Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 29 Oct 1925, p. 2

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'nations. prevent the border skirmishes tha 'centrating troops on her frontiers. against Greece. not confirmed in diplomatic channels, but such an appeal was expected. It is reported the Greek forces have ' entered Petrich, after bombarding it most of the day, and that the town was in flames. A Greek army' consisting of two di- visions is said to have invaded Bul- garia, the Sixth Division coming from While the Foreign Ministers in Athens were making heroic efforts to began on Monday developing into an actual state of war, news came from Belgrade that Jugo -Slavia. was con-, Information from Sofia is thai the Council of Ministers was seriously considering a declaration of war Another report was that the Bulgarian Government woull sek the Allies for permission to moii- ~.ize the army. The report from Vienna that Bulgaria had appealed for inter- vention by the League of Nations was | A despatch from 'Lotidon says: Sr ticns circies here there is considerable anxiety cver the possibility of grave developments which might arise from the Bulgar-Greek frontier clash. The fear felt here is founded not only on the instability of the situation as re- gards Creeco and Bulgaria themselves but also on the possibility of compli- cations arising through secretly exert- ed influence of outside powers. In lengve quarters here it is. said the Cenvva secretariat is expectiry to rece' e ar eppeal for intervention at any moment. Jugo-Siavia (Serbia), of courss, has at least a legal interest in the devalop- ments of the dispute, because, though sho denounced her treaty of "alaance with Greece, it remains in force until ner t summer, . On that acconni it way suggested that the Bulgar-Greek con- {thet might result--were Jugs Slavia to refute io go to Greece's aid--in an | increase of the Serbo-Greel esirange- ment over the Macedonian railway and a Salonica free zone, disputes which through the recent intervention of Anglo-French diplomacy had been brought to the eve of a settlement. Such a settiement would lead to a new Serbo-Greek entente. t AUTOMOBILE PLUNGES THROUGH SOO BRIDGE Two Victims Entombed Un- der Car in Twenty Feet of Water. Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. Oct. 25.-- This morning the bodies of two peo- ple, John Hulme, aged 45, 284 John Street, blacksmith shop foreman of the Algoma Stee! Co., and Mrs. James Penfold, aged 42, 76 Pim Street, were taken from the tail race at the Span- ish River Pulp and Paper Co. mills as the result of an auto acident which occurred presumably about 1 o'clock this morning. Discovery early this morning of a broken railing in the bridge approach led to-the belief that an-aceident had occurred, and Diver Huston of the ship. canal staff, who was sent. down by the police, discovered the auto. Ropes were attached to the machine and it was raised to the surface. The body of Mrs. Penfold floated out of the broken window of the car as it neared the surface, and the body of Hulme was discovered under it, where he was crushed when the ma- chine overturned after leaping the embankment and plunging into 20 feet of swift water. Hume's watch stopped a few minutes after one o'ciock, which leads the 'police to % lieve that the accident occurred shor ly before that hour. At the point where the accident took place there is a'sharp jog inthe road as' it hits the bridge approach, and examination of the broken railing leads to the belief that Hulme did not notice this and made no attempt to turn. Hulme leaves a widow and a son and daughter, and Mrs. Penfold a husband, two sons and a daughter, one of the sons being married. Coroner A. S. McCaig stated to-day that there would be no inquest. 21 DEATHS, HEAVY LOSS CAUSED BY WIND Devastating Storms Swept States on Atlantic Coast. New York, Oct. 25.--Two devastat- ing windstorms struck the Atlantic|i Cow Puts Steamer most unprecedented incidént is report- ed from Wiarton, where a cow charged a lake steamer with such force, and LEVEL CROSSING § SCENE OF DOUBLE FATALITY Two Killed at Springfield and Two Injured Sear Beach- ville. St. Thomas, Ont., Oct. 25.--Carl Coyle, aged 21 years, school teacher, despatch fr. Rutolk and the Elovinth from Mant. France and Britain have agreed. to] zarik, notify both Greece and Bulgaria that another Balkan conflict Will not ba ~ tolerated. A continuance of hostiiities on the Macedonia' frontier, they fear, . wou.d soon resu't in drawing in other both diplomatic and League of Na- AIDED IN ESTABLISHING: PEACE Left to right, Foreign Secretery Chamberlain, Foreign Secretary Strese- mann and Foreign Secretary Briand, the principal delegates of England. Ger- many and France at the Lecerno parley. a ae tal, the: British Poor's, ough vot getting rich as 'rapid: y as they were before the war, were still gettin, DESIRE FOR PEACE NOW RULES IN EUROPE 2 richer, and certainly not poorer as a This is the Miracle of Locarno, nagion, There were evidences of| Declares Premier Baldwin. | greater consuming power in a parts of the country, and he. concluded: "We may: look to the future, if not i with buoyant hope, at any rate with i solid confidence." A despatch from Colchester, Eng., says: --*"The miracle of Locarno is that a will for peace has been created in Europe for the first time since the world war," declared Premier gg rete. win in a speech here on Thursday. ecoveri Sight "We have therefore been ab: e," he Joy atR ng Fatal to Bridgeburg Man continued, "to build' a solid founda- tion which will bear any superstruc- ture erected upoh it, and if the prom- ise of Locarno is fulfilled, as I have, every hope it wil be, the peace of | we have built up in Western Europo is a prelude to peace throughout the whole of Europe. "For the first time in Europe we! have before us a treaty, which of its nature is inclusive, not exclusive. In other words, all such arrangements in the past have been arrangements which were designed in essence agéinst a third party, "At Locarno there was nothing of over the recovery of his sight, which (he lost twenty 'years ago h | overstudy, caused the death here yes- terday of Frederick Clark, age 87. Clark's infinite patience through his years of darknéss had been a subject for marvel on the part of his friends, to whom he had aways declared he would some day see again. Quite re- cently friends and relatives subscribed to a fund to engble him to undergo an operation, which proved successful. When the surgeons removed the bandages from his eyes he exc.aimed and Miss Ethel Jamieson, aged 17, telephone operator, both rosidents of Springfield, Ont., were instantly killed! about six o'clock Sunday ns when! the automobile they were »iding. in was struck by a fast Michigan Central Railway train, at the first crossing' east of Springfield, 30 miles east of, this city. The train, which was made up of deadhead equipment, was trave!-! ing at a high rate of speed. It was in charge of conductor Norman Mur-' ray and engineman Thomas Oddy,' both of St. Thomas. Ther® was a high wind blowing at the time of the accident, and it is ba- lieved the rain on the windshield pre-' vented Coyle from seeing the approach (out actually naming it, the kind. These new agreements, ne 2 wholly pacific from beginning to'end;|in ecstasy, "I can see again!" Within are mutual guarantees between all the [our hours #8 was dead. His demise contracting parties, with no direction | Was aseribed to shock fol 'owing 0 over- against any third or-any other party," -OXCitement, .'- «* 'Winston ~Churchiil, Chancellor of - i the Exchequer, who followed Premier Baldwin at the oyster feast in Col- chester Guildhall, threatenad to in- crease the income "tax next year, with- unless - the , Cabinet's new economy committee ste- | ceeded in effecting Fonsiderable sav- ings. The Chancelior others" was 'opti- mistic. Although he had not been able to decide whether the nation was' actually beginning to live on its capi-' LS -~ S--_ & ' ---------- een Oldest Twins in Canada At Young g People's Rally Brantford, Oct. 25. 25--The ciaim of being "ths oldest twins in Canada" is put forth on behalf of Isaac and Joseph Davidson of this city, the id. &st delsgates in attendance at the yminicn Anglican Young People's As- sociation convention. They are £3 years od. w of the train. The impact was terrific, the car was smashed to pieces and the occupants hurled into the.air. The bodies were taken to an undertaking establishment in the village. Coyle is survived by his wife. He was in a coupe on his way to Springfield to get a sister and gave Miss Jamieson a "lift? who was en her way to work. Ingersoll, Ont., Oct. 26.--Injured at Beachville at a late hour Friday night, when the auto in which they were rid- ing went into the ditch, Miss Norman Corbett and Miss O:ive Minshail of Brownsville were brought to Alex- andra Hospital here. Mrs, Corbett had her right hip and right arm bro- ken, while" Miss Minshall suffered a fracture of her left knee. The acci- dent happened when Mr. Corbett who! was at the wheel turned to cffer candy to those in the back seat. The car was badly damaged. ay Out of Commission Owen Sound, Ont., Oct. 28.--Anal- n such a. vulnerable spot that the ship Coast States to-day and to-night, re- Suing in at least 21 deaths and, heavy damage to homes and shipping. | | levelled dozens of homes. ~ aged and the town thrown into dar! ness. National guardsmen were caled » "out to protect property from looters. was damaged sufficiently to requir In Pike and Barbour Counties, | smal Il lake carrier, had brought a load Alabama, a tornado, sweeping in from 'of cattle down from Manitoulin Is'and . the Texas Coast, killed sixteen per-|and included in the load was a par- "sons, injured more than a score, and ticularly ferocious cow. When the {boat was unloading at the Booth Fish- "The second storm, roaring in from eries dock the cow jumped the gang . tho Atlantic, passed from the Mary-! plank into the water. land and Delaware Coasts through animal then charged the boat sand New York and into New England. Off managed to puncture the hull below - Rockaway' Point, New York, two fish- the water line go that the steamer had ermen 'were drowned and another fa- to be taken to the marine railway in tality was reported from Woburn, Wiarton and later to the dry dock in Mass., where 500 houses were dam-|Colingwood. Mr. J. JP Tyson recovered the ani-| ma! with a rowboat and rope. Weather Indicates | lm LT its going on the dry dock for repairs. The steamer Henry Hedwell, a The enraged --n 'to Spring Threshing Negtos. Sask, Oct. Oct. 25. Fears are Grain experts estimate that spring threshing. Tt is probable that if threshing is CROSS-WORD PUZZLE Bridgeburg, Oct, 25. 25. "Excessive joy plane. He was trying a landing test, during the course of his qualification for pilot, and when approaching the | ground the machine appeared to lose flying speed, machine was too ciose to the ground] to-nllow the "pilot to regain=contfol. "| Pilot Matthews, it is reported, was r instantly kiiled. MacLeod, Alberta, on July 17, 1902, i d, 6.75 to $7.50; butcher ~-- rand College in from the Royal Mili- oe rh choice, | $6.50 to $7; do, do, ta ollege in June, 1024. 6 to $6.25; do, med, $4.7 263 LE Le ers choice '$6.2 to. $6. o, W. B. Northrup, Former Clerk $5.75 to $6; do, med., $4.50 to $5; do, f Co Di 0 com, $3.50 to $4.50; butcher, ows, of mmons, es at Ottawa choice, $4.50 to $5.25; do, fair to iE mu $4 to $4.50 [atcha bulls, 20, 50 A "despatch from Ottawa says:-- | to $5.50; bolognas, gz .50 One of the' best- -known"figures in canners and cutters, 2.50! liamentary circles was removed with the death here, early Thursday at Miton Heights, stating that he could el y "| cone to see th 7.5 the two brothers went to Guelph yesterday morning to tee him. They returned on the C.P.R.' r due at Christie Station at do, second pa flour, bre bai igmdis Pa 8 railway. tracks to.their home. Meet: , per barrel, in_carlots; {ing a westbound freight, both Ss $6. stepped directly in front of an east-' Stra El per ton, bound freight, on a sharp curve. Both men were i ntly killed. Pascuale Gardini, the married brother, Was: Baled carrying his little three-year-old- son 8, pe; in his arms, and, with great presence' on, of hind, and having only a second to. do it; he, seeing the engine almost. upon him, and no chance of escaping death, threw his little son down he embankment, saving the child's life, and losing his own. The child sus- us-' 4c. tained slight injuries about the face' EK; and head. 60c; ------ int snien KILLED WHEN PLANE . CRASHED TO GROUND 1b. Flight Oca at st Cam Was ~ Making est at p Borden jE So hand-picked, 1b., 6%e¢; ERLE ALL im "133 A dhaih from Barrie, Ont., gal. says:--Flight Officer T. C, Matthews gal, Map: v5 ib.: was instantly killed at Camp Borden. | 10h, tins, 12% th 18c: 5-1b. tins, 1 He was a pupil learning to fly, and to 18%c; 23%-ib. tins, 14% to 1 when making "a test. crashed to the, Smoked meats--Hams, med., i [ ground, 82¢c; cooke 4 hams, 45 to 48c; smoked 3 "Mr. Matthews, who was undergoing, rolls," 22 28:10" 2607 break- a course on flying instructioti, was | fast "Sacti 3 5 2 86¢c; 8 cial brand flying solo in an Ayro training air.| breakfast bacon, 38 to boneless, 83 to 40c, Cured meats--Long clear bacon, 50 (to 70 lbs., $22; 70 to 90 lbs., $20.50; 20 Ibs. and up, $1950; lightweight rolls, in barrels, $43.50; heavyweight rolls, $39.50 per bbl. Lard--Pure tierces, 18 to 18%; tubs, 18% to 19¢; pails, 19 to 19%c; prints, 20 to 203m; shortening tierces, 13%c; LR 14c; pails, %e; blocks, 15 to 'Heavy steers, 'holes. $1.75 to $8; stalled and fell. The The late pilot officer was born at 8 Fingers choice, $00 to 3100. A "fair, $i 0 $60; .caives, Shoots 12. 95 to i sn; 90 good, $10 to $12; do, grass- , K. ing, of William Barton Northr ; 3 despatch from Locarno saysi-- The Ta Pi. Ea et. tween 70,000,000. and 80,000,000 bush-| 'els, will have to be threshed next] spring. j between 30 and 85 per cent. of the |erop is still unthreshod and they de-| on | Clare the present weather conditions Hindicate i; © B1=A race of people HORIZONTAL 1--Pooh 4--Prefix meaning "three" Y--Pronoun 0--Brother (abbr) 12--A desert wanderer 14--An anesthetic. 16--WIild animal 17--A countryman 19--Total 20--Sawmlil-truck 21--8plit x 23--A priest of ancient Britain # 28~=Muslcal note 26--To attempt 27--A heavy wi ht (abbr.) « 29-=Preposition d 81--To tangle 83--A type measure (pl) re have existency animal =... * 368A 3-Xr8 animal (abbr. A abbr.) spor) rt in, action 42--Hardens by use 43--Great period of time 44--Part af verb. "to be" ' 46--A sal! 48--A alo "England Stat, 49--Cyclopedia abr) Shi) abbr. '83-French definite 'article 84--Musiocal n 66-~Combini g form mea Thanet swing PR! C., M.A, a former clerk of the Soin of Commons, and, prior to that, Mem- ber of Parliament for the constituency of East Hastings. Mr, Northrup was 69 years old last Monday. A barrister, and for many years head of the firm of Northrup and Rob- erts, Belleville, where he resided. Mr. Northrup contested East Hastings at a bye-election in 1892. He 'was suc- cessful 'and represented that consti- | tuenscy inthe House of Commons" until 1896, when he was defeated. he held ithe seat until the gefieral i Slaction of 1917, In the Jolowing year | * Ihe was appointed Clerk of the House. of Commons, a position which he held until 1922, when he retired and was succeeded by Arthur Beauchesne, K.| { €:, then Deputy-Clerk. y : 5; 2 i --e eer, School Nurse Killed When Train Hits Auto A despatch fro i sag When an ae ass bY nds | Com. 1=--The 2--In a row (poet.) 8--Cod:like fishes B--Muslcal note 6--Possessive pronoun 7--To shut in 8--Suffix denoting the agent 9--Start 10--To Invade suddenty 11~--Metal-bearing fos _} 18--Obscure aw great bay In Canada Tg way, was struck by a fast Wabas! passenger train at Shisier's Crossin, five milés west of Bridgeburg, la this afternoon; Margaret Sharpe," 'aged 28, school nurse, of was instantly killed, and 'Ru pa 21 Both i ¥ "Bin Again in 1900 he was returned, when | $3.20, Helen Ellsworth, aged 23, of Ridge-! ge o $6.26; g light' sheep, $650 t0 "$7.80; henvies and bucks, .50 to $6; good lambs, $12 to $12.50; do, med. , $10.50 to $11; do, bucks, $10 to $10 do, salle, $8. 50 to $9.50; hogs, tik smooth = fed and watered, $11.86; do, f.0.b., $31.25; do, country i points, $11; do, of cars, $12.35; select [Prom $1.90. MONTREAL. spring wheat pats., ds, $7.60; strong | 'hake 4 Niner Patsy cs: | i et, $20.28, Middlings, $36.25. Hay--No. 2 , per| , ton, car 1 $14, atte Ske. nest wests., 2407 Snes -- to 48% ; to d2%¢c; Seconds, 4] Storage Forni secon ah he toes, per: bag, car $28. ows; $3 to sso; i 'ob i eel calves, "$10; better $11; caves, $5; lambs, iis for Hoy and wethers, $11.50 for mixed Tots gous Janis, inclu LA ixed 2 vow, $10 to-§10.25. skies of London or Paris, this conf ence would have failed to produce same resuit. Movies and Motor Bike Two members of the Royal Household - have come out recent.y in brand new roles--the Duke of York as a motion = picture photographer and Prince Henry is a first of the King's sons. Henry as a first of the King's eT "| come interested in the 'makihg of mo-" summer, where he spent seven wacks with his parents, leading a. simple life at the famous royal estate i in the Stot- ighlands. . , : ied Tots, $1598 | Lom, show is e gon of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mac- Donald, of Sydney River. PE ¢ 5 circumstances in which the Euro- pean pact was negotiated.in Locarno are not paralicled -in "the history of Europe, and certainly not in post-war _ diplomacy. No doubt, the soothing influences of the weather and scenery of Southern Switzerland had much to P. do with. this, asidid the utter neces-- T | sity of the situation; but it was still another factor that made 'possible the agreement of Western Powers to out law war in Western Europe. Hi This was the neutral attitude of the Allied Fepresentatives toward their = = Former "el Germany. Europe's bad boy is now back in the family circle, with 'past misdemeanors rd given, in the diplomatic sense. Some observers here have analyzed Ger- many's ition es that of being flat- tered into agreeing to almost every- thing placed before it. There is no question but that Luther, Streseman and their delegation have been ifitoxi- cated to some degree by the friendly atterition of their Allied colleagues. - Mention of ultimatum, and threats of pressure were 'rigorously avoided here, Conditions were different from those of every other post-war confer- ence at which Germans were present. Fine manners; friendly Gestures and strict observance of social etiquette replaced ( the old-style system, and with the heavenly weather, plus thé 'absolute knowledge of every Allied statesman present that it was peace, "now or never," the Locarno confer- ence proved a complete success. Perhaps, under the foggy October a * -- Interest British Royal Princes A despatch from London saysi-- of the camera for a'long time, he Dots ot Tor ie ne ey Sn, Prince Henry took up mo -- Duis sho In fk is Pre' his own portable pe ras he went,

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