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Sunday Sun from Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear, England • 9

Publication:
Sunday Suni
Location:
Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear, England
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE SUNDAY SUN APRIL 10 1927 9 WOMAN SOLD FOR PACKET OF LAVENDER FIRE AT FAT FACTORY DANGEROUS OUTBREAK IN NEWCASTLE BARONET DIES IN POVERTY OBLIGED TO OBTAIN PARISH RELIEF Of OFF TO STATES IN TEARS Deportation Of Mde De Casares HOLD-UP'S TURN Writ For Old Debt Before Sailing Loose Matrimonial Ways Tramping Community IN CONGESTED AREA CHILD BURIED ON MOUNTAIN SIDE I a woman There is a smell of dead going "At we went np the mountain side and Jackson said We will bury her like they do in De dug a hole with a pocket krile scooped the earth out with a spoon and buried the baby He brought a hook out of bis podkel oaUe-t it John's and eaid a prayer ovpr tbe baby At Lichfield Jackson sent bis girl to mo with money and fowl I told her I would not have it and Jackson went into a ten-per and told the Lichfield police I had buried my child on the Giving evidence as to the efforts made to find the body the mother said Jackson witfnlly misled the police from the spot where the child was He knew the place she bnt he did not want the police to find the hodv An amazing story which revealed loose matrimonial relations the tramping fraternity was zn inquest held at Llangollen ri ay on a child whose body was rcd in a shallow grave on the mountains mother of the ehild Elsie 0 -i AS'tcR-underLyne stated rt ttw man with whom she was ng was induoed to part with another man for a packet of 1 KM on whom the inquest was wa Elsie Stnart aged nine BIG FAMILY LEFT It has just come to light that a man who d'ed several days ago in Brighton Poor Law Infirmary was Sir James Herbert Renals Bart son of the late Sir Jiaeph Renals i former Lord Mayor of London Sir James Renals had been it impoverished circumstances for some years and had lived with his wife and family in Brighton in a modest neighbourhood No one among their neighbours suspected that Renals as chose to be known was in reality a baronet Sir James on completing nis education at Chiwcll Grammar School entered his father silk business but later went to South Africa where he held an important mining post He returned to England wlien the war broke ont hut was rejected on volunteering for active service At Brighton he worked as an advertisement canvasser and was successful for some time but latterly he had fallen on hard times and finally had to apply for parish relief HEIR A BOY OF SEVEN His death occurred at the age of 66 and he was buried last Tuesday his funeral being attended by members of his family including his only brother Mr Renals Sir James succeeded to the title in 1K)7 and was a of the City of London He leaves six children the youngest of whom is only three months old The heir to the title is his eldest son Herbert Renals a lad of seven who is at present Brighton Sanatorium It is understood tint efforts are being made to get the children into a London orphanage fJAHE Travers Motor Reliability Trial caused great interest in the North of A England yesterday An idea of some the country covered will be gained iy the photograph which shows Mr Proe negotiating Raise Head near Allendale Fire broke out in a congested area between Blackett Street and High Knar Street Newcastle shortly after ten last niglrc and but for the promptness of the Fire Brigade much of llie property would have been destroyed The work of the firemen was witnessed by a huge crowd Tite rcat of the fire wa3 the edible fat manufacturing establishment of Messrs Jacks and Co Sidgale and High Friar Lane Si gate is a very narrow thorough la re running parallel with Blackett Street at some little distance to the south Flames were Issuing lrom all the windows of the building when the brigade arrived with two engines Owing to the narrowness of the thoroughfare and the dense volumes of smoke and poisonous fumes that were emitted from the burning budding the task of the firemen was Iwth unpleasant and dangerous but with jets of water directed from both sides the heat was reduced MINIATURE EXPLOSIONS Tt seemed at first that an extensive portion of the adjoining property which included a cabinet and furniture manufactory would be involved The efforts to save this property however were entirely successful and after nearly an critical work on the fat mnnufae-torv the flames were subdued and tbe fire-engines were withdrawn although firemen were playim on the building for e-- time afterwards There wan a considerable amount of fat on the nremises and th's natur-dlv intensified the Threat of the fire The nlav of water on the burning oil enrse-i exnlosions while at close nnsrters the nat-re of sto-k-in-tradc handicapped the work of salvage The Coroner: Why did yon not interpose and tell the poPce that Jackson was taxing BEAM RADIO WONDERS Concerts Across The Globe TREASURE IN LUMBER ROOM Old Book Sold for £80 at London Auction GOSFORTH FIND and the man who buried it was of Ashion-undor-Lyne 'ng hawker c-rener directing the Jury said of the case as reported to him cssrt a case of gross and callous icrality fDd of 1926 the woman Elsie living in a common a man named Grime at Whit-be had her baby with her Jackson and bis three children be house and Jackson sent his laughter to inquire if Stuart and if not whether she would for him vid "What about Geoffrey aod Jackson it was alleged -me inducement to him to let -man go- them to the wrong I wa-frighfened sir He hno threatened to cut my throat if I went to the Corwen Union He also threatened a roung man who knew nil abont the baby He said he would cut both onr heads off A letter was read from the young man referred to which described Jackscn as a I Replying to further questions Stuart Jackson had an overcoat over the head and was sqneezing it to him I she added he smothered I I lilian Jackson aged 15 said it was her father who said that the child should be 1 taken to Carwen Union The woman refused and then Taekson aid it had better lie buried in the mountain saying to the irnmnn: "I am risking my lifo by doing this WOMAN without a country This appears to lie the plight of Madame Gloria de Casares who figured some time ago as part owner of an alleged whiskyrunning ship Her hold-up at Liverpool by immigration officials had a mysterious development ycsteidav preceding her deportation in tears to the 'Tnited States in the Cunard liner Caronia INTERVIEWED AT HOTEL Confined to her room in one ot the leading city hotels where she has been on parole since Tuesday Madame Casavcs was attended by a officer and at onee summoned a solicitor for advice In a special interview with a Sun" representative she declared-" The officer has presented a writ tor over £2(K) in connection witn an affair in London over 12 months ago and he insists that he is goiug to distrain on my personal belongings leaving me only £5 worth of clothing with which to if I have to go lhis is the final persecution with which the law of this country is trying to overwhelm me Tho financial matter was practically settled bv my payment of a ertain sum a Ions time ago and although I have lived in London nothins has been aid about it Detained here by a mysterious order of the Home Office someone now finds it opportune to reap up an old matter to leave me stranded Of what use is £5 worth of clothiflg to me with a pro6peet of having to cross the Atlantic again? It is not the price of hat I shall mist this late-t development with everything but physical force and if after consultation with my solicitors I am beaten i suppose I sha'l have to depart a victim of your law TERRIBLE The suspense i have been in is terrible Even vet two hours before the scheduled departure of the liner on which am supposed to sail I have not been officially told that I am to go neither uo I know way I have been detain! To myself the police and even the Liverpool immigration officers the secret of the Home Office has been well preserved All I kDow is have to leave my own country because of the foolishness of the Government and I have nowhere to go America may refuse me permission to land when I arrive there and if they do 1 suppose I may shipped to the Argentine where my husband resides But we are separated and unless he cares to give me financial support 1 should be worse off in the Argentine than anvwhere else WITHOUT A EXPLOSION HAVOC Sensational Affair in South Africa CAPF TOWN April 9 While three Councillors were engaged in some investigate work at the Town Hall of De Wetsdorp (Orange Free State' an explosion ot the petrol lighting plant took place wrecking the building and destroying the booke Two councillors were fatally injured and a third is not expected to recover A knife wns found embedded iu a wound in one of them The Town Clerk has been arrested im an vco I Mrs Stuart has told lot of Ok AND A rKATcK added the witnes My father never rt awl his three children and threatened nd her child left the lodging er slept in barns and spent STORY in an ou bouse of a farm at i jaccfn! evidence was that whilst in the fsirn with tho mother and children he took the laity because it was crying He nut the hahv on his breast and not on his n-m lieeaue his arm wn paralysed by a gunshot wound received wliile he was escaping from a nrison in Genua nr "I as he added "when I civ the chi'd si The Coroner It lias been sugge-ted that the coat which von placed ve- the he'' contributor to its Witness: I did not nut the coat over its The bedy wa placed in the h-rd I loved the child with a r-'e and the man pulled a book out of Jove I love the woman and am willing to tshe her hack We had no erarrel and he told lies when she said I threatened he The Coroner: Whv von mis'esd the police as to where tho child was buried? I hd forgotten the nlnce ad I bet myself "Did you kmw von were committing a hy burvn a human hrdv without knew I was an I I was too timid the oird'-rr charm vo (h-t morning with suffocating the child? No she is Ir saying it now becume she wants revenge The Coroner commented on the fact that pocket and said a prayer trr tbeir tramping ami at Matlock wnere the woman to accompanv another pair of pet av from Jackscn afterwards gave information to the dire at Lichfield I am net blaming this class of people and shocking immor-I nfort unstelr it is not confined to said the Corel wov an cried hysterically during the net's tee tal of the facts She said Jackson's inducement to OnM allow her to ie ve with him was a DEAF GIRL HEARS Sense Recovered During Gramophone Recital Doaf for about nine years Mary Taylor aged 14 of Burnley recovered her heal ing to a remarkable extent while listening to a Beethoven gramophone record at the BurnL-v High School She recorded her impressions of the event in essay form and submitted it to the Beethoven Centenary Committee in connection with their national essay competition Tho committee replied that while the essay would be judged in the erd nary way they wished to record tlieir appreciation of Mary experience by enclosing half glunea Tho girl while a student at the Burnley Deaf School attained such proficiency in lip-reading thrt she was awarded a scholarship to tho high seh-ol Fxeept for special coaching in French and mathematics he is able to keep pace with the other girls DOMESTIC DRAMA A romantic find in an old lumber room by two Gosforth ladies has resulted in a much-damaged copy of a 300-year-old book being knocked down at a London auction for £80 The book which is dated 1620 aud entitled "The Light of is full of maps and other-diagrams relating to live navigation of the Old World Recent investigation has reveaed the existence of another copy in the library of the British Museum BIBLE WINDFALL The lucky find was made by Miss Wright Linden Road and her friend Mrs Moncrieff treasurer of the Gosforth branch of the British and Foreign Bible Society Afer payment of the foes the balance of £70 wns handed over to the headquarters cf the Society who are naturally very grateful for the welcome addition to their funds Interviewed by a Sunday Sun core-1 -ntativo yesterday Mrs Moncrieff said that she had been busy orgning a jumhlo sale and had asked Miss Wright if she would give away any books STORY OF THE FIND Miss Wrirrht brought me up to her attic where there were seme old she proceeded said to me you can have this old and took it away me it to my husband who thought it might he of some value and he went to a hook dealer in Newcastle who offered him £4 for it Wo then showed it to Messrs Hodnson of Chancery Lane London who recommended putting a reserve price of £12 on it and it wns sold on December 'S for £80 Wo know who the bidder Tt h-hove-1 that the look had been lying in the attic for many years ENTOMBED MINERS Rescuers Stimulated By Sound cf Voice Two men were Hir ed by a fall of debris in a tin mine in Cornwall morning Tlicv were working in the Gecvor mine at Pendeen rear Penzance when there was a fall of ground parties worked hard at removing the debris and although little hope was at first held of recover' ng the men alive the rumour of a voice having been heard revived hope profosip" In heln the nolice to find HOPE OF FUTURE Valuable Help To Commerce fJWIE beam system will undoubtedly enable concerts ot speeches to be transmitted from Australia ta England or vice vensa and re-broadcast by stations here or in Australa I think that is coming soon It is on the way Yes even listeners with crystal sets will be able to pick up almost any part of the Senatore Marconi expressed this opinion to a Press representative yesterday when discussing tho possibilities opened up by the beam wireicss service No I say Rugby station is out of he sad laughingly It fnllils a function of its own for slower service and broadcasting messages which have to be picked up anywhere Senatore Marooni stated that the apparatus had already been constructed cr establishing wireless telephonic municnlion with Canada Tests have carried out between country and Montreal Ottawa and Toronto succeeded in speaking to Australia so far back as mined Senatore Marconi it is sale to say the clay is coming when there will he direct telephonic as well as telegraphic communication not only with all parts of the British Empire but with all parts of the world PICTURES BY WIRELESS Wo have experimented on the transmission of facsimiles and obtained wonderful rc6ults The real problem wns to get tho elc'tric waves to travel to Australia with reliability Having ob lained that television or picture trans-nussion will become ns easy between this country and Australia as it is between places only half a mile apart I have not devoted a great deal of study to tele vision but I am convinced it will lie assisted and improved by the beam system and possibly by tho beam system only stations demonstrated that they are capable of dealing with about 150000 words a day in ta direction am operating up to speeds of Tdo per minute I hnvc great confidence that hv the utilisation of another wave or two wave wc shall be able to have absolutely continuous service to Australia tests carried out on the Canadian circuit have demonstrated the possibility of super-imposing a commercial telephone channel upon onr existing bigh-sneed telegraph services thus obviating the cost of erecting separate stations for carrying out telephonic commercial advantages of such an important development of the beam system are obvious and the opening of the first multiplex telephone nnd telegraph service will he epoch-making in the history of long-distance radio a- c- te picket of lavender He also told him said i rt to call at a big bouse where he the would get half a ACCUSATION The child belonged to Grime On the night in question it went to sleep on Ji k- arm and when witness woke up it was dead cNin eff have smothered sfiessM turned and said he had rot me! rn no to mind a- nobody would i I tell anybody or vou will t'ouble take her toa I else we will a 1 be found out" We Ttnt airav 1 carried the child S' 1 i- we paseed a shop 1 heard in miles have of (r them the of A EASTER taken them 23 awav from where the child wn buried then c-kcd Jackson: you been earning a Jackson I have written a book on some my experiences in the war and I gave to people to read and got money from Doctors Jones and Bridgewater who rondneted a postmortem examination on body -t-ted that there was evidence the child having suffered from pneumonia but there was nothing to indicate that it had been suffocated A verdict of Death from natural was returned Alleged Attack on Father-m-Law James William Wilson an 18-year-old miner of Worth Avenue was remanded at Darwen yesterday on a charge of attempting to murder his father-in-law John Addison a railway worker by attacking him with an axe in a betlrooin A police witness stated that the alleged attack was made nbout a quarter past eleven or Friday night The prisoner had been out with his mother in-law and his sistcr-in-lnw and they had called at several places When they returned to Add house in Derwent Street the prisoner was alleged to have asked where his father-in-law was and was told that he was npstairs in bed The prisoner is was further alleged then obtained a small axe and went upstairs The f-dlien-in-law afterwards came 1own M'-ediug from the head and from serious iniories A doctor was called to him and he wns afterwards removed to the Infirmary where he is lying in a serious condition When asked if he had any object on to a remand the prisoner made no reply I am a woman apparently without a country although 1 was born in England The freedom of Russia is criticised Ellia fsland looms ns a bogey to most people but what about the British Government who iot only refuse an Eogl'sh-horn person permission to land but also will not give the reason for tlieir "How will you live in the Madame de Casares was asked I do not was the reply Have- you means your own that are available outside That is rather a private matter she replied am so worried 1 cannot tel! you she concluded and she returned to her room where the sheriff's offrer was in possession TEARFUL FAREWELL Five minutes before the Caronia sailed Sundav representative left Madame de Casares her cabin in tears It has all been too much for sho said "I can eav no It is understood that there was a stormy scene in her hotel before she surrendered herself to the inevitable As the time drew near for her de-oarture a cfe-ctive arrived on the scene prepared tc take any necessary steps if and when upon Madame de Casares tearfully nrotested but she wa nresen-ed with the alternative of going either to the ship or to police headquarters under arrest Slio therefore made a settlement with the sheriff' officer and then consented to proceed to the Caronia whither she was followed and seen to the cabin by the detective who was cne of the last to leavo the ship before she sailed TRAGEDIES GF THE ROAD Stockton Fate Near Gosforth Park Not an Early Festival Until 1929 Eastet Sunday may fall on any one of 35 days as early as March 22 nnd as Into ns April the exact time being governed by i he age of the Eeelnsinstical Moon It mus fall on the fitst Sunday after the moon shall have been 14 days old on any flay between March 21 and April 18 When Easter is at its earliest the moon must have been 14 old on the previous day but it was more than 100 years ago that Easter fell on such a day and there will be no recurrence before the 23rd century As recently as Easter fell on its latest day and 10 years hence there will be another latest Easter All Easters falling in March are considered and those falling after April 16 aro referred to as late Easters so that this festival is In 1850 IStil 1S72 1007 nnd 1918 there wore early Easters and tho next Easter wili be in 1929 It is significant that there is an interval of 11 years in some of these dates which is by no means an uncommon cycle in the matter of Easters March 31 comes with comparative frequency ns the date of Easter Sunday nnd of all dates March 21 is the rarest Iasi occuring in 1799 and it will he 1910 before there is a repetition la England the festival is arrived at by the Gregorian Calendar but in Russia Serbia Greece and Bulgaria where the Julian Calendar obtains there is a difference of five weeks in the date npon which Easter falls UNDECEIVED fence Does Not Cover Street Betting -ed bookmaker named Branski lu a Hud yesterdiv fined five guinea: I '-set betting at stated that he thought his I been misled and said that lie ior tho return of the ution replied that the Betting tly stated that the certificate er lawful any betting in any place which was unlawlui when passed It did not legalise 'fling first case taken under the new was brought as a warning st rates emphasised that the ne-red no exemption from under the law for street betting The Gosforth police have established the idenity of the eve! its who was fatally lDjured by being knocked down by a motor on the North Road near ered him When lie applied for Gosforth Park on Friday night 'd he had no office and plied De wa- Victor Rend (13) cf 36 Diamond the fctreet He contended bfocklon-on-Teee and lived with grandfather at 3 Mitchell Avenue Je-uiond He was apprenticed with Messrs Bainbridge and Co Ltd of Market Street Newcastle Afer being found unconscious on Wigtown Hoad near Carlisle a young motor cyclist William Clark joiner of Constable Street Carlisle died during the night in the Cumberland Infirmary His motor-cycle was lying on the roadway a short dis ance from where he was picked up The police arp making investigations but it was surmised that the fatality was due a tvre burs ing Cycling suddenly from a side turning on Friday night at Blean near Canterbury Miss Constance Conquest 23 of the Haven Giles Lane Canterbury was struck lry a trar-elling from Canterbury to Wliit-stable and died in hospital yesterday The 'bn wa full of pase- gers at the time John Richanl the 6-years-old deaf and dumb son of an Alreravon butcher was inn over by a steam lorry yesterday nnd killed while croing the street His mother saw the accident from her bed room window Plan to Help the CkanceDor a tax on hats? BIGAMY TANGLE Judge on Case at Belfast A singular matrimonial tangle was investigated at Belfast Assizes yesterday when James Walker of Barrow-in-Furness his cousin James Walker of Belfast and Catherine Walker all pleaded guilty to bigamy The woman was the wife of the first-named prisoner who deserted her and married another woman Mrs Walker then married the second Walker and lived lumpily with him The Judge said that the tangle was appalling The first Janies would go to prison for a year and sentences of six morths each would be imposed on the others DIAMOND WEDDING Southsea Man Who Fought in American Civil War Aged 80 and SI respectively Mr and Mrs Hoare of Southsea have just celebrated their diamond wedding Mr Hoare fought in the American Civil War He joined the US Navy in 1863 There nrotten children of the marriage Mr and Mrs Hoare both enjoy good health Portsmouth has another long-wedded couple in Mr and Mrs Noakes of Enstnev who will have been married 50 years to-morrow Mr Noakes formerly belonged to the Lancers and was a fencing and gymnastic instructor George Henry Phillips 41) years Trinity pilot at Plymouth celebrates his golden wedding to-morrow In 53 sea service he has saved many lives NOT TAX HATS? NO FLOWERS WANTED A Request for a Simple Burial Mr Frederick John Page Norwich master printer who died on January 8Jnst leaving estate of tho value of £37415 desired the trustees to conduct his funeral in the quietest and simplest manner his coffin to be made of plain oak free from all unnecessary and expensive ovnamentat on and no flowers whatever art to he allowed at his funeral A plain tomi'tffone is to he erected over his grave with the following inscription at the loot thereof in plain letters viz: Let no proud 6tone with sculptured virtn -s ri-e To ma the spot wherein a sinner lies But if some boast must deck the grme Bomt of His love Who died lost man to save And when journey is over And I the deal Saviour shall see praise Him for ever amt ever For saving a sinner like He made numerous charitable bequests MR PROPHECY Opening a sale of work at Car' isle yesler- DISASTROUS Bishop of Durham on Last Upheaval its hope that tho lesson of this disastrous blunder may I not say ruinous crime? will have been learned nnd that in the years to onitic nil sections of the community will art more respon-s bly and more fraternally in tho comity of the Those words wore spoken by tho Bishop of Durham Dr Hensley Henson at South Shields yesterday when ho dedicated a new chapel nnd institute at 8 Wellington Terrace in connection the South Shields branch of the Northumberland nnd Durham Mission to tho Deaf and Dumb Co1 i i -i- struck Lieut -Col i i D3O Unionist MP for a way in which Mr Churchill pfl out of his Budget difficui- i'iel intends to a-sk the Chan-Exrfiequer this week to con-: position of a 10 per cent tax 'ail prce of feminine headgear i CO-ORDINATION PLAN Home Office and Fire Brigades A bold step towards the co-ordination of the fire fighting forces of the country 16 being initiated by the Home Office who have invited representatives of the fire brigade associations to a conference which will meet towards the end of the month to discuss plans for carrying out the project It is proposed that the country be divided into zones within which every established fire brigade will be ready at a notice to send men and apparatus to the assistance of a neigh bouring district It is generally admitted that the problem is not easy of solution A big town for instance may be surrounded by urban districts and parishes some or all of which have no fire brigades of their own and refuse to pay anything towaids tho upkeep of the fire bngndo in the adjoining town How can the town fire brigade Ire compelled to t'O to the assistance of the rural area in such circiimstanees? This is one of lhe problems with which the committee will be faced MOUNT BEATEN The Prince of Wales riding his horse Cark Courtier finished third in the Open Nomination Race at WOMAN IN STREAM Returning Night Discovery Cries for help wore heard by a party of efematod that at least dancers who were returning to fast is are bought each year by Grin-tend from Forest Row in a motor- balf-pnst one yesterday tats this country at an average roach at MYSTERY SOLVED Young Woman with Lost Memory Identified The mystery of the young womnn found in a semi-eonscious condition on a bungalow doorstep in the early hours of Tuesday morning at Higher Walton Preeton has been solved She hnd apparently slept through the night and was suffering from loss of memory but in Fulwood institution she recovered sufficiently to give information which has led to her being Identified as Rose Priee aged 22 living with her sister in East St Gretna Green She had been in service at Aecrington and was going home to Scotland She hod to change at Preston and remembers a porter taking charge of her luggage at that station but nothing of what happened afterwards Her emnlovers at Accrington were com-munirated with as result of the information she gave and thev have Identified her ng flown the H- IV 1 each and lhe Colonel morning if fl2dufl conld lie raised 1 They notice! the calls as they wero f' this source msing over bridge over the River only nor woman Medway and having stopped the coach th" Colcrel Why they scrambled down a steep bark into a hats ecape if tliere vs to rnvire below There tm-v were astonished to discover a worn in fully clothed standing in the stream With great difficnltv she vn a man huvs a hat to keen rm nnd nrolectcd and not sleep Bill they had introduced they would be swept away by the electors with ignominy Mr Henderson addressing a lnliour demonstration later in the day made an attack on the Trade Union Bill which he described ns a rear! ionarv measure hnd been to embarrass and even to arrest many good work a which were initiated ami being extended all over the country Tile has been altered nnd adapted for the use cf the 200 derf nnd dumb inhabitants of South Shields Tynemouth and Jarrow 63 MILESIAN HOUR Gateshead Express Fine Performance Gateshead enginc-d rivers have been responsible for some very fine work re-centlv mi LNER expresses over the famous racing-ground between Darlington and York On Monday Driver A Forbes of Gatesltead driving the Pacilic engine Sunstar achieved a time of only 42 minutes for the 44 miles between Darlington and York with the 85 pm Newcastle to York express beating the time allowed for this journey by one minute the average speed being nbout 63 miles per hour Last Sunday the up East Coast express hauled by the Pacific locomotive City of York covered the 44 miles between Darlington and York in 47 minutes ws against 4S minutes allowed the weight of the train being 430 tons The driver on tb occasion was Noble also of Gatehcid asTsted up the bank the lights ol the ifenknev Hunt yesterday llfitar nfw-li nl rvo Hn iIiiw 4 I motor roach and flares MANSION DESTROYED paper aiding the res- tiers The woman who was taken to East Grinstem! Workhouse in a state of co: h'pse later gave her name as Kmilv GringelLs anil said she did not know how she nni" to he in the water Gal-side a large mansion in Kirkcudbright burned to the ground Walker the proprietor eng neer'ng nnd shipping London and Glasgow by fumes but was CHOCOLATE BONUS Two thousand employees of Clarke Vicko Is and Coombs Ltd the makers of Ola mien chocolate and confectionery I circles Liverpool shared JU130B0 netween them yesterday He was overcome shire wns yesterday James Kay is well known im-ntation while with a i irmre nr less nn artificial w-s the renly AGUE CONFERENCE ie-- Crotvdy chief of lhe it the League of Nati u-s pal speaker in Newcastle con sente by the i'-t Council of the League cf Union 'I to the League Committee into the traffic in women and id that a report had to the League Council -in i The course was in a very heavy condition and several ploughed fields had to he crossed in course of the race which was over a distance of 3J miles The Prince's mount started favourite at 2 to I There were 12 runners one of the riders lieing Miss Taycock daughter of Brigadier-General Lnyeock THE SMALLEST BABY The claim of Battersea London to possess the smalest baby in tho world is KILLED ON THE LINE Shortlv before six o'clock yesterday morning an L'NBR policeman wns walking along the Newcastle-South Shields line near Barnes Itoad South Shields when he discovered the bndlv mutilated body of a voting man lying on the railway After the bodv had leen removed to the mortuary it was iden ilied as being that of James Henrv Chapman aged 22 of 31 Porches! cr StrCet Tyne Dock Chapman who had hern in regular employment at Holdon Colliery is staled to have been subject to epileptic tits MR TRIP I 'hall he back in time for tho big fight aga -n't the Trade Union Bill on the floor r'f the Ifotise of deel3r(( fr Ramsey MacDonald to a Sunder Sun yesterday -'ll' iv it v'vii iitny vuMfi ny sum represen tol the first half of rescind by his son Alexander their annual bonus Mr GeOrgo I They were the -els occupants at the Mnthieson the veteran chairman nnd one I iM hek prev of the found rs of the compnnv he now over K4 srid was the thirty-seventh anniversary profit an the emnlovee hnd never heen sent nwny empty-handed day to visit a gr (daughter who was jurat in another lire in Glasgow VITRIOL-THROWING CHARGE Frank Coales a rhntilfenr was at i-nm- ii: fact that prior to bis departure from London for disputed by Aucklnnd calnnd fe fO 11 I 1 II I Aft Ih AM ft la A 1 1 1 Mrs Johnson who nal traffic did oxit Amenes to -av that the hope the ofople nf the eoinitrv will as mt a realise verv qtii'kly the terrible I Mindy or demand from that has heel) ere hv ti Geyftiv Tiew oi the international action and the npnnllinidy un- settled stale which it will hring in Unship ORDER FOR BELFAST Ihawsd 1 1 Stftr fin 1 rl a ul A Star Line have ordered a DRUNK AS SIGN OF GRIEF Because Catherine Banton Sajford attended the inquest on her brother in a drunken condition and tho Coroner Ordered her arrest she was fined 6s at Salford Police Court yesterday She said she had got drunk because her brother died The officer sail he icund her at home drinking boor iroia put southencTsensation Edward George Wilson the ex-Canadian soldier who is stabbed while in the dock at Southend Pc lice Court on Friday was yesterday moiirtig stated to bo not so well as overnight His conditiua was regarded as very aarfa us Oldham yesterday remanded in custody for a week on it charge of doing grievous bodily harm to his wife by throwing vitriol on her burning her nljout the head face nnd neck on Thursdny night Inst The police sa that lhe woman was ftt present in Oldham Infirmary and would not le fit to attend court for somo days KING AND LORD ROSEBERY The King nnd Queen paid a visit to Lord Rosebery at 'I lie Durdans Epsom Yesterday afternoon arriving bv motorcar a few minutes ho lore three The to tor in itatesmau will bo 83 yeans of ago next month lives at Beckenham Avenue Auckland is the mother of a baby whirh only we'ghed two pounds at birth and was only 14) inches high The Battersea baby in question weighed 2 lbs 2 ozs and measured 15 inches GIRLS ESCAPE FROM FIRE Severs girls made an exciting ascii from a big fire which broke out yesterday on the premises of a Gloucester rinting house The principal building wns destroyed Girls employed in the upper rooms eseaned by climbing through a window and reached safety by means of a ladder TYRE CAUSES TRAGEDY The Carlisle Coroner hold nn inquest yesterday on George Willinm Clark aged 'ii who accompanied hv other young men on motor-cycles went to d-mce on Friday night Cl irk returned first and was found hv liis friends unconscious on the road The front byte wns off the rim and the inner tube was protruding Death resulted from dislocated spine and lind injuries The Coroner decided Hint the ouler cover of the cycle went wrong and threw the rider over the handle bars A verdict of "Accidental death" was returned I-i -enxer snip about 20fi tona tr es-: llarland and 4Ao(T CARL VISIT Car! Rosa terminate their tour with a sentson at Newcastle Theatre Royal -oni me ncing nn Easter Monday The programme will include The which has not been performed ny the company in Newcastle for a long time nnd the recently revived Don one of lighter wnrfciS Tho repertoire for the fortnight is well balanced and the company will be at full Strength WORKING AT 105 of jr William Kemp of Hatfield who cele- 1 1 rat -s bis 105th birthday to-dar bus lived I uICL a in I i 1 1 1 will he I lie i cl Britinb-built in four mign II cWiiy recalls aim the first in wki 1 White at Victoria accession reioiemp Queen -Mw i ui he ef ill enjoys bis pipe ami glass of fast laM uuiBed lately 1 1wer baa never needed glasses and does odd gardening jobs.

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Pages Available:
109,085
Years Available:
1919-2003