1916, in _the later year becoming at- tached to the staff of Lord Derby, at that time the War Minister. Sir :Ianmar has represented the Sunder- ‘land constituency in the House of Commons since 1910. In January, 1919, he was appointed Under-Secre- tary for Home Affairs in Premier Lloyd George’s Cabinet. He was created a baronet in 1915. The Protestant cathedral at Ross Carbery, county Cork, was entered Wednesday night and the statue of the late Lord Carbery, valued at $1,000, was damaged beyond repair. Ten Civilians Killed in Clash Between Jews, Moslems and Arabs. A despatch from London sayszâ€"It is reported that ten civilians were killed and one hundred and eighty wounded, and that three British ofï¬- cers were wounded, in the disturb- ances in Jerusalem on April 4 be- tween the Jews, Moslems and Arabs. The despatch says the exact cause of the trouble has not yet been as- certained. Other disturbances oc- curred April 6, when the town was packed with British troops. Early in the morning of April 6, Arabs tried to enter the Damascus gate, but were ï¬red on. During further dis- turbances some houses were burned. Canadian Chosen For Important Post Sir- Hamari Greenwood, the new Chief Secretary for Ireland, was born at Whitby, Ontario, in 1870 and re- ceived his education in this country. He served in the war fror: 1914 to 200 CASUALTIES A despatch from Dublin says:â€" While three police constables were ¢ycling in the neighborhood of New- gort, county Tipperary, Friday morn- ing, they were ambushed by a number of men who opened ï¬re at close range, killing two of them and seriously wounding the third. The constables had to pass through a bleak moun- tainous district on their way to local sessions, where they were concerned in a case. The surviving constable, after the attack, saw about twenty men running away. A vacated police barracks at Black- roy, outside of Limerick boundary, was burned down. Four men arrested under the Defense of the Realm Act, Were taken to Cork. A mail van from Cavan to Arva was held up near Crossdonney, and more than £100 sterling, representing old age pension money, stolen. TWO IRISH POLICE- MEN KILLED More Outrages in Various Parts of Distressful Isle. The despatch adds .ihat from the latest information, although there was considerable efl'ervescence in the Jerusalem district, the situation was well in hand. FIUME TO Understanding Reached on Adriatic Question. A despatch from London says:â€" Italy and Jugo-Slavia have reached an understanding on the Adriatic settle- ment. The agreement is said to in- clude these main terms: 1. Fiume to remain Italian. 2. Scutari is to be given to Jugo- Slavia. In diplomatic circles it is averted Premier Lloyd George is the real author of this compromise. The Jugo-Slavs, under the reported agreement, would receive Susak, the Canale Della Fiumara, the Porto Baross and the port of Volosca. The port of Abbazia, just to the south- west of Volosca, would remain Italian, with the Jugoâ€"Slavs receiving Scutari, on the Albania coast as compensation. Gabriele D’Annunzio, the insurgent commander at Fiume, is declared to be strongly against the arrangement. Gabriele D’Annunzio, the commander at Fiume, is d be stroneg against the an- SIR HAMAR GREENWOOD REMAIN ITALIAN 1N JERUSALEM CASH BONUS RE- FUSED TO VETERANS Not the Best Way to Help Sol- diers, Says Government. A despatch from Ottawa says:â€"The Dominion Government on Friday an- nounced an afï¬rmation of its decision of a year ago not to pay a cash bonus to war veterans. Sir George Foster, Acting Prime Minister, made a state- ment on the Government’s policy in the Commons, declaring that the Gov- ernment was not of opinion that the best way to re-establish the returned soldiers was by placing in their hands sums of money over which the Ad- ministration should have no super- vision. The Acting Premier drew at- tention to the fact that a Pensions Committee had been appointed again this session, but he said it was im- possible to dispose of such an impor- tant question of re-establishéng re- turned men at one or two sessions of Parliament. As the statement was made by Sir George Foster before the orders of the day were called, there was no op- portunity for it to be debated, but the Acting Premier promised that the matter could be discussed later. He told an inquirer that the Pensions Committee, as now constituted, had never had the question of cash bonus or gratuity directly referred to it. A despatch from One thousand and I rages were committe tween January, 1919, 1089 Outrages fin which ‘ein attributes movement. y and 0111: Hum R Ireland in Year London 11d March 1ty-niue them :ial White em to the Thirty-one s and ï¬ve were ï¬red out- )8 This total does not include the po- llice barracks, to the number of more Week 11] destroyed during Eas ter