to be rescued to American woman s labor, WO~- pro- mine mo rod irests regar women's in a united women's Anglo-American for the realization of poses.' > serrate * «> LJ < INDIAN RADICALS PUT UNDER ARREST oh kB * Scores of were Tokio, April Indian preparing a demonstration of violence in connection with the visit of the Prince of Wales, April 12th, have arrested here Every taken by the ipanese gov ernment to protect the Brit- ish Prince during his voyage through Japan as guest of Crown Prince Hironhito and the mikado. The Indians, who were arrested, be deported. 2 radicals who been a ok bb pd 2. ition eing 3 prec fo of will dled NEWS OFF THE WIRES | IN CONDENSED FORM | Tidings From Places Far and | Near Are Briefly Recounted. Of more than 51,000,000 gers carried Canadian during the 31st, 1921, and 240 injured. Fire ('anada during the week ended Mar:h 29th, are estimat by the Monetary at $1, 617,100, compared $212,250 the previous week The Bell Telephone has sold to a syndicate, of Royal Sécurities Corporation, Limit & and Company, Limit- value of its 8 per n shares Arm- | passen railroads December killed, on year emding four only were losses in Times with ed Compalvy composed ed, Greenshields Aemilius Jarvis & ed, $2,000,000 par cent. comnmo Ottawa [situated Company, stadium Plans is to have a new Rockliffe under foot build a concrete grandstand to house 10,000, and to ke an ideal field for sum- mer and autumn sports W. 8. Hall, Vankleek Hill, been appointed crown attorney and clerk of the peace for the count- ies of Prescott and Ruseell, in | cession to Louis Cote, resigned | Parliament will adjourn from the | Wednesday prior to Good Friday until the following Tuesday | Premier W. M, Hughes describes the result of the recent election in New South Wales in which the Doo- out WAY are already to has as c- Bennett's Appeal Falls not get anything like an unanimous | ley Labor government was defeated, Calgary, Alta. April 3.--1J. Shaw, elected to parfiament as an |an Open admission of the failure of | ! Ind dent candidate in West Cal- the farmer ministers to properly ad-| permanently 'passed never to return, | gary, holds his seat, the appeal of R. B. Bennett, Conservative, against his election, having been dismissed Sat- urdey morning. Mr. Shaw was de- clared elected in a recount, by a ma- jority of sixteen, Mr. Bennett the ground thet ballots which were marked in ink for him should be counted, but the ruling of the appeal court is that Mr. Shaw is properly not to be éounted. CPF FHER TPP IPIISILIS ® ¢ KING AND QUEEN + WILL VISIT WAR CEME- TERIES IN FRANCE # + -- 4% London, April + + + + + 2.--It is aun- thoritatively announced thatthe + King and Quean will pay a # State visit to the King and # Queen of the Belgians, com- # mencing Monday, May Sth. At + the conclusion of his visit his + Majesty will visit as many as * possible of the war demoteries # of ithe British gud overseas =» forees in Belgium and France. + * | welcome if it gets that far. In some {as a "most gratifying return to san T. [quarters it fe feit that it would be |It7." That the Russian grain trade has | -Con- Phebe rer W Shedd head br errr ree A Bill Is to ALLEN Starting Wednesday ND. W. GRIFFITH'S { "Way Down East" LAST EDITION GIVES FACTS ON REVOLT Premier Smuts Says Rebel Leaders Were Not of La- bor Party. London, April 3.-- Premier Smuts, of South Africa, speaking on the sec ond reading of the Indemnity Biil, in the House of Assembly. Reuter's Cape Town correspondent oables,~ stated that the losses on the gove ernment side of the Rand Insurpece tion were fifty killed afd 237 wounded, while on the other side 138 were killed or died in hospital and 287 were wounded. Ninety-eight Indians and natives were killed or wounded. The authorities received by capture 1,150 rifles, 231 shotguns, 745 revolvers, 43,000 rounds of rifle ammunition and 13,000 rounds of ammunition, One machine gun was captured in action. Premier Smuts defended the gov- ernment"s proclamation of martial law, He emphasized the fact that genuine workers and trade unionists were practically superseded by an entirely different set of men, who constituted a military revolutionary junta, styled the Councils of Action. I'he Witwatersrand, he sald, con- tained a fairly large percentage of whites, who were uneducated and gravitated to the towns. There were also people from abroad with Social istic ideas who were opposed to all the traditions of South Africa. It was the coming together of these elements that had set things going towards revolution. The rank and file of those who participated in the revolution were not mefmbars of the Labor party at all. The majority of the rank and file in this sad, terrible business were Nationalists The combination of Natjonalist and International Com munist elements, with the pernicious doctrines preached by the National- ist party, affected the minds cof the ignorant people and constituted the danger Every rebel commandant was a Nationalist, Premier Smuts de~ clared. CO-OPERATIVE HANDLING OF CHEESE AND BUTTER revolver o> be Introduced by Hon. Manning Do- | herty. | Toronto, April 3.-- Hon. Manning Doherty, minister of agriculture, in the provincial government, stated io: |day that he would introduce a bill this session to provide for the cos operative handling of the cheese and butter business of Ontario similar [to co-operative fruit selling, which has proved a great success in the Ni- agara. distriet, Highway Staffs Move. Brockville, April 3.--Under a re organization of the engineering stat of the deportment of public high- ways in eastern Ontario, A. L. Bald- win, who has had charge of the pro- vincial bighway operations between Kingston and Prescott, hes been ap- pointed to assume control of the same work on the provineial highway between Brockville and Prescott and on the Prince of Wales highway ber tween Pregrott and Ottawa, and will move his office from Gan~ Brookville. shortly anoque to Want Lower Freight Rates, London, April 3.---A Reuter de- spatch from Wellington, New Zea- land, says the meat producers' board reports that as a result of negotia~ tions with various interests it is hope ed that if sufficient quantities of beef are forthooming, reductions will be cocured in freezing freight charges of five shillings per hundred pounds, STRING MINERS FORM A NEW POLTICAL PARTY minister their departments and while | 18 the claim interesting to Canadian Unite With Rallroad Workers | there are 'sound arguments in favor 'of the creation of an office that would. give direction and advice in | provincial spending and financing, {such @ mové would leave the govern- | ment open to Tdicule and ° attack, {heels of two years of administration ithat had jumped the expenditure tand the debt of the province so tre- {elected and the disputed baMots are , Mendously | On the top of this, there would |be opposition from some ministers {to anything that looked like inter- | terence with their departments, and junless the mew office had some force and weight it would fail to accom- re anything worth while, {former finance commissioner for To- ronto and now directing the destinies of the Maseey-Harris Company, has recently visited Queen's Park on | more than one occasion. | The roll of fatal casualties from ithe factional 'disorders jin Belfast {rasched a total of sixty-four for the imonsh of March--the | when Sir Arthur becomes an earl, |g PPI5 0000800000000 {month in Belfast's history. coming, es it would, hard on the | Recently, it is said, expert finan- | @ |Clal edvice has been sought, and it | : + Th / 11s significant that Thomas Bradshaw, (jon of a bridge over the Niagara | wheat growers There was ty-four million dollars in the toms and excise revenue for the fis- cal year, which closed on March 1st, {as compared with the year previous, Brig.-Gen. D. M. Ormonde, Port- |age La Prairie, Man., has been slat- ed to succeed Commissioner A. B | Perry as commissioned of the Royal | Canadian Mounted Police Mellor, of Chicago, won the an- {nual Marathon at Detroit, Mich, Del- | low, Toronto, was second, and Fabre | Montreal, third | Will Bridge Niagara, Buffalo to Fort Erie Albany, N.Y.. April 3 --"onetrur River between Buffalo and ore Ere, Ont., was made possible Saturday {when it was annoumed that the gov ernor had signed the Howe bill, in jcorporating the Buffalo and Fort Erie Public Bridge Company The bridge is to be erected by the com- | pany and operated as a toll bridge until the investment has been repaid, ! blackest | when it reverts to the state or any {bridge boat race iAgency the state may designate, a decrease of over six-| cus- | and Farmers to Enter Federal Field. | Washington, April 3.--A power ful third party---purporting to re- present 23,000,000 workers and 10,- [000,000 tarmers in the United States ---entered the national political erena here Saturday. The definite decision to form the new party ae the great coal strike be- gins is regarded here as most signi {ficant. The 600,000 ininers now quit- country ting work throughout the {have joined hamds with t8¢ ratirond {workers and farmers to form the |backbone of the new organization, {Fred. C. Howe, secretary of the na- tional committee, told the United | Press, A name for the new party has pot Iyet been decided upon. Field agents will be scatiered throughout the ma- tion to give bettle to undesirable Re- publican and Democratic candidates tn the fall esdgressional elections. Forces already are at work Im 14 slates, 5 Cambridge won the Oxford-Cam- on Saturday by ,eight lengths, i » SAP SS won. dois es

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